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XVI
Leave-Takings
A FEW DAYS
after
the tragic passage-at-arms
between Hollingsworth and me, I appeared at the
dinner-table, actually dressed in a coat, instead
of my customary blouse; with a satin cravat, too,
a white vest, and several other things that made
me seem strange and outlandish to myself. As for
my companions, this unwonted spectacle caused a
great stir upon the wooden benches, that bordered
either side of our homely board.
"What's in
the wind now, Miles?" asked one of
them. "Are you deserting us?"
"Yes, for
a week or two," said I. "It strikes me
that my health demands a little relaxation of
labor, and a short visit to the seaside, during
the dog-days."
"You look
like it!" grumbled Silas Foster, not
greatly pleased with the idea of losing an
efficient laborer, before the stress of the season
was well over. "Now, here's a pretty fellow! His
shoulders have broadened, a matter of six inches,
since he came among us; he can do his day's work,
if he likes, with any man or ox on the farm;--and
yet he talks about going to the seashore for his
health! Well, well, old woman," added he to his
wife, "let me have a platefull of that pork and
cabbage! I begin to feel in a very weakly way.
When the others have had their turn, you and I
will take a jaunt to Newport or Saratoga!"
"Well, but,
Mr. Foster," said I, "you must allow
me to take a little breath."
"Breath!" retorted
the old yeoman. "Your lungs
have the play of a pair of blacksmith's bellows,
already. What on earth do you want more? But go
along! I understand the business. We shall never
see your face here again. Here ends the
reformation of the world, so far as Miles
Coverdale has a hand in it!"
"By no
means," I replied. "I am resolute to die
in the last ditch, for the good of the cause."
"Die in
a ditch!" muttered gruff Silas, with
genuine Yankee intolerance of any intermission of
toil, except on Sunday, the Fourth of July, the
autumnal Cattle-show, Thanksgiving, or the annual
Fast. "Die in a ditch! I believe in my
conscience you would, if there were no steadier
means than your own labor to keep you out of it!"
The truth
was, that an intolerable discontent and
irksomeness had come over me. Blithedale was no
longer what it had been. Everything was suddenly
faded. The sun-burnt and arid aspect of our woods
and pastures, beneath the August sky, did but
imperfectly symbolize the lack of dew and moisture
that, since yesterday, as it were, had blighted my
fields of thought, and penetrated to the innermost
and shadiest of my contemplative recesses. The
change will be recognized by many, who, after a
period of happiness, have endeavored to go on with
the same kind of life, in the same scene, in spite
of the alteration or withdrawal of some principal
circumstance. They discover (what heretofore,
perhaps, they had not known) that it was this
which gave the bright color and vivid reality to
the whole affair.
I stood
on other terms than before, not only with
Hollingsworth, but with Zenobia and Priscilla. As
regarded the two latter, it was that dreamlike and
miserable sort of change that denies you the
privilege to complain, because you can assert no
positive injury, nor lay your finger on anything
tangible. It is a matter which you do not see,
but feel, and which, when you try to analyze it,
seems to lose its very existence, and resolve
itself into a sickly humor of your own. Your
understanding, possibly, may put faith in this
denial. But your heart will not so easily rest
satisfied. It incessantly remonstrates, though,
most of the time, in a bass-note, which you do not
separately distinguish; but, now-and-then, with a
sharp cry, importunate to be heard, and resolute
to claim belief. "Things are not as they
were!"it keeps saying--"You shall not impose on
me! I will never be quiet! I will throb
painfully! I will be heavy, and desolate, and
shiver with cold! For I, your deep heart, know
when to be miserable, as once I knew when to be
happy! All is changed for us! You are beloved no
more!" And, were my life to be spent over again, I
would invariably lend my ear to this Cassandra of
the inward depths, however clamorous the music and
the merriment of a more superficial region.
My outbreak
with Hollingsworth, though never
definitely known to our associates, had really an
effect upon the moral atmosphere of the Community.
It was incidental to the closeness of
relationship, into which we had brought ourselves,
that an unfriendly state of feeling could not
occur between any two members, without the whole
society being more or less commoted and made
uncomfortable thereby. This species of nervous
sympathy (though a pretty characteristic enough,
sentimentally considered, and apparently
betokening an actual bond of love among us) was
yet found rather inconvenient in its practical
operation; mortal tempers being so infirm and
variable as they are. If one of us happened to
give his neighbor a box on the ear, the tingle was
immediately felt, on the same side of everybody's
head. Thus, even on the supposition that we were
far less quarrelsome than the rest of the world, a
great deal of time was necessarily wasted in
rubbing our ears.
Musing on
all these matters, I felt an
inexpressible longing for at least a temporary
novelty. I thought of going across the Rocky
Mountains, or to Europe, or up the Nile--of
offering myself a volunteer on the Exploring
Expedition--of taking a ramble of years, no matter
in what direction, and coming back on the other
side of the world. Then, should the colonists of
Blithedale have established their enterprise on a
permanent basis, I might fling aside my
pilgrim-staff and dusty shoon, and rest as
peacefully here as elsewhere. Or, in case
Hollingsworth should occupy the ground with his
School of Reform, as he now purposed, I might
plead earthly guilt enough, by that time, to give
me what I was inclined to think the only
trustworthy hold on his affections. Meanwhile,
before deciding on any ultimate plan, I determined
to remove myself to a little distance, and take an
exterior view of what we had all been about.
In truth,
it was dizzy work, amid such
fermentation of opinions as was going on in the
general brain of the Community. It was a kind of
Bedlam, for the time being; although, out of the
very thoughts that were wildest and most
destructive, might grow a wisdom, holy, calm, and
pure, and that should incarnate itself with the
substance of a noble and happy life. But, as
matters now were, I felt myself (and having a
decided tendency towards the actual, I never liked
to feel it) getting quite out of my reckoning,
with regard to the existing state of the world. I
was beginning to lose the sense of what kind of a
world it was, among innumerable schemes of what it
might or ought to be. It was impossible, situated
as we were, not to imbibe the idea that everything
in nature and human existence was fluid, or fast
becoming so; that the crust of the Earth, in many
places, was broken, and its whole surface
portentously upheaving; that it was a day of
crisis, and that we ourselves were in the critical
vortex. Our great globe floated in the atmosphere
of infinite space like an unsubstantial bubble.
No sagacious man will long retain his sagacity, if
he live exclusively among reformers and
progressive people, without periodically returning
into the settled system of things, to correct
himself by a new observation from that old
stand-point.
It was
now time for me, therefore, to go and hold
a little talk with the conservatives, the writers
of the North American Review, the merchants, the
politicians, the Cambridge men, and all those
respectable old blockheads, who still, in this
intangibility and mistiness of affairs, kept a
death-grip on one or two ideas which had not come
into vogue since yesterday-morning.
The brethren
took leave of me with cordial
kindness; and as for the sisterhood, I had serious
thoughts of kissing them all round, but forbore to
do so, because, in all such general salutations,
the penance is fully equal to the pleasure. So I
kissed none of them, and nobody, to say the truth,
seemed to expect it.
"Do you
wish me," I said to Zenobia, "to announce,
in town, and at the watering-places, your purpose
to deliver a course of lectures on the rights of
women?"
"Women possess
no rights," said Zenobia, with a
half-melancholy smile; "or, at all events, only
little girls and grandmothers would have the force
to exercise them."
She gave
me her hand, freely and kindly, and
looked at me, I thought, with a pitying expression
in her eyes; nor was there any settled light of
joy in them, on her own behalf, but a troubled and
passionate flame, flickering and fitful.
"I regret,
on the whole, that you are leaving us,"
she said; "and all the more, since I feel that
this phase of our life is finished, and can never
be lived over again. Do you know, Mr. Coverdale,
that I have been several times on the point of
making you my confidant, for lack of a better and
wiser one? But you are too young to be my Father
Confessor; and you would not thank me for treating
you like one of those good little handmaidens, who
share the bosom-secrets of a tragedy-queen!"
"I would
at least be loyal and faithful," answered
I, "and would counsel you with an honest purpose,
if not wisely."
"Yes," said
Zenobia, "you would be only too
wise--too honest. Honesty and wisdom are such a
delightful pastime, at another person's expense!"
"Ah, Zenobia,"
I exclaimed, "if you would but let
me speak!"
"By no
means," she replied; "especially when you
have just resumed the whole series of social
conventionalisms, together with that
straight-bodied coat. I would as fief open my
heart to a lawyer or a clergyman! No, no, Mr.
Coverdale; if I choose a counsellor, in the
present aspect of my affairs, it must be either an
angel or a madman; and I rather apprehend that the
latter would be likeliest of the two to speak the
fitting word. It needs a wild steersman when we
voyage through Chaos! The anchor is up!
Farewell!"
Priscilla, as
soon as dinner was over, had betaken
herself into a corner, and set to work on a little
purse. As I approached her, she let her eyes rest
on me, with a calm, serious look; for, with all
her delicacy of nerves, there was a singular
self-possession in Priscilla, and her
sensibilities seemed to lie sheltered from
ordinary commotion, like the water in a deep well.
"Will you
give me that purse, Priscilla," said I,
"as a parting keepsake?"
"Yes," she
answered; "if you will wait till it is
finished."
"I must
not wait, even for that," I replied.
"Shall I find you here, on my return?"
"I never
wish to go away," said she.
"I have
sometimes thought," observed I, smiling,
"that you, Priscilla, are a little prophetess; or,
at least, that you have spiritual intimations
respecting matters which are dark to us grosser
people. If that be the case, I should like to ask
you what is about to happen. For I am tormented
with a strong foreboding, that, were I to return
even so soon as tomorrow moming, I should find
everything changed. Have you any impressions of
this nature?"
"Ah, no!"
said Priscilla, looking at me
apprehensively. "If any such misfortune is
coming, the shadow has not reached me yet. Heaven
forbid! I should be glad if there might never be
any change, but one summer follow another, and all
just like this!"
"No summer
ever came back, and no two summers ever
were alike," said I, with a degree of Orphic
wisdom that astonished myself. "Times change, and
people change; and if our hearts do not change as
readily, so much the worse for us! Good bye,
Priscilla!"
I gave
her hand a pressure, which, I think, she
neither resisted nor returned. Priscilla's heart
was deep, but of small compass; it had room but
for a very few dearest ones, among whom she never
reckoned me.
On the
door-step, I met Hollingsworth. I had a
momentary impulse to hold out my hand, or, at
least, to give a parting nod, but resisted both.
When a real and strong affection has come to an
end, it is not well to mock the sacred past with
any show of those common-place civilities that
belong to ordinary intercourse. Being dead
henceforth to him, and he to me, there could be no
propriety in our chilling one another with the
touch of two corpse-like hands, or playing at
looks of courtesy with eyes that were impenetrable
beneath the glaze and the film. We passed,
therefore, as if mutually invisible.
I can
nowise explain what sort of whim, prank, or
perversity it was, that, after all these
leave-takings, induced me to go to the pig-stye
and take leave of the swine! There they lay,
buried as deeply among the straw as they could
burrow, four huge black grunters, the very symbols
of slothful ease and sensual comfort. They were
asleep, drawing short and heavy breaths, which
heaved their big sides up and down. Unclosing
their eyes, however, at my approach, they looked
dimly forth at the outer world, and simultaneously
uttered a gentle grunt; not putting themselves to
the trouble of an additional breath for that
particular purpose, but grunting with their
ordinary inhalation. They were involved, and
almost stifled, and buried alive, in their own
corporeal substance. The very unreadiness and
oppression, wherewith these greasy citizens gained
breath enough to keep their life-machinery in
sluggish movement, appeared to make them only the
more sensible of the ponderous and fat
satisfaction of their existence. Peeping at me,
an instant, out of their small, red, hardly
perceptible eyes, they dropt asleep again; yet not
so far asleep but that their unctuous bliss was
still present to them, betwixt dream and reality.
"You must
come back in season to eat part of a
spare-rib," said Silas Foster, giving my hand a
mighty squeeze. "I shall have these fat fellows
hanging up by the heels, heads downward, pretty
soon, I tell you!"
"Oh, cruel
Silas, what a horrible idea!" cried I.
"All the rest of us, men, women, and live-stock,
save only these four porkers, are bedevilled with
one grief or another; they alone are happy--and
you mean to cut their throats, and eat them! It
would be more for the general comfort to let them
eat us; and bitter and sour morsels we should be!"
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