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XIX
Zenobia's Drawing-Room
THE REMAINDER
of
the day, so far as I was
concerned, was spent in meditating on these recent
incidents. I contrived, and alternately rejected,
innumerable methods of accounting for the presence
of Zenobia and Priscilla, and the connection of
Westervelt with both. It must be owned, too, that
I had a keen, revengeful sense of the insult
inflicted by Zenobia's scornful recognition, and
more particularly by her letting down the curtain;
as if such were the proper barrier to be
interposed between a character like hers, and a
perceptive faculty like mine. For, was mine a
mere vulgar curiosity? Zenobia should have known
me better than to suppose it. She should have
been able to appreciate that quality of the
intellect and the heart, which impelled me (often
against my own will, and to the detriment of my
own comfort) to live in other lives, and to
endeavor--by generous sympathies, by delicate
intuitions, by taking note of things too slight
for record, and by bringing my human spirit into
manifold accordance with the companions whom God
assigned me--to learn the secret which was hidden
even from themselves.
Of all
possible observers, methought, a woman,
like Zenobia, and a man, like Hollingsworth,
should have selected me. And, now, when the event
has long been past, I retain the same opinion of
my fitness for the office. I might have condemned
them. Had I been judge, as well as witness, my
sentence might have been stern as that of Destiny
itself. But, still, no trait of original nobility
of character; no struggle against temptation; no
iron necessity of will, on the one hand, nor
extenuating circumstance to be derived from
passion and despair, on the other; no remorse that
might co-exist with error, even if powerless to
prevent it; no proud repentance, that should claim
retribution as a meed--would go unappreciated.
True, again, I might give my full assent to the
punishment which was sure to follow. But it would
be given mournfully, and with undiminished love.
And, after all was finished, I would come, as if
to gather up the white ashes of those who had
perished at the stake, and to tell the world--the
wrong being now atoned for--how much had perished
there, which it had never yet known how to praise.
I sat
in my rocking-chair, too far withdrawn from
the window to expose myself to another rebuke,
like that already inflicted. My eyes still
wandered towards the opposite house, but without
effecting any new discoveries. Late in the
afternoon, the weathercock on the church-spire
indicated a change of wind; the sun shone dimly
out, as if the golden wine of its beams were
mingled half-and-half with water. Nevertheless,
they kindled up the whole range of edifices, threw
a glow over the windows, glistened on the wet
roofs, and, slowly withdrawing upward, perched
upon the chimney-tops; thence they took a higher
flight, and lingered an instant on the tip of the
spire, making it the final point of more cheerful
light in the whole sombre scene. The next moment,
it was all gone. The twilight fell into the area
like a shower of dusky snow; and before it was
quite dark, the gong of the hotel summoned me to
tea.
When I
returned to my chamber, the glow of an
astral lamp was penetrating mistily through the
white curtain of Zenobia's drawing-room. The
shadow of a passing figure was now-and-then cast
upon this medium, but with too vague an outline
for even my adventurous conjectures to read the
hieroglyphic that it presented.
All at
once, it occurred to me how very absurd was
my behavior, in thus tormenting myself with crazy
hypotheses as to what was going on within that
drawing-room, when it was at my option to be
personally present there. My relations with
Zenobia, as yet unchanged--as a familiar friend,
and associated in the same life-long
enterprise--gave me the right, and made it no more
than kindly courtesy demanded, to call on her.
Nothing, except our habitual independence of
conventional rules, at Blithedale, could have kept
me from sooner recognizing this duty. At all
events, it should now be performed.
In compliance
with this sudden impulse, I soon
found myself actually within the house, the rear
of which, for two days past, I had been so
sedulously watching. A servant took my card, and
immediately returning, ushered me up-stairs. On
the way, I heard a rich, and, as it were,
triumphant burst of music from a piano, in which I
felt Zenobia's character, although heretofore I
had known nothing of her skill upon the
instrument. Two or three canary-birds, excited by
this gush of sound, sang piercingly, and did their
utmost to produce a kindred melody. A bright
illumination streamed through the door of the
front drawing-room; and I had barely stept across
the threshold before Zenobia came forward to meet
me, laughing, and with an extended hand.
"Ah, Mr.
Coverdale," said she, still smiling,
but, as I thought, with a good deal of scornful
anger underneath, "it has gratified me to see the
interest which you continue to take in my affairs!
I have long recognized you as a sort of
transcendental Yankee, with all the native
propensity of your countrymen to investigate
matters that come within their range, but rendered
almost poetical, in your case, by the refined
methods which you adopt for its gratification.
After all, it was an unjustifiable stroke, on my
part--was it not?--to let down the
window-curtain!"
"I cannot
call it a very wise one," returned I,
with a secret bitterness which, no doubt, Zenobia
appreciated. "It is really impossible to hide
anything, in this world, to say nothing of the
next. All that we ought to ask, therefore, is,
that the witnesses of our conduct, and the
speculators on our motives, should be capable of
taking the highest view which the circumstances of
the case may admit. So much being secured, I, for
one, would be most happy in feeling myself
followed, everywhere, by an indefatigable human
sympathy."
"We must
trust for intelligent sympathy to our
guardian angels, if any there be," said Zenobia.
"As long as the only spectator of my poor tragedy
is a young man, at the window of his hotel, I must
still claim the liberty to drop the curtain."
While this
passed, as Zenobia's hand was extended,
I had applied the very slightest touch of my
fingers to her own. In spite of an external
freedom, her manner made me sensible that we stood
upon no real terms of confidence. The thought
came sadly across me, how great was the contrast
betwixt this interview and our first meeting.
Then, in the warm light of the country fireside,
Zenobia had greeted me cheerily and hopefully,
with a full sisterly grasp of the hand, conveying
as much kindness in it as other women could have
evinced by the pressure of both arms around my
neck, or by yielding a cheek to the brotherly
salute. The difference was as complete as between
her appearance, at that time--so simply attired,
and with only the one superb flower in her
hair--and now, when her beauty was set off by all
that dress and ornament could do for it. And they
did much. Not, indeed, that they created, or
added anything to what Nature had lavishly done
for Zenobia. But, those costly robes which she
had on, those flaming jewels on her neck, served
as lamps to display the personal advantages which
required nothing less than such an illumination,
to be fully seen. Even her characteristic flower,
though it seemed to be still there, had undergone
a cold and bright transfiguration; it was a flower
exquisitely imitated in jeweller's work, and
imparting the last touch that transformed Zenobia
into a work of art.
"I scarcely
feel," I could not forbear saying, "as
if we had ever met before. How many years ago it
seems, since we last sat beneath Eliot's pulpit,
with Hollingsworth extended on the fallen leaves,
and Priscilla at his feet! Can it be, Zenobia,
that you ever really numbered yourself with our
little band of earnest, thoughtful, philanthropic
laborers?"
"Those ideas
have their time and place," she
answered, coldly. "But, I fancy, it must be a
very circumscribed mind that can find room for no
others."
Her manner
bewildered me. Literally, moreover, I
was dazzled by the brilliancy of the room. A
chandelier hung down in the centre, glowing with I
know not how many lights; there were separate
lamps, also, on two or three tables, and on marble
brackets, adding their white radiance to that of
the chandelier. The furniture was exceedingly
rich. Fresh from our old farm-house, with its
homely board and benches in the dining-room, and a
few wicker-chairs in the best parlor, it struck me
that here was the fulfilment of every fantasy of
an imagination, revelling in various methods of
costly self-indulgence and splendid ease.
Pictures, marbles, vases; in brief, more shapes of
luxury than there could be any object in
enumerating, except for an auctioneer's
advertisement--and the whole repeated and doubled
by the reflection of a great mirror, which showed
me Zenobia's proud figure, likewise, and my own.
It cost me, I acknowledge, a bitter sense of
shame, to perceive in myself a positive effort to
bear up against the effect which Zenobia sought to
impose on me. I reasoned against her, in my
secret mind, and strove so to keep my footing. In
the gorgeousness with which she had surrounded
herself--in the redundance of personal ornament,
which the largeness of her physical nature and the
rich type of her beauty caused to seem so
suitable--I malevolently beheld the true character
of the woman, passionate, luxurious, lacking
simplicity, not deeply refined, incapable of pure
and perfect taste. But, the next instant, she was
too powerful for all my opposing struggles. I saw
how fit it was that she should make herself as
gorgeous as she pleased, and should do a thousand
things that would have been ridiculous in the
poor, thin, weakly characters of other women. To
this day, however, I hardly know whether I then
beheld Zenobia in her truest attitude, or whether
that were the truer one in which she had presented
herself at Blithedale. In both, there was
something like the illusion which a great actress
flings around her.
"Have you
given up Blithedale forever?" I
inquired.
"Why should
you think so?" asked she.
"I cannot
tell," answered I; "except that it
appears all like a dream that we were ever there
together."
"It is
not so to me," said Zenobia. "I should
think it a poor and meagre nature, that is capable
of but one set of forms, and must convert all the
past into a dream, merely because the present
happens to be unlike it. Why should we be content
with our homely life of a few months past, to the
exclusion of all other modes? It was good; but
there are other lives as good or better. Not, you
will understand, that I condemn those who give
themselves up to it more entirely than I, for
myself, should deem it wise to do."
It irritated
me, this self-complacent,
condescending, qualified approval and criticism of
a system to which many individuals--perhaps as
highly endowed as our gorgeous Zenobia--had
contributed their all of earthly endeavor, and
their loftiest aspirations. I determined to make
proof if there were any spell that would exorcise
her out of the part which she seemed to be acting.
She should be compelled to give me a glimpse of
something true; some nature, some passion, no
matter whether right or wrong, provided it were
real.
"Your allusion
to that class of circumscribed
characters, who can live only in one mode of
life," remarked I, coolly, "reminds me of our poor
friend Hollingsworth. Possibly, he was in your
thoughts, when you spoke thus. Poor fellow! It
is a pity that, by the fault of a narrow
education, he should have so completely immolated
himself to that one idea of his; especially as the
slightest modicum of common-sense would teach him
its utter impracticability. Now that I have
returned into the world, and can look at his
project from a distance, it requires quite all my
real regard for this respectable and
well-intentioned man to prevent me laughing at
him--as, I find, society at large does!"
Zenobia's eyes
darted lightning; her cheeks
flushed; the vividness of her expression was like
the effect of a powerful light, flaming up
suddenly within her. My experiment had fully
succeeded. She had shown me the true flesh and
blood of her heart, by thus involuntarily
resenting my slight, pitying, half-kind,
half-scornful mention of the man who was all in
all with her. She herself, probably, felt this;
for it was hardly a moment before she
tranquillized her uneven breath, and seemed as
proud and self-possessed as ever.
"I rather
imagine," said she, quietly, "that your
appreciation falls short of Mr. Hollingsworth's
just claims. Blind enthusiasm, absorption in one
idea, I grant, is generally ridiculous, and must
be fatal to the respectability of an ordinary man;
it requires a very high and powerful character, to
make it otherwise. But a great man--as, perhaps,
you do not know--attains his normal condition only
through the inspiration of one great idea. As a
friend of Mr. Hollingsworth, and, at the same
time, a calm observer, I must tell you that he
seems to me such a man. But you are very
pardonable for fancying him ridiculous.
Doubtless, he is so--to you! There can be no
truer test of the noble and heroic, in any
individual, than the degree in which he possesses
the faculty of distinguishing heroism from
absurdity."
I dared
make no retort to Zenobia's concluding
apothegm. In truth, I admired her fidelity. It
gave me a new sense of Hollingsworth's native
power, to discover that his influence was no less
potent with this beautiful woman, here, in the
midst of artificial life, than it had been, at the
foot of the gray rock, and among the wild
birch-trees of the wood-path, when she so
passionately pressed his hand against her heart.
The great, rude, shaggy, swarthy man! And Zenobia
loved him!
"Did you
bring Priscilla with you?" I resumed.
"Do you know, I have sometimes fancied it not
quite safe, considering the susceptibility of her
temperament, that she should be so constantly
within the sphere of a man like Hollingsworth?
Such tender and delicate natures, among your sex,
have often, I believe, a very adequate
appreciation of the heroic element in men. But,
then, again, I should suppose them as likely as
any other women to make a reciprocal impression.
Hollingsworth could hardly give his affections to
a person capable of taking an independent stand,
but only to one whom he might absorb into himself.
He has certainly shown great tenderness for
Priscilla."
Zenobia had
turned aside. But I caught the
reflection of her face in the mirror, and saw that
it was very pale;--as pale, in her rich attire, as
if a shroud were round her.
"Priscilla is
here," said she, her voice a little
lower than usual. "Have not you learnt as much,
from your chamber-window? Would you like to see
her?"
She made
a step or two into the back drawing-room,
and called:--
"Priscilla! Dear
Priscilla!"
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