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The Woman Who Dared Part 4

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"Kenrick next day renewed his suit by letter; He begged I would not give a hasty 'No,'

But wait and grant him opportunities To prove that he was worthy and sincere, And to procure the requisite divorce.

While I was answering his letter, he Drove out with Percival. My brief reply Told him there could be no decision other Than a complete and final negative.

"Then I sat down and ran my fingers over The keys of the piano; and my mood At length expressed itself in that wild burst Of a melodious anguish, which Edgardo Gives vent to in 'Lucia.' Words could add Nothing to magnify the utter heart-break Of that despair; and Donizetti's score Has made the cry audible through the ages.

Less from the instrument than from my heart Was wrung the pa.s.sionate music.

"At its close, A long-drawn breath made me look round, and there Whom should I see but Percival, as if Transfixed in mute surprise! 'I did not know There was a listener,--had supposed you gone,'

Said I; and he replied: 'I thought you'd have Some word for Kenrick: so our drive was short.'

'Nothing but this.' I handed him my letter; He took it, bowed, and left me.

"The next day I learnt that Kenrick had engaged his pa.s.sage In Wednesday's steamer for New York. My stay Must now be brief; my services no longer Could be of any use; and so I wrote Some formal lines, addressed to Percival, Asking for my dismissal, and conveying To both the gentlemen my thanks sincere For all their kindness and munificence.

Two days I waited, but no answer came.

"The third day Kenrick sought an interview.

We met, and freely talked of this and that.

Said he, at last: 'Into what false, false ways We plunge because we do not care to _think_!

We shudder at Chinese morality When it allows a parent to destroy Superfluous female children. Look at home!

Have we no ancient social superst.i.tions Born of the same old barbarous family?

My life, Miss Merivale, has been so crowded That I've had little time to trace opinion Down to its root before accepting it.

In giving opportunity for thought, Sickness has been a brisk iconoclast.

Behold the world's ideal of a wife![4]

'Tis something like to this:

"'She marries young, Perhaps in meek submission to the will Parental, or in hope of a support; In a few years,--as heart and brain mature, And knowledge widens,--finds her lord and master Is a wrong-headed churl, a selfish tyrant, A miser, or a blockhead, or a brute; Her love for him, if love there ever was, Is turned to hatred or indifference: What shall she do? The world has one reply: You made your bed, and you must lie in it; True, you were heedless seventeen--no matter!

True, a false sense of duty urged you on, And you were wrongly influenced--no matter!

Be his wife still; stand by him to the last; Do not rebel against his cruelty; The more he plays the ruffian, the more merit In your endurance! Suffering is your lot; It is the badge and jewel of a woman.

Shun not contamination from his touch; Keep having children by him, that his traits And his bad blood may be continuous.

Think that you love him still; and feed your heart With all the lies you can, to keep it pa.s.sive!

"'So say the bellwethers who lead the many Over stone walls into the thorns and ditches, Because their fathers took that way before them.

Such is the popular morality!

But is it moral? Nay; when man or woman Can look up, with the heart of prayer, and say, Forbid it, Heaven, forbid it, self-respect, Forbid it, merciful regard for others, That this one should be parent to my child,-- That moment should the intimate relations Of marriage end, and a release be found![5]

"'How many blunder in mistaking Pa.s.sion, Mixed with a little sentiment, for Love!

Pa.s.sion may lead to Love, as it may lead Away from Love, but Pa.s.sion is not Love; It may exist with Hate; too often leads Its victim blindfold into hateful bonds, Under the wild delusion that Love leads.

Love's bonds are adamant, and Love a slave; And yet Love's service must be perfect freedom.

Candor it craves, for Love is innocent,-- But no enforced fidelity, no ties Such as the harem shelters. Dupes are they Who think that Love can ever be compelled!

Only what's lovely Love can truly love, And fickleness and falsehood are deformed.

Reveal their features, Love may mourn indeed, But will not rave. Love, even when abandoned, Feels pity and not anger for the heart That could not prize Love's warm fidelity.

But Pa.s.sion, selfish, proud, and murderous, Seizes the pistol or the knife, and kills;-- And cozened juries make a heroine Of her who, stung with jealousy or pride, Or, by some meaner motive, hurled a wreck, a.s.sa.s.sinates her too inconstant wooer.

"'Now do I see how little, in my case, There was of actual love, how much of pa.s.sion!

Love's day for me, if it may ever come In this brief stage, is yet to dawn. You smile; Love must have hope, a ray of hope, at least, To catch the hue of life; and so, Miss Mary, I'll not profess to love you; all I say Is, that a little hope from you would make me!

But, since we can't be lovers, let's be friends; Here, in this little wallet, is a check For an amount that will secure your future From serious want,--a sum I shall not miss.

But which--'

"With many thanks I answered 'No!'

'What can I do?' he asked, 'to show my debt To you and Percival?' I shook my head, And something in the sadness of my smile Arrested his attention. But that moment A girl rushed in with cry of 'O, he's killed-- Killed, the poor man!'--'Who?'--'Mr. Percival!'

The name was like a blow upon my heart, And Kenrick saw it, and supported me.

"But in a moment I was strong. I heard A scuffling noise of people at the door, And then a form--'twas Percival's--was borne Into a room, and placed upon a bed.

Pale and insensible he lay; a surgeon Came in; at last we got an explanation: In rescuing from a frightened horse the child Of a poor woman, Percival had been Thrown down, an arm been broken, and the pain Had made him faint. My nervous laugh of joy, When I was sure that this was the extreme Of injury, betrayed my reckless heart, And Kenrick had my secret. Percival Was soon himself; the broken limb was set, And I, engaged to stay another week To wait on the new patient--nothing loath.

"The day of his departure, Kenrick drew me Aside, and, in a whisper, said, 'He loves you!'

'Loves me?' With palms held tightly on my breast To keep my heart down, I repeated, 'Loves me?'

'Twas hard to credit. 'Pardon me,' said Kenrick, 'If by communication of your secret, I changed the desolation of his life To sudden bloom and fragrance, for a moment.'

'A moment only?'--'Soon his scruples rose: It cannot be! he said; two mountains lie Between my fate and hers.--Two bubbles rather!

Retorted I; let's take their alt.i.tude.-- One is my age.--That mountain is already Tunnelled or levelled, since she sees it not.-- The other is that infamous decree Against me at the period of my suit, Granting the guilty party a divorce, But me prohibiting to wed again.-- Well, that decree (I answered bitterly) Would have with me the weight of a request That I'd hereafter quaff at common puddles And not at one pure fount; I'd heed the bar As I would heed the gra.s.s-webbed gossamer; I'd sooner balk a bench of drivellers Than outrage sacred nature.--If that bench Could have you up for bigamy, what then?-- The dear old dames! they should not have the means To prove it on me: for the pact should be 'Twixt me and her who would accept my troth Freely before high heaven and all its angels: Witnesses which the sheriff could not summon, Could not, at least, produce.--But, Kenrick, you Do not consider all the risk and pain; The social stigma, and, should children come, The grief, the shame, the disrepute to them.-- To which I answered: G.o.d's great gift of life, Coming through parentage select and pure, To me is such a sacred, sacred thing, So precious, so inestimably precious, That your objections seem of small account; Since only stunted hearts and slavish minds Could visit on your children disrepute, Who fitly could ignore such Brahmanism, Since they'd be born, most probably, with brains.

"'When the neglect of form, if 'tis neglected, Is all in honor, purged of selfishness, Where shall the heart and reason lay the blame?

But understand me: Would I cheapen form?

Nay, I should fear that those who would evade it, Without a reason potent as your own, Trifled with danger. But I cannot make A G.o.d of form, an idol crus.h.i.+ng me.

Unlike the church, I look on marriage as A civil contract, not a sacrament,[6]

Indissoluble, spite of every wrong; The high and holy purposes of marriage Are not fulfilled in instances where each Helps to demoralize or blight the other; Let it then stand, like other contracts, on A basis purely personal and legal.

"'Oh! how we hug the fictions we are born to!

Challenging never, never testing them; Accepting them as irreversible; Part of G.o.d's order, not to be improved; Placing the form above the informing spirit, The outward show above the inward life; A hollow lie, well varnished, well played out, Above the pure, the everlasting truth; Fancying Nature is not Nature still, Because repressed, or cheated, or concealed; Juggling ourselves with frauds a very child, Yet unperverted, readily would pierce!

"'Consider my own case: a month ago, See me a maniac, rus.h.i.+ng forth to find A wife who loved me not; my heart all swollen With rage against the man to whom I owed Exposure of her falsehood; ah, how blind!

To chase a form from which the soul had fled!

If I grew sane at length, you, Percival, And the mere presence of our little nurse Have brought me light and healing. I am cured, Thank Heaven, and can exult at my release.

"'Here I paused. Percival made no reply, But sat like one absorbed. I paced the floor Awhile, and then confronting him resumed:-- Your scruples daunt you still; well, there's a way To free you from the meshes of the law: On my return, I'll go to Albany, Where war's financial sinews, as you know, Are those of legislation equally; I'll have a law put through to meet your case; To strip away these toils. I can; I will!-- Percival almost stunned me with his No!

Make _me_ a gutter, adding more pollution To the fount of public justice? Never! No!

I would not feed corruption with a bribe, To win release to-morrow. Such a cure Would be, my friend, far worse than the disease.-- Then there's no way, said I; and so, farewell!

The carriage waits to take me to the station.-- I shall not say farewell until we part Beside the carriage-door, said he: you'll take Your leave of Mary?--Yes, I go to seek her.-- And this, Miss Mary, is a full report Of all that pa.s.sed between my friend and me.'

"Here Kenrick ended. He had been, methought, Thus copious, in the hope his argument Would make me look as scornfully as he On obstacles that Percival would raise.

I thanked him for his courtesy, and then, Not without some emotion, we two parted.

When the last sound of the retiring wheels Was drowned in other noises, Percival Came in, and found me waiting in the parlor.

'Now let me have a talk with you,' he said.

So, in the little parlor we sat down.

I see it now, all vividly before me!

The carpet--ay, its very hues and figures: The chandelier, the sofa, the engraving Of Wellington that hung above the mantel; The little bookcase, holding Scott and Irving, And Gibbon's Rome, and Eloisa's Letters; And, in a vase, upon the marble stand, An opening rose-bud I had plucked that day-- Type of my own unfolding, rosy hope!

"Said Percival: 'We'll not amuse each other With words indifferent; and we'll allow Small opportunity for hearts to speak: We know what they would utter, might we dare To give them audience. Let Reason rule.

What I propose is this: that we now part-- Part for two years; and when that term shall end, If we are still in heart disposed as now, Then can we orient ourselves anew, And shape our course as wary conscience bids.

Till then, no meeting and no correspondence!

"'Now for conditions more particular: You have a sister--Mrs. Hammersley-- Julia, I think you said,--an elder sister, Resident here, and in society, But fretted by her lord's extravagance And her own impecuniosity.

You at her house shall be a visitor, But not without the means of aiding her; And who but I can now supply the means?

Here's the dilemma: how can you be free If you're my debtor? Yet you _must_ be free, And promise to be free; nor let my gift Sway you one jot in trammelling your heart.

Two years you'll spend with Mrs. Hammersley; Accepting all Society can offer To welcome youth and beauty to its lap; Keeping your heart as open as you can To influences and impressions new; For, Mary, bear in mind how young you are!

So much for _you_. On _my_ part, I'll return To my own country, and endeavor there Once more to rectify the wretched wrong That circ.u.mscribes me. I shall fail perhaps-- But we can be prepared for either issue.'

"Here he was silent, and I said: 'You're right, And I accept your terms without reserve.'

We parted, and except a clasp of hands That lingered in each other, and a glance That flashed farewell from eyes enthroning truth, There was no outward token of our love.

"Two years (the longest of my life were they!) Emptied their sands at last, and then I wrote A letter to him, to the Barings' care, Containing one word only; this: '_Unchanged._'

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The Woman Who Dared Part 4 summary

You're reading The Woman Who Dared. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Epes Sargent. Already has 526 views.

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