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XI
The Wood-Path
NOT LONG AFTER
the
preceding incident, in order to
get the ache of too constant labor out of my
bones, and to relieve my spirit of the irksomeness
of a settled routine, I took a holiday. It was my
purpose to spend it, all alone, from
breakfast-time till twilight, in the deepest
wood-seclusion that lay anywhere around us.
Though fond of society, I was so constituted as to
need these occasional retirements, even in a life
like that of Blithedale, which was itself
characterized by a remoteness from the world.
Unless renewed by a yet farther withdrawal towards
the inner circle of self-communion, I lost the
better part of my individuality. My thoughts
became of little worth, and my sensibilities grew
as arid as a tuft of moss, (a thing whose life is
in the shade, the rain, or the noontide dew,)
crumbling in the sunshine, after long expectance
of a shower. So, with my heart full of a drowsy
pleasure, and cautious not to dissipate my mood by
previous intercourse with any one, I hurried away,
and was soon pacing a wood-path, arched overhead
with boughs, and dusky brown beneath my feet.
At first,
I walked very swiftly, as if the heavy
floodtide of social life were roaring at my heels,
and would outstrip and overwhelm me, without all
the better diligence in my escape. But, threading
the more distant windings of the track, I abated
my pace and looked about me for some side-aisle,
that should admit me into the innermost sanctuary
of this green cathedral; just as, in human
acquaintanceship, a casual opening sometimes lets
us, all of a sudden, into the long-sought intimacy
of a mysterious heart. So much was I absorbed in
my reflections--or rather, in my mood, the
substance of which was as yet too shapeless to be
called thought--that footsteps rustled on the
leaves, and a figure passed me by, almost without
impressing either the sound or sight upon my
consciousness.
A moment
afterwards, I heard a voice at a little
distance behind me, speaking so sharply and
impertinently that it made a complete discord with
my spiritual state, and caused the latter to
vanish, as abruptly as when you thrust a finger
into a soap-bubble.
"Halloo, friend!"
cried this most unseasonable
voice. "Stop a moment, I say! I must have a word
with you!"
I turned
about, in a humor ludicrously irate. In
the first place, the interruption, at any rate,
was a grievous injury; then, the tone displeased
me. And, finally, unless there be real affection
in his heart, a man cannot--such is the bad state
to which the world has brought itself--cannot more
effectually show his contempt for a
brother-mortal, nor more gallingly assume a
position of superiority, than by addressing him as
"friend." Especially does the misapplication of
this phrase bring out that latent hostility, which
is sure to animate peculiar sects, and those who,
with however generous a purpose, have sequestered
themselves from the crowd; a feeling, it is true,
which may be hidden in some dog-kennel of the
heart, grumbling there in the darkness, but is
never quite extinct, until the dissenting party
have gained power and scope enough to treat the
world generously. For my part, I should have
taken it as far less an insult to be styled
"fellow," "clown," or "bumpkin." To either of
these appellations, my rustic garb (it was a linen
blouse, with checked shirt and striped pantaloons,
a chip-hat on my head, and a rough hickory-stick
in my hand) very fairly entitled me. As the case
stood, my temper darted at once to the opposite
pole; not friend, but enemy!
"What do
you want with me?" said I, facing about.
"Come a
little nearer, friend!" said the stranger,
beckoning.
"No," answered
I. "If I can do anything for you,
without too much trouble to myself, say so. But
recollect, if you please, that you are not
speaking to an acquaintance, much less a friend!"
"Upon my
word, I believe not!" retorted he,
looking at me with some curiosity; and lifting his
hat, he made me a salute, which had enough of
sarcasm to be offensive, and just enough of
doubtful courtesy to render any resentment of it
absurd.--"But I ask your pardon! I recognize a
little mistake. If I may take the liberty to
suppose it, you, sir, are probably one of the
Aesthetic--or shall I rather say
ecstatic?--laborers, who have planted themselves
hereabouts. This is your forest of Arden; and you
are either the banished Duke, in person, or one of
the chief nobles in his train. The melancholy
Jacques, perhaps? Be it so! In that case, you
can probably do me a favor."
I never,
in my life, felt less inclined to confer
a favor on any man.
"I am
busy!" said I.
So unexpectedly
had the stranger made me sensible
of his presence, that he had almost the effect of
an apparition, and certainly a less appropriate
one (taking into view the dim woodland solitude
about us) than if the salvage man of antiquity,
hirsute and cinctured with a leafy girdle, had
started out of a thicket. He was still young,
seemingly a little under thirty, of a tall and
well-developed figure, and as handsome a man as
ever I beheld. The style of his beauty, however,
though a masculine style, did not at all commend
itself to my taste. His countenance--I hardly
know how to describe the peculiarity--had an
indecorum in it, a kind of rudeness, a hard,
coarse, forth-putting freedom of expression, which
no degree of external polish could have abated,
one single jot. Not that it was vulgar. But he
had no fineness of nature; there was in his eyes
(although they might have artifice enough of
another sort) the naked exposure of something that
ought not to be left prominent. With these vague
allusions to what I have seen in other faces, as
well as his, I leave the quality to be
comprehended best--because with an intuitive
repugnance--by those who possess least of it.
His hair,
as well as his beard and moustache, was
coal-black; his eyes, too, were black and
sparkling, and his teeth remarkably brilliant. He
was rather carelessly, but well and fashionably
dressed, in a summer-moming costume. There was a
gold chain, exquisitely wrought, across his vest.
I never saw a smoother or whiter gloss than that
upon his shirt-bosom, which had a pin in it, set
with a gem that glimmered, in the leafy shadow
where he stood, like a living tip of fire. He
carried a stick with a wooden head, carved in
vivid imitation of that of a serpent. I hated
him, partly, I do believe, from a comparison of my
own homely garb with his well-ordered foppishness.
"Well, sir,"
said I, a little ashamed of my first
irritation, but still with no waste of civility,
"be pleased to speak at once, as I have my own
business in hand."
"I regret
that my mode of addressing you was a
little unfortunate," said the stranger, smiling;
for he seemed a very acute sort of person, and
saw, in some degree, how I stood affected towards
him. "I intended no offence, and shall certainly
comport myself with due ceremony hereafter. I
merely wish to make a few inquiries respecting a
lady, formerly of my acquaintance, who is now
resident in your Community, and, I believe,
largely concerned in your social enterprise. You
call her, I think, Zenobia."
"That is
her name in literature," observed I--"a
name, too, which possibly she may permit her
private friends to know and address her by;--but
not one which they feel at liberty to recognize,
when used of her, personally, by a stranger or
casual acquaintance."
"Indeed!" answered
this disagreeable person; and
he turned aside his face, for an instant, with a
brief laugh, which struck me as a noteworthy
expression of his character. "Perhaps I might put
forward a claim, on your own grounds, to call the
lady by a name so appropriate to her splendid
qualities. But I am willing to know her by any
cognomen that you may suggest."
Heartily wishing
that he would be either a little
more offensive, or a good deal less so, or break
off our intercourse altogether, I mentioned
Zenobia's real name.
"True," said
he; "and, in general society, I have
never heard her called otherwise. And, after all,
our discussion of the point has been gratuitous.
My object is only to inquire when, where, and how,
this lady may most conveniently be seen?"
"At her
present residence, of course," I replied.
"You have but to go thither and ask for her. This
very path will lead you within sight of the
house;--so I wish you good morning."
"One moment,
if you please," said the stranger.
"The course you indicate would certainly be the
proper one, in an ordinary morning-call. But my
business is private, personal, and somewhat
peculiar. Now, in a Community like this, I should
judge that any little occurrence is likely to be
discussed rather more minutely than would quite
suit my views. I refer solely to myself, you
understand, and without intimating that it would
be other than a matter of entire indifference to
the lady. In short, I especially desire to see
her in private. If her habits are such as I have
known them, she is probably often to be met with
in the woods, or by the river-side; and I think
you could do me the favor to point out some
favorite walk, where, about this hour, I might be
fortunate enough to gain an interview."
I reflected,
that it would be quite a
super-erogatory piece of quixotism, in me, to
undertake the guardianship of Zenobia, who, for my
pains, would only make me the butt of endless
ridicule, should the fact ever come to her
knowledge. I therefore described a spot which, as
often as any other, was Zenobia's resort, at this
period of the day; nor was it so remote from the
farm-house as to leave her in much peril, whatever
might be the stranger's character.
"A single
word more!" said he; and his black eyes
sparkled at me, whether with fun or malice I knew
not, but certainly as if the Devil were peeping
out of them. "Among your fraternity, I
understand, there is a certain holy and benevolent
blacksmith; a man of iron, in more senses than
one; a rough, cross-grained, well-meaning
individual, rather boorish in his manners--as
might be expected--and by no means of the highest
intellectual cultivation. He is a philanthropical
lecturer, with two or three disciples, and a
scheme of his own, the preliminary step in which
involves a large purchase of land, and the
erection of a spacious edifice, at an expense
considerably beyond his means; inasmuch as these
are to be reckoned in copper or old iron, much
more conveniently than in gold or silver. He
hammers away upon his one topic, as lustily as
ever he did upon a horse-shoe! Do you know such a
person?"
I shook
my head, and was turning away.
"Our friend,"
he continued, "is described to me as
a brawny, shaggy, grim, and ill-favored personage,
not particularly well-calculated, one would say,
to insinuate himself with the softer sex. Yet, so
far has this honest fellow succeeded with one
lady, whom we wot of, that he anticipates, from
her abundant resources, the necessary funds for
realizing his plan in brick and mortar!"
Here the
stranger seemed to be so much amused with
his sketch of Hollingsworth's character and
purposes, that he burst into a fit of merriment,
of the same nature as the brief, metallic laugh
already alluded to, but immensely prolonged and
enlarged. In the excess of his delight, he opened
his mouth wide, and disclosed a gold band around
the upper part of his teeth; thereby making it
apparent that every one of his brilliant grinders
and incisors was a sham. This discovery affected
me very oddly. I felt as if the whole man were a
moral and physical humbug; his wonderful beauty of
face, for aught I knew, might be removeable like a
mask; and, tall and comely as his figure looked,
he was perhaps but a wizened little elf, gray and
decrepit, with nothing genuine about him, save the
wicked expression of his grin. The fantasy of his
spectral character so wrought upon me, together
with the contagion of his strange mirth on my
sympathies, that I soon began to laugh as loudly
as himself.
By-and-by, he
paused, all at once; so suddenly,
indeed, that my own cachinnation lasted a moment
longer.
"Ah, excuse
me!" said he. "Our interview seems to
proceed more merrily than it began."
"It ends
here," answered I. "And I take shame to
myself, that my folly has lost me the right of
resenting your ridicule of a friend."
"Pray allow
me," said the stranger, approaching a
step nearer, and laying his gloved hand on my
sleeve. "One other favor I must ask of you. You
have a young person, here at Blithedale, of whom I
have heard--whom, perhaps, I have known--and in
whom, at all events, I take a peculiar interest.
She is one of those delicate, nervous young
creatures, not uncommon in New England, and whom I
suppose to have become what we find them by the
gradual refining away of the physical system,
among your women. Some philosophers choose to
glorify this habit of body by terming it
spiritual; but, in my opinion, it is rather the
effect of unwholesome food, bad air, lack of
out-door exercise, and neglect of bathing, on the
part of these damsels and their female
progenitors; all resulting in a kind of hereditary
dyspepsia. Zenobia, even with her uncomfortable
surplus of vitality, is far the better model of
womanhood. But--to revert again to this young
person--she goes among you by the name of
Priscilla. Could you possibly afford me the means of
speaking with her?"
"You have
made so many inquiries of me," I
observed, "that I may at least trouble you with
one. What is your name?"
He offered
me a card, with "Professor Westervelt"
engraved on it. At the same time, as if to
vindicate his claim to the professorial dignity,
so often assumed on very questionable grounds, he
put on a pair of spectacles, which so altered the
character of his face that I hardly knew him
again. But I liked the present aspect no better
than the former one.
"I must
decline any further connection with your
affairs," said I, drawing back. "I have told you
where to find Zenobia. As for Priscilla, she has
closer friends than myself, through whom, if they
see fit, you can gain access to her."
"In that
case," returned the Professor,
ceremoniously raising his hat, "good morning to
you."
He took
his departure, and was soon out of sight
among the windings of the wood-path. But, after a
little reflection, I could not help regretting
that I had so peremptorily broken off the
interview, while the stranger seemed inclined to
continue it. His evident knowledge of matters,
affecting my three friends, might have led to
disclosures, or inferences, that would perhaps
have been serviceable. I was particularly struck
with the fact, that, ever since the appearance of
Priscilla, it had been the tendency of events to
suggest and establish a connection between Zenobia
and her. She had come, in the first instance, as
if with the sole purpose of claiming Zenobia's
protection. Old Moodie's visit, it appeared, was
chiefly to ascertain whether this object had been
accomplished. And here, to-day, was the
questionable Professor, linking one with the other
in his inquiries, and seeking communication with
both.
Meanwhile, my
inclination for a ramble having been
baulked, I lingered in the vicinity of the farm,
with perhaps a vague idea that some new event
would grow out of Westervelt's proposed interview
with Zenobia. My own part, in these transactions,
was singularly subordinate. It resembled that of
the Chorus in a classic play, which seems to be
set aloof from the possibility of personal
concernment, and bestows the whole measure of its
hope or fear, its exultation or sorrow, on the
fortunes of others, between whom and itself this
sympathy is the only bond. Destiny, it may
be--the most skilful of stage-managers--seldom
chooses to arrange its scenes, and carry forward
its drama, without securing the presence of at
least one calm observer. It is his office to give
applause, when due, and sometimes an inevitable
tear, to detect the final fitness of incident to
character, and distil, in his long-brooding
thought, the whole morality of the performance.
Not to
be out of the way, in case there were need
of me in my vocation, and, at the same time, to
avoid thrusting myself where neither Destiny nor
mortals might desire my presence, I remained
pretty near the verge of the woodlands. My
position was off the track of Zenobia's customary
walk, yet not so remote but that a recognized
occasion might speedily have brought me thither.
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