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XXIII
A Village-Hall
WELL! I
betook
myself away, and wandered up and
down, like an exorcised spirit that had been
driven from its old haunts, after a mighty
struggle. It takes down the solitary pride of
man, beyond most other things, to find the
impracticability of flinging aside affections that
have grown irksome. The bands, that were silken
once, are apt to become iron fetters, when we
desire to shake them off. Our souls, after all,
are not our own. We convey a property in them to
those with whom we associate, but to what extent
can never be known, until we feel the tug, the
agony, of our abortive effort to resume an
exclusive sway over ourselves. Thus, in all the
weeks of my absence, my thoughts continually
reverted back, brooding over the by-gone months,
and bringing up incidents that seemed hardly to
have left a trace of themselves, in their passage.
I spent painful hours in recalling these trifles,
and rendering them more misty and unsubstantial
than at first, by the quantity of speculative
musing, thus kneaded in with them. Hollingsworth,
Zenobia, Priscilla! These three had absorbed my
life into themselves. Together with an
inexpressible longing to know their fortunes,
there was likewise a morbid resentment of my own
pain, and a stubborn reluctance to come again
within their sphere.
All that
I learned of them, therefore, was
comprised in a few brief and pungent squibs, such
as the newspapers were then in the habit of
bestowing on our socialist enterprise. There was
one paragraph which, if I rightly guessed its
purport, bore reference to Zenobia, but was too
darkly hinted to convey even thus much of
certainty. Hollingsworth, too, with his
philanthropic project, afforded the penny-a-liners
a theme for some savage and bloody-minded jokes;
and, considerably to my surprise, they affected me
with as much indignation as if we had still been
friends.
Thus passed
several weeks; time long enough for my
brown and toil-hardened hands to re-accustom
themselves to gloves. Old habits, such as were
merely external, returned upon me with wonderful
promptitude. My superficial talk, too, assumed
altogether a worldly tone. Meeting former
acquaintances, who showed themselves inclined to
ridicule my heroic devotion to the cause of human
welfare, I spoke of the recent phase of my life as
indeed fair matter for a jest. But I also gave
them to understand that it was, at most, only an
experiment, on which I had staked no valuable
amount of hope or fear; it had enabled me to pass
the summer in a novel and agreeable way, had
afforded me some grotesque specimens of artificial
simplicity, and could not, therefore, so far as I
was concerned, be reckoned a failure. In no one
instance, however, did I voluntarily speak of my
three friends. They dwelt in a profounder region.
The more I consider myself, as I then was, the
more do I recognize how deeply my connection with
those three had affected all my being
.
As it was already the epoch of annihilated space,
I might, in the time I was away from Blithedale,
have snatched a glimpse at England, and been back
again. But my wanderings were confined within a
very limited sphere. I hopped and fluttered, like
a bird with a string about its leg, gyrating round
a small circumference, and keeping up a restless
activity to no purpose. Thus, it was still in our
familiar Massachusetts-- in one of its white
country-villages--that I must next particularize
an incident.
The scene
was one of those Lyceum-halls, of which
almost every village has now its own, dedicated to
that sober and pallid, or, rather, drab-colored,
mode of winter-evening entertainment, the Lecture.
Of late years, this has come strangely into vogue,
when the natural tendency of things would seem to
be, to substitute lettered for oral methods of
addressing the public. But, in halls like this,
besides the winter course of lectures, there is a
rich and varied series of other exhibitions.
Hither comes the ventriloquist, with all his
mysterious tongues; the thaumaturgist, too, with
his miraculous transformations of plates, doves,
and rings, his pancakes smoking in your hat, and
his cellar of choice liquors, represented in one
small bottle. Here, also, the itinerant professor
instructs separate classes of ladies and gentlemen
in physiology, and demonstrates his lessons by the
aid of real skeletons, and mannikins in wax, from
Paris. Here is to be heard the choir of Ethiopian
melodists, and to be seen, the diorama of Moscow
or Bunker Hill, or the moving panorama of the
Chinese wall. Here is displayed the museum of wax
figures, illustrating the wide Catholicism of
earthly renown by mixing up heroes and statesmen,
the Pope and the Mormon Prophet, kings, queens,
murderers, and beautiful ladies; every sort of
person, in short, except authors, of whom I never
beheld even the most famous, done in wax. And
here, in this many-purposed hall, (unless the
selectmen of the village chance to have more than
their share of the puritanism, which, however
diversified with later patchwork, still gives its
prevailing tint to New England character,) here
the company of strolling players sets up its
little stage, and claims patronage for the
legitimate drama.
But, on
the autumnal evening which I speak of, a
number of printed handbills--stuck up in the
bar-room and on the sign-post of the hotel, and on
the meeting-house porch, and distributed largely
through the village--had promised the inhabitants
an interview with that celebrated and hitherto
inexplicable phenomenon, the Veiled Lady!
The hall
was fitted up with an amphitheatrical
descent of seats towards a platform, on which
stood a desk, two lights, a stool, and a
capacious, antique chair. The audience was of a
generally decent and respectable character; old
farmers, in their Sunday black coats, with shrewd,
hard, sun-dried faces, and a cynical humor,
oftener than any other expression, in their eyes;
pretty girls, in many-colored attire; pretty young
men--the schoolmaster, the lawyer, or
student-at-law, the shopkeeper--all looking rather
suburban than rural. In these days, there is
absolutely no rusticity, except when the actual
labor of the soil leaves its earth-mould on the
person. There was likewise a considerable
proportion of young and middle-aged women, many of
them stern in feature, with marked foreheads, and
a very definite line of eyebrow; a type of
womanhood in which a bold intellectual development
seems to be keeping pace with the progressive
delicacy of the physical constitution. Of all
these people I took note, at first, according to
my custom. But I ceased to do so, the moment that
my eyes fell on an individual who sat two or three
seats below me, immoveable, apparently deep in
thought, with his back, of course, towards me, and
his face turned steadfastly upon the platform.
After sitting
awhile, in contemplation of this
person's familiar contour, I was irresistibly
moved to step over the intervening benches, lay my
hand on his shoulder, put my mouth close to his
ear, and address him in a sepulchral, melodramatic
whisper:--
"Hollingsworth! Where
have you left Zenobia!"
His nerves,
however, were proof against my attack.
He turned half around, and looked me in the face,
with great, sad eyes, in which there was neither
kindness nor resentment, nor any perceptible
surprise.
"Zenobia, when
I last saw her," he answered, "was
at Blithedale."
He said
no more. But there was a great deal of
talk going on, near me, among a knot of people who
might be considered as representing the mysticism,
or, rather, the mystic sensuality, of this
singular age. The nature of the exhibition, that
was about to take place, had probably given the
turn to their conversation.
I heard,
from a pale man in blue spectacles, some
stranger stories than ever were written in a
romance; told, too, with a simple, unimaginative
steadfastness, which was terribly eflficacious in
compelling the auditor to receive them into the
category of established facts. He cited instances
of the miraculous power of one human being over
the will and passions of another; insomuch that
settled grief was but a shadow, beneath the
influence of a man possessing this potency, and
the strong love of years melted away like a vapor.
At the bidding of one of these wizards, the
maiden, with her lover's kiss still burning on her
lips, would turn from him with icy indifference;
the newly made widow would dig up her buried heart
out of her young husband's grave, before the sods
had taken root upon it; a mother, with her babe's
milk in her bosom, would thrust away her child.
Human character was but soft wax in his hands; and
guilt, or virtue, only the forms into which he
should see fit to mould it. The religious
sentiment was a flame which he could blow up with
his breath, or a spark that he could utterly
extinguish. It is unutterable, the horror and
disgust with which I listened, and saw, that, if
these things were to be believed, the individual
soul was virtually annihilated, and all that is
sweet and pure, in our present life, debased, and
that the idea of man's eternal responsibility was
made ridiculous, and immortality rendered, at
once, impossible, and not worth acceptance. But I
would have perished on the spot, sooner than
believe it.
The epoch
of rapping spirits, and all the wonders
that have followed in their train--such as tables,
upset by invisible agencies, bells, self-tolled at
funerals, and ghostly music, performed on
jewsharps--had not yet arrived. Alas, my
countrymen, methinks we have fallen on an evil
age! If these phenomena have not humbug at the
bottom, so much the worse for us. What can they
indicate, in a spiritual way, except that the soul
of man is descending to a lower point than it has
ever before reached, while incarnate? We are
pursuing a downward course, in the eternal march,
and thus bring ourselves into the same range with
beings whom death, in requital of their gross and
evil lives, has degraded below humanity. To hold
intercourse with spirits of this order, we must
stoop, and grovel in some element more vile than
earthly dust. These goblins, if they exist at
all, are but the shadows of past mortality,
outcasts, mere refuse-stuff, adjudged unworthy of
the eternal world, and, on the most favorable
supposition, dwindling gradually into nothingness.
The less we have to say to them, the better; lest
we share their fate!
The audience
now began to be impatient; they
signified their desire for the entertainment to
commence, by thump of sticks and stamp of
boot-heels. Nor was it a great while longer,
before, in response to their call, there appeared
a bearded personage in Oriental robes, looking
like one of the enchanters of the Arabian Nights.
He came upon the platform from a
side-door--saluted the spectators, not with a
salaam, but a bow--took his station at the
desk--and first blowing his nose with a white
handkerchief, prepared to speak. The environment
of the homely village-hall, and the absence of
many ingenious contrivances of stage-effect, with
which the exhibition had heretofore been set off,
seemed to bring the artifice of this character
more openly upon the surface. No sooner did I
behold the bearded enchanter, than laying my hand
again on Hollingsworth's shoulder, I whispered in
his ear:--
"Do you
know him?"
"I never
saw the man before," he muttered, without
turning his head.
But I
had seen him, three times, already. Once,
on occasion of my first visit to the Veiled Lady;
a second time, in the wood-path at Blithedale;
and, lastly, in Zenobia's drawing-room. It was
Westervelt. A quick association of ideas made me
shudder, from head to foot; and, again, like an
evil spirit, bringing up reminiscences of a man's
sins, I whispered a question in Hollingsworth's
ear.
"What have
you done with Priscilla?"
He gave
a convulsive start, as if I had thrust a
knife into him, writhed himself round on his seat,
glared fiercely into my eyes, but answered not a
word.
The Professor
began his discourse, explanatory of
the psychological phenomena, as he termed them,
which it was his purpose to exhibit to the
spectators. There remains no very distinct
impression of it on my memory. It was eloquent,
ingenious, plausible, with a delusive show of
spirituality, yet really imbued throughout with a
cold and dead materialism. I shivered, as at a
current of chill air, issuing out of a sepulchral
vault and bringing the smell of corruption along
with it. He spoke of a new era that was dawning
upon the world; an era that would link soul to
soul, and the present life to what we call
futurity, with a closeness that should finally
convert both worlds into one great, mutually
conscious brotherhood. He described (in a
strange, philosophical guise, with terms of art,
as if it were a matter of chemical discovery) the
agency by which this mighty result was to be
effected; nor would it have surprised me, had he
pretended to hold up a portion of his universally
pervasive fluid, as he affirmed it to be, in a
glass phial.
At the
close of his exordium, the Professor
beckoned with his hand--one, twice, thrice--and a
figure came gliding upon the platform, enveloped
in a long veil of silvery whiteness. It fell
about her, like the texture of a summer cloud,
with a kind of vagueness, so that the outline of
the form, beneath it, could not be accurately
discerned. But the movement of the Veiled Lady
was graceful, free, and unembarrassed, like that
of a person accustomed to be the spectacle of
thousands. Or, possibly, a blindfold prisoner
within the sphere with which this dark, earthly
magician had surrounded her, she was wholly
unconscious of being the central object to all
those straining eyes.
Pliant to
his gesture, (which had even an
obsequious courtesy, but, at the same time, a
remarkable decisiveness,) the figure placed itself
in the great chair. Sitting there, in such
visible obscurity, it was perhaps as much like the
actual presence of a disembodied spirit as
anything that stage-trickery could devise. The
hushed breathing of the spectators proved how
high-wrought were their anticipations of the
wonders to be performed, through the medium of
this incomprehensible creature. I, too, was in
breathless suspense, but with a far different
presentiment of some strange event at hand.
"You see
before you the Veiled Lady," said the
bearded Professor, advancing to the verge of the
platform. "By the agency of which I have just
spoken, she is, at this moment, in communion with
the spiritual world. That silvery veil is, in one
sense, an enchantment, having been dipt, as it
were, and essentially imbued, through the potency
of my art, with the fluid medium of spirits.
Slight and ethereal as it seems, the limitations
of time and space have no existence within its
folds. This hall--these hundreds of faces,
encompassing her within so narrow an
amphitheatre--are of thinner substance, in her
view, than the airiest vapor that the clouds are
made of. She beholds the Absolute!"
As preliminary
to other, and far more wonderful
psychological experiments, the exhibitor suggested
that some of his auditors should endeavor to make
the Veiled Lady sensible of their presence by such
methods--provided, only, no touch were laid upon
her person--as they might deem best adapted to
that end. Accordingly, several deep-lunged
country-fellows, who looked as if they might have
blown the apparition away with a breath, ascended
the platform. Mutually encouraging one another,
they shouted so close to her ear, that the veil
stirred like a wreath of vanishing mist; they
smote upon the floor with bludgeons; they
perpetrated so hideous a clamor, that methough tit
might have reached, at least a little way, into
the eternal sphere. Finally, with the assent of
the Professor, they laid hold of the great chair,
and were startled, apparently, to find it soar
upward, as if lighter than the air through which
it rose. But the Veiled Lady remained seated and
motionless, with a composure that was hardly less
than awful, because implying so immeasurable a
distance betwixt her and these rude persecutors.
"These efforts
are wholly without avail," observed
the Professor, who had been looking on with an
aspect of serene indifference. "The roar of a
battery of cannon would be inaudible to the Veiled
Lady. And yet, were I to will it, sitting in this
very hall, she could hear the desert-wind sweeping
over the sands, as far off as Arabia; the
ice-bergs grinding one against the other, in the
polar seas; the rustle of a leaf in an East Indian
forest; the lowest whispered breath of the
bashfullest maiden in the world, uttering the
first confession of her love! Nor does there
exist the moral inducement, apart from my own
behest, that could persuade her to lift the
silvery veil, or arise out of that chair!"
Greatly to
the Professor's discomposure, however,
just as he spoke these words, the Veiled Lady
arose. There was a mysterious tremor that shook
the magic veil. The spectators, it may be,
imagined that she was about to take flight into
that invisible sphere, and to the society of those
purely spiritual beings, with whom they reckoned
her so near akin. Hollingsworth, a moment ago,
had mounted the platform, and now stood gazing at
the figure, with a sad intentness that brought the
whole power of his great, stern, yet tender soul,
into his glance.
"Come!" said
he, waving his hand towards her.
"You are safe!"
She threw
off the veil, and stood before that
multitude of people, pale, tremulous, shrinking,
as if only then had she discovered that a thousand
eyes were gazing at her. Poor maiden! How
strangely had she been betrayed! Blazoned abroad
as a wonder of the world, and performing what were
adjudged as miracles--in the faith of many, a
seeress and a prophetess--in the harsher judgment
of others, a mountebank--she had kept, as I
religiously believe, her virgin reserve and
sanctity of soul, throughout it all. Within that
encircling veil, though an evil hand had flung it
over her, there was as deep a seclusion as if this
forsaken girl had, all the while, been sitting
under the shadow of Eliot's pulpit, in the
Blithedale woods, at the feet of him who now
summoned her to the shelter of his arms. And the
true heart-throb of a woman's affection was too
powerful for the jugglery that had hitherto
environed her. She uttered a shriek and fled to
Hollingsworth, like one escaping from her
deadliest enemy, and was safe forever!
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