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XXVI
Zenobia and Coverdale
ZENOBIA
had
entirely forgotten me. She fancied
herself alone with her great grief. And had it
been only a common pity that I felt for her--the
pity that her proud nature would have repelled, as
the one worst wrong which the world yet held in
reserve--the sacredness and awfulness of the
crisis might have impelled me to steal away,
silently, so that not a dry leaf should rustle
under my feet. I would have left her to struggle,
in that solitude, with only the eye of God upon
her. But, so it happened, I never once dreamed of
questioning my right to be there, now, as I had
questioned it, just before, when I came so
suddenly upon Hollingsworth and herself, in the
passion of their recent debate. It suits me not
to explain what was the analogy that I saw, or
imagined, between Zenobia's situation and mine;
nor, I believe, will the reader detect this one
secret, hidden beneath many a revelation which
perhaps concerned me less. In simple truth,
however, as Zenobia leaned her forehead against
the rock, shaken with that tearless agony, it
seemed to me that the self-same pang, with hardly
mitigated torment, leaped thrilling from her
heart-strings to my own. Was it wrong, therefore,
if I felt myself consecrated to the priesthood, by
sympathy like this, and called upon to minister to
this woman's affliction, so far as mortal could?
But, indeed,
what could mortal do for her?
Nothing! The attempt would be a mockery and an
anguish. Time, it is true, would steal away her
grief, and bury it, and the best of her heart in
the same grave. But Destiny itself, methought, in
its kindliest mood, could do no better for
Zenobia, in the way of quick relief, than to cause
the impending rock to impend a little further, and
fall upon her head. So I leaned against a tree,
and listened to her sobs, in unbroken silence.
She was half prostrate, half kneeling, with her
forehead still pressed against the rock. Her sobs
were the only sound; she did not groan, nor give
any other utterance to her distress. It was all
involuntary.
At length,
she sat up, put back her hair, and
stared about her with a bewildered aspect, as if
not distinctly recollecting the scene through
which she had passed, nor cognizant of the
situation in which it left her. Her face and brow
were almost purple with the rush of blood. They
whitened, however, by-and-by, and, for some time,
retained this deathlike hue. She put her hand to
her forehead, with a gesture that made me forcibly
conscious of an intense and living pain there.
Her glance,
wandering wildly to-and-fro, passed
over me, several times, without appearing to
inform her of my presence. But, finally, a look
of recognition gleamed from her eyes into mine.
"Is it
you, Miles Coverdale?" said she, smiling.
"Ah, I perceive what you are about! You are
turning this whole affair into a ballad. Pray let
me hear as many stanzas as you happen to have
ready!"
"Oh, hush,
Zenobia!" I answered. "Heaven knows
what an ache is in my soul!"
"It is
genuine tragedy, is it not?" rejoined
Zenobia, with a sharp, light laugh. "And you are
willing to allow, perhaps, that I have had hard
measure. But it is a woman's doom, and I have
deserved it like a woman; so let there be no pity,
as, on my part, there shall be no complaint. It
is all right now, or will shortly be so. But, Mr.
Coverdale, by all means, write this ballad, and
put your soul's ache into it, and turn your
sympathy to good account, as other poets do, and
as poets must, unless they choose to give us
glittering icicles instead of lines of fire. As
for the moral, it shall be distilled into the
final stanza, in a drop of bitter honey."
"What shall
it be, Zenobia?" I inquired,
endeavoring to fall in with her mood.
"Oh, a
very old one will serve the purpose," she
replied. "There are no new truths, much as we
have prided ourselves on finding some. A moral?
Why, this:--that, in the battlefield of life, the
downright stroke, that would fall only on a man's
steel head-piece, is sure to light on a woman's
heart, over which she wears no breastplate, and
whose wisdom it is, therefore, to keep out of the
conflict. Or this:--that the whole universe, her
own sex and yours, and Providence, or Destiny, to
boot, make common cause against the woman who
swerves one hair's breadth out of the beaten
track. Yes; and add, (for I may as well own it,
now,) that, with that one hair's breadth, she goes
all astray, and never sees the world in its true
aspect, afterwards!"
"This last
is too stern a moral," I observed.
"Cannot we soften it a little?"
"Do it,
if you like, at your own peril, not on my
responsibility," she answered; then, with a sudden
change of subject, she went on:--"After all, he
has flung away what would have served him better
than the poor, pale flower he kept. What can
Priscilla do for him? Put passionate warmth into
his heart, when it shall be chilled with frozen
hopes? Strengthen his hands, when they are weary
with much doing and no performance? No; but only
tend towards him with a blind, instinctive love,
and hang her little, puny weakness for a clog upon
his arm! She cannot even give him such sympathy
as is worth the name. For will he never, in many
an hour of darkness, need that proud, intellectual
sympathy which he might have had from me?--the
sympathy that would flash light along his course,
and guide as well as cheer him? Poor
Hollingsworth! Where will he find it now?"
"Hollingsworth has
a heart of ice!" said I,
bitterly. "He is a wretch!"
"Do him
no wrong!" interrupted Zenobia, turning
haughtily upon me. "Presume not to estimate a man
like Hollingsworth! It was my fault, all along,
and none of his. I see it now! He never sought
me. Why should he seek me? What had I to offer
him? A miserable, bruised, and battered heart,
spoilt long before he met me! A life, too,
hopelessly entangled with a villain's! He did
well to cast me off. God be praised, he did it!
And yet, had he trusted me, and borne with me a
little longer, I would have saved him all this
trouble."
She was
silent, for a time, and stood with her
eyes fixed on the ground. Again raising them, her
look was more mild and calm.
"Miles Coverdale!"
said she.
"Well, Zenobia!"
I responded. "Can I do you any
service?"
"Very little,"
she replied. "But it is my
purpose, as you may well imagine, to remove from
Blithedale; and, most likely, I may not see
Hollingsworth again. A woman in my position, you
understand, feels scarcely at her ease among
former friends. New faces--unaccustomed
looks--those only can she tolerate. She would
pine, among familiar scenes; she would be apt to
blush, too, under the eyes that knew her secret;
her heart might throb uncomfortably; she would
mortify herself, I suppose, with foolish notions
of having sacrificed the honor of her sex, at the
foot of proud, contumacious man. Poor womanhood,
with its rights and wrongs! Here will be new
matter for my course of lectures, at the idea of
which you smiled, Mr. Coverdale, a month or two
ago. But, as you have really a heart and
sympathies, as far as they go, and as I shall
depart without seeing Hollingsworth, I must
entreat you to be a messenger between him and me."
"Willingly," said
I, wondering at the strange way
in which her mind seemed to vibrate from the
deepest earnest to mere levity. "What is the
message?"
"True;--what is
it?" exclaimed Zenobia. "After
all, I hardly know. On better consideration, I
have no message. Tell him--tell him something
pretty and pathetic, that will come nicely and
sweetly into your ballad--anything you please, so
it be tender and submissive enough. Tell him he
has murdered me! Tell him that I'll haunt
him!"--she spoke these words with the wildest
energy--"And give him--no, give Priscilla--this!"
Thus saying,
she took the jewelled flower out of
her hair; and it struck me as the act of a queen,
when worsted in a combat, discrowning herself, as
if she found a sort of relief in abasing all her
pride.
"Bid her
wear this for Zenobia's sake," she
continued. "She is a pretty little creature, and
will make as soft and gentle a wife as the veriest
Bluebeard could desire. Pity that she must fade
so soon! These delicate and puny maidens always
do. Ten years hence, let Hollingsworth look at my
face and Priscilla's, and then choose betwixt
them. Or, if he pleases, let him do it nowl"
How magnificently
Zenobia looked, as she said
this! The effect of her beauty was even
heightened by the over-consciousness and
self-recognition of it, into which, I suppose,
Hollingsworth's scorn had driven her. She
understood the look of admiration in my face;
and--Zenobia to the last--it gave her pleasure.
"It is
an endless pity," said she, "that I had not
bethought myself of winning your heart, Mr.
Coverdale, instead of Hollingsworth's. I think I
should have succeeded; and many women would have
deemed you the worthier conquest of the two. You
are certainly much the handsomest man. But there
is a fate in these things. And beauty, in a man,
has been of little account with me, since my
earliest girlhood, when, for once, it turned my
head. Now, farewell!"
"Zenobia, whither
are you going?" I asked.
"No matter
where," said she. "But I am weary of
this place, and sick to death of playing at
philanthropy and progress. Of all varieties of
mock-life, we have surely blundered into the very
emptiest mockery, in our effort to establish the
one true system. I have done with it; and
Blithedale must find another woman to superintend
the laundry, and you, Mr. Coverdale, another
nurse to make your gruel, the next time you fall
ill. It was, indeed, a foolish dream! Yet it
gave us some pleasant summer days, and bright
hopes, while they lasted. It can do no more; nor
will it avail us to shed tears over a broken
bubble. Here is my hand! Adieu!"
She gave
me her hand, with the same free,
whole-souled gesture as on the first afternoon of
our acquaintance; and being greatly moved, I
bethought me of no better method of expressing my
deep sympathy than to carry it to my lips. In so
doing, I perceived that this white hand--so
hospitably warm when I first touched it, five
months since--was now cold as a veritable piece of
snow.
"How very
cold!" I exclaimed, holding it between
both my own, with the vain idea of warming it.
"What can be the reason? It is really deathlike!"
"The extremities
die first, they say," answered
Zenobia, laughing. "And so you kiss this poor,
despised, rejected hand! Well, my dear friend, I
thank you! You have reserved your homage for the
fallen. Lip of man will never touch my hand
again. I intend to become a Catholic, for the
sake of going into a nunnery. When you next hear
of Zenobia, her face will be behind the
black-veil; so look your last at it no--for all is
over! Once more, farewell!"
She withdrew
her hand, yet left a lingering
pressure, which I felt long afterwards. So
intimately connected, as I had been, with perhaps
the only man in whom she was ever truly
interested, Zenobia looked on me as the
representative of all the past, and was conscious
that, in bidding me adieu, she likewise took final
leave of Hollingsworth, and of this whole epoch of
her life. Never did her beauty shine out more
lustrously, than in the last glimpse that I had of
her. She departed, and was soon hidden among the
trees.
But, whether
it was the strong impression of the
foregoing scene, or whatever else the cause, I was
affected with a fantasy that Zenobia had not
actually gone, but was still hovering about the
spot, and haunting it. I seemed to feel her eyes
upon me. It was as if the vivid coloring of her
character had left a brilliant stain upon the air.
By degrees, however, the impression grew less
distinct. I flung myself upon the fallen leaves,
at the base of Eliot's pulpit. The sunshine
withdrew up the tree-trunks, and flickered on the
topmost boughs; gray twilight made the wood
obscure; the stars brightened out; the pendent
boughs became wet with chill autumnal dews. But I
was listless, worn-out with emotion on my own
behalf, and sympathy for others, and had no heart
to leave my comfortless lair, beneath the rock.
I must
have fallen asleep, and had a dream, all
the circumstances of which utterly vanished at the
moment when they converged to some tragical
catastrophe, and thus grew too powerful for the
thin sphere of slumber that enveloped them.
Starting from the ground, I found the risen moon
shining upon the rugged face of the rock, and
myself all in a tremble.
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