<h3 class='c001'>CHAPTER XVI</h3></div>
<p class='c015'>For the most part people do not think at all. They have little phrases
and formulas which stand in their minds for thoughts and opinions, and they
repeat them parrotlike. Most of their notions and ideas and prejudices are
mere extraneous accretions, barnacled on to them by men and books in their
passage through life, as shells are on a vessel, but not growing out of them or
really belonging to them.—<span class='sc'>Anon.</span></p>
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<div class='line'>Life in her creaking shoes</div>
<div class='line in2'>Goes, and more formal grows,</div>
<div class='line'>A round of calls and cues.</div>
<div class='line in30'>—<span class='sc'>W. E. Henley.</span></div>
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<p class='c010'>At the end of the week, on Saturday morning, Anna
Burgess was sitting on a low stool in the middle of her
bedroom, surrounded by a curious confusion and medley
of miscellaneous things. Before her was an open cedar
chest of large proportions; its pungent odour was mingled
with the spicy smell of winter apples, dried fruits, and
maple sugar. From the half unpacked chest, quilts of
calico patchwork and soft home-woven blankets were
overflowing; piles of snowy linen sheets and pillowcases,
finely hemstitched and bordered with delicate
thread-work, lay about the floor, together with body
linen of equal daintiness, and books in dull and faded
binding, while the red apples, rolled everywhere, studded
the confused array as commas do a printer’s page.</p>
<p class='c011'>In the chest still lay some old-fashioned furs and
other clothing. Anna, as she sat, had her lap heaped
with a quantity of yellowed lace, and a number of small,
thin silver spoons. She was reading a letter, and, as she
read, unconsciously tears were running down her cheeks.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>“You must have known,” wrote Gulielma Mallison,
“that I could not let my dear daughter go empty-handed
to her new home. The box has been long,
however, in being made ready, but I know your husband
and his mother will make excuses, the marriage having
been so sudden. Lucia and I have taken comfort in
sorting out and preparing the things. The linen is,
much of it, what was left of my own bridal outfit,
but we have bleached it on the snow, and it is still
strong. The silver I have tried to divide equally among
you all. This is your portion. The little porringer, you
know, came over from Germany with my mother, then
the Jungfrau Benigna von Brosius.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I regret that I am unable to provide you with more
dresses, etc., but there is little to do with and little to
choose from in Haran. Indeed, I hardly ever get to
Haran any more, my rheumatism is so bad, and the
going has been terrible this winter. We got Lucia’s
husband’s sister to buy the white cotton cloth, and sent
it back by Joseph when he went down with a load of
wood. The brown cloak I shall not be likely to need
any more, going out so seldom, and Lucia says she
doesn’t begrudge it to you at all, being much too long
for her, and it would be a shame to cut off any of that
material to waste. You know it is the best of camlet
cloth, and there is no wear out to it. I have given Lucia
the melodeon, and she says it is only fair that you should
have the cloak and the brown silk dress. We got
Amanda Turner to make that over for you by an old waist
we had of yours. She was here three days, right through
the worst snowstorm we have had all winter, and there
was nothing to interrupt us. We turned the silk and
made it all over. I think we succeeded pretty well.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>I thought you really ought to have one silk dress, now
you are going to live in this country. Of course you’ll
be invited out to tea some, there in Fulham. The
grey merino will do for afternoons. I made you four
aprons, two white, and two check to wear about your
work, and you’ll need them afternoons for taking care
of your husband’s mother. Please give her my best
respects. I send the dried fruit to her,—maybe it will
tempt her appetite a little,—and part of the maple sugar,
that in the little cakes. Lucia ran it for her especially.
We thought maybe they wouldn’t have it down there
in Fulham, that was pure.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I am sorry we haven’t anything better to send Mr.
Burgess, but I put in your dear father’s quilted dressing-gown
as my particular present; his health being so poor,
Lucia and I thought it might be acceptable. The books
are for him, from your father’s library....”</p>
<p class='c011'>The letter dropped in Anna’s lap, and covering her
face with both hands, she burst into passionate tears.
Her old life, in all its homely, simple sweetness called
her mightily, and the sharp sense of her own separation
from it now and forever tore her heart. Her mother’s
inability to comprehend the new conditions, the eager
self-sacrifice which had gladly shorn her own poor life
bare of every lingering superfluity of possession that she
might equip her child with such small dower as was
attainable, had to Anna a pathos which seemed almost
too poignant to endure. How well, oh, how well she
understood the planning and contriving, the simple joy
in each small new object gained; the delight which her
mother and Lucia had shared in picturing to themselves
her own grateful surprise in the manifold treasures stored
in the dear old chest, itself an heirloom of impressive
<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>value in the Mallison family. And she was grateful
beyond words to tell, and pleased and proud to come
thus set out to her husband; and yet, these possessions,
so unspeakably precious to her, would, she knew only
too well, wear a rustic and incongruous aspect in the
Burgess household. She knew that Keith and his mother
would be gentle and respectful in thought as in word,
but she knew the faint embarrassment which they would
try to conceal in receiving gifts for which they would
have no use; she knew the delicate, half-pitying, well-meaning
sympathy, which could never understand, try
as it would.</p>
<p class='c011'>On Sunday morning, Anna attended church with her
husband and his mother for the first time, the latter
making a great effort, since church-going was far beyond
her usual invalid routine. When Anna presented herself
in the hall ready to start, Mrs. Burgess, or Madam
Burgess as she was generally styled after this time, had
bit her lip and almost gasped, such was her amazement
and dismay. However, she had said nothing, the situation
being plainly hopeless, and she sat in the carriage
in speechless anxiety, while Keith’s face reflected the
same emotion. He had felt it impossible to interfere
with Anna’s arraying herself as she had for church, seeing
with his sensitive perception that the garments fashioned
and sent her from her home by the hands of her
mother and sister, for such a time as this, were in her
eyes sacredly beyond criticism or cavil.</p>
<p class='c011'>Anna now preceded him, following his mother, down
the broad aisle of the stately and well-filled church,
drawing to herself unconsciously the attention of many
eyes. She wore over the soft overshot silk gown the
brown camlet cloak which had formed in her mother’s
<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>eyes the chief glory of her simple trousseau. It was a
long, circular cape, falling to the hem of her dress,
drawn up about the throat and shoulders with quaint
smocking after a forgotten art, and tied with a long,
loose bow of changeable brown ribbon. The outlines
of this garment were so simple and so natural that it
could never, at any period or by any shift of fashion,
become awkward, but it had at that time an effect of
Puritan-like quaintness. She wore a dark, broad-brimmed
hat with falling plumes, according well in simplicity as
in colour with her cloak.</p>
<p class='c011'>As she passed down to the Burgess pew, her height
and bearing, the flowing outline of her costume, the
purity and unconscious, childlike seriousness of her face
with its clear brune pallor, the steady light of her hazel
eyes, the lustreless masses of her dark hair, all combined
to make a singular impression of mediæval loveliness, of
something rare and fine and wholly distinct from the
prevalent type of women in the ambitious little city.
There were some who, seeing her, smiled and whispered
at the quaintness of her dress; there were others who
found their eyes irresistibly drawn again and again by
the picturesque harmony of her figure; there were one
or two persons who, watching the proud, pure severity
of her face as she sat with her soul lifted to God and
heedless of outward things, saw in her a woman fit for
reverence and wonder, one whose spirit had been most
evidently nourished on the greatness and simplicity of
spiritual realities, and who was yet untouched by “the
world’s slow stain.”</p>
<p class='c011'>And so it came about that Keith Burgess and his
mother, who had been dismayed at the lack of conformity
to fashion in Anna’s dress at this first appearance in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>their world, found themselves met, the service over, by
men and women who had admiration and interest, sober
and sincere, to express, and much to say aside of the
singular distinction, the aristocratic dignity and charm,
of the bride. Madam Burgess was not slow to produce
the good points of Anna’s ancestry of which she had
quickly possessed herself, thus enhancing the favourable
impression, and she was ready to accept Anna, cloak
and all, herself, when the son of one of Fulham’s leading
men, Pierce Everett, an artist newly returned from Paris,
came to her with a respectful but eager wish that Mrs.
Keith Burgess would at some future day grant him the
notable favour of sitting to him for some saint’s face and
figure.</p>
<p class='c011'>There was a little crowd about them as they passed
out to their carriage, and much kind and deferential courtesy
pressing upon Anna’s notice. A group of young
girls on the church steps watched her with shy, awed
glances, and murmured to each other that they adored
her, she was so different from any bride they had ever
seen; she was grave and quiet, and something of pathos
and mystery seemed to remove her far from the conscious,
fluttering pink-and-white brides of their experience.</p>
<p class='c011'>The young artist, Pierce Everett, joined a friend, a
professor of literature in the local university, Nathan
Ward, as he walked away from the church.</p>
<p class='c011'>“What a study for a saint!” he exclaimed, with
enthusiasm. “I did not suppose there was such a
woman left in the world. Where can she have been
saved up to keep that super-earthly look?”</p>
<p class='c011'>Professor Ward smiled. After a silence he said,—</p>
<p class='c011'>“Here’s a conundrum, if it is Sunday: Why is Keith
Burgess like St. Francis of Assisi?”</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>The answer not being forthcoming, Professor Ward
presently volunteered it.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Because he has espoused Poverty, Chastity, and
Obedience. In Mrs. Keith these three are one.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Fulham was a small city with a college of no great
reputation, which called itself a university by reason of
having a divinity school affiliated. Furthermore it was
a seaboard town and had had a large shipping trade in
former years, now slowly dying a natural death. The
aristocratic circle of Fulham—there was but one—was
as definitely marked and as strongly defended from
invasion as it is possible for such a circle to be, even
in an old New England town. In fact, it existed more
obviously for its own defence and preservation from the
ineligible than for any other reason; and only two classes
of citizens were eligible,—namely, those who had some
connection with “the university,” and those who inherited
either poverty or riches from ancestors engaged
in foreign commerce. These two agreed in one, and
agreed to rule out all others. Thus the aristocratic
circle was necessarily small and its social functions
painfully mechanical and monotonous; its maidens
were proverbially lacking in personal charms, and its
young men, with rare exceptions, fled, escaping to more
interesting and varied scenes; but it was supremely satisfied,
rejoiced in the distinction of its unattainable exclusiveness,
and looked with cold and unrelenting disfavour
upon all strangers, newcomers, or fellow-citizens, however
meritorious, who failed to possess the sole claims to its
ranks.</p>
<p class='c011'>Madam Burgess enjoyed a double title to membership
in this exclusive circle. Her fathers before her, for several
<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>generations, had been shipowners residing in the
house now her own, to which her husband, the Reverend
Elon Burgess, had come, as an eminently suitable
adjunct upon their marriage. Mr. Burgess had filled a
minor chair in the divinity school for the ten years of
their married life; he had not filled even this particularly
well, being a man of small calibre, lacking in any trace
of original power or talent, but his name was in the
university catalogue, and hence his place in the ranks
of Fulham’s high social circle safe forever. But, although
of limited ability, Professor Burgess was fine of grain and
fine of habit, and sincerely pious in a day when to be
called pious did not awaken a smile. In the fear and
faith of God and in true humility he had lived and
died, leaving perhaps no very large and irreparable
vacancy, and no overwhelming sense of loss or desolation
even to his wife and son, and still having borne—</p>
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<div class='line in8'>“without reproach</div>
<div class='line'>The fine old name of gentleman.”</div>
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<p class='c011'>As a girl Sarah Keith had given satisfactory evidence
of a “change of heart,” and in a time of profound missionary
awakening she had declared herself strongly in
sympathy with foreign missions. To the position thus
taken she had consistently adhered. All boards and auxiliaries
to which she was available claimed her name on
their lists. Missionary literature was always scattered
abundantly in her library, her gifts were large, and her
allegiance to religious interests was so completely taken
for granted that it would no more have been questioned
in Fulham than her place in its aristocracy. Certainly
she never doubted herself that she was essentially a
religious woman. Nevertheless, religion, whether personal
<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>or in its outreaching toward a world which she
would have unhesitatingly called “lost,” consisted for
her now in a series of mechanical observances, and in
tenacious orthodoxy of opinion it had become a dry
husk enclosing a dead seed. The brief blossoming of
the religious impulse of her young years over, she had
fixed her affections on the small adventitious trappings
of “this transitory life,” and denied unconsciously the
power of that other life, the form of which she so punctiliously
maintained.</p>
<p class='c011'>Her invalidism was becoming, not inconvenient on
the whole, and not wholly imaginary. Such was the
woman who was now by the ordering of Providence to
rule and direct the unfoldings of Anna’s early womanhood,
since Keith Burgess cherished a respect and
submission to his mother which would have found
something akin in Chinese ancestor-worship. He had
reproduced in his own young life his mother’s early
missionary fervour; that it was long dead in her case
he did not suspect. With Keith this experience had received
a strong accent from the temper of his college
life, and from the possibility of an actual dedication of
himself to the missionary vocation. It had thus become,
as we have seen, for a time nobly and completely dominant
with him, the strongest passion his life had known.
He was himself surprised to find, on his reaction from
the crisis of loss and disappointment connected with his
illness and the abandonment of a missionary career, how
natural and, on the whole, how satisfactory it was to
settle back into his own place in his old home, to fall
back into the small, comfortable interests of Fulham,
and to find full soon an aspect of unreality and even of
incongruity clothing his former ardent dream.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>Not so Anna.</p>
<p class='c011'>The ordered precision, the formal, stiff monotony,
repeated day after day in her husband’s home, the cold,
conventional courtesies, the absence of any purpose save
to maintain things in existing form without progress or
alteration, for a time exerted upon her an almost paralyzing
effect. A torpid dulness, a physical oppression,
came upon her when shut up alone to the companionship
of Madam Burgess, against which she found it
impossible to struggle successfully. Accustomed to
serious mental work, to much strenuous bodily labour,
to the wholesome severity of long walks in all weathers,
and more than all to the stimulus of a great, immediate
purpose ennobling every homeliest task and smallest service,—the
present life of inaction, of sluggish ease, of
absence of responsibility of motive or purpose, was like
the life of a prison. A heavy, spiritless apathy overbore
every motion to fresh endeavour or to new hopes and
incitements. She “fluttered and failed for breath,” and
at times her heart seemed bursting with its longing, the
old wild, girlish longing, grown still and deep, for freedom
and for power.</p>
<p class='c011'>With mechanical indifference she accompanied Madam
Burgess on her daily drives, paid and received visits,
shopped, and attended the various prescribed social
functions, read aloud to Keith, and made a feint of embroidering
the great ottoman cover which her mother-in-law
had contrived for her leisure. It was a stag’s
head with impossible square eyes, the head partially
surrounded by a half-wreath of oak leaves and acorns,
staring out of an illimitable field of small red stitches,
numberless as the sands of the seashore, and significant,
Anna thought wearily, of her endless, monotonous hours.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>All the while, just below the surface, repeated
through the long days, was the bitter conflict of her
spirit, her perpetual, unanswered questioning, Why had
God thus dealt with her? Why, with all power
to save or heal, had he permitted the illness to come
upon Keith which had thus brought to naught what
she had supposed was the very and sacred purpose of
her creation.</p>
<p class='c011'>Upon the intensity of youth and a nature of profound
and passionate earnestness this thwarting of her dedicated
purpose, this apparent rejection of herself from the service
of God, worked piteous havoc. Anna did not grow
sullen or rebellious, but she felt her whole interior life
to be in hopeless confusion. Her sense of an immediate
and personal relation to a fatherly God had suffered something
like an earthquake shock. All the high faith, the
sacred and filial purpose, the profound self-dedication of
her girlhood, seemed to have been flung aside by the God
whom she had sought to know and serve, with cold, blank
indifference, without sign or suggestion of pity, of love,
or of amends. The God of whom Mrs. Westervelt had
taught her, a conception which she had gradually absorbed
and assimilated as her own, a God closer than
breathing, nearer than hands and feet, to whom the heart
was never lifted in vain, whose presence could be indubitably
felt and known, who answered every holy and
devout prayer of his children, and who led them immediately
in every thought and action—where was he?
Either he existed only in imagination, or she was herself
rejected by him as unworthy; and, in a depth below
the depth of burning grief, she saw her father likewise
despised and rejected.</p>
<p class='c011'>A great protest, honest and indignant, rose up in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>Anna’s heart. She knew that, as far as mortal man
could be holy and harmless in the eyes of his God, her
father had been; and she knew that her own purposes
had been blameless and sincere. She refused to quibble
with herself in regard to these facts; something staunch
and sturdy in her mental constitution—not obstinacy,
not pride, but sheer inward honesty—refused to seek
accommodation in any forced paroxysm of humility or
blind submission. With a sorrow which a lighter nature
could not have comprehended, but with characteristic
conclusiveness, she said to herself, the stress of her
inward conflict spent, “I do not know God,” and
composed her spirit in silence to wait.</p>
<p class='c011'>At the end of a month Keith returned to his class in
the Massachusetts Divinity School, with which he was
to graduate in June. Immediately thereafter he expected
to enter upon the duties of his missionary secretaryship,
and make his home in Fulham with his wife and
mother.</p>
<p class='c011'>Thrown thus upon the sole companionship of Madam
Burgess, and forced either to make the best of the situation
or to appear the crude, undisciplined provincial
who sullenly refuses to adapt herself to new conditions,
Anna’s native good sense came to her rescue. With
strong will she crowded down her mental conflict, while
with conscientious earnestness she addressed herself to
the duty of making herself a cheerful and sympathetic
companion to her husband’s mother, and of filling the
social position in which she was undeniably placed, however
inscrutable the reasons therefor. New influences
came out to meet and win her on every side, and she
responded with a social grace, and even facility, which
amazed all who had seen her first as the cold, pale, silent
<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>girl whose marriage altar had seemed rather an altar of
sacrifice.</p>
<p class='c011'>An effect of singular charm was produced by this
new mental attitude, the opening out of a nature until
now so closely sealed. The native seriousness, the fine,
direct simplicity, of Anna’s girlhood remained; but they
seemed flooded with a new and warmer light, welcome
as daily sunshine while the hardness, the rigour, and the
severity melted away. She submitted without further
protest to the comparative luxury of her surroundings,
found it surprisingly agreeable, and discovered a fresh,
forgotten joy in simple physical existence, which carried
her bravely through the long, dull days of the Burgess
order of life.</p>
<p class='c011'>Notwithstanding all these things, below the surface of
her life, often below the surface of her thought, lay an
unplumbed depth of spiritual loneliness, a sense of double
orphanhood, a voice which cried and would not be
stilled; for while men and women had come near, of
God she had become shy, feeling toward him as toward
a dearest friend grown cold.</p>
<p class='c011'>But one night, as she lay alone and wakeful, tears
painful, not easily flowing, wetting her pillow, a sudden
thought stung her by its throbbing wonder and delight,
seeming great enough to reconcile all things, even God,
who had filled her with bitterness, and hedged her about
in all her ways.</p>
<p class='c011'>She said to herself, “It may be I shall have a child,”
and the deep places of her nature called to each other in
joy and exultation; and she knew that, if this grace
should be given her, all would yet be clear, and she could
still believe in God’s love, and in his purpose in her
life.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>So, blindly groping through the rough and thorny
way by which humanity has sought God through many
ages, this human soul, sincere and humble, perpetuated
the heart-breaking fallacy of conditioning the Divine
Love, the Eternal Power and Godhead, on the small
mutations of her own life, seen at short range.</p>
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<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>
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