<SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>
<h3> VI. COVERDALE'S SICK-CHAMBER </h3>
<p>The horn sounded at daybreak, as Silas Foster had forewarned us, harsh,
uproarious, inexorably drawn out, and as sleep-dispelling as if this
hard-hearted old yeoman had got hold of the trump of doom.</p>
<p>On all sides I could hear the creaking of the bedsteads, as the
brethren of Blithedale started from slumber, and thrust themselves into
their habiliments, all awry, no doubt, in their haste to begin the
reformation of the world. Zenobia put her head into the entry, and
besought Silas Foster to cease his clamor, and to be kind enough to
leave an armful of firewood and a pail of water at her chamber door.
Of the whole household,—unless, indeed, it were Priscilla, for whose
habits, in this particular, I cannot vouch,—of all our apostolic
society, whose mission was to bless mankind, Hollingsworth, I
apprehend, was the only one who began the enterprise with prayer. My
sleeping-room being but thinly partitioned from his, the solemn murmur
of his voice made its way to my ears, compelling me to be an auditor of
his awful privacy with the Creator. It affected me with a deep
reverence for Hollingsworth, which no familiarity then existing, or
that afterwards grew more intimate between us,—no, nor my subsequent
perception of his own great errors,—ever quite effaced. It is so rare,
in these times, to meet with a man of prayerful habits (except, of
course, in the pulpit), that such an one is decidedly marked out by the
light of transfiguration, shed upon him in the divine interview from
which he passes into his daily life.</p>
<p>As for me, I lay abed; and if I said my prayers, it was backward,
cursing my day as bitterly as patient Job himself. The truth was, the
hot-house warmth of a town residence, and the luxurious life in which I
indulged myself, had taken much of the pith out of my physical system;
and the wintry blast of the preceding day, together with the general
chill of our airy old farmhouse, had got fairly into my heart and the
marrow of my bones. In this predicament, I seriously wished—selfish
as it may appear—that the reformation of society had been postponed
about half a century, or, at all events, to such a date as should have
put my intermeddling with it entirely out of the question.</p>
<p>What, in the name of common-sense, had I to do with any better society
than I had always lived in? It had satisfied me well enough. My
pleasant bachelor-parlor, sunny and shadowy, curtained and carpeted,
with the bedchamber adjoining; my centre-table, strewn with books and
periodicals; my writing-desk with a half-finished poem, in a stanza of
my own contrivance; my morning lounge at the reading-room or picture
gallery; my noontide walk along the cheery pavement, with the
suggestive succession of human faces, and the brisk throb of human life
in which I shared; my dinner at the Albion, where I had a hundred
dishes at command, and could banquet as delicately as the wizard
Michael Scott when the Devil fed him from the king of France's kitchen;
my evening at the billiard club, the concert, the theatre, or at
somebody's party, if I pleased,—what could be better than all this?
Was it better to hoe, to mow, to toil and moil amidst the accumulations
of a barnyard; to be the chambermaid of two yoke of oxen and a dozen
cows; to eat salt beef, and earn it with the sweat of my brow, and
thereby take the tough morsel out of some wretch's mouth, into whose
vocation I had thrust myself? Above all, was it better to have a fever
and die blaspheming, as I was like to do?</p>
<p>In this wretched plight, with a furnace in my heart and another in my
head, by the heat of which I was kept constantly at the boiling point,
yet shivering at the bare idea of extruding so much as a finger into
the icy atmosphere of the room, I kept my bed until breakfast-time,
when Hollingsworth knocked at the door, and entered.</p>
<p>"Well, Coverdale," cried he, "you bid fair to make an admirable farmer!
Don't you mean to get up to-day?"</p>
<p>"Neither to-day nor to-morrow," said I hopelessly. "I doubt if I ever
rise again!"</p>
<p>"What is the matter now?" he asked.</p>
<p>I told him my piteous case, and besought him to send me back to town in
a close carriage.</p>
<p>"No, no!" said Hollingsworth with kindly seriousness. "If you are
really sick, we must take care of you."</p>
<p>Accordingly he built a fire in my chamber, and, having little else to
do while the snow lay on the ground, established himself as my nurse. A
doctor was sent for, who, being homaeopathic, gave me as much medicine,
in the course of a fortnight's attendance, as would have laid on the
point of a needle. They fed me on water-gruel, and I speedily became a
skeleton above ground. But, after all, I have many precious
recollections connected with that fit of sickness.</p>
<p>Hollingsworth's more than brotherly attendance gave me inexpressible
comfort. Most men—and certainly I could not always claim to be one of
the exceptions—have a natural indifference, if not an absolutely
hostile feeling, towards those whom disease, or weakness, or calamity
of any kind causes to falter and faint amid the rude jostle of our
selfish existence. The education of Christianity, it is true, the
sympathy of a like experience and the example of women, may soften and,
possibly, subvert this ugly characteristic of our sex; but it is
originally there, and has likewise its analogy in the practice of our
brute brethren, who hunt the sick or disabled member of the herd from
among them, as an enemy. It is for this reason that the stricken deer
goes apart, and the sick lion grimly withdraws himself into his den.
Except in love, or the attachments of kindred, or other very long and
habitual affection, we really have no tenderness. But there was
something of the woman moulded into the great, stalwart frame of
Hollingsworth; nor was he ashamed of it, as men often are of what is
best in them, nor seemed ever to know that there was such a soft place
in his heart. I knew it well, however, at that time, although
afterwards it came nigh to be forgotten. Methought there could not be
two such men alive as Hollingsworth. There never was any blaze of a
fireside that warmed and cheered me, in the down-sinkings and
shiverings of my spirit, so effectually as did the light out of those
eyes, which lay so deep and dark under his shaggy brows.</p>
<p>Happy the man that has such a friend beside him when he comes to die!
and unless a friend like Hollingsworth be at hand,—as most probably
there will not,—he had better make up his mind to die alone. How many
men, I wonder, does one meet with in a lifetime, whom he would choose
for his deathbed companions! At the crisis of my fever I besought
Hollingsworth to let nobody else enter the room, but continually to
make me sensible of his own presence by a grasp of the hand, a word, a
prayer, if he thought good to utter it; and that then he should be the
witness how courageously I would encounter the worst. It still
impresses me as almost a matter of regret that I did not die then, when
I had tolerably made up my mind to it; for Hollingsworth would have
gone with me to the hither verge of life, and have sent his friendly
and hopeful accents far over on the other side, while I should be
treading the unknown path. Now, were I to send for him, he would
hardly come to my bedside, nor should I depart the easier for his
presence.</p>
<p>"You are not going to die, this time," said he, gravely smiling. "You
know nothing about sickness, and think your case a great deal more
desperate than it is."</p>
<p>"Death should take me while I am in the mood," replied I, with a little
of my customary levity.</p>
<p>"Have you nothing to do in life," asked Hollingsworth, "that you fancy
yourself so ready to leave it?"</p>
<p>"Nothing," answered I; "nothing that I know of, unless to make pretty
verses, and play a part, with Zenobia and the rest of the amateurs, in
our pastoral. It seems but an unsubstantial sort of business, as
viewed through a mist of fever. But, dear Hollingsworth, your own
vocation is evidently to be a priest, and to spend your days and nights
in helping your fellow creatures to draw peaceful dying breaths."</p>
<p>"And by which of my qualities," inquired he, "can you suppose me fitted
for this awful ministry?"</p>
<p>"By your tenderness," I said. "It seems to me the reflection of God's
own love."</p>
<p>"And you call me tender!" repeated Hollingsworth thoughtfully. "I
should rather say that the most marked trait in my character is an
inflexible severity of purpose. Mortal man has no right to be so
inflexible as it is my nature and necessity to be."</p>
<p>"I do not believe it," I replied.</p>
<p>But, in due time, I remembered what he said.</p>
<p>Probably, as Hollingsworth suggested, my disorder was never so serious
as, in my ignorance of such matters, I was inclined to consider it.
After so much tragical preparation, it was positively rather mortifying
to find myself on the mending hand.</p>
<p>All the other members of the Community showed me kindness, according to
the full measure of their capacity. Zenobia brought me my gruel every
day, made by her own hands (not very skilfully, if the truth must be
told), and, whenever I seemed inclined to converse, would sit by my
bedside, and talk with so much vivacity as to add several gratuitous
throbs to my pulse. Her poor little stories and tracts never half did
justice to her intellect. It was only the lack of a fitter avenue that
drove her to seek development in literature. She was made (among a
thousand other things that she might have been) for a stump oratress.
I recognized no severe culture in Zenobia; her mind was full of weeds.
It startled me sometimes, in my state of moral as well as bodily
faint-heartedness, to observe the hardihood of her philosophy. She
made no scruple of oversetting all human institutions, and scattering
them as with a breeze from her fan. A female reformer, in her attacks
upon society, has an instinctive sense of where the life lies, and is
inclined to aim directly at that spot. Especially the relation between
the sexes is naturally among the earliest to attract her notice.</p>
<p>Zenobia was truly a magnificent woman. The homely simplicity of her
dress could not conceal, nor scarcely diminish, the queenliness of her
presence. The image of her form and face should have been multiplied
all over the earth. It was wronging the rest of mankind to retain her
as the spectacle of only a few. The stage would have been her proper
sphere. She should have made it a point of duty, moreover, to sit
endlessly to painters and sculptors, and preferably to the latter;
because the cold decorum of the marble would consist with the utmost
scantiness of drapery, so that the eye might chastely be gladdened with
her material perfection in its entireness. I know not well how to
express that the native glow of coloring in her cheeks, and even the
flesh-warmth over her round arms, and what was visible of her full
bust,—in a word, her womanliness incarnated,—compelled me sometimes
to close my eyes, as if it were not quite the privilege of modesty to
gaze at her. Illness and exhaustion, no doubt, had made me morbidly
sensitive.</p>
<p>I noticed—and wondered how Zenobia contrived it—that she had always a
new flower in her hair. And still it was a hot-house flower,—an
outlandish flower,—a flower of the tropics, such as appeared to have
sprung passionately out of a soil the very weeds of which would be
fervid and spicy. Unlike as was the flower of each successive day to
the preceding one, it yet so assimilated its richness to the rich
beauty of the woman, that I thought it the only flower fit to be worn;
so fit, indeed, that Nature had evidently created this floral gem, in a
happy exuberance, for the one purpose of worthily adorning Zenobia's
head. It might be that my feverish fantasies clustered themselves
about this peculiarity, and caused it to look more gorgeous and
wonderful than if beheld with temperate eyes. In the height of my
illness, as I well recollect, I went so far as to pronounce it
preternatural.</p>
<p>"Zenobia is an enchantress!" whispered I once to Hollingsworth. "She
is a sister of the Veiled Lady. That flower in her hair is a talisman.
If you were to snatch it away, she would vanish, or be transformed into
something else."</p>
<p>"What does he say?" asked Zenobia.</p>
<p>"Nothing that has an atom of sense in it," answered Hollingsworth. "He
is a little beside himself, I believe, and talks about your being a
witch, and of some magical property in the flower that you wear in your
hair."</p>
<p>"It is an idea worthy of a feverish poet," said she, laughing rather
compassionately, and taking out the flower. "I scorn to owe anything
to magic. Here, Mr. Hollingsworth, you may keep the spell while it has
any virtue in it; but I cannot promise you not to appear with a new one
to-morrow. It is the one relic of my more brilliant, my happier days!"</p>
<p>The most curious part of the matter was that, long after my slight
delirium had passed away,—as long, indeed, as I continued to know this
remarkable woman,—her daily flower affected my imagination, though
more slightly, yet in very much the same way. The reason must have
been that, whether intentionally on her part or not, this favorite
ornament was actually a subtile expression of Zenobia's character.</p>
<p>One subject, about which—very impertinently, moreover—I perplexed
myself with a great many conjectures, was, whether Zenobia had ever
been married. The idea, it must be understood, was unauthorized by any
circumstance or suggestion that had made its way to my ears. So young
as I beheld her, and the freshest and rosiest woman of a thousand,
there was certainly no need of imputing to her a destiny already
accomplished; the probability was far greater that her coming years had
all life's richest gifts to bring. If the great event of a woman's
existence had been consummated, the world knew nothing of it, although
the world seemed to know Zenobia well. It was a ridiculous piece of
romance, undoubtedly, to imagine that this beautiful personage, wealthy
as she was, and holding a position that might fairly enough be called
distinguished, could have given herself away so privately, but that
some whisper and suspicion, and by degrees a full understanding of the
fact, would eventually be blown abroad. But then, as I failed not to
consider, her original home was at a distance of many hundred miles.
Rumors might fill the social atmosphere, or might once have filled it,
there, which would travel but slowly, against the wind, towards our
Northeastern metropolis, and perhaps melt into thin air before reaching
it.</p>
<p>There was not—and I distinctly repeat it—the slightest foundation in
my knowledge for any surmise of the kind. But there is a species of
intuition,—either a spiritual lie or the subtile recognition of a
fact,—which comes to us in a reduced state of the corporeal system.
The soul gets the better of the body, after wasting illness, or when a
vegetable diet may have mingled too much ether in the blood. Vapors
then rise up to the brain, and take shapes that often image falsehood,
but sometimes truth. The spheres of our companions have, at such
periods, a vastly greater influence upon our own than when robust
health gives us a repellent and self-defensive energy. Zenobia's
sphere, I imagine, impressed itself powerfully on mine, and transformed
me, during this period of my weakness, into something like a mesmerical
clairvoyant.</p>
<p>Then, also, as anybody could observe, the freedom of her deportment
(though, to some tastes, it might commend itself as the utmost
perfection of manner in a youthful widow or a blooming matron) was not
exactly maiden-like. What girl had ever laughed as Zenobia did? What
girl had ever spoken in her mellow tones? Her unconstrained and
inevitable manifestation, I said often to myself, was that of a woman
to whom wedlock had thrown wide the gates of mystery. Yet sometimes I
strove to be ashamed of these conjectures. I acknowledged it as a
masculine grossness—a sin of wicked interpretation, of which man is
often guilty towards the other sex—thus to mistake the sweet, liberal,
but womanly frankness of a noble and generous disposition. Still, it
was of no avail to reason with myself nor to upbraid myself.
Pertinaciously the thought, "Zenobia is a wife; Zenobia has lived and
loved! There is no folded petal, no latent dewdrop, in this perfectly
developed rose!"—irresistibly that thought drove out all other
conclusions, as often as my mind reverted to the subject.</p>
<p>Zenobia was conscious of my observation, though not, I presume, of the
point to which it led me.</p>
<p>"Mr. Coverdale," said she one day, as she saw me watching her, while
she arranged my gruel on the table, "I have been exposed to a great
deal of eye-shot in the few years of my mixing in the world, but never,
I think, to precisely such glances as you are in the habit of favoring
me with. I seem to interest you very much; and yet—or else a woman's
instinct is for once deceived—I cannot reckon you as an admirer. What
are you seeking to discover in me?"</p>
<p>"The mystery of your life," answered I, surprised into the truth by the
unexpectedness of her attack. "And you will never tell me."</p>
<p>She bent her head towards me, and let me look into her eyes, as if
challenging me to drop a plummet-line down into the depths of her
consciousness.</p>
<p>"I see nothing now," said I, closing my own eyes, "unless it be the
face of a sprite laughing at me from the bottom of a deep well."</p>
<p>A bachelor always feels himself defrauded, when he knows or suspects
that any woman of his acquaintance has given herself away. Otherwise,
the matter could have been no concern of mine. It was purely
speculative, for I should not, under any circumstances, have fallen in
love with Zenobia. The riddle made me so nervous, however, in my
sensitive condition of mind and body, that I most ungratefully began to
wish that she would let me alone. Then, too, her gruel was very
wretched stuff, with almost invariably the smell of pine smoke upon it,
like the evil taste that is said to mix itself up with a witch's best
concocted dainties. Why could not she have allowed one of the other
women to take the gruel in charge? Whatever else might be her gifts,
Nature certainly never intended Zenobia for a cook. Or, if so, she
should have meddled only with the richest and spiciest dishes, and such
as are to be tasted at banquets, between draughts of intoxicating wine.</p>
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