<h2> Chapter 17 </h2><br/>
<br/>
<p>My attack of illness, although sharp, had passed off so
quickly that I confidently looked to complete restoration to
my former vigorous state of health in a very short time.
Nevertheless, many days went by, and I failed to recover
strength, but remained pretty much in that condition of body
in which I had quitted the sick-room. This surprised and
distressed me at first, but in a little time I began to get
reconciled to such a state, and even to discover that it had
certain advantages, the chief of which was that the tumult of
my mind was over for a season, so that I craved for nothing
very eagerly. My friends advised me to do no work; but not
wishing to eat the bread of idleness—although the bread
was little now, as I had little appetite—I made it a
rule to go every morning to the workhouse, and occupy myself
for two or three hours with some light, mechanical task which
put no strain on me, physical or mental. Even this playing at
work fatigued me. Then, after changing my dress, I would
repair to the music-room to resume my search after hidden
knowledge in any books that happened to be there; for I could
read now, a result which my sweet schoolmistress had been the
first to see, and at once she had abandoned the lessons I had
loved so much, leaving me to wander at will, but without a
guide, in that wilderness of a strange literature. I had
never been to the library, and did not even know in what part
of the house it was situated; nor had I ever expressed a wish
to see it. And that for two reasons: one was, that I had
already half-resolved—my resolutions were usually of
that complexion—never to run the risk of appearing
desirous of knowing too much; the other and weightier reason
was, that I had never loved libraries. They oppress me with a
painful sense of my mental inferiority; for all those tens of
thousands of volumes, containing so much important but
unappreciated matter, seem to have a kind of collective
existence, and to look down on me, like a man with great,
staring, owlish eyes, as an intruder on sacred ground—a
barbarian, whose proper place is in the woods. It is a mere
fancy, I know, but it distresses me, and I prefer not to put
myself in the way of it. Once in a book I met with a scornful
passage about people with "bodily constitutions like those of
horses, and small brains," which made me blush painfully; but
in the very next passage the writer makes amends, saying that
a man ought to think himself well off if, in the lottery of
life, he draws the prize of a healthy stomach without a mind,
that it is better than a fine intellect with a crazy stomach.
I had drawn the healthy stomach—liver, lungs, and heart
to match—and had never felt dissatisfied with my prize.
Now, however, it seemed expedient that I should give some
hours each day to reading; for so far my conversations and
close intimacy with the people of the house had not
dissipated the cloud of mystery in which their customs were
hid; and by customs I here refer to those relating to
courtship and matrimony only, for that was to me the main
thing. The books I read, or dipped into, were all highly
interesting, especially the odd volumes I looked at belonging
to that long series on the <i>Houses of the World</i>, for
these abounded in marvelous and entertaining matter. There
were also histories of the house, and works on arts,
agriculture, and various other subjects, but they were not
what I wanted. After three or four hours spent in these
fruitless researches, I would proceed to the Mother's Room,
where I was now permitted to enter freely every afternoon,
and when there, to remain as long as I wished. It was so
pleasant that I soon dropped into the custom of remaining
until supper-time compelled me to leave it, Chastel
invariably treating me now with a loving tenderness of manner
which seemed strange when I recalled the extremely
unfavorable impression I had made at our first interview.</p>
<p>It was never my nature to be indolent, or to love a quiet,
dreamy existence: on the contrary, my fault had lain in the
opposite direction, unlimited muscular exercise being as
necessary to my well-being as fresh air and good food, and
the rougher the exercise the better I liked it. But now, in
this novel condition of languor, I experienced a wonderful
restfulness both of body and mind, and in the Mother's Room,
resting as if some weariness of labor still clung to me,
breathing and steeped in that fragrant, summer-like
atmosphere, I had long intervals of perfect inactivity and
silence, while I sat or reclined, not thinking but in a
reverie, while many dreams of pleasures to come drifted in a
vague, vaporous manner through my brain. The very character
of the room—its delicate richness, the exquisitely
harmonious disposition of colors and objects, and the
illusions of nature produced on the mind—seemed to lend
itself to this unaccustomed mood, and to confirm me in it.</p>
<p>The first impression produced was one of brightness: coming
to it by way of the long, dim sculpture gallery was like
passing out into the open air, and this effect was partly due
to the white and crystal surfaces and the brilliancy of the
colors where any color appeared. It was spacious and lofty,
and the central arched or domed portion of the roof, which
was of a light turquoise blue, rested on graceful columns of
polished crystal. The doors were of amber-colored glass set
in agate frames; but the windows, eight in number, formed the
principal attraction. On the glass, hill and mountain scenery
was depicted, the summits in some of them appearing beyond
wide, barren plains, whitened with the noonday splendor and
heat of midsummer, untempered by a cloud, the soaring peaks
showing a pearly luster which seemed to remove them to an
infinite distance. To look out, as it were, from the
imitation shade of such an arbor, or pavilion, over those
far-off, sun-lit expanses where the light appeared to dance
and quiver as one gazed, was a never-failing delight. Such
was its effect on me, combined with that of the mother's new
tender graciousness, resulting I knew not whether from
compassion or affection, that I could have wished to remain a
permanent invalid in her room.</p>
<p>Another cause of the mild kind of happiness I now experienced
was the consciousness of a change in my own mental
disposition, which made me less of an alien in the house; for
I was now able, I imagined, to appreciate the beautiful
character of my friends, their crystal purity of heart and
the religion they professed. Far back in the old days I had
heard, first and last, a great deal about sweetness and light
and Philistines, and not quite knowing what this grand
question was all about, and hearing from some of my friends
that I was without the qualities they valued most, I
thereafter proclaimed myself a Philistine, and was satisfied
to have the controversy ended in that way, so far as it
concerned me personally. Now, however, I was like one to whom
some important thing has been told, who, scarcely hearing and
straightway forgetting, goes about his affairs; but, lying
awake at night in the silence of his chamber, recalls the
unheeded words and perceives their full significance. My
sojourn with this people—angelic women and mild-eyed
men with downy, unrazored lips, so mild in manner yet in
their arts "laying broad bases for eternity"—above all
the invalid hours spent daily in the Mother's Room, had
taught me how unlovely a creature I had been. It would have
been strange indeed if, in such an atmosphere, I had not
absorbed a little sweetness and light into my system.</p>
<p>In this sweet refuge—this slumberous valley where I had
been cast up by that swift black current that had borne me to
an immeasurable distance on its bosom, and with such a change
going on within me—I sometimes thought that a little
more and I would touch that serene, enduring bliss which
seemed to be the normal condition of my fellow-inmates. My
passion for Yoletta now burned with a gentle flame, which did
not consume, but only imparted an agreeable sense of warmth
to the system. When she was there, sitting with me at her
mother's feet, sometimes so near that her dark, shining hair
brushed against my cheek, and her fragrant breath came on my
face; and when she caressed my hand, and gazed full at me
with those dear eyes that had no shadow of regret or anxiety
in them, but only unfathomable love, I could imagine that our
union was already complete, that she was altogether and
eternally mine.</p>
<p>I knew that this could not continue. Sometimes I could not
prevent my thoughts from flying away from the present; then
suddenly the complexion of my dream would change, darkening
like a fair landscape when a cloud obscures the sun. Not
forever would the demon of passion slumber and dream in my
breast; with recovered strength it would wake again, and,
ever increasing in power and ever baffled of its desire,
would raise once more that black tempest of that past to
overwhelm me. Other darker visions followed: I would see
myself as in a magic glass, lying with upturned, ghastly
face, with many people about me, hurrying to and fro,
wringing their hands and weeping aloud with grief, shuddering
at the abhorred sight of blood on their sacred, shining
floors; or, worse still, I saw myself shivering in sordid
rags and gaunt with long-lasting famine, a fugitive in some
wintry, desolate land, far from all human companionship, the
very image of Yoletta scorched by madness to formless ashes
in my brain; and for all sensations, feelings, memories,
thoughts, nothing left to me but a distorted likeness of the
visible world, and a terrible unrest urging me, as with a
whip of scorpions, ever on and on, to ford yet other black,
icy torrents, and tear myself bleeding through yet other
thorny thickets, and climb the ramparts of yet other
gigantic, barren hills.</p>
<p>But these moments of terrible depression, new to my life,
were infrequent, and seldom lasted long. Chastel was my good
angel; a word, a touch from her hand, and the ugly spirits
would vanish. She appeared to possess a mysterious
faculty—perhaps only the keen insight and sympathy of a
highly spiritualized nature—which informed her of much
that was passing in my heart: if a shadow came there when she
had no wish or strength to converse, she would make me draw
close to her seat, and rest her hand on mine, and the shadow
would pass from me.</p>
<p>I could not help reflecting often and wonderingly at this
great change in her manner towards me. Her eyes dwelt
lovingly on me, and her keenest suffering, and the
unfortunate blundering expressions I frequently let fall,
seemed equally powerless to wring one harsh or impatient word
from her. I was not now only one among her children,
privileged to come and sit at her feet, to have with them a
share in her impartial affection; and remembering that I was
a stranger in the house, and compared but poorly with the
others, the undisguised preference she showed for me, and the
wish to have me almost constantly with her, seemed a great
mystery.</p>
<p>One afternoon, as I sat alone with her, she made the remark
that my reading lessons had ceased.</p>
<p>"Oh yes, I can read perfectly well now," I answered. "May I
read to you from this book?" Saying which, I put my hand
towards a volume lying on the couch at her side. It differed
from the other books I had seen, in its smaller size and blue
binding.</p>
<p>"No, not in this book," she said, with a shade of annoyance
in her voice, putting out her hand to prevent my taking it.</p>
<p>"Have I made another mistake?" I asked, withdrawing my hand.
"I am very ignorant."</p>
<p>"Yes, poor boy, you are very ignorant," she returned, placing
her hand on my forehead. "You must know that this is a
mother's book, and only a mother may read in it."</p>
<p>"I am afraid," I said, with a sigh, "that it will be a long
time before I cease to offend you with such mistakes."</p>
<p>"There is no occasion to say that, for you have not offended
me, only you make me feel sorry. Every day when you are with
me I try to teach you something, to smooth the path for you;
but you must remember, my son, that others cannot feel
towards you as I do, and it may come to pass that they will
sometimes be offended with you, because their love is less
than mine."</p>
<p>"But why do you care so much for me?" I asked, emboldened by
her words. "Once I thought that you only of all in the house
would never love me: what has changed your feelings towards
me, for I know that they have changed?" She looked at me,
smiling a little sadly, but did not reply. "I think I should
be happier for knowing," I resumed, caressing her hand. "Will
you not tell me?"</p>
<p>There was a strange trouble on her face as her eyes glanced
away and then returned to mine again, while her lips
quivered, as if with unspoken words. Then she answered: "No,
I cannot tell you now. It would make you happy, perhaps, but
the proper time has not yet arrived. You must be patient, and
learn, for you have much to learn. It is my desire that you
should know all those things concerning the family of which
you are ignorant, and when I say all, I mean not only those
suitable to one in your present condition, as a son of the
house, but also those higher matters which belong to the
heads of the house—to the father and mother."</p>
<p>Then, casting away all caution, I answered: "It is precisely
a knowledge of those greater matters concerning the family
which I have been hungering after ever since I came into the
house."</p>
<p>"I know it," she returned. "This hunger you speak of was
partly the cause of your fever, and it is in you, keeping you
feverish and feeble still; but for this, instead of being a
prisoner here, you would now be abroad, feeling the sun and
wind on your face."</p>
<p>"And if you know that," I pleaded, "why do you not now impart
the knowledge that can make me whole? For surely, all those
lesser matters—those things suitable for one in my
condition to know—can be learned afterwards, in due
time. For they are not of pressing importance, but the other
is to me a matter of life and death, if you only knew it."</p>
<p>"I know everything," she returned quickly. But a cloud had
come over her face at my concluding words, and a startled
look into her eyes. "Life and death! do you know what you are
saying?" she exclaimed, fixing her eyes on me with such
intense earnestness in them that mine fell abashed before
their gaze. Then, after a while, she drew my head down
against her knees, and spoke with a strange tenderness. "Do
you then find it so hard to exercise a little patience, my
son, that you do not acquiesce in what I say to you, and fear
to trust your future in my hands? My time is short for all
that I have to do, yet I also must be patient and wait,
although for me it is hardest. For now your coming, which I
did not regard at first, seeing in you only a pilgrim like
others—one who through accidents of travel had been
cast away and left homeless in the world, until we found and
gave you shelter—now, it has brought something new into
my life: and if this fresh hope, which is only an old,
perished hope born again, ever finds fulfillment, then death
will lose much of its bitterness. But there are difficulties
in the way which only time, and the energy of a soul that
centers all its faculties in one desire, one enterprise, can
overcome. And the chief difficulty I find is in
yourself—in that strange, untoward disposition so often
revealed in your conversation, which you have shown even now;
for to be thus questioned and pressed, and to have my
judgment doubted, would have greatly offended me in another.
Remember this, and do not abuse the privilege you enjoy:
remember that you must greatly change before I can share with
you the secrets of my heart that concern you. And bear in
mind, my son, that I am not rebuking you for a want of
knowledge; for I know that for many deficiencies you are not
blameworthy. I know, for instance, that nature has denied to
you that melodious and flexible voice in which it is our
custom every day to render homage to the Father, to express
all the sacred feelings of our hearts, all our love for each
other, the joy we have in life, and even our griefs and
sorrows. For grief is like a dark, oppressive cloud, until
from lip and hand it breaks in the rain of melody, and we are
lightened, so that even the things that are painful give to
life a new and chastened glory. And as with music, so with
all other arts. There is a twofold pleasure in contemplating
our Father's works: in the first and lower kind you share
with us; but the second and more noble, springing from the
first, is ours through that faculty by means of which the
beauty and harmony of the visible world become transmuted in
the soul, which is like a pencil of glass receiving the white
sunbeam into itself, and changing it to red, green, and
violet-colored light: thus nature transmutes itself in our
minds, and is expressed in art. But in you this second
faculty is wanting, else you would not willingly forego so
great a pleasure as its exercise affords, and love nature
like one that loves his fellow-man, but has no words to
express so sweet a feeling. For the happiness of love with
sympathy, when made known and returned, is increased an
hundredfold; and in all artistic work we commune not with
blind, irrational nature, but with the unseen spirit which is
in nature, inspiring our hearts, returning love for love, and
rewarding our labor with enduring bliss. Therefore it is your
misfortune, not your fault, that you are deprived of this
supreme solace and happiness."</p>
<p>To this speech, which had a depressing effect on me, I
answered sadly: "Every day I feel my deficiencies more
keenly, and wish more ardently to lessen the great distance
between us; but now—sweet mother, forgive me for saying
it!—your words almost make me despond."</p>
<p>"And yet, my son, I have spoken only to encourage you. I know
your limitations, and expect nothing beyond your powers; nor
do your errors greatly trouble me, believing as I do that in
time you will be able to dismiss them from your mind. But the
temper of your mind must be changed to be worthy of the
happiness I have designed for you. Patience must chasten that
reckless spirit in you; for feverish diligence, alternating
with indifference or despondence, there must be unremitting
effort; and for that unsteady flame of hope, which burns so
brightly in the morning and in the evening sings so low,
there must be a bright, unwavering, and rational hope. It
would be strange indeed if after this you were cast down;
and, lest you forget anything, I will say again that only by
giving you enduring happiness and the desire of your heart
can my one hope be fulfilled. Consider how much I say to you
in these words; it saddens me to think that so much was
necessary. And do not think hardly of me, my son, for wishing
to keep you a little longer in this prison with me: for in a
little while your weakness will pass away like a morning
cloud. But for me there shall come no change, since I must
remain day and night here with the shadow of death; and when
I am taken forth, and the sunshine falls once more on my
face, I shall not feel it, and shall not see it, and I shall
lie forgotten when you are in the midst of your happy years."</p>
<p>Her words smote on my heart with a keen pain of compassion.
"Do not say that you will be forgotten!" I exclaimed
passionately; "for should you be taken away, I shall still
love and worship your memory, as I worship you now when you
are alive."</p>
<p>She caressed my hand, but did not speak; and when I looked
up, her worn face had dropped on the pillow, and her eyes
were closed. "I am tired—tired," she murmured. "Stay
with me a little longer, but leave me if I sleep."</p>
<p>And in a little while she slept. The light was on her face,
resting on the purple pillow, and with the soulful eyes
closed, and the lips that had no red color of life in them
also closed and motionless, it was like a face carved in
ivory of one who had suffered like Isarte in the house and
perished long generations ago; and the abundant dark,
lusterless hair that framed it, looked dead too, and of the
color of wrought iron.</p>
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