<h2> Chapter 18 </h2><br/>
<br/>
<p>Chastel's words sank deep in my heart—deeper than words
had ever sunk before into that somewhat unpromising soil; and
although she had purposely left me in the dark with regard to
many important matters, I now resolved to win her esteem, and
bind her yet more closely to me by correcting those faults in
my character she had pointed out with so much tenderness.</p>
<p>Alas! the very next day was destined to bring me a sore
trouble. On entering the breakfast-room I became aware that a
shadow had fallen on the house. Among his silent people the
father sat with gray, haggard face and troubled eyes; then
Yoletta entered, her sweet face looking paler than when I had
first seen it after her long punishment, while under her
heavy, drooping eyelids her skin was stained with that
mournful purple which tells of a long vigil and a heart
oppressed with anxiety. I heard with profound concern that
Chastel's malady had suddenly become aggravated; that she had
passed the night in the greatest suffering. What would become
of me, and of all those bright dreams of happiness, if she
were to die? was my first idea. But at the same time I had
the grace to feel ashamed of that selfish thought.
Nevertheless, I could not shake off the gloom it had produced
in me, and, too distressed in mind to work or read, I
repaired to the Mother's Room, to be as near as possible to
the sufferer on whose recovery so much now depended. How
lonely and desolate it seemed there, now that she was absent!
Those mountain landscapes, glowing with the white radiance of
mimic sunshine, still made perpetual summer; yet there seemed
to be a wintry chill and death-like atmosphere which struck
to the heart, and made me shiver with cold. The day dragged
slowly to its close, and no rest came to the sufferer, nor
sign of improvement to relieve our anxiety. Until past
midnight I remained at my post, then retired for three or
four miserable, anxious hours, only to return once more when
it was scarcely light. Chastel's condition was still
unchanged, or, if there had been any change, it was for the
worse, for she had not slept. Again I remained, a prey to
desponding thoughts, all day in the room; but towards evening
Yoletta came to take me to her mother. The summons so
terrified me that for some moments I sat trembling and unable
to articulate a word; for I could not but think that
Chastel's end was approaching. Yoletta, however, divining the
cause of my agitation, explained that her mother could not
sleep for torturing pains in her head, and wished me to place
my hand on her forehead, to try whether that would cause any
relief. This seemed to me a not very promising remedy; but
she told me that on former occasions they had often succeeded
in procuring her ease by placing a hand on her forehead, and
that having failed now, Chastel had desired them to call me
to her to try my hand. I rose, and for the first time entered
that sacred chamber, where Chastel was lying on a low bed
placed on a slightly raised platform in the center of the
floor. In the dim light her face looked white as the pillow
on which it rested, her forehead contracted with sharp pain,
while low moans came at short intervals from her twitching
lips; but her wide-open eyes were fixed on my face from the
moment I entered the room, and to me they seemed to express
mental anguish rather than physical suffering. At the head of
the bed sat the father, holding her hand in his; but when I
entered he rose and made way for me, retiring to the foot of
the bed, where two of the women were seated. I knelt beside
the bed, and Yoletta raised and tenderly placed my right hand
on the mother's forehead, and, after whispering to me to let
it rest very gently there, she also withdrew a few paces.</p>
<p>Chastel did not speak, but for some minutes continued her
low, piteous moanings, only her eyes remained fixed on my
face; and at last, becoming uneasy at her scrutiny, I said in
a whisper: "Dearest mother, do you wish to say anything to
me?"</p>
<p>"Yes, come nearer," she replied; and when I had bent my cheek
close to her face, she continued: "Do not fear, my son; I
shall not die. I cannot die until that of which I have spoken
to you has been accomplished."</p>
<p>I rejoiced at her words, yet, at the same time, they gave me
pain; for it seemed as though she knew how much my heart had
been troubled by that ignoble fear.</p>
<p>"Dear mother, may I say something?" I asked, wishing to tell
her of my resolutions.</p>
<p>"Not now; I know what you wish to say," she returned. "Be
patient and hopeful always, and fear nothing, even though we
should be long divided; for it will be many days before I can
leave this room to speak with you again."</p>
<p>So softly had she whispered, that the others who stood so
near were not aware that she had spoken at all.</p>
<p>After this brief colloquy she closed her eyes, but for some
time the low moans of pain continued. Gradually they sank
lower, and became less and less frequent, while the lines of
pain faded out of her white, death-like face. And at length
Yoletta, stealing softly to my side, whispered, "She is
sleeping," and withdrawing my hand, led me away.</p>
<p>When we were again in the Mother's Room she threw her arms
about my neck and burst into a tempest of tears.</p>
<p>"Dearest Yoletta, be comforted," I said, pressing her to my
breast; "she will not die."</p>
<p>"Oh, Smith, how do you know?" she returned quickly, looking
up with her eyes still shining with large drops.</p>
<p>Then, of Chastel's whispered words to me, I repeated those
four, "I shall not die," but nothing more; they were however,
a great relief to her, and her sweet, sorrowful face
brightened like a drooping flower after rain.</p>
<p>"Ah, she knew, then, that the touch of your hand would cause
sleep, that sleep would save her," she said, smiling up at
me.</p>
<p>"And you, my darling, how long is it since you closed those
sweet eyelids that seem so heavy?"</p>
<p>"Not since I slept three nights ago."</p>
<p>"Will you sit by me here, resting your head on me, and sleep
a little now?"</p>
<p>"Not there!" she cried quickly. "Not on the mother's couch.
But if you will sit here, it will be pleasant if I can sleep
for a little while, resting on you."</p>
<p>I placed myself on the low seat she led me to, and then, when
she had coiled herself up on the cushions, with her arms
still round my neck, and her head resting on my bosom, she
breathed a long happy sigh, and dropped like a tired child to
sleep.</p>
<p>How perfect my happiness would have been then, with Yoletta
in my arms, clasping her weary little ministering hands in
mine, and tenderly kissing her dark, shining hair, but for
the fear that some person might come there to notice and
disturb me. And pretty soon I was startled to see the father
himself coming from Chastel's chamber to us. Catching sight
of me he paused, smiling, then advanced, and deliberately sat
down by my side.</p>
<p>"This one is sleeping also," he said cheerfully, touching the
girl's hair with his hand. "But you need not fear, Smith; I
think we shall be able to talk very well without waking her."</p>
<p>I had feared something quite different, if he had only known
it, and felt considerably relieved by his words;
nevertheless, I was not over-pleased at the prospect of a
conversation just then, and should have preferred being left
alone with my precious burden.</p>
<p>"My son," he continued, placing a hand on my shoulder, "I
sometimes recall, not without a smile, the effect your first
appearance produced on us, when we were startled at your
somewhat grotesque pilgrim costume. Your attempts at singing,
and ignorance of art generally, also impressed me
unfavorably, and gave me some concern when I thought about
the future—that is, <i>your</i> future; for it seemed
to me that you had but slender foundations whereon to build a
happy life. These doubts, however, no longer trouble me; for
on several occasions you have shown us that you possess
abundantly that richest of all gifts and safest guide to
happiness—the capacity for deep affection. To this
spirit of love in you—this summer of the heart which
causes it to blossom with beautiful thoughts and
deeds—I attribute your success just now, when the
contact of your hand produced the long-desired, refreshing
slumber so necessary to the mother at this stage of her
malady. I know that this is a mysterious thing; and it is
commonly said that in such cases relief is caused by an
emanation from the brain through the fingers. Doubtless this
is so; and I also choose to believe that only a powerful
spirit of love in the heart can rightly direct this subtle
energy, that where such a spirit is absent the desired effect
cannot be produced."</p>
<p>"I do not know," I replied. "Great as my love and devotion
is, I cannot suppose it to equal, much less to surpass, that
of others who yet failed on this occasion to give relief."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes; only that is looking merely at the surface of the
matter, and leaving out of sight the unfathomable mysteries
of a being compounded of flesh and spirit. There are among
our best instruments peculiar to this house, especially those
used chiefly in our harvest music, some of such
finely-tempered materials, and of so delicate a construction,
that the person wishing to perform on them must not only be
inspired with the melodious passion, but the entire
system—body and soul—must be in the proper mood,
the flesh itself elevated into harmony with the exalted
spirit, else he will fail to elicit the tones or to give the
expression desired. This is a rough and a poor simile, when
we consider how wonderful an instrument a human being is,
with the body that burns with thought, and the spirit that
quivers and cries with pain, and when we think how its
innumerable, complex chords may be injured and untuned by
suffering. The will may be ours, but something, we know not
what, interposes to defeat our best efforts. That you have
succeeded in producing so blessed a result, after we had
failed, has served to deepen and widen in our hearts the love
we already felt for you; for how much more precious is this
melody of repose, this sweet interval of relief from cruel
pain the mother now experiences, than many melodies from
clear voices and trained hands."</p>
<p>In my secret heart I believed that he was taking much too
lofty a view of the matter; but I had no desire to argue
against so flattering a delusion, if it were one, and only
wished that I could share it with him.</p>
<p>"She is sleeping still," he said presently, "perhaps without
pain, like Yoletta here, and her sleep will now probably last
for some hours."</p>
<p>"I pray Heaven that she may wake refreshed and free from
pain," I remarked.</p>
<p>He seemed surprised at my words, and looked searchingly into
my face. "My son," he said, "it grieves me, at a moment like
the present, to have to point out a great error to you; but
it is an error hurtful to yourself and painful to those who
see it, and if I were to pass it over in silence, or put off
speaking of it to another time, I should not be fulfilling
the part of a loving father towards you."</p>
<p>Surprised at this speech, I begged him to tell me what I had
said that was wrong.</p>
<p>"Do you not then know that it is unlawful to entertain such a
thought as you have expressed?" he said. "In moments of
supreme pain or bitterness or peril we sometimes so far
forget ourselves as to cry out to Heaven to save us or to
give us ease; but to make any such petition when we are in
the full possession of our faculties is unworthy of a
reasonable being, and an offense to the Father: for we pray
to each other, and are moved by such prayers, remembering
that we are fallible, and often err through haste and
forgetfulness and imperfect knowledge. But he who freely gave
us life and reason and all good gifts, needs not that we
should remind him of anything; therefore to ask him to give
us the thing we desire is to make him like ourselves, and
charge him with an oversight; or worse, we attribute weakness
and irresolution to him, since the petitioner thinks my
importunity to incline the balance in his favor."</p>
<p>I was about to reply that I had always considered prayer to
be an essential part of religion, and not of my form of
religion only, but of all religions all over the world.
Luckily I remembered in time that he probably knew more about
matters "all over the world" than I did, and so held my
tongue.</p>
<p>"Have you any doubts on the subject?" he asked, after a
while.</p>
<p>"I must confess that I still have some doubts," I replied. "I
believe that our Creator and Father desires the happiness of
all his creatures and takes no pleasure in seeing us
miserable; for it would be impossible not to believe it,
seeing how greatly happiness overbalances misery in the
world. But he does not come to us in visible form to tell us
in an audible voice that to cry out to him in sore pain and
distress is unlawful. How, then, do we know this thing? For a
child cries to its mother, and a fledgling in the nest to its
parent bird; and he is infinitely more to us than parent to
child—infinitely stronger to help, and knows our griefs
as no fellow-mortal can know them. May we not, then, believe,
without hurt to our souls, that the cry of one of his
children in affliction may reach him; that in his compassion,
and by means of his sovereign power over nature, he may give
ease to the racked body, and peace and joy to the desolate
mind?"</p>
<p>"You ask me, How, then, do we know this thing? and you answer
the question yourself, yet fail to perceive that you answer
it, when you say that although he does not come in a visible
form to teach us this thing and that thing, yet we know that
he desires our happiness; and to this you might have added a
thousand or ten thousand other things which we know. If the
reason he gave us to start with makes it unnecessary that he
should come to tell us in an audible voice that he desires
our happiness, it must also surely suffice to tell us which
are lawful and which unlawful of all the thoughts continually
rising in our hearts. That any one should question so evident
and universally accepted a truth, the foundation of all
religion, seems very surprising to me. If it had consisted
with his plan to make these delicate mortal bodies capable of
every agreeable sensation in the highest degree, yet not
liable to accident, and not subject to misery and pain, he
would surely have done this for all of us. But reason and
nature show us that such an end did not consist with his
plan; therefore to ask him to suspend the operations of
nature for the benefit of any individual sufferer, however
poignant and unmerited the sufferings may be, is to shut our
eyes to the only light he has given us. All our highest and
sweetest feelings unite with reason to tell us with one voice
that he loves us; and our knowledge of nature shows us
plainly enough that he also loves all the creatures inferior
to man. To us he has given reason for a guide, and for the
guidance and protection of the lower kinds he has given
instinct: and though they do not know him, it would make us
doubt his impartial love for all his creatures, if we, by
making use of our reason, higher knowledge, and articulate
speech, were able to call down benefits on ourselves, and
avert pain and disaster, while the dumb, irrational brutes
suffered in silence—the languishing deer that leaves
the herd with a festering thorn in its foot; the passage bird
blown from its course to perish miserably far out at sea."</p>
<p>His conclusions were perhaps more logical than mine;
nevertheless, although I could not argue the matter any more
with him, I was not yet prepared to abandon this last
cherished shred of old beliefs, although perhaps not
cherished for its intrinsic worth, but rather because it had
been given to me by a sweet woman whose memory was sacred to
my heart—my mother before Chastel.</p>
<p>Fortunately, it was not necessary to continue the discussion
any longer, for at this juncture one of the watchers from the
sick-room came to report that the mother was still sleeping
peacefully, hearing which, the father rose to seek a little
needful rest in an adjoining room. Before going, however, he
proposed, with mistaken kindness, to relieve me of my burden,
and place the girl without waking her on a couch. But I would
not consent to have her disturbed; and finally, to my great
delight, they left her still in my arms, the father warmly
pressing my hand, and advising me to reflect well on his
words concerning prayer.</p>
<p>It was growing dark now, and how welcome that obscurity
seemed, while with no one nigh to see or hear I kissed her
soft tresses a hundred times, and murmured a hundred
endearing words in her sleeping ears.</p>
<p>Her waking, which gave me a pang at first, afforded me in the
end a still greater bliss.</p>
<p>"Oh, how dark it is—where am I?" she exclaimed,
starting suddenly from repose.</p>
<p>"With me, sweetest," I said. "Do you not remember going to
sleep on my breast?"</p>
<p>"Yes; but oh, why did you not wake me sooner? My
mother—my mother—"</p>
<p>"She is still quietly sleeping, dearest. Ah, I wish you also
had continued sleeping! It was such a delight to have you in
my arms."</p>
<p>"My love!" she said, laying her soft cheek against mine. "How
sweet it was to fall asleep in your arms! When we came in
here I could scarcely say a word, for my heart was too full
for speech; and now I have a hundred things to say. After
all, I should only finish by giving you a kiss, which is more
eloquent than speech; so I shall kiss you at once, and save
myself the trouble of talking so much."</p>
<p>"Say one of the hundred things, Yoletta."</p>
<p>"Oh, Smith, before this evening I did not think that I could
love you more; and sometimes, when I recalled what I once
said to you—on the hill, do you remember?—it
seemed to me that I already loved you a little too much. But
now I am convinced that I was mistaken, for a thousand
offenses could not alienate my heart, which is all yours
forever."</p>
<p>"Mine for ever, without a doubt, darling?" I murmured,
holding her against my breast; and in my rapture almost
forgetting that this angelic affection she lavished on me
would not long satisfy my heart.</p>
<p>"Yes, for ever, for you shall never, never leave the house.
Your pilgrimage, from which you derived so little benefit, is
over now. And if you ever attempt to go forth again to find
out new wonders in the world, I shall clasp you round with my
arms, as I do now, and keep you prisoner against your will;
and if you say 'Farewell' a hundred times to me, I shall blot
out that sad word every time with my lips, and put a better
one in its place, until my word conquers yours."</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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