Part 24 (2/2)
I gave him the letter, and rose to go, but he detained me.
”Stay till I have read it, if you can spare me the time,” he said. ”It is just possible that there is something in it which we _ought_ to discuss.”
I turned to the mantelpiece, and tried to interest myself in the lovely things with which it was crowded; but never in my life did my heart sink so for another; never have I endured such moments of pained suspense.
I heard him open the envelope; I heard the paper rustle as he turned the page; and then there was silence--
Full of the city's stilly sound--
a moment only, but filled with
Something which possess'd The darkness of the world, delight, Life, anguish, death, immortal love.
Ceasing not, mingled, unrepress'd, Apart from s.p.a.ce, witholding time--
a moment's silence, and then a heavy fall. Lorrimer had fainted.
I stayed three days at the Great Hospital, three days of the most delightful converse. At first, Lorrimer had rebelled, not realising that Ideala's last decision was irrevocable.
”You have over-persuaded her,” he said.
”No,” I answered; ”I have convinced her. And I shall convince you, too.”
He pleaded for her pathetically, not for himself at all. ”She has had so little joy!” he said; using the very words that had occurred to me.
”And I wanted to silence her. I wanted to save her from her fate. For she is _une des cinq ou six creatures humaines qui naissent, dans tout un siecle, pour aimer la verite, et pour mourir sans avoir pu la faire aimer des autres_. She must suffer terribly if she goes on.”
This was a point upon which we differed. He would have given her the natural joys of a woman--husband, home, children, friends, and only such intellectual pursuits which are pleasant. _I_ had always hoped to see her at work in a wider field. But she was one of those rare women who are born to fulfil both destinies at once, and worthily, if only circ.u.mstances had made it possible for her to combine the two.
Before I had been with him many hours, I began to be sensible of that difference of feeling on certain subjects which would have made their union a veritable linking of the past to the future--his belief that nothing can be better than what has been, and that the old inst.i.tutions revised are all that the world wants; and her faith in future developments of all good ideas, and further discoveries never yet imagined. For one thing, Lorrimer considered famine and war inevitable scourges of the human race, necessary for the removal of the surplus population, and useless to contend against, because destined to recur, so long as there is a human race; but he would have limited intellectual pursuits for women, because culture is held to prevent the trouble for which the elder expedients only provided a cure--a point upon which Ideala did not agree with him at all. ”Nothing is more disastrous to social prosperity,” she held, ”or more likely to add to the criminal cla.s.ses, than families which are too large for their parents to bring up, and educate comfortably, in their own station. If the higher education of women is a natural check on over-production of that kind, then encourage it thankfully as a merciful dispensation of providence for the prevention of much misery. I can see no reason in nature or ethics for a teeming population only brought into existence to be removed by famine and war. Why, this old green ball of an earth would roll on just as merrily without any of us.”
Lorrimer wrote to her at last. He had been obliged to acquiesce; and I took Ideala his letter; but she, womanlike, though nothing would have altered her decision, was not at first satisfied with his compliance.
It seemed to her too ready; and that made her doubt if she might not have been to blame after all. They wrote to each other once again, and when she received his last letter, she spoke to me about it.
”He must have seen it as you do from the first, for he has said no word to alter my determination--rather the contrary,” she told me. ”We are not to meet again, nor to correspond; and doubtless it is a relief to him to have the matter settled in this way; but one thing puzzles me.
In my last letter I bade him good-bye, adding 'since that is what you wish,' and he has replied: 'I never said I wished it; will you remember that?' I do remember it, and it comforts me; but why?”
I knew that Lorrimer had said little in order to make her sacrifice as easy for her as possible; and I was silent, too, for the same reason. I thought if she felt herself to blame, her pride would come to the rescue, and make her loss appear rather inevitable than voluntary. For, say what we will, we reconcile ourselves to the inevitable sooner than to those sorrows which we might have saved ourselves had we deemed it right.
”You insinuated once that it was all my fault,” she said. ”Perhaps it was--if fault there be. But if I tempted him, it must have been generosity that made him yield to the temptation. He pitied me, and was ready to make me happy by devoting himself to me, since that was what I seemed to require. And I agree with you now. I don't think we should, either of us, have found any real happiness in that way. But, oh, how I long for him! for his friends.h.i.+p! for his companions.h.i.+p! for his love!
It is hard, hard, hard, if he does not miss me as I do him.”
Then I told her: ”But he does. And he did not yield to your decision until I had convinced him that he could never make you happy in such a position.”
A great sigh of relief escaped her. And then I saw that I ought to have been frank with her from the first. It strengthened her to know that they still had something left to them in common, though that something was only their grief.
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