Other people’s eyes.
“Our parlor carpet is beginning
to look real shabby,” said Mrs. Cartwright.
“I declare! if I don’t feel right down
ashamed of it, every time a visitor, who is anybody,
calls in to see me.”
“A new one will cost—”
The husband of Mrs. Cartwright, a
good-natured, compliant man, who was never better
pleased than when he could please his wife, paused
to let her finish the sentence, which she did promptly,
by saying,—
“Only forty dollars. I’ve
counted it all up. It will take thirty-six yards.
I saw a beautiful piece at Martin’s—just
the thing—at one dollar a yard. Binding,
and other little matters, won’t go beyond three
or four dollars, and I can make it myself, you know.”
“Only forty dollars! Mr.
Cartwright glanced down at the carpet which had decorated
the floor of their little parlor for nearly five years.
It had a pleasant look in his eyes, for it was associated
with many pleasant memories. Only forty dollars
for a new one! If the cost were only five, instead
of forty, the inclination to banish this old friend
to an out-of-the-way chamber would have been no stronger
in the mind of Mr. Cartwright. But forty dollars
was an item in the calculation, and to Mr. Cartwright
a serious one. Every year he was finding it harder
to meet the gradually increasing demand upon his purse;
for there was a steadily progressive enlargement of
his family, and year after year the cost of living
advanced. He was thinking of this when his wife
said,—
“You know, Henry, that cousin
Sally Gray is coming here on a visit week after next.
Now I do want to put the very best face on to things
while she is here. We were married at the same
time, and I hear that her husband is getting rich.
I feel a little pride about the matter, and don’t
want her to think that we’re growing worse off
than when we began life, and can’t afford to
replace this shabby old carpet by a new one.”
No further argument was needed. Mr. Cartwright
had sixty dollars in one of the bureau drawers,—a
fact well known to his wife. And it was also
well known to her that it was the accumulation of
very careful savings, designed, when the sum reached
one hundred dollars, to cancel a loan made by a friend,
at a time when sickness and a death in the family
had run up their yearly expenses beyond the year’s
income. Very desirous was Mr. Cartwright to pay
off this loan, and he had felt lighter in heart as
those aggregate of his savings came nearer and nearer
to the sum required for that purpose.
But he had no firmness to oppose his
wife in anything. Her wishes in this instance,
as in many others, he unwisely made a law. The
argument about cousin Sally Gray was irresistible.
No more than his wife did he wish to look poor in
her eyes; and so, for the sake of her eyes, a new
carpet was bought, and the old one—not by
any means as worn and faded as the language of his
wife indicated—sent up stairs to do second-hand
duty in the spare bedroom.
Not within the limit of forty dollars
was the expense confined. A more costly pattern
than could be obtained for one dollar a yard tempted
the eyes of Mrs. Cartwright, and abstracted from her
husband’s savings the sum of over fifty dollars.
Mats and rugs to go with the carpet were indispensable,
to give the parlor the right effect in the eyes of
cousin Sally Gray, and the purchase of these absorbed
the remainder of Mr. Cartwright’s carefully hoarded
sixty dollars.
Unfortunately, for the comfortable
condition of Mrs. Cartwright’s mind, the new
carpet, with its flaunting colors, put wholly out of
countenance the cane-seat chairs and modest pier table,
and gave to the dull paper on the wall a duller aspect.
Before, she had scarcely noticed the hangings on the
Venetian blinds, now, it seemed as if they had lost
their freshness in a day; and the places where they
were broken, and had been sewed again, were singularly
apparent every time her eye rested upon them.
“These blinds do look dreadfully!”
she said to her husband, on the day after the carpet
went down. “Can you remember what they cost?”
“Eight dollars,” replied Mr. Cartwright.
“So much?” The wife sighed as she spoke.
“Yes, that was the price. I remember it
very well.”
“I wonder what new hangings
would cost?” Mrs. Cartwright’s manner
grew suddenly more cheerful, as the suggestion of a
cheaper way to improve the windows came into her thought.
“Not much, I presume,” answered her husband.
“Don’t you think we’d better have
it done?”
“Yes,” was the compliant answer.
“Will you stop at the blind-maker’s,
as you go to the store, and tell him to send up for
them to-day? It must be attended to at once,
you know, for cousin Sally will be here on next Wednesday.”
Mr. Cartwright called at the blind-maker’s,
as requested, and the blind-maker promised to send
for the blinds. From there he continued onto
the store in which he was employed. There he found
a note on his desk from the friend to whom he was
indebted for the one hundred dollars.
“Dear Cartwright” (so
the note ran), “if it is possible for you to
let me have the one hundred dollars I loaned you, its
return to-morrow will be a particular favor, as I
have a large payment to make, and have been disappointed
in the receipt of a sum of money confidently expected.”
A very sudden change of feeling did
Mr. Cartwright experience. He had, in a degree,
partaken of his wife’s pleasure in observing
the improved appearances of their little parlor but
this pleasure was now succeeded by a sense of painful
regret and mortification. It was nearly two hours
before Mr. Cartwright returned an answer to his friend’s
note. Most of that time had been spent in the
vain effort to discover some way out of the difficulty
in which he found himself placed. He would have
asked an advance of one hundred dollars on his salary,
but he did not deem that a prudent step, and for two
reasons. One was, the known character of his employers;
and the other was involved in the question of how
he was to support his family for the time he was working
out this advance? At last, in sadness and humiliation,
he wrote a brief reply, regretting his inability to
replace the loan now, but promising to do it in a very
short time. Not very long after this answer was
sent, there came another note from his friend, written
in evident haste, and under the influence of angry
feelings. It was in these words:—
“I enclose your due bill, which
I, yesterday, thought good for its face. But,
as it is worthless, I send it back. The man who
buys new carpets and new furniture, instead of paying
his honest debts, can be no friend of mine. I
am sorry to have been mistaken in Henry Cartwright.”
Twice did the unhappy man read this
cutting letter; then, folding it up slowly, be concealed
it in one of his pockets. Nothing was said about
it to his wife, whose wordy admiration of the new carpet,
and morning, noon, and night, for the next two or
three days, was a continual reproof of his weakness
for having yielded to her wishes in a matter where
calm judgement and a principle of right should have
prevailed. But she could not help noticing that
he was less cheerful; and once or twice he spoke to
her in a way that she thought positively ill-natured.
Something was wrong with him; but what that something
was, she did not for an instant imagine.
At last the day arrived for cousin
Sally Gray’s visit. Unfortunately the Venetian
blinds were still at the blind-maker’s, where
they were likely to remain for a week longer, as it
was discovered, on the previous afternoon, that he
had never touched them since they came into his shop.
Without them the little parlor had a terribly bare
look; the strong light coming in, and contrasting harshly
the new, gaudy carpet with the old, worn, and faded
furniture. Mrs. Cartwright fairly cried with
vexation.
“We must have something for
the windows, Henry,” she said, as she stood,
disconsolate, in the parlor, after tea. “It
will never do in the world to let cousin Sally find
us in this trim.”
“Cousin Sally will find a welcome
in our hearts,” replied her husband, in a sober
voice, “and that, I am sure, will be more grateful
to her than new carpets and window blinds.”
The way in which this was spoken rather
surprised Mrs. Cartwright, and she felt just a little
rebuked.
“Don’t you think,”
she said, after a few moments of silence on both sides,
“that we might afford to buy a few yards of lace
to put up to the windows, just for decency’s
sake?”
“No,” answered the husband,
firmly. “We have afforded too much already.”
His manner seemed to Mrs. Cartwright
almost ill-natured. It hurt her very much.
Both sat down in the parlor, and both remained silent.
Mrs. Cartwright thought of the mean appearance everything
in that “best room” would have in the
eyes of cousin Sally, and Mr. Cartwright thought of
his debt to his friend, and of that friend’s
anger and alienation. Both felt more uncomfortable
than they had been for a long time.
On the next day cousin Sally arrived.
She had not come to spy out the nakedness of the land,—not
for the purpose of making contrasts between her own
condition in life and that of Mr. Cartwright,—but
from pure love. She had always been warmly attached
to her cousin; and the years during which new life-associations
had separated them had increased rather than diminished
this attachment. But the gladness of their meeting
was soon overshadowed; at least for cousin Sally.
She saw by the end of the first day’s visit that
her cousin was more concerned to make a good appearance
in her eyes,—to have her understand that
she and her husband were getting along bravely in
the world,—than to open her heart to her
as of old, and exchange with her a few pages in the
history of their inner lives. What interest had
she in the new carpet, or the curtainless window, that
seemed to be the most prominent of all things in the
mind of her relative? None whatever! If
the visit had been from Mary Cartwright to herself,
she would never have thought for an instant of making
preparations for her coming in the purchase of new
furniture, or by any change in the externals of her
home. All arrangements for the reception would
have been in her heart.
Cousin Sally was disappointed.
She did not find the relative, with whom so many years
of her life had been spent in sweet intercourse, as
she had hoped to find her. The girlish warmth
of feelings had given place to a cold worldliness
that repelled instead of attracting her. She
had loved, and suffered much; had passed through many
trials, and entered through many opening doors into
new experiences, during the years since their ways
parted. And she had come to this old, dear friend,
yearning for that heart intercourse,—that
reading together of some of the pages of their books
of life,—which she felt almost as a necessity.
What interest had she for the mere externals of Mary’s
life? None! None! And the constant
reference thereto, by her cousin, seemed like a desecration.
Careful and troubled about the little things of life,
she found the dear old friend of her girlish days,
to whom she had come hopefully, as to one who could
comprehend, as in earlier years, the feelings, thoughts,
and aspirations which had grown stronger, deeper,
and of wider range.
Alas! Alas! How was the fine gold dimmed
in her eyes!
“Dear Mary!” she said
to her cousin, on the morning of the day that was,
to end her visit,—they were sitting, together
in the little parlor, and Mrs. Cartwright had referred,
for the fortieth time, to the unshaded windows, and
declared herself mortified to death at the appearance
of things,—“Dear Mary! It was
to see you, not your furniture, that I came.
To look into your heart and feel it beating against
mine as of old; not to pry, curiously, into your ways
of living, nor to compare your house-furnishing with
my own. But for your constant reference to these
things, I should not have noticed, particularly, how
your house was attired; and if asked about them, could
only have answered, ‘She’s living very
nicely.’ Forgive me for this plain speech,
dear cousin. I did not mean to give utterance
to such language; but the words are spoken now, and
cannot be recalled.”
Mrs. Cartwright, if not really offended,
was mortified and rebuked and these states of feeling
united with pride, served to give coldness to her
exterior. She tried to be cordial in manner towards
her cousin; to seem as if she had not felt her words;
but this was impossible, for she had felt them too
deeply. She saw that the cherished friend and
companion of her girlhood was disappointed in her;
that she had come to look into her heart, and not into
the attiring of her home; and was going away with
diminished affection. After years of divergence,
their paths had touched; and, separating once more,
she felt that they would never run parallel again.
A few hours later, cousin Sally gave
her a parting kiss. How different in warmth to
the kiss of meeting! Very sad, very dissatisfied
with herself,—very unhappy did Mrs. Cartwright
feel, as she sat musing alone after her relative had
departed. She was conscious of having lost a
friend forever, because she had not risen to the higher
level to which that friend had attained—not
in external, but in the true internal life.
But a sharper mortification was in
store for her. The letter of her husband’s
friend, in which he had returned the due bill for one
hundred dollars, fell accidentally into her hands,
and overwhelmed her with consternation. For that
new carpet, which had failed to win more than a few
extorted sentences of praise from cousin Sally Gray,
her husband had lost the esteem of one of his oldest
and best friends, and was now suffering, in silence,
the most painful trial of his life.
Poor, weak woman! Instead of
the pleasure she had hoped to gain in the possession
of this carpet, it had made her completely wretched.
While sitting almost stupefied with the pressure that
was on her feelings, a neighbor called in, and she
went down to the parlor to meet her.
“What a lovely carpet!”
said the neighbor, in real admiration. “Where
did you buy it?”
“At Martin’s,” was answered.
“Had they any more of the same pattern?”
inquired the neighbor.
“This was the last piece.”
The neighbor was sorry. It was
the most beautiful pattern she had ever seen; and
she would hunt the city over but what she would find
another just like it.
“You may have this one,”
said Mrs Cartwright, on the impulse of the moment.
“My husband doesn’t particularly fancy
it. Your parlor is exactly the size of mine.
It is all made and bound nicely as you can see; and
this work on it shall cost you nothing. We paid
a little over fifty dollars for the carpet before
a stitch was taken in it; and fifty dollars will make
you the possessor.”
“Are you really in earnest?” said the
neighbor.
“Never more so in my life.”
“It is a bargain, then.”
“Very well.”
“When can I have it?”
“Just as soon as I can rip it
from the floor,” said Mrs. Cartwright, in real
earnest.
“Go to work,” replied
the neighbor, laughing out at the novelty of the affair.
“Before your task is half done, I will be back
with the fifty dollars, and a man to carry home the
carpet.”
And so she was. In less than
half an hour after the sale was made, in this off-hand
fashion, Mrs. Cartwright sat alone in her parlor,
looking down upon the naked floor. But she had
five ten-dollar gold pieces in her hand, and they
were of more value in her eyes than twenty carpets.
Not long did she sit musing here. There was other
work to do. The old carpet must be replaced upon
the parlor floor ere her husband’s return.
And it was replaced. In the midst of her hurried
operations the old blinds with the new hangings came
in, and were put up to the windows. When Mr.
Cartwright returned home, and stepped inside of the
little parlor, where he found his wife awaiting him,
he gave an exclamation of surprise.
“Why, Mary! What is the
meaning of this? Where is the new carpet?”
She laid the five gold pieces in his
hand, and then looked earnestly, and with tears in
her eyes, upon his wondering face.
“What are these, Mary? Where did they come
from?”
“Cousin Sally is gone.
The carpet didn’t seem attractive in her eyes,
and it has lost all beauty in mine. So I sold
the unlovely thing, and here is the money. Take
it, dear Henry, and let it serve the purpose for which
it was designed.”
“All right again!” exclaimed
Mr. Cartwright, as soon as the whole matter was clear
to him. “All right, Mary, dear! That
carpet, had it remained, would have wrecked, I fear,
the happiness of our home. Ah, let us consult
only our own eyes hereafter, Mary—not the
eyes of other people! None think the better of
us for what we seem—only for what we are.
It is not from fine furniture that our true pleasure
in life is to come, but from a consciousness of right-doing.
Let the inner life be right, and the outer life will
surely be in just harmony. In the humble abode
of virtue there is more real happiness than in the
palace-homes of the unjust, the selfish, and wrong-doers.
The sentiment is old as the world, but it must come
to every heart, at some time in life, with all the
force of an original utterance. And let it so
come to us now, dear wife!”
And thus it did come. This little
experience showed them an aspect of things that quickened
their better reasons, and its smart remained long
enough to give it the power of a monitor in all their
after lives. They never erred again in this wise.
For two or three years more the old carpet did duty
in their neat little parlor, and when it was at last
replaced by a new one, the change was made for their
own eyes, and not for the eyes of another.