AFTER THE STORM.
AFTER the storm. Alas!
that there should be a wreck-strewn shore so soon!
That within three days of the bridal morning a tempest
should have raged, scattering on the wind sweet blossoms
which had just opened to the sunshine, tearing away
the clinging vines of love, and leaving marks of desolation
which no dew and sunshine could ever obliterate!
It was not a blessed honeymoon to
them. How could it be, after what had passed?
Both were hurt and mortified; and while there was mutual
forgiveness and great tenderness and fond concessions,
one toward the other, there was a sober, (sic) thoughful
state of mind, not favorable to happiness.
Mr. Delancy hoped the lesson—a
very severe one—might prove the guarantee
of future peace. It had, without doubt, awakened
Irene’s mind to sober thoughts—and
closer self-examination than usual. She was convicted
in her own heart of folly, the memory of which could
never return to her without a sense of pain.
At the end of three weeks from the
day of their marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson went down
to the city to take possession of their new home.
On the eve of their departure from Ivy Cliff, Mr. Delancy
had a long conference with his daughter, in which
he conjured her, by all things sacred, to guard herself
against that blindness of passion which had already
produced such unhappy consequences. She repeated,
with many tears, her good resolutions for the future,
and showed great sorrow and contrition for the past.
“It may come out right,”
said the old man to himself; as he sat alone, with
a pressure of foreboding on his mind, looking into
the dim future, on the day of their departure for
New York. His only and beloved child had gone
forth to return no more, unless in sorrow or wretchedness.
“It may come out right, but my heart has sad
misgivings.”
There was a troubled suspense of nearly
a week, when the first letter came from Irene to her
father. He broke the seal with unsteady hands,
fearing to let his eyes fall upon the opening page.
“My dear, dear father! I am a happy young
wife.”
“Thank God!” exclaimed
the old man aloud, letting the hand fall that held
Irene’s letter. It was some moments before
he could read farther; then he drank in, with almost
childish eagerness, every sentence of the long letter.
“Yes, yes, it may come out right,”
said Mr. Delancy; “it may come out right.”
He uttered the words, so often on his lips, with more
confidence than usual. The letter strongly urged
him to make her a visit, if it was only for a day
or two.
“You know, dear father,”
she wrote, “that most of your time is to be
spent with us—all your winters, certainly;
and we want you to begin the new arrangement as soon
as possible.”
Mr. Delancy sighed over the passage.
He had not set his heart on this arrangement.
It might have been a pleasant thing for him to anticipate;
but there was not the hopeful basis for anticipation
which a mind like his required.
Not love alone prompted Mr. Delancy
to make an early visit to New York; a feeling of anxiety
to know how it really was with the young couple acted
quite as strongly in the line of incentive. And
so he went down to the city and passed nearly a week
there. Both Irene and her husband knew that he
was observing them closely all the while, and a consciousness
of this put them under some constraint. Everything
passed harmoniously, and Mr. Delancy returned with
the half-hopeful, half-doubting words on his lips,
so often and often repeated—
“Yes, yes, it may come out right.”
But it was not coming out altogether
right. Even while the old man was under her roof,
Irene had a brief season of self-willed reaction against
her husband, consequent on some unguarded word or act,
which she felt to be a trespass on her freedom.
To save appearances while Mr. Delancy was with them,
Hartley yielded and tendered conciliation, all the
while that his spirit chafed sorely.
The departure of Mr. Delancy for Ivy
Cliff was the signal for both Irene and her husband
to lay aside a portion of the restraint which each
had borne with a certain restlessness that longed for
a time of freedom. On the very day that he left
Irene showed so much that seemed to her husband like
perverseness of will that he was seriously offended,
and spoke an unguarded word that was as fire to stubble—a
word that was repented of as soon as spoken, but which
pride would not permit him to recall. It took
nearly a week of suffering to discipline the mind
of Mr. Emerson to the point of conciliation.
On the part of Irene there was not the thought of
yielding. Her will, supported by pride, was as
rigid as iron. Reason had no power over her.
She felt, rather than thought.
Thus far, both as lover and husband,
in all their alienations, Hartley had been the first
to yield; and it was so now. He was strong-willed
and persistent; but cooler reason helped him back into
the right way, and he had, thus far, found it quicker
than Irene. Not that he suffered less or repented
sooner. Irene’s suffering was far deeper,
but she was blinder and more self-determined.
Again the sun of peace smiled down
upon them, but, as before, on something shorn of its
strength or beauty.
“I will be more guarded,”
said Hartley to himself. “Knowing her weakness,
why should I not protect her against everything that
wounds her sensitive nature? Love concedes, is
long suffering and full of patience. I love Irene—words
cannot tell how deeply. Then why should I not,
for her sake, bear and forbear? Why should I think
of myself and grow fretted because she does not yield
as readily as I could desire to my wishes?”
So Emerson talked with himself and
resolved. But who does not know the feebleness
of resolution when opposed to temperament and confirmed
habits of mind? How weak is mere human strength!
Alas! how few, depending on that alone, are ever able
to bear up steadily, for any length of time, against
the tide of passion!
Off his guard in less than twenty-four
hours after resolving thus with himself, the young
husband spoke in captious disapproval of something
which Irene had done or proposed to do, and the consequence
was the assumption on her part of a cold, reserved
and dignified manner, which hurt and annoyed him beyond
measure. Pride led him to treat her in the same
way; and so for days they met in silence or formal
courtesy, all the while suffering a degree of wretchedness
almost impossible to be endured, and all the while,
which was worst of all, writing on their hearts bitter
things against each other.
To Emerson, as before, the better
state first returned, and the sunshine of his countenance
drove the shadows from hers. Then for a season
they were loving, thoughtful, forbearing and happy.
But the clouds came back again, and storms marred
the beauty of their lives.
All this was sad—very sad.
There were good and noble qualities in the hearts
of both. They were not narrow-minded and selfish,
like so many of your placid, accommodating, calculating
people, but generous in their feelings and broad in
their sympathies. They had ideals of life that
went reaching out far beyond themselves. Yes,
it was sad to see two such hearts beating against
and bruising each other, instead of taking the same
pulsation. But there seemed to be no help for
them. Irene’s jealous guardianship of her
freedom, her quick temper, pride and self-will made
the position of her husband so difficult that it was
almost impossible for him to avoid giving offence.
The summer and fall passed away without
any serious rupture between the sensitive couple,
although there had been seasons of great unhappiness
to both. Irene had been up to Ivy Cliff many times
to visit her father, and now she was, beginning to
urge his removal to the city for the winter; but Mr.
Delancy, who had never given his full promise to this
arrangement, felt less and less inclined to leave
his old home as the season advanced. Almost from
boyhood he had lived there, and his habits were formed
for rural instead of city life.
He pictured the close streets, with
their rows of houses, that left for the eye only narrow
patches of ethereal blue, and contrasted this with
the broad winter landscape, which for him had always
spread itself out with a beauty rivaled by no other
season, and his heart failed him.
The brief December days were on them,
and Irene grew more urgent.
“Come, dear father,” she
wrote. “I think of you, sitting all alone
at Ivy Cliff, during these long evenings, and grow
sad at heart in sympathy with your loneliness.
Come at once. Why linger a week or even a day
longer? We have been all in all to each other
these many years, and ought not to be separated now.”
But Mr. Delancy was not ready to exchange
the pure air and widespreading scenery of the Highlands
for a city residence, even in the desolate winter,
and so wrote back doubtingly. Irene and her husband
then came up to add the persuasion of their presence
at Ivy Cliff. It did not avail, however.
The old man was too deeply wedded to his home.
“I should be miserable in New
York,” he replied to their earnest entreaties;
“and it would not add to your happiness to see
me going about with a sober, discontented face, or
to be reminded every little while that if you had
left me to my winter’s hibernation I would have
been a contented instead of a dissatisfied old man.
No, no, my children; Ivy Cliff is the best place for
me. You shall come up and spend Christmas here,
and we will have a gay season.”
There was no further use in argument.
Mr. Delancy would have his way; and he was right.
Irene and her husband went back to
the city, with a promise to spend Christmas at the
old homestead.
Two weeks passed. It was the
twentieth of December. Without previous intimation,
Irene came up alone to Ivy Cliff, startling her father
by coming in suddenly upon him one dreary afternoon,
just as the leaden sky began to scatter down the winter’s
first offering of snow.
“My daughter!” he exclaimed,
so surprised that he could not move from where he
was sitting.
“Dear father!” she answered
with a loving smile, throwing her arms around his
neck and kissing him.
“Where is Hartley?” asked
the old man, looking past Irene toward the door through
which she had just entered.
“Oh, I left him in New York,” she replied.
“In New York! Have you come alone?”
“Yes. Christmas is only
five days off, you know, and I am here to help you
prepare for it. Of course, Hartley cannot leave
his business.”
She spoke in an excited, almost gay
tone of voice. Mr. Delancy looked at her earnestly.
Unpleasant doubts flitted through his mind.
“When will your husband come up?” he inquired.
“At Christmas,” she answered, without
hesitation.
“Why didn’t you write,
love?” asked Mr. Delancy. “You have
taken me by surprise, and set my nerves in a flutter.”
“I only thought about it last
evening. One of my sudden resolutions.”
And she laughed a low, fluttering
laugh. It might have been an error, but her father
had a fancy that it did not come from her heart.
“I will run up stairs and put
off my things,” she said, moving away.
“Did you bring a trunk?”
“Oh yes; it is at the landing. Will you
send for it?”
And Irene went, with quick steps,
from the apartment, and ran up to the chamber she
still called her own. On the way she met Margaret.
“Miss Irene!” exclaimed
the latter, pausing and lifting her hands in astonishment.
“Why, where did you come from?”
“Just arrived in the boat.
Have come to help you get ready for Christmas.”
“Please goodness, how you frightened
me!” said the warm-hearted domestic, who had
been in the family ever since Irene was a child, and
was strongly attached to her. “How’s
Mr. Emerson?”
“Oh, he’s well, thank you, Margaret.”
“Well now, child, you did set
me all into a fluster. I thought maybe you’d
got into one of your tantrums, and come off and left
your husband.”
“Why, Margaret!” A crimson
flush mantled the face of Irene.
“You must excuse me, child,
but just that came into my head,” replied Margaret.
“You’re very downright and determined sometimes;
and there isn’t anything hardly that you wouldn’t
do if the spirit was on you. I’m glad it’s
all right. Dear me! dear me!”
“Oh, I’m not quite so
bad as you all make me out,” said Irene, laughing.
“I don’t think you are
bad,” answered Margaret, in kind deprecation,
yet with a freedom of speech warranted by her years
and attachment to Irene. “But you go off
in such strange ways—get so wrong-headed
sometimes—that there’s no counting
on you.”
Then, growing more serious, she added—
“The fact is, Miss Irene, you
keep me feeling kind of uneasy all the time.
I dreamed about you last night, and maybe that has
helped to put me into a fluster now.”
“Dreamed about me!” said
Irene, with a degree of interest in her manner.
“Yes. But don’t stand
here, Miss Irene; come over to your room.”
“What kind of a dream had you,
Margaret?” asked the young wife, as she sat
down on the side of the bed where, pillowed in sleep,
she had dreamed so many of girlhood’s pleasant
dreams.
“I was dreaming all night about
you,” replied Margaret, looking sober-faced.
“And you saw me in trouble?”
“Oh dear, yes; in nothing but
trouble. I thought once that I saw you in a great
room full of wild beasts. They were chained or
in cages; but you would keep going close up to the
bars of the cages, or near enough for the chained
animals to spring upon you. And that wasn’t
all. You put the end of your little parasol in
between the bars, and a fierce tiger struck at you
with his great cat-like paw, tearing the flesh from
your arm. Then I saw you in a little boat, down
on the river. You had put up a sail, and was
going out all alone. I saw the boat move off
from the shore just as plainly as I see you now.
I stood and watched until you were in the middle of
the river. Then I thought Mr. Emerson was standing
by me, and that we both saw a great monster—a
whale, or something else—chasing after your
boat. Mr. Emerson was in great distress, and
said, ’I told her not to go, but she is so self-willed.’
And then he jumped into a boat and, taking the oars,
went gliding out after you as swiftly as the wind.
I never saw mortal arm make a boat fly as he did that
little skiff. And I saw him strike the monster
with his oar just as his huge jaws were opened to
devour you. Dear! dear; but I was frightened,
and woke up all in a tremble.”
“Before he had saved me?”
said Irene, taking a deep breath.
“Yes; but I don’t think
there was any chance of saving there, and I was glad
that I waked up when I did.”
“What else did you dream?” asked Irene.
“Oh, I can’t tell you
all I dreamed. Once I saw you fall from the high
rock just above West Point and go dashing down into
the river. Then I saw you chased by a mad bull.”
“And no one came to my rescue?”
“Oh yes, there was more than
one who tried to save you. First, your father
ran in between you and the bull; but he dashed over
him. Then I saw Mr. Emerson rushing up with a
pitchfork, and he got before the mad animal and pointed
the sharp prongs at his eyes; but the bull tore down
on him and tossed him away up into the air. I
awoke as I saw him falling on the sharp-pointed horns
that were held up to catch him.”
“Well, Margaret, you certainly
had a night of horrors,” said Irene, in a sober
way.
“Indeed, miss, and I had; such
a night as I don’t wish to have again.”
“And your dreaming was all about me?”
“Yes.”
“And I was always in trouble or danger?”
“Yes, always; and it was mostly
your own fault, too. And that reminds me of what
the minister told us in his sermon last Sunday.
He said that there were a great many kinds of trouble
in this world—some coming from the outside
and some coming from the inside; that the outside
troubles, which we couldn’t help, were generally
easiest to be borne; while the inside troubles, which
we might have prevented, were the bitterest things
in life, because there was remorse as well as suffering.
I understood very well what he meant.”
“I am afraid,” said Irene,
speaking partly to herself, “that most of my
troubles come from the inside.”
“I’m afraid they do,” spoke out
the frank domestic.
“Margaret!”
“Indeed, miss, and I do think
so. If you’d only get right here”—laying
her hand upon her breast—“somebody
beside yourself would be a great deal happier.
There now, child, I’ve said it; and you needn’t
go to getting angry with me.”
“They are often our best friends
who use the plainest speech,” said Irene.
“No, Margaret, I am not going to be angry with
one whom I know to be true-hearted.”
“Not truer-hearted than your
husband, Miss Irene; nor half so loving.”
“Why did you say that?”
Margaret started at the tone of voice in which this
interrogation was made.
“Because I think so,” she answered naively.
Irene looked at her for some moments
with a penetrating gaze, and then said, with an affected
carelessness of tone—
“Your preacher and your dreams
have made you quite a moralist.”
“They have not taken from my
heart any of the love it has felt for you,”
said Margaret, tears coming into her eyes.
“I know that, Margaret.
You were always too kind and indulgent, and I always
too wayward and unreasonable. But I am getting
years on my side, and shall not always be a foolish
girl.”
Snow had now begun to fall thickly,
and the late December day was waning toward the early
twilight. Margaret went down stairs and left
Irene alone in her chamber, where she remained until
nearly tea-time before joining her father.
Mr. Delancy did not altogether feel
satisfied in his mind about this unheralded visit
from his daughter, with whose wayward moods he was
too familiar. It might be all as she said, but
there were intrusive misgivings that troubled him.
At tea-time she took her old place
at the table in such an easy, natural way, and looked
so pleased and happy, that her father was satisfied.
He asked about her husband, and she talked of him without
reserve.
“What day is Hartley coming up?” he inquired.
“I hope to see him on the day
before Christmas,” returned Irene. There
was a falling in her voice that, to the ears of Mr.
Delancy, betrayed a feeling of doubt.
“He will not, surely, put it
off later,” said the father.
“I don’t know,”
said Irene. “He may be prevented from leaving
early enough to reach here before Christmas morning.
If there should be a cold snap, and the river freeze
up, it will make the journey difficult and attended
with delay.”
“I think the winter has set
in;” and Mr. Delancy turned his ear toward the
window, against which the snow and hail were beating
with violence. “It’s a pity Hartley
didn’t come up with you.”
A sober hue came over the face of
Irene. This did not escape the notice of her
father; but it was natural that she should feel sober
in thinking of her husband as likely to be kept from
her by the storm. That such were her thoughts
her words made evident, for she said, glancing toward
the window—
“If there should be a deep snow,
and the boats stop running, how can Hartley reach
here in time?”
On the next morning the sun rose bright
and warm for the season. Several inches of snow
had fallen, giving to the landscape a wintry whiteness,
but the wind was coming in from the south, genial as
spring. Before night half the snowy covering was
gone.
“We had our fears for nothing,”
said Mr. Delancy, on the second day, which was as
mild as the preceding one. “All things promise
well. I saw the boats go down as usual; so the
river is open still.”
Irene did not reply. Mr. Delancy
looked at her curiously, but her face was partly turned
away and he did not get its true expression.
The twenty-fourth came. No letter
had been received by Irene, nor had she written to
New York since her arrival at Ivy Cliff.
“Isn’t it singular that
you don’t get a letter from Hartley?” said
Mr. Delancy.
Irene had been sitting silent for
some time when her father made this remark.
“He is very busy,” she said, in reply.
“That’s no excuse.
A man is never too busy to write to his absent wife.”
“I haven’t expected a
letter, and so am not disappointed. But he’s
on his way, no doubt. How soon will the boat arrive?”
“Between two and three o’clock.”
“And it’s now ten.”
The hours passed on, and the time
of arrival came. The windows of Irene’s
chamber looked toward the river, and she was standing
at one of them alone when the boat came in sight.
Her face was almost colorless, and contracted by an
expression of deep anxiety. She remained on her
feet for the half hour that intervened before the
boat could reach the landing. It was not the first
time that she had watched there, in the excitement
of doubt and fear, for the same form her eyes were
now straining themselves to see.
The shrill sound of escaping steam
ceased to quiver on the air, and in a few minutes
the boat shot forward into view and went gliding up
the river. Irene scarcely breathed, as she stood,
with colorless face, parted lips and eager eyes, looking
down the road that led to the landing. But she
looked in vain; the form of her husband did not appear—and
it was Christmas Eve!
What did it mean?