AFTER THE STORM.
AFTER the storm. And they
were reconciled. The clouds rolled back; the
sun came out again with his radiant smiles and genial
warmth. But was nothing broken? nothing lost?
Did each flower in the garden of love lift its head
as bravely as before? In every storm of passion
something is lost. Anger is a blind fury, who
tramples ruthlessly on tenderest and holiest things.
Alas for the ruin that waits upon her footsteps!
The day that followed this night of
reconciliation had many hours of sober introversion
of thought for both Emerson and his wife; hours in
which memory reproduced language, conduct and sentiments
that could not be dwelt upon without painful misgivings
for the future. They understood each other too
well to make light account of things said and done,
even in anger.
In going over, as Irene did many times,
the language used by her husband on the night before,
touching their relation as man and wife, and his prerogative,
she felt the old spirit of revolt arising. She
tried to let her thought fall into his rational presentation
of the question involving precedence, and even said
to herself that he was right; but pride was strong,
and kept lifting itself in her mind. She saw,
most clearly, the hardest aspect of the case.
It was, in her view, command and obedience. And
she knew that submission was, for her, impossible.
On the part of Emerson, the day’s
sober thought left his mind in no more hopeful condition
than that of his wife. The pain suffered in consequence
of her temporary flight from home, though lessened
by her return, had not subsided. A portion of
confidence in her was lost. He felt that he had
no guarantee for the future; that at any moment, in
the heat of passion, she might leave him again.
He remembered, too distinctly, her words on the night
before, when he tried to make her comprehend his view
of the relation between man and wife—“That
will not suit me, Hartley.” And he felt
that she was in earnest; that she would resist every
effort he might make to lead and control as a man
in certain things, just as she had done from the beginning.
In matrimonial quarrels you cannot
kiss and make up again, as children do, forgetting
all the stormy past in the sunshiny present.
And this was painfully clear to both Hartley and Irene,
as she, alone in her chamber, and he, alone in his
office, pondered, on that day of reconciliation, the
past and the future. Yet each resolved to be
more forbearing and less exacting; to be emulous of
concession, rather than exaction; to let love, uniting
with reason, hold pride and self-will in close submission.
Their meeting, on Hartley’s
return home, at his usual late hour in the afternoon,
was tender, but not full of the joyous warmth of feeling
that often showed itself. Their hearts were not
light enough for ecstasy. But they were marked
in their attentions to each other, emulous of affectionate
words and actions, yielding and considerate.
And yet this mutual, almost formal, recognition of
a recent state of painful antagonism left on each
mind a feeling of embarrassment, checked words and
sentences ere they came to utterance, and threw amid
their pleasant talks many intermittent pauses.
Often through the day had Mr. Emerson,
as he dwelt on the unhappy relation existing between
himself and his wife, made up his mind to renew the
subject of their true position to each other, as briefly
touched upon in their meeting of the night before,
and as often changed his purpose, in fear of another
rupture. Yet to him it seemed of the first importance
that this matter, as a basis of future peace, should
be settled between them, and settled at once.
If he held one view and she another, and both were
sensitive, quick-tempered and tenacious of individual
freedom, fierce antagonism might occur at any moment.
He had come home inclined to the affirmative side
of the question, and many times during the evening
it was on his lips to introduce the subject. But
he was so sure that it would prove a theme of sharp
discussion, that he had not the courage to risk the
consequences.
There was peace again after this conflict,
but it was not, by any means, a hopeful peace.
It had no well-considered basis. The causes which
had produced a struggle were still in existence, and
liable to become active, by provocation, at any moment.
No change had taken place in the characters, dispositions,
temperaments or general views of life in either of
the parties. Strife had ceased between them only
in consequence of the pain it involved. A deep
conviction of this fact so sobered the mind of Mr.
Emerson, and altered, in consequence, his manner toward
Irene, that she felt its reserve and coldness as a
rebuke that chilled the warmth of her tender impulses.
And this manner did not greatly change
as the days and weeks moved onward. Memory kept
too vividly in the mind of Emerson that one act, and
the danger of its repetition on some sudden provocation.
He could not feel safe and at ease with his temple
of peace built close to a slumbering volcano, which
was liable at any moment to blaze forth and bury its
fair proportions in lava and ashes.
Irene did not comprehend her husband’s
state of mind. She felt painfully the change
in his manner, but failed in reaching the true cause.
Sometimes she attributed his coldness to resentment;
sometimes to defect of love; and sometimes to a settled
determination on his part to inflict punishment.
Sometimes she spent hours alone, weeping over these
sad ruins of her peace, and sometimes, in a spirit
of revolt, she laid down for herself a line of conduct
intended to react against her husband. But something
in his calm, kind, self-reliant manner, when she looked
into his face, broke down her purpose. She was
afraid of throwing herself against a rock which, while
standing immovable, might bruise her tender limbs
or extinguish life in the strong concussion.