A new acquaintance.
BOTH Emerson and his wife came
up from this experience changed in themselves and
toward each other. A few days had matured them
beyond what might have been looked for in as many
years. Life suddenly put on more sober hues,
and the future laid off its smiles and beckonings
onward to greener fields and mountain-heights of felicity.
There was a certain air of manly self-confidence, a
firmer, more deliberate way of expressing himself on
all subjects, and an evidence of mental clearness
and strength, which gave to Irene the impression of
power and superiority not wholly agreeable to her
self-love, yet awakening emotions of pride in her husband
when she contrasted him with other men. As a man
among men, he was, as he had ever been, her beau ideal;
but as a husband, she felt a daily increasing spirit
of resistance and antagonism, and it required constant
watchfulness over herself to prevent this feeling
from exhibiting itself in act.
On the part of Emerson, the more he
thought about this subject of the husband’s
relative duties and prerogatives—thought
as a man and as a lawyer—the more strongly
did he feel about it, and the more tenacious of his
assumed rights did he become. Matters which seemed
in the beginning of such light importance as scarcely
to attract his attention, now loomed up before him
as things of moment. Thus, if he spoke of their
doing some particular thing in a certain way, and
Irene suggested a different way, instead of yielding
to her view, he would insist upon his own. If
she tried to show him a reason why her way was best,
he would give no weight to her argument or representation.
On the other hand, it is but just to say that he rarely
opposed her independent suggestions or interfered with
her freedom; and if she had been as considerate toward
him, the danger of trouble would have been lessened.
It is the little foxes that spoil
the tender grapes, and so it is the little reactions
of two spirits against each other that spoil the tender
blossoms of love and destroy the promised vintage.
Steadily, day by day, and week by week, were these
light reactions marring the happiness of our undisciplined
young friends, and destroying in them germ after germ,
and bud after bud, which, if left to growth and development,
would have brought forth ripe, luscious fruit in the
later summer of their lives. Trifles, light as
air were noticed, and their importance magnified.
Words, looks, actions, insignificant in themselves,
were made to represent states of will or antagonism
which really had no existence.
Unhappily for their peace, Irene had
a brooding disposition. She held in her memory
utterances and actions forgotten by her husband, and,
by dwelling upon, magnified and gave them an importance
to which they were not entitled. Still more unhappily
for their peace, Irene met about this time, and became
attached to, a lady of fine intellectual attainments
and fascinating manners, who was an extremist in opinion
on the subject of sexual equality. She was married,
but to a man greatly her inferior, though possessing
some literary talent, which he managed to turn to
better account than she did her finer powers.
He had been attracted by her brilliant qualities,
and in approaching her scorched his wings, and ever
after lay at her feet. She had no very high respect
for him, but found a husband on many accounts a convenient
thing, and so held on to the appendage. If he
had been man enough to remain silent on the themes
she was so fond of discussing on all occasions, people
of common sense and common perception would have respected
him for what he was worth. But he gloried in
his bondage, and rattled his chains as gleefully as
if he were discoursing sweet music. What she announced
oracularly, he attempted to demonstrate by bald and
feeble arguments. He was the false understanding
to her perverted will.
The name of this lady was Mrs. Talbot.
Irene met her soon after her marriage and removal
to New York, and was charmed with her from the beginning.
Mr. Emerson, on the contrary, liked neither her nor
her sentiments, and considered her a dangerous friend
for his wife. He expressed himself freely in
regard to her at the commencement of the intimacy;
but Irene took her part so warmly, and used such strong
language in her favor, that Emerson deemed it wisest
not to create new sentiments in her favor out of opposition
to himself.
Within a week from that memorable
Christmas day on which Irene came back from Ivy Cliff,
Mrs. Talbot, who had taken a fancy to the spirited,
independent, undisciplined wife of Emerson, called
in to see her new friend. Irene received her
cordially. She was, in fact, of all her acquaintances,
the one she most desired to meet.
“I’m right glad you thought
of making me a call,” said Mrs. Emerson, as
they sat down together. “I’ve felt
as dull all the morning as an anchorite.”
“You dull!” Mrs. Talbot
affected surprise, as she glanced round the tasteful
room in which they were sitting. “What is
there to cloud your mind? With such a home and
such a husband as you possess life ought to be one
long, bright holiday.”
“Good things in their way,”
replied Mrs. Emerson. “But not everything.”
She said this in a kind of thoughtless
deference to Mrs. Talbot’s known views on the
subject of homes and husbands, which she had not hesitated
to call women’s prisons and women’s jailers.
“Indeed! And have you made that discovery?”
Mrs. Talbot laughed a low, gurgling
sort of laugh, leaning, at the same time, in a confidential
kind of way, closer to Mrs. Emerson.
“Discovery!”
“Yes.”
“It is no discovery,”
said Mrs. Emerson. “The fact is self-evident.
There is much that a woman needs for happiness beside
a home and a husband.”
“Right, my young friend, right!”
Mrs. Talbot’s manner grew earnest. “No
truer words were ever spoken. Yes—yes—a
woman needs a great deal more than these to fill the
measure of her happiness; and it is through the attempt
to restrict and limit her to such poor substitutes
for a world-wide range and freedom that she has been
so dwarfed in mental stature, and made the unhappy
creature and slave of man’s hard ambition and
indomitable love of power. There were Amazons
of old—as the early Greeks knew to their
cost—strong, self-reliant, courageous women,
who acknowledged no human superiority. Is the
Amazonian spirit dead in the earth? Not so!
It is alive, and clothing itself with will, power
and persistence. Already it is grasping the rein,
and the mettled steed stands impatient to feel the
rider’s impulse in the saddle. The cycle
of woman’s degradation and humiliation is completed.
A new era in the world’s social history has
dawned for her, and the mountain-tops are golden with
the coming day.”
Irene listened with delight and even
enthusiasm to these sentiments, uttered with ardor
and eloquence.
“It is not woman’s fault,
taking her in the aggregate, that she is so weak in
body and mind, and such a passive slave to man’s
will,” continued Mrs. Talbot. “In
the retrocession of races toward barbarism mere muscle,
in which alone man is superior to woman, prevailed.
Physical strength set itself up as master. Might
made right. And so unhappy woman was degraded
below man, and held to the earth, until nearly all
independent life has been crushed out of her.
As civilization has lifted nation after nation out
of the dark depths of barbarism, the condition of
woman physically has been improved. For the sake
of his children, if from no better motive, man has
come to treat his wife with a more considerate kindness.
If she is still but the hewer of his wood and the
drawer of his water, he has, in many cases, elevated
her to the position of dictatress in these humble
affairs. He allows her ‘help!’ But,
mentally and socially, he continues to degrade her.
In law she is scarcely recognized, except as a criminal.
She is punished if she does wrong, but has no legal
protection in her rights as an independent human being.
She is only man’s shadow. The public opinion
that affects her is made by him. The earliest
literature of a country is man’s expression;
and in this man’s view of woman is always apparent.
The sentiment is repeated generation after generation,
and age after age, until the barbarous idea comes
down, scarcely questioned, to the days of high civilization,
culture and refinement.
“Here, my young friend, you
have the simple story of woman’s degradation
in this age of the world. Now, so long as she
submits, man will hold her in fetters. Power
and dominion are sweet. If a man cannot govern
a state, he will be content to govern a household—but
govern he will, if he can find anywhere submissive
subjects.”
“He is born a tyrant; that I
have always felt,” said Mrs. Emerson. “You
see it in a family of sisters and brothers. The
boys always attempt to rule their sisters, and if
the latter do not submit, then comes discord and contention.”
“I have seen this, in hundreds
of instances,” replied Mrs. Talbot. “It
was fully illustrated in my own case. I had two
brothers, who undertook to exercise their love of
domineering on me. But they did not find a passive
subject—no, not by any means. I was
never obedient to their will, for I had one of my
own. We made the house often a bedlam for our
poor mother; but I never gave way—no, not
for an instant, come what might. I had different
stuff in me from that of common girls, and in time
the boys were glad to let me alone.”
“Are your brothers living?” asked Mrs.
Emerson.
“Yes. One resides in New
York, and the other in Boston. One is a merchant,
the other a physician.”
“How was it as you grew older?”
“About the same. They are
like nearly all men—despisers of woman’s
intellect.”
Irene sighed, and, letting her eyes
fall to the floor, sat lost in thought for some moments.
The suggestions of her friend were not producing agreeable
states of mind.
“They reject the doctrine of
an equality in the sexes?” said Mrs. Emerson.
“Of course. All men do that,” replied
Mrs. Talbot.
“Your husband among the rest?”
“Talbot? Oh, he’s
well enough in his way!” The lady spoke lightly,
tossing her head in a manner that involved both indifference
and contempt. “I never take him into account
when discussing these matters. That point was
settled between us long and long ago. We jog
on without trouble. Talbot thinks as I do about
the women—or pretends that he does, which
is all the same.”
“A rare exception to the general
run of husbands,” said Irene, thinking at the
same time how immeasurably superior Mr. Emerson was
to this weakling, and despising him in her heart for
submitting to be ruled by a woman. Thus nature
and true perception spoke in her, even while she was
seeking to blind herself by false reasonings.
“Yes, he’s a rare exception;
and it’s well for us both that it is so.
If he were like your husband, for instance, one of
us would have been before the legislature for a divorce
within twelve months of our marriage night.”
“Like my husband! What
do you mean?” Mrs. Emerson drew herself up,
with half real and half affected surprise.
“Oh, he’s one of your
men who have positive qualities about them—strong
in intellect and will.”
Irene felt pleased with the compliment
bestowed upon her husband.
“But wrong in his ideas of woman.”
“How do you know?” asked Irene.
“How do I know? As I know
all men with whom I come in contact. I probe
them.”
“And you have probed my husband?”
“Undoubtedly.”
“And do not regard him as sound on this subject?”
“No sounder than other men of
his class. He regards woman as man’s inferior.”
“I think you state the case
too strongly,” said Mrs. Emerson, a red spot
burning on her cheek. “He thinks them mentally
different.”
“Of course he does.”
“But not different as to superiority
and inferiority,” replied Irene.
“Mere hair-splitting, my child.
If they are mentally different, one must be more highly
organized than the other, and of course, superior.
Mr. Emerson thinks a man’s rational powers stronger
than a woman’s, and that, therefore, he must
direct in affairs generally, and she follow his lead.
I know; I’ve talked with and drawn him out on
this subject.”
Mrs. Emerson sighed again faintly,
while her eyes dropped from the face of her visitor
and sunk to the floor. A shadow was falling on
her spirit—a weight coming down with a gradually
increasing pressure upon her heart. She remembered
the night of her return from Ivy Cliff and the language
then used by her husband on this very subject, which
was mainly in agreement with the range of opinions
attributed to him by Mrs. Talbot.
“Marriage, to a spirited woman,”
she remarked, in a pensive undertone, “is a
doubtful experiment.”
“Always,” returned her
friend. “As woman stands now in the estimate
of man, her chances for happiness are almost wholly
on the side of old-maidism. Still, freedom is
the price of struggle and combat; and woman will first
have to show, in actual strife, that she is the equal
of her present lord.”
“Then you would turn every home
into a battlefield?” said Mrs. Emerson.
“Every home in which there is
a tyrant and an oppressor,” was the prompt answer.
“Many fair lands, in all ages, have been trampled
down ruthlessly by the iron feet of war; and that were
better, as the price of freedom, than slavery.”
Irene sighed again, and was again silent.
“What,” she asked, “if
the oppressor is so much stronger than the oppressed
that successful resistance is impossible? that with
every struggle the links of the chain that binds her
sink deeper into her quivering flesh?”
“Every age and every land have
seen noble martyrs in the cause of freedom. It
is better to die for liberty than live an ignoble
slave,” answered the tempter.
“And I will die a free woman.”
This Irene said in her heart.