WEARY OF CONSTRAINT.
TIME moved on, and Mrs. Emerson’s
intimate city friends were those to whom she had been
introduced, directly or indirectly, through Mrs. Talbot.
Of these, the one who had most influence over her was
Mrs. Lloyd, and that influence was not of the right
kind. Singularly enough, it so happened that
Mr. Emerson never let this lady at his house, though
she spent hours there every week; and, more singular
still, Irene had never spoken about her to her husband.
She had often been on the point of doing so, but an
impression that Hartley would take up an unreasonable
prejudice against her kept the name of this friend
back from her lips.
Months now succeeded each other without
the occurrence of events marked by special interest.
Mr. Emerson grew more absorbed in his profession as
cases multiplied on his hands, and Irene, interested
in her circle of bright-minded, independent-thoughted
women, found the days and weeks gliding on pleasantly
enough. But habits of estimating things a little
differently from the common sentiment, and views of
life not by any means consonant with those prevailing
among the larger numbers of her sex, were gradually
taking root.
Young, inexperienced, self-willed
and active in mind, Mrs. Emerson had most unfortunately
been introduced among a class of persons whose influence
upon her could not fail to be hurtful. Their
conversation was mainly of art, literature, social
progress and development; the drama, music, public
sentiment on leading topics of the day; the advancement
of liberal ideas, the necessity of a larger liberty
and a wider sphere of action for woman, and the equality
of the sexes. All well enough, all to be commended
when viewed in their just relation to other themes
and interests, but actually pernicious when separated
from the homely and useful things of daily life, and
made so to overshadow these as to warp them into comparative
insignificance. Here lay the evil. It was
this elevation of her ideas above the region of use
and duty into the mere æsthetic and reformatory that
was hurtful to one like Irene—that is, in
fact, hurtful to any woman, for it is always hurtful
to take away from the mind its interest in common
life—the life, we mean, of daily useful
work.
Work! We know the word has not
a pleasant sound to many ears, that it seems to include
degradation, and a kind of social slavery, and lies
away down in a region to which your fine, cultivated,
intellectual woman cannot descend without, in her view,
soiling her garments. But for all this, it is
alone in daily useful work of mind or hands, work
in which service and benefits to others are involved,
that a woman (or a man) gains any true perfection of
character. And this work must be her own, must
lie within the sphere of her own relations to others,
and she must engage in it from a sense of duty that
takes its promptings from her own consciousness of
right. No other woman can judge of her relation
to this work, and she who dares to interfere or turn
her aside should be considered an enemy—not
a friend.
No wonder, if this be true, that we
have so many women of taste, cultivation, and often
brilliant intellectual powers, blazing about like
comets or shooting stars in our social firmament.
They attract admiring attention, excite our wonder,
give us themes for conversation and criticism; but
as guides and indicators while we sail over the dangerous
sea of life, what are they in comparison with some
humble star of the sixth magnitude that ever keeps
its true place in the heavens, shining on with its
small but steady ray, a perpetual blessing? And
so the patient, thoughtful, loving wife and mother,
doing her daily work for human souls and bodies, though
her intellectual powers be humble, and her taste but
poorly cultivated, fills more honorably her sphere
than any of her more brilliant sisters, who cast off
what they consider the shackles by which custom and
tyranny have bound them down to mere home duties and
the drudgery of household care. If down into these
they would bring their superior powers, their cultivated
tastes, their larger knowledge, how quickly would
some desert homes in our land put on refreshing greenness,
and desolate gardens blossom like the rose! We
should have, instead of vast imaginary Utopias in the
future, model homes in the present, the light and
beauty of which, shining abroad, would give higher
types of social life for common emulation.
Ah, if the Genius of Social Reform
would only take her stand centrally! If she would
make the regeneration of homes the great achievement
of our day, then would she indeed come with promise
and blessing. But, alas! she is so far vagrant
in her habits—a fortune-telling gipsy,
not a true, loving, useful woman.
Unhappily for Mrs. Emerson, it was
the weird-eyed, fortune-telling gipsy whose Delphic
utterances had bewildered her mind.
The reconciliation which followed
the Christmas-time troubles of Irene and her husband
had given both more prudent self-control. They
guarded themselves with a care that threw around the
manner of each a certain reserve which was often felt
by the other as coldness. To both this was, in
a degree, painful. There was tender love in their
hearts, but it was overshadowed by self-will and false
ideas of independence on the one side, and by a brooding
spirit of accusation and unaccustomed restraint on
the other. Many times, each day of their lives,
did words and sentiments, just about to be uttered
by Hartley Emerson, die unspoken, lest in them something
might appear which would stir the quick feelings of
Irene into antagonism.
There was no guarantee of happiness
in such a state of things. Mutual forbearance
existed, not from self-discipline and tender love,
but from fear of consequences. They were burnt
children, and dreaded, as well they might, the fire.
With little change in their relations
to each other, and few events worthy of notice, a
year went by. Mr. Delancy came down to New York
several times during this period, spending a few days
at each visit, while Irene went frequently to Ivy
Cliff, and stayed there, occasionally, as long as
two or three weeks. Hartley always came up from
the city while Irene was at her father’s, but
never stayed longer than a single day, business requiring
him to be at his office or in court. Mr. Delancy
never saw them together without closely observing
their manner, tone of speaking and language. Both,
he could see, were maturing rapidly. Irene had
changed most. There was a style of thinking,
a familiarity with popular themes and a womanly confidence
in her expression of opinions that at times surprised
him. With her views on some subjects his own mind
was far from being in agreement, and they often had
warm arguments. Occasionally, when her husband
was at Ivy Cliff a difference of sentiment would arise
between them. Mr. Delancy noticed, when this was
the case, that Irene always pressed her view with
ardor, and that her husband, after a brief but pleasant
combat, retired from the field. He also noticed
that in most cases, after this giving up of the contest
by Hartley, he was more than usually quiet and seemed
to be pondering things not wholly agreeable.
Mr. Delancy was gratified to see that
there was no jarring between them. But he failed
not at the same time to notice something else that
gave him uneasiness. The warmth of feeling, the
tenderness, the lover-like ardor which displayed itself
in the beginning, no longer existed. They did
not even show that fondness for each other which is
so beautiful a trait in young married partners.
And yet he could trace no signs of alienation.
The truth was, the action of their lives had been
inharmonious. Deep down in their hearts there
was no defect of love. But this love was compelled
to hide itself away; and so, for the most part, it
lay concealed from even their own consciousness.
During the second year of their married
life there came a change of state in both Irene and
her husband. They had each grown weary of constraint
when together. It was irksome to be always on
guard, lest some word, tone or act should be misunderstood.
In consequence, old collisions were renewed, and Hartley
often grew impatient and even contemptuous toward
his wife, when she ventured to speak of social progress,
woman’s rights, or any of the kindred themes
in which she still took a warm interest. Angry
retort usually followed on these occasions, and periods
of coldness ensued, the effect of which was to produce
states of alienation.
If a babe had come to soften the heart
of Irene, to turn thought and feeling in a new direction,
to awaken a mother’s love with all its holy
tenderness, how different would all have been!—different
with her, and different with him. There would
then have been an object on which both could centre
interest and affection, and thus draw lovingly together
again, and feel, as in the beginning, heart beating
to heart in sweet accordings. They would have
learned their love-lessons over again, and understood
their meanings better. Alas that the angels of
infancy found no place in their dwelling!
With no central attraction at home,
her thoughts stimulated by association with a class
of intellectual, restless women, who were wandering
on life’s broad desert in search of green places
and refreshing springs, each day’s journey bearing
them farther and farther away from landscapes of perpetual
verdure, Irene grew more and more interested in subjects
that lay for the most part entirely out of the range
of her husband’s sympathies; while he was becoming
more deeply absorbed in a profession that required
close application of thought, intellectual force and
clearness, and cold, practical modes of looking at
all questions that came up for consideration.
The consequence was that they were, in all their common
interests, modes of thinking and habits of regarding
the affairs of life, steadily receding from each other.
Their evenings were now less frequently spent together.
If home had been a pleasant place to him, Mr. Emerson
would have usually remained at home after the day’s
duties were over; or, if he went abroad, it would have
been usually in company with his wife. But home
was getting to be dull, if not positively disagreeable.
If a conversation was started, it soon involved disagreement
in sentiment, and then came argument, and perhaps
ungentle words, followed by silence and a mutual writing
down in the mind of bitter things. If there was
no conversation, Irene buried herself in a book—some
absorbing novel, usually of the heroic school.
Naturally, under this state of things,
Mr. Emerson, who was social in disposition, sought
companionship elsewhere, and with his own sex.
Brought into contact with men of different tastes,
feelings and habits of thinking, he gradually selected
a few as intimate friends, and, in association with
these, formed, as his wife was doing, a social point
of interest outside of his home; thus widening still
further the space between them.
The home duties involved in housekeeping,
indifferently as they had always been discharged by
Irene, were now becoming more and more distasteful
to her. This daily care about mere eating and
drinking seemed unworthy of a woman who had noble
aspirations, such as burned in her breast. That
was work for women-drudges who had no higher ambition;
“and Heaven knows,” she would often say
to herself, “there are enough and to spare of
these.”
“What’s the use of keeping
up an establishment like this just for two people?”
she would often remark to her husband; and he would
usually reply,
“For the sake of having a home
into which one may retire and shut out the world.”
Irene would sometimes suggest the
lighter expense of boarding.
“If it cost twice as much I
would prefer to live in my own house,” was the
invariable answer.
“But see what a burden of care
it lays on my shoulders.”
Now Hartley could only with difficulty
repress a word of impatient rebuke when this argument
was used. He thought of his own daily devotion
to business, prolonged often into the night, when an
important case was on hand, and mentally charged his
wife with a selfish love of ease. On the other
hand, it seemed to Irene that her husband was selfish
in wishing her to bear the burdens of housekeeping
just for his pleasure or convenience, when they might
live as comfortably in a hotel or boarding-house.
On this subject Hartley would not
enter into a discussion. “It’s no
use talking, Irene,” he would say, when she grew
in earnest. “You cannot tempt me to give
up my home. It includes many things that with
me are essential to comfort. I detest boarding-houses;
they are only places for sojourning, not living.”
As agreement on this subject was out
of the question, Irene did not usually urge considerations
in favor of abandoning their pleasant home.