BORN FOR EACH OTHER.
I SAW Mr. Emerson yesterday,”
said Mrs. Everet. She was sitting with Irene
in her own house in New York.
“Did you?” Irene spoke
evenly and quietly, but did not turn her face toward
Mrs. Everet.
“Yes. I saw him at my husband’s
store. Mr. Everet has engaged him to conduct
an important suit, in which many thousands of dollars
are at stake.”
“How does be look?” inquired
Irene, without showing any feelings but still keeping
her face turned from Mrs Everet.
“Well, I should say, though
rather too much frosted for a man of his years.”
“Gray, do you mean?” Irene manifested
some surprise.
“Yes; his hair and beard are
quite sprinkled with time’s white snow-flakes.”
“He is only forty,” remarked Irene.
“I should say fifty, judging from his appearance.”
“Only forty.” And
a faint sigh breathed on the lips of Irene. She
did not look around at her friend but sat very still,
with her face turned partly away. Mrs. Everet
looked at her closely, to read, if possible, what
was passing in her mind. But the countenance of
Irene was too much hidden. Her attitude, however,
indicated intentness of thought, though not disturbing
thought.
“Rose,” she said at length,
“I grow less at peace with myself as the years
move onward.”
“You speak from some passing
state of mind,” suggested Mrs. Everet.
“No; from a gradually forming
permanent state. Ten years ago I looked back
upon the past in a stern, self-sustaining, martyr-spirit.
Five years ago all things wore a different aspect.
I began to have misgivings; I could not so clearly
make out my case. New thoughts on the subject—and
not very welcome ones—began to intrude.
I was self-convicted of wrong; yes, Rose, of a great
and an irreparable wrong. I shut my eyes; I tried
to look in other directions; but the truth, once seen,
could not pass from the range of mental vision.
I have never told you that I saw Mr. Emerson five
years ago. The effect of that meeting was such
that I could not speak of it, even to you. We
met on one of the river steamboats—met
and looked into each other’s eyes for just a
moment. It may only be a fancy of mine, but I
have thought sometimes that, but for this seemingly
accidental meeting, he would have married again.”
“Why do you think so?” asked Mrs. Everet.
Irene did not answer for some moments.
She hardly dared venture to put what she had seen
in words. It was something that she felt more
like hiding even from her own consciousness, if that
were possible. But, having ventured so far, she
could not well hold back. So she replied, keeping
her voice into as dead a level as it was possible
to assume:
“He was sitting in earnest conversation
with a young lady, and from the expression of her
face, which I could see, the subject on which he was
speaking was evidently one in which more than her thought
was interested. I felt at the time that he was
on the verge of a new life-experiment—was
about venturing upon a sea on which he had once made
shipwreck. Suddenly he turned half around and
looked at me before I had time to withdraw my eyes—looked
at me with a strange, surprised, startled look.
In another moment a form came between us; when it
passed I was lost from his gaze in the crowd of passengers.
I have puzzled myself a great many times over that
fact of his turning his eyes, as if from some hidden
impulse, just to the spot where I was sitting.
There are no accidents—as I have often heard
you say—in the common acceptation of the
term; therefore this was no accident.”
“It was a providence,” said Rose.
“And to what end?” asked Irene.
Mrs. Everet shook her head.
“I will not even presume to conjecture.”
Irene sighed, and then sat lost in
thought. Recovering herself, she said:
“Since that time I have been
growing less and less satisfied with that brief, troubled
portion of my life which closed so disastrously.
I forgot how much the happiness of another was involved.
A blind, willful girl, struggling in imaginary bonds,
I thought only of myself, and madly rent apart the
ties which death only should have sundered. For
five years, Rose, I have carried in my heart the expression
which looked out upon me from the eyes of Mr. Emerson
at that brief meeting. Its meaning was not then,
nor is it now, clear. I have never set myself
to the work of interpretation, and believe the task
would be fruitless. But whenever it is recalled
I am affected with a tender sadness. And so his
head is already frosted, Rose?”
“Yes.”
“Though in years he has reached
only manhood’s ripened state. How I have
marred his life! Better, far better, would it
have been for him if I had been the bride of Death
on my wedding-day!”
A shadow of pain darkened her face.
“No,” replied Mrs. Everet;
“it is better for both you and him that you
were not the bride of Death. There are deeper
things hidden in the events of life than our reason
can fathom. We die when it is best for ourselves
and best for others that we should die—never
before. And the fact that we live is in itself
conclusive that we are yet needed in the world by
all who can be affected by our mortal existence.”
“Gray hairs at forty!” This seemed to
haunt the mind of Irene.
“It may be constitutional,”
suggested Mrs. Everet; “some heads begin to
whiten at thirty.”
“Possibly.”
But the tone expressed no conviction.
“How was his face?” asked Irene.
“Grave and thoughtful. At least so it appeared
to me.”
“At forty.” It was all Irene said.
Mrs. Everet might have suggested that
a man of his legal position would naturally be grave
and thoughtful, but she did not.
“It struck me,” said Mrs.
Everet, “as a true, pure, manly face. It
was intellectual and refined; delicate, yet firm about
the mouth and expansive in the upper portions.
The hair curled softly away from his white temples
and forehead.”
“Worthy of a better fate!”
sighed Irene. “And it is I who have marred
his whole life! How blind is selfish passion!
Ah, my friend, the years do not bring peace to my
soul. There have been times when to know that
he had sought refuge from a lonely life in marriage
would have been a relief to me. Were this the
case, the thought of his isolation, of his imperfect
life, would not be for ever rebuking me. But
now, while no less severely rebuked by this thought,
I feel glad that he has not ventured upon an act no
clear sanction for which is found in the Divine law.
He could not, I feel, have remained so true and pure
a man as I trust he is this day. God help him
to hold on, faithful to his highest intuitions, even
unto the end.”
Mrs. Everet looked at Irene wonderingly
as she spoke. She had never before thus unveiled
her thoughts.
“He struck me,” was her
reply, “as a man who had passed through years
of discipline and gained the mastery of himself.”
“I trust that it may be so,”
Irene answered, rather as if speaking to herself than
to another.
“As I grow older,” she
added, after a long pause, now looking with calm eyes
upon her friend, “and life-experiences correct
my judgment and chasten my feelings, I see all things
in a new aspect. I understand my own heart better—its
needs, capacities and yearnings; and self-knowledge
is the key by which we unlock the mystery of other
souls. So a deeper self-acquaintance enables me
to look deeper into the hearts of all around me.
I erred in marrying Mr. Emerson. We were both
too hasty, self-willed and tenacious of rights and
opinions to come together in a union so sacred and
so intimate. But, after I had become his wife,
after I had taken upon myself such holy vows, it was
my duty to stand fast. I could not abandon my
place and be innocent before God and man. And
I am not innocent, Rose.”
The face of Irene was strongly agitated
for some moments; but she recovered herself and went
on:
“I am speaking of things that
have hitherto been secrets of my own heart. I
could not bring them out even for you to look at, my
dearest, truest, best of friends. Now it seems
as if I could not bear the weight of my heavy thoughts
alone; as if, in admitting you beyond the veil, I
might find strength to suffer, if not ease from pain.
There is no such thing as living our lives over again
and correcting their great errors. The past is
an irrevocable fact. Ah, if conscience would
sleep, if struggles for a better life would make atonement
for wrong—then, as our years progress, we
might lapse into tranquil states. But gradually
clearing vision increases the magnitude of a fault
like mine, for its fatal consequences are seen in
broader light. There is a thought which has haunted
me for a year past like a spectre. It comes to
me unbidden; sometimes to disturb the quiet of my
lonely evenings, sometimes in the silent night-watches
to banish sleep from my pillow; sometimes to place
silence on my lips as I sit among cherished friends.
I never imagined that I would put this thought in
words for any mortal ear; yet it is coming to my lips
now, and I feel impelled to go on. You believe
that there are, as you call them ‘conjugal partners,’
or men and women born for each other, who, in a true
marriage of souls, shall become eternally one.
They do not always meet in this life; nay, for the
sake of that discipline which leads to purification,
may form other and uncongenial ties in the world, and
live unhappily; but in heaven they will draw together
by a divinely-implanted attraction, and be there united
for ever. I have felt that something like this
must be true; that every soul must have its counterpart.
The thought which has so haunted me is, that Hartley
Emerson and unhappy I were born for each other.”
She paused and looked with a half-startled
air upon Mrs. Everet to mark the effect of this revelation.
But Rose made no response and showed no surprise,
however she might have been affected by the singular
admission of her friend.
“It has been all in vain,”
continued Irene “that I have pushed the thought
aside—called it absurd, insane, impossible—back
it would come and take its old place. And, stranger
still, out of facts that I educed to prove its fallacy
would come corroborative suggestions. I think
it is well for my peace of mind that I have not been
in the way of hearing about him or of seeing him.
Since we parted it has been as if a dark curtain had
fallen between us; and, so far as I am concerned,
that curtain has been lifted up but once or twice,
and then only for a moment of time. So all my
thoughts of him are joined to the past. Away
back in that sweet time when the heart of girlhood
first thrills with the passion of love are some memories
that haunt my soul like dreams from Elysium.
He was, in my eyes, the impersonation of all that
was lovely and excellent; his presence made my sense
of happiness complete; his voice touched my ears as
the blending of all rich harmonies. But there
fell upon him a shadow; there came hard discords in
the music which had entranced my soul; the fine gold
was dimmed. Then came that period of mad strife,
of blind antagonism, in which we hurt each other by
rough contact. Finally, we were driven far asunder,
and, instead of revolving together around a common
centre, each has moved in a separate orbit. For
years that dark period of pain has held the former
period of brightness in eclipse; but of late gleams
from that better time have made their way down to
the present. Gradually the shadows are giving
away. The first state is coming to be felt more
and more as the true state—as that in best
agreement with what we are in relation to each other.
It was the evil in us that met in such fatal antagonism—not
the good; it was something that we must put off if
we would rise from natural and selfish life into spiritual
and heavenly life. It was our selfishness and
passion that drove us asunder. Thus it is, dear
Rose, that my thoughts have been wandering about in
the maze of life that entangles me. In my isolation
I have time enough for mental inversion—for
self-exploration—for idle fancies, if you
will. And so I have lifted the veil for you;
uncovered my inner life; taken you into the sanctuary
over whose threshold no foot but my own had ever passed.”
There was too much in all this for
Mrs. Everet to venture upon any reply that involved
suggestion or advice. It was from a desire to
look deeper into the heart of her friend that she had
spoken of her meeting with Mr. Emerson. The glance
she obtained revealed far more than her imagination
had ever reached.