CHAPTER 58
ABSENCE
It was a long and gloomy night that
gathered on me, haunted by the ghosts of many hopes,
of many dear remembrances, many errors, many unavailing
sorrows and regrets.
I went away from England; not knowing,
even then, how great the shock was, that I had to
bear. I left all who were dear to me, and went
away; and believed that I had borne it, and it was
past. As a man upon a field of battle will receive
a mortal hurt, and scarcely know that he is struck,
so I, when I was left alone with my undisciplined
heart, had no conception of the wound with which it
had to strive.
The knowledge came upon me, not quickly,
but little by little, and grain by grain. The
desolate feeling with which I went abroad, deepened
and widened hourly. At first it was a heavy sense
of loss and sorrow, wherein I could distinguish little
else. By imperceptible degrees, it became a
hopeless consciousness of all that I had lost —
love, friendship, interest; of all that had been shattered
— my first trust, my first affection, the whole
airy castle of my life; of all that remained —
a ruined blank and waste, lying wide around me, unbroken,
to the dark horizon.
If my grief were selfish, I did not
know it to be so. I mourned for my child-wife,
taken from her blooming world, so young. I mourned
for him who might have won the love and admiration
of thousands, as he had won mine long ago. I
mourned for the broken heart that had found rest in
the stormy sea; and for the wandering remnants of
the simple home, where I had heard the night-wind
blowing, when I was a child.
From the accumulated sadness into
which I fell, I had at length no hope of ever issuing
again. I roamed from place to place, carrying
my burden with me everywhere. I felt its whole
weight now; and I drooped beneath it, and I said in
my heart that it could never be lightened.
When this despondency was at its worst,
I believed that I should die. Sometimes, I thought
that I would like to die at home; and actually turned
back on my road, that I might get there soon.
At other times, I passed on farther away, -from city
to city, seeking I know not what, and trying to leave
I know not what behind.
It is not in my power to retrace,
one by one, all the weary phases of distress of mind
through which I passed. There are some dreams
that can only be imperfectly and vaguely described;
and when I oblige myself to look back on this time
of my life, I seem to be recalling such a dream.
I see myself passing on among the novelties of foreign
towns, palaces, cathedrals, temples, pictures, castles,
tombs, fantastic streets — the old abiding places
of History and Fancy — as a dreamer might; bearing
my painful load through all, and hardly conscious
of the objects as they fade before me. Listlessness
to everything, but brooding sorrow, was the night
that fell on my undisciplined heart. Let me look
up from it — as at last I did, thank Heaven!
— and from its long, sad, wretched dream, to
dawn.
For many months I travelled with this
ever-darkening cloud upon my mind. Some blind
reasons that I had for not returning home —
reasons then struggling within me, vainly, for more
distinct expression — kept me on my pilgrimage.
Sometimes, I had proceeded restlessly from place
to place, stopping nowhere; sometimes, I had lingered
long in one spot. I had had no purpose, no sustaining
soul within me, anywhere.
I was in Switzerland. I had
come out of Italy, over one of the great passes of
the Alps, and had since wandered with a guide among
the by-ways of the mountains. If those awful
solitudes had spoken to my heart, I did not know it.
I had found sublimity and wonder in the dread heights
and precipices, in the roaring torrents, and the wastes
of ice and snow; but as yet, they had taught me nothing
else.
I came, one evening before sunset,
down into a valley, where I was to rest. In
the course of my descent to it, by the winding track
along the mountain-side, from which I saw it shining
far below, I think some long-unwonted sense of beauty
and tranquillity, some softening influence awakened
by its peace, moved faintly in my breast. I
remember pausing once, with a kind of sorrow that was
not all oppressive, not quite despairing. I remember
almost hoping that some better change was possible
within me.
I came into the valley, as the evening
sun was shining on the remote heights of snow, that
closed it in, like eternal clouds. The bases
of the mountains forming the gorge in which the little
village lay, were richly green; and high above this
gentler vegetation, grew forests of dark fir, cleaving
the wintry snow-drift, wedge-like, and stemming the
avalanche. Above these, were range upon range
of craggy steeps, grey rock, bright ice, and smooth
verdure-specks of pasture, all gradually blending with
the crowning snow. Dotted here and there on
the mountain’s-side, each tiny dot a home, were
lonely wooden cottages, so dwarfed by the towering
heights that they appeared too small for toys.
So did even the clustered village in the valley,
with its wooden bridge across the stream, where the
stream tumbled over broken rocks, and roared away
among the trees. In the quiet air, there was
a sound of distant singing — shepherd voices;
but, as one bright evening cloud floated midway along
the mountain’s-side, I could almost have believed
it came from there, and was not earthly music.
All at once, in this serenity, great Nature spoke
to me; and soothed me to lay down my weary head upon
the grass, and weep as I had not wept yet, since Dora
died!
I had found a packet of letters awaiting
me but a few minutes before, and had strolled out
of the village to read them while my supper was making
ready. Other packets had missed me, and I had
received none for a long time. Beyond a line
or two, to say that I was well, and had arrived at
such a place, I had not had fortitude or constancy
to write a letter since I left home.
The packet was in my hand. I
opened it, and read the writing of Agnes.
She was happy and useful, was prospering
as she had hoped. That was all she told me of
herself. The rest referred to me.
She gave me no advice; she urged no
duty on me; she only told me, in her own fervent manner,
what her trust in me was. She knew (she said)
how such a nature as mine would turn affliction to
good. She knew how trial and emotion would exalt
and strengthen it. She was sure that in my every
purpose I should gain a firmer and a higher tendency,
through the grief I had undergone. She, who so
gloried in my fame, and so looked forward to its augmentation,
well knew that I would labour on. She knew that
in me, sorrow could not be weakness, but must be strength.
As the endurance of my childish days had done its
part to make me what I was, so greater calamities
would nerve me on, to be yet better than I was; and
so, as they had taught me, would I teach others.
She commended me to God, who had taken my innocent
darling to His rest; and in her sisterly affection
cherished me always, and was always at my side go where
I would; proud of what I had done, but infinitely prouder
yet of what I was reserved to do.
I put the letter in my breast, and
thought what had I been an hour ago! When I heard
the voices die away, and saw the quiet evening cloud
grow dim, and all the colours in the valley fade, and
the golden snow upon the mountain-tops become a remote
part of the pale night sky, yet felt that the night
was passing from my mind, and all its shadows clearing,
there was no name for the love I bore her, dearer
to me, henceforward, than ever until then.
I read her letter many times.
I wrote to her before I slept. I told her that
I had been in sore need of her help; that without her
I was not, and I never had been, what she thought me;
but that she inspired me to be that, and I would try.
I did try. In three months more,
a year would have passed since the beginning of my
sorrow. I determined to make no resolutions
until the expiration of those three months, but to
try. I lived in that valley, and its neighbourhood,
all the time.
The three months gone, I resolved
to remain away from home for some time longer; to
settle myself for the present in Switzerland, which
was growing dear to me in the remembrance of that evening;
to resume my pen; to work.
I resorted humbly whither Agnes had
commended me; I sought out Nature, never sought in
vain; and I admitted to my breast the human interest
I had lately shrunk from. It was not long, before
I had almost as many friends in the valley as in Yarmouth:
and when I left it, before the winter set in, for
Geneva, and came back in the spring, their cordial
greetings had a homely sound to me, although they
were not conveyed in English words.
I worked early and late, patiently
and hard. I wrote a Story, with a purpose growing,
not remotely, out of my experience, and sent it to
Traddles, and he arranged for its publication very
advantageously for me; and the tidings of my growing
reputation began to reach me from travellers whom
I encountered by chance. After some rest and
change, I fell to work, in my old ardent way, on a
new fancy, which took strong possession of me.
As I advanced in the execution of this task, I felt
it more and more, and roused my utmost energies to
do it well. This was my third work of fiction.
It was not half written, when, in an interval of rest,
I thought of returning home.
For a long time, though studying and
working patiently, I had accustomed myself to robust
exercise. My health, severely impaired when
I left England, was quite restored. I had seen
much. I had been in many countries, and I hope
I had improved my store of knowledge.
I have now recalled all that I think
it needful to recall here, of this term of absence
— with one reservation. I have made it,
thus far, with no purpose of suppressing any of my
thoughts; for, as I have elsewhere said, this narrative
is my written memory. I have desired to keep
the most secret current of my mind apart, and to the
last. I enter on it now. I cannot so completely
penetrate the mystery of my own heart, as to know
when I began to think that I might have set its earliest
and brightest hopes on Agnes. I cannot say at
what stage of my grief it first became associated with
the reflection, that, in my wayward boyhood, I had
thrown away the treasure of her love. I believe
I may have heard some whisper of that distant thought,
in the old unhappy loss or want of something never
to be realized, of which I had been sensible.
But the thought came into my mind as a new reproach
and new regret, when I was left so sad and lonely
in the world.
If, at that time, I had been much
with her, I should, in the weakness of my desolation,
have betrayed this. It was what I remotely dreaded
when I was first impelled to stay away from England.
I could not have borne to lose the smallest portion
of her sisterly affection; yet, in that betrayal,
I should have set a constraint between us hitherto
unknown.
I could not forget that the feeling
with which she now regarded me had grown up in my
own free choice and course. That if she had
ever loved me with another love — and I sometimes
thought the time was when she might have done so —
I had cast it away. It was nothing, now, that
I had accustomed myself to think of her, when we were
both mere children, as one who was far removed from
my wild fancies. I had bestowed my passionate
tenderness upon another object; and what I might have
done, I had not done; and what Agnes was to me, I
and her own noble heart had made her.
In the beginning of the change that
gradually worked in me, when I tried to get a better
understanding of myself and be a better man, I did
glance, through some indefinite probation, to a period
when I might possibly hope to cancel the mistaken
past, and to be so blessed as to marry her.
But, as time wore on, this shadowy prospect faded,
and departed from me. If she had ever loved me,
then, I should hold her the more sacred; remembering
the confidences I had reposed in her, her knowledge
of my errant heart, the sacrifice she must have made
to be my friend and sister, and the victory she had
won. If she had never loved me, could I believe
that she would love me now?
I had always felt my weakness, in
comparison with her constancy and fortitude; and now
I felt it more and more. Whatever I might have
been to her, or she to me, if I had been more worthy
of her long ago, I was not now, and she was not.
The time was past. I had let it go by, and
had deservedly lost her.
That I suffered much in these contentions,
that they filled me with unhappiness and remorse,
and yet that I had a sustaining sense that it was
required of me, in right and honour, to keep away from
myself, with shame, the thought of turning to the dear
girl in the withering of my hopes, from whom I had
frivolously turned when they were bright and fresh
— which consideration was at the root of every
thought I had concerning her — is all equally
true. I made no effort to conceal from myself,
now, that I loved her, that I was devoted to her;
but I brought the assurance home to myself, that it
was now too late, and that our long-subsisting relation
must be undisturbed.
I had thought, much and often, of
my Dora’s shadowing out to me what might have
happened, in those years that were destined not to
try us; I had considered how the things that never
happen, are often as much realities to us, in their
effects, as those that are accomplished. The
very years she spoke of, were realities now, for my
correction; and would have been, one day, a little
later perhaps, though we had parted in our earliest
folly. I endeavoured to convert what might have
been between myself and Agnes, into a means of making
me more self-denying, more resolved, more conscious
of myself, and my defects and errors. Thus, through
the reflection that it might have been, I arrived
at the conviction that it could never be.
These, with their perplexities and
inconsistencies, were the shifting quicksands of my
mind, from the time of my departure to the time of
my return home, three years afterwards. Three
years had elapsed since the sailing of the emigrant
ship; when, at that same hour of sunset, and in the
same place, I stood on the deck of the packet vessel
that brought me home, looking on the rosy water where
I had seen the image of that ship reflected.
Three years. Long in the aggregate,
though short as they went by. And home was very
dear to me, and Agnes too — but she was not mine
- she was never to be mine. She might have been,
but that was past!