“I am in love with my wife,”
he said—a superfluous remark, as I had
not questioned his attachment to the woman he had married.
We walked for ten minutes and then he said it again.
I turned to look at him. He began to talk and
told me the tale I am now about to set down.
The thing he had on his mind happened
during what must have been the most eventful week
of his life. He was to be married on Friday afternoon.
On Friday of the week before he got a telegram announcing
his appointment to a government position. Something
else happened that made him very proud and glad.
In secret he was in the habit of writing verses and
during the year before several of them had been printed
in poetry magazines. One of the societies that
give prizes for what they think the best poems published
during the year put his name at the head of its list.
The story of his triumph was printed in the newspapers
of his home city and one of them also printed his
picture.
As might have been expected he was
excited and in a rather highly strung nervous state
all during that week. Almost every evening he
went to call on his fiancée, the daughter of a judge.
When he got there the house was filled with people
and many letters, telegrams and packages were being
received. He stood a little to one side and men
and women kept coming up to speak to him. They
congratulated him upon his success in getting the
government position and on his achievement as a poet.
Everyone seemed to be praising him and when he went
home and to bed he could not sleep. On Wednesday
evening he went to the theatre and it seemed to him
that people all over the house recognized him.
Everyone nodded and smiled. After the first act
five or six men and two women left their seats to
gather about him. A little group was formed.
Strangers sitting along the same row of seats stretched
their necks and looked. He had never received
so much attention before, and now a fever of expectancy
took possession of him.
As he explained when he told me of
his experience, it was for him an altogether abnormal
time. He felt like one floating in air. When
he got into bed after seeing so many people and hearing
so many words of praise his head whirled round and
round. When he closed his eyes a crowd of people
invaded his room. It seemed as though the minds
of all the people of his city were centred on himself.
The most absurd fancies took possession of him.
He imagined himself riding in a carriage through the
streets of a city. Windows were thrown open and
people ran out at the doors of houses. “There
he is. That’s him,” they shouted,
and at the words a glad cry arose. The carriage
drove into a street blocked with people. A hundred
thousand pairs of eyes looked up at him. “There
you are! What a fellow you have managed to make
of yourself!” the eyes seemed to be saying.
My friend could not explain whether
the excitement of the people was due to the fact that
he had written a new poem or whether, in his new government
position, he had performed some notable act. The
apartment where he lived at that time was on a street
perched along the top of a cliff far out at the edge
of his city, and from his bedroom window he could
look down over trees and factory roofs to a river.
As he could not sleep and as the fancies that kept
crowding in upon him only made him more excited, he
got out of bed and tried to think.
As would be natural under such circumstances,
he tried to control his thoughts, but when he sat
by the window and was wide awake a most unexpected
and humiliating thing happened. The night was
clear and fine. There was a moon. He wanted
to dream of the woman who was to be his wife, to think
out lines for noble poems or make plans that would
affect his career. Much to his surprise his mind
refused to do anything of the sort.
At a corner of the street where he
lived there was a small cigar store and newspaper
stand run by a fat man of forty and his wife, a small
active woman with bright grey eyes. In the morning
he stopped there to buy a paper before going down
to the city. Sometimes he saw only the fat man,
but often the man had disappeared and the woman waited
on him. She was, as he assured me at least twenty
times in telling me his tale, a very ordinary person
with nothing special or notable about her, but for
some reason he could not explain, being in her presence
stirred him profoundly. During that week in the
midst of his distraction she was the only person he
knew who stood out clear and distinct in his mind.
When he wanted so much to think noble thoughts he could
think only of her. Before he knew what was happening
his imagination had taken hold of the notion of having
a love affair with the woman.
“I could not understand myself,”
he declared, in telling me the story. “At
night, when the city was quiet and when I should have
been asleep, I thought about her all the time.
After two or three days of that sort of thing the
consciousness of her got into my daytime thoughts.
I was terribly muddled. When I went to see the
woman who is now my wife I found that my love for
her was in no way affected by my vagrant thoughts.
There was but one woman in the world I wanted to live
with and to be my comrade in undertaking to improve
my own character and my position in the world, but
for the moment, you see, I wanted this other woman
to be in my arms. She had worked her way into
my being. On all sides people were saying I was
a big man who would do big things, and there I was.
That evening when I went to the theatre I walked home
because I knew I would be unable to sleep, and to satisfy
the annoying impulse in myself I went and stood on
the sidewalk before the tobacco shop. It was
a two story building, and I knew the woman lived upstairs
with her husband. For a long time I stood in the
darkness with my body pressed against the wall of
the building, and then I thought of the two of them
up there and no doubt in bed together. That made
me furious.
“Then I grew more furious with
myself. I went home and got into bed, shaken
with anger. There are certain books of verse and
some prose writings that have always moved me deeply,
and so I put several books on a table by my bed.
“The voices in the books were
like the voices of the dead. I did not hear them.
The printed words would not penetrate into my consciousness.
I tried to think of the woman I loved, but her figure
had also become something far away, something with
which I for the moment seemed to have nothing to do.
I rolled and tumbled about in the bed. It was
a miserable experience.
“On Thursday morning I went
into the store. There stood the woman alone.
I think she knew how I felt. Perhaps she had been
thinking of me as I had been thinking of her.
A doubtful hesitating smile played about the corners
of her mouth. She had on a dress made of cheap
cloth and there was a tear on the shoulder. She
must have been ten years older than myself. When
I tried to put my pennies on the glass counter, behind
which she stood, my hand trembled so that the pennies
made a sharp rattling noise. When I spoke the
voice that came out of my throat did not sound like
anything that had ever belonged to me. It barely
arose above a thick whisper. ‘I want you,’
I said. ’I want you very much. Can’t
you run away from your husband? Come to me at
my apartment at seven tonight.’
“The woman did come to my apartment
at seven. That morning she didn’t say anything
at all. For a minute perhaps we stood looking
at each other. I had forgotten everything in
the world but just her. Then she nodded her head
and I went away. Now that I think of it I cannot
remember a word I ever heard her say. She came
to my apartment at seven and it was dark. You
must understand this was in the month of October.
I had not lighted a light and I had sent my servant
away.
“During that day I was no good
at all. Several men came to see me at my office,
but I got all muddled up in trying to talk with them.
They attributed my rattle-headedness to my approaching
marriage and went away laughing.
“It was on that morning, just
the day before my marriage, that I got a long and
very beautiful letter from my fiancée. During
the night before she also had been unable to sleep
and had got out of bed to write the letter. Everything
she said in it was very sharp and real, but she herself,
as a living thing, seemed to have receded into the
distance. It seemed to me that she was like a
bird, flying far away in distant skies, and that I
was like a perplexed bare-footed boy standing in the
dusty road before a farm house and looking at her receding
figure. I wonder if you will understand what
I mean?
“In regard to the letter.
In it she, the awakening woman, poured out her heart.
She of course knew nothing of life, but she was a woman.
She lay, I suppose, in her bed feeling nervous and
wrought up as I had been doing. She realized
that a great change was about to take place in her
life and was glad and afraid too. There she lay
thinking of it all. Then she got out of bed and
began talking to me on the bit of paper. She
told me how afraid she was and how glad too. Like
most young women she had heard things whispered.
In the letter she was very sweet and fine. ’For
a long time, after we are married, we will forget we
are a man and woman,’ she wrote. ’We
will be human beings. You must remember that
I am ignorant and often I will be very stupid.
You must love me and be very patient and kind.
When I know more, when after a long time you have
taught me the way of life, I will try to repay you.
I will love you tenderly and passionately. The
possibility of that is in me or I would not want to
marry at all. I am afraid but I am also happy.
O, I am so glad our marriage time is near at hand!’
“Now you see clearly enough
what a mess I was in. In my office, after I had
read my fiancée’s letter, I became at once very
resolute and strong. I remember that I got out
of my chair and walked about, proud of the fact that
I was to be the husband of so noble a woman. Right
away I felt concerning her as I had been feeling about
myself before I found out what a weak thing I was.
To be sure I took a strong resolution that I would
not be weak. At nine that evening I had planned
to run in to see my fiancée. ‘I’m
all right now,’ I said to myself. ’The
beauty of her character has saved me from myself.
I will go home now and send the other woman away.’
In the morning I had telephoned to my servant and
told him that I did not want him to be at the apartment
that evening and I now picked up the telephone to tell
him to stay at home.
“Then a thought came to me.
‘I will not want him there in any event,’
I told myself. ’What will he think when
he sees a woman coming in my place on the evening
before the day I am to be married?’ I put the
telephone down and prepared to go home. ’If
I want my servant out of the apartment it is because
I do not want him to hear me talk with the woman.
I cannot be rude to her. I will have to make some
kind of an explanation,’ I said to myself.
“The woman came at seven o’clock,
and, as you may have guessed, I let her in and forgot
the resolution I had made. It is likely I never
had any intention of doing anything else. There
was a bell on my door, but she did not ring, but knocked
very softly. It seems to me that everything she
did that evening was soft and quiet, but very determined
and quick. Do I make myself clear? When she
came I was standing just within the door where I had
been standing and waiting for a half hour. My
hands were trembling as they had trembled in the morning
when her eyes looked at me and when I tried to put
the pennies on the counter in the store. When
I opened the door she stepped quickly in and I took
her into my arms. We stood together in the darkness.
My hands no longer trembled. I felt very happy
and strong.
“Although I have tried to make
everything clear I have not told you what the woman
I married is like. I have emphasized, you see,
the other woman. I make the blind statement that
I love my wife, and to a man of your shrewdness that
means nothing at all. To tell the truth, had I
not started to speak of this matter I would feel more
comfortable. It is inevitable that I give you
the impression that I am in love with the tobacconist’s
wife. That’s not true. To be sure I
was very conscious of her all during the week before
my marriage, but after she had come to me at my apartment
she went entirely out of my mind.
“Am I telling the truth?
I am trying very hard to tell what happened to me.
I am saying that I have not since that evening thought
of the woman who came to my apartment. Now, to
tell the facts of the case, that is not true.
On that evening I went to my fiancée at nine, as she
had asked me to do in her letter. In a kind of
way I cannot explain the other woman went with me.
This is what I mean—you see I had been
thinking that if anything happened between me and the
tobacconist’s wife I would not be able to go
through with my marriage. ’It is one thing
or the other with me,’ I had said to myself.
“As a matter of fact I went
to see my beloved on that evening filled with a new
faith in the outcome of our life together. I am
afraid I muddle this matter in trying to tell it.
A moment ago I said the other woman, the tobacconist’s
wife, went with me. I do not mean she went in
fact. What I am trying to say is that something
of her faith in her own desires and her courage in
seeing things through went with me. Is that clear
to you? When I got to my fiancée’s house
there was a crowd of people standing about. Some
were relatives from distant places I had not seen
before. She looked up quickly when I came into
the room. My face must have been radiant.
I never saw her so moved. She thought her letter
had affected me deeply, and of course it had.
Up she jumped and ran to meet me. She was like
a glad child. Right before the people who turned
and looked inquiringly at us, she said the thing that
was in her mind. ‘O, I am so happy,’
she cried. ’You have understood. We
will be two human beings. We will not have to
be husband and wife.’
“As you may suppose everyone
laughed, but I did not laugh. The tears came
into my eyes. I was so happy I wanted to shout.
Perhaps you understand what I mean. In the office
that day when I read the letter my fiancée had written
I had said to myself, ’I will take care of the
dear little woman.’ There was something
smug, you see, about that. In her house when
she cried out in that way, and when everyone laughed,
what I said to myself was something like this:
’We will take care of ourselves.’
I whispered something of the sort into her ears.
To tell you the truth I had come down off my perch.
The spirit of the other woman did that to me.
Before all the people gathered about I held my fiancée
close and we kissed. They thought it very sweet
of us to be so affected at the sight of each other.
What they would have thought had they known the truth
about me God only knows!
“Twice now I have said that
after that evening I never thought of the other woman
at all. That is partially true but, sometimes
in the evening when I am walking alone in the street
or in the park as we are walking now, and when evening
comes softly and quickly as it has come to-night,
the feeling of her comes sharply into my body and mind.
After that one meeting I never saw her again.
On the next day I was married and I have never gone
back into her street. Often however as I am walking
along as I am doing now, a quick sharp earthy feeling
takes possession of me. It is as though I were
a seed in the ground and the warm rains of the spring
had come. It is as though I were not a man but
a tree.
“And now you see I am married
and everything is all right. My marriage is to
me a very beautiful fact. If you were to say that
my marriage is not a happy one I could call you a
liar and be speaking the absolute truth. I have
tried to tell you about this other woman. There
is a kind of relief in speaking of her. I have
never done it before. I wonder why I was so silly
as to be afraid that I would give you the impression
I am not in love with my wife. If I did not instinctively
trust your understanding I would not have spoken.
As the matter stands I have a little stirred myself
up. To-night I shall think of the other woman.
That sometimes occurs. It will happen after I
have gone to bed. My wife sleeps in the next
room to mine and the door is always left open.
There will be a moon to-night, and when there is a
moon long streaks of light fall on her bed. I
shall awake at midnight to-night. She will be
lying asleep with one arm thrown over her head.
“What is it that I am now talking
about? A man does not speak of his wife lying
in bed. What I am trying to say is that, because
of this talk, I shall think of the other woman to-night.
My thoughts will not take the form they did during
the week before I was married. I will wonder
what has become of the woman. For a moment I will
again feel myself holding her close. I will think
that for an hour I was closer to her than I have ever
been to anyone else. Then I will think of the
time when I will be as close as that to my wife.
She is still, you see, an awakening woman. For
a moment I will close my eyes and the quick, shrewd,
determined eyes of that other woman will look into
mine. My head will swim and then I will quickly
open my eyes and see again the dear woman with whom
I have undertaken to live out my life. Then I
will sleep and when I awake in the morning it will
be as it was that evening when I walked out of my
dark apartment after having had the most notable experience
of my life. What I mean to say, you understand
is that, for me, when I awake, the other woman will
be utterly gone.”