THE efforts which were made to save
Miss Loring, only had the effect to render the sacrifice
more acutely painful. Evil instead of good followed
Mrs. Denison’s appeals to Mr. Dexter. They
served but to arouse the demon jealousy in his heart.
Upon Hendrickson’s movements he set the wariest
surveillance. Twice, since that never-to-be-forgotten
evening he met the young man in company when Jessie
was present. With an eye that never failed for
an instant in watchfulness, he noted his countenance
and movements; and he kept on his betrothed as keen
an observation. Several times he left her alone,
in order to give Hendrickson an opportunity to get
into her company. But there was too studied avoidance
of contact. Had they met casually and exchanged
a few pleasant words, suspicion would have been allayed.
As it was, jealousy gave its own interpretation to
their conduct.
On the last of these occasions referred
to, from a position where he deemed himself beyond
the danger of casual observation, Hendrickson searched
with his eyes for the object of his undying regard.
He saw her, sitting alone, not far distant. Her
manner was that of one lost in thought—the
expression of her countenance dreamy, and overcast
with a shade of sadness. How long he had been
gazing upon her face, the young man could not have
told, so absorbed was he in the feelings her presence
had awakened, when turning almost involuntarily his
eyes caught the gleam of another pair of eyes that
were fixed intently upon him. So suddenly had
he turned, that the individual observing him was left
without opportunity to change in any degree the expression
of his eyes or countenance. It was almost malignant.
That individual was Leon Dexter.
In spite of himself, Hendrickson showed
confusion, and was unable to return the steady gaze
that rested upon him. His eyes fell. When
he looked up again, which was in a moment, Dexter
had left his position, and was crossing the room towards
Miss Loring.
“It is the fiend Jealousy!”
said Hendrickson, as he withdrew into another room.
“Well—let it poison all the springs
of his happiness, as he has poisoned mine! I
care not how keen may be his sufferings.”
He spoke with exceeding bitterness.
A few weeks later, and the dreaded
consummation came. In honor of the splendid alliance
formed by her niece, Mrs. Loring gave a most brilliant
wedding party, and the lovely bride stood forth in
all her beauty and grace—the admired and
the envied. A few thought her rather pale—some
said her eyes were too dreamy—and a gossip
or two declared that the rich young husband had only
gained her person, while her heart was in the keeping
of another. “She has not married the man,
but his wealth and position!” was the unguarded
remark of one of these thoughtless individuals; and
by a singular fatality, the sentence reached the ears
of Mr. Dexter. Alas! It was but throwing
another fagot on the already kindling fires of unhallowed
jealousy. The countenance of the young husband
became clouded; and it was only by an effort that
he could arouse himself, and assume a gay exterior.
The prize after which he had sprung with such eager
haste, distancing all competitors, was now his own.
Binding vows had been uttered, and the minister had
said—“What God hath joined together,
let not man put asunder.” Yet, even in his
hour of triumph, came the troubled conviction that,
though he had gained the beautiful person of his bride,
he could not say surely that her more beautiful soul
was all his own.
And so there was a death’s head
at his feast; and the costly wine was dashed with
bitterness.
Of what was passing in the mind of
Dexter his bride had no knowledge; nor did her keen
instincts warn her that the demon of jealousy was
already in his heart. Suffering, and the colder
spirit of endurance that followed, had rendered her,
in a certain sense, obtuse in this direction.
A full-grown, strong woman, had Jessie
become suddenly. The gentle, tenderly-loving,
earnest, simple-hearted girl, could never have sustained
the part it was hers to play. Unless a new and
more vigorous life had been born in her, she must
have fallen. But now she stood erect, shading
her heart from her own eyes, and gathering from principle
strength for duty. Very pure—very true
she was. Yet, in her new relation, purity and
truth were shrined in a cold exterior. It were
not possible to be otherwise. She did not love
her husband in any thing like the degree she was capable
of loving. It was not in him to find the deep
places of her heart. But true to him she could
be, and true to him it was her purpose to remain.
Taking all the antecedents of this
case, we will not wonder, when told that quite from
the beginning of so inharmonious a union, Dexter found
himself disappointed in his bride. He was naturally
ardent and demonstrative; while, of necessity, she
was calm, cold, dignified—or simply passive.
She was never unamiable or capricious; and rarely
opposed him in anything reasonable or unreasonable.
But she was reserved almost to constraint at times—a
vestal at the altar, rather than a loving wife.
He was very proud of her, as well he might be; for
she grew peerless in beauty. But her beauty was
from the development of taste, thought, and intellect.
It was not born of the affections. Yes, Leon
Dexter was sadly disappointed. He wanted something
more than all this.
Lifted from an almost obscure position,
as the dependent niece of Mrs. Loring, the young wife
of Mr. Dexter found herself in a larger circle, and
in the society of men and women of more generally
cultivated tastes. She soon became a centre of
attraction; for taste attracts taste, mind seeks mind.
And where beauty is added, the possessor has invincible
charms. It did not escape the eyes of Dexter
that, in the society of other men, his young wife was
gayer and more vivacious (sic) that when with him.
This annoyed him so much, that he began to act capriciously,
as it seemed to Jessie. Sometimes he would require
her to leave a pleasant company long before the usual
hour, and sometimes he would refuse to go with her
to parties or places of amusement, yet give no reasons
that were satisfactory. On these occasions, a
moody spirit would come over him. If she questioned,
he answered with evasion, or covert ill-nature.
The closer union of an external marriage
did not invest the husband with any new attractions
for his wife. The more intimately she knew him,
the deeper became her repugnance. He had no interior
qualities in harmony with her own. An intensely
selfish man, it was impossible for him to inspire
a feeling of love in a mind so pure in its impulses,
and so acute in its perceptions. If Mrs. Dexter
had been a worldly-minded woman—a lover
of—or one moved by the small ambitions
of fashionable life—her husband would have
been all well enough. She would have been adjoined
to him in a way altogether satisfactory to her tastes,
and they would have circled their orbit of life without
an eccentric motion. But the deeper capacities
and higher needs of Mrs. Dexter, made this union quite
another thing. Her husband had no power to fill
her soul—to quicken her life-pulses—to
stir the silent chords of her heart with the deep,
pure, ravishing melodies they were made to give forth.
That she was superior to him mentally, Mr. Dexter
was not long in discovering. Very rapidly did
her mind, quickened by a never-dying pain, spring
forward towards its culmination. Of its rapid
growth in power and acuteness, he only had evidence
when he listened to her in conversation with men and
women of large acquirements and polished tastes.
Alone with him, her mind seemed to grow duller every
day; and if he applied the spur, it was only to produce
a start, not a movement onwards.
Alas for Leon Dexter! He had
caged his beautiful bird; but her song had lost, already,
its ravishing sweetness.