December 25th. — Last Christmas
I was a bride, with a heart overflowing with present
bliss, and full of ardent hopes for the future, though
not unmingled with foreboding fears. Now I am
a wife: my bliss is sobered, but not destroyed;
my hopes diminished, but not departed; my fears increased,
but not yet thoroughly confirmed; and, thank heaven,
I am a mother too. God has sent me a soul to
educate for heaven, and give me a new and calmer bliss,
and stronger hopes to comfort me.
Dec. 25th, 1823. — Another year
is gone. My little Arthur lives and thrives.
He is healthy, but not robust, full of gentle playfulness
and vivacity, already affectionate, and susceptible
of passions and emotions it will be long ere he can
find words to express. He has won his father’s
heart at last; and now my constant terror is, lest
he should be ruined by that father’s thoughtless
indulgence. But I must beware of my own weakness
too, for I never knew till now how strong are a parent’s
temptations to spoil an only child.
I have need of consolation in my son,
for (to this silent paper I may confess it) I have
but little in my husband. I love him still;
and he loves me, in his own way — but oh, how
different from the love I could have given, and once
had hoped to receive! How little real sympathy
there exists between us; how many of my thoughts and
feelings are gloomily cloistered within my own mind;
how much of my higher and better self is indeed unmarried
— doomed either to harden and sour in the sunless
shade of solitude, or to quite degenerate and fall
away for lack of nutriment in this unwholesome soil!
But, I repeat, I have no right to complain; only let
me state the truth — some of the truth, at least,
— and see hereafter if any darker truths will
blot these pages. We have now been full two
years united; the ‘romance’ of our attachment
must be worn away. Surely I have now got down
to the lowest gradation in Arthur’s affection,
and discovered all the evils of his nature: if
there be any further change, it must be for the better,
as we become still more accustomed to each other;
surely we shall find no lower depth than this.
And, if so, I can bear it well — as well, at
least, as I have borne it hitherto.
Arthur is not what is commonly called
a bad man: he has many good qualities; but he
is a man without self-restraint or lofty aspirations,
a lover of pleasure, given up to animal enjoyments:
he is not a bad husband, but his notions of matrimonial
duties and comforts are not my notions. Judging
from appearances, his idea of a wife is a thing to
love one devotedly, and to stay at home to wait upon
her husband, and amuse him and minister to his comfort
in every possible way, while he chooses to stay with
her; and, when he is absent, to attend to his interests,
domestic or otherwise, and patiently wait his return,
no matter how he may be occupied in the meantime.
Early in spring he announced his intention
of going to London: his affairs there demanded
his attendance, he said, and he could refuse it no
longer. He expressed his regret at having to
leave me, but hoped I would amuse myself with the
baby till he returned.
‘But why leave me?’ I
said. ’I can go with you: I can be
ready at any time.’
‘You would not take that child to town?’
‘Yes; why not?’
The thing was absurd: the air
of the town would be certain to disagree with him,
and with me as a nurse; the late hours and London
habits would not suit me under such circumstances;
and altogether he assured me that it would be excessively
troublesome, injurious, and unsafe. I over-ruled
his objections as well as I could, for I trembled
at the thoughts of his going alone, and would sacrifice
almost anything for myself, much even for my child,
to prevent it; but at length he told me, plainly,
and somewhat testily, that he could not do with me:
he was worn out with the baby’s restless nights,
and must have some repose. I proposed separate
apartments; but it would not do.
‘The truth is, Arthur,’
I said at last, ’you are weary of my company,
and determined not to have me with you. You might
as well have said so at once.’
He denied it; but I immediately left
the room, and flew to the nursery, to hide my feelings,
if I could not soothe them, there.
I was too much hurt to express any
further dissatisfaction with his plans, or at all
to refer to the subject again, except for the necessary
arrangements concerning his departure and the conduct
of affairs during his absence, till the day before
he went, when I earnestly exhorted him to take care
of himself and keep out of the way of temptation.
He laughed at my anxiety, but assured me there was
no cause for it, and promised to attend to my advice.
‘I suppose it is no use asking
you to fix a day for your return?’ said I.
’Why, no; I hardly can, under
the circumstances; but be assured, love, I shall not
be long away.’
‘I don’t wish to keep
you a prisoner at home,’ I replied; ’I
should not grumble at your staying whole months away
— if you can be happy so long without me —
provided I knew you were safe; but I don’t like
the idea of your being there among your friends, as
you call them.’
’Pooh, pooh, you silly girl!
Do you think I can’t take care of myself?’
‘You didn’t last time.
But this time, Arthur,’ I added, earnestly,
’show me that you can, and teach me that I need
not fear to trust you!’
He promised fair, but in such a manner
as we seek to soothe a child. And did he keep
his promise? No; and henceforth I can never
trust his word. Bitter, bitter confession!
Tears blind me while I write. It was early
in March that he went, and he did not return till
July. This time he did not trouble himself to
make excuses as before, and his letters were less
frequent, and shorter and less affectionate, especially
after the first few weeks: they came slower
and slower, and more terse and careless every time.
But still, when I omitted writing, he complained of
my neglect. When I wrote sternly and coldly,
as I confess I frequently did at the last, he blamed
my harshness, and said it was enough to scare him
from his home: when I tried mild persuasion,
he was a little more gentle in his replies, and promised
to return; but I had learnt, at last, to disregard
his promises.