Samson. O that torment should not be confined
To the body's wounds and sores,
But must secret passage find
To the inmost mind.
Dire inflammation, which no cooling herb
Or medicinal liquor can asswage,
Nor breath of vernal air from snowy Alp.
Sleep hath forsook and given me o'er
To death's benumming opium as my only cure,
Thence faintings, swoonings of despair,
And sense of heaven's desertion.
MILTON.--Samson Agonistes.
Hitherto I have chiefly followed the history of my hero, if hero in
any sense he can yet be called. Now I must leave him for a while,
and take up the story of the rest of the few persons concerned in my
tale.
Lady Emily had gone to Madeira, and Mr. Arnold had followed. Mrs.
Elton and Harry, and Margaret, of course, had gone to London.
Euphra was left alone at Arnstead.
A great alteration had taken place in this strange girl. The
servants were positively afraid of her now, from the butler down to
the kitchen-maid. She used to go into violent fits of passion, in
which the mere flash of her eyes was overpowering. These outbreaks
would be followed almost instantaneously by seasons of the deepest
dejection, in which she would confine herself to her room for hours,
or, lame as she was, wander about the house and the Ghost's Walk,
herself pale as a ghost, and looking meagre and wretched.
Also, she became subject to frequent fainting fits, the first of
which took place the night before Hugh's departure, after she had
returned to the house from her interview with him in the Ghost's
Walk. She was evidently miserable.
For this misery we know that there were very sufficient reasons,
without taking into account the fact that she had no one to
fascinate now. Her continued lameness, which her restlessness
aggravated, likewise gave her great cause for anxiety. But I
presume that, even during the early part of her confinement, her
mind had been thrown back upon itself, in that consciousness which
often arises in loneliness and suffering; and that even then she had
begun to feel that her own self was a worse tyrant than the count,
and made her a more wretched slave than any exercise of his unlawful
power could make her.
Some natures will endure an immense amount of misery before they
feel compelled to look there for help, whence all help and healing
comes. They cannot believe that there is verily an unseen
mysterious power, till the world and all that is in it has vanished
in the smoke of despair; till cause and effect is nothing to the
intellect, and possible glories have faded from the imagination;
then, deprived of all that made life pleasant or hopeful, the
immortal essence, lonely and wretched and unable to cease, looks up
with its now unfettered and wakened instinct, to the source of its
own life--to the possible God who, notwithstanding all the
improbabilities of his existence, may yet perhaps be, and may yet
perhaps hear his wretched creature that calls. In this loneliness
of despair, life must find The Life; for joy is gone, and life is
all that is left: it is compelled to seek its source, its root, its
eternal life. This alone remains as a possible thing. Strange
condition of despair into which the Spirit of God drives a man--a
condition in which the Best alone is the Possible!
Other simpler natures look up at once. Even before the first pang
has passed away, as by a holy instinct of celestial childhood, they
lift their eyes to the heavens whence cometh their aid. Of this
class Euphra was not. She belonged to the former. And yet even she
had begun to look upward, for the waters had closed above her head.
She betook herself to the one man of whom she had heard as knowing
about God. She wrote, but no answer came. Days and days passed
away, and there was no reply.
"Ah! just so!" she said, in bitterness. "And if I cried to God for
ever, I should hear no word of reply. If he be, he sits apart, and
leaves the weak to be the prey of the bad. What cares he?"
Yet, as she spoke, she rose, and, by a sudden impulse, threw herself
on the floor, and cried for the first time:
She rose at least with a little hope, and with the feeling that if
she could cry to him, it might be that he could listen to her. It
seemed natural to pray; it seemed to come of itself: that could not
be except it was first natural for God to hear. The foundation of
her own action must be in him who made her; for her call could be
only a response after all.
The time passed wearily by. Dim, slow November days came on, with
the fall of the last brown shred of those clouds of living green
that had floated betwixt earth and heaven. Through the bare boughs
of the overarching avenue of the Ghost's Walk, themselves living
skeletons, she could now look straight up to the blue sky, which had
been there all the time. And she had begun to look up to a higher
heaven, through the bare skeleton shapes of life; for the foliage of
joy had wholly vanished--shall we say in order that the children of
the spring might come?--certainly in order first that the blue sky
of a deeper peace might reflect itself in the hitherto darkened
waters of her soul.
Perhaps some of my readers may think that she had enough to repent
of to keep her from weariness. She had plenty to repent of, no
doubt; but repentance, between the paroxysms of its bitterness, is a
very dreary and November-like state of the spiritual weather. For
its foggy mornings and cheerless noons cannot believe in the sun of
spring, soon to ripen into the sun of summer; and its best time is
the night, that shuts out the world and weeps its fill of slow
tears. But she was not altogether so blameworthy as she may have
appeared. Her affectations had not been altogether false. She
valued, and in a measure possessed, the feelings for which she
sought credit. She had a genuine enjoyment of nature, though after
a sensuous, Keats-like fashion, not a Wordsworthian. It was the
body, rather than the soul, of nature that she loved--its beauty
rather than its truth. Had her love of nature been of the deepest,
she would have turned aside to conceal her emotions rather than have
held them up as allurements in the eyes of her companion. But as no
body and no beauty can exist without soul and truth, she who loves
the former must at least be capable of loving the deeper essence to
which they owe their very existence.
This view of her character is borne out by her love of music and her
liking for Hugh. Both were genuine. Had the latter been either more
or less genuine than it was, the task of fascination would have been
more difficult, and its success less complete. Whether her own
feelings became further involved than she had calculated upon, I
cannot tell; but surely it says something for her, in any case, that
she desired to retain Hugh as her friend, instead of hating him
because he had been her lover.
How glad she would have been of Harry now! The days crawled one
after the other like weary snakes. She tried to read the New
Testament: it was to her like a mouldy chamber of worm-eaten
parchments, whose windows had not been opened to the sun or the wind
for centuries; and in which the dust of the decaying leaves choked
the few beams that found their way through the age-blinded panes.
This state of things could not have lasted long; for Euphra would
have died. It lasted, however, until she felt that she had been
leading a false, worthless life; that she had been casting from her
every day the few remaining fragments of truth and reality that yet
kept her nature from falling in a heap of helpless ruin; that she
had never been a true friend to any one; that she was of no
value--fit for no one's admiration, no one's love. She must leave
her former self, like a dead body, behind her, and rise into a purer
air of life and reality, else she would perish with that everlasting
death which is the disease and corruption of the soul itself.
To those who know anything of such experiences, it will not be
surprising that such feelings as these should be alternated with
fierce bursts of passion. The old self then started up with
feverish energy, and writhed for life. Never any one tried to be
better, without, for a time, seeming to himself, perhaps to others,
to be worse. For the suffering of the spirit weakens the brain
itself, and the whole physical nature groans under it; while the
energy spent in the effort to awake, and arise from the dust, leaves
the regions previously guarded by prudence naked to the wild inroads
of the sudden destroying impulses born of suffering, self-sickness,
and hatred. As in the delirious patient, they would dash to the
earth whatever comes first within reach, as if the thing first
perceived, and so (by perception alone) brought into contact with
the suffering, were the cause of all the distress.
One day a letter arrived for her. She had had no letter from any
one for weeks. Yet, when she saw the direction, she flung it from
her. It was from Mrs. Elton, whom she disliked, because she found
her utterly uninteresting and very stupid.
Poor Mrs. Elton laid no claim to the contraries of these epithets.
But in proportion as she abjured thought, she claimed speech, both
by word of mouth and by letter. Why not? There was nothing in it.
She considered reason as an awful enemy to the soul, and obnoxious
to God, especially when applied to find out what he means when he
addresses us as reasonable creatures. But speech? There was no
harm in that. Perhaps it was some latent conviction that this power
of speech was the chief distinction between herself and the lower
animals, that made her use it so freely, and at the same time open
her purse so liberally to the Hospital for Orphan Dogs and Cats. Had
it not been for her own dire necessity, the fact that Mrs. Elton was
religious would have been enough to convince Euphra that there could
not possibly be anything in religion.
The letter lay unopened till next day--a fact easy to account for,
improbable as it may seem; for besides writing as largely as she
talked, and less amusingly because more correctly, Mrs. Elton wrote
such an indistinct though punctiliously neat hand, that the reading
of a letter of hers involved no small amount of labour. But the sun
shining out next morning, Euphra took courage to read it, while
drinking her coffee, although she could not expect to make that
ceremony more pleasant thereby. It contained an invitation to visit
Mrs. Elton at her house in --- Street, Hyde Park, with the assurance
that, now that everything was arranged, they had plenty of room for
her. Mrs. Elton was sure she must be lonely at Arnstead; and Mrs.
Horton could, no doubt, be trusted--and so on.
Had this letter arrived a few weeks earlier, Euphra would have
infused into her answer a skilful concoction of delicate contempt;
not for the amusement of knowing that Mrs. Elton would never
discover a trace of it, but simply for a relief to her own dislike.
Now she would have written a plain letter, containing as brief and
as true an excuse as she could find, had it not been, that, inclosed
in Mrs. Elton's note she found another, which ran thus:
"DEAR EUPHRA,--Do come and see us. I do not like London at all
without you. There are no happy days here like those we had at
Arnstead with Mr. Sutherland. Mrs. Elton and Margaret are very kind
to me. But I wish you would come. Do, do, do. Please do.
"The dear boy!" said Euphra, with a gush of pure and grateful
affection; "I will go and see him."
Harry had begun to work with his masters, and was doing his best,
which was very good. If his heart was not so much in it as when he
was studying with his big brother, he gained a great benefit from
the increase of exercise to his will, in the doing of what was less
pleasant. Ever since Hugh had given his faculties a right
direction, and aided him by healthful manly sympathy, he had been
making up for the period during which childhood had been protracted
into boyhood; and now he was making rapid progress.
When Euphra arrived, Harry rushed to the hall to meet her. She took
him in her arms, and burst into tears. Her tears drew forth his.
He stroked her pale face, and said:
"I was afraid you did not love me, Euphra; but now I am sure you
do."
"Indeed I do. I am very sorry for everything that made you think I
did not love you."
"No, no. It was all my fancy. Now we shall be very happy."
And so Harry was. And Euphra, through means of Harry, began to gain
a little of what is better than most kinds of happiness, because it
is nearest to the best happiness--I mean peace. This foretaste of
rest came to her from the devotedness with which she now applied
herself to aid the intellect, which she had unconsciously repressed
and stunted before. She took Harry's books when he had gone to bed;
and read over all his lessons, that she might be able to assist him
in preparing them; venturing thus into some regions of labour into
which ladies are too seldom conducted by those who instruct them.
This produced in her quite new experiences. One of these was, that
in proportion as she laboured for Harry, hope grew for herself. It
was likewise of the greatest immediate benefit that the intervals of
thought, instead of lying vacant to melancholy, or the vapours that
sprung from the foregoing strife of the spiritual elements, should
be occupied by healthy mental exercise.
Still, however, she was subject to great vicissitudes of feeling. A
kind of peevishness, to which she had formerly been a stranger, was
but too ready to appear, even when she was most anxious, in her
converse with Harry, to behave well to him. But the pure
forgiveness of the boy was wonderful. Instead of plaguing himself
to find out the cause of her behaviour, or resenting it in the
least, he only laboured, by increased attention and submission, to
remove it; and seemed perfectly satisfied when it was followed by a
kind word, which to him was repentance, apology, amends, and
betterment, all in one. When he had thus driven away the evil
spirit, there was Euphra her own self. So perfectly did she see,
and so thoroughly appreciate this kindness and love of Harry, that
he began to look to her like an angel of forgiveness come to live a
boy's life, that he might do an angel's work.
Her health continued very poor. She suffered constantly from more
or less headache, and at times from faintings. But she had not for
some time discovered any signs of somnambulism.
Of this peculiarity her friends were entirely ignorant. The
occasions, indeed, on which it had manifested itself to an excessive
degree, had been but few.