Various

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 15, January, 1859


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looked relieved as I spoke thus lightly. "I should find it sad to die," he said. "Life looks bright to me even yet."

      This man was a coward. He dreaded that struggle, that humiliation of spirit, through which all must pass ere peace with Heaven is achieved. Yet more, perhaps, he dreaded that deeper struggle which ensues when we essay to tear Self from its throne in the heart, and place God thereon. As he said, life looked bright to him; and all his plans and purposes in life were for himself, his own advancement, his own well-being. It would have been hard to make the change; and he thought it was not necessary now, at least.

      No more was said upon the subject. Our days went on as before. There was a little music, some light reading, an occasional call from a friend,—and long pauses of rest between all these. And slowly, but surely, life failed, and the soul drew near its doom.

      I knew now that he loved me still; he talked of it sometimes when he woke suddenly, and did not at once remember where he was; I saw it, too, in his look, his manner; but we never breathed it to each other, and he did not think I knew.

      One night there was a great change; physicians were summoned in haste; there were hours of anxious watching. Toward morning he seemed a little better, and I was left alone with him. He slumbered quietly, but when he awoke there was a strange and solemn look in his face, such as I had never seen before. I knew what it must mean.

      "When Dr. Hammond comes, let me see him alone," he whispered.

      I made no objection; nothing could frustrate my purpose now.

      The physician came,—a kind old man, who had known us all from infancy. He was closeted awhile with William; then he came out, looking deeply moved.

      "Go to him,—comfort him, if you can," he said.

      "You have told him?" I asked.

      "Yes,—he insisted upon hearing the truth, and I knew he had got where it could make no difference. Poor fellow! it was a terrible blow."

      I wanted a few moments for reflection; I sent John in my stead. I locked myself in my own room, and tried to get the full weight of what I was going to do. I was about to meet him who had rejected my heart's best love, no longer in the flush and insolence of health and strength, but doomed, dying,—with a dark, hopeless eternity stretching out before his shuddering gaze. And when he turned to me in those last awful moments for solace and affection, I was to tell him that the girl he loved, the woman he adored, had since that one night kept the purpose of vengeance hot in her heart,—that for years her sole study had been to baffle and to wound him,—and that now, through all those months that she had been beside him, that he had looked to her as friend, helper, comforter, she had kept her deadly aim in view. She had deceived him with false hopes of recovery; she had turned again to the world the thoughts which he would fain have fixed on heaven; while he was loving her, she had hated him. She had darkened his life; she had ruined his soul.

      Oh, was not this a revenge worthy of the name?

      I went to him. He was sitting in the great easy-chair, propped with pillows; John had left the room, overcome by his feelings. Never shall I forget that face,—the despair of those eyes.

      I sat down by him and took his hand.

      "The Doctor has told you?" I murmured.

      "Yes,—and what is this world which I so soon must enter? I believe too much to have one moment's peace in view of what is coming. Oh, why did I not believe more before it was too late?"

      I kept silence a few minutes; then I said,—

      "Listen, William,—I have something to tell you."

      He looked eagerly toward me;—perhaps he thought even then, poor dupe, that it was some word of hope, that there was some chance for his recovery.

      Then I told him all,—all,—my lifelong hatred, my cherished purpose. Blank amazement was in the gaze that he turned upon me. I feared that impending death had blunted his senses, and that he did not fully comprehend.

      "You will remember now what I once told you," I cried, with savage joy; "for so surely as there is another world, in that world shall you live, and live to suffer, and to remember in your anguish why you suffer, and to whose hand you owe it."

      He understood well enough now. "Fiend!" he exclaimed, with a look of horror, and started to his feet. The effort, the emotion, were too much. Blood gushed from his lips; a frightful spasm convulsed his features; he fell back; he was gone!

      Yes,—he was gone! And my life's work was complete!

      I cannot tell what happened after that. I suppose they must have found him, and laid him out, and buried him; but I remember nothing of it. Since then I have lived in this great, gloomy house, with its barred doors and windows. Never since I came here have I seen a face that I knew. Maniacs are all about me; I meet them in the halls, the gardens; sometimes I hear the fiercer sort raving and dashing about their cells. But I do not feel afraid of them.

      It is strange how they all fancy that the rest are mad, and they the only sane ones. Some of them even go so far as to think that I have lost my reason. I heard one woman say, not long ago,—"Why, she has been mad these twenty years! She never was married in her life; but she believes all these things as if they were really so, and tells them over to anybody who will listen to her."

      Mad these twenty years! So young as I am, too! And I never married, and all my wrongs a maniac's raving! I was angry at first, and would have struck her; then I thought, "Poor thing! Why should I care? She does not know what she is saying."

      And I go about, seeing always before me that pallid, horror-stricken face; and wishing sometimes—oh, how vainly!—that I had listened to him that bright October day,—that I had been a happy wife, perchance a happy mother. But no, no! I must not think thus. Once I look at it in that way, my whole life becomes a terror, a remorse. I will not, must not, have it so.

      Then let me rejoice again, for I have had my revenge,—a great, a glorious revenge!

* * * * *

      LEFT BEHIND

        It was the autumn of the year;

        The strawberry-leaves were red and sere;

        October's airs were fresh and chill,

        When, pausing on the windy hill,

        The hill that overlooks the sea,

        You talked confidingly to me,

        Me, whom your keen artistic sight

        Has not yet learned to read aright,

        Since I have veiled my heart from you,

        And loved you better than you knew.

        You told me of your toilsome past,

        The tardy honors won at last,

        The trials borne, the conquests gained,

        The longed-for boon of Fame attained:

        I knew that every victory

        But lifted you away from me,—

        That every step of high emprise

        But left me lowlier in your eyes;

        I watched the distance as it grew,

        And loved you better than you knew.

        You did not see the bitter trace

        Of anguish sweep across my face;

        You did not hear my proud heart beat

        Heavy and slow beneath your feet;

        You thought of triumphs still unwon,

        Of glorious deeds as yet undone;—

        And I, the while you talked to me,

        I watched the gulls float lonesomely

        Till lost amid the hungry blue,

        And loved you better than you knew.

        You