The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Summer Evening's Dream, by Edward Bellamy

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Title: A Summer Evening's Dream
       1898

Author: Edward Bellamy

Release Date: September 21, 2007 [EBook #22705]
Last Updated: December 17, 2012

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SUMMER EVENING'S DREAM ***




Produced by David Widger





 




A SUMMER EVENING'S DREAM  




By Edward Bellamy 

1898  





It is a village street, with great elms on either side, while along the  middle stands another row set in a narrow strip of grassy common, so that  the street and roadway are in reality double. The dwellings on either side  are not only widely parted by the broad street, but are still further  isolated, each in its large garden of ancient fruit trees. It is four  o'clock of a sunny August afternoon, and a quiet, Sabbath-like but for its  lazy voluptuousness, broods over the scene. No carriage, or even  pedestrian, has passed for an hour. The occasional voices of children at  play in some garden, the latching of a gate far down the street, the dying  fall of a drowsy chanticleer, are but the punctuation of the poem of  summer silence that has been flowing on all the afternoon. Upon the  tree-tops the sun blazes brightly, and between their stems are glimpses of  outlying meadows, which simmer in the heat as if about to come to a boil.  But the shadowed street offers a cool and refreshing vista to the eye, and  a veritable valley of refuge to the parched and dusty traveler along the  highway.  

On the broad piazza of one of the quaint old-fashioned houses, behind a  needless screen of climbing woodbine, two girls are whiling away the  afternoon. One of them is lounging in a lassy rocking-chair, while the  other sits more primly and is industriously sewing.  

I suppose you 'll be glad enough to see George when he comes to-night to  take you back to the city? I'm afraid you find it pretty dull here,said  the latter, with an intonation of uneasy responsibility sufficiently  attesting that the brilliant-looking girl opposite was a guest.  

That young lady, when addressed, was indulging in a luxurious country  yawn, an operation by no means to be hurried, but to be fully and lazily  enjoyed in all its several and long-drawn stages, and as thus practiced a  wonderfully calming and soporific relaxation wholly unknown to the fretted  denizens of cities, whose yawn is one of irritation and not of rest.I do  so enjoy your Plainfield yawns, Lucy,she said when she had quite  finished. "Were you saying that it was a little dull? Well, perhaps it is,  but then the trees and things seem to be' enjoying themselves so hugely  that it would be selfish to make a fuss, even if it is n't exactly my kind  of fun."  

"Your kind of fun is due by the six-o'clock stage, I believe."  

The other laughed and said, "I wish you would n't make another allusion to  George. I think of him so much that I 'm ashamed, as it is. I 'm sure this  is a very aggravating place for an engaged girl to be at. One gets so  dreadfully sentimental with nothing to take up the mind, especially with  such monstrous moons as you have. I got fairly frightened of the one last  night. It drew me out through my eyes like a big plaster."  

"Mabel French!"  

"I don't care; it did. That was just the feeling."  

There was no hurry about talking, for the rich, mellow summer silence had  a body to it that prevented pauses from seeming empty, and it might have  been half an hour afterward that Mabel suddenly leaned forward, putting  her face close to the vine-trellis, and cried in a low voice, "Who's that?  Po tell me! They're the very first persons who have gone by this  afternoon, I do believe."  

A pretty phaeton was slowly passing, containing an elderly gentleman and  lady.  

"Oh, that is only Lawyer Morgan and old Miss Rood," replied Lucy, just  glancing up, and then down again. "They go out driving once a week  regularly, and always at about this time in the afternoon."  

"They look like afternoon sort of people," said Mabel. "But why does n't  Lawyer Morgan take out his wife?"  

"He has n't got any. Miss Rood comes nearest to that. Oh, no, you needn't  open your eyes; there's not a properer old maid in town, or old bachelor  either, for that matter."  

"Are they relatives?"  

"No, indeed."  

"How long has this Platonic romance been going on, pray?"  

"Oh, ever since they were young,forty years, perhaps. I only know  by tradition, you see. It began ages before my day. They say she was very  pretty once. Old Aunty Perkins remembers that she was quite the belle of  the village as a girl. It seems strange, does n't it?"  

"Tell me the whole story," said Mabel, turning round so as to face Lucy as  the phaeton passed out of sight.  

"There's not much to tell. Mr. Morgan has always lived here, and so has  Miss Rood. He lives alone with a housekeeper in that fine house at the end  of the street, and she entirely alone in that little white house over  there among the apple-trees. All the people who knew them when they were  young are dead, gone away, or moved off. They are relics of a past  generation, and are really about as much shut up to each other for  sympathy as an old married couple."  

"Well, why on earth are n't they married?"  

"People hereabouts got tired of asking that full thirty years ago,"  replied Lucy, with a little shrug. "Even the gossips long since wore out  the subject, and I believe we have all of us forgotten that there is  anything peculiar about their relations. He calls on her two or three  times a week, and takes her out driving on pleasant days; escorts her to  places of amusement or social gatherings when either of them cares to go,  which is n't often; and wherever they are, people take it for granted they  will pair off together. He is never seen with any other lady."  

"It's very strange," said Mabel thoughtfully, "and I'm sure it's very  romantic. Queer old couple! I wonder how they really feel toward each  other, and whether they would n't like to be married?"  

Awhile after she suddenly demanded, "Don't you think Miss Rood looks like  me?"  

Lucy laughed at first, but upon closer inspection of the fair questioner  admitted that there might be some such resemblance as the shriveled apples  brought up from the cellar in spring bear to the plump, rosy-cheeked  beauties that went down in October.  

If Mr. Morgan and Miss Rood, as they rode past, had chanced to overhear  Mabel's question why they had not married, it would have affected them  very differently. He would have been startled by the novelty of an idea  that had not occurred to him in twenty years, but the blush on her cheek  would have been one of painful consciousness.  

As boy and girl they had been each other's chosen companion, and as young  man and maiden their childish preference had bloomed into a reciprocal  love. Thanks to the freedom and simplicity of village life, they enjoyed  as lovers a constant and easy familiarity and daily association almost as  complete in sympathy of mind and heart as anything marriage could offer.  There were none of the usual obstacles to incite them to matrimony. They  were never even formally engaged, so wholly did they take it for granted  that they should marry. It was so much a matter of course that there was  no hurry at all about it; and besides, so long as they had it to look  forward to, the foreground of life was illuminated for them: it was still  morning. Mr. Morgan was constitutionally of a dreamy and unpractical turn,  a creature of habits and a victim of ruts; and as years rolled on he  became more and more satisfied with these half-friendly, half-loverlike  relations. He never found the time when it seemed an object to marry, and  now, for very many years, the idea had not even occurred to him as  possible; and so far was he from the least suspicion that Miss Rood's  experience had not been precisely similar to his own, that he often  congratulated himself on the fortunate coincidence.  

Time cures much, and many years ago Miss Hood had recovered from the first  bitterness of discovering that his love had become insensibly transformed  into a very tender but perfectly peaceful friendship. No one but him had  ever touched her heart, and she had no interest in life besides him. Since  she was not to be his wife, she was glad to be his lifelong, tender,  self-sacrificing friend. So she raked the ashes over the fire in her  heart, and left him to suppose that it had gone out as in his. Nor was she  without compensation in their friendship. It was with a delightful thrill  that she felt how fully in mind and heart he leaned and depended upon her,  and the unusual and romantic character of their relations in some degree  consoled her for the disappointment of womanly aspirations by a feeling of  distinction. She was not like other women: her lot was set apart and  peculiar. She looked down upon her sex. The conventionality of women's  lives renders their vanity peculiarly susceptible to a suggestion that  their destiny is in any respect unique, a fact that has served the  turn of many a seducer before now. To-day, after returning from his drive  with Miss Rood, Mr. Morgan had walked in his garden, and as the evening  breeze arose, it bore to his nostrils that first indescribable flavor of  autumn which warns us that the soul of Summer has departed from her yet  glowing body. He was very sensitive to these changes of the year, and,  obeying an impulse that had been familiar to him in all unusual moods his  life long, he left the house after tea and turned his steps down the  street. As he stopped at Miss Rood's gate, Lucy, Mabel, and George Hammond  were under the apple-trees in the garden opposite.  

"Look, Mabel! There's Mr. Morgan going to call on Miss Rood," said Lucy  softly.  

"Oh, do look, George!" said Mabel eagerly.That old gentleman has been  paying court to an old maid over in that little house for forty years. And  to think,she added in a lower tone, intended for his private ear, "what  a fuss you make about waiting six months!"  

Humph! You please to forget that it's easier to wait for some things than  for others. Six months of my kind of waiting, I take it, require more  patience than forty years of hisor any other man's,he added, with  increased emphasis.  

"Be quiet, sir!" replied Mabel, answering his look of unruly admiration  with one of half pique.I 'm not a sugar-plum, that's not enjoyed till  it's in the mouth. If you have n't got me now, you 'll never have me. If  being engaged isn't enough, you don't deserve to be married.And then,  seeing the blank expression with which he looked down at her, she added  with a prescient resigned-ness, "I 'm afraid, dear, you 'll be so  disappointed when we 're married, if you find this so tedious."  

Lucy had discreetly wandered away, and of how they made it up there were  no witnesses. But it seems likely that they did so, for shortly after they  wandered away together down the darkening street.  

Like most of the Plainfield houses, that at which Mr. Morgan turned in  stood well back from the street. At a side window, still further sheltered  from view by a gyringa-bush at the house corner, sat a little woman with a  small, pale face, the still attractive features perceptibly sharpened by  years, of which the half-gray hair bore further testimony. The eyes, just  now fixed absently upon the dusking landscape, were light gray and a  little faded, while around the lips there were crow's-feet, especially  when they were pressed together, as now, in an unsatisfied, almost  pathetic look, evidently habitual to her face when in repose. There was  withal something in her features that so reminded you of Mr. Morgan that  any one conversant with the facts of his life-romance would have at once  inferredthough by just what logic he might not be able to explainthat  this must be Miss Eood. It is well known that long-wedded couples often  gain at length a certain resemblance in feature and manner; and although  these two were not married, yet their intimacy of a lifetime was perhaps  the reason why her face bore when in repose something of that seer-like  expression which communion with the bodiless shapes of memory had given to  his.  

The latching of the gate broke up her depressing reverie, and banished the  pinched and pining look from her features. Among the neighbors Miss Rood  was sometimes called a sour old maid, but the face she kept for Mr. Morgan  would never have suggested that idea to the most ill-natured critic.  

He stopped at the window, near which the walk passed to the doorway, and  stood leaning on the sill,a tall, slender figure, stooping a  little, with smooth, scholarly face, and thin iron-gray hair. His only  noticeable feature was a pair of eyes whose expression and glow indicated  an imaginative temperament. It was pleasant to observe the relieved  restlessness in the look and manner of the two friends, as if at the mere  being in each other's presence, though neither seemed in any haste to  exchange even the words of formal greeting.  

At length she said, in a tone of quiet satisfaction, "I knew you would  come, for I was sure this deathly autumn's flavor would make you restless.  Is n't it strange how it affects the nerves of memory, and makes one sad  with thinking of all the sweet, dear days that are dead?"  

"Yes, yes," he answered eagerly; "I can think of nothing else. Do they not  seem wonderfully clear and near to-night? To-night, of all nights in the  year, if the figures and scenes of memory can be reëmbodied in visible  forms, they ought to become so to the eyes that strain and yearn for  them."  

"What a fanciful idea, Robert!"  

"I don't know that it is; I don't feel sure. Nobody understands the  mystery of this Past, or what are the conditions of existence in that  world. These memories, these forms and faces, that are so near, so almost  warm and visible that we find ourselves smiling on the vacant air where  they seem to be, are they not real and living?"  

"You don't mean you believe in ghosts?"  

I am not talking of ghosts of the dead, but of ghosts of the past,  memories of scenes or persons, whether the persons are dead or not  of our own selves as well as others. Why,he continued, his voice  softening into a passionate, yearning tenderness, "the figure I would give  most to see just once more is yourself as a girl, as I remember you in the  sweet grace and beauty of your maidenhood. Ah, well! ah, well!"  

"Don't!" she cried involuntarily, while her features contracted in sudden  pain.  

In the years during which his passion for her had been cooling into a  staid friendship, his imagination had been recurring with constantly  increasing fondness and a dreamy passion to the memory of her girlhood.  And the cruelest part of it was that he so unconsciously and  unquestioningly assumed that she could not have identity enough with that  girlish ideal to make his frequent glowing references to it even  embarrassing. Generally, however, she heard and made no sign, but the  suddenness of his outburst just now had taken her off her guard.  

He glanced up with some surprise at her exclamation, but was too much  interested in his subject to take much notice of it. "You know," he said,  there are great differences in the distinctness with which we can bring  up our memories. Very well! The only question is, What is the limit to  that distinctness, or is there any? Since we know there are such wide  degrees in distinctness, the burden of proof rests on those who would  prove that those degrees stop short of any particular point. Don't you  see, then, that it might be possible to see them?And to enforce his  meaning he laid his hand lightly on hers as it rested on the window-seat.  

She withdrew it instantly from the contact, and a slight flush tinged her  sallow cheeks. The only outward trace of her memory of their youthful  relations was the almost prudish chariness of her person by which she  indicated a sense of the line to be drawn between the former lover and the  present friend.  

"Something in your look just now," he said, regarding her musingly, as one  who seeks to trace the lineaments of a dead face in a living one,reminds  me of you as you used to sit in this very window as a girl, and I stood  just here, and we picked out stars together. There! now it's gone;and he  turned away regretfully.  

She looked at his averted face with a blank piteousness which revealed all  her secret. She would not have had him see it for worlds, but it was a  relief just for a moment to rest her features in the sad cast which the  muscles had grown tired in repressing. The autumn scent rose stronger as  the air grew damp, and he stood breathing it in, and apparently feeling  its influence like some Delphian afflatus.  

"Is there anything, Mary,is there anything so beautiful as that  light of eternity that rests on the figures of memory? Who that has once  felt it can care for the common daylight of the present any more, or take  pleasure in its prosaic groups?"  

You'll certainly catch cold standing in that wet grass; do come in and  let me shut the blinds,she said, for she had found cheerful lamplight  the best corrective for his vagaries.  

So he came in and sat in his special arm-chair, and they chatted about  miscellaneous village topics for an hour. The standpoint from which they  canvassed Plainfield people and things was a peculiarly outside one. Their  circle of two was like a separate planet from which they observed the  world. Their tone was like, and yet quite unlike, that in which a  long-married couple discuss their acquaintances; for, while their  intellectual intimacy was perfect, their air expressed a constant mutual  deference and solicitude of approbation not to be confounded with the  terrible familiarity of matrimony; and at the same time they constituted a  self-sufficient circle, apart from the society around them, as man and  wife cannot. Man and wife are so far merged as to feel themselves a unit  over against society. They are too much identified to find in each other  that sense of support and countenance which requires a feeling of the  exteriority of our friend's life to our own. If these two should marry,  they would shortly find themselves impelled to seek refuge in conventional  relations with that society of which now they were calmly independent.  

At length Mr. Morgan rose and threw open the blinds. The radiance of the  full harvest-moon so flooded the room that Miss Eood was fain to blow out  the poor lamp for compassion. "Let us take a walk," he said.  

The streets were empty and still, and they walked in silence, spelled by  the perfect beauty of the evening. The dense shadows of the elms lent a  peculiarly rich effect to the occasional bars and patches of moonlight on  the street floor; the white houses gleamed among their orchards; and here  and there, between the dark tree-stems, there were glimpses of the shining  surface of the broad outlying meadows, which looked like a surrounding  sea.  

Miss Rood was startled to see how the witchery of the scene possessed her  companion. His face took on a set, half-smiling expression, and he dropped  her arm as if they had arrived at the place of entertainment to which he  had been escorting her. He no longer walked with measured pace, but glided  along with a certain stealthiness, peering on this side and that down  moony vistas and into shadow-bowers, as if half-expecting, if he might  step lightly enough, to catch a glimpse of some sort of dream-people  basking there.  

Nor could Miss Rood herself resist the impression the moony landscape gave  of teeming with subtle forms of life, escaping the grosser senses of human  beings, but perceptible by their finer parts. Each cosy nook of light and  shadow was yet warm from some presence that had just left it. The  landscape fairly stirred with ethereal forms of being beneath the  fertilizing moon-rays, as the earth-mould wakes into physical life under  the sun's heat. The yellow moonlight looked warm as spirits might count  warmth. The air was electric with the thrill of circumambient existence.  There was the sense of pressure, of a throng. It would have been  impossible to feel lonely. The pulsating sounds of the insect world seemed  the rhythm to which the voluptuous beauty of the night had spontaneously  set itself. The common air of day had been transmuted into the atmosphere  of reverie and Dreamland. In that magic medium the distinction between  imagination and reality fast dissolved. Even Miss Bood was conscious of a  delightful excitement, a vague expectancy. Mr. Morgan, she saw, was moved  quite beyond even his exaggerated habit of imaginative excitement. His  wet, shining, wide-opened eyes and ecstatic expression indicated complete  abandonment to the illusions of the scene.  

They had seated themselves, as the concentration of the brain upon  imaginative activity made the nerves of motion sluggish, upon a rude bench  formed by wedging a plank between two elms that stood close together. They  were within the shadow of the trees, but close up to their feet rippled a  lake of moonlight. The landscape shimmering before them had been the  theatre of their fifty years of life. Their history was written in its  trees and lawns and paths. The very air of the place had acquired for them  a dense, warm, sentient feeling, to which that of all other places was  thin and raw. It had become tinctured by their own spiritual emanations,  by the thoughts, looks, words and moods of which it had so long received  the impression. It had become such vitalized air, surcharged with sense  and thought, as might be taken to make souls for men out of.  

Over yonder, upon the playground, yet lingered the faint violet fragrance  of their childhood. Beneath that elm a kiss had once touched the air with  a fire that still warmed their cheeks in passing. Yonder the look of a  face was cut on the viewless air as on marble. Surely, death does but  touch the living, for the dead ever keep their power over us; it is only  we who lose ours over them. Each vista of leafy arch and distant meadow  framed in some scene of their youth-time, painted in the imperishable hues  of memory that borrow from time an ever richer and more glowing tint. It  was no wonder that to these two old people, sitting on the bench between  the elms, the atmosphere before them, saturated with associations, dense  with memories, should seem fairly quivering into material forms, like a  distant mist turning to rain.  

At length Miss Rood heard her companion say, in a whisper of tremulous  exultation, "Do you know, Mary, I think I shall see them very soon."  

"See whom?" she asked, frightened at his strange tone.  

"Why, see us, of course, as I was telling you," he whispered,"you  and me as we were young,see them as I see you now. Don't you  remember it was just along here that we used to walk on spring evenings?  We walk here no more, but they do evermore, beautiful, beautiful children.  I come here often to lie in wait for them. I can feel them now; I can  almost, almost see them." His whisper became scarcely audible and the  words dropped slowly. "I know the sight is coming, for every day they grow  more vivid. It can't be long before I quite see them. It may come at any  moment."  

Miss Rood was thoroughly frightened at the intensity of his excitement,  and terribly perplexed as to what she should do.  

"It may come at any time; I can almost see them now," he murmured.Ah!  look!With parted lips and unspeakably intense eyes, as if his life were  flowing out at them, he was staring across the moonlit paths before them  to the point where the path debouched from the shadow.  

Following his eyes, she saw what for a moment made her head swim with the  thought that she too was going mad. Just issuing from the shadows, as if  in answer to his words, were a young man and a girl, his arm upon her  waist, his eyes upon her face. At the first glance Miss Rood was impressed  with a resemblance to her own features in those of the girl, which her  excitement exaggerated to a perfect reproduction of them. For an instant  the conviction possessed her that by some impossible, indescribable,  inconceivable miracle she was looking upon the resurrected figures of her  girlish self and her lover.  

At first Mr. Morgan had half started from his seat, and was between rising  and sitting. Then he rose with a slow, involuntary movement, while his  face worked terribly between bewilderment and abandonment to illusion. He  tottered forward a few steps to the edge of the moonlight, and stood  peering at the approaching couple with a hand raised to shade his eyes and  a dazed, unearthly smile on his face. The girl saw him first, for she had  been gazing demurely before her, while her lover looked only at her. At  sight of the gray-haired man suddenly confronting them with a look of  bedlam, she shrieked and started back in terror. Miss Rood, recalled to  her senses, sprang forward, and catching Mr. Morgan's arm endeavored with  gentle force to draw him away.  

But it was too late for that. The young man, at first almost as much  startled as his companion at the uncanny apparition, naturally experienced  a revulsion of indignation at such an extraordinary interruption to his  tête-à-tête, and stepped up to Mr. Morgan as if about to inflict summary  chastisement. But perceiving that he had to do with an elderly man, he  contented himself with demanding in a decidedly aggressive tone what the  devil he meant by such a performance.  

Mr. Morgan stared at him without seeing him, and evidently did not take in  the words. He merely gasped once or twice, and looked as if he had fainted  away on his feet. His blank, stunned expression showed that his faculties  were momentarily benumbed by the shock. Miss Rood felt as if she should  die for the pity of it as she looked at his face, and her heart was  breaking for grief as she sought to mollify the young man with some  inarticulate words of apology, meanwhile still endeavoring to draw Mr.  Morgan away. But at this moment the girl, recovering from her panic, came  up to the group and laid her hand on the young man's arm, as if to check  and silence him. It was evident that she saw there was something quite  unusual in the circumstances, and the look which she bent upon Mr. Morgan  was one of sympathy and considerate interrogation. But Miss Rood could see  no way out of their awkward situation, which grew more intolerable every  moment as they thus confronted each other. It was finally Mr. Morgan's  voice, quite firm, but with an indescribable sadness in the tones, which  broke the silence: "Young people, I owe you an apology, such as it is. I  am an old man, and the past is growing so heavy that it sometimes quite  overbalances me. My thoughts have been busy to-night with the days of my  youth, and the spell of memory has been so strong that I have not been  quite myself. As you came into view I actually entertained the incredible  idea for a moment that somehow I saw in you the materialized memories of  myself and another as we once walked this same path."  

The young man bowed, as Mr. Morgan ended, in a manner indicating his  acceptance of the apology, although he looked both amazed and amused. But  the explanation had a very different effect upon the girl at his side. As  she listened, her eyes had filled with tears, and her face had taken on a  wonderfully tender, pitiful smile. When he ended speaking, she impulsively  said,I 'm so sorry we were not what you thought us! Why not pretend we  are, to-night at least? We can pretend it, you know. The moonlight makes  anything possible;and then glancing at Miss Rood, she added, as if  almost frightened, "Why, how much we look alike! I 'm not sure it isn't  true, anyway."  

This was, in fact, an unusually marked example of those casual  resemblances between strangers which are sometimes seen. The hair of the  one was indeed gray and that of the other dark, but the eyes were of the  same color by night, and the features, except for the greater fullness of  the younger face, were cast in the same mould, while figure and bearing  were strikingly similar, although daylight would doubtless have revealed  diversities, enough that moonlight refused to disclose.  

The two women looked at each other with an expression almost of suspicion  and fear, while the young man observed, "Your mistake was certainly  excusable, sir."  

"It will be the easier to pretend," said the girl, as with a half-serious,  half-sportive imperiousness she laid her hand on Mr. Morgan's arm.And  now it is thirty years ago, and we are walking together.He involuntarily  obeyed the slight pressure, and they walked slowly away, leaving the other  two, after an embarrassed pause, to follow them.  

For some time they walked in silence. He was deliberately abandoning  himself to the illusion, supported as it was by the evidence of his  senses, that he was wandering in some of the mysterious be-tween-worlds  which he had so often dreamed of, with the love of his youth in her  youth-time charm. Did he really believe it to be so? Belief is a term  quite irrelevant to such a frame as his, in which the reflective and  analytical powers are for a time purposely held in abeyance. The  circumstances of her introduction to him had dropped from his mind as  irrelevant accidents, like the absurdities which occur in our sweetest and  most solemn dreams without marring their general impression in our  memories. Every glance he threw upon his companion, while on the one hand  it shocked his illusion in that she seemed not likely to vanish away, on  the other strengthened it with an indescribable thrill by the revelation  of some fresh trait of face or figure, some new expression, that  reproduced the Miss Rood of his youth. Not, indeed, that it is likely his  companion was thus perfectly the double of that lady, although so much  resembling her, but the common graces of maidenhood were in Mr. Morgan's  mind the peculiar personal qualities of the only woman he had ever much  known.  

Of his own accord he would not have dared to risk breaking the charm by a  word. But his companionwho, as is tolerably evident by this time,  was Mabel Frenchhad meanwhile formed a scheme quite worthy of her  audacious temper. She had at once recognized both Mr. Morgan and Miss  Rood, and had gone thus far from a mere romantic impulse, without definite  intentions of any sort. But the idea now came into her head that she might  take advantage of this extraordinary situation to try a match-making  experiment, which instantly captivated her fancy. So she said, while ever  so gently pressing his arm and looking up into his face with an arch smile  (she was recognized as the best amateur actress in her set at home), "I  wonder if the moon will be so mellow after we are married?"  

His illusion was rudely disturbed by the shock of an articulate voice,  softly and low as she spoke, and he looked around with a startled  expression that made her fear her rôle was ended. But she could not know  that the eyes she turned to his were mirrors where he saw his dead youth.  The two Miss Roodsthe girl and the woman, the past and the presentwere  fused and become one in his mind. Their identity flashed upon him.  

An artesian well sunk from the desert surface through the underlying  strata, the layers of ages, strikes some lake long ago covered over, and  the water welling up converts the upper waste into a garden. Just so at  her words and her look his heart suddenly filled, as if it came from afar,  with the youthful passion he had felt toward Miss Bood, but which, he knew  not exactly when or how, had been gradually overgrown with the dullness of  familiarity and had lapsed into an indolent affectionate habit. The warm,  voluptuous pulse of this new feelingnew, and yet instantly  recognized as oldbrought with it a flood of youthful associations,  and commingled the far past with the present in a confusion more complete  and more intoxicating than ever. He saw double again. "Married!" he  murmured dreamily. "Yes, surely, we will be married."  

And as he spoke, he looked at her with such a peculiar expression that she  was a little frightened. It looked like a more serious business than she  had counted on, and for a moment, if she could have cut and run, perhaps  she would have done so. But she had a strain of the true histrionic artist  about her, and with a little effort rose to the difficulty of the rôle.  "Of course we will be married," she replied, with an air of innocent  surprise. "You speak as if you had just thought of it."  

He turned toward her as if he would sober his senses by staring at her,  his pupils dilating and contracting in the instinctive effort to clear the  mind by clearing the eyes.  

But with a steady pressure on his arm she compelled him to walk on by her  side. Then she said, in a soft, low voice, as if a little awed by what she  were telling, while at the same time she nestled nearer his side, "I had  such a sad dream last night, and your strange talk reminds me of it. It  seemed as if we were old and white-haired and stooping, and went wandering  about, still together, but not married, lonely and broken. And I woke up  feeling you can't think how dreary and sad, as if a bell had tolled  in my ears as I slept; and the feeling was so strong that I put my fingers  to my face to find if it was withered; and when I could not tell  certainly, I got up and lit my lamp and looked in the glass; and my face,  thank God! was fresh and young; but I sat on my bed and cried to think of  the poor old people I had left behind in my dream."  

Mabel had so fallen into the spirit of her part that she was really crying  as she ended. Her tears completed Mr. Morgan's mental confusion, and he  absolutely did not know whom he was addressing or where he was himself, as  he cried, "No, no, Mary! Don't cry! It shall not be; it shall never be."  

Lightly withdrawing her hand from his arm, she glided like a sprite from  his side, and was lost in the shadows, while her whispered words still  sounded in his ear, "Good-by for thirty years!"  

A moment after, three notes, clear as a bird's call, sounded from the  direction whither she had vanished, and Miss Rood's companion, breaking  off short a remark on the excessive dryness of the weather, bowed  awkwardly and also disappeared among the shadows.  

When Miss Rood laid her hand on Mr. Morgan's arm to recall him to the fact  that they were now alone together, he turned quickly, and his eyes swept  her from head to foot, and then rested on her face with an expression of  intense curiosity and a wholly new interest, as if he were tracing out a  suddenly suggested resemblance which overwhelmed him with emotion. And as  he gazed, his eyes began to take fire from the faded features on which  they had rested so many years in mere complacent friendliness, and she  instinctively averted her face.  

Long intimacy had made her delicately sensitive to his moods, and when he  drew her arm in his and turned to walk, although he had not uttered a  word, she trembled with agitation.  

"Mary, we have had an extraordinary experience to-night," he said. The old  dreaminess in his voice, as of one narcotized or in a trance, sometimes a  little forced, as of one trying to dream, to which she had become  accustomed, and of which in her heart of hearts she was very weary, was  gone. In its place she recognized a resonance which still further confused  her with a sense of altered relations. His polarity had changed: his  electricity was no longer negative, but positive.  

Her feminine instinct vaguely alarmed, she replied,Yes, indeed, but it  is getting late. Had n't we better go in?What lent the unusual  intonation of timidity to her voice? Certainly nothing that she could have  explained.  

"Not quite yet, Mary," he answered, turning his gaze once more fully upon  her.  

Her eyes dropped before his, and a moment after fluttered up to find an  explanation for their behavior, only to fall again in blind panic. For,  mingling unmistakably with the curiosity with which he was still studying  her features, was a newborn expression of appropriation and passionate  complacency. Her senses whirled in a bewilderment that had a suffocating  sweetness about it. Though she now kept her eyes on the ground, she felt  his constant sidewise glances, and, desperately seeking relief from the  conscious silence that enveloped them like a vapor of intoxicating fumes,  she forced herself to utter the merest triviality she could summon to her  lips: "See that house." The husky tones betrayed more agitation than the  ruse concealed.  

He answered as irrelevantly as she had spoken, "Yes, indeed, so it is."  That was their only attempt at conversation.  

For a half hourit might have been much more or much lessthey  walked in this way, thrilling with the new magnetism that at once  attracted and estranged them with an extraordinary sense of strangeness in  familiarity. At length they paused under the little porch of Miss Rood's  cottage, where he commonly bade her good-evening after their walks. The  timidity and vague alarms that had paralyzed her while they were walking  disappeared as he was about to leave her, and she involuntarily returned  his unusual pressure of her hand.  

A long time after, behold her still encircled in his arms, not blushing,  but pale and her eyes full of a soft, astonished glow! "Oh, Robert!" was  all she had said after one first little gasp.  

They never met George or Mabel again. Mrs. Morgan learned subsequently  that two young people from the city answering their description had been  guests at the opposite house, and had left Plainfield the morning after  the events hereinbefore set forth, and drew her conclusions accordingly.  But her husband preferred to cherish the secret belief that his theory  that memories might become visible had proved true in one instance at  least. least. 







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