A few
mornings after, as Mary was sitting ruminating, harassed by perplexing
thoughts, and fears, a letter was delivered to her: the servant waited for an
answer. Her heart palpitated; it was from Henry; she held it some time in her
hand, then tore it open; it was not a long one; and
only contained an account of a relapse, which prevented his sailing in the
first packet, as he had intended. Some tender enquiries were added, concerning
her health, and state of mind; but they were expressed in rather a formal
style: it vexed her, and the more so, as it stopped the current of affection,
which the account of his arrival and illness had made flow to her heart—it ceased to beat for a moment—she read the passage
over again; but could not tell what she was hurt by—only that it did not answer
the expectations of her affection. She wrote a laconic, incoherent note in
return, allowing him to call on her the next day—he had requested permission at
the conclusion of his letter.
Her mind was
then painfully active; she could not read or walk; she tried to fly from
herself, to forget the long hours that were yet to run before to-morrow could
arrive: she knew not what time he would come; certainly in the morning, she
concluded; the morning then was anxiously wished for; and every wish produced a
sigh, that arose from expectation on the stretch, damped by fear and vain
regret.
To beguile
the tedious time, Henry's favorite tunes were sung; the books they
read together turned over; and the short epistle read at least a hundred times.—Any one who had seen her, would have supposed that she was
trying to decypher Chinese characters.
After a
sleepless night, she hailed the tardy day, watched the rising sun, and then
listened for every footstep, and started if she heard the street door opened.
At last he came, and she who had been counting the hours, and doubting whether
the earth moved, would gladly have escaped the approaching interview.
With an
unequal, irresolute pace, she went to meet him; but when she beheld his
emaciated countenance, all the tenderness, which the formality of his letter
had damped, returned, and a mournful presentiment stilled the internal
conflict. She caught his hand, and looking wistfully at
him, exclaimed, "Indeed, you are not well!"
"I am
very far from well; but it matters not," added he with a smile of
resignation; "my native air may work wonders, and besides, my mother is a
tender nurse, and I shall sometimes see thee."
Mary felt
for the first time in her life, envy; she wished involuntarily, that all the
comfort he received should be from her. She enquired about the symptoms of his
disorder; and heard that he had been very ill; she hastily drove away the fears, that former dear bought experience suggested: and
again and again did she repeat, that she was sure he would soon recover. She
would then look in his face, to see if he assented, and ask more questions to
the same purport. She tried to avoid speaking of herself,
and Henry left her, with, a promise of visiting her the next day.
Her mind was
now engrossed by one fear—yet she would not allow herself to think that she
feared an event she could not name. She still saw his pale face; the sound of
his voice still vibrated on her ears; she tried to retain it; she listened,
looked round, wept, and prayed.
Henry had
enlightened the desolate scene: was this charm of life to fade away, and, like
the baseless fabric of a vision, leave not a wreck behind? These thoughts
disturbed her reason, she shook her head, as if to drive them out of it; a
weight, a heavy one, was on her heart; all was not well there.
Out of this
reverie she was soon woke to keener anguish, by the arrival of a letter from
her husband; it came to Lisbon after her departure: Henry had forwarded
it to her, but did not choose to deliver it himself, for a very obvious reason;
it might have produced a conversation he wished for some time to avoid; and his
precaution took its rise almost equally from benevolence and love.
She could
not muster up sufficient resolution to break the seal: her fears were not
prophetic, for the contents gave her comfort. He informed her that he intended
prolonging his tour, as he was now his own master, and wished to remain some
time on the continent, and in particular to visit Italy without any restraint:
but his reasons for it appeared childish; it was not to cultivate his taste, or
tread on classic ground, where poets and philosophers caught their lore; but to
join in the masquerades, and such burlesque amusements.
These instances of folly relieved Mary, in some degree reconciled her to
herself added fuel to the devouring flame—and silenced something like a pang,
which reason and conscience made her feel, when she reflected, that it is the
office of Religion to reconcile us to the seemingly hard dispensations of providence;
and that no inclination, however strong, should oblige us to desert the post
assigned us, or force us to forget that virtue should be an active principle;
and that the most desirable station, is the one that exercises our faculties,
refines our affections, and enables us to be useful.
One
reflection continually wounded her repose; she feared not poverty; her wants
were few; but in giving up a fortune, she gave up the power of comforting the
miserable, and making the sad heart sing for joy.
Heaven had endowed her with uncommon humanity, to render her one of His
benevolent agents, a messenger of peace; and should she attend to her own
inclinations?
These
suggestions, though they could not subdue a violent passion, increased her
misery. One moment she was a heroine, half determined to bear whatever fate
should inflict; the next, her mind would recoil—and tenderness possessed her
whole soul. Some instances of Henry's affection, his worth and genius, were
remembered: and the earth was only a vale of tears, because he was not to
sojourn with her.