<h2> Chapter 13 </h2><br/>
<br/>
<p>As I approached the building, soft strains floating far out
into the night-air became audible, and I knew that the sweet
spirit of music, to which they were all so devoted, was
present with them. After listening for awhile in the shadow
of the portico I went in, and, anxious to avoid disturbing
the singers, stole away into a dusky corner, where I sat down
by myself. Yoletta had, however, seen me enter, for presently
she came to me.</p>
<p>"Why did you not come in to supper, Smith?" she said. "And
why do you look so sad?"</p>
<p>"Do you need to ask, Yoletta? Ah, it would have made me so
happy if I could have won your mother's affection! If she
only knew how much I wish for it, and how much I sympathize
with her! But she will never like me, and all I wished to say
to her must be left unsaid."</p>
<p>"No, not so," she said. "Come with me to her now: if you feel
like that, she will be kind to you—how should it be
otherwise?"</p>
<p>I greatly feared that she advised me to take an imprudent
step; but she was my guide, my teacher and friend in the
house, and I resolved to do as she wished. There were no
lights in the long gallery when we entered it again, only the
white moonbeams coming through the tall windows here and
there lit up a column or a group of statues, which threw
long, black shadows on floor and Wall, giving the chamber a
weird appearance. Once more, when I reached the middle of the
room, I paused, for there before me, ever bending forward,
sat that wonderful woman of stone, the moonlight streaming
full on her pale, wistful face and silvery hair.</p>
<p>"Tell me, Yoletta, who is this?" I whispered. "Is it a statue
of some one who lived in this house?"</p>
<p>"Yes; you can read about her in the history of the house, and
in this inscription on the stone. She was a mother, and her
name was Isarte."</p>
<p>"But why has she that strange, haunting expression on her
face? Was she unhappy?"</p>
<p>"Oh, can you not see that she was unhappy! She endured many
sorrows, and the crowning calamity of her life was the loss
of seven loved sons. They were away in the mountains
together, and did not return when expected: for many years
she waited for tidings of them. It was conjectured that a
great rock had fallen on and crushed them beneath it. Grief
for her lost children made her hair white, and gave that
expression to her face."</p>
<p>"And when did this happen?"</p>
<p>"Over two thousand years ago."</p>
<p>"Oh, then it is a very old family tradition. But the
statue—when was that made and placed here?"</p>
<p>"She had it made and placed here herself. It was her wish
that the grief she endured should be remembered in the house
for all time, for no one had ever suffered like her; and the
inscription, which she caused to be put on the stone, says
that if there shall ever come to a mother in the house a
sorrow exceeding hers, the statue shall be removed from its
place and destroyed, and the fragments buried in the earth
with all forgotten things, and the name of Isarte forgotten
in the house."</p>
<p>It oppressed my mind to think of so long a period of time
during which that unutterably sad face had gazed down on so
many generations of the living. "It is most strange!" I
murmured. "But do you think it right, Yoletta, that the grief
of one person should be perpetuated like that in the house;
for who can look on this face without pain, even when it is
remembered that the sorrow it expresses ended so many
centuries ago?"</p>
<p>"But she was a mother, Smith, do you not understand? It would
not be right for us to wish to have our griefs remembered for
ever, to cause sorrow to those who succeed us; but a mother
is different: her wishes are sacred, and what she wills is
right."</p>
<p>Her words surprised me not a little, for I had heard of
infallible men, but never of women; moreover, the woman I was
now going to see was also a "mother in the house," a
successor to this very Isarte. Fearing that I had touched on
a dangerous topic, I said no more, and proceeding on our way,
we soon reached the mother's room, the large glass door of
which now stood wide open. In the pale light of the
moon—for there was no other in the room—we found
Chastel on the couch where I had seen her before, but she was
lying extended at full length now, and had only one attendant
with her.</p>
<p>Yoletta approached her, and, stooping, touched her lips to
the pale, still face. "Mother," she said, "I have brought
Smith again; he is anxious to say something to you, if you
will hear him."</p>
<p>"Yes, I will hear him," she replied. "Let him sit near me;
and now go back, for your voice is needed. And you may also
leave me now," she added, addressing the other lady.</p>
<p>The two then departed together, and I proceeded to seat
myself on a cushion beside the couch.</p>
<p>"What is it you wish to say to me?" she asked. The words were
not very encouraging, but her voice sounded gentler now, and
I at once began. "Hush," she said, before I had spoken two
words. "Wait until this ends—I am listening to
Yoletta's voice."</p>
<p>Through the long, dusky gallery and the open doors soft
strains of music were floating to us, and now, mingling with
the others, a clearer, bell-like voice was heard, which
soared to greater heights; but soon this ceased to be
distinguishable, and then she sighed and addressed me again.
"Where have you been all the evening, for you were not at
supper?"</p>
<p>"Did you know that?" I asked in surprise.</p>
<p>"Yes, I know everything that passes in the house. Reading and
work of all kinds are a pain and weariness. The only thing
left to me is to listen to what others do or say, and to know
all their comings and goings. My life is nothing now but a
shadow of other people's lives."</p>
<p>"Then," I said, "I must tell you how I spent the time after
seeing you to-day; for I was alone, and no other person can
say what I did. I went away along the river until I came to
the grove of great trees on the bank, and there I sat until
the moon rose, with my heart full of unspeakable pain and
bitterness."</p>
<p>"What made you have those feelings?"</p>
<p>"When I heard of you, and saw you, my heart was drawn to you,
and I wished above all things in the world to be allowed to
love and serve you, and to have a share in your affection;
but your looks and words expressed only contempt and dislike
towards me. Would it not have been strange if I had not felt
extremely unhappy?"</p>
<p>"Oh," she replied, "now I can understand the reason of the
surprise your words have often caused in the house! Your very
feelings seem unlike ours. No other person would have
experienced the feelings you speak of for such a cause. It is
right to repent your faults, and to bear the burden of them
quietly; but it is a sign of an undisciplined spirit to feel
bitterness, and to wish to cast the blame of your suffering
on another. You forget that I had reason to be deeply
offended with you. You also forget my continual suffering,
which sometimes makes me seem harsh and unkind against my
will."</p>
<p>"Your words seem only sweet and gracious now," I returned.
"They have lifted a great weight from my heart, and I wish I
could repay you for them by taking some portion of your
suffering on myself."</p>
<p>"It is right that you should have that feeling, but idle to
express it," she answered gravely. "If such wishes could be
fulfilled my sufferings would have long ceased, since any one
of my children would gladly lay down his life to procure me
ease."</p>
<p>To this speech, which sounded like another rebuke, I made no
reply.</p>
<p>"Oh, this is bitterness indeed—a bitterness you cannot
know," she resumed after a while. "For you and for others
there is always the refuge of death from continued
sufferings: the brief pang of dissolution, bravely met, is
nothing in comparison with a lingering agony like mine, with
its long days and longer nights, extending to years, and that
great blackness of the end ever before the mind. This only a
mother can know, since the horror of utter darkness, and vain
clinging to life, even when it has ceased to have any hope or
joy in it, is the penalty she must pay for her higher state."</p>
<p>I could not understand all her words, and only murmured in
reply: "You are young to speak of death."</p>
<p>"Yes, young; that is why it is so bitter to think of. In old
age the feelings are not so keen." Then suddenly she put out
her hands towards me, and, when I offered mine, caught my
fingers with a nervous grasp and drew herself to a sitting
position. "Ah, why must I be afflicted with a misery others
have not known!" she exclaimed excitedly. "To be lifted above
the others, when so young; to have one child only; then after
so brief a period of happiness, to be smitten with
barrenness, and this lingering malady ever gnawing like a
canker at the roots of life! Who has suffered like me in the
house? You only, Isarte, among the dead. I will go to you,
for my grief is more than I can bear; and it may be that I
shall find comfort even in speaking to the dead, and to a
stone. Can you bear me in your arms?" she said, clasping me
round the neck. "Take me up in your arms and carry me to
Isarte."</p>
<p>I knew what she meant, having so recently heard the story of
Isarte, and in obedience to her command I raised her from the
couch. She was tall, and heavier than I had expected, though
so greatly emaciated; but the thought that she was Yoletta's
mother, and the mother of the house, nerved me to my task,
and cautiously moving step by step through the gloom, I
carried her safely to that white-haired, moonlit woman of
stone in the long gallery. When I had ascended the steps and
brought her sufficiently near, she put her arms about the
statue, and pressed its stony lips with hers.</p>
<p>"Isarte, Isarte, how cold your lips are!" she murmured, in
low, desponding tones. "Now, when I look into these eyes,
which are yours, and yet not yours, and kiss these stony
lips, how sorely does the hunger in my heart tempt me to sin!
But suffering has not darkened my reason; I know it is an
offense to ask anything of Him who gives us life and all good
things freely, and has no pleasure in seeing us miserable.
This thought restrains me; else I would cry to Him to turn
this stone to flesh, and for one brief hour to bring back to
it the vanished spirit of Isarte. For there is no one living
that can understand my pain; but you would understand it, and
put my tired head against your breast, and cover me with your
grief-whitened hair as with a mantle. For your pain was like
mine, and exceeded mine, and no soul could measure it,
therefore in the hunger of your heart you looked far off into
the future, where some one would perhaps have a like
affliction, and suffer without hope, as you suffered, and
measure your pain, and love your memory, and feel united with
you, even over the gulf of long centuries of time. You would
speak to me of it all, and tell me that the greatest grief
was to go away into darkness, leaving no one with your blood
and your spirit to inherit the house. This also is my grief,
Isarte, for I am barren and eaten up by death, and must soon
go away to be where you are. When I am gone, the father of
the house will take no other one to his bosom, for he is old,
and his life is nearly complete; and in a little while he
will follow me, but with no pain and anguish like mine to
cloud his serene spirit. And who will then inherit our place?
Ah, my sister, how bitter to think of it! for then a stranger
will be the mother of the house, and my one only child will
sit at her feet, calling her mother, serving her with her
hands, and loving and worshiping her with her heart!"</p>
<p>The excitement had now burned itself out: she had dropped her
head wearily on my shoulder, and bade me take her back. When
I had safely deposited her on the couch again, she remained
for some minutes with her face covered, silently weeping.</p>
<p>The scene in the gallery had deeply affected me; now,
however, while I sat by her, pondering over it, my mind
reverted to that vanished world of sorrow and different
social conditions in which I had lived, and where the lot of
so many poor suffering souls seemed to me so much more
desolate than that of this unhappy lady, who had, I imagined,
much to console her. It even seemed to me that the grief I
had witnessed was somewhat morbid and overstrained; and,
thinking that it would perhaps divert her mind from brooding
too much over her own troubles, I ventured, when she had
grown calm again, to tell her some of my memories. I asked
her to imagine a state of the world and the human family, in
which all women were, in one sense, on an equality—all
possessing the same capacity for suffering; and where all
were, or would be, wives and mothers, and without any such
mysterious remedy against lingering pain as she had spoken
of. But I had not proceeded far with my picture before she
interrupted me.</p>
<p>"Do not say more," she said, with an accent of displeasure.
"This, I suppose, is another of those grotesque fancies you
sometimes give expression to, about which I heard a great
deal when you first came to us. That all people should be
equal, and all women wives and mothers seems to me a very
disordered and a very repulsive idea The one consolation in
my pain, the one glory of my life could not exist in such a
state as that, and my condition would be pitiable indeed. All
others would be equally miserable. The human race would
multiply, until the fruits of the soil would be insufficient
for its support; and earth would be filled with degenerate
beings, starved in body and debased in mind—all
clinging to an existence utterly without joy. Life is dark to
me, but not to others: these are matters beyond you, and it
is presumptuous in one of your condition to attempt to
comfort me with idle fancies."</p>
<p>After some moments of silence, she resumed: "The father has
said to-day that you came to us from an island where even the
customs of the people are different from ours; and perhaps
one of their unhappy methods is to seek to medicine a real
misery by imagining some impossible and immeasurably greater
one. In no other way can I account for your strange words to
me; for I cannot believe that any race exists so debased as
actually to practice the things you speak of. Remember that I
do not ask or desire to be informed. We have a different way;
for although it is conceivable that present misery might be
mitigated, or forgotten for a season, by giving up the soul
to delusions, even by summoning before the mind repulsive and
horrible images, that would be to put to an unlawful use, and
to pervert, the brightest faculties our Father has given us:
therefore we seek no other support in all sufferings and
calamities but that of reason only. If you wish for my
affection, you will not speak of such things again, but will
endeavor to purify yourself from a mental vice, which may
sometimes, in periods of suffering, give you a false comfort
for a brief season, only to degrade you, and sink you later
in a deeper misery. You must now leave me."</p>
<p>This unexpected and sharp rebuke did not anger me, but it
made me very sad; for I now perceived plainly enough that no
great advantage would come to me from Chastel's acquaintance,
since it was necessary to be so very circumspect with her.
Deeply troubled, and in a somewhat confused state of mind, I
rose to depart. Then she placed her thin, feverish white hand
on mine. "You need not go away again," she said, "to indulge
in bitter feelings by yourself because I have said this to
you. You may come with the others to see me and talk to me
whenever I am able to sit here and bear it. I shall not
remember your offense, but shall be glad to know that there
is another soul in the house to love and honor me."</p>
<p>With such comfort as these words afforded I returned to the
music-room, and, finding it empty, went out to the terrace,
where the others were now strolling about in knots and
couples, conversing and enjoying the lovely moonlight.
Wandering a little distance away by myself, I sat down on a
bench under a tree, and presently Yoletta came to me there,
and closely scrutinized my face.</p>
<p>"Have you nothing to tell me?" she asked. "Are you happier
now?"</p>
<p>"Yes, dearest, for I have been spoke to very kindly; and I
should have been happier if only—" But I checked myself
in time, and said no more to her about my conversation with
the mother. To myself I said: "Oh, that island, that island!
Why can't I forget its miserable customs, or, at any rate,
stick to my own resolution to hold my tongue about them?"</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />