[Illustration]




                               AN EPISODE
                                 IN THE
                        DOINGS OF THE DUALIZED.


[Illustration]

        “The truth is, a great mind must be androgynous.”
                                                    —COLERIDGE.

                        BY EVELEEN LAURA MASON,
                            BROOKLINE, MASS.
                                 1898.




                               CHAPTER I.


This was the way it happened. Like all beginnings of things, the roots
were in the dark. Ethelbert Daksha came of a family in which girls
counted for a big half of all that was bright and interesting.

The Dakshas were a delightful family every way, except, perhaps, in the
matter of money-wealth. That seemed constitutionally lacking, because
you will see yourself that people who take great interest in devising
ways of spending money, and very little in devising ways of getting it
to spend, in the constitution of things are lacking in money-wealth. But
they had everything else except money, and their chief thought in regard
to that lack was an amiable perplexity that it seemed to be such a
desideratum in affairs of society. There was a big but exhausted English
property on the mother’s side; and this strain of high English blood was
mixed with a dash of hard-headed German culture and a few drops from the
veins of a Spanish dame, lady-mother of the Hidalgos. So, you see, when,
ninety years before, a discontent with something in the Old World
society had set the elder Daksha down on American soil, various European
nationalities were transplanted to root as best might be in American
civilization. In addition to all this, as faith in all things high,
bounded brightly in the Daniel O’Connell blood which coursed through
Daniel Daksha’s veins, it was very natural that his daughter Ethelbert,
considering as she did that all nationalities were equally admirable for
different virtues, should be greatly astonished that there should be
quarrels between those of different countries, when the blood of four
nations coursed so amicably in her own veins. If ever there were a girl
who, in the nature of things was a typical American, it was Ethelbert
Daksha, with the race-drift of Europe, Asia and Africa in her individual
veins, as our nation carries it in its aggregated citizenship.

Mr. Daksha recognized all this. He was one of the dreamers who work, at
whose feet life lays its crown of success; although so far his many
admirable schemes for regenerating society had made him at once the most
serviceable and the most impecunious of mortals. He had abundant means,
but little money; and while it might be stretching a point to say the
Dakshas cultivated a life of beauty on a little oatmeal, yet it would
give a hint at the way in which beauty was cultivated in that simple
home, where oatmeal was the chief of their diet; that is, if you leave
out of the reckoning the best periodicals and old writings of all climes
and ages. These things were really the chief of their diet, and had much
to do with the fact that they, like the old lady who lived on the hill,
were scarce ever quiet concerning the topic of the ideal order of
society which is soon coming to our nation, and through us to the world.

Life among the Dakshas was like a bit of Greek art transplanted to the
robust civilization of this country, which is trying so hard to
assimilate its many diverse elements. The theory of the elegant Greeks
was: “What the spirit wills, the body must.” This theory had been
practicalized more or less fully by O’Connell, who knew no law stronger
than that of the _necessities_, which he deemed were laid on him as
liberator of his people. The same theory had been the impelling power of
the Spanish proverb which, translated, reads: “In his own soul, and not
in that of another, must the principle of one’s actions be established.”
While the German element, which fills the veins of England’s crowned
family, in quick response to the same idea, cried out: “Let every man
hear for himself, and hearing, then speak.”

So as you may well suppose, the theory that spirit is master and body is
only the good servant to do the spirit’s bidding, met some rebuffs as
the Dakshas lived it out midst that portion of the newly rich who devote
their energies to saving—not MAN, but money. And so much were the
Dakshas in love with their beautiful ideals that but for their good
common sense they would have become domineering dogmatists; and thus,
properly, would have made themselves greatly disliked, and therefore,
incapacitated for service.

About forty odd years before this episode the heads of the Daksha family
had settled themselves to the recognition that the inordinate frenzy for
money-making which was deluging its possessors, would insure many low
tragedies in high (?) life; and to the recognition that society was
becoming but like a witch’s caldron with its seethe and bubble of toil
and trouble, and with its inodorous stench of poison things, flung into
it by the witches and wizards, as they carry out their passion-dance on
the old Harry’s pavilion.

Of course the Dakshas had their opinion of this besotted high (?) life,
with its stimulation of that excitement which wrecks nerve and brain.
But they did not presume to force the virtues of self-culture on persons
whose highest dream of success was TO INCREASE THEIR CHANCES FOR THIS
INDULGENCE IN HIGH OLD TIMES, and who were more than willing to pay for
them, with the after years of that disease, remorse and reek of ill-fame
in which “the name of the wicked rots.”

Whatever they might choose to _do_ with their knowledge, the fact
remained that the younger Dakshas _knew_ that they, by inheritance, were
rooted in different purposes and back-history than such as this, which
reveals itself in these forms of faith-breaking, love-outraging,
humanity-destroying bewilderments. So when this other kind of girls and
boys, with their mothers and fathers flying around in society’s
whirligig, flitted about them, the Dakshas thought steadily on the truth
as they knew it; and “hearing for themselves, then spoke,” thus giving
their companions a chance to catch on at any point of spiritual contact
which they found available.

So the roots of Ethelbert Daksha’s life had gathered force and fibre in
wisdom religions known in ancient America, Europe, Asia and Africa; and
the might of this force was now annealed in her nature, and was forming
into a unified strength of character, which to the ignorant seemed like
a thing of very different quality.

Reginald Grove altogether misunderstood Ethel when first they met; for
he did not so much as know that there were girls in the world with
character-roots so deep and far-reaching. There were two things he
recognized at sight, but character was not one. He knew money when he
saw it, and he thought he knew poverty, too. His father belonged to the
class of people who laugh at “blood,” and worship money. His blood was
made up of such things as a man who lays the reins on the neck of his
impulses can get into his veins, if in his early days his father strikes
a “money lead” and he “a society life”; but then he had a mother, too,
and there came in the difference.

Since he was seventeen years old Reginald had bought all the high-priced
things that our fast civilization has to offer in exchange for “soul,”
and now the ashes of that past were beginning to grit between his teeth;
for he had a sweet memory of peace, purity and of an harmonious-purpose
which glinted across his mind angelically as the remains of what had
been his baby guesses at real manhood. But this dream, and the sainted
mother who had inspired it, had both been devastated by the ignorant
animalism of the elder Grove. So when the mother-spirit was released
from earth’s control, little Regie’s waiting eyes turned to his father;
and watching, he perceived that his father’s shrewd bargaining instincts
resulted in increased wealth, which made it possible for him to sow a
big crop of gilded misery, and still to pay his son’s bills, while he
did likewise; and that doing all this he was yet flattered as a
millionaire. So you see, beloved as was his mother’s memory and distinct
as had been her teachings to his baby mind, they became but “woman’s
notions” when contradicted by his father’s practices, and by the
licensing laws of paternal government which assure young men they may
sin freely, and yet be wealthy and wise; and healthy, too, if nostrums
will make them so.

For a time Reginald believed this, seeing the nation’s fathers had by
license laws practically declared it. And as the wisdom of the nation’s
mothers had been placed under silence as deep as the grave, “no cause or
impediment being shown to forbid the banns” between his soul and
corruption, he rushed on in the paths prepared for feet like his. But
lately he did not feel very healthy; and as for his wealth, he feared
that was getting a bit rickety, and his wisdom was hardly at par.

So these were Reginald’s character “roots.” But it was the one little
radical, or true-life fibre, which vibrated with a thrill when he first
met Ethelbert Daksha. At the instant, it seemed to him as though the
mirage which ever floated up from the fens of his unrecorded life, was
swept away by a breath from over the jasper walls of the eternal city.
That curious look out of Ethelbert’s eyes, so all-comprehending, pitiful
and yet unmoved, held him, as his mother’s eyes had always done in the
past; and he had not a word to say. He felt as such men feel when
conscious of the moral distance between their private lives and the
lives of sweet girl acquaintances.

As usual he waited for Ethelbert to speak; but as is not usual she,
recognizing his moral state, did not come down and hunt round for
something to say on its level. “The great gulf fixed,” was fixed. She
did not try to cross it; so she escaped falling and floundering therein,
for her pains. Ethelbert believed not in self-abnegation, but in
self-expression. She believed it right to stand squarely on her own fair
heights; that from there, with the hand next her heart placed in
Jehovah’s, she could give her _brain_-inspired right hand to brother man
and then lift!

“An Englishman dares be silent,” they say, and Ethelbert’s English
quality was in the ascendant, when Reginald looked at her, wishing to
know if those mother-eyes were backed by a brain filled with mother wit
and wisdom. He met silence, and went away from that party with an
unsatisfied hunger in his soul, which proved that that abused thing was
not dead yet.

After that they met casually often; and Ethelbert, who “pondered all
these things in her heart,” which are brought by “ministering spirits to
those who are _heirs_ of salvation,” knew Reginald better than as if
they for years had talked much self-disguising trash together.

One summer afternoon when she was sitting on the balcony of the Daksha
home he passed and raised his hat, and she bowed in return, with the
thought in mind and eyes, “that man is inherently a good man.” And he
saw it, and halted, and then with direct purpose, crossed the street and
seated himself on the step, asking no permission.

“Miss Ethelbert, you always make me wish I were a boy five years old,”
he said.

“I wish you were,” said Ethelbert.

This was sudden for Reginald; for though he was willing to recognize the
failure he had made of manhood, Ethelbert’s businesslike way of
accepting the idea was not flattering, and he was used to flattery.

“Why do you wish it?” he said after knocking his teeth, not agreeably,
with the head of his cane and gazing at her combatively.

“So that you could cleave to the right. You are so old in your habits
now, so undeveloped in the practice of judgment, and—oh, there is
Bertha! Come right up here, Bertha. I was sitting here looking for you.
Yes, you can have the newly cut lawn grass for your rabbits; but I want
to see you first. I have saved the papers for you. Now, Mr. Grove, this
is one of my friends, Bertha Gemacht; and Bertha, this is one of my
friends, Reginald Grove.”

Reginald had risen to his feet under this speech, the words of which are
only recorded. The cool, helpful look which she turned on him in view of
his moral mismanagement, and which was not in the least altered as she
looked from him to Bertha, and from Bertha to him again, was as new to
him as it was irritating and fascinating. For Bertha was to him a
hard-looking woman as she laid her sack for holding the grass, down, and
turned on him a look cowed, yet angry, and with another mixed expression
indescribable.

There was a little odor of whiskey about Bertha, and so there was about
Reginald; and Ethelbert’s senses were as keen in one case as they were
in the other; but she noticed that while Bertha seemed not in the least
surprised that such a man as Reginald was found in a nice lady’s
company, he was plainly indignant at seeing Bertha there; and that he
watched them with disapprobation while they leaned over an illustrated
paper together.

“Now I would like you to read an account of the two women who took a
homestead of one hundred and sixty acres; and for seven years worked it
so well and wisely that they now have a delightful, valuable home, and
have since added three other women to the household: women who had lost
hope of happiness and honor, but are now becoming healthy and
self-sustained by work,—honest, skillful work. Of course one has to have
health in order to have nice clear brains.”

“O Bertha, did you read and understand the health journal I loaned you?
And did you think, after all the facts I told you, that you would better
still sometimes use whiskey and—”

“Indeed, Miss Daksha, I have not taken more than—”

“Bertha,” Ethelbert interrupted. “Of course you will drink whiskey all
you choose. I was only wishing you would choose not to drink it at all.
Do you think rum drinking makes people healthy, wealthy and wise?”

Bertha’s face had lighted up under the idea which had lately been
brought to her by this friend, whose unvarying recognition of Bertha’s
individuality, and of the fact that she could make of herself just such
a woman as she chose to make, had opened a world of dignified
possibilities before her. Her large eyes, which often had the look of an
angry animal brought to bay, had now in them a puzzled, wondering look,
full of startled expectancy.

“Do you think I am healthier than you are?” said Ethelbert. Bertha
nodded eagerly. “Would you wish to be like me?”

“O Gott in Himmel! Would I not!” said Bertha, and she threw her old
apron over her head; and the wild conflict within broke forth in a
tempest of sobs.

Reginald sat down on the steps with his back to them both, and looked
out on the evening clouds; and Ethelbert, in that sharp fellowship with
suffering which is part of the price paid by those whose soul-sight
gives them redemptive power with the tempted and fallen, steadied
herself under the pangs of the sudden remorse that had struck the heart
of the man and of the woman anear.

“There Bertha, now listen,” said she presently. “Let us, you and I, not
do anything which will in the least harm the pure river of life, which,
flowing through our veins, comes first from Jehovah, the fount of all
life. See, Bertha!”

The girl uncovered her eyes, and awe-struck, looked at Ethelbert as she
bared her arm and showed the blue tracery there, and on her hand,
adding: “See, the beautiful stream in the little river-beds here, flows
on, and up through this big artery in my throat, over my brain. And
Bertha,” she paused, and with a dramatic but perfectly unaffected
gesture full of regnant poise, and with a light in her eyes never seen
on sea or land, she said again, slowly: “And, Bertha, brain rules here!
What the spirit wills, this body must. So my brain has commanded that
nothing shall be put into my blood which shall send poisonous elements
maddeningly up to the throne of reason. But Bertha, if you think it is
wise to do as you do, you may have some good cause for it, that I know
nothing about. Tell me, am I mistaken in my ideas? Shall I go with you
where you went this afternoon, and put into my veins all that you did
into yours?”

“Gott bewahr! Oh, don’t say, don’t think of such things of your veins!”
cried Bertha, almost throwing her arms round Ethelbert.

Reginald sprang to his feet and looked at poor Bertha with a loathful
vindictiveness hard to describe.

“Is it too bad for me? Oh, then, it must be too bad for you,” said
Ethelbert, with a pain intense in her tone. “You cut me to the heart
just so when you violate your blood with things of horror. It is good
German blood, and part of it flows in my veins, and all of it came from
the great Fountain of Life who ‘made of one blood all nations of the
earth,’ and who, in this, our beloved country, is gathering up all the
nations of the earth into the life of this Republic’s inheritance. It is
for women to secure to our nation a heritage better than golden crowns.”

Ethelbert’s grey eyes were fixed on a floating cloud, and, absorbing
into herself the doings of the beautiful world above, she broke up her
reverie; and turning, looked at Bertha, saying explainingly: “You see
yourself, Bertha, I mean that my parents and grandparents might have
forgotten that I was coming to inherit their blood and their brains, and
might have carelessly filled the fountain of their life with
poison-loving elements. Now, if they had done so, what do you suppose I
would now do about it myself?”

“I’ll tell you what you would do about it,” interrupted Reginald. “You
would have thought it the best blood in the land, madame, and would have
scorned that girl as much as you scorn me, to whom you are reading this
lesson over her shoulders. She don’t understand a word you’ve said; but
do you think I am a fool?”

“No,” said Ethelbert simply.

Bertha looked after him as he walked off a few steps.

“Is that man your friend?” she said sharply. “I understand not all your
speaking words, but full well I know your wisdom in the thought of it,
and well I know that the body is as a beast if the spirit shall not
command what it will do. He thinks me a fool—too much fool to talk your
wisdom-words. I are not fool. I choose this day. This head shall say,
‘No more of beer and oder tings to my body. It has said so before this
time, many days, but now, _the body must_!’ Now then, I, Bertha, ask
you: Do you think I am a fool?”

“No,” said Ethelbert.

“Well, I shall be a fool if I steals away my brains some more.”

“I think you will never do that any more. Brain force can be lost and
wasted; or it can be treasured up, englobed delightsomely. Now, Bertha,
take this rosebud and try to live as healthfully and sweet as roses do.
Bertha, gather up your grass for the rabbits, and make the little things
clean and happy, and then you can read your papers tonight, and come and
get some more. Here is a pencil, so you can mark any little place you
don’t quite understand, and I will tell you about it. Good-night.”

“Good-night, Miss Daksha,” said Bertha, looking back enviously at
Reginald, who stood striking the rosebush with his cane, and not yet
dismissed.

“You can’t put that rose together again,” said Ethelbert.

“Who cares?” said he roughly. For, as Ethelbert would not flatter him,
he unconsciously proposed not to flatter her. You see he had felt full
of the ashes of the past; and those ashes, like a volatile alkali,
needed only an acid admixture to ensure a sudden fermentation of soul.
The truths which had seemed so sweet to Bertha had been acid to him, and
a foam of wrath was choking him as he sputtered: “Who cares?”

“That is the question,” said Ethelbert, gathering up the shattered rose:
“Who cares?”

He gave the bush another cut with his cane; for the fermentation of
ideas within was quite unendurable. He had always supposed that women
were made on purpose to flatter men, and he had always had so much of it
that he was sick of it; but now when he cared a good deal to be thought
well of, he felt it was a bit hard to be made to think of himself as he
had been made to think all that morning. He had until now thought
Ethelbert particularly attractive, because she was so bright; but now he
thought her brightness was so overmuch of a good thing as to be
perfectly detestable. The same hand that in wanton cruelty was whacking
to pieces those exquisite moss rosebuds, would willingly have whacked
out of existence all the high human tests of character which had
stripped his soul bare before his gaze. Something of this, but not very
clearly defined, made him hit the bush again as he looked at Ethelbert,
who, free from a suggestion of reproof or sentiment of any kind,
repeated: “Who cares?”

“I don’t,” said Reginald; and after a pause: “Do you?”

“Do I care that I can’t put the rose together again? I don’t aspire to
do that; yet I do very much care to have all the power I can possibly
obtain with which to arrest the destruction of beautiful life and
orderly happiness.”

“Oh, yes, much you care to make a fellow happy,” said Reginald sullenly.
“Look at the cold-blooded way you sat there and talked to that miserable
thing about me.” And after waiting again, he said with the combativeness
of a man opposed by silence, when instead he longed for a quarrel: “Now
this is all very well, Miss Daksha, but you know that if you
noticed—noticed—well, as you might say—if you smelt whiskey on her (now
you’ve got it), if you smelt whiskey on her, you could—you are sharp
enough to notice—anything, in fact,” said he, stumbling on under her
steady uplifted eyes, “Aren’t you?”

“I notice many things,” said Ethelbert, like a little truthful child.

He hit the rosebush again. “You are a queer girl,” he said. “You have no
respect for a man’s feelings.”

“What are those things?”

“What things?”

“A man’s feelings, I believe you called them,” said Ethelbert.

He came near her, with red passion-flushes patching his face like
Satan’s finger-prints; and stood angrily looking at her. And then he
slashed the air close to her with his cane; but he might as well have
shot glances of rage at a lily-cup, in the hope of arresting the sweet
aura it exhaled. He turned angrily away. “Well, I can just believe you,”
he said. “You neither know nor care what feelings are. You care more
about that old rose.”

“That depends,” said Ethelbert. “I care for the rose because it is
sweet, orderly life. If a man’s feelings are the same, I care just as
much for them. But character is not a question of feeling. It is a
question of wise action.”

He muttered a passionate oath, and hit the bush again. For the devils
were “rending him,” and “that kind goeth not out, except by prayer and
fasting.” He was not much of a praying man; and as for fasting, his
habitual diet and incessant brandy quaffing did not come under that
head, nor produce those calming results. Added to this, three months had
passed since Ethelbert Daksha had seemed to him as no woman had ever
seemed to him before; and in those three months he had been afraid to
approach acquaintanceship, because of the infinite distance between
them. This distance he, with all his unpublished record of
demoralization, had decency enough to recognize. And now he had a
feeling akin to hatred toward Ethelbert, that she should have the
impudence to know anything of him except what his “good clothes,” not
bad-featured face, and his hitherto very silent tongue might have told.

He forgot that he was living in this new age in which something like
occult powers are given to the “pure in heart,” who, seeing God, who is
All, and in all, necessarily must see the truth as to the conditions
which fill society. His spiritual and intuitional faculties were not
dead, but sealed up, and enswathed in cerements of flesh. And so, as he
now himself realized, he had nothing but a man’s feelings, hot, blind
and passionate, to oppose to the percipient intelligence, that, cool and
pure, looked steadily into the seething caldron of his heart.

“If a man’s feelings are orderly, beautiful life, I care just as much
for them,” she said again slowly. And as he stood before the Virgin
Mother grace in her, an ineffable longing for purity and new creation
took possession of him. He covered his eyes and sat down on the steps.

“Mine were beautiful when I was three years old,” he said, “orderly,
beautiful life. O good God, yes, they were!” It was a cry of remorse to
his Creator, and Ethelbert understood it so.

“I believe that readily, Reginald,” she said, simply; “and I have
limitless reverence for them; they were as sweet as this bud.” He took
from her hand the exquisite moss-covered wonder, and sat looking at it,
while Ethelbert laid the mutilated rose, with its upgathered petals, on
a book in her lap.

“You mean that is about what my life is worth now,” said he, pointing at
the leaves and torn blossom.

“You choose to do it yourself,” said Ethelbert.

“Who cares?” was the angry response, for he had often sentimentalized
with girls over his ruined hopes, and had so led up to sweet
flirtations; but Ethelbert’s remark and the level look of her eyes,
nipped that sort of a thing in the bud; and his “ugly” was rising at
about the rate of ten degrees a second, when she said: “I do.”

“On your honor, do you?” he asked huskily.

“On honor, yes, I care,” she said. He looked white and kept the bud in
his hand. She wished to help him, but she did not wish to preach nor
sentimentalize.

“You have abused this rosebud fearfully,” rising and examining one on
the bush. “You have shattered the rose and the leaves. Here is a bud
which you have marred, but—” she stooped to examine it more closely;
“but I see it is not beyond the power of performing good uses still and
of opening to mature life.”

These kind of analogies were not exactly in his line of thought, but
somehow as with her he looked at this bud, with one side of the moss
stripped off and the wound on the outer leaf, he became very sorry for
the little Reginald Grove who buried his mother, and afterwards so badly
mismanaged himself. For the moment he felt that all he had ever
possessed which was worth caring about, was what he had had when,
environed by mother-love, he grew up in her smiles. It was a presence
about Ethelbert which made that time seem so valuable. He looked up at
the simple house, and then at Ethelbert’s dainty but inexpensive dress.
The fragrance of the rose seemed intoxicating with its story of possible
redemption. Yet every instinct of his better nature told him it was
impossible that his life could ever blend with Ethelbert’s, while also
his best instincts, with an exigency of strong desire, demanded just
that union. He was in a torture of soul, comparable with nothing he had
ever before experienced. Suddenly he remembered his wealth, but it
seemed only an abject thing. Yet presently, for some reason, he said:
“Do you care for wealth?”

“Immensely,” said Ethelbert.

He looked up at her as though he could not believe his ears; but in his
heart there was a hope, broken by doubt and darkened by disappointment;
a hope that all-conquering wealth could win even her, but a
disappointment in her if this could so be. After a moment he stumbled
on, saying: “I—I somehow don’t see much good in it. After you have eaten
all you can, and have drunken more than—than you ought, and made a
fashion-block of yourself, and so on; in fact, you know money can’t give
you back whatever there was in those old days,” said Reginald, motioning
toward the rose; “it can’t make the now impossible possible.”

“That depends,” said Ethelbert. “Money could make the now impossible
possible to many people.”

He looked at her with that same compound expression on his countenance;
for you know this man, who had never grown to real manhood, being much
bigger outside than he was in,—this man had for years stood on guard
against the many girls whom he fancied wished to marry his money. So he
said, with a dash of the Grove suspicious shrewdness: “Is there anything
now impossible to you that it could make possible?”

“Yes.”

He looked at her with lowering lights in his eyes.

“Do you want that thing very much?”

“I have set myself to obtain it.”

“How much would you give?” said he, his heart beating thickly, and yet
he could not look at her because of the mingled sense of victory and
disappointment.

“I shall give my life for it,” she said quietly. “I have settled that.”

And while he was looking at her, utterly dazed as to her meaning, Judge
Elkhorn threw himself from his horse and eagerly came up to Ethelbert,
who received him with more alacrity than her still manner usually
exhibited.

Now Judge Elkhorn was a man head and shoulders above his fellows in much
that makes average manhood. He was very wealthy, too; and Reginald
thought of both these facts as he watched Ethelbert and the judge; and
forty thousand fiends took hold of him within.

The judge, intent on the object of his visit, had at first given that
casual bow and glance with which one habitually recognizes the presence
of a fellow-being; but the look on Reginald’s countenance arrested his
notice, so that the two men for a moment faced each other with a
well-defined stare; and during this moment Reginald’s countenance
perceptibly grew more red, lowering, and akin to the bulldog character
of expression, and Judge Elkhorn’s more self-poised.

The next moment Reginald arose with an impulse to get away; but as
Ethelbert had at the very same moment set forward two cane chairs, he
seated himself composedly with a set to his jaw that was not lost to the
notice of his hostess.

The judge preserved silence with the air of a man who recognizes the
fact that it was perfectly in order that the first visitor should take
his departure; and an air that reminded one that he was suppressing all
knowledge of the fact that this man’s presence was a very questionable
advantage to the lady favored with it.

Ethelbert, instead of running to the rescue and disguising these men’s
characters from one another and herself by a flood of small talk, sat
thinking faithfully on Reginald’s very best qualities, and looking at
the moss rosebud which he held by the stem in such a way as to conceal
from the eye the flower which was under his half-closed hand. And when
she seated herself a trifle nearer him than to the judge, Reginald
recognized the gentle influence, and with an impulse of some kind,
pinned the bud on his coat lapel.

The judge seemed absolutely entranced with the sunset clouds opposite
him. His gaze was extremely abstracted, and when he turned it toward
Ethelbert, Reginald really felt that his presence was honestly
forgotten, as the judge, evidently taking up his last conversation with
Ethelbert, said: “Miss Daksha, you are supported in your ingenious
theory by Augustin, as well as others. Augustin says: ‘A knowledge of
the truth is equal to the task both of discerning and confuting all
false assertions and erroneous arguments, though never before met with,
if only they may be freely brought forward.’ I have reconsidered my
attempt to dissuade you from the (as I thought) quixotic undertaking on
which you have set your heart. I was astonished at the self-confidence
with which you virtually promise to give help to the struggling, counsel
to the doubtful, light to the blind, hope to the despondent, and
refreshment to the weary. But I perceive you propose to do this, not by
dictating to others, but by simply setting forth the law of your own
mind, and leaving it to the reasonableness or lack of reasonableness of
those about you to act upon it for themselves. There! Have I stated this
as you explained your plan to me in our delightful conversation?” said
the judge, turning his eyes, with their hard will-power, upon Ethelbert.

“Admirably,” said Ethelbert.

“Do you read Petrarch?”

“Why, really, no, I do not,” said Ethelbert in surprise at herself. “I
suppose I have not yet gotten to it.”

“I wondered whether it was your memory of that great author, or whether
it were the wonderful reception of profoundest truth which blesses pure
souls in all ages, bringing ever to the intelligent worker those few
_fundamentals_ which relate to our moral natures. See, I copied this for
you, that you might perceive not only that I was wrong in being against
you, but that you have Petrarch on your side.”

And he passed her a bit copied from “De Vita Solitaria,” which is
substantially as quoted from Ethelbert’s own expression.

“You remember,” said the judge, “you had said it was your own purpose to
accumulate wisdom and employ all your acquirements and understanding in
just the manner which would best ensure benefit to the people of this
now nearly twenty-first century, and would help to solve the especial
problems of our conglomerate American society. Petrarch substantially
says the same of his efforts for his people in his epoch.”

Reginald was turning over in his mind something which echoed down from
babydom. He remembered a little book among his mother’s choice few, with
letters on the back. Did he not in childhood spell out the letters there
P-E-T-R-A-R-C-H? And what else was it he “knew about the old fellow”?
Oh, he had an idea now. He dimly remembered many talks with his mother;
but he thought he would let these people talk on with their high themes,
while he sat pulling out his mustache and getting a word or two together
in such good form as would show this snob whom he was.

“All I have to say then, is,” commenced the little Captain Grove coolly,
“Petrarch is rather coming up in reputation when he finds himself able
to keep up with the thoughts of Miss Daksha. I knew old Pete; he was one
of my mother’s favorites. You know he was mashed on a girl called
‘Laura.’”

A merry peal from Ethelbert quite cleared the atmosphere; but, in the
sharp, bright handling of the subject that followed, Reginald felt
himself completely stranded again. So he had shrewdness enough to retire
on his laurels, and to take his departure at a moment when a pretty
little sentiment as to his arrested development along very nice lines of
life, had quite taken possession of Mrs. Daksha, as well as of the rest.

He walked direct from this visit to a bookstore and inquired for
Petrarch’s works, much to the amazement of the man who had hitherto
supplied him with another style of literature. And then in his room in
his hotel he recommenced an acquaintance with that author, or his
mother, or with the moss rosebud which he had placed at his elbow, in a
vase, or with Miss Ethelbert, or with himself. With which, or with how
many of these he recommenced an acquaintance that evening, it would have
been hard for him to say. But when he arose from the long half-reverie
he was in a new frame of mind; and, too, he fancied he had stolen a
march on Miss Daksha in regard to at least one book.




                              CHAPTER II.


After dinner Reginald seated himself in the office of his hotel. There
were the usual number of men about the place, talking and smoking, and
watching the women who passed through the office now and then. Hotel
life, with its ordinary distractions of seeing and being seen, and
newsmongering and time-killing, was rather a bore to Reginald. But he
had had little idea of anything else, unless it were a big house on
something of the same plan of social divertisement and high hilarity. He
had had spells of the blues, of course, in which he longed for something
indefinable; and now that his nerves and health were breaking down
pretty fast, he had these blues more often than ever. His regular cure
for these attacks was a visit to the bar, and then a couple of cigars
after it, then more blues, and then more cigars; so, of course, a
permanent removal of the cause and the effect did not seem very likely
to be secured.

There were one or two women at his hotel, acquaintances of his, who had
led the life of dressing, dining, party-going and evening dancing or
riding, for an indefinite number of years; women who had tried every
popular watering-place in the summer and many southern resorts in the
winter, and who were getting stout and flashy, both as to diamonds and
general effect; women who had money enough not to need to marry, and
knowledge enough of the general quality of some of the men about them,
not to care to marry; and such a general sense of loneliness and
dissatisfaction with the dullness, staleness, flatness and
unprofitableness of life, as made them not to care to live, and quite
too keen a certainty of a life to come, to at all desire to risk
embarking on that unknown sea on which diamonds and dinners, whist and
mature old flirtations, could not be taken as cargo.

Reginald had often wondered as he sat and talked nothing by the hour to
these women, whether he or they were the most utter failures and bores.
When this problem got too deep for him, he usually went to the bar; in
fact, the bar was his grand resort, most of the time. But when these
same questions presented themselves to these women, very few of them
went to the bar or had the bar brought to them. They usually set to
thinking, and then sometimes cried themselves so sick that their suppers
were sent up to their rooms and eaten with the salt of tears.

Now the difference in these cases of inanity was, that while the first
useless mortal drowned himself in liquor and the second in tears, the
result was the inebriation and steady animalization of the faculties of
the one, while the other certainly escaped being classed with those who
never ate bread in sorrow, and knows not the unseen powers.

The boarders said that there had been what they called “tender passages”
in history, between Mrs. Mancredo and Reginald. She had soft Italian
eyes, which had cried many passionate hours, but they were always cooled
off and black-leaded up; and then with a little pink to make the
tear-stain pinker still, Mrs. Mancredo never looked much the worse for
the honest but baffled scrutiny which she had made of life in general
and her own in particular. But on the reverse, she looked just so much
the better, as she was for the time less hard and world encrusted.

At these times, if Reginald had not been too recently to his throne of
consolation, the bar, he felt quite impressed by the element of
womanliness which was visible in her tear-brightened eyes.

On the evening after he had ventured on Ethelbert’s fuller acquaintance,
and had had that ethical and æsthetic conversation, and the interesting
_tête-a-tête_ with the rosebud, Petrarch and himself, Mrs. Mancredo had
had a good long cry, so-called.

For a young bride had arrived at the hotel, wife of an invalid person;
and in the good gossip after dinner, Mrs. Mancredo had chatted about
herself (apparently) to this young bride, until she knew all the past
history of the girl, and had a pretty clear forecast of her future
history as well. Then she commenced with being very sorry for the
pretty, ingenuous young thing, and more sorry for herself because of the
years in which she was an unenviable wife, and still more sorry for
herself in her present mature womanhood. So when she came down to supper
she had her pretty round chin well up in the air, while her heavily
leaded eyelashes drooped under the languor of her hard weeping. She had
that strange sort of expectancy of something better, new, and more
satisfactory at last, which sometimes follows on a new discovery of the
great disproportion between human aspirations and the ordinary objects,
which are palmed off upon them as satisfactory food.

She glanced toward Reginald as she passed his table, and inwardly
ejaculated “Horrid thing! Eternally eating, whenever he stops
wine-bibbing and smoking long enough.” And then with a flutter and flow
of drapery, she permitted the waiter to adjust the paraphernalia of the
occasion, as with a flashing of finger-rings and twittering of the
pendants in her ears, and heaving of the laces under the diamonds at her
breast, she proceeded to practically assert the always conceded fact
that she was a splendid-looking woman. Three or four newcomers
recognized the fact, and the old habitués were as loyal as ever. She saw
all that, while she read and reread the bill of fare, and while the
patient John brushed off imaginary crumbs, and did many useless things
to remind her he still lived, and lived but to serve. Then—“Oh,
anything,” was her order. He had expected that would be all, but he was
obliged to wait just the same for its utterance.

Mrs. Mancredo meanwhile had not for a moment lost sight of the fact that
Reginald had not once glanced toward her; and also that, though he had
not changed his dress otherwise, the moss rosebud which he had worn
before was gone now. She began to get up a theory about that rosebud.
She had before never seen him with a buttonhole bouquet. Once when he
had asked her for a flower he had only held it for a while; he hadn’t
worn it. In a polite sort of a way, one time with another, she had
snubbed Reginald often; but all the same, if he was going to wear
rosebuds, she was going to know why and whence. So she watched him. He
was not even reading his paper; he was eating, not without interest in
the good things before him: he was not enough far gone in his new love
for that. But he was so abstracted that he—oh, horrors!—he had
deliberately, firmly, kept his clutch on his knife and fork, and, having
struck the butt of the handle of each squarely down on the table, he
held them points upwards in the air, while he industriously masticated
his food and glared, unconscious, into the abysmal beyond.

“There’s his lineage well defined,” said she to herself, determinedly
watching him; till he with a start looked directly at her, and she
holding his eye, with a quick gesture imitated his attitude, stare and
all; and then sinking back in her chair, fanned herself in a pantomimic
swoon.

He shook his head across the dining-hall, signifying that he had an
account to settle, for that manœuvre. And when he had picked at a grape
or two for dessert, she significantly moved back the empty chair at her
emptily table, and he came over and sat down with her.

She sniffed the air as he approached.

“I smell a moss rosebud,” said she, raising her fibbingly black
eyelashes and fibbing lips towards him.

Reginald had been getting quite bright that afternoon, and he answered
to her direct gaze: “You have a perfect nose.” And just as she took in
the compliment he went on, explanatorily, “a double-barrelled,
back-action nose; a burglarious, lock-picking nose, that can shoot round
three spiral staircases, down a back hall and unlock a door, all for the
purpose of getting at a moss rosebud that you saw pinned on my lapel two
hours ago, and which you don’t see there now! Do you know why you don’t
see it there now? I’ll tell you. It is because it is in a little vase
beside a copy of Petrarch’s works up in my room.”

Now she dropped her eyes and pushed her chair back.

“All right, my poetical friend. I believed all your parables till you
came to a ‘copy of Petrarch’; but there are limits,” said she, and she
looked at him in a way which, with the accompanying words and
intonation, would have meant in a man’s mouth, “You are lying, and I
know it and you know it.”

Reginald had always taken a good deal of this sort of thing from the
sort of women produced by society (?), some of whom think it persiflage,
and some of whom habitually talk that way because of the habitual state
of unfaith in men, which, with or without cause, fills their minds and
hearts.

Reginald had never at any time in his life liked this; for with all his
arrest of high manhood, no man could truly accuse him of lying, or of
dishonor along that line toward males. And as a boy he never did lie to
his mother, and as a son he had never lied to his father; and when these
jocular accusations first began to meet him from pretty girls’ lips, he
disliked them much. But when he saw all the fellows had to take it, he
began to think that was “high style,” and that, after all, may be, if
women took it for granted that the fellows lied and were bad, and yet
still petted them and invited them to their homes, badness might, after
all, not be badness, nor lying be lying; and that, may be, one thing was
as good as another, all through the catalogue. At any rate, that women
seemed to think so and that no one fellow could stand against this tide,
even if he wanted to do so. But he always disliked this thing just the
same, and never saw the wit of it.

The word “parables,” somehow, too, this evening, struck him worse than
it would if she had said “lies”; for “parables,” as they were taught him
at his mother’s knee, were “beautiful words of life”; and besides,
“whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap,” was getting to be a
fact which he was illustrating in himself.

While he thought of these things he looked so glowering that Mrs.
Mancredo said, lightly, “Now what ails you?”

“How many times in a week, on the average, do you suppose you tell us
fellows that we lie?”

“Well, the times I tell you so, compared with the times you do it, are
so infinitesimally small that a body could not be to the trouble of
reckoning them,” said she lazily.

He looked at her seriously. “Do you think men lie?” he said.

She answered him in blank amazement: “Why, of course, child!”

“All men?”

“Might except a deaf mute or two, if you like.”

“Will you except me?”

“Did you say except or accept?”

“I certainly said except. At this point in our conversation I could not
ask you to accept me, for I can’t imagine what a woman would ever want
of a liar.”

She shrugged her shoulders and ejaculated: “Hobson’s choice as for
that!”

She looked as pretty as though she were being real good; in fact, she
looked a great deal prettier. There was an impishness about her with
which Reginald was more fully _en rapport_ than he was with high
goodness. True, she expressed disbelief in him, even on the one point on
which he could somewhat justly value himself; but she looked “sort of
loving” out of her eyes all the time; and Reginald had never resisted
that kind of flattery.

And so they sat looking at one another; he a silly slave to her wiles,
and crushing back the honest longing he had had for her approbation of
his best virtue; and she, a slave to the conditions imposed on
disfranchised womanhood, and crushing back her longing for his
recognition of her individuality and her right to be of sound use to the
world,—practical, sound use. She could not accuse him of deflection from
that virtue which woman is taught to most strenuously hold herself, and
man’s breach of which most cruelly afflicts her. So she accused him of
lying,—a slave’s vice,—which he, not being a slave, need not lean
toward. Thus they played at cross-purposes, neither helping the other
out of the social tangle.

When he rose from the table it was with an angry perplexity.

“What in the mischief has set her to believe that I am such a liar?” he
said to himself.

And as she went up toward her pretty private parlor she was thinking to
herself: “He is as truthful a fellow, as far as his words and promises
go, as I happen to know. But his fickle passions are what I despise him
for. He really thinks I doubt that he has the rosebud and the poem on
his table. I as good as saw them when he said it. But that means another
love; and that is what he was gazing at, with his knife and fork in the
air like a farmer. I’ve got the idea now. They were farmer’s people when
he was twelve or so. He of course had that habit then, and he was
thinking of his early boyhood and fell back into those rough ways. This
new love, this rosebud flame, has something to do with old times. She
can’t be a very young girl, then.”

And so soliloquizing, each within self, they walked up the broad
stairway together.

“Your rosebud took you to boyhood, didn’t it?” she asked, turning square
upon him at the landing, and facing him as he stood on the step below.

“It is no use saying yes or no; you don’t believe me,” said he, with a
blunt boy-directness that seemed to touch her.

“You great goose!” she said. “Of course I believe you.”

“You said you didn’t.”

“Well, what of that?”

“A good deal of it,” said he, indignantly. “I believe you when you tell
me a thing.”

“More goose you!”

He stood and looked at her like one dazed. He was trying so hard that
day to bring his life to firmer foundations; and she stood there
laughing at him as though lies and truths were all jokes together. “Good
heavens, what do you mean! Do you mean that you lie?”

“Yes, that’s what I mean; always do,” said she.

“Then you are lying now?”

“Of course.”

“Oh, then, if you are lying when you say that you lie, you would be
telling the truth then; only if you are telling the truth when you say
you lie, then you are lying.”

“You need to go to sleep and clear your head,” said she coolly.

“Look here now, tell me once, are you truthful?”

“Yes, I am full of truths of one kind and another: oppressively full. I
should like to unload.”

“And yet you say you are a liar?”

“Oh, yes. Now let us go right over and over it again and again; it is
only quarter past eleven,” said she, laughing at his eagerness.

“You call this a great joke, don’t you?” with passionate intensity.

“Perfectly convulsing,” she answered, with a look as if her patience was
about gone, and as if, should he dare to browbeat her any longer with
that look in his eyes, she would establish her claim to a new line of
ability. This possibility was so evident on her countenance that he
said:

“I believe if you can lie like this, you can do anything.”

“I seem to feel some undeveloped ability stirring within me myself,”
said she; “nothing of course in the chewing, drinking, sweltering
animalism line. But let us say some skillful, intellectual achievement,
which might rid the world of a few thousands like yourself, and make
room for a new race,” said she with a deliberate consideration that had
in it the _savoir-faire_ of a society woman, wrought up beyond much more
endurance of the life she had been forced to lead,—a life now coming in
sight of the convincing truths of this liberalizing age.

Poor Reginald stood actually aghast. His lower jaw had fallen and his
eyes protruded, as, with his third finger pointed to his breast, he
stammered: “Me! Rid the world of such as me? What have you against me?”

She looked at him with fury suppressed; and at last, when she had
controlled herself enough to speak, said, in a low tone, full of the
sense of insult and degradation which our false social conditions have
forced on thinking womanhood: “I have just that against you, which you
would have against me, if my character, through and through, was a
facsimile of yours. Sir, that is what I have against you!”

He looked at her dumb. “I don’t understand, I—”

“Oh, well, take the night to it! Think your life over, every step of the
way up, since you have entered young hoodlumism; and just fancy that a
twin sister of yours had kept with you all the way, step by step, in all
your paths—where would she—”

Reginald had leaned against the balustrade perfectly white. “You are a
very fiend,” he said; and then he pulled up stairs as a man gropes who
has been struck by blindness.

Mrs. Mancredo was frightened. She wanted to help him up. “You—you’ve
done enough,” he said thickly, without looking at her. And she went into
her parlor and he went up to the next flight.

When Reginald had closed and locked his door and mechanically thrown
himself on a sofa, he lay there for some time—not thinking, yet not
unconscious. The room had been quite shut up, and the bud, now half
opened, had filled the air with its exquisite fragrance. He sensed this
fragrance, and, in the half stupor which had come to him, he felt the
presence of tender, soothing hands passing, not over his head, but near
the very brain substance within his head. His mind seemed reëchoing the
speech he had made about Petrarch’s Laura, on which he had prided
himself. And as it repeated itself, there were withdrawn all gross
elements, until the spiritualized worship which Petrarch had for his
paragon of true virtue, seemed to enswathe his being with a heavenly
marvel of pure love. A mellifluous rapture of mind, all separate from
the senses, overflowed his highest being; and then, as clearly as ever
he felt the sun’s rays, he felt his own mother’s presence, and knew, or
thought he knew, that he was falling down and down serenely into her
care, with an ecstasy of the annihilation of self, and all self-burdens.

                  *       *       *       *       *

The next morning Mrs. Mancredo took an early breakfast, and then stayed
in the parlor a while, looking about. She breakfasted three times that
morning, and then asked if any one had seen Mr. Grove. It was discovered
that no one had. Then Mrs. Mancredo, remembering how he had groped up
stairs, followed the matter through. The result was, they found him
insensible in his room, and one glance at him told it was no inebriate’s
sleep.




                              CHAPTER III.


A partial paralysis had befallen Reginald Grove. At his first stage of
consciousness, Mrs. Mancredo noticed that when a servant in clearing the
room took up the withered rosebud, his heavy gaze followed it. She
replaced it, and then bending over him said: “Do you want to see her?”

The eagerness of his attempt to respond showed his wish. Mrs. Mancredo
ordered her carriage for a drive past the gardens of the town, on the
lookout for moss roses.

“She must be a widow,” she was saying to herself, when her thoughts were
interrupted by the sight of a rosebush, much beaten down on the side
next the house-steps; and on the other, in the full glory of its mossy
beauty.

“Turn round, John, and go slowly back, and then come to this spot and
on, till I tell you to stop.”

As they passed the house the second time, Mrs. Mancredo had a good view
of the roses, and of a young woman whose every nervous motion meant
purpose, watering the bush. Mrs. Mancredo stopped the carriage and
descended. On approaching Miss Daksha she looked at her steadily a
moment, and then presented her card.

“I came—I came to look at your moss roses, and to talk about them. What
has happened to this bush?” she said abruptly.

“It has been abused.”

“Did you ever live on a farm?” said Mrs. Mancredo then, after a long
pause.

Ethelbert turned and looked at her, and then drawing chairs into the
shade, said with a strange, sweet smile: “No, I never did. Now please
sit here and I’ll sit with you, and you shall tell me what you really
want to know.”

Mrs. Mancredo was a bit overwhelmed; but she sat, and wheeling her guns,
said as suddenly as possible: “Reginald Grove wants to see you.”

“Is he ill?”

“You know him, then?”

“Why don’t you say whatever you have to say?” said Ethelbert simply.

“If I did, I should say that you gave him a rosebud and loaned him a
volume of Petrarch’s ‘De Vita Solitaria,’ and that he loves you, and is
sick, paralyzed, dying!—and wants to see you,” she said with Italian
impetuosity, leaning more and more toward Ethelbert, trying to shock the
secret out of her, with each added word. “You know him, you gave him the
rosebud—the book?”

“I spoke to him for the first time yester-morn. I have seen him several
times. I gave him the rosebud; I did not loan him the book.” She laid
her cool hand on this woman’s burning hot hand, saying: “He is nothing
to me more than any and every human being is. Any child five years old,
with beautiful possibilities, is more interesting.”

“Then why pin a rosebud on his coat?”

“He pinned it there as a sort of symbol of his lost sweet childhood,
which he wishes he could regain, and which I think he could.”

“O, this is stupidity!” said Mrs. Mancredo in quick Italian. “We all
know that can never be done! What is he, that he should have his
childhood back again, more than I should—more than thousands? No! he has
made his bed, and there he shall lie upon it, a paralyzed idiot, for
what I know. He is a bad man! Do you understand what that means? And he
is a rich bad man, and his visits to this simple house and to you mean
no good! Do you understand that?”

“I understand you,” said Ethelbert, rising and looking down upon her
visitor, “but you don’t understand me, and cannot. Till you have known
me a long while, you will misinterpret everything I say or do.”

“How old are you?” was the next angry question.

“Ages old. I am able to help you and this sick friend of yours. I am
sorry for your trouble,” said Ethelbert, with a divine pity in her voice
and look, and an uplifting power going forth like a cooling shadow
displacing the glare and scorch of passion; until, in the cool of it,
the tears which, unshed, had burned Mrs. Mancredo’s eyes ever since she
had seen Reginald groping upstairs the night before his shock, came
forth, relieving her spirit.

Then altogether perplexed, but believing Ethel’s every word, she said:
“Can you come down to the hotel and see if you can ease him? The doctor
says that his paralysis comes from the ‘functional disorder of the
nervous centers,’ whatever all-that-is.”

“That is hemiplegia,” said Ethelbert, “and means ‘I strike one-half,’—so
he is paralyzed on one side. If that is it, one corner of his mouth will
be drawn a little, and one cheek will look in a sort, withered and
drooping. If it is that, his mind will be curious.”

“You are a cold-blooded thing, any way,” said Mrs. Mancredo, frightened
and angry.

Ethelbert opened her eyes reflectively.

“Forgive me,” said the excitable woman, “and get into my carriage and
come now.”

“In a minute,” said Ethelbert; and in about that time she came back with
her hat and her mother, whom she introduced, saying:

“My mother will go, too.” And cutting some fresh roses she followed the
two elder ladies into the carriage, and they drove away to the hotel.

Reginald was awake when they entered; and Ethelbert had given the
flowers to Mrs. Mancredo, who walked with them to the sick man. He
smiled that strange half smile, which was contradicted by the paralyzed
muscles on the other side of his mouth. “He will get on in a way, you
know,—in a way,” said the physician. “He will perhaps be talking and
about again, in a way, you know,—in a way.”

“I found her, Reginald, she is here,” said Mrs. Mancredo, and she
motioned to Miss Daksha to approach. A look of heavenly rapture
overspread his countenance. In a strange, full voice he cried out: “My
mother!”

With an exclamation the physician started forward, but fell back, as
Ethelbert said all motherly: “Yes, Reginald.”

He looked at her with consuming eagerness. “You have been gone so long,”
he said, a little thickly. “Where is Cousin Alitza?”

A muffled shriek from Mrs. Mancredo thrilled through the room.

“You know what he means!” asserted Ethelbert, looking at Mrs. Mancredo,
who, with a perfectly bloodless face and a shrinking, stealthy step,
approached. Reginald Grove looked at her puzzled, and then said
fretfully, lifting his eyes to Ethelbert: “You have all been gone so
long; see how she has grown.”

There was an oppressive hush of bewilderment. The doctor was held back
by the unmoved air with which Ethelbert kept her post, giving way to her
as if she were the physician of the occasion in whom he trusted. She
stood, gently stroking Reginald’s head. He raised his other hand and
patted hers languidly, as a pleased child would do, and so presently
fell asleep. Then the other physicians came in, and a little apart
discussed the case, perplexed.

“He called you Alitza. Your card was marked Corrinne,” said Ethelbert;
and after scarce a moment’s halt Mrs. Mancredo said with truthful
rapidity: “I am—I was—Alitza Corrinne Roccoca, his cousin. I have seen
him but twice since I was seventeen, until I met him in this city. He
loved me when we were children; he hated me when I was older. He never
dreamed that Mrs. Mancredo was—is—Alitza.”

Ethelbert was silent; she was thinking of his perplexed words: “You have
all been away so long; see how she has grown,” and of the childlike
manner in which he had clung to her and called her “mother.” She
remembered a curious case of mental-aberration of which she had read.
“Doctors,” she said, “your patient’s mind has become blank, back to the
time before his mother’s death. Don’t you see? He thinks I am his
mother; and his mother passed away when he was five years old. He is a
child again; that is all.”

“Yes, but a paralyzed one,” said the physicians.




                              CHAPTER IV.


The doctor motioned them all to come with him to an adjoining room. And
then Mrs. Mancredo told all she knew about the rosebud which had become
associated in Reginald’s mind with his early life, and of the
conversation which had taken place between them the night of his attack,
adding:

“I was in the family when he was a little fellow, before auntie died. We
parted after that, and only met a few times when I was a tall, thin,
sallow girl; and—and he did not know me when we met again here at this
hotel this summer, in my robust maturity. He isn’t quick, Reginald
isn’t, and I’ve puzzled him my share, one way and another. He has been
getting in a bad way, poor Regie, and here’s the end of it.”

And to this the doctors agreed. This was the end of poor Reginald Grove;
and as his fate seemed settled, the older Mr. Grove, when he arrived,
accepted the statement that Reginald was a wrecked man, body and mind.
And when Mrs. Mancredo had made herself known to Mr. Grove on his
arrival, in a softened state of feeling toward both the father and son
she found herself promising more in the way of help and responsibility
than she at first realized, or afterwards wanted to perform. And the
elder Grove (deeply interested in speculations in Mexico, and interested
in his own approaching third marriage) was well content to turn this
responsibility over to Mrs. Mancredo, with (it was popularly said) the
promise of all the money necessary for Reginald’s needs or fancies. It
was not until Mr. Grove had steamed away to Mexico that Mrs. Mancredo
really began to look about her; and then she did it with some disgust at
her own stupidity, as she was pleased to name the sympathy that had
overwhelmed her and swept her on to undertake, in an indefinite way, all
that the care of Reginald involved.

One warm day in the late fall she brought Reginald in her carriage down
to the Dakshas. He was urgent to go there every day, and was often
brought down and placed in a long-chair out on their piazza, where, with
his volume of Petrarch (from which he was inseparable) he passed many
pleasant hours. His facial disfigurement was not as marked as at first.
But he was paralyzed through one arm and leg, and the sense of taste,
touch and smell seemed deadened. His hearing and his sight were not
perceptibly injured, and the childlike alertness of his questions seemed
to show that the gray matter of the brain, like a galvanic battery,
still generated the electric current sufficiently to produce and
accumulate nervous force for the few demands which the partially
deadened coarser part of the brain now made upon it. There was evinced
by Reginald an utter deadness to the passions of fear, desire, etc. The
central ganglia, which serves to do the drudgery of the brain, leaving
the gray matter free for higher, more difficult kinds of work, was
injured; thus overthrowing the balance of power between the highest
meditative, spiritual faculties, and the seat of those practical
faculties which insure energetic daily activities.

It was as if the partial paralysis which had befallen Reginald Grove had
sent a partial sleep to the abused and overtaxed faculties of his animal
being; while the higher hemisphere of his brain, so long crippled by
inaction, now arousing from that lethargy of disuse, put forth dormant
strength. Whether true or not, this was Ethelbert’s theory of the case,
and her study of developments confirmed her in it. He was, in a sense,
helpless and forceless; yet the childlike, placid clearness of his
ideals, and the exhalation of sentiment in view of nature’s beauties,
were so inherently clear-cut and rare, that, broken and disorganized
though he was, Reginald Grove was now a less disagreeable person to
Ethelbert than he had been on his first tumultuous visit. He was seldom
pettish or unmanageable when with Ethelbert; but to Mrs. Mancredo his
talk was unendurable. She called him a miserable fellow, blaming him
passionately to Ethelbert.

“But I don’t think he is miserable,” said Ethelbert, in her quiet way.
“He was miserable, when in other moments he loathed himself for his
self-mismanagement. He acted like a soul in torment the first time he
was here; and I fancy he was not then at his worst.”

“I am sure I can’t understand your notions. Do you mean, you think he is
less miserable than before?” said Mrs. Mancredo, looking toward
Reginald, who sat reading the book from which he was inseparable, as a
very little child reads. The sight of that book made her wild with
nervousness. There seemed something uncanny in the way he had identified
himself with the personages and ideas there. And his numerous polyglot
questions asked in regard to things she could not explain, and his
weird, childlike shrewdness of imagination as to some unseen world of
mind and spirit, were getting to be the horrible thing to Mrs. Mancredo.

From what in the apparently stolid, noncommittal old Reginald, this
spirit of occult divination of the purposes, powers and results of
Petrarch’s struggles, had evolved itself, she could not fancy. And she
was getting so nervous at the steady illumination of his eyes that she
would have given half she was worth to have removed from her memory all
knowledge of his existence. Whether he had become absolutely foolish, or
uncannily wise and weird, she did not know. But her refuge was
Ethelbert; and Reginald’s unaltered fancy for calling Ethelbert
“mother,” seemed to favor Mrs. Mancredo’s dawning hope of a way to get
rid of him helpfully. And as she so thinking stood there, down in the
garden, looking back at him up on the piazza, he called out: “Mother!
mother!” and they both walked quickly to him.

“Let’s have a nice read about ‘of such is the kingdom of heaven,’ and
about the poor boy out of whom the devils were cast. I want to know
about those mighty works, and how power did them.”

Mrs. Mancredo, with an ignorant person’s horror of what may result from
irregularity of mental action, felt it was awful that a man who had lost
the gustatory appetites which render nice food a pleasure to the palate,
should yet, as Ethelbert said, feast on the high thoughts and things of
the unseen realms. For Ethelbert believed he did not _think_ in the
sense of concentrating attention; but, instead, she believed his mind
simply reflected back to his attention what passed in the realms of life
above and anear him, as a lake reflects all that shadows itself upon its
surface; and this she explained to Mrs. Mancredo, adding:

“It is for this reason that I wish he could be always cared for by some
discerning person, who, dwelling unmoved in that beautiful realm which
now has hold on his mind, and who, reading his very thought, would thus
sustain him at peace there, as a student under these angelic teachers,
and so educate him for a real manhood which he would thus yet attain. Do
you understand?”

“No, I don’t understand,” was the blunt response. “All I know is, he has
played out his little play on the stage of life, and has made a tragedy
or farce of it, common enough in this age. He makes me wild with
nervousness sometimes. What do you want me to _do_ with him, for
heaven’s sake?”

“You are right. It is for heaven’s sake that I want you to do it; for
there is a heaven, and it belongs on earth,” said Ethel, slowly. “I
believe it is only the organs at the base of his brain which are
exhausted; and as they are nearly deadened, he seems like a fool to
people who can only use their lower brain, which is the seat of the
senses and passions—but—”

“Do you mean that as I am not alert on those spiritual planes which
arouse themselves in this ghostly way with him, and as he cannot use his
common-sense faculties, which are alert enough in me, I probably seem to
him to be as much of an idiot as he to me seems to be?”

“I mean you have no common ground to meet upon just now. Not, however,
that you are unspiritual, but because your nature is so closely knitted
up, that you act and think as a well-constructed entity, dealing with
entities, not with fragments.”

“Well, we never did have any common ground,” said Mrs. Mancredo, just as
Judge Elkhorn came on the scene. And then her mind took hold of the fact
that if she could not get along with Reginald as a whole, she certainly
did not want to deal with the ghastly fragments of him which seemed
left. And this she told Ethel.

“He never has been mentally whole,” said Ethel. “He is gathering up his
fragments;” said Ethel. “Don’t you want to help him?”

Then Mrs. Mancredo gave Judge Elkhorn a crude version of the story,
appealing from Ethel to him, concerning the whole business, in a way
which some women have; not because they are going to act on the advice
they may receive, but because they understand themselves better after
hearing themselves “talk out the whole problem.”

Judge Elkhorn was a bright man in many regards, and had had an ambition
to electrify the world with a theory which would give a new basis for
action in reforms; but in dealing with such a case as this, he had
certain serious limitations. For he prided himself on never going beyond
the common-sense recognition of objects which he could taste, touch,
feel, smell and see. But here was Reginald with the common-sense plane
of mind (that is, the plane of mind on which practical people live
externally and meet each other) terribly damaged, and with three out of
five sense-avenues to knowledge, shut up. And yet Miss Ethelbert claimed
he was living in a rather select sort of world of his own, after a
tranquil fashion; not devoid of certain startling gleams of
intelligence, nay, wisdom. But as for an unseen world, and “an education
beyond the grave,” Judge Elkhorn was pleased to say, “he hoped he had
left all faith in that sort of thing along with fear of spooks and the
dark.” He was willing to call Reginald’s state “a curious phenomenon.”
For the rest, he would have liked to have relegated this man to the
obscurity of some asylum. For if he disliked Reginald when he was well
(?) and obtrusively at home on Ethelbert’s balcony the day they first
met, he disliked him vastly more now that he, as a child, was ensconced
on Ethelbert’s attention.

Judge Elkhorn thought the whole thing preposterous; and notwithstanding
his fine humanitarian theories for helping misery in the mass, he would
have liked to take prompt steps to hinder its being served up in
individual cases, in polite society. He quite laid down the law on this
subject to Miss Daksha, and interposed his particular likes and dislikes
as if they were the code of the Medes and Persians. Ethel let him
proceed. But she held to her faith in the final rehabilitation of
Reginald, and expressed it.

So, in language of his own, Judge Elkhorn at last reassured her that her
concern for this case was really unfitting.

“Who being judge?” said she.

“I shall have to be judge of your conduct, if you desire to retain my
friendship and respect.”

“But that is _not_ my desire. My desire is to get Reginald Grove well,”
she said quietly, holding Judge Elkhorn steady in the light of her
self-directing intelligence, until, without more words, he himself saw
that he had supposed her general friendliness for him was identified
with an enfeebling dependence on his approbation.

Then—

“Mrs. Mancredo, what will _you_ do for this man?” Ethel cheerily asked.

“What can I do?”

“You could take Reginald away from the hotel-life which you dislike, and
which you find so injurious to both of you; and you could get a nice,
rightly adjusted home. And then, from the pure potencies of your
splendid being, you could second nature’s recuperative forces in _him_;
and they, unthwarted and assisted thus by you, will build him up again
into health of body, by giving him a new affluence of mind. Then _mind_
will recreate the body. To accomplish this would perhaps take years of
real mothering-wit and wisdom. But—”

“Years, Ethelbert? I should be an old woman by that time, near my
fifties. What is a woman worth then? And what would this rejuvenated
young scholar care for me? I mean—this is nonsense; and yes, _what would
I be by that time?_”

“You would be a woman who at least would have achieved one defined
object in life. You are now sick of existence. Money spending, dressing,
dining, and days spent in wishing that things and men were different,
have given your active imagination and non-concentrated powers no
comfort for years past. Neither could you get much good by running up
and down the world, trying to get an audience to listen to your
theories. Absolute, concentrated personal work, done well, on the spot
you stand on, will not fatigue you any more than does the toil of mere
self-exhibit and self-protection from the inroads of others on your
property and yourself. You say twelve years hence you will be a woman in
the fifties, if you give these years to work. How old will you be twelve
years hence if you don’t?”

“There are always asylums and skilled people,” she suggested, trembling
with alarm, not so much at the work, as at undertaking to settle herself
to a twelve-years’ job for him. She was very pale, and looked toward the
man with a shrinking, like that in the eyes of a dumb creature being led
at last to the altar of final sacrifice.

“Yes,” said Ethelbert, “there are always asylums; and they are getting
fuller and fuller of people who know so ill how to deal with time, that
fearing, faltering and fightings have landed them there to die, while
their friends outside, fearing, faltering and fighting against their
fears, soon need asylums, too. This man’s trembling intellect would be
ruined by a few months in the average insane asylum. You say you would
be an old woman at fifty if you tried to save that man; tell me, then,
what will you be if you don’t?”

“Mother! mother! please call little Alitza; she can read me the story of
the little leaden soldier; he didn’t fight well; he fell in the gutter.”

Of course that was Reginald’s voice speaking out in good English this
time, which was enfibred by the childish ring of a perfectly carefree
mind, when it is filled with blithe imaginings.

Judge Elkhorn looked at him with startled attention, and Mrs. Mancredo
shuddered, half whispering: “We used to read ‘Comte d’Andersen’ in the
French, with his mother. He was such a pretty little fellow, and took up
French so easily. I learned it, too, though Italian was my baby tongue.
My father was French. O dear, my life has amounted to nothing after all
my efforts!”

“How would it do, then, to cease efforts, and in a home be easily
useful?”

“It would make a scandal.”

Ethelbert unconsciously drew herself up, till it seemed as if the
universe did not contain air enough to fill her expanding lungs as she
said:

“‘Don’t talk of scandal. Needs break through stone walls. Take counsel
of your own soul, though all the world should be scandalized thereby.’”
And then, turning at the repeated call for “mother,” she went to
Reginald, who could not be satisfied without a caressing touch of her
health-giving hand. But then, contented, he went on with his reading,
caring for the attention only as a petted child cares for an accustomed
endearment which is hourly, perhaps, received.

Yet Judge Elkhorn looked not incapable of striking the paralyzed
creature. But the Italian, with an instant’s sharp scrutiny, saw only in
the act that Diana-like integrity of purpose, which like a light
reflected, beautified her own face, too, with the mother-tenderness that
filled Ethelbert’s being, as she said:

“Will you go to Alitza’s house, or stay with mother?”

“Of course I shall stay with my mother. Alitza may come when she
chooses,” said the invalid again in English. And Elkhorn, with arms high
folded, looked on, forgetful of all else but the simple intelligent
purpose which made radiant these workers. Was it that passion by them
had been triturated into the high potency of a god-like vigor, which was
sent now through the earth to bring redemption to universal man, and (at
their hands) to this individual, by the way?

“Yes, yes, take him, keep him here,” said Mrs. Mancredo. “Do as he says,
Miss Daksha. He is coming to seem such a dreadful responsibility—guarded
by angels, that—”

“Oh, if this is the style of doing things which women are going to put
on the world!” the judge exclaimed, “asylums and criminal courts will
get to seem more devoted to miracle-working than the churches now are;
and every idiot will become a center for spiritually scientific
endeavor.”

“They never should have been anything less. In fact, idiots don’t
belong. They are transgressions of law, as much as criminals. They, with
hundreds of other things, are but the results of women’s unnatural
relation to the university-education, which must be by _her_ bestowed on
man,” said Ethelbert, leading them away from proximity to Reginald.
Because even though he seemed unobservant of what was going on about
him, she thought that when he was not directly _addressed_ he (as if in
echo) heard what was said to or about him. This manner of dealing with
him rendered his visible presence in this world of effects a means by
which those who were about him in this world were partially introduced
to the other.

The judge and Mrs. Mancredo stood drawn together, looking back at this
alienated mentality. Then she half whispered:

“They say at the hotel that he ought to—well—not be at the hotel, no
matter what big bills I am willing to pay, and all that. So many people
are in a rickety mental condition themselves, that—instead of _studying_
a case like this, Miss Ethel, as _you_ do, it alarms them, and—and—well,
I don’t know myself what it does to them—yes, and to me, too. I will
confess I dislike sick men. And it sometimes seems to be not Reginald at
all, but a ghost which has arisen out of his childhood—sort of waiting
to have another try at what he can make of life.”

“Yet there are hundreds of such men everywhere, and we can’t afford to
use our brains over them. Why should women spend their lives doing such
jobs? Men choose to go the pace that kills, one way and another, and
will not hear one word from women till they drop down dead weights on
the shoulders of—”

Mrs. Mancredo broke forth into convulsive weeping. This was too much for
Judge Elkhorn. He took sudden leave, assured of one thing: that was,
that Mrs. Mancredo saw the cleansing work which would have to be done in
society’s augean stables if women took up the business of turning these
stables into ‘the home of the brave and the free.’ And he saw that the
idea that she _ought_ to save this man, now had a hold on Mrs. Mancredo,
and he knew that when a strong woman thinks she _ought_ to do a thing,
the ship of state may as well clear its decks for an encounter from all
the guns hitherto known or unknown in moral combat. For he had learned
that women are constitutionally brave as well as educationally timid,
and that they set no limits to their daring when once they enter the
lists to do the thing that must be done.

After he was gone, Mrs. Mancredo stood watching Reginald’s happy,
superintelligent look. Then—

“What have you done to him and to us all?” she said. “It is as if—as if
we were watching by the hallowed dead.”

“I think it is wonderful myself,” said Ethelbert. “I have concluded that
the core of Reginald’s nature is the love of truth; and that this core
of his being has not yet been ruined by social abuses; and that this
love of truth is a radical root, from which a resurrected life will
arise. There is hope of a tree, though it be cut down, that it shall
live again if the roots are healthy. The roots of his life are better
than the visible growths that have appeared,” said Ethelbert.

“Oh, let me come here, too! Let us both come!” cried Mrs. Mancredo,
after the strange, tremblant silence; “I can’t keep away from here. I am
so much happier here than I have ever been in my life; I feel so broken
up and stripped of everything, somehow. Let me fetch down a few things.
You can crowd together a little and give me two rooms; or better still,
throw out an addition across the house. You can make new parlors—so—with
a veranda round them, and give Regie the sunny half, and—and take me in
and educate me, too. You’ve tossed me all up, somehow. At the rate I am
going on I shall be a selfish old woman at fifty, and have done neither
Regie nor myself nor anyone any good. But really, you know, he don’t
deserve a bit of this at my hands. Do you know the night he had the
shock, I felt as though—as though—”

She stopped and looked at Ethelbert’s impassive face. “You have never
asked me what there was between Regie and me,” she said. “Sharp as you
are, you must have known I hated him. Well, yes,” hesitated Mrs.
Mancredo, “in a sort, I hated him. Have you never wondered what there is
between us? You don’t look as if you cared now.”

“I should be sorry to have anything between him and his best
development, or you and yours. All the rest does not amount to much
either way at this terrible social crisis,” said Ethelbert, as she gazed
down the long ages which had been leading on to this stage of general
social, chaotic development, which is but an outward sign of the
particular state of the aggregated individual. “And instead of feeling
frightened at wickedness, and planning a punitive reform, the simple
thing to do is to recognize these conditions as _stages_ at which the
fomentation takes place, which always precedes clarification. A thorough
clarification of society is at hand, the outcome of which will be, ‘the
new order of the new age.’”

“I begin to think so myself,” said Mrs. Mancredo, after a long pause, in
which she had watched the thought-gleams in Ethel’s eyes. Then, vexed at
her own perplexity, she said uneasily:

“I wonder if anything would interest you that was not purely
metaphysical or psychological? I mean—in fact—I want—that is—I wonder—

“Oh come, tell me. How far _would_ your ideas of old-fashioned duty
carry you? Would they make you interfere with another person’s business?
Would they make you make a body tell you all she knew about herself, and
make you bring a body right down to the grindstone of confession, and
bind her to your dictatorial law of ways and means of repentance?”

Ethel laughed amiably, saying: “If you want to know my character, you
would better glance at my life.”

But still, with an alarmed, distrustful, quizzical look, the outgrowth
of her experiences, Mrs. Mancredo said at last:

“Do you think you can take better care of Reginald than I can?”

“I can do my duty better than you can do my duty, but I cannot do yours;
but on my way to do mine, if you are with me you ought to get some view
of what your duty is, as I shall get new views from you regarding _my_
work. That seems to be the whole of the affair,” said Ethel, taking Mrs.
Mancredo’s hand cordially.

“Is that so? Would you not dictate to me, nor talk to others about me,
nor flinch from your duty if I neglected mine?”

“I only know,” said Ethelbert after a pause, “whatever comes to me to be
done, I shall do, but I shall accommodate my actions to new
circumstances which may arise, for I should be sorry to have anything
come between Reginald and his best development, or between you and
yours. The development of the individual is the point; all else is
inconsiderable.”

“Now look at me,” said Mrs. Mancredo, taking her hand tightly, and
looking her straight in the eyes. “Remember what you have said, for I
shall not forget it. Listen: I am Reginald Grove’s wife.”

Ethel caught her breath, for this she had not foreseen.

“Now, then, how far will you practice your personal liberty principles?
How much will you leave me in perfect freedom to choose my own duty?
Remember, you have said you would be sorry to have anything come between
Reginald and his best development, and me and mine, and that all the
rest amounts to little either way.

“Now, then,” she continued, starting off again after a little pause, “if
you don’t want anything to come between me and my best development, you
will let me give up my life there at the hotel, and you will make the
changes in your house that I suggest, and let me pay you the hotel
prices, and bring along my carriage and servant John, and take me into
the family on the ‘personal liberty principle’ with which you four
heavenly mortals control or don’t control each other’s lives. And you
will angelically mind your heaven-appointed business of evoking Regie’s
lost angel, and leave me to evolve my own as best I can.”

By this time Ethelbert’s beryl eyes were looking into Mrs. Mancredo’s
black ones, as if this arrangement were a simple plan for a lawn party.

“Why don’t you look disgusted at a woman who passes as rich Mr.
Mancredo’s widow, and who is really Reginald Grove’s wife, and has never
been any other man’s wife, nor anything like it, in any way to anybody!”

“Disgust must be too unpleasant a feeling to take on one’s self
prematurely,” said Ethelbert, with her rare sweet smile, as she took
Mrs. Mancredo’s hands in hers and sat looking way down through the
turbulent surface of her eyes, into the sorrowful depths beneath; then:
“When I learn all, I am sure I shall have reason to congratulate you,
that with all your temptations and perplexities you have done so well.”

“How well?”

“I only know that you want nothing between you and your upward path; and
that is well, absolutely well.”

“That is true; and I have never wanted any evil thing, and I really
doubt if anyone really wants evil things. Shall I tell you my history
now?” she continued.

“I don’t see why you should.”

“Have you no curiosity?”

“Not of that kind. I am curious to know just how Reginald’s brain looks,
and if his tranquil, happy life is accumulating force in the superior
brain faster than he is using it. I would like to see if recuperative
energy can be stored up like money in a bank, ready for a heavy draft,
and—”

“If you weren’t so interested in all that, you would be more interested
in my affairs.”

“Yes, if I were not so much interested in life _as a
religiously-scientific-problem_, I would be more interested in gossip,
and would now bid you good-by, and immediately would set the town alive
with a little romance; which, instead, you will tell me much later, and
will tell the rest of the world when you choose.” And with a long grasp
of the hand, Ethelbert moved away as she spoke.

“Don’t you care to know?” said Mrs. Mancredo, following her up.

“I don’t care to know anything except the resurrection-truth that you
can still make your life as beautiful as you choose. You are thirty-five
years old; you have forty-five years to live in this world,” said
Ethelbert. “Think of that, and fashion circumstances accordantly with
the result you would like to see.”

“Well, I declare, I never thought of that way of doing,” said Mrs.
Mancredo, after a pause. Then: “Do you really mean to say that you take
me on trust?”

“I do,” said Ethelbert; “and ‘equal exchange is no robbery.’ You take me
so, too, do you not?” And a hand-grasp, peculiar and vitalizing, sealed
the compact. And this was the last reference made to that matter till
years afterward.

                  *       *       *       *       *

The house had not only been promptly enlarged, and Mrs. Mancredo very
promptly domiciled there as she desired, but also within two years other
developments had taken place. Mrs. Mancredo was now “one of them,” and
participated in their many other lines of work, an account of which in
the limits of this little booklet will not appear. This is but an
episode in the doings of the dualized, and it must suffice to say that,
under the best health conditions, physical and psychical, Reginald so
improved that strangers recognized him but as a lame man, who had been
paralyzed, but who was a person of winsome, gentle manners. His speech
was inconsequent, and often polyglot and startling in its sudden
outbreaks into good English concerning unknown themes related to realms
unknown, and intangible to those who could not comprehend his mental
movement.

The home of the Dakshas was more than ever like themselves; or it would
be truer to say, was as much as ever like themselves, since the changes
which had developed were but outward signs of the average spiritual
state of the occupants of that home.

The house eventually was greatly enlarged. For Mrs. Mancredo and her
servant having come to stay, the sustained condition of spiritual
attraction necessitated a steady extension of the outward buildings.

As, for instance, when Bertha Gemacht (whose life was a romance) had
first heard of Reginald’s attack, and of Miss Daksha’s intention of
restoring his faculties, she had presented herself to Ethelbert,
internally necessitated to explain her relation to the problem in hand.
For the memorable scene and conversation on the balcony had left with
her a fixed belief that the vital force of vein and brain is the vigor
of Jehovah in us; and that those who reverence it according to the law
of right use, having englobed that vital force, are thereby enriched,
and fitted for a great order of service. For that this wealth of vein
and brain is wealth, indeed, of an absolutely empowering sort; and is,
in itself, _power_. And she had fully learned that by its inherent
_empowerment_ it naturally introduces its possessor to services which
can only be carried forward on the plane of superordinary intelligence.

Bertha had taken to this philosophy as naturally as she had to
breathing. But her heart had lately become very sore with the fear that,
as the workers were to be “the pure in heart” who see good and God, she,
for cause known to herself, might not be considered “pure in heart,” and
so might be rejected as not fitted to help even in the humblest way, in
the splendid work here opening up. The bitterness of this dread had
filled her mind for weeks,—yes, from the first. And the bitterness was
none the less bitter from the fact that the very _circumstance_ in her
life which she felt would be taken as ground for her rejection from this
work for the new age, was in her good judgment the circumstance which
had educated her to well do one line of work, that ought to be a
collateral to the rest of it, as carried on here.

So one day she came suddenly to see Miss Daksha, appearing at the
sunlighted stretch of rooms, the abutting tower-end of which was
connected with Reginald’s suite. She glanced furtively at him, halting
as she knocked, and Ethel, understanding all, said at once:

“Bertha, I call him—not bad, but bewildered; not sick, but being healed;
not lost, _but in process of finding himself_. His helplessness now
exists because Mother Wisdom Divine has _arrested_ him, by putting to
sleep certain of his faculties, in order to the better releasement of
his higher nature. As we understand this matter, he is mentally in
communion now with saintly spirits. And if your angel and mine can but
wisely conspire with angels higher yet, he will be safely carried
through this crisis; and in a few years he will have forgotten all of
the evil things of the past, and will be ready for a new life. And then
all will go well, if but only people will then not remember against him
his follies and transgressions.

“For Bertha,” Ethel said, curiously looking into the steadfast German
eyes, as if showing her a sight of “those invisible things of God, which
are clearly seen, being understood by things which are made.” “Bertha,
Reginald ought not to die yet physically. Dying as he now is would but
necessitate that at his next incarnation some other woman would be
tortured to give birth to perhaps an unchanged _distracted_ being, with
the same self-destructive tendencies as those evinced the day when,
years ago, he was beating the rosebush to pieces.

“All that unfortunate waste of mother-pain can be prevented; for we here
will now take up for him, and others, the work of being spiritual
mothers, who will very simply, in this home, supplement the work of the
other poor mothers who have had to give birth to ill-conditioned
children, without being properly accoutred, with the time, money, and
education requisite to enable them to teach these children the ways of
life.

“That day on the balcony when he was destroying the rosebud, his
mother’s spirit touched mine (as mine now touches yours), and she urged
me (as I am now urging you) to bring this child out of his state of
arrested development into harmony with righteousness. She informed me
that in the bonds of matrimony, as well as out, Bertha, mothers often
endure abuse which no creature but man thrusts on his mate; abuse which
devitalizes and poisons the fountain at which, born and unborn, the babe
is fed; and which weakens the nerve substance of the child, by draining
the vital forces of the mother, in a way more ruinous than would be a
sword-thrust.

“This mother with spiritual insistence urged me to keep her son in the
body, and to carry him through this valley of the shadow of death, so as
to enable him to attain a resurrection to newness of life in this body.”

Bertha’s eyes were raised in soul-flaming sympathy with the sufferings
hinted at. Such violence had been done her. For years she had been
hurled into wraths and torments, and into the dangers of that moral
defeat from which she had been delivered by Ethel’s comprehension of her
inward righteousness, as opposed to the outward conditions that had been
thrust upon her, and as opposed to the reputation which she had unjustly
been made to bear.

And of all this she thought. But Ethel’s stated recognition of the
_commonness_ of the outrages put on woman as maid and mother, now
aroused her intelligence as to the _general_ need for a general
enlightenment. But her wrath was inexpressible, and she cried out
suddenly: “O, but he is a fool, that Reginald! If he had treated me well
I could have done him great good. I hate him! I wish he would cease to
live in any world,—could be blasted, blotted out of all worlds, and made
into nothing at all, with a lasting ache of shame to it! For he is a
fool. Miss Ethelbert, it’s—it’s him! That’s who it was!” And she covered
her face, stretched and distorted with loathing, and whispered
dreadfully:

“Let him die as the fool dies; withhold your breath of life from him.
Dead he would be but for the vitality you exhale upon the upper realms
of his being. Let him die! Let him be damned, as he has damned my poor
Waldemar into being! I do hate, hate fools!”

Just so had Mrs. Mancredo said: “I do—dislike sick men.”

And Ethelbert, well knowing that woman’s dislike of folly and sickness
would turn men away from both, if woman were free to rise to her own
heights, said calmly: “It is precisely because you hate fools that you
will conspire with me, his mother, and other angels of God, to
annihilate the fool and evoke the man. Two children, Waldemar and
Reginald,—is it not so? Your Waldemar is your son, and better born than
Reginald. For after that assault you were deserted by your assailant,
and lived in virginal conditions through all the time of the coming of
your son to this present incarnation. You have lived since, loathing
evil, seeking the good and pursuing it, and—in an humble sense—pondering
these things in your heart, as did the mother of our Lord; and—”

“Aye, I hate him! I would gladly have been like the Virgin Mother,
reverently treated, by the spirit-of-life in some good man,—if not by
the Angel of the Annunciation. Mystery and unfathomable mystery as it
all is, I claim I should have had the highest and best. I am a good
girl; I am from a good family. I love that story; I love the mystery as
the good Father in our mountain village in Germany taught it. I meant
always to be like Mary, blessed among women. Reginald betrothed me; and
betrothal is almost marriage in my land.”

She turned, and gazing again back toward Reginald’s chair, said again:
“Aye, I hate him! Beast, brute! I think—I think I must kill him! I do
hate him! What will my Waldemar think of me! I hate that _man_!”

“Who?” said Ethelbert.

“That man,” said Bertha, with a point of her finger, like a
sword-thrust. And Reginald, as if shocked by an electric charge, sent
forth a cry, springing forward as if galvanized; and Bertha, frightened,
heard Ethelbert say, steadily:

“There is no man there,—a crippled child, an absent spirit, a wraith, a
wreck, a ghost, a ‘remains’ of the criminal who was arrested in the act
of killing a citizen of this nation, called Reginald Grove; that
‘remains’ is there; nothing more. A child waiting to come forth to the
business of making one more try at self-management, is there.”

“You were right,” Ethelbert continued, not unobservant meanwhile of
Bertha’s alarm at the effect of the electric-battery which her finger
had fired at Reginald, and at the flush which had mounted Reginald’s
face. “You are right in saying there are too many born and buried. Let
us not bury him (this ‘remains’), but let us electrify him into newness
of spirit, and then he will not need rebirth of the body. Give him
another chance. You and Waldemar shall have yours.”

“No; for if he gets well you will be making him marry me. All the good
ladies try to make those kind of men do that. And the men hate us, and
we hate them; and even when they are of our own class, they always think
we are worse for what was as bad for one as for the other. And they
think they have done us great honor; and we keep on, never able to do
anything that will make the wrong right; and all that comes of it is
hate, hate, hate; and more babies are born, all of them full of hate;
and the mothers can’t take care of so many; and it’s all nothing but
hate, hate, hate. And the mother dies hating, and the children live
hating; and it’s all foolishness and misery. You are my enemy if you
make him marry me; and you can’t be my friend if you are his.”

“Now, then, is he going to stay here?”

“He will stay here,” said Ethel.

“Then I must go.”

“Must you?”

“Yes madame, you would not have two such people under your roof!”

“The clear dome above us is the roof I live under,” said Ethelbert, “and
it covers all sorts of acting people. A few boards nailed together
neither roofs life in nor shuts life out. People who are separated are
separated by partitions thin as glass and strong as adamant, and
repellant or death-dealing as a live electrical wire. Go or stay, as you
choose. But, dear child, you need never fear that I should make Captain
Grove marry you, or make anybody do anything. Liberty is the law of
life. But I see your perception that you are to Reginald a part of a
dreadful dream, the same as he is to you, may be true. A hundred
marriage services would not in themselves unite you. All you say of the
disaster which comes from these unintelligent methods of compelling
legal-unions between persons who are abhorrent to each other, is true.
You need have no fear of any compulsion.

“We are living in a revolutionary epoch. My family believes marriage is
the great sacrament of life. But we do not perceive, however, that all
legal marriages are so formed and sustained as to render them
sacramental to the parties concerned. Yet we do think that the highest
type of marriage is symbolic of the kingdom of heaven. But I will tell
you this: If your case were mine, I should not try to right up the wrong
I had done by going on to do more wrongs under the shelter of legality.
If you consider that Waldemar was damned into being (that was your term,
not mine, I should not use it; I do not think he is), your next care
should be to bless him out of that condemnatory state, by giving him
such instruction and such simple joys in life as will secure him against
perpetuating any form of wrong-doing. Put away sadness, Bertha, and
remember not wrongs against your brother Reginald. Correct the past by
dealing sensibly with the present. Truth and right living will bring
good results to the future.

“A large proportion of morals and manners today are unintelligent. Yours
have been. But all that ceases today. Excessive emotional wrath at those
who have blundered with us, does not help either them or us to better
intelligence, nor to the best adjustment of results.”

“Unintelligent? What a niddering word for, for—”

“Yes, unintelligent. A fuller intelligence will render all the mysteries
and miseries of life intelligible. For whatever is in the past, you are,
with others, responsible. Now waste no more brain-substance in grief,
shame or wrath, but conserve all your nervous force for your work.
_Assume the motherhood_ which you _pre_sumed upon. Your mind is crowded
with artificial distinctions. A few simple principles, held to amiably,
will make all your life sweet and intelligent, even now.

“You love purity. That characteristic is rooted deep in your nature. You
are ethically valuable to the kind of work that must be done in this
age, because of that characteristic. I will tell you five points of
faith that abide with me. Then you will see why I say that any methods
_of abusing the brain-substance is unintelligent_, and why I say that
fuller intelligence concerning woman-nature and possibilities will
render _intelligible_ the past miseries and mysteries of life, and will
displace them with the spontaneous joyfulness of wisdom’s way of living.

“Do you understand?”

“Certainly I understand. Tell me your five points of faith,” said
Bertha, clear-headedly.

“One is, that purity is natural and inherent in humanity. Next, it
consists in an invulnerable ability to garner up the vital force within
the seven nerve-centers ready for use, just as the electric current is
captured and held by the electric dynamo, ready to be put to use in a
scientific and purposeful way; in order that great things may be
achieved for the race, by means of its light-giving, heat-supplying,
weight-lifting and propelling power. Next, I believe purity is a
profitable, satisfactory personal possession. For it fills the nerves
and brain with a reserve force which is a tremendous reconstructive
energy. The possession of purity is always back of that steady
brain-building which goes on, with its incessant increase of mental
grasp and power of intuitive perception. So that those who have large
reserves of the _wealth_ which _purity_ brings, can lay hold on the
history of past ages, taking possession of such history in great blocks
of time and events; and they can apprehend things which are to come, in
time to prepare for crises, one after another, in such a way as to turn
what would have been disaster into success. Purity gives one
self-possession, and creates a simple, unsullied self, well worth
possessing.

“It enables people to dare to state themselves in unqualified correct
terms. For their unmixed simple purposes bear each other out in the long
run. And I say, Bertha, if all women were legally upheld in being what
men delight to be called (that is, Right Honorable,) the sons of such
women would be by nature ‘Right Honorables.’ I will uphold you in being
right honorable, Bertha, and Waldemar shall be Right Honorable.”

“Gott be danken.”

“There cannot be a more profitable and satisfactory possession than
purity. It fills one with courage and truth, and makes honor easy. Its
joys fade not away. Its hopes are fulfilled, and I believe if we were
all possessors of this type of purity, and understood how to live
according to its law, the social result would be, that humanity would
become like the angels of God: right, bright, agile and light; with
probably less marrying and no divorcing; because of the well-poised,
well-contented lives to which such men and women will have attained. If
all possessed this type of purity, there would be an end to these
inordinate desires which now make some people to be self-tormented
monsters, and others to be their victims. When this type of purity
exists, then family life, worthy the name, will be established on a
plane of health-giving-comfort to all concerned. While those who, St.
Paul says, ‘do better than to marry, though to marry may be to do well,’
will be able, Bertha, to coöperate together in simple, unsullied service
to the world, which always needs such service.

“When people come once to know the buoyant delight way down to old, old
age, which is ushered in by a scientific life of purity, they will never
thereafter rack themselves with the disorders and maniacal nervelessness
which comes, Bertha, one way and another, from the abuse of vitality.

“It is doubtful if people, as a whole, will ever learn life’s true and
refined joys until women are legally upheld in their own work of
carrying out that law of liberty to all as opposed to license in any;
which law enables the evolution of such a joyous love of decency, and
such reverence for the God-power in the blood and brain of each, as
shall secure health, wealth and vivacity to individuals and the nations
throughout the earth.”

“It is all true, true,” said Bertha. “But that comes from beliefs which
are all one. But yet you said five points of faith, and I shall learn
them all. So you would better name the fifth, by telling me what is
purity. You say it is natural and inherent to humanity. And you tell me
it is profitable; and what the social result would be if we all
possessed it and lived according to its law. But what is it, what does
it consist in?”

“To be pure, the dictionary tells us, is to be unsullied, unmixed,
genuine, unqualified. Purity is free from a burdensome sense of shame,
and is full of an invigorating courage which is wide away from all
necessity of making and loving those things which the Bible calls
‘lies.’ Because a robust healthfulness fills with courage those who
habitually practice the scientific law of purity. So that, in the
character of a Right Honorable, purity, courage and truth knit each
other up into a triuned power against which nothing can prevail. Purity
knows how to deal in an offhand way with its own nature and needs, being
full of the courage of its own convictions as to what it wants to do and
be.

“The courage of purity is full of simplicity and high achievement; quite
the opposite of that bravado which, attached to inordinate desires, is
full of duplicity and failure. Purity is not timid, for it is its own
protector. It is genuine, unmixed God-power, and makes its possessor a
partaker in omnipotent omniscience. This fact all can prove for
themselves who enable themselves to do so.

“It consists in an intelligent use of the vital element of blood and
brain; and this intelligent use is religion itself. For, Bertha, the
vitality within us is the divine creative power of Jehovah, and should
be reverenced with awe. I repeat it, I distinctly believe this elusive,
thrilling gladness-element of mind and nerve, is the joy-power, the
intellectual vigor of that Vital One, the being whom we call God; who is
the breath of our lives, and of whom we are competent to know more and
more eternally.

“Now the only real _class_ distinction between people is—not that some
are rich and some are poor, not that some are university graduates and
some are not, but—that some have cultivated and _know_ their
possibilities of garnering up this vital force within their own nerve
centers, ready for use, just as the electric dynamo captures and garners
up the electric current, that it may be in readiness to achieve great
results for this great age.

“Those who have this order of self-sovereignty have what the world
cannot give and cannot take away. Those whose self-sovereignty is
founded on this unimpregnable purity of brain and nerve have entered
into a permanent delight in life. And no matter to what retreat their
humble duty calls them, they are among the rulers of the age.

“Ach, Himmel! It is the secret of the sanctuary!” said Bertha. “We of
the high mountain regions are taught it, in the old fatherland. Nothing
can be wanted, if Waldemar and I have and hold this, and give it to the
world.”

So thus came Bertha into the home of the Dakshas.




                               CHAPTER V.


As Bertha left the room Daniel entered it. Then, as do saints on the
other shore when dealing with those who have come up out of great
tribulations, so these two looked each into the eyes of the other, and
met there, love-full-of-wisdom.

In the silence they stood for a moment, thinking of the “foundation
stone” on which the “builders build,”—a foundation stone which supports
that gate of opulence which is coeval and consonant with the temple of
life. A foundation stone, diamond-like in its adamantine strength, and a
radiator of shafts of that light which has lighted every man who has
come into the world. Rays of which, mingling with rays are emitted now
everywhere, till the dispelling of all darkness is at hand.

“I have heard from the Landseers,” said Daniel. Then, as if that
statement were but in continuance of the thoughts which had swiftly
glanced from mind to mind, he added: “The work of individual spiritual
construction moves on so fast in the world today, that soon no man will
question his neighbor, ‘Know ye the Lord?’ for all shall know that all
others, too, do know him; and shall know _who_ he is; for they shall see
him as he is, and know that he is He-vaw. It is becoming well understood
that the pure in heart see He-vaw, and seeing He-vaw as he is, become
like He-vaw. But we need for _use_, institutions for training our young
men in this art of life.”

Words were few and powerful in which Daniel and daughter treated the
mysteries at stake in the swift transactions taking place under their
roof, and under the broad dome of the blue above.

As has been said, the Dakshas were what today’s people commonly
recognize as “old, old souls.” So though by many this will be
unbelievable, their opulent minds kept always in circulation the
_thoughts to be uttered_. And their eyes and ears conveyed and received
suggestions, information and impressions as swiftly as the electric
current receives and carries messages. For “the wheels” which some joker
declared were in the Daksha-brain, were there, and what is more, “the
spirit of creative life was in the wheels.” But if (as it was said
jocularly) there was a buzzing in their bonnets, the bees that buzzed
there were all honey-makers for humanity.

But Judge Elkhorn not only lacked all such activity of brain-substance,
but was an inherent pauper concerning this order of social opulence.
Moreover, he did not believe any one could have what he did not. So the
wit about the wheels in the heads of the Daksha family and the buzzing
of the bees in their bonnets was the judge’s own. Meanwhile he wished
for their power. For he was a man as painfully curious to know
everybody’s past, and the whys and wherefores of all that they did, as
he was anxious to reservedly shield his own past, present and future
plans from inspection.

So, as Mrs. Mancredo did not explain to him her affairs, he only knew of
them what had been reported at the hotel; namely, that she was an
adopted sister of Reginald Grove. He knew that one of the women under
the roof claimed to dislike Grove as a disagreeable sick man, and
another had declared that she hated him as a furious fool. But as to
Miss Daksha’s sentiment toward the man whom she was said to be saving,
he could discover nothing. And therefore that matter uncomfortably
occupied his mind. For, in his conjectures concerning Ethelbert, he had
nothing to go upon but a more or less murky form of concluding that the
acts of _all_ women were based upon some emotional, self-seeking
foundation.

He was not to say “a nice man,” this Judge Elkhorn. But of curiosity,
persistence and “prod,” he had no lack. He had some things in stocks,
some things in banks, and some things in mortgages on farms out West;
but his poverty was extreme and corrosive. One form of it that was
eating his vitals this day, made him peer sharply through his glasses
and thrust his head forward in a way which caused his Adam’s apple to
choke up against his collar; and that resulted in making him pitch his
very hoarse voice up very high in the effort to get it, if possible, a
bit higher than that collar, and so on a level with his greatly
heightened curiosity.

For this curiosity took form in the desire to know what conditions could
have existed which made both Mrs. Mancredo and Bertha Gemacht look at
Reginald as they had looked at him in the judge’s presence. For in the
look of both was repulsion, dread, and distinctly a look of enslavement
to him, to which was added a portrayed sense of angry restiveness under
that enslavement. What is more, he had twice noticed how invariably they
turned away from the sick man, and gazed appealingly (it could be called
nothing else) into the eyes of Ethel. And he had seen that her
superordinary manner steadied them, and correlated them with strength.
For strengthened they were, as all are strengthened who are released
from fear, and allied to that power which comes as direct from
All-that-is as water comes into a basin from a reservoir to which its
conductors are attached.

Judge Elkhorn knew, too, that Mrs. Mancredo, her carriage and coachman,
John Sullivan, and a North American “Indian-rubber,” as she called him,
were all long since settled in the Daksha family. And he knew that the
man Fleetwood liked himself very much; and often said: “We are the
ancient people, and we know the laws of the spirit of peace and purity,
and our medicine men deal with medicine of a secret sort, for those who
can take it in faith.” Elkhorn also knew that there had come into the
family a Madame Roland, a _religieuse_ in heart, and a companion of the
toilet to Mrs. Mancredo in practice. He knew, too, that Robert one day
had imported into the family a Japanese gardener and a Chinese
laundryman. At last in answer to Elkhorn’s urgencies, Daniel Daksha
provisionally admitted him to the family, under the promise to withdraw
within two weeks unless he was asked to extend his stay. He was an
expansive liberal-leagued man; but he did not like servants to forget
their places, as he had told Robert. Then Robert had explained that, as
their household was based on the principle that “a true aristocrat was
one who best served the greatest number and asked least for self in
return,” Ethel, Daniel and Althea were preëminently the servants of the
family. But as for himself, Robert said, he did not pretend to live up
to that ideal as yet.

In this way Elkhorn learned that this conglomerate household was
distinctly trying to practicalize the royal law of liberty; and that
under that law, one person would no more force chains on any other than
he would consent to wear chains himself. This sounded well to Elkhorn,
until Robert, who did not stay his tongue, added:

“It takes the age-long development that comes to the true old aristocrat
(like Aristarchus) to carry out this ideal in a really royal way,
because ordinary selfishness and self-conceit are unequal to the task.”

Elkhorn did not like that. But then Robert didn’t wish him to like it,
as he objected to having Judge Elkhorn come into the family at all.
For he considered that Elkhorn had roots of character which rendered
liberty for him, an unattainable glory. Because his progenitors had
been through so much fighting and persecuting in trying to obtain
liberty for their _own_ consciences and for Calvinism, that, though
the tendency to persecute and fight remained with Elkhorn, liberty was
neither yet obtained by him for himself, nor was it by him permitted
to others. But this was exactly what Judge Elkhorn did not realize
about himself. He figured as a liberty league man; but of late was
beginning to realize it is a mighty acquisition to really be in league
with liberty.... Meanwhile, Daniel liked Judge Elkhorn for many
reasons. For though Judge Elkhorn got as excited over his negations as
his progenitors had gotten over their affirmations of immortality, and
though he became irascible at the suggestion that there was a realm of
life beyond the ken of those senses called common; and though he got
very angry with people who insisted on a knowledge of “the unseen
world,” “invisible powers,” and the theory of a moral accountability
beyond the grave, yet Daniel liked him, as a make-weight against the
top-lofty theories of people who lived more in the unseen world than
in the seen. And Daniel knew himself to be one of these last-mentioned
people. And, too, Daniel knew the peculiar fact about Robert was, he
at this time knew a terrifying amount about the unseen world, and was
receiving as much from the psychical realm as he could support without
becoming a maniac. And Daniel knew Robert did not relish having
Elkhorn come into the family; for Elkhorn’s prowess consisted in
trying to annihilate the popular and private reverence which the
people of this nation have for their several partial-statements of
religious truth. Meanwhile Robert knew it had never been Daniel’s way
to say, “We—‘us and you’—will chum together against the rest of the
world. We have uttered the last word.” But Robert also knew that the
fact that Elkhorn was on the warpath against almost everything, had
but caused Daniel to think his presence in the family might act as an
antidote against any tendency to any form of unity which, when based
on indolent, ignorant acquiescence, results in not unity, but
_nullity_.

Daniel comprehended the crisis which Robert was facing. Poor Robert, who
had been singled out from the Daksha family by the not flattering title,
“Robert le Diable.” Not that he was so really wicked, but because the
singular goodness of his style of wickedness made the excessive
wickedness of some good people’s goodness look very wicked, indeed.

To this nearly overwhelming rush of contending forces, Robert at times
submitted quite unresentingly. He knew appearances were certainly
against him. He also knew that there was never a crisis at which liberty
of individual action was to be more demanded by men and women than at
this crisis at the end of the nineteenth century. Only those can
understand Robert’s troubles who are touched with a feeling of that
infirmity under which a brain staggers when the inflow of psychical life
is to the full, as much as even the rapidly expanding braincell can
carry. For he was still trying to keep his place in the outer world,
while passing through such stress of mental weather as is better borne
in seclusion, if such seclusion can anywhere be found in these too
public times. For only those can carry this inflow of mental afflatus
who have been taught to know that this pressure on the brain-cells will
but happily result in an increase of the brain’s capacity to
commodiously entertain the life that comes into these cells, if but this
inflow of mental afflatus can be met with heroic faith and fortitude,
_well instructed_.

Daniel was his helper, and had told him that persons who were rightly
taught these scientifically-religious facts do not fear, but on the
reverse, _exult_ in this brain-cracking-pressure; being upheld by their
faith that the pressure, endured as a good soldier of the cross should
endure it, will but result in the upbuilding of more brain-cells, which
will then serve gloriously as enlarged receptacles for the incoming of
more brain substance; with the further result that as this development
goes forward these good workers will construct a brain-building fitted
to carry on an order of cerebration, finer and inconceivably swifter and
more reliable than that which is now dreamed of by man as possible.

But well assisted though he was by the dear old Daniel (who had walked
that way before him), Robert was at a crisis when he was getting all the
inflow of spiritual afflatus that he could carry. And he decided if
Elkhorn were to be at the little evening “conversations,” dear to the
Dakshas, this judge should not be allowed to badger him into discussing
psychical matters, about which the judge was as uneasily curious as he
was unenlightenable. For Daniel knew that such “growing pains” as
afflict men whose mentalities are being adapted to the psychic burden
they have to bear, are, to men devoid of these higher inspirational
benefits, the unknown quantity in the problem of life. And he considered
these experiences used to be called “strivings after God” and
“visitations of grace” by Christians of the true spiritual type of the
older time. And he believed that in turning his back on all forms of
religion, Elkhorn had turned his face away from the very facts of
spiritual development which he was yet curious to dissect now, as a new
psychical scientific development.

But Daniel knew that was a time (as it is even now in 1898) when a
pressure was being brought to bear on the Committee of the Judiciary at
the National Capitol, by a steadily increasing number of men, who
(engaged in a religio-politico pull, year after year,) were trying to
thrust on this country a creedal-constitution, by putting in a
compulsory-religion amendment. Though the National Constitution
distinctly provides for the exercise of liberty of conscience, and for
the full right of the individual to self-government and self-expression.
He believed intelligent, alert persons all knew that the insertion of
the proposed words would not amend but would _annul_ and abrogate the
National Constitution of this American Republic; a Constitution whose
preamble states, that we hold it to be self-evident that men are born
free, and have a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness;
and whose whole tenor is to protect the individual in freedom of thought
and self-expression, and to protect every one from being politically
discriminated against on account of religious or non-religious views.

Daniel knew that at a recent hearing at the National Capitol, the
Chairman of the Judiciary had said to the man who was editor of a paper
called the _Christian Statesman_, and the maker of the little “Christian
Manual,” in conformity with which he more or less modestly expected to
have our American constitutional-liberty annihilated: “I see you refer
to God the Father and to the Lord Jesus Christ as Ruler of the Nation?
Why not to the Holy Spirit?” And in reply to this, the _Doctor_ of
_Divinity_ had made answer: “It is not revealed to us that the _Holy
Spirit_ has relations to nations.”

So after such an answer as that, of course Daniel was sure that while
people might not blame the man who, as a subject of the British lion,
was little likely to have had it revealed to him that a HOLY _Spirit_
has relations to nations, yet that their common sense would recognize
that the ignorance which an unfortunate-national-environment had brought
upon this Doctor of Divinity did not very specially fit him to go about
trying to wipe out other people’s Constitution with his little “Manual.”

Daniel knew that lofty souls from Africa, Asia, the nations of the
Mediterranean and the islands of the sea (represented here as voting
citizens allegiant to our National Constitution) had age-long been
taught that life, _Life Itself_, is dependent on that Holy Spirit—the
feminine in Deity—which continuously broods all-that-is into order; and
he claimed no government but the one dominated by that desecrator of
womanhood, Henry Tudor, and his followers, would wish to thrust the Holy
Spirit out of “relations to nations”; and that _that_ government (?)
whose hand is against every other knows well that if it can but starve,
evict, stupefy and slay our people through annihilating their national
money, their national lands, their religious liberty and (that once
protective agency) their patriotic navy and army _made up of American
citizens_, it can then easily entrap what is left into the present
religio-politico-pull, which is bent on establishing on earth that
particular form of hell that riots wherever that plundering, preaching,
prostituting government (?) makes its lair.

It was a wild epoch. And the increasing ecclesiastic assumptions of a
new influx of salary-seeking teachers (?) was on the way to injure the
simple purity of faith with which the religiously-philosophical science
of the evolution of man had previously been bettering American society;
and some men’s hearts were failing them for fear.

But Daniel Daksha, who had been a simple-souled, devoted man from his
cradle-days upward, and who had suffered many things for the truth’s
sake, had no fear. For he was a prophet, and had known that in the last
days it would come to pass that “the mountain of the Lord’s house would
be exalted and would be established in the top of the mountains, and
that all peoples would flow up to it.” He believed this was “the Woman
Age,” and he was not among the men whose hope of existence lies in
swamping women’s power, either by its subjection to animal-abuse in the
home or in the shambles; wherein he believed the new movement was
putting woman up as a licensed article, sellable for revenue to the
would-be on-coming government of the brute, by the brute, and for the
brute,—a would-be on-coming style of government which, in its nature,
counts woman out of it, because she is human; and the brute-rule has set
itself to consume her, when having annihilated her individuality,
religiously and politically, it shall then have turned her into a
“commodity,”—a commodity to be bought and sold in marriage and out, for
the consumption of that brute-rule, to whom “it is not revealed that the
_Holy Spirit_ has relations to nations.”

In view of all these things, the Dakshas were more than content to have
at their home not whist-parties and dancing-parties, but free
discussions of these things.




                              CHAPTER VI.


One evening after Judge Elkhorn’s arrival in the family when many guests
were present, he opened up his warfare with Robert against credulity.

Robert with a glance laid the discussion in Ethel’s hands, and then she
said: “But if you should succeed in annihilating the reverence which
people have for their different forms of religion, and should get them
to believe they have nothing to do but eat, drink and die and decay,
would they not so eat, drink and be merry as to decay before they died,
and yet live long enough to multiply what you call ‘dangerous classes’?”

“O!” said the judge, “I would enforce temperance, because I believe
people get more happiness out of life by being decent.”

“But suppose others think they get more happiness by being indecent,
what then? What more has your belief to do with their affairs than the
belief of religious people has to do with your affairs?”

“Well, of course, as to that,” said the judge, with honest hesitation,
“freedom given to the ignorant and passionate would annihilate society,
and reduce countries to conditions of carnage. The problem is difficult,
because ignorance is so brutish that brute force has to be used to
repress it.”

“Don’t repress it, enlighten it,” said one Paul Palmer, swiftly.

But Elkhorn, lifting his voice a little, swung on: “And so it comes
about that we have to control brutishness by brute force, or we have to
make a compromise with it, by regulating it through license laws so as
to repress its encroachments on law-abiding people.”

“Where do you get your law-abiding people?” said Palmer; for Elkhorn
spoke with the high air of one who has uttered that “last word” which so
many are struggling to put forth in these last days; and had turned a
crushing gaze on flippant Paul Palmer.

“What!” said Ethel, “license evil so as to gain freedom from it? A
liberty league man must know that liberty granted to all women and men
is based on such freedom for each, that no one is accountable to any
other, and therefore no one is empowered to either forbid or grant any
act to anyone. Therefore, liberty is inherent only in—”

“Oh, you’re getting on fast,” the judge interrupted. “On such grounds as
that we should have anarchy. Besides, leave out all religion when you
talk to me.”

“——inherent only in the real individual. Therefore we want to secure
that simple form of education to all, which will create a citizenship of
real individuals,” said Ethel, with an amiable but marked imitation of
Elkhorn’s manner of riding on serenely to the end of his subject;—a bit
of _esprit_ which amiably amused him and them all, without distracting
attention from the argument. And she continued:

“Judge Elkhorn, if you believe in granting license, you believe in
stultifying liberty. For liberty to all leaves no man to grant or forbid
anything to anyone. License is the antagonist of liberty. For liberty is
the use of law, and license is the abuse of law.

“Briefly then, in this country, where everything consistent with the
right of others is already constitutionally conceded to each one, the
attempt to give anything more to anyone, is an encroachment on liberty.
For it is plain that if among ten people everything is granted to each
one which is consistent with the liberty of the other nine, then to
grant more to five of the ten is to encroach on the other five, and at
once converts the favored five into masters, and fixes the status of the
other five as slaves. This has been done. The result is, liberty has
been dethroned, and licentiousness is set up in her place.”

“But,” said Elkhorn, “if it were agreed to all around, for the sake of
peace?”

“It would be an agreement to dethrone liberty, and the compactors would
be traitors and self-made slaves; and war, not peace, would be the
result. But it has never been agreed to all around. I never agreed to
it. It was done by trickery and the feebleness of the enslaved, with the
result that for the lack of courage to stand by the law of liberty, we
have all become the slaves of license, and not peace, but war prevails
concerning every question which is before the country, yes, before the
world,—Europe, Asia, Africa, America and the islands of the sea.”

“Miss Daksha,” said Palmer, “according to your opinion, how did all this
muss creep in?”

“In this era it practically was never out,” said Ethel. “Liberty, as
formulated in the preamble of our Constitution, has failed of
practicalization, because people were not, and are not, up to the level,
requisite to even mentally grasp the idea. It is God-like, and far
beyond the popular ideal of what God is like. And what makes matters
worse, it is beyond what the average pulpit now claims God is like. But
shall we feel badly about all this? No; let us rather say, that as yet
we have not had time, conveniences nor methods adequate to the evolution
of the ideal commonwealth of the United States, into which individual
intelligence will be presently annealed.”

The power of her thought reached every mind there, poorly as these words
convey it on paper. But to invite fuller explanations, Mrs. Daksha said:
“Ethel, what precisely do you mean by commonwealth? Anything in the
ordinary communistic line, or on the Bellamy idea?”

“Please take from my words the simplest dictionary sense of them, quite
unrelated to any elaborated theory,” said Ethel, with that comfortable
assurance which comes to each of us, that anyone ought to know what _we_
are talking about, however misapprehended other theorists have chosen to
make themselves to be, by their play upon words.

“According to my idea,” said Ethel, “commonwealth consists in the common
services which each can perform to others, in releasing and distributing
those natural commodities which earth, water, air and the spiritual
substance-of-the-universe put potentially into the possession of each
individual.”

“Ye Goths!” ejaculated Judge Elkhorn. “You are going into things deep
and high.”

“Things deep and high have gone into the question. That’s what makes an
intelligent handling of it so difficult on the part of the
gold-worshiping, materialistic class of irreligious-religionists who are
trying to annihilate our present _real_ constitutional Theodicy, a
_natural_ Theodicy in which ‘the voice of the people’ (might it be
really but heard) is the voice of God, the Holy Spirit; that spirit
which Churchianity declares before our judiciary ‘has not relations to
nations’; and which that set of people apparently intend shall not have,
if that _vox populi_, which is ‘the voice of God,’ can be silenced,”
said Daniel Daksha.

“It must be gone into deep, broad and high, if we are going to handle it
on the square,” said Palmer, who was a most intelligent freemason.

“In politely giving the masses possession of the universe,” said Elkhorn
satirically, “how would you regulate people’s way of taking possession
and working and sharing?”

“If once we rightly got hold of the principle at stake, that matter
would regulate itself. I accept the natural distinctions which now
actually exist, and which really will eventually control everything, in
spite of all our artificial attempts to the contrary.”

“For instance,” said Elkhorn.

“Will you admit that as we go on now, it takes much of our time to make
and enforce laws for building up and hedging in artificial distinctions?
And the rest of it to crush out those real distinctions that inhere in
the nature of things?”

“For instance,” said Elkhorn again.

“I see Mr. Palmer has made a note of my definition of commonwealth,”
said Ethel. “So instead of giving instances of what I mean by artificial
distinctions, I will repeat my definition of commonwealth, and go on.
Commonwealth consists of the common-sense service which each can perform
to the other, by releasing and distributing those natural commodities,
which earth, air, water and the spiritual substance of the universe put
potentially into the possession of each individual. This commonwealth,
then, is divisible into three classes of valuables; namely, personal
common-sense services; secondly, the natural ‘commodities’ of earth,
water and air, and the spiritual substance-of-the-universe, and for the
third class of values—‘_credits_.’

“Now my happy philosophy of the matter points to the fact, that one’s
natural (not his artificial) desires are in the line of his ability,
duty and destiny. So that if each man and woman is left free to follow
intelligently his and her desires, each will attain the true development
and best use of self, for self and others. Thus, a real civil service
will come about, not by expending millions of dollars and days in
arbitrarily dictating ways and measures by which individuals shall
civilly be serviceable, but by leaving each individual intelligently and
blithely free to use self-inherent possessions in a way which will
occasion a self-adjusting supply of everything to the demands of
everybody. This will naturally release and distribute first, personal
services; second, the commodities which fill earth, air, water and the
spiritual substance-of-the-universe, and will bring into play the third
element in the class of values, recognized in the system of social
economics; namely, credits.”

“But what will be your medium,” said Elkhorn dubiously, “of exchange?”

“Time,” said Ethel simply. “For of course to meet the orderly demands of
each and all, with an orderly supply, will take a great deal of time.
But then we each have _all the time there is_; and this, at the start,
equalizes the distribution _of that_ medium of exchange. And our bank
can never fail us, for when our drafts on it are _very_ large, we will
still have reserves of it in eternity. So time is the medium of exchange
for the common-sense services which will release and keep in
distributive-circulation the commonwealth-commodities of which earth,
water, air and the spiritual-substance-of-the-universe make each of us
possessed. (Silence invited her to go on.) Time is a commodity, for as
we all know, ‘commodities are a class of valuables organic and
inorganic, which may be fitted by human effort to satisfy human
desires.’

“Franklin used to say ‘Time is money,’ but the point I make is, that
time is _value per se_; so intrinsic in quality, so invariable in
quantitative supply, that it is the natural medium of exchange for all
the valuables precious to a morally sustained government of people, by
and for people. But, though time is value, it is difficult to place an
exact valuation on time without asking, Whose time? And that would seem
like asking, Whose rain, whose air, and whose sunshine? Yet it is
impossible to place an exact valuation on time without first getting an
answer to the question, _Whose_ time, whose services? For the value of a
person’s services depends on the use which the servitor has theretofore
made of his or her time. So here comes in the matter of personal
‘credits.’ So, in coming toward your question, Judge Elkhorn, concerning
distinctions as to the way of ‘working and sharing,’ we might take it as
an axiom in the morals of social economics, that the value of personal
services, broadly considered, is measurable by the _use_ which the
servitor has heretofore made of his or her time. And as time is the
medium of exchange, a person who has not theretofore made skilled use of
his time, might wish to contribute more of it to help out the works of a
person who has made great use of his time. This would only include that
one day from many people would have to be given to execute the plans
which another person might have potentially worked out in the hours of a
vision-filled night, as these plans thus led the way into that which
would advance the interests of all concerned. All this, American
economists of two hundred years ago must have known; judging by the zeal
with which, in the midst of their straightened circumstances, they held
themselves to the business of developing the capacity of children (the
born citizens of their ideal on-coming Republic). These true
human-economists bound themselves to cultivate in humanity a capacity to
utilize _time_. For the development in each little citizen of the
capacity to _well-use-time_, enabled each such well-developed person to
hold the other in well-poised personal liberty; while each chose for
self such an order (or such orders) of personal service as makes each
one to be of most value to himself and others.”

“Oh, oh, oh!” ejaculated the judge. “Who are the fellows who really did
this? Name them, do, Miss Daksha.”

Ethel halted at this onslaught from the man who claimed to believe of
everybody and everything only what his external senses revealed to him
concerning them. Everybody laughed good-naturedly; and Ethel laughed
with them at herself. For she knew there was a line between things,
perceivable only to the inner senses and those perceptible to the outer
senses. But she, like her father Daniel, was a dreamer who worked; and
therefore took care to protect herself from seeming like a dreamer who
_lied_, as she saw Elkhorn thought and meant to hint to her that she
was. She felt what she said was truth, as to the interior aspirational
thoughts which were held by many women and men, who, like Hawthorne,
Emerson and others of earlier date, had philosophized, romanced and
poetized over common-sense facts, and had thus enthroned them; till they
now, at least, were lodged in the memories of men like Elkhorn, as
entertaining fictions.

Luckily for Ethel she had a merry soul, as well as a philosophically
religious one. And, too, she had the faculty of standing off at a
distance from herself in a way that enabled her to see herself as others
saw her. She was not self-conceited, though to others she seemed so. If
she had been, her gift of seeing herself as others often saw her (so
frequently was she misunderstood), would have many times a day taken
down her self-conceit.

She saw the confusion in Elkhorn’s mind concerning her. She knew he was
a stoical man, and had no power of imaging the unseen. He was like the
men of that class which long ago sprung up and outlawed the poets, and
repressed everything of that sort (music included, I believe); because
these things, according to these realists (?) led to lies, and were
lies. All this was in Ethel’s mind as she caught Daniel’s eye, and they
both laughed out cheerily. For Daniel had often been called a —— (that
name you know) and, too, he had been quite outlawed long ago by deacons,
who called him a “rationalist.” And then when he patiently inquired if
they would rather he should become “irrational,” he was churched for it.
So when Ethel and Daniel had rung forth that swift chime of laughter, it
had rung up memories of these things to the ears of all who heard it.

Her pleasantness and just estimate of others seemed to have cleared the
atmosphere. And Judge Elkhorn said cordially, but a little quizzically,
“Well, we’ll take all that on the strength of our faith in you, Miss
Daksha. But go on, and take your time.”

“Yes, take your time,” said Robert, accenting significantly. “This is
not half bad that you are saying, Ethel, but it is quite a fairy tale to
everybody who is listening to you, you know.”

“On, on with the fairy story,” said Paul Palmer.

“I am talking to you about the realness of these men’s ideals; men like
William Ellery Channing, Warren, Emerson, Thoreau and men of earlier and
later date than either of these; men some of them who had the serious
scholasticism which was held in the college of ‘Mary and William,’ of
Baltimore. And I receive from them proofs that they had hold of the fact
that the _spiritual essence_ of the social economics of a self-governed
people, was their goal; and that their idea of real social economics
included a full,—a supernal evolution of national moral-power.

“These men and women of early and later date steadily put forth
teachings which impressed the fact that, to the faithfulness of the
individual conscience, the liberties of the race were committed. And so
I legitimately conclude that national moral-power must now be evolved by
persons who, with leisurely intelligence, apply themselves to dealing
with the commodities of earth, air, sea and _the spiritual substance of
the universe_ as they engage themselves in graciously exchanging mutual
services. America has such men and women, and needs many.

“There is time; there are personal services. What hinders us that we are
not baptized in the water of life, flowing out from the throne of
supernal power? A social waste hinders us, and that waste results from a
fallacy which seeks to sustain the relation of supply and demand, on the
basis of the legal tender of a money token; as if to say: “I know that
man is hungry, the money in his hand shows it.”

“But, Miss Daksha, we can’t keep brutes in order with these elusive,
transcendental theories,” said Elkhorn.

“Yes,” said Palmer, “the question is, How can we keep brutes in order
without throwing license as a ‘sop to Cerberus’?”

“To keep brutes in order is not this nation’s problem, as woman, the
mother of man, understands it,” she answered swiftly. “We are not
dealing with a menagerie. We are dealing with a nation of immortals
whose native air is liberty. And as to raising the question as to
whether all people shall be allowed to breathe their native air of
liberty, that would be but insolence on my part, if I should name it.
These, ‘_the people_,’ are endowed with certain inalienable rights,
among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. How, then,
can any two or three people talk of keeping the rest in bounds?”

“But, Mr. Palmer, the simile is fortunate which compares license to a
sop thrown to Cerberus, that hundred-brained-monster. For you remember
in the Greek story, that sop was flung _up_ to Cerberus, by those who
dwelt _down_ in Pluto’s regions, and who wished to keep Cerberus down
there to guard the mouth of Pluto’s regions, and who wished to keep him
content with being chained there.”

“Do you see? It is in exact correspondence with the doings of modern
Pluto-crats who toss the sop of license up to the enchained masses, to
keep them content with conditions which are hell-on-earth to us all.”

Such angelic tones filled her voice, such angelic pity illumined her
paling countenance, as she said these hard-sounding words, that that
hell-on-earth appeared at once to be what it is, a hideous intrusion on
a fair realm. And two men sprang to their feet, as if to smite the thing
back to the under world, and deliver Cerberus from his chains.

Ethel stood beside them, one with them in the purpose; saying, swiftly,
with the flame of a white-light-spreading through the very pores of her
fine face:

“Hold to your present thought! And take home now the part of the story
popularly forgotten: Pluto promised Cerberus, as a gift to whomsoever
could release and bring him to the upper air _without the use of
weapons_.

“The promise holds good today. But—but among the Greeks there was a
man—Hercules. He did it.

“There are such men among Americans. Hercules did it. How? Certainly not
by licensing Cerberus to remain chained down in Pluto’s regions. What
Hercules did do, was this: he brought Cerberus a morsel fresh from the
feast of the ‘gods of Olympus’; and Cerberus, at the taste, aflame for
more, burst his chains, and willingly he went away with Hercules to the
upper air, where such feasts awaited him.

“Men of America, the trouble with our nation is, there is a dearth of
deities at our Capitol! There is still a lack of Herculean power! We
want more there at the moral-feasts of our Olympus, the flavor of which
would be new to our desiring, fighting, frenzied Cerberi! It is not that
our ‘masses’ are so greatly degraded. It is that our superiors are so
little superior; are, in fact, so much at one quality with the chained
Cerberi, that, for the gift of Cerberus, no man has yet been able to
bring him to the upper air. Worse than that, faith is nearly gone, that
there _is_ any upper air, or that there are at our Olympus any
Capitolian gods.”

“No. The smoke of hades and the ‘sop’ flung up by Pluto are there; and
the snapping of the jaws of the Cerberi-congress, as they jump this way
and that to catch ‘the sop.’ These things are there,” said Elkhorn.

“Plus—some men who are to be honored,” said Paul Palmer. “Still, that is
only partly the fashion of that place,” continued he; “the smoke of the
torment still ascends. But the question there honestly today is, What is
to be done about it? There is an upper air somewhere, and there are men
in the Congress of the United States, and in the parliament of Britain,
and in the legislative bodies among the peoples of every country in the
world, who are seeking for these heights.” He halted, then looking out
from under his deep brows, in intensity of upflaming hope, he said with
ferocious directness:

“Ethel Daksha, I ask you, what _can_ be kept restrainingly before the
masses, if (according to your idea of liberty) we take away from them
fear of punishment? If no man or woman is amenable to any other, will it
not be grab, tear and carnage, by the hundred-headed-monster?”

“What is it now?” said Ethel, “when everyone is presuming to frighten
and to dictate to everyone else? But I will ask a better question than
that. I will ask if _you_ are kept up to duty by fear of punishment? If
not, by what?”

It was long before he spoke, and no one thought of breaking the silence,
for it was a solemn one.

“Whatever rectitude there is in me,” he said, “comes from an inherent
repugnance to making chains for myself by forming habits that would fit
me to dwell in Pluto’s region. Yes, it is a repugnance to the smoke,
stench and torment of the Pluto-cratical domain, which was graphically
and practically explained to me in earliest childhood, by my most
vigorous mother. It is this deep-seated repugnance to moral smoke,
stench and torment, which keeps me up to my idea of duty. And then, Miss
Ethel, I certainly am not better than other men, but I surmise I was
vastly better taught than some men are, from babyhood, and before birth.
For, like thousands of men everywhere today, there comes to me a sort of
homesick, perplexed feeling, at having to sojourn amid such
‘hell-let-loose’ conditions as (so-called) _society_ today represents.
But we all seem to be chained, paralyzed, hypnotized,—heaven knows what,
and unable to break up the influence, which has its grip on the church,
and which the church wants to clamp on to the state.”

“Paul Palmer,” said Ethel, with Quaker-like simplicity, “if thy mother
had been at the Capitol, those who now conduct like Cerberi would have
long since known themselves for what they are—not brutes, but interiorly
pure spirits—perplexed and homesick at having ever to breathe the miasma
of the Plutonic shores.

“Look at this picture.” Ethel showed one of Flaxman’s engravings of
Psyche in the lower regions: a fair spirit, standing in a dark defile,
gazing upward in a maze of wonder, as with hope astrain. “Believe me,
brothers, that is the spirit of the new age. A beautiful thing,
intelligently expectant of soon being _itself_. We are all immortal men,
and those whom Pluto seems to have chained, are not chained except by
the fetters of one delusion—they deludedly think themselves beasts. But
they are inherently of the so-called Dios Kouroi. And the Dios Kouroi
know there is food in the upper air, and place and pleasures there
convenient for the hundred-brained Cerberi who are but undeveloped gods.

“Believe me,” she said slowly, a look of infinite joy glorifying her
upraised countenance, “the Herculean power of the _Dios Kouroi_ can,
when ordered, bring from the upper air a morsel to the Cerberi, and
without weapons win them away to the heights.”

Then to her it was as if down-reaching mighty arms, with clasped hands
passed under her feet, lifted her with blissful enswathement to an
electric oneness with delight-in-right.

Elkhorn felt as if he were walking on a wave of light, whose warmth
filled the marrow of his bones. Feeling, too, he was one of the very
gods for whom Ethel had asked, he opened his mouth to boast: “I have
tasted, I can give,” when it all passed, and he dared not boast of what
he now doubted having for the moment received.

Paul Palmer had covered his eyes, and stood trembling, white, radiant
and reverently assured forever, that there was an “upper air,” and that
there was a goddess there; and that for him life held but one
purpose,—and that was to do Herculean work for the hundred-headed masses
who all hated their chains as heartily as did he. Masses all of whom
would win away to the heights, to go no more down forever, could they
but be fed with such morsels as these there, in that moment of
transfiguration had tasted.

“There will be no more working against nature when in the near future
the mountain of the house of Yod He-Vaw shall be established in the top
of the mountain,” said Daniel, “for the center of gravitation will be
established in the upper air when woman, released from bondage to
brutality, bounds up and stands at her post. Then all men will scale
Alpine heights of purity, wisdom and wealth, for the love of the
womanhood there, the eternal feminine in Deity.”

“Alpine heights! Woman there!”

It was a cry of rapture from beyond the portière, in the added suite of
rooms which had been built on for Reginald Grove’s use.

Ethel heard it, and explaining it as if she were double-brained, said:
“He is in the garden of Eden, the place of innocence where spirits in
liberty live, as live the lilies of God; neither fearing, fighting, nor
desiring desires; but where, welcoming the will-of-wisdom, they become
like the self-unioned One. See?”

With a swift impulse, turning on one toe-poised limb, winding so, her
clinging gown about her svelt figure, with arms extended, head thrown
back and face upraised, she stood, a radiant image of dual being,
unified in cruciform.

                  *       *       *       *       *

What had come to her? Had the ecstasy of the “real cross” drawn her up
into itself? Had she for a finality won away into the company of those
who unintermittingly do the will-of-wisdom?

Free and far through Emperean space on wings of vision fleetly she fled,
gleaming from the gladness of the star-filled air the truth (known to
the intelligences) of the meaning of that victory won over Semiramis,
when defeated on the banks of the Indus she flew away in the form of a
dove. For the starry hosts were showing them the meaning of the
“whirling wheel of Ixion,” on which the spirit of the world will still
be crucified until the coming-woman, by self-use, shall have expressed
to the race her relation to the world’s work, and worship; and so shall
have healed it of its woes.

And the two men to whom Ethel was giving participance in all she was
sharing with the angels, heard jubilates in the upper air, pitifully
tremulant, yet glad, which revealed that the cries of the world are but
the growing pains which all endure while getting the growths that bring
forth new forms of life, of knowledge and beauty.

To Paul Palmer’s entranced uplook, it seemed as if the bounding moon,
shining through the great window back of where Ethel stood, could hardly
wait for gladness in going through the blue; where the sparkling stars
were the dust of the wisdom of the ages, transmuted into the gold of
those supernal heights.

And lovingly laughing together, the moon and earth and they seemed
bounding through realms where old beyond compare had grown that
seed-thought, which now, falling to earth, is sowing itself and
springing up daily in the electrical doings of those who, inwardly
yearning for it, put forth the deeds which the reception of this seed
enables.

On, on, through spheres where the inhabitants know full well that the
crassness of selfhood is but the undeveloped manner of the creature, as
it struggles toward the real humanity, whose spirit is a form of WILL
refined to WISDOM.

On and on—till—oh, ecstasy—next—

“Ethel, my daughter.”

It was to the three as if those words had buffeted their way to them
across ages of absence and realms of peace. Then, somewhere in the
star-garden it seemed Daniel must have met them. As friendlily near,
with swiftness indescribable, they shot earthward together (or thus it
seemed) lighting so, as a thistle-down alights upon the earth.

Ethel’s eyes met Daniel’s as he stood beside her; and with the memory of
how the star-seed was sowing the earth with thoughts for this new age,
she cried out ringingly: “Was such bravery of beauty ever before seen by
you, Daniel?” Then—“oh, I understand,” she whispered hushedly, steadying
herself and them all.

For she perceived what had befallen. But she well knew how to bridge the
chasm between ecstasies and earth’s needs so as to turn raptures into
rational-spiritualized results.

Her first swift act was to concentrate on Reginald this focussed energy,
in a way to fetch his wandering mind into harmony with the work of this
epoch; not by sundering him suddenly from the realm he lived in, but by
giving him an interior sense of the presence of those who stood there
with her and with him, in that instant’s transfiguration on the mount of
vision, when altogether they were allied to the doings of the dualized.

Ethel never “lost herself”—as the term goes—in these ecstasies, any more
than an eagle in the delight of its ascending flight to heights, even
above the eyrie where it dwells, loses itself. It is an eagle still, and
knows its way aloft and below. Nevertheless, she knew that when she went
aloft this time, it was as if at the sound of a triumphal trump, persons
there rallied and sped away with her. And upborne by her wings and
seeing with her un-sun-blinded eyes, they saw what she saw, and learned
what she knew. For when the urgency of her need rang through the
silence, calling on life, that Life _per se_ should show itself to those
who knew it not, that the sight of it should baptize this household into
fitness for the Herculean-labors of this epoch, she knew trusted helpers
then, with an under-lift, had upborne her and hers into participation
with all-creative bliss. And that what they then learned no art, not
even music’s own, with octaves ever so many, can hint to mortal ears.

For what these seers then saw, tones, nor half-tones, quarters nor
eighths, in octaves ever so many, not yet have learned to melodize.

“Grace of heaven, Daksha, is she living woman, or spirit only?” said
Paul Palmer breathlessly.

“I only know,” said Robert, in tones muffled by his heart’s quick pulse,
“that one day the spirit of harmony came and dwelt under the roof, where
I had had cradle. And this is she.”

“Yes, yes, it is the new Madonna,” whispered Reinsvelt, Robert’s artist
friend. And he sped away out at the path from the house to the street.

“He does well,” said Paul. “He goes to whiten white canvas with that
white ‘vision’s inward illuminings.’ Visions, which will ‘pierce gross
sight, and with mild persistence urge man’s search to vaster issues,
whose growing sway controls the growing life of man.’”

“He has caught the art-thought of the new age. For you see, Robert, as
the pictures of the Crucified Man have tortured woman’s soul to a
devotion of self-sacrificing desire to rescue man from the cross which
man’s passions make for him,—so the new picture of that dearer self, in
ecstatic union with the gladsome heights above, will arouse _men_
themselves to become the sanctuary of nuptial rites. For see you not the
meaning of George Eliot’s most wonderful poem? ‘Oh, Might I Join the
Choir Invisible?’ Robert, Madonna, self-crossed by the will-of-wisdom is
Elohim; the cabalistic feminine-duad of the Hebrew. And it lacks not the
mother there, but ‘shapes it forth before the multitude, divinely human,
raising worship so, to reverence more mixed with’ WISDOM.”

And Paul Palmer, like Reinsvelt, as if empowered by some dynametrical
battery affixed to the forces of heaven, sped away to write of new deeds
for the redemption of that hundred-headed power, the Cerberi—the masses
of the people. Seeing that we are all of the mass—_the high mass_.

For as Ethel, raised from private considerations, lived amid public and
illustrious thoughts, those whom she attracted were attracted not to
her, but to the _public and illustrious thoughts_ which were her realest
and most entirely creative self. So that the centripetal attraction
toward this self was balanced by the centrifugal force which sent those
who admired her out and far away from her bodily-presence to work the
work of that force which sent them on its way.

As had done Paul and Reinsvelt, so did the rest, one after another. For
they speedily bethought them of deeds that should be wrought at once,
impelled by the new force to high enterprise.

For the centripetal power that attracted people to Ethel was like that
of the sun or of mightier Arcturus, never absorbing them emotionally
into her atmosphere; but on the reverse, filling them with the vigor of
God, and sending them to achieve newly discerned lines of public
beneficence.

Thus Ethel suddenly found herself standing alone. For everyone had
fallen away from her presence, away and out to do the will-of-wisdom.
And for an instant she halted, with a sense of sudden and unaccountable
desertion; forgetting for the moment how many hundred times the same
thing had befallen her, after one of those mystical uplifts had filled
with power those who had entered with her into the moment of full
vision, and who from thence had hastened gladly down among the multitude
to practicalize there what the vision had but illustrated.

“’Twas but that ‘loneliness which inures to oneliness,’” she said to
herself; entering then herself again into the at-one-ment with the
divine purpose.

Then it came. And reeling under the sudden inflow of the might of the
Eternal, as it surged through brain and nerve, she knew some great need
was at hand, calling for all the power with which she was now being
surcharged. Then arms trembling with the eagerness of a shuddering
soul’s necessities, closed around her.

“I have waited years. Love me, Ethel. I am friendless, distrusted and
forlorn. Let me tell you fully now, my story and Reginald’s. For I have
a suspicion that haunts me, and I want to get square with all moral
questions all round. But all stands still, while Reginald is as he is.
It is time he was well.”

In external stature Ethel was a grand, large woman. And with a solemn
glorifying of her power, inhaling a breath which attendant hosts
supplied, seating herself, she took to her arms her courageous friend,
holding her commodiously, and saying: “Your hour has come. Tell me what
you will. Your work is ready for you now, and you for your work, choose
what you may.”

And as great Isis might have held a woman, childlike in proportion to
herself, so held she Alitza Roccoca, bathing her spirit in a _love_ now
again becoming known to mortals in this passion-wearied age.




                              CHAPTER VII.


Then,—

“But Reginald’s mother died,” said Alitza, in a singularly half-muffled
tone, as if she had been long going forward with the story, and now but
made an addition. “Then Uncle George (as I called old Grove) sent me to
a good school. It was thought by some to be very good of him; but there
was much more back of all that, you must know. I was a thin ghost of a
girl then; thinner than I have now become, and I had cross-eyes (as
people call it), and I was sallow. But little Reg was used to me; so to
come to it at once, the summer I was seventeen I came home from school
to the old Grove place. There was no one there but one old servant and
Reg, who had been suspended from the academy on some charge; so there we
were together two months, as good as in a wilderness.

“The first thing I knew we were engaged to be married, and then nothing
would do for Reg but a drive to Hartford, to the minister’s; but I knew
the minister would not marry us if he knew we were both under age. So as
quick as he asked how old we were, I said I was eighteen and Reg was
twenty-one. And then came the trouble; for truth, of a sort, was always
Reg’s strong point. And as we rode away together, married tight enough
by the minister, he looked at me with absolute dislike, and wanted to
know what I told that story for.

“I told him that as he had been teasing me for six weeks to marry him,
and as I had at last said I would, some one had got to tell the lie; and
as he hated to, I did it for him out of kindness. I felt bad about it
myself. And then the minister had looked at us in a queer way; and
Ethel, I was such a simple, ignorant little child, that I did not even
know then what disagreeable thing the minister might have been thinking,
other than that I was telling a lie. And I knew I was, and that made me
color up; and that had made Reginald mad. And so the outcome of his
haste to tie me to him by that ceremony was that he had called me a
liar, and I had told him I hated him. Then I would do nothing other but
drive straight to the old home, half frightened to death at what I had
done.

“Then you must know, as we drove up to the house up came a common sort
of a fellow on horseback; and the first thing he did was to joke Reg for
riding with me, when he was suspended for a flirtation, at least, with a
common sort of a girl who lived in the academy town. I was as mad as a
lunatic at that; for though I understood nothing about such sort of
talk, I loathed the least breath of it as badly as Reg hated lying. And
while I was in a frenzy of wrath, and tearing away at both of the
impossible rowdy boys, up came old Grove, driving in from somewhere with
‘friends’ to whom he was going to sell the so-called Grove place. The
sight of me there made him mad anyway, for a reason that I can now
understand; and in a minute the other young boor had let out all about
our foolish work at the minister’s house; and, too, Reg’s affair with
the other girl; all this—imagine it—was blazed out before those four
men; mixing me, Reginald’s good straight maiden wife, up with things
which I simply felt sure were very detestable.

“Well, I went to my old nurse’s room (she had always staid there in the
family for my sake), and I got from her papers which auntie had gotten
from old Grove before she died, and had made nurse keep privately for
me, though he had hunted for them everywhere. For you must know that
they were legal documents which showed that the estate we lived on and
every cent of money on which he had been speculating was my money, which
he, as one guardian, held in trust for me, and was bound to invest for
me. So the more successfully he turned it over, the richer I was
growing. Well, you see? But the point with me was, I knew the possession
of this paper gave me a jack-wrench to put on old Grove, whenever I got
ready. But I loved Reg then in a way, and could not disgrace his father
without disgracing him. And I didn’t see how I could go to my other
guardian without letting him know how bad old Grove was. My nurse had
talked a good deal to me about it, and I had made up my mind the week
before, romantically, that I would marry Reg and turn my property all
over to him, and save his feelings, and keep him as rich as he thought
himself to be, and give him a surprise the day after we should be
married, by telling him all about it.

“What I did do was to take all those papers and my wedding certificate
and get away, carrying with me a look as if I would just as lief kill
anyone who spoke to me disrespectfully, like old Grove had done. I was
hateful enough looking to get on quite well. I got a good place to do
housework under the name of Jane Collins. I stayed there two years,
saving money, and terribly frightened lest Grove or Reg should find me.
Next, the lady I worked for recommended me as housekeeper for a
half-paralyzed old man, because I was good, and as ugly looking as
gloomy sin. I was a good nurse, and he said my touch made him stronger.
He was kind, but rather romantic; and finally I had to tell him my
story, because he wanted to marry me. I showed him my certificate, and
then I showed him my other papers; and because I could trust him, I told
him I had a plan of my own. I wanted a very fine education, and I wanted
to put my other guardian on old Grove’s track, so as to get my money all
into my own hands clear and fair, and then make it all over to Reg, who
wasn’t fit to rough it, somehow. But that I had got to do carefully, for
I was legally his wife, and so the money was his in a way; but that I
would never be Reg’s wife any longer than till the day I could find
myself in a condition to be divorced, and could make him marry the girl
who had been a good girl till he ruined her. My idea was that she really
was (law or no law) his wife more than I was. Heaven knows I didn’t want
ever to see him again. Yet I had that romantic, real, dispassionate sort
of principle which made me determined to keep my vow to do him good and
not evil, all the days of his life. So, as I say, I was bound he should
have the money, and marry the girl of whom I have told you, but whom I
never could find.

“All this seemed just fun to old Mr. Mancredo, and he took so much
interest in the ‘joke of the thing,’ as he called it, putting a lawyer
on Grove’s track, and fixing things up a little, while getting at facts,
that he grew better in health under it; and he had my eyes straightened,
and gave me the best of teachers, of which he was chief. And with
kindness, approbation, good treatment and all, by the time I was
twenty-four I was not only quite handsome, but had everything all about
my business in my own hands. But the poor little girl had died,—so
somebody said, but I’m not sure,—and that took my courage down. And Reg
was at West Point, ‘swinging round on my money,’ Mr. Mancredo said. But
you see Reg had called me a liar, and I loathed the whole mess. But you
see I had a woman’s pride in being, myself, _intrinsic wealth_ of a
finer sort than that thing called ‘money’ can fully represent. I wanted
to know how to do well (and in a way which would be of marketable value)
every sort of thing which could be needed in the economics of a broad
social-system. It made me sick to see men, who inherently had nothing
worth exchanging, quarreling so much to get their clutch on the ‘medium
of exchange’ called money. But not to stop about all that now, I can
only tell you that old Mr. Mancredo laughed so much, and had such a good
time over my theories, that he legally adopted me as his heiress and
daughter, and then got so well that we travelled all over Europe and the
Nile country, and he made my guardian stop bothering about the laws of
the matter, and appearances, and the rest of it. For why should I go
back to Reginald, who hated me, and force on him my money as a gift,
which he now was enjoying much better under the supposition that it was
his of right? Besides, I was really punishing old John Grove most
deliciously; and I relished that. For he was a singularly offensive old
animal; and besides, ‘if your enemy thirst, give him drink,’ and he was
awful on the money-thirst. And I was helping him to pour gold down his
own throat, with just enough of a scare with every gulp to make life a
terror to the old animal; and it was fun to me. But just before we
sailed for the Mediterranean I did send Reg one ringing slap. For I was
angry that he was such a coward as not to have fought for me against his
father. But then he was afraid as death of his ‘old dad,’ as he called
him; just as his mother had been. I wrote to him that his mother in
heaven would never forgive him for his treatment of me; for that she had
left me in his care, as a younger sister. And that now, however low he
sunk, he might look about him in the sloughs there, for any woman whom
he met might be the sister to whom he had betrayed his trust. I did not
mean to give him a chance to take much comfort in his badness. But I
meant to do more than to merely put a ‘death’s head’ at the feast of
life which he had spoiled for me. I knew that this letter would put him
on the wrong track, so that he would never look for me among the
cultivated, scholarly, useful women, whom I intended to lead before I
was forty. And besides, I felt it would give him an idea of the fact
that all women are the sisters of all men, and that a man is a felon if
he betrays their trust. So I thought this letter hit off all these
things pretty well; don’t you see that it did?

“Well, we travelled everywhere, Mr. Mancredo and I, and I cultivated a
leisurely, haughty manner, and grew high-colored, with magnificent eyes,
they said, and then I knew how to dress. And people commonly called me
‘Mrs. Mancredo.’ Sometimes I corrected it and sometimes I did not. The
world was so full of tangles that I scorned to bother myself about
names. I knew how staunch I was. And besides, I had such an innate
passion for chastity and continence, that the other sort of life seemed
as idiotic to me as to have dashed my brains out a little every day
would have seemed. Dear old Mancredo called me a very brainy woman, and
I valued that, and I enjoyed being good without letting anybody know it,
if you can imagine such a notion. But then, always, Miss Ethel, I have
devotedly loved my guardian angel.”

She became silent, and the silence was preserved. Then—

“We lived in Italy several years. My mother was an Italian, and so was
Mr. Mancredo, and I felt to be the middle-aged, rich Italian woman whom,
by adapting myself to dear Mr. Mancredo’s language and needs, in his
lameness, I was becoming. When he died I was as much a widowed heart as
if I had been his wife. He called me always a truthful, sound nature,
and encouraged me to believe that my last ‘slap’ at Reginald would
sicken him of vice, which, by the way, he curiously enough did not
believe Reginald was particularly guilty of. He said the false
conditions of woman’s environment had cultivated lack of frankness in
me, and that a certain sort of farcical manœuvering even now made me
like to put people in the wrong, to my own disadvantage, rather than to
allow them to intrude on my business, which is true. ‘You are too fond
of being privately good,’ said he, which was a funny fact.

“After everything was over and I had gotten back to America, Mr.
Mancredo’s lawyer (and he was my guardian) wanted me to come down on old
Grove, whose touch was turning everything to gold. They had come out
West here, and Reg was riding the social wave buoyed up by my money, and
I decided to come West and take a look at him, with the agreement that
at a word from me my lawyer should come on and fetch old Grove with him,
for he was under close surveillance on two accounts.

“And then at the hotel I found the poor fellow, awfully gone down, and
drinking away like a man with something on his conscience. I felt vexed
with him for getting nothing but brandy-slings out of all that money,
for there were people who needed it, and could have used it if he
couldn’t. I found it was said that he was a fellow who was afraid of
women. He had a queer way of looking at them, and his way with me was
his general way. Perhaps he thought any one of them might be me, and the
dread _wore_ on him. But he did not know me, and I rather had to press
myself on his attention, to try to make things come about so we could
settle on a divorce. But my attention to him made him shyer and more
distrustful than ever; yet he was perplexed by a half recognition at
times, too, I think.

“He never knew me, though, till that night on the stairs when I asked
him what would have become of that sister of his if she had been as
unprincipled as he had been. And then, oh dear, poor fellow, that was
the end of all for him! I have never been much to him, and never
anything to anyone else, but I have always been true to myself and to my
guardian angel.”

She stopped and gave way to the weeping that had twice interrupted her,
then said, drawing a full breath:

“So I am honestly and only Mrs. Reginald Grove.”

“Oh, my good Lord!”

It was Reginald’s voice, in full manhood’s tone.

“Oh, go to him, Ethel, I am afraid!” said Alitza.

But Reginald, parting the blinds, stepped out of the long window and
stood in the moonlight looking about him, with his hand to his head,
gazing at Ethel, who, rosy-red with joy, looked into the eyes of an
irate but not insane man.

“I have had enough of this talking outside my window. I tell you I don’t
know where I am. Send for Mrs. Mancredo. She’s a straight woman, but by
George, how she _will_ lie. Why, Miss Ethel, I didn’t know you. You are
looking old and queer, somehow. I’m frightened somehow. This room and
place—? Send for Robert. He’ll take me round to my hotel in his trap, as
he did yesterday.”

“Take my arm for a moment, and we will walk up and down the balcony,”
said Ethel. “Your foot feels as if it were asleep, does it not?”

“It feels as though it were waking up. Get out, man! Hold off there!”
said he, bracing back against the wall ready to strike out at Fleetwood,
his nurse, who approached too much in the character of an attendant to
escape distrust.

“I am here, Captain Grove,” said Ethel. “You are my guest.”

“I am your guest, Miss Ethel? Well, that’s all right then. You hear
that, you peeping idiot back there? I’m Miss Ethel’s guest; but I tell
you others, the whole posse of you, to keep away from me, or I’ll knock
you all down, like ninepins in an alley. They are for shutting me up
somewhere. I have heard lots of talk about it, and if that dark fellow
isn’t a doctor, what is he, with his soft-stepping ways?

“There, look at that. There are my roses, not wilted yet; and there is
my Petrarch. There’s no drunk about me. I was here yesterday. I remember
everything: only I forget some of it. Oh,—oh, Miss Ethel, what has
happened?”

“Just this: you have been ill, but you are getting well now.”

“There now, you’re telling the truth. But when have I been ill, and
where have I been ill?” said he, reassured, yet with the anger of a
proud man fighting against the treachery of his faculties. “Look here.
That’s—_that’s_ Mrs. Mancredo that I hear crying somewhere. It breaks me
all up to have that woman so unhappy. Come, Miss Ethel, if you believe
in prayer, down on your knees, and tell them up there to keep paralysis
off a fellow like me. I’m not half a bad lot, I tell you. No, indeed;
I’m not half bad.”

At last Ethel brought him to see that if he would submit to patient
thought he would soon bridge the mental hiatus that now afflicted him,
since his mind had been abstracted from things about him. But that only
made him anxious to have one good fight with the best fellow there, to
prove that there was nothing the matter with him, and never had been.

“Well, then, take me,” said Daniel Daksha, coming up; his presence so
full of blessed content that Reginald laid his hand in that man’s with a
comforted sense that “old Heem,” as he was sometimes called, would see
him through all right.

It was held to be desirable that Reginald should be saved from the
sudden shock of the knowledge that as thirty odd years had been blotted
out of his memory at the time of his paralysis, so now at this crisis of
probable recovery the years which had since intervened, with their life
of other worldliness and other consciousness, were swept away for the
moment, like a dream forgotten.

Daniel’s full comprehension of a brief but similar lapse from
consciousness that had once befallen him, prepared him to help Reginald
thoroughly.

Reginald was singularly, courteously grateful for the care which he saw
had been taken of him, in bringing him to this private home. But his
mind was full of shadowy incidents related to the two worlds in which he
had lived. And Daniel well knew the terrors and mental perils of a man
recently returned as from a far country. He knew Reginald Grove felt
badgered and broken-hearted at the incongruous, conflicting memories
which bewildered him; and he felt that presently, when Reginald should
begin to recall the blissful states of existence now left behind him as
in a dreamland, he would fall into conditions of homesickness for those
states of exaltation, which might result in settled melancholia or
suicide.

The possibility of this man’s being mentally wrecked, after all the
lofty care which had been bestowed on him, seemed a disaster which could
and should be diverted. For it was Daniel’s theory that a man who had
gone through such an experience as this, should find a way to make
himself of use to others tempted and tried in a like way; and that
therefore he must pull through.

So rising to his feet, and standing between Reginald and Ethel, he said
staunchly, looking at Reginald:

“Ethel, he is well now; and what I have to say is, that a man who has
been so expensively educated by angels in heaven and on earth, as this
Captain Reginald Grove has been, will of course be honorable and
soldierly enough to review coolly all the extraordinary lessons he has
learned, digesting the facts which seem confusing, and winning out of
them at last an order of knowledge which will fit him to do for other
needy fellows the same things which we Dakshas have done for him.”

Reginald looked up with a glad, proud expectancy, now quite sure that
all was right enough with him, and that he had had some unusually good
thing befall him, which in some way fitted him to be quite a friend with
the Dakshas, and a coworker with them in unusual lines.

Then with the strong tone of one determined to get at facts, he said:
“Miss Ethel, what whitened your hair since—since the day on the
balcony?”

“It turned white in one night. For I will tell you this: there is a
world where a day is as a thousand years; and we learn fast in a few
seconds there.”

“And did you go to that world?”

“I did,” said Ethel.

“How did you get back?”

“It was my inner self that went. No one looking at my outer self—my
body—could have seen that I was away.”

“Well,” said Reginald, after a prolonged look into her face and his own
memories: “I see that you are the same old truthful young girl, who said
kind words to me one day out on your balcony, all about my mother and
roses, and the goodness of wealth, and that you wished, with me, that I
was but five years old. Now what you say would look to some people
uncommon unlikely. But—but if you don’t know about your own hair—whose
hair should—” He heard an hysterical giggle.

“Oh, there she is at her old tricks. There’s Mrs. Mancredo making fun of
a fellow,” he said irritably.

“But then, you see,” said Ethel, “she’s not been away, as you and Daniel
and I have. But you will soon find your way back; we did, though it
seemed unnatural at first, and we felt homesick for the upper air. Sleep
now; in the morning all will seem more natural, and Mrs. Mancredo will
help you.”

He slept, and slept soundly. In the morning he was up early. What he
wanted to see now, was Mrs. Mancredo. She seemed to him somehow to be
his oldest friend; and a homesickness for old, old friends had begun to
lay hold on him.

He warily looked about. The doors were open; he would go out. If any one
stopped him he would know they thought him mad; and if they did, he
would knock them down and run. But no one seemed to care where he was
going. He passed Ethel and she bowed to him, with a cordial
good-morning; and Daniel Heem, who was reading on the other balcony,
bowed cordially; but it was all with the air that they were all alike,
and at their ease in that house.

There were two men down by the lake-bluffs. But no one seemed to care
where he was going. The air and the sunshine were good; and it felt
strangely good (though queer) to use his own legs. He looked about
warily, tarrying in the rose-garden. But no infant ever longed more than
he for caressing love; and no man fired with wrath against some
tormenting thing, felt readier than he to deal a death-blow. Yes, he
would get away to the little old arbor in the shrubbery, and there, all
alone, he would cry his heart free (he told himself) for something he
had lost. Then crying as he ran, and running as he cried, he at last
flung himself down on the breast of mother earth, longing for some
unnamable treasure.

What had befallen? Realms of being had been opened to his knowledge,
whose delights the repeating power of his brain could not repicture. He
felt as if starving for what he had lost. He bit at the earth, with
inarticulate cries of soul-bereftness.

Suddenly two arms closed about him, lifting him till his head rested on
a throbbing bosom. They tightened till he felt himself swayed gently to
and fro, while sobs, strong as his own, shook the rocking form which
held him. As he lay extended, half along the ground and half in this
sheltering care, there came to him something of that sort of peace in
which his senses had been enveloped when he before had floated away into
that child-kingdom from which he had had last night so rude an
awakening. He waited wonderingly.

A hand pressed back the hair from his forehead.

“Don’t you know me, Reginald?”

He opened his eyes and saw black velvet. Was he dead? Was coffin couch
so soft? Did angel arms so sweetly clasp poor mortal form within that
narrow bound?

Not yet, at least. For bending over him he saw black orbs and cheeks
tear-flushed. The velvet was a woman’s dress; and laces there rose and
fell with the palpitations of a woman’s heart.

It was Mrs. Mancredo; and she held him tight, as if she would never let
him go.

“I thought you were my mother,” he said.

“Ethel Daksha, do you mean?” she asked, after a strange pause.

“No-o-o, my own dear mother. I thought I was well dead at last; I wish I
were. I have been so knocked about.”

Presently he said, out of the silence, in a good common-sense way: “I
must be awfully sick, or you wouldn’t hold me—like this, as if—as if I
were fainted, you know.”

She shivered. “Don’t you know me?” He sat up and looked at her, and
wondered if he must doubt his own senses next. No, the flush on the dark
cheek, the soft brown orbs and wealth of black hair, were all beauties
possessed by his tormenting friend, Mrs. Mancredo. Like a summer
night-lightning memory flashed, sending him to search her face to find
in it—the link lost in his twice-dissevered life.

“Of course I know you,” he said angrily; “and as I don’t seem to be
dying, I’ll stand on my feet.” And he gave her his hand, helping her to
rise, with his wits all about him.

Something in his act and look whelmed the soul of this strange woman who
had been his playmate from childhood up, and had parted from him on the
bridal hour. And sinking on the arbor-seat she wept violently. With a
scowl of distress and of another emotion, in which there was no liking,
tortured by the mental hiatus which the sight of Mrs. Mancredo
intensified, he said suddenly: “Why do you tell such falsehoods? I hate
it in woman.”

Astonished, and giggling nervously at his queer starts and turns, her
eyes shining like lambent stars through the mist, chiefly concerned not
to startle him, and falling back into the way which, as “little Alitza,”
she had had to use toward him for the last five years, she gently said:

“Well, Regie, I never will again.”

“Oh, oh, they speak like that where I just came from!” he cried. “Tell
me, oh, tell me, was it a trance? I cannot endure this cloud over my
mind which is so thin that I can almost see through it, and yet so dense
that it stifles me. Tell me all!” he pleaded.

“I will. Stop me if I skip anything that you want explained. You have
been for quite a while with the Dakshas. I have been here, too. You have
lived a double existence; and though I could see you every day, you
seemed never to see Mrs. Mancredo, but instead, your thoughts were away
in some other world and time. You thought Ethel Daksha was your mother,
and always called her so. And once I dreamed, or I saw you, with your
real mother and Ethel Daksha together in the unseen world, and—”

“Yes, yes, angels and my mother’s touch—and—Laura and Petrarch, and
sustained ecstasies she brought in on my soul, flooding my very brain
with joys, warm, white, flying joys—which—oh, it is gone, I am lost
again. No, no, I have it. There was great whiteness, great light, Alpine
heights and woman there, in the grace and glory of electric might,
competent to make man mount as on wings, as eagle’s wings ascending
heights, else inaccessible! I was a boy, always playing with joys,
sweeter than wine and more freely fine. No one blamed another there, and
no one hurried. And I saw always Alitza there; and nothing had harmed
her, for her angels had guarded her at every step. Oh, take me back! No,
no, I will not go back! You think I rave; I do not, I only remember too
much at once. I must remember that Daniel just said—you heard it
yourself—that a man so expensively educated by angels of earth and
heaven must be honorable and soldierly, and gather himself to do for
others what has been done for his redemption to good use on earth. Come,
oh, once more try and bring me what I lack!”

“You know, Reginald, after we all had last night a strange, a heavenly
strange evening, you suddenly roused out of your long, long inattention
to what was going on about you. And now you seem to have forgotten
everything since the night five years ago when you quarrelled (are you
listening?) with Mrs. Mancredo on the stairs of the hotel, when—”

“Oh where, where is little Alitza—playmate, sister, and—she, you—it is
strange you are both such liars!”

“Reginald Grove! You miserable thing,” she said in wholesome anger; “is
that all you can remember about me—us? You are not worth saving.”

“Oh, Mrs. Mancredo, you are—are only and honestly Mrs. Reginald Grove! I
heard you say it. Wait, my brain can’t stand it. You are—”

“Only and honestly Mrs. Reginald Grove,” she repeated. “My only marriage
is with you, just as you understand and remember its limitation, nothing
more. We are all seeking a simple life here, with little marriage or
giving in marriage, because the power of the angels, with whom we
co-operate for the redemption of the Cerberi, is all and in all for us.

“And Reginald, listen to me carefully: No one blames another here; no
one hurries or worries, or enters on wordy discussions of past blunders
or future plans. We act, leaving no room for license, but taking the
liberty to each one be his or her best self, according to individual
judgment.

“Now, Reginald, my permanent relation to you is that of sister. I have
in no real sense ever been, or wanted to be, your wife; neither shall I
ever be. You will hear from the lawyer tomorrow how absolutely sisterly
was the affection which impelled me to agree to your wish for our
marriage, such as it was; and you will see that the plans I laid in my
own mind at eighteen, will be carried out if you like them, now in our
maturity. I shall then be legally divorced from you, and—”

She looked at him. His face was bright and cheerful, interested, and
perhaps a little perplexed; but above all, cheerful, alert and rather
exhilarated.

She continued. “Remember this: We here are all dwellers on the threshold
which is between things seen with the physical vision (so to say) and
the things which are invisible to those eyes. We are chiefly interested
in getting ourselves (and keeping ourselves) in right relations to the
realms of supersensuous life, with which we may choose to surround
ourselves. For of course we draw about us spirits, which in tendencies
and longings are like ourselves. Listen to me: One of the family here,
who has a far-reaching inheritance of psychic-faculty and self-poised
spiritual power, is—”

“Is,” said Reginald, “the one woman in the world who is, in a way, my
wife more than you are.”

Alitza sprang to her feet, flushed and with blazing eyes. For however
thoroughly she ought to have been glad that the way was so clear, and
Reginald so evidently relieved and ready to give her up, she was not
prepared for this raw style of arriving at the conclusion. Till,
suddenly, “Truth is his strong point, you know,” seemed uttered in her
ears, as if in Ethel’s distant spirit tone. She caught herself up and
steadied her angry pulse, and listened, trembling and expectant; but
there was nothing more.

Then “Very well, you know your business and I know mine,” she said, and
left him.

He had all his wits about him, and filled with a sudden sense of the
electric shock which Bertha’s finger-point had sent through him on the
day of Ethel’s conversation with her, he gathered up (with a tingling
sense of shame) all that they together had one day said of him, as being
“a fool not worth mothering.”

The blood surged through his brain, bubbling up cleansingly through all
the stagnant cells, bringing him in its parts and as a whole, a memory
of the things which had been going on about him for the five years of
double-consciousness through which he had lived.

Later in the day he felt strangely happy, and clear-headed and proud,
and ready for life; as if he had been assured by competent judges that
he was really a much more level-headed man, and had always been more
level-headed, with a much clearer eye for the main point at stake, than
anything in his stultified life heretofore had proved.

He saw perfectly well that the story of his life could not end here amid
the congratulations of his friends over his return to health, and their
assurances in relation to Mrs. Mancredo that he was a lucky fellow, with
a wife possessed of such faithfulness and maturity of youthful power.
For of course the story that she was his wife, and all the rest of it,
had gotten abroad. And Reginald knew it had.

Perhaps if his mental grasp as to moral relations had been as bewildered
as it was when, five years before, he regularly turned to his “drinks”
in order to quiet his perplexities, he would have accepted the
congratulations and slipped along the lines as publicly expected of him.
But five years’ immersion in the blithesome delights of a world where
righteousness reigned, had fortified Reginald in his inherent love of
truth and straightforward dealing, and had enabled him to adopt as
theories to be immediately practicalized, the methods of honor (founded
on simplicity and courage) toward which the Dakshas aspired.

So when a few days later he found Alitza had legally passed over to him
a good little fortune, and had taken steps to secure (on some of the
many available pleas) a legal release from the results of that
marriage-ceremony, he said, cheerfully and blithely: “That’s all right.”
And when he further learned that Alitza had deeded a further amount of
wealth to Bertha Gemacht, he said: “That’s all wrong; I won’t allow it.
I hope to marry her, and so right up things. And the other money is
enough for both of us,” showing that, as Alitza said to herself, “five
years, even in the society of angels, could not rid the Grove blood of
the thought that a man can cast off a woman when he chooses, and then
marry her when he gets ready; but that, having married her, such a man
felt it was better for him that she should possess as little of that
legal tender called money, as possible; seeing (to the Grove notion of
things) it was sum and substance of independence. She told Ethel that
the irrepressible young hoodlum stood confessed at this touchstone, as
far as his relations to what he would have called ‘this sort of a woman’
were concerned. Then she said to Grove: “It seems difficult for you to
understand that you have nothing to do with what money someone else may
choose to give to a third person, let that third person be whom it may.”
For quarrel these two people must, by nature. And glad Alitza was that
she had always kept him beyond arm’s length, and now had not let her
sympathy with his sickness, or her joy at his recovery, cause her to
abbreviate the distance between their ineradicable antagonisms.

“This is a different case,” said he.

“All cases are alike here, for all are individuals,” said she.

“But—she—she’s to be my wife.”

“That’s what you don’t yet know,” said Alitza. “Pah, it takes more than
a visit to paradise to take that sort of stuff out of your brains. I see
the use of purgatory now. You ought to have gone there and staid longer.
We’ve all agreed to let you drop, the next time you knock yourself to
pieces. So look out!”

“All right, then, I won’t take your money,” said he.

“Well, leave it; or you can put it into the sinking fund for the
enterprise of this family,” she said. “No one is overinfluenced here.”

And he did it that day.

And then the divorce was amicably enough accomplished, but the other
marriage did not occur.

He said to Ethel afterwards, with wide eyes full of childlike wonder:
“How queer! Do you know _she_ refused me? I’m—I’m afraid, you know,
she’s somehow gone wrong, in spite of all your good opinions.”

And Alitza, speaking of this remark, said, irate, to Daniel: “After all,
it does seem as if it took a burial six feet under ground to get that
stuff out of him and his like. Why can’t they take to decency as
naturally as women do?”

“Oh, all he needs is some real misery,” said Daniel. “Leave him to get
it in his own way. He has dreamed of heaven and languished sentimentally
in paradise, but his business is now to pull himself up out of sluggish
uselessness to others. Turning away that money of yours into the public
good, is a hint at something courageous.”

“Anyway,” said Alitza, “Regie’s as truthful as a dumb brute, even when
he is tossed about by his instincts. He told me, today that he had never
had any feeling toward me but a brother’s anxiety and sense of
responsibility, and that he knew all about the property matter from the
nurse; and that he did hate his ‘old dad,’ and had a sort of hankering
after revenge; and besides, felt it was too mean for the old man to be
cheating me out of my money. And when the nurse said ‘there was enough
for both, and for him to ask me to marry him,’ he thought it would be
about the only way to fix things up easy all round. Yet that when it was
done, and we quarreled all the way home from the minister’s, he felt
sick of it. For he had no love for me like that. And the sight of his
‘old dad’s’ fury threw him into confusion and terror, and a sort of dumb
sickness, just as he had seen in his mother many a time. So he said
today, in his simple way, he was as glad as anything that I had pulled
through life so splendidly; and was glad, in a way, that we didn’t in
the least care for each other, and could be divorced all comfortably.”

“It’s a queer case, and, in a way, uncommonly sweet, take it altogether,
as these sorts of confusing marital troubles go in these days. For I was
privately planning to marry him, so that he could have the house and
money that he thought were his own, without creating any fuss with old
Grove over the affair. And he was chivalrously going to marry me (in
fact did in a way) so as to deliver me and my money out of old Grove’s
clutches without disgracing his father. Of course it was all quite as if
the question of managing the money were the one question on earth to be
considered. Isn’t it disgraceful? Think of the confusion that comes of
unintelligent conduct, in regard to what real love and real marriage is.
In a way, Reg is a lovable fellow, and has some common sense in him. He
is my own cousin, anyway, and I would do anything to save him except to
marry him, and luckily he don’t want me to do that; so I can mother him
still, as I have always done. I promised his mother I would do my best
for him; and I find he had promised to do the same by me. And I think we
have both blunderingly tried.”

“Oh, he’ll be well mothered among them all,” said Robert, when Daniel
one day told him all this. “And the queer part is, it is my opinion that
Mrs. Mancredo loves him with the soundest kind of a real wife love,
whether she knows it or not. But as for him, he says he has never had a
permanent attraction toward any woman except the mother of his child.
And now she dreads him with a furious fear, lest he should somehow set
up a claim, and get power over her boy. I’ve seen women like that
before. I wonder where these transitional states will land us all.”

“It is the great question of the day,” said Daniel. “But manœuvres on
the part of men to disguise from women the conditions of this crucial
epoch will not help the cause along. Men must come into recognition of
the fact that perfect frankness between men and women will lead up to a
natural settlement of the matter as nothing else will do. In fact, it
depends altogether upon the courageous doings of the dualized.”

“Just what do you mean by dualized?” said Robert.

“I mean first, as Bacon says, the men and women ‘who have procured the
will to obey the reason, not to invade it.’”

“He called that the moralization of the whole being; you call it the
dualization. But you include something else,” said Robert, “in your last
meaning.”

“Oh, that last point comes later. And no person is ready even to discuss
that, until first the subjection of the will to the reason is
accomplished by them and in them. That includes the real moralization of
the whole being, body and spirit,” said Daniel.

“And so, Robert,” said Ethel, “it is mother-wisdom, full of divinest
love which impels Bertha to protect herself and child against what she
fears in Reginald. But perhaps the same mother-wisdom, full of divine
love, will—now that she is financially independent of him—bring her, in
the near future, to be as noble a wife-friend to Reginald as ever a
poor, struggling fellow-creature had. She is a noble woman, rightly
considered.”

“She is,” said Mrs. Mancredo. “And she is quite the person to never rest
until she puts one for whom she feels responsible (as she now does for
Reginald) into the way of finding his best self. She wants to help
Reginald exactly as she will Waldemar. That is, to tell him all the
facts, and then leave him free to become what he adores in—well—that
is—oh, how can one express it!

“For my part,” she resumed, “my love for humanity is and always has been
broader, more intelligent and spiritualizing than a self-arrested,
masculine soul can imagine. The fact is, men in the past have praised a
_simulacrum_ of womanhood which with dire ARTS and infernal-wizzardry
they, themselves demonologically concocted. Then they have set up before
the _androgynous_ mind of a vigorous, virginal womanhood, this unclean
SIMULACRUM of woman, as the thing that she must emulate, or be damned,
to use ‘pulpit words.’

“It is of no use opening your eyes, Robert; I may take my departure the
_next_ moment, but I will tell the truth _this_. But the best way to
stop talking disagreeable things is to set vigorously about doing
agreeable things. So now what I have to propose is this: In this house
we bachelor-maids (glancing toward Ethel) and MAIDENLY-MOTHERS who
_enjoy_ a celibate life, and who are legally and financially independent
of men, should hold on to our shekels and our homes (NOT AS FOOLISH
SOCIAL-CENTERS or as unremunerative idols, to be scrubbed and garnished,
but) as centers where we can do what the Bible speaks of when it says,
‘He sets the solitary in families.’

“It takes so much time to run up and down the earth and to salary
officers to show us how _not_ to do it, that I would rather permanently
go right on here, ready for emergencies, with an occasional timely
home-extension.”

“Oh, I imagine that really would be about like our Daniel’s idea, when I
was a little fellow,” said Robert. “When we first came out West, and
when we had plenty of grain and three or four cows, and a well-built,
sunny house, and the big windows full of plants, and an outfit of
kinder-garden ‘gifts’ and Daniel’s perfect knowledge of the
philosophically-religious-science of child-gardening; and when I had
agreed to buy all the clothes for as many children as happened to come
to the door, and when we were hindered, because the mother there,” he
said, halting with a quizzical glance at Althea, “would not have all
sorts of nondescript children homing themselves in our house. Your
thought, Mrs. Mancredo, is about like Daniel’s and mine then was.

“But, Mrs. Mancredo, my mother was queen of that home, and was a
splendid homemaker, with Daniel’s help; only in our case she was the
money-maker, and Daniel was the family philosopher. Yet she would no
more tolerate the thought than as if there were some moral taint, in
being simply good to folks. And as Daniel was taking the part of
mother-man and Althea of the _man-mother_, Daniel succumbed. Now seeing
we are all telling the truth, JUST AS IF THE LIGHT THAT LIGHTETH EVERY
MAN WAS SHINING RIGHT THROUGH US, REVEALING ALL THAT IN EACH OF US
HINDERS THE GROWTH OF ‘THE LILIES’ OF THIS RESURRECTION TIME,—let’s have
the man-mother tell us, if she can, why she did not let other children
share Ethel’s ideal surroundings and true academical-advantages, which
that man-of-men, Daniel, was so lavishly bestowing on one little
solitary girl. Will you tell us, lady?” said Robert.

The giant was timid and fragmentary in his statements, like one whose
brain was crowded full of self-adjusting ideals. His headaches made him
distrustful of himself in these days. But better times were coming.

Althea, the man-mother, the business head of the family (for that she
had been), looked perturbed. She wished Robert had not brought up that
question, either publicly or privately. She looked at him in a way that
meant: “Robert, tell them it’s no matter about it.” But he did not tell
them so; he wanted to know. They were all hunting for truth, and women
were wanting men to tell the truth squarely to them, so that men could
start _and eventually_ “square the circle.” By inference, women are to
now explicitly unveil the remote recesses of their mental-hidingplaces;
and that was what the judicial-looking Robert now said blankly to
Althea.

Althea, quite amazed, raised her eyes, so like Robert’s, with a
half-challenging shake of the head. But he looked stringent and unmoved.

She rose a little uneasily on her chair, quaintly folding her handsome
hands, like a child who “did not know the answer.” No one smiled. All
gazed at her unflinchingly, every eye magisterially beholding her.

For all the years of the children’s lives _she_ had taken _them_ to task
like this, saying: “Of course you know _why_ you do each act; or, of
course you would refrain from action till you found out.”

_She_ had never been taken to task before, and had rushed through too
many strokes of big business to submit to much interference.

It was not that she was unwilling to explain the facts of this affair;
it was that she did not “understand such a little thing.” So she said:
“I do not know.”

“Oh, oh, Robert, would _you_ ever dare to ‘NOT KNOW’?” said Ethel,
folding her hands in imitation of Althea.

“Not in my wildest moments,” said Robert.

“Why,” interposed Althea, “what else would you have me say, when I
don’t? Doubtless it is something to do with some two or
three-thousand-year-old-scare which some antediluvian ghost of you men
put on my ancient shade, when you tried to tell as bad falsehoods as are
betimes told now, concerning woman’s nature, duty and—concerning the
_secrecy_ necessary to be sustained about home-affairs, because of the
untellable horrors prevalent within palace and hut,—where worse than
brute passions usurp control over the priestesses of what—home? No, that
is a word very generally needing to be illustrated by a new style of
marital life. However, Daniel and I know what home is; and so do my
children. There was nothing in our home which would not have bettered
the world to know about. That is the reason I can’t tell you _why_ I was
averse to have a lot of little children educated and homed and cared for
with Ethel,” she said perplexed. “Perhaps I was feeling stingy and
tired. At any rate, I remember I wanted to get rich.

“But Daniel; consider what an exclusive home I was born and bred in, and
how long ago it was, and what departures from old-fashioned dependency I
even then had risked. The fact that of old, woman was chiefly protected
in an enforced-penury, of which she was bitterly ashamed, tended to give
her that preposterous fashion of (metaphorically) peeping out of doors
and windows, and scurrying round to make the best of things before
admitting eyes (much less individuals) into the secrets of the domicile
where she slaved (as I never did); but where she did not intellectually
and morally reign, as Daniel and I together did.

“Now, Robert, I hope you are satisfied. I have told the truth as to an
age-long tendency in women ‘to want their home all to themselves.’ But
other things and complications there might have been about it, too. I am
tired of that subject now, Robert.”

“But just one word. Why should women feel so afflicted about this penury
business?”

Althea, for reasons of her own, did not like this following up of this
matter, and Ethel took on herself to answer:

“The reason was and is, because the world is the continent of every form
of life, knowledge and beauty necessary for all the needs and delights
of an intellectualized humanity. So woman’s discontent, anger and unrest
at stagnant, self-stultifying conditions, are elements especially
serviceable to her less alert and foreseeing companion.”

Adding: “‘The sense of beauty, _next to the miraculous, divine suasion_,
is the means through which HUMAN character is purified and elevated.’”

“I like that answer well,” said Robert. “And I think the power which
beauty has over us all makes us more amenable to that ‘miraculous,
divine suasion’ through which man is finally purified and elevated.

“Well, that’s finely finished, and I think we are to be congratulated on
the success of our attempt at square dealing,” continued Robert. “But
you know, Ethel, in the old days you and Daniel had some mysterious
talisman by which you discovered if any _goddesses_ came to town in the
Civil (?) War-time days, when so many unhappy babies were likely to be
neglected. Other kinds than the goddess sort you seemed to think were
material not worth your time and attention. I have thought of your way
of discriminating then, in association with the amount of time which you
blessed souls have since seen fit to give to that Reginald?”

He put this in the form of a question, and Ethel said:

“There is in Reginald ‘a little seed of immortal power, which will save
its kind alive.’ Therefore he was especially worth saving. He will help
progress toward conditions in which the ARTS OF PEACE will prosper. For
this progress is dependent on the _intelligibility of the doings of
dualized_—self-harmonized natures. _He_ will make such things
intelligible when he gains equilibrium.

“Bertha, now, is such an one. She has come up out of the scarth of great
tribulation, and she has washed her robes white in the life-blood of her
own bleeding heart, image as it is of the bleeding heart of the Mother
of divine Humanity. She, the outraged, has become pitiful to him who
crucified her and put her to open shame—a shame which she will never
forget. And,” continued Ethel, after a strange pause, “which I should be
sorry to see her forget. For such dealings with woman are not to be
permitted nor condoned. Nevertheless, Reginald is worth saving, though
he should not be encouraged, Mrs. Mancredo, to suppose Bertha will have
anything more to say to him than to—”

“What, Miss Ethel, do you really mean that you women are going to
conspire to make all other women leave us men alone in peace?” said
Reginald, walking out from his secluded chair in the corner behind the
portières, where he had half relapsed into his old fashion of floating
away into union with _reflective agencies_. “Do you mean,” he repeated
stumblingly, as he came into their circle, “Do you mean that women are
to be taught somehow to leave us men to mind our business? We men are
dead tired of women, all of us; but we can’t really get rid of them. We
often feel like shrieking out at women: ‘For heaven’s sake, take
yourselves out of sight and hearing for a thousand years. Get out of our
light, and give us a chance to find _ourselves_!’

“They take too much out of our self-esteem when they tell the truth; and
when they don’t, they take too much out of our esteem for _them_, which
is worse yet, for our comfort. We know there is something wrong about
us, but as we don’t quite understand ourselves, of course we can’t make
them understand us. The reason I want to shriek out at them is—well—it
is queer, but it is because I like _them so much_.”

Robert laughed out, as if he had a fellow feeling for Reginald in this
difficulty.

“Now that sounds queer, but it is the truth, isn’t it, Robert?” he said,
with translucent, beautiful orbs raised in integrity. For Reginald was
having an amazing good time, telling the truth as he understood it. But
then he went on and told other truths so simply and helpfully, that they
began to fear he was really getting sick again.

“See that? Now look at that,” he said. “I have been listening to you, to
see how much you would bear in the way of real endeavor at
truth-tellings. And now, when I speak as plainly as I can, you think my
brain is giving way. Now listen to me. If a lot of good men and women
don’t speak the truth about this matter of love, a lot of good brains
will give way under the contradictory teachings that some sorts of
churches are by silence consenting to, while protecting men in
debauching woman-power, in marriage and out. Protestant churches never,
in my experience of their doings, assist women to establish themselves
on their own moral heights; even though these churches know that,
standing thus and there, women would lift men up to these heights, and
so easily hasten forward man’s truly human development. Besides, such
women’s sons would be born right the first time, and have less need of a
second birth. Woman could do so much for us if we would only give her a
fair chance to work according to her genius.

“You know how it was with LAURA?” Nothing could exceed his tenderness
and devotion as Reginald uttered this name, once so dear to Petrarch.
And then, as if reciting a memorized matter he went on in his distant,
ventriloquized voice:

“If that idolized object of Petrarch’s vehement passion had not held to
her rectitude (notwithstanding the harsh vicissitudes of her home), that
man Petrarch would never have known that _that_ woman’s personal
attractions were not her _real_ charm for him. For that _they_ were
excelled by her inherent moral glory and her spiritual-percipience.

“He would not have known that what he really adored was her _interior_
SELF, which SELF it was his business by the grace of HE-VAH to develop
_in himself_. And if by lack of rectitude she had failed of holding him
up to the business of understanding her spirit (instead of merely
possessing her personal attractions), he might not have learned the
truth as to WHAT LOVE FOR WOMAN IS FOUNDATIONED UPON EVEN IN THIS LIFE.
And in that case he would not, at her translation to the unseen world,
have been carried forward by his love to THE TRIUMPHS OF SELF-DISCOVERY
which befalls us when the Lord into his garden comes and the LILIES GROW
AND THRIVE.”

He was looking straight into the air as one does when remembering (or
putting together again) the parts of a total, which, though perfect in
its whole, is yet painfully puzzling in its stages of partial
development.

He was looking into the air much as he had been used to do before his
recovery of speech, when in mellifluous tones, scarcely audible, he had
talked on in a language quite unknown as the listening Ethel upbore his
highest intelligence, aiding him as he tried to tell what Petrarch had
sought and at last had found in his “VITA SOLITARIA.”

“As it was, after Laura’s translation to the unseen world his love for
her spiritualized into a worship for that _love-full-of wisdom_ which
our Lord promised to send to lead us into all truth, and which he called
‘the Comforter,’ which was to dwell in disciples of holiness.

“Well would it be for us if we could first, chastely love all womanhood
as sisters; and then as mothers, noble and dignified, which is far from
being cold and proud. I am sure woman could (if we cleared her way
respectfully) put us at our ease with her on her own supernal plane,
without descending to us from it. If woman remained on her lawful
heights she would leave us men always aspiring toward some veiled and
virgin loveliness which would quicken each dulled spirit, and set it
free from the chains that bind _thought_ to the person, instead of to
the _spiritual-principle_ toward which, in reality, man’s interior
nature aspires.

“Of course all this is only saying that woman is a help, able to meet
her brother’s painful needs at this _fin de siècle_. And that she is
awfully benevolent to do it, when she has a right to better enjoyments
than that of the misery of birthing and burying babies—many of whom are
not fit to be born—and to better enjoyment than this taking care of men,
who are not fair enough to secure to _her_ those advantages which would
enable her to act freely, according to the teachings of supernal light.

“I have always been sure,” added Reginald, “that at a certain stage in
man’s development the best thing a wisely-helpful-woman can do for a
man, is to set him absolutely free from love to _her_. That, chained to
_her no more_, she can then, with kind demeanor and dear reserve,
explain him to himself by revealing to him the mental-mystery of that
finished femininity, which is type and potency of the ‘sleeping beauty’
within his own being,—a sleeping beauty yet to be electrified into
activity by man’s strenuous englobement of his brain substance. Thus, a
fair face will conduct men by a fairer way to his one means of
self-releasement from loving an extraneous self, and will bring him to
the treasured bliss which will ne’er abandon the man who attains it!
Thus man—like woman—will become wholly sexed: neither male nor female,
but-both; being self-whole, self-harmonized, like the lilies of the
Resurrection.”

Robert had grasped Reginald’s hand.

A silence had settled upon them.

Then Robert, with smouldering rage, broke forth relative to
he—knew—what—

“And yet in the face of all this, think of the embrutalized form of
marriage-ceremony which thrusts words into the mouth of a spiritual man
who is suitor for a life-long union with a woman who is an image of the
feminine in Deity! Think of a decent man having to take into his mouth
that indecent, shoppy remark; a remark which is prescribed to him by a
shoppy-church in response to woman’s enforced promise that she will obey
him. The decent man is made to say (and worse still, the
intellectually-hungry maiden is made to hear him say) ‘With my body (why
not with my brain?) I thee worship.’ ‘And with all my worldly goods (why
not with his best intelligence?) I thee endow.’”

“Is there not some immediate way to lift the grace of fine living out of
the sloughs with which a most materialistic on-striding form of religion
is saturating it?” he asked impatiently. “It is you women who are to
blame for upholding this materialistic-sacerdotalism,” continued Robert.

“There is a way,” said Daniel.

“And we will fetch it forward,” said they all at once, steadying poor
Robert, who had had a peculiar state of nature, added to a sight of “the
better way,” to rightly adjust.

“Yes,” said Daniel, “there is a way; and it is bourgeoning forth on
every side. It is the Resurrection-dawn, for now the Lord into his
garden has come, and the lilies grow and thrive.”




                               AD FINIS.


“... the lover ascends to the highest beauty (to the love and knowledge
of the Divinity) by steps on this ladder of created souls. Somewhat like
this the truly-wise have told us of love, in all ages; the doctrine is
not old nor is it new.

“If Plato, Plutarch and Apuleius taught it, so have Petrarch, Angelo and
Milton. It awaits a truer unfolding in opposition and rebuke to that
subterranean prudence which presides at marriage, with words that take
hold on the upper world, whilst one eye is prowling in the cellar; so
that its greatest discourse has a savor of hams and powdering tubs.

“Worst, when this sensualism intrudes on the education of young women,
and teaches that marriage means nothing but a housewife’s thrift; and
that woman’s life has no other aim.”—_Emerson._


                                _FINIS._

[Illustration: EASTERTIDE OF 1898.]

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                          TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES


 1. Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in
      spelling.
 2. Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
 3. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.