The Blithedale Romance - Page 100/170

Arriving in town (where my bachelor-rooms, long before this time, had

received some other occupant), I established myself, for a day or two,

in a certain, respectable hotel. It was situated somewhat aloof from

my former track in life; my present mood inclining me to avoid most of

my old companions, from whom I was now sundered by other interests, and

who would have been likely enough to amuse themselves at the expense of

the amateur workingman. The hotel-keeper put me into a back room of

the third story of his spacious establishment. The day was lowering,

with occasional gusts of rain, and an ugly tempered east wind, which

seemed to come right off the chill and melancholy sea, hardly mitigated

by sweeping over the roofs, and amalgamating itself with the dusky

element of city smoke. All the effeminacy of past days had returned

upon me at once. Summer as it still was, I ordered a coal fire in the

rusty grate, and was glad to find myself growing a little too warm with

an artificial temperature.

My sensations were those of a traveller, long sojourning in remote

regions, and at length sitting down again amid customs once familiar.

There was a newness and an oldness oddly combining themselves into one

impression. It made me acutely sensible how strange a piece of

mosaic-work had lately been wrought into my life. True, if you look at

it in one way, it had been only a summer in the country. But,

considered in a profounder relation, it was part of another age, a

different state of society, a segment of an existence peculiar in its

aims and methods, a leaf of some mysterious volume interpolated into

the current history which time was writing off.

At one moment, the

very circumstances now surrounding me--my coal fire and the dingy room

in the bustling hotel--appeared far off and intangible; the next

instant Blithedale looked vague, as if it were at a distance both in

time and space, and so shadowy that a question might be raised whether

the whole affair had been anything more than the thoughts of a

speculative man. I had never before experienced a mood that so robbed

the actual world of its solidity. It nevertheless involved a charm, on

which--a devoted epicure of my own emotions--I resolved to pause, and

enjoy the moral sillabub until quite dissolved away.

Whatever had been my taste for solitude and natural scenery, yet the

thick, foggy, stifled element of cities, the entangled life of many men

together, sordid as it was, and empty of the beautiful, took quite as

strenuous a hold upon my mind. I felt as if there could never be

enough of it. Each characteristic sound was too suggestive to be

passed over unnoticed. Beneath and around me, I heard the stir of the

hotel; the loud voices of guests, landlord, or bar-keeper; steps

echoing on the staircase; the ringing of a bell, announcing arrivals or

departures; the porter lumbering past my door with baggage, which he

thumped down upon the floors of neighboring chambers; the lighter feet

of chambermaids scudding along the passages;--it is ridiculous to think

what an interest they had for me! From the street came the tumult of

the pavements, pervading the whole house with a continual uproar, so

broad and deep that only an unaccustomed ear would dwell upon it. A

company of the city soldiery, with a full military band, marched in

front of the hotel, invisible to me, but stirringly audible both by its

foot-tramp and the clangor of its instruments. Once or twice all the

city bells jangled together, announcing a fire, which brought out the

engine-men and their machines, like an army with its artillery rushing

to battle. Hour by hour the clocks in many steeples responded one to

another.