The Blithedale Romance - Page 113/170

Pictures, marbles, vases,--in brief, more shapes of

luxury than there could be any object in enumerating, except for an

auctioneer's advertisement,--and the whole repeated and doubled by the

reflection of a great mirror, which showed me Zenobia's proud figure,

likewise, and my own. It cost me, I acknowledge, a bitter sense of

shame, to perceive in myself a positive effort to bear up against the

effect which Zenobia sought to impose on me. I reasoned against her,

in my secret mind, and strove so to keep my footing. In the

gorgeousness with which she had surrounded herself,--in the redundance

of personal ornament, which the largeness of her physical nature and

the rich type of her beauty caused to seem so suitable,--I malevolently

beheld the true character of the woman, passionate, luxurious, lacking

simplicity, not deeply refined, incapable of pure and perfect taste.

But, the next instant, she was too powerful for all my opposing

struggles. I saw how fit it was that she should make herself as

gorgeous as she pleased, and should do a thousand things that would

have been ridiculous in the poor, thin, weakly characters of other

women. To this day, however, I hardly know whether I then beheld

Zenobia in her truest attitude, or whether that were the truer one in

which she had presented herself at Blithedale. In both, there was

something like the illusion which a great actress flings around her.

"Have you given up Blithedale forever?" I inquired.

"Why should you think so?" asked she.

"I cannot tell," answered I; "except that it appears all like a dream

that we were ever there together."

"It is not so to me," said Zenobia. "I should think it a poor and

meagre nature that is capable of but one set of forms, and must convert

all the past into a dream merely because the present happens to be

unlike it. Why should we be content with our homely life of a few

months past, to the exclusion of all other modes? It was good; but

there are other lives as good, or better. Not, you will understand,

that I condemn those who give themselves up to it more entirely than I,

for myself, should deem it wise to do."

It irritated me, this self-complacent, condescending, qualified

approval and criticism of a system to which many individuals--perhaps

as highly endowed as our gorgeous Zenobia--had contributed their all of

earthly endeavor, and their loftiest aspirations. I determined to make

proof if there were any spell that would exorcise her out of the part

which she seemed to be acting. She should be compelled to give me a

glimpse of something true; some nature, some passion, no matter whether

right or wrong, provided it were real.