The Blithedale Romance - Page 96/170

I stood on other terms than before, not only with Hollingsworth, but

with Zenobia and Priscilla. As regarded the two latter, it was that

dreamlike and miserable sort of change that denies you the privilege to

complain, because you can assert no positive injury, nor lay your

finger on anything tangible. It is a matter which you do not see, but

feel, and which, when you try to analyze it, seems to lose its very

existence, and resolve itself into a sickly humor of your own. Your

understanding, possibly, may put faith in this denial. But your heart

will not so easily rest satisfied. It incessantly remonstrates,

though, most of the time, in a bass-note, which you do not separately

distinguish; but, now and then, with a sharp cry, importunate to be

heard, and resolute to claim belief. "Things are not as they were!" it

keeps saying. "You shall not impose on me! I will never be quiet! I

will throb painfully! I will be heavy, and desolate, and shiver with

cold! For I, your deep heart, know when to be miserable, as once I

knew when to be happy! All is changed for us! You are beloved no

more!" And were my life to be spent over again, I would invariably

lend my ear to this Cassandra of the inward depths, however clamorous

the music and the merriment of a more superficial region.

My outbreak with Hollingsworth, though never definitely known to our

associates, had really an effect upon the moral atmosphere of the

Community. It was incidental to the closeness of relationship into

which we had brought ourselves, that an unfriendly state of feeling

could not occur between any two members without the whole society being

more or less commoted and made uncomfortable thereby. This species of

nervous sympathy (though a pretty characteristic enough, sentimentally

considered, and apparently betokening an actual bond of love among us)

was yet found rather inconvenient in its practical operation, mortal

tempers being so infirm and variable as they are. If one of us happened

to give his neighbor a box on the ear, the tingle was immediately felt

on the same side of everybody's head. Thus, even on the supposition

that we were far less quarrelsome than the rest of the world, a great

deal of time was necessarily wasted in rubbing our ears.

Musing on all these matters, I felt an inexpressible longing for at

least a temporary novelty. I thought of going across the Rocky

Mountains, or to Europe, or up the Nile; of offering myself a volunteer

on the Exploring Expedition; of taking a ramble of years, no matter in

what direction, and coming back on the other side of the world. Then,

should the colonists of Blithedale have established their enterprise on

a permanent basis, I might fling aside my pilgrim staff and dusty

shoon, and rest as peacefully here as elsewhere. Or, in case

Hollingsworth should occupy the ground with his School of Reform, as he

now purposed, I might plead earthly guilt enough, by that time, to give

me what I was inclined to think the only trustworthy hold on his

affections. Meanwhile, before deciding on any ultimate plan, I

determined to remove myself to a little distance, and take an exterior

view of what we had all been about.