Englishwoman's Love Letters - Page 26/59

Dearest: Do I not write you long letters? It reveals my weakness. I have

thought (it had been coming on me, and now and then had broken out of me

before I met you) that, left to myself, I should have become a writer of

books--I scarcely can guess what sort--and gone contentedly into

middle-age with that instead of this as my raison d'être.

How gladly I lay down that part of myself, and say--"But for you, I had

been this quite other person, whom I have no wish to be now"! Beloved,

your heart is the shelf where I put all my uncut volumes, wondering a

little what sort of a writer I should have made; and chiefly wondering,

would you have liked me in that character?

There is one here in the family who considers me a writer of the darkest

dye, and does not approve of it. Benjy comes and sits most mournfully

facing me when I settle down on a sunny morning, such as this, to write:

and inquires, with all the dumbness a dog is capable of--"What has come

between us, that you fill up your time and mine with those cat's-claw

scratchings, when you should be in your woodland dress running [with] me

through damp places?"

Having written this sentimental meaning into his eyes, and Benjy still

sitting watching me, I was seized with ruth for my neglect of him, and

took him to see his mother's grave. At the bottom of the long walk is our

dog's cemetery:--no tombstones, but mounds; and a dog-rose grows there and

flourishes as nowhere else. It was my fancy as a child to have it planted:

and I declare to you, it has taken wonderfully to the notion, as if it

knew that it had relations of a higher species under its keeping. Benjy,

too, has a profound air of knowing, and never scratches for bones there,

as he does in other places. What horror, were I to find him digging up his

mother's skeleton! Would my esteem for him survive?

When we got there to-day, he deprecated my choice of locality, asking

what I had brought him there for. I pointed out to him the precise

mound which covered the object of his earliest affections, and gathered

you these buds. Are they not a deep color for wild ones?--if their blush

remains a fixed state till the post brings them to you.

Through what flower would you best like to be passed back, as regards

your material atoms, into the spiritualized side of nature, when we

have done with ourselves in this life? No single flower quite covers all

my wants and aspirations. You and I would put our heads together

underground and evolve a new flower--"carnation, lily, lily, rose"--and

send it up one fine morning for scientists to dispute over and give

diabolical learned names to. What an end to our cozy floral

collaboration that would be!