Englishwoman's Love Letters - Page 36/59

Why, my Beloved: Since you put it to me as a point of conscience (it is

only lying on your back with one active leg doing nothing, and the other

dying to have done aching, which has made you take this new start of

inquiring within upon everything), since you call on me for a

conscientious answer, I say that it stands to reason that I love you more

than you love me, because there is so much more of you to love, let alone

fit for loving.

Do you imagine that you are going to be a cripple for life, and therefore

an indifferent dancer in the dances I shall always be leading you, that

you have started this fit of self-depreciation? Or is it because I have

thrown Meredith at your sick head that you doubt my tact and my affection,

and my power patiently to bear for your sake a good deal of cold shoulder?

Dearest, remember I am doctoring you from a distance: and am not yet

allowed to come and see my patient, so can only judge from your letters

how ill you are. That you have been concealing from me almost

treacherously: and only by a piece of abject waylaying did I receive word

to-day of your sleepless nights, and so get the key to your symptoms. Lay

by Meredith, then, for a while: I am sending you a cargo of Stevenson

instead. You have been truly unkind, trying to read what required effort,

when you were fit for nothing of the sort.

And lest even Stevenson should be too much for you, and wanting very much,

and perhaps a little bit jealously, to be your most successful nurse, I am

letting my last large bit of shyness of you go; and with a pleasant sort

of pain, because I know I have hit on a thing that will please you, I open

my hands and let you have these, and with them goes my last blush:

henceforth I am a woman without a secret, and all your interest in me may

evaporate. Yet I know well it will not.

As for this resurrection pie from love's dead-letter office, you will

find from it at least one thing--how much I depended upon response from

you before I could become at all articulate. It is you, dearest, from

the beginning who have set my head and heart free and made me a woman. I

am something quite different from the sort of child I was less than a

year ago when I wrote that small prayer which stands sponsor for all

that follows. How abundantly it has been answered, dearest Beloved,

only I know: you do not!