Part 9 (1/2)
Blind Love
LUCILLA was at the piano when I entered the sitting-room.
”I wanted you of all things,” she said. ”I have sent all over the house in search of you. Where have you been?”
I told her.
She sprang to her feet with a cry of delight.
”You have persuaded him to trust you--you have discovered everything. You only said 'I have been at Browndown'--and I heard it in your voice. Out with it! out with it!”
She never moved--she seemed hardly to breathe--while I was telling her all that had pa.s.sed at the interview between Oscar and me. As soon as I had done, she got up in a violent hurry--flushed and eager--and made straight for her bedroom door.
”What are you going to do?” I asked.
”I want my hat and my stick,” she answered.
”You are going out?”
”Yes.”
”Where?”
”Can you ask the question? To Browndown of course!”
I begged her to wait a moment, and hear a word or two that I had to say.
It is, I suppose, almost needless to add that my object in speaking to her was to protest against the glaring impropriety of her paying a second visit, in one day, to a man who was a stranger to her. I declared, in the plainest terms, that such a proceeding would be sufficient, in the estimation of any civilized community, to put her reputation in peril.
The result of my interference was curious and interesting in the extreme.
It showed me that the virtue called Modesty (I am not speaking of Decency, mind) is a virtue of purely artificial growth; and that the successful cultivation of it depends in the first instance, not on the influence of the tongue, but on the influence of the eye.
Suppose the case of an average young lady (conscious of feeling a first love) to whom I might have spoken in the sense that I have just mentioned--what would she have done?
She would a.s.suredly have shown some natural and pretty confusion, and would, in all human probability, have changed color more or less while she was listening to me. Lucilla's charming face revealed but one expression--an expression of disappointment, slightly mixed perhaps with surprise. I believed her to be then, what I knew her to be afterwards, as pure a creature as ever walked the earth. And yet, of the natural and becoming confusion, of the little inevitable feminine changes of color which I had expected to see, not so much as a vestige appeared--and this, remember, in the case of a person of unusually sensitive and impulsive nature: quick, on the most trifling occasions, to feel and to express its feeling in no ordinary degree.
What did it mean?
It meant that here was one strange side shown to me of the terrible affliction that darkened her life. It meant that modesty is essentially the growth of our own consciousness of the eyes of others judging us--and that blindness is never bashful, for the one simple reason that blindness cannot see. The most modest girl in existence is bolder with her lover in the dark than in the light. The female model who ”sits” for the first time in a drawing academy, and who shrinks from the ordeal, is persuaded, in the last resort, to enter the students' room by having a bandage bound over her eyes. My poor Lucilla had always the bandage over her eyes. My poor Lucilla was never to meet her lover in the light. She had grown up with the pa.s.sions of a woman--and yet, she had never advanced beyond the fearless and primitive innocence of a child. Ah, if ever there was a sacred charge confided to any mortal creature, here surely was a sacred charge confided to Me! I could not endure to see the poor pretty blind face turned so insensibly towards mine, after such words as I had just said to her. She was standing within my reach. I took her by the arm, and made her sit on my knee. ”My dear!” I said, very earnestly, ”you must not go to him again to-day.”
”I have got so much to say to him,” she answered impatiently, ”I want to tell him how deeply I feel for him, and how anxious I am to make his life a happier one if I can.”
”My dear Lucilla! you can't say this to a young man. It is as good as telling him, in plain words, that you are fond of him!”
”I _am_ fond of him.”
”Hus.h.!.+ hus.h.!.+ Keep it to yourself, until you are sure that _he_ is fond of _you._ It is the man's place, my love--not the woman's--to own the truth first in matters of this sort.”
”That is very hard on the women. If they feel it first, they ought to own it first.” She paused for a moment, considering with herself--and abruptly got off my knee. ”I _must_ speak to him!” she burst out. ”I _must_ tell him that I have heard his story, and that I think all the better of him after it, instead of the worse!”
She was again on her way to get her hat. My only chance of stopping her was to invent a compromise.
”Write him a note,” I said--and then suddenly remembered that she was blind. ”You shall dictate,” I added; ”and I will hold the pen. Be content with that for to-day. For my sake, Lucilla!”