<h2><SPAN name="2HCH0043"></SPAN> CHAPTER XLIII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
“My spirit is too weak; mortality<br/>
Weighs heavily on me like unwilling sleep,<br/>
And each imagined pinnacle and steep<br/>
Of godlike hardship tells me I must die<br/>
Like a sick eagle looking at the sky.”<br/>
—K<small>EATS</small>.</p>
<p>After a few minutes the unwonted stillness had penetrated Mordecai’s
consciousness, and he looked up at Deronda, not in the least with bewilderment
and surprise, but with a gaze full of reposing satisfaction. Deronda rose and
placed his chair nearer, where there could be no imagined need for raising the
voice. Mordecai felt the action as a patient feels the gentleness that eases
his pillow. He began to speak in a low tone, as if he were only thinking
articulately, not trying to reach an audience.</p>
<p>“In the doctrine of the Cabbala, souls are born again and again in new
bodies till they are perfected and purified, and a soul liberated from a
worn-out body may join the fellow-soul that needs it, that they may be
perfected together, and their earthly work accomplished. Then they will depart
from the mortal region, and leave place for new souls to be born out of the
store in the eternal bosom. It is the lingering imperfection of the souls
already born into the mortal region that hinders the birth of new souls and the
preparation of the Messianic time:—thus the mind has given shape to what
is hidden, as the shadow of what is known, and has spoken truth, though it were
only in parable. When my long-wandering soul is liberated from this weary body,
it will join yours, and its work will be perfected.”</p>
<p>Mordecai’s pause seemed an appeal which Deronda’s feeling would not
let him leave unanswered. He tried to make it truthful; but for
Mordecai’s ear it was inevitably filled with unspoken meaning. He only
said,</p>
<p>“Everything I can in conscience do to make your life effective I will
do.”</p>
<p>“I know it,” said Mordecai, in a tone of quiet certainty which
dispenses with further assurance. “I heard it. You see it all—you
are by my side on the mount of vision, and behold the paths of fulfillment
which others deny.”</p>
<p>He was silent a moment or two, and then went on meditatively,</p>
<p>“You will take up my life where it was broken. I feel myself back in that
day when my life was broken. The bright morning sun was on the quay—it
was at Trieste—the garments of men from all nations shone like
jewels—the boats were pushing off—the Greek vessel that would land
us at Beyrout was to start in an hour. I was going with a merchant as his clerk
and companion. I said, I shall behold the lands and people of the East, and I
shall speak with a fuller vision. I breathed then as you do, without labor; I
had the light step and the endurance of youth, I could fast, I could sleep on
the hard ground. I had wedded poverty, and I loved my bride—for poverty
to me was freedom. My heart exulted as if it had been the heart of Moses ben
Maimon, strong with the strength of three score years, and knowing the work
that was to fill them. It was the first time I had been south; the soul within
me felt its former sun; and standing on the quay, where the ground I stood on
seemed to send forth light, and the shadows had an azure glory as of spirits
become visible, I felt myself in the flood of a glorious life, wherein my own
small year-counted existence seemed to melt, so that I knew it not; and a great
sob arose within me as at the rush of waters that were too strong a bliss. So I
stood there awaiting my companion; and I saw him not till he said: ‘Ezra,
I have been to the post and there is your letter.’”</p>
<p>“Ezra!” exclaimed Deronda, unable to contain himself.</p>
<p>“Ezra,” repeated Mordecai, affirmatively, engrossed in memory.
“I was expecting a letter; for I wrote continually to my mother. And that
sound of my name was like the touch of a wand that recalled me to the body
wherefrom I had been released as it were to mingle with the ocean of human
existence, free from the pressure of individual bondage. I opened the letter;
and the name came again as a cry that would have disturbed me in the bosom of
heaven, and made me yearn to reach where that sorrow was—‘Ezra, my
son!’”</p>
<p>Mordecai paused again, his imagination arrested by the grasp of that
long-passed moment. Deronda’s mind was almost breathlessly suspended on
what was coming. A strange possibility had suddenly presented itself.
Mordecai’s eyes were cast down in abstracted contemplation, and in a few
moments he went on,</p>
<p>“She was a mother of whom it might have come—yea, might have come
to be said, ‘Her children arise up and call her blessed.’ In her I
understood the meaning of that Master who, perceiving the footsteps of his
mother, rose up and said, ‘The Majesty of the Eternal cometh near!’
And that letter was her cry from the depths of anguish and desolation—the
cry of a mother robbed of her little ones. I was her eldest. Death had taken
four babes one after the other. Then came, late, my little sister, who was,
more than all the rest, the desire of my mother’s eyes; and the letter
was a piercing cry to me—‘Ezra, my son, I am robbed of her. He has
taken her away and left disgrace behind. They will never come
again.’”—Here Mordecai lifted his eyes suddenly, laid his
hand on Deronda’s arm, and said, “Mine was the lot of Israel. For
the sin of the father my soul must go into exile. For the sin of the father the
work was broken, and the day of fulfilment delayed. She who bore me was
desolate, disgraced, destitute. I turned back. On the instant I
turned—her spirit and the spirit of her fathers, who had worthy Jewish
hearts, moved within me, and drew me. God, in whom dwells the universe, was
within me as the strength of obedience. I turned and traveled with
hardship—to save the scant money which she would need. I left the
sunshine, and traveled into freezing cold. In the last stage I spent a night in
exposure to cold and snow. And that was the beginning of this slow
death.”</p>
<p>Mordecai let his eyes wander again and removed his hand. Deronda resolutely
repressed the questions which urged themselves within him. While Mordecai was
in this state of emotion, no other confidence must be sought than what came
spontaneously: nay, he himself felt a kindred emotion which made him dread his
own speech as too momentous.</p>
<p>“But I worked. We were destitute—every thing had been seized. And
she was ill: the clutch of anguish was too strong for her, and wrought with
some lurking disease. At times she could not stand for the beating of her
heart, and the images in her brain became as chambers of terror, where she
beheld my sister reared in evil. In the dead of night I heard her crying for
her child. Then I rose, and we stretched forth our arms together and prayed. We
poured forth our souls in desire that Mirah might be delivered from
evil.”</p>
<p>“Mirah?” Deronda repeated, wishing to assure, himself that his ears
had not been deceived by a forecasting imagination. “Did you say
Mirah?”</p>
<p>“That was my little sister’s name. After we had prayed for her, my
mother would rest awhile. It lasted hardly four years, and in the minute before
she died, we were praying the same prayer—I aloud, she silently. Her soul
went out upon its wings.”</p>
<p>“Have you never since heard of your sister?” said Deronda, as
quietly as he could.</p>
<p>“Never. Never have I heard whether she was delivered according to our
prayer. I know not, I know not. Who shall say where the pathways lie? The
poisonous will of the wicked is strong. It poisoned my life—it is slowly
stifling this breath. Death delivered my mother, and I felt it a blessedness
that I was alone in the winters of suffering. But what are the winters
now?—they are far off”—here Mordecai again rested his hand on
Deronda’s arm, and looked at him with that joy of the hectic patient
which pierces us to sadness—“there is nothing to wail in the
withering of my body. The work will be the better done. Once I said the work of
this beginning was mine, I am born to do it. Well, I shall do it. I shall live
in you. I shall live in you.”</p>
<p>His grasp had become convulsive in its force, and Deronda, agitated as he had
never been before—the certainty that this was Mirah’s brother
suffusing his own strange relation to Mordecai with a new solemnity and
tenderness—felt his strong young heart beating faster and his lips
paling. He shrank from speech. He feared, in Mordecai’s present state of
exaltation (already an alarming strain on his feeble frame), to utter a word of
revelation about Mirah. He feared to make an answer below that high pitch of
expectation which resembled a flash from a dying fire, making watchers fear to
see it die the faster. His dominant impulse was to do as he had once done
before: he laid his firm, gentle hand on the hand that grasped him.
Mordecai’s, as if it had a soul of its own—for he was not
distinctly willing to do what he did—relaxed its grasp, and turned upward
under Deronda’s. As the two palms met and pressed each other Mordecai
recovered some sense of his surroundings, and said,</p>
<p>“Let us go now. I cannot talk any longer.”</p>
<p>And in fact they parted at Cohen’s door without having spoken to each
other again—merely with another pressure of the hands.</p>
<p>Deronda felt a weight on him which was half joy, half anxiety. The joy of
finding in Mirah’s brother a nature even more than worthy of that
relation to her, had the weight of solemnity and sadness; the reunion of
brother and sister was in reality the first stage of a supreme
parting—like that farewell kiss which resembles greeting, that last
glance of love which becomes the sharpest pang of sorrow. Then there was the
weight of anxiety about the revelation of the fact on both sides, and the
arrangements it would be desirable to make beforehand. I suppose we should all
have felt as Deronda did, without sinking into snobbishness or the notion that
the primal duties of life demand a morning and an evening suit, that it was an
admissible desire to free Mirah’s first meeting with her brother from all
jarring outward conditions. His own sense of deliverance from the dreaded
relationship of the other Cohens, notwithstanding their good nature, made him
resolve if possible to keep them in the background for Mirah, until her
acquaintance with them would be an unmarred rendering of gratitude for any
kindness they had shown to her brother. On all accounts he wished to give
Mordecai surroundings not only more suited to his frail bodily condition, but
less of a hindrance to easy intercourse, even apart from the decisive prospect
of Mirah’s taking up her abode with her brother, and tending him through
the precious remnant of his life. In the heroic drama, great recognitions are
not encumbered with these details; and certainly Deronda had as reverential an
interest in Mordecai and Mirah as he could have had in the offspring of
Agamemnon; but he was caring for destinies still moving in the dim streets of
our earthly life, not yet lifted among the constellations, and his task
presented itself to him as difficult and delicate, especially in persuading
Mordecai to change his abode and habits. Concerning Mirah’s feeling and
resolve he had no doubt: there would be a complete union of sentiment toward
the departed mother, and Mirah would understand her brother’s greatness.
Yes, greatness: that was the word which Deronda now deliberately chose to
signify the impression that Mordecai had made on him. He said to himself,
perhaps rather defiantly toward the more negative spirit within him, that this
man, however erratic some of his interpretations might be—this
consumptive Jewish workman in threadbare clothing, lodged by charity,
delivering himself to hearers who took his thoughts without attaching more
consequences to them than the Flemings to the ethereal chimes ringing above
their market-places—had the chief elements of greatness; a mind
consciously, energetically moving with the larger march of human destinies, but
not the less full of conscience and tender heart for the footsteps that tread
near and need a leaning-place; capable of conceiving and choosing a
life’s task with far-off issues, yet capable of the unapplauded heroism
which turns off the road of achievement at the call of the nearer duty whose
effect lies within the beatings of the hearts that are close to us, as the
hunger of the unfledged bird to the breast of its parent.</p>
<p>Deronda to-night was stirred with the feeling that the brief remnant of this
fervid life had become his charge. He had been peculiarly wrought on by what he
had seen at the club of the friendly indifference which Mordecai must have gone
on encountering. His own experience of the small room that ardor can make for
itself in ordinary minds had had the effect of increasing his reserve; and
while tolerance was the easiest attitude to him, there was another bent in him
also capable of becoming a weakness—the dislike to appear exceptional or
to risk an ineffective insistence on his own opinion. But such caution appeared
contemptible to him just now, when he, for the first time, saw in a complete
picture and felt as a reality the lives that burn themselves out in solitary
enthusiasm: martyrs of obscure circumstance, exiled in the rarity of their own
minds, whose deliverances in other ears are no more than a long passionate
soliloquy—unless perhaps at last, when they are nearing the invisible
shores, signs of recognition and fulfilment may penetrate the cloud of
loneliness; or perhaps it may be with them as with the dying Copernicus made to
touch the first printed copy of his book when the sense of touch was gone,
seeing it only as a dim object through the deepening dusk.</p>
<p>Deronda had been brought near to one of those spiritual exiles, and it was in
his nature to feel the relation as a strong chain, nay, to feel his imagination
moving without repugnance in the direction of Mordecai’s desires. With
all his latent objection to schemes only definite in their generality and
nebulous in detail—in the poise of his sentiments he felt at one with
this man who had made a visionary selection of him: the lines of what may be
called their emotional theory touched. He had not the Jewish consciousness, but
he had a yearning, grown the stronger for the denial which had been his
grievance, after the obligation of avowed filial and social ties. His feeling
was ready for difficult obedience. In this way it came that he set about his
new task ungrudgingly; and again he thought of Mrs. Meyrick as his chief
helper. To her first he must make known the discovery of Mirah’s brother,
and with her he must consult on all preliminaries of bringing the mutually lost
together. Happily the best quarter for a consumptive patient did not lie too
far off the small house at Chelsea, and the first office Deronda had to perform
for this Hebrew prophet who claimed him as a spiritual inheritor, was to get
him a healthy lodging. Such is the irony of earthly mixtures, that the heroes
have not always had carpets and teacups of their own; and, seen through the
open window by the mackerel-vender, may have been invited with some hopefulness
to pay three hundred per cent, in the form of fourpence. However,
Deronda’s mind was busy with a prospective arrangement for giving a
furnished lodging some faint likeness to a refined home by dismantling his own
chambers of his best old books in vellum, his easiest chair, and the
bas-reliefs of Milton and Dante.</p>
<p>But was not Mirah to be there? What furniture can give such finish to a room as
a tender woman’s face?—and is there any harmony of tints that has
such stirrings of delight as the sweet modulation of her voice? Here is one
good, at least, thought Deronda, that comes to Mordecai from his having fixed
his imagination on me. He has recovered a perfect sister, whose affection is
waiting for him.</p>
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