flowing through a
valley; the rains, the brooks, the torrents hie to
it, the trees fall upon its surface, so do the flowers, the
gravel of
its shores, the rocks of the summits; storms and the loitering tribute
of the
crystal streams alike increase it. Yes, when love comes all
comes to love!
The first great danger over, the
countess and I grew accustomed to
illness. In spite of the
confusion which the care of the sick entails,
the count's room, once so untidy, was now clean and
inviting. Soon we
were like two beings flung upon a desert island, for not only do
anxieties
isolate, but they brush aside as petty the conventions of
the world. The
welfare of the sick man obliged us to have points of
contact which no other circumstances would have authorized. Many a
time our hands, shy or timid
formerly, met in some service that we
rendered to the count--was I not there to
sustain and help my
Henriette? Absorbed in a duty
comparable to that of a soldier at the
pickets, she forgot to eat; then I served her, sometimes on her lap, a
hasty meal which necessitated a thousand little attentions. We were
like children at a grave. She would order me
sharply to prepare
whatever might ease the sick man's
suffering; she employed me in a
hundred petty ways. During the time when
actual danger obscured, as it
does during the battle, the subtile distinctions which
characterize
the facts of ordinary life, she
necessarily laid aside the reserve
which all women, even the most unconventional,
preserve in their looks
and words and actions before the world or their own family. At the
first chirping of the birds she would come to
relieve my watch,
wearing a morning
garment which revealed to me once more the dazzling
treasures that in my folly I had treated as my own. Always dignified,
nay
imposing, she could still be familiar.
Thus it came to pass that we found ourselves
unconsciously intimate,
half-married as it were. She showed herself nobly confiding, as sure
of me as she was of herself. I was thus taken deeper and deeper into
her heart. The
countess became once more my Henriette, Henriette
constrained to love with increasing strength the friend who endeavored
to be her second soul. Her hand un
resistingly met mine at the least
solicitation; my eyes were permitted to follow with delight the lines
of her beauty during the long hours when we listened to the count's
breathing, without driving her from their sight. The meagre pleasures
which we allowed ourselves--sympathizing looks, words
spoken in
whispers not to wake the count, hopes and fears
repeated and again
repeated, in short, the thousand incidents of the fusion of two hearts
long separated--stand out in bright array upon the sombre background
of the
actual scene. Our souls knew each other to their depths under
this test, which many a warm
affection is
unable to bear,
finding life
too heavy or too flimsy in the close bonds of hourly intercourse.
You know what
disturbance follows the
illness of a master; how the
affairs of life seem to come to a standstill. Though the real care of
the family and
estate fell upon Madame de Mortsauf, the count was
useful in his way; he talked with the farmers, transacted business
with his bailiff, and received the rents; if she was the soul, he was
the body. I now made myself her
steward so that she could nurse the
count without neglecting the property. She accepted this as a matter
of course, in fact without thanking me. It was another sweet communion
to share her family cares, to
transmit her orders. In the evenings we
often met in her room to discuss these interests and those of her
children. Such conversations gave one
semblance the more to our
transitory marriage. With what delight she encouraged me to take a
husband's place, giving me his seat at table, sending me to talk with
the bailiff,--all in perfect
innocence, yet not without that inward
pleasure the most
virtuous woman in the world will feel when she finds
a course where
strictobedience to duty and the
satisfaction of her
wishes are combined.
Nullified, as it were, by
illness, the count no longer oppressed his
wife or his household, the
countess then became her natural self; she
busied herself with my affairs and showed me a thousand kindnesses.
With what joy I discovered in her mind a thought,
vaguely conceived
perhaps, but
exquisitely expressed,
namely, to show me the full value
of her person and her qualities and make me see the change that would
come over her if she lived understood. This flower, kept in the cold
atmosphere of such a home, opened to my gaze, and to mine only; she
took as much delight in letting me
comprehend her as I felt in
studying her with the searching eyes of love. She proved to me in all
the
trifling things of daily life how much I was in her thoughts.
When, after my turn of watching, I went to bed and slept late,
Henriette would keep the house
absolutely silent near me; Jacques and
Madeleine played
elsewhere, though never ordered to do so; she
invented excuses to serve my breakfast herself--ah, with what
sparkling pleasure in her movements, what swallow-like
rapidity, what
lynx-eyed perception! and then! what carnation on her cheeks, what
quiverings in her voice!
Can such expansions of the soul be described in words?
Often she was wearied out; but if, at such moments of lassitude my
welfare came in question, for me, as for her children, she found fresh
strength and
sprang up
eagerly and
joyfully. How she loved to shed her
tenderness like sunbeams in the air! Ah, Natalie, some women share the
privileges of angels here below; they
diffuse that light which Saint-
Martin, the
mysteriousphilosopher, declared to be intelligent,
melodious, and perfumed. Sure of my
discretion, Henriette took
pleasure in raising the curtain which hid the future and in showing me
two women in her,--the woman bound hand and foot who had won me in
spite of her
severity, and the woman freed, whose
sweetness should
make my love eternal! What a difference. Madame de Mortsauf was the
skylark of Bengal, transported to our cold Europe,
mournful on its
perch, silent and dying in the cage of a
naturalist; Henriette was the
singing bird of
oriental poems in groves beside the Ganges, flying
from branch to branch like a living jewel amid the roses of a
volkameria that ever blooms. Her beauty grew more beautiful, her mind
recovered strength. The
continualsparkle of this happiness was a
secret between ourselves, for she dreaded the eye of the Abbe Dominis,
the representative of the world; she masked her
contentment with
playfulness, and covered the proofs of her
tenderness with the banner
of gratitude.
"We have put your friendship to a
severe test, Felix; we may give you
the same rights we give to Jacques, may we not, Monsieur l'abbe?" she
said one day.
The stern abbe answered with the smile of a man who can read the human
heart and see its
purity; for the
countess he always showed the
respect mingled with
adoration which the angels
inspire. Twice during
those fifty days the
countess passed beyond the limits in which we
held our
affection. But even these infringements were shrouded in a
veil, never lifted until the final hour when avowal came. One morning,
during the first days of the count's
illness, when she repented her
harsh
treatment in withdrawing the
innocent privileges she had
formerly granted me, I was expecting her to
relieve my watch. Much
fatigued, I fell asleep, my head against the wall. I wakened suddenly
at the touch of something cool upon my
forehead which gave me a
sensation as if a rose had rested there. I opened my eyes and saw the
countess,
standing a few steps distant, who said, "I have just come."
I rose to leave the room, but as I bade her good-bye I took her hand;
it was moist and trembling.
"Are you ill?" I said.
"Why do you ask that question?" she replied.
I looked at her blushing and confused. "I was dreaming," I replied.
Another time, when Monsieur Origet had announced
positively that the
count was convalescent, I was lying with Jacques and Madeleine on the
step of the portico
intent on a game of spillikins which we were
playing with bits of straw and hooks made of pins; Monsieur de
Mortsauf was asleep. The doctor, while
waiting for his horse to be
harnessed, was talking with the
countess in the salon. Monsieur Origet
went away without my noticing his
departure. After he left, Henriette
leaned against the window, from which she watched us for some time
without our
seeing her. It was one of those warm evenings when the sky
is copper-colored and the earth sends up among the echoes a myriad
mingling noises. A last ray of
sunlight was leaving the roofs, the
flowers in the garden perfumed the air, the bells of the cattle
returning to their stalls sounded in the distance. We were all
conforming to the silence of the evening hour and hushing our voices
that we might not wake the count. Suddenly, I heard the guttural sound
of a sob
violently" target="_blank" title="ad.强暴地;猛烈地">
violently suppressed; I rushed into the salon and found the