knew how much you loved her."
Though prepared to suffer, I found I had no strength to bear a scene
which recalled my memories of past happiness. "Ah!" I thought, "I see
it still, that
barren moor, dried like a
skeleton, lit by a gray sky,
in the centre of which grew a single flowering bush, which again and
again I looked at with a shudder,--the
forecast of this mournful
hour!"
All was gloom in the little castle, once so
animated, so full of life.
The servants were
weeping;
despair and
desolation everywhere. The
paths were not raked, work was begun and left
undone, the workmen
standing idly about the house. Though the grapes were being gathered
in the
vineyard, not a sound reached us. The place seemed uninhabited,
so deep the silence! We walked about like men whose grief rejects all
ordinary topics, and we listened to the count, the only one of us who
spoke.
After a few words prompted by the
mechanical love he felt for his wife
he was led by the natural bent of his mind to
complain of her. She had
never, he said, taken care of herself or listened to him when he gave
her good advice. He had been the first to notice the symptoms of her
illness, for he had
studied them in his own case; he had fought them
and cured them without other
assistance than careful diet and the
avoidance of all
emotion. He could have cured the
countess, but a
husband ought not to take so much
responsibility upon himself,
especially when he has the
misfortune of
finding his experience, in
this as in everything, despised. In spite of all he could say, the
countess insisted on
seeing Origet,--Origet, who had managed his case
so ill, was now killing his wife. If this disease was, as they said,
the result of
excessive grief, surely he was the one who had been in a
condition to have it. What griefs could the
countess have had? She was
always happy; she had never had troubles or annoyances. Their fortune,
thanks to his care and to his sound ideas, was now in a most
satisfactory state; he had always allowed Madame de Mortsauf to reign
at Clochegourde; her children, well trained and now in health, gave
her no anxiety,--where, then, did this grief they talked of come from?
Thus he argued and discussed the matter, mingling his expressions of
despair with
senseless accusations. Then, recalled by some sudden
memory to the
admiration which he felt for his wife, tears rolled from
his eyes which had been dry so long.
Madeleine came to tell me that her mother was ready. The Abbe
Birotteau followed me. Madeleine, now a grave young girl, stayed with
her father,
saying that the
countess desired to be alone with me, and
also that the presence of too many persons would
fatigue her. The
solemnity of this moment gave me that sense of
inward heat and outward
cold which overcomes us often in the great events of life. The Abbe
Birotteau, one of those men whom God marks for his own by investing
them with
sweetness and
simplicity, together with
patience and
compassion, took me aside.
"Monsieur," he said, "I wish you to know that I have done all in my
power to prevent this meeting. The
salvation of this saint required
it. I have considered her only, and not you. Now that you are about to
see her to whom
access ought to have been denied you by the angels,
let me say that I shall be present to protect you against yourself and
perhaps against her. Respect her
weakness. I do not ask this of you as
a
priest, but as a
humble friend whom you did not know you had, and
who would fain save you from
remorse. Our dear patient is dying of
hunger and
thirst. Since morning she is a
victim to the feverish
irritation which precedes that
horrible death, and I cannot conceal
from you how deeply she regrets life. The cries of her rebellious
flesh are stifled in my heart--where they wake echoes of a wound still
tender. But Monsieur de Dominis and I accept this duty that we may
spare the sight of this moral
anguish to her family; as it is, they no
longer recognize their star by night and by day in her; they all,
husband, children, servants, all are asking, 'Where is she?'--she is
so changed! When she sees you, her regrets will
revive. Lay aside your
thoughts as a man of the world, forget its vanities, be to her the
auxiliary of heaven, not of earth. Pray God that this dear saint die
not in a moment of doubt, giving voice to her
despair."
I did not answer. My silence alarmed the poor confessor. I saw, I
heard, I walked, and yet I was no longer on the earth. The thought,
"In what state shall I find her? Why do they use these precautions?"
gave rise to apprehensions which were the more cruel because so
indefinite; all forms of
sufferingcrowded my mind.
We reached the door of the
chamber and the abbe opened it. I then saw
Henriette, dressed in white, sitting on her little sofa which was
placed before the
fireplace, on which were two vases filled with
flowers; flowers were also on a table near the window. The expression
of the abbe's face, which was that of
amazement at the change in the
room, now restored to its former state, showing me that the dying
woman had sent away the repulsive preparations which surround a sick-
bed. She had spent the last waning strength of fever in decorating her
room to receive him whom in that final hour she loved above all things
else. Surrounded by clouds of lace, her shrunken face, which had the
greenish pallor of a magnolia flower as it opens, resembled the first
outline of a cherished head drawn in chalks upon the yellow
canvas of
a
portrait. To feel how deeply the vulture's talons now buried
themselves in my heart, imagine the eyes of that outlined face
finished and full of life,--hollow eyes which shone with a brilliancy
unusual in a dying person. The calm
majesty given to her in the past
by her
constantvictory over sorrow was there no longer. Her
forehead,
the only part of her face which still kept its beautiful proportions,
wore an expression of
aggressive will and
covert threats. In spite of
the waxy
texture of her elongated face,
inward fires were issuing from
it like the fluid mist which seems to flame above the fields of a hot
day. Her hollow temples, her
sunken cheeks showed the interior
formation of the face, and the smile upon her whitened lips vaguely
resembled the grin of death. Her robe, which was folded across her
breast, showed the emaciation of her beautiful figure. The expression
of her head said
plainly that she knew she was changed, and that the
thought filled her with
bitterness. She was no longer the arch
Henriette, nor the
sublime and saintly Madame de Mortsauf, but the
nameless something of Bossuet struggling against annihilation, driven
to the
selfish battle of life against death by
hunger and balked
desire. I took her hand, which was dry and burning, to kiss it, as I
seated myself beside her. She guessed my
sorrowful surprise from the
very effort that I made to hide it. Her discolored lips drew up from
her famished teeth
trying to form a smile,--the forced smile with
which we
strive to hide either the irony of
vengeance, the expectation
of pleasure, the intoxication of our souls, or the fury of
disappointment.
"Ah, my poor Felix, this is death," she said, "and you do not like
death;
odious death, of which every human creature, even the boldest
lover, feels a
horror. This is the end of love; I knew it would be so.
Lady Dudley will never see you thus surprised at the change in her.
Ah! why have I so longed for you, Felix? You have come at last, and I
reward your
devotion by the same
horrible sight that made the Comte de
Rance a Trappist. I, who hoped to remain ever beautiful and noble in
your memory, to live there
eternally a lily, I it is who destroy your
illusions! True love cannot calculate. But stay; do not go, stay.
Monsieur Origet said I was much better this morning; I shall recover.
Your looks will bring me back to life. When I
regain a little
strength, when I can take some
nourishment, I shall be beautiful
again. I am scarcely thirty-five, there are many years of happiness
before me,--happiness renews our youth; yes, I must know happiness! I
have made
delightful plans,--we will leave Clochegourde and go to
Italy."
Tears filled my eyes and I turned to the window as if to look at the
flowers. The abbe followed me
hastily, and bending over the bouquet
whispered, "No tears!"
"Henriette, do you no longer care for our dear
valley," I said, as if
to explain my sudden
movement.
"Oh, yes!" she said, turning her
forehead to my lips with a fond
motion. "But without you it is fatal to me,--without THEE," she added,
putting her burning lips to my ear and whispering the words like a
sigh.
I was
horror-struck at the wild
caress, and my will was not strong