me; I would not have you other than you are in this letter, the
first--oh, may it not be the last! Who but a poet could have
excused and understood a young girl so delicately?
I wish to speak with the
sincerity that dictated the first lines
of your letter. And first, let me say that most
fortunately you do
not know me. I can
joyfully assure you than I am neither that
hideous Mademoiselle Vilquin nor the very noble and withered
Mademoiselle d'Herouville who floats between twenty and forty
years of age,
unable to decide on a
satisfactory date. The
Cardinal d'Herouville flourished in the history of the Church at
least a century before the
cardinal of whom we boast as our only
family glory,--for I take no
account of lieutenant-generals, and
abbes who write trumpery little verses.
Moreover, I do not live in the
magnificent villa Vilquin; there is
not in my veins, thank God, the ten-millionth of a drop of that
chilly blood which flows behind a
counter. I come on one side from
Germany, on the other from the south of France; my mind has a
Teutonic love of reverie, my blood the vivacity of Provence. I am
noble on my father's and on my mother's side. On my mother's I
derive from every page of the Almanach de Gotha. In short, my
precautions are well taken. It is not in any man's power, nor even
in the power of the law, to unmask my incognito. I shall remain
veiled, unknown.
As to my person and as to my "belongings," as the Normans say,
make yourself easy. I am at least as handsome as the little girl
(ignorantly happy) on whom your eyes chanced to light during your
visit to Havre; and I do not call myself poverty-stricken,
although ten sons of peers may not accompany me on my walks. I
have seen the humiliating
comedy of the heiress sought for her
millions played on my
account. In short, make no attempt, even on
a wager, to reach me. Alas! though free as air, I am watched and
guarded,--by myself, in the first place, and
secondly, by people
of nerve and courage who would not
hesitate to put a knife in your
heart if you tried to
penetrate my
retreat. I do not say this to
excite your courage or
stimulate your
curiosity; I believe I have
no need of such incentives to interest you and
attach you to me.
I will now reply to the second
edition,
considerably enlarged, of
your first sermon.
Will you have a
confession? I said to myself when I saw you so
distrustful, and mistaking me for Corinne (whose improvisations
bore me dreadfully), that in all
probability dozes of Muses had
already led you, rashly curious, into their valleys, and begged
you to taste the fruits of their boarding-school Parnassus. Oh!
you are
perfectly safe with me, my friend; I may love
poetry, but
I have no little verses in my pocket-book, and my stockings are,
and will remain, immaculately white. You shall not be pestered
with the "Flowers of my Heart" in one or more volumes. And,
finally, should it ever happen that I say to you the word "Come!"
you will not find--you know it now--an old maid, no, nor a poor
and ugly one.
Ah! my friend, if you only knew how I regret that you came to
Havre! You have lowered the charm of what you call my
romance. God
alone knew the treasure I was reserving for the man noble enough,
and
trusting enough, and perspicacious enough to come--having
faith in my letters, having
penetrated step by step into the
depths of my heart--to come to our first meeting with the
simplicity of a child: for that was what I dreamed to be the
innocence of a man of
genius. And now you have spoiled my
treasure! But I
forgive you; you live in Paris and, as you say,
there is always a man within a poet.
Because I tell you this will you think me some little girl who
cultivates a garden-full of illusions? You, who are witty and
wise, have you not guessed that when Mademoiselle d'Este received
your pedantic lesson she said to herself: "No, dear poet, my first
letter was not the
pebble which a
vagabond child flings about the
highway to
frighten the owner of the
adjacent fruit-trees, but a
net carefully and prudently thrown by a
fisherman seated on a rock
above the sea, hoping and expecting a
miraculous draught."
All that you say so
beautifully about the family has my approval.
The man who is able to please me, and of whom I believe myself
worthy, will have my heart and my life,--with the consent of my
parents, for I will neither
grieve them, nor take them unawares:
happily, I am certain of reigning over them; and, besides, they
are
wholly without
prejudice. Indeed, in every way, I feel myself
protected against any delusions in my dream. I have built the
fortress with my own hands, and I have let it be fortified by the
boundless
devotion of those who watch over me as if I were a
treasure,--not that I am
unable to defend myself in the open, if
need be; for, let me say, circumstances have furnished me with
armor of proof on which is engraved the word "Disdain." I have the
deepest
horror of all that is calculating,--of all that is not
pure, disinterested, and
wholly noble. I
worship the beautiful,
the ideal, without being
romantic; though I HAVE been, in my heart
of hearts, in my dreams. But I recognize the truth of the various
things, just even to vulgarity, which you have written me about
Society and social life.
For the time being we are, and we can only be, two friends. Why
seek an
unseen friend? you ask. Your person may be unknown to me,
but your mind, your heart I KNOW; they please me, and I feel an
infinitude of thoughts within my soul which need a man of
geniusfor their confidant. I do not wish the poem of my heart to be
wasted; I would have it known to you as it is to God. What a
precious thing is a true comrade, one to whom we can tell all! You
will surely not
reject the unpublished leaflets of a young girl's
thoughts when they fly to you like the pretty insects fluttering
to the sun? I am sure you have never before met with this good
fortune of the soul,--the honest confidences of an honest girl.
Listen to her prattle; accept the music that she sings to you in
her own heart. Later, if our souls are sisters, if our characters
warrant the attempt, a white-haired old serving-man shall await
you by the
wayside and lead you to the
cottage, the villa, the
castle, the palace--I don't know yet what sort of bower it will
be, nor what its color, nor whether this
conclusion will ever be
possible; but you will admit, will you not? that it is
poetic, and
that Mademoiselle d'Este has a complying
disposition. Has she not
left you free? Has she gone with
jealous feet to watch you in the
salons of Paris? Has she imposed upon you the labors of some high
emprise, such as paladins sought voluntarily in the olden time?
No, she asks a
perfectlyspiritual and
mysticalliance. Come to me
when you are
unhappy, wounded, weary. Tell me all, hide nothing; I
have balms for all your ills. I am twenty years of age, dear
friend, but I have the sense of fifty, and un
fortunately I have
known through the experience of another all the
horrors and the
delights of love. I know what baseness the human heart can
contain, what infamy; yet I myself am an honest girl. No, I have
no illusions; but I have something better, something real,--I have
beliefs and a religion. See! I open the ball of our confidences.
Whoever I marry--provided I choose him for myself--may sleep in
peace or go to the East Indies sure that he will find me on his
return
working at the
tapestry which I began before he left me;
and in every
stitch he shall read a verse of the poem of which he
has been the hero. Yes, I have
resolved within my heart never to
follow my husband where he does not wish me to go. I will be the
divinity of his
hearth. That is my religion of
humanity. But why
should I not test and choose the man to whom I am to be like the
life to the body? Is a man ever impeded by life? What can that
woman be who thwarts the man she loves?--an
illness, a disease,
not life. By life, I mean that
joyous health which makes each hour
a pleasure.
But to return to your letter, which will always be precious to me.
Yes, jesting apart, it contains that which I desired, an
expression of prosaic sentiments which are as necessary to family
life as air to the lungs; and without which no happiness is
possible. To act as an honest man, to think as a poet, to love as
women love, that is what I longed for in my friend, and it is now