"Yes," I replied, "for I would give
eternity for a day of happiness,
and you--"
"I!" she said haughtily.
I was silent and lowered my eyes to escape the
lightning of hers.
"There is many an I in me," she said. "Of which do you speak? Those
children," pointing to Jacques and Madeleine, "are one--Felix," she
cried in a heartrending voice, "do you think me
selfish? Ought I to
sacrifice
eternity to
reward him who devotes to me his life? The
thought is
dreadful; it wounds every
sentiment of religion. Could a
woman so fallen rise again? Would her happiness
absolve her? These are
questions you force me to consider.--Yes, I
betray at last the secret
of my
conscience; the thought has traversed my heart; often do I
expiate it by
penance; it caused the tears you asked me to
account for
yesterday--"
"Do you not give too great importance to certain things which common
women hold at a high price, and--"
"Oh!" she said, interrupting me; "do you hold them at a lower?"
This logic stopped all argument.
"Know this," she continued. "I might have the baseness to
abandon that
poor old man whose life I am; but, my friend, those other feeble
creatures there before us, Madeleine and Jacques, would remain with
their father. Do you think, I ask you do you think they would be alive
in three months under the
insanedominion of that man? If my failure
of duty
concerned only myself--" A noble smile crossed her face. "But
shall I kill my children! My God!" she exclaimed. "Why speak of these
things? Marry, and let me die!"
She said the words in a tone so bitter, so hollow, that they stifled
the remonstrances of my
passion.
"You uttered cries that day beneath the walnut-tree; I have uttered my
cries here beneath these alders, that is all," I said; "I will be
silent henceforth."
"Your
generosity shames me," she said, raising her eyes to heaven.
We reached the
terrace and found the count sitting in a chair, in the
sun. The sight of that
sunken face, scarcely brightened by a feeble
smile, extinguished the last flames that came from the ashes. I leaned
against the balustrade and considered the picture of that poor wreck,
between his
sickly children and his wife, pale with her vigils, worn
out by
extremefatigue, by the fears, perhaps also by the joys of
these terrible months, but whose cheeks now glowed from the emotions
she had just passed through. At the sight of that
suffering family
beneath the trembling leafage through which the gray light of a cloudy
autumn sky came dimly, I felt within me a rupture of the bonds which
hold the body to the spirit. There came upon me then that moral spleen
which, they say, the strongest wrestlers know in the
crisis of their
combats, a
species of cold
madness which makes a
coward of the bravest
man, a bigot of an unbeliever, and renders those it grasps indifferent
to all things, even to vital
sentiments, to honor, to love--for the
doubt it brings takes from us the knowledge of ourselves and
disgusts
us with life itself. Poor,
nervous creatures, whom the very richness
of your organization delivers over to this
mysterious, fatal power,
who are your peers and who your judges? Horrified by the thoughts that
rose within me, and demanding, like the
wicked man, "Where is now thy
God?" I could not
restrain the tears that rolled down my cheeks.
"What is it, dear Felix?" said Madeleine in her
childish voice.
Then Henriette put to
flight these dark horrors of the mind by a look
of tender solicitude which shone into my soul like a
sunbeam. Just
then the old
huntsman brought me a letter from Tours, at sight of
which I made a sudden cry of surprise, which made Madame de Mortsauf
tremble. I saw the king's signet and knew it
contained my recall. I
gave her the letter and she read it at a glance.
"What will become of me?" she murmured, be
holding her desert sunless.
We fell into a stupor of thought which oppressed us
equally; never had
we felt more
strongly how necessary we were to one another. The
countess, even when she spoke
indifferently of other things, seemed to
have a new voice, as if the
instrument had lost some chords and others
were out of tune. Her movements were apathetic, her eyes without
light. I begged her to tell me her thoughts.
"Have I any?" she replied in a dazed way.
She drew me into her
chamber, made me sit upon the sofa, took a
package from the
drawer of her dressing-table, and knelt before me,
saying: "This hair has fallen from my head during the last year; take
it, it is yours; you will some day know how and why."
Slowly I bent to meet her brow, and she did not avoid my lips. I
kissed her sacredly, without
unworthypassion, without one impure
impulse, but
solemnly, with
tenderness. Was she
willing to make the
sacrifice; or did she merely come, as I did once, to the verge of the
precipice? If love were leading her to give herself could she have
worn that calm, that holy look; would she have asked, in that pure
voice of hers, "You are not angry with me, are you?"
I left that evening; she wished to accompany me on the road to
Frapesle; and we stopped under my walnut-tree. I showed it to her, and
told her how I had first seen her four years earlier from that spot.
"The
valley was so beautiful then!" I cried.
"And now?" she said quickly.
"You are beneath my tree, and the
valley is ours!"
She bowed her head and that was our
farewell; she got into her
carriage with Madeleine, and I into mine alone.
On my return to Paris I was absorbed in pressing business which took
all my time and kept me out of society, which for a while forgot me. I
corresponded with Madame de Mortsauf, and sent her my
journal once a
week. She answered twice a month. It was a life of
solitude yet
teeming, like those sequestered spots,
blooming unknown, which I had
sometimes found in the depths of woods when
gathering the flowers for
my poems.
Oh, you who love! take these obligations on you; accept these daily
duties, like those the Church imposes upon Christians. The rigorous
observances of the Roman faith
contain a great idea; they
plough the
furrow of duty in the soul by the daily
repetition of acts which keep
alive the sense of hope and fear. Sentiments flow clearer in furrowed
channels which
purify their
stream; they
refresh the heart, they
fertilize the life from the
abundant treasures of a
hidden faith, the
source
divine in which the single thought of a single love is
multiplied indefinitely.
My love, an echo of the Middle Ages and of
chivalry, was known, I know
not how; possibly the king and the Duc de Lenoncourt had
spoken of it.
From that upper
sphere the
romantic yet simple story of a young man
piously adoring a beautiful woman
remote from the world, noble in her
solitude,
faithful without support to duty, spread, no doubt quickly,
through the faubourg St. Germain. In the salons I was the object of
embarrassing notice; for
retired life has advantages which if once
experienced make the burden of a
constant social intercourse
insupportable. Certain minds are
painfullyaffected by violent
contrasts, just as eyes accustomed to soft colors are hurt by glaring
light. This was my condition then; you may be surprised at it now, but
have
patience; the inconsistencies of the Vandenesse of to-day will be
explained to you.
I found society
courteous and women most kind. After the marriage of
the Duc de Berry the court resumed its former
splendor and the glory
of the French fetes revived. The Allied
occupation was over,
prosperity reappeared, enjoyments were again possible. Noted
personages,
illustrious by rank,
prominent by fortune, came from all
parts of Europe to the capital of the
intellect, where the merits and
the vices of other countries were found magnified and whetted by the
charms of French
intellect.
Five months after leaving Clochegourde my good angel wrote me, in the
middle of the winter, a
despairing letter, telling me of the serious
illness of her son. He was then out of danger, but there were many
fears for the future; the doctor said that precautions were necessary
for his lungs--the
suggestion of a terrible idea which had put the
mother's heart in
mourning. Hardly had Jacques begun to convalesce,
and she could breathe again, when Madeleine made them all
uneasy. That
pretty plant, whose bloom had
latelyrewarded the mother's culture,
was now frail and pallid and anemic. The
countess, worn-out by
Jacques' long
illness, found no courage, she said, to bear this
additional blow, and the ever present
spectacle of these two dear
failing creatures made her
insensible to the redoubled
torment of her
husband's
temper. Thus the storms were again raging; tearing up by the
roots the hopes that were planted deepest in her bosom. She was now at
the mercy of the count; weary of the struggle, she allowed him to
regain all the ground he had lost.
"When all my strength is employed in caring for my children," she
wrote, "how is it possible to employ it against Monsieur de Mortsauf;
how can I struggle against his aggressions when I am fighting against