continued, showing a letter that was on the mantelshelf. "He is now my
adopted son, and that is all. The heart, dear friend, makes its
bequests; my last wishes
impose a
sacred duty on that dear Felix. I
think I do not put too great a burden on him; grant that I do not ask
too much of you in desiring to leave him these last words. You see, I
am always a woman," she said, bending her head with mournful
sweetness; "after obtaining
pardon I ask a gift--Read this," she
added, giving me the letter; "but not until after my death."
The count saw her color change: he lifted her and carried her himself
to the bed, where we all surrounded her.
"Felix," she said, "I may have done something wrong to you. Often I
gave you pain by letting you hope for that I could not give you; but
see, it was that very courage of wife and mother that now
enables me
to die
forgiven" target="_blank" title="
forgive的过去分词">
forgiven of all. You will
forgive me too; you who have so often
blamed me, and whose
injustice was so dear--"
The Abbe Birotteau laid a finger on his lips. At that sign the dying
woman bowed her head, faintness
overcame her;
presently she waved her
hands as if summoning the
clergy and her children and the servants to
her presence, and then, with an imploring
gesture, she showed me the
desolate count and the children beside him. The sight of that father,
the secret of whose
insanity was known to us alone, now to be left
sole
guardian of those
delicate beings, brought mute entreaties to her
face, which fell upon my heart like
sacred fire. Before receiving
extreme unction she asked
pardon of her servants if by a hasty word
she had sometimes hurt them; she asked their prayers and commended
each one,
individually, to the count; she nobly confessed that during
the last two months she had uttered complaints that were not Christian
and might have shocked them; she had repulsed her children and clung
to life unworthily; but she attributed this
failure of
submission to
the will of God to her
intolerable sufferings. Finally, she publicly
thanked the Abbe Birotteau with heartfelt
warmth for having shown her
the
illusion of all
earthly things.
When she ceased to speak, prayers were said again, and the curate of
Sache gave her the viaticum. A few moments later her breathing became
difficult; a film overspread her eyes, but soon they cleared again;
she gave me a last look and died to the eyes of earth,
hearing perhaps
the
symphony of our sobs. As her last sigh issued from her lips,--the
effort of a life that was one long anguish,--I felt a blow within me
that struck on all my faculties. The count and I remained beside the
bier all night with the two abbes and the curate, watching, in the
glimmer of the tapers, the body of the
departed, now so calm, laid
upon the
mattress of her bed, where once she had suffered
cruelly. It
was my first
communion with death. I remained the whole of that night
with my eyes fixed on Henriette, spell-bound by the pure expression
that came from the stilling of all tempests, by the whiteness of that
face where still I saw the traces of her
innumerableaffections,
although it made no answer to my love. What
majesty in that silence,
in that coldness! How many thoughts they expressed! What beauty in
that cold
repose, what power in that immobility! All the past was
there and futurity had begun. Ah! I loved her dead as much as I had
loved her living. In the morning the count went to bed; the three
wearied priests fell asleep in that heavy hour of dawn so well known
to those who watch. I could then, without witnesses, kiss that
sacredbrow with all the love I had never been allowed to utter.
The third day, in a cool autumn morning, we followed the
countess to
her last home. She was carried by the old
huntsman, the two
Martineaus, and Manette's husband. We went down by the road I had so
joyously ascended the day I first returned to her. We crossed the
valley of the Indre to the little
cemetery of Sache--a poor village
graveyard, placed behind the church on the slope of the hill, where
with true
humility she had asked to be buried beneath a simple cross
of black wood, "like a poor country-woman," she said. When I saw, from
the centre of the
valley, the village church and the place of the
graveyard a convulsive
shudder seized me. Alas! we have all our
Golgothas, where we leave the first thirty-three years of our lives,
with the lance-wound in our side, the crown of thorns and not of roses
on our brow--that hill-slope was to me the mount of expiation.
We were followed by an
immense crowd, seeking to express the grief of
the
valley where she had
silently buried so many noble actions.
Manette, her
faithful woman, told me that when her savings did not
suffice to help the poor she economized upon her dress. There were
babes to be provided for, naked children to be clothed, mothers
succored in their need, sacks of flour brought to the millers in
winter for
helpless old men, a cow sent to some poor home,--deeds of a
Christian woman, a mother, and the lady of the manor. Besides these
things, there were dowries paid to
enableloving hearts to marry;
substitutes bought for youths to whom the draft had brought despair,
tender offerings of the
loving woman who had said: "The happiness of
others is the
consolation of those who cannot themselves be happy."
Such things,
related at the "veillees," made the crowd
immense. I
walked with Jacques and the two abbes behind the
coffin. According to
custom neither the count nor Madeleine were present; they remained
alone at Clochegourde. But Manette insisted in coming with us. "Poor
madame! poor madame! she is happy now," I heard her
saying to herself
amid her sobs.
As the
procession left the road to the mills I heard a simultaneous
moan and a sound of
weeping as though the
valley were lamenting for
its soul. The church was filled with people. After the service was
over we went to the graveyard where she wished to be buried near the
cross. When I heard the pebbles and the
gravel falling upon the
coffinmy courage gave way; I staggered and asked the two Martineaus to
steady me. They took me, half-dead, to the
chateau of Sache, where the
owners very kindly invited me to stay, and I accepted. I will own to
you that I dreaded a return to Clochegourde, and it was equally
repugnant to me to go to Frapesle, where I could see my Henriette's
windows. Here, at Sache, I was near her. I lived for some days in a
room which looked on the
tranquil,
solitaryvalley I have mentioned to
you. It is a deep
recess among the hills, bordered by oaks that are
doubly centenarian, through which a
torrent rushes after rain. The
scene was in keeping with the stern and
solemn meditations to which I
desired to
abandon myself.
I had perceived, during the day which followed the fatal night, how
unwelcome my presence might be at Clochegourde. The count had gone
through
violentmotion" target="_blank" title="n.感情;情绪;激动">
emotions at the death of his wife; but he had expected
the event; his mind was made up to it in a way that was something like
indifference. I had noticed this several times, and when the
countessgave me that letter (which I still dared not read) and when she spoke
of her
affection for me, I remarked that the count, usually so quick
to take offence, made no sign of feeling any. He attributed
Henriette's wording to the
extreme sensitiveness of a
conscience which
he knew to be pure. This
selfish insensibility was natural to him. The
souls of these two beings were no more married than their bodies; they
had never had the
intimatecommunion which keeps feeling alive; they
had shared neither pains nor pleasures, those strong links which tear
us by a thousand edges when broken, because they touch on all our
fibers, and are fastened to the inmost
recesses of our hearts.
Another
considerationforbade my return to Clochegourde,--Madeleine's
hostility. That hard young girl was not disposed to modify her hatred
beside her mother's
coffin. Between the count, who would have talked
to me
incessantly of himself, and the new
mistress of the house, who
would have shown me invincible
dislike, I should have found myself
horribly annoyed. To be treated thus where once the very flowers
welcomed me, where the steps of the portico had a voice, where my
memory clothed with
poetry the balconies, the fountains, the
balustrades, the trees, the glimpses of the
valleys! to be hated where
I once was loved--the thought was
intolerable to me. So, from the
first, my mind was made up.
Alas! alas! was this the end of the keenest love that ever entered the
heart of man? To the eyes of strangers my conduct might be
reprehensible, but it had the
sanction of my own
conscience. It is
thus that the noblest feelings, the sublimest dramas of our youth must
end. We start at dawn, as I from Tours to Clochegourde, we
clutch the
world, our hearts hungry for love; then, when our treasure is in the
crucible, when we
mingle with men and circumstances, all becomes
gradually debased and we find but little gold among the ashes. Such is