to outshine the heroes or the swaggerers to be found in her circle.
When I believed that I had left
poverty for ever behind me, I regained
my freedom of mind, humiliated my rivals, and was looked upon as a
very
attractive, dazzling, and
irresistible sort of man. But acute
folk used to say with regard to me, 'A fellow as clever as that will
keep all his
enthusiasms in his brain,' and charitably extolled my
faculties at the expense of my feelings. 'Isn't he lucky, not to be in
love!' they exclaimed. 'If he were, could he be so light-hearted and
animated?' Yet in Foedora's presence I was as dull as love could make
me. When I was alone with her, I had not a word to say, or if I did
speak, I renounced love; and I
affectedgaiety but ill, like a
courtier who has a bitter mortification to hide. I tried in every way
to make myself
indispensable in her life, and necessary to her
vanityand to her comfort; I was a
plaything at her pleasure, a slave always
at her side. And when I had frittered away the day in this way, I went
back to my work at night, securing merely two or three hours' sleep in
the early morning.
"But I had not, like Rastignac, the 'English system' at my finger-
ends, and I very soon saw myself without a penny. I fell at once into
that
precarious way of life which industriously hides cold and
miserable depths beneath an elusive surface of
luxury; I was a coxcomb
without conquests, a penniless fop, a
namelessgallant. The old
sufferings were renewed, but less
sharply; no doubt I was growing used
to the
painfulcrisis. Very often my sole diet consisted of the scanty
provision of cakes and tea that is offered in drawing-rooms, or one of
the
countess' great dinners must
sustain me for two whole days. I used
all my time, and exerted every effort and all my powers of
observation, to
penetrate the impenetrable
character of Foedora.
Alternate hope and
despair had swayed my opinions; for me she was
sometimes the tenderest, sometimes the most unfeeling of women. But
these transitions from joy to
sadness became unendurable; I sought to
end the
horribleconflict within me by extinguishing love. By the
light of
warning gleams my soul sometimes recognized the gulfs that
lay between us. The
countess confirmed all my fears; I had never yet
detected any tear in her eyes; an affecting scene in a play left her
smiling and
unmoved. All her instincts were
selfish; she could not
divine another's joy or sorrow. She had made a fool of me, in fact!
"I had rejoiced over a sacrifice to make for her, and almost
humiliated myself in seeking out my kinsman, the Duc de Navarreins, a
selfish man who was
ashamed of my
poverty, and had injured me too
deeply not to hate me. He received me with the
politecoldness that
makes every word and
gesture seem an
insult; he looked so ill at ease
that I pitied him. I blushed for this pettiness amid
grandeur, and
penuriousness surrounded by
luxury. He began to talk to me of his
heavy losses in the three per cents, and then I told him the object of
my visit. The change in his manners,
hitherto glacial, which now
gradually, became
affectionate, disgusted me.
"Well, he called upon the
countess, and completely eclipsed me with
her.
"On him Foedora exercised spells and witcheries unheard of; she drew
him into her power, and arranged her whole
mysterious business with
him; I was left out, I heard not a word of it; she had made a tool of
me! She did not seem to be aware of my
existence while my cousin was
present; she received me less
cordially perhaps than when I was first
presented to her. One evening she chose to
mortify me before the duke
by a look, a
gesture, that it is
useless to try to express in words. I
went away with tears in my eyes, planning terrible and outrageous
schemes of
vengeance without end.
"I often used to go with her to the theatre. Love utterly absorbed me
as I sat beside her; as I looked at her I used to give myself up to
the pleasure of listening to the music, putting all my soul into the
double joy of love and of
hearing every
emotion of my heart translated
into
musical cadences. It was my
passion that filled the air and the
stage, that was
triumphant everywhere but with my
mistress. Then I
would take Foedora's hand. I used to scan her features and her eyes,
imploring of them some
indication that one blended feeling possessed
us both, seeking for the sudden
harmony awakened by the power of
music, which makes our souls
vibrate in
unison; but her hand was
passive, her eyes said nothing.
"When the fire that burned in me glowed too
fiercely from the face I
turned upon her, she met it with that
studied smile of hers, the
conventional expression that sits on the lips of every
portrait in
every
exhibition. She was not listening to the music. The
divine pages
of Rossini, Cimarosa, or Zingarelli called up no
emotion, gave no
voice to any
poetry in her life; her soul was a desert.
"Foedora presented herself as a drama before a drama. Her lorgnette
traveled
restlessly" target="_blank" title="ad.不安定地;烦躁地">
restlessly over the boxes; she was
restless too beneath the
apparent calm; fashion tyrannized over her; her box, her
bonnet, her
carriage, her own
personality absorbed her entirely. My merciless
knowledge
thoroughly tore away all my illusions. If good breeding
consists in self-forgetfulness and
consideration for others, in
constantly showing
gentleness in voice and
bearing, in pleasing
others, and in making them content in themselves, all traces of her
plebeian
origin were not yet obliterated in Foedora, in spite of her
cleverness. Her self-forgetfulness was a sham, her manners were not
innate but
painfully acquired, her
politeness was rather subservient.
And yet for those she singled out, her honeyed words expressed natural
kindness, her pretentious
exaggeration was exalted
enthusiasm. I alone
had scrutinized her grimacings, and stripped away the thin rind that
sufficed to
conceal her real nature from the world; her trickery no
longer deceived me; I had sounded the depths of that feline nature. I
blushed for her when some
donkey or other flattered and complimented
her. And yet I loved her through it all! I hoped that her snows would
melt with the
warmth of a poet's love. If I could only have made her
feel all the
greatness that lies in
devotion, then I should have seen
her perfected, she would have been an angel. I loved her as a man, a
lover, and an artist; if it had been necessary not to love her so that
I might win her, some cool-headed coxcomb, some self-possessed
calculator would perhaps have had an
advantage over me. She was so
vain and sophisticated, that the language of
vanity would
appeal to
her; she would have allowed herself to be taken in the toils of an
intrigue; a hard, cold nature would have gained a complete ascendency
over her. Keen grief had pierced me to my very soul, as she
unconsciously revealed her
absolute love of self. I seemed to see her
as she one day would be, alone in the world, with no one to whom she
could stretch her hand, with no friendly eyes for her own to meet and
rest upon. I was bold enough to set this before her one evening; I
painted in vivid colors her
lonely, sad, deserted old age. Her comment
on this
prospect of so terrible a
revenge of thwarted nature was
horrible.
" 'I shall always have money,' she said; 'and with money we can always
inspire such sentiments as are necessary for our comfort in those
about us.'
"I went away confounded by the arguments of
luxury, by the
reasoningof this woman of the world in which she lived; and blamed myself for
my infatuated
idolatry. I myself had not loved Pauline because she was
poor; and had not the
wealthy Foedora a right to
repulse Raphael?
Conscience is our unerring judge until we finally
stifle it. A
specious voice said within me, 'Foedora is neither attracted to nor
repulses any one; she has her liberty, but once upon a time she sold
herself to the Russian count, her husband or her lover, for gold. But
temptation is certain to enter into her life. Wait till that moment
comes!' She lived
remote from
humanity, in a
sphere apart, in a hell
or a heaven of her own; she was neither frail nor
virtuous. This
feminine enigma in embroideries and cashmeres had brought into play
every
emotion of the human heart in me--pride,
ambition, love,
curiosity.
"There was a craze just then for praising a play at a little Boulevard
theatre, prompted perhaps by a wish to appear
original that besets us
all, or due to some freak of fashion. The
countess showed some signs
of a wish to see the floured face of the actor who had so delighted
several people of taste, and I obtained the honor of
taking her to a
first
presentation of some
wretched farce or other. A box scarcely
cost five francs, but I had not a brass
farthing. I was but half-way
through the
volume of Memoirs; I dared not beg for
assistance of
Finot, and Rastignac, my
providence, was away. These constant
perplexities were the bane of my life.
"We had once come out of the theatre when it was raining heavily,
Foedora had called a cab for me before I could escape from her show of
concern; she would not admit any of my excuses--my
liking for wet