movement.
"We cannot deny the fact," the
chemist replied.
"Pshaw! those gentlemen the doctrinaires have invented a nebulous
aphorism for our consolation--Stupid as a fact."
"Your aphorism," said the
chemist, "seems to me as a fact very
stupid."
They began to laugh, and went off to dine like folk for whom a miracle
is nothing more than a phenomenon.
Valentin reached his own house shivering with rage and consumed with
anger. He had no more faith in anything. Conflicting thoughts shifted
and surged to and fro in his brain, as is the case with every man
brought face to face with an inconceivable fact. He had readily
believed in some
hidden flaw in Spieghalter's
apparatus; he had not
been surprised by the incompetence and
failure of science and of fire;
but the flexibility of the skin as he handled it, taken with its
stubbornness when all means of
destruction that man possesses had been
brought to bear upon it in vain--these things terrified him. The
incontrovertible fact made him dizzy.
"I am mad," he muttered. "I have had no food since the morning, and
yet I am neither hungry nor thirsty, and there is a fire in my breast
that burns me."
He put back the skin in the frame where it had been enclosed but
lately, drew a line in red ink about the
actual configuration of the
talisman, and seated himself in his
armchair.
"Eight o'clock already!" he exclaimed. "To-day has gone like a dream."
He leaned his elbow on the arm of the chair, propped his head with his
left hand, and so remained, lost in secret dark reflections and
consuming thoughts that men condemned to die bear away with them.
"O Pauline!" he cried. "Poor child! there are gulfs that love can
never
traverse,
despite the strength of his wings."
Just then he very
distinctly heard a smothered sigh, and knew by one
of the most tender privileges of
passionate" target="_blank" title="a.易动情的;易怒的">
passionate love that it was Pauline's
breathing.
"That is my death warrant," he said to himself. "If she were there, I
should wish to die in her arms."
A burst of gleeful and
heartylaughter made him turn his face towards
the bed; he saw Pauline's face through the
transparent curtains,
smiling like a child for
gladness over a successful piece of mischief.
Her pretty hair fell over her shoulders in
countless curls; she looked
like a Bengal rose upon a pile of white roses.
"I cajoled Jonathan," said she. "Doesn't the bed belong to me, to me
who am your wife? Don't scold me,
darling; I only wanted to surprise
you, to sleep beside you. Forgive me for my freak."
She
sprang out of bed like a
kitten, showed herself gleaming in her
lawn
raiment, and sat down on Raphael's knee.
"Love, what gulf were you talking about?" she said, with an
anxiousexpression
apparent upon her face.
"Death."
"You hurt me," she answered. "There are some thoughts upon which we,
poor women that we are, cannot dwell; they are death to us. Is it
strength of love in us, or lack of courage? I cannot tell. Death does
not
frighten me," she began again, laughingly. "To die with you, both
together, to-morrow morning, in one last
embrace, would be joy. It
seems to me that even then I should have lived more than a hundred
years. What does the number of days matter if we have spent a whole
lifetime of peace and love in one night, in one hour?"
"You are right; Heaven is
speaking through that pretty mouth of yours.
Grant that I may kiss you, and let us die," said Raphael.
"Then let us die," she said, laughing.
Towards nine o'clock in the morning the
daylight streamed through the
chinks of the window shutters. Obscured somewhat by the muslin
curtains, it yet sufficed to show clearly the rich colors of the
carpet, the silks and furniture of the room, where the two lovers were
lying asleep. The gilding sparkled here and there. A ray of sunshine
fell and faded upon the soft down quilt that the freaks of live had
thrown to the ground. The outlines of Pauline's dress,
hanging from a
cheval glass, appeared like a
shadowy ghost. Her
dainty shoes had been
left at a distance from the bed. A
nightingale came to perch upon the
sill; its trills
repeated over again, and the sounds of its wings
suddenly
shaken out for
flight, awoke Raphael.
"For me to die," he said, following out a thought begun in his dream,
"my organization, the
mechanism of flesh and bone, that is quickened
by the will in me, and makes of me an individual MAN, must display
some
perceptible disease. Doctors ought to understand the symptoms of
any attack on
vitality, and could tell me whether I am sick or sound."
He gazed at his
sleeping wife. She had stretched her head out to him,
expressing in this way even while she slept the
anxioustenderness of
love. Pauline seemed to look at him as she lay with her face turned
towards him in an attitude as full of grace as a young child's, with
her pretty, half-opened mouth held out towards him, as she drew her
light, even
breath. Her little pearly teeth seemed to
heighten the
redness of the fresh lips with the smile hovering over them. The red
glow in her
complexion was brighter, and its whiteness was, so to
speak, whiter still just then than in the most im
passioned moments of
the waking day. In her unconstrained grace, as she lay, so full of
believing trust, the adorable attractions of
childhood were added to
the enchantments of love.
Even the most unaffected women still obey certain social conventions,
which
restrain the free
expansion of the soul within them during their
waking hours; but
slumber seems to give them back the spontaneity of
life which makes
infancy lovely. Pauline blushed for nothing; she was
like one of those
beloved and
heavenly beings, in whom reason has not
yet put motives into their actions and
mystery into their glances. Her
profile stood out in sharp
relief against the fine cambric of the
pillows; there was a certain sprightliness about her loose hair in
confusion, mingled with the deep lace ruffles; but she was
sleeping in
happiness, her long lashes were
tightly pressed against her cheeks, as
if to secure her eyes from too strong a light, or to aid an effort of
her soul to
recollect and to hold fast a bliss that had been perfect
but
fleeting. Her tiny pink and white ear, framed by a lock of her
hair and outlined by a
wrapping of Mechlin lace, would have made an
artist, a
painter, an old man, wildly in love, and would perhaps have
restored a
madman to his senses.
Is it not an ineffable bliss to behold the woman that you love,
sleeping, smiling in a
peaceful dream beneath your
protection, loving
you even in dreams, even at the point where the individual seems to
cease to exist,
offering to you yet the mute lips that speak to you in
slumber of the latest kiss? Is it not
indescribable happiness to see a
trusting woman, half-clad, but wrapped round in her love as by a cloak
--modesty in the midst of dishevelment--to see admiringly her
scattered clothing, the
silkenstockinghastily put off to please you
last evening, the unclasped
girdle that implies a
boundless faith in
you. A whole
romance lies there in that
girdle; the woman that it used
to protect exists no longer; she is yours, she has become YOU;
henceforward any betrayal of her is a blow dealt at yourself.
In this softened mood Raphael's eyes wandered over the room, now
filled with memories and love, and where the very
daylight seemed to
take
delightful hues. Then he turned his gaze at last upon the
outlines of the woman's form, upon youth and
purity, and love that
even now had no thought that was not for him alone, above all things,
and longed to live for ever. As his eyes fell upon Pauline, her own
opened at once as if a ray of
sunlight had lighted on them.
"Good-morning," she said, smiling. "How handsome you are, bad man!"
The grace of love and youth, of silence and dawn, shone in their
faces, making a
divine picture, with the
fleeting spell over it all
that belongs only to the earliest days of
passion, just as simplicity
and artlessness are the
peculiar possession of
childhood. Alas! love's
springtide joys, like our own
youthfullaughter, must even take
flight, and live for us no longer save in memory; either for our
despair, or to shed some soothing
fragrance over us, according to the
bent of our inmost thoughts.
"What made me wake you?" said Raphael. "It was so great a pleasure to
watch you
sleeping that it brought tears to my eyes."
"And to mine, too," she answered. "I cried in the night while I
watched you
sleeping, but not with happiness. Raphael, dear, pray
listen to me. Your
breathing is labored while you sleep, and something
rattles in your chest that
frightens me. You have a little dry cough
when you are asleep, exactly like my father's, who is dying of
phthisis. In those sounds from your lungs I recognized some of the
peculiar symptoms of that
complaint. Then you are
feverish; I know you