expressed a
haughty pride in keeping with her hand, her chin, her
brows, and her beautiful figure. And--as a last diagnostic to guide
the judgment of a connoisseur--Natalie's pure voice, a most seductive
voice, had certain
metallic tones. Softly as that brassy ring was
managed, and in spite of the grace with which its sounds ran through
the
compass of the voice, that organ revealed the
character of the
Duke of Alba, from whom the Casa-Reales were collaterally descended.
These indications were those of
violent passions without tenderness,
sudden devotions, irreconcilable
dislikes, a mind without
intelligence, and the desire to rule natural to persons who feel
themselves
inferior to their pretensions.
These defects, born of
temperament and
constitution, were buried in
Natalie like ore in a mine, and would only appear under the shocks and
harsh
treatment to which all
characters are subjected in this world.
Meantime the grace and
freshness of her youth, the
distinction of her
manners, her
sacredignorance, and the
sweetness of a young girl, gave
a
delicate glamour to her features which could not fail to mislead an
unthinking or
superficial mind. Her mother had early taught her the
trick of
agreeable talk which appears to imply
superiority, replying
to arguments by clever jests, and attracting by the graceful
volubility beneath which a woman hides the subsoil of her mind, as
Nature disguises her
barren strata beneath a
wealth of ephemeral
vegetation. Natalie had the charm of children who have never known
what it is to suffer. She charmed by her
frankness, and had none of
that
solemn air which mothers
impose on their daughters by laying down
a programme of
behavior and language until the time comes when they
marry and are emancipated. She was gay and natural, like any young
girl who knows nothing of marriage, expects only pleasure from it,
replies to all objections with a jest, foresees no troubles, and
thinks she is acquiring the right to have her own way.
How could Paul, who loved as men love when desire increases love,
perceive in a girl of this nature whose beauty dazzled him, the woman,
such as she would probably be at thirty, when observers themselves
have been misled by these appearances? Besides, if happiness might
prove difficult to find in a marriage with such a girl, it was not
impossible. Through these
embryo defects shone several fine qualities.
There is no good quality which, if
properly developed by the hand of
an able master, will not
stifle defects, especially in a young girl
who loves him. But to render ductile so intractable a woman, the iron
wrist, about which de Marsay had preached to Paul, was needful. The
Parisian dandy was right. Fear, inspired by love is an infallible
instrument by which to manage the minds of women. Whoso loves, fears;
whoso fears is nearer to
affection than to hatred.
Had Paul the
coolness,
firmness, and judgment required for this
struggle, which an able husband ought not to let the wife
suspect? Did
Natalie love Paul? Like most young girls, Natalie mistook for love the
first emotions of
instinct and the pleasure she felt in Paul's
external appearance; but she knew nothing of the things of marriage
nor the demands of a home. To her, the Comte de Manerville, a rising
diplomatist, to whom the courts of Europe were known, and one of the
most
elegant young men in Paris, could not seem, what perhaps he was,
an ordinary man, without moral force, timid, though brave in some
ways,
energetic perhaps in
adversity, but
helpless against the
vexations and annoyances that
hinder happiness. Would she, in after
years, have sufficient tact and
insight to
distinguish Paul's noble
qualities in the midst of his minor defects? Would she not
magnify the
latter and forget the former, after the manner of young wives who know
nothing of life? There comes a time when wives will
pardon defects in
the husband who spares her annoyances,
considering annoyances in the
same
category as misfortunes. What conciliating power, what wise
experience would
uphold and
enlighten the home of this young pair?
Paul and his wife would
doubtless think they loved when they had
really not
advanced beyond the endearments and compliments of the
honeymoon. Would Paul in that early period yield to the
tyranny of his
wife, instead of establishing his empire? Could Paul say, "No?" All
was peril to a man so weak where even a strong man ran some risks.
The subject of this Study is not the
transition of a
bachelor into a
married man,--a picture which, if
broadlycomposed, would not lack the
attraction which the inner struggles of our nature and feelings give
to the commonest situations in life. The events and the ideas which
led to the marriage of Paul with Natalie Evangelista are an
introduction to our real subject, which is to
sketch the great comedy
that precedes, in France, all conjugal pairing. This Scene, until now
singularly neglected by our
dramatic authors, although it offers novel
resources to their wit, controlled Paul's future life and was now
awaited by Madame Evangelista with feelings of
terror. We mean the
discussion which takes place on the subject of the marriage contract
in all families, whether noble or bourgeois, for human passions are as
keenly excited by small interests as by large ones. These comedies,
played before a notary, all
resemble, more or less, the one we shall
now
relate, the interest of which will be far less in the pages of
this book than in the memories of married persons.
CHAPTER III
THE MARRIAGE CONTRACT--FIRST DAY
At the
beginning of the winter of 1822, Paul de Manerville made a
formal request, through his great-aunt, the Baronne de Maulincour, for
the hand of Mademoiselle Natalie Evangelista. Though the baroness
never stayed more than two months in Medoc, she remained on this
occasion till the last of October, in order to
assist her nephew
through the affair and play the part of a mother to him. After
conveying the first suggestions to Madame Evangelista the experienced
old woman returned to inform Paul of the results of the overture.
"My child," she said, "the affair is won. In talking of property, I
found that Madame Evangelista gives nothing of her own to her
daughter. Mademoiselle Natalie's dowry is her patrimony. Marry her, my
dear boy. Men who have a name and an
estate to
transmit, a family to
continue, must, sooner or later, end in marriage. I wish I could see
my dear Auguste
taking that course. You can now carry on the marriage
without me; I have nothing to give you but my
blessing, and women as
old as I are out of place at a
wedding. I leave for Paris to-
morrow.
When you present your wife in society I shall be able to see her and
assist her far more to the purpose than now. If you had had no house
in Paris I would
gladly have arranged the second floor of mine for
you."
"Dear aunt," said Paul, "I thank you
heartily. But what do you mean
when you say that the mother gives nothing of her own, and that the
daughter's dowry is her patrimony?"
"The mother, my dear boy, is a sly cat, who takes
advantage of her
daughter's beauty to
impose conditions and allow you only that which
she cannot prevent you from having;
namely, the daughter's fortune
from her father. We old people know the importance of inquiring
closely, What has he? What has she? I
advise you
therefore to give
particular instructions to your notary. The marriage contract, my dear
child, is the most
sacred of all duties. If your father and your
mother had not made their bed
properly you might now be sleeping
without sheets. You will have children, they are the commonest result
of marriage, and you must think of them. Consult Maitre Mathias our
old notary."
Madame de Maulincour
departed, having plunged Paul into a state of
extreme
perplexity. His mother-in-law a sly cat! Must he struggle for
his interests in the marriage contract? Was it necessary to defend
them? Who was likely to attack them?
He followed the advice of his aunt and confided the
drawing-up of the
marriage contract to Maitre Mathias. But these threatened discussions
oppressed him, and he went to see Madame Evangelista and announce his
intentions in a state of rather
livelyagitation. Like all timid men,
he
shrank from allowing the
distrust his aunt had put into his mind to
be seen; in fact, he considered it insulting. To avoid even a slight
jar with a person so
imposing to his mind as his future mother-in-law,
he proceeded to state his intentions with the circumlocution natural
to persons who dare not face a difficulty.
"Madame," he said, choosing a moment when Natalie was
absent from the
room, "you know, of course, what a family notary is. Mine is a worthy
old man, to whom it would be a
sincere grief if he were not entrusted
with the
drawing of my marriage contract."
"Why, of course!" said Madame Evangelista, interrupting him, "but are
not marriage contracts always made by
agreement of the notaries of
both families?"
The time that Paul took to reply to this question was occupied by
Madame Evangelista in asking herself, "What is he thinking of?" for
women possess in an
eminent degree the art of
reading thoughts from
the play of
countenance. She divined the instigations of the great-
aunt in the embarrassed glance and the agitated tone of voice which