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modeste mignon-第13部分

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the wounded angel。



Modeste; recovering her first impression; renewed her confidence in

that soul; in that countenance as ravishing as the face of Bernadin de

Saint…Pierre。 She paid no further attention to the publisher。 And so;

about the beginning of the month of August she wrote the following

letter to this Dorat of the sacristy; who still ranks as a star of the

modern Pleiades。



  To Monsieur de Canalis;Many a time; monsieur; I have wished to

  write to you; and why? Surely you guess why;to tell you how much

  I admire your genius。 Yes; I feel the need of expressing to you

  the admiration of a poor country girl; lonely in her little

  corner; whose only happiness is to read your thoughts。 I have read

  Rene; and I come to you。 Sadness leads to reverie。 How many other

  women are sending you the homage of their secret thoughts? What

  chance have I for notice among so many? This paper; filled with my

  soul;can it be more to you than the perfumed letters which

  already beset you。 I come to you with less grace than others; for

  I wish to remain unknown and yet to receive your entire confidence

  as though you had long known me。



  Answer my letter and be friendly with me。 I cannot promise to make

  myself known to you; though I do not positively say I will not

  some day do so。



  What shall I add? Read between the lines of this letter; monsieur;

  the great effort which I am making: permit me to offer you my

  hand;that of a friend; ah! a true friend。



Your servant;       O。 d'Este M。





  P。S。If you do me the favor to answer this letter address your

  reply; if you please; to Mademoiselle F。 Cochet; 〃poste restante;〃

  Havre。







CHAPTER VII



A POET OF THE ANGELIC SCHOOL



All young girls; romantic or otherwise; can imagine the impatience in

which Modeste lived for the next few days。 The air was full of tongues

of fire。 The trees were like a plumage。 She was not conscious of a

body; she hovered in space; the earth melted away under her feet。 Full

of admiration for the post…office; she followed her little sheet of

paper on its way; she was happy; as we all are happy at twenty years

of age; in the first exercise of our will。 She was possessed; as in

the middle ages。 She made pictures in her mind of the poet's abode; of

his study; she saw him unsealing her letter; and then followed myriads

of suppositions。



After sketching the poetry we cannot do less than give the profile of

the poet。 Canalis is a short; spare man; with an air of good…breeding;

a dark…complexioned; moon…shaped face; and a rather mean head like

that of a man who has more vanity than pride。 He loves luxury; rank;

and splendor。 Money is of more importance to him than to most men。

Proud of his birth; even more than of his talent; he destroys the

value of his ancestors by making too much of them in the present day;

after all; the Canalis are not Navarreins; nor Cadignans; nor

Grandlieus。 Nature; however; helps him out in his pretensions。 He has

those eyes of Eastern effulgence which we demand in a poet; a delicate

charm of manner; and a vibrant voice; yet a taint of natural

charlatanism destroys the effect of nearly all these advantages; he is

a born comedian。 If he puts forward his well…shaped foot; it is

because the attitude has become a habit; if he uses exclamatory terms

they are part of himself; if he poses with high dramatic action he has

made that deportment his second nature。 Such defects as these are not

incompatible with a general benevolence and a certain quality of

errant and purely ideal chivalry; which distinguishes the paladin from

the knight。 Canalis has not devotion enough for a Don Quixote; but he

has too much elevation of thought not to put himself on the nobler

side of questions and things。 His poetry; which takes the town by

storm on all profitable occasions; really injures the man as a poet;

for he is not without mind; but his talent prevents him from

developing it; he is overweighted by his reputation; and is always

aiming to make himself appear greater than he has the credit of being。

Thus; as often happens; the man is entirely out of keeping with the

products of his thought。 The author of these naive; caressing; tender

little lyrics; these calm idylls pure and cold as the surface of a

lake; these verses so essentially feminine; is an ambitious little

creature in a tightly buttoned frock…coat; with the air of a diplomat

seeking political influence; smelling of the musk of aristocracy; full

of pretension; thirsting for money; already spoiled by success in two

directions; and wearing the double wreath of myrtle and of laurel。 A

government situation worth eight thousand francs; three thousand

francs' annuity from the literary fund; two thousand from the Academy;

three thousand more from the paternal estate (less the taxes and the

cost of keeping it in order);a total fixed income of fifteen

thousand francs; plus the ten thousand bought in; one year with

another; by his poetry; in all twenty…five thousand francs;this for

Modeste's hero was so precarious and insufficient an income that he

usually spent five or six thousand francs more every year; but the

king's privy purse and the secret funds of the foreign office had

hitherto supplied the deficit。 He wrote a hymn for the king's

coronation which earned him a whole silver service;having refused a

sum of money on the ground that a Canalis owed his duty to his

sovereign。



But about this time Canalis had; as the journalists say; exhausted his

budget。 He felt himself unable to invent any new form of poetry; his

lyre did not have seven strings; it had one; and having played on that

one string so long; the public allowed him no other alternative but to

hang himself with it; or to hold his tongue。 De Marsay; who did not

like Canalis; made a remark whose poisoned shaft touched the poet to

the quick of his vanity。 〃Canalis;〃 he said; 〃always reminds me of

that brave man whom Frederic the Great called up and commended after a

battle because his trumpet had never ceased tooting its one little

tune。〃 Canalis's ambition was to enter political life; and he made

capital of a journey he had taken to Madrid as secretary to the

embassy of the Duc de Chaulieu; though it was really made; according

to Parisian gossip; in the capacity of 〃attache to the duchess。〃 How

many times a sarcasm or a single speech has decided the whole course

of a man's life。 Colla; the late president of the Cisalpine republic;

and the best lawyer in Piedmont; was told by a friend when he was

forty years of age that he knew nothing of botany。 He was piqued;

became a second Jussieu; cultivated flowers; and compiled and

published 〃The Flora of Piedmont;〃 in Latin; a labor of ten years。

〃I'll master De Marsay some of these days!〃 thought the crushed poet;

〃after all; Canning and Chateaubriand are both in politics。〃



Canalis would gladly have brought forth some great political poem; but

he was afraid of the French press; whose criticisms are savage upon

any writer who takes four alexandrines to express one idea。 Of all the

poets of our day only three; Hugo; Theophile Gautier; and De Vigny;

have been able to win the double glory of poet and prose…writer; like

Racine and Voltaire; Moliere; and Rabelais;a rare distinction in the

literature of France; which ought to give a man a right to the

crowning title of poet。



So then; the bard of the faubourg Saint…Germain was doing a wise thing

in trying to house his little chariot under the protecting roof of the

present government。 When he became president of the court of Claims at

the foreign office; he stood in need of a secretary;a friend who

could take his place in various ways; cook up his interests with

publishers; see to his glory in the newspapers; help him if need be in

politics;in short; a cat's paw and satellite。 In Paris many men of

celebrity in art; science; and literature have one or more train…

bearers; captains of the guard; chamberlains as it were; who live in

the sunshine of their presence;aides…de…camp entrusted with delicate

missions; allowing themselves to be compromised if necessary; workers

round the pedestal of the idol; not exactly his servants; nor yet his

equals; bold in his defence; first in the breach; covering all

retreats; busy with his business; and devoted to him just so long as

their illusions last; or until the moment when they have got all they

wanted。 Some of these satellites perceive the ingratitude of their

great man; others feel that they are simply made tools of; many weary

of the life; very few remain contented with that sweet equality of

feeling and sentiment which is the only reward that should be looked

for in an intimacy with a superior man;a reward that contented Ali

when Mohammed raised him to himself。



Many of these men; misled by vanity; think themselves quite as capable

as their patron。 Pure devotion; such as M
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