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modeste mignon-第31部分

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〃He is well…dressed; and wears the ribbon of the Legion of honor。〃



Canalis made a sign of assent; and the valet retreated; and then

returned and announced; 〃Monsieur Dumay。〃



When he heard himself announced; when he was actually in presence of

Canalis; in a study as gorgeous as it was elegant; with his feet on a

carpet far handsomer than any in the house of Mignon; and when he met

the studied glance of the poet who was playing with the tassels of a

sumptuous dressing…gown; Dumay was so completely taken aback that he

allowed the great poet to have the first word。



〃To what do I owe the honor of your visit; monsieur?〃



〃Monsieur;〃 began Dumay; who remained standing。



〃If you have a good deal to say;〃 interrupted Canalis; 〃I must ask you

to be seated。〃



And Canalis himself plunged into an armchair a la Voltaire; crossed

his legs; raised the upper one to the level of his eye and looked

fixedly at Dumay; who became; to use his own martial slang;

〃bayonetted。〃



〃I am listening; monsieur;〃 said the poet; 〃my time is precious;the

ministers are expecting me。〃



〃Monsieur;〃 said Dumay; 〃I shall be brief。 You have seducedhow; I do

not knowa young lady in Havre; young; beautiful; and rich; the last

and only hope of two noble families; and I have come to ask your

intentions。〃



Canalis; who had been busy during the last three months with serious

matters of his own; and was trying to get himself made commander of

the Legion of honor and minister to a German court; had completely

forgotten Modeste's letter。〃



〃I!〃 he exclaimed。



〃You!〃 repeated Dumay。



〃Monsieur;〃 answered Canalis; smiling; 〃I know no more of what you are

talking about than if you had said it in Hebrew。 I seduce a young

girl! I; who〃 and a superb smile crossed his features。 〃Come; come;

monsieur; I'm not such a child as to steal fruit over the hedges when

I have orchards and gardens of my own where the finest peaches ripen。

All Paris knows where my affections are set。 Very likely there may be

some young girl in Havre full of enthusiasm for my verses;of which

they are not worthy; that would not surprise me at all; nothing is

more common。 See! look at that lovely coffer of ebony inlaid with

mother…of…pearl; and edged with that iron…work as fine as lace。 That

coffer belonged to Pope Leo X。; and was given to me by the Duchesse de

Chaulieu; who received it from the king of Spain。 I use it to hold the

letters I receive from ladies and young girls living in every quarter

of Europe。 Oh! I assure you I feel the utmost respect for these

flowers of the soul; cut and sent in moments of enthusiasm that are

worthy of all reverence。 Yes; to me the impulse of a heart is a noble

and sublime thing! Othersscofferslight their cigars with such

letters; or give them to their wives for curl…papers; but I; who am a

bachelor; monsieur; I have too much delicacy not to preserve these

artless offeringsso fresh; so disinterestedin a tabernacle of

their own。 In fact; I guard them with a species of veneration; and at

my death they will be burned before my eyes。 People may call that

ridiculous; but I do not care。 I am grateful; these proofs of devotion

enable me to bear the criticisms and annoyances of a literary life。

When I receive a shot in the back from some enemy lurking under cover

of a daily paper; I look at that casket and think;here and there in

this wide world there are hearts whose wounds have been healed; or

soothed; or dressed by me!〃



This bit of poetry; declaimed with all the talent of a great actor;

petrified the lieutenant; whose eyes opened to their utmost extent;

and whose astonishment delighted the poet。



〃I will permit you;〃 continued the peacock; spreading his tail; 〃out

of respect for your position; which I fully appreciate; to open that

coffer and look for the letter of your young lady。 Though I know I am

right; I remember names; and I assure you you are mistaken in

thinking〃



〃And this is what a poor child comes to in this gulf of Paris!〃 cried

Dumay;〃the darling of her parents; the joy of her friends; the hope

of all; petted by all; the pride of a family; who has six persons so

devoted to her that they would willingly make a rampart of their lives

and fortunes between her and sorrow。 Monsieur;〃 Dumay remarked after a

pause; 〃you are a great poet; and I am only a poor soldier。 For

fifteen years I served my country in the ranks; I have had the wind of

many a bullet in my face; I have crossed Siberia and been a prisoner

there; the Russians flung me on a kibitka; and God knows what I

suffered。 I have seen thousands of my comrades die;but you; you have

given me a chill to the marrow of my bones; such as I never felt

before。〃



Dumay fancied that his words moved the poet; but in fact they only

flattered him;a thing which at this period of his life had become

almost an impossibility; for his ambitious mind had long forgotten the

first perfumed phial that praise had broken over his head。



〃Ah; my soldier!〃 he said solemnly; laying his hand on Dumay's

shoulder; and thinking to himself how droll it was to make a soldier

of the empire tremble; 〃this young girl may be all in all to you; but

to society at large what is she? nothing。 At this moment the greatest

mandarin in China may be yielding up the ghost and putting half the

universe in mourning; and what is that to you? The English are killing

thousands of people in India more worthy than we are; why; at this

very moment while I am speaking to you some ravishing woman is being

burned alive;did that make you care less for your cup of coffee this

morning at breakfast? Not a day passes in Paris that some mother in

rags does not cast her infant on the world to be picked up by whoever

finds it; and yet see! here is this delicious tea in a cup that cost

five louis; and I write verses which Parisian women rush to buy;

exclaiming; 'Divine! delicious! charming! food for the soul!' Social

nature; like Nature herself; is a great forgetter。 You will be quite

surprised ten years hence at what you have done to…day。 You are here

in a city where people die; where they marry; where they adore each

other at an assignation; where young girls suffocate themselves; where

the man of genius with his cargo of thoughts teeming with humane

beneficence goes to the bottom;all side by side; sometimes under the

same roof; and yet ignorant of each other; ignorant and indifferent。

And here you come among us and ask us to expire with grief at this

commonplace affair。〃



〃You call yourself a poet!〃 cried Dumay; 〃but don't you feel what you

write?〃



〃Good heavens! if we endured the joys or the woes we sing we should be

as worn out in three months as a pair of old boots;〃 said the poet;

smiling。 〃But stay; you shall not come from Havre to Paris to see

Canalis without carrying something back with you。 Warrior!〃 (Canalis

had the form and action of an Homeric hero) 〃learn this from the poet:

Every noble sentiment in man is a poem so exclusively individual that

his nearest friend; his other self; cares nothing for it。 It is a

treasure which is his alone; it is〃



〃Forgive me for interrupting you;〃 said Dumay; who was gazing at the

poet with horror; 〃but did you ever come to Havre?〃



〃I was there for a day and a night in the spring of 1824 on my way to

London。〃



〃You are a man of honor;〃 continued Dumay; 〃will you give me your word

that you do not know Mademoiselle Modeste Mignon?〃



〃This is the first time that name ever struck my ear;〃 replied

Canalis。



〃Ah; monsieur!〃 said Dumay; 〃into what dark intrigue am I about to

plunge? Can I count upon you to help me in my inquiries?for I am

certain that some one has been using your name。 You ought to have had

a letter yesterday from Havre。〃



〃I received none。 Be sure; monsieur; that I will help you;〃 said

Canalis; 〃so far as I have the opportunity of doing so。〃



Dumay withdrew; his heart torn with anxiety; believing that the

wretched Butscha had worn the skin of the poet to deceive Modeste;

whereas Butscha himself; keen…witted as a prince seeking revenge; and

far cleverer than any paid spy; was ferretting out the life and

actions of Canalis; escaping notice by his insignificance; like an

insect that bores its way into the sap of a tree。



The Breton had scarcely left the poet's house when La Briere entered

his friend's study。 Naturally; Canalis told him of the visit of the

man from Havre。



〃Ha!〃 said Ernest; 〃Modeste Mignon; that is just what I have come to

speak of。〃



〃Ah; bah!〃 cried Canalis; 〃have I had a triumph by proxy?〃



〃Yes; and here is the key to it。 My friend; I am loved by the sweetest

girl in all the world;beautiful enough to shine beside the greatest

beauties in Paris; with a heart and mind worthy of Clarissa。 She has

seen me; I have pleased her; and she thinks me the great Canalis。 But

that is not all。 Modeste Mignon is of high
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