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modeste mignon-第36部分
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thirst for love; and the thirst for admiration。 Like every true
colonel of the Empire he saw in this correspondence; rapidly read;
only the young girl who had thrown herself at the head of a poet; but
in the letters which we were forced to lack of space to suppress; a
better judge would have admired the dignified and gracious reserve
which Modeste had substituted for the rather aggressive and light…
minded tone of her first letters。 The father; however; was only too
cruelly right on one point。 Modeste's last letter; which we have read;
had indeed spoken as though the marriage were a settled fact; and the
remembrance of that letter filled her with shame; she thought her
father very harsh and cruel to force her to receive a man unworthy of
her; yet to whom her soul had flown; as it were; bare。 She questioned
Dumay about his interview with the poet; she inveigled him into
relating its every detail; and she did not think Canalis as barbarous
as the lieutenant had declared him。 The thought of the beautiful
casket which held the letters of the thousand and one women of this
literary Don Juan made her smile; and she was strongly tempted to say
to her father: 〃I am not the only one to write to him; the elite of my
sex send their leaves for the laurel wreath of the poet。〃
During this week Modeste's character underwent a transformation。 The
catastropheand it was a great one to her poetic natureroused a
faculty of discernment and also the malice latent in her girlish
heart; in which her suitors were about to encounter a formidable
adversary。 It is a fact that when a young woman's heart is chilled her
head becomes clear; she observes with great rapidity of judgment; and
with a tinge of pleasantry which Shakespeare's Beatrice so admirably
represents in 〃Much Ado about Nothing。〃 Modeste was seized with a deep
disgust for men; now that the most distinguished among them had
betrayed her hopes。 When a woman loves; what she takes for disgust is
simply the ability to see clearly; but in matters of sentiment she is
never; especially if she is a young girl; in a condition to see
clearly。 If she cannot admire; she despises。 And so; after passing
through terrible struggles of the soul; Modeste necessarily put on the
armor on which; as she had once declared; the word 〃Disdain〃 was
engraved。 After reaching that point she was able; in the character of
uninterested spectator; to take part in what she was pleased to call
the 〃farce of the suitors;〃 a performance in which she herself was
about to play the role of heroine。 She particularly set before her
mind the satisfaction of humiliating Monsieur de La Briere。
〃Modeste is saved;〃 said Madame Mignon to her husband; 〃she wants to
revenge herself on the false Canalis by trying to love the real one。〃
Such in truth was Modeste's plan。 It was so utterly commonplace that
her mother; to whom she confided her griefs; advised her on the
contrary to treat Monsieur de La Briere with extreme politeness。
CHAPTER XVII
A THIRD SUITOR
〃Those two young men;〃 said Madame Latournelle; on the Saturday
evening; 〃have no idea how many spies they have on their tracks。 We
are eight in all; on the watch。〃
〃Don't say two young men; wife; say three!〃 cried little Latournelle;
looking round him。 〃Gobenheim is not here; so I can speak out。〃
Modeste raised her head; and everybody; imitating Modeste; raised
theirs and looked at the notary。
〃Yes; a third loverand he is something like a loveroffers himself
as a candidate。〃
〃Bah!〃 exclaimed the colonel。
〃I speak of no less a person;〃 said Latournelle; pompously; 〃than
Monsieur le Duc d'Herouville; Marquis de Saint…Sever; Duc de Nivron;
Comte de Bayeux; Vicomte d'Essigny; grand equerry and peer of France;
knight of the Spur and the Golden Fleece; grandee of Spain; and son of
the last governor of Normandy。 He saw Mademoiselle Modeste at the time
when he was staying with the Vilquins; and he regretted thenas his
notary; who came from Bayeux yesterday; tells methat she was not
rich enough for him; for his father recovered nothing but the estate
of Herouville on his return to France; and that is saddled with a
sister。 The young duke is thirty…three years old。 I am definitively
charged to lay these proposals before you; Monsieur le comte;〃 added
the notary; turning respectfully to the colonel。
〃Ask Modeste if she wants another bird in her cage;〃 replied the
count; 〃as far as I am concerned; I am willing that my lord the grand
equerry shall pay her attention。〃
Notwithstanding the care with which Charles Mignon avoided seeing
people; and though he stayed in the Chalet and never went out without
Modeste; Gobenheim had reported Dumay's wealth; for Dumay had said to
him when giving up his position as cashier: 〃I am to be bailiff for my
colonel; and all my fortune; except what my wife needs; is to go to
the children of our little Modeste。〃 Every one in Havre had therefore
propounded the same question that the notary had already put to
himself: 〃If Dumay's share in the profits is six hundred thousand
francs; and he is going to be Monsieur Mignon's bailiff; then Monsieur
Mignon must certainly have a colossal fortune。 He arrived at
Marseilles on a ship of his own; loaded with indigo; and they say at
the Bourse that the cargo; not counting the ship; is worth more than
he gives out as his whole fortune。〃
The colonel was unwilling to dismiss the servants he had brought back
with him; whom he had chosen with care during his travels; and he
therefore hired a house for them in the lower part of Ingouville;
where he installed his valet; cook; and coachman; all Negroes; and
three mulattos on whose fidelity he could rely。 The coachman was told
to search for saddle…horses for Mademoiselle and for his master; and
for carriage…horses for the caleche in which the colonel and the
lieutenant had returned to Havre。 That carriage; bought in Paris; was
of the latest fashion; and bore the arms of La Bastie; surmounted by a
count's coronet。 These things; insignificant in the eyes of a man who
for four years had been accustomed to the unbridled luxury of the
Indies and of the English merchants at Canton; were the subject of
much comment among the business men of Havre and the inhabitants of
Ingouville and Graville。 Before five days had elapsed the rumor of
them ran from one end of Normandy to the other like a train of
gunpowder touched by fire。
〃Monsieur Mignon has come back from China with millions;〃 some one
said in Rouen; 〃and it seems he was made a count in mid…ocean。〃
〃But he was the Comte de La Bastie before the Revolution;〃 answered
another。
〃So they call him a liberal just because he was plain Charles Mignon
for twenty…five years! What are we coming to?〃 said a third。
Modeste was considered; therefore; notwithstanding the silence of her
parents and friends; as the richest heiress in Normandy; and all eyes
began once more to see her merits。 The aunt and sister of the Duc
d'Herouville confirmed in the aristocratic salons of Bayeux Monsieur
Charles Mignon's right to the title and arms of count; derived from
Cardinal Mignon; for whom the Cardinal's hat and tassels were added as
a crest。 They had seen Mademoiselle de La Bastie when they were
staying at the Vilquins; and their solicitude for the impoverished
head of their house now became active。
〃If Mademoiselle de La Bastie is really as rich as she is beautiful;〃
said the aunt of the young duke; 〃she is the best match in the
province。 SHE at least is noble。〃
The last words were aimed at the Vilquins; with whom they had not been
able to come to terms; after incurring the humiliation of staying in
that bourgeois household。
Such were the little events which; contrary to the rules of Aristotle
and of Horace; precede the introduction of another person into our
story; but the portrait and the biography of this personage; this late
arrival; shall not be long; taking into consideration his own
diminutiveness。 The grand equerry shall not take more space here than
he will take in history。 Monsieur le Duc d'Herouville; offspring of
the matrimonial autumn of the last governor of Normandy; was born
during the emigration in 1799; at Vienna。 The old marechal; father of
the present duke; returned with the king in 1814; and died in 1819;
before he was able to marry his son。 He could only leave him the vast
chateau of Herouville; the park; a few dependencies; and a farm which
he had bought back with some difficulty; all of which returned a
rental of about fifteen thousand francs a year。 Louis XVIII。 gave the
post of grand equerry to the son; who; under Charles X。; received the
usual pension of twelve thousand francs which was granted to the
pauper peers of France。 But what were these twenty…seven thousand
francs a year and the salary of grand equerry to such a family? In
Paris; of course; the young d
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