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the lily of the valley-第11部分

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Monsieur de Chessel fully understood this。 They always met politely;

but there was none of that daily intercourse or that agreeable

intimacy which ought to have existed between Clochegourde and

Frapesle; two estates separated only by the Indre; and whose

mistresses could have beckoned to each other from their windows。



Jealousy; however; was not the sole reason for the solitude in which

the Count de Mortsauf lived。 His early education was that of the

children of great families;an incomplete and superficial instruction

as to knowledge; but supplemented by the training of society; the

habits of a court life; and the exercise of important duties under the

crown or in eminent offices。 Monsieur de Mortsauf had emigrated at the

very moment when the second stage of his education was about to begin;

and accordingly that training was lacking to him。 He was one of those

who believed in the immediate restoration of the monarchy; with that

conviction in his mind; his exile was a long and miserable period of

idleness。 When the army of Conde; which his courage led him to join

with the utmost devotion; was disbanded; he expected to find some

other post under the white flag; and never sought; like other

emigrants; to take up an industry。 Perhaps he had not the sort of

courage that could lay aside his name and earn his living in the sweat

of a toil he despised。 His hopes; daily postponed to the morrow; and

possibly a scruple of honor; kept him from offering his services to

foreign powers。 Trials undermined his courage。 Long tramps afoot on

insufficient nourishment; and above all; on hopes betrayed; injured

his health and discouraged his mind。 By degrees he became utterly

destitute。 If to some men misery is a tonic; on others it acts as a

dissolvent; and the count was of the latter。



Reflecting on the life of this poor Touraine gentleman; tramping and

sleeping along the highroads of Hungary; sharing the mutton of Prince

Esterhazy's shepherds; from whom the foot…worn traveller begged the

food he would not; as a gentleman; have accepted at the table of the

master; and refusing again and again to do service to the enemies of

France; I never found it in my heart to feel bitterness against him;

even when I saw him at his worst in after days。 The natural gaiety of

a Frenchman and a Tourangean soon deserted him; he became morose; fell

ill; and was charitably cared for in some German hospital。 His disease

was an inflammation of the mesenteric membrane; which is often fatal;

and is liable; even if cured; to change the constitution and produce

hypochondria。 His love affairs; carefully buried out of sight and

which I alone discovered; were low…lived; and not only destroyed his

health but ruined his future。



After twelve years of great misery he made his way to France; under

the decree of the Emperor which permitted the return of the emigrants。

As the wretched wayfarer crossed the Rhine and saw the tower of

Strasburg against the evening sky; his strength gave way。 〃'France!

France!' I cried。 'I see France!'〃 (he said to me) 〃as a child cries

'Mother!' when it is hurt。〃 Born to wealth; he was now poor; made to

command a regiment or govern a province; he was now without authority

and without a future; constitutionally healthy and robust; he returned

infirm and utterly worn out。 Without enough education to take part

among men and affairs; now broadened and enlarged by the march of

events; necessarily without influence of any kind; he lived despoiled

of everything; of his moral strength as well as his physical。 Want of

money made his name a burden。 His unalterable opinions; his

antecedents with the army of Conde; his trials; his recollections; his

wasted health; gave him susceptibilities which are but little spared

in France; that land of jest and sarcasm。 Half dead he reached Maine;

where; by some accident of the civil war; the revolutionary government

had forgotten to sell one of his farms of considerable extent; which

his farmer had held for him by giving out that he himself was the

owner of it。



When the Lenoncourt family; living at Givry; an estate not far from

this farm; heard of the arrival of the Comte de Mortsauf; the Duc de

Lenoncourt invited him to stay at Givry while a house was being

prepared for him。 The Lenoncourt family were nobly generous to him;

and with them he remained some months; struggling to hide his

sufferings during that first period of rest。 The Lenoncourts had

themselves lost an immense property。 By birth Monsieur de Mortsauf was

a suitable husband for their daughter。 Mademoiselle de Lenoncourt;

instead of rejecting a marriage with a feeble and worn…out man of

thirty…five; seemed satisfied to accept it。 It gave her the

opportunity of living with her aunt; the Duchesse de Verneuil; sister

of the Prince de Blamont…Chauvry; who was like a mother to her。



Madame de Verneuil; the intimate friend of the Duchesse de Bourbon;

was a member of the devout society of which Monsieur Saint…Martin

(born in Touraine and called the Philosopher of Mystery) was the soul。

The disciples of this philosopher practised the virtues taught them by

the lofty doctrines of mystical illumination。 These doctrines hold the

key to worlds divine; they explain existence by reincarnations through

which the human spirit rises to its sublime destiny; they liberate

duty from its legal degradation; enable the soul to meet the trials of

life with the unalterable serenity of the Quaker; ordain contempt for

the sufferings of this life; and inspire a fostering care of that

angel within us who allies us to the divine。 It is stoicism with an

immortal future。 Active prayer and pure love are the elements of this

faith; which is born of the Roman Church but returns to the

Christianity of the primitive faith。 Mademoiselle de Lenoncourt

remained; however; in the Catholic communion; to which her aunt was

equally bound。 Cruelly tried by revolutionary horrors; the Duchesse de

Verneuil acquired in the last years of her life a halo of passionate

piety; which; to use the phraseology of Saint…Martin; shed the light

of celestial love and the chrism of inward joy upon the soul of her

cherished niece。



After the death of her aunt; Madame de Mortsauf received several

visits at Clochegourde from Saint…Martin; a man of peace and of

virtuous wisdom。 It was at Clochegourde that he corrected his last

books; printed at Tours by Letourmy。 Madame de Verneuil; wise with the

wisdom of an old woman who has known the stormy straits of life; gave

Clochegourde to the young wife for her married home; and with the

grace of old age; so perfect where it exists; the duchess yielded

everything to her niece; reserving for herself only one room above the

one she had always occupied; and which she now fitted up for the

countess。 Her sudden death threw a gloom over the early days of the

marriage; and connected Clochegourde with ideas of sadness in the

sensitive mind of the bride。 The first period of her settlement in

Touraine was to Madame de Mortsauf; I cannot say the happiest; but the

least troubled of her life。



After the many trials of his exile; Monsieur de Mortsauf; taking

comfort in the thought of a secure future; had a certain recovery of

mind; he breathed anew in this sweet valley the intoxicating essence

of revived hope。 Compelled to husband his means; he threw himself into

agricultural pursuits and began to find some happiness in life。 But

the birth of his first child; Jacques; was a thunderbolt which ruined

both the past and the future。 The doctor declared the child had not

vitality enough to live。 The count concealed this sentence from the

mother; but he sought other advice; and received the same fatal

answer; the truth of which was confirmed at the subsequent birth of

Madeleine。 These events and a certain inward consciousness of the

cause of this disaster increased the diseased tendencies of the man

himself。 His name doomed to extinction; a pure and irreproachable

young woman made miserable beside him and doomed to the anguish of

maternity without its joysthis uprising of his former into his

present life; with its growth of new sufferings; crushed his spirit


and completed its destruction。



The countess guessed the past from the present; and read the future。

Though nothing is so difficult as to make a man happy when he knows

himself to blame; she set herself to that task; which is worthy of an

angel。 She became stoical。 Descending into an abyss; whence she still

could see the sky; she devoted herself to the care of one man as the

sister of charity devotes herself to many。 To reconcile him with

himself; she forgave him that for which he had no forgiveness。 The

count grew miserly; she accepted the privations he imposed。 Like all

who have known the world only to acquire its suspiciousness; he feared

betrayal; she lived in solitude and yielded without a murmur to his

mistrust。 With a woman's tact s
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