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the lily of the valley-第13部分

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〃Why should you be troubled when there is no occasion?〃 she replied。

〃Now go and attend to the rye。 You know if you are not there the men

will let the gleaners of the other villages get into the field before

the sheaves are carried away。〃



〃I am going to take a first lesson in agriculture; madame;〃 I said to

her。



〃You have a very good master;〃 she replied; motioning towards the

count; whose mouth screwed itself into that smile of satisfaction

which is vulgarly termed a 〃bouche en coeur。〃



Two months later I learned she had passed that night in great anxiety;

fearing that her son had the croup; while I was in the boat; rocked by

thoughts of love; imagined that she might see me from her window

adoring the gleam of the candle which was then lighting a forehead

furrowed by fears! The croup prevailed at Tours; and was often fatal。

When we were outside the gate; the count said in a voice of emotion;

〃Madame de Mortsauf is an angel!〃 The words staggered me。 As yet I

knew but little of the family; and the natural conscience of a young

soul made me exclaim inwardly: 〃What right have I to trouble this

perfect peace?〃



Glad to find a listener in a young man over whom he could lord it so

easily; the count talked to me of the future which the return of the

Bourbons would secure to France。 We had a desultory conversation; in

which I listened to much childish nonsense which positively amazed me。

He was ignorant of facts susceptible of proof that might be called

geometric; he feared persons of education; he rejected superiority;

and scoffed; perhaps with some reason; at progress。 I discovered in

his nature a number of sensitive fibres which it required the utmost

caution not to wound; so that a conversation with him of any length

was a positive strain upon the mind。 When I had; as it were; felt of

his defects; I conformed to them with the same suppleness that his

wife showed in soothing him。 Later in life I should certainly have

made him angry; but now; humble as a child; supposing that I knew

nothing and believing that men in their prime knew all; I was

genuinely amazed at the results obtained at Clochegourde by this

patient agriculturist。 I listened admiringly to his plans; and with an

involuntary flattery which won his good…will; I envied him the estate

and its outlooka terrestrial paradise; I called it; far superior to

Frapesle。



〃Frapesle;〃 I said; 〃is a massive piece of plate; but Clochegourde is

a jewel…case of gems;〃a speech which he often quoted; giving credit

to its author。



〃Before we came here;〃 he said; 〃it was desolation itself。〃



I was all ears when he told of his seed…fields and nurseries。 New to

country life; I besieged him with questions about prices; means of

preparing and working the soil; etc。; and he seemed glad to answer all

in detail。



〃What in the world do they teach you in your colleges?〃 he exclaimed

at last in astonishment。



On this first day the count said to his wife when he reached home;

〃Monsieur Felix is a charming young man。〃



That evening I wrote to my mother and asked her to send my clothes and

linen; saying that I should remain at Frapesle。 Ignorant of the great

revolution which was just taking place; and not perceiving the

influence it was to have upon my fate; I expected to return to Paris

to resume my legal studies。 The Law School did not open till the first

week in November; meantime I had two months and a half before me。



The first part of my stay; while I studied to understand the count;

was a period of painful impressions to me。 I found him a man of

extreme irascibility without adequate cause; hasty in action in

hazardous cases to a degree that alarmed me。 Sometimes he showed

glimpses of the brave gentleman of Conde's army; parabolic flashes of

will such as may; in times of emergency; tear through politics like

bomb…shells; and may also; by virtue of honesty and courage; make a

man condemned to live buried on his property an Elbee; a Bonchamp; or

a Charette。 In presence of certain ideas his nostril contracted; his

forehead cleared; and his eyes shot lightnings; which were soon

quenched。 Sometimes I feared he might detect the language of my eyes

and kill me。 I was young then and merely tender。 Will; that force that

alters men so strangely; had scarcely dawned within me。 My passionate

desires shook me with an emotion that was like the throes of fear。

Death I feared not; but I would not die until I knew the happiness of

mutual loveBut how tell of what I felt! I was a prey to perplexity;

I hoped for some fortunate chance; I watched; I made the children love

me; I tried to identify myself with the family。



Little by little the count restrained himself less in my presence。 I

came to know his sudden outbreaks of temper; his deep and ceaseless

melancholy; his flashes of brutality; his bitter; cutting complaints;

his cold hatreds; his impulses of latent madness; his childish moans;

his cries of a man's despair; his unexpected fury。 The moral nature

differs from the physical nature inasmuch as nothing is absolute in

it。 The force of effects is in direct proportion to the characters or

the ideas which are grouped around some fact。 My position at

Clochegourde; my future life; depended on this one eccentric will。



I cannot describe to you the distress that filled my soul (as quick in

those days to expand as to contract); whenever I entered Clochegourde;

and asked myself; 〃How will he receive me?〃 With what anxiety of heart

I saw the clouds collecting on that stormy brow。 I lived in a

perpetual 〃qui…vive。〃 I fell under the dominion of that man; and the

sufferings I endured taught me to understand those of Madame de

Mortsauf。 We began by exchanging looks of comprehension; tried by the

same fire; how many discoveries I made during those first forty days!

of actual bitterness; of tacit joys; of hopes alternately submerged

and buoyant。 One evening I found her pensively watching a sunset which

reddened the summits with so ravishing a glow that it was impossible

not to listen to that voice of the eternal Song of Songs by which

Nature herself bids all her creatures love。 Did the lost illusions of

her girlhood return to her? Did the woman suffer from an inward

comparison? I fancied I perceived a desolation in her attitude that

was favorable to my first appeal; and I said; 〃Some days are hard to

bear。〃



〃You read my soul;〃 she answered; 〃but how have you done so?〃



〃We touch at many points;〃 I replied。 〃Surely we belong to the small

number of human beings born to the highest joys and the deepest

sorrows; whose feeling qualities vibrate in unison and echo each other

inwardly; whose sensitive natures are in harmony with the principle of

things。 Put such beings among surroundings where all is discord and

they suffer horribly; just as their happiness mounts to exaltation

when they meet ideas; or feelings; or other beings who are congenial

to them。 But there is still a third condition; where sorrows are known

only to souls affected by the same distress; in this alone is the

highest fraternal comprehension。 It may happen that such souls find no

outlet either for good or evil。 Then the organ within us endowed with

expression and motion is exercised in a void; expends its passion

without an object; utters sounds without melody; and cries that are

lost in solitude;terrible defeat of a soul which revolts against the

inutility of nothingness。 These are struggles in which our strength

oozes away without restraint; as blood from an inward wound。 The

sensibilities flow to waste and the result is a horrible weakening of

the soul; an indescribable melancholy for which the confessional

itself has no ears。 Have I not expressed our mutual sufferings?〃



She shuddered; and then without removing her eyes from the setting

sun; she said; 〃How is it that; young as you are; you know these

things? Were you once a woman?〃



〃Ah!〃 I replied; 〃my childhood was like a long illness〃



〃I hear Madeleine coughing;〃 she cried; leaving me abruptly。



The countess showed no displeasure at my constant visits; and for two

reasons。 In the first place she was pure as a child; and her thoughts

wandered into no forbidden regions; in the next I amused the count and

made a sop for that lion without claws or mane。 I found an excuse for

my visits which seemed plausible to every one。 Monsieur de Mortsauf

proposed to teach me backgammon; and I accepted; as I did so the

countess was betrayed into a look of compassion; which seemed to say;

〃You are flinging yourself into the jaws of the lion。〃 If I did not

understand this at the time; three days had not passed before I knew

what I had undertaken。 My patience; which nothing exhausts; the fruit

of my miserable childhood; ripened under this last trial。 The count

was delighted when he could jeer at me for not putting in practice the

principles or the rules he had explained; if
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