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the lily of the valley-第37部分
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matter with me; now I know。 The orifice of my stomach is affected; I
can digest nothing。〃
〃How do you come to be as wise as the professor of a medical school?〃
I asked; laughing。 〃Is your doctor indiscreet enough to tell you such
things?〃
〃God forbid I should consult a doctor;〃 he cried; showing the aversion
most imaginary invalids feel for the medical profession。
I now listened to much crazy talk; in the course of which he made the
most absurd confidences;complained of his wife; of the servants; of
the children; of life; evidently pleased to repeat his daily speeches
to a friend who; not having heard them daily; might be alarmed; and
who at any rate was forced to listen out of politeness。 He must have
been satisfied; for I paid him the utmost attention; trying to
penetrate his inconceivable nature; and to guess what new tortures he
had been inflicting on his wife; of which she had not written to me。
Henriette presently put an end to the monologue by appearing in the
portico。 The count saw her; shook his head; and said to me: 〃You
listen to me; Felix; but here no one pities me。〃
He went away; as if aware of the constraint he imposed on my
intercourse with Henriette; or perhaps from a really chivalrous
consideration for her; knowing he could give her pleasure by leaving
us alone。 His character exhibited contradictions that were often
inexplicable; he was jealous; like all weak beings; but his confidence
in his wife's sanctity was boundless。 It may have been the sufferings
of his own self…esteem; wounded by the superiority of that lofty
virtue; which made him so eager to oppose every wish of the poor
woman; whom he braved as children brave their masters or their
mothers。
Jacques was taking his lessons; and Madeleine was being dressed; I had
therefore a whole hour to walk with the countess alone on the terrace。
〃Dear angel!〃 I said; 〃the chains are heavier; the sands hotter; the
thorns grow apace。〃
〃Hush!〃 she said; guessing the thoughts my conversation with the count
had suggested。 〃You are here; and all is forgotten! I don't suffer; I
have never suffered。〃
She made a few light steps as if to shake her dress and give to the
breeze its ruches of snowy tulle; its floating sleeves and fresh
ribbons; the laces of her pelerine; and the flowing curls of her
coiffure a la Sevigne; I saw her for the first time a young girl;gay
with her natural gaiety; ready to frolic like a child。 I knew then the
meaning of tears of happiness; I knew the joy a man feels in bringing
happiness to another。
〃Sweet human flower; wooed by my thought; kissed by my soul; oh my
lily!〃 I cried; 〃untouched; untouchable upon thy stem; white; proud;
fragrant; and solitary〃
〃Enough; enough;〃 she said; smiling。 〃Speak to me of yourself; tell me
everything。〃
Then; beneath the swaying arch of quivering leaves; we had a long
conversation; filled with interminable parentheses; subjects taken;
dropped; and retaken; in which I told her my life and my occupations;
I even described my apartment in Paris; for she wished to know
everything; and (happiness then unappreciated) I had nothing to
conceal。 Knowing thus my soul and all the details of a daily life full
of incessant toil; learning the full extent of my functions; which to
any one not sternly upright offered opportunities for deception and
dishonest gains; but which I had exercised with such rigid honor that
the king; I told her; called me Mademoiselle de Vandenesse; she seized
my hand and kissed it; and dropped a tear; a tear of joy; upon it。
This sudden transposition of our roles; this homage; coupled with the
thoughtswiftly expressed but as swiftly comprehended〃Here is the
master I have sought; here is my dream embodied!〃 all that there was
of avowal in the action; grand in its humility; where love betrayed
itself in a region forbidden to the senses;this whirlwind of
celestial things fell on my heart and crushed it。 I felt myself too
small; I wished to die at her feet。
〃Ah!〃 I said; 〃you surpass us in all things。 Can you doubt me?for
you did doubt me just now; Henriette。〃
〃Not now;〃 she answered; looking at me with ineffable tenderness;
which; for a moment; veiled the light of her eyes。 〃But seeing you so
changed; so handsome; I said to myself; 'Our plans for Madeleine will
be defeated by some woman who will guess the treasures in his heart;
she will steal our Felix; and destroy all happiness here。'〃
〃Always Madeleine!〃 I replied。 〃Is it Madeleine to whom I am
faithful?〃
We fell into a silence which Monsieur de Mortsauf inconveniently
interrupted。 I was forced to keep up a conversation bristling with
difficulties; in which my honest replies as to the king's policy
jarred with the count's ideas; and he forced me to explain again and
again the king's intentions。 In spite of all my questions as to his
horses; his agricultural affairs; whether he was satisfied with his
five farms; whether he meant to cut the timber of the old avenue; he
returned to the subject of politics with the pestering faculty of an
old maid and the persistency of a child。 Minds like his prefer to dash
themselves against the light; they return again and again and hum
about it without ever getting into it; like those big flies which
weary our ears as they buzz upon the glass。
Henriette was silent。 To stop the conversation; in which I feared my
young blood might take fire; I answered in monosyllables; mostly
acquiescent; avoiding discussion; but Monsieur de Mortsauf had too
much sense not to perceive the meaning of my politeness。 Presently he
was angry at being always in the right; he grew refractory; his
eyebrows and the wrinkles of his forehead worked; his yellow eyes
blazed; his rufous nose grew redder; as it did on the day I first
witnessed an attack of madness。 Henriette gave me a supplicating look;
making me understand that she could not employ on my behalf an
authority to which she had recourse to protect her children。 I at once
answered the count seriously; taking up the political question; and
managing his peevish spirit with the utmost care。
〃Poor dear! poor dear!〃 she murmured two or three times; the words
reaching my ear like a gentle breeze。 When she could intervene with
success she said; interrupting us; 〃Let me tell you; gentlemen; that
you are very dull company。〃
Recalled by this conversation to his chivalrous sense of what was due
to a woman; the count ceased to talk politics; and as we bored him in
our turn by commonplace matters; he presently left us to continue our
walk; declaring that it made his head spin to go round and round on
the same path。
My sad conjectures were true。 The soft landscape; the warm atmosphere;
the cloudless skies; the soothing poetry of this valley; which for
fifteen years had calmed the stinging fancies of that diseased mind;
were now impotent。 At a period of life when the asperities of other
men are softened and their angles smoothed; the disposition of this
man became more and more aggressive。 For the last few months he had
taken a habit of contradicting for the sake of contradiction; without
reason; without even trying to justify his opinions; he insisted on
knowing the why and the wherefore of everything; grew restless under a
delay or an omission; meddled with every item of the household
affairs; and compelled his wife and the servants to render him the
most minute and fatiguing account of all that was done; never allowing
them the slightest freedom of action。 Formerly he did not lose his
temper except for some special reason; now his irritation was
constant。 Perhaps the care of his farms; the interests of agriculture;
an active out…door life had formerly soothed his atrabilious temper by
giving it a field for its uneasiness; and by furnishing employment for
his activity。 Possibly the loss of such occupation had allowed his
malady to prey upon itself; no longer exercised on matters without; it
was showing itself in more fixed ideas; the moral being was laying
hold of the physical being。 He had lately become his own doctor; he
studied medical books; fancied he had the diseases he read of; and
took the most extraordinary and unheard of precautions about his
health;precautions never the same; impossible to foresee; and
consequently impossible to satisfy。 Sometimes he wanted no noise;
then; when the countess had succeeded in establishing absolute
silence; he would declare he was in a tomb; and blame her for not
finding some medium between incessant noise and the stillness of La
Trappe。 Sometimes he affected a perfect indifference for all earthly
things。 Then the whole household breathed freely; the children played;
family affairs went on without criticism。 Suddenly he would cry out
lamentably; 〃They want to kill me!My dear;〃 he would say to his
wife; increasing the injustice of his words by the aggravating tones
of his sharp vo
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