登陆注册
34541700000020

第20章 CALYSTE(1)

The poor mother returned to the salon deeply distressed at finding that the whole town was aware of what she had thought was known to her alone. She sat down, trimmed the wick of the lamp by cutting it with a pair of old scissors, took up once more the worsted-work she was doing, and awaited Calyste. The baroness fondly hoped to induce her son by this means to come home earlier and spend less time with Mademoiselle des Touches. Such calculations of maternal jealousy were wasted. Day after day, Calyste's visits to Les Touches became more frequent, and every night he came in later. The night before the day of which we speak it was midnight when he returned.

The baroness, lost in maternal meditation, was setting her stitches with the rapidity of one absorbed in thought while engaged in manual labor. Whoever had seen her bending to the light of the lamp beneath the quadruply centennial hangings of that ancient room would have admired the sublimity of the picture. Fanny's skin was so transparent that it was possible to read the thoughts that crossed her brow beneath it. Piqued with a curiosity that often comes to a pure woman, she asked herself what devilish secrets these daughters of Baal possessed to so charm men as to make them forgetful of mother, family, country, and self-interests. Sometimes she longed to meet this woman and judge her soberly for herself. Her mind measured to its full extent the evils which the innovative spirit of the age--described to her as so dangerous for young souls by the rector--would have upon her only child, until then so guileless; as pure as an innocent girl, and beautiful with the same fresh beauty.

Calyste, that splendid offspring of the oldest Breton race and the noblest Irish blood, had been nurtured by his mother with the utmost care. Until the moment when the baroness made over the training of him to the rector of Guerande, she was certain that no impure word, no evil thought had sullied the ears or entered the mind of her precious son. After nursing him at her bosom, giving him her own life twice, as it were, after guiding his footsteps as a little child, the mother had put him with all his virgin innocence into the hands of the pastor, who, out of true reverence for the family, had promised to give him a thorough and Christian education. Calyste thenceforth received the instruction which the abbe himself had received at the Seminary. The baroness taught him English, and a teacher of mathematics was found, not without difficulty, among the employes at Saint-Nazaire. Calyste was therefore necessarily ignorant of modern literature, and the advance and present progress of the sciences. His education had been limited to geography and the circumspect history of a young ladies'

boarding-school, the Latin and Greek of seminaries, the literature of the dead languages, and to a very restricted choice of French writers.

When, at sixteen, he began what the Abbe Grimont called his philosophy, he was neither more nor less than what he was when Fanny placed him in the abbe's hands. The Church had proved as maternal as the mother. Without being over-pious or ridiculous, the idolized young lad was a fervent Catholic.

For this son, so noble, so innocent, the baroness desired to provide a happy life in obscurity. She expected to inherit some property, two or three thousand pounds sterling, from an aunt. This sum, joined to the small present fortune of the Guenics, might enable her to find a wife for Calyste, who would bring him twelve or even fifteen thousand francs a year. Charlotte de Kergarouet, with her aunt's fortune, a rich Irish girl, or any other good heiress would have suited the baroness, who seemed indifferent as to choice. She was ignorant of love, having never known it, and, like all the other persons grouped about her, she saw nothing in marriage but a means of fortune. Passion was an unknown thing to these Catholic souls, these old people exclusively concerned about salvation, God, the king, and their property. No one should be surprised, therefore, at the foreboding thoughts which accompanied the wounded feelings of the mother, who lived as much for the future interests of her son as by her love for him. If the young household would only listen to wisdom, she thought, the coming generation of the du Guenics, by enduring privations, and saving, as people do save in the provinces, would be able to buy back their estates and recover, in the end, the lustre of wealth. The baroness prayed for a long age that she might see the dawn of this prosperous era. Mademoiselle du Guenic had understood and fully adopted this hope which Mademoiselle des Touches now threatened to overthrow.

The baroness heard midnight strike, with tears; her mind conceived of many horrors during the next hour, for the clock struck one, and Calyste was still not at home.

"Will he stay there?" she thought. "It would be the first time. Poor child!"At that moment Calyste's step resounded in the lane. The poor mother, in whose heart rejoicing drove out anxiety, flew from the house to the gate and opened it for her boy.

"Oh!" cried Calyste, in a grieved voice, "my darling mother, why did you sit up for me? I have a pass-key and the tinder-box.""You know very well, my child, that I cannot sleep when you are out,"she said, kissing him.

When the baroness reached the salon, she looked at her son to discover, if possible, from the expression of his face the events of the evening. But he caused her, as usual, an emotion that frequency never weakened,--an emotion which all loving mothers feel at sight of a human masterpiece made by them; this sentiment blues their sight and supersedes all others for the moment.

Except for the black eyes, full of energy and the heat of the sun, which he derived from his father, Calyste in other respects resembled his mother; he had her beautiful golden hair, her lovable mouth, the same curving fingers, the same soft, delicate, and purely white skin.

同类推荐
  • 华严一乘法界图

    华严一乘法界图

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 名物蒙求

    名物蒙求

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 薛仁贵征辽事略

    薛仁贵征辽事略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 口齿类要

    口齿类要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 法胜阿毗昙心论

    法胜阿毗昙心论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 吾乃黑无常

    吾乃黑无常

    开天传说之一,因无常而入,故又名:《开天传说之无常入》。阿康因为见习黑白无常勾错魂,导致进入地府,这阴差阳错的结果,导致阿康步入修仙,又因种种怪事儿,选择留在地府修行。
  • 韩露的惬意生活

    韩露的惬意生活

    韩露是名穷屌丝,生活的磨难让她抓狂,工作不顺利,和丈夫的感情也出现了危机,在一次醉酒后,她意外失足,却受到了命运之神的青睐,给了她重活一次的机会,她性格懦弱,父母离婚,原生家庭一团糟……30岁的灵魂装在12岁的灵魂里,会改变父母的婚姻状况吗?会让自己变强大吗?一切都看韩露的本事。
  • 绝色轻狂:狂傲天下

    绝色轻狂:狂傲天下

    穿越异世,将军府废材的花痴三小姐。母亲不在。没人疼,因柔软竟被下人欺负。当21世纪的王牌杀手归来。“废材?”呵呵。老子全系。”丹药?“送你一桶高级丹药,也不会心疼。”花痴?“”呵呵,本小姐不稀罕“丑陋?”绝色的面貌亮瞎你的眼。神宠?不用自己动。神宠送上门来男人?自己慢慢看很好看滴!不可能弃文的!只是更新有点慢哦~要有耐心哦本文重写一片,希望可以。名字叫:【绝代风华:逆天的风】
  • 守城录

    守城录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 邪王爆宠:纨绔祸水妃

    邪王爆宠:纨绔祸水妃

    一世为人,二世为将,三世为妖。她魂穿异世,乃金厥国第一女将。奈何城破国亡,她立下血誓若有下世定要颠覆江山。再次重生她是妖界公主,兄疼妖宠,万人敬仰。意外重返人间,魂附将军府嫡小姐之身。她惊才绝艳,蛊惑皇子,整治恶女,潜入皇朝,步步为谋,只为当年血誓。冷艳将军,温柔四殿下,腹黑三殿下,痴情狼妖,忠心狐妖,集万千宠爱于一身,可她眼里只有他?且看她如何定江山,平定混沌三界?【女强男强+美男多多】
  • 横店大神养成系统

    横店大神养成系统

    横店大神,文化层次百分之90为初中及以下。来横店,就是混吃等死,躺尸混盒饭。横店大神们每天大概就做3件事,1,玩王者农药,2,讨论女人。3,就是躺尸。来横店你什么都不可能学会,只能学会躺尸,钱也是挣不到的,大多数大神都在为明天的饭钱,下月的房租发愁。——摘自维基百科【叮!重生系统加载中,您即将重生为横店大神】林一凡:“啥?我之前可是首富,凭啥要变大神啊?”【数据加载完毕。】林一凡:“我选择死亡,我不想重生。”【不,你想。】林一凡:“我TM!”
  • 影视作品评论与分析

    影视作品评论与分析

    本书的出版能够给处于材料迷城的考生最清晰、最准确、最全面的学习、复习、考试指南,而且还反映了最新的艺术考试动向和发展态势。博采同类书之长而又独辟蹊径,其预见性、权威性、针对性均优于市面同类辅导书。
  • 重生异界之我是剑圣

    重生异界之我是剑圣

    “诶呀,好帅的大哥哥!”“嗯呐!真帅,我要给他生猴子!““他是我的。。。。。。”地球宅男穿越异界,附带英雄盒子系统,变身无极剑圣,帅的昏天黑地,丹药?我有一地球的,武技?剑圣配送五个天级武技,魂武装?我随时拿出来最顶尖的,信不?“谁能挡我!”天才?踩!美女?推!踏遍千山,我为主宰!
  • 农家有女初长成

    农家有女初长成

    人见人爱,狗见狗撒欢的二十一世纪美女兽医,一朝重生,成了小小农女!上有偏心寡妇娘,下有恶毒跋扈姐,田上人家是非多,这方唱罢那边又登场,人穷势薄遭人欺,咱打击报复要趁早。与天斗自寻死路,与人斗其乐无穷!那个相公,怼妻一时爽,追妻路漫漫,别老盯着我,快去种田去!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 邪王嗜宠之逗比王妃太逆天

    邪王嗜宠之逗比王妃太逆天

    幻界,他是冷血无情,实力逆天的冥帝(忧王),她是身份尊贵,一路开挂的幻岛岛主,因为一个和亲,他们相遇了,他对她一见钟情,她亦是如此。现代二十一世纪,他是手段残忍,不近女色的全球首富——墨忧璃;她是高冷无情,逗比无比的国民初恋——澜千洛(黛安娜.伊文捷琳)她把全球贵族世家得罪了个遍,但他没有半分责怪,还陪她一起闹……