登陆注册
36835400000035

第35章

But does the lofty reasoner after the fashion of Moliere want still better reasons? Well, here they are. My dear Geronte, marriages are usually made in defiance of common-sense. Parents make inquiries about a young man. If the Leander--who is supplied by some friend, or caught in a ball-room--is not a thief, and has no visible rent in his reputation, if he has the necessary fortune, if he comes from a college or a law-school and so fulfils the popular ideas of education, and if he wears his clothes with a gentlemanly air, he is allowed to meet the young lady, whose mother has ordered her to guard her tongue, to let no sign of her heart or soul appear on her face, which must wear the smile of a danseuse finishing a pirouette. These commands are coupled with instructions as to the danger of revealing her real character, and the additional advice of not seeming alarmingly well educated. If the settlements have all been agreed upon, the parents are good-

natured enough to let the pair see each other for a few moments;

they are allowed to talk or walk together, but always without the slightest *******, and knowing that they are bound by rigid rules.

The man is as much dressed up in soul as he is in body, and so is the young girl. This pitiable comedy, mixed with bouquets, jewels, and theatre-parties is called "paying your addresses." It revolts me: I desire that actual marriage shall be the result of a previous and long marriage of souls. A young girl, a woman, has throughout her life only this one moment when reflection, second sight, and experience are necessary to her. She plays her liberty, her happiness, and she is not allowed to throw the dice; she risks her all, and is forced to be a mere spectator. I have the right, the will, the power to make my own unhappiness, and I use them, as did my mother, who, won by beauty and led by instinct, married the most generous, the most liberal, the most loving of men. I know that you are free, a poet, and noble-looking. Be sure that I

should not have chosen one of your brothers in Apollo who was already married. If my mother was won by beauty, which is perhaps the spirit of form, why should I not be attracted by the spirit and the form united? Shall I not know you better by studying you in this correspondence than I could through the vulgar experience of "receiving your addresses"? This is the question, as Hamlet says.

But my proceedings, dear Chrysale, have at least the merit of not binding us personally. I know that love has its illusions, and every illusion its to-morrow. That is why there are so many partings among lovers vowed to each other for life. The proof of love lies in two things,--suffering and happiness. When, after passing through these double trials of life two beings have shown each other their defects as well as their good qualities, when they have really observed each other's character, then they may go to their grave hand in hand. My dear Argante, who told you that our little drama thus begun was to have no future? In any case shall we not have enjoyed the pleasures of our correspondence?

I await your orders, monseigneur, and I am with all my heart, Your handmaiden, O. d'Este M.

To Mademoiselle O. d'Este M.,--You are a witch, a spirit, and I

love you! Is that what you desire of me, most original of girls?

Perhaps you are only seeking to amuse your provincial leisure with the follies which are you able to make a poet commit. If so, you have done a bad deed. Your two letters have enough of the spirit of mischief in them to force this doubt into the mind of a Parisian. But I am no longer master of myself; my life, my future depend on the answer you will make me. Tell me if the certainty of an unbounded affection, oblivious of all social conventions, will touch you,--if you will suffer me to seek you. There is anxiety enough and uncertainty enough in the question as to whether I can personally please you. If your reply is favorable I change my life, I bid adieu to all the irksome pleasures which we have the folly to call happiness. Happiness, my dear and beautiful unknown, is what you dream it to be,--a fusion of feelings, a perfect accordance of souls, the imprint of a noble ideal (such as God does permit us to form in this low world) upon the trivial round of daily life whose habits we must needs obey, a constancy of heart more precious far than what we call fidelity. Can we say that we make sacrifices when the end in view is our eternal good, the dream of poets, the dream of maidens, the poem which, at the entrance of life when thought essays its wings, each noble intellect has pondered and caressed only to see it shivered to fragments on some stone of stumbling as hard as it is vulgar?--for to the great majority of men, the foot of reality steps instantly on that mysterious egg so seldom hatched.

I cannot speak to you any more of myself; not of my past life, nor of my character, nor of an affection almost maternal on one side, filial on mine, which you have already seriously changed--an effect upon my life which must explain my use of the word "sacrifice." You have already rendered me forgetful, if not ungrateful; does that satisfy you? Oh, speak! Say to me one word, and I will love you till my eyes close in death, as the Marquis de Pescaire loved his wife, as Romeo loved Juliet, and faithfully.

Our life will be, for me at least, that "felicity untroubled"

同类推荐
  • 豪谱

    豪谱

    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。
  • 脉法

    脉法

    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。
  • 佛说弥勒下生经

    佛说弥勒下生经

    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。
  • 送陈判官罢举赴江外

    送陈判官罢举赴江外

    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。
  • 游烂柯山

    游烂柯山

    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
  • 你是一条船

    你是一条船

    本书作者为当代作家马新亭,共收录60余篇小故事。作品力图概括人生的复杂性和人格的多重性,热情赞颂人性的美好。既是青少年认知社会的窗口、丰富阅历的捷径,又堪称写作素材的宝典。本书所选励志类小小说精品,不但情节跌宕起伏、引人入胜,而且富有教益,旨在感染和引导青少年昂扬向上、好学进取,成长为社会的有用之才。
  • 易物人

    易物人

    她是这世间唯一的易物人,人们以故事向她换取所需之物与事。而事实上,一切是否又如表面上一样,只是易物如此简单?扑朔迷离的身世,隐藏的阴谋,她又能否找到一切的真相?
  • 深圳几段情

    深圳几段情

    那是小呆来惠城的前三个月,经历变态男上司的百般“蹂躏”,并惨遭丢工作丢脸的境遇。而后不得不进军深城奋斗的故事。
  • 蝶咒

    蝶咒

    [花雨授权]离奇的连环杀人案已令他头疼难耐,在这样的节骨眼上,竟还莫名其妙地多出个未婚妻?引蛇出洞,还是顺藤摸瓜?欲知凶案真相,请务必锁定《蝶咒》!
  • 给老师的健康枕边书

    给老师的健康枕边书

    本书从教师的健康现状、职业特点出发,有针对性地从教师的饮食、运动、环境、心理和常见疾病等教师健康的各个方面,讲解了教师身心健康的知识。
  • 混乱中的潜行者

    混乱中的潜行者

    孤独的旅者,踏破了血的长河。真实的内心,在血色的河水中倒映。寻求孤独,还是寻找寂寞?渴望安宁,抑或紧张的刺激?不同的自己,真实的自己,心中的天平在狂乱中倾斜。
  • 拳御星辰

    拳御星辰

    这是一个种族林立的世界,这是一个强者纵横的世界,这是一个有着无限隐秘的世界。任何修炼体系都可能出现绝世强者,甚至一个屠夫都可能刀劈巨龙。被迷雾封锁的元初大陆,且看一个阳光的少年如何拨开头顶的阴霾,让永恒星空的光辉再次布满夜空。历经苦难却仍勇敢前行,在最黑的黑暗中仍然不改初心。
  • 都市极品神王

    都市极品神王

    一次意外穿越到了天古大陆,凭借绝世天资横扫天下,号称凌帝。为了家人、为了那成神的契机最终打开通道回到地球.....
  • 梓兰墨韵之倾世风华

    梓兰墨韵之倾世风华

    她,银眸璀璨,沉静聪颖。她,性情直爽,不拘小节。不是意外的相识,却是意外的相知。一对古朴的镯子,一块神秘的玉佩,指引她们前方的路。为了同一个目标,不懈追寻。却不知道她们在做出决定的那一刻,就被扯入了跨越万年时光的阴谋中心。一路上的患难与共,几经生死,默契无双。她沉静,她欢脱;她风华绝代,她倾世韶华。携手共进,共谱盛世篇章……
  • 修途之路

    修途之路

    老人挡住了他的路“前方坎坷,回去吧!”“如果,我不呢?”“那你会死,会粉身碎骨,会感受到未曾感受过的痛苦”张天一坚毅道:“会死,即使死亡那又如何!粉身碎骨那又如何!这是我自己选择的路!我不会退缩!我也无所畏惧!”