登陆注册
14822000000082

第82章

See with what tranquillity Senora Dona Perfecta pursues her occupation of writing. Enter her room, and, notwithstanding the lateness of the hour, you will surprise her busily engaged, her mind divided between meditation and the writing of several long and carefully worded epistles traced with a firm hand, every hair-stroke of every letter in which is correctly formed. The light of the lamp falls full upon her face and bust and hands, its shade leaving the rest of her person and almost the whole of the room in a soft shadow. She seems like a luminous figure evoked by the imagination from amid the vague shadows of fear.

It is strange that we should not have made before this a very important statement, which is that Dona Perfecta was handsome, or rather that she was still handsome, her face preserving the remains of former beauty.

The life of the country, her total lack of vanity, her disregard for dress and personal adornment, her hatred of fashion, her contempt for the vanities of the capital, were all causes why her native beauty did not shine or shone very little. The intense shallowness of her complexion, indicating a very bilious constitution, still further impaired her beauty.

Her eyes black and well-opened, her nose finely and delicately shaped, her forehead broad and smooth, she was considered by all who saw her as a finished type of the human figure; but there rested on those features a certain hard and proud expression which excited a feeling of antipathy. As some persons, although ugly, attract; Dona Perfecta repelled. Her glance, even when accompanied by amiable words, placed between herself and those who were strangers to her the impassable distance of a mistrustful respect; but for those of her house--that is to say, for her relations, admirers, and allies--she possessed a singular attraction. She was a mistress in governing, and no one could equal her in the art of adapting her language to the person whom she was addressing.

Her bilious temperament and an excessive association with devout persons and things, which excited her imagination without object or result, had aged her prematurely, and although she was still young she did not seem so. It might be said of her that with her habits and manner of life she had wrought a sort of rind, a stony, insensible covering within which she shut herself, like the snail within his portable house. Dona Perfecta rarely came out of her shell.

Her irreproachable habits, and that outward amiability which we have observed in her from the moment of her appearance in our story, were the causes of the great prestige which she enjoyed in Orbajosa. She kept up relations, besides, with some excellent ladies in Madrid, and it was through their means that she obtained the dismissal of her nephew. At the moment which we have now arrived in our story, we find her seated at her desk, which is the sole confidant of her plans and the depository of her numerical accounts with the peasants, and of her moral accounts with God and with society. There she wrote the letters which her brother received every three months; there she composed the notes that incited the judge and the notary to embroil Pepe Rey in lawsuits; there she prepared the plot through which the latter lost the confidence of the Government; there she held long conferences with Don Inocencio. To become acquainted with the scene of others of her actions whose effects we have observed, it would be necessary to follow her to the episcopal palace and to the houses of various of her friends.

We do not know what Dona Perfecta would have been, loving. Hating, she had the fiery vehemence of an angel of hatred and discord among men.

Such is the effect produced on a character naturally hard, and without inborn goodness, by religious exaltation, when this, instead of drawing its nourishment from conscience and from truth revealed in principles as simple as they are beautiful, seeks its sap in narrow formulas dictated solely by ecclesiastical interests. In order that religious fanaticism should be inoffensive, the heart in which it exists must be very pure. It is true that even in that case it is unproductive of good. But the hearts that have been born without the seraphic purity which establishes a premature Limbo on the earth, are careful not to become greatly inflamed with what they see in retables, in choirs, in locutories and sacristies, unless they have first erected in their own consciences an altar, a pulpit, and a confessional.

Dona Perfecta left her writing from time to time, to go into the adjoining room where her daughter was. Rosarito had been ordered to sleep, but, already precipitated down the precipice of disobedience, she was awake.

"Why don't you sleep?" her mother asked her. "I don't intend to go to bed to-night. You know already that Caballuco has taken away with him the men we had here. Something might happen, and I will keep watch. If I did not watch what would become of us both?"

"What time is it?" asked the girl.

"It will soon be midnight. Perhaps you are not afraid, but I am."

Rosarito was trembling, and every thing about her denoted the keenest anxiety. She lifted her eyes to heaven supplicatingly, and then turned them on her mother with a look of the utmost terror.

"Why, what is the matter with you?"

"Did you not say it was midnight?"

"Yes."

"Then---- But is it already midnight?"

Rosario made an effort to speak, then shook her head, on which the weight of a world was pressing.

"Something is the matter with you; you have something on your mind," said her mother, fixing on her daughter her penetrating eyes.

"Yes--I wanted to tell you," stammered the girl, "I wanted to say----

同类推荐
  • 西麓堂琴统摘录

    西麓堂琴统摘录

    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。
  • 影梅庵忆语

    影梅庵忆语

    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。
  • 羯磨

    羯磨

    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。
  • 幼幼集成

    幼幼集成

    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。
  • 白华山人诗说

    白华山人诗说

    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
  • 基层公共文化体育服务探索与实践

    基层公共文化体育服务探索与实践

    作为在基层耕耘了三十多年的文化体育工作者,与文化体育结缘半生,摸着石头过河,经过长期对文化体育工作孜孜不倦的理论探讨与具体时间,在如何建设体系完善,覆盖有效,供给充足,服务规范,保障有力的公共文化体育服务方面,积累了一点有益的实践经验和学术研究成果。
  • 叶罗丽娃娃的羽毛大家庭

    叶罗丽娃娃的羽毛大家庭

    玩叶罗丽娃娃的人都知道年糕糖,莓子,薇薇和妮可,这本小说是我第一次写,写的是每天的一些趣事(一些),提供给大家看
  • 椒山取胆记

    椒山取胆记

    扬州城前经岁月温柔,如今颇显妖娆,安逸中悄然放下包袱,却也爱上了夜夜笙歌的生活。其中又以那柳江湖畔边的金丝巷里最为热闹,那是秦楼名妓,粉墨纸客汇聚之地,出门左转右转,哪都能看见欢乐。
  • 妾本情凉

    妾本情凉

    阮怡然做梦也没有想到,她会嫁给纨绔子弟君未澜。这个君家二少,在新婚夜,与狐朋狗友赌新娘肚兜花色;于回门日,看她黑蚁袭身而不施援手;不久他重回书院,要她假扮书童随侍左右,与无数男子同一屋檐。时光荏苒,她悲悯所嫁非人,偏又在朝夕相处中,发现真相并非如此。龙困鱼池,他有难言之隐,她挺他,助他,爱他,念他,却在他重回荣耀之际,得知那身份早有御赐正妻。她唯一能求的——是他放手,允她儿时梦想。然而成就单纯梦想的背后,又是谁抗下全部的血雨腥风?如果一切恩怨还能淡去,他会问她,“你是否愿意,听我讲这故事的另一个版本?”
  • 梵香一世

    梵香一世

    一曲悲歌。这是一个关于情爱的故事,一场始于幻世的浮生之梦。
  • 凤舞红尘:莲劫

    凤舞红尘:莲劫

    拥有神秘空间的凤清莲在与丧尸的战斗中“牺牲”,再睁眼面对的便是一个异世大陆...原本以为是人生的尽头却成了人生的开端...
  • 失心徒

    失心徒

    勇者杀死了恶龙救了公主,公主却杀死了勇者,这是一个公主杀勇者上位的时代,一个失心的少年却立志要成为斩杀恶龙的勇者。
  • 东汉太仙朝

    东汉太仙朝

    我要建仙朝!做天帝!【新人新书,满地打滚求温暖!】
  • 天邪战鉴

    天邪战鉴

    荷花淀,水浪涌、新莲轻卷。草长柳发青鹮唱对,寒蛙醒、戏声一片。湖外楼台楼外月,舞倩影、腰姿婉转。北斗静、流荧过隙,脉脉迢迢银汉。惊赞,花开叶落,鬓云霜染。曲陌红尘黄粱旧梦,烟火尽、昙花一现。俏丽佳人催酒醒,俱往矣、时光荏苒。渺名利沉浮,傲视苍生,天邪一念。
  • 家与成长

    家与成长

    1998年,出生在一个普通,且贫穷的家庭,书写着一段又一段,关于,家庭,兄弟,亲情,爱情,成长的经历与社会的现实。