登陆注册
15697900000040

第40章

That love was still young and pure and full of illusions when it came to an end. Before I gave way to passion--and never was a woman so urged by fate--I had been drawn into the mistake that ruins many a girl's life, a marriage with a man whose agreeable manners concealed his emptiness. Marriage plucked my hopes away one by one. And now, to-day, I have forfeited happiness through marriage, as well as the happiness styled criminal, and I have known no happiness. Nothing is left to me. If I could not die, at least I ought to be faithful to my memories."No tears came with the words. Her eyes fell, and there was a slight twisting of the fingers interclasped, according to her wont. It was simply said, but in her voice there was a note of despair, deep as her love seemed to have been, which left Charles without a hope. The dreadful story of a life told in three sentences, with that twisting of the fingers for all comment, the might of anguish in a fragile woman, the dark depths masked by a fair face, the tears of four years of mourning fascinated Vandenesse; he sat silent and diminished in the presence of her woman's greatness and nobleness, seeing not the physical beauty so exquisite, so perfectly complete, but the soul so great in its power to feel. He had found, at last, the ideal of his fantastic imaginings, the ideal so vigorously invoked by all who look on life as the raw material of a passion for which many a one seeks ardently, and dies before he has grasped the whole of the dreamed-of treasure.

With those words of hers in his ears, in the presence of her sublime beauty, his own thoughts seemed poor and narrow. Powerless as he felt himself to find words of his own, simple enough and lofty enough to scale the heights of this exaltation, he took refuge in platitudes as to the destiny of women.

"Madame, we must either forget our pain, or hollow out a tomb for ourselves."But reason always cuts a poor figure beside sentiment; the one being essentially restricted, like everything that is positive, while the other is infinite. To set to work to reason where you are required to feel, is the mark of a limited nature. Vandenesse therefore held his peace, sat awhile with his eyes fixed upon her, then came away. A prey to novel thoughts which exalted woman for him, he was in something the same position as a painter who has taken the vulgar studio model for a type of womanhood, and suddenly confronts the /Mnemosyne/ of the Musee --that noblest and least appreciated of antique statues.

Charles de Vandenesse was deeply in love. He loved Mme. d'Aiglemont with the loyalty of youth, with the fervor that communicates such ineffable charm to a first passion, with a simplicity of heart of which a man only recovers some fragments when he loves again at a later day. Delicious first passion of youth, almost always deliciously savored by the woman who calls it forth; for at the golden prime of thirty, from the poetic summit of a woman's life, she can look out over the whole course of love--backwards into the past, forwards into the future--and, knowing all the price to be paid for love, enjoys her bliss with the dread of losing it ever present with her. Her soul is still fair with her waning youth, and passion daily gathers strength from the dismaying prospect of the coming days.

"This is love," Vandenesse said to himself this time as he left the Marquise, "and for my misfortune I love a woman wedded to her memories. It is hard work to struggle against a dead rival, never present to make blunders and fall out of favor, nothing of him left but his better qualities. What is it but a sort of high treason against the Ideal to attempt to break the charm of memory, to destroy the hopes that survive a lost lover, precisely because he only awakened longings, and all that is loveliest and most enchanting in love?"These sober reflections, due to the discouragement and dread of failure with which love begins in earnest, were the last expiring effort of diplomatic reasoning. Thenceforward he knew no afterthoughts, he was the plaything of his love, and lost himself in the nothings of that strange inexplicable happiness which is full fed by a chance word, by silence, or a vague hope. He tried to love Platonically, came daily to breathe the air that she breathed, became almost a part of her house, and went everywhere with her, slave as he was of a tyrannous passion compounded of egoism and devotion of the completest. Love has its own instinct, finding the way to the heart, as the feeblest insect finds the way to its flower, with a will which nothing can dismay or turn aside. If feeling is sincere, its destiny is not doubtful. Let a woman begin to think that her life depends on the sincerity or fervor or earnestness which her lover shall put into his longings, and is there not sufficient in the thought to put her through all the tortures of dread? It is impossible for a woman, be she wife or mother, to be secure from a young man's love. One thing it is within her power to do--to refuse to see him as soon as she learns a secret which she never fails to guess. But this is too decided a step to take at an age when marriage has become a prosaic and tiresome yoke, and conjugal affection is something less than tepid (if indeed her husband has not already begun to neglect her). Is a woman plain?

she is flattered by a love which gives her fairness. Is she young and charming? She is only to be won by a fascination as great as her own power to charm, that is to say, a fascination well-nigh irresistible.

Is she virtuous? There is a love sublime in its earthliness which leads her to find something like absolution in the very greatness of the surrender and glory in a hard struggle. Everything is a snare. No lesson, therefore, is too severe where the temptation is so strong.

同类推荐
  • 历代兵制

    历代兵制

    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。
  • 周慎斋遗书

    周慎斋遗书

    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。
  • 圆觉经佚文

    圆觉经佚文

    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。
  • 金匮玉函要略辑义

    金匮玉函要略辑义

    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。
  • 李煜集

    李煜集

    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
  • 邪王追妃之神魔帝妃

    邪王追妃之神魔帝妃

    她21世纪的王牌杀手!代号:炙棂她!邪神鬼医!亦正亦邪!传说她只看心情救人!她心情好的时候!不管你是好人还是坏人,她都救!当她心情不好时!不管你是好人还是坏人她都杀!人们对她又爱又恨!再一次业余爱好中【盗墓】……她!暗夜殿殿主!冷酷无情!如麻!心狠手辣……传闻她的心是死的!当她穿越异世时!又会发生真样的事情!还会医手遮天和噬血猎手?
  • 校草生活

    校草生活

    一个来至乡下的孩子,考试重点大学却没钱支付学费,在一位老人的帮助下开始了他的校草生活。。
  • 辞玺瓷徙

    辞玺瓷徙

    结婚前不过见了三面,韩玺和苏瓷就结了婚,十二月严冬,鹅毛大雪,政要皆至。苏瓷对韩玺说:“韩玺,不要骗我,我害怕别人骗我。”韩玺说:“平平,我会对你负责。”结婚半年,他对她千般万般好,她以为上天真的这么眷顾她。她丢了拘束,一点一点依赖上他。后来坏事一件一件发生,她的父亲病重,公司破产,她和骆连川的事情让韩玺知道的一清二楚。再后来她看到他的丈夫亲吻另一个女人。她说:“韩玺,你还是骗了我。”“这一切,都是你做的?”“不是我,还会是谁呢。”“为什么偏偏是我,为什么不去和别人结婚...为什么不和蒋曼秋结婚...”她已泣不成声。“因为你身上有我想得到的东西,当然,现在没有了。想报复我?没有机会了,十点的飞机,去加拿大安安心心度过你的下半生。”他亲自押送她去机场,看着她进安检的时候,他总以为心里的难受是出于愧疚。“韩大,苏瓷的飞机,失事了。”手里温润的瓷杯子落在地上,变成碎片。哈,总归不是无情到底。某年某月,韩玺站在大街上,想着自己老婆怎么就没有守时的时候。等到凌晨四点,有刚玩了一晚上的年轻人吵闹着路过。他总归是失去了他的平平。
  • 人仙演义

    人仙演义

    本书讲诉一个现代青年修行的经历,解密神奇的武术气功,玄奥的道术丹法,博大精深的中医,诡异的密宗修行,神秘的相法。。。。什么是仙?什么是道?本书带你走进真实的修真世界。。。。。太极,形意,八卦,古传易筋经,古传内功,三丰通神劲,纯阳丹法,吕祖百字碑,周易参同契,黄帝内经,难经,纳洛六法,拙火定,逆人形法,江湖金口诀。。。。。失传多年的东西将在本书出现。。。。。。。江湖传言:人仙录出,天下大乱!得此书者,可升仙!千年之后再现江湖,是希望还是骗局?敬请观看《人仙演义》
  • 万界圣域

    万界圣域

    圣域,凌驾于诸天万域之上,为万界所共尊,是圣界大陆无数修道者的圣地,却因万年前的一场惊世之战跌下神坛……从此,圣路断,圣人难寻。当那劫难再度降临,圣域,能否重现辉煌……
  • 不死刀帝

    不死刀帝

    绝世天仙,杀破九天。不死不灭,镇压六界。
  • 能量突击

    能量突击

    杨树因意外激活父母留给他的一个金属圆柱体,从而获得一种可以把各种能量互相转化的能力。而父母所在的研究所更是神秘莫测。时间的车轮滚滚向前,为不被碾压的粉身碎骨,主动或被动,让人使出浑身解数,不惜一切的适应或改变这个世界。杨树说:我只是个宅男,我只想做个不起眼的宅男。
  • 漫漫婚姻公关路

    漫漫婚姻公关路

    职场小白得罪总裁下场很惨!被叫到办公室后老板告诉她要和她结婚?什么?这是得罪老板的惩罚么?既然这样那老板麻烦您把前任女友、绯闻女友、还有因为爱慕你而来折磨我的女人们都解决掉好嘛。我要干什么?我很忙的啊!我还要在这漫漫公关路上努力奋斗,要不然,怎么配得上你。
  • 天寻梦回

    天寻梦回

    他为寻她,不惜与天庭对抗。一路向南,斩妖魔,披荆棘。可到头来却发现,她竟在……
  • 豪门总裁的青梅娇妻

    豪门总裁的青梅娇妻

    母亲的去世,男友的背叛,让她不得不走到了父亲身边。到了父亲家里却受到更多的排挤,除了父亲之外,每个人都想让她看不到第二天早上的太阳。然而误打误撞的情况下,却认识了在酒吧买醉的他。谁料第二次见面,身为姐姐未婚夫的他却决定娶她这个在家里不受宠的女儿,这让很多人敢怒不敢言,而她则要面对一个陌生人来做老公的情景。刚开始的阴差阳错,到后来措手不及的婚姻,会不会让他们的爱情最终修成正果?