登陆注册
16242300000030

第30章

I saw love budding under your affected madness,and I concealed from you my thoughts,my poetry;I did not admit you to my kingdom of beauty.Well,well;you will love my child for love of me if he should one day lose his poor father.Keep my secrets as the grave will keep them.Do not mourn for me;I have been dead this many a day,if Saint Bernard was right in saying that where there is no more love there is no more life.'""And the Countess died,"said the Consul,putting away the letters and locking the pocket-book.

"Is the Count still living?"asked the Ambassador,"for since the revolution of July he has disappeared from the political stage.""Do you remember,Monsieur de Lora,"said the Consul-General,"having seen me going to the steamboat with----""A white-haired man!an old man?"said the painter.

"An old man of forty-five,going in search of health and amusement in Southern Italy.That old man was my poor friend,my patron,passing through Genoa to take leave of me and place his will in my hands.He appoints me his son's guardian.I had no occasion to tell him of Honorine's wishes.""Does he suspect himself of murder?"said Mademoiselle des Touches to the Baron de l'Hostal.

"He suspects the truth,"replied the Consul,"and that is what is killing him.I remained on board the steam packet that was to take him to Naples till it was out of the roadstead;a small boat brought me back.We sat for some little time taking leave of each other--for ever,I fear.God only knows how much we love the confidant of our love when she who inspired it is no more.

"'That man,'said Octave,'holds a charm and wears an aureole.'the Count went to the prow and looked down on the Mediterranean.It happened to be fine,and,moved no doubt by the spectacle,he spoke these last words:'Ought we not,in the interests of human nature,to inquire what is the irresistible power which leads us to sacrifice an exquisite creature to the most fugitive of all pleasures,and in spite of our reason?In my conscience I heard cries.Honorine was not alone in her anguish.And yet I would have it!.I am consumed by remorse.In the Rue Payenne I was dying of the joys I had not;now Ishall die in Italy of the joys I have had.Wherein lay the discord between two natures,equally noble,I dare assert?'"For some minutes profound silence reigned on the terrace.

Then the Consul,turning to the two women,asked,"Was she virtuous?"Mademoiselle des Touches rose,took the Consul's arm,went a few steps away,and said to him:

"Are not men wrong too when they come to us and make a young girl a wife while cherishing at the bottom of their heart some angelic image,and comparing us to those unknown rivals,to perfections often borrowed from a remembrance,and always finding us wanting?""Mademoiselle,you would be right if marriage were based on passion;and that was the mistake of those two,who will soon be no more.

Marriage with heart-deep love on both sides would be Paradise."Mademoiselle des Touches turned from the Consul,and was immediately joined by Claude Vignon,who said in her ear:

"A bit of a coxcomb is M.de l'Hostal."

"No,"replied she,whispering to Claude these words:"for he has not yet guessed that Honorine would have loved him.--Oh!"she exclaimed,seeing the Consul's wife approaching,"his wife was listening!Unhappy man!"Eleven was striking by all the clocks,and the guests went home on foot along the seashore.

"Still,that is not life,"said Mademoiselle des Touches."That woman was one of the rarest,and perhaps the most extraordinary exceptions in intellect--a pearl!Life is made up of various incidents,of pain and pleasure alternately.The Paradise of Dante,that sublime expression of the ideal,that perpetual blue,is to be found only in the soul;to ask it of the facts of life is a luxury against which nature protests every hour.To such souls as those the six feet of a cell,and the kneeling chair are all they need.""You are right,"said Leon de Lora;"but good-for-nothing as I may be,I cannot help admiring a woman who is capable,as that one was,of living by the side of a studio,under a painter's roof,and never coming down,nor seeing the world,nor dipping her feet in the street mud.""Such a thing has been known--for a few months,"said Claude Vignon,with deep irony.

"Comtesse Honorine is not unique of her kind,"replied the Ambassador to Mademoiselle des Touches."A man,nay,and a politician,a bitter writer,was the object of such a passion;and the pistol shot which killed him hit not him alone;the woman who loved lived like a nun ever after.""Then there are yet some great souls in this age!"said Camille Maupin,and she stood for some minutes pensively leaning on the balustrade of the quay.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 乐比亚爱情宝典

    乐比亚爱情宝典

    当她遇上他们,一切的一切真相都浮出水面。当初,到底是谁背叛谁······美丽强大的他,光芒四射的他,隐藏在黑暗的他,到底是谁······乐比亚爱情宝典,敬请期待······
  • 总裁之贴身高手

    总裁之贴身高手

    【泡妞秘籍】偷渡回国本以为从此以后无牵无挂的徐逸开始了苦逼无比的还债生活,他的债主有御姐有萝莉,还有魅力无限的美女总裁,有性感警花,有可爱漂亮的校花……
  • 宇宙之战

    宇宙之战

    神秘莫测的外星人终于露面了,但是是来攻打地球,看几个末日英雄如何拯救地球(PS:这时作者瞎编的,如有雷同,不胜荣幸啊。)
  • 创界游记

    创界游记

    动荡的大陆,却是一代穿越者的归宿。种族纷争,强者争霸,人族圣人却同时销声匿迹,留下无助的凡人在夹缝中生存。奴役?还是接受血的洗礼?作为大陆原住民的主角,将见证蛮荒与文明的碰撞,接受冰与火的洗礼,揭开被历史湮没的真相......
  • EXO岁月流苏

    EXO岁月流苏

    我们去看樱花吧,在岁月流苏的那一刻不是所有的人都像边伯贤一样
  • 四叶草的季节

    四叶草的季节

    每一个人都有一个悲催的童年,希望你可以在里面找到自己的影子,也欢迎随时找我们交流
  • 霸汉第三卷

    霸汉第三卷

    无赖少年林涉出身神秘,从小混迹于市井之中,一身痞气却满腹经纶,至情至性,智深若海。偶涉武道以天纵之资无师而成绝世高手,凭就超凡的智慧和胆识自乱世之中脱颖而出。在万般劫难之后,恰逢赤眉绿林之乱,乃聚小城之兵,以奇迹般的速度在乱世中崛起。
  • 星界阳神

    星界阳神

    争渡,争渡,只为横渡苦海,抵达彼岸,完成超脱。
  • 书童爱:有情人终成眷属

    书童爱:有情人终成眷属

    入学的那一天,见到了他,从此爱上了他,他从小患有血友病,大学时因为一次意外换上了艾滋病,但是他们一直不离不弃,最终修成正果。
  • 青少年应该知道的泥塑(阅读中华国粹)

    青少年应该知道的泥塑(阅读中华国粹)

    中华民族在漫长的发展历程中,依靠勤劳的素质和智慧的力量,创造了灿烂的文化,从文学到艺术,从技艺到科学,创造出数不尽的文明成果。国粹具有鲜明的民族特色,显示出中华民族独特的艺术渊源以及技艺发展轨迹,这些都是民族智慧的结晶。