第 21 节
作者:想聊      更新:2021-02-19 01:11      字数:9322
  brought with it hours of delightful languor; moments of divine
  sweetness and content which followed by secret immolation。 Her
  conscience was; if I may call it so; contagious; her self…devotion
  without earthly recompense awed me by its persistence; the living;
  inward piety which was the bond of her other virtues filled the air
  about her with spiritual incense。 Besides; I was young;young enough
  to concentrate my whole being on the kiss she allowed me too seldom to
  lay upon her hand; of which she gave me only the back; and never the
  palm; as though she drew the line of sensual emotions there。 No two
  souls ever clasped each other with so much ardor; no bodies were ever
  more victoriously annihilated。 Later I understood the cause of this
  sufficing joy。 At my age no worldly interests distracted my heart; no
  ambitions blocked the stream of a love which flowed like a torrent;
  bearing all things on its bosom。 Later; we love the woman in a woman;
  but the first woman we love is the whole of womanhood; her children
  are ours; her interests are our interests; her sorrows our greatest
  sorrow; we love her gown; the familiar things about her; we are more
  grieved by a trifling loss of hers than if we knew we had lost
  everything。 This is the sacred love that makes us live in the being of
  another; whereas later; alas! we draw another life into ours; and
  require a woman to enrich our pauper spirit with her young soul。
  I was now one of the household; and I knew for the first time an
  infinite sweetness; which to a nature bruised as mine was like a bath
  to a weary body; the soul is refreshed in every fibre; comforted to
  its very depths。 You will hardly understand me; for you are a woman;
  and I am speaking now of a happiness women give but do not receive。 A
  man alone knows the choice happiness of being; in the midst of a
  strange household; the privileged friend of its mistress; the secret
  centre of her affections。 No dog barks at you; the servants; like the
  dogs; recognize your rights; the children (who are never misled; and
  know that their power cannot be lessened; and that you cherish the
  light of their life); the children possess the gift of divination;
  they play with you like kittens and assume the friendly tyranny they
  show only to those they love; they are full of intelligent discretion
  and come and go on tiptoe without noise。 Every one hastens to do you
  service; all like you; and smile upon you。 True passions are like
  beautiful flowers all the more charming to the eye when they grow in a
  barren soil。
  But if I enjoyed the delightful benefits of naturalization in a family
  where I found relations after my own heart; I had also to pay some
  costs for it。 Until then Monsieur de Mortsauf had more or less
  restrained himself before me。 I had only seen his failings in the
  mass; I was now to see the full extent of their application and
  discover how nobly charitable the countess had been in the account she
  had given me of these daily struggles。 I learned now all the angles of
  her husband's intolerable nature; I heard his perpetual scolding about
  nothing; complaints of evils of which not a sign existed; I saw the
  inward dissatisfaction which poisoned his life; and the incessant need
  of his tyrannical spirit for new victims。 When we went to walk in the
  evenings he selected the way; but whichever direction we took he was
  always bored; when we reached home he blamed others; his wife had
  insisted on going where she wanted; why was he governed by her in all
  the trifling things of life? was he to have no will; no thought of his
  own? must he consent to be a cipher in his own house? If his harshness
  was to be received in patient silence he was angry because he felt a
  limit to his power; he asked sharply if religion did not require a
  wife to please her husband; and whether it was proper to despise the
  father of her children? He always ended by touching some sensitive
  chord in his wife's mind; and he seemed to find a domineering pleasure
  in making it sound。 Sometimes he tried gloomy silence and a morbid
  depression; which always alarmed his wife and made her pay him the
  most tender attentions。 Like petted children; who exercise their power
  without thinking of the distress of their mother; he would let her
  wait upon him as upon Jacques and Madeleine; of whom he was jealous。
  I discovered at last that in small things as well as in great ones the
  count acted towards his servants; his children; his wife; precisely as
  he had acted to me about the backgammon。 The day when I understood;
  root and branch; these difficulties; which like a rampant overgrowth
  repressed the actions and stifled the breathing of the whole family;
  hindered the management of the household and retarded the improvement
  of the estate by complicating the most necessary acts; I felt an
  admiring awe which rose higher than my love and drove it back into my
  heart。 Good God! what was I? Those tears that I had taken on my lips
  solemnized my spirit; I found happiness in wedding the sufferings of
  that woman。 Hitherto I had yielded to the count's despotism as the
  smuggler pays his fine; henceforth I was a voluntary victim that I
  might come the nearer to her。 The countess understood me; allowed me a
  place beside her; and gave me permission to share her sorrows; like
  the repentant apostate; eager to rise to heaven with his brethren; I
  obtained the favor of dying in the arena。
  〃Were it not for you I must have succumbed under this life;〃 Henriette
  said to me one evening when the count had been; like the flies on a
  hot day; more stinging; venomous; and persistent than usual。
  He had gone to bed。 Henriette and I remained under the acacias; the
  children were playing about us; bathed in the setting sun。 Our few
  exclamatory words revealed the mutuality of the thoughts in which we
  rested from our common sufferings。 When language failed silence as
  faithfully served our souls; which seemed to enter one another without
  hindrance; together they luxuriated in the charms of pensive languor;
  they met in the undulations of the same dream; they plunged as one
  into the river and came out refreshed like two nymphs as closely
  united as their souls could wish; but with no earthly tie to bind
  them。 We entered the unfathomable gulf; we returned to the surface
  with empty hands; asking each other by a look; 〃Among all our days on
  earth will there be one for us?〃
  In spite of the tranquil poetry of evening which gave to the bricks of
  the balustrade their orange tones; so soothing and so pure; in spite
  of the religious atmosphere of the hour; which softened the voices of
  the children and wafted them towards us; desire crept through my veins
  like the match to the bonfire。 After three months of repression I was
  unable to content myself with the fate assigned me。 I took Henriette's
  hand and softly caressed it; trying to convey to her the ardor that
  invaded me。 She became at once Madame de Mortsauf; and withdrew her
  hand; tears rolled from my eyes; she saw them and gave me a chilling
  look; as she offered her hand to my lips。
  〃You must know;〃 she said; 〃that this will cause me grief。 A
  friendship that asks so great a favor is dangerous。〃
  Then I lost my self…control; I reproached her; I spoke of my
  sufferings; and the slight alleviation that I asked for them。 I dared
  to tell her that at my age; if the senses were all soul still the soul
  had a sex; that I could meet death; but not with closed lips。 She
  forced me to silence with her proud glance; in which I seemed to read
  the cry of the Mexican: 〃And I; am I on a bed of roses?〃 Ever since
  that day by the gate of Frapesle; when I attributed to her the hope
  that our happiness might spring from a grave; I had turned with shame
  from the thought of staining her soul with the desires of a brutal
  passion。 She now spoke with honeyed lip; and told me that she never
  could be wholly mine; and that I ought to know it。 As she said the
  words I know that in obeying her I dug an abyss between us。 I bowed my
  head。 She went on; saying she had an inward religious certainty that
  she might love me as a brother without offending God or man; such love
  was a living image of the divine love; which her good Saint…Martin
  told her was the life of the world。 If I could not be to her somewhat
  as her old confessor was; less than a lover yet more than a brother; I
  must never see her again。 She could die and take to God her sheaf of
  sufferings; borne not without tears and anguish。
  〃I gave you;〃 she said in conclusion; 〃more than I ought to have
  given; so that nothing might be left to take; and I am punished。〃
  I was forced to calm her; to promise never to cause her pain; and to
  love her at twenty…one years of age as old men love their youngest
  child。
  The next day I went early。 There were no flowers in the vases of her
  gray salon。 I rushed into the fields and vineyards to make her two
  bouquets; but as I gathered