第 37 节
作者:尘小春      更新:2021-03-08 19:23      字数:9322
  interest which is traditionally ascribed to women。 So; when common
  sense; the law of social proprieties; family interestall the mixed
  elements which; since the Restoration; have been dignified by the mane
  of Public Morals; out of sheer aversion to the name of the Catholic
  religionwhere this is seconded by a sense of insults a little too
  offensive; when the fatigue of constant self…sacrifice has almost
  reached the point of exhaustion; and when; under these circumstances;
  a too cruel blowone of those mean acts which a man never lets a
  woman know of unless he believes himself to be her assured master
  puts the crowning touch to her revulsion and disenchantment; the
  moment has come for the intervention of the friend who undertakes the
  cure。 Madame Piedefer had no great difficulty now in removing the film
  from her daughter's eyes。
  She sent for Monsieur de Clagny; who completed the work by assuring
  Madame de la Baudraye that if she would give up Etienne; her husband
  would allow her to keep the children and to live in Paris; and would
  restore her to the command of her own fortune。
  〃And what a life you are leading!〃 said he。 〃With care and judgment;
  and the support of some pious and charitable persons; you may have a
  salon and conquer a position。 Paris is not Sancerre。〃
  Dinah left it to Monsieur de Clagny to negotiate a reconciliation with
  the old man。
  Monsieur de la Baudraye had sold his wine well; he had sold his wool;
  he had felled his timber; and; without telling his wife; he had come
  to Paris to invest two hundred thousand francs in the purchase of a
  delightful residence in the Rue de l'Arcade; that was being sold in
  liquidation of an aristocratic House that was in difficulties。 He had
  been a member of the Council for the Department since 1826; and now;
  paying ten thousand francs in taxes; he was doubly qualified for a
  peerage under the conditions of the new legislation。
  Some time before the elections of 1842 he had put himself forward as
  candidate unless he were meanwhile called to the Upper House as Peer
  of France。 At the same time; he asked for the title of Count; and for
  promotion to the higher grade of the Legion of Honor。 In the matter of
  the elections; the dynastic nominations; now; in the event of Monsieur
  de la Baudraye being won over to the Government; Sancerre would be
  more than ever a rotten borough of royalism。 Monsieur de Clagny; whose
  talents and modesty were more and more highly appreciated by the
  authorities; gave Monsieur de la Baudraye his support; he pointed out
  that by raising this enterprising agriculturist to the peerage; a
  guarantee would be offered to such important undertakings。
  Monsieur de la Baudraye; then; a Count; a Peer of France; and
  Commander of the Legion of Honor; was vain enough to wish to cut a
  figure with a wife and handsomely appointed house。〃He wanted to
  enjoy life;〃 he said。
  He therefore addressed a letter to his wife; dictated by Monsieur de
  Clagny; begging her to live under his roof and to furnish the house;
  giving play to the taste of which the evidences; he said; had charmed
  him at the Chateau d'Anzy。 The newly made Count pointed out to his
  wife that while the interests of their property forbade his leaving
  Sancerre; the education of their boys required her presence in Paris。
  The accommodating husband desired Monsieur de Clagny to place sixty
  thousand francs at the disposal of Madame la Comtesse for the interior
  decoration of their mansion; requesting that she would have a marble
  tablet inserted over the gateway with the inscription: /Hotel de la
  Baudraye/。
  He then accounted to his wife for the money derived from the estate of
  Silas Piedefer; told her of the investment at four and a half per cent
  of the eight hundred thousand francs he had brought from New York; and
  allowed her that income for her expenses; including the education of
  the children。 As he would be compelled to stay in Paris during some
  part of the session of the House of Peers; he requested his wife to
  reserve for him a little suite of rooms in an /entresol/ over the
  kitchens。
  〃Bless me! why; he is growing young againa gentleman!a magnifico!
  What will he become next? It is quite alarming;〃 said Madame de la
  Baudraye。
  〃He now fulfils all your wishes at the age of twenty;〃 replied the
  lawyer。
  The comparison of her future prospects with her present position was
  unendurable to Dinah。 Only the day before; Anna de Fontaine had turned
  her head away in order to avoid seeing her bosom friend at the
  Chamarolles' school。
  〃I am a countess;〃 said Dinah to herself。 〃I shall have the peer's
  blue hammer…cloth on my carriage; and the leaders of the literary
  world in my drawing…roomand I will look at her!〃And it was this
  little triumph that told with all its weight at the moment of her
  rehabilitation; as the world's contempt had of old weighed on her
  happiness。
  One fine day; in May 1842; Madame de la Baudraye paid all her little
  household debts and left a thousand crowns on top of the packet of
  receipted bills。 After sending her mother and the children away to the
  Hotel de la Baudraye; she awaited Lousteau; dressed ready to leave the
  house。 When the deposed king of her heart came into dinner; she said:
  〃I have upset the pot; my dear。 Madame de la Baudraye requests the
  pleasure of your company at the /Rocher de Cancale/。〃
  She carried off Lousteau; quite bewildered by the light and easy
  manners assumed by the woman who till that morning has been the slave
  of his least whim; for she too had been acting a farce for two months
  past。
  〃Madame de la Baudraye is figged out as if for a first night;〃 said he
  /une premiere/; the slang abbreviation for a first performance。
  〃Do not forget the respect you owe to Madame de la Baudraye;〃 said
  Dinah gravely。 〃I do not mean to understand such a word as /figged
  out/。〃
  〃Didine a rebel!〃 said he; putting his arm round her waist。
  〃There is no such person as Didine; you have killed her; my dear;〃 she
  replied; releasing herself。 〃I am taking you to the first performance
  of /Madame la Comtesse de la Baudraye/。〃
  〃It is true; then; that our insect is a peer of France?〃
  〃The nomination is to be gazetted in this evening's /Moniteur/; as I
  am told by Monsieur de Clagny; who is promoted to the Court of
  Appeal。〃
  〃Well; it is quite right;〃 said the journalist。 〃The entomology of
  society ought to be represented in the Upper House。〃
  〃My friend; we are parting for ever;〃 said Madame de la Baudraye;
  trying to control the trembling of her voice。 〃I have dismissed the
  two servants。 When you go in; you will find the house in order; and no
  debts。 I shall always feel a mother's affection for you; but in
  secret。 Let us part calmly; without a fuss; like decent people。
  〃Have you had a fault to find with my conduct during the past six
  years?〃
  〃None; but that you have spoiled my life; and wrecked my prospects;〃
  said he in a hard tone。 〃You have read Benjamin Constant's book very
  diligently; you have even studied the last critique on it; but you
  have read with a woman's eyes。 Though you have one of those superior
  intellects which would make a fortune of a poet; you have never dared
  to take the man's point of view。
  〃That book; my dear; is of both sexes。We agreed that books were male
  or female; dark or fair。 In /Adolphe/ women see nothing but Ellenore;
  young men see only Adolphe; men of experience see Ellenore and
  Adolphe; political men see the whole of social existence。 You did not
  think it necessary to read the soul of Adolpheany more than your
  critic indeed; who saw only Ellenore。 What kills that poor fellow; my
  dear; is that he has sacrificed his future for a woman; that he never
  can be what he might have beenan ambassador; a minister; a
  chamberlain; a poetand rich。 He gives up six years of his energy at
  that stage of his life when a man is ready to submit to the hardships
  of any apprenticeshipto a petticoat; which he outstrips in the
  career of ingratitude; for the woman who has thrown over her first
  lover is certain sooner or later to desert the second。 Adolphe is; in
  fact; a tow…haired German; who has not spirit enough to be false to
  Ellenore。 There are Adolphes who spare their Ellenores all ignominious
  quarreling and reproaches; who say to themselves; 'I will not talk of
  what I have sacrificed; I will not for ever be showing the stump of my
  wrist to let that incarnate selfishness I have made my queen;' as
  Ramorny does in /The Fair Maid of Perth/。 But men like that; my dear;
  get cast aside。
  〃Adolphe is a man of birth; an aristocratic nature; who wants to get
  back into the highroad to honors and recover his social birthright;
  his blighted position。You; at this moment; are playing both parts。
  You are suffering from the pangs of having lost your position; and
  think yourself justified in throwing over a hapless lover whose
  misfortune it has been that he fancied you so far superior as to
  understand that; though a man's heart ought to be true; his sex may be
  allowed to indulge its caprices。〃
  〃And do you suppose that I shall not make it my business to restore to
  you all you have lost by me? Be quite easy;〃 said Madame de la
  Baudraye; astounded by t