登陆注册
14827400000024

第24章

"I am thinking of my mother," she answered, in a grave voice. "You will never know, Jules, what I suffer in remembering my mother's dying farewell, said in a voice sweeter than all music, and in feeling the solemn touch of her icy hand at a moment when you overwhelm me with those assurances of your precious love."

She raised her husband, strained him to her with a nervous force greater than that of men, and kissed his hair, covering it with tears.

"Ah! I would be hacked in pieces for you! Tell me that I make you happy; that I am to you the most beautiful of women--a thousand women to you. Oh! you are loved as no other man ever was or will be. I don't know the meaning of those words 'duty,' 'virtue.' Jules, I love you for yourself; I am happy in loving you; I shall love you more and more to my dying day. I have pride in my love; I feel it is my destiny to have one sole emotion in my life. What I shall tell you now is dreadful, I know--but I am glad to have no child; I do not wish for any. I feel I am more wife than mother. Well, then, can you fear?

Listen to me, my own beloved, promise to forget, not this hour of mingled tenderness and doubt, but the words of that madman. Jules, you /must/. Promise me not to see him, not to go to him. I have a deep conviction that if you set one foot in that maze we shall both roll down a precipice where I shall perish--but with your name upon my lips, your heart in my heart. Why hold me so high in that heart and yet so low in reality? What! you who give credit to so many as to money, can you not give me the charity of faith? And on the first occasion in our lives when you might prove to me your boundless trust, do you cast me from my throne in your heart? Between a madman and me, it is the madman whom you choose to believe? oh, Jules!" She stopped, threw back the hair that fell about her brow and neck, and then, in a heart-rending tone, she added: "I have said too much; one word should suffice. If your soul and your forehead still keep this cloud, however light it be, I tell you now that I shall die of it."

She could not repress a shudder, and turned pale.

"Oh! I will kill that man," thought Jules, as he lifted his wife in his arms and carried her to her bed.

"Let us sleep in peace, my angel," he said. "I have forgotten all, I swear it!"

Clemence fell asleep to the music of those sweet words, softly repeated. Jules, as he watched her sleeping, said in his heart:--"She is right; when love is so pure, suspicion blights it. To that young soul, that tender flower, a blight--yes, a blight means death."

When a cloud comes between two beings filled with affection for each other and whose lives are in absolute unison, that cloud, though it may disperse, leaves in those souls a trace of its passage. Either love gains a stronger life, as the earth after rain, or the shock still echoes like distant thunder through a cloudless sky. It is impossible to recover absolutely the former life; love will either increase or diminish.

At breakfast, Monsieur and Madame Jules showed to each other those particular attentions in which there is always something of affectation. There were glances of forced gaiety, which seemed the efforts of persons endeavoring to deceive themselves. Jules had involuntary doubts, his wife had positive fears. Still, sure of each other, they had slept. Was this strained condition the effect of a want of faith, or was it only a memory of their nocturnal scene? They did not know themselves. But they loved each other so purely that the impression of that scene, both cruel and beneficent, could not fail to leave its traces in their souls; both were eager to make those traces disappear, each striving to be the first to return to the other, and thus they could not fail to think of the cause of their first variance. To loving souls, this is not grief; pain is still far-off; but it is a sort of mourning, which is difficult to depict. If there are, indeed, relations between colors and the emotions of the soul, if, as Locke's blind man said, scarlet produces on the sight the effect produced upon the hearing by a blast of trumpets, it is permissible to compare this reaction of melancholy to mourning tones of gray.

But even so, love saddened, love in which remains a true sentiment of its happiness, momentarily troubled though it be, gives enjoyments derived from pain and pleasure both, which are all novel. Jules studied his wife's voice; he watched her glances with the freshness of feeling that inspired him in the earliest days of his passion for her.

The memory of five absolutely happy years, her beauty, the candor of her love, quickly effaced in her husband's mind the last vestiges of an intolerable pain.

The day was Sunday,--a day on which there was no Bourse and no business to be done. The reunited pair passed the whole day together, getting farther into each other's hearts than they ever yet had done, like two children who in a moment of fear, hold each other closely and cling together, united by an instinct. There are in this life of two-in-one completely happy days, the gift of chance, ephemeral flowers, born neither of yesterday nor belonging to the morrow. Jules and Clemence now enjoyed this day as though they forboded it to be the last of their loving life. What name shall we give to that mysterious power which hastens the steps of travellers before the storm is visible; which makes the life and beauty of the dying so resplendent, and fills the parting soul with joyous projects for days before death comes; which tells the midnight student to fill his lamp when it shines brightest; and makes the mother fear the thoughtful look cast upon her infant by an observing man? We all are affected by this influence in the great catastrophes of life; but it has never yet been named or studied; it is something more than presentiment, but not as yet clear vision.

All went well till the following day. On Monday, Jules Desmarets, obliged to go to the Bourse on his usual business, asked his wife, as usual, if she would take advantage of his carriage and let him drive her anywhere.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 至尊唐三藏

    至尊唐三藏

    这位女妖...额不对。。。这位女菩萨贫僧有礼了!.............
  • 妖城余槟

    妖城余槟

    茫茫世间,另有着一个种族。他们被称作“妖”,可以与任何生物交流,无法进食肉制品;不愿其他的生物受到伤害,因而仇视人类;拥有着可怕的力量,足以达到毁灭……余槟,巨大而繁华的中心城市,有其许多群居点。当人们如镜般平稳的生活遭遇仇敌的击碎,破碎的次元里,堪堪倒映出几分幻影与迷惑?
  • 千骨番外之画骨深情

    千骨番外之画骨深情

    花千骨在时间的轮回中找到了自己的记忆,但是洪荒之力控制了她,最终的唯一的救命方法是什么呢,花千骨还会回到白子画身边吗?敬请期待^ω^
  • 经济汇编食货典户口部

    经济汇编食货典户口部

    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。
  • 太古血歌

    太古血歌

    万族林立,以我为尊!洪荒各界,唯我称雄!我欲转乾坤!踏苍穹!封天封地封万物!夺我所有······
  • 乖乖女与冷傲腹黑女王

    乖乖女与冷傲腹黑女王

    10岁的她无依无靠,父母双亡。看起来什么都不知道的样子,心中却计划着一个复仇计划,多年后她会发生怎样的改变?他被父母抛弃,在A国街头被欺辱,这不起眼的毛头小子谁知会成为黑道霸主。他们命运中的相遇又会发生什么?牵扯两代人的恩怨,又会有怎么样的结局?
  • 女扮男装:樱兰之旅

    女扮男装:樱兰之旅

    女扮男装的她们,在樱兰会遇到什么呢?爱情、友情,会擦出怎样的火花呢?揭穿后,众人的态度又是怎样的呢?结果,又是如何闭幕……
  • 矜来时

    矜来时

    彼时年少不解尘事,天涯苍茫,他就是她的天。于他身后,那股子傲气四处迸发,那股执念,在她幼小的内心深处萌芽。那四百年,是再平凡不过,却似是人间最难得的往昔。磨平了她的傲气,冲淡了她的执念。阅过红尘繁多,方知大道无情,方知天下之大。所谓全天下,也不过是儿时妄语。只得让过往尘封,将往事埋藏,不论前尘事,念不得后生。将饮一壶酒,与之月下对弈;一瞬忆起前尘,似有故人叹。酒毕,却是做着一场春秋大梦。那人似又在轻唤她名,月下似又是他的身影。云起雨落,梦醒,只余一声空叹。
  • 爱情,今夜别将我遗忘

    爱情,今夜别将我遗忘

    职场情感文学,诠释什么样的爱情该坚守,什么样的爱情该放手。
  • 穿越:世界第一神女殿下

    穿越:世界第一神女殿下

    她是二十一世纪的大明星,在她的演唱会上,一场蓄意谋杀使她穿越到另一个世界,遇见了两个大boss——冷酷无情的精明帝王,身份不详的神秘亲信,与之展开连绵不断的纠缠。(不是NP,放心入坑)