登陆注册
15491300000122

第122章 CHAPTER VI 'TWAS THUS THEY BADE ADIEU(3)

"You can imagine, then, that a pamphlet of two hundred pages might afford a--slightly intriguing woman sufficient ground for persecution.""I see it all, madame, I understand it!" cried la Peyrade, with animation. "I believe that woman to be one of the elite of her sex, with as much mind and malice as Richelieu! Adorable magician! it is she who has set in motion the police and the gendarmes; but, more than that, it is she who withholds that cross the ministers were about to give.""If that be so," said the countess, "why struggle against her?""Ah! I struggle no longer," said la Peyrade. Then, with an assumed air of contrition, he added, "You must, indeed, HATE me, madame.""Not quite as much as you may think," replied the countess; "but, after all, suppose that I do hate you?""Ah! madame," cried la Peyrade, ardently, "I should then be the happiest of unhappy men; for that hatred would seem to me sweeter and more precious than your indifference. But you do not hate me; why should you feel to me that most blessed feminine sentiment which Scribe has depicted with such delicacy and wit?"Madame de Godollo did not answer immediately. She lowered her eyelids, and the deeper breathing of her bosom gave to her voice when she did speak a tremulous tone:--"The hatred of a woman!" she said. "Is a man of your stoicism able to perceive it?""Ah! yes, madame," replied la Peyrade, "I do indeed perceive it, but not to revolt against it; on the contrary, I bless the harshness that deigns to hurt me. Now that I know my beautiful and avowed enemy, Ishall not despair of touching her heart; for never again will I follow any road but the one that she points out to me, never will I march under any banner but hers. I shall wait--for her inspiration, to think; for her will, to will; for her commands, to act. In all things I will be her auxiliary,--more than that, her slave; and if she still repulses me with that dainty foot, that snowy hand, I will bear it resignedly, asking, in return for such obedience one only favor,--that of kissing the foot that spurns me, of bathing with tears the hand that threatens me."During this long cry of the excited heart, which the joy of triumph wrung from a nature so nervous and impressionable as that of the Provencal, he had slidden from his chair, and now knelt with one knee on the ground beside the countess, in the conventional attitude of the stage, which is, however, much more common in real life than people suppose.

"Rise, monsieur," said the countess, "and be so good as to answer me."Then, giving him a questioning look from beneath her beautiful frowning brows, she continued: "Have you well-weighed the outcome of the words you have just uttered? Have you measured the full extent of your pledge, and its depth? With your hand on your heart and on your conscience, are you a man to fulfil those words? Or are you one of the falsely humble and perfidious men who throw themselves at our feet only to make us lose the balance of our will and our reason?""I!" exclaimed la Peyrade; "never can I react against the fascination you have wielded over me from the moment of our first interview! Ah! madame, the more I have resisted, the more I have struggled, the more you ought to trust in my sincerity and its tardy expression. What Ihave said, I think; that which I think aloud to-day I have thought in my soul since the hour when I first had the honor of admittance to you; and the many days I have passed in struggling against this allurement have ended in giving me a firm and deliberate will, which understands itself, and is not cast down by your severity.""Severity?" said the countess; "possibly. But you ought to think of the kindness too. Question yourself carefully. We foreign women do not understand the careless ease with which a Frenchwoman enters upon a solemn engagement. To us, our YES is sacred; our word is a bond. We do and we will nothing by halves. The arms of my family bear a motto which seems significant under the present circumstances,--'All or Nothing'; that is saying much, and yet, perhaps, not enough.""That is how I understand my pledge," replied la Peyrade; "and on leaving this room my first step will be to break with that ignoble past which for an instant I seemed to hold in the balance against the intoxicating future you do not forbid me to expect.""No," said the countess, "do it calmly and advisedly; I do not like rash conduct; you will not please me by taking open steps. These Thuilliers are not really bad at heart; they humiliated you without knowing that they did so; their world is not yours. Is that their fault? Loosen the tie between you, but do not violently break it. And, above all, reflect. Your conversion to my beliefs is of recent date.

What man is certain of what his heart will say to him to-morrow?""Madame," said la Peyrade, "I am that man. We men of Southern blood do not love as you say a Frenchwoman loves.""But," said the countess, with a charming smile, "I thought it was hatred we were talking of.""Ah, madame," cried the barrister, "explained and understood as it has been, that word is still a thing that hurts me. Tell me rather, not that you love me, but that the words you deigned to say to me at our first interview were indeed the expression of your thoughts.""My friend," said the countess, dwelling on the word; "one of your moralists has said: 'There are persons who say, THAT IS or THAT ISNOT.' Do me the favor to count me among such persons."So saying, she held out her hand to her suitor with a charming gesture of modesty and grace. La Peyrade, quite beside himself, darted upon that beautiful hand and devoured it with kisses.

"Enough, child!" said the countess, gently freeing her imprisoned fingers; "adieu now, soon to meet again! Adieu! My headache, I think, has disappeared."La Peyrade picked up his hat, and seemed about to rush from the apartment; but at the door he turned and cast upon the handsome creature a look of tenderness. The countess made him, with her head, a graceful gesture of adieu; then, seeing that la Peyrade was inclined to return to her, she raised her forefinger as a warning to control himself and go.

La Peyrade turned and left the apartment.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 英雄联盟之风再起时

    英雄联盟之风再起时

    曾经的他充满着斗志燃烧着激情,他想带着那些和他有着同样游戏梦想对他无比信任的兄弟一起夺取世界冠军的最高荣誉。然而梦想才刚刚开始,就已经结束。他跌倒在痛苦与困惑,他在现实中迷茫,他离开了那些比赛的舞台。当心结被解开,当他从迷茫中走出,当他找回当初的自己,当风再起时,曾经那个耀眼的少年再一次站在世界舞台上,会带来什么的震撼!
  • 灵阵天下

    灵阵天下

    古大陆,上古修士,主宰布局,神王喋血,一个平凡的少年怀揣着一个简单的信念一路艰难前行,他是身陷囹圄,成为他人棋子,还是逆天破局,冲出迷惘,成就大道……
  • 带着节操来修仙

    带着节操来修仙

    问:仙为何?道为何?节操为何?答:一念成仙,一妄入魔,一掉节操……修仙、屠魔、捡节操。
  • 武道少帅

    武道少帅

    令人闻风丧胆的黑道少帅楚少尘,历尽千辛万苦寻找到了阔别十年的亲人,谁想到重逢当日,竟遭遇灭门惨祸!带着无边的悔恨,楚少尘魂穿以武为尊的天穹大陆,成为一个无法修炼武道的废柴!华夏古武逆天改命,昔日少帅重振少帅威名!
  • 合浦珠

    合浦珠

    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。
  • 农家老太太

    农家老太太

    比穿越成农家小寡妇还惨的是什么?那就是穿越成老寡妇。姜婉白想着,她都这样了,谁让她不痛快,她就让谁不痛快。
  • 陌路情断,缘分为何物

    陌路情断,缘分为何物

    执子之手,与子偕老,曾经的诺言你早已忘记,你说过要和我浪迹天涯,我知道你的身份不允许,我不奢求,你说过要娶我当你妻子,可是在成婚当天新娘不是我,你说要帮我报仇,结果我灭家仇人是你……这世道究竟还要我失去多少,才肯罢休。
  • 徐福纪

    徐福纪

    冷峻的刺客姬慷,年纪轻轻就当上了秘密机构的行动总指挥使。在一次行动中他与术士徐福的偶然交集,冥冥中引导了他命运的走向。被天外之物唤醒失落记忆的姬慷,该如何选择自己的命运?徐福是骗子还是英雄,大海深处他究竟找到了什么?虽然时处诸子百家的末期,却仍有许多能人异士活跃在秦朝的历史舞台上。其中不乏名噪一时却又迅速销声匿迹的神秘门派,如纵横家、墨家、阴阳家。另外还有秦国为了对抗合纵六国而建立的隐秘刺客组织,塞外凶残好战的匈奴,外海遥远的异民族......在乱世之道的背景下,用历史的悬疑构建一个理想的国度。
  • 天上掉下个小仙女

    天上掉下个小仙女

    一个小仙女从天上掉下,还好死不死的赖上了王昊,从此,王昊跟随她的脚步,踏上一条通往神棍的不归路。“铁口直断,一卦千金。”“美女,你头顶凶兆…哎…你干嘛?”“大爷,你面犯桃花,会被抓奸在床……”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 倾城虐恋:如果来世再重来

    倾城虐恋:如果来世再重来

    【虐恋三部曲之玄幻虐恋】前世,她身手无敌,是顶级的杀手,但奈何长相欠缺。今生,她妖娆艳丽,很少有人能比过她的容貌,但偏偏是个废柴!呵呵……废柴?没关系,她可以练!品味不好?没关系,她可以改!有女人跟她作对?没关系,她可以打!那,如果有男人不乖的话……她只能调教了!——“女人,你是要挑战我的极限么?”某女不屑一顾:“一边去,我忙着呢!”——“女人,你这是引火上身!”某女一脸不耐烦:“去去去!找别的女人泄火去,我忙着呢!”终于某天,他忍不了了,把某女霸王硬上弓:“看来,是我对你太好了么……”接下来……你们懂!看她如何执一袭红装,携一身妖娆狂傲,倾天下,惑众生。【你送我满城烟火,我赠你一世迷离。】