VI.
THE OLD AGE OF A
GUILTY MOTHER
It was one of the earliest June days
of the year 1844. A lady of fifty or thereabouts,
for she looked older than her actual age, was pacing
up and down one of the sunny paths in the garden of
a great mansion in the Rue Plument in Paris.
It was noon. The lady took two or three turns
along the gently winding garden walk, careful never
to lose sight of a certain row of windows, to which
she seemed to give her whole attention; then she sat
down on a bench, a piece of elegant semi-rusticity
made of branches with the bark left on the wood.
From the place where she sat she could look through
the garden railings along the inner boulevards to
the wonderful dome of the Invalides rising above the
crests of a forest of elm-trees, and see the less
striking view of her own grounds terminating in the
gray stone front of one of the finest hotels in the
Faubourg Saint-Germain.
Silence lay over the neighboring gardens,
and the boulevards stretching away to the Invalides.
Day scarcely begins at noon in that aristocratic quarter,
and masters and servants are all alike asleep, or
just awakening, unless some young lady takes it into
her head to go for an early ride, or a gray-headed
diplomatist rises betimes to redraft a protocol.
The elderly lady stirring abroad at
that hour was the Marquise d’Aiglemont, the
mother of Mme. de Saint-Hereen, to whom the great
house belonged. The Marquise had made over the
mansion and almost her whole fortune to her daughter,
reserving only an annuity for herself.
The Comtesse Moina de Saint-Hereen
was Mme. d’Aiglemont’s youngest child.
The Marquise had made every sacrifice to marry her
daughter to the eldest son of one of the greatest
houses of France; and this was only what might have
been expected, for the lady had lost her sons, first
one and then the other. Gustave, Marquis d’Aiglemont,
had died of the cholera; Abel, the second, had fallen
in Algeria. Gustave had left a widow and children,
but the dowager’s affection for her sons had
been only moderately warm, and for the next generation
it was decidedly tepid. She was always civil
to her daughter-in-law, but her feeling towards the
young Marquise was the distinctly conventional affection
which good taste and good manners require us to feel
for our relatives. The fortunes of her dead children
having been settled, she could devote her savings
and her own property to her darling Moina.
Moina, beautiful and fascinating from
childhood, was Mme. d’Aiglemont’s
favorite; loved beyond all the others with an instinctive
or involuntary love, a fatal drawing of the heart,
which sometimes seems inexplicable, sometimes, and
to a close observer, only too easy to explain.
Her darling’s pretty face, the sound of Moina’s
voice, her ways, her manner, her looks and gestures,
roused all the deepest emotions that can stir a mother’s
heart with trouble, rapture, or delight. The
springs of the Marquise’s life, of yesterday,
to-morrow, and to-day, lay in that young heart.
Moina, with better fortune, had survived four older
children. As a matter of fact, Mme. d’Aiglemont
had lost her eldest daughter, a charming girl, in a
most unfortunate manner, said gossip, nobody knew
exactly what became of her; and then she lost a little
boy of five by a dreadful accident.
The child of her affections had, however,
been spared to her, and doubtless the Marquise saw
the will of Heaven in that fact; for those who had
died, she kept but very shadowy recollections in some
far-off corner of her heart; her memories of her dead
children were like the headstones on a battlefield,
you can scarcely see them for the flowers that have
sprung up about them since. Of course, if the
world had chosen, it might have said some hard truths
about the Marquise, might have taken her to task for
shallowness and an overweening preference for one
child at the expense of the rest; but the world of
Paris is swept along by the full flood of new events,
new ideas, and new fashions, and it was inevitable
the Mme. d’Aiglemont should be in some
sort allowed to drop out of sight. So nobody thought
of blaming her for coldness or neglect which concerned
no one, whereas her quick, apprehensive tenderness
for Moina was found highly interesting by not a few
who respected it as a sort of superstition. Besides,
the Marquise scarcely went into society at all; and
the few families who knew her thought of her as a
kindly, gentle, indulgent woman, wholly devoted to
her family. What but a curiosity, keen indeed,
would seek to pry beneath the surface with which the
world is quite satisfied? And what would we not
pardon to old people, if only they will efface themselves
like shadows, and consent to be regarded as memories
and nothing more!
Indeed, Mme. d’Aiglemont
became a kind of example complacently held up by the
younger generation to fathers of families, and frequently
cited to mothers-in-law. She had made over her
property to Moina in her own lifetime; the young Countess’
happiness was enough for her, she only lived in her
daughter. If some cautious old person or morose
uncle here and there condemned the course with—“Perhaps
Mme. d’Aiglemont may be sorry some day
that she gave up her fortune to her daughter; she
may be sure of Moina, but how can she be equally sure
of her son-in-law?”—these prophets
were cried down on all sides, and from all sides a
chorus of praise went up for Moina.
“It ought to be said, in justice
to Mme. de Saint-Hereen, that her mother cannot
feel the slightest difference,” remarked a young
married woman. “Mme. d’Aiglemont
is admirably well housed. She has a carriage
at her disposal, and can go everywhere just as she
used to do—”
“Except to the Italiens,”
remarked a low voice. (This was an elderly parasite,
one of those persons who show their independence—as
they think—by riddling their friends with
epigrams.) “Except to the Italiens. And
if the dowager cares for anything on this earth but
her daughter—it is music. Such a good
performer she was in her time! But the Countess’
box is always full of young butterflies, and the Countess’
mother would be in the way; the young lady is talked
about already as a great flirt. So the poor mother
never goes to the Italiens.”
“Mme. de Saint-Hereen has delightful
‘At Homes’ for her mother,” said
a rosebud. “All Paris goes to her salon.
“And no one pays any attention
to the Marquise,” returned the parasite.
“The fact is that Mme.
d’Aiglemont is never alone,” remarked a
coxcomb, siding with the young women.
“In the morning,” the
old observer continued in a discreet voice, “in
the morning dear Moina is asleep. At four o’clock
dear Moina drives in the Bois. In the evening
dear Moina goes to a ball or to the Bouffes.
—Still, it is certainly true that Mme.
d’Aiglemont has the privilege of seeing her
dear daughter while she dresses, and again at dinner,
if dear Moina happens to dine with her mother.
Not a week ago, sir,” continued the elderly
person, laying his hand on the arm of the shy tutor,
a new arrival in the house, “not a week ago,
I saw the poor mother, solitary and sad, by her own
fireside.—’What is the matter?’
I asked. The Marquise looked up smiling, but I
am quite sure that she had been crying.—’I
was thinking that it is a strange thing that I should
be left alone when I have had five children,’
she said, ’but that is our destiny! And
besides, I am happy when I know that Moina is enjoying
herself.’—She could say that to me,
for I knew her husband when he was alive. A poor
stick he was, and uncommonly lucky to have such a
wife; it was certainly owing to her that he was made
a peer of France, and had a place at Court under Charles
X.”
Yet such mistaken ideas get about
in social gossip, and such mischief is done by it,
that the historian of manners is bound to exercise
his discretion, and weigh the assertions so recklessly
made. After all, who is to say that either mother
or daughter was right or wrong? There is but
One who can read and judge their hearts! And how
often does He wreak His vengeance in the family circle,
using throughout all time children as His instruments
against their mothers, and fathers against their sons,
raising up peoples against kings, and princes against
peoples, sowing strife and division everywhere?
And in the world of ideas, are not opinions and feelings
expelled by new feelings and opinions, much as withered
leaves are thrust forth by the young leaf-buds in
the spring?—all in obedience to the immutable
Scheme; all to some end which God alone knows.
Yet, surely, all things proceed to Him, or rather,
to Him all things return.
Such thoughts of religion, the natural
thoughts of age, floated up now and again on the current
of Mme. d’Aiglemont’s thoughts; they
were always dimly present in her mind, but sometimes
they shone out clearly, sometimes they were carried
under, like flowers tossed on the vexed surface of
a stormy sea.
She sat on a garden-seat, tired with
walking, exhausted with much thinking—with
the long thoughts in which a whole lifetime rises up
before the mind, and is spread out like a scroll before
the eyes of those who feel that Death is near.
If a poet had chanced to pass along
the boulevard, he would have found an interesting
picture in the face of this woman, grown old before
her time. As she sat under the dotted shadow
of the acacia, the shadow the acacia casts at noon,
a thousand thoughts were written for all the world
to see on her features, pale and cold even in the hot,
bright sunlight. There was something sadder than
the sense of waning life in that expressive face,
some trouble that went deeper than the weariness of
experience. It was a face of a type that fixes
you in a moment among a host of characterless faces
that fail to draw a second glance, a face to set you
thinking. Among a thousand pictures in a gallery,
you are strongly impressed by the sublime anguish on
the face of some Madonna of Murillo’s; by some
Beatrice Cenci in which Guido’s art portrays
the most touching innocence against a background of
horror and crime; by the awe and majesty that should
encircle a king, caught once and for ever by Velasquez
in the sombre face of a Philip II., and so is it with
some living human faces; they are tyrannous pictures
which speak to you, submit you to searching scrutiny,
and give response to your inmost thoughts, nay, there
are faces that set forth a whole drama, and Mme.
d’Aiglemont’s stony face was one of these
awful tragedies, one of such faces as Dante Alighieri
saw by thousands in his vision.
For the little season that a woman’s
beauty is in flower it serves her admirably well in
the dissimulation to which her natural weakness and
our social laws condemn her. A young face and
rich color, and eyes that glow with light, a gracious
maze of such subtle, manifold lines and curves, flawless
and perfectly traced, is a screen that hides everything
that stirs the woman within. A flush tells nothing,
it only heightens the coloring so brilliant already;
all the fires that burn within can add little light
to the flame of life in eyes which only seem the brighter
for the flash of a passing pain. Nothing is so
discreet as a young face, for nothing is less mobile;
it has the serenity, the surface smoothness, and the
freshness of a lake. There is not character in
women’s faces before the age of thirty.
The painter discovers nothing there but pink and white,
and the smile and expression that repeat the same
thought in the same way—a thought of youth
and love that goes no further than youth and love.
But the face of an old woman has expressed all that
lay in her nature; passion has carved lines on her
features; love and wifehood and motherhood, and extremes
of joy and anguish, having wrung them, and left their
traces in a thousand wrinkles, all of which speak
a language of their own; then it is that a woman’s
face becomes sublime in its horror, beautiful in its
melancholy, grand in its calm. If it is permissible
to carry the strange metaphor still further, it might
be said that in the dried-up lake you can see the
traces of all the torrents that once poured into it
and made it what it is. An old face is nothing
to the frivolous world; the frivolous world is shocked
by the sight of the destruction of such comeliness
as it can understand; a commonplace artist sees nothing
there. An old face is the province of the poets
among poets of those who can recognize that something
which is called Beauty, apart from all the conventions
underlying so many superstitions in art and taste.
Though Mme. d’Aiglemont
wore a fashionable bonnet, it was easy to see that
her once black hair had been bleached by cruel sorrows;
yet her good taste and the gracious acquired instincts
of a woman of fashion could be seen in the way she
wore it, divided into two bandeaux, following
the outlines of a forehead that still retained some
traces of former dazzling beauty, worn and lined though
it was. The contours of her face, the regularity
of her features, gave some idea, faint in truth, of
that beauty of which surely she had once been proud;
but those traces spoke still more plainly of the anguish
which had laid it waste, of sharp pain that had withered
the temples, and made those hollows in her cheeks,
and empurpled the eyelids, and robbed them of their
lashes, and the eyes of their charm. She was in
every way so noiseless; she moved with a slow, self-contained
gravity that showed itself in her whole bearing, and
struck a certain awe into others. Her diffident
manner had changed to positive shyness, due apparently
to a habit now of some years’ growth, of effacing
herself in her daughter’s presence. She
spoke very seldom, and in the low tones used by those
who perforce must live within themselves a life of
reflection and concentration. This demeanor led
others to regard her with an indefinable feeling which
was neither awe nor compassion, but a mysterious blending
of the many ideas awakened in us by compassion and
awe. Finally, there was something in her wrinkles,
in the lines of her face, in the look of pain in those
wan eyes of hers, that bore eloquent testimony to
tears that never had fallen, tears that had been absorbed
by her heart. Unhappy creatures, accustomed to
raise their eyes to heaven, in mute appeal against
the bitterness of their lot, would have seen at once
from her eyes that she was broken in to the cruel
discipline of ceaseless prayer, would have discerned
the almost imperceptible symptoms of the secret bruises
which destroy all the flowers of the soul, even the
sentiment of motherhood.
Painters have colors for these portraits,
but words, and the mental images called up by words,
fail to reproduce such impressions faithfully; there
are mysterious signs and tokens in the tones of the
coloring and in the look of human faces, which the
mind only seizes through the sense of sight; and the
poet is fain to record the tale of the events which
wrought the havoc to make their terrible ravages understood.
The face spoke of cold and steady
storm, an inward conflict between a mother’s
long-suffering and the limitations of our nature, for
our human affections are bounded by our humanity,
and the infinite has no place in finite creatures.
Sorrow endured in silence had at last produced an
indefinable morbid something in this woman. Doubtless
mental anguish had reacted on the physical frame, and
some disease, perhaps an aneurism, was undermining
Julie’s life. Deep-seated grief lies to
all appearance very quietly in the depths where it
is conceived, yet, so still and apparently dormant
as it is, it ceaselessly corrodes the soul, like the
terrible acid which eats away crystal.
Two tears made their way down the
Marquise’s cheeks; she rose to her feet as if
some thought more poignant than any that preceded it
had cut her to the quick. She had doubtless come
to a conclusion as to Moina’s future; and now,
foreseeing clearly all the troubles in store for her
child, the sorrows of her own unhappy life had begun
to weigh once more upon her. The key of her position
must be sought in her daughter’s situation.
The Comte de Saint-Hereen had been
away for nearly six months on a political mission.
The Countess, whether from sheer giddiness, or in
obedience to the countless instincts of woman’s
coquetry, or to essay its power—with all
the vanity of a frivolous fine lady, all the capricious
waywardness of a child—was amusing herself,
during her husband’s absence, by playing with
the passion of a clever but heartless man, distracted
(so he said) with love, the love that combines readily
with every petty social ambition of a self-conceited
coxcomb. Mme. d’Aiglemont, whose long
experience had given her a knowledge of life, and
taught her to judge of men and to dread the world,
watched the course of this flirtation, and saw that
it could only end in one way, if her daughter should
fall into the hands of an utterly unscrupulous intriguer.
How could it be other than a terrible thought for
her that her daughter listened willingly to this roue?
Her darling stood on the brink of a precipice, she
felt horribly sure of it, yet dared not hold her back.
She was afraid of the Countess. She knew too
that Moina would not listen to her wise warnings; she
knew that she had no influence over that nature—iron
for her, silken-soft for all others. Her mother’s
tenderness might have led her to sympathize with the
troubles of a passion called forth by the nobler qualities
of a lover, but this was no passion—it was
coquetry, and the Marquise despised Alfred de Vandenesse,
knowing that he had entered upon this flirtation with
Moina as if it were a game of chess.
But if Alfred de Vandenesse made her
shudder with disgust, she was obliged—unhappy
mother!—to conceal the strongest reason
for her loathing in the deepest recesses of her heart.
She was on terms of intimate friendship with the Marquis
de Vandenesse, the young man’s father; and this
friendship, a respectable one in the eyes of the world,
excused the son’s constant presence in the house,
he professing an old attachment, dating from childhood,
for Mme. de Saint-Hereen. More than this,
in vain did Mme. d’Aiglemont nerve herself
to come between Moina and Alfred de Vandenesse with
a terrible word, knowing beforehand that she should
not succeed; knowing that the strong reason which
ought to separate them would carry no weight; that
she should humiliate herself vainly in her daughter’s
eyes. Alfred was too corrupt; Moina too clever
to believe the revelation; the young Countess would
turn it off and treat it as a piece of maternal strategy.
Mme. d’Aiglemont had built her prison walls
with her own hands; she had immured herself only to
see Moina’s happiness ruined thence before she
died; she was to look on helplessly at the ruin of
the young life which had been her pride and joy and
comfort, a life a thousand times dearer to her than
her own. What words can describe anguish so hideous
beyond belief, such unfathomed depths of pain?
She waited for Moina to rise, with
the impatience and sickening dread of a doomed man,
who longs to have done with life, and turns cold at
the thought of the headsman. She had braced herself
for a last effort, but perhaps the prospect of the
certain failure of the attempt was less dreadful to
her than the fear of receiving yet again one of those
thrusts that went to her very heart—before
that fear her courage ebbed away. Her mother’s
love had come to this. To love her child, to
be afraid of her, to shrink from the thought of the
stab, yet to go forward. So great is a mother’s
affection in a loving nature, that before it can fade
away into indifference the mother herself must die
or find support in some great power without her, in
religion or another love. Since the Marquise
rose that morning, her fatal memory had called up
before her some of those things, so slight to all
appearance, that make landmarks in a life. Sometimes,
indeed, a whole tragedy grows out of a single gesture;
the tone in which a few words were spoken rends a
whole life in two; a glance into indifferent eyes
is the deathblow of the gladdest love; and, unhappily,
such gestures and such words were only too familiar
to Mme. d’Aiglemont—she had met
so many glances that wound the soul. No, there
was nothing in those memories to bid her hope.
On the contrary, everything went to show that Alfred
had destroyed her hold on her daughter’s heart,
that the thought of her was now associated with duty—not
with gladness. In ways innumerable, in things
that were mere trifles in themselves, the Countess’
detestable conduct rose up before her mother; and the
Marquise, it may be, looked on Moina’s undutifulness
as a punishment, and found excuses for her daughter
in the will of Heaven, that so she still might adore
the hand that smote her.
All these things passed through her
memory that morning, and each recollection wounded
her afresh so sorely, that with a very little additional
pain her brimming cup of bitterness must have overflowed.
A cold look might kill her.
The little details of domestic life
are difficult to paint; but one or two perhaps will
suffice to give an idea of the rest.
The Marquise d’Aiglemont, for
instance, had grown rather deaf, but she could never
induce Moina to raise her voice for her. Once,
with the naivete of suffering, she had begged Moina
to repeat some remark which she had failed to catch,
and Moina obeyed, but with so bad a grace, the Mme.
d’Aiglemont had never permitted herself to make
her modest request again. Ever since that day
when Moina was talking or retailing a piece of news,
her mother was careful to come near to listen; but
this infirmity of deafness appeared to put the Countess
out of patience, and she would grumble thoughtlessly
about it. This instance is one from among very
many that must have gone to the mother’s heart;
and yet nearly all of them might have escaped a close
observer, they consisted in faint shades of manner
invisible to any but a woman’s eyes. Take
another example. Mme. d’Aiglemont happened
to say one day that the Princesse de Cadignan had
called upon her. “Did she come to see you!”
Moina exclaimed. That was all, but the Countess’
voice and manner expressed surprise and well-bred
contempt in semitones. Any heart, still young
and sensitive, might well have applauded the philanthropy
of savage tribes who kill off their old people when
they grow too feeble to cling to a strongly shaken
bough. Mme. d’Aiglemont rose smiling,
and went away to weep alone.
Well-bred people, and women especially,
only betray their feelings by imperceptible touches;
but those who can look back over their own experience
on such bruises as this mother’s heart received,
know also how the heart-strings vibrate to these light
touches. Overcome by her memories, Mme.
d’Aiglemont recollected one of those microscopically
small things, so stinging and so painful was it that
never till this moment had she felt all the heartless
contempt that lurked beneath smiles.
At the sound of shutters thrown back
at her daughter’s windows, she dried her tears,
and hastened up the pathway by the railings. As
she went, it struck her that the gardener had been
unusually careful to rake the sand along the walk
which had been neglected for some little time.
As she stood under her daughter’s windows, the
shutters were hastily closed.
“Moina, is it you?” she asked.
No answer.
The Marquise went on into the house.
“Mme. la Comtesse is in the
little drawing-room,” said the maid, when the
Marquise asked whether Mme. de Saint-Hereen had
finished dressing.
Mme. d’Aiglemont hurried
to the little drawing-room; her heart was too full,
her brain too busy to notice matters so slight; but
there on the sofa sat the Countess in her loose morning-gown,
her hair in disorder under the cap tossed carelessly
on he head, her feet thrust into slippers. The
key of her bedroom hung at her girdle. Her face,
aglow with color, bore traces of almost stormy thought.
“What makes people come in!”
she cried, crossly. “Oh! it is you, mother,”
she interrupted herself, with a preoccupied look.
“Yes, child; it is your mother——”
Something in her tone turned those
words into an outpouring of the heart, the cry of
some deep inward feeling, only to be described by
the word “holy.” So thoroughly in
truth had she rehabilitated the sacred character of
a mother, that her daughter was impressed, and turned
towards her, with something of awe, uneasiness, and
remorse in her manner. The room was the furthest
of a suite, and safe from indiscreet intrusion, for
no one could enter it without giving warning of approach
through the previous apartments. The Marquise
closed the door.
“It is my duty, my child, to
warn you in one of the most serious crises in the
lives of us women; you have perhaps reached it unconsciously,
and I am come to speak to you as a friend rather than
as a mother. When you married, you acquired freedom
of action; you are only accountable to your husband
now; but I asserted my authority so little (perhaps
I was wrong), that I think I have a right to expect
you to listen to me, for once at least, in a critical
position when you must need counsel. Bear in
mind, Moina that you are married to a man of high
ability, a man of whom you may well be proud, a man
who—”
“I know what you are going to
say, mother!” Moina broke in pettishly.
“I am to be lectured about Alfred—”
“Moina,” the Marquise
said gravely, as she struggled with her tears, “you
would not guess at once if you did not feel—”
“What?” asked Moina, almost
haughtily. “Why, really, mother—”
Mme. d’Aiglemont summoned
up all her strength. “Moina,” she
said, “you must attend carefully to this that
I ought to tell you—”
“I am attending,” returned
the Countess, folding her arms, and affecting insolent
submission. “Permit me, mother, to ring
for Pauline,” she added with incredible self-possession;
“I will send her away first.”
She rang the bell.
“My dear child, Pauline cannot possibly hear—”
“Mamma,” interrupted the
Countess, with a gravity which must have struck her
mother as something unusual, “I must—”
She stopped short, for the woman was in the room.
“Pauline, go yourself
to Baudran’s, and ask why my hat has not yet
been sent.”
Then the Countess reseated herself
and scrutinized her mother. The Marquise, with
a swelling heart and dry eyes, in painful agitation,
which none but a mother can fully understand, began
to open Moina’s eyes to the risk that she was
running. But either the Countess felt hurt and
indignant at her mother’s suspicions of a son
of the Marquis de Vandenesse, or she was seized with
a sudden fit of inexplicable levity caused by the
inexperience of youth. She took advantage of a
pause.
“Mamma, I thought you were only
jealous of the father—” she
said, with a forced laugh.
Mme. d’Aiglemont shut her
eyes and bent her head at the words, with a very faint,
almost inaudible sigh. She looked up and out into
space, as if she felt the common overmastering impulse
to appeal to God at the great crises of our lives;
then she looked at her daughter, and her eyes were
full of awful majesty and the expression of profound
sorrow.
“My child,” she said,
and her voice was hardly recognizable, “you have
been less merciful to your mother than he against whom
she sinned; less merciful than perhaps God Himself
will be!”
Mme. d’Aiglemont rose;
at the door she turned; but she saw nothing but surprise
in her daughter’s face. She went out.
Scarcely had she reached the garden when her strength
failed her. There was a violent pain at her heart,
and she sank down on a bench. As her eyes wandered
over the path, she saw fresh marks on the path, a man’s
footprints were distinctly recognizable. It was
too late, then, beyond a doubt. Now she began
to understand the reason for that order given to Pauline,
and with these torturing thoughts came a revelation
more hateful than any that had gone before it.
She drew her own inferences—the son of
the Marquis de Vandenesse had destroyed all feeling
of respect for her in her daughter’s mind.
The physical pain grew worse; by degrees she lost
consciousness, and sat like one asleep upon the garden-seat.
The Countess de Saint-Hereen, left
to herself, thought that her mother had given her
a somewhat shrewd home-thrust, but a kiss and a few
attentions that evening would make all right again.
A shrill cry came from the garden.
She leaned carelessly out, as Pauline, not yet departed
on her errand, called out for help, holding the Marquise
in her arms.
“Do not frighten my daughter!”
those were the last words the mother uttered.
Moina saw them carry in a pale and
lifeless form that struggled for breath, and arms
moving restlessly as in protest or effort to speak;
and overcome by the sight, Moina followed in silence,
and helped to undress her mother and lay her on her
bed. The burden of her fault was greater than
she could bear. In that supreme hour she learned
to know her mother—too late, she could
make no reparation now. She would have them leave
her alone with her mother; and when there was no one
else in the room, when she felt that the hand which
had always been so tender for her was now grown cold
to her touch, she broke out into weeping. Her
tears aroused the Marquise; she could still look at
her darling Moina; and at the sound of sobbing, that
seemed as if it must rend the delicate, disheveled
breast, could smile back at her daughter. That
smile taught the unnatural child that forgiveness is
always to be found in the great deep of a mother’s
heart.
Servants on horseback had been dispatched
at once for the physician and surgeon and for Mme.
d’Aiglemont’s grandchildren. Mme.
d’Aiglemont the younger and her little sons
arrived with the medical men, a sufficiently impressive,
silent, and anxious little group, which the servants
of the house came to join. The young Marquise,
hearing no sound, tapped gently at the door.
That signal, doubtless, roused Moina from her grief,
for she flung open the doors and stood before them.
No words could have spoken more plainly than that
disheveled figure looking out with haggard eyes upon
the assembled family. Before that living picture
of Remorse the rest were dumb. It was easy to
see that the Marquise’s feet were stretched
out stark and stiff with the agony of death; and Moina,
leaning against the door-frame, looking into their
faces, spoke in a hollow voice:
“I have lost my mother!”
PARIS, 1828-1844.