II.
A HIDDEN
GRIEF
Between the Seine and the little river
Loing lies a wide flat country, skirted on the one
side by the Forest of Fontainebleau, and marked out
as to its southern limits by the towns of Moret, Montereau,
and Nemours. It is a dreary country; little knolls
of hills appear only at rare intervals, and a coppice
here and there among the fields affords for game;
and beyond, upon every side, stretches the endless
gray or yellowish horizon peculiar to Beauce, Sologne,
and Berri.
In the very centre of the plain, at
equal distances from Moret and Montereau, the traveler
passes the old chateau of Saint-Lange, standing amid
surroundings which lack neither dignity nor stateliness.
There are magnificent avenues of elm-trees, great gardens
encircled by the moat, and a circumference of walls
about a huge manorial pile which represents the profits
of the maltote, the gains of farmers-general,
legalized malversation, or the vast fortunes of great
houses now brought low beneath the hammer of the Civil
Code.
Should any artist or dreamer of dreams
chance to stray along the roads full of deep ruts,
or over the heavy land which secures the place against
intrusion, he will wonder how it happened that this
romantic old place was set down in a savanna of corn-land,
a desert of chalk, and sand, and marl, where gaiety
dies away, and melancholy is a natural product of
the soil. The voiceless solitude, the monotonous
horizon line which weigh upon the spirits are negative
beauties, which only suit with sorrow that refuses
to be comforted.
Hither, at the close of the year 1820,
came a woman, still young, well known in Paris for
her charm, her fair face, and her wit; and to the
immense astonishment of the little village a mile away,
this woman of high rank and corresponding fortune
took up her abode at Saint-Lange.
From time immemorial, farmers and
laborers had seen no gentry at the chateau. The
estate, considerable though it was, had been left in
charge of a land-steward and the house to the old servants.
Wherefore the appearance of the lady of the manor
caused a kind of sensation in the district.
A group had gathered in the yard of
the wretched little wineshop at the end of the village
(where the road forks to Nemours and Moret) to see
the carriage pass. It went by slowly, for the
Marquise had come from Paris with her own horses,
and those on the lookout had ample opportunity of
observing a waiting-maid, who sat with her back to
the horses holding a little girl, with a somewhat
dreamy look, upon her knee. The child’s
mother lay back in the carriage; she looked like a
dying woman sent out into the country air by her doctors
as a last resource. Village politicians were
by no means pleased to see the young, delicate, downcast
face; they had hoped that the new arrival at Saint-Lange
would bring some life and stir into the neighborhood,
and clearly any sort of stir or movement must be distasteful
to the suffering invalid in the traveling carriage.
That evening, when the notables of
Saint-Lange were drinking in the private room of the
wineshop, the longest head among them declared that
such depression could admit of but one construction—the
Marquise was ruined. His lordship the Marquis
was away in Spain with the Duc d’Angouleme (so
they said in the papers), and beyond a doubt her ladyship
had come to Saint-Lange to retrench after a run of
ill-luck on the Bourse. The Marquis was one of
the greatest gamblers on the face of the globe.
Perhaps the estate would be cut up and sold in little
lots. There would be some good strokes of business
to be made in that case, and it behooved everybody
to count up his cash, unearth his savings and to see
how he stood, so as to secure his share of the spoil
of Saint-Lange.
So fair did this future seem, that
the village worthies, dying to know whether it was
founded on fact, began to think of ways of getting
at the truth through the servants at the chateau.
None of these, however, could throw any light on the
calamity which had brought their mistress into the
country at the beginning of winter, and to the old
chateau of Saint-Lange of all places, when she might
have taken her choice of cheerful country-houses famous
for their beautiful gardens.
His worship the mayor called to pay
his respects; but he did not see the lady. Then
the land-steward tried with no better success.
Madame la Marquise kept her room,
only leaving it, while it was set in order, for the
small adjoining drawing-room, where she dined; if,
indeed, to sit down to a table, to look with disgust
at the dishes, and take the precise amount of nourishment
required to prevent death from sheer starvation, can
be called dining. The meal over, she returned
at once to the old-fashioned low chair, in which she
had sat since the morning, in the embrasure of the
one window that lighted her room.
Her little girl she only saw for a
few minutes daily, during the dismal dinner, and even
for a short time she seemed scarcely able to bear
the child’s presence. Surely nothing but
the most unheard-of anguish could have extinguished
a mother’s love so early.
None of the servants were suffered
to come near, her own woman was the one creature whom
she liked to have about her; the chateau must be perfectly
quiet, the child must play at the other end of the
house. The slightest sound had grown so intolerable,
that any human voice, even the voice of her own child,
jarred upon her.
At first the whole countryside was
deeply interested in these eccentricities; but time
passed on, every possible hypothesis had been advanced
to account for them and the peasants and dwellers in
the little country towns thought no more of the invalid
lady.
So the Marquise was left to herself.
She might live on, perfectly silent, amid the silence
which she herself had created; there was nothing to
draw her forth from the tapestried chamber where her
grandmother died, whither she herself had come that
she might die, gently, without witnesses, without
importunate solicitude, without suffering from the
insincere demonstrations of egoism masquerading as
affection, which double the agony of death in great
cities.
She was twenty-six years old.
At that age, with plenty of romantic illusions still
left, the mind loves to dwell on the thought of death
when death seems to come as a friend. But with
youth, death is coy, coming up close only to go away,
showing himself and hiding again, till youth has time
to fall out of love with him during this dalliance.
There is that uncertainty too that hangs over death’s
to-morrow. Youth plunges back into the world of
living men, there to find the pain more pitiless than
death, that does not wait to strike.
This woman who refused to live was
to know the bitterness of these reprieves in the depths
of her loneliness; in moral agony, which death would
not come to end, she was to serve a terrible apprenticeship
to the egoism which must take the bloom from her heart
and break her in to the life of the world.
This harsh and sorry teaching is the
usual outcome of our early sorrows. For the first,
and perhaps for the last time in her life, the Marquise
d’Aiglemont was in very truth suffering.
And, indeed, would it not be an error to suppose that
the same sentiment can be reproduced in us? Once
develop the power to feel, is it not always there
in the depths of our nature? The accidents of
life may lull or awaken it, but there it is, of necessity
modifying the self, its abiding place. Hence,
every sensation should have its great day once and
for all, its first day of storm, be it long or short.
Hence, likewise, pain, the most abiding of our sensations,
could be keenly felt only at its first irruption,
its intensity diminishing with every subsequent paroxysm,
either because we grow accustomed to these crises,
or perhaps because a natural instinct of self-preservation
asserts itself, and opposes to the destroying force
of anguish an equal but passive force of inertia.
Yet of all kinds of suffering, to
which does the name of anguish belong? For the
loss of parents, Nature has in a manner prepared us;
physical suffering, again, is an evil which passes
over us and is gone; it lays no hold upon the soul;
if it persists, it ceases to be an evil, it is death.
The young mother loses her firstborn, but wedded love
ere long gives her a successor. This grief, too,
is transient. After all, these, and many other
troubles like unto them, are in some sort wounds and
bruises; they do not sap the springs of vitality, and
only a succession of such blows can crush in us the
instinct that seeks happiness. Great pain, therefore,
pain that arises to anguish, should be suffering so
deadly, that past, present, and future are alike included
in its grip, and no part of life is left sound and
whole. Never afterwards can we think the same
thoughts as before. Anguish engraves itself in
ineffaceable characters on mouth and brow; it passes
through us, destroying or relaxing the springs that
vibrate to enjoyment, leaving behind in the soul the
seeds of a disgust for all things in this world.
Yet, again, to be measureless, to
weigh like this upon body and soul, the trouble should
befall when soul and body have just come to their
full strength, and smite down a heart that beats high
with life. Then it is that great scars are made.
Terrible is the anguish. None, it may be, can
issue from this soul-sickness without undergoing some
dramatic change. Those who survive it, those
who remain on earth, return to the world to wear an
actor’s countenance and to play an actor’s
part. They know the side-scenes where actors
may retire to calculate chances, shed their tears,
or pass their jests. Life holds no inscrutable
dark places for those who have passed through this
ordeal; their judgments are Rhadamanthine.
For young women of the Marquise d’Aiglemont’s
age, this first, this most poignant pain of all, is
always referable to the same cause. A woman,
especially if she is a young woman, greatly beautiful,
and by nature great, never fails to stake her whole
life as instinct and sentiment and society all unite
to bid her. Suppose that that life fails her,
suppose that she still lives on, she cannot but endure
the most cruel pangs, inasmuch as a first love is
the loveliest of all. How comes it that this
catastrophe has found no painter, no poet? And
yet, can it be painted? Can it be sung? No;
for the anguish arising from it eludes analysis and
defies the colors of art. And more than this,
such pain is never confessed. To console the sufferer,
you must be able to divine the past which she hugs
in bitterness to her soul like a remorse; it is like
an avalanche in a valley; it laid all waste before
it found a permanent resting-place.
The Marquise was suffering from this
anguish, which will for long remain unknown, because
the whole world condemns it, while sentiment cherishes
it, and the conscience of a true woman justifies her
in it. It is with such pain as with children
steadily disowned of life, and therefore bound more
closely to the mother’s heart than other children
more bounteously endowed. Never, perhaps, was
the awful catastrophe in which the whole world without
dies for us, so deadly, so complete, so cruelly aggravated
by circumstance as it had been for the Marquise.
The man whom she had loved was young and generous;
in obedience to the laws of the world, she had refused
herself to his love, and he had died to save a woman’s
honor, as the world calls it. To whom could she
speak of her misery? Her tears would be an offence
against her husband, the origin of the tragedy.
By all laws written and unwritten she was bound over
to silence. A woman would have enjoyed the story;
a man would have schemed for his own benefit.
No; such grief as hers can only weep freely in solitude
and in loneliness; she must consume her pain or be
consumed by it; die or kill something within her—her
conscience, it may be.
Day after day she sat gazing at the
flat horizon. It lay out before her like her
own life to come. There was nothing to discover,
nothing to hope. The whole of it could be seen
at a glance. It was the visible presentment in
the outward world of the chill sense of desolation
which was gnawing restlessly at her heart. The
misty mornings, the pale, bright sky, the low clouds
scudding under the gray dome of heaven, fitted with
the moods of her soul-sickness. Her heart did
not contract, was neither more nor less seared, rather
it seemed as if her youth, in its full blossom, was
slowly turned to stone by an anguish intolerable because
it was barren. She suffered through herself and
for herself. How could it end save in self-absorption?
Ugly torturing thoughts probed her conscience.
Candid self-examination pronounced that she was double,
there were two selves within her; a woman who felt
and a woman who thought; a self that suffered and a
self that could fain suffer no longer. Her mind
traveled back to the joys of childish days; they had
gone by, and she had never known how happy they were.
Scenes crowded up in her memory as in a bright mirror
glass, to demonstrate the deception of a marriage which,
all that it should be in the eyes of the world, was
in reality wretched. What had the delicate pride
of young womanhood done for her—the bliss
foregone, the sacrifices made to the world? Everything
in her expressed love, awaited love; her movements
still were full of perfect grace; her smile, her charm,
were hers as before; why? she asked herself.
The sense of her own youth and physical loveliness
no more affected her than some meaningless reiterated
sound. Her very beauty had grown intolerable
to her as a useless thing. She shrank aghast
from the thought that through the rest of life she
must remain an incomplete creature; had not the inner
self lost its power of receiving impressions with
that zest, that exquisite sense of freshness which
is the spring of so much of life’s gladness?
The impressions of the future would for the most part
be effaced as soon as received, and many of the thoughts
which once would have moved her now would move her
no more.
After the childhood of the creature
dawns the childhood of the heart; but this second
infancy was over, her lover had taken it down with
him into the grave. The longings of youth remained;
she was young yet; but the completeness of youth was
gone, and with that lost completeness the whole value
and savor of life had diminished somewhat. Should
she not always bear within her the seeds of sadness
and mistrust, ready to grow up and rob emotion of
its springtide of fervor? Conscious she must
always be that nothing could give her now the happiness
so longed for, that seemed so fair in her dreams.
The fire from heaven that sheds abroad its light in
the heart, in the dawn of love, had been quenched
in tears, the first real tears which she had shed;
henceforth she must always suffer, because it was
no longer in her power to be what once she might have
been. This is a belief which turns us in aversion
and bitterness of spirit from any proffered new delight.
Julie had come to look at life from
the point of view of age about to die. Young
though she felt, the heavy weight of joyless days had
fallen upon her, and left her broken-spirited and old
before her time. With a despairing cry, she asked
the world what it could give her in exchange for the
love now lost, by which she had lived. She asked
herself whether in that vanished love, so chaste and
pure, her will had not been more criminal than her
deeds, and chose to believe herself guilty; partly
to affront the world, partly for her own consolation,
in that she had missed the close union of body and
soul, which diminishes the pain of the one who is
left behind by the knowledge that once it has known
and given joy to the full, and retains within itself
the impress of that which is no more.
Something of the mortification of
the actress cheated of her part mingled with the pain
which thrilled through every fibre of her heart and
brain. Her nature had been thwarted, her vanity
wounded, her woman’s generosity cheated of self-sacrifice.
Then, when she had raised all these questions, set
vibrating all the springs in those different phases
of being which we distinguish as social, moral, and
physical, her energies were so far exhausted and relaxed
that she was powerless to grasp a single thought amid
the chase of conflicting ideas.
Sometimes as the mists fell, she would
throw her window open, and would stay there, motionless,
breathing in unheedingly the damp earthly scent in
the air, her mind to all appearance an unintelligent
blank, for the ceaseless burden of sorrow humming in
her brain left her deaf to earth’s harmonies
and insensible to the delights of thought.
One day, towards noon, when the sun
shone out for a little, her maid came in without a
summons.
“This is the fourth time that
M. le Cure has come to see Mme. la Marquise;
to-day he is so determined about it, that we did not
know what to tell him.”
“He has come to ask for some
money for the poor, no doubt; take him twenty-five
louis from me.”
The woman went only to return.
“M. le Cure will not take the
money, my lady; he wants to speak to you.”
“Then let him come!” said
Mme. d’Aiglemont, with an involuntary shrug
which augured ill for the priest’s reception.
Evidently the lady meant to put a stop to persecution
by a short and sharp method.
Mme. d’Aiglemont had lost
her mother in her early childhood; and as a natural
consequence in her bringing-up, she had felt the influence
of the relaxed notions which loosened the hold of
religion upon France during the Revolution. Piety
is a womanly virtue which women alone can really instil;
and the Marquise, a child of the eighteenth century,
had adopted her father’s creed of philosophism,
and practised no religious observances. A priest,
to her way of thinking, was a civil servant of very
doubtful utility. In her present position, the
teaching of religion could only poison her wounds;
she had, moreover, but scanty faith in the lights
of country cures, and made up her mind to put this
one gently but firmly in his place, and to rid herself
of him, after the manner of the rich, by bestowing
a benefit.
At first sight of the cure the Marquise
felt no inclination to change her mind. She saw
before her a stout, rotund little man, with a ruddy,
wrinkled, elderly face, which awkwardly and unsuccessfully
tried to smile. His bald, quadrant-shaped forehead,
furrowed by intersecting lines, was too heavy for
the rest of his face, which seemed to be dwarfed by
it. A fringe of scanty white hair encircled the
back of his head, and almost reached his ears.
Yet the priest looked as if by nature he had a genial
disposition; his thick lips, his slightly curved nose,
his chin, which vanished in a double fold of wrinkles,
—all marked him out as a man who took cheerful
views of life.
At first the Marquise saw nothing
but these salient characteristics, but at the first
word she was struck by the sweetness of the speaker’s
voice. Looking at him more closely, she saw that
the eyes under the grizzled eyebrows had shed tears,
and his face, turned in profile, wore so sublime an
impress of sorrow, that the Marquise recognized the
man in the cure.
“Madame la Marquise, the rich
only come within our province when they are in trouble.
It is easy to see that the troubles of a young, beautiful,
and wealthy woman, who has lost neither children nor
relatives, are caused by wounds whose pangs religion
alone can soothe. Your soul is in danger, madame.
I am not speaking now of the hereafter which awaits
us. No, I am not in the confessional. But
it is my duty, is it not, to open your eyes to your
future life here on earth? You will pardon an
old man, will you not, for importunity which has your
own happiness for its object?”
“There is no more happiness
for me, monsieur. I shall soon be, as you say,
in your province; but it will be for ever.”
“Nay, madame. You will
not die of this pain which lies heavy upon you, and
can be read in your face. If you had been destined
to die of it, you would not be here at Saint-Lange.
A definite regret is not so deadly as hope deferred.
I have known others pass through more intolerable
and more awful anguish, and yet they live.”
The Marquise looked incredulous.
“Madame, I know a man whose
affliction was so sore that your trouble would seem
to you to be light compared with his.”
Perhaps the long solitary hours had
begun to hang heavily; perhaps in the recesses of
the Marquise’s mind lay the thought that here
was a friendly heart to whom she might be able to
pour out her troubles. However, it was, she gave
the cure a questioning glance which could not be mistaken.
“Madame,” he continued,
“the man of whom I tell you had but three children
left of a once large family circle. He lost his
parents, his daughter, and his wife, whom he dearly
loved. He was left alone at last on the little
farm where he had lived so happily for so long.
His three sons were in the army, and each of the lads
had risen in proportion to his time of service.
During the Hundred Days, the oldest went into the
Guard with a colonel’s commission; the second
was a major in the artillery; the youngest a major
in a regiment of dragoons. Madame, those three
boys loved their father as much as he loved them.
If you but knew how careless young fellows grow of
home ties when they are carried away by the current
of their own lives, you would realize from this one
little thing how warmly they loved the lonely old
father, who only lived in and for them—never
a week passed without a letter from one of the boys.
But then he on his side had never been weakly indulgent,
to lessen their respect for him; nor unjustly severe,
to thwart their affection; or apt to grudge sacrifices,
the thing that estranges children’s hearts.
He had been more than a father; he had been a brother
to them, and their friend.
“At last he went to Paris to
bid them good-bye before they set out for Belgium;
he wished to see that they had good horses and all
that they needed. And so they went, and the father
returned to his home again. Then the war began.
He had letters from Fleurus, and again from Ligny.
All went well. Then came the battle of Waterloo,
and you know the rest. France was plunged into
mourning; every family waited in intense anxiety for
news. You may imagine, madame, how the old man
waited for tidings, in anxiety that knew no peace
nor rest. He used to read the gazettes; he went
to the coach office every day. One evening he
was told that the colonel’s servant had come.
The man was riding his master’s horse—what
need was there to ask any questions?—the
colonel was dead, cut in two by a shell. Before
the evening was out the youngest son’s servant
arrived—the youngest had died on the eve
of the battle. At midnight came a gunner with
tidings of the death of the last; upon whom, in those
few hours, the poor father had centered all his life.
Madame, they all had fallen.”
After a pause the good man controlled
his feelings, and added gently:
“And their father is still living,
madame. He realized that if God had left him
on earth, he was bound to live on and suffer on earth;
but he took refuge in the sanctuary. What could
he be?”
The Marquise looked up and saw the
cure’s face, grown sublime in its sorrow and
resignation, and waited for him to speak. When
the words came, tears broke from her.
“A priest, madame; consecrated
by his own tears previously shed at the foot of the
altar.”
Silence prevailed for a little.
The Marquise and the cure looked out at the foggy
landscape, as if they could see the figures of those
who were no more.
“Not a priest in a city, but
a simple country cure,” added he.
“At Saint-Lange,” she said, drying her
eyes.
“Yes, madame.”
Never had the majesty of grief seemed
so great to Julie. The two words sank straight
into her heart with the weight of infinite sorrow.
The gentle, sonorous tones troubled her heart.
Ah! that full, deep voice, charged with plangent vibration,
was the voice of one who had suffered indeed.
“And if I do not die, monsieur,
what will become of me?” The Marquise spoke
almost reverently.
“Have you not a child, madame?”
“Yes,” she said stiffly.
The cure gave her such a glance as
a doctor gives a patient whose life is in danger.
Then he determined to do all that in him lay to combat
the evil spirit into whose clutches she had fallen.
“We must live on with our sorrows—you
see it yourself, madame, and religion alone offers
us real consolation. Will you permit me to come
again?—to speak to you as a man who can
sympathize with every trouble, a man about whom there
is nothing very alarming, I think?”
“Yes, monsieur, come back again.
Thank you for your thought of me.”
“Very well, madame; then I shall return very
shortly.”
This visit relaxed the tension of
soul, as it were; the heavy strain of grief and loneliness
had been almost too much for the Marquise’s
strength. The priest’s visit had left a
soothing balm in her heart, his words thrilled through
her with healing influence. She began to feel
something of a prisoner’s satisfaction, when,
after he has had time to feel his utter loneliness
and the weight of his chains, he hears a neighbor
knocking on the wall, and welcomes the sound which
brings a sense of human friendship. Here was an
unhoped-for confidant. But this feeling did not
last for long. Soon she sank back into the old
bitterness of spirit, saying to herself, as the prisoner
might say, that a companion in misfortune could neither
lighten her own bondage nor her future.
In the first visit the cure had feared
to alarm the susceptibilities of self-absorbed grief,
in a second interview he hoped to make some progress
towards religion. He came back again two days
later, and from the Marquise’s welcome it was
plain that she had looked forward to the visit.
“Well, Mme. la Marquise,
have you given a little thought to the great mass
of human suffering? Have you raised your eyes
above our earth and seen the immensity of the universe?—the
worlds beyond worlds which crush our vanity into insignificance,
and with our vanity reduce our sorrows?”
“No, monsieur,” she said;
“I cannot rise to such heights, our social laws
lie too heavily upon me, and rend my heart with a too
poignant anguish. And laws perhaps are less cruel
than the usages of the world. Ah! the world!”
“Madame, we must obey both.
Law is the doctrine, and custom the practice of society.”
“Obey society?” cried
the Marquise, with an involuntary shudder. “Eh!
monsieur, it is the source of all our woes. God
laid down no law to make us miserable; but mankind,
uniting together in social life, have perverted God’s
work. Civilization deals harder measure to us
women than nature does. Nature imposes upon us
physical suffering which you have not alleviated;
civilization has developed in us thoughts and feelings
which you cheat continually. Nature exterminates
the weak; you condemn them to live, and by so doing,
consign them to a life of misery. The whole weight
of the burden of marriage, an institution on which
society is based, falls upon us; for the man liberty,
duties for the woman. We must give up our whole
lives to you, you are only bound to give us a few
moments of yours. A man, in fact, makes a choice,
while we blindly submit. Oh, monsieur, to you
I can speak freely. Marriage, in these days,
seems to me to be legalized prostitution. This
is the cause of my wretchedness. But among so
many miserable creatures so unhappily yoked, I alone
am bound to be silent, I alone am to blame for my
misery. My marriage was my own doing.”
She stopped short, and bitter tears fell in the silence.
“In the depths of my wretchedness,
in the midst of this sea of distress,” she went
on, “I found some sands on which to set foot
and suffer at leisure. A great tempest swept
everything away. And here am I, helpless and
alone, too weak to cope with storms.”
“We are never weak while God
is with us,” said the priest. “And
if your cravings for affection cannot be satisfied
here on earth, have you no duties to perform?”
“Duties continually!”
she exclaimed, with something of impatience in her
tone. “But where for me are the sentiments
which give us strength to perform them? Nothing
from nothing, nothing for nothing,—this,
monsieur, is one of the most inexorable laws of nature,
physical or spiritual. Would you have these trees
break into leaf without the sap which swells the buds?
It is the same with our human nature; and in me the
sap is dried up at its source.”
“I am not going to speak to
you of religious sentiments of which resignation is
born,” said the cure, “but of motherhood,
madame, surely—”
“Stop, monsieur!” said
the Marquise, “with you I will be sincere.
Alas! in future I can be sincere with no one; I am
condemned to falsehood. The world requires continual
grimaces, and we are bidden to obey its conventions
if we would escape reproach. There are two kinds
of motherhood, monsieur; once I knew nothing of such
distinctions, but I know them now. Only half
of me has become a mother; it were better for me if
I had not been a mother at all. Helene is not
his child! Oh! do not start. At Saint-Lange
there are volcanic depths whence come lurid gleams
of light and earthquake shocks to shake the fragile
edifices of laws not based on nature. I have borne
a child, that is enough, I am a mother in the eyes
of the law. But you, monsieur, with your delicately
compassionate soul, can perhaps understand this cry
from an unhappy woman who has suffered no lying illusions
to enter her heart. God will judge me, but surely
I have only obeyed His laws by giving way to the affections
which He Himself set in me, and this I have learned
from my own soul.—What is a child, monsieur,
but the image of two beings, the fruit of two sentiments
spontaneously blended? Unless it is owned by
every fibre of the body, as by every chord of tenderness
in the heart; unless it recalls the bliss of love,
the hours, the places where two creatures were happy,
their words that overflowed with the music of humanity,
and their sweet imaginings, that child is an incomplete
creation. Yes, those two should find the poetic
dreams of their intimate double life realized in their
child as in an exquisite miniature; it should be for
them a never-failing spring of emotion, implying their
whole past and their whole future.
“My poor little Helene is her
father’s child, the offspring of duty and of
chance. In me she finds nothing but the affection
of instinct, the woman’s natural compassion
for the child of her womb. Socially speaking,
I am above reproach. Have I not sacrificed my
life and my happiness to my child? Her cries
go to my heart; if she were to fall into the water,
I should spring to save her, but she is not in my
heart.
“Ah! love set me dreaming of
a motherhood far greater and more complete. In
a vanished dream I held in my arms a child conceived
in desire before it was begotten, the exquisite flower
of life that blossoms in the soul before it sees the
light of day. I am Helene’s mother only
in the sense that I brought her forth. When she
needs me no longer, there will be an end of my motherhood;
with the extinction of the cause, the effects will
cease. If it is a woman’s adorable prerogative
that her motherhood may last through her child’s
life, surely that divine persistence of sentiment
is due to the far-reaching glory of the conception
of the soul? Unless a child has lain wrapped
about from life’s first beginnings by the mother’s
soul, the instinct of motherhood dies in her as in
the animals. This is true; I feel that it is
true. As my poor little one grows older, my heart
closes. My sacrifices have driven us apart.
And yet I know, monsieur, that to another child my
heart would have gone out in inexhaustible love; for
that other I should not have known what sacrifice meant,
all had been delight. In this, monsieur, my instincts
are stronger than reason, stronger than religion or
all else in me. Does the woman who is neither
wife nor mother sin in wishing to die when, for her
misfortune, she has caught a glimpse of the infinite
beauty of love, the limitless joy of motherhood?
What can become of her? I can tell you what
she feels. I cannot put that memory from me so
resolutely but that a hundred times, night and day,
visions of a happiness, greater it may be than the
reality, rise before me, followed by a shudder which
shakes brain and heart and body. Before these
cruel visions, my feelings and thoughts grow colorless,
and I ask myself, ’What would my life have been
if——?’”
She hid her face in her hands and burst into tears.
“There you see the depths of
my heart!” she continued. “For his
child I could have acquiesced in any lot however dreadful.
He who died, bearing the burden of the sins of the
world will forgive this thought of which I am dying;
but the world, I know, is merciless. In its ears
my words are blasphemies; I am outraging all its codes.
Oh! that I could wage war against this world and break
down and refashion its laws and traditions! Has
it not turned all my thoughts, and feelings, and longings,
and hopes, and every fibre in me into so many sources
of pain? Spoiled my future, present, and past?
For me the daylight is full of gloom, my thoughts
pierce me like a sword, my child is and is not.
“Oh, when Helene speaks to me,
I wish that her voice were different, when she looks
into my face I wish that she had other eyes. She
constantly keeps me in mind of all that should have
been and is not. I cannot bear to have her near
me. I smile at her, I try to make up to her for
the real affection of which she is defrauded.
I am wretched, monsieur, too wretched to live.
And I am supposed to be a pattern wife. And I
have committed no sins. And I am respected!
I have fought down forbidden love which sprang up
at unawares within me; but if I have kept the letter
of the law, have I kept it in my heart? There
has never been but one here,” she said, laying
her right hand on her breast, “one and no other;
and my child feels it. Certain looks and tones
and gestures mould a child’s nature, and my poor
little one feels no thrill in the arm I put about
her, no tremor comes into my voice, no softness into
my eyes when I speak to her or take her up. She
looks at me, and I cannot endure the reproach in her
eyes. There are times when I shudder to think
that some day she may be my judge and condemn her
mother unheard. Heaven grant that hate may not
grow up between us! Ah! God in heaven, rather
let the tomb open for me, rather let me end my days
here at Saint-Lange!—I want to go back to
the world where I shall find my other soul and become
wholly a mother. Ah! forgive me, sir, I am mad.
Those words were choking me; now they are spoken.
Ah! you are weeping too! You will not despise
me—”
She heard the child come in from a
walk. “Helene, my child, come here!”
she called. The words sounded like a cry of despair.
The little girl ran in, laughing and
calling to her mother to see a butterfly which she
had caught; but at the sight of that mother’s
tears she grew quiet of a sudden, and went up close,
and received a kiss on her forehead.
“She will be very beautiful some day,”
said the priest.
“She is her father’s child,”
said the Marquise, kissing the little one with eager
warmth, as if she meant to pay a debt of affection
or to extinguish some feeling of remorse.
“How hot you are, mamma!”
“There, go away, my angel,” said the Marquise.
The child went. She did not seem
at all sorry to go; she did not look back; glad perhaps
to escape from a sad face, and instinctively comprehending
already an antagonism of feeling in its expression.
A mother’s love finds language in smiles, they
are a part of the divine right of motherhood.
The Marquise could not smile. She flushed red
as she felt the cure’s eyes. She had hoped
to act a mother’s part before him, but neither
she nor her child could deceive him. And, indeed,
when a woman loves sincerely, in the kiss she gives
there is a divine honey; it is as if a soul were breathed
forth in the caress, a subtle flame of fire which
brings warmth to the heart; the kiss that lacks this
delicious unction is meagre and formal. The priest
had felt the difference. He could fathom the
depths that lie between the motherhood of the flesh
and the motherhood of the heart. He gave the Marquise
a keen, scrutinizing glance, then he said:
“You are right, madame; it would
be better for you if you were dead——”
“Ah!” she cried, “then
you know all my misery; I see you do if, Christian
priest as you are, you can guess my determination to
die and sanction it. Yes, I meant to die, but
I have lacked the courage. The spirit was strong,
but the flesh was weak, and when my hand did not tremble,
the spirit within me wavered.
“I do not know the reason of
these inner struggles, and alternations. I am
very pitiably a woman no doubt, weak in my will, strong
only to love. Oh, I despise myself. At night,
when all my household was asleep, I would go out bravely
as far as the lake; but when I stood on the brink,
my cowardice shrank from self-destruction. To
you I will confess my weakness. When I lay in
my bed, again, shame would come over me, and courage
would come back. Once I took a dose of laudanum;
I was ill, but I did not die. I thought I had
emptied the phial, but I had only taken half the dose.”
“You are lost, madame,”
the cure said gravely, with tears in his voice.
“You will go back into the world, and you will
deceive the world. You will seek and find a compensation
(as you imagine it to be) for your woes; then will
come a day of reckoning for your pleasures—”
“Do you think,” she cried,
“that I shall bestow the last, the most
precious treasures of my heart upon the first base
impostor who can play the comedy of passion?
That I would pollute my life for a moment of doubtful
pleasure? No; the flame which shall consume my
soul shall be love, and nothing but love. All
men, monsieur, have the senses of their sex, but not
all have the man’s soul which satisfies all the
requirements of our nature, drawing out the melodious
harmony which never breaks forth save in response
to the pressure of feeling. Such a soul is not
found twice in our lifetime. The future that lies
before me is hideous; I know it. A woman is nothing
without love; beauty is nothing without pleasure.
And even if happiness were offered to me a second
time, would not the world frown upon it? I owe
my daughter an honored mother. Oh! I am
condemned to live in an iron circle, from which there
is but one shameful way of escape. The round of
family duties, a thankless and irksome task, is in
store for me. I shall curse life; but my child
shall have at least a fair semblance of a mother.
I will give her treasures of virtue for the treasures
of love of which I defraud her.
“I have not even the mother’s
desire to live to enjoy her child’s happiness.
I have no belief in happiness. What will Helene’s
fate be? My own, beyond doubt. How can a
mother ensure that the man to whom she gives her daughter
will be the husband of her heart? You pour scorn
on the miserable creatures who sell themselves for
a few coins to any passer-by, though want and hunger
absolve the brief union; while another union, horrible
for quite other reasons, is tolerated, nay encouraged,
by society, and a young and innocent girl is married
to a man whom she has only met occasionally during
the previous three months. She is sold for her
whole lifetime. It is true that the price is
high! If you allow her no compensation for her
sorrows, you might at least respect her; but no, the
most virtuous of women cannot escape calumny.
This is our fate in its double aspect. Open prostitution
and shame; secret prostitution and unhappiness.
As for the poor, portionless girls, they may die or
go mad, without a soul to pity them. Beauty and
virtue are not marketable in the bazaar where souls
and bodies are bought and sold—in the den
of selfishness which you call society. Why not
disinherit daughters? Then, at least, you might
fulfil one of the laws of nature, and guided by your
own inclinations, choose your companions.”
“Madame, from your talk it is
clear to me that neither the spirit of family nor
the sense of religion appeals to you. Why should
you hesitate between the claims of the social selfishness
which irritates you, and the purely personal selfishness
which craves satisfactions—”
“The family, monsieur—does
such a thing exist? I decline to recognize as
a family a knot of individuals bidden by society to
divide the property after the death of father and
mother, and to go their separate ways. A family
means a temporary association of persons brought together
by no will of their own, dissolved at once by death.
Our laws have broken up homes and estates, and the
old family tradition handed down from generation to
generation. I see nothing but wreck and ruin
about me.”
“Madame, you will only return
to God when His hand has been heavy upon you, and
I pray that you have time enough given to you in which
to make your peace with Him. Instead of looking
to heaven for comfort, you are fixing your eyes on
earth. Philosophism and personal interest have
invaded your heart; like the children of the sceptical
eighteenth century, you are deaf to the voice of religion.
The pleasures of this life bring nothing but misery.
You are about to make an exchange of sorrows, that
is all.”
She smiled bitterly.
“I will falsify your predictions,”
she said. “I shall be faithful to him who
died for me.”
“Sorrow,” he answered,
“is not likely to live long save in souls disciplined
by religion,” and he lowered his eyes respectfully
lest the Marquise should read his doubts in them.
The energy of her outburst had grieved him. He
had seen the self that lurked beneath so many forms,
and despaired of softening a heart which affliction
seemed to sear. The divine Sower’s seed
could not take root in such a soil, and His gentle
voice was drowned by the clamorous outcry of self-pity.
Yet the good man returned again and again with an apostle’s
earnest persistence, brought back by a hope of leading
so noble and proud a soul to God; until the day when
he made the discovery that the Marquise only cared
to talk with him because it was sweet to speak of
him who was no more. He would not lower his ministry
by condoning her passion, and confined the conversation
more and more to generalities and commonplaces.
Spring came, and with the spring the
Marquise found distraction from her deep melancholy.
She busied herself for lack of other occupation with
her estate, making improvements for amusement.
In October she left the old chateau.
In the life of leisure at Saint-Lange she had recovered
from her grief and grown fair and fresh. Her
grief had been violent at first in its course, as the
quoit hurled forth with all the player’s strength,
and like the quoit after many oscillations, each feebler
than the last, it had slackened into melancholy.
Melancholy is made up of a succession of such oscillations,
the first touching upon despair, the last on the border
between pain and pleasure; in youth, it is the twilight
of dawn; in age, the dusk of night.
As the Marquise drove through the
village in her traveling carriage, she met the cure
on his way back from the church. She bowed in
response to his farewell greeting, but it was with
lowered eyes and averted face. She did not wish
to see him again. The village cure had judged
this poor Diana of Ephesus only too well.