Love
Before starting for Paris, the Duc
d’Herouville had forbidden the castle servants
under heavy pains and penalties to go upon the shore
where Etienne had passed his life, unless the Duc de
Nivron took any of them with him. This order,
suggested by Beauvouloir, who had shown the duke the
wisdom of leaving Etienne master of his solitude,
guaranteed to Gabrielle and her attendants the inviolability
of the little domain, outside of which he forbade
them to go without his permission.
Etienne had remained during these
two days shut up in the old seignorial bedroom under
the spell of his tenderest memories. In that
bed his mother had slept; her thoughts had been confided
to the furnishings of that room; she had used them;
her eyes had often wandered among those draperies;
how often she had gone to that window to call with
a cry, a sign, her poor disowned child, now master
of the chateau. Alone in that room, whither he
had last come secretly, brought by Beauvouloir to
kiss his dying mother, he fancied that she lived again;
he spoke to her, he listened to her, he drank from
that spring that never faileth, and from which have
flowed so many songs like the “Super flumina
Babylonis.”
The day after Beauvouloir’s
return he went to see his young master and blamed
him gently for shutting himself up in a single room,
pointing out to him the danger of leading a prison
life in place of his former free life in the open
air.
“But this air is vast,”
replied Etienne. “The spirit of my mother
is in it.”
The physician prevailed, however,
by the gentle influence of affection, in making Etienne
promise that he would go out every day, either on
the seashore, or in the fields and meadows which were
still unknown to him. In spite of this, Etienne,
absorbed in his memories, remained yet another day
at his window watching the sea, which offered him
from that point of view aspects so various that never,
as he believed, had he seen it so beautiful.
He mingled his contemplations with readings in Petrarch,
one of his most favorite authors,—him whose
poesy went nearest to the young man’s heart through
the constancy and the unity of his love. Etienne
had not within him the stuff for several passions.
He could love but once, and in one way only.
If that love, like all that is a unit, were intense,
it must also be calm in its expression, sweet and
pure like the sonnets of the Italian poet.
At sunset this child of solitude began
to sing, in the marvellous voice which had entered
suddenly, like a hope, into the dullest of all ears
to music,—those of his father. He expressed
his melancholy by varying the same air, which he repeated,
again and again, like the nightingale. This air,
attributed to the late King Henri IV., was not the
so-called air of “Gabrielle,” but something
far superior as art, as melody, as the expression
of infinite tenderness. The admirers of those
ancient tunes will recognize the words, composed by
the great king to this air, which were taken, probably,
from some folk-song to which his cradle had been rocked
among the mountains of Bearn.
“Dawn, approach,
I pray thee;
It gladdens me to see thee;
The maiden
Whom I love
Is rosy, rosy like thee;
The rose itself,
Dew-laden,
Has not her freshness;
Ermine has not
Her pureness;
Lilies have not
Her whiteness.”
After naively revealing the thought
of his heart in song, Etienne contemplated the sea,
saying to himself: “There is my bride; the
only love for me!” Then he sang too other lines
of the canzonet,—
“She is fair
Beyond compare,”—
repeating it to express the imploring
poesy which abounds in the heart of a timid young
man, brave only when alone. Dreams were in that
undulating song, sung, resung, interrupted, renewed,
and hushed at last in a final modulation, the tones
of which died away like the lingering vibrations of
a bell.
At this moment a voice, which he fancied
was that of a siren rising from the sea, a woman’s
voice, repeated the air he had sung, but with all
the hesitations of a person to whom music is revealed
for the first time. He recognized the stammering
of a heart born into the poesy of harmony. Etienne,
to whom long study of his own voice had taught the
language of sounds, in which the soul finds resources
greater than speech to express its thoughts, could
divine the timid amazement that attended these attempts.
With what religious and subtile admiration had that
unknown being listened to him! The stillness
of the atmosphere enabled him to hear every sound,
and he quivered at the distant rustle of the folds
of a gown. He was amazed, —he, whom
all emotions produced by terror sent to the verge of
death —to feel within him the healing,
balsamic sensation which his mother’s coming
had formerly brought to him.
“Come, Gabrielle, my child,”
said the voice of Beauvouloir, “I forbade you
to stay upon the seashore after sundown; you must come
in, my daughter.”
“Gabrielle,” said Etienne
to himself. “Oh! the pretty name!”
Beauvouloir presently came to him,
rousing his young master from one of those meditations
which resemble dreams. It was night, and the moon
was rising.
“Monseigneur,” said the
physician, “you have not been out to-day, and
it is not wise of you.”
“And I,” replied Etienne,
“can I go on the seashore after sundown?”
The double meaning of this speech,
full of the gentle playfulness of a first desire,
made the old man smile.
“You have a daughter, Beauvouloir.”
“Yes, monseigneur,—the
child of my old age; my darling child. Monseigneur,
the duke, your father, charged me so earnestly to watch
your precious health that, not being able to go to
Forcalier, where she was, I have brought her here,
to my great regret. In order to conceal her from
all eyes, I have placed her in the house monseigneur
used to occupy. She is so delicate I fear everything,
even a sudden sentiment or emotion. I have never
taught her anything; knowledge would kill her.”
“She knows nothing!” cried Etienne, surprised.
“She has all the talents of
a good housewife, but she has lived as the plants
live. Ignorance, monseigneur, is as sacred a thing
as knowledge. Knowledge and ignorance are only
two ways of living, for the human creature. Both
preserve the soul and envelop it; knowledge is your
existence, but ignorance will save my daughter’s
life. Pearls well-hidden escape the diver, and
live happy. I can only compare my Gabrielle to
a pearl; her skin has the pearl’s translucence,
her soul its softness, and until this day Forcalier
has been her fostering shell.”
“Come with me,” said Etienne,
throwing on a cloak. “I want to walk on
the seashore, the air is so soft.”
Beauvouloir and his master walked
in silence until they reached a spot where a line
of light, coming from between the shutters of a fisherman’s
house, had furrowed the sea with a golden rivulet.
“I know not how to express,”
said Etienne, addressing his companion, “the
sensations that light, cast upon the water, excites
in me. I have often watched it streaming from
the windows of that room,” he added, pointing
back to his mother’s chamber, “until it
was extinguished.”
“Delicate as Gabrielle is,”
said Beauvouloir, gaily, “she can come and walk
with us; the night is warm, and the air has no dampness.
I will fetch her; but be prudent, monseigneur.”
Etienne was too timid to propose to
accompany Beauvouloir into the house; besides, he
was in that torpid state into which we are plunged
by the influx of ideas and sensations which give birth
to the dawn of passion. Conscious of more freedom
in being alone, he cried out, looking at the sea now
gleaming in the moonlight,—
“The Ocean has passed into my soul!”
The sight of the lovely living statuette
which was now advancing towards him, silvered by the
moon and wrapped in its light, redoubled the palpitations
of his heart, but without causing him to suffer.
“My child,” said Beauvouloir, “this
is monseigneur.”
In a moment poor Etienne longed for
his father’s colossal figure; he would fain
have seemed strong, not puny. All the vanities
of love and manhood came into his heart like so many
arrows, and he remained in gloomy silence, measuring
for the first time the extent of his imperfections.
Embarrassed by the salutation of the young girl, he
returned it awkwardly, and stayed beside Beauvouloir,
with whom he talked as they paced along the shore;
presently, however, Gabrielle’s timid and deprecating
countenance emboldened him, and he dared to address
her. The incident of the song was the result of
mere chance. Beauvouloir had intentionally made
no preparations; he thought, wisely, that between
two beings in whom solitude had left pure hearts,
love would arise in all its simplicity. The repetition
of the air by Gabrielle was a ready text on which
to begin a conversation.
During this promenade Etienne was
conscious of that bodily buoyancy which all men have
felt at the moment when a first love transports their
vital principle into another being. He offered
to teach Gabrielle to sing. The poor lad was
so glad to show himself to this young girl invested
with some slight superiority that he trembled with
pleasure when she accepted his offer. At that
moment the moonlight fell full upon her, and enabled
Etienne to note the points of her resemblance to his
mother, the late duchess. Like Jeanne de Saint-Savin,
Beauvouloir’s daughter was slender and delicate;
in her, as in the duchess, sadness and suffering conveyed
a mysterious charm. She had that nobility of
manner peculiar to souls on whom the ways of the world
have had no influence, and in whom all is noble because
all is natural. But in Gabrielle’s veins
there was also the blood of “la belle Romaine,”
which had flowed there from two generations, giving
to this young girl the passionate heart of a courtesan
in an absolutely pure soul; hence the enthusiasm that
sometimes reddened her cheek, sanctified her brow,
and made her exhale her soul like a flash of light,
and communicated the sparkle of flame to all her motions.
Beauvouloir shuddered when he noticed this phenomenon,
which we may call in these days the phosphorescence
of thought; the old physician of that period regarded
it as the precursor of death.
Hidden beside her father, Gabrielle
endeavored to see Etienne at her ease, and her looks
expressed as much curiosity as pleasure, as much kindliness
as innocent daring. Etienne detected her in stretching
her neck around Beauvouloir with the movement of a
timid bird looking out of its nest. To her the
young man seemed not feeble, but delicate; she found
him so like herself that nothing alarmed her in this
sovereign lord. Etienne’s sickly complexion,
his beautiful hands, his languid smile, his hair parted
in the middle into two straight bands, ending in curls
on the lace of his large flat collar, his noble brow,
furrowed with youthful wrinkles,—all these
contrasts of luxury and weakness, power and pettiness,
pleased her; perhaps they gratified the instinct of
maternal protection, which is the germ of love; perhaps,
also, they stimulated the need that every woman feels
to find distinctive signs in the man she is prompted
to love. New ideas, new sensations were rising
in each with a force, with an abundance that enlarged
their souls; both remained silent and overcome, for
sentiments are least demonstrative when most real and
deep. All durable love begins by dreamy meditation.
It was suitable that these two beings should first
see each other in the softer light of the moon, that
love and its splendors might not dazzle them too suddenly;
it was well that they met by the shores of the Ocean,—vast
image of the vastness of their feelings. They
parted filled with one another, fearing, each, to
have failed to please.
From his window Etienne watched the
lights of the house where Gabrielle was. During
that hour of hope mingled with fear, the young poet
found fresh meanings in Petrarch’s sonnets.
He had now seen Laura, a delicate, delightful figure,
pure and glowing like a sunray, intelligent as an
angel, feeble as a woman. His twenty years of
study found their meaning, he understood the mystic
marriage of all beauties; he perceived how much of
womanhood there was in the poems he adored; in short,
he had so long loved unconsciously that his whole
past now blended with the emotions of this glorious
night. Gabrielle’s resemblance to his mother
seemed to him an order divinely given. He did
not betray his love for the one in loving the other;
this new love continued her maternity. He
contemplated that young girl, asleep in the cottage,
with the same feelings his mother had felt for him
when he was there. Here, again, was a similitude
which bound this present to the past. On the
clouds of memory the saddened face of his mother appeared
to him; he saw once more her feeble smile, he heard
her gentle voice; she bowed her head and wept.
The lights in the cottage were extinguished.
Etienne sang once more the pretty canzonet, with a
new expression, a new meaning. From afar Gabrielle
again replied. The young girl, too, was making
her first voyage into the charmed land of amorous
ecstasy. That echoed answer filled with joy the
young man’s heart; the blood flowing in his
veins gave him a strength he never yet had felt, love
made him powerful. Feeble beings alone know the
voluptuous joy of that new creation entering their
life. The poor, the suffering, the ill-used,
have joys ineffable; small things to them are worlds.
Etienne was bound by many a tie to the dwellers in
the City of Sorrows. His recent accession to
grandeur had caused him terror only; love now shed
within him the balm that created strength; he loved
Love.
The next day Etienne rose early to
hasten to his old house, where Gabrielle, stirred
by curiosity and an impatience she did not acknowledge
to herself, had already curled her hair and put on
her prettiest costume. Both were full of the
eager desire to see each other again,—mutually
fearing the results of the interview. As for
Etienne, he had chosen his finest lace, his best-embroidered
mantle, his violet-velvet breeches; in short, those
handsome habiliments which we connect in all memoirs
of the time with the pallid face of Louis XIII., a
face oppressed with pain in the midst of grandeur,
like that of Etienne. Clothes were certainly
not the only point of resemblance between the king
and the subject. Many other sensibilities were
in Etienne as in Louis XIII.,—chastity,
melancholy, vague but real sufferings, chivalrous
timidities, the fear of not being able to express
a feeling in all its purity, the dread of too quickly
approaching happiness, which all great souls desire
to delay, the sense of the burden of power, that tendency
to obedience which is found in natures indifferent
to material interests, but full of love for what a
noble religious genius has called the “astral.”
Though wholly inexpert in the ways
of the world, Gabrielle was conscious that the daughter
of a doctor, the humble inhabitant of Forcalier, was
cast at too great a distance from Monseigneur Etienne,
Duc de Nivron and heir to the house of Herouville,
to allow them to be equal; she had as yet no conception
of the ennobling of love. The naive creature
thought with no ambition of a place where every other
girl would have longed to seat herself; she saw the
obstacles only. Loving, without as yet knowing
what it was to love, she only felt herself distant
from her pleasure, and longed to get nearer to it,
as a child longs for the golden grapes hanging high
above its head. To a girl whose emotions were
stirred at the sight of a flower, and who had unconsciously
foreseen love in the chants of the liturgy, how sweet
and how strong must have been the feelings inspired
in her breast the previous night by the sight of the
young seigneur’s feebleness, which seemed to
reassure her own. But during the night Etienne
had been magnified to her mind; she had made him a
hope, a power; she had placed him so high that now
she despaired of ever reaching him.
“Will you permit me to sometimes
enter your domain?” asked the duke, lowing his
eyes.
Seeing Etienne so timid, so humble,—for
he, on his part, had magnified Beauvouloir’s
daughter,—Gabrielle was embarrassed with
the sceptre he placed in her hands; and yet she was
profoundly touched and flattered by such submission.
Women alone know what seduction the respect of their
master and lover has for them. Nevertheless, she
feared to deceive herself, and, curious like the first
woman, she wanted to know all.
“I thought you promised yesterday
to teach me music,” she answered, hoping that
music might be made a pretext for their meetings.
If the poor child had known what Etienne’s
life really was, she would have spared him that doubt.
To him his word was the echo of his mind, and Gabrielle’s
little speech caused him infinite pain. He had
come with his heart full, fearing some cloud upon
his daylight, and he met a doubt. His joy was
extinguished; back into his desert he plunged, no
longer finding there the flowers with which he had
embellished it. With that prescience of sorrows
which characterizes the angel charged to soften them—who
is, no doubt, the Charity of heaven—Gabrielle
instantly divined the pain she had caused. She
was so vividly aware of her fault that she prayed
for the power of God to lay bare her soul to Etienne,
for she knew the cruel pang a reproach or a stern look
was capable of causing; and she artlessly betrayed
to him these clouds as they rose in her soul,—the
golden swathings of her dawning love. One tear
which escaped her eyes turned Etienne’s pain
to pleasure, and he inwardly accused himself of tyranny.
It was fortunate for both that in the very beginning
of their love they should thus come to know the diapason
of their hearts; they avoided henceforth a thousand
shocks which might have wounded them.
Etienne, impatient to entrench himself
behind an occupation, led Gabrielle to a table before
the little window at which he himself had suffered
so long, and where he was henceforth to admire a flower
more dainty than all he had hitherto studied.
Then he opened a book over which they bent their heads
till their hair touched and mingled.
These two beings, so strong in heart,
so weak in body, but embellished by all the graces
of suffering, were a touching sight. Gabrielle
was ignorant of coquetry; a look was given the instant
it was asked for, the soft rays from the eyes of each
never ceasing to mingle, unless from modesty.
The young girl took the joy of telling Etienne what
pleasure his voice gave her as she listened to his
song; she forgot the meaning of his words when he
explained to her the position of the notes or their
value; she listened to him, leaving melody for
the instrument, the idea for the form; ingenuous flattery!
the first that true love meets. Gabrielle thought
Etienne handsome; she would have liked to stroke the
velvet of his mantle, to touch the lace of his broad
collar. As for Etienne he was transformed under
the creative glance of those earnest eyes; they infused
into his being a fruitful sap, which sparkled in his
eyes, shone on his brow, remade him inwardly, so that
he did not suffer from this new play of his faculties;
on the contrary they were strengthened by it.
Happiness is the mother’s milk of a new life.
As nothing came to distract them from
each other, they stayed together not only this day
but all days; for they belonged to one another from
the first hour, passing the sceptre from one to the
other and playing with themselves as children play
with life. Sitting, happy and content, upon the
golden sands, they told each other their past, painful
for him, but rich in dreams; dreamy for her, but full
of painful pleasure.
“I never had a mother,”
said Gabrielle, “but my father has been good
as God himself.”
“I never had a father,”
said the hated son, “but my mother was all of
heaven to me.”
Etienne related his youth, his love
for his mother, his taste for flowers. Gabrielle
exclaimed at his last words. Questioned why, she
blushed and avoided answering; then when a shadow passed
across that brow which death seemed to graze with
its pinion, across that visible soul where the young
man’s slightest emotions showed, she answered:—
“Because I too love flowers.”
To believe ourselves linked far back
in the past by community of tastes, is not that a
declaration of love such as virgins know how to give?
Love desires to seem old; it is a coquetry of youth.
Etienne brought flowers on the morrow,
ordering his people to find rare ones, as his mother
had done in earlier days for him. Who knows the
depths to which the roots of a feeling reach in the
soul of a solitary being thus returning to the traditions
of mother-love in order to bestow upon a woman the
same caressing devotion with which his mother had
charmed his life? To him, what grandeur in these
nothings wherein were blended his only two affections.
Flowers and music thus became the language of their
love. Gabrielle replied to Etienne’s gifts
by nosegays of her own,—nosegays which told
the wise old doctor that his ignorant daughter already
knew enough. The material ignorance of these
two lovers was like a dark background on which the
faintest lines of their all-spiritual intercourse were
traced with exquisite delicacy, like the red, pure
outlines of Etruscan figures. Their slightest
words brought a flood of ideas, because each was the
fruit of their long meditations. Incapable of
boldly looking forward, each beginning seemed to them
an end. Though absolutely free, they were imprisoned
in their own simplicity, which would have been disheartening
had either given a meaning to their confused desires.
They were poets and poem both. Music, the most
sensual of arts for loving souls, was the interpreter
of their ideas; they took delight in repeating the
same harmony, letting their passion flow through those
fine sheets of sound in which their souls could vibrate
without obstacle.
Many loves proceed through opposition;
through struggles and reconciliations, the vulgar
struggle of mind and matter. But the first wing-beat
of true love sends it far beyond such struggles.
Where all is of the same essence, two natures are
no longer to be distinguished; like genius in its
highest expression, such love can sustain itself in
the brightest light; it grows beneath the light, it
needs no shade to bring it into relief. Gabrielle,
because she was a woman, Etienne, because he had suffered
much and meditated much, passed quickly through the
regions occupied by common passions and went beyond
it. Like all enfeebled natures, they were quickly
penetrated by Faith, by that celestial glow which
doubles strength by doubling the soul. For them
their sun was always at its meridian. Soon they
had that divine belief in themselves which allows
of neither jealousy nor torment; abnegation was ever
ready, admiration constant.
Under these conditions, love could
have no pain. Equal in their feebleness, strong
in their union, if the noble had some superiority
of knowledge and some conventional grandeur, the daughter
of the physician eclipsed all that by her beauty,
by the loftiness of her sentiments, by the delicacy
she gave to their enjoyments. Thus these two
white doves flew with one wing beneath their pure blue
heaven; Etienne loved, he was loved, the present was
serene, the future cloudless; he was sovereign lord;
the castle was his, the sea belonged to both of them;
no vexing thought troubled the harmonious concert of
their canticle; virginity of mind and senses enlarged
for them the world, their thoughts rose in their minds
without effort; desire, the satisfactions of which
are doomed to blast so much, desire, that evil of
terrestrial love, had not as yet attacked them.
Like two zephyrs swaying on the same willow-branch,
they needed nothing more than the joy of looking at
each other in the mirror of the limpid waters; immensity
sufficed them; they admired their Ocean, without one
thought of gliding on it in the white-winged bark
with ropes of flowers, sailed by Hope.
Love has its moment when it suffices
to itself, when it is happy in merely being.
During this springtime, when all is budding, the lover
sometimes hides from the beloved woman, in order to
enjoy her more, to see her better; but Etienne and
Gabrielle plunged together into all the delights of
that infantine period. Sometimes they were two
sisters in the grace of their confidences, sometimes
two brothers in the boldness of their questionings.
Usually love demands a slave and a god, but these
two realized the dream of Plato,—they were
but one being deified. They protected each other.
Caresses came slowly, one by one, but chaste as the
merry play—so graceful, so coquettish—of
young animals. The sentiment which induced them
to express their souls in song led them to love by
the manifold transformations of the same happiness.
Their joys caused them neither wakefulness nor delirium.
It was the infancy of pleasure developing within them,
unaware of the beautiful red flowers which were to
crown its shoots. They gave themselves to each
other, ignorant of all danger; they cast their whole
being into a word, into a look, into a kiss, into the
long, long pressure of their clasping hands.
They praised each other’s beauties ingenuously,
spending treasures of language on these secret idylls,
inventing soft exaggerations and more diminutives than
the ancient muse of Tibullus, or the poesies of Italy.
On their lips and in their hearts love flowed ever,
like the liquid fringes of the sea upon the sands
of the shore,—all alike, all dissimilar.
Joyous, eternal fidelity!
If we must count by days, the time
thus spent was five months only; if we may count by
the innumerable sensations, thoughts, dreams, glances,
opening flowers, realized hopes, unceasing joys, speeches
interrupted, renewed, abandoned, frolic laughter,
bare feet dabbling in the sea, hunts, childlike, for
shells, kisses, surprises, clasping hands,—call
it a lifetime; death will justify the word. There
are existences that are ever gloomy, lived under ashen
skies; but suppose a glorious day, when the sun of
heaven glows in the azure air,—such was
the May of their love, during which Etienne had suspended
all his griefs,—griefs which had passed
into the heart of Gabrielle, who, in turn, had fastened
all her joys to come on those of her lord. Etienne
had had but one sorrow in his life,—the
death of his mother; he was to have but one love—Gabrielle.