登陆注册
38591600000011

第11章

marry, yes, in a few months' time one of the keenest pangs of regret will be the recollection of a self which used to be, of the two young girls who sat one evening under one of the tallest oak-trees on the hillside at Ecouen, and looked along the fair valley at our feet in the light of the sunset, which caught us in its glow. We sat on a slab of rock in ecstasy, which sobered down into melancholy of the gentlest. You were the first to discover that the far-off sun spoke to us of the future. How inquisitive and how silly we were! Do you remember all the absurd things we said and did? We embraced each other; 'like lovers,' said we. We solemnly promised that the first bride should faithfully reveal to the other the mysteries of marriage, the joys which our childish minds imagined to be so delicious. That evening will complete your despair, Louisa. In those days you were young and beautiful and careless, if not radiantly happy; a few days of marriage, and you will be, what I am already--ugly, wretched, and old. Need I tell you how proud I was and how vain and glad to be married to Colonel Victor d'Aiglemont? And besides, how could I tell you now? for Icannot remember that old self. A few moments turned my girlhood to a dream. All through the memorable day which consecrated a chain, the extent of which was hidden from me, my behavior was not free from reproach. Once and again my father tried to repress my spirits; the joy which I showed so plainly was thought unbefitting the occasion, my talk scarcely innocent, simply because I was so innocent. I played endless child's tricks with my bridal veil, my wreath, my gown. Left alone that night in the room whither I had been conducted in state, I planned a piece of mischief to tease Victor. While I awaited his coming, my heart beat wildly, as it used to do when I was a child stealing into the drawing-room on the last day of the old year to catch a glimpse of the New Year's gifts piled up there in heaps. When my husband came in and looked for me, my smothered laughter ringing out from beneath the lace in which I had shrouded myself, was the last outburst of the delicious merriment which brightened our games in childhood . . ."When the dowager had finished reading the letter, and after such a beginning the rest must have been sad indeed, she slowly laid her spectacles on the table, put the letter down beside them, and looked fixedly at her niece. Age had not dimmed the fire in those green eyes as yet.

"My little girl," she said, "a married woman cannot write such a letter as this to a young unmarried woman; it is scarcely proper--""So I was thinking," Julie broke in upon her aunt. "I felt ashamed of myself while you were reading it.""If a dish at table is not to our taste, there is no occasion to disgust others with it, child," the old lady continued benignly, "especially when marriage has seemed to us all, from Eve downwards, so excellent an institution. . . You have no mother?"The Countess trembled, then she raised her face meekly, and said:

"I have missed my mother many times already during the past year; but I have myself to blame, I would not listen to my father. He was opposed to my marriage; he disapproved of Victor as a son-in-law."She looked at her aunt. The old face was lighted up with a kindly look, and a thrill of joy dried Julie's tears. She held out her young, soft hand to the old Marquise, who seemed to ask for it, and the understanding between the two women was completed by the close grasp of their fingers.

"Poor orphan child!"

The words came like a final flash of enlightenment to Julie. It seemed to her that she heard her father's prophetic voice again.

"Your hands are burning! Are they always like this?" asked the Marquise.

"The fever only left me seven or eight days ago.""You had a fever upon you, and said nothing about it to me!""I have had it for a year," said Julie, with a kind of timid anxiety.

"My good little angel, then your married life hitherto has been one long time of suffering?"Julie did not venture to reply, but an affirmative sign revealed the whole truth.

"Then you are unhappy?"

"On! no, no, aunt. Victor loves me, he almost idolizes me, and I adore him, he is so kind.""Yes, you love him; but you avoid him, do you not?""Yes . . . sometimes . . . He seeks me too often.""And often when you are alone you are troubled with the fear that he may suddenly break in on your solitude?""Alas! yes, aunt. But, indeed, I love him, I do assure you.""Do you not, in your own thoughts, blame yourself because you find it impossible to share his pleasures? Do you never think at times that marriage is a heavier yoke than an illicit passion could be?""Oh, that is just it," she wept. "It is all a riddle to me, and can you guess it all? My faculties are benumbed, I have no ideas, I can scarcely see at all. I am weighed down by vague dread, which freezes me till I cannot feel, and keeps me in continual torpor. I have no voice with which to pity myself, no words to express my trouble. Isuffer, and I am ashamed to suffer when Victor is happy at my cost.""Babyish nonsense, and rubbish, all of it!" exclaimed the aunt, and a gay smile, an after-glow of the joys of her own youth, suddenly lighted up her withered face.

"And do you too laugh!" the younger woman cried despairingly.

"It was just my own case," the Marquise returned promptly. "And now Victor has left you, you have become a girl again, recovering a tranquillity without pleasure and without pain, have you not?"Julie opened wide eyes of bewilderment.

"In fact, my angel, you adore Victor, do you not? But still you would rather be a sister to him than a wife, and, in short, your marriage is emphatically not a success?""Well--no, aunt. But why do you smile?"

同类推荐
  • 蜃楼外史

    蜃楼外史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 懋斋诗钞

    懋斋诗钞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 中兴间气集

    中兴间气集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • CLOTELLE

    CLOTELLE

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 正一解卮醮仪

    正一解卮醮仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 生活心理医生

    生活心理医生

    本书理论和实际相结合,运用大量日常生活中的生动案例,深刻剖析了常见的心理问题和心理疾病,提出了切实可行的解决之道,是我们解决日常心理问题和心理疾病的好帮手。
  • 我竟然不是最强

    我竟然不是最强

    一个刚刚开始修仙的肉身少年,因为机缘来到了现世,他认为自己一定是最强,可是,“年轻人,不要焦躁。”“什么,我还不是最强!?那我就要变成最强!”前几张可能有点白,但后面就还可以了,请你们来看看吧~= ̄ω ̄=
  • 头号甜心,帝少的心尖宠

    头号甜心,帝少的心尖宠

    被亲妈一阵炮轰的刘小妮再也坐不住了,结婚!马上就结婚!可是这去哪儿找个新郎?刘小妮可是怎么也没想到,自己就阴差阳错的相亲相到一极品。此人长得一脸正气,可动作却邪佞非凡。这不,第一次见面,人家就俯身挑着她的下巴:“跟我结婚,彩礼都归你。”管他是谁,反正总算找到个道上的了,可是这小财迷看着这桃花眼的男人,怎么心跳的那么厉害呢?一来二去,这婚结过了也该算银货两讫了吧,可是当小财迷想离婚走人的时候,却发现自己这整的这是一军婚!“池宇墨,你这是明摆着坑我!”“嗯哼,从见你第一眼,爷就打算掐了你这朵花!”
  • 路先生,请问你贵性

    路先生,请问你贵性

    『甜宠+欢脱』小记者见义勇为,成功救下跳楼女。不料,脚下一滑,顺手拽住了一人,从高空跌下。醒来,悲催发现,两人互穿了!从此,逗逼搞怪的小记者和矜贵高冷的总裁大人杠上了!然,傲娇之余,却总有不得不向对方低下高贵头颅的时刻…&据说,路靳声心思费尽,方得美人归。然,一日,朋友圈却爆出一段求婚视频,众人才悟:原来是女追男!苏沫闻之,气的跳脚,“那时候他还是我好吗?!”也怪她当时矫情,要结婚先求婚,却不知某人腹黑地录了视频!但…她是不会认输的!同日,微信群惊现一段“女训男,男很怂”的视频,众人惊掉下巴:路靳声…怕老婆!某女撑着下巴乐开花,嘻嘻,谁怕谁?
  • 无罪之魂

    无罪之魂

    瘟疫与黑暗褪去的大地,神灵远逝。战马和骑士的荣光不现,蒸汽轰鸣。黑暗之血孕育出的恶果,潜藏人心。无言的恐惧跨越了未来,静待其候。有人从灰烬中捡起王冠,成为传奇。————Thesoulofinnocence————黑暗之血,无罪之魂。一个穿越者意外拔出了圣剑,虽然没有打倒魔王,但拯救了世界的故事。
  • 贴身暧昧

    贴身暧昧

    打脸一分钟,修炼十年功!在鸟不拉屎的山上锤炼了十几年的龙震天降临都市,开始了贴身保护的暧昧之旅!美女?必须有!打脸?必须有!爽文?必须有!
  • 情深可愿:妾身有礼了

    情深可愿:妾身有礼了

    他的老师是她的爹,她的哥哥们是他的兄弟,可是这么多年他们二人却从未见过。是缘分不够还是佛说孽缘,当两人成为夫妻大夜王朝的帝后,他无奈灭她满门,自此分道扬镳。是谁在背后算计着一切,上辈的爱恨牵扯着更多的秘密,等一切谜团花开雾散,他们,还能在一起吗?可愿否,愿还是不愿?
  • 洛克王国之蓝雪梦幻旅程

    洛克王国之蓝雪梦幻旅程

    蓝雪是一个智力超群的小女孩,有一天晚上,她偶然遇见了属于自己的蓝晶晶并去了洛克王国,开始了了她的奇幻旅程。
  • 总裁,夫人又在搞事情!

    总裁,夫人又在搞事情!

    三年前,温璟宠她如命,而她却留下一条勒索短信,逃之夭夭。三年后再遇,他捏着她的下巴将她抵在墙角:“宋颜,我要让你尝尝什么叫痛苦!”他用一纸婚约给她的生活筑起铜墙铁壁,她爬不出墙,也钻不进他的心。他说,我要让你尝尝始乱终弃是什么下场!说好的让她生不如死,他却时时刻刻护她周全宠她上天,怎么回事?宋颜觉得自己被骗了!
  • 鲤鱼精也要做妖王

    鲤鱼精也要做妖王

    这是一个万类霜天竞自由的故事。山河广袤,妖族还以为自己仍然是时代的主角,幽域里大鬼吃小鬼,鬼王们则在憧憬着万劫阴灵可入圣。远古神庭仅剩的几尊神灵,仍不愿放弃最后的神道希望。看似弱小的人族,占据着大地的中央,万民开化,励精图治,积蓄了足够力量的人主誓要让普天之下,莫非王土!大争之世,我们的主角却只是震泽里一尾小小的鲤鱼精,每天望着天空吐着泡泡,平平无奇。但你要是能听懂鱼语,你就会知道他其实是在对天咆哮:“为什么要给我金手指?!这系统的名字其实是作死系统吧?!”另外,为什么任务奖励会是小钻风的记忆???