登陆注册
20010500000036

第36章 SUICIDE(5)

During the last days employed by the legal formalities required before proceeding to arrest for debt,Raoul went about,in spite of himself,with that coldly sullen and morose expression of face which may be noticed in persons who are either fated to commit suicide or are meditating it.The funereal ideas they are turning over in their minds appear upon their foreheads in gray and cloudy tints,their smile has something fatalistic in it,their motions are solemn.These unhappy beings seem to want to suck the last juices of the life they mean to leave;their eyes see things invisible,their ears are listening to a death-knell,they pay no attention to the minor things about them.

These alarming symptoms Marie perceived one evening at Lady Dudley's.

Raoul was sitting apart on a sofa in the boudoir,while the rest of the company were conversing in the salon.The countess went to the door,but he did not raise his head;he heard neither Marie's breathing nor the rustle of her silk dress;he was gazing at a flower in the carpet,with fixed eyes,stupid with grief;he felt he had rather die than abdicate.All the world can't have the rock of Saint Helena for a pedestal.Moreover,suicide was then the fashion in Paris.Is it not,in fact,the last resource of all atheistical societies?Raoul,as he sat there,had decided that the moment had come to die.Despair is in proportion to our hopes;that of Raoul had no other issue than the grave.

"What is the matter?"cried Marie,flying to him.

"Nothing,"he answered.

There is one way of saying that word "nothing"between lovers which signifies its exact contrary.Marie shrugged her shoulders.

"You are a child,"she said."Some misfortune has happened to you.""No,not to me,"he replied."But you will know all soon enough,Marie,"he added,affectionately.

"What were you thinking of when I came in?"she asked,in a tone of authority.

"Do you want to know the truth?"She nodded."I was thinking of you;Iwas saying to myself that most men in my place would have wanted to be loved without reserve.I am loved,am I not?""Yes,"she answered.

"And yet,"he said,taking her round the waist and kissing her forehead at the risk of being seen,"I leave you pure and without remorse.I could have dragged you into an abyss,but you remain in all your glory on its brink without a stain.Yet one thought troubles me--""What is it?"she asked.

"You will despise me."She smiled superbly."Yes,you will never believe that I have sacredly loved you;I shall be disgraced,I know that.Women never imagine that from the depths of our mire we raise our eyes to heaven and truly adore a Marie.They assail that sacred love with miserable doubts;they cannot believe that men of intellect and poesy can so detach their soul from earthly enjoyment as to lay it pure upon some cherished altar.And yet,Marie,the worship of the ideal is more fervent in men then in women;we find it in women,who do not even look for it in us.""Why are you making me that article?"she said,jestingly.

"I am leaving France;and you will hear to-morrow,how and why,from a letter my valet will bring you.Adieu,Marie."Raoul left the house after again straining the countess to his heart with dreadful pressure,leaving her stupefied and distressed.

"What is the matter,my dear?"said Madame d'Espard,coming to look for her."What has Monsieur Nathan been saying to you?He has just left us in a most melodramatic way.Perhaps you are too reasonable or too unreasonable with him."The countess got into a hackney-coach and was driven rapidly to the newspaper office.At that hour the huge apartments which they occupied in an old mansion in the rue Feydeau were deserted;not a soul was there but the watchman,who was greatly surprised to see a young and pretty woman hurrying through the rooms in evident distress.She asked him to tell her where was Monsieur Nathan.

"At Mademoiselle Florine's,probably,"replied the man,taking Marie for a rival who intended to make a scene.

"Where does he work?"

"In his office,the key of which he carries in his pocket.""I wish to go there."

The man took her to a dark little room looking out on a rear court-yard.The office was at right angles.Opening the window of the room she was in,the countess could look through into the window of the office,and she saw Nathan sitting there in the editorial arm-chair.

"Break in the door,and be silent about all this;I'll pay you well,"she said."Don't you see that Monsieur Nathan is dying?"The man got an iron bar from the press-room,with which he burst in the door.Raoul had actually smothered himself,like any poor work-girl,with a pan of charcoal.He had written a letter to Blondet,which lay on the table,in which he asked him to ascribe his death to apoplexy.The countess,however,had arrived in time;she had Raoul carried to her coach,and then,not knowing where else to care for him,she took him to a hotel,engaged a room,and sent for a doctor.

In a few hours Raoul was out of danger;but the countess did not leave him until she had obtained a general confession of the causes of his act.When he had poured into her heart the dreadful elegy of his woes,she said,in order to make him willing to live:--"I can arrange all that."

But,nevertheless,she returned home with a heart oppressed with the same anxieties and ideas that had darkened Nathan's brow the night before.

"Well,what was the matter with your sister?"said Felix,when his wife returned."You look distressed.""It is a dreadful history about which I am bound to secrecy,"she said,summoning all her nerve to appear calm before him.

In order to be alone and to think at her ease,she went to the Opera in the evening,after which she resolved to go (as we have seen)and discharge her heart into that of her sister,Madame du Tillet;relating to her the horrible scene of the morning,and begging her advice and assistance.Neither the one nor the other could then know that du Tillet himself had lighted the charcoal of the vulgar brazier,the sight of which had so justly terrified the countess.

"He has but me in all the world,"said Marie to her sister,"and Iwill not fail him."

That speech contains the secret motive of most women;they can be heroic when they are certain of being all in all to a grand and irreproachable being.

同类推荐
  • King Henry VIII

    King Henry VIII

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Journal of A Voyage to Lisbon

    Journal of A Voyage to Lisbon

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 陶说说今篇

    陶说说今篇

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宝藏天女陀罗尼法

    宝藏天女陀罗尼法

    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。
  • 白喉条辨

    白喉条辨

    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
  • 龙凤玦

    龙凤玦

    江湖从不缺少纷争,或是为名,或是为利,那看似平静的湖面下面永远是暗流涌动,而龙凤玦的传说无疑是给这表面平静的江湖投下了一枚重磅炸弹。“龙腾九霄,凤养万物,龙凤合鸣,天地反覆。”这十六字的预言不知何时起响彻了江湖,江湖中人纷纷猜测其意,流言四起。且看父母惨死,身怀龙形玦的孤儿薛柏如何在这纷乱的江湖中拨开层层迷雾,搅乱天下风云。
  • 电视文艺生态批评论

    电视文艺生态批评论

    本书是一本从理论创新角度探究电视文艺批评方法的专著。将自然生态学与人文生态学研究的系列成果引入到电视中来,对与电视文艺相关的节目、现状具体考察,在借鉴中西方文化批评的相关理论资源的基础上,建立电视文艺生态批评方法,通过整体关注电视文艺与精神生态、文化生态、社会生态的内在关系,以“生态中心”的价值尺度,把完善电视文化,建立以人为目的当代传媒体系作为自己的重要目标。
  • 华都大侦探

    华都大侦探

    没有背景,没有后台。唯一能够依靠的就是,自己超群的智慧,斗歹徒,降悍匪,在一场场惊心动魄的迷局当中能否获得胜利。剽悍的未婚妻,柔情的搭档,却因自己卷入恐怖组织的迷局当中,他的智慧,能否保护自己心爱的人?他又能佛破开最后的谜题,局中局,谜中谜,且看少年侦探,能否力挽狂澜,揭开一切的真相。
  • TFBOYS之十年你敢赌吗

    TFBOYS之十年你敢赌吗

    让陈馨然万万没想到的是,她奇迹般的见到了自己梦寐以求的偶像TFBOYS,还糊糊涂涂的当上了TFBOYS的经纪人。一场游戏也就此开始,十年,你,敢赌吗?
  • 网文写作素材和写作技巧汇总

    网文写作素材和写作技巧汇总

    网文写作技巧和写作素材汇总,旨在交流心得
  • 我就是歌神

    我就是歌神

    在最光辉灿烂的时候把生命一下子玩到尽头,就是永恒!——黄家驹这是一段关于音乐的故事一个音乐少年的成长之路游走于音乐于现实之间,带你穿梭于梦想与虚幻间,体会那音乐与心灵的激情碰撞。。。平淡的写作风格,希望带给你真实的感动,菜包将全力打造经典都市音乐小说。。。多谢暴雨创的Q群:29027261还有飞扬的Q群:33493488
  • 暑门

    暑门

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 妃常嚣张:医手遮天下

    妃常嚣张:医手遮天下

    一场阴谋,绝色特工化身千家落魄小姐,又岂是盘中餐,任人刀俎。一手银针,一袭白衣,佳人浅笑而立,问天下谁人与之争锋,唯有那冷酷少年,对她誓死追随,天堂地狱,我与你同在。
  • 重生之电竞之魂

    重生之电竞之魂

    拥有完美意识与各种极限判断的楚枫被上帝开了一个玩笑,用生命在热爱并投入电子竞技无奈却是个重度手残,每次看着屏幕中得意洋洋的对手,自己心中总有N种方法制裁他,但由手中操纵出来却总是慢了数拍。灰心丧气之下被车一撞重生到一个16岁少年的身上,从此完美意识加极限操作处理,塑造了一个全新的电竞之魂……
  • 梦里三生三世

    梦里三生三世

    一生情,两世追忆。半世流离,一世悲凉。半世沉溺,一世哀伤。一场神劫,促使两条互不相干的平行线,演变成交叉线。是悲是喜,只在一念之间。世人都说,敌不过的是似水流年。月寂寥,树遮影,伊人顾盼君回望。敌不过的哪是似水流年,江山早为你我说定了永别。纪清池说:你别想离开我,这一世别想,下一世也别想。永远......也别想。就算是死,你也只会埋在我纪家的祖坟里。温知宁说:你不是我,怎么知我心中伤痛多深。如有来世,我不愿再沉溺,半世悲凉已足够。世上最遥远的距离,是面对爱你的人,用冷漠的心,掘了一条无法逾越的鸿沟。早知今日,何必当初。一回头,早已物是人非。且行且珍惜……