登陆注册
20277400000027

第27章 A WOMAN WITHOUT A HEART(3)

Henceforward I shall let you have a hundred francs each month. Here is your first quarter's income for this year,' he added, fingering a pile of gold, as if to make sure that the amount was correct. 'Do what you please with it.'

"I confess that I was ready to fling myself at his feet, to tell him that I was a thief, a scoundrel, and, worse than all, a liar! But a feeling of shame held me back. I went up to him for an embrace, but he gently pushed me away.

" 'You are a man now, MY CHILD,' he said. 'What I have just done was a very proper and simple thing, for which there is no need to thank me.

If I have any claim to your gratitude, Raphael,' he went on, in a kind but dignified way, 'it is because I have preserved your youth from the evils that destroy young men in Paris. We will be two friends henceforth. In a year's time you will be a doctor of law. Not without some hardship and privations you have acquired the sound knowledge and the love of, and application to, work that is indispensable to public men. You must learn to know me, Raphael. I do not want to make either an advocate or a notary of you, but a statesman, who shall be the pride of our poor house. . . . Good-night,' he added.

"From that day my father took me fully into confidence. I was an only son; and ten years before, I had lost my mother. In time past my father, the head of a historic family remembered even now in Auvergne, had come to Paris to fight against his evil star, dissatisfied at the prospect of tilling the soil, with his useless sword by his side. He was endowed with the shrewdness that gives the men of the south of France a certain ascendency when energy goes with it. Almost unaided, he made a position for himself near the fountain of power. The revolution brought a reverse of fortune, but he had managed to marry an heiress of good family, and, in the time of the Empire, appeared to be on the point of restoring to our house its ancient splendor.

"The Restoration, while it brought back considerable property to my mother, was my father's ruin. He had formerly purchased several estates abroad, conferred by the Emperor on his generals; and now for ten years he struggled with liquidators, diplomatists, and Prussian and Bavarian courts of law, over the disputed possession of these unfortunate endowments. My father plunged me into the intricate labyrinths of law proceedings on which our future depended. We might be compelled to return the rents, as well as the proceeds arising from sales of timber made during the years 1814 to 1817; in that case my mother's property would have barely saved our credit. So it fell out that the day on which my father in a fashion emancipated me, brought me under a most galling yoke. I entered on a conflict like a battlefield; I must work day and night; seek interviews with statesmen, surprise their convictions, try to interest them in our affairs, and gain them over, with their wives and servants, and their very dogs; and all this abominable business had to take the form of pretty speeches and polite attentions. Then I knew the mortifications that had left their blighting traces on my father's face. For about a year I led outwardly the life of a man of the world, but enormous labors lay beneath the surface of gadding about, and eager efforts to attach myself to influential kinsmen, or to people likely to be useful to us. My relaxations were lawsuits, and memorials still furnished the staple of my conversation. Hitherto my life had been blameless, from the sheer impossibility of indulging the desires of youth; but now Ibecame my own master, and in dread of involving us both in ruin by some piece of negligence, I did not dare to allow myself any pleasure or expenditure.

"While we are young, and before the world has rubbed off the delicate bloom from our sentiments, the freshness of our impressions, the noble purity of conscience which will never allow us to palter with evil, the sense of duty is very strong within us, the voice of honor clamors within us, and we are open and straightforward. At that time I was all these things. I wished to justify my father's confidence in me. But lately I would have stolen a paltry sum from him, with secret delight;but now that I shared the burden of his affairs, of his name and of his house, I would secretly have given up my fortune and my hopes for him, as I was sacrificing my pleasures, and even have been glad of the sacrifice! So when M. de Villele exhumed, for our special benefit, an imperial decree concerning forfeitures, and had ruined us, Iauthorized the sale of my property, only retaining an island in the middle of the Loire where my mother was buried. Perhaps arguments and evasions, philosophical, philanthropic, and political considerations would not fail me now, to hinder the perpetration of what my solicitor termed a 'folly'; but at one-and-twenty, I repeat, we are all aglow with generosity and affection. The tears that stood in my father's eyes were to me the most splendid of fortunes, and the thought of those tears has often soothed my sorrow. Ten months after he had paid his creditors, my father died of grief; I was his idol, and he had ruined me! The thought killed him. Towards the end of the autumn of 1826, at the age of twenty-two, I was the sole mourner at his graveside--the grave of my father and my earliest friend. Not many young men have found themselves alone with their thoughts as they followed a hearse, or have seen themselves lost in crowded Paris, and without money or prospects. Orphans rescued by public charity have at any rate the future of the battlefield before them, and find a shelter in some institution and a father in the government or in the procureur du roi. I had nothing.

"Three months later, an agent made over to me eleven hundred and twelve francs, the net proceeds of the winding up of my father's affairs. Our creditors had driven us to sell our furniture. From my childhood I had been used to set a high value on the articles of luxury about us, and I could not help showing my astonishment at the sight of this meagre balance.

同类推荐
  • 曲品

    曲品

    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。
  • The Second Funeral of Napoleon

    The Second Funeral of Napoleon

    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。
  • 四阿含暮抄解

    四阿含暮抄解

    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。
  • 白苏斋类集

    白苏斋类集

    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。
  • 汉武帝外传

    汉武帝外传

    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
  • 元素力主宰者

    元素力主宰者

    这是一个分为上下层的世界,上层世界富有而华丽,下层世界是弱者生存的地方,这里靠的是自然界元素的力量,金、木、水、火、土、光、暗、七种元素组成他从小被欺压,他有一只血红的眼睛,被人们称为怪物,他性情冷漠,对人冷,对地冷,对天冷,对所有的一切都那么冷让我们一步步来看他是多强的一个存在,他将是元素的主宰者,他,将是元素之力
  • 医生江湖

    医生江湖

    年轻人的世界,面对职场、感情和人际关系,是事业重要还是爱情重要。家庭、朋友、亲情都是要去关注的。
  • 跌进时空隧道

    跌进时空隧道

    名叫伍欣的女孩一次意外,跌进时空隧道,她穿越了......机智勇敢的她是否能回到她本来的世界呢?是否会不适应穿越的世界呢?敬请阅读。
  • 网游之第二世界S

    网游之第二世界S

    在拥有匹敌人类智慧的AI的游戏《新世界》中,任何形式的死亡都会拥有最大的惩罚,但是这依旧无法阻止它风靡全球。但这真的只是个残酷一点的游戏吗?不,当GM发现其不合理之时,这个游戏的一切都已经无法停止。游戏脱离了GM的掌控开始驶向与预定不同的结果,那么在这个游戏最终将走向何方?当拥有智慧的AI意识到他们所处的世界为虚幻之物时,他们又会如何抉择?
  • 云墙

    云墙

    修,二十一世纪的退伍特种兵。穿越到一片充满未知机遇与挑战的大陆。高耸的云墙,将这方大陆与世隔绝。修所在的大陆被神所遗弃修意外与巴赫,纯种血族连立契约。他能否穿越云墙,拯救这片大陆,让它重焕光明?
  • 给我一个选择的理由

    给我一个选择的理由

    微风轻轻拂起与桃花香气混合着湿润泥土的味道飘过我的鼻梁,进入鼻孔。这是谁的味道?是你的吗?我的爱人
  • 明宪宗宝训

    明宪宗宝训

    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。
  • 幻彩帝都

    幻彩帝都

    在我们美丽的上空,人们只知道那里住这玉皇大帝和一群神仙,却不知在凌霄宝殿的最东面还住着一群可爱的小仙,分别有红橙黄绿青蓝紫七位正殿殿主,还有他们的统治者——金帝,他们住的地方叫幻彩帝都,他们有神仙的法力,却又比一般的神仙逍遥,可是他们却也没有神仙的长寿——幻彩帝都有个规矩:当幻彩帝都的金帝羽化之时,他的七位正殿殿主也必须化为幻彩帝都的七彩守护莲,生生世世守护幻彩帝都,而当新一任金帝上位之时,会重新寻找与他有缘的七殿殿主......几千年来从未改变,直到轮到第十二代金帝上位,位于紫殿宫的的殿主不甘就这样化为守护莲,于是逃跑了……却引来一场大乱……
  • 牛郎织女的后现代生活

    牛郎织女的后现代生活

    牛郎织女这对被王母娘娘用天河分开后,思念牛郎的织女趁着母亲的千年大寿逃出天宫来到了人间,本想和龙王结为亲家的玉帝闻后大怒,取了织女的神力,从此织女成为了一个民间女子,不甘落后的织女和牛郎在凡间开公司,建企业,在他们的努力下,牛郎和织女的企业壮大成熟,最终上市,一对患难夫妻在书写小人物的奋斗史的同时,也赢来了众神的尊敬。
  • 我们去西线

    我们去西线

    本小说为短篇小说,发于庆祝中国抗日战争暨世界反法西斯战争胜利70周年之时。所有历史背景均为网络资料可查询,主要人物为虚构,历史路线绝无任何虚假崩塌。向在第二次世界大战中阵亡的盟国官兵及平民致以崇高的敬意,祈求世界和平。