登陆注册
20280500000098

第98章

"I could not die in peace," said Veronique, in a voice of deep emotion, "if I suffered the false impression you all have of me to remain. You see in me a guilty woman, who asks your prayers, and who seeks to make herself worthy of pardon by this public confession of her sin. That sin was so great, its consequences were so fatal, that perhaps no penance can atone for it. But the more humiliation I submit to here on earth, the less I may have to dread the wrath of God in the heavenly kingdom to which I am going. My father, who had great confidence in me, commended to my care (now twenty years ago) a son of this parish, in whom he had seen a great desire to improve himself, an aptitude for study, and fine characteristics. I mean the unfortunate Jean-Francois Tascheron, who thenceforth attached himself to me as his benefactress. How did the affection I felt for him become a guilty one? I think myself excused from explaining this. Perhaps it could be shown that the purest sentiments by which we act in this world were insensibly diverted from their course by untold sacrifices, by reasons arising from our human frailty, by many causes which might appear to dismiss the evil of my sin. But even if the noblest affections moved me, was I less guilty? Rather let me confess that I, who by education, by position in the world, might consider myself superior to the youth my father confided to me, and from whom I was separated by the natural delicacy of our sex,--I listened, fatally, to the promptings of the devil. I soon found myself too much the mother of that young man to be insensible to his mute and delicate admiration. He alone, he first, recognized my true value. But perhaps a horrible calculation entered my mind. I thought how discreet a youth would be who owed his all to me, and whom the chances of life had put so far away from me, though we were born equals. I made even my reputation for benevolence, my pious occupations, a cloak to screen my conduct. Alas!--and this is doubtless one of my greatest sins--I hid my passion under cover of the altar. The most virtuous of my actions--the love I bore my mother, the acts of devotion which were sincere and true in the midst of my wrong- doing--all, all were made to serve the ends of a desperate passion, and were links in the chain that held me. My poor beloved mother, who hears me now, was for a long time, ignorantly, an accomplice in my sin. When her eyes were opened, too many dangerous facts existed not to give her mother's heart the strength to be silent. Silence with her has been the highest virtue. Her love for her daughter has gone beyond her love to God. Ah! I here discharge her solemnly from the heavy burden of secrecy which she has borne. She shall end her days without compelling either eyes or brow to lie. Let her motherhood stand clear of blame; let that noble, sacred old age, crowned with virtue, shine with its natural lustre, freed of that link which bound her indirectly to infamy!"

Tears checked the dying woman's voice for an instant; Aline gave her salts to inhale.

"There is no one who has not been better to me than I deserve," she went on,--"even the devoted servant who does this last service; she has feigned ignorance of what she knew, but at least she was in the secret of the penances by which I have destroyed the flesh that sinned. I here beg pardon of the world for the long deception to which I have been led by the terrible logic of society. Jean-Francois Tascheron was not as guilty as he seemed. Ah! you who hear me, I implore you to remember his youth, and the madness excited in him partly by the remorse that seized upon me, partly by involuntary seductions. More than that! it was a sense of honor, though a mistaken honor, which caused the most awful of these evils. Neither of us could endure our perpetual deceit. He appealed, unhappy man, to my own right feeling; he sought to make our fatal love as little wounding to others as it could be. We meant to hide ourselves away forever. Thus I was the cause, the sole cause, of his crime. Driven by necessity, the unhappy man, guilty of too much devotion to an idol, chose from all evil acts the one which might be hereafter reparable. I knew nothing of it till the moment of execution. At that moment the hand of God threw down that scaffolding of false contrivances--I heard the cries; they echo in my ears! I divined the struggle, which I could not stop, --I, the cause of it! Tascheron was maddened; I swear it."

Here Veronique turned her eyes upon Monsieur de Grandville, and a sob was heard to issue from Denise Tascheron's breast.

"He lost his mind when he saw what he thought his happiness destroyed by unforeseen circumstances. The unhappy man, misled by his love, went headlong from a delinquent act to crime--from robbery to a double murder. He left my mother's house an innocent man, he returned a guilty one. I alone knew that there was neither premeditation nor any of the aggravating circumstances on which he was sentenced to death. A hundred times I thought of betraying myself to save him; a hundred times a horrible and necessary restraint stopped the words upon my lips. Undoubtedly, my presence near the scene had contributed to give him the odious, infamous, ignoble courage of a murderer. Were it not for me, he would have fled. I had formed that soul, trained that mind, enlarged that heart; I knew it; he was incapable of cowardice or meanness. Do justice to that involuntarily guilty arm, do justice to him, whom God, in his mercy, has allowed to sleep in his quiet grave, where you have wept for him, suspecting, it may be, the extenuating truth. Punish, curse the guilty creature before you! Horrified by the crime when once committed, I did my best to hide my share in it.

Trusted by my father--I, who was childless--to lead a child to God, I led him to the scaffold! Ah! punish me, curse me, the hour has come!"

Saying these words, her eyes shone with the stoic pride of a savage.

同类推荐
  • 评琴书屋医略

    评琴书屋医略

    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。
  • 杨文公谈苑

    杨文公谈苑

    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。
  • 上清明堂元真经诀

    上清明堂元真经诀

    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。
  • 阿育王传

    阿育王传

    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。
  • 伤寒门

    伤寒门

    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。
热门推荐
  • 心有理想,春暖花开

    心有理想,春暖花开

    和君集团2007年创办的和君商学院,开创了民企创办商学院的先河,是中国原创性商学思想的策源地。本书即是一本多角度展现和君商学院的著作。书中系统阐述了和君商学院的教育理念与设计思想,记录了大量年轻学子的理想追求、求学生活以及成长蜕变的历程,是对现行中国商学教育的感悟和总结,也是一种培养商学优秀人才模式的实践和探索。对广大高校在读学子及初入职场的年轻人士有非常好的指导性;对于企业管理者,在选择和培养人才,以及创建自己的企业大学、商学院方面,具有很好的借鉴意义。
  • 中华人民共和国企业所得税法

    中华人民共和国企业所得税法

    为加强法制宣传,迅速普及法律知识,服务于我国民主法制建设,多年来,中国民主法制出版社根据全国人大常委会每年定期审议通过、修订的法律,全品种、大规模的出版了全国人民代表大会常务委员会公报版的系列法律单行本。该套法律单行本经过最高立法机关即全国人民代表大会常务委员会的权威审定,法条内容准确无误,文本格式规范合理,多年来受到了社会各界广泛关注与好评。
  • 四王之冠

    四王之冠

    当巨猩、神象、大蛇、影雕遇到大地、炙炎、极冰、飓风会发生怎样的碰撞?当万剑朝鸣、天斧霹雳遇到鬼影无痕、软骨至柔又将怎样惨烈?那一曲天籁真敢作入耳之音?那一眼似水柔情真的是一生相伴?当代表了‘光明’的暴怒与怜悯王冠加身!当左眼神月,右眼炙阳的魔鬼觉醒之时,挥手间,惊天地,泣鬼神!当威严与守护王冠、荣耀与掌控王冠、宽容与生命王冠、暴怒与怜悯王冠降世。到底哪个才是四王之王,四王之冠!
  • TFBOYS之鱼忆七秒

    TFBOYS之鱼忆七秒

    腹黑段子手?说好的乖宝宝呢!爱豆式嘲笑,飞一般的体验,是爱豆了不起?长得帅了不起?了不起。好!我服。我到底饭了三个怎样的爱豆!揭秘!谁说的乖巧可爱的好宝宝?出来看我不打你!你以为这是喜剧?开玩笑,我不会告诉你其实并不是。
  • 娇兰染情(上)

    娇兰染情(上)

    多年前的相遇,注定了两人今生的厮守,可是这样一个聪慧的女子,又怎会明白他真正的心意?她一心只为政治上的联婚而联婚,却不知,他为她心动,在这一场你追我逐的游戏中,结局会是怎样一种发展?
  • 穿越之失忆公主的守护人

    穿越之失忆公主的守护人

    啊,穿越了,呀,失忆了!那个帅哥是谁啊,你说什么,修仙,我不干,不干,有宝贝?可以,考虑,考虑
  • 锦绣江湖之画中仙

    锦绣江湖之画中仙

    一幅画,缘起,不知道是不是命运捉弄,再相见已是陌路。一家酒家,看人间悲欢离合,消千古情愁。
  • 总裁霸爱小妖精

    总裁霸爱小妖精

    三年前,她是他的未婚妻,却在大婚之日逃走。三年后,她是别人的未婚妻,却被未婚夫送到了债主的床上。他救她,帮她还债,给她工作,替她解决纠纷,超级宠她,对她有求必应,让她再次爱上他。却在她沦陷之时,将她推向深渊。“你这么讨厌我,为什么还要帮我?保护我?”“我就是让你越欠越多,让你情债肉偿!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 天启轮回

    天启轮回

    蝶谷依存她却亡,舍命却挽一念魂,亲送她入轮回道,已身也迫在重生,为她舍命而不悔,轮回十年重修道,踏骨重回王之路,伊人红妆已相随,依偎身旁心欢喜,在踏诸天万界中
  • 大师的国民理想

    大师的国民理想

    近百年来,数十位学术和思想大师围绕中国的民族精神、社会改良、乡村建设、文化和教育改革等多个领域进行了艰苦追寻和不懈探索,希望本书能引发读者对国家、民族、个体命运发展和社会改革前景做更深层次的思考。