登陆注册
20295200000050

第50章

Ten days after the evening at the theatre when they had met, Monsieur de Clagny came to call at four o'clock, after coming out of court, and found Madame de la Baudraye making a little cap. The sight of this proud and ambitious woman, whose mind was so accomplished, and who had queened it so well at the Chateau d'Anzy, now condescending to household cares and sewing for the coming infant, moved the poor lawyer, who had just left the bench. And as he saw the pricks on one of the taper fingers he had so often kissed, he understood that Madame de la Baudraye was not merely playing at this maternal task.

In the course of this first interview the magistrate saw to the depths of Dinah's soul. This perspicacity in a man so much in love was a superhuman effort. He saw that Didine meant to be the journalist's guardian spirit and lead him into a nobler road; she had seen that the difficulties of his practical life were due to some moral defects.

Between two beings united by love--in one so genuine, and in the other so well feigned--more than one confidence had been exchanged in the course of four months. Notwithstanding the care with which Etienne wrapped up his true self, a word now and then had not failed to enlighten Dinah as to the previous life of a man whose talents were so hampered by poverty, so perverted by bad examples, so thwarted by obstacles beyond his courage to surmount. "He will be a greater man if life is easy to him," said she to herself. And she strove to make him happy, to give him the sense of a sheltered home by dint of such economy and method as are familiar to provincial folks. Thus Dinah became a housekeeper, as she had become a poet, by the soaring of her soul towards the heights.

"His happiness will be my absolution."

These words, wrung from Madame de la Baudraye by her friend the lawyer, accounted for the existing state of things. The publicity of his triumph, flaunted by Etienne on the evening of the first performance, had very plainly shown the lawyer what Lousteau's purpose was. To Etienne, Madame de la Baudraye was, to use his own phrase, "a fine feather in his cap." Far from preferring the joys of a shy and mysterious passion, of hiding such exquisite happiness from the eyes of the world, he found a vulgar satisfaction in displaying the first woman of respectability who had ever honored him with her affection.

The Judge, however, was for some time deceived by the attentions which any man would lavish on any woman in Madame de la Baudraye's situation, and Lousteau made them doubly charming by the ingratiating ways characteristic of men whose manners are naturally attractive.

There are, in fact, men who have something of the monkey in them by nature, and to whom the assumption of the most engaging forms of sentiment is so easy that the actor is not detected; and Lousteau's natural gifts had been fully developed on the stage on which he had hitherto figured.

Between the months of April and July, when Dinah expected her confinement, she discovered why it was that Lousteau had not triumphed over poverty; he was idle and had no power of will. The brain, to be sure, must obey its own laws; it recognizes neither the exigencies of life nor the voice of honor; a man cannot write a great book because a woman is dying, or to pay a discreditable debt, or to bring up a family; at the same time, there is no great talent without a strong will. These twin forces are requisite for the erection of the vast edifice of personal glory. A distinguished genius keeps his brain in a productive condition, just as the knights of old kept their weapons always ready for battle. They conquer indolence, they deny themselves enervating pleasures, or indulge only to a fixed limit proportioned to their powers. This explains the life of such men as Walter Scott, Cuvier, Voltaire, Newton, Buffon, Bayle, Bossuet, Leibnitz, Lopez de Vega, Calderon, Boccacio, Aretino, Aristotle--in short, every man who delighted, governed, or led his contemporaries.

A man may and ought to pride himself more on his will than on his talent. Though Talent has its germ in a cultivated gift, Will means the incessant conquest of his instincts, of proclivities subdued and mortified, and difficulties of every kind heroically defeated. The abuse of smoking encouraged Lousteau's indolence. Tobacco, which can lull grief, inevitably numbs a man's energy.

Then, while the cigar deteriorated him physically, criticism as a profession morally stultified a man so easily tempted by pleasure.

Criticism is as fatal to the critic as seeing two sides to a question is to a pleader. In these professions the judgment is undermined, the mind loses its lucid rectitude. The writer lives by taking sides.

Thus, we may distinguish two kinds of criticism, as in painting we may distinguish art from practical dexterity. Criticism, after the pattern of most contemporary leader-writers, is the expression of judgments formed at random in a more or less witty way, just as an advocate pleads in court on the most contradictory briefs. The newspaper critic always finds a subject to work up in the book he is discussing. Done after this fashion, the business is well adapted to indolent brains, to men devoid of the sublime faculty of imagination, or, possessed of it indeed, but lacking courage to cultivate it. Every play, every book comes to their pen as a subject, making no demand on their imagination, and of which they simply write a report, seriously or in irony, according to the mood of the moment. As to an opinion, whatever it may be, French wit can always justify it, being admirably ready to defend either side of any case. And conscience counts for so little, these /bravi/ have so little value for their own words, that they will loudly praise in the greenroom the work they tear to tatters in print.

Nay, men have been known to transfer their services from one paper to another without being at the pains to consider that the opinions of the new sheet must be diametrically antagonistic to those of the old.

同类推荐
  • 文韬

    文韬

    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。
  • 菩萨行方便境界神通变化经

    菩萨行方便境界神通变化经

    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。
  • 孟子注疏

    孟子注疏

    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。
  • 相续解脱如来所作随顺处了义经

    相续解脱如来所作随顺处了义经

    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。
  • 刘子遗书

    刘子遗书

    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
  • 重生之生活玩家

    重生之生活玩家

    懒癌患者萧书薇无意间下载了一个诡异的游戏客户端,结果重生到了三年前的高二……在游戏里,她收获了奇葩的小伙伴,get了各种神奇的生活技能,从此化身手工达人,治好懒癌,重拾自信,幸福生活不是梦!
  • 傲世狂龙在都市

    傲世狂龙在都市

    山省中强势家族的遗子,在恩师、师姐以及女总裁的帮助下成为一方霸主,一个二十几岁的毛头小子,手握他人的生死大权,拥有至高无上的权力,最终没有辜负恩师的期望,成为华夏国武林以及中医界的泰斗……
  • 道士的净土

    道士的净土

    道士十大境界:羽士、烟客、术方、真人、大宗、天师、幻尊、龙魂、道神、帝泰!修炼四象力提升道士境界:羽道力(外向道术)、骨道力(体术)、血道力(内力)、智道力(实战经验)!必须四象全修!每境五阶,保持第五阶巅峰状态一年可升下一境,十大境巅峰状态:四象初开、四象升华、四象平衡、四象循环、四象专精、四象凝聚、四象合一、四象无形、四象崩塌!被一个奇怪老道裹挟到坤界的主角,为了回到家乡不得不进行道士修行,体内四象缺一的主角被一本黄书拉去学第65门道术(四象力只有64门),此道术本身只能用于防御,而主角不得不以守为攻独闯道疆!在阴差阳错下随1级道士组织(最高10级)一路开拓的同时,他还将揭开一个惊天阴谋!
  • 撼天帝主

    撼天帝主

    他不是一个好人,但也不是一个坏人。转世重生,修魔之道,如何逆世成尊,且看陈宸安的帝主崛起路!
  • 幻世游龙劫

    幻世游龙劫

    神龙意志咆哮中原,龙生九子破碎成兽!东南西北,春夏秋冬,儒墨道法,温烈醇冷,诸位试图品味主人公其中风趣。正邪对立,阴阳守恒,终究是亘古不变,还是造物弄人……
  • 神元决

    神元决

    天才体质,废物灵魂,该如何自处?本质吸引,天熊为伴,走向强者之路。孰言吾道前无途,金焰青云破穹庐,天魔绝处仍勿忘,亘古深仇不可顾。一个得天独厚的少年,却无法修炼元气而不能成为修炼者转休体术。然而,无意间得到的一朵青莲开启了他体内的神秘力量,使他走上了不同于他人的修炼道路,并陷入了无休止的追杀之中。他却在无数次的生死之间得悟大道,最终站在强者之巅。然而,当他与封印中的强者相遇之时,得知了一个惊天秘密。
  • 神炉

    神炉

    有一个外星人从玄武天星来到地球成了我的朋友他跟我讲述了他的故事从一个懵懂的少年靠着努力和智慧在残酷的世界里一步步修炼成宇宙间最强大的存在这是一个真实的故事我只是一个转述者我保证它的精彩不亚于你所看过的任何小说
  • 中国共产党早期革命家的故事(之三)

    中国共产党早期革命家的故事(之三)

    本套丛书中收录的人物,都是在创建中华人民共和国的伟大斗争中和领导人民进行社会主义经济建设的伟大事业中立下了丰功伟绩的老一辈无产阶级革命家,都是中华民族几千年历史上涌现出来的风云人的中出类拔萃者。
  • 凡人涅盘

    凡人涅盘

    “鸡头、燕颔、蛇颈、龟背、鱼尾、五彩色,高六尺许”凤凰也而涅槃正是凤凰之所性。相传:凤凰每次死后,会周身燃起大火,然后其在烈火中获得重生,并获得较之以前更强大的生命力,称之为“凤凰涅槃”。凤凰性格高洁,非非晨露不饮,非嫩竹不食,非千年梧桐不栖。陈凡正是巧然遇上了一只“超高傲”的凤凰,意外之下巧得凤凰之传承。且看陈凡是如何因此奇遇而主宰整个天地,笑傲乾坤......
  • 暴力界区

    暴力界区

    没有最暴力,只有更暴力!暴力的功法,暴力的丹药,暴力的科技,暴力的女人,一切的一切,都是如此的暴力!只有暴力,才有魅力!!