modeste mignon-第27节
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says in the 〃Maiden's Song;〃 of the plant itself whose eyes unclosing
see its own image within its breast?
Such emotions; now taking place in La Briere; tend to show that; like
other poor fellows for whom life begins in toil and care; he had never
yet been loved。 Arriving at Havre overnight; he had gone to bed at
once; like a true coquette; to obliterate all traces of fatigue; and
now; after taking his bath; he had put himself into a costume
carefully adapted to show him off to the best advantage。 This is;
perhaps; the right moment to exhibit a full…length portrait of him; if
only to justify the last letter that Modeste was still to write to
him。
Born of a good family in Toulouse; and allied by marriage to the
minister who first took him under his protection; Ernest had that air
of good…breeding which comes of an education begun in the cradle; and
the habit of managing business affairs gave him a certain sedateness
which was not pedantic;though pedantry is the natural outgrowth of
premature gravity。 He was of ordinary height; his face; which won upon
all who saw him by its delicacy and sweetness; was warm in the flesh…
tints; though without color; and relieved by a small moustache and
imperial a la Mazarin。 Without this evidence of virility he might have
resembled a young woman in disguise; so refined was the shape of his
face and the cut of his lips; so feminine the transparent ivory of a
set of teeth; regular enough to have seemed artificial。 Add to these
womanly points a habit of speech as gentle as the expression of the
face; as gentle; too; as the blue eyes with their Turkish eyelids; and
you will readily understand how it was that the minister occasionally
called his young secretary Mademoiselle de La Briere。 The full; clear
forehead; well framed by abundant black hair; was dreamy; and did not
contradict the character of the face; which was altogether melancholy。
The prominent arch of the upper eyelid; though very beautifully cut;
overshadowed the glance of the eye; and added a physical sadness;if
we may so call it;produced by the droop of the lid over the eyeball。
This inward doubt or eclipsewhich is put into language by the word
modestywas expressed in his whole person。 Perhaps we shall be able
to make his appearance better understood if we say that the logic of
design required greater length in the oval of his head; more space
between the chin; which ended abruptly; and the forehead; which was
reduced in height by the way in which the hair grew。 The face had; in
short; a rather compressed appearance。 Hard work had already drawn
furrows between the eyebrows; which were somewhat too thick and too
near together; like those of a jealous nature。 Though La Briere was
then slight; he belonged to the class of temperaments which begin;
after they are thirty; to take on an unexpected amount of flesh。
The young man would have seemed to a student of French history a very
fair representative of the royal and almost inconceivable figure of
Louis XIII。;that historical figure of melancholy modesty without
known cause; pallid beneath the crown; loving the dangers of war and
the fatigues of hunting; but hating work; timid with his mistress to
the extent of keeping away from her; so indifferent as to allow the
head of his friend to be cut off;a figure that nothing can explain
but his remorse for having avenged his father on his mother。 Was he a
Catholic Hamlet; or merely the victim of incurable disease? But the
undying worm which gnawed at the king's vitals was in Ernest's case
simply distrust of himself;the timidity of a man to whom no woman
had ever said; 〃Ah; how I love thee!〃 and; above all; the spirit of
self…devotion without an object。 After hearing the knell of the
monarchy in the fall of his patron's ministry; the poor fellow had
next fallen upon a rock covered with exquisite mosses; named Canalis;
he was; therefore; still seeking a power to love; and this spaniel…
like search for a master gave him outwardly the air of a king who has
met with his。 This play of feeling; and a general tone of suffering in
the young man's face made it more really beautiful than he was himself
aware of; for he had always been annoyed to find himself classed by
women among the 〃handsome disconsolate;〃a class which has passed out
of fashion in these days; when every man seeks to blow his own trumpet
and put himself in the advance。
The self…distrustful Ernest now rested his immediate hopes on the
fashionable clothes he intended to wear。 He put on; for this sacred
interview; where everything depended on a first impression; a pair of
black trousers and carefully polished boots; a sulphur…colored
waistcoat; which left to sight an exquisitely fine shirt with opal
buttons; a black cravat; and a small blue surtout coat which seemed
glued to his back and shoulders by some newly…invented process。 The
ribbon of the Legion of honor was in his buttonhole。 He wore a well…
fitting pair of kid gloves of the Florentine bronze color; and carried
his cane and hat in the left hand with a gesture and air that was
worthy of the Grand Monarch; and enabled him to show; as the sacred
precincts required; his bare head with the light falling on his
carefully arranged hair。 He stationed himself before the service began
in the church porch; from whence he could examine the church; and the
Christiansmore particularly the female Christianswho dipped their
fingers in the holy water。
An inward voice cried to Modeste as she entered; 〃It is he!〃 That
surtout; and indeed the whole bearing of the young man were
essentially Parisian; the ribbon; the gloves; the cane; the very
perfume of his hair were not of Havre。 So when La Briere turned about
to examine the tall and imposing Madame Latournelle; the notary; and
the bundled…up (expression sacred to women) figure of Modeste; the
poor child; though she had carefully tutored herself for the event;
received a violent blow on her heart when her eyes rested on this
poetic figure; illuminated by the full light of day as it streamed
through the open door。 She could not be mistaken; a small white rose
nearly hid the ribbon of the Legion。 Would he recognize his unknown
mistress muffled in an old bonnet with a double veil? Modeste was so
in fear of love's clairvoyance that she began to stoop in her walk
like an old woman。
〃Wife;〃 said little Latournelle as they took their seats; 〃that
gentleman does not belong to Havre。〃
〃So many strangers come here;〃 answered his wife。
〃But;〃 said the notary; 〃strangers never come to look at a church like
ours; which is less than two centuries old。〃
Ernest remained in the porch throughout the service without seeing any
woman who realized his hopes。 Modeste; on her part; could not control
the trembling of her limbs until Mass was nearly over。 She was in the
grasp of a joy that none but she herself could depict。 At last she
heard the foot…fall of a gentleman on the pavement of the aisle。 The
service over; La Briere was making a circuit of the church; where no
one now remained but the punctiliously pious; whom he proceeded to
subject to a shrewd and keen analysis。 Ernest noticed that a prayer…
book shook violently in the hands of a veiled woman as he passed her;
as she alone kept her face hidden his suspicions were aroused; and
then confirmed by Modeste's dress; which the lover's eye now scanned
and noted。 He left the church with the Latournelles and followed them
at a distance to the rue Royale; where he saw them enter a house
accompanied by Modeste; whose custom it was to stay with her friends
till the hour of vespers。 After examining the little house; which was
ornamented with scutcheons; he asked the name of the owner; and was
told that he was Monsieur Latournelle; the chief notary in Havre。 As
Ernest lounged along the rue Royale hoping for a glimpse into the
house; Modeste caught sight of him; and thereupon declared herself too
ill to go to vespers。 Poor Ernest thus had his trouble for his pains。
He dared not wander about Ingouville; moreover; he made it a point of
honor to obey orders; and he therefore went back to Paris; previously
writing a letter which Francoise Cochet duly delivered on the morrow
with the Havre postmark。
It was the custom of Monsieur and Madame Latournelle to dine at the
Chalet every Sunday when they brought back Modeste after vespers。 So;
as soon as the invalid felt a little better; they started for
Ingouville; accompanied by Butscha。 Once at home; the happy Modeste
forgot her pretended illness and her disguise; and dressed herself
charmingly; humming as she came down to dinner;
〃Nought is sleepingHeart! awaking;
Lift thine incense to the skies。〃
Butscha shuddered slightly when he caught sight of her; so changed did
she seem to him。 The wings of love were fastened to her shoulders; she
had the air of a nymph; a Psyche; her cheeks glowed with the divin