登陆注册
18889100000231

第231章

"Who can she be," I said, speaking to the walls; "this girl who seems to have the most elevated feelings under the veil of the most cynical libertinism? She says that in Parma she wishes to remain perfectly unknown, her own mistress, and I cannot, of course, flatter myself that she will not place me under the same restrictions as the captain to whom she has already abandoned herself. Goodbye to my expectations, to my money, and my illusions! But who is she--what is she? She must have either a lover or a husband in Parma, or she must belong to a respectable family; or, perhaps, thanks to a boundless love for debauchery and to her confidence in her own charms, she intends to set fortune, misery, and degradation at defiance, and to try to enslave some wealthy nobleman! But that would be the plan of a mad woman or of a person reduced to utter despair, and it does not seem to be the case with Henriette. Yet she possesses nothing.

True, but she refused, as if she had been provided with all she needed, the kind assistance of a man who has the right to offer it, and from whom, in sooth, she can accept without blushing, since she has not been ashamed to grant him favours with which love had nothing to do. Does she think that it is less shameful for a woman to abandon herself to the desires of a man unknown and unloved than to receive a present from an esteemed friend, and particularly at the eve of finding herself in the street, entirely destitute in the middle of a foreign city, amongst people whose language she cannot even speak? Perhaps she thinks that such conduct will justify the 'faux pas' of which she has been guilty with the captain, and give him to understand that she had abandoned herself to him only for the sake of escaping from the officer with whom she was in Rome. But she ought to be quite certain that the captain does not entertain any other idea; he shews himself so reasonable that it is impossible to suppose that he ever admitted the possibility of having inspired her with a violent passion, because she had seen him once through a window in Civita-Vecchia. She might possibly be right, and feel herself justified in her conduct towards the captain, but it is not the same with me, for with her intelligence she must be aware that I

would not have travelled with them if she had been indifferent to me, and she must know that there is but one way in which she can obtain my pardon. She may be endowed with many virtues, but she has not the only one which could prevent me from wishing the reward which every man expects to receive at the hands of the woman he loves. If she wants to assume prudish manners towards me and to make a dupe of me, I am bound in honour to shew her how much she is mistaken."

After this monologue, which had made me still more angry, I made up my mind to have an explanation in the morning before our departure.

"I shall ask her," said I to myself, "to grant me the same favours which she has so easily granted to her old captain, and if I meet with a refusal the best revenge will be to shew her a cold and profound contempt until our arrival in Parma."

I felt sure that she could not refuse me some marks of real or of pretended affection, unless she wished to make a show of a modesty which certainly did not belong to her, and, knowing that her modesty would only be all pretence, I was determined not to be a mere toy in her hands.

As for the captain, I felt certain, from what he had told me, that he would not be angry with me if I risked a declaration, for as a sensible man he could only assume a neutral position.

Satisfied with my wise reasoning, and with my mind fully made up, I

fell asleep. My thoughts were too completely absorbed by Henriette for her not to haunt my dreams, but the dream which I had throughout the night was so much like reality that, on awaking, I looked for her in my bed, and my imagination was so deeply struck with the delights of that night that, if my door had not been fastened with a bolt, I

should have believed that she had left me during my sleep to resume her place near the worthy Hungarian.

When I was awake I found that the happy dream of the night had turned my love for the lovely creature into a perfect amorous frenzy, and it could not be other wise. Let the reader imagine a poor devil going to bed broken down with fatigue and starvation; he succumbs to sleep, that most imperative of all human wants, but in his dream he finds himself before a table covered with every delicacy; what will then happen? Why, a very natural result. His appetite, much more lively than on the previous day, does not give him a minute's rest he must satisfy it or die of sheer hunger.

I dressed myself, resolved on making sure of the possession of the woman who had inflamed all my senses, even before resuming our journey.

"If I do not succeed," I said to myself, "I will not go one step further."

But, in order not to offend against propriety, and not to deserve the reproaches of an honest man, I felt that it was my duty to have an explanation with the captain in the first place.

I fancy that I hear one of those sensible, calm, passionless readers, who have had the advantage of what is called a youth without storms, or one of those whom old age has forced to become virtuous, exclaim, "Can anyone attach so much importance to such nonsense?"

Age has calmed my passions down by rendering them powerless, but my heart has not grown old, and my memory has kept all the freshness of youth; and far from considering that sort of thing a mere trifle, my only sorrow, dear reader, arises from the fact that I have not the power to practise, to the day of my death, that which has been the principal affair of my life!

When I was ready I repaired to the chamber occupied by my two travelling companions, and after paying each of them the usual morning compliments I told the officer that I was deeply in love with Henriette, and I asked him whether he would object to my trying to obtain her as my mistress.

同类推荐
  • 归庐谭往录

    归庐谭往录

    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。
  • 钓矶立谈

    钓矶立谈

    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。
  • 善恶因果经

    善恶因果经

    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。
  • 唐才子传

    唐才子传

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Dark Lady of the Sonnets

    Dark Lady of the Sonnets

    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
  • 都市行之独具慧眼

    都市行之独具慧眼

    徐少宁因为女人被人打残了双眼,却又因祸得福的开启了慧眼。徐少宁:那啥,灵物我能分辨啊,个人的气运我也看得见啊,还有一方水土的灵气汇聚地更是看的一清二楚,最蛋疼的是大地的龙脉我居然也看得见啊!路人甲:女人的衣服你也能看得穿?徐少宁竖起了中指,“滚粗,当我徐少宁是个啥,没见弱水三千环绕在我身,我却只取了一瓢饮么!”
  • 通吃大仙

    通吃大仙

    通吃天下,唯吾独仙!那一年,林山喊着口号走出东茗域……你是顶级炼药师,身份尊贵?没关系,吃了你,我便是顶级炼药师。你是道器灵体化形,不认主?没关系,吃了你,我便是你主。你是修仙界第一美女,没定亲?来来来,这有粉妆玉砌、偏偏少年一枚,求交往,会暖床……
  • 隐婚甜妻:总裁,别傲娇

    隐婚甜妻:总裁,别傲娇

    三年前,她成为他的合法妻子,却因此失去了自己的孩子。三年后,她化身金牌编剧回国,再次见面,倔强坚持离婚。“为什么离婚,给我一个理由!”“你欠我一个儿子!”“老婆,你的意思是,我们再生一个?”
  • 圣天大道

    圣天大道

    圣天大陆地域之广阔无边无际,大陆之上万族林立、诸圣争霸,帝国、门派、家族,各大势力明争暗斗,称雄一方。
  • 爱的纹身

    爱的纹身

    如果眼睛不舒服可要赶紧治疗,否则后果很严重。秦立峰也开始冲着我挤眉弄眼了,到底怎么了?我一转身,这可不是普通的转身,这一转身可不得了,石磊正怒火中烧的站在我背后,原来如此。
  • 幻世三梦

    幻世三梦

    大学生秦朝偶遇蛊女,深陷深山苗寨,离奇诡异的经历
  • 畅游星河

    畅游星河

    遨游这片天下,不禁感叹,宇宙之大。自由穿梭银河,黯然泪下,已站世界之颠。科技,异能的碰撞,打开一个新的天地。
  • 那是不了了之的爱情

    那是不了了之的爱情

    在那个懵懵懂懂的时期里,你或许会遇到,或许遇到过,又或许已经遇到那么一个人。那么一段感情。到后来,你也不知道那是不是所谓爱情。可是那段情,却一直深埋于心。我也曾遇到过,那是一段不了了之的爱情。
  • 网游之奋斗在元纪

    网游之奋斗在元纪

    主角没有神秘的背景,没有夸张的异能,有的只是为了这糟糕的生活继续下去的执着和拼搏。圆自己和所有失意者一个对游戏的热爱和对生活的奋斗,一个YY的梦。数据流!!感谢中国作者素材库提供免费封面
  • 老家故事

    老家故事

    本书是刘黎丽的散文集,包括:我为什么要写刘庄、满子大叔的罗曼史、孤儿小本的情债、梅姨与三个男人、能人老才、阿花的爱情、女贼癸嫂......