登陆注册
19865000000047

第47章 A WOMAN WITHOUT A HEART(23)

"I had rejoiced over a sacrifice to make for her, and almost humiliated myself in seeking out my kinsman, the Duc de Navarreins, a selfish man who was ashamed of my poverty, and had injured me too deeply not to hate me. He received me with the polite coldness that makes every word and gesture seem an insult; he looked so ill at ease that I pitied him. I blushed for this pettiness amid grandeur, and penuriousness surrounded by luxury. He began to talk to me of his heavy losses in the three per cents, and then I told him the object of my visit. The change in his manners, hitherto glacial, which now gradually, became affectionate, disgusted me.

"Well, he called upon the countess, and completely eclipsed me with her.

"On him Foedora exercised spells and witcheries unheard of; she drew him into her power, and arranged her whole mysterious business with him; I was left out, I heard not a word of it; she had made a tool of me! She did not seem to be aware of my existence while my cousin was present; she received me less cordially perhaps than when I was first presented to her. One evening she chose to mortify me before the duke by a look, a gesture, that it is useless to try to express in words. Iwent away with tears in my eyes, planning terrible and outrageous schemes of vengeance without end.

"I often used to go with her to the theatre. Love utterly absorbed me as I sat beside her; as I looked at her I used to give myself up to the pleasure of listening to the music, putting all my soul into the double joy of love and of hearing every emotion of my heart translated into musical cadences. It was my passion that filled the air and the stage, that was triumphant everywhere but with my mistress. Then Iwould take Foedora's hand. I used to scan her features and her eyes, imploring of them some indication that one blended feeling possessed us both, seeking for the sudden harmony awakened by the power of music, which makes our souls vibrate in unison; but her hand was passive, her eyes said nothing.

"When the fire that burned in me glowed too fiercely from the face Iturned upon her, she met it with that studied smile of hers, the conventional expression that sits on the lips of every portrait in every exhibition. She was not listening to the music. The divine pages of Rossini, Cimarosa, or Zingarelli called up no emotion, gave no voice to any poetry in her life; her soul was a desert.

"Foedora presented herself as a drama before a drama. Her lorgnette traveled restlessly over the boxes; she was restless too beneath the apparent calm; fashion tyrannized over her; her box, her bonnet, her carriage, her own personality absorbed her entirely. My merciless knowledge thoroughly tore away all my illusions. If good breeding consists in self-forgetfulness and consideration for others, in constantly showing gentleness in voice and bearing, in pleasing others, and in making them content in themselves, all traces of her plebeian origin were not yet obliterated in Foedora, in spite of her cleverness. Her self-forgetfulness was a sham, her manners were not innate but painfully acquired, her politeness was rather subservient.

And yet for those she singled out, her honeyed words expressed natural kindness, her pretentious exaggeration was exalted enthusiasm. I alone had scrutinized her grimacings, and stripped away the thin rind that sufficed to conceal her real nature from the world; her trickery no longer deceived me; I had sounded the depths of that feline nature. Iblushed for her when some donkey or other flattered and complimented her. And yet I loved her through it all! I hoped that her snows would melt with the warmth of a poet's love. If I could only have made her feel all the greatness that lies in devotion, then I should have seen her perfected, she would have been an angel. I loved her as a man, a lover, and an artist; if it had been necessary not to love her so that I might win her, some cool-headed coxcomb, some self-possessed calculator would perhaps have had an advantage over me. She was so vain and sophisticated, that the language of vanity would appeal to her; she would have allowed herself to be taken in the toils of an intrigue; a hard, cold nature would have gained a complete ascendency over her. Keen grief had pierced me to my very soul, as she unconsciously revealed her absolute love of self. I seemed to see her as she one day would be, alone in the world, with no one to whom she could stretch her hand, with no friendly eyes for her own to meet and rest upon. I was bold enough to set this before her one evening; Ipainted in vivid colors her lonely, sad, deserted old age. Her comment on this prospect of so terrible a revenge of thwarted nature was horrible.

" 'I shall always have money,' she said; 'and with money we can always inspire such sentiments as are necessary for our comfort in those about us.'

"I went away confounded by the arguments of luxury, by the reasoning of this woman of the world in which she lived; and blamed myself for my infatuated idolatry. I myself had not loved Pauline because she was poor; and had not the wealthy Foedora a right to repulse Raphael?

Conscience is our unerring judge until we finally stifle it. Aspecious voice said within me, 'Foedora is neither attracted to nor repulses any one; she has her liberty, but once upon a time she sold herself to the Russian count, her husband or her lover, for gold. But temptation is certain to enter into her life. Wait till that moment comes!' She lived remote from humanity, in a sphere apart, in a hell or a heaven of her own; she was neither frail nor virtuous. This feminine enigma in embroideries and cashmeres had brought into play every emotion of the human heart in me--pride, ambition, love, curiosity.

同类推荐
  • A Ride Across Palestine

    A Ride Across Palestine

    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。
  • The Voice of the City

    The Voice of the City

    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。
  • 注解伤寒论

    注解伤寒论

    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。
  • 小五义

    小五义

    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。
  • 中论序疏

    中论序疏

    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。
热门推荐
  • 卓越员工素质修炼

    卓越员工素质修炼

    平凡的员工安于现状,却因为放弃努力,不得不过平凡的生活。而卓越的员工不安于现状,他们经过不断的努力,最终成为了一名卓越的员工。超越平凡,选择卓越。这是一句值得每一个企业员工一生追求的格言。郑一群编著的《卓越员工素质修炼》从员工的角度出发,着重从正确认识自己的位置;做一个善于思考的员工;行动是通往成功的桥梁;懂得感恩,营造和谐环境;对待工作尽职尽责;勤奋让你从平凡走向卓越;增强自己的团队意识;拥有良好的人际关系;在追求卓越的过程中不断成长等九个方面详尽展开。通过《卓越员工素质修炼》,你将发现,只要经过自己的不懈努力,你也可以从平凡的员工步入到卓越员工的行列中。
  • 雨天遇见你

    雨天遇见你

    刘雨若在经历了婚姻的挫折后,几次三番被前夫和前夫的现任妻子找麻烦,但是命运并没有让她的衰运就此延续,她的身边始终都有着喜欢他的人守护在他的身边,无论是如何的守护,总是站在她身后等着她转身。终于,在经历了流产,误会,甚至是排挤,更多的前男友的不屑与破坏后,还是与许星灿在一起了。几经风雨,好事多磨,最终却是白首不相离。
  • 校花之兵王保镖

    校花之兵王保镖

    五年前的今天他是一人之上,万人之上的兵王。五年之后一次任务的失败让他回到了普通人的生活。可世间万物让他感叹。无数的美女向他扑来。他该如何面对
  • 我的哭泣日记

    我的哭泣日记

    25岁的年轻女孩丁了,在北漂的日子里患了抑郁症。她从小有记日记的习惯,而且早熟敏感。她想回顾下一路走来的成长历程,在眼前这万般艰难的世界找到心底的一道光。关于亲情,关于友情,关于爱情,关于成长,关于那个自己真实的样子。兴许你会看到自己的影子。
  • 一宠成瘾,顾少的心尖宠妻

    一宠成瘾,顾少的心尖宠妻

    父亲被抓,她成为人人都能踩上一脚的落魄千金,不惜贱卖自己,而他为了报复她,巨资将她拍下。他将她抵在墙上,咬牙开口,“林未晚,我当初体会的,我会一分不少,尽数奉还给你们!”在她被众人欺时,却是他护在身边,轻笑道:"我顾景的女人,我宠都来不及,什么时候轮到你们来欺负了?。”她被逼疯,拿刀对着他时.......却转手被他送进监狱当爱已深入骨髓,恨则需要剔骨剜肉!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 拜金俏王妃

    拜金俏王妃

    为什么太阳是黄的?因为金子是黄的!东方鸷呀东方鸷,你问我爱你有多深,金子代表我的心!
  • 无敌升级系统

    无敌升级系统

    这是一个混乱的年代,神灵遁匿,人间妖魔纷乱,百姓愁苦!这是一个拥有无限可能的年代,凡人可向神灵宣战!地球游戏的设计者,杨修,意外的穿越到大荒世界。通过杀戮经验不断升级,逆上屠神,狩猎神格,重建无上神庭。大荒,我来了!
  • 无界杀手

    无界杀手

    杀手之王叶钧遇到了出道以来最大的挑战,一介凡人又怎能杀死不死之妖?一个杀手走上了修仙之路,是否又真能成为“十步杀一人,千里不留行”的绝世杀神?妖族,魔族相继登场,一场毁灭世界的阴谋在酝酿,叶钧凭一己之力是否能力挽狂澜?当末世来临,挽救亿万生命的是科技还是神灵?杀手多情,还是无情杀手?爱与恨,情与爱,所有的情感是否是杀手致命的弱点?天道无情,当杀手与天合道,是否能慧剑断情,成为孤命杀星?且看叶钧如何从万千世界,横贯时间永不改变的杀人与被杀中步步登顶!这是一个杀手的童话,从杀手之王到神王杀手,我是杀手我怕谁,遇魔杀魔,遇神杀神,纵横十亿大千世界,舍我其谁!
  • 灵爵

    灵爵

    九品修灵的漫漫长路,一名从大漠中走出的狼女,一步一步走上了这条巅峰之路。ps:本书萝莉多多,御女多多,欢迎大家观看。
  • 玻璃城之爱情城堡

    玻璃城之爱情城堡

    玻璃城正如它的名字是水晶宫般美丽的一座城堡,人们称之为爱情之城。玻璃城拥有全世界最美的风景,传说在这个城堡里生活的人每个人都会拥有有一段属于自己的感人肺腑的爱情故事。默雪晴是个很幸运的女孩,她拥有一切美好的先天条件。幸福的家庭,美丽的容颜,婀娜多姿的身材,纯真的心灵,就是这样一朵似出水芙蓉的花儿在玻璃城盛开了,可是外表美丽的城堡里却暗藏着很多不为人知的黑暗,默雪晴的人生虽然并不顺利,但她却一点点成长了起来。情节虚构,请勿模仿