登陆注册
19917700000057

第57章

One day I asked for news of M. de la Marche. It was only to Patience that I dared to put this question.

"Gone," he answered.

"What! Gone?" I replied. "For long?"

"Forever, please God! I don't know anything about it, for I ask no questions; but I happened to be in the garden when he took leave of her, and it was all as cold as a December night. Still, /au revoir/was said on both sides, but though Edmee's manner was kind and honest as it always is, the other had the face of a farmer when he sees frosts in April. Mauprat, Mauprat, they tell me that you have become a great student and a genuine good fellow. Remember what I told you;when you are old there will probably no longer be any titles or estate. Perhaps you will be called 'Father' Mauprat, as I am called 'Father' Patience, though I have never been either a priest or a father of a family.""Well, what are you driving at?"

"Remember what I once told you," he repeated. "There are many ways of being a sorcerer, and one may read the future without being a servant of the devil. For my part, I give my consent to your marriage with your cousin. Continue to behave decently. You are a wise man now, and can read fluently from any book set before you. What more do you want?

There are so many books here that the sweat runs from my brow at the very sight of them; it seems as if I were again starting the old torment of not being able to learn to read. But you have soon cured yourself. If M. Hubert were willing to take my advice, he would fix the wedding for the next Martinmas.""That is enough, Patience!" I said. "This is a painful subject with me; my cousin does not love me.""I tell you she does. You lie in your throat, as the nobles say. Iknow well enough how she nursed you; and Marcasse from the housetop happened to look through her window and saw her on her knees in the middle of the room at five o'clock in the morning the day that you were so ill."These imprudent assertions of Patience, Edmee's tender cares, the departure of M. de la Marche, and, more than anything else, the weakness of my brain, enabled me to believe what I wished; but in proportion as I regained my strength Edmee withdrew further and further within the bounds of calm and discreet friendship. Never did man recover his health with less pleasure than I mine; for each day made Edmee's visits shorter; and when I was able to leave my room Ihad merely a few hours a day near her, as before my illness. With marvellous skill she had given me proof of the tenderest affection without ever allowing herself to be drawn into a fresh explanation concerning our mysterious betrothal. If I had not yet sufficient greatness of soul to renounce my rights, I had at least developed enough honour not to refer to them; and I found myself on exactly the same terms with her as at the time when I had fallen ill. M. de la Marche was in Paris; but according to her he had been summoned thither by his military duties and ought to return at the end of the winter on which we were entering. Nothing that the chevalier or the abbe said tended to show that there had been a quarrel between Edmee and him.

They rarely spoke of the lieutenant-general, but when they had to speak of him they did so naturally and without any signs of repugnance. I was again filled with my old doubts, and could find no remedy for them except in the kingdom of my own will. "I will force her to prefer me," I would say to myself as I raised my eyes from my book and watched Edmee's great, inscrutable eyes calmly fixed on the letters which her father occasionally received from M. de la Marche, and which he would hand to her as soon as he had read them. I buried myself in my work again. For a long time I suffered from frightful pains in the head, but I overcame them stoically. Edmee again began the course of studies which she had indirectly laid down for my winter evenings. Once more I astonished the abbe by my aptitude and the rapidity of my conquests. The kindness he had shown me during my illness had disarmed me; and although I was still unable to feel any genuine affection for him, knowing well that he was of little service to me with my cousin, I gave him proof of much more confidence and respect than in the past. His talks were as useful to me as my reading. I was allowed to accompany him in his walks in the park and in his philosophical visits to Patience's snow-covered hut. This gave me an opportunity of seeing Edmee more frequently and for longer periods. My behaviour was such that all her mistrust vanished, and she no longer feared to be alone with me. On such occasions, however, Ihad but little scope for displaying my heroism; for the abbe, whose vigilance nothing could lull to sleep, was always at our heels. This supervision no longer annoyed me; on the contrary, I was pleased at it; for, in spite of all my resolutions, the storms of passion would still sweep my senses into a mysterious disorder; and once or twice when I found myself alone with Edmee I left her abruptly and went away, so that she might not perceive my agitation.

Our life, then, was apparently calm and peaceful, and for some time it was so in reality; but soon I disturbed it more than ever by a vice which education developed in me, and which had hitherto been hidden under coarser but less fatal vices. This vice, the bane of my new period of life, was vanity.

In spite of their theories, the abbe and my cousin made the mistake of showing too much pleasure at my rapid progress. They had so little expected perseverance from me that they gave all the credit to my exceptional abilities. Perhaps, too, in the marked success of the philosophical ideas they had applied to my education they saw something of a triumph for themselves. Certain it is, I was not loath to let myself be persuaded that I had great intellectual powers, and that I was a man very much above the average. My dear instructors were soon to gather the sad fruit of their imprudence, and it was already too late to check the flight of my immoderate conceit.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 宝贝,你是我的

    宝贝,你是我的

    一个是她生死相许的初恋,一个是她患难与共的爱人,看着这对失散多年的兄弟因她而成为仇人,她要怎么办?两个人的爱情是美好,三个人的爱情是什么??当爱情与亲情纠结在一起的时候要怎么选择?如梦般的人生便是本文女主,一个孤儿的坎坷情路。
  • 惑世妖颜

    惑世妖颜

    她,曾也是尊敬长辈的好宝宝,也是乖巧听话的好妹妹,亦是尊师重道的好徒儿,然而,得到的却只有背弃。她笑,原来如此。妖者,媚世人,惑天下她,立于万里河山之上,如画江山,却掩不住那眉间的孤寂落寞弑君,弑兄,囚姐,大逆不道,无情无义,天地不容妖孽,你要为你所作所为付出代价她亦笑,妖又如何?既然你看不惯,大可来杀我,只是,你敢么?最初的最初,她只想要一个爱她、怜她、惜她的家这是一只小小妖孽成长史本文有点慢热
  • 邪少拐爱

    邪少拐爱

    欢迎大家收看植生的新作《邪少拐爱》,作品有点虐爱,喜欢的亲们别忘了收藏,呵呵……感谢支持。有空可以到隔壁坐坐,长篇《猎心:定个糊涂老婆》,地址:http://novel.hongxiu.com/a/440819/她本是个小保姆,只为生活努力;阴差阳错一纸合约成为了不能见光的情妇;本有爱却无爱,本有心却迷失;为了生活她忍受了别人不能忍受的事情;本来平静的生活也是涟漪阵阵;他只是众多公子哥中的一员;深爱着自己认为值得爱的女人;他纵容她的种种行为;为博红颜一笑可以无情地伤害另外一个无辜的人;当捧在手中的明珠有一天消失了;他将她成为了泄恨的工具;她有心逃离,投入了爱人的怀里;他却步步追逐,只因一句:“我现在喜欢你”;感情的纠缠时缘起还是缘落;逃避是幸福的源泉还噩梦的开始……
  • 超级无敌进化废品站

    超级无敌进化废品站

    超级无敌进化废品站,回收所有你认为没有用的东西。在这个变废为宝,政府大力要求保护环境的年代,回收,已经成为一种趋势。而有了超级智能废品站系统的龙强生,人类已经无法驾驭他啦。回收废品,可以兑换商城中的玩意,兑换了一个智能保镖,他养成了杀人特技,兑换一个智能医生,他养成千古医才,且看龙强生如何强悍养成。杀伐果断,热血贲张。美女林立,我自逍遥。龙强生笑道,一切乃:姜太公钓鱼,愿者上钩!
  • 大秦谋略

    大秦谋略

    月下灯客所著的《大秦谋略》是一部历史小说,还原真实的战国。韩赵魏楚燕齐七国是战国时期强大的诸侯国,排除了周王室,这七国统治着华夏大地大部分的土地,虽然还有一些如卫国、陈国这样的小诸侯国,但是却无法与这七颗璀璨的明珠相比。本书以战国时期为背景,写那时候的人物与战国故事,让读者更好地学习那段时期的历史。
  • 乱世神创

    乱世神创

    无限好书尽在阅文。
  • 洛蝶梦璃菲

    洛蝶梦璃菲

    她经过一世又一世的轮回,而他却为了她带着记忆进入轮回。终于在她第十世找到了她,与她经历了一段刻苦铭心的爱恋,但终究还是一段难忘的回忆。“梦蝶,无论你轮回多少世,变过多少名字,我的心永不变。”他回到神界,许下誓言,等待着她历劫成功归来。“洛熙,无论我再轮回多少世,与多少人相爱,我的心永不变。”她再次轮回,经历自己的劫,许下誓言。等待着自己历劫成功。百世轮回后她历劫成功回归神界,在千年后的神界又会发生谢什么……淡漠的她和温柔的他之间又会发生些什么……
  • 轰轰烈烈那三年

    轰轰烈烈那三年

    正所谓有人的地方就有江湖。学校亦是江湖。不是每一所学校都是神圣的象牙塔,不然我国普及了九年义务教育以后公安机关会集体失业。而且那些重点中学也不是那么的完美,尤其是在非省会城市,重点高中为了获取生源和收入时往往会通过收取择校费这一方法达到双收效果,但是副作用是很明显的,很多“坏学生”就此可以上到很好的中学,注意小李子用了引号,因为小李子到现在也不知道那些人到底算不算坏学生,也许坏学生的定义也不是那么的明晰。这本书,写的就是我省一所重点高校中的江湖,一群“坏学生”,和他们喜怒哀乐的三年高中生活。
  • 废材重生:众位美男碗里来

    废材重生:众位美男碗里来

    上一世她是废材无缘修仙,被迫入宫,却被一旨圣意送入黄泉。涅槃重来,她毫无仙资,却偶得宝物,踏足修仙。她阴狠毒辣,只在乎自己在乎的,无关正邪黑白!她手段极端,人若犯我灭其满门!
  • 战场黎明

    战场黎明

    星空是最为神秘的地方,有着绚丽的美景,有着神秘的暗域。平静中暗潮涌动,爆发着一次又一次的战役,一次次的轮回,能否在这一刻得到真正的终结!迎接那真正的黎明时刻!