按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
and fancy that I am destined to die for one I love。 One of your
poems; 〃The Maiden's Song;〃 paints these delicious moments; when
gaiety is tender; when aspiration is a need; it is one of my
favorites。 Do you want me to put all my flatteries into one?well
then; I think you worthy to be ME!
Your letter; though short; enables me to read within you。 Yes; I
have guessed your tumultuous struggles; your piqued curiosity;
your projects; but I do not yet know you well enough to satisfy
your wishes。 Hear me; dear; the mystery in which I am shrouded
allows me to use that word; which lets you see to the bottom of my
heart。 Hear me: if we once meet; adieu to our mutual
comprehension! Will you make a compact with me? Was the first
disadvantageous to you? But remember it won you my esteem; and it
is a great deal; my friend; to gain an admiration lined throughout
with esteem。 Here is the compact: write me your life in a few
words; then tell me what you do in Paris; day by day; with no
reservations; and as if you were talking to some old friend。 Well;
having done that; I will take a step myselfI will see you; I
promise you that。 And it is a great deal。
This; dear; is no intrigue; no adventure; no gallantry; as you men
say; can come of it; I warn you frankly。 It involves my life; and
more than that;something that causes me remorse for the many
thoughts that fly to you in flocksit involves my father's and my
mother's life。 I adore them; and my choice must please them; they
must find a son in you。
Tell me; to what extent can the superb spirits of your kind; to
whom God has given the wings of his angels; without always adding
their amiability;how far can they bend under a family yoke; and
put up with its little miseries? That is a text I have meditated
upon。 Ah! though I said to my heart before I came to you; Forward!
Onward! it did not tremble and palpitate any the less on the way;
and I did not conceal from myself the stoniness of the path nor
the Alpine difficulties I had to encounter。 I thought of all in my
long; long meditations。 Do I not know that eminent men like you
have known the love they have inspired quite as well as that which
they themselves have felt; that they have had many romances in
their lives;you particularly; who send forth those airy visions
of your soul that women rush to buy? Yet still I cried to myself;
〃Onward!〃 because I have studied; more than you give me credit
for; the geography of the great summits of humanity; which you
tell me are so cold。 Did you not say that Goethe and Byron were
the colossi of egoism and poetry? Ah; my friend; there you shared
a mistake into which superficial minds are apt to fall; but in you
perhaps it came from generosity; false modesty; or the desire to
escape from me。 Vulgar minds may mistake the effect of toil for
the development of personal character; but you must not。 Neither
Lord Byron; nor Goethe; nor Walter Scott; nor Cuvier; nor any
inventor; belongs to himself; he is the slave of his idea。 And
this mysterious power is more jealous than a woman; it sucks their
blood; it makes them live; it makes them die for its sake。 The
visible developments of their hidden existence do seem; in their
results; like egotism; but who shall dare to say that the man who
has abnegated self to give pleasure; instruction; or grandeur to
his epoch; is an egoist? Is a mother selfish when she immolates
all things to her child? Well; the detractors of genius do not
perceive its fecund maternity; that is all。 The life of a poet is
so perpetual a sacrifice that he needs a gigantic organization to
bear even the ordinary pleasures of life。 Therefore; into what
sorrows may he not fall when; like Moliere; he wishes to live the
life of feeling in its most poignant crises; to me; remembering
his personal life; Moliere's comedy is horrible。
The generosity of genius seems to me half divine; and I place you
in this noble family of alleged egoists。 Ah! if I had found self…
interest; ambition; a seared nature where I now can see my best
loved flowers of the soul; you know not what long anguish I should
have had to bear。 I met with disappointment before I was sixteen。
What would have become of me had I learned at twenty that fame is
a lie; that he whose books express the feelings hidden in my heart
was incapable of feeling them himself? Oh! my friend; do you know
what would have become of me? Shall I take you into the recesses
of my soul? I should have gone to my father and said; 〃Bring me
the son…in…law whom you desire; my will abdicates;marry me to
whom you please。〃 And the man might have been a notary; banker;
miser; fool; dullard; wearisome as a rainy day; common as the
usher of a school; a manufacturer; or some brave soldier without
two ideas;he would have had a resigned and attentive servant in
me。 But what an awful suicide! never could my soul have expanded
in the life…giving rays of a beloved sun。 No murmur should have
revealed to my father; or my mother; or my children the suicide of
the creature who at this instant is shaking her fetters; casting
lightnings from her eyes; and flying towards you with eager wing。
See; she is there; at the angle of your desk; like Polyhymnia;
breathing the air of your presence; and glancing about her with a
curious eye。 Sometimes in the fields where my husband would have
taken me to walk; I should have wept; apart and secretly; at sight
of a glorious morning; and in my heart; or hidden in a bureau…
drawer; I might have kept some treasure; the comfort of poor girls
ill…used by love; sad; poetic souls;but ah! I have YOU; I
believe in YOU; my friend。 That belief straightens all my thoughts
and fancies; even the most fantastic; and sometimessee how far
my frankness leads meI wish I were in the middle of the book we
are just beginning; such persistency do I feel in my sentiments;
such strength in my heart to love; such constancy sustained by
reason; such heroism for the duties for which I was created;if
indeed love can ever be transmuted into duty。
If you were able to follow me to the exquisite retreat where I
fancy ourselves happy; if you knew my plans and projects; the
dreadful word 〃folly!〃 might escape you; and I should be cruelly
punished for sending poetry to a poet。 Yes; I wish to be a spring
of waters inexhaustible as a fertile land for the twenty years
that nature allows me to shine。 I want to drive away satiety by
charm。 I mean to be courageous for my friend as most women are for
the world。 I wish to vary happiness。 I wish to put intelligence
into tenderness; and to give piquancy to fidelity。 I am filled
with ambition to kill the rivals of the past; to conjure away all
outside griefs by a wife's gentleness; by her proud abnegation; to
take