登陆注册
19868800000028

第28章

So the Marquise was left to herself. She might live on, perfectly silent, amid the silence which she herself had created; there was nothing to draw her forth from the tapestried chamber where her grandmother died, whither she herself had come that she might die, gently, without witnesses, without importunate solicitude, without suffering from the insincere demonstrations of egoism masquerading as affection, which double the agony of death in great cities.

She was twenty-six years old. At that age, with plenty of romantic illusions still left, the mind loves to dwell on the thought of death when death seems to come as a friend. But with youth, death is coy, coming up close only to go away, showing himself and hiding again, till youth has time to fall out of love with him during this dalliance. There is that uncertainty too that hangs over death's to-morrow. Youth plunges back into the world of living men, there to find the pain more pitiless than death, that does not wait to strike.

This woman who refused to live was to know the bitterness of these reprieves in the depths of her loneliness; in moral agony, which death would not come to end, she was to serve a terrible apprenticeship to the egoism which must take the bloom from her heart and break her in to the life of the world.

This harsh and sorry teaching is the usual outcome of our early sorrows. For the first, and perhaps for the last time in her life, the Marquise d'Aiglemont was in very truth suffering. And, indeed, would it not be an error to suppose that the same sentiment can be reproduced in us? Once develop the power to feel, is it not always there in the depths of our nature? The accidents of life may lull or awaken it, but there it is, of necessity modifying the self, its abiding place. Hence, every sensation should have its great day once and for all, its first day of storm, be it long or short. Hence, likewise, pain, the most abiding of our sensations, could be keenly felt only at its first irruption, its intensity diminishing with every subsequent paroxysm, either because we grow accustomed to these crises, or perhaps because a natural instinct of self-preservation asserts itself, and opposes to the destroying force of anguish an equal but passive force of inertia.

Yet of all kinds of suffering, to which does the name of anguish belong? For the loss of parents, Nature has in a manner prepared us;physical suffering, again, is an evil which passes over us and is gone; it lays no hold upon the soul; if it persists, it ceases to be an evil, it is death. The young mother loses her firstborn, but wedded love ere long gives her a successor. This grief, too, is transient.

After all, these, and many other troubles like unto them, are in some sort wounds and bruises; they do not sap the springs of vitality, and only a succession of such blows can crush in us the instinct that seeks happiness. Great pain, therefore, pain that arises to anguish, should be suffering so deadly, that past, present, and future are alike included in its grip, and no part of life is left sound and whole. Never afterwards can we think the same thoughts as before.

Anguish engraves itself in ineffaceable characters on mouth and brow;it passes through us, destroying or relaxing the springs that vibrate to enjoyment, leaving behind in the soul the seeds of a disgust for all things in this world.

Yet, again, to be measureless, to weigh like this upon body and soul, the trouble should befall when soul and body have just come to their full strength, and smite down a heart that beats high with life. Then it is that great scars are made. Terrible is the anguish. None, it may be, can issue from this soul-sickness without undergoing some dramatic change. Those who survive it, those who remain on earth, return to the world to wear an actor's countenance and to play an actor's part. They know the side-scenes where actors may retire to calculate chances, shed their tears, or pass their jests. Life holds no inscrutable dark places for those who have passed through this ordeal; their judgments are Rhadamanthine.

For young women of the Marquise d'Aiglemont's age, this first, this most poignant pain of all, is always referable to the same cause. Awoman, especially if she is a young woman, greatly beautiful, and by nature great, never fails to stake her whole life as instinct and sentiment and society all unite to bid her. Suppose that that life fails her, suppose that she still lives on, she cannot but endure the most cruel pangs, inasmuch as a first love is the loveliest of all.

How comes it that this catastrophe has found no painter, no poet? And yet, can it be painted? Can it be sung? No; for the anguish arising from it eludes analysis and defies the colors of art. And more than this, such pain is never confessed. To console the sufferer, you must be able to divine the past which she hugs in bitterness to her soul like a remorse; it is like an avalanche in a valley; it laid all waste before it found a permanent resting-place.

The Marquise was suffering from this anguish, which will for long remain unknown, because the whole world condemns it, while sentiment cherishes it, and the conscience of a true woman justifies her in it.

It is with such pain as with children steadily disowned of life, and therefore bound more closely to the mother's heart than other children more bounteously endowed. Never, perhaps, was the awful catastrophe in which the whole world without dies for us, so deadly, so complete, so cruelly aggravated by circumstance as it had been for the Marquise.

同类推荐
  • 子平真诠评注

    子平真诠评注

    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。
  • 女丹合编选注

    女丹合编选注

    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。
  • 廿载繁华梦

    廿载繁华梦

    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。
  • The City of Domes

    The City of Domes

    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。
  • 闽海纪要

    闽海纪要

    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
  • 黄帝金匮玉衡经

    黄帝金匮玉衡经

    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。
  • 山村诡异闻

    山村诡异闻

    被神秘笼罩下的山村,接二连三的怪事发生。离奇的溺水孩童,神秘的水鬼为何出现,隐藏在死亡背后的真相是如何。半夜凄厉的婴孩啼哭声,午夜时分谁在敲响我家的院门,一步步,离奇背后是什么惊天的秘密。神秘的庙宇,诡异的榕树埋葬着多少不为人知的故事。白蛇复仇,险些害了人命,死后,为何风云骤起。这背后,是否别有端倪。水鬼再现,顿时扑朔迷离,且看人何以斗鬼。灵异事件缕见不鲜…(这不是惊悚小说,只是一本奇异录)(有兴趣的书友欢迎加入QQ辰风书友群:309418640)
  • 太古争锋

    太古争锋

    一部飞仙卷,引发一场圣地危机;远古天人之争再度降临,芸芸众生将何去何从?通天道上英骨现,又诉说着怎么样的往事?三界神魔人妖鬼仙,又如何演绎一番乱古之争!
  • 英雄联盟之中原争霸

    英雄联盟之中原争霸

    魔兽,星际,DNF……每当中国梦之队问鼎世界冠军的前夕,半路总是杀出程咬金。为什么,为什么,又是韩国队!哪怕在如今最火爆的网络游戏英雄联盟中,中原依旧处在被思密达国支配的恐惧里,前路一片渺茫。何人能挡高丽族?一生抗韩,永不停息。而今,王校长率先扛起抗韩的大旗。然而前赴后继的富二代们,不知道他们的所作所为,又掀起了中原更大的腥风血雨。半个纪实类的文,请大家关注今年LPL联赛,我会努力赶上进度的。
  • 蚀暗腥纹

    蚀暗腥纹

    “嗯,傀儡?说得是我吗?”被丧尸感染后觉得已无出路,然而是命运的使然还是运气好导致他因祸得福,成为推翻神界的另类神。
  • 媒介与民生:电视民生新闻的理论与实践

    媒介与民生:电视民生新闻的理论与实践

    我国当代民生新闻经过多年的发展,已经形成一定的社会影响力,广受社会大众喜爱,也是目前学界与业界共同关注与讨论的热点话题。电视民生新闻的兴起,既是政治民主化、媒介市场化与传播平民化的产物,又是中国新闻媒介“新闻本位”、“受众本位”观念的革新与强化。在构建和谐社会的时代背景下,“民生新闻”成为新闻媒介与社会环境形成良性互动的一种传播范式。平民化的传播理念与传播方式使民生新闻与普通老百姓的日常生活、喜怒哀乐紧密联系在一起,体现了“以人为本”、“三贴近”的社会政治话语与新闻媒介人文关怀、社会责任的价值认同。
  • 英雄联盟之龙战天下

    英雄联盟之龙战天下

    这里有强大的帝国城邦,这里也有隐世的神庙古教,这里有厉害的魔法,这里也有极致的武道,强者可以傲视天地,俯视苍穹……这里就是英雄联盟,一个无比精彩的魔幻世界。看一个从山村走出的少年,如何在这片天地崛起……
  • 摩罗汩

    摩罗汩

    隐于巫山的半神突然收了一个身附魔魂的少年,揭开尘封多年的神魔大战往事!一把弑魂神剑,多少妖魔神仙!老去的宗族恩怨,无知的狂妄少年!这一代的汩乱才刚刚开始!
  • 斯坦贝克俄罗斯纪行

    斯坦贝克俄罗斯纪行

    本书是世界著名的作家斯坦贝克与战地摄影家卡帕40天苏联之行的记录。以斯坦贝克的数百页旅行札记和卡帕的四千余张摄影负片,展示了俄罗斯大地与人民的真实。
  • 神鬼相师

    神鬼相师

    大学生姜浩,意外获得先祖传承,风水改命运,命理测人生,金钱卜卦,六爻算尽天下事,祈禳之术,奇门遁甲,包罗万象,尽在神鬼八阵图,鳏寡孤独又如何?逆天改命,誓要抱得美人归!