贝壳电子书 > 英文原著电子书 > modeste mignon >

第48章

modeste mignon-第48章

小说: modeste mignon 字数: 每页4000字

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!




acquaintance。 On this the count proposed to present his daughter to

those ladies himself; and invited the whole party to dinner on the day

of his return to the villa。 The duke accepted the invitation。 The blue

ribbon; the title; and above all; the ecstatic glances of the noble

gentleman had an effect upon Modeste; but she appeared to great

advantage in carriage; dignity; and conversation。 The duke withdrew

reluctantly; carrying with him an invitation to visit the Chalet every

evening;an invitation based on the impossibility of a courtier of

Charles X。 existing for a single evening without his rubber。



The following evening; therefore; Modeste was to see all three of her

lovers。 No matter what young girls may say; and though the logic of

the heart may lead them to sacrifice everything to preference; it is

extremely flattering to their self…love to see a number of rival

adorers around them;distinguished or celebrated men; or men of

ancient lineage;all endeavoring to shine and to please。 Suffer as

Modeste may in general estimation; it must be told she subsequently

admitted that the sentiments expressed in her letters paled before the

pleasure of seeing three such different minds at war with one another;

three men who; taken separately; would each have done honor to the

most exacting family。 Yet this luxury of self…love was checked by a

misanthropical spitefulness; resulting from the terrible wound she had

received;although by this time she was beginning to think of that

wound as a disappointment only。 So when her father said to her;

laughing; 〃Well; Modeste; do you want to be a duchess?〃 she answered;

with a mocking curtsey;



〃Sorrows have made me philosophical。〃



〃Do you mean to be only a baroness?〃 asked Butscha。



〃Or a viscountess?〃 said her father。



〃How could that be?〃 she asked quickly。



〃If you accept Monsieur de La Briere; he has enough merit and

influence to obtain permission from the king to bear my titles and

arms。〃



〃Oh; if it comes to disguising himself; HE will not make any

difficulty;〃 said Modeste; scornfully。



Butscha did not understand this epigram; whose meaning could only be

guessed by Monsieur and Madame Mignon and Dumay。



〃When it is a question of marriage; all men disguise themselves;〃

remarked Latournelle; 〃and women set them the example。 I've heard it

said ever since I came into the world that 'Monsieur this or

Mademoiselle that has made a good marriage;'meaning that the other

side had made a bad one。〃



〃Marriage;〃 said Butscha; 〃is like a lawsuit; there's always one side

discontented。 If one dupes the other; certainly half the husbands in

the world are playing a comedy at the expense of the other half。〃



〃From which you conclude; Sieur Butscha?〃 inquired Modeste。



〃To pay the utmost attention to the manoeuvres of the enemy;〃 answered

the clerk。



〃What did I tell you; my darling?〃 said Charles Mignon; alluding to

their conversation on the seashore。



〃Men play as many parts to get married as mothers make their daughters

play to get rid of them;〃 said Latournelle。



〃Then you approve of stratagems?〃 said Modeste。



〃On both sides;〃 cried Gobenheim; 〃and that brings it even。〃



This conversation was carried on by fits and starts; as they say; in

the intervals of cutting and dealing the cards; and it soon turned

chiefly on the merits of the Duc d'Herouville; who was thought very

good…looking by little Latournelle; little Dumay; and little Butscha。

Without the foregoing discussion on the lawfulness of matrimonial

tricks; the reader might possibly find the forthcoming account of the

evening so impatiently awaited by Butscha; somewhat too long。



Desplein; the famous surgeon; arrived the next morning; and stayed

only long enough to send to Havre for fresh horses and have them put…

to; which took about an hour。 After examining Madame Mignon's eyes; he

decided that she could recover her sight; and fixed a suitable time; a

month later; to perform the operation。 This important consultation

took place before the assembled members of the Chalet; who stood

trembling and expectant to hear the verdict of the prince of science。

That illustrious member of the Academy of Sciences put about a dozen

brief questions to the blind woman as he examined her eyes in the

strong light from a window。 Modeste was amazed at the value which a

man so celebrated attached to time; when she saw the travelling…

carriage piled with books which the great surgeon proposed to read

during the journey; for he had left Paris the evening before; and had

spent the night in sleeping and travelling。 The rapidity and clearness

of Desplein's judgment on each answer made by Madame Mignon; his

succinct tone; his decisive manner; gave Modeste her first real idea

of a man of genius。 She perceived the enormous difference between a

second…rate man; like Canalis; and Desplein; who was even more than a

superior man。 A man of genius finds in the consciousness of his talent

and in the solidity of his fame an arena of his own; where his

legitimate pride can expand and exercise itself without interfering

with others。 Moreover; his perpetual struggle with men and things

leave them no time for the coxcombry of fashionable genius; which

makes haste to gather in the harvests of a fugitive season; and whose

vanity and self…love are as petty and exacting as a custom…house which

levies tithes on all that comes in its way。



Modeste was the more enchanted by this great practical genius; because

he was evidently charmed with the exquisite beauty of Modeste;he;

through whose hands so many women had passed; and who had long since

examined the sex; as it were; with magnifier and scalpel。



〃It would be a sad pity;〃 he said; with an air of gallantry which he

occasionally put on; and which contrasted with his assumed

brusqueness; 〃if a mother were deprived of the sight of so charming a

daughter。〃



Modeste insisted on serving the simple breakfast which was all the

great surgeon would accept。 She accompanied her father and Dumay to

the carriage stationed at the garden…gate; and said to Desplein at

parting; her eyes shining with hope;



〃And will my dear mamma really see me?〃



〃Yes; my little sprite; I'll promise you that;〃 he answered; smiling;

〃and I am incapable of deceiving you; for I; too; have a daughter。〃



The horses started and carried him off as he uttered the last words

with unexpected grace and feeling。 Nothing is more charming than the

peculiar unexpectedness of persons of talent。







CHAPTER XX



THE POET DOES HIS EXERCISES



This visit of the great surgeon was the event of the day; and it left

a luminous trace in Modeste's soul。 The young enthusiast ardently

admired the man whose life belonged to others; and in whom the habit

of studying physical suffering had destroyed the manifestations of

egoism。 That evening; when Gobenheim; the Latournelles; and Butscha;

Canalis; Ernest; and the Duc d'Herouville were gathered in the salon;

they all congratulated the Mignon family on the hopes which Desplein

encouraged。 The conversation; in which the Modeste of her letters was

once more in the ascendant; turned naturally on the man whose genius;

unfortunately for his fame; was appreciable only by the faculty and

men of science。 Gobenheim contributed a phrase which is the sacred

chrism of genius as interpreted in these days by public economists and

bankers;



〃He makes a mint of money。〃



〃They say he is very grasping;〃 added Canalis。



The praises which Modeste showered on Desplein had annoyed the poet。

Vanity acts like a woman;they both think they are defrauded when

love or praise is bestowed on others。 Voltaire was jealous of the wit

of a roue whom Paris admired for two days; and even a duchess takes

offence at a look bestowed upon her maid。 The avarice excited by these

two sentiments is such that a fraction of them given to the poor 

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的