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LIX.
ACTS AND WORDS.
"Intrigues of heavy dreams! We go to the right; darkness: we go to the left; darkness: in front; darkness ...
the thread which you think you hold, escapes out of your hand, and, triumphant for a moment, you set yourself again to grope your way to the catastrophe, which is a denseness of shadows."
CAMILLE LEMONNIERE (_Croquis d'automne_).
When the Captain had gone away, Marcel perceived the triumphant face of his servant. Mad with shame and rage he shut himself up in his room, and asked himself what was going to become of him. "What am I to do?" he said to himself; "here is the punishment already."
Nevertheless, on serious reflection, he saw a way all traced out before him; it was the ancient, the good, the old way which he had followed until then, and into which the Captain had just brutally driven him back:
The way of his duty.
To forget Suzanne! He had that very morning, without wis.h.i.+ng it, almost unknowingly, commenced the rapture; the father's visit had just completed the work.
To forget Suzanne! Yes, he would forget her, he must; not only his honour, his reputation, but his very existence were involved in it. Material impossibilities rose up before him in every direction where he tried to deviate from the straight path. His servant! The father! He was compelled to be an honourable man anyhow, not lost sight of, watched and spied upon by these two enemies.
To forget Suzanne! How, after what had pa.s.sed the previous day, would he dream for a moment of remembering her? He was almost thankful to his servant for having stopped him in time on a descent, at the end of which was scandal and dishonour.
In any other circ.u.mstances his pride would have revolted at the menaces of the foolish father, he would have been stung in his self-esteem, and he would have disputed with him for his treasure. But where was his pride?
Where was his dignity? He had left all that on the lap of a cook.
Reputation was safe; that was henceforth the only good which he must keep at any price.
"Come," said he, "keep it, have courage. Stand up, son of saints and martyrs. Yield not, hesitate not, march forward, without being anxious for what is on the right or left. Do thy duty in one direction, since in the other thou hast failed. Is a man then lost because he has for one moment deviated from his way? Is he dead for one false step? Peter denied his master three times, thou hast done so but once!"[1]
The postman's ring drew him from his reverie. He ran to receive the letter, recognized the writing, hastily put it into his pocket, took up his hat and his breviary, and went out without saying a word.
When he was in the little hollow road which is at the bottom of the hill, he turned round, and, certain that he was not being followed, only then did he open the letter which follows:
"MONSIEUR LE CURe,
"Why are you vexed with me? If you have not seen me any more at Ma.s.s, it is that I have had to contend with my father, and that I have been obliged to yield. Nevertheless, I am unhappy, and more than ever have I need of your counsel. You have said: 'We cannot serve two masters,' and 'it is very difficult to render to Caesar that which is Caesar's, and to G.o.d that which is G.o.d's.' One word, if you please, through the medium of Marianne to
"Your very devoted
"S.D."
He tore up the letter into the smallest fragments and returned home in all haste.
A few hours after, Marianne received the following notice:
_"To-morrow evening at 7 o'clock, in honour of the Holy Virgin, there will be Salutation and Benediction at the Chapel of St. Anne. The faithful are besought to attend."_
[Footnote 1: Thou art man and not G.o.d, says the holy book of Consolation, thou art flesh and not an angel. How canst thou always continue in very virtue?]
LX.
TALKS.
"When from the hills fell balmy night, 'Neith the dark foliage of the lofty trees, Starred by the moon-beams' placid light, Often we wandered by the water's side."
CAMILLE DELTHIL (_Poesie inedite_).
As he expected, she did not fail to be at the meeting-place. She was unaware of her father's proceedings; it was Marcel who informed her of them. She was quite terrified; but he rea.s.sured her, and knew how to soothe her young conscience; and meeting followed meeting. Dear and innocent meetings. The most prudish old woman would have found nothing to find fault with. The mystery, and their being forbidden, formed all their charm.
The Chapel of St. Anne, half-a-league distant from the village, was a charming object for a walk. You cross the meadow as far as the little river, bordered with willows, then the chapel is reached by a hollow lane hedged with quicksets. The sweet month of May had begun. Three evenings a week the little nave was in festal dress, and filled with light, and perfumes and flowers.
Suzanne went no more to Ma.s.s, but she had said to her father:
--Will you not let me go instead and take a walk sometimes beside Saint Anne's, to hear the music and the singing of the congregation?
--Marianne shall accompany you, replied Durand.
They were always the last to leave the chapel, and Marcel soon rejoined them. It was at some winding of the path that he used to meet them _by chance_, and every time he showed great surprise. They walked slowly along, talking of one thing and another. The Spring, the latest books, the _good_ Captain's rheumatism, were themes of inexhaustible variety. The future sometimes attracted their thoughts, her own future; and the priest tried to cause a few fresh rays to s.h.i.+ne into the young unquiet soul.
They talked also of the school and of friends who had gone out into the world. One of them, a fair child with blue eyes, was her best-beloved and the fairest of the fair, and Marcel sometimes felt jealous of these warm, young-girl friends.h.i.+ps.
He did not disdain to talk of fas.h.i.+ons; it is one way of pleasing, and he admired aloud the elegant cut of the waist, the twig of lilac fastened to the body of her dress, and the graceful art which had twined her long jetty plaits. She smiled and said: "What, you too; you too; you pay attention to these woman's trifles!"
But what matters the topic of their conversations, all they could say was not worth the joyous note which sang at the bottom of their hearts.
When they drew near the village he bowed to her respectfully, and each one returned by a different way.
Marianne was then profuse in her praises:
-What a fine Cure! she said, so kind and civil. If your father only knew him better!
And Suzanne, who returned very thoughtful, said once: "The Cure! can it be?
It is the Cure then."
LXI.
LE PeRE HYACINTHE.
"She still preserved for herself that little scene; thus, little by little, we acc.u.mulate within ourselves all the elements of the inner life."