登陆注册
26508700000040

第40章 A WOMAN WITHOUT A HEART(16)

"There had been a sudden change in the weather, and sleet was falling in showers as we went out. Foedora's carriage was unable to reach the doorway of the theatre. At the sight of a well-dressed woman about to cross the street, a commissionaire held an umbrella above us, and stood waiting at the carriage-door for his tip. I would have given ten years of life just then for a couple of halfpence, but I had not a penny. All the man in me and all my vainest susceptibilities were wrung with an infernal pain. The words, 'I haven't a penny about me, my good fellow!' came from me in the hard voice of thwarted passion;and yet I was that man's brother in misfortune, as I knew too well;and once I had so lightly paid away seven hundred thousand francs! The footman pushed the man aside, and the horses sprang forward. As we returned, Foedora, in real or feigned abstraction, answered all my questions curtly and by monosyllables. I said no more; it was a hateful moment. When we reached her house, we seated ourselves by the hearth, and when the servant had stirred the fire and left us alone, the countess turned to me with an inexplicable expression, and spoke.

Her manner was almost solemn.

" 'Since my return to France, more than one young man, tempted by my money, has made proposals to me which would have satisfied my pride. Ihave come across men, too, whose attachment was so deep and sincere that they might have married me even if they had found me the penniless girl I used to be. Besides these, Monsieur de Valentin, you must know that new titles and newly-acquired wealth have been also offered to me, and that I have never received again any of those who were so ill-advised as to mention love to me. If my regard for you was but slight, I would not give you this warning, which is dictated by friendship rather than by pride. A woman lays herself open to a rebuff of some kind, if she imagines herself to be loved, and declines, before it is uttered, to listen to language which in its nature implies a compliment. I am well acquainted with the parts played by Arsinoe and Araminta, and with the sort of answer I might look for under such circumstances; but I hope to-day that I shall not find myself misconstrued by a man of no ordinary character, because I have frankly spoken my mind.'

"She spoke with the cool self-possession of some attorney or solicitor explaining the nature of a contract or the conduct of a lawsuit to a client. There was not the least sign of feeling in the clear soft tones of her voice. Her steady face and dignified bearing seemed to me now full of diplomatic reserve and coldness. She had planned this scene, no doubt, and carefully chosen her words beforehand. Oh, my friend, there are women who take pleasure in piercing hearts, and deliberately plunge the dagger back again into the wound; such women as these cannot but be worshiped, for such women either love or would fain be loved. A day comes when they make amends for all the pain they gave us; they repay us for the pangs, the keenness of which they recognize, in joys a hundred-fold, even as God, they tell us, recompenses our good works. Does not their perversity spring from the strength of their feelings? But to be so tortured by a woman, who slaughters you with indifference! was not the suffering hideous?

"Foedora did not know it, but in that minute she trampled all my hopes beneath her feet; she maimed my life and she blighted my future with the cool indifference and unconscious barbarity of an inquisitive child who plucks its wings from a butterfly.

" 'Later on,' resumed Foedora, 'you will learn, I hope, the stability of the affection that I keep for my friends. You will always find that I have devotion and kindness for them. I would give my life to serve my friends; but you could only despise me, if I allowed them to make love to me without return. That is enough. You are the only man to whom I have spoken such words as these last.'

"At first I could not speak, or master the tempest that arose within me; but I soon repressed my emotions in the depths of my soul, and began to smile.

" 'If I own that I love you,' I said, 'you will banish me at once; if I plead guilty to indifference, you will make me suffer for it. Women, magistrates, and priests never quite lay the gown aside. Silence is non-committal; be pleased then, madame, to approve my silence. You must have feared, in some degree, to lose me, or I should not have received this friendly admonition; and with that thought my pride ought to be satisfied. Let us banish all personal considerations. You are perhaps the only woman with whom I could discuss rationally a resolution so contrary to the laws of nature. Considered with regard to your species, you are a prodigy. Now let us investigate, in good faith, the causes of this psychological anomaly. Does there exist in you, as in many women, a certain pride in self, a love of your own loveliness, a refinement of egoism which makes you shudder at the idea of belonging to another; is it the thought of resigning your own will and submitting to a superiority, though only of convention, which displeases you? You would seem to me a thousand times fairer for it.

Can love formerly have brought you suffering? You probably set some value on your dainty figure and graceful appearance, and may perhaps wish to avoid the disfigurements of maternity. Is not this one of your strongest reasons for refusing a too importunate love? Some natural defect perhaps makes you insusceptible in spite of yourself? Do not be angry; my study, my inquiry is absolutely dispassionate. Some are born blind, and nature may easily have formed women who in like manner are blind, deaf, and dumb to love. You are really an interesting subject for medical investigation. You do not know your value. You feel perhaps a very legitimate distaste for mankind; in that I quite concur --to me they all seem ugly and detestable. And you are right,' Iadded, feeling my heart swell within me; 'how can you do otherwise than despise us? There is not a man living who is worthy of you.'

同类推荐
  • 韩擒虎话本

    韩擒虎话本

    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。
  • 世宗實錄(穆宗實錄)

    世宗實錄(穆宗實錄)

    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。
  • 北狩行录

    北狩行录

    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。
  • 持世陀罗尼经

    持世陀罗尼经

    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。
  • 柯亭词论

    柯亭词论

    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
  • 红楼之别样黛玉

    红楼之别样黛玉

    林家四代列侯,至林如海又高中探花,深受皇帝宠信授国之财柄巡盐御史一职.如此长盛不衰,林家岂是简单家族,林如海岂是简单人物?林黛玉被无子的林如海视为女公子养大,又岂只会伤春悲秋被人陷害至斯,不一样的生活,别样的黛玉!
  • 桥

    弋舟,1972年生,青年新锐作家。有长中短篇小说200余万字,见于《作家》《花城》《人民文学》《天涯》《青年文学》《上海文学》《大家》《中国作家》《山花》等文学刊物。著有长篇小说若干。
  • 朱颜不改长相忆

    朱颜不改长相忆

    她——祭璃颜,神奥大陆祭璃家的耻辱,一生痴痴傻傻,浑浑噩噩。她——祭璃颜,民国年间的天才特工,却在一次刺杀任务中死去,继而来到神奥大陆。她成为了她,她们一样却又不一样!在这黑暗的年代,没有火光,那就让她成为点亮夜空的光明之火。既然世人都已麻木,那就让她用热血去唤醒一切!他说:“既然天下所有人都背叛了你,那就别怪我背弃这个世界!”她说:“神若不公,天若不义,为了你,我逆天而行又如何?!”一场异世大陆的盛会,就此拉开帷幕。
  • tfboys许我十年伴我一生

    tfboys许我十年伴我一生

    年少轻狂的我只为你一人证明胜者为王。待我凯旋,伴我别走。他们说错过是最美的遇见,但我怕错过了你就不会再见。你可知我初心不变只为守候那个青梅竹马的你。
  • 重生静妃当道

    重生静妃当道

    重生于丞相府中最小的庶女,心不甘情不愿入宫成了静妃。可一次意外,她与皇上互换身子。她成了九五之尊,而他成了后宫里的妃子。互换身份后,从刚开始的恐慌无措,到后来的得心应手。她利用前世的智慧与他一起携手闯过一个又一个难关,斗妃子,斗群臣,斗得不亦乐乎。静妃当道,借皇帝之手,翻手为云,覆手为雨。
  • 琉璃走失经年

    琉璃走失经年

    程依朵是个乖巧懂事而又多愁善感的女孩,认识初恋男友泉宇之后,噩梦便开始:她被小混混绑架、好朋友林夕涯意外失踪、甚至父亲被诱惑借高利贷,连房子都抵押了……更要命的是,她的世界疑云重重,身边每个人都有不可告人的秘密,仿佛只有她是透明的。那么,所有的真相都能浮出水面吗?她的大学校友兼老乡董翔巍一直处心积虑地接近她,并与她的两位室友有着似有若无的暧昧关系,他究竟有什么阴谋?之后出现的蓝格儿,就是夕涯吗?为什么会与泉宇牵扯到上一辈的恩怨?还有,偷偷在依朵抽屉里塞糖果的男孩,居然是泉宇的好兄弟,夕涯喜欢的男孩秦莫扬!那么,几经周折,他们是否能有情人终成眷属?
  • 契约吸血鬼

    契约吸血鬼

    千年的轮回,永恒的爱恋,曾经的背叛,撕裂的心痛。现在的契约,让千年前的一切颠覆!何来背叛,何来封印,只要有你,我便无惧!
  • 唯剑独尊

    唯剑独尊

    挥手灭杀远古妖兽,抬腿踢飞上古神王,将那些狂傲的天才全部踩在脚下!王拓也一个受尽欺负的家族废物,一次的意外,使得他拥有一件神秘的宝物,唤醒了远古封印的强者!
  • 王俊凯之我爱的不是你

    王俊凯之我爱的不是你

    他爱的是边夏夏,但是边夏夏爱的不是他,她爱的居然是一个不存在的影子。鹿晗爱的便是边夏夏的影子,初夏夏。“不要伪装了,求你!”绝望蔓延着……
  • 斗罗大陆之穿越回现代

    斗罗大陆之穿越回现代

    神界大乱,唐三被迫转世,不料回到了现代。