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a woman of thirty-第22章

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 burden of marriage; an institution on which society is based; falls upon us; for the man liberty; duties for the woman。 We must give up our whole lives to you; you are only bound to give us a few moments of yours。 A man; in fact; makes a choice; while we blindly submit。 Oh; monsieur; to you I can speak freely。 Marriage; in these days; seems to me to be legalized prostitution。 This is the cause of my wretchedness。 But among so many miserable creatures so unhappily yoked; I alone am bound to be silent; I alone am to blame for my misery。 My marriage was my own doing。〃

She stopped short; and bitter tears fell in the silence。

〃In the depths of my wretchedness; in the midst of this sea of distress;〃 she went on; 〃I found some sands on which to set foot and suffer at leisure。 A great tempest swept everything away。 And here am I; helpless and alone; too weak to cope with storms。〃

〃We are never weak while God is with us;〃 said the priest。 〃And if your cravings for affection cannot be satisfied here on earth; have you no duties to perform?〃

〃Duties continually!〃 she exclaimed; with something of impatience in her tone。 〃But where for me are the sentiments which give us strength to perform them? Nothing from nothing; nothing for nothing;this; monsieur; is one of the most inexorable laws of nature; physical or spiritual。 Would you have these trees break into leaf without the sap which swells the buds? It is the same with our human nature; and in me the sap is dried up at its source。〃

〃I am not going to speak to you of religious sentiments of which resignation is born;〃 said the cure; 〃but of motherhood; madame; surely〃

〃Stop; monsieur!〃 said the Marquise; 〃with you I will be sincere。 Alas! in future I can be sincere with no one; I am condemned to falsehood。 The world requires continual grimaces; and we are bidden to obey its conventions if we would escape reproach。 There are two kinds of motherhood; monsieur; once I knew nothing of such distinctions; but I know them now。 Only half of me has become a mother; it were better for me if I had not been a mother at all。 Helene is not /his/ child! Oh! do not start。 At Saint…Lange there are volcanic depths whence come lurid gleams of light and earthquake shocks to shake the fragile edifices of laws not based on nature。 I have borne a child; that is enough; I am a mother in the eyes of the law。 But you; monsieur; with your delicately compassionate soul; can perhaps understand this cry from an unhappy woman who has suffered no lying illusions to enter her heart。 God will judge me; but surely I have only obeyed His laws by giving way to the affections which He Himself set in me; and this I have learned from my own soul。What is a child; monsieur; but the image of two beings; the fruit of two sentiments spontaneously blended? Unless it is owned by every fibre of the body; as by every chord of tenderness in the heart; unless it recalls the bliss of love; the hours; the places where two creatures were happy; their words that overflowed with the music of humanity; and their sweet imaginings; that child is an incomplete creation。 Yes; those two should find the poetic dreams of their intimate double life realized in their child as in an exquisite miniature; it should be for them a never…failing spring of emotion; implying their whole past and their whole future。

〃My poor little Helene is her father's child; the offspring of duty and of chance。 In me she finds nothing but the affection of instinct; the woman's natural compassion for the child of her womb。 Socially speaking; I am above reproach。 Have I not sacrificed my life and my happiness to my child? Her cries go to my heart; if she were to fall into the water; I should spring to save her; but she is not in my heart。

〃Ah! love set me dreaming of a motherhood far greater and more complete。 In a vanished dream I held in my arms a child conceived in desire before it was begotten; the exquisite flower of life that blossoms in the soul before it sees the light of day。 I am Helene's mother only in the sense that I brought her forth。 When she needs me no longer; there will be an end of my motherhood; with the extinction of the cause; the effects will cease。 If it is a woman's adorable prerogative that her motherhood may last through her child's life; surely that divine persistence of sentiment is due to the far…reaching glory of the conception of the soul? Unless a child has lain wrapped about from life's first beginnings by the mother's soul; the instinct of motherhood dies in her as in the animals。 This is true; I feel that it is true。 As my poor little one grows older; my heart closes。 My sacrifices have driven us apart。 And yet I know; monsieur; that to another child my heart would have gone out in inexhaustible love; for that other I should not have known what sacrifice meant; all had been delight。 In this; monsieur; my instincts are stronger than reason; stronger than religion or all else in me。 Does the woman who is neither wife nor mother sin in wishing to die when; for her misfortune; she has caught a glimpse of the infinite beauty of love; the limitless joy of motherhood? What can become of her? /I/ can tell you what she feels。 I cannot put that memory from me so resolutely but that a hundred times; night and day; visions of a happiness; greater it may be than the reality; rise before me; followed by a shudder which shakes brain and heart and body。 Before these cruel visions; my feelings and thoughts grow colorless; and I ask myself; 'What would my life have been /if/?' 〃

She hid her face in her hands and burst into tears。

〃There you see the depths of my heart!〃 she continued。 〃For /his/ child I could have acquiesced in any lot however dreadful。 He who died; bearing the burden of the sins of the world will forgive this thought of which I am dying; but the world; I know; is merciless。 In its ears my words are blasphemies; I am outraging all its codes。 Oh! that I could wage war against this world and break down and refashion its laws and traditions! Has it not turned all my thoughts; and feelings; and longings; and hopes; and every fibre in me into so many sources of pain? Spoiled my future; present; and past? For me the daylight is full of gloom; my thoughts pierce me like a sword; my child is and is not。

〃Oh; when Helene speaks to me; I wish that her voice were different; when she looks into my face I wish that she had other eyes。 She constantly keeps me in mind of all that should have been and is not。 I cannot bear to have her near me。 I smile at her; I try to make up to her for the real affection of which she is defrauded。 I am wretched; monsieur; too wretched to live。 And I am supposed to be a pattern wife。 And I have committed no sins。 And I am respected! I have fought down forbidden love which sprang up at unawares within me; but if I have kept the letter of the law; have I kept it in my heart? There has never been but one here;〃 she said; laying her right hand on her breast; 〃one and no other; and my child feels it。 Certain looks and tones and gestures mould a child's nature; and my poor little one feels no thrill in the arm I put about her; no tremor comes into my voice; no softness into my eyes when I speak to her or take her up。 She looks at me; and I cannot endure the reproach in her eyes。 There are times when I shudder to think that some day she may be my judge and condemn her mother unheard。 Heaven grant that hate may not grow up between us! Ah! God in heaven; rather let the tomb open for me; rather let me end my days here at Saint…Lange!I want to go back to the world where I shall find my other soul and become wholly a mother。 Ah! forgive me; sir; I am mad。 Those words were choking me; now they are spoken。 Ah! you are weeping too! You will not despise me〃

She heard the child come in from a walk。 〃Helene; my child; come here!〃 she called。 The words sounded like a cry of despair。

The little girl ran in; laughing and calling to her mother to see a butterfly which she had caught; but at the sight of that mother's tears she grew quiet of a sudden; and went up close; and received a kiss on her forehead。

〃She will be very beautiful some day;〃 said the priest。

〃She is her father's child;〃 said the Marquise; kis
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