Letters of Two Brides
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第93章 MME.GASTON TO MME.DE L'ESTORADE The Chalet(1)

So,after a silence of two years,you are pricked by curiosity,and want to know why I have not written.My dear Renee,there are no words,no images,no language to express my happiness.That we have strength to bear it sums up all I could say.It costs us no effort,for we are in perfect sympathy.The whole two years have known no note of discord in the harmony,no jarring word in the interchange of feeling,no shade of difference in our lightest wish.Not one in this long succession of days has failed to bear its own peculiar fruit;not a moment has passed without being enriched by the play of fancy.So far are we from dreading the canker of monotony in our life,that our only fear is lest it should not be long enough to contain all the poetic creations of a love as rich and varied in its development as Nature herself.Of disappointment not a trace!We find more pleasure in being together than on the first day,and each hour as it goes by discloses fresh reason for our love.Every day as we take our evening stroll after dinner,we tell each other that we really must go and see what is doing in Paris,just as one might talk of going to Switzerland.

"Only think,"Gaston will exclaim,"such and such a boulevard is being made,the Madeleine is finished.We ought to see it.Let us go to-morrow."And to-morrow comes,and we are in no hurry to get up,and we breakfast in our bedroom.Then midday is on us,and it is too hot;a siesta seems appropriate.Then Gaston wishes to look at me,and he gazes on my face as though it were a picture,losing himself in this contemplation,which,as you may suppose,is not one-sided.Tears rise to the eyes of both as we think of our love and tremble.I am still the mistress,pretending,that is,to give less than I receive,and Irevel in this deception.To a woman what can be sweeter than to see passion ever held in check by tenderness,and the man who is her master stayed,like a timid suitor,by a word from her,within the limits that she chooses?

You asked me to describe him;but,Renee,it is not possible to make a portrait of the man we love.How could the heart be kept out of the work?Besides,to be frank between ourselves,we may admit that one of the dire effects of civilization on our manners is to make of man in society a being so utterly different from the natural man of strong feeling,that sometimes not a single point of likeness can be found between these two aspects of the same person.The man who falls into the most graceful operatic poses,as he pours sweet nothings into your ear by the fire at night,may be entirely destitute of those more intimate charms which a woman values.On the other hand,an ugly,boorish,badly-dressed figure may mark a man endowed with the very genius of love,and who has a perfect mastery over situations which might baffle us with our superficial graces.A man whose conventional aspect accords with his real nature,who,in the intimacy of wedded love,possesses that inborn grace which can be neither given nor acquired,but which Greek art has embodied in statuary,that careless innocence of the ancient poets which,even in frank undress,seems to clothe the soul as with a veil of modesty--this is our ideal,born of our own conceptions,and linked with the universal harmony which seems to be the reality underlying all created things.To find this ideal in life is the problem which haunts the imagination of every woman--in Gaston I have found it.

Ah!dear,I did not know what love could be,united to youth,talent,and beauty.Gaston has no affectations,he moves with an instinctive and unstudied grace.When we walk alone together in the woods,his arm round my waist,mine resting on his shoulder,body fitting to body,and head touching head,our step is so even,uniform,and gentle,that those who see us pass by night take the vision for a single figure gliding over the graveled walks,like one of Homer's immortals.A like harmony exists in our desires,our thoughts,our words.More than once on some evening when a passing shower has left the leaves glistening and the moist grass bright with a more vivid green,it has chanced that we ended our walk without uttering a word,as we listened to the patter of falling drops and feasted our eyes on the scarlet sunset,flaring on the hilltops or dyeing with a warmer tone the gray of the tree trunks.

Beyond a doubt our thoughts then rose to Heaven in silent prayer,pleading as it were,for our happiness.At times a cry would escape us at the moment when some sudden bend on the path opened up fresh beauties.What words can tell how honey-sweet,how full of meaning,is a kiss half-timidly exchanged within the sanctuary of nature--it is as though God had created us to worship in this fashion.

And we return home,each more deeply in love than ever.

A love so passionate between old married people would be an outrage on society in Paris;only in the heart of the woods,like lovers,can we give scope to it.

To come to particulars,Gaston is of middle height--the height proper to all men of purpose.Neither stout nor thin,his figure is admirably made,with ample fulness in the proportions,while every motion is agile;he leaps a ditch with the easy grace of a wild animal.Whatever his attitude,he seems to have an instinctive sense of balance,and this is very rare in men who are given to thought.Though a dark man,he has an extraordinarily fair complexion;his jet-black hair contrasts finely with the lustreless tints of the neck and forehead.

He has the tragic head of Louis XIII.His moustache and tuft have been allowed to grow,but I made him shave the whiskers and beard,which were getting too common.An honorable poverty has been his safeguard,and handed him over to me,unsoiled by the loose life which ruins so many young men.His teeth are magnificent,and he has a constitution of iron.His keen blue eyes,for me full of tenderness,will flash like lightning at any rousing thought.