994 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
994 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
1850
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THE SPECTACLES
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by Edgar Allen Poe
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SPECTACLES
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MANY years ago, it was the fashion to ridicule the idea of "love
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at first sight;" but those who think, not less than those who feel
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deeply, have always advocated its existence. Modern discoveries,
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indeed, in what may be termed ethical magnetism or magnetoesthetics,
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render it probable that the most natural, and, consequently, the
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truest and most intense of the human affections are those which
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arise in the heart as if by electric sympathy- in a word, that the
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brightest and most enduring of the psychal fetters are those which are
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riveted by a glance. The confession I am about to make will add
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another to the already almost innumerable instances of the truth of
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the position.
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My story requires that I should be somewhat minute. I am still a
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very young man- not yet twenty-two years of age. My name, at
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present, is a very usual and rather plebeian one- Simpson. I say "at
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present;" for it is only lately that I have been so called- having
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legislatively adopted this surname within the last year in order to
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receive a large inheritance left me by a distant male relative,
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Adolphus Simpson, Esq. The bequest was conditioned upon my taking
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the name of the testator,- the family, not the Christian name; my
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Christian name is Napoleon Bonaparte- or, more properly, these are
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my first and middle appellations.
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I assumed the name, Simpson, with some reluctance, as in my true
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patronym, Froissart, I felt a very pardonable pride- believing that
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I could trace a descent from the immortal author of the
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"Chronicles." While on the subject of names, by the bye, I may mention
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a singular coincidence of sound attending the names of some of my
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immediate predecessors. My father was a Monsieur Froissart, of
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Paris. His wife- my mother, whom he married at fifteen- was a
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Mademoiselle Croissart, eldest daughter of Croissart the banker, whose
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wife, again, being only sixteen when married, was the eldest
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daughter of one Victor Voissart. Monsieur Voissart, very singularly,
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had married a lady of similar name- a Mademoiselle Moissart. She, too,
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was quite a child when married; and her mother, also, Madame Moissart,
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was only fourteen when led to the altar. These early marriages are
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usual in France. Here, however, are Moissart, Voissart, Croissart, and
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Froissart, all in the direct line of descent. My own name, though,
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as I say, became Simpson, by act of Legislature, and with so much
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repugnance on my part, that, at one period, I actually hesitated about
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accepting the legacy with the useless and annoying proviso attached.
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As to personal endowments, I am by no means deficient. On the
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contrary, I believe that I am well made, and possess what nine
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tenths of the world would call a handsome face. In height I am five
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feet eleven. My hair is black and curling. My nose is sufficiently
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good. My eyes are large and gray; and although, in fact they are
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weak a very inconvenient degree, still no defect in this regard
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would be suspected from their appearance. The weakness itself,
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however, has always much annoyed me, and I have resorted to every
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remedy- short of wearing glasses. Being youthful and good-looking, I
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naturally dislike these, and have resolutely refused to employ them. I
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know nothing, indeed, which so disfigures the countenance of a young
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person, or so impresses every feature with an air of demureness, if
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not altogether of sanctimoniousness and of age. An eyeglass, on the
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other hand, has a savor of downright foppery and affectation. I have
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hitherto managed as well as I could without either. But something
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too much of these merely personal details, which, after all, are of
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little importance. I will content myself with saying, in addition,
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that my temperament is sanguine, rash, ardent, enthusiastic- and
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that all my life I have been a devoted admirer of the women.
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One night last winter I entered a box at the P-- Theatre, in company
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with a friend, Mr. Talbot. It was an opera night, and the bills
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presented a very rare attraction, so that the house was excessively
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crowded. We were in time, however, to obtain the front seats which had
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been reserved for us, and into which, with some little difficulty,
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we elbowed our way.
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For two hours my companion, who was a musical fanatico, gave his
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undivided attention to the stage; and, in the meantime, I amused
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myself by observing the audience, which consisted, in chief part, of
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the very elite of the city. Having satisfied myself upon this point, I
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was about turning my eyes to the prima donna, when they were
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arrested and riveted by a figure in one of the private boxes which had
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escaped my observation.
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If I live a thousand years, I can never forget the intense emotion
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with which I regarded this figure. It was that of a female, the most
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exquisite I had ever beheld. The face was so far turned toward the
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stage that, for some minutes, I could not obtain a view of it- but the
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form was divine; no other word can sufficiently express its
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magnificent proportion- and even the term "divine" seems
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ridiculously feeble as I write it.
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The magic of a lovely form in woman- the necromancy of female
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gracefulness- was always a power which I had found it impossible to
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resist, but here was grace personified, incarnate, the beau ideal of
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my wildest and most enthusiastic visions. The figure, almost all of
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which the construction of the box permitted to be seen, was somewhat
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above the medium height, and nearly approached, without positively
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reaching, the majestic. Its perfect fullness and tournure were
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delicious. The head of which only the back was visible, rivalled in
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outline that of the Greek Psyche, and was rather displayed than
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concealed by an elegant cap of gaze aerienne, which put me in mind
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of the ventum textilem of Apuleius. The right arm hung over the
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balustrade of the box, and thrilled every nerve of my frame with its
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exquisite symmetry. Its upper portion was draperied by one of the
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loose open sleeves now in fashion. This extended but little below
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the elbow. Beneath it was worn an under one of some frail material,
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close-fitting, and terminated by a cuff of rich lace, which fell
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gracefully over the top of the hand, revealing only the delicate
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fingers, upon one of which sparkled a diamond ring, which I at once
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saw was of extraordinary value. The admirable roundness of the wrist
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was well set off by a bracelet which encircled it, and which also
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was ornamented and clasped by a magnificent aigrette of
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jewels-telling, in words that could not be mistaken, at once of the
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wealth and fastidious taste of the wearer.
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I gazed at this queenly apparition for at least half an hour, as
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if I had been suddenly converted to stone; and, during this period,
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I felt the full force and truth of all that has been said or sung
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concerning "love at first sight." My feelings were totally different
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from any which I had hitherto experienced, in the presence of even the
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most celebrated specimens of female loveliness. An unaccountable,
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and what I am compelled to consider a magnetic, sympathy of soul for
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soul, seemed to rivet, not only my vision, but my whole powers of
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thought and feeling, upon the admirable object before me. I saw- I
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felt- I knew that I was deeply, madly, irrevocably in love- and this
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even before seeing the face of the person beloved. So intense, indeed,
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was the passion that consumed me, that I really believe it would
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have received little if any abatement had the features, yet unseen,
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proved of merely ordinary character, so anomalous is the nature of the
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only true love- of the love at first sight- and so little really
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dependent is it upon the external conditions which only seem to create
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and control it.
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While I was thus wrapped in admiration of this lovely vision, a
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sudden disturbance among the audience caused her to turn her head
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partially toward me, so that I beheld the entire profile of the
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face. Its beauty even exceeded my anticipations- and yet there was
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something about it which disappointed me without my being able to tell
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exactly what it was. I said "disappointed," but this is not altogether
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the word. My sentiments were at once quieted and exalted. They partook
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less of transport and more of calm enthusiasm of enthusiastic
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repose. This state of feeling arose, perhaps, from the Madonna-like
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and matronly air of the face; and yet I at once understood that it
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could not have arisen entirely from this. There was something else-
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some mystery which I could not develope- some expression about the
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countenance which slightly disturbed me while it greatly heightened my
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interest. In fact, I was just in that condition of mind which prepares
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a young and susceptible man for any act of extravagance. Had the
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lady been alone, I should undoubtedly have entered her box and
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accosted her at all hazards; but, fortunately, she was attended by two
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companions- a gentleman, and a strikingly beautiful woman, to all
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appearance a few years younger than herself.
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I revolved in my mind a thousand schemes by which I might obtain,
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hereafter, an introduction to the elder lady, or, for the present,
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at all events, a more distinct view of her beauty. I would have
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removed my position to one nearer her own, but the crowded state of
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the theatre rendered this impossible; and the stern decrees of Fashion
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had, of late, imperatively prohibited the use of the opera-glass in
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a case such as this, even had I been so fortunate as to have one
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with me- but I had not- and was thus in despair.
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At length I bethought me of applying to my companion.
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"Talbot," I said, "you have an opera-glass. Let me have it."
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"An opera- glass!- no!- what do you suppose I would be doing with an
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opera-glass?" Here he turned impatiently toward the stage.
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"But, Talbot," I continued, pulling him by the shoulder, "listen
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to me will you? Do you see the stage- box?- there!- no, the next.- did
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you ever behold as lovely a woman?"
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"She is very beautiful, no doubt," he said.
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"I wonder who she can be?"
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"Why, in the name of all that is angelic, don't you know who she is?
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'Not to know her argues yourself unknown.' She is the celebrated
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Madame Lalande- the beauty of the day par excellence, and the talk
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of the whole town. Immensely wealthy too- a widow, and a great
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match- has just arrived from Paris."
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"Do you know her?"
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"Yes; I have the honor."
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"Will you introduce me?"
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"Assuredly, with the greatest pleasure; when shall it be?"
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"To-morrow, at one, I will call upon you at B--'s.
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"Very good; and now do hold your tongue, if you can."
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In this latter respect I was forced to take Talbot's advice; for
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he remained obstinately deaf to every further question or
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suggestion, and occupied himself exclusively for the rest of the
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evening with what was transacting upon the stage.
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In the meantime I kept my eyes riveted on Madame Lalande, and at
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length had the good fortune to obtain a full front view of her face.
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It was exquisitely lovely- this, of course, my heart had told me
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before, even had not Talbot fully satisfied me upon the point- but
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still the unintelligible something disturbed me. I finally concluded
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that my senses were impressed by a certain air of gravity, sadness,
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or, still more properly, of weariness, which took something from the
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youth and freshness of the countenance, only to endow it with a
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seraphic tenderness and majesty, and thus, of course, to my
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enthusiastic and romantic temperment, with an interest tenfold.
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While I thus feasted my eyes, I perceived, at last, to my great
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trepidation, by an almost imperceptible start on the part of the lady,
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that she had become suddenly aware of the intensity of my gaze. Still,
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I was absolutely fascinated, and could not withdraw it, even for an
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instant. She turned aside her face, and again I saw only the chiselled
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contour of the back portion of the head. After some minutes, as if
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urged by curiosity to see if I was still looking, she gradually
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brought her face again around and again encountered my burning gaze.
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Her large dark eyes fell instantly, and a deep blush mantled her
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cheek. But what was my astonishment at perceiving that she not only
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did not a second time avert her head, but that she actually took
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from her girdle a double eyeglass- elevated it- adjusted it- and
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then regarded me through it, intently and deliberately, for the
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space of several minutes.
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Had a thunderbolt fallen at my feet I could not have been more
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thoroughly astounded- astounded only- not offended or disgusted in the
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slightest degree; although an action so bold in any other woman
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would have been likely to offend or disgust. But the whole thing was
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done with so much quietude- so much nonchalance- so much repose-
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with so evident an air of the highest breeding, in short- that nothing
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of mere effrontery was perceptible, and my sole sentiments were
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those of admiration and surprise.
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I observed that, upon her first elevation of the glass, she had
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seemed satisfied with a momentary inspection of my person, and was
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withdrawing the instrument, when, as if struck by a second thought,
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she resumed it, and so continued to regard me with fixed attention for
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the space of several minutes- for five minutes, at the very least, I
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am sure.
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This action, so remarkable in an American theatre, attracted very
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general observation, and gave rise to an indefinite movement, or buzz,
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among the audience, which for a moment filled me with confusion, but
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produced no visible effect upon the countenance of Madame Lalande.
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Having satisfied her curiosity- if such it was- she dropped the
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glass, and quietly gave her attention again to the stage; her
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profile now being turned toward myself, as before. I continued to
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watch her unremittingly, although I was fully conscious of my rudeness
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in so doing. Presently I saw the head slowly and slightly change its
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position; and soon I became convinced that the lady, while
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pretending to look at the stage was, in fact, attentively regarding
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myself. It is needless to say what effect this conduct, on the part of
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so fascinating a woman, had upon my excitable mind.
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Having thus scrutinized me for perhaps a quarter of an hour, the
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fair object of my passion addressed the gentleman who attended her,
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and while she spoke, I saw distinctly, by the glances of both, that
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the conversation had reference to myself.
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Upon its conclusion, Madame Lalande again turned toward the stage,
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and, for a few minutes, seemed absorbed in the performance. At the
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expiration of this period, however, I was thrown into an extremity
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of agitation by seeing her unfold, for the second time, the
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eye-glass which hung at her side, fully confront me as before, and,
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disregarding the renewed buzz of the audience, survey me, from head to
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foot, with the same miraculous composure which had previously so
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delighted and confounded my soul.
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This extraordinary behavior, by throwing me into a perfect fever
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of excitement- into an absolute delirium of love-served rather to
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embolden than to disconcert me. In the mad intensity of my devotion, I
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forgot everything but the presence and the majestic loveliness of
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the vision which confronted my gaze. Watching my opportunity, when I
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thought the audience were fully engaged with the opera, I at length
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caught the eyes of Madame Lalande, and, upon the instant, made a
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slight but unmistakable bow.
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She blushed very deeply- then averted her eyes- then slowly and
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cautiously looked around, apparently to see if my rash action had been
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noticed- then leaned over toward the gentleman who sat by her side.
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I now felt a burning sense of the impropriety I had committed, and
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expected nothing less than instant exposure; while a vision of pistols
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upon the morrow floated rapidly and uncomfortably through my brain.
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I was greatly and immediately relieved, however, when I saw the lady
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merely hand the gentleman a play-bill, without speaking, but the
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reader may form some feeble conception of my astonishment- of my
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profound amazement- my delirious bewilderment of heart and soul- when,
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instantly afterward, having again glanced furtively around, she
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allowed her bright eyes to set fully and steadily upon my own, and
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then, with a faint smile, disclosing a bright line of her pearly
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teeth, made two distinct, pointed, and unequivocal affirmative
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inclinations of the head.
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It is useless, of course, to dwell upon my joy- upon my transport-
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upon my illimitable ecstasy of heart. If ever man was mad with
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excess of happiness, it was myself at that moment. I loved. This was
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my first love- so I felt it to be. It was love
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supreme-indescribable. It was "love at first sight;" and at first
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sight, too, it had been appreciated and returned.
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Yes, returned. How and why should I doubt it for an instant. What
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other construction could I possibly put upon such conduct, on the part
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of a lady so beautiful- so wealthy- evidently so accomplished- of so
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high breeding- of so lofty a position in society- in every regard so
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entirely respectable as I felt assured was Madame Lalande? Yes, she
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loved me- she returned the enthusiasm of my love, with an enthusiasm
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as blind- as uncompromising- as uncalculating- as abandoned- and as
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utterly unbounded as my own! These delicious fancies and
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reflections, however, were now interrupted by the falling of the
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drop-curtain. The audience arose; and the usual tumult immediately
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supervened. Quitting Talbot abruptly, I made every effort to force
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my way into closer proximity with Madame Lalande. Having failed in
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this, on account of the crowd, I at length gave up the chase, and bent
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my steps homeward; consoling myself for my disappointment in not
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having been able to touch even the hem of her robe, by the
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reflection that I should be introduced by Talbot, in due form, upon
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the morrow.
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This morrow at last came, that is to say, a day finally dawned
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upon a long and weary night of impatience; and then the hours until
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"one" were snail-paced, dreary, and innumerable. But even Stamboul, it
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is said, shall have an end, and there came an end to this long
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delay. The clock struck. As the last echo ceased, I stepped into B--'s
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and inquired for Talbot.
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"Out," said the footman- Talbot's own.
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"Out!" I replied, staggering back half a dozen paces- "let me tell
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you, my fine fellow, that this thing is thoroughly impossible and
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impracticable; Mr. Talbot is not out. What do you mean?"
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"Nothing, sir; only Mr. Talbot is not in, that's all. He rode over
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to S--, immediately after breakfast, and left word that he would not
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be in town again for a week."
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I stood petrified with horror and rage. I endeavored to reply, but
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my tongue refused its office. At length I turned on my heel, livid
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with wrath, and inwardly consigning the whole tribe of the Talbots
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to the innermost regions of Erebus. It was evident that my considerate
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friend, il fanatico, had quite forgotten his appointment with
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myself- had forgotten it as soon as it was made. At no time was he a
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very scrupulous man of his word. There was no help for it; so
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smothering my vexation as well as I could, I strolled moodily up the
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street, propounding futile inquiries about Madame Lalande to every
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male acquaintance I met. By report she was known, I found, to all-
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to many by sight- but she had been in town only a few weeks, and there
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were very few, therefore, who claimed her personal acquaintance. These
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few, being still comparatively strangers, could not, or would not,
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take the liberty of introducing me through the formality of a
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morning call. While I stood thus in despair, conversing with a trio of
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friends upon the all absorbing subject of my heart, it so happened
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that the subject itself passed by.
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"As I live, there she is!" cried one.
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"Surprisingly beautiful!" exclaimed a second.
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"An angel upon earth!" ejaculated a third.
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I looked; and in an open carriage which approached us, passing
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slowly down the street, sat the enchanting vision of the opera,
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accompanied by the younger lady who had occupied a portion of her box.
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"Her companion also wears remarkably well," said the one of my
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trio who had spoken first.
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"Astonishingly," said the second; "still quite a brilliant air,
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but art will do wonders. Upon my word, she looks better than she did
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at Paris five years ago. A beautiful woman still;- don't you think so,
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Froissart?- Simpson, I mean."
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"Still!" said I, "and why shouldn't she be? But compared with her
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friend she is as a rush- light to the evening star- a glow- worm to
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Antares.
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"Ha! ha! ha!- why, Simpson, you have an astonishing tact at making
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discoveries- original ones, I mean." And here we separated, while
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one of the trio began humming a gay vaudeville, of which I caught only
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the lines-
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Ninon, Ninon, Ninon a bas-
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A bas Ninon De L'Enclos!
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During this little scene, however, one thing had served greatly to
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console me, although it fed the passion by which I was consumed. As
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the carriage of Madame Lalande rolled by our group, I had observed
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that she recognized me; and more than this, she had blessed me, by the
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most seraphic of all imaginable smiles, with no equivocal mark of
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the recognition.
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As for an introduction, I was obliged to abandon all hope of it
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until such time as Talbot should think proper to return from the
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country. In the meantime I perseveringly frequented every reputable
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place of public amusement; and, at length, at the theatre, where I
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first saw her, I had the supreme bliss of meeting her, and of
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exchanging glances with her once again. This did not occur, however,
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until the lapse of a fortnight. Every day, in the interim, I had
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inquired for Talbot at his hotel, and every day had been thrown into a
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spasm of wrath by the everlasting "Not come home yet" of his footman.
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Upon the evening in question, therefore, I was in a condition little
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short of madness. Madame Lalande, I had been told, was a Parisian- had
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lately arrived from Paris- might she not suddenly return?- return
|
|
before Talbot came back- and might she not be thus lost to me forever?
|
|
The thought was too terrible to bear. Since my future happiness was at
|
|
issue, I resolved to act with a manly decision. In a word, upon the
|
|
breaking up of the play, I traced the lady to her residence, noted the
|
|
address, and the next morning sent her a full and elaborate letter, in
|
|
which I poured out my whole heart.
|
|
|
|
I spoke boldly, freely- in a word, I spoke with passion. I concealed
|
|
nothing- nothing even of my weakness. I alluded to the romantic
|
|
circumstances of our first meeting- even to the glances which had
|
|
passed between us. I went so far as to say that I felt assured of
|
|
her love; while I offered this assurance, and my own intensity of
|
|
devotion, as two excuses for my otherwise unpardonable conduct. As a
|
|
third, I spoke of my fear that she might quit the city before I
|
|
could have the opportunity of a formal introduction. I concluded the
|
|
most wildly enthusiastic epistle ever penned, with a frank declaration
|
|
of my worldly circumstances- of my affluence- and with an offer of
|
|
my heart and of my hand.
|
|
|
|
In an agony of expectation I awaited the reply. After what seemed
|
|
the lapse of a century it came.
|
|
|
|
Yes, actually came. Romantic as all this may appear, I really
|
|
received a letter from Madame Lalande- the beautiful, the wealthy, the
|
|
idolized Madame Lalande. Her eyes- her magnificent eyes, had not
|
|
belied her noble heart. Like a true Frenchwoman as she was she had
|
|
obeyed the frank dictates of her reason- the generous impulses of
|
|
her nature- despising the conventional pruderies of the world. She had
|
|
not scorned my proposals. She had not sheltered herself in silence.
|
|
She had not returned my letter unopened. She had even sent me, in
|
|
reply, one penned by her own exquisite fingers. It ran thus:
|
|
|
|
"Monsieur Simpson vill pardonne me for not compose de butefulle tong
|
|
of his contree so vell as might. It is only de late dat I am arrive,
|
|
and not yet ave do opportunite for to- l'etudier.
|
|
|
|
"Vid dis apologie for the maniere, I vill now say dat, helas!-
|
|
Monsieur Simpson ave guess but de too true. Need I say de more? Helas!
|
|
am I not ready speak de too moshe?
|
|
|
|
"EUGENIE LALAND."
|
|
|
|
This noble- spirited note I kissed a million times, and committed,
|
|
no doubt, on its account, a thousand other extravagances that have now
|
|
escaped my memory. Still Talbot would not return. Alas! could he
|
|
have formed even the vaguest idea of the suffering his absence had
|
|
occasioned his friend, would not his sympathizing nature have flown
|
|
immediately to my relief? Still, however, he came not. I wrote. He
|
|
replied. He was detained by urgent business- but would shortly return.
|
|
He begged me not to be impatient- to moderate my transports- to read
|
|
soothing books- to drink nothing stronger than Hock- and to bring
|
|
the consolations of philosophy to my aid. The fool! if he could not
|
|
come himself, why, in the name of every thing rational, could he not
|
|
have enclosed me a letter of presentation? I wrote him again,
|
|
entreating him to forward one forthwith. My letter was returned by
|
|
that footman, with the following endorsement in pencil. The
|
|
scoundrel had joined his master in the country:
|
|
|
|
"Left S-- yesterday, for parts unknown- did not say where- or when
|
|
be back- so thought best to return letter, knowing your handwriting,
|
|
and as how you is always, more or less, in a hurry.
|
|
|
|
"Yours sincerely,
|
|
|
|
"STUBBS."
|
|
|
|
After this, it is needless to say, that I devoted to the infernal
|
|
deities both master and valet:- but there was little use in anger, and
|
|
no consolation at all in complaint.
|
|
|
|
But I had yet a resource left, in my constitutional audacity.
|
|
Hitherto it had served me well, and I now resolved to make it avail me
|
|
to the end. Besides, after the correspondence which had passed between
|
|
us, what act of mere informality could I commit, within bounds, that
|
|
ought to be regarded as indecorous by Madame Lalande? Since the affair
|
|
of the letter, I had been in the habit of watching her house, and thus
|
|
discovered that, about twilight, it was her custom to promenade,
|
|
attended only by a negro in livery, in a public square overlooked by
|
|
her windows. Here, amid the luxuriant and shadowing groves, in the
|
|
gray gloom of a sweet midsummer evening, I observed my opportunity and
|
|
accosted her.
|
|
|
|
The better to deceive the servant in attendance, I did this with the
|
|
assured air of an old and familiar acquaintance. With a presence of
|
|
mind truly Parisian, she took the cue at once, and, to greet me,
|
|
held out the most bewitchingly little of hands. The valet at once fell
|
|
into the rear, and now, with hearts full to overflowing, we discoursed
|
|
long and unreservedly of our love.
|
|
|
|
As Madame Lalande spoke English even less fluently than she wrote
|
|
it, our conversation was necessarily in French. In this sweet
|
|
tongue, so adapted to passion, I gave loose to the impetuous
|
|
enthusiasm of my nature, and, with all the eloquence I could
|
|
command, besought her to consent to an immediate marriage.
|
|
|
|
At this impatience she smiled. She urged the old story of decorum-
|
|
that bug-bear which deters so many from bliss until the opportunity
|
|
for bliss has forever gone by. I had most imprudently made it known
|
|
among my friends, she observed, that I desired her acquaintance-
|
|
thus that I did not possess it- thus, again, there was no
|
|
possibility of concealing the date of our first knowledge of each
|
|
other. And then she adverted, with a blush, to the extreme recency
|
|
of this date. To wed immediately would be improper- would be
|
|
indecorous- would be outre. All this she said with a charming air of
|
|
naivete which enraptured while it grieved and convinced me. She went
|
|
even so far as to accuse me, laughingly, of rashness- of imprudence.
|
|
She bade me remember that I really even know not who she was- what
|
|
were her prospects, her connections, her standing in society. She
|
|
begged me, but with a sigh, to reconsider my proposal, and termed my
|
|
love an infatuation- a will o' the wisp- a fancy or fantasy of the
|
|
moment- a baseless and unstable creation rather of the imagination
|
|
than of the heart. These things she uttered as the shadows of the
|
|
sweet twilight gathered darkly and more darkly around us- and then,
|
|
with a gentle pressure of her fairy-like hand, overthrew, in a
|
|
single sweet instant, all the argumentative fabric she had reared.
|
|
|
|
I replied as best I could- as only a true lover can. I spoke at
|
|
length, and perseveringly of my devotion, of my passion- of her
|
|
exceeding beauty, and of my own enthusiastic admiration. In
|
|
conclusion, I dwelt, with a convincing energy, upon the perils that
|
|
encompass the course of love- that course of true love that never
|
|
did run smooth- and thus deduced the manifest danger of rendering that
|
|
course unnecessarily long.
|
|
|
|
This latter argument seemed finally to soften the rigor of her
|
|
determination. She relented; but there was yet an obstacle, she
|
|
said, which she felt assured I had not properly considered. This was a
|
|
delicate point- for a woman to urge, especially so; in mentioning
|
|
it, she saw that she must make a sacrifice of her feelings; still, for
|
|
me, every sacrifice should be made. She alluded to the topic of age.
|
|
Was I aware- was I fully aware of the discrepancy between us? That the
|
|
age of the husband, should surpass by a few years- even by fifteen
|
|
or twenty- the age of the wife, was regarded by the world as
|
|
admissible, and, indeed, as even proper, but she had always
|
|
entertained the belief that the years of the wife should never
|
|
exceed in number those of the husband. A discrepancy of this unnatural
|
|
kind gave rise, too frequently, alas! to a life of unhappiness. Now
|
|
she was aware that my own age did not exceed two and twenty; and I, on
|
|
the contrary, perhaps, was not aware that the years of my Eugenie
|
|
extended very considerably beyond that sum.
|
|
|
|
About all this there was a nobility of soul- a dignity of candor-
|
|
which delighted- which enchanted me- which eternally riveted my
|
|
chains. I could scarcely restrain the excessive transport which
|
|
possessed me.
|
|
|
|
"My sweetest Eugenie," I cried, "what is all this about which you
|
|
are discoursing? Your years surpass in some measure my own. But what
|
|
then? The customs of the world are so many conventional follies. To
|
|
those who love as ourselves, in what respect differs a year from an
|
|
hour? I am twenty-two, you say, granted: indeed, you may as well
|
|
call me, at once, twenty-three. Now you yourself, my dearest
|
|
Eugenie, can have numbered no more than- can have numbered no more
|
|
than- no more than- than- than- than-"
|
|
|
|
Here I paused for an instant, in the expectation that Madame Lalande
|
|
would interrupt me by supplying her true age. But a Frenchwoman is
|
|
seldom direct, and has always, by way of answer to an embarrassing
|
|
query, some little practical reply of her own. In the present
|
|
instance, Eugenie, who for a few moments past had seemed to be
|
|
searching for something in her bosom, at length let fall upon the
|
|
grass a miniature, which I immediately picked up and presented to her.
|
|
|
|
"Keep it!" she said, with one of her most ravishing smiles. "Keep it
|
|
for my sake- for the sake of her whom it too flatteringly
|
|
represents. Besides, upon the back of the trinket you may discover,
|
|
perhaps, the very information you seem to desire. It is now, to be
|
|
sure, growing rather dark- but you can examine it at your leisure in
|
|
the morning. In the meantime, you shall be my escort home to-night. My
|
|
friends are about holding a little musical levee. I can promise you,
|
|
too, some good singing. We French are not nearly so punctilious as you
|
|
Americans, and I shall have no difficulty in smuggling you in, in
|
|
the character of an old acquaintance."
|
|
|
|
With this, she took my arm, and I attended her home. The mansion was
|
|
quite a fine one, and, I believe, furnished in good taste. Of this
|
|
latter point, however, I am scarcely qualified to judge; for it was
|
|
just dark as we arrived; and in American mansions of the better sort
|
|
lights seldom, during the heat of summer, make their appearance at
|
|
this, the most pleasant period of the day. In about an hour after my
|
|
arrival, to be sure, a single shaded solar lamp was lit in the
|
|
principal drawing-room; and this apartment, I could thus see, was
|
|
arranged with unusual good taste and even splendor; but two other
|
|
rooms of the suite, and in which the company chiefly assembled,
|
|
remained, during the whole evening, in a very agreeable shadow. This
|
|
is a well-conceived custom, giving the party at least a choice of
|
|
light or shade, and one which our friends over the water could not
|
|
do better than immediately adopt.
|
|
|
|
The evening thus spent was unquestionably the most delicious of my
|
|
life. Madame Lalande had not overrated the musical abilities of her
|
|
friends; and the singing I here heard I had never heard excelled in
|
|
any private circle out of Vienna. The instrumental performers were
|
|
many and of superior talents. The vocalists were chiefly ladies, and
|
|
no individual sang less than well. At length, upon a peremptory call
|
|
for "Madame Lalande," she arose at once, without affectation or demur,
|
|
from the chaise longue upon which she had sat by my side, and,
|
|
accompanied by one or two gentlemen and her female friend of the
|
|
opera, repaired to the piano in the main drawing-room. I would have
|
|
escorted her myself, but felt that, under the circumstances of my
|
|
introduction to the house, I had better remain unobserved where I was.
|
|
I was thus deprived of the pleasure of seeing, although not of
|
|
hearing, her sing.
|
|
|
|
The impression she produced upon the company seemed electrical but
|
|
the effect upon myself was something even more. I know not how
|
|
adequately to describe it. It arose in part, no doubt, from the
|
|
sentiment of love with which I was imbued; but chiefly from my
|
|
conviction of the extreme sensibility of the singer. It is beyond
|
|
the reach of art to endow either air or recitative with more
|
|
impassioned expression than was hers. Her utterance of the romance
|
|
in Otello- the tone with which she gave the words "Sul mio sasso,"
|
|
in the Capuletti- is ringing in my memory yet. Her lower tones were
|
|
absolutely miraculous. Her voice embraced three complete octaves,
|
|
extending from the contralto D to the D upper soprano, and, though
|
|
sufficiently powerful to have filled the San Carlos, executed, with
|
|
the minutest precision, every difficulty of vocal
|
|
composition-ascending and descending scales, cadences, or fiorituri.
|
|
In the final of the Somnambula, she brought about a most remarkable
|
|
effect at the words:
|
|
|
|
Ah! non guinge uman pensiero
|
|
|
|
Al contento ond 'io son piena.
|
|
|
|
Here, in imitation of Malibran, she modified the original phrase
|
|
of Bellini, so as to let her voice descend to the tenor G, when, by
|
|
a rapid transition, she struck the G above the treble stave, springing
|
|
over an interval of two octaves.
|
|
|
|
Upon rising from the piano after these miracles of vocal
|
|
execution, she resumed her seat by my side; when I expressed to her,
|
|
in terms of the deepest enthusiasm, my delight at her performance.
|
|
Of my surprise I said nothing, and yet was I most unfeignedly
|
|
surprised; for a certain feebleness, or rather a certain tremulous
|
|
indecision of voice in ordinary conversation, had prepared me to
|
|
anticipate that, in singing, she would not acquit herself with any
|
|
remarkable ability.
|
|
|
|
Our conversation was now long, earnest, uninterrupted, and totally
|
|
unreserved. She made me relate many of the earlier passages of my
|
|
life, and listened with breathless attention to every word of the
|
|
narrative. I concealed nothing- felt that I had a right to conceal
|
|
nothing- from her confiding affection. Encouraged by her candor upon
|
|
the delicate point of her age, I entered, with perfect frankness,
|
|
not only into a detail of my many minor vices, but made full
|
|
confession of those moral and even of those physical infirmities,
|
|
the disclosure of which, in demanding so much higher a degree of
|
|
courage, is so much surer an evidence of love. I touched upon my
|
|
college indiscretions- upon my extravagances- upon my carousals-
|
|
upon my debts- upon my flirtations. I even went so far as to speak
|
|
of a slightly hectic cough with which, at one time, I had been
|
|
troubled- of a chronic rheumatism- of a twinge of hereditary gout-
|
|
and, in conclusion, of the disagreeable and inconvenient, but hitherto
|
|
carefully concealed, weakness of my eyes.
|
|
|
|
"Upon this latter point," said Madame Lalande, laughingly, "you have
|
|
been surely injudicious in coming to confession; for, without the
|
|
confession, I take it for granted that no one would have accused you
|
|
of the crime. By the by," she continued, "have you any
|
|
recollection-" and here I fancied that a blush, even through the gloom
|
|
of the apartment, became distinctly visible upon her cheek- "have
|
|
you any recollection, mon cher ami of this little ocular assistant,
|
|
which now depends from my neck?"
|
|
|
|
As she spoke she twirled in her fingers the identical double
|
|
eye-glass which had so overwhelmed me with confusion at the opera.
|
|
|
|
"Full well- alas! do I remember it," I exclaimed, pressing
|
|
passionately the delicate hand which offered the glasses for my
|
|
inspection. They formed a complex and magnificent toy, richly chased
|
|
and filigreed, and gleaming with jewels, which, even in the
|
|
deficient light, I could not help perceiving were of high value.
|
|
|
|
"Eh bien! mon ami" she resumed with a certain empressment of
|
|
manner that rather surprised me- "Eh bien! mon ami, you have earnestly
|
|
besought of me a favor which you have been pleased to denominate
|
|
priceless. You have demanded of me my hand upon the morrow. Should I
|
|
yield to your entreaties- and, I may add, to the pleadings of my own
|
|
bosom- would I not be entitled to demand of you a very- a very
|
|
little boon in return?"
|
|
|
|
"Name it!" I exclaimed with an energy that had nearly drawn upon
|
|
us the observation of the company, and restrained by their presence
|
|
alone from throwing myself impetuously at her feet. "Name it, my
|
|
beloved, my Eugenie, my own!- name it!- but, alas! it is already
|
|
yielded ere named."
|
|
|
|
"You shall conquer, then, mon ami," said she, "for the sake of the
|
|
Eugenie whom you love, this little weakness which you have at last
|
|
confessed- this weakness more moral than physical- and which, let me
|
|
assure you, is so unbecoming the nobility of your real nature- so
|
|
inconsistent with the candor of your usual character- and which, if
|
|
permitted further control, will assuredly involve you, sooner or
|
|
later, in some very disagreeable scrape. You shall conquer, for my
|
|
sake, this affectation which leads you, as you yourself acknowledge,
|
|
to the tacit or implied denial of your infirmity of vision. For,
|
|
this infirmity you virtually deny, in refusing to employ the customary
|
|
means for its relief. You will understand me to say, then, that I wish
|
|
you to wear spectacles;- ah, hush!- you have already consented to wear
|
|
them, for my sake. You shall accept the little toy which I now hold in
|
|
my hand, and which, though admirable as an aid to vision, is really of
|
|
no very immense value as a gem. You perceive that, by a trifling
|
|
modification thus- or thus- it can be adapted to the eyes in the
|
|
form of spectacles, or worn in the waistcoat pocket as an eye-glass.
|
|
It is in the former mode, however, and habitually, that you have
|
|
already consented to wear it for my sake."
|
|
|
|
This request- must I confess it?- confused me in no little degree.
|
|
But the condition with which it was coupled rendered hesitation, of
|
|
course, a matter altogether out of the question.
|
|
|
|
"It is done!" I cried, with all the enthusiasm that I could muster
|
|
at the moment. "It is done- it is most cheerfully agreed. I
|
|
sacrifice every feeling for your sake. To-night I wear this dear
|
|
eye-glass, as an eye-glass, and upon my heart; but with the earliest
|
|
dawn of that morning which gives me the pleasure of calling you
|
|
wife, I will place it upon my- upon my nose,- and there wear it ever
|
|
afterward, in the less romantic, and less fashionable, but certainly
|
|
in the more serviceable, form which you desire."
|
|
|
|
Our conversation now turned upon the details of our arrangements for
|
|
the morrow. Talbot, I learned from my betrothed, had just arrived in
|
|
town. I was to see him at once, and procure a carriage. The soiree
|
|
would scarcely break up before two; and by this hour the vehicle was
|
|
to be at the door, when, in the confusion occasioned by the
|
|
departure of the company, Madame L. could easily enter it
|
|
unobserved. We were then to call at the house of a clergyman who would
|
|
be in waiting; there be married, drop Talbot, and proceed on a short
|
|
tour to the East, leaving the fashionable world at home to make
|
|
whatever comments upon the matter it thought best.
|
|
|
|
Having planned all this, I immediately took leave, and went in
|
|
search of Talbot, but, on the way, I could not refrain from stepping
|
|
into a hotel, for the purpose of inspecting the miniature; and this
|
|
I did by the powerful aid of the glasses. The countenance was a
|
|
surpassingly beautiful one! Those large luminous eyes!- that proud
|
|
Grecian nose!- those dark luxuriant curls!- "Ah!" said I, exultingly
|
|
to myself, "this is indeed the speaking image of my beloved!" I turned
|
|
the reverse, and discovered the words- "Eugenie Lalande- aged
|
|
twenty-seven years and seven months."
|
|
|
|
I found Talbot at home, and proceeded at once to acquaint him with
|
|
my good fortune. He professed excessive astonishment, of course, but
|
|
congratulated me most cordially, and proffered every assistance in his
|
|
power. In a word, we carried out our arrangement to the letter, and,
|
|
at two in the morning, just ten minutes after the ceremony, I found
|
|
myself in a close carriage with Madame Lalande- with Mrs. Simpson, I
|
|
should say- and driving at a great rate out of town, in a direction
|
|
Northeast by North, half-North.
|
|
|
|
It had been determined for us by Talbot, that, as we were to be up
|
|
all night, we should make our first stop at C--, a village about
|
|
twenty miles from the city, and there get an early breakfast and
|
|
some repose, before proceeding upon our route. At four precisely,
|
|
therefore, the carriage drew up at the door of the principal inn. I
|
|
handed my adored wife out, and ordered breakfast forthwith. In the
|
|
meantime we were shown into a small parlor, and sat down.
|
|
|
|
It was now nearly if not altogether daylight; and, as I gazed,
|
|
enraptured, at the angel by my side, the singular idea came, all at
|
|
once, into my head, that this was really the very first moment since
|
|
my acquaintance with the celebrated loveliness of Madame Lalande, that
|
|
I had enjoyed a near inspection of that loveliness by daylight at all.
|
|
|
|
"And now, mon ami," said she, taking my hand, and so interrupting
|
|
this train of reflection, "and now, mon cher ami, since we are
|
|
indissolubly one- since I have yielded to your passionate
|
|
entreaties, and performed my portion of our agreement- I presume you
|
|
have not forgotten that you also have a little favor to bestow- a
|
|
little promise which it is your intention to keep. Ah! let me see! Let
|
|
me remember! Yes; full easily do I call to mind the precise words of
|
|
the dear promise you made to Eugenie last night. Listen! You spoke
|
|
thus: 'It is done!- it is most cheerfully agreed! I sacrifice every
|
|
feeling for your sake. To-night I wear this dear eye-glass as an
|
|
eye-glass, and upon my heart; but with the earliest dawn of that
|
|
morning which gives me the privilege of calling you wife, I will place
|
|
it upon my- upon my nose,- and there wear it ever afterward, in the
|
|
less romantic, and less fashionable, but certainly in the more
|
|
serviceable, form which you desire.' These were the exact words, my
|
|
beloved husband, were they not?"
|
|
|
|
"They were," I said; "you have an excellent memory; and assuredly,
|
|
my beautiful Eugenie, there is no disposition on my part to evade
|
|
the performance of the trivial promise they imply. See! Behold! they
|
|
are becoming- rather- are they not?" And here, having arranged the
|
|
glasses in the ordinary form of spectacles, I applied them gingerly in
|
|
their proper position; while Madame Simpson, adjusting her cap, and
|
|
folding her arms, sat bolt upright in her chair, in a somewhat stiff
|
|
and prim, and indeed, in a somewhat undignified position.
|
|
|
|
"Goodness gracious me!" I exclaimed, almost at the very instant that
|
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the rim of the spectacles had settled upon my nose- "My goodness
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gracious me!- why, what can be the matter with these glasses?" and
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taking them quickly off, I wiped them carefully with a silk
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handkerchief, and adjusted them again.
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But if, in the first instance, there had occurred something which
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occasioned me surprise, in the second, this surprise became elevated
|
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into astonishment; and this astonishment was profound- was extreme-
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indeed I may say it was horrific. What, in the name of everything
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hideous, did this mean? Could I believe my eyes?- could I?- that was
|
|
the question. Was that- was that- was that rouge? And were those-
|
|
and were those- were those wrinkles, upon the visage of Eugenie
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Lalande? And oh! Jupiter, and every one of the gods and goddesses,
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|
little and big! what- what- what- what had become of her teeth? I
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|
dashed the spectacles violently to the ground, and, leaping to my
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|
feet, stood erect in the middle of the floor, confronting Mrs.
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Simpson, with my arms set a-kimbo, and grinning and foaming, but, at
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the same time, utterly speechless with terror and with rage.
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|
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Now I have already said that Madame Eugenie Lalande- that is to say,
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|
Simpson- spoke the English language but very little better than she
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|
wrote it, and for this reason she very properly never attempted to
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|
speak it upon ordinary occasions. But rage will carry a lady to any
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|
extreme; and in the present care it carried Mrs. Simpson to the very
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|
extraordinary extreme of attempting to hold a conversation in a tongue
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that she did not altogether understand.
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|
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"Vell, Monsieur," said she, after surveying me, in great apparent
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|
astonishment, for some moments- "Vell, Monsieur?- and vat den?- vat de
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|
matter now? Is it de dance of de Saint itusse dat you ave? If not like
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me, vat for vy buy de pig in the poke?"
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|
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"You wretch!" said I, catching my breath- "you- you- you
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|
villainous old hag!"
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|
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|
"Ag?- ole?- me not so ver ole, after all! Me not one single day more
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|
dan de eighty-doo."
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|
|
|
"Eighty-two!" I ejaculated, staggering to the wall- "eighty-two
|
|
hundred thousand baboons! The miniature said twenty-seven years and
|
|
seven months!"
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|
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|
"To be sure!- dat is so!- ver true! but den de portraite has been
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|
take for dese fifty-five year. Ven I go marry my segonde usbande,
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|
Monsieur Lalande, at dat time I had de portraite take for my
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|
daughter by my first usbande, Monsieur Moissart!"
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|
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|
"Moissart!" said I.
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|
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|
"Yes, Moissart," said she, mimicking my pronunciation, which, to
|
|
speak the truth, was none of the best,- "and vat den? Vat you know
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|
about de Moissart?"
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|
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|
"Nothing, you old fright!- I know nothing about him at all; only I
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|
had an ancestor of that name, once upon a time."
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|
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|
"Dat name! and vat you ave for say to dat name? 'Tis ver goot
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|
name; and so is Voissart- dat is ver goot name too. My daughter,
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|
Mademoiselle Moissart, she marry von Monsieur Voissart,- and de name
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|
is bot ver respectaable name."
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|
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"Moissart?" I exclaimed, "and Voissart! Why, what is it you mean?"
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|
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|
"Vat I mean?- I mean Moissart and Voissart; and for de matter of
|
|
dat, I mean Croissart and Froisart, too, if I only tink proper to mean
|
|
it. My daughter's daughter, Mademoiselle Voissart, she marry von
|
|
Monsieur Croissart, and den again, my daughter's grande daughter,
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|
Mademoiselle Croissart, she marry von Monsieur Froissart; and I
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|
suppose you say dat dat is not von ver respectaable name.-"
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|
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|
"Froissart!" said I, beginning to faint, "why, surely you don't
|
|
say Moissart, and Voissart, and Croissart, and Froissart?"
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|
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|
"Yes," she replied, leaning fully back in her chair, and
|
|
stretching out her lower limbs at great length; "yes, Moissart, and
|
|
Voissart, and Croissart, and Froissart. But Monsieur Froissart, he vas
|
|
von ver big vat you call fool- he vas von ver great big donce like
|
|
yourself- for he lef la belle France for come to dis stupide Amerique-
|
|
and ven he get here he went and ave von ver stupide, von ver, ver
|
|
stupide sonn, so I hear, dough I not yet av ad de plaisir to meet
|
|
vid him- neither me nor my companion, de Madame Stephanie Lalande.
|
|
He is name de Napoleon Bonaparte Froissart, and I suppose you say
|
|
dat dat, too, is not von ver respectable name."
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|
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|
Either the length or the nature of this speech, had the effect of
|
|
working up Mrs. Simpson into a very extraordinary passion indeed;
|
|
and as she made an end of it, with great labor, she lumped up from her
|
|
chair like somebody bewitched, dropping upon the floor an entire
|
|
universe of bustle as she lumped. Once upon her feet, she gnashed
|
|
her gums, brandished her arms, rolled up her sleeves, shook her fist
|
|
in my face, and concluded the performance by tearing the cap from
|
|
her head, and with it an immense wig of the most valuable and
|
|
beautiful black hair, the whole of which she dashed upon the ground
|
|
with a yell, and there trammpled and danced a fandango upon it, in
|
|
an absolute ecstasy and agony of rage.
|
|
|
|
Meantime I sank aghast into the chair which she had vacated.
|
|
"Moissart and Voissart!" I repeated, thoughtfully, as she cut one of
|
|
her pigeon-wings, and "Croissart and Froissart!" as she completed
|
|
another- "Moissart and Voissart and Croissart and Napoleon Bonaparte
|
|
Froissart!- why, you ineffable old serpent, that's me- that's me- d'ye
|
|
hear? that's me"- here I screamed at the top of my voice- "that's
|
|
me-e-e! I am Napoleon Bonaparte Froissart! and if I havn't married
|
|
my great, great, grandmother, I wish I may be everlastingly
|
|
confounded!"
|
|
|
|
Madame Eugenie Lalande, quasi Simpson- formerly Moissart- was, in
|
|
sober fact, my great, great, grandmother. In her youth she had been
|
|
beautiful, and even at eighty-two, retained the majestic height, the
|
|
sculptural contour of head, the fine eyes and the Grecian nose of
|
|
her girlhood. By the aid of these, of pearl-powder, of rouge, of false
|
|
hair, false teeth, and false tournure, as well as of the most
|
|
skilful modistes of Paris, she contrived to hold a respectable footing
|
|
among the beauties en peu passees of the French metropolis. In this
|
|
respect, indeed, she might have been regarded as little less than
|
|
the equal of the celebrated Ninon De L'Enclos.
|
|
|
|
She was immensely wealthy, and being left, for the second time, a
|
|
widow without children, she bethought herself of my existence in
|
|
America, and for the purpose of making me her heir, paid a visit to
|
|
the United States, in company with a distant and exceedingly lovely
|
|
relative of her second husband's- a Madame Stephanie Lalande.
|
|
|
|
At the opera, my great, great, grandmother's attention was
|
|
arrested by my notice; and, upon surveying me through her eye-glass,
|
|
she was struck with a certain family resemblance to herself. Thus
|
|
interested, and knowing that the heir she sought was actually in the
|
|
city, she made inquiries of her party respecting me. The gentleman who
|
|
attended her knew my person, and told her who I was. The information
|
|
thus obtained induced her to renew her scrutiny; and this scrutiny
|
|
it was which so emboldened me that I behaved in the absurd manner
|
|
already detailed. She returned my bow, however, under the impression
|
|
that, by some odd accident, I had discovered her identity. When,
|
|
deceived by my weakness of vision, and the arts of the toilet, in
|
|
respect to the age and charms of the strange lady, I demanded so
|
|
enthusiastically of Talbot who she was, he concluded that I meant
|
|
the younger beauty, as a matter of course, and so informed me, with
|
|
perfect truth, that she was "the celebrated widow, Madame Lalande."
|
|
|
|
In the street, next morning, my great, great, grandmother
|
|
encountered Talbot, an old Parisian acquaintance; and the
|
|
conversation, very naturally turned upon myself. My deficiencies of
|
|
vision were then explained; for these were notorious, although I was
|
|
entirely ignorant of their notoriety, and my good old relative
|
|
discovered, much to her chagrin, that she had been deceived in
|
|
supposing me aware of her identity, and that I had been merely
|
|
making a fool of myself in making open love, in a theatre, to an old
|
|
woman unknown. By way of punishing me for this imprudence, she
|
|
concocted with Talbot a plot. He purposely kept out of my way to avoid
|
|
giving me the introduction. My street inquiries about "the lovely
|
|
widow, Madame Lalande," were supposed to refer to the younger lady, of
|
|
course, and thus the conversation with the three gentlemen whom I
|
|
encountered shortly after leaving Talbot's hotel will be easily
|
|
explained, as also their allusion to Ninon De L'Enclos. I had no
|
|
opportunity of seeing Madame Lalande closely during daylight; and,
|
|
at her musical soiree, my silly weakness in refusing the aid of
|
|
glasses effectually prevented me from making a discovery of her age.
|
|
When "Madame Lalande" was called upon to sing, the younger lady was
|
|
intended; and it was she who arose to obey the call; my great,
|
|
great, grandmother, to further the deception, arising at the same
|
|
moment and accompanying her to the piano in the main drawing-room. Had
|
|
I decided upon escorting her thither, it had been her design to
|
|
suggest the propriety of my remaining where I was; but my own
|
|
prudential views rendered this unnecessary. The songs which I so
|
|
much admired, and which so confirmed my impression of the youth of
|
|
my mistress, were executed by Madame Stephanie Lalande. The eyeglass
|
|
was presented by way of adding a reproof to the hoax- a sting to the
|
|
epigram of the deception. Its presentation afforded an opportunity for
|
|
the lecture upon affectation with which I was so especially edified.
|
|
It is almost superfluous to add that the glasses of the instrument, as
|
|
worn by the old lady, had been exchanged by her for a pair better
|
|
adapted to my years. They suited me, in fact, to a T.
|
|
|
|
The clergyman, who merely pretended to tie the fatal knot, was a
|
|
boon companion of Talbot's, and no priest. He was an excellent "whip,"
|
|
however; and having doffed his cassock to put on a great-coat, he
|
|
drove the hack which conveyed the "happy couple" out of town. Talbot
|
|
took a seat at his side. The two scoundrels were thus "in at the
|
|
death," and through a half-open window of the back parlor of the
|
|
inn, amused themselves in grinning at the denouement of the drama. I
|
|
believe I shall be forced to call them both out.
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, I am not the husband of my great, great,
|
|
grandmother; and this is a reflection which affords me infinite
|
|
relief,- but I am the husband of Madame Lalande- of Madame Stephanie
|
|
Lalande - with whom my good old relative, besides making me her sole
|
|
heir when she dies- if she ever does- has been at the trouble of
|
|
concocting me a match. In conclusion: I am done forever with billets
|
|
doux and am never to be met without SPECTACLES.
|
|
|
|
THE END
|
|
.
|