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st. ives-第3部分

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his big whiskers?' she would say。  'And this one;' indicating 

myself with her gold eye…glass; 'is; I assure you; quite an 

oddity。'  The oddity; you may be certain; ground his teeth。  She 

had a way of standing in our midst; nodding around; and addressing 

us in what she imagined to be French: 'BIENNE; HOMMES!  CA VA 

BIENNE?'  I took the freedom to reply in the same lingo: BIENNE; 

FEMME! CA VA COUCI…COUCI TOUT D'MEME; LA BOURGEOISE!'  And at that; 

when we had all laughed with a little more heartiness than was 

entirely civil; 'I told you he was quite an oddity!' says she in 

triumph。  Needless to say; these passages were before I had 

remarked the niece。



The aunt came on the day in question with a following rather more 

than usually large; which she manoeuvred to and fro about the 

market and lectured to at rather more than usual length; and with 

rather less than her accustomed tact。  I kept my eyes down; but 

they were ever fixed in the same direction; quite in vain。  The 

aunt came and went; and pulled us out; and showed us off; like 

caged monkeys; but the niece kept herself on the outskirts of the 

crowd and on the opposite side of the courtyard; and departed at 

last as she had come; without a sign。  Closely as I had watched 

her; I could not say her eyes had ever rested on me for an instant; 

and my heart was overwhelmed with bitterness and blackness。  I tore 

out her detested image; I felt I was done with her for ever; I 

laughed at myself savagely; because I had thought to please; when I 

lay down at night sleep forsook me; and I lay; and rolled; and 

gloated on her charms; and cursed her insensibility; for half the 

night。  How trivial I thought her! and how trivial her sex!  A man 

might be an angel or an Apollo; and a mustard…coloured coat would 

wholly blind them to his merits。  I was a prisoner; a slave; a 

contemned and despicable being; the butt of her sniggering 

countrymen。  I would take the lesson: no proud daughter of my foes 

should have the chance to mock at me again; none in the future 

should have the chance to think I had looked at her with 

admiration。  You cannot imagine any one of a more resolute and 

independent spirit; or whose bosom was more wholly mailed with 

patriotic arrogance; than I。  Before I dropped asleep; I had 

remembered all the infamies of Britain; and debited them in an 

overwhelming column to Flora。



The next day; as I sat in my place; I became conscious there was 

some one standing near; and behold; it was herself!  I kept my 

seat; at first in the confusion of my mind; later on from policy; 

and she stood; and leaned a little over me; as in pity。  She was 

very still and timid; her voice was low。  Did I suffer in my 

captivity? she asked me。  Had I to complain of any hardship?



'Mademoiselle; I have not learned to complain;' said I。  'I am a 

soldier of Napoleon。'



She sighed。  'At least you must regret LA FRANCE;' said she; and 

coloured a little as she pronounced the words; which she did with a 

pretty strangeness of accent。



'What am I to say?' I replied。  'If you were carried from this 

country; for which you seem so wholly suited; where the very rains 

and winds seem to become you like ornaments; would you regret; do 

you think?  We must surely all regret! the son to his mother; the 

man to his country; these are native feelings。'



'You have a mother?' she asked。



'In heaven; mademoiselle;' I answered。  'She; and my father also; 

went by the same road to heaven as so many others of the fair and 

brave: they followed their queen upon the scaffold。  So; you see; I 

am not so much to be pitied in my prison;' I continued: 'there are 

none to wait for me; I am alone in the world。  'Tis a different 

case; for instance; with yon poor fellow in the cloth cap。  His bed 

is next to mine; and in the night I hear him sobbing to himself。  

He has a tender character; full of tender and pretty sentiments; 

and in the dark at night; and sometimes by day when he can get me 

apart with him; he laments a mother and a sweetheart。  Do you know 

what made him take me for a confidant?'



She parted her lips with a look; but did not speak。  The look 

burned all through me with a sudden vital heat。



'Because I had once seen; in marching by; the belfry of his 

village!' I continued。  'The circumstance is quaint enough。  It 

seems to bind up into one the whole bundle of those human instincts 

that make life beautiful; and people and places dear … and from 

which it would seem I am cut off!'



I rested my chin on my knee and looked before me on the ground。  I 

had been talking until then to hold her; but I was now not sorry 

she should go: an impression is a thing so delicate to produce and 

so easy to overthrow!  Presently she seemed to make an effort。



'I will take this toy;' she said; laid a five…and…sixpenny piece in 

my hand; and was gone ere I could thank her。



I retired to a place apart near the ramparts and behind a gun。  The 

beauty; the expression of her eyes; the tear that had trembled 

there; the compassion in her voice; and a kind of wild elegance 

that consecrated the freedom of her movements; all combined to 

enslave my imagination and inflame my heart。  What had she said?  

Nothing to signify; but her eyes had met mine; and the fire they 

had kindled burned inextinguishably in my veins。  I loved her; and 

I did not fear to hope。  Twice I had spoken with her; and in both 

interviews I had been well inspired; I had engaged her sympathies; 

I had found words that she must remember; that would ring in her 

ears at night upon her bed。  What mattered if I were half shaved 

and my clothes a caricature?  I was still a man; and I had drawn my 

image on her memory。  I was still a man; and; as I trembled to 

realise; she was still a woman。  Many waters cannot quench love; 

and love; which is the law of the world; was on my side。  I closed 

my eyes; and she sprang up on the background of the darkness; more 

beautiful than in life。  'Ah!' thought I; 'and you too; my dear; 

you too must carry away with you a picture; that you are still to 

behold again and still to embellish。  In the darkness of night; in 

the streets by day; still you are to have my voice and face; 

whispering; making love for me; encroaching on your shy heart。  Shy 

as your heart is; IT is lodged there … I am lodged there; let the 

hours do their office … let time continue to draw me ever in more 

lively; ever in more insidious colours。'  And then I had a vision 

of myself; and burst out laughing。



A likely thing; indeed; that a beggar…man; a private soldier; a 

prisoner in a yellow travesty; was to awake the interest of this 

fair girl!  I would not despair; but I saw the game must be played 

fine and close。  It must be my policy to hold myself before her; 

always in a pathetic or pleasing attitude; never to alarm or 

startle her; to keep my own secret locked in my bosom
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