Works of Honore De Balzac

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Works of Honore De Balzac Page 1423

by Honoré de Balzac


  SCENE TENTH

  Ferdinand and Pauline (who locks the door).

  Pauline

  Are you married?

  Ferdinand

  What a joke! Wouldn’t I have told you?

  Pauline

  Ah! (She sinks back on a chair, then falls upon her knees.) Holy

  Virgin, what vows shall I make to thee? (She kisses Ferdinand’s hand.)

  And you, a thousand blessings on your head!

  Ferdinand

  Who could have told you such a foolish thing?

  Pauline

  My stepmother.

  Ferdinand Why, she knows all about me, and if she did not, she would set spies to discover all; for suspicion with such women as that is certitude! Listen, Pauline, moments now are precious. It was Madame de Grandchamp who brought me into this house.

  Pauline

  And why?

  Ferdinand

  Because she is in love with me.

  Pauline

  How horrible! And what of my father?

  Ferdinand

  She was in love with me before her marriage.

  Pauline

  She is in love with you; but you, are you in love with her?

  Ferdinand

  Do you think if I were, I should have remained in this house?

  Pauline

  And she is still in love with you?

  Ferdinand Yes, unhappily she is! I ought to tell you that she was at one time beloved by me; but to-day I hate her from the bottom of my heart, and I sometimes ask myself why. Is it because I am in love with you, and every genuine and pure love is by nature exclusive? Is it because the contrast between an angel of purity, such as you, and a devil like her excites in me just as much hatred towards her as it rouses love towards you, my joy, my bliss, my beauteous treasure? I cannot say. But I hate her, and I love you so much that I should not regret dying if your father killed me; for one talk with you, one hour spent in this chamber by your side, seems, even when it is passed away, a whole lifetime to me.

  Pauline Oh, say those dear words again! For they bring back my confidence once more. After hearing you speak thus, I forgive you the wrong you have done me in telling that I am not your first and only love, as you are mine. It is but a lost illusion, that is all! Do not be vexed with me. Young girls are foolish, they have no ambition but in their love, and they would fain rule over the past as they rule over the future of their beloved! But you hate her! And in that word, you give me more proof of love than you have given me for the two years that we have loved. If only you knew with what cruelty this stepmother has put me on the rack, by her questions! But I will be avenged!

  Ferdinand You must be very careful! She is a very dangerous woman! She rules your father. She is a woman who will fight to the death!

  Pauline

  To the death! That is as I wish it!

  Ferdinand Be prudent, dear Pauline! We are going to act in harmony, are we not? Well, my love, the prosecuting attorney is of opinion that if we would triumph over the difficulties that prevent our union, we must have fortitude enough to part for some time.

  Pauline

  Oh! Give me two days and I will win over my father!

  Ferdinand But you do not know Madame de Grandchamp. She has gone too far to leave off without ruining you, and to do that she will go to any lengths. But I will not go away without giving you what may prove most effective weapons against her.

  Pauline

  Oh, give them, give them to me!

  Ferdinand Not yet. And you must promise me not to make use of them, unless your life is in danger; for what I am doing is certainly a breach of confidence. But it is for your sake I do it.

  Pauline

  Tell me what it is?

  Ferdinand To-morrow I shall put into your hands the letters which she wrote to me, some of them before, some of them after her marriage. Pauline, do not read them! Swear this to me, in the name of our love, in the name of our happiness! It will be sufficient, should it ever become absolutely necessary, that she knows that they are in your possession; at that moment you will see her trembling and groveling at your feet, for all her machinations then are foiled. But do not use them excepting as a last resort, and keep them well concealed.

  Pauline

  What a terrible duel it will be!

  Ferdinand Terrible! But, Pauline be courageous, as you have so far been, in keeping the secret of our love; do not acknowledge it, until you find it no longer possible to deny it.

  Pauline Oh, why did your father betray the Emperor? If fathers knew how their children would be punished for the sins of their parents, there would be none but good men!

  Ferdinand Perhaps this sad interview will prove the last moment of happiness we shall have!

  Pauline (aside) I will rejoin him, if he leaves me — (Aloud) See, I no longer weep, I am full of courage! But tell me, will your friend know the place where you are hiding?

  Ferdinand

  Eugene will be our confidential friend.

  Pauline

  And the letters?

  Ferdinand

  To-morrow! To-morrow! But where will you conceal them?

  Pauline

  I shall keep them about me.

  Ferdinand

  Good! Farewell!

  Pauline

  Oh no, not yet!

  Ferdinand

  A moment more may ruin us.

  Pauline Or unite us for life. Come, let me show you out, I shall not rest until I see you in the garden. Come!

  Ferdinand Let me take one more glance at this maiden chamber, in which you will think of me — where all things speak of you.

  (Scene curtain.)

  SCENE ELEVENTH

  (The drawing-room before described.)

  Pauline on the veranda; Gertrude at the door of the room.

  Gertrude

  She is seeing him out! He has been deceiving me! So has she! (Taking

  Pauline by the hand, she leads her to the front of the stage.) Will

  you dare tell me, now, mademoiselle, that you do not love him?

  Pauline

  Madame, I am deceiving no one.

  Gertrude

  You are deceiving your father.

  Pauline

  And you, madame?

  Gertrude

  So both of you are against me — Oh, I shall —

  Pauline

  You shall do nothing, either against me or against him.

  Gertrude Do not compel me to show my power! You must be obedient to your father, and — he is obedient to me.

  Pauline

  We shall see!

  Gertrude (aside) Her coolness makes my blood boil. My brain reels! (Aloud) Do you know that I would rather die than live without him?

  Pauline And so would I, madame. But I am free. I have not sworn as you have to be faithful to a husband — And your husband is my father!

  Gertrude (kneeling before Pauline) What have I done to you? I have loved you, I have educated you, I have been a good mother to you.

  Pauline

  Be a faithful wife, and I will say no more.

  Gertrude

  Nay! Speak! Say all you like — Ah! the struggle has begun.

  SCENE TWELFTH

  The same persons and the General.

  The General

  How is this? What is going on here?

  Gertrude (to Pauline) You must feign sickness. Come lie down. (She makes her lie down.) I happened, my dear, to hear moans. Our dear child was calling for help; she was almost suffocated by the flowers in her bedroom.

  Pauline Yes, papa, Marguerite had forgotten to take away the vase of flowers, and I almost died.

  Gertrude

  Come, my daughter, come into the open air.

  (Gertrude and Pauline go towards the door.)

  The General

  Stay a moment. What have you done with the flowers.

  Pauline

  I do not know where Madame has put them.

  Gertrude
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  I threw them into the garden.

  (The General abruptly rushes out, after setting his candle on the card table.)

  SCENE THIRTEENTH

  Pauline and Gertrude; later, the General.

  Gertrude

  Go back to your room, lock yourself in! I’ll take all the blame.

  (Pauline goes to her room.) I will wait for him here.

  (Gertrude goes back into her room.)

  The General (coming in from the garden) I can find the vase of flowers nowhere. There is some mystery in all these things. Gertrude? — There is no one here! Ah! Madame de Grandchamp, you will have to tell me! — It is a nice thing that I should be deceived by both wife and daughter!

  Curtain to the Second Act.

  ACT III

  SCENE FIRST

  (Same stage-setting. Morning.)

  Gertrude; then Champagne.

  Gertrude (brings a flower vase from the garden and puts it down on the table) What trouble I had to allay his suspicions! One or two more scenes like that and I shall lose control of him. But I have gained a moment of liberty now — provided Pauline does not come to trouble me! She must be asleep — she went to bed so late! — would it be possible to lock her in her room? (She goes to the door of Pauline’s chamber, but cannot find the key.) I am afraid not.

  Champagne (coming in)

  M. Ferdinand is coming, madame.

  Gertrude

  Thank you, Champagne. He went to bed very late, did he not?

  Champagne M. Ferdinand makes his rounds, as you know, every night, and he came in at half-past one o’clock. I sleep over him, and I heard him.

  Gertrude

  Does he ever go to bed later than that?

  Champagne Sometimes he does, but that is according to the time he makes his rounds.

  Gertrude Very good. Thank you, Champagne. (Exit Champagne.) As the reward for a sacrifice which has lasted for twelve years, and whose agonies can only be understood by women, — for what man can guess at such tortures! — what have I asked? Very little! Merely to know that he is here, near to me, without any satisfaction saving, from time to time, a furtive glance at him. I wished only to feel sure that he would wait for me. To feel sure of this is enough for us, us for whom a pure, a heavenly love is something never to be realized. Men never believe that they are loved by us, until they have brought us down into the mire! And this is how he has rewarded me! He makes nocturnal assignations with this stupid girl! Ah! He may as well pronounce my sentence of death; and if he has the courage to do so, I shall have the courage at once to bring about their eternal separation; I can do it! But here he comes! I feel faint! My God! Why hast Thou made me love with such desperate devotion him who no longer loves me!

  SCENE SECOND

  Ferdinand and Gertrude.

  Gertrude Yesterday you deceived me. You came here last night, through this room, entering by means of a false key, to see Pauline, at the risk of being killed by M. de Grandchamp! Oh! you needn’t lie about it. I saw you, and I came upon Pauline just as you concluded your nocturnal promenade. You have made a choice upon which I cannot offer you my congratulations. If only you had heard us discussing the matter, on this very spot! If you had seen the boldness of this girl, the effrontery with which she denied everything to me, you would have trembled for your future, that future which belongs to me, and for which I have sold myself, body and soul.

  Ferdinand (aside) What an avalanche of reproach! (Aloud) Let us try, Gertrude, both of us, to behave wisely in this matter. Above all things, let us try to avoid base accusations. I shall never forget what you have been to me; I still entertain towards you a friendship which is sincere, unalterable and absolute; but I no longer love you.

  Gertrude

  That is, since eighteen months ago.

  Ferdinand

  No. Since three years ago.

  Gertrude You must admit then that I have the right to detest and make war upon your love for Pauline; for this love has rendered you a traitor and criminal towards me.

  Ferdinand

  Madame!

  Gertrude Yes, you have deceived me. In standing as you did between us two, you made me assume a character which is not mine. I am violent as you know. Violence is frankness, and I am living a life of outrageous duplicity. Tell me, do you know what it is to have to invent new lies, on the spur of the moment, every day, — to live with a dagger at your heart? Oh! This lying! But for us, it is the Nemesis of happiness. It is disgraceful, when it succeeds; it is death, when it fails. And you, other men envy you because you make women love you. You will be applauded, while I shall be despised. And you do not wish me to defend myself! You have nothing but bitter words for a woman who has hidden from you everything — her remorse — her tears! I have suffered alone and without you the wrath of heaven; alone and without you I have descended into my soul’s abyss, an abyss which has been opened by the earthquake of sorrow; and, while repentance was gnawing at my heart, I had for you nothing but looks of tenderness, and smiles of gaiety! Come, Ferdinand, do not despise a slave who lies in such utter subjection to your will!

  Ferdinand (aside) I must put an end to this. (Aloud) Listen to me, Gertrude. When first we met it was youth alone united us in love. I then yielded, you may say, to an impulse of that egotism which lies at the bottom of every man’s heart, though he knows it not, concealed under the flowers of youthful passion. There is so much turbulence in our sentiments at twenty-two! The infatuation which may seize us then, permits us not to reflect either upon life as it really is, or upon the seriousness of its issues —

  Gertrude (aside)

  How calmly he reasons upon it all! Ah! It is infamous!

  Ferdinand And at that time I loved you freely, with entire devotion; but afterwards — afterwards, life changed its aspect for both of us. If you ask why I remained under a roof which I should never have approached, it is because I chose in Pauline the only women with whom it was possible for me to end my days. Come, Gertrude, do not break yourself to pieces against the barrier raised by heaven. Do not torture two beings who ask you to yield to them happiness, and who will ever love you dearly.

  Gertrude

  Ah, I see! You are the martyr — and I — I am the executioner! Would not

  I have been your wife to-day, if I had not set your happiness above

  the satisfaction of my love?

  Ferdinand

  Very well! Do the same thing to-day, by giving me my liberty.

  Gertrude You mean the liberty of loving some one else. That is not the way you spoke twelve years ago. Now it will cost my life.

  Ferdinand It is only in romance that people die of love. In real life they seek consolation.

  Gertrude Do not you men die for your outraged honor, for a word, for a gesture? Well, there are women who die for their love, that is, when their love is a treasure which has become their all, which is their very life! And I am one of those women. Since you have been under this roof, Ferdinand, I have feared a catastrophe every moment. Yes. And I always carry about me something which will enable me to quit this life, the very moment that misfortune falls on us. See! (She shows him a phial.) Now you know that life that I have lived!

  Ferdinand

  Ah! you weep!

  Gertrude I swore that I would keep back these tears, but they are strangling me! For you — While you speak to me with that cold politeness which is your last insult, — your last insult to a love which you repudiate! — you show not the least sympathy towards me! You would like to see me dead, for then you would be unhampered by me. But, Ferdinand, you do not know me! I am willing to confess everything to the General, whom I would not deceive. This lying fills me with disgust! I shall take my child, I shall come to your house, we will flee together. But no more of Pauline!

  Ferdinand

  If you did this, I would kill myself.

  Gertrude And I, too, would kill myself! Then we should be united in death, and you would never be hers!

  Ferdinand (aside) />
  What an infernal creature!

  Gertrude And there is this consideration. What would you do if the barrier which separates you from Pauline were never broken down?

  Ferdinand

  Pauline will be able to maintain her own independence.

  Gertrude

  But if her father should marry her to some one else?

  Ferdinand

  It would be my death.

  Gertrude People die of love in romance. In real life they console themselves with some one else, and a man only does his duty by being true to her with whom he has plighted troth.

  The General (outside)

  Gertrude! Gertrude!

  Gertrude I hear the general calling. (The General appears.) You will then finish your business as quickly as you can, M. Ferdinand, and return promptly; I shall wait for you here.

  (Exit Ferdinand.)

  SCENE THIRD

  The General, Gertrude, then Pauline.

  The General This is rather early in the morning for you to be holding a conference with Ferdinand! What were you discussing? The factory?

  Gertrude What were we discussing? I will tell you; for you are exactly like your son; when once you begin to ask questions, you must have a direct answer. I had an impression that Ferdinand had something to do with Pauline’s refusal to marry Godard.

  The General

  When I come to think of it, you were perhaps right.

  Gertrude I got M. Ferdinand to come here for the purpose of clearing up my suspicions, and you interrupted us at the very moment when I seemed likely to gain some information.

  (Pauline pushes the door ajar unseen.)

  The General

 

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