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XVII
When Augustine was so imprudent as
to set forth her serious grievances
against her husband, the two old
people were speechless with
indignation. But the word
"divorce" was ere long spoken by Madame
Guillaume. At the sound of the word
divorce the apathetic old draper
seemed to wake up. Prompted by his
love for his daughter, and also by
the excitement which the proceedings
would bring into his uneventful
life, father Guillaume took up the
matter. He made himself the leader
of the application for a divorce,
laid down the lines of it, almost
argued the case; he offered to be at
all the charges, to see the
lawyers, the pleaders, the judges,
to move heaven and earth. Madame de
Sommervieux was frightened, she
refused her father's services, said
she would not be separated from her
husband even if she were ten times
as unhappy, and talked no more about
her sorrows. After being
overwhelmed by her parents with all
the little wordless and consoling
kindnesses by which the old couple
tried in vain to make up to her for
her distress of heart, Augustine
went away, feeling the impossibility
of making a superior mind intelligible
to weak intellects. She had
learned that a wife must hide from
every one, even from her parents,
woes for which it is so difficult to
find sympathy. The storms and
sufferings of the upper spheres are
appreciated only by the lofty
spirits who inhabit there. In any
circumstance we can only be judged
by our equals.
Thus poor Augustine found herself
thrown back on the horror of her
meditations, in the cold atmosphere
of her home. Study was indifferent
to her, since study had not brought
her back her husband's heart.
Initiated into the secret of these
souls of fire, but bereft of their
resources, she was compelled to
share their sorrows without sharing
their pleasures. She was disgusted
with the world, which to her seemed
mean and small as compared with the
incidents of passion. In short,
her life was a failure.
One evening an idea flashed upon her
that lighted up her dark grief
like a beam from heaven. Such an
idea could never have smiled on a
heart less pure, less virtuous than
hers. She determined to go to the
Duchesse de Carigliano, not to ask
her to give her back her husband's
heart, but to learn the arts by
which it had been captured; to engage
the interest of this haughty fine
lady for the mother of her lover's
children; to appeal to her and make
her the instrument of her future
happiness, since she was the cause
of her present wretchedness.
So one day Augustine, timid as she
was, but armed with supernatural
courage, got into her carriage at
two in the afternoon to try for
admittance to the boudoir of the
famous coquette, who was never
visible till that hour. Madame de
Sommervieux had not yet seen any of
the ancient and magnificent mansions
of the Faubourg Saint-Germain. As
she made her way through the stately
corridors, the handsome
staircases, the vast
drawing-rooms--full of flowers, though it was in
the depth of winter, and decorated
with the taste peculiar to women
born to opulence or to the elegant
habits of the aristocracy,
Augustine felt a terrible clutch at
her heart; she coveted the secrets
of an elegance of which she had
never had an idea; she breathed in an
air of grandeur which explained the
attraction of the house for her
husband. When she reached the
private rooms of the Duchess she was
filled with jealousy and a sort of despair,
as she admired the
luxurious arrangement of the
furniture, the draperies and the
hangings. Here disorder was a grace,
here luxury affected a certain
contempt of splendor. The fragrance
that floated in the warm air
flattered the sense of smell without
offending it. The accessories of
the rooms were in harmony with a
view, through plate-glass windows, of
the lawns in a garden planted with
evergreen trees. It was all
bewitching, and the art of it was
not perceptible. The whole spirit of
the mistress of these rooms pervaded
the drawing-room where Augustine
awaited her. She tried to divine her
rival's character from the aspect
of the scattered objects; but there
was here something as impenetrable
in the disorder as in the symmetry,
and to the simple-minded young
wife all was a sealed letter. All
that she could discern was that, as
a woman, the Duchess was a superior
person. Then a painful thought
came over her.
"Alas! And is it true,"
she wondered, "that a simple and loving heart
is not all-sufficient to an artist;
that to balance the weight of
these powerful souls they need a
union with feminine souls of a
strength equal to their own? If I
had been brought up like this siren,
our weapons at least might have been
equal in the hour of struggle."
"But I am not at home!"
The sharp, harsh words, though spoken in an
undertone in the adjoining boudoir,
were heard by Augustine, and her
heart beat violently.
"The lady is in there,"
replied the maid.
"You are an idiot! Show her
in," replied the Duchess, whose voice was
sweeter, and had assumed the dulcet
tones of politeness. She evidently
now meant to be heard.
Augustine shyly entered the room. At
the end of the dainty boudoir she
saw the Duchess lounging luxuriously
on an ottoman covered with brown
velvet and placed in the centre of a
sort of apse outlined by soft
folds of white muslin over a yellow
lining. Ornaments of gilt bronze,
arranged with exquisite taste,
enhanced this sort of dais, under which
the Duchess reclined like a Greek
statue. The dark hue of the velvet
gave relief to every fascinating
charm. A subdued light, friendly to
her beauty, fell like a reflection
rather than a direct illumination.
A few rare flowers raised their
perfumed heads from costly Sevres
vases. At the moment when this picture
was presented to Augustine's
astonished eyes, she was approaching
so noiselessly that she caught a
glance from those of the
enchantress. This look seemed to say to some
one whom Augustine did not at first
perceive, "Stay; you will see a
pretty woman, and make her visit
seem less of a bore."
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