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Madame de Mauves
Chapter VII
Henry James
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       _ He felt, when he found himself unobserved and outside, that he must
       plunge into violent action, walk fast and far and defer the opportunity
       for thought. He strode away into the forest, swinging his cane, throwing
       back his head, casting his eyes into verdurous vistas and following the
       road without a purpose. He felt immensely excited, but could have given
       no straight name to his agitation. It was a joy as all increase of
       freedom is joyous; something seemed to have been cleared out of his path
       and his destiny to have rounded a cape and brought him into sight of an
       open sea. But it was a pain in the degree in which his freedom somehow
       resolved itself into the need of despising all mankind with a single
       exception; and the fact that Madame de Mauves inhabited a planet
       contaminated by the presence of the baser multitude kept elation from
       seeming a pledge of ideal bliss.
       There she was, at any rate, and circumstances now forced them to be
       intimate. She had ceased to have what men call a secret for him, and
       this fact itself brought with it a sort of rapture. He had no prevision
       that he should "profit," in the vulgar sense, by the extraordinary
       position into which they had been thrown; it might be but a cruel trick
       of destiny to make hope a harsher mockery and renunciation a keener
       suffering. But above all this rose the conviction that she could do
       nothing that wouldn't quicken his attachment. It was this conviction
       that gross accident--all odious in itself--would force the beauty of her
       character into more perfect relief for him that made him stride along as
       if he were celebrating a spiritual feast. He rambled at hazard for a
       couple of hours, finding at last that he had left the forest behind him
       and had wandered into an unfamiliar region. It was a perfectly rural
       scene, and the still summer day gave it a charm for which its meagre
       elements but half accounted.
       He thought he had never seen anything so characteristically French; all
       the French novels seemed to have described it, all the French
       landscapists to have painted it. The fields and trees were of a cool
       metallic green; the grass looked as if it might stain his trousers and
       the foliage his hands. The clear light had a mild greyness, the sheen of
       silver, not of gold, was in the work-a-day sun. A great red-roofed high-
       stacked farmhouse, with whitewashed walls and a straggling yard,
       surveyed the highroad, on one side, from behind a transparent curtain of
       poplars. A narrow stream half-choked with emerald rushes and edged with
       grey aspens occupied the opposite quarter. The meadows rolled and sloped
       away gently to the low horizon, which was barely concealed by the
       continuous line of clipped and marshalled trees. The prospect was not
       rich, but had a frank homeliness that touched the young man's fancy. It
       was full of light atmosphere and diffused clearness, and if it was
       prosaic it was somehow sociable.
       Longmore was disposed to walk further, and he advanced along the road
       beneath the poplars. In twenty minutes he came to a village which
       straggled away to the right, among orchards and potagers. On the left,
       at a stone's throw from the road, stood a little pink-faced inn which
       reminded him that he had not breakfasted, having left home with a
       prevision of hospitality from Madame de Mauves. In the inn he found a
       brick-tiled parlour and a hostess in sabots and a white cap, whom, over
       the omelette she speedily served him--borrowing licence from the bottle
       of sound red wine that accompanied it--he assured she was a true artist.
       To reward his compliment she invited him to smoke his cigar in her
       little garden behind the house.
       Here he found a tonnelle and a view of tinted crops stretching down to
       the stream. The tonnelle was rather close, and he preferred to lounge on
       a bench against the pink wall, in the sun, which was not too hot. Here,
       as he rested and gazed and mused, he fell into a train of thought which,
       in an indefinable fashion, was a soft influence from the scene about
       him. His heart, which had been beating fast for the past three hours,
       gradually checked its pulses and left him looking at life with rather a
       more level gaze. The friendly tavern sounds coming out through the open
       windows, the sunny stillness of the yellowing grain which covered so
       much vigorous natural life, conveyed no strained nor high-pitched
       message, had little to say about renunciation--nothing at all about
       spiritual zeal. They communicated the sense of plain ripe nature,
       expressed the unperverted reality of things, declared that the common
       lot isn't brilliantly amusing and that the part of wisdom is to grasp
       frankly at experience lest you miss it altogether. What reason there was
       for his beginning to wonder after this whether a deeply-wounded heart
       might be soothed and healed by such a scene, it would be difficult to
       explain; certain it was that as he sat there he dreamt, awake, of an
       unhappy woman who strolled by the slow-flowing stream before him and who
       pulled down the fruit-laden boughs in the orchards. He mused and mused,
       and at last found himself quite angry that he couldn't somehow think
       worse of Madame de Mauves--or at any rate think otherwise. He could
       fairly claim that in the romantic way he asked very little of life--made
       modest demands on passion: why then should his only passion be born to
       ill fortune? Why should his first--his last--glimpse of positive
       happiness be so indissolubly linked with renunciation?
       It is perhaps because, like many spirits of the same stock, he had in
       his composition a lurking principle of sacrifice, sacrifice for
       sacrifice's sake, to the authority of which he had ever paid due
       deference, that he now felt all the vehemence of rebellion. To renounce,
       to renounce again, to renounce for ever, was this all that youth and
       longing and ardour were meant for? Was experience to be muffled and
       mutilated like an indecent picture? Was a man to sit and deliberately
       condemn his future to be the blank memory of a regret rather than the
       long possession of a treasure? Sacrifice? The word was a trap for minds
       muddled by fear, an ignoble refuge of weakness. To insist now seemed not
       to dare, but simply to BE, to live on possible terms.
       His hostess came out to hang a moist cloth on the hedge, and, though her
       guest was sitting quietly enough, she might have imagined in his kindled
       eyes a flattering testimony to the quality of her wine. As she turned
       back into the house she was met by a young man of whom Longmore took
       note in spite of his high distraction. He was evidently a member of that
       jovial fraternity of artists whose very shabbiness has an affinity with
       the unestablished and unexpected in life--the element often gazed at
       with a certain wistfulness out of the curtained windows even of the
       highest respectability. Longmore was struck first with his looking like
       a very clever man and then with his looking like a contented one. The
       combination, as it was expressed in his face, might have arrested the
       attention of a less exasperated reasoner. He had a slouched hat and a
       yellow beard, a light easel under one arm, and an unfinished sketch in
       oils under the other. He stopped and stood talking for some moments to
       the landlady, while something pleasant played in his face. They were
       discussing the possibilities of dinner; the hostess enumerated some very
       savoury ones, and he nodded briskly, assenting to everything. It
       couldn't be, Longmore thought, that he found such ideal ease in the
       prospect of lamb-chops and spinach and a croute aux fruits. When the
       dinner had been ordered he turned up his sketch, and the good woman fell
       to admiring and comparing, to picking up, off by the stream-side, the
       objects represented.
       Was it his work, Longmore wondered, that made him so happy? Was a strong
       talent the best thing in the world? The landlady went back to her
       kitchen, and the young painter stood, as if he were waiting for
       something, beside the gate which opened upon the path across the fields.
       Longmore sat brooding and asking himself if it weren't probably better
       to cultivate the arts than to cultivate the passions. Before he had
       answered the question the painter had grown tired of waiting. He had
       picked up a pebble, tossed it lightly into an upper window and called
       familiarly "Claudine!" Claudine appeared; Longmore heard her at the
       window, bidding the young man cultivate patience. "But I'm losing my
       light," he said; "I must have my shadows in the same place as
       yesterday."
       "Go without me then," Claudine answered; "I'll join you in ten minutes."
       Her voice was fresh and young; it represented almost aggressively to
       Longmore that she was as pleased as her companion.
       "Don't forget the Chenier," cried the young man, who, turning away,
       passed out of the gate and followed the path across the fields until he
       disappeared among the trees by the side of the stream. Who might
       Claudine be? Longmore vaguely wondered; and was she as pretty as her
       voice? Before long he had a chance to satisfy himself; she came out of
       the house with her hat and parasol, prepared to follow her companion.
       She had on a pink muslin dress and a little white hat, and she was as
       pretty as suffices almost any Frenchwoman to be pleasing. She had a
       clear brown skin and a bright dark eye and a step that made walking as
       light a matter as being blown--and this even though she happened to be
       at the moment not a little over-weighted. Her hands were encumbered with
       various articles involved in her pursuit of her friend. In one arm she
       held her parasol and a large roll of needlework, and in the other a
       shawl and a heavy white umbrella, such as painters use for sketching.
       Meanwhile she was trying to thrust into her pocket a paper-covered
       volume which Longmore saw to be the poems of Andre Chenier, and in the
       effort dropping the large umbrella and marking this with a half-smiled
       exclamation of disgust. Longmore stepped forward and picked up the
       umbrella, and as she, protesting her gratitude, put out her hand to take
       it, he recognised her as too obliging to the young man who had preceded
       her.
       "You've too much to carry," he said; "you must let me help you."
       "You're very good, monsieur," she answered. "My husband always forgets
       something. He can do nothing without his umbrella. He is d'une
       etourderie--"
       "You must allow me to carry the umbrella," Longmore risked; "there's too
       much of it for a lady."
       She assented, after many compliments to his politeness; and he walked
       by her side into the meadow. She went lightly and rapidly, picking her
       steps and glancing forward to catch a glimpse of her husband. She was
       graceful, she was charming, she had an air of decision and yet of
       accommodation, and it seemed to our friend that a young artist would
       work none the worse for having her seated at his side reading Chenier's
       iambics. They were newly married, he supposed, and evidently their path
       of life had none of the mocking crookedness of some others. They asked
       little; but what need to ask more than such quiet summer days by a shady
       stream, with a comrade all amiability, to say nothing of art and books
       and a wide unmenaced horizon? To spend such a morning, to stroll back to
       dinner in the red-tiled parlour of the inn, to ramble away again as the
       sun got low--all this was a vision of delight which floated before him
       only to torture him with a sense of the impossible. All Frenchwomen were
       not coquettes, he noted as he kept pace with his companion. She uttered
       a word now and then for politeness' sake, but she never looked at him
       and seemed not in the least to care that he was a well-favoured and
       well-dressed young man. She cared for nothing but the young artist in
       the shabby coat and the slouched hat, and for discovering where he had
       set up his easel.
       This was soon done. He was encamped under the trees, close to the
       stream, and, in the diffused green shade of the little wood, couldn't
       have felt immediate need of his umbrella. He received a free rebuke,
       however, for forgetting it, and was informed of what he owed to
       Longmore's complaisance. He was duly grateful; he thanked our hero
       warmly and offered him a seat on the grass. But Longmore felt himself a
       marplot and lingered only long enough to glance at the young man's
       sketch and to see in it an easy rendering of the silvery stream and the
       vivid green rushes. The young wife had spread her shawl on the grass at
       the base of a tree and meant to seat herself when he had left them,
       meant to murmur Chenier's verses to the music of the gurgling river.
       Longmore looked a while from one of these lucky persons to the other,
       barely stifled a sigh, bade them good-morning and took his departure. He
       knew neither where to go nor what to do; he seemed afloat on the sea of
       ineffectual longing. He strolled slowly back to the inn, where, in the
       doorway, he met the landlady returning from the butcher's with the
       lambchops for the dinner of her lodgers.
       "Monsieur has made the acquaintance of the dame of our young painter,"
       she said with a free smile--a smile too free for malicious meanings.
       "Monsieur has perhaps seen the young man's picture. It appears that he's
       d'une jolie force."
       "His picture's very charming," said Longmore, "but his dame is more
       charming still."
       "She's a very nice little woman; but I pity her all the more."
       "I don't see why she's to be pitied," Longmore pleaded. "They seem a
       very happy couple."
       The landlady gave a knowing nod. "Don't trust to it, monsieur! Those
       artists--ca na pas de principes! From one day to another he can plant
       her there! I know them, allez. I've had them here very often; one year
       with one, another year with another."
       Longmore was at first puzzled. Then, "You mean she's not his wife?" he
       asked.
       She took it responsibly. "What shall I tell you? They're not des hommes
       serieux, those gentlemen! They don't engage for eternity. It's none of
       my business, and I've no wish to speak ill of madame. She's gentille--
       but gentille, and she loves her jeune homme to distraction."
       "Who then is so distinguished a young woman?" asked Longmore. "What do
       you know about her?"
       "Nothing for certain; but it's my belief that she's better than he. I've
       even gone so far as to believe that she's a lady--a vraie dame--and that
       she has given up a great many things for him. I do the best I can for
       them, but I don't believe she has had all her life to put up with a
       dinner of two courses." And she turned over her lamb-chops tenderly, as
       to say that though a good cook could imagine better things, yet if you
       could have but one course lamb-chops had much in their favour. "I shall
       do them with breadcrumbs. Voila les femmes, monsieur!"
       Longmore turned away with the feeling that women were indeed a
       measureless mystery, and that it was hard to say in which of their forms
       of perversity there was most merit. He walked back to Saint-Germain more
       slowly than he had come, with less philosophic resignation to any event
       and more of the urgent egotism of the passion pronounced by philosophers
       the supremely selfish one. Now and then the episode of the happy young
       painter and the charming woman who had given up a great many things for
       him rose vividly in his mind and seemed to mock his moral unrest like
       some obtrusive vision of unattainable bliss.
       The landlady's gossip had cast no shadow on its brightness; her voice
       seemed that of the vulgar chorus of the uninitiated, which stands always
       ready with its gross prose rendering of the inspired passages of human
       action. Was it possible a man could take THAT from a woman--take all
       that lent lightness to that other woman's footstep and grace to her
       surrender and not give her the absolute certainty of a devotion as
       unalterable as the process of the sun? Was it possible that so clear a
       harmony had the seeds of trouble, that the charm of so perfect union
       could be broken by anything but death? Longmore felt an immense desire
       to cry out a thousand times "No!" for it seemed to him at last that he
       was somehow only a graver equivalent of the young lover and that
       rustling Claudine was a lighter sketch of Madame de Mauves. The heat of
       the sun, as he walked along, became oppressive, and when he re-entered
       the forest he turned aside into the deepest shade he could find and
       stretched himself on the mossy ground at the foot of a great beech. He
       lay for a while staring up into the verdurous dusk overhead and trying
       mentally to see his friend at Saint-Germain hurry toward some quiet
       stream-side where HE waited, as he had seen that trusting creature hurry
       an hour before. It would be hard to say how well he succeeded; but the
       effort soothed rather than excited him, and as he had had a good deal
       both of moral and physical fatigue he sank at last into a quiet sleep.
       While he slept moreover he had a strange and vivid dream. He seemed to
       be in a wood, very much like the one on which his eyes had lately
       closed; but the wood was divided by the murmuring stream he had left an
       hour before. He was walking up and down, he thought, restlessly and in
       intense expectation of some momentous event. Suddenly, at a distance,
       through the trees, he saw a gleam of a woman's dress, on which he
       hastened to meet her. As he advanced he recognised her, but he saw at
       the same time that she was on the other bank of the river. She seemed at
       first not to notice him, but when they had come to opposite places she
       stopped and looked at him very gravely and pityingly. She made him no
       sign that he must cross the stream, but he wished unutterably to stand
       by her side. He knew the water was deep, and it seemed to him he knew
       how he should have to breast it and how he feared that when he rose to
       the surface she would have disappeared. Nevertheless he was going to
       plunge when a boat turned into the current from above and came swiftly
       toward them, guided by an oarsman who was sitting so that they couldn't
       see his face. He brought the boat to the bank where Longmore stood; the
       latter stepped in, and with a few strokes they touched the opposite
       shore. Longmore got out and, though he was sure he had crossed the
       stream, Madame de Mauves was not there. He turned with a kind of agony
       and saw that now she was on the other bank--the one he had left. She
       gave him a grave silent glance and walked away up the stream. The boat
       and the boatman resumed their course, but after going a short distance
       they stopped and the boatman turned back and looked at the still divided
       couple. Then Longmore recognised him--just as he had recognised him a
       few days before at the restaurant in the Bois de Boulogne. _