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The Valley Of Decision
BOOK IV - THE REWARD   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 6
Edith Wharton
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       BOOK IV - THE REWARD: CHAPTER 6
       Fulvia, in the twilight, sat awaiting the Duke.
       The room in which she sat looked out on a stone-flagged cloister
       enclosing a plot of ground planted with yews; and at the farther end of
       this cloister a door communicated by a covered way with the ducal
       gardens. The house had formed a part of the convent of the Perpetual
       Adoration, which had been sold by the nuns when they moved to the new
       buildings the late Duke had given them. A portion had been torn down to
       make way for the Marquess of Cerveno's palace, and in the remaining
       fragment, a low building wedged between high walls, Fulvia had found a
       lodging. Her whole dwelling consisted of the Abbess's parlour, in which
       she now sat, and the two or three adjoining cells. The tall presses in
       the parlour had been filled with her father's books, and surmounted by
       his globes and other scientific instruments. But for this the apartment
       remained as unadorned as in her predecessor's day; and Fulvia, in her
       austere black gown, with a lawn kerchief folded over her breast, and the
       unpowdered hair drawn back from her pale face, might herself have passed
       for the head of a religious community.
       She cultivated with almost morbid care this severity of dress and
       surroundings. There were moments when she could hardly tolerate the pale
       autumnal beauty which her glass reflected, when even this phantom of
       youth and radiance became a stumbling-block to her spiritual pride. She
       was not ashamed of being the Duke of Pianura's mistress; but she had a
       horror of being thought like the mistresses of other princes. She
       loathed all that the position represented in men's minds; she had
       refused all that, according to the conventions of the day, it entitled
       her to claim: wealth, patronage, and the rank and estates which it was
       customary for the sovereign to confer. She had taken nothing from Odo
       but his love, and the little house in which he had lodged her.
       Three years had passed since Fulvia's flight to Pianura. From the moment
       when she and Odo had stood face to face again, it had been clear to him
       that he could never give her up, to her that she could never leave him.
       Fate seemed to have thrown them together in derision of their long
       struggle, and both felt that lassitude of the will which is the reaction
       from vain endeavour. The discovery that he needed her, that the task for
       which he had given her up could after all not be accomplished without
       her, served to overcome her last resistance. If the end for which both
       strove could best be attained together--if he needed the aid of her
       unfaltering faith as much as she needed that of his wealth and
       power--why should any personal scruple stand between them? Why should
       she who had given all else to the cause--ease, fortune, safety, and even
       the happiness that lay in her hand--hesitate to make the final sacrifice
       of a private ideal? According to the standards of her day there was no
       dishonour to a woman in being the mistress of a man whose rank forbade
       his marrying her: the dishonour lay in the conduct which had come to be
       associated with such relations. Under the old dispensation the influence
       of the prince's mistress had stood for the last excesses of moral and
       political corruption; why might it not, under the new law, come to
       represent as unlimited a power for good?
       So love, the casuist, argued; and during those first months, when
       happiness seemed at last its own justification, Fulvia lived in every
       fibre. But always, even then, she was on the defensive against that
       higher tribunal which her own conception of life had created. In spite
       of herself she was a child of the new era, of the universal reaction
       against the falseness and egotism of the old social code. A standard of
       conduct regulated by the needs of the race rather than by individual
       passion, a conception of each existence as a link in the great chain of
       human endeavour, had slowly shaped itself out of the wild theories and
       vague "codes" of the eighteenth-century moralists; and with this sense
       of the sacramental nature of human ties, came a renewed reverence for
       moral and physical purity.
       Fulvia was of those who require that their lives shall be an affirmation
       of themselves; and the lack of inner harmony drove her to seek some
       outward expression of her ideals. She threw herself with renewed passion
       into the political struggle. The best, the only justification of her
       power, was to use it boldly, openly, for the good of the people. All the
       repressed forces of her nature were poured into this single channel. She
       had no desire to conceal her situation, to disguise her influence over
       Odo. She wished it rather to be so visible a factor in his relations
       with his people that she should come to be regarded as the ultimate
       pledge of his good faith. But, like all the casuistical virtues, this
       position had the rigidity of something created to fit a special case;
       and the result was a fixity of attitude, which spread benumbingly over
       her whole nature. She was conscious of the change, yet dared not
       struggle against it, since to do so was to confess the weakness of her
       case. She had chosen to be regarded as a symbol rather than a woman, and
       there were moments when she felt as isolated from life as some marble
       allegory in its niche above the market-place.
       It was the desire to associate herself with the Duke's public life that
       had induced her, after much hesitation, to accept the degree which the
       University had conferred on her. She had shared eagerly in the work of
       reconstructing the University, and had been the means of drawing to
       Pianura several teachers of distinction from Padua and Pavia. It was her
       dream to build up a seat of learning which should attract students from
       all parts of Italy; and though many young men of good family had
       withdrawn from the classes when the Barnabites were dispossessed, she
       was confident that they would soon be replaced by scholars from other
       states. She was resolved to identify herself openly with the educational
       reform which seemed to her one of the most important steps toward civic
       emancipation; and she had therefore acceded to the request of the
       faculty that, on receiving her degree, she should sustain a thesis
       before the University. This ceremony was to take place a few days hence,
       on the Duke's birthday; and, as the new charter was to be proclaimed on
       the same day, Fulvia had chosen as the subject of her discourse the
       Constitution recently promulgated in France.
       She pushed aside the bundle of political pamphlets which she had been
       studying, and sat looking out at the strip of garden beyond the arches
       of the cloister. The narrow horizon bounded by convent walls symbolised
       fitly enough the life she had chosen to lead: a life of artificial
       restraints and renunciations, passive, conventual almost, in which even
       the central point of her love burned, now, with a calm devotional glow.
       The door in the cloister opened and the Duke crossed the garden. He
       walked slowly, with the listless step she had observed in him of late;
       and as he entered she saw that he looked pale and weary.
       "You have been at work again," she said. "A cabinet-meeting?"
       "Yes," he answered, sinking into the Abbess's high carved chair.
       He glanced musingly about the dim room, in which the shadow of the
       cloister made an early dusk. Its atmosphere of monastic calm, of which
       the significance did not escape him, fell soothingly on his spirit. It
       simplified his relation to Fulvia by tacitly restricting it within the
       bounds of a tranquil tenderness. Any other setting would have seemed
       less in harmony with their fate.
       Better, perhaps, than Fulvia, he knew what ailed them both. Happiness
       had come to them, but it had come too late; it had come tinged with
       disloyalty to their early ideals; it had come when delay and
       disillusionment had imperceptibly weakened the springs of passion. For
       it is the saddest thing about sorrow that it deadens the capacity for
       happiness; and to Fulvia and Odo the joy they had renounced had returned
       with an exile's alien face.
       Seeing that he remained silent, she rose and lit the shaded lamp on the
       table. He watched her as she moved across the room. Her step had lost
       none of its flowing grace, of that harmonious impetus which years ago
       had drawn his boyish fancy in its wake. As she bent above the lamp, the
       circle of light threw her face into relief against the deepening shadows
       of the room. She had changed, indeed, but as those change in whom the
       springs of life are clear and abundant: it was a development rather than
       a diminution. The old purity of outline remained; and deep below the
       surface, but still visible sometimes to his lessening insight, the old
       girlish spirit, radiant, tender and impetuous, stirred for a moment in
       her eyes.
       The lamplight fell on the pamphlets she had pushed aside. Odo picked one
       up. "What are these?" he asked.
       "They were sent to me by the English traveller whom Andreoni brought
       here."
       He turned a few pages. "The old story," he said. "Do you never weary of
       it?"
       "An old story?" she exclaimed. "I thought it had been the newest in the
       world. Is it not being written, chapter by chapter, before our very
       eyes?"
       Odo laid the treatise aside. "Are you never afraid to turn the next
       page?" he asked.
       "Afraid? Afraid of what?"
       "That it may be written in blood."
       She uttered a quick exclamation; then her face hardened, and she said in
       a low tone: "De Crucis has been with you."
       He made the half-resigned, half-impatient gesture of the man who feels
       himself drawn into a familiar argument from which there is no issue.
       "He left yesterday for Germany."
       "He was here too long!" she said, with an uncontrollable escape of
       bitterness.
       Odo sighed. "If you would but let me bring him to you, you would see
       that his influence over me is not what you think it."
       She was silent a moment; then she said: "You are tired tonight. Let us
       not talk of these things."
       "As you please," he answered, with an air of relief; and she rose and
       went to the harpsichord.
       She played softly, with a veiled touch, gliding from one crepuscular
       melody to another, till the room was filled with drifts of sound that
       seemed like the voice of its own shadows. There had been times when he
       could have yielded himself to this languid tide of music, letting it
       loosen the ties of thought till he floated out into the soothing dimness
       of sensation; but now the present held him. To Fulvia, too, he knew the
       music was but a forced interlude, a mechanical refuge from thought. She
       had deliberately narrowed their intercourse to one central idea; and it
       was her punishment that silence had come to be merely an intensified
       expression of this idea.
       When she turned to Odo she saw the same consciousness in his face. It
       was useless for them to talk of other things. With a pang of unreasoning
       regret she felt that she had become to him the embodiment of a single
       thought--a formula, rather than a woman.
       "Tell me what you have been doing," she said.
       The question was a relief. At once he began to separation of his work.
       All his thoughts, all his time, were given to the constitution which was
       to define the powers of Church and state. The difficulties increased as
       the work advanced; but the gravest difficulty was one of which he dared
       not tell her: his own growing distrust of the ideas for which he
       laboured. He was too keenly aware of the difference in their mental
       operations. With Fulvia, ideas were either rejected or at once converted
       into principles; with himself, they remained stored in the mind, serving
       rather as commentaries on life than as incentives to action. This
       perpetual accessibility to new impressions was a quality she could not
       understand, or could conceive of only as a weakness. Her own mind was
       like a garden in which nothing is ever transplanted. She allowed for no
       intermediate stages between error and dogma, for no shifting of the
       bounds of conviction; and this security gave her the singleness of
       purpose in which he found himself more and more deficient.
       Odo remembered that he had once thought her nearness would dispel his
       hesitations. At first it had been so; but gradually the contact with her
       fixed enthusiasms had set up within him an opposing sense of the claims
       ignored. The element of dogmatism in her faith showed the discouraging
       sameness of the human mind. He perceived that to a spirit like Fulvia's
       it might become possible to shed blood in the cause of tolerance.
       The rapid march of events in France had necessarily produced an opposite
       effect on minds so differently constituted. To Fulvia the year had been
       a year of victory, a glorious affirmation of her political creed. Step
       by step she had seen, as in some old allegorical painting, error fly
       before the shafts of truth. Where Odo beheld a conflagration she saw a
       sunrise; and all that was bare and cold in her own life was warmed and
       transfigured by that ineffable brightness.
       She listened patiently while he enlarged on the difficulties of the
       case. The constitution was framed in all its details, but with its
       completion he felt more than ever doubtful of the wisdom of granting it.
       He would have welcomed any postponement that did not seem an admission
       of fear. He dreaded the inevitable break with the clergy, not so much
       because of the consequent danger to his own authority, as because he was
       increasingly conscious of the newness and clumsiness of the instrument
       with which he proposed to replace their tried and complex system. He
       mentioned to Fulvia the rumours of popular disaffection; but she swept
       them aside with a smile.
       "The people mistrust you," she said. "And what does that mean? That you
       have given your enemies time to work on their credulity. The longer you
       delay the more opposition you will encounter. Father Ignazio would
       rather destroy the state than let it be saved by any hand but his."
       Odo reflected. "Of all my enemies," he said, "Father Ignazio is the one
       I most respect, because he is the most sincere."
       "He is the most dangerous, then," she returned. "A fanatic is always
       more powerful than a knave."
       He was struck with her undiminished faith in the sufficiency of such
       generalisations. Did she really think that to solve such a problem it
       was only necessary to define it? The contact with her unfaltering
       assurance would once have given him a momentary glow; but now it left
       him cold.
       She was speaking more urgently. "Surely," she said, "the noblest use a
       man can make of his own freedom is to set others free. My father said it
       was the only justification of kingship."
       He glanced at her half-sadly. "Do you still fancy that kings are free? I
       am bound hand and foot."
       "So was my father," she flashed back at him; "but he had the Promethean
       spirit."
       She coloured at her own quickness, but Odo took the thrust tranquilly.
       "Yes," he said, "your father had the Promethean spirit: I have not. The
       flesh that is daily torn from me does not grow again."
       "Your courage is as great as his," she exclaimed, her tenderness in
       arms.
       "No," he answered, "for his was hopeful." There was a pause, and then he
       began to speak of the day's work.
       All the afternoon he had been in consultation with Crescenti, whose vast
       historical knowledge was of service in determining many disputed points
       in the tenure of land. The librarian was in sympathy with any measures
       tending to relieve the condition of the peasantry; yet he was almost as
       strongly opposed as Trescorre to any reproduction of the Tuscan
       constitution.
       "He is afraid!" broke from Fulvia. She admired and respected Crescenti,
       yet she had never fully trusted him. The taint of ecclesiasticism was on
       him.
       Odo smiled. "He has never been afraid of facing the charge of
       Jansenism," he replied. "All his life he has stood in open opposition to
       the Church party."
       "It is one thing to criticise their dogmas, another to attack their
       privileges. At such a time he is bound to remember that he is a
       priest--that he is one of them."
       "Yet, as you have often pointed out, it is to the clergy that France in
       great measure owes her release from feudalism."
       She smiled coldly. "France would have won her cause without the clergy!"
       "This is not France, then," he said with a sigh. After a moment he began
       again: "Can you not see that any reform which aims at reducing the power
       of the clergy must be more easily and successfully carried out if they
       can be induced to take part in it? That, in short, we need them at this
       moment as we have never needed them before? The example of France ought
       at least to show you that."
       "The example of France shows me that, to gain a point in such a
       struggle, any means must be used! In France, as you say, the clergy were
       with the people--here they are against them. Where persuasion fails
       coercion must be used!"
       Odo smiled faintly. "You might have borrowed that from their own
       armoury," he said.
       She coloured at the sarcasm. "Why not?" she retorted. "Let them have a
       taste of their own methods! They know the kind of pressure that makes
       men yield--when they feel it they will know what to do."
       He looked at her with astonishment. "This is Gamba's tone," he said. "I
       have never heard you speak in this way before."
       She coloured again; and now with a profound emotion. "Yes," she said,
       "it is Gamba's tone. He and I speak for the same cause and with the same
       voice. We are of the people and we speak for the people. Who are your
       other counsellors? Priests and noblemen! It is natural enough that they
       should wish to make their side of the question heard. Listen to them, if
       you will--conciliate them, if you can! We need all the allies we can
       win. Only do not fancy they are really speaking for the people. Do not
       think it is the people's voice you hear. The people do not ask you to
       weigh this claim against that, to look too curiously into the defects
       and merits of every clause in their charter. All they ask is that the
       charter should be given them!"
       She spoke with the low-voiced passion that possessed her at such
       moments. All acrimony had vanished from her tone. The expression of a
       great conviction had swept aside every personal animosity, and cleared
       the sources of her deepest feeling. Odo felt the pressure of her
       emotion. He leaned to her and their hands met.
       "It shall be given them," he said.
       She lifted her face to his. It shone with a great light. Once before he
       had seen it so illumined, but with how different a brightness! The
       remembrance stirred in him some old habit of the senses. He bent over
       and kissed her.
       Content of BOOK IV - THE REWARD: CHAPTER 6 [Edith Wharton's novel: The Valley Of Decision]
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BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 1
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 2
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 3
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 4
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 5
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 6
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 7
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 8
   BOOK I - THE OLD ORDER - CHAPTER 9
BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 1
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 2
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 3
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 4
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 5
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 6
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 7
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 8
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 9
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 10
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 11
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 12
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 13
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 14
   BOOK II - THE NEW LIGHT - CHAPTER 15
BOOK III - THE CHOICE
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 1
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 2
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 3
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 4
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 5
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 6
   BOOK III - THE CHOICE - CHAPTER 7
BOOK IV - THE REWARD
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 1
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 2
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 3
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 4
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 5
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 6
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 7
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 8
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 9
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 10
   BOOK IV - THE REWARD - CHAPTER 11