Letters of Two Brides - Page 38/94

But the impulse is repressed, and I return to my carriage, swearing to

die an old maid. Love is undoubtedly an incarnation, and how many

conditions are needful before it can take place! We are not certain of

never quarreling with ourselves, how much less so when there are two?

This is a problem which God alone can solve.

I begin to think that I shall return to the convent. If I remain in

society, I shall do things which will look like follies, for I cannot

possibly reconcile myself to what I see. I am perpetually wounded

either in my sense of delicacy, my inner principles, or my secret

thoughts.

Ah! my mother is the happiest of women, adored as she is by Canalis,

her great little man. My love, do you know I am seized sometimes with

a horrible craving to know what goes on between my mother and that

young man? Griffith tells me she has gone through all these moods; she

has longed to fly at women, whose happiness was written in their face;

she has blackened their character, torn them to pieces. According to

her, virtue consists in burying all these savage instincts in one's

innermost heart. But what then of the heart? It becomes the sink of

all that is worst in us.

It is very humiliating that no adorer has yet turned up for me. I am a

marriageable girl, but I have brothers, a family, relations, who are

sensitive on the point of honor. Ah! if that is what keeps men back,

they are poltroons.

The part of Chimene in the Cid and that of the Cid delight me. What

a marvelous play! Well, good-bye.