Letters of Two Brides - Page 84/94

RENEE DE L'ESTORADE TO LOUISE DE CHAULIEU

May.

If love be the life of the world, why do austere philosophers count it

for nothing in marriage? Why should Society take for its first law

that the woman must be sacrificed to the family, introducing thus a

note of discord into the very heart of marriage? And this discord was

foreseen, since it was to meet the dangers arising from it that men

were armed with new-found powers against us. But for these, we should

have been able to bring their whole theory to nothing, whether by the

force of love or of a secret, persistent aversion.

I see in marriage, as it at present exists, two opposing forces which

it was the task of the lawgiver to reconcile. "When will they be

reconciled?" I said to myself, as I read your letter. Oh! my dear, one

such letter alone is enough to overthrow the whole fabric constructed

by the sage of Aveyron, under whose shelter I had so cheerfully

ensconced myself! The laws were made by old men--any woman can see

that--and they have been prudent enough to decree that conjugal love,

apart from passion, is not degrading, and that a woman in yielding

herself may dispense with the sanction of love, provided the man can

legally call her his. In their exclusive concern for the family they

have imitated Nature, whose one care is to propagate the species.

Formerly I was a person, now I am a chattel. Not a few tears have I

gulped down, alone and far from every one. How gladly would I have

exchanged them for a consoling smile! Why are our destinies so

unequal? Your soul expands in the atmosphere of a lawful passion. For

you, virtue will coincide with pleasure. If you encounter pain, it

will be of your own free choice. Your duty, if you marry Felipe, will

be one with the sweetest, freest indulgence of feeling. Our future is

big with the answer to my question, and I look for it with restless

eagerness.

You love and are adored. Oh! my dear, let this noble romance, the old

subject of our dreams, take full possession of your soul. Womanly

beauty, refined and spiritualized in you, was created by God, for His

own purposes, to charm and to delight. Yes, my sweet, guard well the

secret of your heart, and submit Felipe to those ingenious devices of

ours for testing a lover's metal. Above all, make trial of your own

love, for this is even more important. It is so easy to be misled by

the deceptive glamour of novelty and passion, and by the vision of

happiness.