THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO
PART 9
The
entertainments of this evening consisted of a ball and supper; it was a fancy
ball, and the company danced in groups in the gardens, which were very
extensive. The high and luxuriant trees, under which the groups assembled, were
illuminated with a profusion of lamps, disposed with taste and fancy. The gay
and various dresses of the company, some of whom were seated on the turf,
conversing at their ease, observing the cotillons, taking refreshments, and
sometimes touching sportively a guitar; the gallant manners of the gentlemen,
the exquisitely capricious air of the ladies; the light fantastic steps of
their dances; the musicians, with the lute, the hautboy, and the tabor, seated
at the foot of an elm, and the sylvan scenery of woods around were circumstances,
that unitedly formed a characteristic and striking picture of French festivity.
Emily surveyed the gaiety of the scene with a melancholy kind of pleasure, and
her emotion may be imagined when, as she stood with her aunt, looking at one of
the groups, she perceived Valancourt; saw him dancing with a young and
beautiful lady, saw him conversing with her with a mixture of attention and
familiarity, such as she had seldom observed in his manner. She turned hastily
from the scene, and attempted to draw away Madame Cheron, who was conversing
with Signor Cavigni, and neither perceived Valancourt, or was willing to be
interrupted. A faintness suddenly came over Emily, and, unable to support
herself, she sat down on a turf bank beneath the trees, where several other
persons were seated. One of these, observing the extreme paleness of her
countenance, enquired if she was ill, and begged she would allow him to fetch
her a glass of water, for which politeness she thanked him, but did not accept
it. Her apprehension lest Valancourt should observe her emotion made her
anxious to overcome it, and she succeeded so far as to re-compose her
countenance. Madame Cheron was still conversing with Cavigni; and the Count
Bauvillers, who had addressed Emily, made some observations upon the scene, to
which she answered almost unconsciously, for her mind was still occupied with
the idea of Valancourt, to whom it was with extreme uneasiness that she
remained so near. Some remarks, however, which the Count made upon the dance
obliged her to turn her eyes towards it, and, at that moment, Valancourt's met
hers. Her colour faded again, she felt, that she was relapsing into faintness,
and instantly averted her looks, but not before she had observed the altered
countenance of Valancourt, on perceiving her. She would have left the spot
immediately, had she not been conscious, that this conduct would have shewn him
more obviously the interest he held in her heart; and, having tried to attend
to the Count's conversation, and to join in it, she, at length, recovered her
spirits. But, when he made some observation on Valancourt's partner, the fear
of shewing that she was interested in the remark, would have betrayed it to
him, had not the Count, while he spoke, looked towards the person of whom he
was speaking. 'The lady,' said he, 'dancing with that young Chevalier, who
appears to be accomplished in every thing, but in dancing, is ranked among the
beauties of Tholouse. She is handsome, and her fortune will be very large. I
hope she will make a better choice in a partner for life than she has done in a
partner for the dance, for I observe he has just put the set into great
confusion; he does nothing but commit blunders. I am surprised, that, with his
air and figure, he has not taken more care to accomplish himself in dancing.'
Emily,
whose heart trembled at every word, that was now uttered, endeavoured to turn
the conversation from Valancourt, by enquiring the name of the lady, with whom
he danced; but, before the Count could reply, the dance concluded, and Emily,
perceiving that Valancourt was coming towards her, rose and joined Madame
Cheron.
'Here is
the Chevalier Valancourt, madam,' said she in a whisper, 'pray let us go.' Her
aunt immediately moved on, but not before Valancourt had reached them, who
bowed lowly to Madame Cheron, and with an earnest and dejected look to Emily,
with whom, notwithstanding all her effort, an air of more than common reserve
prevailed. The presence of Madame Cheron prevented Valancourt from remaining,
and he passed on with a countenance, whose melancholy reproached her for having
increased it. Emily was called from the musing fit, into which she had fallen,
by the Count Bauvillers, who was known to her aunt.
'I have
your pardon to beg, ma'amselle,' said he, 'for a rudeness, which you will
readily believe was quite unintentional. I did not know, that the Chevalier was
your acquaintance, when I so freely criticised his dancing.' Emily blushed and
smiled, and Madame Cheron spared her the difficulty of replying. 'If you mean
the person, who has just passed us,' said she, 'I can assure you he is no
acquaintance of either mine, or ma'amselle St. Aubert's: I know nothing of
him.'
'O! that
is the Chevalier Valancourt,' said Cavigni carelessly, and looking back. 'You
know him then?' said Madame Cheron. 'I am not acquainted with him,' replied
Cavigni. 'You don't know, then, the reason I have to call him impertinent;—he
has had the presumption to admire my niece!'
'If every
man deserves the title of impertinent, who admires ma'amselle St. Aubert,'
replied Cavigni, 'I fear there are a great many impertinents, and I am willing
to acknowledge myself one of the number.'
'O
Signor!' said Madame Cheron, with an affected smile, 'I perceive you have
learnt the art of complimenting, since you came into France. But it is cruel to
compliment children, since they mistake flattery for truth.'
Cavigni
turned away his face for a moment, and then said with a studied air, 'Whom then
are we to compliment, madam? for it would be absurd to compliment a woman of
refined understanding; SHE is above all praise.' As he finished the sentence he
gave Emily a sly look, and the smile, that had lurked in his eye, stole forth.
She perfectly understood it, and blushed for Madame Cheron, who replied, 'You
are perfectly right, signor, no woman of understanding can endure compliment.'
'I have
heard Signor Montoni say,' rejoined Cavigni, 'that he never knew but one woman
who deserved it.'
'Well!'
exclaimed Madame Cheron, with a short laugh, and a smile of unutterable
complacency, 'and who could she be?'
'O!'
replied Cavigni, 'it is impossible to mistake her, for certainly there is not
more than one woman in the world, who has both the merit to deserve compliment
and the wit to refuse it. Most women reverse the case entirely.' He looked
again at Emily, who blushed deeper than before for her aunt, and turned from
him with displeasure.
'Well,
signor!' said Madame Cheron, 'I protest you are a Frenchman; I never heard a
foreigner say any thing half so gallant as that!'
'True,
madam,' said the Count, who had been some time silent, and with a low bow, 'but
the gallantry of the compliment had been utterly lost, but for the ingenuity
that discovered the application.'
Madame
Cheron did not perceive the meaning of this too satirical sentence, and she,
therefore, escaped the pain, which Emily felt on her account. 'O! here comes
Signor Montoni himself,' said her aunt, 'I protest I will tell him all the fine
things you have been saying to me.' The Signor, however, passed at this moment
into another walk. 'Pray, who is it, that has so much engaged your friend this
evening?' asked Madame Cheron, with an air of chagrin, 'I have not seen him
once.'
'He had a
very particular engagement with the Marquis La Riviere,' replied Cavigni,
'which has detained him, I perceive, till this moment, or he would have done
himself the honour of paying his respects to you, madam, sooner, as he
commissioned me to say. But, I know not how it is—your conversation is so
fascinating—that it can charm even memory, I think, or I should certainly have
delivered my friend's apology before.'
'The
apology, sir, would have been more satisfactory from himself,' said Madame
Cheron, whose vanity was more mortified by Montoni's neglect, than flattered by
Cavigni's compliment. Her manner, at this moment, and Cavigni's late
conversation, now awakened a suspicion in Emily's mind, which, notwithstanding
that some recollections served to confirm it, appeared preposterous. She
thought she perceived, that Montoni was paying serious addresses to her aunt,
and that she not only accepted them, but was jealously watchful of any
appearance of neglect on his part.—That Madame Cheron at her years should elect
a second husband was ridiculous, though her vanity made it not impossible; but
that Montoni, with his discernment, his figure, and pretensions, should make a
choice of Madame Cheron—appeared most wonderful. Her thoughts, however, did not
dwell long on the subject; nearer interests pressed upon them; Valancourt,
rejected of her aunt, and Valancourt dancing with a gay and beautiful partner,
alternately tormented her mind. As she passed along the gardens she looked
timidly forward, half fearing and half hoping that he might appear in the
crowd; and the disappointment she felt on not seeing him, told her, that she
had hoped more than she had feared.
Montoni
soon after joined the party. He muttered over some short speech about regret
for having been so long detained elsewhere, when he knew he should have the
pleasure of seeing Madame Cheron here; and she, receiving the apology with the
air of a pettish girl, addressed herself entirely to Cavigni, who looked archly
at Montoni, as if he would have said, 'I will not triumph over you too much; I
will have the goodness to bear my honours meekly; but look sharp, Signor, or I
shall certainly run away with your prize.'
The
supper was served in different pavilions in the gardens, as well as in one
large saloon of the chateau, and with more of taste, than either of splendour,
or even of plenty. Madame Cheron and her party supped with Madame Clairval in
the saloon, and Emily, with difficulty, disguised her emotion, when she saw
Valancourt placed at the same table with herself. There, Madame Cheron having
surveyed him with high displeasure, said to some person who sat next to her,
'Pray, who IS that young man?' 'It is the Chevalier Valancourt,' was the
answer. 'Yes, I am not ignorant of his name, but who is this Chevalier
Valancourt that thus intrudes himself at this table?' The attention of the person,
who whom she spoke, was called off before she received a second reply. The
table, at which they sat, was very long, and, Valancourt being seated, with his
partner, near the bottom, and Emily near the top, the distance between them may
account for his not immediately perceiving her. She avoided looking to that end
of the table, but whenever her eyes happened to glance towards it, she observed
him conversing with his beautiful companion, and the observation did not
contribute to restore her peace, any more than the accounts she heard of the
fortune and accomplishments of this same lady.
Madame
Cheron, to whom these remarks were sometimes addressed, because they supported
topics for trivial conversation, seemed indefatigable in her attempts to
depreciate Valancourt, towards whom she felt all the petty resentment of a
narrow pride. 'I admire the lady,' said she, 'but I must condemn her choice of
a partner.' 'Oh, the Chevalier Valancourt is one of the most accomplished young
men we have,' replied the lady, to whom this remark was addressed: 'it is
whispered, that Mademoiselle D'Emery, and her large fortune, are to be his.'
'Impossible!'
exclaimed Madame Cheron, reddening with vexation, 'it is impossible that she
can be so destitute of taste; he has so little the air of a person of
condition, that, if I did not see him at the table of Madame Clairval, I should
never have suspected him to be one. I have besides particular reasons for
believing the report to be erroneous.'
'I cannot
doubt the truth of it,' replied the lady gravely, disgusted by the abrupt
contradiction she had received, concerning her opinion of Valancourt's merit.
'You will, perhaps, doubt it,' said Madame Cheron, 'when I assure you, that it
was only this morning that I rejected his suit.' This was said without any
intention of imposing the meaning it conveyed, but simply from a habit of
considering herself to be the most important person in every affair that
concerned her niece, and because literally she had rejected Valancourt. 'Your
reasons are indeed such as cannot be doubted,' replied the lady, with an
ironical smile. 'Any more than the discernment of the Chevalier Valancourt,'
added Cavigni, who stood by the chair of Madame Cheron, and had heard her
arrogate to herself, as he thought, a distinction which had been paid to her
niece. 'His discernment MAY be justly questioned, Signor,' said Madame Cheron,
who was not flattered by what she understood to be an encomium on Emily.
'Alas!'
exclaimed Cavigni, surveying Madame Cheron with affected ecstasy, 'how vain is
that assertion, while that face—that shape—that air—combine to refute it!
Unhappy Valancourt! his discernment has been his destruction.'
Emily
looked surprised and embarrassed; the lady, who had lately spoke, astonished,
and Madame Cheron, who, though she did not perfectly understand this speech,
was very ready to believe herself complimented by it, said smilingly, 'O
Signor! you are very gallant; but those, who hear you vindicate the Chevalier's
discernment, will suppose that I am the object of it.'
'They
cannot doubt it,' replied Cavigni, bowing low.
'And
would not that be very mortifying, Signor?'
'Unquestionably
it would,' said Cavigni.
'I cannot
endure the thought,' said Madame Cheron.
'It is
not to be endured,' replied Cavigni.
'What can
be done to prevent so humiliating a mistake?' rejoined Madame Cheron.
'Alas! I
cannot assist you,' replied Cavigni, with a deliberating air. 'Your only chance
of refuting the calumny, and of making people understand what you wish them to
believe, is to persist in your first assertion; for, when they are told of the
Chevalier's want of discernment, it is possible they may suppose he never
presumed to distress you with his admiration.—But then again—that diffidence,
which renders you so insensible to your own perfections—they will consider
this, and Valancourt's taste will not be doubted, though you arraign it. In
short, they will, in spite of your endeavours, continue to believe, what might
very naturally have occurred to them without any hint of mine—that the
Chevalier has taste enough to admire a beautiful woman.'
'All this
is very distressing!' said Madame Cheron, with a profound sigh.
'May I be
allowed to ask what is so distressing?' said Madame Clairval, who was struck
with the rueful countenance and doleful accent, with which this was delivered.
'It is a
delicate subject,' replied Madame Cheron, 'a very mortifying one to me.' 'I am
concerned to hear it,' said Madame Clairval, 'I hope nothing has occurred, this
evening, particularly to distress you?' 'Alas, yes! within this half hour; and
I know not where the report may end;—my pride was never so shocked before, but
I assure you the report is totally void of foundation.' 'Good God!' exclaimed
Madame Clairval,' what can be done? Can you point out any way, by which I can
assist, or console you?'
'The only
way, by which you can do either,' replied Madame Cheron, 'is to contradict the
report wherever you go.'
'Well!
but pray inform me what I am to contradict.'
'It is so
very humiliating, that I know not how to mention it,' continued Madame Cheron,
'but you shall judge. Do you observe that young man seated near the bottom of
the table, who is conversing with Mademoiselle D'Emery?' 'Yes, I perceive whom
you mean.' 'You observe how little he has the air of a person of condition; I
was saying just now, that I should not have thought him a gentleman, if I had
not seen him at this table.' 'Well! but the report,' said Madame Clairval, 'let
me understand the subject of your distress.' 'Ah! the subject of my distress,'
replied Madame Cheron; 'this person, whom nobody knows—(I beg pardon, madam, I
did not consider what I said)—this impertinent young man, having had the
presumption to address my niece, has, I fear, given rise to a report, that he had
declared himself my admirer. Now only consider how very mortifying such a
report must be! You, I know, will feel for my situation. A woman of my
condition!—think how degrading even the rumour of such an alliance must be.'
'Degrading
indeed, my poor friend!' said Madame Clairval. 'You may rely upon it I will
contradict the report wherever I go;' as she said which, she turned her
attention upon another part of the company; and Cavigni, who had hitherto
appeared a grave spectator of the scene, now fearing he should be unable to
smother the laugh, that convulsed him, walked abruptly away.
'I
perceive you do not know,' said the lady who sat near Madame Cheron, 'that the
gentleman you have been speaking of is Madame Clairval's nephew!' 'Impossible!'
exclaimed Madame Cheron, who now began to perceive, that she had been totally
mistaken in her judgment of Valancourt, and to praise him aloud with as much
servility, as she had before censured him with frivolous malignity.
Emily,
who, during the greater part of this conversation, had been so absorbed in
thought as to be spared the pain of hearing it, was now extremely surprised by
her aunt's praise of Valancourt, with whose relationship to Madame Clairval she
was unacquainted; but she was not sorry when Madame Cheron, who, though she now
tried to appear unconcerned, was really much embarrassed, prepared to withdraw
immediately after supper. Montoni then came to hand Madame Cheron to her
carriage, and Cavigni, with an arch solemnity of countenance, followed with Emily,
who, as she wished them good night, and drew up the glass, saw Valancourt among
the crowd at the gates. Before the carriage drove off, he disappeared. Madame
Cheron forbore to mention him to Emily, and, as soon as they reached the
chateau, they separated for the night.
On the
following morning, as Emily sat at breakfast with her aunt, a letter was
brought to her, of which she knew the handwriting upon the cover; and, as she
received it with a trembling hand, Madame Cheron hastily enquired from whom it
came. Emily, with her leave, broke the seal, and, observing the signature of
Valancourt, gave it unread to her aunt, who received it with impatience; and,
as she looked it over, Emily endeavoured to read on her countenance its
contents. Having returned the letter to her niece, whose eyes asked if she
might examine it, 'Yes, read it, child,' said Madame Cheron, in a manner less
severe than she had expected, and Emily had, perhaps, never before so willingly
obeyed her aunt. In this letter Valancourt said little of the interview of the
preceding day, but concluded with declaring, that he would accept his
dismission from Emily only, and with entreating, that she would allow him to
wait upon her, on the approaching evening. When she read this, she was
astonished at the moderation of Madame Cheron, and looked at her with timid
expectation, as she said sorrowfully—'What am I to say, madam?'
'Why—we
must see the young man, I believe,' replied her aunt, 'and hear what he has
further to say for himself. You may tell him he may come.' Emily dared scarcely
credit what she heard. 'Yet, stay,' added Madame Cheron, 'I will tell him so
myself.' She called for pen and ink; Emily still not daring to trust the
emotions she felt, and almost sinking beneath them. Her surprise would have
been less had she overheard, on the preceding evening, what Madame Cheron had
not forgotten—that Valancourt was the nephew of Madame Clairval.
What were
the particulars of her aunt's note Emily did not learn, but the result was a
visit from Valancourt in the evening, whom Madame Cheron received alone, and
they had a long conversation before Emily was called down. When she entered the
room, her aunt was conversing with complacency, and she saw the eyes of
Valancourt, as he impatiently rose, animated with hope.
'We have
been talking over this affair,' said Madame Cheron, 'the chevalier has been
telling me, that the late Monsieur Clairval was the brother of the Countess de
Duvarney, his mother. I only wish he had mentioned his relationship to Madame
Clairval before; I certainly should have considered that circumstance as a
sufficient introduction to my house.' Valancourt bowed, and was going to
address Emily, but her aunt prevented him. 'I have, therefore, consented that
you shall receive his visits; and, though I will not bind myself by any
promise, or say, that I shall consider him as my nephew, yet I shall permit the
intercourse, and shall look forward to any further connection as an event,
which may possibly take place in a course of years, provided the chevalier
rises in his profession, or any circumstance occurs, which may make it prudent
for him to take a wife. But Mons. Valancourt will observe, and you too, Emily,
that, till that happens, I positively forbid any thoughts of marrying.'
Emily's
countenance, during this coarse speech, varied every instant, and, towards its
conclusion, her distress had so much increased, that she was on the point of
leaving the room. Valancourt, meanwhile, scarcely less embarrassed, did not
dare to look at her, for whom he was thus distressed; but, when Madame Cheron
was silent, he said, 'Flattering, madam, as your approbation is to me—highly as
I am honoured by it—I have yet so much to fear, that I scarcely dare to hope.'
'Pray, sir, explain yourself,' said Madame Cheron; an unexpected requisition,
which embarrassed Valancourt again, and almost overcame him with confusion, at
circumstances, on which, had he been only a spectator of the scene, he would
have smiled.
'Till I
receive Mademoiselle St. Aubert's permission to accept your indulgence,' said
he, falteringly—'till she allows me to hope—'
'O! is
that all?' interrupted Madame Cheron. 'Well, I will take upon me to answer for
her. But at the same time, sir, give me leave to observe to you, that I am her
guardian, and that I expect, in every instance, that my will is hers.'
As she
said this, she rose and quitted the room, leaving Emily and Valancourt in a
state of mutual embarrassment; and, when Valancourt's hopes enabled him to
overcome his fears, and to address her with the zeal and sincerity so natural
to him, it was a considerable time before she was sufficiently recovered to
hear with distinctness his solicitations and inquiries.
The
conduct of Madame Cheron in this affair had been entirely governed by selfish
vanity. Valancourt, in his first interview, had with great candour laid open to
her the true state of his present circumstances, and his future expectancies,
and she, with more prudence than humanity, had absolutely and abruptly rejected
his suit. She wished her niece to marry ambitiously, not because she desired to
see her in possession of the happiness, which rank and wealth are usually
believed to bestow, but because she desired to partake the importance, which
such an alliance would give. When, therefore, she discovered that Valancourt
was the nephew of a person of so much consequence as Madame Clairval, she
became anxious for the connection, since the prospect it afforded of future
fortune and distinction for Emily, promised the exaltation she coveted for
herself. Her calculations concerning fortune in this alliance were guided
rather by her wishes, than by any hint of Valancourt, or strong appearance of
probability; and, when she rested her expectation on the wealth of Madame
Clairval, she seemed totally to have forgotten, that the latter had a daughter.
Valancourt, however, had not forgotten this circumstance, and the consideration
of it had made him so modest in his expectations from Madame Clairval, that he
had not even named the relationship in his first conversation with Madame
Cheron. But, whatever might be the future fortune of Emily, the present
distinction, which the connection would afford for herself, was certain, since
the splendour of Madame Clairval's establishment was such as to excite the
general envy and partial imitation of the neighbourhood. Thus had she consented
to involve her niece in an engagement, to which she saw only a distant and
uncertain conclusion, with as little consideration of her happiness, as when
she had so precipitately forbade it: for though she herself possessed the means
of rendering this union not only certain, but prudent, yet to do so was no part
of her present intention.
From this
period Valancourt made frequent visits to Madame Cheron, and Emily passed in
his society the happiest hours she had known since the death of her father.
They were both too much engaged by the present moments to give serious
consideration to the future. They loved and were beloved, and saw not, that the
very attachment, which formed the delight of their present days, might possibly
occasion the sufferings of years. Meanwhile, Madame Cheron's intercourse with
Madame Clairval became more frequent than before, and her vanity was already
gratified by the opportunity of proclaiming, wherever she went, the attachment
that subsisted between their nephew and niece.
Montoni
was now also become a daily guest at the chateau, and Emily was compelled to
observe, that he really was a suitor, and a favoured suitor, to her aunt.
Thus
passed the winter months, not only in peace, but in happiness, to Valancourt
and Emily; the station of his regiment being so near Tholouse, as to allow this
frequent intercourse. The pavilion on the terrace was the favourite scene of
their interviews, and there Emily, with Madame Cheron, would work, while
Valancourt read aloud works of genius and taste, listened to her enthusiasm,
expressed his own, and caught new opportunities of observing, that their minds
were formed to constitute the happiness of each other, the same taste, the same
noble and benevolent sentiments animating each.
To be continued