The Elixir of Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 31 pages of information about The Elixir of Life.

The Elixir of Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 31 pages of information about The Elixir of Life.

Poetry and the sublime transports of passion scarcely reached ankle-depth with him now.  He in nowise fell into the error of strong natures who flatter themselves now and again that little souls will believe in a great soul, and are willing to barter their own lofty thoughts of the future for the small change of our life-annuity ideas.  He, even as they, had he chosen, might well have walked with his feet on the earth and his head in the skies; but he liked better to sit on earth, to wither the soft, fresh, fragrant lips of a woman with kisses, for like Death, he devoured everything without scruple as he passed; he would have full fruition; he was an Oriental lover, seeking prolonged pleasures easily obtained.  He sought nothing but a woman in women, and cultivated cynicism, until it became with him a habit of mind.  When his mistress, from the couch on which she lay, soared and was lost in regions of ecstatic bliss, Don Juan followed suit, earnest, expansive, serious as any German student.  But he said I, while she, in the transports of intoxication, said We.  He understood to admiration the art of abandoning himself to the influence of a woman; he was always clever enough to make her believe that he trembled like some boy fresh from college before his first partner at a dance, when he asks her, “Do you like dancing?” But, no less, he could be terrible at need, could unsheathe a formidable sword and make short work of Commandants.  Banter lurked beneath his simplicity, mocking laughter behind his tears—­for he had tears at need, like any woman nowadays who says to her husband, “Give me a carriage, or I shall go into a consumption.”

For the merchant the world is a bale of goods or a mass of circulating bills; for most young men it is a woman, and for a woman here and there it is a man; for a certain order of mind it is a salon, a coterie, a quarter of the town, or some single city; but Don Juan found his world in himself.

This model of grace and dignity, this captivating wit, moored his bark by every shore; but wherever he was led he was never carried away, and was only steered in a course of his own choosing.  The more he saw, the more he doubted.  He watched men narrowly, and saw how, beneath the surface, courage was often rashness; and prudence, cowardice; generosity, a clever piece of calculation; justice, a wrong; delicacy, pusillanimity; honesty, a modus vivendi; and by some strange dispensation of fate, he must see that those who at heart were really honest, scrupulous, just, generous, prudent, or brave were held cheaply by their fellow-men.

“What a cold-blooded jest!” said he to himself.  “It was not devised by a God.”

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The Elixir of Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.