Marie Bashkirtseff (From Childhood to Girlhood) eBook

Marie Bashkirtseff
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 73 pages of information about Marie Bashkirtseff (From Childhood to Girlhood).

Marie Bashkirtseff (From Childhood to Girlhood) eBook

Marie Bashkirtseff
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 73 pages of information about Marie Bashkirtseff (From Childhood to Girlhood).

“Ah!”

“Oh! there is nothing like the rolling of a carriage to give ideas.”

“Aha!  That’s different; well, well, I didn’t know.”

And she left me to compose at my ease.  Then, after a silence: 

“Why did A——­ turn so pale when P——­ began to sing:  ’Knowst thou the land?’”

“How could you have seen?  For my part, I can never notice whether a person turns pale or blushes.”

“Yes, you, because you can’t see at a distance, but I can.  He turned as white as a sheet when she sang:  ‘There would I fain live!’”

“I saw nothing.”

Wednesday, November 17th, 1875.

Many things have changed since Monday.  I don’t wish to die, no matter where and no matter how, and I have since been ashamed of myself.  I meant to trifle with the man, and it seems as if the man was trifling with me.  This insult, joined to the wrath I feel for my weakness Monday, makes me detest him.

At six o’clock we arrived without having secured any accommodations at the Grand Hotel, so we took rooms at the Hotel Splendide.

“Is it worth while to choose for a hero a miserable Nice scamp like that A——?” said my aunt, “and to write a lot of stuff about him?”

Certainly my aunt understands nothing of the matter, and that is very fortunate.  I do think of him, and yet if he loved me, I would not consent to be his wife.  No one in the household considered him a suitable match.  They noticed him because I was interested in him.  They talked about him because they saw it gave me pleasure, yet if I said I wanted to marry him they would think me crazy, would raise a loud outcry, for they are dreaming of a throne for me.  So I don’t want to marry him.  I only say I am jealous; that is why I am going to Rome.  If I stayed in Nice I could not work; I should only torment myself.  Since knowing him, since he has paid me attention, my studies have suffered greatly, especially since it has seemed to me, and I am almost sure of it, that he is not madly in love with me, I have not been able to read a book or practise an hour on the piano.

Paris, November 18th, 1875.

Tired enough, finery will use me up, me and my money.  But that is why I came to Paris, and we must do things conscientiously.  I need not say that I am not having anything made in colours, everything is white.

I feel sad, unnerved, I should like to smile and to weep.  No, really, love is full of interest.

I was in good spirits this evening, I talked with my aunt, and complained of M——­ A——.  She answered that M——­ A——­ was a girl of the street, a worthless creature.  I declared that she deserved every punishment for having, without knowing me, from mere gossip, formed a bad opinion of me and basely slandered me.  Seizing a sheet of paper, I wrote: 

“Contemptible old creature, your daughter no longer loves G——­, she loves a door-keeper in the Theatre Italien, who is a very handsome fellow.”

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Project Gutenberg
Marie Bashkirtseff (From Childhood to Girlhood) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.