The Lily of the Valley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 363 pages of information about The Lily of the Valley.

The Lily of the Valley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 363 pages of information about The Lily of the Valley.

A new soul, a soul with rainbow wings, had burst its chrysalis.  Descending from the azure wastes where I had long admired her, my star had come to me a woman, with undiminished lustre and purity.  I loved, knowing naught of love.  How strange a thing, this first irruption of the keenest human emotion in the heart of a man!  I had seen pretty women in other places, but none had made the slightest impression upon me.  Can there be an appointed hour, a conjunction of stars, a union of circumstances, a certain woman among all others to awaken an exclusive passion at the period of life when love includes the whole sex?

The thought that my Elect lived in Touraine made the air I breathed delicious; the blue of the sky seemed bluer than I had ever yet seen it.  I raved internally, but externally I was seriously ill, and my mother had fears, not unmingled with remorse.  Like animals who know when danger is near, I hid myself away in the garden to think of the kiss that I had stolen.  A few days after this memorable ball my mother attributed my neglect of study, my indifference to her tyrannical looks and sarcasms, and my gloomy behavior to the condition of my health.  The country, that perpetual remedy for ills that doctors cannot cure, seemed to her the best means of bringing me out of my apathy.  She decided that I should spend a few weeks at Frapesle, a chateau on the Indre midway between Montbazon and Azay-le-Rideau, which belonged to a friend of hers, to whom, no doubt, she gave private instructions.

By the day when I thus for the first time gained my liberty I had swum so vigorously in Love’s ocean that I had well-nigh crossed it.  I knew nothing of mine unknown lady, neither her name, nor where to find her; to whom, indeed, could I speak of her?  My sensitive nature so exaggerated the inexplicable fears which beset all youthful hearts at the first approach of love that I began with the melancholy which often ends a hopeless passion.  I asked nothing better than to roam about the country, to come and go and live in the fields.  With the courage of a child that fears no failure, in which there is something really chivalrous, I determined to search every chateau in Touraine, travelling on foot, and saying to myself as each old tower came in sight, “She is there!”

Accordingly, of a Thursday morning I left Tours by the barrier of Saint-Eloy, crossed the bridges of Saint-Sauveur, reached Poncher whose every house I examined, and took the road to Chinon.  For the first time in my life I could sit down under a tree or walk fast or slow as I pleased without being dictated to by any one.  To a poor lad crushed under all sorts of despotism (which more or less does weigh upon all youth) the first employment of freedom, even though it be expended upon nothing, lifts the soul with irrepressible buoyancy.  Several reasons combined to make that day one of enchantment.  During my school years I had never been taken to walk more than two or three miles from a city; yet there remained in my mind among the earliest recollections of my childhood that feeling for the beautiful which the scenery about Tours inspires.  Though quite untaught as to the poetry of such a landscape, I was, unknown to myself, critical upon it, like those who imagine the ideal of art without knowing anything of its practice.

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The Lily of the Valley from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.