Letters of Two Brides eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about Letters of Two Brides.

Letters of Two Brides eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about Letters of Two Brides.

Whilst you are preparing to reap the joys of that many-sided existence which awaits a young lady of the Chaulieu family, and to queen it in Paris, your poor little sweetheart, Renee, that child of the desert, has fallen from the empyrean, whither together we had soared, into the vulgar realities of a life as homely as a daisy’s.  I have vowed to myself to comfort this young man, who has never known youth, but passed straight from his mother’s arms to the embrace of war, and from the joys of his country home to the frosts and forced labor of Siberia.

Humble country pleasures will enliven the monotony of my future.  It shall be my ambition to enlarge the oasis round my house, and to give it the lordly shade of fine trees.  My turf, though Provencal, shall be always green.  I shall carry my park up the hillside and plant on the highest point some pretty kiosque, whence, perhaps, my eyes may catch the shimmer of the Mediterranean.  Orange and lemon trees, and all choicest things that grow, shall embellish my retreat; and there will I be a mother among my children.  The poetry of Nature, which nothing can destroy, shall hedge us round; and standing loyally at the post of duty, we need fear no danger.  My religious feelings are shared by my father-in-law and by the Chevalier.

Ah! darling, my life unrolls itself before my eyes like one of the great highways of France, level and easy, shaded with evergreen trees.  This century will not see another Bonaparte; and my children, if I have any, will not be rent from me.  They will be mine to train and make men of—­the joy of my life.  If you also are true to your destiny, you who ought to find your mate amongst the great ones of the earth, the children of your Renee will not lack a zealous protectress.

Farewell, then, for me at least, to the romances and thrilling adventures in which we used ourselves to play the part of heroine.  The whole story of my life lies before me now; its great crises will be the teething and nutrition of the young Masters de l’Estorade, and the mischief they do to my shrubs and me.  To embroider their caps, to be loved and admired by a sickly man at the mouth of the Gemenos valley —­there are my pleasures.  Perhaps some day the country dame may go and spend a winter in Marseilles; but danger does not haunt the purlieus of a narrow provincial stage.  There will be nothing to fear, not even an admiration such as could only make a woman proud.  We shall take a great deal of interest in the silkworms for whose benefit our mulberry-leaves will be sold!  We shall know the strange vicissitudes of life in Provence, and the storms that may attack even a peaceful household.  Quarrels will be impossible, for M. de l’Estorade has formally announced that he will leave the reins in his wife’s hands; and as I shall do nothing to remind him of this wise resolve, it is likely he may persevere in it.

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Project Gutenberg
Letters of Two Brides from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.