Derues eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 157 pages of information about Derues.

Derues eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 157 pages of information about Derues.

“Here is an instance which I was bound to accept, seeing it happened to myself.  I was then twenty, and my mother lived in the neighbourhood of Tours, whilst I was at the seminary of Montpellier.  After several years of separation, I had obtained permission to go and see her.  I wrote, telling her of this good news, and I received her answer—­full of joy and tenderness.  My brother and sister were to be informed, it was to be a family meeting, a real festivity; and I started with a light and joyous heart.  My impatience was so great, that, having stopped for supper at a village inn some ten leagues from Tours, I would not wait till the next morning for the coach which went that way, but continued the journey on foot and walked all night.  It was a long and difficult road, but happiness redoubled my strength.  About an hour after sunrise I saw distinctly the smoke and the village roofs, and I hurried on to surprise my family a little sooner.  I never felt more active, more light-hearted and gay; everything seemed to smile before and around me.  Turning a corner of the hedge, I met a peasant whom I recognised.  All at once it seemed as if a veil spread over my sight, all my hopes and joy suddenly vanished, a funereal idea took possession of me, and I said, taking the hand of the man, who had not yet spoken—­

“‘My mother is dead, I am convinced my mother is dead!’

“He hung down his head and answered—­

“‘She is to be buried this morning!’

“Now whence came this revelation?  I had seen no one, spoken to no one; a moment before I had no idea of it!”

Derues made a gesture of surprise.  Monsieur de Lamotte put his hand to his eyes, and said to the cure—­

“Your presentiments were true; mine, happily, are unfounded.  But listen, and tell me if in the state of anxiety which oppressed me I had not good reason for alarm and for fearing some fatal misfortune.”

His eyes again sought Derues.  “Towards the middle of last night I at length fell asleep, but, interrupted every moment, this sleep was more a fatigue than a rest; I seemed to hear confused noises all round me.  I saw brilliant lights which dazzled me, and then sank back into silence and darkness.  Sometimes I heard someone weeping near my bed; again plaintive voices called to me out of the darkness.  I stretched out my arms, but nothing met them, I fought with phantoms; at length a cold hand grasped mine and led me rapidly forward.  Under a dark and damp vault a woman lay on the ground, bleeding, inanimate—­it was my wife!  At the same moment, a groan made me look round, and I beheld a man striking my son with a dagger.  I cried out and awoke, bathed in cold perspiration, panting under this terrible vision.  I was obliged to get up, walk about, and speak aloud, in order to convince myself it was only a dream.  I tried to go to sleep again, but the same visions still pursued me.  I saw always the same man armed with two daggers streaming with blood; I heard always the cries of his two victims.  When day came, I felt utterly broken, worn-out; and this morning, you, my father, could see by my despondency what an impression this awful night had made upon me.”

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Derues from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.