and he could not think of either separately.
But, notwithstanding the steadfastness and force of
his love, he had not yet made any effort to see Mademoiselle
Vincart. At first, the increase of occupation
caused by Claudet’s departure, the new duties
devolving upon him, together with his inexperience,
had prevented Julien from entertaining the possibility
of renewing relations that had been so violently sundered.
Little by little, however; as he reviewed the situation
of affairs, which his cousin’s generous sacrifice
had engendered, he began to consider how he could
benefit thereby. Claudet’s departure had
left the field free, but Julien felt no more confidence
in himself than before. The fact that Reine had
so unaccountably refused to marry the grand chasserot
did not seem to him sufficient encouragement.
Her motive was a secret, and therefore, of doubtful
interpretation. Besides, even if she were entirely
heart-whole, was that a reason why she should give
Julien a favorable reception? Could she forget
the cruel insult to which he had subjected her?
And immediately after that outrageous behavior of
his, he had had the stupidity to make a proposal for
Claudet. That was the kind of affront, thought
he, that a woman does not easily forgive, and the very
idea of presenting himself before her made his heart
sink. He had seen her only at a distance, at
the Sunday mass, and every time he had endeavored to
catch her eye she had turned away her head. She
also avoided, in every way, any intercourse with the
chateau. Whenever a question arose, such as the
apportionment of lands, or the allotment of cuttings,
which would necessitate her having recourse to M.
de Buxieres, she would abstain from writing herself,
and correspond only through the notary, Arbillot.
Claudet’s heroic departure, therefore, had really
accomplished nothing; everything was exactly at the
same point as the day after Julien’s unlucky
visit to La Thuiliere, and the same futile doubts and
fears agitated him now as then. It also occurred
to him, that while he was thus debating and keeping
silence, days, weeks, and months were slipping away;
that Reine would soon reach her twenty-third year,
and that she would be thinking of marriage. It
was well known that she had some fortune, and suitors
were not lacking. Even allowing that she had no
afterthought in renouncing Claudet, she could not
always live alone at the farm, and some day she would
be compelled to accept a marriage of convenience, if
not of love.
“And to think,” he would say to himself, “that she is there, only a few steps away, that I am consumed with longing, that I have only to traverse those pastures, to throw myself at her feet, and that I positively dare not! Miserable wretch that I am, it was last spring, while we were in that but together, that I should have spoken of my love, instead of terrifying her with my brutal caresses! Now it is too late! I have wounded and humiliated her; I have driven away Claudet, who would at any rate have made her a stalwart lover, and I have made two beings unhappy, without counting myself. So much for my miserable shufflings and evasion! Ah! if one could only begin life over again!”