Villette Charlotte BrontĂ« (summer reads .txt) đ
- Author: Charlotte Brontë
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On this question I was still pausing, when the moon, so dim hitherto, seemed to shine out somewhat brighter: a ray gleamed even white before me, and a shadow became distinct and marked. I looked more narrowly, to make out the cause of this well-defined contrast appearing a little suddenly in the obscure alley: whiter and blacker it grew on my eye: it took shape with instantaneous transformation. I stood about three yards from a tall, sable-robed, snowy-veiled woman.
Five minutes passed. I neither fled nor shrieked. She was there still. I spoke.
âWho are you? and why do you come to me?â
She stood mute. She had no faceâ âno features: all below her brow was masked with a white cloth; but she had eyes, and they viewed me.
I felt, if not brave, yet a little desperate; and desperation will often suffice to fill the post and do the work of courage. I advanced one step. I stretched out my hand, for I meant to touch her. She seemed to recede. I drew nearer: her recession, still silent, became swift. A mass of shrubs, full-leaved evergreens, laurel and dense yew, intervened between me and what I followed. Having passed that obstacle, I looked and saw nothing. I waited. I saidâ ââIf you have any errand to men, come back and deliver it.â Nothing spoke or reappeared.
This time there was no Dr. John to whom to have recourse: there was no one to whom I dared whisper the words, âI have again seen the nun.â
Paulina Mary sought my frequent presence in the Rue CrĂ©cy. In the old Bretton days, though she had never professed herself fond of me, my society had soon become to her a sort of unconscious necessary. I used to notice that if I withdrew to my room, she would speedily come trotting after me, and opening the door and peeping in, say, with her little peremptory accentâ ââCome down. Why do you sit here by yourself? You must come into the parlour.â
In the same spirit she urged me nowâ ââLeave the Rue Fossette,â she said, âand come and live with us. Papa would give you far more than Madame Beck gives you.â
Mr. Home himself offered me a handsome sumâ âthrice my present salaryâ âif I would accept the office of companion to his daughter. I declined. I think I should have declined had I been poorer than I was, and with scantier fund of resource, more stinted narrowness of future prospect. I had not that vocation. I could teach; I could give lessons; but to be either a private governess or a companion was unnatural to me. Rather than fill the former post in any great house, I would deliberately have taken a housemaidâs place, bought a strong pair of gloves, swept bedrooms and staircases, and cleaned stoves and locks, in peace and independence. Rather than be a companion, I would have made shirts and starved.
I was no bright ladyâs shadowâ ânot Miss de Bassompierreâs. Overcast enough it was my nature often to be; of a subdued habit I was: but the dimness and depression must both be voluntaryâ âsuch as kept me docile at my desk, in the midst of my now well-accustomed pupils in Madame Beckâs first classe; or alone, at my own bedside, in her dormitory, or in the alley and seat which were called mine, in her garden: my qualifications were not convertible, nor adaptable; they could not be made the foil of any gem, the adjunct of any beauty, the appendage of any greatness in Christendom. Madame Beck and I, without assimilating, understood each other well. I was not her companion, nor her childrenâs governess; she left me free: she tied me to nothingâ ânot to herselfâ ânot even to her interests: once, when she had for a fortnight been called from home by a near relationâs illness, and on her return, all anxious and full of care about her establishment, lest something in her absence should have gone wrong finding that matters had proceeded much as usual, and that there was no evidence of glaring neglectâ âshe made each of the teachers a present, in acknowledgment of steadiness. To my bedside she came at twelve oâclock at night, and told me she had no present for me. âI must make fidelity advantageous to the St. Pierre,â said she; âif I attempt to make it advantageous to you, there will arise misunderstanding between usâ âperhaps separation. One thing, however, I can do to please youâ âleave you alone with your liberty: câest-ce que je ferai.â She kept her word. Every slight shackle she had ever laid on me, she, from that time, with quiet hand removed. Thus I had pleasure in voluntarily respecting her rules; gratification in devoting double time, in taking double pains with the pupils she committed to my charge.
As to Mary de Bassompierre, I visited her with pleasure, though I would not live with her. My visits soon taught me that it was unlikely even my occasional and voluntary society would long be indispensable to her. M. de Bassompierre, for his part, seemed impervious to this conjecture, blind to this possibility; unconscious as any child to the signs, the likelihoods, the fitful beginnings of what, when it drew to an end, he might not approve.
Whether or not he would cordially approve, I used to speculate. Difficult to say. He was much taken up with scientific interests; keen, intent, and somewhat oppugnant in what concerned his favourite pursuits, but unsuspicious and trustful in the ordinary affairs of life. From all I could gather, he seemed to regard his âdaughterlingâ as still but a child, and probably had not yet admitted the notion that others might look on her in a different light: he would speak of what should be done when âPollyâ was a woman, when she should be grown up; and âPolly,â standing beside his chair, would sometimes smile and take his honoured
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