I Will Repay Baroness Orczy (philippa perry book .txt) đ
- Author: Baroness Orczy
Book online «I Will Repay Baroness Orczy (philippa perry book .txt) đ». Author Baroness Orczy
âYou are a mad idealist, my dear DĂ©roulĂšde!â
âHow can I help it? I have lived under the same roof with her for three weeks now. I have begun to understand what a saint is like.â
âAnd âtwill be when you understand that your idol has feet of clay that youâll learn the real lesson of love,â said Blakeney earnestly. âIs it love to worship a saint in heaven, whom you dare not touch, who hovers above you like a cloud, which floats away from you even as you gaze? To love is to feel one being in the world at one with us, our equal in sin as well as in virtue. To love, for us men, is to clasp one woman with our arms, feeling that she lives and breathes just as we do, suffers as we do, thinks with us, loves with us, and, above all, sins with us. Your mock saint who stands in a niche is not a woman if she have not suffered, still less a woman if she have not sinned. Fall at the feet of your idol an you wish, but drag her down to your level after thatâ âthe only level she should ever reach, that of your heart.â
Who shall render faithfully a true account of the magnetism which poured forth from this remarkable man as he spoke: this well-dressed, foppish apostle of the greatest love that man has ever known. And as he spoke the whole story of his own great, true love for the woman who once had so deeply wronged him seemed to stand clearly written in the strong, lazy, good-humoured, kindly face glowing with tenderness for her.
DĂ©roulĂšde felt this magnetism, and therefore did not resent the implied suggestion, anent the saint whom he was still content to worship.
A dreamer and an idealist, his mind held spellbound by the great social problems which were causing the upheaval of a whole country, he had not yet had the time to learn the sweet lesson which Nature teaches to her electâ âthe lesson of a great, a true, human and passionate love. To him, at present, Juliette represented the perfect embodiment of his most idealistic dreams. She stood in his mind so far above him that if she proved unattainable, he would scarce have suffered. It was such a foregone conclusion.
Blakeneyâs words were the first to stir in his heart a desire for something beyond that quasi-medieval worship, something weaker and yet infinitely stronger, something more earthy and yet almost divine.
âAnd now, shall we join the ladies?â said Blakeney after a long pause, during which the mental workings of his alert brain were almost visible, in the earnest look which he cast at his friend. âYou shall keep the papers in your desk, give them into the keeping of your saint, trust her all in all rather than not at all, and if the time should come that your heaven-enthroned ideal fall somewhat heavily to earth, then give me the privilege of being a witness to your happiness.â
âYou are still mistrustful, Blakeney,â said DĂ©roulĂšde lightly. âIf you say much more Iâll give these papers into Mademoiselle Marnyâs keeping until tomorrow.â
VIII Anne MieThat night, when Blakeney, wrapped in his cloak, was walking down the Rue Ecole de MĂ©decine towards his own lodgings, he suddenly felt a timid hand upon his sleeve.
Anne Mie stood beside him, her pale, melancholy face peeping up at the tall Englishman, through the folds of a dark hood closely tied under her chin.
âMonsieur,â she said timidly, âdo not think me very presumptuous. Iâ âI would wish to have five minutesâ talk with youâ âmay I?â
He looked down with great kindness at the quaint, wizened little figure, and the strong face softened at the sight of the poor, deformed shoulder, the hard, pinched look of the young mouth, the general look of pathetic helplessness which appeals so strongly to the chivalrous.
âIndeed, mademoiselle,â he said gently, âyou make me very proud; and I can serve you in any way, I pray you command me. But,â he added, seeing Anne Mieâs somewhat scared look, âthis street is scarce fit for private conversation. Shall we try and find a better spot?â
Paris had not yet gone to bed. In these times it was really safest to be out in the open streets. There, everybody was more busy, more on the move, on the lookout for suspected houses, leaving the wanderer alone.
Blakeney led Anne Mie towards the Luxembourg Gardens, the great devastated pleasure-ground of the ci-devant tyrants of the people. The beautiful Anne of Austria, and the Medici before her, Louis XIII, and his gallant musketeersâ âall have given place to the great cannon-forging industry of this besieged Republic. France, attacked on every side, is forcing her sons to defend her: persecuted, martyrised, done to death by her, she is still their Mother: La Patrie, who needs their arms against the foreign foe. England is threatening the north, Prussia and Austria the east. Admiral Hoodâs flag is flying on Toulon Arsenal.
The siege of the Republic!
And the Republic is fighting for dear life. The Tuileries and Luxembourg Gardens are transformed into a township of gigantic smithies; and Anne Mie, with scared eyes, and clinging to Blakeneyâs arm, cast furtive, terrified glances at the huge furnaces and the begrimed, darkly scowling faces of the workers within.
âThe people of France in arms against tyranny!â Great placards, bearing these inspiriting words, are affixed to gallows-shaped posts, and flutter in the evening breeze, rendered scorching by the heat of the furnaces all around.
Farther on, a group of older men, squatting on the ground, are busy making tents, and some womenâ âthe same Megaeras who daily shriek round the guillotineâ âare plying their needles and scissors for the purpose of making clothes for the soldiers.
The soldiers are the entire able-bodied male population of France.
âThe people of France in arms against tyranny!â
That is their sign, their trademark; one of
Comments (0)