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<h1> FAREWELL </h1><br/><br/>
<h2> By Honore De Balzac </h2><br/><br/>
<h3> Translated by Ellen Marriage </h3><br/><br/>
<p>"Come, Deputy of the Centre, come along! We shall have to mend our pace
if we mean to sit down to dinner when every one else does, and that's
a fact! Hurry up! Jump, Marquis! That's it! Well done! You are bounding
over the furrows just like a stag!"</p>
<p>These words were uttered by a sportsman seated much at his ease on the
outskirts of the Foret de l'Isle-Adam; he had just finished a Havana
cigar, which he had smoked while he waited for his companion, who
had evidently been straying about for some time among the forest
undergrowth. Four panting dogs by the speaker's side likewise watched
the progress of the personage for whose benefit the remarks were made.
To make their sarcastic import fully clear, it should be added that the
second sportsman was both short and stout; his ample girth indicated a
truly magisterial corpulence, and in consequence his progress across
the furrows was by no means easy. He was striding over a vast field
of stubble; the dried corn-stalks underfoot added not a little to the
difficulties of his passage, and to add to his discomforts, the genial
influence of the sun that slanted into his eyes brought great drops of
perspiration into his face. The uppermost thought in his mind being a
strong desire to keep his balance, he lurched to and fro like a coach
jolted over an atrocious road.</p>
<p>It was one of those September days of almost tropical heat that finishes
the work of summer and ripens the grapes. Such heat forebodes a coming
storm; and though as yet there were wide patches of blue between the
dark rain-clouds low down on the horizon, pale golden masses were rising
and scattering with ominous swiftness from west to east, and drawing
a shadowy veil across the sky. The wind was still, save in the upper
regions of the air, so that the weight of the atmosphere seemed to
compress the steamy heat of the earth into the forest glades. The tall
forest trees shut out every breath of air so completely that the little
valley across which the sportsman was making his way was as hot as a
furnace; the silent forest seemed parched with the fiery heat. Birds and
insects were mute; the topmost twigs of the trees swayed with scarcely
perceptible motion. Any one who retains some recollection of the summer
of 1819 must surely compassionate the plight of the hapless supporter
of the ministry who toiled and sweated over the stubble to rejoin his
satirical comrade. That gentleman, as he smoked his cigar, had arrived,
by a process of calculation based on the altitude of the sun, to the
conclusion that it must be about five o'clock.</p>
<p>"Where the devil are we?" asked the stout sportsman. He wiped his brow
as he spoke, and propped himself against a tree in the field opposite
his companion, feeling quite unequal to clearing the broad ditch that
lay between them.</p>
<p>"And you ask that question of <i>me</i>!" retorted the other, laughing from
his bed of tall brown grasses on the top of the bank. He flung the end
of his cigar into the ditch, exclaiming, "I swear by Saint Hubert that
no one shall catch me risking myself again in a country that I don't
know with a magistrate, even if, like you, my dear d'Albon, he happens
to be an old schoolfellow."</p>
<p>"Why, Philip, have you really forgotten your own language? You surely
must have left your wits behind you in Siberia," said the stouter of the
two, with a glance half-comic, half-pathetic at the guide-post distant
about a hundred paces from them.</p>
<p>"I understand," replied the one addressed as Philip. He snatched up his
rifle, suddenly sprang to his feet, made but one jump of it into the
field, and rushed off to the guide-post. "This way, d'Albon, here you
are! left about!" he shouted, gesticulating in the direction of the
highroad. "<i>To Baillet and l'Isle-Adam!</i>" he went on; "so if we go along
here, we shall be sure to come upon the cross-road to Cassan."</p>
<p>"Quite right, Colonel," said M. d'Albon, putting the cap with which he
had been fanning himself back on his head.</p>
<p>"Then <i>forward</i>! highly respected Councillor," returned Colonel Philip,
whistling to the dogs, that seemed already to obey him rather than the
magistrate their owner.</p>
<p>"Are you aware, my lord Marquis, that two leagues yet remain before
us?" inquired the malicious soldier. "That village down yonder must be
Baillet."</p>
<p>"Great heavens!" cried the Marquis d'Albon. "Go on to Cassan by all
means, if you like; but if you do, you will go alone. I prefer to wait
here, storm or no storm; you can send a horse for me from the chateau.
You have been making game of me, Sucy. We were to have a nice day's
sport by ourselves; we were not to go very far from Cassan, and go
over ground that I knew. Pooh! instead of a day's fun, you have kept me
running like a greyhound since four o'clock this morning, and nothing
but a cup or two of milk by way of breakfast. Oh! if ever you find
yourself in a court of law, I will take care that the day goes against
you if you were in the right a hundred times over."</p>
<p>The dejected sportsman sat himself down on one of the stumps at the
foot of the guide-post, disencumbered himself of his rifle and empty
game-bag, and heaved a prolonged sigh.</p>
<p>"Oh, France, behold thy Deputies!" laughed Colonel de Sucy. "Poor old
d'Albon; if you had spent six months at the other end of Siberia as I
did..."</p>
<p>He broke off, and his eyes sought the sky, as if the story of his
troubles was a secret between himself and God.</p>
<p>"Come, march!" he added. "If you once sit down, it is all over with
you."</p>
<p>"I can't help it, Philip! It is such an old habit in a magistrate! I am
dead beat, upon my honor. If I had only bagged one hare though!"</p>
<p>Two men more different are seldom seen together. The civilian, a man
of forty-two, seemed scarcely more than thirty; while the soldier, at
thirty years of age, looked to be forty at the least. Both wore the red
rosette that proclaimed them to be officers of the Legion of Honor. A
few locks of hair, mingled white and black, like a magpie's wing,
had strayed from beneath the Colonel's cap; while thick, fair curls
clustered about the magistrate's temples. The Colonel was tall, spare,
dried up, but muscular; the lines in his pale face told a tale of
vehement passions or of terrible sorrows; but his comrade's jolly
countenance beamed with health, and would have done credit to an
Epicurean. Both men were deeply sunburnt. Their high gaiters of brown
leather carried souvenirs of every ditch and swamp that they crossed
that day.</p>
<p>"Come, come," cried M. de Sucy, "forward! One short hour's march, and we
shall be at Cassan with a good dinner before us."</p>
<p>"You never were in love, that is positive," returned the Councillor,
with a comically piteous expression. "You are as inexorable as Article
304 of the Penal Code!"</p>
<p>Philip de Sucy shuddered violently. Deep lines appeared in his broad
forehead, his face was overcast like the sky above them; but though
his features seemed to contract with the pain of an intolerably bitter
memory, no tears came to his eyes. Like all men of strong character, he
possessed the power of forcing his emotions down into some inner depth,
and, perhaps, like many reserved natures, he shrank from laying bare a
wound too deep for any words of human speech, and winced at the thought
of ridicule from those who do not care to understand. M. d'Albon was one
of those who are keenly sensitive by nature to the distress of others,
who feel at once the pain they have unwillingly given by some blunder.
He respected his friend's mood, rose to his feet, forgot his weariness,
and followed in silence, thoroughly annoyed with himself for having
touched on a wound that seemed not yet healed.</p>
<p>"Some day I will tell you my story," Philip said at last, wringing
his friend's hand, while he acknowledged his dumb repentance with a
heart-rending glance. "To-day I cannot."</p>
<p>They walked on in silence. As the Colonel's distress passed off the
Councillor's fatigue returned. Instinctively, or rather urged by
weariness, his eyes explored the depths of the forest around them; he
looked high and low among the trees, and gazed along the avenues, hoping
to discover some dwelling where he might ask for hospitality. They
reached a place where several roads met; and the Councillor, fancying
that he saw a thin film of smoke rising through the trees, made a stand
and looked sharply about him. He caught a glimpse of the dark green
branches of some firs among the other forest trees, and finally, "A
house! a house!" he shouted. No sailor could have raised a cry of "Land
ahead!" more joyfully than he.</p>
<p>He plunged at once into undergrowth, somewhat of the thickest; and the
Colonel, who had fallen into deep musings, followed him unheedingly.</p>
<p>"I would rather have an omelette here and home-made bread, and a chair
to sit down in, than go further for a sofa, truffles, and Bordeaux wine
at Cassan."</p>
<p>This outburst of enthusiasm on the Councillor's part was caused by the
sight of the whitened wall of a house in the distance, standing out in
strong contrast against the brown masses of knotted tree-trunks in the
forest.</p>
<p>"Aha! This used to be a priory, I should say," the Marquis d'Albon cried
once more, as they stood before a grim old gateway. Through the
grating they could see the house itself standing in the midst of some
considerable extent of park land; from the style of the architecture it
appeared to have been a monastery once upon a time.</p>
<p>"Those knowing rascals of monks knew how to choose a site!"</p>
<p>This last exclamation was caused by the magistrate's amazement at the
romantic hermitage before his eyes. The house had been built on a spot
half-way up the hillside on the slope below the village of Nerville,
which crowned the summit. A huge circle of great oak-trees, hundreds of
years old, guarded the solitary place from intrusion. There appeared
to be about forty acres of the park. The main building of the monastery
faced the south, and stood in a space of green meadow, picturesquely
intersected by several tiny clear streams, and by larger sheets of water
so disposed as to have a natural effect. Shapely trees with contrasting
foliage grew here and there. Grottos had been ingeniously contrived; and
broad terraced walks, now in ruin, though the steps were broken and
the balustrades eaten through with rust, gave to this sylvan Thebaid a
certain character of its own. The art of man and the picturesqueness of
nature had wrought together to produce a charming effect. Human passions
surely could not cross that boundary of tall oak-trees which shut out
the sounds of the outer world, and screened the fierce heat of the sun
from this forest sanctuary.</p>
<p>"What neglect!" said M. d'Albon to himself, after the first sense of
delight in the melancholy aspect of the ruins in the landscape, which
seemed blighted by a curse.</p>
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