[Modeste Mignon by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link bookModeste Mignon CHAPTER XI 1/16
.
WHAT COMES OF CORRESPONDENCE. The foregoing letters seemed very original to the persons from whom the author of the "Comedy of Human Life" obtained them; but their interest in this duel, this crossing of pens between two minds, may not be shared.
For every hundred readers, eighty might weary of the battle. The respect due to the majority in every nation under a constitutional government, leads us, therefore, to suppress eleven other letters exchanged between Ernest and Modeste during the month of September.
If, later on, some flattering majority should arise to claim them, let us hope that we can then find means to insert them in their proper place. Urged by a mind that seemed as aggressive as the heart was lovable, the truly chivalrous feelings of the poor secretary gave themselves free play in these suppressed letters, which seem, perhaps, more beautiful than they really are, because the imagination is charmed by a sense of the communion of two free souls.
Ernest's whole life was now wrapped up in these sweet scraps of paper; they were to him what banknotes are to a miser; while in Modeste's soul a deep love took the place of her delight in agitating a glorious life, and being, in spite of distance, its mainspring.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|