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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54105 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54105)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Swan of Vilamorta, by Emilia Pardo Bazán
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Swan of Vilamorta
-
-Author: Emilia Pardo Bazán
-
-Translator: Mary J. Serrano
-
-Release Date: February 3, 2017 [EBook #54105]
-[Last updated: February 15, 2017]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SWAN OF VILAMORTA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Josep Cols Canals, Ernest Schaal, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- SWAN OF VlLAMORTA
-
-
- BY
- EMILIA PARDO BAZ¡N
- AUTHOR OF "A WEDDING TRIP," "A CHRISTIAN WOMAN,"
- "MORRIÑA," ETC.
-
- TRANSLATED BY
- MARY J. SERRANO
-
- TRANSLATOR OF "MARIE BASHKIRTSEFF: THE JOURNAL
- OF A YOUNG ARTIST," ETC.
-
-
- NEW YORK
- CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY
- 104 & 106 FOURTH AVENUE
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1891.
-
- BY
-
- CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY.
-
- _All rights reserved._
-
-
- THE MERSHON COMPANY PRESS,
- RAHWAY, N. J.
-
-
-
-
- THE
- SWAN OF VILAMORTA.
-
- * * *
-
- I.
-
-Behind the pine grove the setting sun had left a zone of fire
-against which the trunks of the pine trees stood out like bronze
-columns. The path was rugged and uneven, giving evidence of the
-ravages wrought by the winter rains; at intervals loose stones,
-looking like teeth detached from the gum, rendered it still more
-impracticable. The melancholy shades of twilight were beginning to
-envelop the landscape; little by little the sunset glow faded away
-and the moon, round and silvery, mounted in the heavens, where the
-evening star was already shining. The dismal croaking of the frogs
-fell sharply on the ear; a fresh breeze stirred the dry plants and
-the dusty brambles that grew by the roadside; and the trunks of the
-pine trees grew momentarily blacker, standing out like inky bars
-against the pale green of the horizon.
-
-A man was descending the path slowly, bent, apparently, on
-enjoying the poetry and the peace of the scene and the hour. He
-carried a stout walking-stick, and as far as one could judge in the
-fading light, he was young and not ill-looking.
-
-He paused frequently, casting glances to the right and to the
-left as if in search of some familiar landmark. Finally he stood
-still and looked around him. At his back was a hill crowned with
-chestnut trees; on his left was the pine grove; on his right a small
-church with a mean belfry; before him the outlying houses of the
-town. He turned, walked back some ten steps, stopped, fronting the
-portico of the church, examined its walls, and, satisfied at last
-that he had found the right place, raised his hands to his mouth and
-forming with them a sort of speaking trumpet, cried, in a clear
-youthful voice:
-
-"Echo, let us talk together!"
-
-From the angle formed by the walls, there came back instantly
-another voice, deeper and less distinct, strangely grave and
-sonorous, which repeated with emphasis, linking the answer to the
-question and dwelling upon the final syllable:
-
-"Let us talk togethe-e-e-e-r!"
-
-"Are you happy?"
-
-"Happy-y-y-y!" responded the echo.
-
-"Who am I?"
-
-"I-I-I-I!"
-
-To these interrogations, framed so that the answer should make
-sense with them, succeeded phrases uttered without any other object
-than that of hearing them reverberated with strange intensity by the
-wall. "It is a lovely night."--"The moon is shining."--"The sun has
-set."--"Do you hear me, echo?"--"Have you dreams, echo, of glory,
-ambition, love?" The traveler, enchanted with his occupation,
-continued the conversation, varying the words, combining them into
-sentences, and, in the short intervals of silence, he listened to the
-faint murmur of the pines stirred by the evening breeze, and to the
-melancholy concert of the frogs. The crimson and rose-colored clouds
-had become ashen and had begun to invade the broad region of the
-firmament over which the unclouded moon shed her silvery light. The
-honeysuckles and elder-flowers on the outskirts of the pine grove
-embalmed the air with subtle and intoxicating fragrance. And the
-interlocutor of the echo, yielding to the poetic influences of the
-scene, ceased his questions and exclamations and began to recite, in
-a slow, chanting voice, verses of Becquer, paying no heed now to the
-voice from the wall, which, in its haste to repeat his words,
-returned them to him broken and confused.
-
-Absorbed in his occupation, pleased with the harmonious sounds of
-the verse, he did not notice the approach of three men of odd and
-grotesque appearance, wearing enormous broad-brimmed felt hats. One
-of the men was leading a mule laden with a leathern sack filled,
-doubtless, with the juice of the grape; and as they walked slowly,
-and the soft clayey soil deadened the noise of their footsteps, they
-passed close by the young man, unperceived by him. They exchanged
-some whispered words with one another. "Who is he,
-man?"--"Segundo."--"The lawyer's son?"--"The same."--"What is he
-doing? Is he talking to himself?"--"No, he is talking to the wall of
-Santa Margarita."--"Well, we have as good a right to do that as he
-has."--"Begin you ----"--"One--two--here goes----"
-
-And from those profane lips fell a shower of vile words and
-coarse and vulgar phrases, interrupting the _Oscuras Golondrinas_
-which the young man was reciting with a great deal of expression, and
-producing, in the peaceful and harmonious nocturnal silence, the
-effect of the clatter of brass pans and kettles in a piece of German
-music. The most refined expressions were in the following style:
-"D---- (here an oath). Hurrah for the wine of the Border! Hurrah for
-the red wine that gives courage to man! D----" (the reader's
-imagination may supply what followed, it being premised that the
-disturbers of the Becquerian dreamer were three lawless muleteers who
-were carrying with them an abundant provision of the blood of the
-grape).
-
-The nymph who dwelt in the wall opposed no resistance to the
-profanation and repeated the round oaths as faithfully as she had
-repeated the poet's verses. Hearing the vociferations and bursts of
-laughter which the wall sent back to him mockingly, Segundo, the
-lawyer's son, aware that the barbarians were turning his sentimental
-amusement into ridicule, became enraged. Mortified and ashamed, he
-tightened his grasp on his stick, strongly tempted to break it on the
-ribs of some one of them; and, muttering between his teeth, "Kaffirs!
-brutes! beasts!" and other offensive epithets, he turned to the left,
-plunged into the pine grove and walked toward the town, avoiding the
-path in order to escape meeting the profane trio.
-
-The town was but a step away. The walls of its nearest houses
-shone white in the moonlight, and the stones of some buildings in
-course of erection, garden walls, orchards, and vegetable beds,
-filled up the space between the town and the pine grove. The path
-grew gradually broader, until it reached the highroad, on either side
-of which leafy chestnut trees cast broad patches of shade. The town
-was already asleep, seemingly, for not a light was to be seen, nor
-were any of those noises to be heard which reveal the proximity of
-those human beehives called cities. Vilamorta is in reality a very
-small beehive, a modest town, the capital of a district. Bathed in
-the splendor of the romantic satellite, however, it was not without a
-certain air of importance imparted to it by the new buildings, of a
-style of architecture peculiar to prison cells, which an
-_Americanized_ Galician, recently returned to his native land with a
-plentiful supply of cash, was erecting with all possible expedition.
-
-Segundo turned into an out-of-the-way street--if there be any
-such in towns like Vilamorta. Only the sidewalks were paved; the
-gutter was a gutter in reality; it was full of muddy pools and heaps
-of kitchen garbage, thrown there without scruple by the inhabitants.
-Segundo avoided two things--stepping into the gutter and walking in
-the moonlight. A man passed so close by him as almost to touch him,
-enveloped, notwithstanding the heat, in an ample cloak, and holding
-open above his head an enormous umbrella, although there was no sign
-of rain; doubtless he was some convalescent, some visitor to the
-springs, who was breathing the pleasant night air with hygienic
-precautions. Segundo, when he saw him, walked closer to the houses,
-turning his face aside as if afraid of being recognized. With no less
-caution he crossed the Plaza del Consistorio, the pride of Vilamorta,
-and then, instead of joining one of the groups who were enjoying the
-fresh air, seated on the stone benches round the public fountain, he
-slipped into a narrow side street, and crossing a retired little
-square shaded by a gigantic poplar turned his steps in the direction
-of a small house half hidden in the shadow of the tree. Between the
-house and Segundo there stood a lumbering bulk--the body of a
-stage-coach, a large box on wheels, its shafts raised in air,
-waiting, lance in rest, as it were, to renew the attack. Segundo
-skirted the obstacle, and as he turned the corner of the square,
-absorbed in his meditations, two immense hogs, monstrously fat,
-rushed out of the half-open gate of a neighboring yard, and at a
-short trot that made their enormous sides shake like jelly, made
-straight for the admirer of Becquer, entangling themselves stupidly
-and blindly between his legs. By a special interposition of
-Providence the young man did not measure his length upon the ground,
-but, his patience now exhausted, he gave each of the swine a couple
-of angry kicks, which drew from them sharp and ferocious grunts, as
-he ejaculated almost audibly: "What a town is this, good Heavens!
-Even the hogs must run against one in the streets. Ah, what a
-miserable place! Hell itself could not be worse!"
-
-By the time he had reached the door of the house, he had, to some
-extent, regained his composure. The house was small and pretty and
-had a cheerful air. There was no railing outside the windows, only
-the stone ledges, which were covered with plants in pots and boxes;
-through the windows shaded by muslin curtains a light could be seen
-burning, and in the silent façade there was something peaceful and
-attractive that invited one to enter. Segundo pushed open the door
-and almost at the same instant there was heard in the dark hall the
-rustling of skirts, a woman's arms were opened and the admirer of
-Becquer, throwing himself into them, allowed himself to be led,
-dragged, carried bodily, almost, up the stairs, and into the little
-parlor where, on a table covered with a white crochet cover, burned a
-carefully trimmed lamp. There, on the sofa, the lover and the lady
-seated themselves.
-
-Truth before all things. The lady was not far from thirty-six or
-thirty-seven, and what is worse, could never have been pretty, or
-even passably good-looking. The smallpox had pitted and hardened her
-coarse skin, giving it the appearance of the leather bottom of a
-sieve. Her small black eyes, hard and bright like two fleas, matched
-well her nose, which was thick and ill-shaped, like the noses of the
-figures of lay monks stamped on chocolate. True, the mouth was
-fresh-colored, the teeth white and sound like those of a dog; but
-everything else pertaining to her--dress, manner, accent, the want of
-grace of the whole--was calculated rather to put tender thoughts to
-flight than to awaken them. With the lamp shining as brightly as it
-does, it is preferable to contemplate the lover. The latter is of
-medium height, has a graceful, well-proportioned figure, and in the
-turn of his head and in his youthful features there is something that
-irresistibly attracts and holds the gaze. His forehead, which is high
-and straight, is shaded and set off by luxuriant hair, worn somewhat
-longer than is allowed by our present severe fashion. His face, thin
-and delicately outlined, casts a shadow on the walls which is made up
-of acute angles. A mustache, curling with the grace which is peculiar
-to a first mustache, and to the wavy locks of a young girl, shades
-but does not cover his upper lip. The beard has not yet attained its
-full growth; the muscles of the throat have not yet become prominent;
-the Adam's apple does not yet force itself on the attention. The
-complexion is dark, pale, and of a slightly bilious hue.
-
-Seeing this handsome youth leaning his head on the shoulder of
-this woman of mature age and undisguised ugliness, it would have been
-natural to take them for mother and son, but anyone coming to this
-conclusion, after a single moment's observation, would have shown
-scant penetration, for in the manifestations of maternal affection,
-however passionate and tender they may be, there is always a
-something of dignity and repose which is wanting in those of every
-other affection.
-
-Doubtless Segundo felt a longing to see the moon again, for he
-rose almost immediately from his seat on the sofa and crossed over to
-the window, his companion following him. He threw open the sash, and
-they sat down side by side in two low chairs whose seats were on a
-level with the flower-pots. A fine carnation regaled the sense with
-its intoxicating perfume; the moon lighted up with her silvery rays
-the foliage of the poplar that cast broad shadow over the little
-square. Segundo opened the conversation this wise:
-
-"Have you made any cigars for me?"
-
-"Here are some," she answered, putting her hand into her pocket
-and drawing from it a bundle of cigars. "I was able to make only a
-dozen and a half for you. I will complete the two dozen to-night
-before I go to bed."
-
-There was a moment's silence, broken by the sharp sound made by
-the striking of the match and then, in a voice muffled by the first
-puff of smoke, Segundo went on:
-
-"Why, has anything new happened?"
-
-"New? No. The children--putting the house in order--and
-then--Minguitos. He made my head ache with his complaining--he
-complained the whole blessed evening. He said his bones ached. And
-you? Very busy, killing yourself reading, studying, writing, eh? Of
-course!"
-
-"No, I have been taking a delightful walk. I went to Peñas-albas
-and returned by way of Santa Margarita. I have seldom spent a
-pleasanter evening."
-
-"I warrant you were making verses."
-
-"No, my dear. The verses I made I made last night after leaving
-you."
-
-"Ah! And you weren't going to repeat them to me. Come, for the
-love of the saints, come, recite them for me, you must know them by
-heart. Come, darling."
-
-To this vehement entreaty succeeded a passionate kiss, pressed on
-the hair and forehead of the poet. The latter raised his eyes, drew
-back a little and, holding his cigar between his fingers after
-knocking off the ashes with his nail, proceeded to recite.
-
-The offspring of his muse was a poem in imitation of Becquer. His
-auditor, who listened to it with religious attention, thought it
-superior to anything inspired by the muse of the great Gustave. And
-she asked for another and then another, and then a bit of Espronceda
-and then a fragment or two of Zorrilla. By this time the cigar had
-gone out; the poet threw away the stump and lighted a fresh one. Then
-they resumed their conversation.
-
-"Shall we have supper soon?"
-
-"Directly. What do you think I have for you?"
-
-"I haven't the least idea."
-
-"Think of what you like best. What you like best, better than
-anything else."
-
-"Bah! You know that so far as I am concerned, provided you don't
-give me anything smoked or greasy----"
-
-"A French omelet! You couldn't guess, eh? Let me tell you--I
-found the receipt in a book. As I had heard that it was something
-good I wanted to try it. I had always made omelets as they make them
-here, so stiff, that you might throw one against the wall without
-breaking it. But this--I think it will be to your taste. As for me, I
-don't like it much, I prefer the old style. I showed Flores how to
-make it. What was in the one you ate at the inn at Orense? Chopped
-parsley, eh?"
-
-"No, ham. But what difference does it make what was in it?"
-
-"I'll run and take it out of the pantry! I thought--the book says
-parsley! Wait, wait."
-
-She overturned her chair in her haste. An instant later the
-jingling of her keys and the opening and closing of a couple of doors
-were heard in the distance. A husky voice muttered some
-unintelligible words in the kitchen. In two minutes she was back
-again.
-
-"Tell me, and those verses, are you not going to publish them? Am
-I not going to see them in print?"
-
-"Yes," responded the poet, slowly turning his head to one side
-and sending a puff of smoke through his lips. "I am going to send
-them to Vigo, to Roberto Blanquez, to insert them in the _Amanecer_."
-
-"I am delighted! You will become famous, sweetheart! How many
-periodicals have spoken of you?"
-
-Segundo laughed ironically and shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"Not many." And with a somewhat preoccupied air he let his gaze
-wander over the plants and far away over the top of the poplar whose
-leaves rustled gently in the breeze. The poet pressed his companion's
-hand mechanically, and the latter returned the pressure with
-passionate ardor.
-
-"Of course. How do you expect them to speak of you when you don't
-put your name to your verses?" she said. "They don't know whose they
-are. They are wondering, likely----"
-
-"What difference does the name make? They could say the same
-things of the pseudonym I have adopted as of Segundo García. The few
-people who will trouble themselves to read my verses will call me the
-Swan of Vilamorta."
-
-
-
-
- II.
-
-
-Segundo García, the lawyer's son, and Leocadia Otero, the
-schoolmistress of Vilamorta, had met each other for the first time in
-the spring at a pilgrimage. Leocadia had gone with some girls to whom
-she had taught their letters and plain sewing. Before the chorus of
-nymphs Segundo had recited verses for more than two hours in an oak
-grove far from the noise of the drum and the bagpipes, where the
-strains of the music and the voices of the crowd came softened by
-distance. The audience was as silent as if they were hearing mass,
-although certain passages of a tender or passionate nature were the
-occasion, among the children, of nudges, pinches, laughter
-instantaneously suppressed; but from the black eyes of the
-schoolmistress, down her cheeks, pitted by the smallpox and pale with
-emotion, flowed two large, warm tears, followed so quickly and in
-such abundance by others that she was obliged to take out her
-handkerchief to wipe them away. And returning by starlight,
-descending the mountain on whose summit stood the sanctuary, by
-sylvan footpaths carpeted with grass and bordered with heather and
-briars, the order of march was as follows: first the children,
-running, jumping, pushing one another among the heather and greeting
-every fall with shouts of laughter; Leocadia and Segundo behind,
-arm-in-arm, pausing from time to time to talk in subdued tones,
-almost in whispers.
-
-A sad and ugly story was told about Leocadia Otero. Although,
-without actually saying so, she had given it to be understood that
-she was a widow, it was whispered that she had never been married;
-that the puny Dominguito, the little cripple who was always sick, was
-born while she lived in the house of her uncle and guardian at
-Orense, after the death of her parents. What was certain was that her
-uncle had died shortly after the birth of the child, bequeathing to
-his niece a couple of fields and a house in Vilamorta, and Leocadia,
-after passing the necessary examinations, had obtained the village
-school and gone to settle in that town. She had lived in it now for
-more than thirteen years, observing the most exemplary conduct,
-watching day and night over Minguitos, and living with the utmost
-frugality in order to rebuild the dilapidated house, which she had
-finally succeeded in doing shortly before her meeting with Segundo.
-Leocadia was a woman of notably industrious habits; in her wardrobe
-she had always a good supply of linen, in her parlor bamboo furniture
-with a rug before the sofa, grapes, rice, and ham in her pantry, and
-carnations and sweet basil in her windows. Minguitos was always as
-neat as a new pin; she herself, when she raised the skirt of her
-habit of Dolores, of good merino, displayed underneath voluminous
-embroidered petticoats, stiff with starch. For all which reasons,
-notwithstanding her ugliness and her former history, the
-schoolmistress was not without suitors--a wealthy retired muleteer,
-and Cansin, the clothier. She rejected the suitors and continued
-living alone with Minguitos and Flores, her old servant, who now
-enjoyed in the house all the privileges of a grandmother.
-
-The iniquitous wrong suffered by her in early youth had produced
-in Leocadia, absorbed as she was in her bitter recollections, a
-profound horror of marriage and an insatiable thirst for the
-romantic, the ideal, which is as a refreshing dew to the imagination
-and which satisfies the emotions. She had the superficial knowledge
-of a village schoolmistress--rudimentary, but sufficient to introduce
-exotic tastes into Vilamorta; that is to say, a taste for literature
-in its most accessible forms--novels and poetry. She devoted to
-reading the leisure hours of her monotonous and upright life. She
-read with faith, with enthusiasm, uncritically; she read believing
-and accepting everything, identifying herself with each one of the
-heroines, in turn, her heart echoing back the poet's sighs, the
-troubadour's songs, and the laments of the bard. Reading was her one
-vice, her secret happiness. When she requested her friends at Orense
-to renew her subscription to the library for her they laughed at her
-and nicknamed her the "Authoress." She an authoress! She only wished
-she were. If she could only give form to what she felt, to the world
-of fancy she carried in her mind! But this was impossible. Never
-would her brain succeed in producing, however hard she might squeeze
-it, even so much as a poor _seguidilla_. Poetry and sensibility were
-stored up in the folds and convolutions of her brain, as solar heat
-is stored up in the coal. What came to the surface was pure
-prose--housekeeping, economy, stews.
-
-When she met Segundo, chance applied the lighted torch to the
-formidable train of feelings and dreams shut up in the soul of the
-schoolmistress. She had at last found a worthy employment for her
-amorous faculties, an outlet for her affections. Segundo was poetry
-incarnate. He represented for her all the graces, all the divine
-attributes of poetry--the flowers, the breeze, the nightingale, the
-dying light of day, the moon, the dark wood.
-
-The fire burned with astounding rapidity. In its flames were
-consumed, first her honorable resolution to efface by the
-blamelessness of her conduct the stigma of the past, then her strong
-and deep maternal affection. Not for an instant did the thought
-present itself to Leocadia's mind that Segundo could ever be her
-husband; although both were free the difference in their ages and the
-intellectual superiority of the young poet placed an insurmountable
-barrier in the way of the aspirations of the schoolmistress. She fell
-in love as into an abyss, and looked neither before nor behind.
-
-Segundo had had in Santiago, during his college days, youthful
-intrigues, adventures of a not very serious nature, such as few men
-escape between the ages of fifteen and twenty-five, occasionally
-taking part, also, in what in that romantic epoch were called
-_orgies_. Notwithstanding all this, however, he was not vicious. The
-son of a hysterical mother, whose strength was exhausted by repeated
-lactations, and who at last succumbed to the debility induced by
-them, Segundo's spirit was much more exacting and insatiable than his
-body. He had inherited from his mother a melancholy temperament and
-innumerable prejudices, innumerable instinctive antipathies,
-innumerable superstitious practices. He had loved her, and he
-cherished her memory with veneration. And more tenacious even than
-his loving remembrance of his mother was the invincible antipathy he
-cherished for his father. It would not be true to say that the lawyer
-had been the murderer of his wife, and yet Segundo clearly divined
-the slow martyrdom endured by that fine nervous organization, and had
-always before his eyes, in his hours of gloom, the mean coffin in
-which the dead woman was interred, shrouded in the oldest sheet that
-was to be found.
-
-Segundo's family consisted of his father, an aunt, advanced in
-years, two brothers, and three sisters. The lawyer García enjoyed the
-reputation of being wealthy--in reality this fortune was
-insignificant--a village fortune accumulated penny by penny, by
-usurious loans and innumerable sordid privations. His practice
-brought him in something, but ten mouths to feed and the professional
-education of three sons swallowed up not a little. The eldest of the
-boys, an officer in an infantry regiment, was stationed in the
-Philippine Islands, and, far from expecting any money from him, they
-were thankful if he did not ask for any. Segundo, the second in age
-as well as in name, had just been graduated--one lawyer more in
-Spain, where this fruit grows so abundantly. The youngest was
-studying at the Institute at Orense, with the intention of becoming
-an apothecary. The girls spent the days running about in the gardens
-and cornfields, half the time barefooted, not even attending
-Leocadia's school to save the slight expense that would be incurred
-in procuring the decent clothing which this would necessitate. As for
-the aunt--Misía Gáspara--she was the soul of the house, a narrow and
-sapless soul, a withered old woman, silent and ghost-like in
-appearance, still active, in spite of her sixty years, who, without
-ceasing to knit her stockings with fingers as yellow as the keys of
-an old harpsichord, sold barley in the granary, wine in the cellar,
-lent a dollar at fifty per cent. interest to the fruit-women and
-hucksters of the market, receiving their wares in payment, measured
-out the food, the light, and their clothing to her nieces, fattened a
-pig with affectionate solicitude, and was respected in Vilamorta for
-her ant-like abilities.
-
-It was the lawyer's aspiration to transmit his practice and his
-office to Segundo. Only the boy gave no indication of an aptitude for
-stirring up law-suits and prosecutions. How had he achieved the
-miracle of passing with honor in the examinations without ever having
-opened a law-book during the whole term, and failing in attendance at
-the college whenever it rained or whenever the sun shone? Well, by
-means of an excellent memory and a good natural intelligence;
-learning by heart, when it was necessary, whole pages from the
-text-books, and remembering and reciting them with the same ease, if
-not with as much taste, as he recited the "Doloras" of Campoamor.
-
-On Segundo's table lay, side by side, the works of Zorrilla and
-Espronceda, bad translations of Heine, books of verse of local poets,
-the "Lamas-Varela," or, _Antidote to Idleness_, and other volumes of
-a no less heterogeneous kind. Segundo was not an insatiable reader;
-he chose his reading according to the whim of the moment, and he read
-only what was in conformity with his tastes, thus acquiring a
-superficial culture of an imperfect and varied nature. Quick of
-apprehension, rather than thoughtful or studious, he had learned
-French without a teacher and almost by intuition, in order to read in
-the original the works of Musset, Lamartine, Proudhon, and Victor
-Hugo. His mind was like an uncultivated field in which grew here and
-there some rare and beautiful flower, some exotic plant; of the
-abstruse and positive sciences, of solid and serious learning, which
-is the nurse of mental vigor--the classics, the best literature, the
-severe teachings of history--he knew nothing; and in exchange, by a
-singular phenomenon of intellectual relationship, he identified
-himself with the romantic movement of the second third of the
-century, and in a remote corner of Galicia lived again the
-psychological life of dead and gone generations. So does some
-venerable academician, over-leaping the nineteen centuries of our
-era, delight himself now with what delighted Horace and live
-platonically enamored of Lydia.
-
-Segundo composed his first verses, cynical and pessimistic in
-intention, ingenuous in reality, before he had reached the age of
-seventeen. His classmates applauded him to the echo. He acquired in
-their eyes a certain prestige, and when the first fruits of his muse
-appeared in a periodical he had, without going beyond the narrow
-circle of the college, admirers and detractors. Thenceforth he
-acquired the right to indulge in solitary walks, to laugh rarely, to
-surround his adventures with mystery, and not to play or take a drink
-for good-fellowship's sake except when he felt in the humor.
-
-And he seldom felt in the humor. Excitation of the senses, of a
-purely physical nature, possessed no attraction for him; if he drank
-at times through bravado, the spectacle of drunkenness, the
-winding-up of student orgies--the soiled tablecloth, the maudlin
-disputes, his companions lying under the table or stretched on the
-sofa, the shamelessness and heartlessness of venal women--repelled
-him and he came away from such scenes filled with disgust and
-contempt, and at times a reaction proper to his complex character
-sent him, a sincere admirer of Proudhon, Quinet, and Renan, to the
-precincts of some solitary church, where he drew in with delight long
-breaths of the incense-laden air.
-
-The lawyer García made no protest against his son's literary
-inclinations because he regarded them as a passing amusement proper
-to his age, a youthful folly, like dancing at a village feast. He
-began to grow uneasy when he saw that Segundo, after graduation,
-showed no inclination to help him in the conduct of his tortuous
-law-suits. Was the boy, then, going to turn out good for nothing but
-to string rhymes together? It was no crime to do this, but--when
-there was not a pile of law-papers to go through and stratagems to
-think of to circumvent the opposing party. Since the lawyer had
-observed this inclination of his son he had treated him with more
-persistent harshness and coldness than before. Every day at table or
-whenever the occasion offered, he made cutting speeches to him about
-the necessity of earning one's own bread by assiduous labor, instead
-of depending upon others for it. These continual sermons, in which he
-displayed the same captious and harassing obstinacy as in the conduct
-of his law-suits, frightened Segundo from the house. In Leocadia's
-house he found a place of refuge, and he submitted passively to be
-adored; flattered in the first place by the triumph his verses had
-obtained, awakening admiration so evidently sincere and ardent, and
-in the second place attracted by the moral well-being engendered by
-unquestioning approval and unmeasured complacency. His idle, dreamy
-brain reposed on the soft cushions which affection smoothes for the
-beloved head; Leocadia sympathized with all his plans for the future,
-developing and enlarging them; she encouraged him to write and to
-publish his verses; she praised him without reserve and without
-hypocrisy, for, for her, whose critical faculty was situated in her
-cardiac cavities, Segundo was the most melodious singer in the
-universe.
-
-Gradually the loving prevision of the schoolmistress extended to
-other departments of Segundo's existence. Neither the lawyer García
-nor Aunt Gáspara supposed that a young man, once his education was
-finished, needed a penny for any extraordinary expense. Aunt Gáspara,
-in particular, protested loudly at every fresh outlay--after filling
-her nephew's trunk one year she thought he was provided with shirts
-for at least ten years to come: clothes had no right to tear or to
-wear out, without any consideration, in that way. Leocadia took note
-of the wants of her idol; one day she observed that he was not well
-supplied with handkerchiefs and she hemmed and marked a dozen for
-him; the next day she noticed that he was expected to keep himself in
-cigars for a year on half a dollar, and she took upon herself the
-task of making them for him, furnishing the material herself gratis.
-She heard the fruit-women criticising Aunt Gáspara's stinginess; she
-inferred from this that Segundo had a poor table, and she set herself
-to the task of devising appetizing and nutritious dishes for him; in
-addition to all which she ordered books from Orense, mended his
-clothes, and sewed on his buttons.
-
-All this she did with inexpressible delight, going about the
-house with a light, almost youthful step, rejuvenated by the sweet
-maternity of love, and so happy that she forgot to scold the
-school-children, thinking only of shortening their tasks that she
-might be all the sooner with Segundo. There was in her affection much
-that was generous and spiritual, and her happiest moments were those
-in which, as they sat side by side at the window, his head resting on
-her shoulder, she listened, while her imagination transformed the
-pots of carnations and sweet basil into a virgin forest, to the
-verses which he recited in a well-modulated voice, verses that seemed
-to Leocadia celestial music.
-
-The medal had its obverse side, however. The mornings were full
-of bitterness when Flores would come with an angry and frowning face,
-her woolen shawl twisted and wrinkled and falling over her eyes, to
-say in short, abrupt phrases:
-
-"The eggs are all used; shall I get more? There is no sugar;
-which kind shall I buy--that dear loaf sugar that we bought last
-week? To-day I got coffee, two pounds of coffee, as if we had a gold
-mine. I won't buy any more cordial--you can go for it yourself--I
-won't."
-
-"What are you talking about, Flores? What is the matter with
-you?"
-
-"I say that if you like to give Ramon, the confectioner,
-twenty-four reals a bottle for _anisette_, when it is to be had for
-eight at the apothecary's, you can do so, but that I am not going to
-put the money in that thief's hand; he will be asking you five
-dollars a bottle for it next."
-
-Leocadia would come out of her reverie with a sigh, and go to the
-bureau drawer for the money, not without thinking that Flores was
-only too right; her savings, her couple of thousand reals laid by for
-an emergency, must be almost gone; it was better not to examine into
-the condition of the purse; better put off annoyances as long as
-possible. God would provide. And she would scold the old woman with
-feigned anger.
-
-"Go for the bottle; go--and don't make me angry. At eight the
-children will be here and I have my petticoat to iron yet. Make
-Minguitos his chocolate; you would be better employed in seeing that
-he has something to eat. And give him some cake."
-
-"Yes. I'll give him some, I'll give him some. If I didn't give
-the poor child something----" grumbled the servant, who at Minguitos'
-name felt her anger increase. In the kitchen could be heard the
-furious knock given to the chocolate-pot to settle it on the fire and
-the angry sound of the mill, afterward, beating the chocolate into
-froth. Flores would enter the room of the deformed boy, who had not
-yet left his bed, and taking his hand in hers, say:
-
-"Are you warm, child? I have brought you your chocolate; do you
-hear?"
-
-"Will mamma give it to me?"
-
-"I will give it to you."
-
-"And mamma--what is she doing?"
-
-"Ironing some petticoats."
-
-The little humpback would fix his eyes on Flores, raising his
-head with difficulty from between the double arch of the breast and
-back. His eyes were deep set, with large pupils; on his mouth, with
-its prominent jaws, rested a melancholy and distorted smile. Throwing
-his arms around the neck of Flores, and putting his lips close to her
-ear:
-
-"Did the _other one_ come yesterday?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, child, yes."
-
-"Will he come again to-day?"
-
-"He'll come. Of course he'll come! Stop talking, _fillino_, stop
-talking and take your chocolate. It's as you like it--thin and with
-froth."
-
-"I don't think I have any appetite for it. Put it there beside
-me."
-
-
-
-
- III.
-
-
-In Vilamorta there was a Casino, a real Casino, small indeed, and
-shabby, besides, but with its billiard-table, bought at second-hand,
-and its _boy_, an old man of seventy, who once a year dusted and
-brushed the green cover. For the only reunions in the Casino of
-Vilamorta were those of the rats and the moths who assembled daily,
-to amuse themselves by eating away the woodwork. The chief centers of
-reunion were the two apothecaries' shops, that of Doña Eufrasia,
-fronting the Plaza and that of Agonde in the high street. Doña
-Eufrasia's shop, nestling in the shadowy corner of an archway, was
-dark; in the hours of meeting it was lighted by a smoky kerosene
-lamp; its furniture consisted of four grimy chairs and a bench.
-
-From the street all that was to be seen were dark mass-cloaks,
-overcoats, broad-brimmed hats, two or three clerical tonsures that
-shone at a distance like metal clasps against the dark background of
-the shop. Agonde's shop, on the contrary, was brightly illuminated
-and gloried in the possession of six glass globes of brilliant
-coloring and fantastic effect, three rows of shelves laden with
-imposing and scientific-looking white porcelain jars bearing Latin
-inscriptions in black letters, a divan, and two leather-covered
-armchairs. The two contrasting shops were also antagonistic; they had
-declared war to the knife against each other.
-
-Agonde's shop, liberal and enlightened in its opinions, said of
-the reactionary shop that it was a center of unending conspiracies,
-where _El Cuartel Real_ and all the rebel proclamations had been read
-during the civil war, and where for the past five years
-ammunition-belts were being diligently prepared for a Carlist party
-that never took the field; and according to the reactionary shop,
-that of Agonde was the headquarters of the Freemasons; where lampoons
-were printed on a little handpress and where gambling was shamelessly
-carried on. The meetings in the reactionary shop broke up with
-religious punctuality at ten, in winter, and eleven in summer, while
-the liberal shop continued to cast on the sidewalk until midnight the
-light of its two bright lamps and the blue, red, and emerald-green
-reflections of its glass globes; for which reasons the members of the
-liberal reunion called those of the other party _owls_, while those
-of the reactionary clique gave their opponents the name of _members
-of the Casino of the Gaming Table_.
-
-Segundo never put his foot over the threshold of the reactionary
-shop and, since the beginning of his acquaintance with Leocadia
-Otero, he had shunned that of Agonde also, for his vanity was wounded
-by the jests and gibes of the apothecary, who was noted for his
-waggish humor. One evening as Saturnino Agonde was crossing the Plaza
-of the Alamo at an unusually late hour--on his way the devil only
-knew whither--he had caught sight of Leocadia and Segundo seated at
-the window, and had heard the psalmody of the verses which the poet
-was declaiming. From that time Segundo had seen depicted on the
-countenance of Agonde, a practical man of a sanguine temperament,
-such contempt for sentimental trifling and for poetry that he
-instinctively avoided him as far as it was possible to do so.
-Occasionally, however, whenever he desired to read _El Imparcial_, to
-know what was going on, he would stop in at the shop for a few
-moments. He did so on the day after his conversation with the echo.
-
-The meeting was very animated. Segundo's father was leaning back
-on the sofa with a newspaper resting on his knees; his
-brother-in-law, the notary Genday, Ramon, the confectioner, and
-Agonde were hotly disputing with him. At the further end of the shop
-Carmelo, the tobacconist, Don Fermin, alias _Tropiezo_,[1] the
-physician, the secretary of the Municipality and the Alcalde sat
-playing _tresillo_ at a small table. When Segundo entered, he
-remarked something unusual in the air of his father and of the group
-that surrounded him, but certain that he would presently be told the
-cause, he silently dropped into an armchair, lighted a cigar, and
-took up the copy of _El Imparcial_ that was lying on the counter.
-
- [1] Trip.
-
-"Well, the papers here say nothing, absolutely nothing, about
-it," exclaimed the confectioner.
-
-From the tresillo table came the voice of the doctor confirming
-Ramon's doubts; the doctor, too, was of the opinion that the event in
-question could not happen without due notice of it being given in the
-papers.
-
-"You would die rather than believe anything," replied Agonde. "I
-am certain of it, I tell you, and it seems to me that when I am
-certain of it----"
-
-"And I too," affirmed Genday. "If it is necessary to call
-witnesses to prove it, they are there. I know it from my own brother,
-who heard it from Mendez de las Vides; you can judge whether I have
-the news on good authority or not. Do you want further proof? Well,
-two armchairs, a handsome gilt bedstead, a great deal of china and a
-piano have been ordered from Orense for Las Vides. Are you
-convinced?"
-
-"In any case they will not come as soon as you say," objected
-Tropiezo.
-
-"They will come at the time I have said. Don Victoriano wants to
-spend the holidays and the vintage season here; they say he longs to
-see his native place again, and that he has spoken of nothing all the
-winter but the journey."
-
-"He is coming to die here," said Tropiezo; "I heard that he was
-in a very bad state of health. You are going to be left without a
-leader."
-
-"Go to----What a devil of a man, what an owl, always predicting
-misfortunes! Either hold your tongue, or talk sense. Attend to the
-game, as you ought to."
-
-Segundo was gazing abstractedly at the glass globes of the shop,
-his attention seemingly occupied with the blue, green, and red points
-of light that sparkled in their center. He understood now the subject
-of their conversation--the expected arrival of Don Victoriano Andres
-de la Comba, the minister, the great political leader of the country,
-the radical representative of the district. What mattered to Segundo
-the arrival of this pretentious coxcomb! And giving himself up to the
-enjoyment of his cigar, he allowed the noisy dispute to go on
-unheeded. Afterward he became absorbed in the reading of an article
-in _El Imparcial_, in which a new poet was warmly eulogized.
-
-Meanwhile at the tresillo table matters were becoming
-complicated. The apothecary, who sat behind the Alcalde, was giving
-him advice--a delicate and difficult task.
-
-The tobacconist and Don Fermin held all the good cards; they had
-the man between them--a ticklish position. The Alcalde was a thin
-shriveled-up old man, of a very timid disposition, who, before he
-ventured to play a card, would think a hundred years about it,
-calculating all the contingencies and all the possible combinations
-of which cards are capable. He did not want now to play that _solo_.
-It would be a great mistake! But the impetuous Agonde encouraged him,
-saying: "Come! I buy it." Thus urged, the Alcalde came to a decision,
-but not without having first entered a protest:
-
-"Very well, I'll play it, but it is a piece of folly,
-gentlemen--so that you may not say I am afraid."
-
-And all that he had foreseen happened; he found himself between
-two fires: on the one side his king of hearts is trumped, on the
-other his opponent takes his knave of trumps with his queen. Don
-Fermin wins the trick without knowing how, while the tobacconist, who
-is smiling maliciously, keeps all his good cards. The Alcalde lifts
-his eyes appealingly to Agonde.
-
-"Didn't I tell you so? A nice fix we have got ourselves into! We
-shall lose the hand; it is lost already."
-
-"No, man, no. What a coward you are--always afraid of everything.
-There you are hesitating as long about throwing a card as if your
-life depended on it. Play a trump! play a trump! That is the way
-cowards always lose--they are afraid to play their trumps."
-
-The opponents winked at each other maliciously.
-
-"_De posita non tibi_," exclaimed the tobacconist.
-
-"_Si codillum non resultabit_," assented Don Fermin.
-
-The Alcalde, quaking with fear, proceeded, by Agonde's advice, to
-look through the tricks his partners had taken, in order to see how
-many trumps had been already played. Tropiezo and the tobacconist
-protested:
-
-What a mania he had for examining the cards!
-
-The Alcalde, somewhat tranquillized, resolved at last to put an
-end to his uncertainty, and with a few bold and decisive plays the
-hand ended, each player winning three tricks.
-
-"A tie!" exclaimed the tobacconist and the apothecary almost
-simultaneously.
-
-"You see! Playing as badly as you could you haven't lost the
-hand," said Agonde. "They needed all their cards to win what they
-did."
-
-They were all absorbed in the game--whose interest was now at its
-height--with the exception of Segundo, who had abandoned himself to
-one of those idle reveries in which the activity of the imagination
-is stimulated by bodily ease. The voices of the players reached his
-ears like a distant murmur; he was a hundred leagues away; he was
-thinking of the article he had just been reading, of which certain
-expressions particularly encomiastic--mellifluous phrases in which
-the critic artfully glossed over the faults of the poet--had remained
-stamped on his memory. When would his turn come to be judged by the
-Madrid press? God alone knew. He lent his attention once more to the
-conversation.
-
-"We must at least give him a serenade," declared Genday.
-
-"A serenade, indeed!" responded Agonde. "A great thing that!
-Something more than a serenade--we must have some sort of a
-procession--a demonstration which will show that the people here are
-with him. We must appoint a committee to receive him with rockets and
-bands of music. Let those plotters at Doña Eufrasia's have something
-to rage about."
-
-The name of the other shop produced a storm of exclamations,
-jests, and stamping of feet.
-
-"Have you heard the news?" asked the waggish Tropiezo. "It seems
-that Nocedal has written a very flattering letter to Doña Eufrasia,
-saying that as he represents Don Carlos in Madrid so she, by reason
-of her merits, ought to represent him in Vilamorta."
-
-Homeric bursts of laughter and a general huzza greeted this
-remark.
-
-"Well, that may be an invention; but it is true, true as gospel,
-that Doña Eufrasia sent Don Carlos her likeness with a complimentary
-inscription."
-
-"And the regiment? Have they fixed on the day on which it is to
-take the field?"
-
-"Of course. They say that the Abbot of Lubrego is to command it."
-
-The hilarity of the assembly was redoubled, for the Abbot of
-Lubrego was nearing his seventieth year, and was so feeble that he
-could scarcely hold himself on his mule. A boy at this moment entered
-the shop, swinging in his hand a glass bottle.
-
-"Don Saturnino!" he cried, in a shrill voice.
-
-"What is it you want?" answered the druggist, mimicking his
-tones.
-
-"Give me some of what this smells like."
-
-"All right," said Agonde, putting the bottle to his nose. "What
-does this smell like, Don Fermin?"
-
-"Let me see--it smells something like--laudanum, eh?--or arnica?"
-
-"Arnica let it be, it is less dangerous. I hope it will have a
-good effect."
-
-"It is time to retire, gentlemen," said the Lawyer García,
-consulting his silver timepiece.
-
-Genday stood up and Segundo followed his example.
-
-The tresillo party proceeded to settle accounts; calculating
-winnings and losses, centavo by centavo, by means of white counters
-and yellow counters. After the close atmosphere of the shop the cool
-air of the street was grateful; the night was mild and clear; the
-stars shone with a friendly light and Segundo, who was quick to
-perceive the poetic aspect of things, felt tempted to leave his
-father and his uncle without ceremony and walk along the road, alone,
-according to his custom, to enjoy the beauty of the night. But his
-Uncle Genday linked his arm through his, saying:
-
-"You are to be congratulated, my boy."
-
-"Congratulated, uncle?"
-
-"Weren't you crazy to get away from here? Didn't you want to take
-your flight to some other place? Haven't you a hatred for office
-work?"
-
-"Good man," interposed the lawyer; "he is crazy enough as it is,
-and you want to unsettle his mind still more----"
-
-"Hold your tongue, you fool! Don Victoriano is coming here, we
-will present the boy to him and ask him to give him a place. And he
-will give him one, and a good one too; for whether he thinks so or
-not, if he does not do what we ask him, the pancake will cost him a
-loaf. The district is not what he imagines it to be, and if his
-adherents do not keep their eyes open the clergy will play a trick
-upon them."
-
-"And Primo? And Mendez de las Vides?"
-
-"They are no match for the priest. The day least expected they
-will be made a show of; they will hang their heads for shame. But
-you, my boy--think well about it. You are not in love with the law?"
-
-Segundo shrugged his shoulders with a smile.
-
-"Well, turn the matter over in your mind; think what would suit
-you best. For you must be something; you must stick your head in
-somewhere. Would you like a justiceship? a place in the post-office?
-in one of the departments?"
-
-They had turned the corner of the Plaza on their way to García's
-house and were passing under Leocadia's window when the fragrance of
-the carnations penetrated to Segundo's brain. He felt a poetic
-revulsion of feeling and, dilating his nostrils to inhale the
-perfume, he exclaimed:
-
-"Neither justice nor post-office employee. Say no more on that
-point, uncle."
-
-"Don't insist, Clodio," said the lawyer bitterly. "He wants to be
-nothing, nothing but a downright idler, to spend his life scribbling
-rhymes. Neither more nor less. The money must be handed out for the
-Institute, the University, the shirt-front, the frock coat, the
-polished boots, and then, when one thinks they are ready to do for
-themselves, back they come, to be a burden to one, to smoke and to
-eat at one's expense. I have three sons to spend my money, to squeeze
-me dry, and not one to give me any help. That is all these young
-gentlemen are good for."
-
-Segundo stopped, twisting the end of his mustache, with a frown
-on his face. They all stood still at the corner of the little plaza,
-as people are wont to do when a conversation changes to a dispute.
-
-"I don't know what puts that into your head, father," declared
-the poet. "Do you suppose that I propose to myself never to be
-anything more than Segundo García, the lawyer's son? If you do, you
-are greatly mistaken. You may be very anxious to be rid of the burden
-of supporting me, but you are not half as anxious as I am to relieve
-you of it."
-
-"Well, then, what are you waiting for? Your uncle is proposing a
-variety of things to you and none of them suits you. Do you want to
-begin by being Minister?"
-
-The poet began to twist his mustache anew.
-
-"There is no use in being impatient, father. I would make a very
-bad post-office clerk and a still worse justice. I don't want to tie
-myself down to any fixed career, in which everything is arranged
-beforehand and moves by routine. In that case I should be a lawyer
-like you or a notary like Uncle Genday. If we really find Don
-Victoriano disposed to do anything for me, ask some position--no
-matter what--without fixed duties, that will enable me to reside in
-Madrid. I will take care of the rest."
-
-"You will take care of the rest. Yes, yes, you say well. You will
-draw upon me for little sums, eh? like your brother in the Philippine
-Islands. Let me tell you for your guidance, then, that you needn't do
-so. I didn't steal what I have, and I don't coin money."
-
-"I am not asking anything from you!" cried Segundo, in a burst of
-savage anger. "Am I in your way? I will get out of it, then; I will
-go to America. That ends it."
-
-"No," said the lawyer, calming down. "Provided you exact no more
-sacrifices from me."
-
-"Not one! not if I were starving!"
-
-The lawyer's door opened; old Aunt Gáspara in her petticoat,
-looking like a fright, had come to let them in. Tied around her head
-was a cotton handkerchief which came so far over her face as almost
-to conceal her sour features. Segundo drew back at this picture of
-domestic life.
-
-"Aren't you coming in?" asked his father.
-
-"I am going with Uncle Genday."
-
-"Are you coming back soon?"
-
-"Directly."
-
-Walking down the square he communicated his plans to Genday. The
-latter, a short man, with a fiery temper, signified his approbation
-by movements quick and restless as those of a lizard. His nephew's
-ideas were not displeasing to him. His active, scheming mind, the
-mind of an electoral agent and a clever notary, accepted vast
-projects more readily than the methodical mind of the lawyer García.
-Uncle and nephew were much of the same way of thinking as to the best
-manner of profiting by Don Victoriano's influence; conversing in this
-way they reached Genday's house, and the servant of the latter--a
-fresh-looking girl--opened the door for her master with all the
-flattering obsequiousness of a confirmed old bachelor's maid-servant.
-Instead of returning home Segundo, preoccupied and excited, walked
-down the plaza to the highroad, stopped at the first clump of
-chestnut trees he came to, and seating himself on the step of a
-wooden cross which the Jesuits had erected there during the last
-mission, gave himself up to the harmless diversion of contemplating
-the evening star, the constellations, and all the splendors of the
-heavenly bodies.
-
-
-
-
- IV.
-
-
-During the tiresome _siestas_ of Vilamorta, while the visitors to
-the springs digested their glasses of mineral water and compensated
-themselves for the loss of their morning sleep by a restorative nap,
-the amateur musicians of the popular band practiced by themselves the
-pieces they were shortly to execute together. From the shoemaker's
-shop came the melancholy notes of a flute; in the baker's resounded
-the lively and martial strains of the horn; in the tobacconist's
-moaned a clarionet; in the cloth-shop, the suppressed sighs of an
-ophicleide filled the air. Those who thus devoted themselves to the
-worship of Euterpe were clerks in shops, younger sons, the youthful
-element of Vilamorta. These snatches of melody rose with piercing
-sonorousness on the drowsy warm atmosphere. When the news spread that
-Don Victoriano Andres de la Comba and his family were expected to
-arrive within twenty-four hours in the town, to leave it again
-immediately for Las Vides, the brass band was tuned to the highest
-pitch and ready to deafen, with any number of waltzes, dances, and
-quicksteps, the ears of the illustrious statesman.
-
-In the town an unusual animation was noticeable. Agonde's house
-was opened, ventilated, and swept, clouds of dust issuing through the
-windows, at one of which, later on, appeared Agonde's sister, with a
-fringe of hair over her forehead and wearing a pearl-shell necklace.
-The housekeeper of the parish priest of Cebre, a famous cook, went
-busily about the kitchen, and the pounding of the mortar and the
-sizzling of oil could be heard. Two hours before the time of the
-arrival of the stage-coach from Orense, that is to say at three
-o'clock in the afternoon, the committee of the notabilities of the
-Combista-radical party were already crossing the plaza, and Agonde
-stood waiting on the threshold of his shop, having sacrificed to the
-solemnity of the occasion his classic cap and velvet slippers, and
-wearing patent-leather boots and a frock coat which made him look
-more bull-necked and pot-bellied than ever. The coach from Orense was
-entering the town from the side next the wood, and, at the tinkling
-of the bells, the clatter of the hoofs of its eight mules and ponies,
-the creaking of its unwieldy bulk, the inhabitants of Vilamorta
-looked out of their windows and came to their doors; the reactionary
-shop only remained closed and hostile. When the cumbrous vehicle
-turned into the square the excitement increased; barefooted children
-climbed on the coach steps, begging an _ochavo_ in whining accents;
-the fruit-women sitting in the arches straightened themselves up to
-obtain a better view, and only Cansin, the clothier, his hands in his
-trousers' pockets, his feet thrust into slippers, continued walking
-up and down his shop with an Olympic air of indifference. The
-overseer reined in the team, saying in soothing accents to a
-rebellious mule:
-
-"E-e-e-e-e-e-h! There, there, Canóniga."
-
-The brass band, drawn up before the town-hall, burst into a
-deafening prelude, and the first rocket whizzed into the air sending
-forth a shower of sparks. The crowd rushed _en masse_ toward the door
-of the coach, to offer their hands, their arms, anything, and a stout
-lady and a priest, with a cotton checked handkerchief tied around his
-temples, alighted from it. Agonde, more amused than angry, made signs
-to the musicians and the rocket-throwers to desist from their task.
-
-"He is not coming yet! he is not coming yet!" he shouted. In
-effect, there were no other passengers in the omnibus. The overseer
-hastened to explain:
-
-"They are just behind, not two steps off, as one might say. In
-Count de Vilar's carriage, in the barouche. On the Señora's account.
-The luggage is here. And they paid for the seats as if they had
-occupied them."
-
-It was not long before the measured trot of Count de Vilar's pair
-of horses was heard and the open carriage, of an old-fashioned style,
-rolled majestically into the plaza. Reclining on the back seat was a
-man enveloped, notwithstanding the heat, in a cloth cloak; at his
-side sat a lady in a gray linen duster, the fanciful brim of her
-traveling-hat standing out sharply against the pure blue of the sky.
-In the front seat sat a little girl of some ten years and a
-_mademoiselle_, a sort of transpyrenean nursery governess. Segundo,
-who had kept in the background at the arrival of the diligence, this
-time was less stubborn and the hand which, covered with a long Suède
-glove, was stretched out in quest of a support, met with the
-energetic and nervous pressure of another hand. The Minister's lady
-looked with surprise at the gallant, gave him a reserved salutation
-and, taking the arm Agonde offered her, walked quickly into the
-apothecary's.
-
-The statesman was slower in alighting. His adherents looked at
-him with surprise. He had changed greatly since his last visit to
-Vilamorta--then in the midst of the revolution--some eight or ten
-years before. His iron-gray hair, whiter on the temples, heightened
-the yellow hue of his complexion; the whites of his eyes, too, were
-yellow and streaked with little red veins; and his furrowed and
-withered countenance bore unmistakable traces of the anxieties of the
-struggle for social position, the vicissitudes of the political
-bench, and the sedentary labors of the forum. His frame hung loosely
-together, being wanting in the erectness which is the sign of
-physical vigor. When the handshakings began, however, and the
-"Delighted to see you----" "At last----" "After an age----" resounded
-around him, the dying gladiator revived, straightened himself up, and
-an amiable smile parted his thin lips, lending a pleasing expression
-to the now stern mouth. He even opened his arms to Genday, who
-squirmed in them like an eel, and he clapped the Alcalde on the back.
-García, the lawyer, tried to attract attention to himself, to
-distinguish himself among the others, saying in the serious tone of
-one who expresses an opinion in a very delicate matter:
-
-"There, upstairs, upstairs now, to rest and to take some
-refreshment."
-
-At last the commotion calmed down, the great man entering the
-apothecary's, followed by García, Genday, the Alcalde, and Segundo.
-
-They seated themselves in Agonde's little parlor, respectfully
-leaving to Don Victoriano the red rep sofa, around which they drew
-their chairs in a semi-circle. Shortly afterward the ladies made
-their appearance, and, now without her hat, it could be seen that
-Señora de Comba was young and beautiful, seeming rather the elder
-sister than the mother of the little girl. The latter, with her
-luxuriant hair falling down her back and her precocious womanly
-seriousness, had the aspect of a sickly plant, while her mother, a
-smiling blonde, seemed overflowing with health. They spoke of the
-journey, of the fertile borders of the Avieiro, of the weather, of
-the road; the conversation was beginning to languish, when Agonde's
-sister entered opportunely, preceded by the housekeeper of the
-priest, carrying two enormous trays filled with smoking cups of
-chocolate, for supper was a meal unknown to the hosts. When the trays
-were set on the table and the chocolate handed around, the company
-grew more animated. The Vilamortans, finding a congenial subject on
-which to exercise their oratorical powers, began to press the
-strangers, to eulogize the excellence of the viands, and calling
-Señora de la Comba by her baptismal name, and adding an affectionate
-diminutive to that of the little girl, they launched forth into
-exclamations and questions.
-
-"Is the chocolate to your taste, Nieves?"
-
-"Do you like it thin or thick?"
-
-"Nieves, take that morsel of cake for my sake; you will find it
-excellent; only we have the secret of making it."
-
-"Come, Victoriniña, don't be bashful; that fresh butter goes very
-well with the hot bread."
-
-"A morsel of toasted sponge-cake. Ah-ha! You don't have cake like
-that in Madrid, eh?"
-
-"No," answered the girl, in a clear and affected voice. "In
-Madrid we eat crullers and doughnuts with our chocolate."
-
-"It is the fashion here to take sponge-cake with it, not
-crullers. Take that one on the top, that brown one. That's nothing, a
-bird could eat it."
-
-Don Victoriano joined in the conversation, praising the bread,
-saying he could not eat it, as it had been absolutely prohibited to
-him, for his malady required that he should abstain from starch and
-gluten in every form--indeed, he had bread sent him from France,
-bread prepared _ad hoc_ without those elements--and as he spoke, he
-turned toward Agonde, who nodded with an air of intelligence, showing
-that he understood the Latin phrase. And Don Victoriano regretted
-doubly the prohibition now, for there was no bread to be compared to
-the Vilamorta bread--which was better of its kind than cake, yes
-indeed. The Vilamortans smiled, highly flattered, but García, with an
-eloquent shake of the head, said that the bread was deteriorating,
-that it was not now what it had formerly been, and that only Pellejo,
-the baker of the plaza, made it conscientiously, having the patience
-to select the wheat, grain by grain, not letting a single wormeaten
-one pass. It was for this reason that his loaves turned out so sweet
-and substantial. Then a discussion arose as to whether bread should
-be porous or the contrary, and as to whether hot bread was wholesome.
-
-Don Victoriano, reanimated by these homely details, talked of his
-childhood, of the slices of bread spread with butter or molasses
-which he used to eat between meals, and when he added that his uncle,
-the priest, occasionally administered a sound drubbing to him, a
-smile once more softened the deep lines of his face. This expansion
-of feeling gave a sweeter expression to his countenance, effacing
-from it the traces left by years of strife, the scars of the wounds
-received in the battle of life, illuminating it with a reflection
-from his vanished youth. How he longed to see again a grapevine in
-Las Vides from which he had robbed grapes a hundred times when he was
-a child.
-
-"And you will rob them again now," exclaimed Clodio Genday gayly.
-"We must tell the master of Las Vides to put a guard over the vine of
-Jaen."
-
-The jest was received with demonstrations of hilarity, and the
-girl laughed with her shrill laugh at the idea of her papa robbing a
-grapevine. Segundo only smiled. His eyes were fixed on Don
-Victoriano, and he was thinking of what his life had been. He went
-over in his mind the history of the great man: At Segundo's age Don
-Victoriano, too, was an obscure lawyer, buried in Vilamorta, eager to
-break from the shell. He had gone to Madrid, where a celebrated
-jurisconsult had taken him as his assistant. The jurisconsult was a
-politician, and Victoriano followed in his footsteps. How did he
-begin to prosper? This period was shrouded in obscurity. Some said
-one thing, some another. Vilamorta found him, when it least expected,
-its candidate and representative. Once in Congress Don Victoriano's
-importance grew steadily, and when the Revolution of September came
-it found him in a sufficiently exalted position to be improvised a
-minister. The brief ministry gave him neither time to wear out his
-popularity nor to give proof of special gifts, and, with his prestige
-almost intact, the Restoration admitted him as a member of a
-fusionist cabinet. He had just laid down the portfolio and come to
-re-establish his shattered health in his native place, where his
-influence was strong and incontestible, thanks to his alliance with
-the illustrious house of Mendez de las Vides. Segundo asked himself
-if a lot like Don Victoriano's would satisfy his aspirations. Don
-Victoriano had wealth--stocks in banks and shares in railways among
-whose directors the name of the able jurisconsult figured. Our
-versifier raised his eyebrows disdainfully and glanced at the
-Minister's wife; that graceful beauty certainly did not love her
-lord. She was the daughter of a younger son of the house of Las
-Vides--a magistrate; she had probably married her husband, allured by
-his position. No; most assuredly the poet did not envy the
-politician. Why had this man risen to the eminent position he
-occupied? What extraordinary gifts did he possess? A diffuse
-parliamentary orator, a passive minister, with some forensic
-ability--sum total, a mediocrity.
-
-While these reflections were passing through Segundo's mind,
-Señora de Comba amused herself by examining minutely the dress and
-the appearance of everyone present. She took in every detail, under
-her half-closed lids, of the toilet of Carmen Agonde, who was arrayed
-in a tight-fitting deep blue bodice that sent the blood to her
-plethoric cheeks. She next lowered her mocking glance to the
-patent-leather boots of the pharmacist, and then raised them again to
-Clodio Genday's fingers, stained by the cigar, and the purple and
-white checked velvet waistcoat of the lawyer García. Finally, her
-glance fell on Segundo, in critical examination of his attire. But
-another glance, steady and ardent, cast it back like a shield.
-
-
-
-
- V.
-
-
-Agonde rose early on the following morning, and descended shortly
-afterward to his shop, leaving his guests wrapped in their slumbers,
-and Carmen charged, the moment they should stir, to pour the
-chocolate into their mouths. The apothecary desired to enjoy the
-effect produced in the town by Don Victoriano's sojourn in his house.
-He was reclining in his leather-covered easy-chair when he saw
-Tropiezo riding past on his gray mule, and called out to him:
-
-"Hello! Hello! Where are you bound for so early?"
-
-"For Doas, man. I have not a minute to spare." And saying this
-the doctor alighted from his mule, which he tied to an iron ring
-fastened in the wall.
-
-"Is the case so urgent?"
-
-"Urgent? That it is. The old woman, the grandmother of Ramon, the
-confectioner. It appears she has already received the last
-sacrament."
-
-"And it is only now they have sent for you?"
-
-"No; I went to see her yesterday, and I applied two dozen
-leeches, that drew their fill of blood from her. She looked like a
-dying kid; she was very weak, and as thin as a wafer. Perhaps if I
-had given her something that I thought of, instead of applying
-leeches----"
-
-"Ah! a trip," interrupted Agonde maliciously.
-
-"Life is a series of trips," responded the doctor, shrugging his
-shoulders. "And upstairs?" he added, raising his eyes interrogatively
-to the ceiling.
-
-"Snoring like princes."
-
-"And he--how does he look?" asked Don Fermin, lowering his voice
-and dwelling on every word.
-
-"He?" repeated Agonde, following his example. "So-so. Oldish. And
-very gray."
-
-"But what is the matter with him? Let us hear. For as to being
-sick, he is that."
-
-"He has--a new disease--a very strange one, one of the latest
-fashion." And Agonde smiled maliciously.
-
-"New?"
-
-Agonde half-closed his eyes, bent toward Tropiezo, and whispered
-something in his ear.
-
-Tropiezo burst into a laugh; suddenly he looked very serious, and
-tapping his nose repeatedly with his forefinger:
-
-"I know, I know," he said emphatically. "And the waters here, and
-some others in France, are the only cure for that disease. If he
-drinks a few glasses from the spring, he will be himself again."
-
-Tropiezo emitted his dictamen leaning on the counter, forgetful
-of the mule that was stamping impatiently at the door.
-
-"And the Señora--what does she say of her husband's state of
-health?" he suddenly asked, with a wink.
-
-"What should she say of it, man? Probably she does not know that
-it is serious."
-
-A look of derision lighted up the inexpressive features of the
-physician; he glanced at Agonde and smothering another burst of
-laughter, began:
-
-"The Señora--"
-
-"Chut!" interrupted the apothecary furiously. The whole Comba
-family were making an irruption into the shop through the small door
-of the porch. Mother and daughter formed a charming group, both
-wearing wide-brimmed hats of coarse straw adorned with enormous bows
-of flame-colored bunting. Their écru cotton gowns embroidered with
-red braid completed the rustic character of their costumes, reminding
-one of a bunch of poppies and straw. The girl's luxuriant dark hair
-hung loose over her shoulders, and the fair locks of the mother
-curled in a tangled mass under the shade of her broad-brimmed hat.
-Nieves did not wear gloves nor was there visible on her face a trace
-of powder, or of any other of the cosmetics whose use is imputed
-unjustly by the women of the provinces to the Madridlenians; on the
-contrary, her rosy ears and neck showed signs of energetic friction
-with the towel and cold water. As for Don Victoriano, the ravages
-made in his countenance by care and sickness were still more apparent
-in the morning light; it was not, as Agonde had said, age that was
-visible there; it was virility, but tortured, exhausted, wounded to
-death.
-
-"Why! Have you had chocolate already?" asked Agonde, in
-confusion.
-
-"No, friend Saturnino, nor shall we take it, with your
-permission, until we return. Don't trouble yourself on our account.
-Victoriniña has ransacked your pantry--your closets----"
-
-The child half opened a handkerchief which she held by the four
-corners, disclosing a provision of bread, cake, and the cheese of the
-country.
-
-"At least let me bring you a whole cheese. I will go see if there
-is not some fresh bread, just out of the oven----"
-
-Don Victoriano objected--let him not be deprived of the pleasure
-of going to breakfast in the poplar-grove near the spring, just as he
-had done when a boy. Agonde remarked that those articles of food were
-not wholesome for him, to which Tropiezo, scratching the tip of his
-ear, responded sceptically:
-
-"Bah! bah! bah! Those are new-fangled notions. What is wholesome
-for the body--can't they understand that--is what the body craves. If
-the gentleman likes bread--and for your malady, Señor Don Victoriano,
-there is nothing like the waters here. I don't know why people go to
-give their money to those French when we have better things at home
-than any they can give us."
-
-The Minister looked at Tropiezo with keen interest depicted on
-his countenance. He called to mind his last visit to Sanchez del
-Abrojo and the contraction of the lips with which the learned
-practitioner had said to him:
-
-"I would send you to Carlsbad or to Vichy, but those waters are
-not always beneficial. At times they hasten the natural course of a
-disease. Rest for a time, and diet yourself--we will see how you are
-when you return in the autumn." And what a look Sanchez del Abrojo
-put on when he said this! An impenetrable, sphinx-like expression.
-The positive assertion of Tropiezo awoke tumultuous hopes in Don
-Victoriano's breast. This village practitioner must know a great deal
-from experience, more perhaps than the pompous doctors of the
-capital.
-
-"Come, papa," said the child impatiently, pulling him by the
-sleeve.
-
-They took the path toward the grove. Vilamorta, naturally given
-to early rising, was more full of activity at this hour than in the
-afternoon. The shops were open, the baskets of the fruit-venders were
-already filled with fruit. Cansin walked up and down his
-establishment with his hands in his pockets, affecting to have
-noticed nothing, so as not to be obliged to bid good-morning to
-Agonde and acknowledge his triumph. Pellejo, covered with flour, was
-haggling with three shopkeepers from Cebre, who wanted to buy some of
-his best wheat. Ramon, the confectioner, was dividing chocolate into
-squares on a large board placed on the counter and rapidly stamping
-them with a hot iron before they should have time to cool.
-
-The morning was cloudless and the sun was already unusually hot.
-The party, augmented by García and Genday, walked through orchards
-and cornfields until they reached the entrance to the walk. Don
-Victoriano uttered an exclamation of joy. It was the same double row
-of elms bordering the river, the foaming and joyous Avieiro, that ran
-on sparkling in gentle cascades, washing with a pleasant murmur the
-rocks, worn smooth by the action of the current. He recognized the
-thick osier plantations; he remembered all his longings of the day
-before and leaned, full of emotion, on the parapet of the walk. The
-scene was almost deserted; half a dozen melancholy and
-bilious-looking individuals, visitors to the springs, were walking
-slowly up and down, discussing their ailments in low tones, and
-eructating the bicarbonate of the waters. Nieves, leaning back on a
-stone bench, gazed at the river. The child touched her on the
-shoulder, saying:
-
-"Mamma, the young man we saw yesterday."
-
-On the opposite bank Segundo García was standing on a rock,
-absorbed in meditation, his straw hat pushed far back on his head,
-his hand resting on his hip, doubtless with the purpose of preserving
-his equilibrium in so dangerous a position. Nieves reproved the
-little girl, saying:
-
-"Don't be silly, child. You startled me. Salute the gentleman."
-
-"He is not looking this way. Ah! now he is looking. Salute him,
-you, mamma. He is taking off his hat, he is going to fall! There! now
-he is safe."
-
-Don Victoriano descended the stone steps leading to the spring.
-The abode of the naiad was a humble grotto--a shed supported on rough
-posts, a small basin overflowing with the water from the spring, some
-wretched hovels for the bathers, and a strong and sickening odor of
-rotten eggs, caused by the stagnation of the sulphur water, were all
-that the fastidious tourist found there. Notwithstanding this, Don
-Victoriano's soul was filled with the purest joy. In this naiad he
-beheld his youth, his lost youth--the age of illusions, of hopes
-blooming as the banks of the Avieiro. How many mornings had he come
-to drink from the fountain, for a jest, to wash his face with the
-water, which enjoyed throughout the country the reputation of
-possessing extraordinary curative virtue for the eyes. Don Victoriano
-stretched out his hands, plunged them into the warm current, feeling
-it slip through his fingers with delight, and playing with it and
-caressing it as one caresses a loved being. But the undulating form
-of the naiad escaped from him as youth escapes from us--without the
-possibility of detaining it. Then the ex-Minister felt a thirst
-awaken in him to drink the waters. Beside him on the edge of the
-basin was a glass; and the keeper, a poor old man in his dotage,
-presented it to him with an idiotic smile. Don Victoriano drank,
-closing his eyes, with indescribable pleasure, enjoying the
-mysterious water, charmed by the magic arts of memory. When he had
-drained the glass he drew himself up and ascended the stairs with a
-firm and elastic step. Victoriniña, who was breakfasting on bread and
-cheese in the avenue, was astonished when her father took a piece of
-bread from her lap, saying gayly:
-
-"We are all God's creatures."
-
-
-
-
- VI.
-
-
-Almost as much as by Don Victoriano's arrival was Vilamorta
-excited by the arrival of Señor de las Vides, accompanied by his
-steward, Primo Genday. This event happened on the afternoon of the
-memorable day on which Don Victoriano had infringed the commands of
-science by eating half a pound of fresh bread. At three o'clock,
-under a blazing sun, Genday the elder and Mendez entered the plaza,
-the latter mounted on a powerful mule, the former on an ordinary nag.
-
-Señor de las Vides was a little old man as dry as a vine branch.
-His carefully shaven cheeks, his thin lips and aristocratically
-pointed nose and chin, his shrewd, kind eyes, surrounded by
-innumerable crows' feet, his intellectual profile, his beardless
-face, called loudly for the curled wig, the embroidered coat and the
-gold snuff-box of the Campomanes and Arandas. With his delicate and
-expressive countenance the countenance of Primo Genday contrasted
-strongly. The steward's complexion was white and red, he had the fine
-and transparent skin, showing the full veins underneath, of those who
-are predisposed to hemiplegy. His eyes were of a greenish color, one
-of them being attached, as it were, to the lax and drooping lid,
-while the other rolled around with mischievous vivacity. His silvery
-curls gave him a distant resemblance to Louis Philippe, as he is
-represented on the coins which bear his effigy.
-
-By a combination not unusual in small towns Primo Genday and his
-brother Clodio served under opposite political banners, both being in
-reality of one mind and both pursuing the same end; Clodio ranged
-himself on the side of the radicals, Primo was the support of the
-Carlist party, and in cases of emergency, in the electoral contests,
-they clasped hands over the fence. When the hoofs of Primo Genday's
-nag resounded on the paving-stones, the windows of the reactionary
-shop were opened and two or three hands were waved in friendly
-welcome. Primo paused, and Mendez continued on his way to Agonde's
-door, where he dismounted.
-
-He was received in Don Victoriano's arms, and then disappeared
-among the shadows of the staircase. The mule remained fastened to the
-ring, stamping impatiently, while the onlookers on the plaza
-contemplated with respect the nobleman's old-fashioned harness of
-embossed leather, ornamented with silver, bright with use. One after
-another other mules and horses were brought to join the first comer.
-And the crowd assigned them their riders with considerable judgment.
-The chestnut nag of the alguazil, a fine animal, with a saddle and a
-silk headstall, was no doubt for the Minister. The black donkey with
-the side-saddle--who could doubt that it was for the Señora? The
-other gentle white donkey they would give to the little girl. The
-Alcalde's ass was for the maid. Agonde would ride the mare he always
-rode, the Morena, that had more malanders on her head than hairs in
-her tail. During this time the radicals, García, Clodio, Genday, and
-Ramon, were discussing the respective merits of the animals and the
-condition of their trappings and calculating the probabilities of
-their being able to reach Las Vides before nightfall. The lawyer
-shook his head, saying emphatically and sententiously:
-
-"They are taking their time about it if they expect to do that."
-
-"And they are bringing the alguazil's horse for Don Victoriano!"
-exclaimed the tobacconist. "Tricky as the very devil! There will be a
-scene. When you rode him, Segundo, did he play you no trick?"
-
-"Me, no. But he is lively."
-
-"You shall see, you shall see."
-
-The travelers were now coming out of the house, and the cavalcade
-began to form. The ladies seated themselves in their side-saddles and
-the men settled their feet in their stirrups. Then the scene
-predicted by the tobacconist took place, to the great scandal and the
-further delay of the party. As soon as the alguazil's nag became
-aware of the presence of a female of his race he began to snuff the
-air excitedly, neighing fiercely. Don Victoriano gathered up the
-reins, but, before the animal had felt the iron in his mouth, he
-became so unmanageable, first rearing, then kicking violently, and
-finally turning his head around to try to bite his rider's legs, that
-Don Victoriano, somewhat pale, thought it prudent to dismount.
-Agonde, furious, dismounted also.
-
-"What an infernal animal!" he cried. "Here, brutes--who told you
-to bring the alguazil's horse? One would suppose you didn't know it
-was a wild beast. You--Alcalde, or you, García--quick, go for
-Requinto's mule; it is only two steps from here. Señor Don
-Victoriano, take my mule. And that tiger, to the stable with him!"
-
-"No," interrupted Segundo, "I will ride him as he is already
-saddled. I will go with you as far as the cross."
-
-And Segundo, providing himself with a strong switch, caught the
-nag by the mane and at a bound was in the saddle. Instead of leaning
-his weight on the stirrup he pressed the animal's sides between his
-legs, raining a shower of blows at the same time on his head. The
-animal, which was already beginning to curvet and prance again, gave
-a snort of pain, and now, quivering and subdued, obeyed his rider's
-touch. The cavalcade put itself in motion as soon as Requinto's mule
-was brought, after handshakings, waving of hats, and even a timid
-_viva_, from what quarter no one knew. The cortége proceeded along
-the highway, the mare and the mules heading the procession, the
-donkeys following behind, and at their side the nag, kept in order by
-dint of switching. The sun was sinking in the west, turning the dust
-of the road into gold; the chestnut trees cast lengthened shadows on
-the ground, and from the osier-brake came a pleasant breeze laden
-with moisture from the river.
-
-Segundo rode along in silence; Victoriniña, delighted to be
-riding on a donkey, smiled, making fruitless efforts to hide with her
-frock her sharp knee-bones, which the shape of the saddle compelled
-her to raise and uncover. Nieves, leaning back in her saddle, opened
-her rose-lined écru lace parasol, and, as they started, drew from her
-bosom a diminutive watch, which she consulted for the hour. A few
-moments of embarrassed silence followed. At last Segundo felt that it
-was necessary to say something:
-
-"How are you doing, Victoriniña?" he said to the child. "Are you
-comfortable?"
-
-"Yes, quite comfortable."
-
-"I warrant you would rather ride on my horse. If you are not
-afraid I will take you before me."
-
-The girl, whose embarrassment had now reached its height, lowered
-her eyes without answering; her mother, smiling graciously, however,
-now joined in the conversation.
-
-"And tell me, García, why don't you address the child as _thou_?
-You treat her with so much ceremony! You will make her fancy she is a
-young lady already."
-
-"I should not dare to do so without her permission."
-
-"Come, Victoriniña, tell this gentleman he has your permission."
-
-The child took refuge in that invincible muteness of growing
-girls whom an exquisite and precocious sensibility renders painfully
-shy. A smile parted her lips, and at the same time her eyes filled
-with tears. Mademoiselle said something gently to her in French;
-meanwhile Nieves and Segundo, laughing confidentially at the
-incident, found the way smoothed for them to begin a conversation.
-
-"When do you think we shall arrive at Las Vides? Is it a pretty
-place? Shall we be comfortable there? How will it agree with
-Victoriano? What sort of a life shall we lead? Shall we have many
-visitors? Is there a garden?"
-
-"Las Vides is a beautiful place," said Segundo. "It has an air of
-antiquity--a lordly air, as it were. I like the escutcheon, and a
-magnificent grapevine that covers the courtyard, and the camellias
-and lemon trees in the orchards, that look like good-sized chestnut
-trees, and the view of the river, and, above all, a pine grove that
-talks and even sings--don't laugh--that sings; yes, Señora, and
-better than most professional singers. Don't you believe it? Well,
-you shall see for yourself presently."
-
-Nieves looked with lively curiosity at the young man and then
-hastily turned her glance aside, remembering the quick and nervous
-hand-pressure of the day before, when she was alighting from the
-carriage. For the second time in the space of a few hours this young
-man had surprised her. Nieves led an extremely regular life in
-Madrid--the life of the middle classes, in which all the incidents
-are commonplace. She went to mass and shopped in the morning; in the
-afternoon she went to the Retiro, or made visits; in the evening she
-went to her parents' house or to the theater with her husband; on
-rare occasions to some ball or banquet at the house of the Duke of
-Puenteanchas, a client of Don Victoriano's. When the latter received
-the portfolio it made little change in Nieves' way of life. She
-received a few more salutations than before in the Retiro; the clerks
-in the shops were more attentive to her; the Duchess of Puenteanchas
-said some flattering things to her, calling her "pet," and here ended
-for Nieves the pleasure of the ministry. The trip to Vilamorta, the
-picturesque country of which she had so often heard her father speak,
-was a novel incident in her monotonous life. Segundo seemed to her a
-curious detail of the journey. He looked at her and spoke to her in
-so odd a way. Bah, fancies! Between this young man and herself there
-was nothing in common. A passing acquaintance, like so many others to
-be met here at every step. So the pines sang, did they? A misfortune
-for Gayarre! And Nieves smiled graciously, dissembling her strange
-thoughts and went on asking questions, to which Segundo responded in
-expressive phrases. Night was beginning to fall. Suddenly, the
-cavalcade, leaving the highroad, turned into a path that led among
-pine groves and woods. At a turn of the path could be seen the
-picturesque dark stone cross, whose steps invited to prayer or to
-sentimental reverie. Agonde stopped here and took his leave of the
-party, and Segundo followed his example.
-
-As the tinkling of the donkeys' bells grew fainter in the
-distance Segundo felt an inexplicable sensation of loneliness and
-abandonment steal over him, as if he had just parted forever from
-persons who were dear to him or who played an important part in his
-life. "A pretty fool I am!" said the poet to himself. "What have I to
-do with these people or they with me? Nieves has invited me to spend
-a few days at Las Vides, _en famille_. When Nieves returns to Madrid
-this winter she will speak of me as 'That lawyer's son, that we met
-at Vilamorta.' Who am I? What position should I occupy in her house?
-An altogether secondary one. That of a boy who is treated with
-consideration because his father disposes of votes."
-
-While Segundo was thus caviling, the apothecary overtook him, and
-horse and mule pursued their way side by side. In the twilight the
-poet could distinguish the placid smile of Agonde, his red cheeks,
-looking redder in contrast to the lustrous black mustache, his
-expression of sensual amiability and epicurean beatitude. An enviable
-lot was the apothecary's. This man was happy in his comfortable and
-well-ordered shop, with his circle of friends, his cap and his
-embroidered slippers, taking life as one takes a glass of cordial,
-sipping it with enjoyment, in peace and harmony, along with the other
-guests at the banquet of life. Why should not Segundo be satisfied
-with what satisfied Agonde perfectly? Whence came this longing for
-something that was not precisely money, nor pleasure, nor fame, nor
-love--which partook of all these, which embraced them all and which
-perhaps nothing would satisfy?
-
-"Segundo."
-
-"Eh?" he answered, turning his head toward Agonde.
-
-"How silent you are, my boy! What do you think of the Minister?"
-
-"What would you have me think of him?"
-
-"And the Señora? Come, you have noticed her, I warrant. She wears
-black silk stockings, like the priests. When she was mounting the
-donkey----"
-
-"I am going to take a gallop as far as Vilamorta. Do you care to
-join me, Saturnino?"
-
-"Gallop with this mule? I should arrive there with my stomach in
-my mouth. Gallop you, if you have a fancy for doing so."
-
-The nag galloped for half a league or so, urged by his rider's
-whip. As they drew near the canebrake by the river, Segundo slackened
-his horse's gallop to a very slow walk. It was now almost dark and
-the cool mists rose, moist and clinging, from the bosom of the
-Avieiro. Segundo remembered that it was two or three days since he
-had put his foot in Leocadia's house. No doubt the schoolmistress was
-now fretting herself to death, weeping and watching for him. This
-thought brought sudden balm to Segundo's wounded spirit. How tenderly
-Leocadia loved him! With what joy did she welcome him! How deeply his
-poetry, his words, moved her! And he--why was it that he did not
-share her ardor? Of this exclusive, this absolute, boundless love,
-Segundo had never deigned to accept even the half; and of all the
-tender terms of endearment invented by the muse he chose for Leocadia
-the least poetical, the least romantic; as we separate the gold and
-silver in our purse from the baser coin, setting aside for the beggar
-the meanest copper, so did Segundo dispense with niggard hand the
-treasures of his love. A hundred times had it happened to him, in his
-walks through the country, to fill his hat with violets, with
-hyacinths and branches of blackberry blossoms, only to throw them all
-into the river on reaching the village, in order not to carry them to
-Leocadia.
-
-
-
-
- VII.
-
-
-While she distributed their tasks among the children, saying to
-one, "Take care to make this hem straight," to another, "Make this
-seam even, the stitch smaller," to a third, "Use your handkerchief
-instead of your dress," and to still another, "Sit still, child,
-don't move your feet," Leocadia cast a glance from time to time
-toward the plaza in the hope of seeing Segundo pass by. But no
-Segundo was to be seen. The flies settled themselves to sleep,
-buzzing, on the ceiling; the heat abated; the afternoon came, and the
-children went away. Leocadia felt a profound sadness take possession
-of her and, without waiting to put the house in order, she went to
-her room and threw herself on the bed.
-
-The glass door was pushed gently open, and some one entered
-softly.
-
-"Mamma," said the intruder, in a low voice.
-
-The schoolmistress did not answer.
-
-"Mamma, mamma," repeated the hunchback, in a louder voice.
-"Mamma!" he shouted at last.
-
-"Is that you? What do you want?"
-
-"Are you ill?"
-
-"No, child."
-
-"As you went to bed----'
-
-"I have a slight headache. There, leave me in peace."
-
-Minguitos turned round and walked in silence toward the door. As
-her eyes fell on the protuberance of his back, a sharp pang pierced
-the heart of the schoolmistress. How many tears that hump had cost
-her in other days. She raised herself on her elbow.
-
-"Minguitos!" she called.
-
-"What is it, mamma?"
-
-"Don't go away. How do you feel to-day? Have you any pain?"
-
-"I feel pretty well, mamma. Only my chest hurts me."
-
-"Let me see; come here."
-
-Leocadia sat up in the bed and, taking the child's head between
-her hands, looked at him with a mother's hungry look. Minguitos' face
-was long and of a melancholy cast; the prominent lower jaw was in
-keeping with the twisted and misshapen body that reminded one of a
-building shaken out of shape by an earthquake or a tree twisted by a
-hurricane. Minguitos' deformity was not congenital. He had always
-been sickly, indeed, and it had always been remarked that his head
-seemed too heavy for his body, and that his legs seemed too frail to
-support him. Leocadia recalled one by one the incidents of his
-childhood. At five years old the boy had met with an accident--a fall
-down the stairs; from that day he lost all his liveliness; he walked
-little and never ran. He contracted a habit of sitting Turkish
-fashion, playing marbles for hours at a time. If he rose his legs
-soon warned him to sit down again. When he stood, his movements were
-vacillating and awkward. When he was quiet he felt no pain, but when
-he turned any part of his body, he experienced slight pains in the
-spinal column. The trouble increased with time; the boy complained of
-a feeling as if an iron band were compressing his chest. Then his
-mother, now thoroughly alarmed, consulted a famous physician, the
-best in Orense. He prescribed frictions with iodine, large doses of
-phosphates of lime, and sea-bathing. Leocadia hastened with the boy
-to a little sea-port. After taking two or three baths, the trouble
-increased; he could not bend his body; his spinal column was rigid
-and it was only when he was in a horizontal position that he felt any
-relief from his now severe pains. Sores appeared on his skin, and one
-morning when Leocadia begged him with tears to straighten himself,
-and tried to lift him up by the arms, he uttered a horrible cry.
-
-"I am broken in two, mamma--I am broken in two," he repeated with
-anguish, while his mother, with trembling fingers sought to find what
-had caused his cry.
-
-It was true! The backbone had bent outward, forming an angle on a
-level with his shoulderblades, the softened vertebræ had sunk and
-_cifosis_, the hump, the indelible mark of irremediable calamity, was
-to deform henceforth this child who was dearer to her than her life.
-The schoolmistress had had a moment of animal and sublime anguish,
-the anguish of the wild beast that sees its young mutilated. She had
-uttered shriek after shriek, cursing the doctor, cursing herself,
-tearing her hair and digging her nails into her flesh. Afterward
-tears had come and she had showered kisses, delirious, but soothing
-and sweet, on the boy, and her grief took a resigned form. During
-nine years Leocadia had had no other thought than to watch over her
-little cripple by night and by day, sheltering him in her love,
-amusing with ingenious inventions the idle hours of his sedentary
-childhood. A thousand incidents of this time recurred to Leocadia's
-memory. The boy suffered from obstinate dyspnoea, due to the pressure
-of the sunken vertebræ on the respiratory organs, and his mother
-would get up in the middle of the night and go in her bare feet to
-listen to his breathing and to raise his pillows. As these
-recollections came to her mind Leocadia felt her heart melt and
-something stir within her like the remains of a great love, the warm
-ashes of an immense fire, and she experienced the unconscious
-reaction of maternity, the irresistible impulse which makes a mother
-see in her grown-up son only the infant she has nursed and protected,
-to whom she would have given her blood, if it had been necessary,
-instead of milk. And uttering a cry of love, pressing her feverish
-lips passionately to the pallid temples of the hunchback, she said,
-falling back naturally into the caressing expressions of the dialect:
-
-"_Malpocadiño._ Who loves you? say, who loves you dearly? Who?"
-
-"You don't love me, mamma. You don't love me," the boy returned,
-half-smiling, leaning his head with delight on the bosom that had
-sheltered his sad childhood. The mother, meantime, wildly kissed his
-hair, his neck, his eyes--as if to make up for lost time--lavishing
-upon him the honeyed words with which infants are beguiled, words
-profaned in hours of passion, which overflowed in the pure channel of
-maternal love.
-
-"My treasure--my king--my glory."
-
-At last the hunchback felt a tear fall on his cheek. Delicious
-assuagement! At first, the tears were large and round, scorching
-almost, but soon they came in a gentle shower and then ceased
-altogether, and there remained where they had fallen only a grateful
-sense of coolness. Passionate phrases rushed simultaneously from the
-lips of mother and son.
-
-"Do you love me dearly, dearly, dearly? As much as your whole
-life?"
-
-"As much, my life, my treasure."
-
-"Will you always love me?"
-
-"Always, always, my joy."
-
-"Will you do something to please me, mamma? I want to ask
-you----"
-
-"What?"
-
-"A favor. Don't turn your face away!"
-
-The hunchback observed that his mother's form suddenly grew stiff
-and rigid as a bar of iron. He no longer felt the sweet warmth of her
-moist eyelids, and the gentle contact of her wet lashes on his cheek.
-In a voice that had a metallic sound Leocadia asked her son:
-
-"And what is the favor you want? Let me hear it."
-
-Minguitos murmured without bitterness, with resignation:
-
-"Nothing, mamma, nothing. I was only in jest."
-
-"But what was the favor you were going to ask me?"
-
-"Nothing, nothing, indeed."
-
-"No, you wanted to ask something," persisted the schoolmistress,
-seizing the pretext to give vent to her anger. "Otherwise you are
-very deceitful and very sly. You keep everything hidden in your
-breast. Those are the lessons Flores teaches you; do you think I
-don't notice it?"
-
-Saying this, she pushed the boy away from her, and sprang from
-the bed. In the hall outside almost at the same moment was heard a
-firm and youthful step. Leocadia trembled, and turning to Minguitos,
-stammered:
-
-"Go, go to Flores. Leave me alone. I do not feel well, and you
-make me worse,"
-
-Segundo's brow was clouded, and as soon as the joy of seeing him
-had subsided Leocadia was seized with the desire to restore him to
-good humor. She waited patiently for a fitting opportunity, however,
-and when this came, throwing her arms around his neck, she began with
-the complaint: Where had he kept himself? Why had he stayed away so
-long? The poet unburdened himself of his grievances. It was
-intolerable to follow in the train of a great man. And allowing
-himself to be carried away by the pleasure of speaking of what
-occupied his mind he described Don Victoriano and the radicals, he
-satirized Agonde's reception of his guests, his manner of
-entertaining them, spoke of the hopes he founded in the protection of
-the ex-Minister, giving them as a reason for the necessity of paying
-court to Don Victoriano. Leocadia fixed her dog-like look on
-Segundo's countenance.
-
-"And the Señora and the girl--what are they like?"
-
-Segundo half-closed his eyes the better to contemplate an
-attractive and charming image that presented itself to his mental
-vision, and to reflect that in the existence of Nieves he played no
-part whatsoever, it being manifest folly for him to think of Señora
-de Comba, who did not think of him. This reflection, natural and
-simple enough, aroused his anger. There was awakened within him a
-keen longing for the unattainable, that insensate and unbridled
-desire with which the likeness of a beautiful woman dead for
-centuries may inspire some dreamer in a museum.
-
-"But answer me--are those ladies handsome?" the schoolmistress
-asked again.
-
-"The mother, yes"--answered Segundo, speaking with the careless
-frankness of one who is secure of his auditor. "Her hair is fair, and
-her eyes are blue--a light blue that makes one think of the verses of
-Becquer." And he began to recite:
-
- "'Tu pupila es azul, y cuando ries
- Su claridad suave me recuerda----'"
-
-Leocadia listened to him at first with eyes cast down; afterward
-with her face turned away from him. When he had finished the poem she
-said in an altered voice, with feigned calmness.
-
-"They will invite you to go there."
-
-"Where?"
-
-"To Las Vides, of course. I hear they intend to have a great deal
-of company."
-
-"Yes; they have given me a pressing invitation, but I shall not
-go. Uncle Clodio insists upon it that I ought to cultivate the
-friendship of Don Victoriano so that he may be of use to me in Madrid
-and help me to get a position there. But, child, to go and play a
-sorry part is not to my liking. This suit is the best I have, and it
-is in last year's fashion. If they play tresillo or give tips to the
-servants--and it is impossible to make my father understand this--and
-I shall not try to do so: God forbid. So that they shall not catch a
-sight of me in Las Vides."
-
-When she heard what his intentions were, Leocadia's countenance
-cleared up, and rising, radiant with happiness, she ran to the
-kitchen. Flores was washing plates and cups and saucers by the light
-of a lamp, knocking them angrily together and rubbing savagely.
-
-"The coffee-pot--did you clean it?"
-
-"Presently, presently," responded the old woman. "Anyone would
-think that one was made of wood, that one is never to get tired--that
-one can do things flying."
-
-"Give it to me, I will clean it. Put more wood on the fire; it is
-going out and the beefsteak will be spoiled." And so saying Leocadia
-washed the coffee-pot, cleaning the filter with a knitting-needle,
-and put some fresh water down to boil in a new saucepan, throwing
-more wood on the fire.
-
-"Yes, heap on wood," growled Flores, "as we get it for nothing!"
-
-Leocadia, who was slicing some potatoes for the beefsteak, paid
-no attention to her. When she had cut up as many as she judged
-necessary, she washed her hands hastily in the jar of the drain, full
-of dirty water, on whose surface floated large patches of grease. She
-then hurried to the parlor where Segundo was waiting for her, and
-soon afterward Flores brought in the supper, which they ate, seated
-at a small side-table. By the time they had got to the coffee Segundo
-began to be more communicative. This coffee was what Leocadia most
-prided herself on. She had bought a set of English china, an
-imitation lacquer-box, a _vermeil_ sugar-tongs and two small silver
-spoons, and she always placed on the table with the coffee a
-liquor-stand, supplied with cumin, rum, and anisette. At the third
-glass, of cumin, seeing the poet amiable and propitious, Leocadia put
-her arm around his neck. He drew back brusquely, noticing with strong
-repulsion the odor of cooking and of parsley with which the garments
-of the schoolmistress were impregnated.
-
-At this moment precisely Minguitos, after letting his shoes drop
-on the floor, was drawing the coverlet around him with a sigh.
-Flores, seated on a low chair, began to recite the rosary. The sick
-child required, to put him to sleep, the monotonous murmur of the
-husky voice which had lulled him to rest, ever since his mother had
-ceased to keep him company at bedtime. The Ave Marias and Gloria
-Patris, mumbled rather than pronounced, little by little dulled
-thought and, by the time the litany was reached, sleep had stolen
-over him, and, half-unconscious, it was with difficulty he made the
-responses to the barbarous phrases of the old woman: "Juana celi--Ora
-pro nobis--Sal-es-enfermorun--nobis--Refajos
-pecadorum--bis--Consolate flitorum--sss----"
-
-The only response was the labored, restless, uneven breathing
-that came through the sleeping boy's half-closed lips. Flores softly
-put out the tallow candle, took off her shoes, in order to make no
-noise, and stole out gently, feeling her way along the dining-room
-wall. From the moment in which Minguitos fell asleep there was no
-more rattling of dishes in the kitchen.
-
-
-
-
- VIII.
-
-
-It was late before the Swan blew out the tallow candle which Aunt
-Gáspara placed every day, always with much grumbling, in his brass
-candlestick. Seated at the little table littered with books, he had
-before him a sheet of paper half covered with lines of unequal
-length, variegated with blots and corrections, little heaps of sand,
-and here and there a flourish. Segundo would not have slept all night
-if he had not first written down the poem which, from the moment he
-had left the cross, had been running through his brain. Only that,
-before taking up the pen, he seemed to have the poem already composed
-in his head, so that all he had to do was to turn the spigot and it
-would flow out in a stream, and when he took the pen in his hand the
-verses, instead of rushing forth, hid themselves or vanished. A few
-strophes fell on the paper, rounded, fluent, finished, with
-harmonious and opportune rhymes, with a certain sweetness and
-sonorousness extremely delightful to the author himself, who
-scribbled them down hastily before they should take flight. Of
-others, however, only the first two lines occurred to him, and,
-perhaps, the fourth--this last rounded, effective; but the third line
-was wanting and he must hunt for it, fill up the space, graft on the
-syllables to eke out the meter. The poet paused and looked up at the
-ceiling, biting the ends of his mustache, and then the idle pen
-traced, obeying the mechanical impulse of the hand, a cocked hat, a
-comet, or some other equally irrelevant design. Sometimes after
-rejecting seven or eight rhymes he would content himself with the
-ninth, which was neither better nor worse than the others. When a
-superfluous syllable would cause a line to halt, he must look for
-another adverb, another adjective. And the accents! If the poet could
-only enjoy the privilege, of saying, eternél, for instance, instead
-of etérnel, it would be so easy to write verses!
-
-Confounded technical difficulties! The divine fire of inspiration
-glowed and burned in Segundo's mind, but as soon as he tried to
-transfer it to the paper, to give expression to what he felt--to
-condense, in words, a world of dreams, a psychic nebula--his mind
-became a blank. To unite the form with the idea, to imprison feeling
-in the golden links of rhyme! Ah, what a light and flowery chain in
-appearance, and how hard to weave in reality! How deceptive the
-natural grace, the facile harmony of the master! How easy it seems to
-express simple, familiar images, to utter the chimeras of the
-imagination and the heart in easy and flowing meter, and yet how
-impossible it is, for him who is not called Becquer, to give his
-verse those palpitating, diaphanous, azure wings on which the
-Becquerian butterfly soars!
-
-While the Swan continues his task of effacing and correcting,
-Leocadia is in her bedroom, preparing to retire. On other nights she
-went to her room with a smile on her lips, her face glowing, her eyes
-humid and half-closed, with deep circles under them, her hair in
-disorder. And on those nights she was in no hurry to retire; she
-would busy herself arranging the articles on her bureau, she would
-even look at herself in the glass of her cheap toilet table. To-night
-her lips were dry, her cheeks pale, she went at once to bed, loosened
-her clothing, and let it fall on the floor, put out the light and
-buried her face in the cool, thick cotton sheets. She did not wish to
-think, all she wished was to forget and to sleep. She tried to lie
-still. A thousand needles seemed to pierce her flesh; she turned
-around, in search of a cool spot, then turned again in search of
-another, and presently she threw off the sheets. She felt a horrible
-restlessness, a savor of bitterness in her mouth. In the silence of
-the night she could hear the tumultuous beating of her heart; if she
-lay on her left side its noise almost deafened her. She tried to fix
-her thoughts on indifferent subjects, and repeated to herself with
-monotonous and persistent regularity--"To-morrow is Sunday, the
-children will not come." In vain; her brain boiled, her blood burned
-as before. Leocadia was jealous.
-
-Measureless, nameless torture! Hitherto the poor schoolmistress
-had not known the accompaniment of love, jealousy, whose barbed sting
-pierces the soul, whose consuming fire dries up the blood, whose
-chill freezes the heart, whose restless anguish makes the nerves
-quiver. Segundo scarcely noticed the young girls of Vilamorta; as for
-the peasant girls, they did not exist for him, he did not even regard
-them as women; so that Leocadia had attributed the poet's hours of
-coldness to the bad offices of the muses. But now! She recalled the
-poem, "A los ojos azules," and his manner of reciting it. Those
-honeyed verses were to her gall and wormwood. Tears sprang to her
-eyes, and she broke into convulsive sobs which shook her frame and
-made the bedstead creak and the cornhusks of the mattress rustle.
-Still her overwrought brain did not suspend its activity. There was
-not a doubt but that Segundo was in love with Señora de Comba; but
-she was a married woman. Bah! in Madrid and in novels all the married
-women have lovers. And then, who could resist Segundo, a poet who was
-the rival of Becquer, who was young, handsome, ardent, when he wished
-to be so?
-
-What could Leocadia do to avert this great calamity? Was it not
-better to resign herself to it? Ah, resignation, that is easily said!
-Why had God denied her the power to express her feelings? Why had she
-not knelt before Segundo, begging him for a little love, describing
-to him and communicating to him the flame that consumed the marrow of
-her bones? Why had she remained mute when she had so many things to
-say? Segundo would not go to Las Vides; so much the better. He had no
-money; better still. He would accept no position, he would not leave
-Vilamorta, better and better. But what did it matter if after all
-Segundo did not love her; if he had turned away from her with a
-gesture which she could still see in the darkness, or rather in the
-lurid light of jealousy.
-
-How warm the night was! How restless she felt! She got out of bed
-and threw herself on the floor, thinking to find some relief in the
-coolness of the boards. Instead of feeling any alleviation she was
-seized with a fit of trembling. A lump seemed to rise in her throat
-that prevented her from breathing. She made an effort to stand up but
-found that she was not able; she felt a hysterical attack coming on,
-but she tried to restrain her cries, her sobs, her contortions, in
-order not to awaken Flores. For a time she succeeded; but at last the
-nervous crisis conquered; her rigid limbs writhed, she dug her nails
-into her throat, she rolled about and beat her temples against the
-floor. Then a cold perspiration broke out over her body, and for a
-moment she lost consciousness. When she returned to herself she was
-calm but exhausted. She rose to her feet, went back to bed, drew the
-clothing over her and sank into a sort of stupor, in which there was
-neither thought nor feeling. The beneficent sleep of early morning
-had wrapped her senses in oblivion.
-
-She woke late, unrested, exhausted, and, as it were, stupefied.
-She could scarcely manage to dress herself; it seemed to her as if a
-year had passed since the night before, and as for her jealous rage,
-her projects of resistance--how could she have thought of such
-things? All that mattered to her, all she desired, was that Segundo
-should be happy, that he should achieve his high destiny, that he
-should be famous. The rest was madness, a convulsion, an attack of
-the nerves to which she had given way, overcome by the sense of her
-loneliness.
-
-The schoolmistress opened the bureau-drawer in which she kept her
-savings and the money for the household expenses. Beside a pile of
-stockings was a slim and flabby purse. A short time ago it had
-contained a few thousand reals, all she possessed in money. Scarcely
-thirty dollars remained, and out of these she must pay Cansin for a
-black merino dress, the confectioner for liqueurs, and some friends
-at Orense for purchases made on her account. And she would not
-receive her little income until November. A brilliant prospect truly!
-
-After a moment of anguish caused by the struggle between her
-economical principles and her resolution, Leocadia washed her face,
-smoothed her hair, put on her dress and her silk manto and left the
-house. Being Sunday, the streets were full of people, and the cracked
-bell of the chapel kept up an incessant ringing. The plaza was full
-of bustle and animation. Before Doña Eufrasia's door, three or four
-mules, whose clerical riders were in the shop, were impatiently
-trying to protect themselves from the persistent attacks of the flies
-and hornets, shaking their heads, stamping their hoofs, and switching
-their flanks with their rough tails. And the fruit-venders, too, in
-the intervals between selling their wares and chatting and laughing
-with one another, were watchful to chase away the troublesome insects
-that settled on the cherries and tomatoes wherever the skin was
-broken, leaving uncovered the sweet pulp or the red flesh. But the
-grand conclave of the flies was held in the confectionery of Ramon.
-It was nauseating to see the insects buzzing blindly in the hot
-atmosphere, entangling their legs in the caramels, and then making
-desperate efforts to free themselves from their sweet captivity. A
-swarm of flies were buzzing around a méringue pie which adorned the
-center of the shelf, and Ramon having grown tired of defending it
-against their attacks, the invading army rifled it at their pleasure;
-around the plate lay the bodies of the flies which had perished in
-the attack; some dry and shriveled, others swollen and with white and
-livid abdomens.
-
-Leocadia entered the back shop. Ramon was there, with his
-shirt-sleeves rolled up, exposing his brawny arms, shaking a saucepan
-gently to cool the egg-paste which it contained; then he proceeded to
-cut the paste with a hot knife, the sugar fizzing and sending forth a
-pleasant odor as it came in contact with the hot metal. The
-confectioner passed the back of his hand across his perspiring brow.
-
-What did Leocadia want? Brizar anisette, eh? Well, it was all
-sold. "You, Rosa, isn't it true that the anisette is all sold?"
-
-The confectioner's wife was seated in a corner of the kitchen,
-feeding a sickly-looking infant. She fixed her gloomy, morbidly
-jealous gaze on the schoolmistress and cried in a harsh voice:
-
-"If you come for more anisette, remember the three bottles that
-are still unpaid for."
-
-"I will pay them now," answered the schoolmistress, taking a
-handful of dollars from her pocket.
-
-"Never mind that now, there is no hurry," stammered the
-confectioner, ashamed of his wife's rudeness.
-
-"Take it, Ramon. Why, it was to give it to you that I came."
-
-"If you insist; but the deuce a hurry I was in."
-
-Leocadia hastened away. Not to have remembered the confectioner's
-wife! Who would ask anything from Ramon before that jealous tigress,
-who, small as she was, and sickly as she looked, ruled her burly
-husband with a rod of iron. Perhaps Cansin----
-
-The clothier was displaying his goods to a group of countrywomen,
-one of whom persisted in declaring the bunting she was looking at to
-be cotton, rubbing it between her fingers to prove herself in the
-right. Cansin, on his side, was rubbing the cloth with exactly
-opposite views.
-
-"How should it be cotton, woman, how should it be cotton?" he
-cried in his shrill voice, putting the cloth close to the buyer's
-face. Cansin appeared so angry that Leocadia did not venture to
-address him; she passed on, quickening her steps. She thought of her
-other suitor, the tavern-keeper. But she suddenly remembered, with a
-feeling of repulsion, his thick lips, his cheeks that seemed to drip
-blood. Turning over in her mind every possible means by which she
-might obtain the money she needed, a thought occurred to her. She
-rejected it, she weighed it, she accepted it. Quickening her pace,
-she walked toward the abode of the lawyer García.
-
-At her first knock Aunt Gáspara opened the door. What a meaning
-contraction of the brow and lips, what a sour face greeted her!
-Leocadia, abashed and covered with confusion, stood still on the
-threshold. The old woman, like a vigilant watch-dog, barred the
-entrance, ready to bark or bite at the first sign of danger.
-
-"What did you want?" she growled.
-
-"To speak to Don Justo. May I?" said the schoolmistress humbly.
-
-"I don't know. I'll see."
-
-And the dragon without further ceremony shut the door in
-Leocadia's face. Leocadia waited. At the end of ten minutes a harsh
-voice called to her:
-
-"Come on!"
-
-The heart of the schoolmistress bounded within her. To go through
-the house in which Segundo was born! It was dark and shabby, cold and
-bare, like the abode of a miser, in which the furniture is made to do
-service until it falls to pieces with old age. Crossing a hall,
-Leocadia saw through a half-open door some garments belonging to
-Segundo hanging on a peg, and recognized them with a secret thrill.
-At the end of the hall was the lawyer's office, an ill-kept, untidy
-room, full of papers and dusty and uninteresting-looking books. Aunt
-Gáspara withdrew, and Leocadia remained standing before the lawyer,
-who, without inviting her to be seated, said to her with a suspicious
-and hostile air, and in the severe tones of a judge:
-
-"And what can I do for you, Señora Doña Leocadia?"
-
-A formula accompanied inwardly by the observation:
-
-"I wager that the scheming schoolmistress has come to tell me
-that she is going to marry that crazy boy and that I shall have to
-support them both."
-
-Leocadia fixed her dejected gaze on García's face, trying to
-discover in his dry and withered features some resemblance to the
-features of a beloved countenance. His face, indeed, resembled
-Segundo's in all but the expression, which was very different; that
-of the father's being as cautious and suspicious as the son's was
-dreamy and abstracted.
-
-"Señor Don Justo----" stammered the schoolmistress. "I am sorry
-to trouble you. I hope you will not take this visit amiss--they told
-me that you----Señor--I need a loan----"
-
-"Money!" roared the lawyer, clenching his fists. "You ask me for
-money!"
-
-"Yes, Señor, on some property----"
-
-"Ah!" (sudden transition in the lawyer, who became all softness
-and amiability). "But how stupid I am! Come in, come in and sit down,
-Doña Leocadia. I hope you are quite well. Why, anyone might find
-himself in a difficulty. And what property is it? Talking together
-people come to an understanding, Señora. Perhaps the vineyard of La
-Junqueira, or the other little one, El Adro? Of late years they have
-yielded little----"
-
-The business was discussed and the promissory note was signed.
-Aunt Gáspara meanwhile walked uneasily and with ghost-like tread, up
-and down the hall outside. When her brother issued from the room and
-gave her some orders she crossed herself hastily several times on the
-forehead and the breast. She then descended stealthily to the cellar,
-and, after some little delay, returned and emptied on the lawyer's
-table the contents of her apron, whence rolled four objects covered
-with dust and cobwebs, from which proceeded, as they struck the
-table, the peculiar sound produced by coin. These objects were an
-earthern savings-bank, a stocking, a leathern sack, and a little
-muslin bag.
-
-That afternoon Leocadia said to Segundo:
-
-"Do you know what, sweetheart? It is a pity that for the sake of
-a new suit or some such trifle you should lose the chance of
-establishing yourself and obtaining what you wish. See, I have a
-little money here that I have no particular use for. Do you want it,
-eh? I will give it to you now and you can return it to me by and by."
-
-Segundo drew himself up and, with a genuine outburst of offended
-dignity, exclaimed:
-
-"Never propose anything like that to me again. I accept your
-attentions at times so as not to see you breaking your heart at my
-refusal, but that you should clothe me and support me--no, that is
-too much."
-
-Half an hour later the schoolmistress renewed her entreaties
-affectionately, availing herself of the opportunity, seeing the Swan
-somewhat pensive. Between him and her there ought to be no _mine_ or
-_thine_. Why should he hesitate to accept what it afforded her so
-great a pleasure to give? Did her future by chance depend upon those
-few paltry dollars? With them he could present himself decently at
-Las Vides, publish his verses, go to Madrid. It would make her so
-happy to see him triumph, eclipse Campoamor, Nuñez de Arce, and all
-the rest! And what was there to prevent Segundo from returning her
-the money, and with interest, too? Talking thus, Leocadia filled a
-handkerchief tied at the four corners with ounces and _doblillos_ and
-_centenes_ and handed it to the poet, saying in a voice rendered
-husky by her emotion:
-
-"Will you slight me?"
-
-Segundiño took the unbeautiful, ungraceful head of the
-schoolmistress between his hands, and looking fixedly in the eyes
-that looked at him humid with happiness he said:
-
-"Leocadia, I know that you are the one human being in this world
-who loves me truly."
-
-"Segundiño, my life," she stammered, beside herself with
-happiness, "it isn't worth mentioning. Just as I give you that--as I
-hope for salvation--I would give you the blood from my veins!"
-
-And what would Aunt Gáspara have said had she known that several
-of the ounces from the stocking, the savings-bank, the sack, and the
-bag would return immediately, loyal and well-trained, to sleep, if
-not under the rafters of the cellar, at least under the roof of Don
-Justo?
-
-
-
-
- IX.
-
-
-The grapevine of Las Vides which has such pleasant recollections
-for Don Victoriano Andres de la Comba, bears those large, substantial
-grapes of the light red and pale green hues which predominate in
-Flemish vineyards, which are known in the neighborhood by the name of
-_náparo_ or _Jaen_ grapes. Its clusters hang in long corymbs of a
-gracefully irregular shape, half hiding themselves among the thick
-foliage. The vine casts a cool shade, and the murmur of a slender
-stream of water that falls into a rough stone basin in which
-vegetables lie soaking, adds to the air of peacefulness of the scene.
-
-The massive building looks almost like a fortress; the main
-building is flanked by two square towers, low-roofed and pierced by
-deep-set windows; in the middle of the central building, above a long
-iron balcony, stands out the large escutcheon with the armorial
-bearings of the Mendez--five vine-leaves and a wolf's head dripping
-blood. This balcony commands a view of the mountain slope and of the
-river that winds below; at the side of one of the towers is a wooden
-gallery, open to the sun, which projects over the garden, and where,
-thanks to the southern exposure, fine carnations grow luxuriantly in
-old pots filled with mold, and wooden boxes overflow with sweet
-basil, Santa Teresa's feathers, cactus, asclepias, and mallows--a
-sun-loving, rich, Arabian flora of intoxicating sweetness. The
-interior of the house is merely a series of whitewashed rooms with
-the rafters exposed and almost without furniture, excepting the
-central room, called the balcony-room, which is furnished with chairs
-with straw seats and wooden, lyre-shaped backs, of the style of the
-Empire. A mirror from which the quicksilver has almost disappeared,
-with a broad ebony frame ornamented with allegorical figures of
-gilded brass representing Phoebus driving his chariot, hangs above
-the sofa. The pride of Las Vides is not the rooms, but the cellar,
-the immense wine-vault, dark, and echoing, and cool as the aisle of a
-cathedral, with its large vats ranged in a line on either side. This
-apartment, unrivaled in the Border, is the one which Señor de las
-Vides shows with most pride--this and his bedroom, which has the
-peculiarity of being impregnable, as it is built in the body of the
-wall and can be entered only through a narrow passage which scarcely
-affords room for a man to turn around.
-
-Mendez de las Vides resembled in no way the traditional type of
-the ignorant lord of the manor who makes a cross for his signature, a
-type very common in that inland country. On the contrary, Mendez
-prided himself on being learned and cultured. He wrote a good
-hand--the small, close handwriting characteristic of obstinate old
-age; he read well, settling his spectacles on his nose, holding the
-newspaper or the book at a distance, emphasizing the words in a
-measured voice. Only his culture was confined to a single epoch--that
-of the Encyclopedists, with whom his father became acquainted late in
-life, and he himself a century after their time. He read Holbach,
-Rousseau, Voltaire, and the fourteen volumes of Feijóo. He bore the
-stamp and seal of this epoch even in his person. In religion he was a
-deist, never neglecting, however, to go to mass and to eat fish in
-Holy Week; in politics he was inclined to uphold the prerogatives of
-the crown against the church. Since the arrival of Don Victoriano,
-however, some movement had taken place in the stratified ideas of the
-hidalgo of Las Vides. He admired English independence, the regard
-paid to the right of the individual combined with a respect for
-tradition and the civilizing influence of the aristocratic classes--a
-series of Saxon importations more or less felicitous but to which Don
-Victoriano owed his political success. Uncle and nephew spent hour
-after hour discussing these abstruse problems of social science,
-while Nieves worked, listening with the hope of hearing the trot of
-some horse sound on the stones of the path announcing some visitor,
-some distraction in her idle existence.
-
-To make the journey to Las Vides, Segundo borrowed the vicious
-nag of the alguazil. From the cross onward the road grew precipitous
-and difficult. Smooth, slippery rocks obstructed the way at times, so
-that the rider was obliged to hold a tight rein to keep the animal,
-whose hoofs slipped continually, drawing sparks from the stone, from
-falling headlong down the descent. The ground, parched by the heat,
-was rugged and uneven. The houses seemed to cling to the
-mountain-side, threatening to lose their hold at every moment and
-topple over into the river, and the indispensable pot of carnations,
-whose flowers peeped through the rails of the wooden balconies,
-reminded one of the flower with which a gypsy carelessly adorns her
-hair. Sometimes Segundo's way led through a pine grove, and he
-inhaled the balsamic odor of the resin and rode over a carpet of dry
-leaves which deadened the sound of his horse's hoofs; suddenly,
-between two fences, a narrow path, bordered by blackberry bushes,
-foxglove and honeysuckle would open before him, and not unfrequently
-he experienced the delightful sense of well-being produced by the
-coolness cast by umbrageous foliage during the heat of the day, as he
-rode through some verdant tunnel--under some lofty grape arbor
-supported on wooden posts, beholding above his head the bunches
-already ripening, and listening to the noisy twittering of the
-sparrows and the shrill whistle of the blackbird. Lizards ran along
-the moss-covered walls. When two or more paths met Segundo would rein
-in his horse, to inquire the way to Las Vides of the women who toiled
-wearily up the steep path, bending under their load of pine wood, or
-the children playing at the doors of the houses.
-
-Far below ran the Avieiro, that, from the height at which Segundo
-regarded it, looked like a steel blade flashing and quivering in the
-sunshine. Before him was the mountain where, like the steps of a
-colossal amphitheater, rose one above another massive walls of
-whitish stone, erected for the support of the grapevines, the white
-stripes showing against the green background, forming an odd
-combination in which stood out here and there the red roof of some
-dovecote or some old homestead, the whole surmounted by the darker
-green of the pine woods. Segundo at last saw below him the tiles of
-Las Vides. He descended a steep slope and found himself before the
-portico.
-
-Under the grapevine were Victorina and Nieves. The child was
-amusing herself jumping the rope, which she did with extraordinary
-agility, the feet close together, without moving from one spot, the
-rope turning so rapidly that the graceful form of the jumper seemed
-to be enveloped in a sort of mist. Through the interstices in the
-foliage of the grapevine came large splashes of sunshine suddenly
-flooding the girl's form with light, in which her hair, her arms and
-her bare legs gleamed, for she wore only a loose navy blue blouse
-without sleeves. When she caught sight of Segundo she gave a little
-cry, dropped the rope and disappeared. Nieves, to make amends, rose
-from the bench where she had been working, with a smile on her lips
-and a slight flush of surprise on her cheeks, and extended her hand
-to the newcomer, who made haste to dismount from his horse.
-
-"And Señor Don Victoriano, how is he?" he asked.
-
-"Oh, he is somewhere in the neighborhood; he is very well, and
-very much interested in the labors of the country--very contented."
-Nieves said these words with the abstracted air with which we speak
-of things that possess only a slight interest for us. Segundo
-observed that the glance of the Minister's wife rested on his fine
-suit, which he had just received from Orense; and the idea that she
-might think it pretentious or ridiculous disturbed him so greatly for
-a time that he regretted not having worn his ordinary clothes.
-
-"You frightened away Victorina," continued Nieves, smiling.
-"Where can the silly child have disappeared to? No doubt she ran away
-because she had on only a blouse. You treat her like a woman, and she
-is growing unbearable. Come."
-
-Nieves gathered up the skirt of her morning gown of white
-cretonne spotted with rosebuds, and made her way intrepidly into the
-kitchen, which was on a level with the yard. Following the little
-Louis XV. heels covered by the Breton lace of her petticoat, Segundo
-passed through several rooms--the kitchen, the dining-room, the
-Rosary room, so called because in it Primo Genday said prayers with
-the servants, and finally the balcony room. Here Nieves stopped,
-saying:
-
-"I will call to them if they chance to be in the vineyard."
-
-And leaning out of the window, she cried:
-
-"Uncle! Victoriano! Uncle!"
-
-Two voices responded.
-
-"What is it? We are coming."
-
-Finding nothing opportune to say, Segundo was silent. Her
-conscience at rest, now that she had called the elders, Nieves turned
-toward him and said, with the graciousness of a hostess who knows
-what are the duties of her position:
-
-"How good this is of you! We had not thought you would care to
-come before the vintage. And now that the holidays are
-approaching--indeed I supposed we should see you in Vilamorta before
-seeing you here, as Victoriano has determined to take a fortnight's
-course of the waters."
-
-She leaned against the wall as she spoke, and Segundo tapped the
-toe of his boot with his whip. From the garden came the voice of
-Mendez:
-
-"Nieves! Nieves! Come down, if it is all the same to you."
-
-"Excuse me, I am going for a parasol."
-
-She soon returned, and Segundo offered her his arm. They
-descended into the garden through the gallery, and after the
-customary greetings were over Mendez protested against Segundo's
-returning that afternoon to Vilamorta.
-
-"The idea! A pretty thing that would be! To expose yourself to
-the heat twice in the same day!"
-
-And Señor de las Vides, availing himself of an opportunity which
-no rural proprietor ever lets slip, took possession of the poet and
-gave himself up to the task of showing him over the estate. He
-explained to him at the same time his viticultural enterprises. He
-had been among the first to employ sulphur fumigation with success,
-and he was now using new manures which would perhaps solve the
-problem of grape cultivation. He was making experiments with the
-common wine of the Border, trying to make with it an imitation of the
-rich Bordeaux; to impart to it, with powdered lily-root, the bouquet,
-the fragrance, of the French wines. But he had to contend against the
-spirit of routine, fanaticism, as he said, confidentially lowering
-his voice and laying his hand on Segundo's shoulder. The other
-vine-growers accused him of disregarding the wholesome traditions of
-the country, of adulterating and making up wine. As if they
-themselves did not make it up. Only that they did so, using common
-drugs for the purpose--logwood and nightshade. He contented himself
-with employing rational methods, scientific discoveries, the
-improvements of modern chemistry, condemning the absurd custom of
-using pitch in the skins, for although the people of the Border
-approved of the taste of pitch in the wine, saying that the pitch
-excited thirst, the exporters disliked, and with reason, the
-stickiness imparted by it. In short, if Segundo would like to see the
-wine vaults and the presses----
-
-There was no help for it. Nieves remained at the door, fearing to
-soil her dress. When they came out they proceeded to inspect the
-garden in detail. The garden, too, was a series of walls built one
-above another, like the steps of a stairs, sustaining narrow belts of
-earth, and this arrangement of the ground gave the vegetation an
-exuberance that was almost tropical. Camellias, peach trees, and
-lemon trees grew in wild luxuriance, laden at once with leaves,
-fruits, and blossoms. Bees and butterflies circled and hummed around
-them, sipping their sweets, wild with the joy of mere existence and
-drunken with the sunshine. They ascended by steep steps from wall to
-wall. Segundo gave his arm to Nieves and at the last step they paused
-to look at the river flowing below.
-
-"Look there," said Segundo, pointing to a distant hill on his
-left. "There is the pine grove. I wager you have forgotten."
-
-"I have not forgotten," responded Nieves, winking her blue eyes
-dazzled by the sun; "the pine grove that sings. You see that I have
-not forgotten. And tell me, do you know if it will sing to-day? For I
-should greatly like to hear it sing this afternoon."
-
-"If a breeze rises. With the air as still as it is now, the pines
-will be almost motionless and almost silent. And I say _almost_, for
-they are never quite silent. The friction of their tops is sufficient
-to cause a peculiar vibration, to produce a murmur----"
-
-"And does that happen," asked Nieves jestingly, "only with the
-pines here or is it the same with all pines?"
-
-"I cannot say," answered Segundo, looking at her fixedly.
-"Perhaps the only pine grove that will ever sing for me will be that
-of Las Vides."
-
-Nieves lowered her eyes, and then glanced round, as if in search
-of Don Victoriano and Mendez, who were on one of the steps above
-them. Segundo observed the movement and with rude imperiousness said
-to Nieves:
-
-"Let us join them."
-
-They rejoined their companions and did not again separate from
-them until they entered the dining-room, where Genday and Tropiezo
-were awaiting them. The last to arrive was the child, now modestly
-attired in a piqué frock and long stockings.
-
-The table at which they dined was placed, not in the center, but
-at one side of the dining-room; it was square and at the sides,
-instead of chairs, stood two oaken benches, dark with age, as seats
-for the guests. The head and foot of the table were left free for the
-service. Sober by nature, Segundo noticed with surprise the
-extraordinary quantity of food consumed by Don Victoriano, observing
-at the same time that his face was thinner than before. Now and then
-the statesman paused remorsefully, saying:
-
-"I am eating ravenously."
-
-The Amphitryon protested, and Tropiezo and Genday expounded in
-turn liberal and consoling doctrines. "Nature is very wise," said
-Señor de las Vides, who had not forgotten Rousseau, "and he who obeys
-her cannot go astray." Primo Genday, fond of eating, like all
-plethoric people, added with a certain theological unction: "In order
-that the soul may be disposed to serve God the reasonable
-requirements of the body must first be attended to." Tropiezo, on his
-side, pushed out his lower lip, denying the existence of certain
-new-fangled diseases. Since the world began there had been people who
-suffered as Don Victoriano was suffering and no one had ever thought
-of depriving them of eating and drinking, quite the contrary. For the
-very reason that the disease was a wasting one it was necessary to
-eat well. Don Victoriano allowed himself to be easily persuaded.
-Those dishes of former times, those antiquated, miraculous
-cruet-stands in which the oil and the vinegar came from the same tube
-without ever mingling, that immense loaf placed on the table as a
-center-piece, were for him so many delightful relics of the past,
-which reminded him of happy hours, the irresponsible years of
-existence. At the dessert, when Primo Genday, still heated with a
-political discussion in which he had characterized the liberals as
-uncircumcised, suddenly grew very serious and proceeded to recite the
-Lord's Prayer, the Minister, a confirmed rationalist, was surprised
-at the devoutness with which he murmured--"Our daily bread."
-_Caramba_, those memories of the days when one was young! Don
-Victoriano grew young again in going over those recollections of his
-boyish days. He even called to mind ephemeral engagements,
-flirtations of a fortnight with young ladies of the Border who, at
-the present time, must be withered old maids or respectable mothers
-of families. A pretty fool he was! The ex-Minister laid down his
-napkin and rose to his feet.
-
-"Do you sleep the siesta?" he asked Segundo.
-
-"No, Señor."
-
-"Nor I either; let us go and smoke a cigar together."
-
-
-
-
- X.
-
-
-They seated themselves near the window in the pa rlor in a couple
-of rocking-chairs brought from Orense. The garden and the vineyard
-breathed a lazy tranquillity, a silence so profound that the dull
-sound of the ripe peaches breaking from the branch and falling on the
-dry ground could be plainly heard. Through the open window came odors
-of fruit and honey. In the house unbroken silence reigned.
-
-"Will you have a cigar?"
-
-"Thanks."
-
-The cigars were lighted and Segundo, following Don Victoriano's
-example, began to rock himself. The rhythmical movement of the
-rocking-chairs, the drowsy quiet of the place, invited to a serious
-and confidential conversation.
-
-"And you, what do you do in Vilamorta? You are a lawyer, are you
-not. I think I have heard that it is your intention to succeed your
-father in his practice--a very intelligent man."
-
-Segundo felt that the occasion was propitious. The smoke of the
-cigars, diffusing itself through the atmosphere, softened the light,
-disposing him to confidence and dispelling his habitual reserve.
-
-"The thought of beginning now the career my father is just ending
-horrifies me," he said, in answer to the ex-Minister's question.
-"That sordid struggle to gain a little money, more or less, those
-village intrigues, that miserable plotting and planning, that
-drawing-up of documents--I was made for none of those things, Señor
-Don Victoriano. It is not that I could not practice. I have been a
-fair student and my good memory always brought me safely through in
-the examinations. But for what does the profession of law serve? For
-a foundation, nothing more. It is a passport, a card of admission to
-some office."
-
-"Well----" said Don Victoriano, shaking the ashes from his cigar,
-"what you say is true, very true. What is learned at the University
-is of scarcely any use afterward. As for me, if it had not been for
-my apprenticeship with Don Juan Antonio Prado, who taught me to make
-a practical use of my legal knowledge and to know how many teeth
-there are in a comb, I should not have distinguished myself greatly
-by my Compostelan learning. My friend, what makes a man of one, what
-really profits one is this terrible apprenticeship, the position in
-which a boy finds himself when a pile of papers is set before him,
-and a pompous gentleman says to him, 'Study this question to-day and
-have ready for me by to-morrow a formulated opinion on it.' There is
-the rub! That is what makes you sweat and bite your nails! There
-neither laziness nor ignorance will avail you. The thing must be
-done, and as it cannot be done by magic----"
-
-"Even in Madrid and on a large scale the practice of the law has
-no attractions for me. I have other aspirations."
-
-"Let us hear what they are."
-
-Segundo hesitated, restrained by a feeling of shyness, as if he
-had been going to narrate a dream or to descant on the delights of
-love. He followed with his eyes for a few moments the blue smoke
-curling upward and finally, the semi-obscurity of the room, secluded
-as a confessional, dissipated his reserve.
-
-"I wish to follow the profession of literature," he returned.
-
-The statesman stopped rocking himself and took his cigar from his
-mouth.
-
-"But my boy, literature is not a profession!" he said. "There is
-no such thing as the profession of literature! Let us understand each
-other--have you ever been out of Vilamorta? I mean beyond Santiago
-and the neighboring towns?"
-
-"No, Señor."
-
-"Then I can understand those illusions and those childish
-notions. They still believe here that a writer or a poet, from the
-mere fact of his being such, may aspire to--and what do you write?"
-
-"Poetry."
-
-"You don't write prose at all?"
-
-"An occasional essay or newspaper article. Very little."
-
-"Bravo! Well, if you trust to poetry to make your way in the
-world--I have remarked something curious in this place and I am going
-to tell you what it is. Verses are still read here with interest, and
-it seems the girls learn them by heart. But in the capital I assure
-you there is scarcely anyone who cares for poetry. You are twenty or
-thirty years behind the age here--at the height of the romantic
-period."
-
-Segundo, annoyed, said with some vehemence:
-
-"And Campoamor? And Nuñez de Arce? And Grilo? Are they not famous
-poets? Are they not popular?"
-
-"Campoamor? They read him because he is very witty, and he sets
-the girls thinking and he makes the men laugh. He has his merit, and
-he amuses while he philosophizes. But remember that neither he nor
-Nuñez de Arce lives by writing verses. Much prosperity that would
-bring them! As to Grilo--well, he has his admirers among ladies of
-rank, and the Queen Mother publishes his poems, and as far as we can
-judge he has plenty of money. But convince yourself that no one will
-ever grow rich by following the road that leads to Parnassus. And
-this is when masters are in question, for of poets of a secondary
-rank, young men who string rhymes together with more or less
-facility, there are probably now in Madrid some two or three hundred.
-Have you ever heard of any of them? No; nor I either. A few friends
-praise them when they publish anything in some insignificant review.
-But there is no need to go on. In plain words, it is time lost."
-
-Segundo silently vented his anger on his cigar.
-
-"Don't take what I say as an offense," continued Don Victoriano.
-"I know little about literature, although in my youthful days I wrote
-_quintillas_, like everybody else. Besides, I have seen nothing of
-what you have written, so that my opinion is impartial and my advice
-sincere."
-
-"My ambition," began Segundo at last, "is not confined
-exclusively to lyric poetry. Perhaps later I might prefer the
-drama--or prose. Who knows? I only want to try my fortune."
-
-Don Victoriano rose and stepped out into the balcony. Suddenly he
-returned, placed both hands on Segundo's shoulders, and putting his
-clean-shaven face close to the face of the poet, said with a pity
-which was not feigned:
-
-"Poor boy! How many, many disappointments are in store for you!"
-
-And as Segundo, astonished at this sudden effusion, remained
-silent, he continued:
-
-"Novice as you are, you have no means of knowing what you are
-doing. I am sorry for you. You are deluding yourself. In the present
-state of society, in order to attain eminence in anything, you must
-sweat blood like Christ in the garden of Gethsemane. If it is lyric
-poetry that is in question, God help you! If you write comedies or
-farces, you have an enviable fate before you--to flatter the actors,
-to have your manuscript lie neglected in the corner of a drawer, to
-have half an act cut out at a stroke; and then the dread of the first
-night, and of what comes after it--which may be the worst of all. If
-you become a journalist, you will not have ten minutes in the day to
-yourself, you will make the reputation of others, and you will never
-see even so much as the shadow of your own. If you write books--but
-who reads in Spain? And if you throw yourself into politics--ah, then
-indeed!"
-
-Segundo, his eyes cast down, his gaze wandering over the pine
-knots in the boarded floor, listened without opening his lips to
-those convincing accents that seemed to tear away one by one the
-rose-leaves of his illusions, with the same strident sound with which
-the nail of the speaker flicked away the ash of his cigar. At last he
-raised his contracted face and looking at the statesman said, not
-without a touch of sarcasm in his voice:
-
-"As for politics, Señor Don Victoriano, it seems to me that you
-ought not to speak ill of that. It has treated you well; you have no
-cause of complaint against it. For you politics has not been a
-stepmother."
-
-Don Victoriano's countenance changed, showing plainly the ravages
-disease had made in his organism; and rising to his feet a second
-time, he threw away his cigar and, walking up and down the room with
-hasty steps, he burst forth passionately, in words that rushed from
-his lips in a sudden flood, in an impetuous and unequal stream, like
-the stream of blood gushing from a severed artery:
-
-"Don't touch that point. Be silent about that, boy. How do you,
-how does anybody know what those things are until he has thrown
-himself headlong into them and is caught fast and cannot escape! If I
-were to tell you--but it is impossible to tell one's whole life, day
-by day, to describe a battle which has lasted for years, without rest
-or respite. To struggle in order to make one's self known, to go on
-struggling to keep one's self from being forgotten, to pass from law
-to politics, from a wheel set with knives to a bed of live coals, to
-fight in Congress without faith, without conviction, because one must
-fight to keep the place one has won; and with all this not to have a
-free hour, not a tranquil moment, not have time for anything. One
-achieves fortune when one no longer has the inclination to enjoy it;
-one marries and has a family and--one has hardly liberty to accompany
-one's wife to the theater. Don't talk to me. A hell, a hell upon
-earth is what politics is. Would you believe" (and here he uttered a
-round oath) "that when my little girl was beginning to walk, I
-proposed to myself one day to have the pleasure of taking her out
-walking--a caprice, a whim. Well, I was going downstairs with the
-child in my arms, very contented, when lo, I found myself face to
-face with the Marquis of Cameros, a candidate for representative from
-Galicia, who had come to ask me for fifteen or twenty
-letters--written in my own hand so that they might prove more
-efficacious. And I was such a fool, man, I was such a fool, that
-instead of throwing the Marquis down the stairs, as I ought to have
-done, I walked back my two flights, gave the child to her nurse, and
-shut myself up in my office to prepare the election. And it was the
-same thing always; tell me, then, have I reason or not to abominate
-such folly, such humbug? Ah, what pains we are at to make ourselves
-miserable!"
-
-There could be no doubt of it; in the voice of the statesman
-there was the sound of repressed tears; in his throat smothered
-curses and blasphemies struggled for utterance. Segundo, to do
-something, threw open the window leading to the balcony. The sun was
-low in the heavens; the heat had grown less intense.
-
-"And worst of all--the consequences!" continued Don Victoriano,
-pausing in his walk. "You strive and struggle without pausing to
-reflect what will be the effect upon your health. You fight, like the
-knights of old, with visor down. But as you are not made of iron, but
-only of flesh and blood, when you least expect it, you find yourself
-sick, sick, wounded, without knowing where. You do not lose blood,
-but you lose the sap of life, like a lemon that is squeezed." And the
-ex-Minister laughed bitterly. "And you want to stop, to rest, to get
-back health at any cost, and you find that it is too late; you have
-not a drop of moisture left in your body. Well, keep on until there
-is an end to you. Much your labors and your triumphs have profited
-you! You have drawn down on yourself a doom from which there is no
-escape!"
-
-He spoke with gesticulations, thrusting his hands into his
-trousers pockets in an outburst of confidence, expressing himself
-with as little reserve as if he had been alone. And in reality he was
-talking to himself. His words were a monologue, the spoken utterance
-of the gloomy thoughts which Don Victoriano, thanks to heroic
-efforts, had hitherto been able to conceal in his own breast. The
-strange malady from which he suffered gave rise to horrible
-nightmares; he dreamed that he was turning into a loaf of sugar and
-that his intellect, his blood, his life, were flowing away from him,
-through a deep, deep channel, converted into syrup. In his waking
-moments his mind refused to accept, as one refused to accept a
-humiliation, so strange a malady. Sanchez del Abrojo must be
-mistaken; his was some functional, transitory disorder, an ordinary
-ailment, the result of his sedentary life, and Tropiezo's
-old-fashioned remedies would perhaps after all prove more efficacious
-than those of science. And if they did not? The statesman felt a cold
-chill run through him that made his hair stand on end and constricted
-his heart. To die when he was scarcely past forty, with his mental
-powers unimpaired, with so many things begun, so many accomplished!
-And no doubt this consuming thirst, this insatiable voracity, this
-debilitating sensation of melting away, of fusion, of dissolving,
-were all fatal symptoms.
-
-Suddenly Don Victoriano remembered the presence of Segundo, which
-he had almost forgotten. And laying both hands on his shoulders a
-second time, and fixing on the poet's eyes, his dry eyes, scorched by
-repressed tears, he cried:
-
-"Do you wish to hear the truth, and to receive good advice? Have
-you ambitions, aspirations, hopes? Well, I have had disappointments,
-and I desire to do you a service by recounting them to you now. Don't
-be a fool; stay here all your life; help your father, take up his
-practice when he lays it down, and marry that blooming daughter of
-Agonde. Never leave this land of fruits, of vines, whose climate is
-so delightful. What would I not give now never to have left it! No,
-my boy, remain quietly here; end a long life here surrounded by a
-numerous progeny. Have you observed how healthy your father is? It is
-a pleasure to see him, with his teeth so sound and perfect. I have
-not a single tooth that is not decayed; they say that it is one of
-the symptoms of my malady. Why, if your mother were living now you
-would be having little brothers and sisters."
-
-Segundo smiled.
-
-"But, Señor Don Victoriano," he said, "to act out your ideas
-would be to vegetate, not to live."
-
-"And what greater happiness than to vegetate," responded the
-statesman, looking out of the window. "Do you think those trees there
-are not to be envied?"
-
-The garden, indeed, seen in the light of the setting sun, had a
-certain air of voluptuous bliss, as if it were enjoying a happy
-dream.
-
-The lustrous leaves of the lemon trees and the camellias, the
-gummy trunks of the fruit trees, seemed to drink in with delight the
-fresh evening breeze, precursor of the vivifying dews of night. The
-golden atmosphere took on in the distance faint lilac tints.
-Innumerable noises began to make themselves heard, preludes to songs
-of insects, to the concerts of the frogs and toads.
-
-The pensive tranquillity of the scene was broken in upon by the
-quick trot of a mule, and Clodio Genday, out of breath, flung himself
-out of his saddle, and reeled into the garden. Gesticulating with his
-hands, with his head, with his whole body, he called, screamed,
-vociferated:
-
-"Oh, I have a nice piece of news for you, a nice piece of news! I
-will be there directly, I will be there directly!"
-
-They went to the head of the stairs leading to the garden, to
-meet him, and when he rushed upon them, like an arrow shot from a
-bow, they saw that he wore neither collar nor cravat, and that his
-dress was in the utmost disorder.
-
-"A mere bagatelle, Señor Don Victoriano--that they are playing a
-trick upon us; that they have played it already, that unless we take
-prompt measures we shall lose the district. You would not believe it,
-if I were to tell you of all the plans they have been laying, for a
-long time past, at Doña Eufrasia's shop. And we simpletons suspecting
-nothing. And all the priests are in the plot; the parish priests of
-Lubrego, of Boan, of Naya, and of Cebre. They have set up as a
-candidate Señorito de Romero of Orense, who is willing to loosen his
-purse-strings. But where is Primo, that good-for-nothing, that
-scarecrow, who never found out a word of all this?"
-
-"We will look for him, man. What do you tell me, what do you tell
-me? I never thought they would have dared----"
-
-And Don Victoriano, animated and excited, followed Clodio, who
-went shouting through the parlor:
-
-"Primo! Primo!"
-
-A little later Segundo saw the two brothers and the ex-Minister
-going through the garden disputing and gesticulating violently.
-Clodio was making charges against Primo, who tried to defend himself,
-while Don Victoriano acted as peacemaker. In his fury Clodio shook
-his clenched fist in Primo's face, almost laying violent hands upon
-him, while the culprit stammered, crossing himself hastily:
-
-"Mercy, mercy, mercy! Ave Maria!"
-
-The poet watched them as they passed by, remarking the
-transformation that had taken place in Don Victoriano. As he turned
-away from the window he saw Nieves standing before him.
-
-"And those gentlemen," she said to him graciously, "have they
-left you all alone? The pines must at this time be singing. There is
-a breeze stirring."
-
-"Undoubtedly they will be singing now," returned the poet. "I
-shall hear them as I ride back to Vilamorta."
-
-Nieves' movement of surprise did not pass unnoticed by Segundo,
-who, looking her steadily in the face, added coldly and proudly:
-"Unless you should command me to remain."
-
-Nieves was silent. She felt that courtesy required that she
-should make some effort to detain her guest, while at the same time
-to ask him to remain, they two being alone, seemed to her inexpedient
-and liable to misconstruction. At last she took a middle course,
-saying with a forced smile:
-
-"But why are you in such a hurry? And will you make us another
-visit?"
-
-"We shall see each other later in Vilamorta. Good-by, Nieves, I
-will not disturb Don Victoriano. Say good-by to him for me and tell
-him he may count upon my father's services and upon mine."
-
-Without taking Nieves' outstretched hand or looking at her he
-descended into the courtyard. He was settling his feet in the
-stirrups when he saw a little figure appear close beside him. It was
-Victorina, with her hands full of lumps of sugar, which she offered
-the nag. The animal eagerly pushed out its under lip, which moved
-with the intelligent undulations of an elephant's trunk.
-
-Segundo interposed:
-
-"Child, he will bite you; he bites."
-
-Then he added gayly:
-
-"Do you want me to lift you up here? You don't? I wager I can
-lift you!"
-
-He lifted her up and seated her on the saddle-cloth, before him.
-She struggled to free herself and in her struggles her beautiful hair
-fell over the face and shoulders of Segundo, who was holding her
-tightly around the waist. He observed with some surprise that the
-girl's heart was beating tumultuously. Turning very pale Victorina
-cried:
-
-"Mamma, mamma!"
-
-At last she succeeded in releasing herself and ran toward Nieves,
-who was laughing merrily at the incident. Half-way she stopped,
-retraced her steps, threw her arms around the horse's neck and
-pressed on his nose a warm kiss.
-
-
-
-
- XI.
-
-
-Eight or ten days intervened between Segundo's visit to Las Vides
-and the return of Don Victoriano and his family to Vilamorta. Don
-Victoriano desired to drink the waters and at the same time to take
-measures to frustrate the dark machinations of Romero's partisans.
-His plan was a simple one--to offer Romero some other district, where
-he would not have to spend a penny, and thus removing the only rival
-who had any prestige in the country he would avoid the mortification
-of a defeat through Vilamorta. It was important to do this before
-October, the period at which the electoral contest was to take place.
-And while Genday, García, the Alcalde and the other Combistas managed
-the negotiation, Don Victoriano, installed in Agonde's house, drank
-two or three glasses of the salubrious waters every morning, after
-which he read his correspondence, and in the afternoon, when the
-sultry heat invited to a siesta, he read or wrote in the cool parlor
-of the apothecary.
-
-Segundo frequently accompanied him in these hours of retirement.
-They talked together like two friends, and the statesman, far from
-insisting on the ideas he had expressed in Las Vides, encouraged the
-poet, offering him to endeavor to obtain a position for him in Madrid
-which should enable him to carry out his plans.
-
-"A position that will not take up much of your time, nor require
-much mental labor--I will see, I will see. I will be on the lookout
-for something."
-
-Segundo observed unmistakable signs of improved health in the
-wrinkled face of the Minister. Don Victoriano was experiencing the
-transitory benefit which mineral waters produce at first, stimulating
-the organism only to waste it all the more rapidly, perhaps,
-afterward. Both digestion and circulation had become more active, and
-perspiration, even, entirely suppressed by the disease, had become
-re-established, dilating the pores with grateful warmth and
-communicating to the dry fibers the elasticity of healthy flesh. As a
-candle flares up brightly before going out, so Don Victoriano seemed
-to be recovering strength when in reality he was wasting away.
-Fancying health was returning to him, he breathed with delight the
-narrow atmosphere of party intrigues, taking pleasure in disputing
-his district inch by inch, in winning over adherents and receiving
-demonstrations of sympathy, and secretly flattered by the absurd
-proposal made by his parishioners to the parish priest of Vilamorta,
-that incense should be burned before him. In the evening he amused
-himself patriarchally among Agonde's visitors, listening to the
-comical stories told of the clique at Doña Eufrasia's shop and
-enjoying the ripple of excitement occasioned by the proximity of the
-feasts. Little by little the innocent tresillo table of Agonde had
-become transformed into something much more wicked. Now, instead of
-four persons being seated at it, there was only one, around whom,
-their eyes fixed on his hands, the others stood grouped. The banker's
-left hand grasped the cards tightly while with the ball of his thumb
-he pushed up the last card until first the spot could be descried,
-then the number, then the knob of a club, the point of a diamond, the
-blue tail of a horse, the turreted crown of a king, and other hands
-took up stakes or took money from the pocket and laid it down on the
-fateful pieces of cardboard with the words:
-
-"On the seven! On the four! The ace is in sight!"
-
-Through respect for Don Victoriano, Agonde refrained from dealing
-the cards when the latter was present, bridling with difficulty the
-only passion that could warm his blood and excite his placid nature,
-giving up his place to Jacinto Ruedas, a famous strolling gambler,
-known everywhere, who followed the scent of the gaming-table as
-others follow the scent of a banquet, a rare type, something between
-a swindler and a spy, who made low jests in a hoarse voice. The
-chroniclers do not state whether the civil authorities, that is to
-say, the judge of Vilamorta, made any attempt to interfere with the
-unlawful diversion in which the visitors to the pharmacy indulged,
-but it is an ascertained fact that, the judge having one leg shorter
-than the other, the pounding of his crutch on the sidewalk gave
-timely warning of his approach to the players. And as for the
-municipal authority, it is known to a certainty that one day, or to
-speak with more exactness, one night, he entered the apothecary's
-back shop like a bomb, holding in his hand money which he threw on a
-card, crying:
-
-"Gentlemen, I am queen!"
-
-"Be an ass, if you like!" responded Agonde, pushing him away with
-marked disrespect.
-
-This year Don Victoriano's presence and the open hostilities
-waged between his partisans and those of Romero gave a martial
-character to the feasts. The Combists desired to render them more
-splendid and brilliant than ever before and the Romerists to render
-them a failure, as far as it was possible. In the main room of the
-townhall the monster balloon, which occupied the whole length of the
-apartment, was being repaired; its white sides were being covered
-with inscriptions, figures, emblems, and symbols, and around the
-floor were scattered tin kettles filled with paste, pots of
-vermilion, Sienna, and ochre, balls of packthread and cut paper
-figures. From the giant balloon sprung daily broods of smaller
-balloons, miniature balloons, made with remnants and fancifully
-decorated in pink and blue. At the meetings at Doña Eufrasia's they
-spoke contemptuously of these preparations and commented on the
-audacity of the inn-keeper's son, a mere dauber, who undertook to
-paint Don Victoriano's likeness on one of the divisions of the large
-balloon. The Romerist young ladies, compressing their lips and
-shrugging their shoulders, declared that they would attend neither
-the fire-works nor the ball, not if their adversaries were to offer
-novenas with that purpose to every saint in heaven.
-
-On the other hand, the young ladies of the Combist party formed a
-sort of court around Nieves. Every afternoon they called for her to
-take her out walking; chief among these were Carmen Agonde,
-Florentina, the daughter of the Alcalde, Rosa, a niece of Tropiezo,
-and Clara, the eldest of García's daughters. This latter was running
-about barefooted, spending her time gathering blackberries in her
-apron, when she received the astounding news that her father had
-ordered a gown for her from Orense, that she might visit the
-Minister's lady. And the gown came with its fresh bows and its stiff
-linings and the girl, her face and hands washed, her hair combed, her
-feet covered with new kid boots, her eyes cast down and her hands
-crossed stiffly before her, went to swell Nieves' train. Victorina
-took Clara García under her especial protection, arranged her dress
-and hair and made her a present of a bracelet, and they became
-inseparable companions.
-
-They generally walked on the highroad, but as soon as Clara grew
-more intimate with Victorina she protested against this, declaring
-that the paths and the by-ways were much more amusing and that much
-prettier things were to be met with in them. And she pressed
-Victorina's arm saying:
-
-"Segundo knows lovely walks!"
-
-As chance would have it, that same afternoon, returning to the
-town, they caught sight of a man stealing along in the shadow of the
-houses, and Clara, who was on the other side of the way, ran over to
-him, and threw her arm around his waist, crying:
-
-"Hey, Segundo; you can't escape from us now, we have caught you."
-
-The poet gave a brotherly push to Clara, and ceremoniously
-saluting Nieves, who returned his salutation with extreme cordiality,
-he said to her:
-
-"The idea of this girl--I am sure she has been making herself
-troublesome to you. You must excuse her."
-
-They sat down on one of the benches of the Plaza, to enjoy the
-fresh air, and when, on the following day the party walked out after
-the siesta, Segundo joined them, studiously avoiding Nieves as if
-some secret understanding, some mysterious complicity existed between
-them. He mingled among the girls and, laying aside his habitual
-reserve, he laughed and jested with Victorina, for whom he gathered,
-as they walked along the hedges, ripe blackberries, acorns, early
-chestnut burrs, and innumerable wild flowers, which the girl put into
-a little Russian leather satchel.
-
-Sometimes Segundo led them along precipitous paths cut in the
-living rock, bordered by walls, supporting grapevines through which
-the expiring rays of the sun could scarcely penetrate. Again he would
-take them through bare and arid woods until they reached some old oak
-grove, some chestnut tree, inside whose trunk, decayed and split with
-age, Segundo would hide himself while the girls hand in hand danced
-around it.
-
-One day he took them to the stone bridge that crossed the
-Avieiro, under whose arches the black water, cold and motionless,
-seems to be dreaming a sinister dream. And he told them how in this
-spot, where, owing to the water being deeper there and less exposed
-to the sun's rays, the largest trout gathered, a corpse had been
-found floating last month near the arch. He took them to hear the
-echo also, and all the girls were wild with delight, talking all
-together, without waiting for the wall to repeat their cries and
-shouts of laughter. On another afternoon he showed them a curious
-lake regarding which innumerable fables were told in the
-country--that it had no bottom, that it reached to the center of the
-earth, that submerged cities could be seen under its surface, that
-strange woods floated and unknown flowers grew in its waters. The
-so-called lake was in reality a large excavation, probably a Roman
-mine that had been flooded with water, which, imprisoned within the
-chain of hillocks of argillaceous tophus heaped up around it by the
-miners' shovels, presented a sepulchral and fantastic aspect, the
-weird effect of the scene being heightened by the somber character of
-the marsh vegetation which covered the surface of the immense pool.
-When it began to grow dark the children declared that this lugubrious
-scene made them horribly afraid; the girls confessed to the same
-feeling, and started for the highroad running at the top of their
-speed, leaving Segundo and Nieves behind. This was the first time
-they had found themselves alone together, for the poet avoided such
-occasions. Nieves looked around uneasily and then, meeting Segundo's
-eyes fixed, ardent and questioning upon hers, lowered her gaze. Then
-the gloom of the landscape and the solemnity of the hour gave her a
-contraction of the heart, and without knowing what she was doing she
-began to run as the girls had done. She heard Segundo's footsteps
-behind her, and when she at last stopped, at a little distance from
-the highroad, she saw him smile and could not help smiling herself at
-her own folly.
-
-"Heavens! What a silly fright!" she cried, "I have made myself
-ridiculous. I am as bad as the children! But that blessed pool is
-enough to make one afraid. Tell me, how is it that they have not
-taken views of it? It is very curious and picturesque."
-
-They returned by the highroad; it was now quite dark and Nieves,
-as if wishing to efface the impression made by her childish terror,
-showed herself gay and friendly with Segundo; two or three times her
-eyes encountered his and, doubtless through absent-mindedness, she
-did not turn them aside. They spoke of the walk of the following day;
-it must be along the banks of the river, which was more cheerful than
-the pond; the scenery there was beautiful, not gloomy like that of
-the pool.
-
-In effect the road they followed on the next day was beautiful,
-although it was obstructed by the osier plantations and canebrakes
-and the intricate growth of the birches and the young poplars, which
-at times impeded their progress. Every now and then Segundo had to
-give his hand to Nieves and put aside the flexible young branches
-that struck against her face. Notwithstanding all his care, he was
-unable to save her from wetting her feet and leaving some fragments
-of the lace of her hat among the branches of a poplar. They stopped
-at a spot where the river, dividing, formed a sort of islet covered
-with cats-tails and gladioli. A rivulet running down the
-mountain-side mingled its waters silently and meekly with the waters
-of Avieiro. At the river's edge grew plants with dentated leaves and
-a variety of ferns and graceful aquatic plants. Segundo knelt down on
-the wet ground and began to gather some flowers.
-
-"Take them, Nieves," he said.
-
-She approached and, kneeling on one knee, he handed her a bunch
-of flowers of a pale turquoise blue, with slender stems, flowers of
-which she had hitherto seen only imitations, as adornments for hats,
-and that she had fancied had only a mythical existence; flowers of
-romance, that she had thought grew only on the banks of the Rhine,
-which is the home of everything romantic; flowers that have so
-beautiful a name--_Forget-me-not_.
-
-
-
-
- XII.
-
-
-Nieves was what is called an exemplary wife, without a dark page
-in her history, without a thought of disloyalty to her husband, a
-coquette only in her dress and in the adornment of her person, and
-even in these practicing no alluring arts, content to obey slavishly
-the dictates of fashion.
-
-Her ideal, if she had any, was to lead a comfortable, elegant
-existence, enjoying the consideration of the world. She had married
-when she was very young, Don Victoriano settling on her some
-thousands of dollars, and on the wedding-day her father had called
-her into his magisterial office and, keeping her standing before him
-as if she were a criminal, had charged her to respect and obey the
-husband she had chosen. She obeyed and respected him.
-
-And her obedience and respect were a torture to Don Victoriano,
-who sought in marriage a compensation for the long years he had spent
-in his law office; years of loneliness during which his arduous
-labors and confinement to business had prevented him from forming any
-tender tie or cultivating gentle affections, permitting him at the
-most some hasty pleasure, some reckless and exciting adventure, which
-did not satisfy his heart. He fancied that the beautiful daughter of
-the President of the Court would requite him for all the tender joys
-he had missed and he found with vain and bitter disappointment that
-Nieves saw in him only the grave husband who is accepted with
-docility, without repugnance, nothing more. Respecting against his
-will the peace of this superficial being, he neither could nor dared
-disturb it, and he fretted his soul with unavailing longings,
-hastening to the crisis of maturity and multiplying the white patches
-that streaked his black hair.
-
-When the child was born Don Victoriano hoped to repay himself
-with interest in new and holy caresses, to take solace in a pure
-oasis of affection. But the requirements of his position, the hurry
-of business, the complex obligations and the implacable cares of his
-existence, interposed themselves between him and a father's joys. He
-saw his daughter only from a distance, barely succeeding, when the
-coffee was brought in, in having her for awhile on his knee. And then
-came the first warnings of his disease.
-
-From the time in which his malady declared itself with all its
-afflicting symptoms, Nieves had still less of her husband's society
-than before; it seemed to her as if she had returned to the rosy days
-of her girlhood, when she flitted about like a butterfly and played
-at lovers with her companions, who wrote her fictitious love-letters
-of an innocent nature, which they put under her pillow.
-
-She never had had much amusement since that time. A great deal of
-amusement was to be found in the routine of a methodical Madrid life!
-Yes, there was a period during which the Marquis de Cameros, a rich
-young client of Don Victoriano's, had come to the house with some
-frequency, and he had even been asked to dine with them three or four
-times, without ceremony. Nieves remembered that the Marquis had cast
-many furtive glances at her, and that they had always met him, by
-chance, at whatever theater they went to. It did not go beyond this.
-
-Nieves was now in the bloom of her second youth--between
-twenty-nine and thirty--terrible epoch in a woman's life; and if it
-brought her no red passion flowers, at least she wished to adorn
-herself with the romantic forget-me-nots of the poet. It seemed to
-Nieves that in the porcelain vase of her existence a flower had been
-wanting, and the fragile blue spray came to complete the beauty of
-the drawing-room toy. Bah! What harm was there in all this? It was a
-childish adventure. Those flowers, preserved between the leaves of a
-costly prayer-book, inspired her only with thoughts as pallid and
-sapless as the poor petals now pressed and dry.
-
-She had fastened the blue spray in her bosom. How well it looked
-among the folds of the écru lace!
-
-"Tell me, mamma," Victorina had said to her that night before
-going to bed, "did Segundo give you those pretty flowers?"
-
-"Oh, I don't remember--yes, I think that García picked them for
-me."
-
-"Will you give them to me to keep in my little satchel?"
-
-"Go, child, go to bed quickly. Mademoiselle, see that she says
-her prayers!"
-
-
-
-
- XIII.
-
-
-The proximity of the feasts put an end to long walks. The
-promenaders confined themselves to walks on the highroad, returning
-soon to the town, where the plaza was crowded with busy people. The
-promenaders included the young ladies of the Combist party, gayly
-attired, parish priests, ill-shaven, of sickly aspect and dejected
-looking, gamblers of doubtful appearance and strangers from the
-Border--all types which Agonde criticised with mordacity, to Nieves'
-great amusement.
-
-"Do you see those women there? They are the Señoritas de Gondas,
-three old maids and a young lady, whom they call their niece, but as
-they have no brother----Those other two are the Molendes, from Cebre,
-very aristocratic people, God save the mark! The fat one thinks
-herself superior to Lucifer, and the other writes poetry, and what
-poetry! I tell Segundo García that he ought to propose to her; they
-would make an excellent pair. They are staying at Lamajosa's; there
-they are in their element, for Doña Mercedes Lamajosa, when any
-visitor comes, in order that it may be known that they are noble,
-says to her daughters: 'Girls, let one of you bring me my knitting;
-it must be in the press, where the letters-patent of nobility are.'
-Those two handsome, well-dressed girls are the Caminos, daughters of
-the judge."
-
-On the eve of the fair the musicians paraded the streets morning
-and afternoon, deafening everybody with the noise of their triumphal
-strains. The plaza in front of the townhall was dotted with booths,
-which made a gay confusion of brilliant and discordant colors. Before
-the townhall were erected some odd-looking objects which with equal
-probability might be taken for instruments of torture, children's
-toys, or scarecrows, but which were in reality fireworks--trees and
-wheels which were to burn that night, with magnificent pomp, favored
-by the stillness of the atmosphere. From the window of the building
-issued, like a Titanic arm, the pole on which was to be hoisted the
-gigantic balloon, and along the balustrade ran a series of colored
-glasses, forming the letters V. A. D. L. C.--a delicate compliment to
-the representative of the district.
-
-It was already dark when Don Victoriano, accompanied by his wife
-and daughter, set out for the townhall to see the fireworks. It was
-with difficulty they made their way through the crowd which filled
-the plaza, where a thousand discordant noises filled the air--now the
-timbrel and castanets in some dance, now the buzz of the _zanfona_,
-now some slow and melancholy popular _copla_, now the shout of some
-aggressive and quarrelsome drunkard. Agonde gave his arm to Nieves,
-made way for her among the crowd, and explained to her the programme
-of the night's entertainment.
-
-"Never was there seen a balloon like this year's," he said; "it
-is the largest we have ever had here. The Romerists are furious."
-
-"And how has my likeness turned out?" asked Don Victoriano with
-interest.
-
-"Oh! It is superb. Better than the likeness in _La
-Illustracion_."
-
-At the door of the townhall the difficulties increased, and it
-was necessary to trample down without mercy the country-people--who
-had installed themselves there, determined not to budge an inch lest
-they should lose their places--before they were able to pass in.
-
-"See what asses they are," said Agonde. "It makes no difference
-whether you step over them or not, they won't rise. They have no
-place to sleep and they intend to pass the night here; to-morrow they
-will waken up and return to their villages."
-
-They made their way as best they could over this motley heap in
-which men and women were crowded together, intertwined, entangled in
-repulsive promiscuity. Even on the steps of the stairs
-suspicious-looking groups were lying, or some drunken peasant snored,
-surfeited with _pulpo_, or some old woman sat counting her coppers in
-her lap. They entered the hall, which was illuminated only by the dim
-light shed by the colored glasses. Some young ladies already occupied
-the space in front of the windows, but the Alcalde, hat in hand, with
-innumerable apologies, made them draw their chairs closer together to
-make room for Nieves, Victorina, and Carmen Agonde, around whom an
-obsequious circle gathered; chairs were brought for the ladies, and
-the Alcalde took Don Victoriano to the Secretary's office, where a
-tray, with some bottles of Tostado and some atrocious cigars, awaited
-him. The young ladies and the children placed themselves in front,
-leaning on the railing of the balcony, running the risk of having
-some rocket fall upon them. Nieves remained a little behind, and drew
-her silver-woven Algerian shawl closer around her, for in this empty,
-gloomy hall the air was chill. At her side was an empty chair, which
-was suddenly occupied by a figure whose outlines were dimly
-distinguishable in the darkness.
-
-"Why, García," she cried, "it is a cure for sore eyes. We haven't
-seen you for two days."
-
-"You don't see me now, either, Nieves," said the poet, leaning
-toward her and speaking in a low voice. "It would be rather difficult
-to see one here."
-
-"That is true," answered Nieves, confused by this simple remark.
-"Why have they not brought lights?"
-
-"Because it would spoil the effect of the fireworks. Don't you
-prefer this species of semi-obscurity?" he added, smiling, before he
-uttered it, at the choice phrase.
-
-Nieves was silent. Unconsciously she was fascinated by the
-situation, in which there was a delicate blending of danger and
-security which was not without a tinge of romance; she felt a sense
-of security in the proximity of the open window, the young girls
-crowded around it, the plaza, where the multitude swarmed like ants,
-and whence came noises like the roaring of the sea, and songs and
-confused cries full of tender melancholy; but at the same time the
-solitude and the darkness of the hall and the species of isolation in
-which she found herself with the Swan afforded one of those chance
-occasions which tempt women of weak principles, who are neither so
-imprudent as to throw themselves headlong into danger, nor so
-cautious as to fly from its shadow.
-
-Nieves remained silent, feeling Segundo's breath fanning her
-cheek. Suddenly both started. The first rocket was streaking the sky
-with a long trail of light, and the noise of the explosion, deadened
-though it was by distance, drew a cheer from the crowd in the plaza.
-After this advanced guard came, one after another, at regular
-intervals, with measured, hollow, deafening sound, eight bombs, the
-signal announced in the programme of the feasts for the beginning of
-the display. The window shook with the report and Nieves did not
-venture to raise her eyes to the sky, fearing, doubtless, to see it
-coming down with the reverberation of the bombs. After this the noise
-of the flying fireworks, chasing one another through the solitudes of
-space, seemed to her soft and pleasant.
-
-The first of these were ordinary rockets, without any novelty
-whatever--a trail of light, a dull report, and a shower of sparks.
-But soon came the surprises, novelties, and marvels of art. There
-were fireworks that exploded, separating into three or four cascades
-of light that vanished with fantastic swiftness in the depths of
-space; from others fell with mysterious slowness and noiselessness
-violet, green, and red lights, as if the angels had overturned in the
-skies a casket of amethysts, emeralds, and rubies. The lights
-descended slowly, like tears, and before they reached the ground
-suddenly went out. The prettiest were the rockets which sent down a
-rain of gold, a fantastic shower of sparks, a stream of drops of
-light as quickly lighted as extinguished. The delight of the crowd in
-the plaza, however, was greatest at the fireworks of three explosions
-and a snake. These were not without beauty; they exploded like simple
-rockets, sending forth a fiery lizard, a reptile which ran through
-the sky in serpentine curves, and then plunged suddenly into
-darkness.
-
-The scene was now wrapped in darkness, now flooded with light,
-when the plaza would seem to rise to a level with the window, with
-its swarm of people, the patches of color of the booths and the
-hundreds of human faces turned upward, beaming with delight at this
-favorite spectacle of the Galicians, a race which has preserved the
-Celtic love and admiration for pyrotechnic displays, for brilliantly
-illuminated nights in which they find a compensation for the cloudy
-horizon of the day.
-
-Nieves, too, was pleased by the sudden alternations of light and
-darkness, a faithful image of the ambiguous condition of her soul.
-When the firmament was lighted up she watched with admiration the
-bright luminaries that gave a Venetian coloring to these pleasant
-moments. When everything was again enveloped in darkness she ventured
-to look at the poet, without seeing him, however, for her eyes,
-dazzled by the fireworks, were unable to distinguish the outlines of
-his face. The poet, on his side, kept his eyes fixed persistently on
-Nieves, and he saw her flooded with light, with that rare and
-beautiful moonlight glow produced by fireworks, and which adds a
-hundredfold to the softness and freshness of the features. He felt a
-keen impulse to condense in one ardent phrase all that the time had
-now come for saying, and he bent toward her--and at last he
-pronounced her name!
-
-"Nieves!"
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Had you ever seen fireworks like these before?"
-
-"No; it is a specialty of this province. I like them greatly. If
-I were a poet like you I would say pretty things about them. Come,
-invent something, you."
-
-"Like them happiness brightens our existence, for a few brief
-moments, Nieves--but while it brightens, while we feel it----"
-
-Segundo inwardly cursed the high-sounding phrase that he found
-himself unable to finish. What nonsense he was talking! Would it not
-be better to bend down a little lower and touch with his lips----But
-what if she should scream? She would not scream, he would venture to
-swear. Courage!
-
-In the balcony a great commotion was heard. Carmen Agonde called
-to Nieves:
-
-"Nieves, come, come! The first tree--a wheel of fire----"
-
-Nieves rose hastily and went and leaned over the balustrade,
-thinking that it would not do to attract attention sitting all the
-evening chatting with Segundo. The tree began to burn at one end, not
-without difficulty, apparently, spitting forth an occasional red
-spark; but suddenly the whole piece took fire--a flaming wheel, an
-enormous wafer of red and green light, which turned round and round,
-expanding and shaking out its fiery locks and making the air resound
-with a noise like the report of fire-arms. It was silent for a few
-brief instants and seemed on the point of going out, a cloud of rosy
-smoke enveloped it, through which shone a point of light, a golden
-sun, which soon began to turn with dizzying rapidity, opening and
-spreading out into an aureole of rays. These went out one by one, and
-the sun, diminishing in size until it was no larger than a coal,
-lazily gave a few languid turns, and, sighing, expired.
-
-As Nieves was returning to her seat she felt a pair of arms
-thrown around her neck. They were those of Victorina who, intoxicated
-with delight at the spectacle of the fireworks, cried in her thin
-voice:
-
-"Mamma, mamma! How lovely! How beautiful! And Carmen says they
-are going to set off more trees and a wheel----"
-
-She stopped, seeing Segundo standing beside Nieves' chair. She
-hung her head, ashamed of her childish enthusiasm, and, instead of
-returning to the window, she remained beside her mother, lavishing
-caresses upon her to disguise the shyness and timidity which always
-took possession of her when Segundo looked at her. Two other pieces
-were burning at two of the corners of the plaza, a pin-wheel and a
-vase, that sent forth showers of light, first golden, then blue. The
-child, notwithstanding her admiration for the fireworks, did not
-appear to have any intention of going to the window to see them,
-leaving Nieves and Segundo alone. The latter remained seated for some
-ten minutes longer, but seeing that the child did not leave her
-mother's side, he rose quickly, seized by a sudden frenzy, and walked
-up and down the dimly-lighted hall with hasty steps, conscious that
-for the moment he was not sufficiently master of himself to maintain
-outward calmness.
-
-By Heaven, he was well employed! Why had he been fool enough to
-let slip so favorable an opportunity! Nieves had encouraged him; he
-had not dreamed it; no; glances, smiles, slight but significant
-indications of liking and good-will; all these there had been, and
-they all counseled him to end so ambiguous and doubtful a situation.
-Ah! If this woman only loved him! And she should love him, and not in
-jest and as a pastime, but madly! Segundo would not be satisfied with
-less. His ambitious soul scorned easy and ephemeral triumphs--all or
-nothing. If the Madridlenian thought of flirting with him she would
-find herself mistaken; he would seize her by her butterfly wings and,
-even at the cost of breaking them, he would hold her fast; if one
-wished to retain a butterfly in his possession he must pierce it
-through the heart or press it to death. Segundo had done this a
-thousand times when he was a boy; he would do it now again; he was
-resolved upon it; whenever a light or mocking laugh, a reserved
-attitude or a tranquil look, showed Segundo that Señora de Comba
-maintained her self-possession, his heart swelled with rage that
-threatened to suffocate him; and when he saw the child beside her
-mother, who was keeping up an animated conversation with the little
-girl, as if she were keeping her there as a protection, he determined
-that he would not let the night pass without knowing what were her
-feelings toward him.
-
-He returned to Nieves, but she had now risen and the child was
-drawing her by the hands to the window; this was the solemn and
-critical moment; the monster balloon had just been attached to the
-pole for the purpose of inflating it; and from the plaza came a loud
-buzz, a buzz of eager expectation. A phalanx of Combist artisans,
-among whom figured Ramon, the confectioner, were clearing a space
-around it sufficiently large to allow of the fuse burning freely, so
-that the difficult operation might be accomplished. The silhouettes
-of the workmen, illuminated by the light of the fuse, could be seen
-moving about, bending down, rising up, dancing a sort of mad dance.
-The darkness was no longer illuminated by the glare of the rockets,
-and the human sea looked black as a lake of pitch.
-
-Still folded in innumerable folds, its sides clinging together,
-the balloon swayed feebly, kissing the ground with its lips of wire,
-between which the ill-smelling fuse was beginning to burn brightly.
-The manufacturers of the colossal balloon proceeded to unfold it
-gently and affectionately, lighting below it other fuses to aid the
-principal one and hasten the rarification of air in its paper body.
-This began to distend itself, the folds opening out with a gentle,
-rustling sound, and the balloon, losing its former limp and lank
-appearance, began to be inflated in places. As yet the figures on its
-sides appeared of unnatural length, like figures reflected from the
-polished, convex surface of a coffee urn; but already several borders
-and mottoes began to make their appearance here and there, acquiring
-their natural proportions and positions and showing clearly the
-coarse red and blue daubs.
-
-The difficulty was that the mouth of the balloon was too large,
-allowing the rarefied air to escape through it; and if the fuses were
-made to burn with greater force there was danger of setting the paper
-on fire and instantly reducing the superb machine to ashes--a
-terrible calamity which must be prevented at all costs. Therefore
-many arms were eagerly stretched out to support it, and when the
-balloon leaned to one side many hands made haste to sustain it--all
-this to the accompaniment of cries, oaths, and maledictions.
-
-In the plaza the surging crowd continued to increase, and the
-eager expectancy became momentarily greater. Carmen Agonde, with her
-mellow laugh, recounted to Nieves the plots that went on behind the
-scenes. Those who were trying to push their way to the front in order
-to overturn the fuses and prevent the ascent of the balloon belonged
-to the Romerist party; a good watch the maker of the fireworks had
-been obliged to keep to prevent them from wetting his powder trees;
-but the greatest hatred was to the balloon, on account of its bearing
-Don Victoriano's likeness; they had vowed and determined that so
-ridiculous and grotesque an object should not ascend into the air
-while they had life to prevent it; and that they themselves would
-construct another balloon, better than that of the townhall, and that
-this should be the only one to ascend. For this reason they applauded
-and uttered shouts of derision every time the gigantic balloon,
-unable to rise from the earth, fell down feebly to the right or to
-the left, while Don Victoriano's partisans directed their efforts on
-the one hand to protect from all injury the enormous bulk of the
-balloon, on the other to inflate it with warm air to make it rise.
-
-Nieves' eyes were fixed attentively on the monster, but her
-thoughts were far away. Segundo had succeeded in pushing his way
-through the crowd in front of the window and was now sitting beside
-her, on her right. No one was observing them now, and the poet,
-without preface, passed his arm around Nieves' waist, placing his
-hand boldly on the spot where, anatomically speaking, the heart is
-situated. Instead of the elastic and yielding curve of the form and
-the quickened pulsation of the organ, Segundo felt under his hand the
-hard surface of one of those long corset-breastplates full of
-whalebones, and furnished with steel springs, which fashion
-prescribes at the present day--an apparatus to which Nieves' form
-owed much of its slender grace. Infernal corset! Segundo could have
-wished that his fingers were pincers to pierce through the fabric of
-her gown, through the steel whalebones, through her inner garments,
-through the flesh and through the very ribs and fasten themselves in
-her heart, and seize it red-hot and bleeding and crush, tear,
-annihilate it! Why could he not feel the throbbings of that heart?
-Leocadia's heart, or even Victorina's, bounded like a bird's when he
-touched it. And Segundo, enraged, pressed his hand with greater
-force, undeterred by the fear of hurting Nieves, desiring, on the
-contrary, to strangle her.
-
-Surprised at Segundo's audacity, Nieves remained silent, not
-daring to make the slightest movement, lest by doing so she should
-attract attention, and protesting only by straightening her form and
-raising her eyes to his with a look of anguish, soon lowering them,
-however, unable to resist the expression in the eyes of the poet. The
-latter continued to search for the absent heart without succeeding in
-feeling anything more than the throbbing of his own arteries, of his
-pulse compressed against the unyielding surface of the corset. But
-fatigue finally conquered, his fingers relaxed their pressure, his
-arm fell down powerless, and rested without strength or illusion on
-the form, at once flexible and unyielding, the form of whalebone and
-steel.
-
-Meanwhile the balloon, in defiance of the Romerist intriguers,
-continued to expand, as its enormous body was filled with gas and
-light, illuminating the plaza like a gigantic lantern. It swayed from
-side to side majestically, and on its immense surface could be read
-plainly all the inscriptions and laudatory phrases invented by the
-enthusiastic Combists. The effigy, or rather the colossal figure of
-Don Victoriano, which filled one of its sides completely, followed
-the curve of the balloon and stood out, so ugly and disproportioned
-that it was a pleasure to see it; it had two frying-pans for eyes,
-the pupils being two eggs fried in them, no doubt; for mouth a
-species of fish or lizard and for beard a tangled forest or map of
-blots of sienna and lampblack. Giant branches of green laurel crossed
-each other above the head of the colossus, matching the golden palms
-of his court dress, represented by daubs of ocher. And the balloon
-swelled and swelled, its distended sides grew ever tenser and tenser,
-and it pulled impatiently at the cord that held it, eager to break
-away and soar among the clouds. The Combists yelled with delight.
-Suddenly a murmur was heard, a low murmur of expectation.
-
-The cord had been dexterously cut and the balloon, majestic,
-magnificent, rose a few yards above the ground, bearing with it the
-apotheosis of Don Victoriano, the glory of his laurels, mottoes and
-emblems. In the balcony and in the plaza below resounded a salvo of
-applause and triumphal acclamations. Oh, vanity of human joys! It was
-not one Romerist stone only but three at least that at this instant,
-directed with unerring aim, pierced the sides of the paper monster,
-allowing the hot air, the vital current, to escape through the
-wounds. The balloon contracted, shriveled up like a worm when it is
-trodden upon, and finally, doubling over in the middle, gave itself
-up a prey to the devouring flames lighted by the fuse which in a
-second's space enveloped it in a fiery mantle.
-
-At the same moment that the balloon of the official candidate
-expired thus miserably, the little Romerist balloon, its swelling
-sides daubed with coarse designs, rose promptly and swiftly from a
-corner of the plaza, resolved not to pause in its ascent until it had
-reached the clouds.
-
-
-
-
- XIV.
-
-
-Nieves spent a restless night and when she awoke in the morning
-the incidents of the preceding evening presented themselves to her
-mind vaguely and confusedly as if she had dreamed them; she could not
-believe in the reality of Segundo's singular hardihood, that taking
-possession of her, that audacious outrage, that she had not known how
-to resent. How compromising the position in which the daring of the
-poet had placed her! And what if anyone had noticed it? When she bade
-good-night to the girls who had been sitting with her at the window,
-they had smiled in a way that was--well, odd; Carmen Agonde, the fat
-girl with the sleepy eyes and placid temper, gave evidence at times
-of a strain of malice. But, no; how could they have observed
-anything? The shawl she had worn was large and had covered her whole
-figure. And Nieves took the shawl, put it on and looked at herself in
-the mirror, using a handglass to obtain a complete view of her
-person, in order to assure herself that, enveloped in this garment,
-it was impossible for an arm passed around her waist to be seen. She
-was engaged in this occupation when the door opened and someone
-entered. She started and dropped the glass.
-
-It was her husband, looking more sallow than ever, and bearing
-the traces of suffering stamped on his countenance. Nieves' heart
-seemed to turn within her. Could it be possible that Don Victoriano
-suspected anything? Her apprehensions were soon relieved, however,
-when she heard him speak, with ill-disguised pique, of the insulting
-behavior of the Romerists and the destruction of the balloon. The
-Minister sought an outlet for his mortification by complaining of the
-pain of the pin-prick.
-
-"But did you ever see the like, child? What do you think of it?"
-he said.
-
-He then went on to complain of the noise of the fair, which had
-lasted all night and had not allowed him to close his eyes. Nieves
-agreed that it was extremely annoying; she, too, had been unable to
-sleep. The Minister opened the window and the noise reached them
-louder and more distinct. It resembled a grand chorale, or symphony,
-composed of human voices, the neighing of horses and mules, the
-grunting of pigs, the lowing of cows, calves, and oxen, hucksters'
-criers, noises of quarreling, songs, blasphemies, and sounds of
-musical instruments. The flood-tide of the fair had submerged
-Vilamorta.
-
-From the window could be seen its waves, a surging sea of men and
-animals crowded together in inextricable confusion. Suddenly among
-the throng of peasants a drove of six or eight calves would rush with
-helpless terror; a led mule had cleared a space around him, dealing
-kicks to right and left, screams and groans of pain were heard on all
-sides, but those behind continued pushing those in front and the
-space was filled up again. The venders of felt hats were a curious
-sight as they walked about with their merchandise on their heads,
-towers of twenty or thirty hats piled one above another, like Chinese
-pagodas. Other venders carried for sale, on a portable counter slung
-from their necks by ribbons, balls of thread, tape, thimbles, and
-scissors; the venders of distaffs and spindles carried their wares
-suspended around their waists, from their breast, everywhere, as
-unskillful swimmers carry bladders, and the venders of frying-pans
-glittered in the sun like feudal warriors.
-
-The confused din, the ceaseless movement of the multitude, and
-the mingling together of human beings and animals, made the brain
-dizzy, and the ear was wearied by the plaintive lowing of the cows
-under the drivers' lash, the terrified cries of women, the brutal
-hilarity of drunken men who issued from the taverns with hats pushed
-far back on their heads, seeking an outlet for their superabundant
-energy by assaulting the men or pinching the girls. The latter,
-screaming with terror, escaped from the drunkards to fall, perhaps,
-on the horns of some ox or to receive a blow from the snout of some
-mule that bathed their foreheads and temples in its frothy saliva.
-But most terrifying of all was it to see infants carried high above
-their mothers' heads, braving, like frail skiffs, the dangers of this
-stormy sea.
-
-Nieves remained for half an hour or so looking out of the window,
-and then, sight and hearing both weary, she withdrew. In the
-afternoon she watched the scene again for a while. The buying and
-selling was less brisk, and the better classes of the Border began to
-make their appearance at the fair. Agonde, who, absorbed in the
-desperate gambling that went on in the back shop, had kept himself
-invisible during the day, now went upstairs and, while he wiped the
-perspiration from his brow, pointed out to Nieves the notabilities of
-the place, as they passed by, naming to her in turn the archpriests,
-the parish priests, the physicians, and the gentry.
-
-"That very thin man, riding that horse that looks as if it had
-been strained through a colander, with silver trimmings in his saddle
-and silver spurs, is Señorito de Limioso, a scion of the house of the
-Cid--God save the mark! The Pazo of Limioso is situated in the
-neighborhood of Cebre. As for money, they have not an _ochavo_; they
-own a few barley-fields, and a couple of grapevines past yielding,
-that bring them in a trifle. But do you suppose that Señorito de
-Limioso would go into an inn to dine? No, Señora; he carries his
-bread and cheese in his pocket, and he will sleep--Heaven knows
-where. As he is a Carlist they may let him stretch himself on the
-floor of Doña Eufrasia's back shop, with the saddle of his nag for a
-pillow, for on a day like this there are no mattresses to spare. And
-you may be sure that his servant's belt bulges out in the way it
-does, because he carries the nag's feed in it."
-
-"You exaggerate, Agonde."
-
-"Exaggerate? No, indeed. You have no idea what those gentlemen
-are. Here they are called _Seven on a horse_, because they have one
-horse for all seven which they ride in pairs, in turn, and when they
-are near the town they stop to ride in, one by one, armed with whip
-and spur, and the nag comes in seven different times, each time with
-a different rider. Why, see those ladies coming there, the one on a
-donkey, the other on a mule--the Señoritas de Loiro. They are friends
-of the Molendes. Look at the bundles they carry before them; they are
-the dresses for to-night's ball."
-
-"But are you really in earnest?"
-
-"In earnest? Yes, indeed, Señora. They have them all here, every
-article--the bustle, or whatever it may be called, that sticks out
-behind, the shoes, the petticoats, and even the rouge. And those are
-very refined, they come to the town to dress themselves; most of the
-young ladies, a few years ago, used to dress themselves in the pine
-wood near the echo of Santa Margarita. As they had no house in the
-town to stay at, and they were not going to lose the ball, at
-half-past ten or eleven they were among the pines, hooking their
-low-necked dresses, fastening on their bows and their gewgaws, and as
-fine as you please. All the gentry together, Nieves, if you will
-believe me, could not make up a dollar among them. They are people
-that, to avoid buying lard, or making broth, breakfast on wine and
-water. They hang up the loaf of wheaten bread among the rafters so
-that it may be out of reach and may last forever. I know them
-well--vanity, and nothing more."
-
-The apothecary spoke angrily, multiplying instances, and
-exaggerating them in the telling, with the rage of the plebeian who
-eagerly seizes an opportunity to ridicule the poor aristocracy,
-relating anecdotes of everyone of the ladies and gentlemen--stories
-of poverty more or less skillfully disguised. Don Victoriano laughed,
-remembering some of the stories, now become proverbial in the
-country, while Nieves, her anxiety set at rest by her husband's
-laughter, began to think without terror, with a certain secret
-complacency, rather, of the episodes of the fireworks. She had feared
-to see Segundo among the crowd, but, as the night advanced and the
-brilliant colors of the booths faded into the surrounding darkness,
-and lights began to appear, and the singing of the drunkards grew
-hoarser, her mind became tranquil, and the danger seemed very remote,
-almost to have disappeared. In her inexperience she had fancied at
-first that the poet's arm would leave its trace, as it were, on her
-waist, and that the poet would seize the first opportunity to present
-himself before her, exacting and impassioned, betraying himself and
-compromising her. But the day passed by, serene and without incident,
-and Nieves experienced the inevitable impatience of the woman who
-waits in vain for the appearance of the man who occupies her
-thoughts. At last she remembered the ball. Segundo would certainly be
-there.
-
-
-
-
- XV.
-
-
-And she adorned herself for the town ball with a certain
-illusion, with the same care as if she were dressing for a soirée at
-the palace of Puenteancha.
-
-Naturally the gown and the ornaments were very different from
-what they would have been in the latter case, but they were selected
-with no less care and consideration--a gown of white China crêpe,
-high-necked, and without a train, trimmed with Valenciennes lace,
-that fell in clinging folds, whose simplicity was completed by long
-dark Suède gloves wrinkled at the wrist, reaching to the elbow. A
-black velvet ribbon, fastened by a diamond and sapphire horseshoe,
-encircled her neck. Her beautiful fair hair, arranged in the English
-fashion, curled slightly over the forehead.
-
-She was almost ashamed of having selected this toilette when she
-crossed the muddy plaza, leaning on Agonde's arm, and heard the poor
-music, and found the entrance of the townhall crowded with
-country-people sitting on the floor, whom it was necessary to step
-over to reach the staircase. On the landings ran the lees of the
-fair--a dark wine-colored rivulet. Agonde drew her aside.
-
-"Don't step there, Nieves; take care," he said.
-
-She felt repelled by this unsightly entrance, calling to mind the
-marble vestibule and staircase of the palace of Puenteancha, carpeted
-down the center, with plants arranged on either side. At the door of
-the apartment which she was now entering was a counter laden with
-cakes and confectionery, at which the wife of Ramon, the
-confectioner, holding in her arms the inevitable baby, presided,
-casting angry glances at the young ladies who had come to amuse
-themselves.
-
-Nieves was given a seat in the most conspicuous part of the room,
-in front of the door. The whitewashed walls were not very clean, nor
-was the red cloth which covered the benches very fresh, nor did the
-badly snuffed candles in the tin chandelier produce a brilliant
-illumination. Owing to the large number of people present the heat
-was almost insupportable. In the center of the apartment the men
-stood grouped together--the youth of Vilamorta, visitors to the
-springs, strangers, gamblers, and the gentry from the neighboring
-country, mingling in one black mass. Every time the band struck up
-anew, deafening the ear with its sonorous strains, the indefatigable
-dancers would leave the group and hurry off in search of their
-partners.
-
-Nieves watched the scene with amazement. The young ladies, with
-their large chignons and their clusters of curls, their faces daubed
-with coarse rice-powder, their bodices cut low around the throat,
-their long trains of cheap materials, continually trodden upon and
-torn by the heavy boots of the gallants, their clumsy, tastelessly
-arranged flowers, and their short-wristed gloves of thick kid, too
-small for their hands, all seemed to her strange and laughable. She
-remembered Agonde's descriptions, the toilet made in the pine grove,
-and fanned herself with her large black fan as if to drive off the
-pestilent air in which the whirl of the dance enveloped her. The
-dancers pursued their task earnestly, diligently, as if they were
-contending for a prize to be awarded to the one who should first get
-out of breath, moving, not with their own motion only, but impelled
-by the jostling, pushing, and crowding of those around them. And
-Nieves, accustomed to the elegant and measured dancing of the
-soirées, wondered at the courage and resolution displayed by the
-dancers of Vilamorta. Some of the girls, whose flounces had been torn
-by some gallant's boot-heel, turned up their skirts, quickly tore off
-the whole trimming, rolled it into a ball, which they threw into a
-corner, and then returned, smiling and contented, to the arms of
-their partners. In vain the men wiped the perspiration from their
-faces; their collars and shirt-fronts grew limp, their hair clung to
-their foreheads; the silk bodices of the ladies began to show stains
-of perspiration, and the marks of their partners' hands. And the
-gymnastics continued, and the dust and the particles of perspiration
-vitiated the atmosphere, and the floor of the room trembled. There
-were handsome couples, blooming girls and gallant young men, who
-danced with the healthy gayety of youth, with sparkling eyes,
-overflowing with animation; and there were ridiculous couples, short
-men and tall women, stout women and beardless boys, a baldheaded old
-man and a stout, middle-aged woman. There were brothers who danced
-with their sisters through shyness, because they had not the courage
-to invite other young ladies to dance, and the secretary of the town
-council, married for many years to a rich Orensen who was old and
-very jealous, danced all the evening with his wife, dancing polkas
-and waltzes in the time of a _habanera_ to keep from dying by
-asphyxiation.
-
-When Nieves entered the ballroom, the other women looked at her,
-first with curiosity, then with surprise. How strange to come so
-simply dressed! Not to wear a train a yard and a half long, nor a
-flower in her hair, nor bracelets nor satin shoes. Two or three
-ladies from Orense, who had cherished the expectation of making a
-sensation in the ball of Vilamorta, began to whisper among
-themselves, criticising the artistic negligence of her attire, the
-modesty of the white, high-necked bodice, and the grace of the small
-head, with its elegantly arranged hair, vaporous as the engravings in
-_La Illustracion_. The Orensens determined to copy the fashion-plate,
-the Vilamortans and the women of the Border, on the contrary,
-criticised the Minister's lady bitterly.
-
-"She is dressed almost as if she would dress at home."
-
-"She does it because she doesn't want to wear her good clothes
-here. Of course for a ball here----She thinks probably that we know
-nothing. But she might at least have dressed her hair a little
-better. And how easy it is to see that she is bored; look, why, she
-seems to be asleep."
-
-"And a little while ago she seemed as if she couldn't sit still a
-moment--she kept tapping the floor with her foot as if she were
-impatient to be gone."
-
-And it was true; Nieves was bored. And if the young ladies who
-censured her could only have known the cause!
-
-She could see Segundo nowhere, anxiously as she looked for him,
-at first with furtive glances, then openly and without disguise. At
-last García came to salute her, and then she could restrain herself
-no longer, and making an effort to speak in a natural and easy tone,
-she asked:
-
-"And the boy? It is a wonder he is not here."
-
-"Who? Segundo? Segundo is--so eccentric. If you could only guess
-what he is doing now. Reading verses or composing them. We must leave
-him to his whims."
-
-And the lawyer waved his hands with a gesture that seemed to say
-that the eccentricities of genius must be respected, while in his own
-mind he said:
-
-"He is most likely with that damned old woman."
-
-The truth is that nothing in the world would have induced the
-poet, under the circumstances, to come to a ball like the present
-one, to be obliged to dance with the young country girls of his
-acquaintance, to perspire and to be pulled about like the other young
-men. And his absence, the result of his æsthetic feeling, produced a
-marvelous effect on Nieves, effacing the last remnant of fear,
-stimulating her coquettish instincts, and piquing her curiosity.
-
-At the same time, in the radical circle that surrounded Don
-Victoriano and his wife, the approaching departure of the Minister
-and Nieves for Las Vides to be present at the vintage was
-discussed--a project that delighted the Minister as an unexpected
-holiday delights a schoolboy. The persons whom the hidalgo had
-invited or intended to invite for the festive occasion were named,
-and when Agonde uttered Segundo's name Nieves raised her eyes, and a
-look of animation lighted up her face, while she said to herself:
-
-"He is fully capable of not going."
-
-
-
-
- XVI.
-
-
-A great day for Las Vides is the day appointed by the town
-council for the inauguration of the vintage. The whole year is passed
-in looking forward to and preparing for the beautiful harvest time.
-The vine is still clothed in purple and gold, but it has already
-begun to drop a part of its rich garniture as a bride drops her veil,
-the wasps settle in clusters on the grapes, announcing to man that
-they are now ripe. The last days of September, serene and peaceful,
-are at hand. To the vintage without delay!
-
-Neither Primo Genday nor Mendez takes a moment's rest. The bands
-of vintagers who come from distant parishes to hire themselves out
-must be attended to, must have their tasks assigned them; the work of
-gathering in the grapes must be organized so that it may be
-advantageously and harmoniously conducted. For the labors of the
-vintage resemble, somewhat, a great battle in which an extraordinary
-expenditure of energy is required from the soldier, a waste of muscle
-and of blood, but in which he must be supplied, in return, with
-everything necessary to recruit his strength during his moments of
-repose. In order that the vintagers might engage in their arduous
-labors with cheerfulness and alacrity, it was necessary to have at
-hand in the cellar the cask of must from which the carters might
-drink at discretion when they returned exhausted from the task of
-carrying the heavy _coleiro_, or basket, filled with grapes up the
-steep ascents; it was necessary that they should have an abundant
-supply of the thick wine flavored with mutton suet, the sardines and
-the barley-bread, when the voracious appetite of the bands demanded
-them; to which end the fire was always kept burning on the hearth at
-Las Vides and the enormous kettles in which the mess was cooked were
-always kept filled.
-
-When in addition to this the presence of numerous and
-distinguished guests be considered, some idea may be formed of the
-bustle of the manor-house during these incomparable days. Its walls
-sheltered, besides the Comba family, Saturnino and Carmen Agonde, the
-young and amiable curate of Naya, the portly arch-priest of Loiro,
-Tropiezo, Clodio Genday, Señorita de Limioso and the two Señoritas de
-Molende. Every class was here represented, so that Las Vides was a
-sort of microcosm or brief compendium of the world of the
-province--the priests attracted by Primo Genday, the radicals by the
-head of the house of Mendez. And all these people of conditions so
-diverse, finding themselves associated together, gave themselves up
-to the enjoyment of the occasion in the greatest possible harmony and
-concord.
-
-To the merriment of the vintagers the merriment of the guests
-responded like an echo. It was impossible to resist the influence of
-the Bacchic joyousness, the delirious gayety which seemed to float in
-the atmosphere. Among all the delightful spectacles which Nature has
-to offer, there is none more delightful than that of her fruitfulness
-in the vintage time, the baskets heaped full of clusters of ruddy or
-dark red grapes, which robust men, almost naked, like fauns, carry
-and empty into the vat or wine-press; the laughter of the vintagers
-hidden among the foliage, disputing, challenging each other from vine
-to vine to sing, a gayety which is followed by a reaction at
-nightfall--as is usually the case with all violent expressions of
-feeling in which there is a great expenditure of muscular strength;
-the merry challenges ending in some prolonged Celtic wail, some
-plaintive _a-laá-laá_. The pagan sensation of well-being, the
-exhilaration produced by the pure air of the country, the mere joy of
-existence, communicated themselves to the spectators of these
-delightful scenes, and at night, while the chorus of fauns and
-Bacchantes danced to the sound of the flute and the timbrel, the
-gentry diverted themselves with childish frolics in the great house.
-
-The young ladies slept all together in a large, bare apartment,
-the Rosary-room, the male guests being lodged by Mendez in another
-spacious room called the screen-room, because in it was a screen, as
-ugly as it was antique; the arch-priest only being excluded from this
-community of lodging, his obesity and his habit of snoring making it
-impossible for any person of even average sensibility to tolerate him
-as a roommate; and the gay and mischievous party being thus divided
-into two sections, there came to be established between them a sort
-of merry warfare, so that the occupants of the Rosary-room thought of
-nothing but playing tricks on the occupants of the screen-room, from
-which resulted innumerable witty inventions and amusing skirmishes.
-Between the two camps there was a neutral one--that of the Comba
-family, whose slumbers were respected and who were exempt in the
-matter of practical jokes, although the feminine band often took
-Nieves as their confidante and counselor.
-
-"Nieves, come here, Nieves; see, how foolish Carmen Agonde is;
-she says she likes the arch-priest, that barrel, better than Don
-Eugeniño, the parish priest of Naya, because it makes her laugh, she
-says, to see him perspiring and to look at the rolls of fat in the
-back of his neck. And say, Nieves, what trick shall we play to-night
-on Don Eugeniño? And on Ramon Limioso, who has been daring us all
-day?"
-
-It was Teresa Molende, a masculine-looking black-eyed brunette, a
-good specimen of the mountaineer, who spoke thus.
-
-"They must pay for the trick they played on us yesterday," added
-her sister Elvira, the sentimental poetess.
-
-"What was that?"
-
-"You must know that they locked Carmen up. They are the very
-mischief! They shut her up in Mendez's room. What is there that they
-won't think of! They tied her hands behind her back with a silk
-handkerchief, tied another handkerchief over her mouth, so that she
-couldn't scream, and left her there like a mouse in a mouse-trap. And
-we, hunting and hunting for Carmen, and no Carmen to be seen. And
-there we were thinking all sorts of things until Mendez went up to
-his room to go to bed and found her there. Of course they had that
-silly creature to deal with, for if it had been I----"
-
-"They would shut you up too," declared Carmen.
-
-"Me!" exclaimed the Amazon, drawing up her portly figure. "They
-would be the ones to get shut up!"
-
-"But they entrapped me into it," affirmed Carmen, looking as if
-she were just ready to cry. "See, Nieves, they said to me: 'Put your
-hands behind you, Carmiña, and we'll put a five-dollar piece in
-them,' and I put them behind me, and they were so treacherous as to
-tie them together."
-
-Nieves joined in the laughter of the two sisters. It could not be
-denied that this simplicity was very amusing. Nieves seemed to be in
-a new world in which routine, the worn-out conventionalities of
-Madrid society, did not exist. True, such noisy and ingenuous
-diversions might at times verge on impropriety or coarseness, but
-sometimes they were really entertaining. From the moment the guests
-rose from table in the afternoon nothing was thought of but frolic
-and fun. Teresa had proposed to herself not to allow Tropiezo to eat
-a meal in peace, and with the utmost dexterity she would catch flies
-on the wing, which she would throw slyly into his soup, or she would
-pour vinegar into his glass instead of wine, or rub pitch on his
-napkin so that it might stick to his mouth. For the arch-priest they
-had another trick--they would draw him on to talk of ceremonies, a
-subject on which he loved to expatiate, and when his attention was
-engaged, take away his plate slyly, which was like tearing a piece of
-his heart out of his breast.
-
-At night, in the parlor of the turbid mirrors, in which were the
-piano and the rocking-chairs, a gay company assembled; they sang
-fragments of _El Juramento_, and _El Grumete_; they played at
-hide-and-seek, and, without hiding, played _brisea_ with _malilla_
-counters; when they grew tired of cards, they had recourse to
-forfeits, to mind-reading, and other amusements. And the frolicsome
-rustic nature once aroused, they passed on to romping games--fool in
-the middle, hoodman-blind, and others which have the zest imparted by
-physical exercise--shouts, pushes and slaps.
-
-Then they would retire to their rooms, still excited by their
-sports, and this was the hour when their merriment was at its height,
-when they played the wildest pranks; when they fastened lighted
-tapers to the bodies of crickets and sent them under the bedroom
-doors; when they took the slats out of Tropiezo's bedstead so that
-when he lay down he might fall to the ground and bruise his ribs. In
-the halls could be heard smothered bursts of laughter and stealthy
-footsteps, white forms would be seen scurrying away, and doors would
-be hastily locked and barricaded with articles of furniture, while
-from behind them a mellow voice could be heard crying:
-
-"They are coming!"
-
-"Fasten the door well, girls! Don't open, not if the king himself
-were to knock!"
-
-
-
-
- XVII.
-
-
-Segundo was the last of the guests to arrive at Las Vides. As he
-cared but little for games and as Nieves did not take any very active
-part in them either, they would often have found themselves thrown
-for society upon each other had it not been for Victorina, who, from
-the moment Segundo appeared, never left her mother's side, and Elvira
-Molende who, from the very instant of his arrival, clung to the poet
-like the ivy to the wall, directing on him a battery of sighs and
-glances, and treating him to sentimental confidences and rhapsodies
-sweet enough to surfeit a confectioner's boy. From the moment in
-which Segundo set foot in Las Vides, Elvira lost all her animation,
-and assumed a languishing and romantic air, which made her cheeks
-appear hollower and the circles under her eyes deeper than ever. Her
-form acquired the melancholy droop of the willow and, giving up
-sports and pranks, she devoted herself exclusively to the Swan.
-
-As it was moonlight, and the evenings were enjoyable out of
-doors, as soon as the sun had set, and the labors of the day were
-ended, and the vintagers assembled for a dance, some of the guests
-would assemble together also in the garden, generally at the foot of
-a high wall bordered with leafy camellias, or they would stop and sit
-down for a chat at some inviting spot on their way home from a walk.
-Elvira knew by heart a great many verses, both good and bad,
-generally of a melancholy kind--sentimental and elegiac; she was
-familiar with all the flowers of poetry, all the tender verses which
-constituted the poetic wealth of the locality, and uttered by her
-thin lips, in the silvery tones of her gentle voice, with the soft
-accents of her native land, the Galician verses, like an Andalusian
-moral maxim in the sensual mouth of a gypsy, had a peculiar and
-impressive beauty--the sensibility of a race crystallized in a poetic
-gem, in a tear of love. These plaintive verses were interrupted at
-times by mocking bursts of laughter, as the gay sounds of the
-castanets strike in on the melancholy notes of the bagpipes. The
-poems in dialect acquired a new beauty, their freshness and sylvan
-aroma seemed to augment by being recited by the soft tones of a
-woman's voice, on the edge of a pine wood and under the shadow of a
-grapevine, on a serene moonlight night; and the rhyme became a vague
-and dreamy melopoeia, like that of certain German ballads; a labial
-music interspersed with soft diphthongs, tender _ñ_'s, _x_'s of a
-more melodious sound than the hissing Castilian _ch_. Generally,
-after the recitations came singing. Don Eugenio, who was a Borderer,
-knew some Portuguese _fados_, and Elvira was unrivaled in her
-rendering of the popular and melancholy song of Curros, which seems
-made for Druidical nights, for nights illuminated by the solemn light
-of the moon.
-
-Segundo's heart thrilled with gratified vanity when Elvira
-recited shyly, in alternation with the verses of the popular and
-admired poets of the country, songs of the Swan, which had appeared
-in periodicals of Vigo or Orense. Segundo had never written in
-dialect, and yet Elvira had a book in which she pasted all the
-productions of the unknown Swan; Teresa, joining in the animated
-conversation with the best intentions in the word, betrayed her
-sister:
-
-"She writes verses too. Come, child, recite something of your
-own. She has a copy-book full of things invented, composed by
-herself."
-
-The poetess, after the indispensable excuses and denials, recited
-two or three little things, almost without poetic form, weak, sincere
-in the midst of their sentimental falseness--verses of the kind which
-reveal no artistic faculty, but which are the sure indication that
-the author or authoress feels an unsatisfied desire, longs for fame
-or for love, as the inarticulate cry of the infant expresses its
-hunger. Segundo twisted his mustache, Nieves lowered her eyes and
-played with the tassels of her fan, impatient and somewhat bored and
-nervous. This occurred two or three days after the arrival of Segundo
-who, in spite of all his attempts, had not yet been able to succeed
-in saying a word in private to Nieves.
-
-"How uncultured these young ladies are!" said Señora de Comba to
-herself, while aloud she said, "How lovely, how tender! It sounds
-like some of Grilo's verses."
-
-
-
-
- XVIII.
-
-
-It was something different from poetry that formed the theme of
-conversation of the head of the house of Las Vides, the Gendays, and
-the arch-priest, installed on the balcony under the pretext of
-enjoying the moonlight, but in reality to discuss the important
-question of the vintage.
-
-A fine crop! Yes, indeed, a fine crop! The grape had not a trace
-of oïdium; it was clean, full, and so ripe that it was as sticky to
-the touch as if it had been dipped in honey. There was not a doubt
-but that the new wine of this year was better than the old wine of
-last year. Last year's vintage was an absolute failure! Hail to-day,
-rain to-morrow! The grape with so much rain had burst before it was
-time to gather it, and had not an atom of pulp; the result was a wine
-that scarcely left a stain on the shirt-sleeves of the muleteers.
-
-At the recollection of so great a calamity, Mendez pressed his
-thin lips together, and the arch-priest breathed hard. And the
-conversation continued, sustained by Primo Genday, who, with much
-verbosity, spitting and laughter, recounted details of harvests of
-twenty years before, declaring:
-
-"This year's crop is exactly like the crop of '61."
-
-"Exactly," assented Mendez. "As for the Rebeco, it will not give
-a load less this year, and the Grilloa--I don't know but that it will
-give us six or seven more. It is a great vine, the Grilloa!"
-
-After these cheerful prognostications of a rich harvest, Mendez
-described with satisfaction to his attentive audience some
-improvements which he had introduced into the cultivation of the
-vine. He had most of his casks secured with iron hoops; they were
-more expensive than wooden ones, but they lasted longer and they
-saved the troublesome labor of making new hoops for each harvest; he
-was thinking too, by way of experiment, of setting up a wine-press,
-doing away with the repulsive spectacle of the trampling of the
-grapes by human feet, and in order that the pressed skins and the
-pulp of the grapes might not go to waste, he would distill from them
-a refined alcohol which Agonde would buy from him at its weight in
-gold.
-
-Lulled by the grave voices discussing important agricultural
-questions on the balcony, Don Victoriano, somewhat fatigued by his
-expedition to the vineyards, sat smoking in the rocking-chair, buried
-in painful meditations. Since his return from the springs he had been
-growing weaker day by day; the temporary improvement had vanished;
-the debility, the unnatural appetite, the thirst, and the desiccation
-of the body had increased. He remembered that Sanchez del Abrojo had
-told him that a slight perspiration would be of the greatest benefit
-to him, and when he observed, after he had been drinking the waters
-for a few days, the re-establishment of this function, his joy knew
-no bounds. But what was his terror when he found that his shirt,
-stiff and hard, adhered to his skin as if it had been soaked in
-syrup. He touched a fold of the sleeve with his lips and perceived a
-sweetish taste. It was plain! He perspired sugar! The glucose
-secretion was, then, uncontrollable, and by a tremendous irony of
-fate all the bitterness of his existence had come to end in this
-strange elaboration of sweet substances.
-
-For some days past he had noticed another alarming symptom. His
-sight was becoming affected. As the aqueous humor of the eye dried up
-the crystalline lens became clouded, producing the cataract of
-diabetes. Don Victoriano had chills. He regretted now having put
-himself into the homicidal hands of Tropiezo and drunk the waters.
-There was not a doubt but that he was being wrongly treated. From
-this day forth a strict regimen, a diet of fruits, fecula, and milk.
-To live, to live, but for a year, and to be able to hide his malady!
-If the electors saw their candidate blind and dying, they would
-desert to Romero. The humiliation of losing the coming election
-seemed to him intolerable.
-
-Bursts of silvery laughter, and youthful exclamations proceeding
-from the garden, changed the current of his thoughts. Why was it that
-Nieves did not perceive the serious condition of her husband's
-health? He wished to dissemble before the whole world, but before his
-wife----Ah, if his wife belonged to him she ought to be beside him
-now, consoling and soothing him by her caresses instead of diverting
-herself and frolicking among the camellias, like a child. If she was
-beautiful and fresh and her husband sickly, so much the worse for
-her. Let her put up with it, as was her duty. Bah! What nonsense!
-Nieves did not love him, had never loved him!
-
-The noise and laughter below increased. Victorina and Teresa, the
-verses being exhausted, had proposed a game of hide-and-seek.
-Victorina was crying at every moment, "Teresa's it!" "Segundo's it!"
-
-The garden was very well adapted for this exercise because of its
-almost labyrinthine intricacy, owing to the fact of its being laid
-out in sloping terraces supported on walls and separated by rows of
-umbrageous trees, communicating with each other by uneven steps, as
-is the case with all the estates in this hilly country. Thus it was
-that the play was very noisy, as the seeker had great difficulty in
-finding those who were hiding.
-
-Nieves endeavored to hide herself securely, through laziness so
-as not to have to run after the others. Chance provided her with a
-superb hiding-place, a large lemon tree situated at one end of a
-terrace, near some steps which afforded an easy means of escape. She
-hid herself here in the densest part of the foliage, drawing her
-light gown closely around her so that it might not betray her. She
-had been only a few moments in her hiding-place when a shadow passed
-before her and a voice murmured softly:
-
-"Nieves!"
-
-"Oh!" she cried, startled. "Who has found me out here?"
-
-"No one has found you; there is no one looking for you but me,"
-cried Segundo vehemently, penetrating into Nieves' hiding-place with
-such impetuosity that the late blossoms which whitened the branches
-of the giant tree showered their petals over their heads, and the
-branches swayed rhythmically.
-
-"For Heaven's sake, García!" she cried, "for Heaven's sake, don't
-be imprudent--go away, or let me go. If the others should come and
-find us here what would they say? For Heaven's sake, go!"
-
-"You wish me to go?" said the poet. "But, Señora, even if they
-should find me here, there would be nothing strange in that; a little
-while ago I was with Teresa Molende behind the camellias there;
-either we are playing or we are not playing. But if you desire it--to
-please you----But before I go I wish to ask you a question----"
-
-"Somewhere else--in the parlor," stammered Nieves, lending an
-anxious ear to the distant noises and cries of the game.
-
-"In the parlor! Surrounded by everybody! No, that cannot be. No,
-now, do you hear me?"
-
-"Yes, I hear you," she returned in a voice rendered almost
-inaudible by terror.
-
-"Well, then, I adore you, Nieves; I adore you, and you love me."
-
-"Hist! Silence, silence! They are coming. I think I hear steps."
-
-"No, it is the leaves. Tell me that you love me and I will go."
-
-"They are coming! For Heaven's sake! I shall die of terror!
-Enough of jesting, García, I entreat you----"
-
-"You know perfectly well that I am not jesting. Have you
-forgotten the night of the fireworks? If you did not love me you
-would have released yourself from my arm on that night, or you would
-have cried out. You look at me sometimes--you return my glances. You
-cannot deny it!"
-
-Segundo was close to Nieves, speaking with fiery impetuosity, but
-without touching her, although the fragrant, rustling branches of
-their shelter closed around them, inviting them to closer proximity.
-But Segundo remembered the cold hard whalebones, and Nieves drew
-back, trembling. Yes, trembling with fear. She might cry out, indeed,
-but if Segundo persisted in remaining how annoying it would be! What
-a mortification! What gossip it would give rise to! After all the
-poet was right--the night of the fireworks she had been culpably weak
-and she was paying for it now. And what would Segundo do if she gave
-him the _yes_ he asked for? He repeated his proud and vehement
-assertion:
-
-"You love me, Nieves. You love me. Tell me that you love me, only
-once, and I will go."
-
-Not far off could be heard the contralto voice of Teresa Molende
-calling to her companions:
-
-"Nieves--where is she? Victorina, Carmen, come in, the dew is
-falling!"
-
-And another shrill voice, that of Elvira, woke the echoes:
-
-"Segundo! Segundo! We are going in!"
-
-In fact that almost imperceptible mizzle, which refreshes the
-sultry nights of Galicia, was falling; the lustrous leaves of the
-lemon tree in which Nieves sat, shrinking back from Segundo, were wet
-with the night dew. The poet leaned toward her and his hands touched
-her hands chilled with cold and terror. He crushed them between both
-his own.
-
-"Tell me that you love me, or----"
-
-"But, good Heavens, they are calling me! They are noticing my
-absence. I am cold!"
-
-"Tell me the truth then. Otherwise there is no human power that
-can tear me from here--come what will. Is it so hard to say a single
-word?"
-
-"And what do you want me to say, tell me?"
-
-"Do you love me, yes or no?"
-
-"And you will let me go--go to the house?"
-
-"Anything you wish--but first tell me, do you love me?"
-
-The _yes_ was almost inaudible. It was an aspiration, a prolonged
-_s_. Segundo crushed her wrists in his grasp.
-
-"Do you love me as I love you? Answer plainly."
-
-This time Nieves, making an effort, pronounced an unequivocal
-_yes_. Segundo released her hands, raised his own to his lips with a
-passionate gesture of gratitude, and springing down the stairs,
-disappeared among the trees.
-
-
-
-
- XIX.
-
-
-Nieves drew a long breath. She felt dazed. She shook her wrists,
-hurt by the pressure of Segundo's fingers, and arranged her hair, wet
-with the night dew, and disordered by the contact of the branches.
-What had she said after all? Anything, no matter what, to escape from
-so compromising a situation. She was to blame for having withdrawn
-from the others and hidden herself in so retired a spot. And with
-that desire to give publicity to unimportant actions which seizes
-people when they have something to conceal she called out:
-
-"Teresa! Elvira! Carmen! Carmen!"
-
-"Nieves! where are you, Nieves?" came in answer from various
-quarters.
-
-"Here, beside the big lemon tree. Wait for me, I am coming!"
-
-When they entered the house, Nieves, who had to some extent
-recovered her composure, began to reflect on what had passed and
-could not but wonder at herself. To say _yes_ to Segundo. She had
-uttered the word partly under compulsion, but she had uttered it. How
-daring the poet had been. It seemed impossible that the son of the
-lawyer of Vilamorta should be so determined. She was a lady of
-distinction, highly respected, her husband had just been Minister.
-And García's family, what were they--nobodies; the father wore
-collars frayed at the edges that were a sight to see; they kept no
-servant; the sisters ran about barefooted half the time. Even Segundo
-himself--he had an unmistakable provincial air and a strong Galician
-accent. He could not indeed be called ugly; there was something
-remarkable in his face and in his manner. He spoke with so much
-passion! As if he commanded instead of entreating! What a masterful
-air he had! And there was something flattering to one's vanity in
-having a suitor of this kind, so ardent and so daring. Who had ever
-fallen in love with Nieves before? There were three or four who had
-made gallant speeches to her--one who had watched her through his
-opera-glass. Everyone in Madrid treated her with that indifference
-and consideration which respectable ladies inspire.
-
-For the rest, this persistency of Segundo's was to a certain
-extent compromising. Would people notice it? Would her husband notice
-it? Bah! Her husband thought only of his ailments, of the elections.
-He scarcely ever spoke to her of anything else. But what if he
-should notice it? How horrible, good Heavens! And the girls who had
-been playing hide and seek, might they not suspect something? Elvira
-seemed more languishing and sighed more frequently than usual. Elvira
-admired Segundo. He--no, he did not pay the slightest attention to
-her. And Segundo's verses sounded well, they were beautiful; they
-were worthy of a place in _La Ilustracion_. In short, as they would
-be obliged to return to Madrid before the elections, there was hardly
-any real danger. She would always preserve a pleasant recollection of
-the summer. The thing was to avoid--to avoid----
-
-Nieves did not venture to tell herself what it was necessary to
-avoid, nor had she settled this point when she entered the parlor,
-where the game of tresillo was already going on. Señora de Comba
-seated herself at the piano and played several quick airs--polkas and
-rigadoons, for the girls to dance. When she stopped they cried out
-for another air.
-
-"Nieves, the _muñeira_!"
-
-"The _riveirana_, please!"
-
-"Do you know the whole of it, Nieves?"
-
-"The whole of it--why, did I not hear it in the feasts?"
-
-"Let us have it then, come."
-
-"Who will dance it?"
-
-"Who knows how to dance it?"
-
-Several voices answered immediately:
-
-"Teresa Molende; ah! it is a pleasure to see her dance it."
-
-"And who will be her partner?"
-
-"Ramonciñe Limioso here, he dances it to perfection."
-
-Teresa laughed in the deep, sonorous tones of a man, declaring
-solemnly that she had forgotten the muñeira--that she never knew it
-well. From the tresillo table came a protest--from the master of the
-house, Mendez: Teresina danced it to perfection. Let her not try to
-excuse herself; no excuse would avail her; there was not in all the
-Border a girl who danced the riveirana with more grace; it was true
-indeed that the taste and the skill for these old customs of the
-country were fast disappearing.
-
-Teresa yielded, not without once more affirming her incompetence.
-And after fastening up her skirt with pins, so that it might not
-impede her movements she stopped laughing and assumed a modest and
-ingenuous air, veiling her large lustrous eyes under her thick
-lashes, dropping her head on her breast, letting her arms fall by her
-sides, swaying them slightly, rubbing the balls of the thumbs and the
-forefingers together, and thus, moving with very short steps, her
-feet close together, keeping time to the music, she made the tour of
-the room, with perfect decorum, her eyes fixed on the floor, stopping
-finally at the head of the room. While this was taking place,
-Señorito de Limioso took off his short jacket, remaining in his
-shirt-sleeves, put on his hat, and asked for an indispensable
-article.
-
-"Victorina, the castanets."
-
-The child ran and brought two pairs of castanets. The Señorito
-secured the cord between his fingers and after a haughty flourish,
-began his rôle. Teresita's partner was as lean and shriveled as Don
-Quixote himself, and, like the Manchego hidalgo, it was undeniable
-that he had a distinguished and stately air, scrupulously as he
-imitated the awkward movements of a rustic. He took his place before
-Teresa and danced a quick measure, courteously but urgently wooing
-her to listen to his suit. At times he touched the floor with the
-sole of his foot, at others with his heel or toe only, almost
-twisting his ankles out of joint with the rapidity of his movements,
-while he played the castanets energetically, the castanets in
-Teresa's hands responding with a faint and timid tinkle. Pushing his
-hat back on his head the gallant looked boldly at his partner,
-approached his face to hers; pursued her, urged his suit in a
-thousand different ways, Teresa never altering her humble and
-submissive attitude nor he his conquering air, his gymnastics, and
-his resolute movements of attack.
-
-It was primitive love, the wooing of the heroic ages, represented
-in this expressive Cantabrian dance, warlike and rude; the woman
-dominated by the strength of the man and, better than enamored,
-afraid; all which was more piquant in view of the Amazon-like type of
-Teresa and the habitual shyness and circumspection of the Señorito.
-There was an instant, however, in which the gallant peeped through
-the barbarous conqueror, and in the midst of a most complicated and
-rapid measure he bent his knee before the beauty, describing the
-figure known as _punto del sacramento_. It was only for a moment
-however; springing to his feet he gave his partner a tender push and
-they stood back to back, touching each other, caressing each other,
-and amorously rubbing shoulder against shoulder and spine against
-spine. In two minutes they suddenly drew apart and with a few
-complicated movements of the ankles and a few rapid turns, during
-which Teresa's skirts whirled around her, the riveirana came to an
-end and a storm of applause burst from the spectators.
-
-While the Señorito wiped the perspiration from his brow and
-Teresa unpinned her skirt, Nieves, who had risen from the piano,
-looked around and noticed Segundo's absence. Elvira made the same
-observation but aloud. Agonde gave them the clew to the mystery.
-
-"No doubt he is at this moment in the pine grove or on the
-river-bank. There is scarcely a night in which he does not make
-eccentric expeditions of the kind; in Vilamorta he does the same
-thing."
-
-"And how is the door to be closed if he does not come? That boy
-is crazy," declared Primo Genday. "We are not all going to do without
-our sleep, we who have to get up early to our work, for that
-featherhead. Hey, do you understand me? I will shut up the house and
-let him manage in the best way he can. Ave Maria!"
-
-Mendez and Don Victoriano protested in the name of courtesy and
-hospitality, and until midnight the door of Las Vides remained open,
-awaiting Segundo's return. As he had not come by that time, however,
-Genday went himself to bar the door muttering between his teeth:
-
-"Ave Mar-- Let him sleep out of doors if he has a fancy for doing
-so."
-
-Segundo, in fact, was at this time on his way to the pine grove.
-He was in a state of intense excitement, and he felt that it would be
-impossible for him in his present mood to meet anyone or to take part
-in any conversation. Nieves, so reserved, so beautiful, had said yes
-to him. The dreams of an ideal love which had tormented his spirit
-were not, then, destined never to be realized, nor would fame be
-unattainable when love was already within his ardent and eager grasp.
-With these thoughts passing through his mind he ascended the steep
-path and walked enraptured through the pine grove. At times he would
-lean against the dark trunk of some pine, his brow bared to the
-breeze, drinking in the cool night air, and listening, as in a dream,
-to the mysterious voices of the trees and the murmur of the river
-that ran below. Ah, what moments of happiness, what supreme joys,
-were promised him by this love, which flattered his pride, excited
-his imagination and satisfied his egotism, the delicate egotism of a
-poet, avid of love, of enjoyments which the imagination idealizes and
-the muse may sing without degradation! All that he had pictured in
-his verses was to be realized in his life; and his song would ring
-forth more clearly and inspiration would flow more freely, and he
-would write, in blood, verses that would cause his readers' hearts to
-thrill with emotion.
-
-In defiance of duty and reason Nieves loved him--she had told him
-so. The poet smiled scornfully when he thought of Don Victoriano,
-with the profound contempt of the idealist for the practical man
-inept in spiritual things. Then he looked around him. The pine grove
-had a gloomy air at this hour. And it was cold. Besides it must be
-late. They would be wondering at his absence in Las Vides. Had Nieves
-retired? With these thoughts passing through his mind he descended
-the rugged path and reached the door ten minutes after the careful
-hand of Genday had secured the bolt. The _contretemps_ did not alarm
-Segundo; he would have to scale some wall; and the romance of the
-incident almost pleased him. How should he effect an entrance?
-
-Undoubtedly the easiest way would be by the garden, into which he
-could lower himself from the brow of the hill--a question of a few
-scratches, but he would be in his own room in ten minutes' time,
-without encountering the dogs that were keeping watch in the yard, or
-any member of the household, as that side of the house, the side
-where the dining-room was situated, was uninhabited. And upon this
-course he decided. He turned back and ascended the top of the hill,
-not without some difficulty. From thence he could command a view of
-the gallery and a good part of the garden. He studied the nature of
-the declivity, so as to avoid falling on the wall and perhaps
-breaking his leg. The hill was bare and without vegetation and the
-figure of the Swan stood out boldly against the background of the
-sky.
-
-When Segundo fixed his eyes on the gallery for the purpose of
-deciding on the safest place for a descent, he saw something that
-troubled his senses with a sweet intoxication, something that gave
-him one of those delightful surprises which make the blood rush to
-the heart to send it coursing back joyful and ardent through the
-veins. In the semi-obscurity of the gallery, standing among the
-flower-pots, his keen gaze descried, without the possibility of a
-doubt as to the reality of the vision, a white figure, the silhouette
-of a woman, whose attitude seemed to indicate that she too had seen
-him, had observed him, that she was waiting for him.
-
-Fancy swiftly sketched out and filled in the details of the
-scene--a colloquy, a divine colloquy of love with Nieves, among the
-carnations and the vines, alone, without any other witnesses than the
-moon, already setting, and the flowers, envious of so much happiness.
-And with a swift movement he rolled down the steep declivity, landing
-on the hard wall. The fruit trees hid the path from him, and two or
-three times he lost his way; at last he found himself at the foot of
-the staircase leading to the gallery, and he raised his eyes to
-satisfy himself as to the reality of the lovely apparition. A woman
-dressed in white was indeed waiting there, leaning over the wooden
-balustrade of the balcony; but the distance did not now admit of any
-optical illusion; it was Elvira Molende, in a percale wrapper, her
-hair hanging loose about her shoulders, as if she were an actress
-rehearsing the rôle of _Sonnambula_. How eagerly the poor girl was
-leaning over the balustrade! The poet would swear that she even
-called his name softly, with a tender lisp.
-
-And he passed on. He made the tour of the garden, entered the
-courtyard by the inner door, which was not closed at night, and
-knocked loudly at the door of the kitchen. The servant opened it for
-him, cursing to himself the young gentlemen who stayed up late at
-night because they were not obliged to rise early in the morning to
-open the cellar for the grape-tramplers.
-
-
-
-
- XX.
-
-
-As the time occupied in the gathering of the grapes and the
-elaboration of the wine in the spacious cellar of Mendez was so
-prolonged, and as in that part of the country everyone has his own
-crop, however small, to gather in, part of the guests went away,
-desirous of attending to their own vineyards. Señorito de Limioso
-needed to see for himself how, between oïdium, the blackbirds, the
-neighbors, and the wasps, not a single bunch of grapes had been left
-him; the Señoritas de Molende had to hang up with their own hands the
-grapes of their famous Tostado, renowned throughout the country; and
-for similar reasons Saturnino Agonde, the arch-priest, and the curate
-of Naya took their leave one by one, the court of Las Vides being
-reduced to Carmen Agonde, maid of honor, Clodio Genday, Aulic
-councilor, Tropiezo, court physician, and Segundo, who might well be
-the page or the troubadour charged to divert the châtelaine with his
-ditties.
-
-Segundo was consumed with a feverish impatience hitherto unknown
-to him. Since the day of the interview in the lemon tree Nieves had
-shunned every occasion of being alone with him; and the feverish
-dream that haunted his sleep, the intolerable anguish which consumed
-him, was that he had advanced no further than the fugitive _yes_,
-which he sometimes even doubted he had heard. He could not endure
-this slow torture, this ceaseless martyrdom; he would have been less
-unhappy if instead of encouraging him Nieves had requited his love
-with open scorn. It was not the brutal desire for positive victories
-which thus tormented him; all he wished was to convince himself that
-he was really loved, and that under that steely corset a tender heart
-throbbed. And so mad was his passion that when he found it impossible
-to approach Nieves, he was seized by an almost irresistible impulse
-to cry out, "Nieves, tell me again that you love me!" Always, always
-obstacles between the two; the child was always at her mother's side.
-Of what avail was it to be rid of Elvira Molende who, since the
-memorable night on which she had kept guard in the gallery, had
-looked at the poet with an expression that was half satirical, half
-mournful? The departure of the poetess removed an obstacle, indeed,
-but it did not put an end to his difficulties.
-
-Segundo suffered in his vanity, wounded by the systematic reserve
-of Nieves, as well as in his love, his ardent longing for the
-impossible. It was already October; the ex-Minister spoke of taking
-his departure immediately, and although Segundo counted on
-establishing himself in Madrid later on through his influence, and
-meeting Nieves again, an infallible instinct told him that between
-Nieves and himself there existed no other bond of union than their
-temporary sojourn in Las Vides, the poetic influences of the season,
-the accident of living under the same roof, and that if this dream
-did not take shape before their separation it would be as ephemeral
-as the vine leaves that were now falling around them, withered and
-sapless.
-
-Autumn was parting with its glories; the wrinkled and knotted
-vine stalks, the dry and shrunken vine branches, lay bare to view,
-and the wind moaned sadly, stripping their leaves from the boughs of
-the fruit trees. One day Victorina asked Segundo:
-
-"When are we going to the pine grove to hear it sing?"
-
-"Whenever you like, child. This afternoon if your mother wishes
-it."
-
-The child conveyed the proposition to Nieves. For some time past
-Victorina had been more than usually demonstrative toward her mother,
-leaning her head upon Nieves' breast, hiding her cheek in her neck,
-passing her hands over her hair and her shoulders while she would
-repeat softly, in a voice that seemed to ask for a caress:
-
-"Mamma! mamma!"
-
-But the eyes of the miniature woman, half-veiled by their long
-lashes, were fixed with loving, longing glance, not on her mother,
-but on the poet, whose words the child drank in eagerly, turning very
-red if he chanced to make some jesting remark to her or gave any
-other indication of being aware of her presence.
-
-Nieves objected a little at first, not wishing to appear
-credulous or superstitious.
-
-"But what has put such an idea into your head?"
-
-"Mamma, when Segundo says that the pines sing, they sing, mamma,
-there is not a doubt of it."
-
-"But you don't know," said Nieves, bestowing on the poet a smile
-in which there was more sugar than salt--"that Segundo writes poetry,
-and that people who write poetry are permitted to--to invent--a
-little?"
-
-"No, Señora," cried Segundo. "Do not teach your child what is not
-true. Do not deceive her. In society it often happens that we utter
-with the lips sentiments that are far from the heart, but in poetry
-we lay bare the feelings of the inmost soul, feelings which in the
-world we are obliged to hide in our own breasts, through respect--or
-through prudence. Believe me."
-
-"Say, mamma, are we going there to-day?"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"To the pine grove."
-
-"If you are very anxious to go. What an obstinate child! But
-indeed I too am curious to hear this orchestra."
-
-Only Nieves, Victorina, Carmen, Segundo, and Tropiezo took part
-in the expedition. The elders remained behind smoking and looking on
-at the important operation of covering and closing some of the vats
-which contained the must, now fermented. As Mendez saw the party
-about to start, he called out in a tone of paternal warning:
-
-"Take care with the descent. The pine needles in this hot weather
-are as slippery as if they had been rubbed with soap. The ladies must
-be helped down. You, Victorina, don't be crazy; don't go rushing
-about there."
-
-The famous pine grove was distant some quarter of a league, but
-they spent fully three-quarters of an hour in making the ascent,
-along a path as steep, narrow, and rugged as the ascent to heaven is
-said to be, and which long before reaching the wood was carpeted with
-the polished, smooth, dry pine needles, which, if they rendered the
-descent more easy than was agreeable, compensated for it by making
-the ascent extremely difficult, causing the foot to slip, and
-fatiguing the ankles and the knees. Nieves stopped from time to time
-to take breath, and was at last fain to avail herself of the support
-of the plump arm of Carmen Agonde.
-
-"_Caramba_, this is like practicing gymnastics! Whoever escapes
-being killed when we are going back will be very lucky."
-
-"Lean well on me, lean well on me," said the sturdy country girl.
-"Many a limb has been broken here already, no doubt. This ascent is
-terrible!"
-
-They reached the summit at last. The prospect was beautiful, with
-that species of beauty that borders on sublimity. The pine wood
-seemed to hang over an abyss. Between the trunks of the trees could
-be caught glimpses of the mountains, of an ashen blue blending into
-violet in the distance; on the other side of the pine wood, that
-which overlooked the river, the ground fell abruptly in a steep,
-almost perpendicular descent, while far below flowed the Avieiro, not
-winding peacefully along, but noisy and foaming, roused into rage by
-the barrier opposed to its progress by some sharp black rocks and
-separating into numerous currents that curled around the bowlders
-like angry green snakes covered with silver scales. To the roaring
-and sobbing of the river the pine wood kept accompaniment with its
-perpetual plaint intoned by the summits of the trees, which swayed
-and vibrated to the kisses of the breeze, dolorous kisses that drew
-from them an incessant moan.
-
-The excursionists, impressed by the tragic aspect of the scene,
-remained mute. Only the child broke the silence, speaking in tones as
-hushed as if she were in a church.
-
-"Well, it is true, mamma! The pines sing. Do you hear them? It
-sounds like the chorus of bishops in 'L'Africaine.' They even seem to
-speak--listen--in bass voices--like that passage in the
-'Huguenots----'"
-
-Nieves agreed that the murmur of the pines was in truth musical
-and solemn. Segundo, leaning against a tree, looked down at the river
-foaming below; Victorina approached him, but he stopped her and made
-her go back.
-
-"No, my child," he said; "don't come near; it is a little
-dangerous; if you should lose your footing and roll down that
-declivity----Go back, go back."
-
-As nothing further occurred to them to say about the pines, the
-excursionists began to think of returning home; Nieves was a little
-uneasy about the descent, and she wished to undertake it before the
-sun should set.
-
-"Now, indeed, we shall break some of our bones, Don Fermin," she
-said to the doctor. "Now, indeed, you may begin to get your bandages
-and splints ready."
-
-"There is another road," said Segundo, emerging from his
-abstraction. "And one which is much less toilsome and much more level
-than this."
-
-"Yes, talk to us now about the other road," cried Tropiezo, true
-to his habit of voting with the opposition. "It is even worse than
-the one by which we came."
-
-"How should it be worse, man? It is a little longer, but as it is
-not so steep it is the best in the end. It skirts the pine wood."
-
-"Do you want to tell me which is the best road--me who know the
-whole country as well as I know my own house? You cannot go by that
-road; I know what I am saying."
-
-"And I say that you can, and I will prove it to you. For once in
-your life don't be stubborn. I came by it not many days ago. Do you
-remember, Nieves, the night we played hide-and-seek in the garden,
-the night they barred me out and I got over the wall?"
-
-Had it not been for the thick shade cast by the pine trees and
-the fading daylight, it would have been seen that Nieves blushed.
-
-"Let us take whichever road is easiest and most level," she said,
-evading an answer. "I am very awkward about walking over rough
-roads."
-
-Segundo offered his arm, saying jestingly:
-
-"That blessed Tropiezo knows as much about roads as he does about
-the art of healing. Come, and you shall see that we will be the
-gainers by it."
-
-Tropiezo, on his side, was saying to Carmen Agonde, shaking his
-head obstinately:
-
-"Well, we will please ourselves and go by the cut, and arrive
-before they do, safe and sound, with the help of God."
-
-Victorina, according to her custom, was going to her mother's
-side, when the doctor called out to her:
-
-"Here, take hold of the end of my stick or you will slip. Your
-mamma will have enough to do to keep herself from falling. And God
-save us from a _trip_," he added, laughing loudly at his jest.
-
-The voices and footsteps receded in the distance, and Segundo and
-Nieves continued on their way in silence. The precipitous character
-of the path along which they walked inspired Nieves with something
-like fear. It was a little path cut on the slope of the pine wood, on
-the very edge of the precipice, almost overhanging the river.
-Although Segundo gave Nieves the least dangerous side, that next the
-wood, leaving himself scarcely a foothold, so that he was obliged to
-place one foot horizontally before the other, in walking, this did
-not set her fears at rest or make the adventure seem any the less
-dangerous to her. Her terror was increased a hundredfold when she saw
-that they were alone.
-
-"Are they not coming?" she asked anxiously.
-
-"We will overtake them in less than ten minutes. They are going
-by the other road," answered Segundo, without adding a single word of
-endearment, or even pressing the arm which trembled with terror
-within his.
-
-"Let us go on, then," said Nieves, in tones of urgent entreaty.
-"I am anxious to be home."
-
-"Why?" asked the poet, suddenly standing still.
-
-"I am tired--out of breath----"
-
-"Well, you shall rest and take a drink of water if you desire
-it."
-
-And with rash hardihood Segundo, without waiting for an answer,
-drew Nieves down the slope and, skirting the rock, stopped on a
-narrow ledge which projected over the river. By the fading sunset
-light they discried a crystal thread of water trickling down the
-black front of the rock.
-
-"Drink, if you wish--in the palm of your hand, for we have no
-glass," said Segundo.
-
-Nieves mechanically released Segundo's arm, scarcely conscious of
-what she was doing, and took a step toward the stream; but the ground
-at the base of the rock, kept moist by the dripping of the water, was
-overgrown with humid vegetation as slippery as sea-weed, and as she
-set her foot upon it she slipped and lost her balance. In her
-vertigo, she saw the river roaring menacingly below, the sharp rocks
-waiting to receive her and mangle her flesh, and she already felt the
-chill air of the abyss. A hand clutched her by her gown, by her
-flesh, perhaps; held her up and drew her back to safety. She dropped
-her head on Segundo's shoulder and the latter, for the first time,
-felt Nieves' heart beat under his hand. And how quickly it beat! It
-beat with fear. The poet bent over her, and on her very lips breathed
-this question:
-
-"Do you love me? tell me, do you love me?"
-
-The answer was inaudible, for even if the words had been formed
-in her throat her sealed lips were unable to articulate them. During
-this short space of time, which was for them an eternity, there
-flashed across Segundo's brain a thought potent and destructive as
-the electric spark. The poet stood fronting the precipice, Nieves
-with her back toward it, kept from falling over its edge only by the
-arm of her savior. A movement forward, a stronger pressure of his
-lips to hers, would be sufficient to make them both lose their
-balance and precipitate them into the abyss. It would be a beautiful
-ending--worthy of the ambitious soul of a poet. Thinking of it
-Segundo found it alluring and desirable, and yet the instinct of
-self-preservation, an animal impulse, but one more powerful than the
-romantic idea, placed between the thought and the action an
-insuperable barrier. He pleased himself, in imagination, with the
-picture of the two bodies clasped in each other's arms, borne along
-by the current of the river. He even saw in fancy the scene of the
-discovery of the corpses, the exclamations; the profound impression
-that such an event would cause in the district; and _something_, some
-poetic feeling that stirred and thrilled in his youthful soul, urged
-him to take the leap; but at the same time a cold fear congealed his
-blood, obliging him to proceed slowly, not toward the abyss, but in
-an opposite direction, toward the path.
-
-All this, short enough in the telling, was instantaneous in the
-thinking. Segundo felt a cold chill strike through him, putting to
-flight thoughts of love as well as of death. It was the chill
-communicated to him by the lips of Nieves, who had fainted in his
-arms.
-
-He dipped his handkerchief in the spring and applied it to her
-temples and wrists. She half opened her eyes. They could hear
-Tropiezo talking, Carmen laughing; they were coming doubtless in
-search of them, to triumph over them. Nieves, when she came back to
-consciousness and found herself still alone, did not make the
-slightest effort to free herself from the poet's embrace.
-
-
-
-
- XXI.
-
-
-As if by tacit agreement the hero and heroine of the adventure
-made light of the danger they had run, to their companions in the
-excursion in the first place, and afterward to the elders at Las
-Vides. Segundo observed a certain reticence regarding the particulars
-of the occurrence. Nieves, on the contrary, was more talkative than
-usual, speaking with nervous loquacity, going over the most
-insignificant details a hundred times. She had slipped; García had
-reached out his hand to her; she had caught it, and as she
-was--well--timid, she had been a little frightened, although there
-was not the slightest occasion for being so. But the obstinate
-Tropiezo, with mild scorn, contradicted her. Good Heavens, how
-mistaken she was! No danger? Why, it was only by a miracle that
-Nieves was not now floating in the Avieiro. The ground there was as
-slippery as soap, and the stones below were as sharp as razors, and
-the current was so strong that----Nieves denied the danger, making an
-effort to laugh; but the terror of the accident had left unmistakable
-traces upon her countenance, changing its warm healthy pallor to a
-sickly hue, producing dark circles under her eyes, and making her
-features twitch convulsively.
-
-Segundo longed to say a few words to her, to ask her to grant him
-an interview; he comprehended that he must avail himself of these
-first moments, while her soul was still under the softening influence
-of gratitude and fright which made her cold heart palpitate beneath
-the whalebone of her stays. In the brief scene of the precipice the
-arrival of Tropiezo had allowed Nieves no time to respond explicitly
-to the poet's ardor, and Segundo wished to come to some agreement
-with her, to devise some means of seeing each other and talking to
-each other alone, to establish the fact at once that all these
-anxieties, these vigils, these intrigues, were love and requited
-love--a mutual passion, in short. When and how should he find the
-desired opportunity of establishing an understanding with Nieves?
-
-It may be said that in the history of every love affair there
-exists a first period in which obstacles accumulate and difficulties,
-seemingly insurmountable, arise, driving to despair the lover who has
-made up his mind to conquer them, and that there comes, too, a second
-period in which the mysterious force of desire and the power of the
-will sweep away these obstacles, and circumstances, for the moment
-favorable, aid the lovers. So it happened on the night of this
-memorable day. As Victorina had been somewhat frightened, hearing of
-the danger her mother had been in, she had been sent to bed early,
-and Carmen Agonde had remained with her to put her asleep by telling
-her stories. The principal witnesses being thus removed and the
-elders plunged in one of their interminable viticultural,
-agricultural, and sociological discussions, Nieves, who had gone out
-on the balcony for air--for she felt as if she had a lump in her
-throat which prevented her from breathing--had an opportunity to chat
-for ten minutes with Segundo, who was standing near the window, not
-far from the rocking-chairs.
-
-Occasionally they would raise their voices and speak on
-indifferent subjects--the afternoon's accident, the strange singing
-of the pines. And low, very low, the diplomatic negotiation of the
-poet followed its course. An interview, a conversation with some
-degree of freedom. Why, of course it could be! Why could it not take
-place in the gallery that very night? No one was going to think of
-going there to spy out what was passing. He could let himself down
-easily into the garden----He could not? She was very timid----It
-would be wrong? Why?--She was tired and not very well----Yes, he
-understood. She would prefer the daytime, perhaps. Well, the other
-would be better, but----Without fail? At the hour of the siesta? In
-the parlor? No; nobody ever went there; everyone was asleep. On her
-word of honor?--Thanks. Yes, it was necessary to dissemble so as not
-to attract attention.
-
-Meantime the gentlemen at the tresillo table talked of the
-vintage and its consequences. The poor country girls earned a good
-deal of money at the work. Apropos of which Don Victoriano gave
-expression to some of his favorite ideas, referring to English
-legislature, and eulogizing the wisdom of that great nation whose
-laws regulating labor give evidence of a careful study of the
-problems it involves, and of some regard for the welfare of women and
-children. With these serious disquisitions the evening ended, every
-owl retiring to his olive tree.
-
-Nieves, seated at her toilet table, her open dressing-case and a
-small silver-framed mirror before her, was taking out, one by one,
-the tortoise-shell hair-pins which fastened her hair. Mademoiselle
-gathered them together and arranged them neatly in a box and braided
-Nieves' hair, after which the latter threw herself back in her seat
-and drew a deep breath; suddenly she looked up.
-
-"If you could make me a cup of lime tea," she said, "in your own
-room, without troubling anybody?"
-
-The Frenchwoman left the room and Nieves leaned her elbow
-thoughtfully on the table, resting her cheek in the palm of her hand,
-without moving her eyes from the mirror. Her face was deathly pale.
-No, this life could not continue; if it did it would carry her to her
-grave. She was very nervous--what terrors! What anxiety, what moments
-of anguish she had suffered! She had seen death face to face, and had
-had more frights, more fears, more misery in a single day than in all
-the previous years of her existence put together. If this were love
-in truth there was little that was pleasing in it; such agitations
-were not suited to her. It was one thing to like to be pretty, and to
-be told so, and even to have a passionate adorer, and another to
-suffer these incessant anxieties, these surprises that bring one's
-heart to one's mouth and expose one to the risk of disgrace and
-destroy one's health. And the poets say that this is happiness. It
-may be so for them--as for the poor women----And why had she not the
-courage to tell Segundo that there must be an end to this, to say to
-him: "I can endure these alarms no longer. I am afraid. I am
-miserable!" Ah, she was afraid of him, too. He was capable of killing
-her; his handsome black eyes sent forth at times electric sparks and
-phosphoric gleams. And then he always took the lead, he dominated
-her, he mastered her. Through him she had been on the point of
-falling into the river, of being dashed to pieces on the rocks. Holy
-Virgin! Why, only half an hour ago did he not almost force her to
-agree to a meeting in the gallery? Which would be a great piece of
-madness, since it would be impossible for her to go to that part of
-the house without her absence being noticed by Mademoiselle, or
-someone else, and its cause being discovered. Good Heavens! All this
-was terrible, terrible! And to-morrow she must go to the parlor at
-the hour of the siesta. Well, then, she would take a bold resolution.
-She would go, yes, but she would go to clear up this
-misunderstanding, to give Segundo some plain talk that would make him
-place some restraint upon himself; that he should love her, very
-good; she had no objection to that, that was well enough; but to
-compromise her in this way, that was a thing unheard of; she would
-entreat him to return to Vilamorta; they would soon go to Madrid. Ah,
-how long that blessed Mademoiselle delayed with the lime tea.
-
-The door opened to admit, not Mademoiselle, but Don Victoriano.
-There was nothing to surprise her in his appearance; he slept in a
-sort of cabinet near his wife's room and separated from it by a
-passageway, and every night before retiring he gave a kiss to the
-child, whose bed was beside her mother's; nevertheless Nieves felt a
-chill creep over her, and she instinctively turned her back to the
-light, coughing to hide her agitation.
-
-The truth was that Don Victoriano looked very serious, even
-stern. He had not indeed been very cheerful or communicative ever
-since his illness had assumed a serious character; but in addition to
-his air of dejection there was an indefinable something, a darker
-gloom on his face than usual, a cloud pregnant with storm. Nieves,
-observing that he did not approach the child's bed, cast down her
-eyes and affected to be occupied in smoothing her hair with the ivory
-comb.
-
-"How do you feel, child? Have you recovered from your fright?"
-asked her husband.
-
-"No; I am still a little----I have asked for some lime tea."
-
-"You did well. See, Nieves----"
-
-"Well--well?"
-
-"See, Nieves, we must go to Madrid at once."
-
-"Whenever you wish. You know that I----"
-
-"No, the thing is that it is necessary, indispensable. I must put
-myself seriously under treatment, child; for if things continue as
-they are now it will soon be all over with me. I had the weakness to
-put myself in the hands of that ass, Don Fermin. God forgive me for
-it! and I fear," he added, smiling bitterly, "that I have made a
-fatal mistake. Let us see if Sanchez del Abrojo will get me out of
-the scrape--I doubt it greatly."
-
-"Heavens, how apprehensive you are!" exclaimed Nieves, breathing
-freely once more and availing herself of the resource offered to her
-by Don Victoriano's illness. "Anyone would think you had an incurable
-disease. When you are once in Madrid and Sanchez has you under his
-care--in a couple of months you will not even remember this trifling
-indisposition."
-
-"Bravo! child, bravo! I don't wish to hurt your feelings or to
-seem unkind, but what you say proves that you neither look at me, nor
-care a straw about my health, nor pay any attention to me whatever,
-which--forgive me--is not creditable to you. My disease is a serious,
-a very serious one--it is a disease that carries people off in fine
-style. I am being converted into sugar, my sight is failing, my head
-aches, I have no blood left, and you, serene and gay, sporting about
-like a child. A wife who loved her husband would not act in this way.
-You have troubled yourself neither about the state of my body nor the
-state of my mind. You are enjoying yourself, having a fine time, and
-as for the rest--a great deal it matters to you!"
-
-Nieves rose to her feet, tremulous, almost weeping.
-
-"What are you saying? I--I----"
-
-"Don't distress yourself, child; don't cry. You are young and
-well; I am wasted and sickly. So much the worse for me. But listen to
-me. Although I seem to you dry and serious, I loved you tenderly,
-Nieves, I love you still, as much as I love that child who is
-sleeping there, I swear it to you before God! And you might--you
-might love me a little--like a daughter--and take some interest in
-me. The trouble would not be for long now--I feel so sick."
-
-Nieves drew near him with an affectionate movement and he touched
-her forehead with his parched lips, pressing her to him at the same
-time. Then he added:
-
-"I have still another observation to make, another sermon to
-preach to you, child."
-
-"What is it?" murmured his wife smiling, but terrified.
-
-"That boy García--don't be alarmed, child, there is no need for
-that--that boy looks at you sometimes in a very curious way, as if he
-were making love to you. No, I am not doubting you. You are and you
-have always been an irreproachable wife--I am not accusing you, nor
-do I attach any importance to such folly. But, although you may not
-believe it, the young men here are very daring; they are shyer in
-appearance than those of the capital, but they are bolder in reality.
-I spent my youthful years here, and I know them. I am only putting
-you on your guard so that you may keep that jackanapes within bounds.
-For the rest of the time we are to remain in this place, avoid those
-long walks and all those other rusticities which they indulge in
-here. A lady like you among these people is a sort of queen, and it
-is not proper that they should take the same liberties with you as
-with the Señoritas de Molende or others like them--but I have already
-told you that such a thought has not even crossed my mind. It is one
-thing that this village Swan should have fallen in love with you, and
-have given you his hand to help you over the rocks, and another that
-I should insult you, child!"
-
-Shortly afterward Mademoiselle entered with the steaming cup of
-tea. And greatly Nieves needed it. Her nerves were in a state of the
-utmost tension. She was on the verge of a hysterical attack. She even
-felt nausea when she took the first few spoonfuls. Mademoiselle
-offered her some anti-hysterical drops. Nieves drank the remedy, and
-with a few yawns and two or three tears the attack passed off. She
-thought she would go to bed, and went into her bedroom. There she saw
-something which renewed her uneasiness--Victorina, instead of being
-asleep, lay with eyes wide open. She had probably heard every word of
-the conversation.
-
-
-
-
- XXII.
-
-
-She had in fact heard it all, from beginning to end. And the
-words of the conjugal dialogue were whirling around in her brain,
-mingling confusedly together, stamping themselves in characters of
-fire on her virgin memory. She repeated them to herself, she tried to
-understand their meaning, she weighed them, she drew conclusions from
-them.
-
-No one can tell which is the precise moment that divides day from
-night, sleeping from waking, youth from maturity, and innocence from
-knowledge. Who can fix the moment in which the child, passing into
-adolescence, observes in herself that undefinable something which may
-perhaps be called consciousness of sex, in which vague presentiment
-is changed into swift intuition, in which, without an exact notion of
-the realities of life, she divines all that experience will
-corroborate and accentuate later on, in which she understands the
-importance of a sign, the significance of an act, the character of a
-relationship, the value of a glance, and the meaning of a reticence.
-The moment in which her eyes, hitherto open only to external life,
-acquire power to scrutinize the inner life also, and losing their
-superficial brilliancy, the clear reflection of her ingenuous purity,
-acquire the concentrated and undefinable expression which constitutes
-the _glance of a grown person_.
-
-This moment arrived for Victorina at the age of eleven, on the
-night we have mentioned, overhearing a dialogue between her father
-and mother. Motionless, with bated breath, her feet cold, her head
-burning, the child heard everything, and afterward, in the dim light
-of the bedroom, united broken links, remembering certain incidents,
-and at last understood without attaching much importance to what she
-understood, reasoning, however, with singular precocity, owing,
-perhaps, to the painful activity with which imagination works in the
-silence of night and the repose of the bed.
-
-It is certain that the child slept badly, tossing about
-restlessly in her monastic little bed. Two ideas, especially, seemed
-to pierce her brain like nails. Her father was ill, very ill, and he
-was annoyed and displeased, besides, because Segundo had fallen in
-love with her mamma. With her mamma. Not with her! With her who
-preserved all the flowers he had given her like relics.
-
-The sorrows of childhood know neither limit nor consolation. When
-we are older and more storms have passed over us, and we have seen
-with astonishment that man can survive griefs which we had thought
-unsurvivable, and that the heavens do not fall because we have lost
-what we love, it may almost be said that absolute despair, which is
-the heritage of childhood, does not exist. It was evident to
-Victorina that her father was dying and that her mother was wicked,
-and Segundo a villain, and that the world had come to an end--and
-that she too, she too, desired to die. If it were possible for the
-hair to turn white at eleven, Victorina would have become white on
-the night in which suffering changed her from a bashful, timid,
-blushing child to a moral being, capable of the greatest heroism.
-
-Nor did Nieves enjoy the balmy sweets of slumber. Her husband's
-words had made her thoughtful. Was Don Victoriano's illness a fatal
-one? It might be so! He looked greatly altered, poor fellow. And
-Nieves felt a touch of grief and apprehension. Why, who could doubt
-that she loved her husband, or that she should regret his death? She
-did not feel for him any passionate love, such as is described in
-novels--but affection--yes. Heaven grant the malady might be a
-trifling one. And if it were not? And if she were to be left a wi----
-She did not dare to complete the word even in her thoughts. To think
-of such a thing seemed like indulging in wicked desires. No, but the
-fact was that women, when their husbands die, were--Holy Virgin! It
-must be a terrible grief. Well, but _if it happened_?
-Segundo--Heavens, what folly! Most assuredly such an absurdity had
-never entered his head. The Garcías--nobodies. And here a vivid
-picture of all Segundo's relations and their manner of living
-presented itself to her mind.
-
-She would willingly have absented herself from the rendezvous on
-the following day, because her husband had begun to suspect something
-and the situation was a compromising one, although in the place
-designated for the interview the meeting between them might always be
-attributed to chance. On the other hand if she failed to meet him,
-Segundo, who was so enamored, was fully capable of creating a
-scandal, of going to look for her in her room, of forcing an entrance
-into it through the window.
-
-After all, thinking well over the matter, she judged it most
-prudent to comply with her promise and to entreat Segundo to--forget
-her--or at least not to compromise her. That was the best course to
-pursue.
-
-Nieves passed the morning in a state of complete prostration; she
-scarcely tasted a morsel at breakfast and during the meal she kept
-her eyes turned away from Segundo, fearing lest her husband should
-surprise some furtive glance of intelligence between them. To make
-matters worse, Segundo, desirous of reminding her with his eyes of
-her promise, looked at her on this day oftener than usual.
-Fortunately Don Victoriano's attention seemed to be all given to
-satisfying his voracious appetite for eating and drinking. The meal
-being finished everyone retired as usual to take the siesta. Nieves
-went to her room. She found Victorina there, lying on the bed. For
-greater precaution she asked her:
-
-"Are you going to sleep the siesta, my pet?"
-
-"To sleep, no. But I am comfortable here."
-
-Nieves looked at herself in the glass and saw that she was pale.
-She washed her teeth, and after satisfying herself by a rapid glance
-that her husband was resting in the other room, she stole softly into
-the parlor. She was trembling. This atmosphere of storm and danger,
-grateful to the sea-fowl, was fatal to the domestic bird. It was no
-life to be always shuddering with fear, her blood curdled by fright.
-It was not to live. It was not to breathe. She would end by becoming
-crazy. Had she not fancied just now that she heard steps behind her,
-as if someone were following her? Two or three times she had stopped
-and leaned, fainting, against the wall of the corridor, vowing in her
-own mind that she would never put herself in such a dilemma again.
-
-When she reached the parlor she stopped, half startled. It was so
-silent and drowsy in the semi-obscurity, with the half-closed
-shutters through which entered a single sunbeam full of dancing
-golden motes, with its sleepy mirrors that were too lazy to reflect
-anything from their turbid surfaces, its drowsy asthmatic clock,
-whose face looked like a human countenance watching her and coughing
-disapprovingly. Suddenly she heard quick, youthful foot-steps and
-Segundo, audacious, impassioned, threw himself at her feet and
-clasped his arms around her. She tried to restrain him, to advise
-him, to explain to him. The poet refused to heed her, he continued
-pouring forth exclamations of gratitude and love and then, rising to
-his feet, he drew her toward him with the irresistible force of a
-passion which does not stop to consider consequences.
-
-When Don Victoriano saw the child enter his room, white as wax,
-livid, almost, darting fire from her eyes, in one of those
-horror-inspired attitudes which can neither be feigned nor imitated,
-he sprang from the bed where he had been lying awake smoking a cigar.
-The child said to him, in a choking voice:
-
-"Come, papa! come, papa!"
-
-What were the thoughts that passed through her father's mind? It
-was never known why he followed his daughter without putting to her a
-single question. On the threshold of the parlor father and child
-paused. Nieves uttered a shrill scream and Segundo, with an
-impassioned and manly gesture, placed himself before her to shield
-her with his body. An unnecessary defense. In the figure of the man
-standing on the threshold there was nothing of menace; what there was
-in it to inspire terror was precisely its air of stupor and
-helplessness; it seemed a corpse, a specter overwhelmed with impotent
-despair--the face, green rather than sallow, the eyes opened, dull
-and fixed, the hands and feet trembling. The man was making fruitless
-efforts to speak; paralysis had begun with the tongue; he tried in
-vain to move it in his mouth, to form sounds. Horrible conflict! The
-words struggled for utterance but remained unuttered; his face
-changed from livid to red, the blood becoming congested in it, and
-the child, clasping her father around the waist, seeing this combat
-between the spirit and the body, cried:
-
-"Help! help! Papa is dying!"
-
-Nieves, not daring to approach her husband, but comprehending
-that something very serious was the matter, screamed too for help.
-And at the various doors appeared one after another Primo Genday and
-Tropiezo in their shirt-sleeves, and Mendez with a cotton
-handkerchief tied over his ears.
-
-Segundo stood silent in the middle of the room, uncertain what
-course to pursue. To leave the room would be cowardly, to
-remain----Tropiezo shook him.
-
-"Go, flying, to Vilamorta, boy!" he said. "Tell Doroteo, the
-cabman, to go to Orense and bring back a doctor with him--the best he
-can find. I don't want to make a trip this time," he added with a
-wink. "Run, hurry off!"
-
-The Swan approached Nieves, who had thrown herself on the sofa
-and was weeping, her face covered with her dainty handkerchief.
-
-"They want me to go for a doctor, Nieves. What shall I do?"
-
-"Go!"
-
-"Shall I return?"
-
-"No--for God's sake leave me. Go bring the doctor! go bring the
-doctor!" And she sobbed more violently than before.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In spite of all Segundo's haste, the physician did not arrive in
-Las Vides until early on the morning of the following day. He did not
-think the case an unusual one. This disease often terminated in this
-way, in paralysis; it was one of the most frequent complications of
-the terrible malady. He added that it would be well to remove the
-patient to Orense, taking suitable precautions. The removal was
-effected without much difficulty, and Don Victoriano lived for a few
-days longer. Twenty-four hours after the interment Nieves and
-Victorina, attired in the deepest mourning, departed for the capital.
-
-
-
-
- XXIII.
-
-
-The black pall of winter has fallen over Vilamorta. It is
-raining, and in the wet and muddy main street and plaza no one is to
-be seen but occasionally some countryman, riding enveloped in his
-grass cloth cloak, his horse's hoofs clattering on the stone
-pavement, raising showers of mud. There are now no fruit-venders for
-the simple reason that there is no fruit; all is deserted, damp,
-muddy, and gloomy; Cansin, in listing slippers, a comforter around
-his neck, walks up and down unceasingly before his door, to prevent
-chilblains; the Alcalde avails himself of a very narrow arch in front
-of his house to pass away the afternoon, walking ten steps up and ten
-steps down, stamping energetically to keep his feet warm--an exercise
-which he affirms to be indispensable to his digestion.
-
-Now indeed the little town seems lifeless! There are neither
-visitors to the springs nor strangers from the surrounding country,
-neither fairs nor vintages. Everywhere reigns the stillness and
-solitude of the tomb, and a moisture so persistent that it covers
-with a minute green vegetation the stones of the houses in course of
-construction. These little towns in winter are enough to make the
-most cheerful person low-spirited; they are the very acme of tedium,
-the quintessence of dullness--the disinclination to arrange one's
-hair, to change one's dress, the interminable evenings, the
-persistent rain, the gloomy cold, the ashen atmosphere, the leaden
-sky!
-
-In the midst of this species of lethargy in which Vilamorta is
-plunged there are, however, some happy beings, beings who are now at
-the summit of felicity, although soon destined to end their existence
-in the most tragic manner; beings who, by their natural instinct
-alone, have divined the philosophy of Epicurus and practice it, and
-eat, drink, and make merry, and neither fear death nor think of the
-unexplored region which opens its gates to the dying, beings who
-receive the rain on their smooth skins with rejoicing, beings for
-whom the mud is a luxurious bath in which they roll and wallow with
-delight, abandoning the discomfort and narrowness of their lairs and
-sties. They are the indisputable lords and masters of Vilamorta at
-this season of the year; they who with their pomps and exploits
-supply the reunions at the apothecary's with food for conversation,
-and entertainment for familiar gatherings in which their respective
-sizes are discussed and they are studied from the point of view of
-their personal qualities, heated discussions taking place as to
-whether the short or the long ear, the curly tail, the hoof more or
-less curved upward, and the snout more or less pointed, augur the
-more succulent flesh and the more abundant fat. Comparisons are made.
-Pellejo's hog is superb as far as size is concerned, but its flesh,
-of an erysipelatous rosy hue, and its immense flabby belly, betray
-the hog of relaxed muscle, nourished on bakehouse refuse; a
-magnificent swine, that of the Alcalde, which has been fed on
-chestnuts, not so large as the other, but what hams it will make!
-What hams! And what bacon! And what a back, broad enough to ride
-upon! This will be the swine of the season. There are not wanting
-those who affirm, however, that the queen of the swine of Vilamorta
-is the pig of Aunt Gáspara, García's pig. The haunches of this
-magnificent animal look like a highroad; it once came near being
-suffocated by its own fat; its teats touch its hoofs and kiss the mud
-of the road. Who can calculate how many pounds of lard it will yield,
-and the black puddings it will fill with its blood, and the sausages
-that its intestines will make?
-
-It stops raining for a week; the cold grows more intense, frost
-falls, whitening the grass of the paths and hardening the ground.
-This is the signal for the hecatomb, for which the auspices are now
-favorable, for, in addition to the cold, the moon is in her last
-quarter; if she were on the wane the flesh would spoil. The hour has
-come for wielding the knife. And through the long nights of Vilamorta
-resound at the most unexpected moments desperate grunts--first grunts
-of fury, that express the impotent rage of the victim at finding
-himself bound to the bench, and reveal in the degenerate domestic pig
-the descendant of the wild mountain boar; then of pain, when the
-knife penetrates the flesh, an almost human cry when its blade
-pierces the heart, and at last a series of despairing groans which
-grow fainter and fainter as life and strength escape with the warm
-stream of blood.
-
-This bloodcurdling drama was being enacted in the house of the
-lawyer García at eleven o'clock on a clear frosty December night. The
-girls, wild with delight, and dying with curiosity, crowded around
-the expiring pig, in whose heart and throat the butcher, with rolled
-up sleeves and bare arms, was about to plunge the knife. Segundo,
-shut up in his bedroom, had before him some sheets of paper, more or
-less covered with scrawls. He was writing verses. But as the sounds
-of the tragedy reached him, he dropped his pen with dismay. He had
-inherited from his mother a profound horror of the spectacle of the
-killing; it usually cost his mother ten or twelve days of suffering,
-during which she was unable to eat food, sickened by the sight of the
-blood, the intestines and the viscera, so like human intestines and
-human viscera, the greasy flitches of bacon hanging from the roof,
-and the strong and stimulating odor of the black pudding and spices.
-Segundo abhorred even the name of pig, and in the morbid condition of
-his mind, in the nervous excitement which consumed him, it was an
-indescribable martyrdom to be unable to set his foot outside the door
-without stumbling against and entangling himself among the accursed
-and repulsive animals, or seeing, through the half-open doors,
-portions of their bodies hanging on hooks. All Vilamorta smelled of
-pig-killing, of warm entrails; Segundo did not know at last where to
-hide himself, and intrenched himself in his own room, closing the
-doors and windows tightly, secluding himself from the external world
-in order to live with his dreams and fancies in a realm where there
-were no hogs, and where only pine groves, blue flowers and precipices
-existed. Insufficient precaution to free himself from the torture of
-that brutal epoch of the year, since here in his own house he was
-besieged by the drama of gluttony and realism. The poet seized his
-hat and hurried out of the room. He must flee where these grunts
-could not penetrate, where those smells should not surround him. He
-walked along the hall, closing his eyes in order not to see, by the
-light of the candle which one of the children was holding, Aunt
-Gáspara with her skeleton-like arm, bare to the elbow, stirring a red
-and frothing liquid in a large earthern pan. When they saw Segundo
-leaving the house the sisters burst into shouts of laughter, and
-called to him, offering him grotesque delicacies, ignoble spoils of
-the dying.
-
-Leocadia had not retired; she felt ill and she was dozing in a
-chair, wrapped in a shawl and shivering with cold; she opened the
-door quickly to Segundo, asking him in alarm if anything had
-happened. Nothing, indeed. They were killing the pig at home--a
-Toledan night; they would not let him sleep. Besides, the night was
-so cold--he felt somewhat indisposed--as if he had a chill. Would she
-make him a cup of coffee, or better still, a rum punch?
-
-"Both, my heart, this very instant!"
-
-Leocadia recovered her spirits and her energy as if by
-enchantment. Soon there rose from the punch-bowl the sapphire flame
-of the punch. In its glare the schoolmistress's face seemed very
-thin. It had lost its former healthy color, a warm brown like that of
-the crust of a well-baked loaf. The pangs of disappointed love were
-revealed in the pallor of her cheeks, in the feverish brightness of
-her eyes, the purplish hue of her lips. Grief had given her prosaic
-features an almost poetic stamp; as she had grown thinner her eyes
-looked larger; she was not now the robust woman, with firm flesh and
-fresh-colored lips, who, pitted though she was by the smallpox, could
-still draw a coarse compliment from the tavern-keeper; the fire of an
-imperious, uncontrollable, and exacting passion was consuming her
-inwardly--the love which comes late in life, that devouring love
-which reason cannot conquer, nor time uproot, nor circumstances
-change, which fixes its talons in the vitals and releases its prey
-only when it has destroyed it.
-
-And this love was of so singular a nature that,--insatiable,
-volcanic, desperate, as it was,--far from dictating acts of violence
-to Leocadia and drawing from her furious reproaches, it inspired her
-with a self-abnegation and a generosity without limits, banishing
-from her mind every thought of self.
-
-The summer, the vintage season, the whole period during which she
-had scarcely seen Segundo, when she knew he had not given her a
-passing thought, that he was devoting himself to another woman, had
-been horrible for her; and yet not a jealous word, not a complaint
-had crossed her lips, nor did she once regret having given Segundo
-the money; and when she saw the poet, her joy was so genuine, so
-profound, that it effaced, as if by magic, the remembrance of her
-sufferings and repaid her for them a hundredfold.
-
-Now there was an additional reason why she should lavish her
-affection upon the poet. He too was suffering, he was ill. What was
-the matter with him? He himself did not know: hypochondria, the grief
-of separation, spleen, the impatient disgust produced by the contrast
-of his mean surroundings with the dreams that filled his imagination.
-A constant inappetency, depression of spirits, an uneasy sensation in
-the stomach, nerves on the stretch, like the strings of a guitar. And
-his love for Nieves was not like Leocadia's love, one of those
-passions that absorb the whole being, affect the heart, attenuate the
-flesh, and subjugate the soul. Nieves lived only in his imagination,
-in his vanity, in his lyrics, in his romantic reveries, those eternal
-inspirers of love. Nieves was the visible incarnation, in beautiful
-and alluring form, of his longings for fame, his literary ambition.
-
-Leocadia had served the punch and was pouring out the coffee
-when, her hand trembling with pleasure and emotion, she spilled some
-of the hot liquid, scalding herself slightly; she took no notice of
-the burn, however, but went on, with the same solicitude as always,
-to minister to Segundo's comfort. Thinking to please and interest the
-poet she asked him for news of the volume of poems which he had in
-hand, and which was to spread his fame far beyond Vilamorta, so soon
-as it should be published in Orense. Segundo did not show much
-enthusiasm at this prospect.
-
-"In Orense," he said, "in Orense----Do you know that I have
-changed my mind? Either I shall publish it in Madrid or I shall not
-publish it at all. The loss to Spanish literature would not be so
-very great."
-
-"And why don't you want to publish it now in Orense?"
-
-"I will tell you. Roberto Blanquez is right in the advice he
-gives me in a letter he has just written me from Madrid. You know
-that Roberto is in a situation there. He says that no one reads books
-published in the provinces; that he has noticed the contempt with
-which books that do not bear the imprint of some publishing house of
-the capital are looked upon there. And besides, that they delay a
-century here in printing a volume, and when it is printed it is full
-of errors, and unattractive in appearance--in short, that they do not
-take. And therefore----"
-
-"Well, then, let the book be published in Madrid. How much would
-it cost?"
-
-"Child, the prices Roberto tells me are enough to frighten one.
-It seems that the affair would cost a fortune. No publisher will buy
-verses or even share with the author the expense of publishing them."
-
-Leocadia answered only by a smile. The little parlor had a look
-of homelike comfort. Although winter had despoiled the balcony of its
-charms, turning the sweet basil yellow and withering the carnations,
-within, the hissing of the coffee-pot, the alcoholic vapor of the
-punch, the quietude, the solicitous affection of the schoolmistress,
-all seemed to temper and soften the atmosphere. Segundo felt a
-pleasant drowsiness stealing over him.
-
-"Will you give me a blanket from your bed?" he said to the
-schoolmistress. "There is not a spot at home where I could rest
-to-night. I might sleep a little on the sofa here."
-
-"You will be cold."
-
-"I shall be in heaven. Go."
-
-Leocadia left the room, and returned dragging in with her an
-unwieldy bulk--a mattress; then she brought a blanket; then, pillows.
-Total, a complete bed. For all that was wanting--only the sheets--she
-brought them also.
-
-
-
-
- XXIV.
-
-
-Leocadia did not vacillate on the following day. She knew the way
-and she went straight to the lawyer's house. The latter received her
-with a frowning brow. Did people think he was coining money? Leocadia
-had now no land to sell; what she brought was of trifling value. If
-she made up her mind to mortgage the house he would speak to his
-brother-in-law Clodio, who had some money saved, and who would like
-to have some such piece of property. Leocadia breathed a sigh of
-regret, it was not with her as with the peasantry--she had no
-attachment to land, but the house! So neat, so pretty, so
-comfortable, arranged according to her own taste!
-
-"Pshaw, by paying the amount of the mortgage you can have it back
-the moment you wish."
-
-So it was settled. Clodio handed out the money, tempted by the
-hope of obtaining, at half its value, so cozy a nest in which to end
-his bachelor existence. In the evening Leocadia asked Segundo to show
-her the manuscript of his poems and to read some of them to her.
-Frequent mention was made in them, with reticences and transparent
-allusions, of certain blue flowers, of the murmur of a pine wood, of
-a precipice, and of various other things which Leocadia knew well
-were not inventions, but had their explanation in past, and to her
-unknown, events. The schoolmistress divined a love story whose
-heroine could be no one but Nieves Mendez. But what she could not
-understand, what she could not explain, was how Señora de Comba, now
-a widow, and free to reward Segundo's love, did not do so
-immediately. The verses breathed profound despondency, ardent
-passion, and intense bitterness. Now Leocadia understood Segundo's
-sadness, his dejection, his mental anguish. How much he must suffer
-in secret! Poets, by their nature, must suffer more and crueler
-tortures than the rest of humanity. There was not a doubt of it--this
-separation, these memories were killing Segundo slowly. Leocadia
-hesitated how to begin the conversation.
-
-"See, listen. Those verses are beautiful and deserve to be
-printed in letters of gold. It just happens, child, that I received
-some money a few days ago from Orense. Do you know what I was
-thinking of the other night while you were asleep in the little bed I
-arranged for you? That it would be better for you to go yourself to
-publish them--yonder--to Madrid."
-
-To her great surprise she saw that Segundo's face clouded. To go
-to Madrid now! Impossible; he must first learn something of Nieves.
-The last tragic scene of his love affair, the dénouement of her
-sudden widowhood, raised between them a barrier difficult to pass.
-Nieves was rich, and if Segundo should go to her now and throw
-himself at her feet, he would not be the lover asking her to requite
-his love, but the suitor to her hand, alleging anterior rights and
-basing on them his aspirations to replace her defunct husband. And
-Segundo, who had accepted money from Leocadia, felt his pride rebel
-at the thought that Nieves might take him for a fortune-hunter, or
-might scorn him for his obscurity and his poverty. But did not Nieves
-love him? Had she not told him so? Why, then, did she not send him
-some message. True, he had made no attempt to communicate with the
-beautiful widow, or to refresh her memory. He feared to do it
-awkwardly, inopportunely, and so reopen the wound caused by the death
-of her husband.
-
-The volume of verses--an excellent idea! The volume of verses was
-the one means of recovering his place in Nieves' recollection
-worthily, borne on the wings of popular applause. If this volume were
-read, admired, praised, it would win fame for its author; the
-difference between his own and Nieves' social position, which might
-now make his pretensions appear ridiculous, would disappear. "To
-marry!" said Segundo to himself. Marriage seemed to him a secondary
-matter. Let Nieves only love him. It was love he asked, not marriage.
-Sitting at Leocadia's very table he wrote to Blanquez, giving him
-instructions, and prepared the manuscript to post it, and made out
-the index and the title-page with the impatient joy of one who,
-expecting to win a fortune, buys a ticket in the lottery. When he was
-gone Leocadia remained sunk in thought. Segundo had no desire to go
-to Madrid. Then the gleam of happiness that flashed across her mind
-at the thought that Segundo should establish himself in Vilamorta was
-quenched by two considerations--one was that Segundo would die of
-tedium here; the other that she could not long continue to supply his
-wants. In mortgaging the house she had burned her last cartridge.
-What should she mortgage now--herself? And she smiled sadly. In the
-hall resounded the steps of the neglected little cripple, on his way
-to bed, where Flores would soon lull him to sleep with her solecisms
-and barbarous litanies. The mother sighed. And this being, this being
-who had no support but her--what should he live on? When ruin had
-overtaken her, and she could no longer give him food or shelter, what
-a mute and continual reproach would the presence of the unhappy child
-be to her! And how could she set him to work?
-
-To work! This word brought to her mind the plans she had matured
-in those hours of sleeplessness and despair in which all the past is
-retraced in thought and new plans are formed for the future and every
-possible course of action is deliberated upon. It was plain that
-Minguitos was unfitted for the material labor of cultivating the
-ground, or for making shoes, or grinding chocolate, like that
-good-looking Ramon; but he knew how to read and write and in
-arithmetic, with a little help from Leocadia, he would be a prodigy.
-To sit behind a counter kills nobody; to attend to a customer, to
-answer his questions, take the money, enter down what is sold, are
-rather entertaining occupations that cheer the mind than fatiguing
-labors. In this way the little hunchback would be amused and would
-lose a little of his terror of strangers, his morbid fear of being
-laughed at.
-
-A few years before if anyone had proposed to Leocadia to separate
-her from her child, to deprive him of the shelter of her loving arms,
-she would have insulted him. Now it seemed to her so easy and natural
-a solution of the question to make him a clerk in a shop. Something,
-nevertheless, still thrilled in the depths of her mother's heart,
-some fibers still closely attached to the soul, that bled, that hurt.
-She must tear them away quickly. It was all for the good of the
-child, to make a man of him, so that to-day or to-morrow----
-
-Leocadia held two or three consultations with Cansin, who had a
-cousin in Orense, the proprietor of a cloth shop; and Cansin,
-dilating upon his influence with him, and the importance of the
-favor, gave the schoolmistress a warm letter of recommendation to
-him. Leocadia went to the city, saw the shopkeeper, and the
-conditions on which he agreed to receive Minguitos were agreed upon.
-The boy would be fed and lodged, his clothes washed, and he would
-receive an occasional suit, made from the remnants of cloth left over
-in the shop. As to pay, he would be paid nothing until he should have
-acquired a thorough knowledge of the business--for a couple of years
-or so. And was he very much deformed? Because that would not be very
-pleasant for the customers. And was he honest? He had never taken any
-money out of his mother's drawer, had he?
-
-Leocadia returned home with her soul steeped in gall. How should
-she tell Minguitos and Flores? Especially Flores! Impossible,
-impossible--she would create a scandal that would alarm the
-neighborhood. And she had promised to take Minguitos without fail on
-the following Monday! A stratagem occurred to her. She said that a
-relative of hers lived in Orense and that she wished to take the
-child there to make his acquaintance. She depicted the journey in
-glowing colors, so that Minguitos might think he was going on a
-pleasure trip. Did he not want to see Orense again? It was a
-magnificent town. She would show him the hot springs, the Cathedral.
-The child, with an instinctive horror of public places, of coming in
-contact with strangers, sorrowfully shook his head; and as for the
-old servant, as if she divined what was going on, she raged and
-stormed all the week. When Sunday came and mother and son were about
-to take their departure in the stage-coach Flores threw her arms
-around the neck of the boy as he was mounting the step, and embraced
-him with the tremulous and doting fondness of a grandmother, covering
-his face with kisses, and moistening it with the saliva on her
-withered lips. She spent the rest of the day sitting in the doorway,
-muttering words of rage, or of tender pity, her forehead pressed
-between her hands in an attitude of despair.
-
-Leocadia, once they were in the diligence, tried to convince the
-boy that the change was for his good; describing to him the pleasant
-life that awaited him in that fine shop situated in the most central
-part of Orense, which was so lively, where he would have very little
-to do, and where he had the hope of earning, if not to-day,
-to-morrow, a little money for himself. At her first words the boy
-fixed on his mother his astonished eyes, in which a look of
-intelligence gradually began to dawn. Minguitos was quick of
-comprehension. He drew up close to his mother, and laid his head down
-on her lap without speaking.
-
-As he continued silent, Leocadia said to him:
-
-"What is the matter with you? Does your head ache?"
-
-"No; let me sleep so--for a little--until we reach Orense."
-
-And thus he remained, quiet and silent, lulled to sleep,
-apparently, by the creaking of the diligence and the deafening noise
-of the windows rattling in their sashes. When they reached the city
-Leocadia touched him on the shoulder, saying:
-
-"We have arrived."
-
-They alighted from the stagecoach and then only did Leocadia
-observe that her lap was moist and that, on the spot where the boy
-had rested his forehead, sparkled two or three crystal drops. But on
-finding himself among strangers, in the gloomy shop crowded with
-rolls of dark cloth, the hunchback's attitude ceased to be resigned;
-he caught hold of his mother's skirt with a despairing impulse,
-uttering a single cry in which were concentrated all his reproaches,
-all his affection:
-
-"M-a-a-a-m-m-a--m-a-a-a-m-m-a!"
-
-This cry still resounded through Leocadia's heart when, on her
-arrival at Vilamorta, she saw Flores lying in wait for her in the
-doorway. Lying in wait is the exact expression, for Flores threw
-herself upon her, the moment she appeared, like a bulldog, like a
-wild animal asking for and demanding her young. And as a man in a fit
-of rage throws at his adversary whatever he finds nearest his hand so
-Flores heaped on Leocadia every species of insult, all sorts of
-injurious and opprobrious epithets, crying, in a voice that trembled
-with rage and hatred:
-
-"Thief, thief, wretch! What have you done with your child, thief?
-Go, drunkard, vagabond, go drink your liqueurs--and your child,
-perhaps, dying of hunger! Reprobate, wolf, traitress, where is the
-child? Where is the little angel? Where have you hidden him, schemer?
-In such a hurry you were to get rid of him so as to be left alone
-with your trumpery young gentleman! Wolf, wolf--if I had a gun, as
-sure as I am standing here, I would send a charge of shot into you!"
-
-Leocadia, her face pale, her eyes red with weeping, put out her
-hand to stop the mouth of the frenzied old woman; but the latter
-caught her fingers between her toothless gums, biting them and
-slavering them with the foam of her fury, and when the schoolmistress
-went upstairs, the old woman followed her, crying after her in hoarse
-and sinister accents:
-
-"You will never have the grace of God, wolf--God and the Holy
-Virgin will punish you! Go, go, rejoice now because you have carried
-out your evil designs! May you be forever accursed, accursed,
-accursed!"
-
-The malediction made Leocadia shudder. The house, with Minguitos
-away, seemed like a tomb. Flores had neither made the dinner nor
-lighted the lamp. Leocadia, too sick at heart to do either, threw
-herself on the bed, dressed as she was, and, later on, undressed
-herself and went to bed without tasting a morsel of food.
-
-
-
-
- XXV.
-
-
-With what interest did Segundo read the letters of Roberto
-Blanquez giving him news of his book. Roberto was a few years older
-than the Swan; the difference in their ages was not so great as to
-prevent their having been very good friends when they were at college
-together, though it was great enough to have given Blanquez so much
-more experience than the poet as to enable him to serve as his guide
-and mentor. Blanquez, too, had had his poetic epoch, when he had
-written Galician verses; he now devoted himself to the prose of a
-modest clerkship, and wrote official articles. Madrid was
-enlightening him, and, with the natural penetration of one in whose
-veins flowed Galician blood, he was gradually acquiring a knowledge
-of practical life. He entertained for Segundo a fanatic admiration
-and a sincere attachment, one of those college attachments which last
-a lifetime. Segundo wrote to him with entire confidence--some cousins
-of Blanquez were acquainted with the mother of Nieves Mendez, and
-through this channel Segundo occasionally received tidings of his
-lady-love. Blanquez was not ignorant of the episodes of the summer.
-And in the beginning his news was very satisfactory: "Nieves lives in
-the greatest retirement--my cousins have given me news of her. She
-scarcely ever leaves the house except to go to mass. The child is not
-well. The physicians say it is the age. They are going to send her to
-a convent of the Sacred Heart to be educated. They say the mother
-looks superb, my boy. It seems they have been left very well off. The
-book will soon appear now. Yesterday I chose the paper for the
-edition and the linen paper for the hundred copies _de luxe_. The
-type will be Elzevir, which is at present the most fashionable. The
-title-page--they make them beautiful now, in six colors--would you
-like it to represent something fanciful, something allegorical?" In
-this style were Roberto's letters, source of illusions for Segundo,
-sole food for his imagination through all that long and gloomy
-winter, in that out-of-the-way corner of the world, in the midst of
-his prosaic domestic surroundings, his mind filled with the
-recollections of his unhappy passion.
-
-March had arrived, that uncertain month of sunshine and showers
-which heralds in the spring with affluence of violets and primroses,
-when the cold begins to lessen, and in the pale blue sky white clouds
-float like streamers, when Segundo received that most precious of all
-objects, that object the sight of which makes the heart palpitate
-with joy and longing, mingled with an undefinable fear resembling,
-somewhat, the feeling with which the new-made father regards his
-first-born--his first printed book. It seemed to him a dream that the
-book should be there, before his eyes, in his hands, with the
-satin-smooth white cover on which the artist had gracefully twined
-around a group of pine trees a few sprays of forget-me-nots; with its
-pea-green paper, that gave it an antique air, the compositions headed
-by three mysterious asterisks. Looking at his verses thus, free from
-blots, finished and correct, the thought standing out clearly in
-distinct black characters on the delicately tinted page, he almost
-felt as if they had issued from his brain just as they were, smoothly
-flowing and with perfect rhymes, without corrections or unmeaning
-syllables put in to fill out the meter.
-
-Leocadia was even more moved by the sight of the book than its
-author had been. She shed tears of joy. The fame of the poet was, in
-a sense, her work! For two or three days she was happy, forgetting
-the bad news which Flores brought her every Sunday from Orense; from
-Orense, where Leocadia did not dare to go herself, fearing to yield
-to the entreaties and melt before the prayers of the child, but where
-palpitated those fibers of her heart which still bled, and which
-Flores wrung with torture by her account of the sufferings of
-Minguitos, who declined visibly in health, and who always complained
-that they made sport of him in the shop and cast up his deformity to
-him.
-
-Unsolvable mysteries of the human heart! Segundo, who despised
-his native place, who believed--nor was he mistaken--that there was
-not in Vilamorta a single person capable of judging of the merits of
-a poem, could not refrain from going one evening to Saturnino
-Agonde's and drawing carelessly the volume from his pocket, throwing
-it on the counter and saying with affected indifference:
-
-"What do you think of that book, my boy?"
-
-On the instant he repented of his weakness, so many were the
-nonsensical remarks and absurd jokes with which the beautiful volume
-inspired the irreverent assemblage. He wished he had never shown it.
-He had drawn all this upon himself. If the public did not treat him
-better than his fellow-townsmen! Man can never isolate himself
-completely from his surroundings--the circle in which he moves must
-always have an interest for him. However little importance Segundo
-might attach to the opinions of the Vilamortans, and although their
-approbation would assuredly not have raised him in his own
-estimation, their stupid mockery wounded and embittered his soul. He
-went home hurt and pained. He spent a feverish night--one of those
-nights in which great projects are conceived and decisive resolutions
-adopted.
-
-His resolutions and his plans he summed up in the letter he wrote
-to Blanquez. The latter did not answer by return of mail; days
-passed, and Segundo went every morning to the post-office, always
-meeting with the same laconic answer. At last one day he received a
-voluminous registered letter.
-
-
-
-
- XXVI.
-
-
-As he opened it, several newspapers fell out, containing notices
-marked by a cross of the volume of poems just published, entitled
-"Songs of Absence," this being the name chosen by Segundo for his
-volume of rhymes.
-
-These were accompanied by a letter of four pages from Roberto.
-What it might contain was of such vital importance to Segundo, so
-great the influence it might exercise over his future, that he laid
-it aside fearing, he knew not why, to read it, wishing to defer what
-he so eagerly desired. The letter lay open before him and certain
-names, certain words frequently repeated, caught his eye. The name of
-the widowed Señora de Comba was often mentioned in it. To calm his
-agitation, which was purely nervous, he took up the newspapers,
-resolving to read first the marked paragraphs. He traversed the _via
-crucis_, in the fullest signification of the words.
-
-_El Imperial_ gave a noisy boom to Galicia and, as a proof that
-the country produced poets in the same abundance as it produced
-exquisite peaches and beautiful flowers mentioned, without naming
-him, the author of "Songs of Absence," a beautiful volume just
-published. And not a line more, not a word of criticism, nothing to
-indicate that anybody in the office of the popular daily had taken
-the trouble even to cut the leaves of the book. _El Liberal_, better
-informed, declared, in three lines, that "Songs of Absence" gave
-evidence of the author's great facility in versification. _La Epoca_,
-in the most obscure corner of its department, "New Books," eulogized
-the typographical elegance of the book; disapproved of the romantic
-savor of the title and of the title-page, and deplored in trenchant
-phrases that the poet should have sought inspiration in the barren
-theme of absence when there were so many wholesome, cheerful and
-fruitful subjects on which to write. _El Dia_----
-
-Ah, as for _El Dia_, it gave Segundo a castigation in style: not
-one of those angry, predetermined, energetic castigations, in which
-the lash is taken up with both hands to crush a powerful and
-dangerous adversary, but a contemptuous cut of the whip, a flick with
-the nail, as it were, as one might brush away a troublesome insect;
-one of those summary criticisms in which the critic does not take the
-trouble to adduce proof or argument in support of his criticisms,
-whose justice he deems so evident as not to require demonstration; an
-execution by a few jests, but jests of a kind that extinguish a new
-author, crush him, relegate him forever to the limbo of obscurity.
-The critic said that now when verses of supreme merit lacked readers
-it was greatly to be deplored that the press should be made to groan
-with rhymes of an inferior quality; that now when Becquer had been
-placed in the pantheon of the immortals it was a crime to treat him
-with the disrespect of stupidly imitating him, mutilating and
-counterfeiting his best thoughts; and finally, that it was to be
-regretted that estimable young men, endowed, perhaps, with admirable
-capabilities for trade, or for the career of an apothecary or a
-notary, should spend their parents' money in costly editions of
-verses which no one would either buy or read.
-
-Underneath this philippic Roberto Blanquez had written: "Pay no
-attention to this ass. Read my article."
-
-And indeed in an obscure, insignificant sheet, one of those
-innumerable periodicals that see the light in Madrid without Madrid
-ever seeing them, Blanquez poured forth the gall of his wounded
-friendship and patriotism--taking the critic to task, eulogizing
-Segundo's book and declaring him the worthy compeer of Becquer, with
-the difference that the former was a little sweeter, a little more
-dreamy, a little more melancholy, as being the son of a land as
-beautiful as it was unfortunate, and which was fairer than Andalusia,
-than Switzerland, or than any other country on the face of the globe;
-ending by saying that if Becquer had been born in Galicia he would
-feel, think, and write like _The Swan of Vilamorta_.
-
-Segundo seized the bundle of newspapers and, after looking at
-them for a moment fixedly and with a gloomy brow, tore them into
-pieces, large at first, then small, then smaller still, which he
-threw out of the window to hover for a moment in the air like
-butterflies or like the silvery petals of the flower of illusion, and
-then fall into the nearest pool. Segundo smiled bitterly. "There goes
-fame," he said to himself. "Now I think I am calmer. Let us see what
-the letter says."
-
-Of this letter we need cite here only certain passages,
-supplementing them with the comments made on them in his mind by the
-reader.
-
-"According to your request I went to the house of Señora de Comba
-to deliver to her the copy, so carefully wrapped up and sealed, which
-you sent me for that purpose."--Of course. It contained an
-inscription which I did not want her to think that you might have
-read.--"She has a beautiful house, hangings and natural flowers
-everywhere."--Everything pertaining to her is like that, beautiful
-and refined.--"But I was obliged to return several times before she
-would receive me, the moment was always inopportune."--She does not
-receive indiscriminately all who may chance to present
-themselves.--"At last she received me, after innumerable ceremonies
-and formalities. She is very beautiful close by, more beautiful,
-even, than at a distance, and it seems impossible that she should
-have a daughter twelve years old; she looks at most twenty-four or
-twenty-five."--What news Roberto has to tell me.--"The moment I told
-her I had come on your part"--Let us hear--"she became--what shall I
-say?"--red--"displeased and annoyed, my boy, and in addition so
-serious, that I was quite taken aback, and did not know what to
-do."--Infamous! Infamous!--"She was afraid that I"--Let us hear; let
-us finish, let us finish.--"She refused to receive the book, in spite
-of my urgent entreaties"--but this is inconceivable. Ah, what a
-woman!--"because she says it would remind her too forcibly of that
-place and of the death of her husband, whom God keep in his glory;
-and consequently she begs you to excuse her"--wretch!--"from opening
-the package and reading your verse, for which she thanks you."--Ha!
-ha! ha!--Bravo! What an actress!
-
-"Notwithstanding all this, as you had charged me explicitly to
-deliver it to her, I determined not to take the book back with me
-and, taking up my hat and saluting her, I laid your package on a
-table. On the following morning, however, it came back to me
-unopened, with all its seals intact."--And I did not throw her into
-the Avieiro that day when our lips--the more fool I! Well, let us
-finish.
-
-"In view of the little widow's conduct I imagine that you must
-have invented all that about the window and the precipice; you must
-have told it to me to fool me or, as you are so imaginative, you
-dreamed that it happened and you took the dream for reality."--He
-does well to mock me.--"At all events, my boy, if you were interested
-in the widow, think no more about her. I know to a certainty, through
-my cousins, who have it for a fact from their father, that at the
-expiration of the period of her mourning she is to marry a certain
-Marquis de Cameros who represented at one time a district in
-Lugo."--Yes, yes, I understand.--"The thing is serious, for,
-according to what my cousins say, the house linen is being
-embroidered already with the coronet of a marchioness."
-
-The letter was torn still more slowly and into still smaller
-pieces than the newspapers. With the fragments Segundo made a ball
-which he threw far into the middle of the pool. "Such is love," he
-said to himself, laughing bitterly.
-
-He began to walk up and down the room, at first with a certain
-monotonous regularity, then restlessly and with fury. Clara, the
-eldest of his sisters, half opened the door of the room, saying:
-
-"Aunt Gáspara says you are to come."
-
-"What for?"
-
-"Dinner is ready."
-
-Segundo took his hat and rushing into the street walked toward
-the river, filled with that species of fury which one who has just
-received some mental shock, some bitter disappointment, is apt to
-feel at being called on to take part in any of the ordinary concerns
-of life.
-
-
-
-
- XXVII.
-
-
-What a walk was his along the marshy borders of the Avieiro! At
-times he hurried on without any motive for accelerating his steps,
-and again, equally without motive, stood still, his gaze riveted on
-some object but in reality seeing nothing. One regret, a gnawing
-grief, pierced his soul when he recalled the past. As in a shipwreck
-there is for each of the passengers some one particular object whose
-loss he deplores more bitterly than that of all his other
-possessions, so Segundo, of all his past life, regretted one instant
-above every other, an instant which he would have given all he
-possessed to live over again--that during which he had stood with
-Nieves on the edge of the precipice, when he might have obtained a
-worthy and glorious death, carrying with him into the abyss the
-precious treasure of his illusions, and the form of the woman who for
-that one unforgettable instant only, had truly loved him.
-
-"A coward then, and a coward now!" thought the poet, calling all
-his resolution to his aid but finding himself unable to summon the
-necessary courage to throw himself at once into the cold and muddy
-waters of the river. What moments of anguish! Giddy with suffering he
-seated himself on a stone on the river bank and watched with idiotic
-vacancy of expression the circles formed on the bosom of the river by
-the drops of rain that fell slantingly from the gray sky, as they
-expanded and were lost in other circles that pressed upon them on all
-sides, while new circles took their place, to be lost in their turn
-in yet other circles, covering the surface of the water with a wavy
-design resembling the silver work called _guilloché_. The poet did
-not even notice that these same rain-drops that fell thick and fast
-on the surface of the Avieiro fell also on his hat and shoulders, ran
-down his forehead and, making their way between his collar and his
-skin, trickled down his neck. He noticed it only when the chill they
-produced made him shiver and he rose and walked slowly home, where
-dinner was already over and no one thought of offering him even so
-much as a cup of broth.
-
-Two or three days later a fever declared itself, which was at
-first slight, but soon grew serious. Tropiezo called it a gastric and
-catarrhal fever, and truth compels us to say that he administered
-remedies not altogether inappropriate; gastric and catarrhal fevers
-are, for physicians whose knowledge is derived chiefly from
-experience, a perfect boon from Heaven, a glorious field in which
-they may count every battle a victory; a beaten path in which they
-run no risk of going astray. It will not lead them to the unknown
-pole of science, but at least it will betray them into no abyss.
-
-As Tropiezo was leaving García's house one evening, after his
-customary visit to Segundo, muffled up to the ears in his comforter,
-he saw, standing beside the lawyer's door in the shadow cast by the
-contiguous wall, a woman clad in an old morning gown and with her
-head bare. The night was bright and Don Fermin was able to
-distinguish her features, but it was not without some difficulty that
-he recognized her to be Leocadia, so altered and aged did the poor
-schoolmistress look. Her countenance betrayed the keenest anxiety as
-she asked the doctor:
-
-"And what news, Don Fermin? How is Segundo getting on?"
-
-"Ah, good evening, Leocadia. Do you know that at first I did not
-recognize you?--Well, very well; there is no cause for uneasiness.
-To-day I ordered him some of the _puchero_ and some soup. It was
-nothing--a cold caught by getting a wetting. But the boy seems a
-little preoccupied, and he was for a time so sad and dejected that I
-thought he was never going to get back his appetite. At this season
-it is necessary to go warmly clad; we have a fine day, and then, when
-you least expect it, back come the rain and the cold again. And
-you--how are you getting on? They tell me that you have not been
-well, either. You must take care of yourself."
-
-"There is nothing the matter with me, Don Fermin."
-
-"So much the better. Any news of the boy?"
-
-"He is in Orense, poor child. He can't get used to it."
-
-"He will get used to it by and by. Of course--accustomed to be
-petted. Well, Leocadia, good-night. Go home, my dear woman, go home."
-
-Don Fermin proceeded on his way, drawing his comforter up closer
-around his ears. That woman was mad; she had not taken the disease
-lightly, it seemed. And how altered she was! How old she had grown in
-these last few months! Old women were worse than young girls when
-they fell in love. He had done wisely, very wisely in telling her
-nothing about Segundo's new plans. She was capable of tearing down
-the house if he had told her. No, silence, silence. A shut mouth
-catches no flies. Let her find it out through someone else besides
-him. And with these sensible ideas and worthy intentions Tropiezo
-reached Agonde's, and before a quarter of an hour had elapsed
-unbosomed himself of his news: Segundo García was going to America to
-seek his fortune--as soon as he should be entirely well, of course.
-He would take the steamer at Corunna.
-
-The occasion was a favorable one for the company to lament once
-more in concert the death of Don Victoriano Andres de la Comba,
-protector and father of all the Vilamortans in want of situations, a
-useful representative and an untiring worker for the district. If he
-were alive now most assuredly a young man of so much ability--a
-poet--that night the party all agreed that Segundo had ability and
-was a poet--would not be obliged to go across the raging seas in
-quest of a decent situation. But since they had lost Don Victoriano,
-Vilamorta was without a voice in the regions of influence and favor,
-for Señorito de Romero, the present representative of the district,
-belonged to the class of docile representatives who give no trouble
-to the Government, who vote when their votes are wanted, and who hold
-themselves cheap, valuing themselves at no more than a few tobacco
-shops, and half a dozen or so of official appointments. Agonde took
-his revenge that night, expatiating on his favorite theme, and
-abusing the pernicious Eufrasian influence which was responsible for
-the decadence of Vilamorta, on account of which its youth were
-obliged to emigrate to the New World. The apothecary expounded his
-theories--he liked the representative of a district to show himself
-in it occasionally. Otherwise of what use was he? In his eyes the
-ideal representative was that famous politician from whom the barber
-of the town he represented had asked a place, basing his request on
-the fact that, owing to the distribution of appointments among the
-persons of his station in the town, there were no customers left for
-him to shave and he was starving. The Alcalde here interposed, saying
-that he had it on very good authority that Señorito de Romero
-intended to interest himself in earnest for Vilamorta; the
-confectioner and some others of those present confirmed this
-statement, and then arose a discussion in which it was proved beyond
-a doubt that a dead representative has no friends and that the new
-representative of the district had already, in the very stronghold of
-the former Combista radicals, friends and adherents.
-
-
-
-
- XXVIII.
-
-
-The Swan has left his native lake, or rather, his pool; he has
-crossed the Atlantic on the wings of steam. Will he ever return? Will
-he come back with a sallow countenance, a disordered liver, and some
-thousands of dollars, in bills of exchange, in his pocketbook, to end
-his life where it began, as the ship disabled by storms receives its
-last repairs in the dockyard in which it was built? Will the black
-vomit, that terrible malady of the Antilles, the scourge of the
-Iberians who seek to emulate Columbus conquering a new world, attack
-him on his arrival on the young continent? Will he remain in the
-tropics, riding in his carriage, united in the bonds of matrimony to
-some Creole? Will he preside one day over one of those diminutive
-republics, in which the doctors are generals and the generals
-doctors? Will his melancholy be cured by the salty kiss of the ocean
-breeze, by the contact of virgin soil, the sharp spur of necessity,
-that, pushing him into the conflict, will say to him, "Work"?
-
-History may perhaps at some future day relate the story of the
-metamorphosis of the Swan, of his wanderings and his vicissitudes;
-but years must first elapse, for it was only yesterday, as one might
-say, that Segundo García quitted Vilamorta, leaving the
-schoolmistress behind him dissolved in tears. And the story of the
-schoolmistress is the only episode in the chronicle of the Swan which
-we can at present bring to an end.
-
-Leocadia was the theme of much gossip in Vilamorta. She was
-seriously ill, according to some, according to others, ruined, and
-according to many, touched in her mind. She had been seen haunting
-the neighborhood of Segundo's house on various nights during the
-poet's illness; it was affirmed that she had sold her land and that
-her house was mortgaged to Clodio Genday; but the strangest thing of
-all, that which was most bitterly censured, was her neglect of her
-son after having cared for him and watched over him from his infancy,
-never going to Orense to see him, while old Flores went there
-constantly, bringing back worse and worse news of the child every
-time she went--that he was wasting away, that he spit blood, that he
-was dying of grief, that he would not last a month. Leocadia, as she
-listened, would let her chin fall upon her breast, and at times her
-shoulders would move convulsively, as if she were weeping. Otherwise
-she appeared calm, although she was very silent and had lost her
-former activity. She helped Flores in the kitchen, attended to the
-children of the school, swept and dusted--all like an automaton,
-while Flores, who pitilessly spied out every occasion to find fault
-with her, took pleasure in crying:
-
-"Woman, you have left this side of the pan dirty--woman, you
-haven't mended your skirt--woman, what are you thinking about? I am
-going to Orense to-day and you will have to take care of the
-_puchero_."
-
-At the end of the summer Clodio demanded the interest on his loan
-and Leocadia was unable to pay it; she was notified accordingly that,
-after the necessary legal proceedings, the creditor would avail
-himself of his legal right to take possession of the house. This was
-a terrible blow for Leocadia.
-
-It will sometimes happen that a prisoner, a distinguished
-personage, a king, it may be, shut up through an adverse fate within
-the walls of a dungeon, stripped of his grandeur, deprived of all
-that once constituted his happiness, will bear his ills for years
-with resignation, calm in appearance although dejected, but if some
-day, by the cruel tyranny of his jailors, this prisoner is deprived
-of some bauble, some trifling object for which he had conceived an
-affection, the grief pent up within his bosom will burst its bounds,
-and the wildest manifestations of grief will follow. Something like
-this happened to Leocadia when she learned that she must abandon
-forever the beloved little house where she had spent in Segundo's
-company hours unique in her existence; the little house in which she
-was mistress, which had been rebuilt with her savings, the little
-house lately so neat and so attractive, of which she was so proud.
-
-Flores heard her on several nights sobbing loudly, but when on
-one or two occasions, moved by an involuntary feeling of pity, the
-old woman went into her room to ask her what ailed her, if she could
-do anything for her, Leocadia, covering her face with the bedclothes,
-had answered in a dull voice: "There is nothing the matter with me,
-woman; let me sleep. You will not even let me sleep!"
-
-During those days her moods varied constantly and she formed a
-thousand different plans. She talked of going to live in Orense, of
-giving up the school and taking sewing to do in the house; she
-talked, too, of accepting the proposal of Clodio Genday, who, having
-dismissed his young servant, for what reason no one knew, offered to
-take Leocadia as his housekeeper, by which arrangement she would
-remain in her house, Flores, of course, being dismissed. None of
-these plans lasted for more than a very short time, but were all in
-turn rejected to give place to others no less ephemeral; and while
-the schoolmistress was thus engaged in forming and rejecting plans
-the time was fast approaching when she should find herself without a
-shelter.
-
-One market day Leocadia went to purchase various articles
-urgently needed by Flores, among others a sieve and a new
-chocolate-pot, the old one being no longer fit for use. The movement
-of the crowd, the jostling of the hucksters, and the glare of the
-autumnal sun made her head, weak from want of sleep, from fasting,
-and from suffering--slightly dizzy. She stopped before a stall where
-sieves were sold, a sort of variety booth, where innumerable
-indispensable trifles were for sale--chocolate-beaters, frying-pans,
-saucepans, kerosene lamps. In a corner were two articles of
-merchandise in great request in the place--consisting of pink paper,
-soft, like brown paper, and some whitish powder, resembling spoiled
-flour. Leocadia's glance fell on these, and the vender, thinking she
-wished to buy some, began to extol their properties, explaining that
-the pink sheets moistened and placed on a plate, would not leave a
-fly alive in the neighborhood, and that the white powder was
-_seneca_, for killing mice, the manner of using it being to mix it
-well with cheese and place the mixture, made into little balls, in
-their haunts. Leocadia asked the price and told the vender to give
-her a small quantity, and the woman, to appear generous, took up a
-good portion on the spatula, wrapped it up in paper, and gave it to
-her for a trifling sum. The drug indeed was of little value, being
-very common in that part of the country, where native arsenic abounds
-in the calcareous spar forming one of the banks of the Avieiro, and
-arsenic, acid--rat-poison--is sold openly in the fairs, rather than
-in drug shops. The schoolmistress put away the powder, bought,
-through complaisance, half a dozen of the pink slips of paper, and on
-her return home punctually delivered to Flores the articles she had
-been commissioned to purchase.
-
-Flores noticed that after dinner Leocadia shut herself up in her
-bedroom, where the old woman could hear her talking aloud as if she
-were praying. Accustomed to her eccentricities the servant thought
-nothing about the matter. When she had ended her prayer, the
-schoolmistress stepped out on the balcony, where she stood gazing for
-a long time at the flower-pots; she then went into the parlor and
-looked for a good while also at the sofa, the chairs, the little
-table, the spots which reminded her of the past. Then she went into
-the kitchen. Flores declared afterward--but in such cases who is
-there that does not lay claim to a prophetic instinct--that
-Leocadia's manner on entering had attracted her attention.
-
-"Have you any fresh water?" she asked.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Give me a glass of it."
-
-Flores affirmed that, as she took the glass, the hand of the
-schoolmistress trembled, as if she had a chill, and the strangest
-part of the matter was that, although there was no sugar in the
-water, Leocadia asked for a spoon, which she put into the glass. An
-hour, or perhaps an hour and a half passed, when Flores heard
-Leocadia groan. She hurried to her room and saw her lying on the bed,
-her face frightfully pale, making desperate and fruitless efforts to
-vomit. Then a cold perspiration broke out on the forehead of the sick
-woman, and she remained motionless and speechless. Flores, terrified,
-ran for Don Fermin, urging him to hurry, saying this was no jesting
-matter. When Don Fermin arrived out of breath, he asked:
-
-"What is this, Leocadia? What is the matter with you; my dear
-woman, what is the matter with you?"
-
-Opening her dilated eyes, she murmured:
-
-"Nothing, Don Fermin, nothing."
-
-Standing on the table at the head of the bed was the glass; it
-contained no water, but the bottom and the sides of the vessel were
-coated with a white powder which had remained undissolved and which
-the schoolmistress, not wishing to leave it there, had scraped off in
-places with the spoon. It is proper to say, on this occasion also,
-that the illustrious Tropiezo made no mistake in the treatment of so
-simple a case. Tropiezo had already fought some battles with this
-common toxic substance and knew its tricks; he had recourse, without
-a moment's delay, to the use of powerful emetics and of oil. Only the
-poison, having gained the start of him, had already entered into the
-circulation and ran through the veins of the schoolmistress, chilling
-her blood. When the nausea and the vomiting ceased several little red
-spots--an eruption similar to that of scarlet-fever--made their
-appearance on Leocadia's pallid face. This symptom lasted until death
-came to set her sad spirit free and release it from its sufferings,
-which was toward daybreak. Shortly before her death, during an
-interval of freedom from pain, Leocadia, making a sign to Flores to
-come nearer, whispered in her ear: "Promise me--that the child shall
-not know it--by the soul of your mother--don't tell him--don't tell
-him the manner of my death."
-
-A few days later Tropiezo was defending himself to the party at
-Agonde's who, for the pleasure of making him angry, were accusing him
-of being responsible for the death of the schoolmistress.
-
-"For one thing, they called me too late, much too late," he said;
-"when the woman was almost in her death agony. For another, she had
-taken a quantity of arsenic which was not large enough to produce
-vomiting, but which was too small to cause merely a colic and be done
-with it. Where I made the mistake was in waiting so long before
-sending for the priest. I did it with the best intentions, so as not
-to frighten her and hoping we might yet pull her through. When
-extreme unction was administered she had no senses left to know what
-was going on."
-
-"So that," said Agonde maliciously, "where you are called in,
-either the soul or the body is sure to meet with a trip."
-
-The company applauded the joke, and there followed funereal jests
-mingled with expressions of pity. Clodio Genday, the creditor of the
-deceased, moved about uneasily in his chair. What stupid
-conversation, _canario_! Let them talk of more cheerful subjects!
-
-And they talked of very cheerful and satisfactory subjects
-indeed. Señorito de Romero had promised to put a telegraph-office in
-Vilamorta; and the newspapers were saying that, owing to the
-increasing importance of the viticultural interests of the Border, a
-branch railroad was needed for which the engineers were soon coming
-to survey the ground.
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
-
- THE ANGLOMANIACS.
-
- _A Story of New York Society To-day._
-
- By MRS. BURTON HARRISON.
-
- A Volume, 12mo, on Extra Fine Laid Paper, Dainty Binding, $1.00.
- Also in "Cassell's Sunshine Series," paper, 50c.
-
-
-This is the story that has attracted such wide attention while
-running through the _Century Magazine_. There has been no such
-picture of New York social life painted within the memory of the
-present generation. The satire is as keen as a rapier point, while
-the story itself has its marked pathetic side. Never has the subject
-of Anglomania been so cleverly treated as in these pages, and it is
-not to be wondered at that society is deeply agitated as to the
-authorship of a story which touches it in its most vulnerable part.
-
- "This delicious satire from the pungent pen of an
- anonymous writer must be read to be appreciated. From the
- introduction on board the Etruria to the final, when the
- heroine waves adieu to her English Lord, it is life, real,
- true American life, and we blush at the truth of the picture.
- There is no line not replete with scathing sarcasm, no
- character which we have not seen and known.... Read this book
- and see human nature; ponder upon what is there written, and
- while it may not make you wise, it certainly will make you
- think upon what is a great and growing social
- evil."--_Norristown Daily Herald._
-
- "The heroine is the daughter of an honest money-making
- old father and an ignorant but ambitious mother, whose money
- has enabled the mother and daughter to make their way into
- the circle of the 'Four Hundred.'"--_N. Y. Herald._
-
-
-
-
- CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY,
- 104 & 106 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.
-
-
-
-
- _LORD HOUGHTON'S
- LIFE AND LETTERS._
-
-
- THE LIFE, LETTERS, AND FRIENDSHIPS OF RICHARD MONCKTON
- MILNES, FIRST LORD HOUGHTON. BY T. WEMYSS REID. INTRODUCTION
- BY RICHARD HENRY STODDARD.
-
- In two vols., with portraits. Price, $5.00.
-
-
-"A perfect storehouse of interesting things, grave and gay,
-political, philosophical, literary, social, witty."--_London Times._
-
-"The book of the season, and an enduring literary
-masterpiece."--_The Star_, London.
-
-"In this biography, not his acquaintances only, but his friends,
-are counted by hundreds, and they are found in every country."--_The
-Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, in The Speaker._
-
-"A charming book, on almost every page of which there is
-something to arrest the attention of the intelligent reader."--_The
-Western Daily Press._
-
-"These charming volumes are more interesting than most novels,
-and fuller of good stories than any jest-book. Every page is full of
-meat--sweetbread be it understood, and not meat from the
-joint."--_The Spectator_, London.
-
-"We can only strongly recommend the reader to get the 'Life and
-Letters' as soon as he can, and he will thank Mr. Wemyss Reid for
-having furnished him with the means of passing as many agreeable
-evenings as it will take him to read through the book."--_The New
-York Herald._
-
- * * * * *
-
- CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY,
- 104 & 106 Fourth Avenue, New York.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber Notes:
-
-Passages in italics were indicated by _underscores_.
-
-Small caps were replaced with ALL CAPS.
-
-Throughout the document, the oe ligature was replaced with "oe".
-
-Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents
-of the speakers. Those words were retained as-is. Possible
-misspellings in dialogues are not corrected if there is a chance that
-the misspellings were deliberate.
-
-Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not
-corrected unless otherwise noted.
-
-On page 22, "aquiring" was replaced with "acquiring".
-
-On page 23, "induge" was replaced with "indulge".
-
-On page 72, "recived" was replaced with "received".
-
-On page 84, "decribed" was replaced with "described".
-
-On page 99, "Dona" was replaced with "Doña".
-
-On page 106, "countrary" was replaced with "contrary".
-
-On page 121, "Nunez" was replaced with "Nuñez".
-
-On page 127, "outbrust" was replaced with "outburst".
-
-On page 129, "volputuous" was replaced with "voluptuous".
-
-On page 130, "Gesticulatng" was replaced with "Gesticulating".
-
-On page 169, "Vila morta" was replaced with "Vilamorta".
-
-On page 181, "aproaching" was replaced with "approaching".
-
-On page 187, "tolerate him" was replaced with "to tolerate him".
-
-On page 193, "expreses" was replaced with "expresses".
-
-On page 200, an extra single quotation mark was deleted.
-
-On page 238, "consiousness" was replaced with "consciousness".
-
-On page 240, "thought ful" was replaced with "thoughtful".
-
-On page 277, "passsages" was replaced with "passages".
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Swan of Vilamorta, by Emilia Pardo Bazán
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Swan of Vilamorta, by Emilia Pardo Bazán
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Swan of Vilamorta
-
-Author: Emilia Pardo Bazán
-
-Translator: Mary J. Serrano
-
-Release Date: February 3, 2017 [EBook #54105]
-[Last updated: February 15, 2017]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SWAN OF VILAMORTA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Josep Cols Canals, Ernest Schaal, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="image-center">
-<img class="border" src="images/cover.jpg" width="442" height="700"
-alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<div class="image-center">
-<img class="border" src="images/title.jpg" width="426" height="700"
-alt="THE
-
-SWAN OF VlLAMORTA
-
-BY
-
-EMILIA PARDO BAZ&Aacute;N
-
-AUTHOR OF &quot;A WEDDING TRIP,&quot; &quot;A CHRISTIAN WOMAN,&quot;
-&quot;MORRI&Ntilde;A,&quot; ETC.
-
-TRANSLATED BY
-
-MARY J. SERRANO
-
-TRANSLATOR OF &quot;MARIE BASHKIRTSEFF: THE JOURNAL
-OF A YOUNG ARTIST,&quot; ETC.
-
-
-NEW YORK
-CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY
-104 &amp; 106 Fourth Avenue"
-title="THE
-
-SWAN OF VlLAMORTA
-
-BY
-
-EMILIA PARDO BAZ&Aacute;N
-
-AUTHOR OF &quot;A WEDDING TRIP,&quot; &quot;A CHRISTIAN WOMAN,&quot;
-&quot;MORRI&Ntilde;A,&quot; ETC.
-
-TRANSLATED BY
-
-MARY J. SERRANO
-
-TRANSLATOR OF &quot;MARIE BASHKIRTSEFF: THE JOURNAL
-OF A YOUNG ARTIST,&quot; ETC.
-
-
-NEW YORK
-CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY
-104 &amp; 106 Fourth Avenue" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="center">Copyright, 1891.</p>
-
-<p class="center">BY</p>
-
-<p class="center">CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved.</i></p>
-
-<p class="right">THE MERSHON COMPANY PRESS,<br />
-RAHWAY, N. J.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<h1><span class="small">THE</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">SWAN OF VILAMORTA.</span></h1>
-
-<h2>I.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Behind the pine grove the setting sun had left
-a zone of fire against which the trunks of the pine
-trees stood out like bronze columns. The path was
-rugged and uneven, giving evidence of the ravages
-wrought by the winter rains; at intervals loose stones,
-looking like teeth detached from the gum, rendered
-it still more impracticable. The melancholy shades
-of twilight were beginning to envelop the landscape;
-little by little the sunset glow faded away and the
-moon, round and silvery, mounted in the heavens,
-where the evening star was already shining. The
-dismal croaking of the frogs fell sharply on the ear;
-a fresh breeze stirred the dry plants and the dusty
-brambles that grew by the roadside; and the trunks
-of the pine trees grew momentarily blacker, standing
-out like inky bars against the pale green of the
-horizon.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page002" id="page002"></a>[pg&nbsp;002]</span>
-A man was descending the path slowly, bent, apparently,
-on enjoying the poetry and the peace of
-the scene and the hour. He carried a stout walking-stick,
-and as far as one could judge in the fading light,
-he was young and not ill-looking.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He paused frequently, casting glances to the right
-and to the left as if in search of some familiar landmark.
-Finally he stood still and looked around him.
-At his back was a hill crowned with chestnut trees;
-on his left was the pine grove; on his right a small
-church with a mean belfry; before him the outlying
-houses of the town. He turned, walked back some
-ten steps, stopped, fronting the portico of the
-church, examined its walls, and, satisfied at last that
-he had found the right place, raised his hands to his
-mouth and forming with them a sort of speaking
-trumpet, cried, in a clear youthful voice:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Echo, let us talk together!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">From the angle formed by the walls, there came
-back instantly another voice, deeper and less distinct,
-strangely grave and sonorous, which repeated with
-emphasis, linking the answer to the question and
-dwelling upon the final syllable:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let us talk togethe-e-e-e-r!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you happy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Happy-y-y-y!&quot; responded the echo.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page003" id="page003"></a>[pg&nbsp;003]</span>
-&quot;Who am I?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I-I-I-I!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To these interrogations, framed so that the answer
-should make sense with them, succeeded phrases
-uttered without any other object than that of hearing
-them reverberated with strange intensity by the
-wall. &quot;It is a lovely night.&quot;&mdash;&quot;The moon is shining.&quot;&mdash;&quot;The
-sun has set.&quot;&mdash;&quot;Do you hear me,
-echo?&quot;&mdash;&quot;Have you dreams, echo, of glory, ambition,
-love?&quot; The traveler, enchanted with his occupation,
-continued the conversation, varying the
-words, combining them into sentences, and, in the
-short intervals of silence, he listened to the faint
-murmur of the pines stirred by the evening breeze,
-and to the melancholy concert of the frogs. The
-crimson and rose-colored clouds had become ashen
-and had begun to invade the broad region of the
-firmament over which the unclouded moon shed her
-silvery light. The honeysuckles and elder-flowers
-on the outskirts of the pine grove embalmed the air
-with subtle and intoxicating fragrance. And the
-interlocutor of the echo, yielding to the poetic influences
-of the scene, ceased his questions and exclamations
-and began to recite, in a slow, chanting voice,
-verses of Becquer, paying no heed now to the
-voice from the wall, which, in its haste to repeat
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page004" id="page004"></a>[pg&nbsp;004]</span>
-his words, returned them to him broken and
-confused.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Absorbed in his occupation, pleased with the harmonious
-sounds of the verse, he did not notice
-the approach of three men of odd and grotesque
-appearance, wearing enormous broad-brimmed felt
-hats. One of the men was leading a mule laden
-with a leathern sack filled, doubtless, with the juice
-of the grape; and as they walked slowly, and the
-soft clayey soil deadened the noise of their footsteps,
-they passed close by the young man, unperceived
-by him. They exchanged some whispered words
-with one another. &quot;Who is he, man?&quot;&mdash;&quot;Segundo.&quot;&mdash;&quot;The
-lawyer&#39;s son?&quot;&mdash;&quot;The same.&quot;&mdash;&quot;What is he
-doing? Is he talking to himself?&quot;&mdash;&quot;No, he is talking
-to the wall of Santa Margarita.&quot;&mdash;&quot;Well, we have
-as good a right to do that as he has.&quot;&mdash;&quot;Begin
-you &mdash;&mdash;&quot;&mdash;&quot;One&mdash;two&mdash;here goes&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And from those profane lips fell a shower of vile
-words and coarse and vulgar phrases, interrupting
-the <i>Oscuras Golondrinas</i> which the young man was
-reciting with a great deal of expression, and producing,
-in the peaceful and harmonious nocturnal
-silence, the effect of the clatter of brass pans and
-kettles in a piece of German music. The most
-refined expressions were in the following style:
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page005" id="page005"></a>[pg&nbsp;005]</span>
-&quot;D&mdash;&mdash; (here an oath). Hurrah for the wine of the
-Border! Hurrah for the red wine that gives courage
-to man! D&mdash;&mdash;&quot; (the reader&#39;s imagination may
-supply what followed, it being premised that the
-disturbers of the Becquerian dreamer were three
-lawless muleteers who were carrying with them an
-abundant provision of the blood of the grape).</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The nymph who dwelt in the wall opposed no
-resistance to the profanation and repeated the round
-oaths as faithfully as she had repeated the poet&#39;s
-verses. Hearing the vociferations and bursts of
-laughter which the wall sent back to him mockingly,
-Segundo, the lawyer&#39;s son, aware that the barbarians
-were turning his sentimental amusement into ridicule,
-became enraged. Mortified and ashamed, he
-tightened his grasp on his stick, strongly tempted to
-break it on the ribs of some one of them; and, muttering
-between his teeth, &quot;Kaffirs! brutes! beasts!&quot;
-and other offensive epithets, he turned to the left,
-plunged into the pine grove and walked toward the
-town, avoiding the path in order to escape meeting
-the profane trio.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The town was but a step away. The walls of its
-nearest houses shone white in the moonlight, and the
-stones of some buildings in course of erection, garden
-walls, orchards, and vegetable beds, filled up the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page006" id="page006"></a>[pg&nbsp;006]</span>
-space between the town and the pine grove. The
-path grew gradually broader, until it reached the highroad,
-on either side of which leafy chestnut trees cast
-broad patches of shade. The town was already
-asleep, seemingly, for not a light was to be seen, nor
-were any of those noises to be heard which reveal
-the proximity of those human beehives called cities.
-Vilamorta is in reality a very small beehive, a modest
-town, the capital of a district. Bathed in the
-splendor of the romantic satellite, however, it was
-not without a certain air of importance imparted to
-it by the new buildings, of a style of architecture
-peculiar to prison cells, which an <i>Americanized</i>
-Galician, recently returned to his native land with a
-plentiful supply of cash, was erecting with all possible
-expedition.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo turned into an out-of-the-way street&mdash;if
-there be any such in towns like Vilamorta. Only
-the sidewalks were paved; the gutter was a gutter in
-reality; it was full of muddy pools and heaps of
-kitchen garbage, thrown there without scruple by
-the inhabitants. Segundo avoided two things&mdash;stepping
-into the gutter and walking in the moonlight.
-A man passed so close by him as almost to touch
-him, enveloped, notwithstanding the heat, in an ample
-cloak, and holding open above his head an enormous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page007" id="page007"></a>[pg&nbsp;007]</span>
-umbrella, although there was no sign of rain;
-doubtless he was some convalescent, some visitor to
-the springs, who was breathing the pleasant night
-air with hygienic precautions. Segundo, when he
-saw him, walked closer to the houses, turning his
-face aside as if afraid of being recognized. With
-no less caution he crossed the Plaza del Consistorio,
-the pride of Vilamorta, and then, instead of joining
-one of the groups who were enjoying the fresh air,
-seated on the stone benches round the public fountain,
-he slipped into a narrow side street, and crossing
-a retired little square shaded by a gigantic poplar
-turned his steps in the direction of a small house
-half hidden in the shadow of the tree. Between the
-house and Segundo there stood a lumbering bulk&mdash;the
-body of a stage-coach, a large box on wheels, its
-shafts raised in air, waiting, lance in rest, as it were,
-to renew the attack. Segundo skirted the obstacle,
-and as he turned the corner of the square, absorbed
-in his meditations, two immense hogs, monstrously
-fat, rushed out of the half-open gate of a neighboring
-yard, and at a short trot that made their
-enormous sides shake like jelly, made straight for
-the admirer of Becquer, entangling themselves stupidly
-and blindly between his legs. By a special
-interposition of Providence the young man did not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page008" id="page008"></a>[pg&nbsp;008]</span>
-measure his length upon the ground, but, his patience
-now exhausted, he gave each of the swine a
-couple of angry kicks, which drew from them sharp
-and ferocious grunts, as he ejaculated almost audibly:
-&quot;What a town is this, good Heavens! Even
-the hogs must run against one in the streets. Ah,
-what a miserable place! Hell itself could not be
-worse!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">By the time he had reached the door of the house,
-he had, to some extent, regained his composure.
-The house was small and pretty and had a cheerful
-air. There was no railing outside the windows, only
-the stone ledges, which were covered with plants in
-pots and boxes; through the windows shaded by
-muslin curtains a light could be seen burning, and in
-the silent fa&ccedil;ade there was something peaceful and
-attractive that invited one to enter. Segundo
-pushed open the door and almost at the same instant
-there was heard in the dark hall the rustling of
-skirts, a woman&#39;s arms were opened and the admirer
-of Becquer, throwing himself into them, allowed himself
-to be led, dragged, carried bodily, almost, up
-the stairs, and into the little parlor where, on a table
-covered with a white crochet cover, burned a carefully
-trimmed lamp. There, on the sofa, the lover
-and the lady seated themselves.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page009" id="page009"></a>[pg&nbsp;009]</span>
-Truth before all things. The lady was not far from
-thirty-six or thirty-seven, and what is worse, could
-never have been pretty, or even passably good-looking.
-The smallpox had pitted and hardened
-her coarse skin, giving it the appearance of the
-leather bottom of a sieve. Her small black eyes,
-hard and bright like two fleas, matched well her
-nose, which was thick and ill-shaped, like the noses of
-the figures of lay monks stamped on chocolate.
-True, the mouth was fresh-colored, the teeth white
-and sound like those of a dog; but everything else
-pertaining to her&mdash;dress, manner, accent, the want
-of grace of the whole&mdash;was calculated rather to put
-tender thoughts to flight than to awaken them.
-With the lamp shining as brightly as it does, it is
-preferable to contemplate the lover. The latter is
-of medium height, has a graceful, well-proportioned
-figure, and in the turn of his head and in his youthful
-features there is something that irresistibly attracts
-and holds the gaze. His forehead, which is
-high and straight, is shaded and set off by luxuriant
-hair, worn somewhat longer than is allowed by our
-present severe fashion. His face, thin and delicately
-outlined, casts a shadow on the walls which is made
-up of acute angles. A mustache, curling with the
-grace which is peculiar to a first mustache, and to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page010" id="page010"></a>[pg&nbsp;010]</span>
-the wavy locks of a young girl, shades but does not
-cover his upper lip. The beard has not yet attained
-its full growth; the muscles of the throat have not
-yet become prominent; the Adam&#39;s apple does not
-yet force itself on the attention. The complexion is
-dark, pale, and of a slightly bilious hue.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Seeing this handsome youth leaning his head on
-the shoulder of this woman of mature age and undisguised
-ugliness, it would have been natural to
-take them for mother and son, but anyone coming
-to this conclusion, after a single moment&#39;s observation,
-would have shown scant penetration, for
-in the manifestations of maternal affection, however
-passionate and tender they may be, there
-is always a something of dignity and repose
-which is wanting in those of every other
-affection.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Doubtless Segundo felt a longing to see the moon
-again, for he rose almost immediately from his seat
-on the sofa and crossed over to the window, his companion
-following him. He threw open the sash, and
-they sat down side by side in two low chairs whose
-seats were on a level with the flower-pots. A fine
-carnation regaled the sense with its intoxicating
-perfume; the moon lighted up with her silvery rays
-the foliage of the poplar that cast broad shadow
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page011" id="page011"></a>[pg&nbsp;011]</span>
-over the little square. Segundo opened the conversation
-this wise:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have you made any cigars for me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here are some,&quot; she answered, putting her hand
-into her pocket and drawing from it a bundle of
-cigars. &quot;I was able to make only a dozen and a half
-for you. I will complete the two dozen to-night
-before I go to bed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was a moment&#39;s silence, broken by the
-sharp sound made by the striking of the match and
-then, in a voice muffled by the first puff of smoke,
-Segundo went on:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, has anything new happened?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;New? No. The children&mdash;putting the house
-in order&mdash;and then&mdash;Minguitos. He made my head
-ache with his complaining&mdash;he complained the whole
-blessed evening. He said his bones ached. And
-you? Very busy, killing yourself reading, studying,
-writing, eh? Of course!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I have been taking a delightful walk. I
-went to Pe&ntilde;as-albas and returned by way of Santa
-Margarita. I have seldom spent a pleasanter evening.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I warrant you were making verses.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, my dear. The verses I made I made last
-night after leaving you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page012" id="page012"></a>[pg&nbsp;012]</span>
-&quot;Ah! And you weren&#39;t going to repeat them to
-me. Come, for the love of the saints, come, recite
-them for me, you must know them by heart. Come,
-darling.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To this vehement entreaty succeeded a passionate
-kiss, pressed on the hair and forehead of the poet.
-The latter raised his eyes, drew back a little and,
-holding his cigar between his fingers after knocking
-off the ashes with his nail, proceeded to recite.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The offspring of his muse was a poem in imitation
-of Becquer. His auditor, who listened to it with
-religious attention, thought it superior to anything
-inspired by the muse of the great Gustave. And
-she asked for another and then another, and then a
-bit of Espronceda and then a fragment or two of
-Zorrilla. By this time the cigar had gone out; the
-poet threw away the stump and lighted a fresh one.
-Then they resumed their conversation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Shall we have supper soon?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Directly. What do you think I have for you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I haven&#39;t the least idea.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Think of what you like best. What you like
-best, better than anything else.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bah! You know that so far as I am concerned,
-provided you don&#39;t give me anything smoked or
-greasy&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page013" id="page013"></a>[pg&nbsp;013]</span>
-&quot;A French omelet! You couldn&#39;t guess, eh?
-Let me tell you&mdash;I found the receipt in a book. As
-I had heard that it was something good I wanted to
-try it. I had always made omelets as they make
-them here, so stiff, that you might throw one against
-the wall without breaking it. But this&mdash;I think it
-will be to your taste. As for me, I don&#39;t like it
-much, I prefer the old style. I showed Flores how
-to make it. What was in the one you ate at the
-inn at Orense? Chopped parsley, eh?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, ham. But what difference does it make
-what was in it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll run and take it out of the pantry! I thought&mdash;the
-book says parsley! Wait, wait.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She overturned her chair in her haste. An instant
-later the jingling of her keys and the opening and
-closing of a couple of doors were heard in the distance.
-A husky voice muttered some unintelligible
-words in the kitchen. In two minutes she was back
-again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me, and those verses, are you not going to
-publish them? Am I not going to see them in
-print?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes,&quot; responded the poet, slowly turning his
-head to one side and sending a puff of smoke
-through his lips. &quot;I am going to send them to Vigo,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page014" id="page014"></a>[pg&nbsp;014]</span>
-to Roberto Blanquez, to insert them in the
-<i>Amanecer</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am delighted! You will become famous,
-sweetheart! How many periodicals have spoken of
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo laughed ironically and shrugged his
-shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not many.&quot; And with a somewhat preoccupied
-air he let his gaze wander over the plants and far
-away over the top of the poplar whose leaves rustled
-gently in the breeze. The poet pressed his companion&#39;s
-hand mechanically, and the latter returned
-the pressure with passionate ardor.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Of course. How do you expect them to speak
-of you when you don&#39;t put your name to your
-verses?&quot; she said. &quot;They don&#39;t know whose they
-are. They are wondering, likely&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What difference does the name make? They
-could say the same things of the pseudonym I have
-adopted as of Segundo Garc&iacute;a. The few people
-who will trouble themselves to read my verses will
-call me the Swan of Vilamorta.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page015" id="page015"></a>[pg&nbsp;015]</span></p>
-
-<h2>II.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo Garc&iacute;a, the lawyer&#39;s son, and Leocadia
-Otero, the schoolmistress of Vilamorta, had met each
-other for the first time in the spring at a pilgrimage.
-Leocadia had gone with some girls to whom she had
-taught their letters and plain sewing. Before the
-chorus of nymphs Segundo had recited verses for
-more than two hours in an oak grove far from the
-noise of the drum and the bagpipes, where the
-strains of the music and the voices of the crowd
-came softened by distance. The audience was as
-silent as if they were hearing mass, although certain
-passages of a tender or passionate nature were the
-occasion, among the children, of nudges, pinches,
-laughter instantaneously suppressed; but from the
-black eyes of the schoolmistress, down her cheeks,
-pitted by the smallpox and pale with emotion,
-flowed two large, warm tears, followed so quickly
-and in such abundance by others that she was
-obliged to take out her handkerchief to wipe them
-away. And returning by starlight, descending the
-mountain on whose summit stood the sanctuary, by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page016" id="page016"></a>[pg&nbsp;016]</span>
-sylvan footpaths carpeted with grass and bordered
-with heather and briars, the order of march was as
-follows: first the children, running, jumping, pushing
-one another among the heather and greeting
-every fall with shouts of laughter; Leocadia and
-Segundo behind, arm-in-arm, pausing from time to
-time to talk in subdued tones, almost in whispers.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A sad and ugly story was told about Leocadia
-Otero. Although, without actually saying so, she
-had given it to be understood that she was a widow,
-it was whispered that she had never been married;
-that the puny Dominguito, the little cripple who
-was always sick, was born while she lived in the
-house of her uncle and guardian at Orense, after the
-death of her parents. What was certain was that
-her uncle had died shortly after the birth of the
-child, bequeathing to his niece a couple of fields
-and a house in Vilamorta, and Leocadia, after passing
-the necessary examinations, had obtained the
-village school and gone to settle in that town. She
-had lived in it now for more than thirteen years,
-observing the most exemplary conduct, watching day
-and night over Minguitos, and living with the utmost
-frugality in order to rebuild the dilapidated house,
-which she had finally succeeded in doing shortly
-before her meeting with Segundo. Leocadia was a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page017" id="page017"></a>[pg&nbsp;017]</span>
-woman of notably industrious habits; in her wardrobe
-she had always a good supply of linen, in her
-parlor bamboo furniture with a rug before the sofa,
-grapes, rice, and ham in her pantry, and carnations
-and sweet basil in her windows. Minguitos was
-always as neat as a new pin; she herself, when she
-raised the skirt of her habit of Dolores, of good
-merino, displayed underneath voluminous embroidered
-petticoats, stiff with starch. For all which
-reasons, notwithstanding her ugliness and her former
-history, the schoolmistress was not without suitors&mdash;a
-wealthy retired muleteer, and Cansin, the clothier.
-She rejected the suitors and continued living alone
-with Minguitos and Flores, her old servant, who
-now enjoyed in the house all the privileges of a
-grandmother.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The iniquitous wrong suffered by her in early
-youth had produced in Leocadia, absorbed as she
-was in her bitter recollections, a profound horror of
-marriage and an insatiable thirst for the romantic,
-the ideal, which is as a refreshing dew to the imagination
-and which satisfies the emotions. She had the
-superficial knowledge of a village schoolmistress&mdash;rudimentary,
-but sufficient to introduce exotic tastes
-into Vilamorta; that is to say, a taste for literature in
-its most accessible forms&mdash;novels and poetry. She
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page018" id="page018"></a>[pg&nbsp;018]</span>
-devoted to reading the leisure hours of her monotonous
-and upright life. She read with faith, with
-enthusiasm, uncritically; she read believing and accepting
-everything, identifying herself with each one
-of the heroines, in turn, her heart echoing back the
-poet&#39;s sighs, the troubadour&#39;s songs, and the laments
-of the bard. Reading was her one vice, her secret
-happiness. When she requested her friends at
-Orense to renew her subscription to the library for
-her they laughed at her and nicknamed her the
-&quot;Authoress.&quot; She an authoress! She only wished
-she were. If she could only give form to what she
-felt, to the world of fancy she carried in her mind!
-But this was impossible. Never would her brain
-succeed in producing, however hard she might
-squeeze it, even so much as a poor <i>seguidilla</i>.
-Poetry and sensibility were stored up in the folds
-and convolutions of her brain, as solar heat is stored
-up in the coal. What came to the surface was pure
-prose&mdash;housekeeping, economy, stews.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When she met Segundo, chance applied the lighted
-torch to the formidable train of feelings and dreams
-shut up in the soul of the schoolmistress. She had
-at last found a worthy employment for her amorous
-faculties, an outlet for her affections. Segundo was
-poetry incarnate. He represented for her all the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page019" id="page019"></a>[pg&nbsp;019]</span>
-graces, all the divine attributes of poetry&mdash;the flowers,
-the breeze, the nightingale, the dying light of
-day, the moon, the dark wood.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The fire burned with astounding rapidity. In its
-flames were consumed, first her honorable resolution
-to efface by the blamelessness of her conduct the
-stigma of the past, then her strong and deep maternal
-affection. Not for an instant did the thought present
-itself to Leocadia&#39;s mind that Segundo could
-ever be her husband; although both were free the
-difference in their ages and the intellectual superiority
-of the young poet placed an insurmountable barrier
-in the way of the aspirations of the schoolmistress.
-She fell in love as into an abyss, and looked
-neither before nor behind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo had had in Santiago, during his college
-days, youthful intrigues, adventures of a not very
-serious nature, such as few men escape between the
-ages of fifteen and twenty-five, occasionally taking
-part, also, in what in that romantic epoch were
-called <i>orgies</i>. Notwithstanding all this, however,
-he was not vicious. The son of a hysterical mother,
-whose strength was exhausted by repeated lactations,
-and who at last succumbed to the debility induced
-by them, Segundo&#39;s spirit was much more
-exacting and insatiable than his body. He had inherited
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page020" id="page020"></a>[pg&nbsp;020]</span>
-from his mother a melancholy temperament
-and innumerable prejudices, innumerable instinctive
-antipathies, innumerable superstitious practices. He
-had loved her, and he cherished her memory with
-veneration. And more tenacious even than his loving
-remembrance of his mother was the invincible
-antipathy he cherished for his father. It would not
-be true to say that the lawyer had been the murderer
-of his wife, and yet Segundo clearly divined the
-slow martyrdom endured by that fine nervous organization,
-and had always before his eyes, in his hours
-of gloom, the mean coffin in which the dead woman
-was interred, shrouded in the oldest sheet that was to
-be found.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo&#39;s family consisted of his father, an aunt,
-advanced in years, two brothers, and three sisters.
-The lawyer Garc&iacute;a enjoyed the reputation of being
-wealthy&mdash;in reality this fortune was insignificant&mdash;a
-village fortune accumulated penny by penny, by
-usurious loans and innumerable sordid privations.
-His practice brought him in something, but ten
-mouths to feed and the professional education of
-three sons swallowed up not a little. The eldest of
-the boys, an officer in an infantry regiment, was stationed
-in the Philippine Islands, and, far from expecting
-any money from him, they were thankful if he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page021" id="page021"></a>[pg&nbsp;021]</span>
-did not ask for any. Segundo, the second in age as
-well as in name, had just been graduated&mdash;one lawyer
-more in Spain, where this fruit grows so abundantly.
-The youngest was studying at the Institute
-at Orense, with the intention of becoming an
-apothecary. The girls spent the days running about
-in the gardens and cornfields, half the time barefooted,
-not even attending Leocadia&#39;s school to save
-the slight expense that would be incurred in procuring
-the decent clothing which this would necessitate.
-As for the aunt&mdash;Mis&iacute;a G&aacute;spara&mdash;she was the soul
-of the house, a narrow and sapless soul, a withered
-old woman, silent and ghost-like in appearance, still
-active, in spite of her sixty years, who, without ceasing
-to knit her stockings with fingers as yellow as
-the keys of an old harpsichord, sold barley in the
-granary, wine in the cellar, lent a dollar at fifty per
-cent. interest to the fruit-women and hucksters of
-the market, receiving their wares in payment, measured
-out the food, the light, and their clothing to her
-nieces, fattened a pig with affectionate solicitude,
-and was respected in Vilamorta for her ant-like
-abilities.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was the lawyer&#39;s aspiration to transmit his practice
-and his office to Segundo. Only the boy gave
-no indication of an aptitude for stirring up law-suits
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page022" id="page022"></a>[pg&nbsp;022]</span>
-and prosecutions. How had he achieved the miracle
-of passing with honor in the examinations without
-ever having opened a law-book during the whole
-term, and failing in attendance at the college whenever
-it rained or whenever the sun shone? Well, by
-means of an excellent memory and a good natural
-intelligence; learning by heart, when it was necessary,
-whole pages from the text-books, and remembering
-and reciting them with the same ease, if not
-with as much taste, as he recited the &quot;Doloras&quot; of
-Campoamor.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On Segundo&#39;s table lay, side by side, the works of
-Zorrilla and Espronceda, bad translations of Heine,
-books of verse of local poets, the &quot;Lamas-Varela,&quot; or,
-<i>Antidote to Idleness</i>, and other volumes of a no less
-heterogeneous kind. Segundo was not an insatiable
-reader; he chose his reading according to the whim
-of the moment, and he read only what was in conformity
-with his tastes, thus acquiring a superficial
-culture of an imperfect and varied nature. Quick of
-apprehension, rather than thoughtful or studious, he
-had learned French without a teacher and almost by
-intuition, in order to read in the original the works
-of Musset, Lamartine, Proudhon, and Victor Hugo.
-His mind was like an uncultivated field in which
-grew here and there some rare and beautiful flower,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page023" id="page023"></a>[pg&nbsp;023]</span>
-some exotic plant; of the abstruse and positive
-sciences, of solid and serious learning, which is the
-nurse of mental vigor&mdash;the classics, the best literature,
-the severe teachings of history&mdash;he knew nothing;
-and in exchange, by a singular phenomenon of
-intellectual relationship, he identified himself with
-the romantic movement of the second third of the
-century, and in a remote corner of Galicia lived
-again the psychological life of dead and gone generations.
-So does some venerable academician, over-leaping
-the nineteen centuries of our era, delight
-himself now with what delighted Horace and
-live platonically enamored of Lydia.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo composed his first verses, cynical and
-pessimistic in intention, ingenuous in reality, before
-he had reached the age of seventeen. His classmates
-applauded him to the echo. He acquired in
-their eyes a certain prestige, and when the first fruits
-of his muse appeared in a periodical he had, without
-going beyond the narrow circle of the college, admirers
-and detractors. Thenceforth he acquired the right
-to indulge in solitary walks, to laugh rarely, to surround
-his adventures with mystery, and not to play
-or take a drink for good-fellowship&#39;s sake except
-when he felt in the humor.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And he seldom felt in the humor. Excitation of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page024" id="page024"></a>[pg&nbsp;024]</span>
-the senses, of a purely physical nature, possessed no
-attraction for him; if he drank at times through
-bravado, the spectacle of drunkenness, the winding-up
-of student orgies&mdash;the soiled tablecloth, the
-maudlin disputes, his companions lying under the
-table or stretched on the sofa, the shamelessness
-and heartlessness of venal women&mdash;repelled him and
-he came away from such scenes filled with disgust
-and contempt, and at times a reaction proper to his
-complex character sent him, a sincere admirer of
-Proudhon, Quinet, and Renan, to the precincts of
-some solitary church, where he drew in with delight
-long breaths of the incense-laden air.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The lawyer Garc&iacute;a made no protest against his
-son&#39;s literary inclinations because he regarded them
-as a passing amusement proper to his age, a youthful
-folly, like dancing at a village feast. He began
-to grow uneasy when he saw that Segundo, after
-graduation, showed no inclination to help him in the
-conduct of his tortuous law-suits. Was the boy,
-then, going to turn out good for nothing but to
-string rhymes together? It was no crime to do this,
-but&mdash;when there was not a pile of law-papers to go
-through and stratagems to think of to circumvent
-the opposing party. Since the lawyer had observed
-this inclination of his son he had treated him with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page025" id="page025"></a>[pg&nbsp;025]</span>
-more persistent harshness and coldness than before.
-Every day at table or whenever the occasion offered,
-he made cutting speeches to him about the necessity
-of earning one&#39;s own bread by assiduous labor,
-instead of depending upon others for it. These continual
-sermons, in which he displayed the same captious
-and harassing obstinacy as in the conduct of
-his law-suits, frightened Segundo from the house. In
-Leocadia&#39;s house he found a place of refuge, and he
-submitted passively to be adored; flattered in the
-first place by the triumph his verses had obtained,
-awakening admiration so evidently sincere and ardent,
-and in the second place attracted by the moral
-well-being engendered by unquestioning approval
-and unmeasured complacency. His idle, dreamy
-brain reposed on the soft cushions which affection
-smoothes for the beloved head; Leocadia sympathized
-with all his plans for the future, developing
-and enlarging them; she encouraged him to write
-and to publish his verses; she praised him without
-reserve and without hypocrisy, for, for her, whose
-critical faculty was situated in her cardiac cavities,
-Segundo was the most melodious singer in the universe.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Gradually the loving prevision of the schoolmistress
-extended to other departments of Segundo&#39;s
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page026" id="page026"></a>[pg&nbsp;026]</span>
-existence. Neither the lawyer Garc&iacute;a nor Aunt
-G&aacute;spara supposed that a young man, once his education
-was finished, needed a penny for any extraordinary
-expense. Aunt G&aacute;spara, in particular, protested
-loudly at every fresh outlay&mdash;after filling her
-nephew&#39;s trunk one year she thought he was provided
-with shirts for at least ten years to come:
-clothes had no right to tear or to wear out, without
-any consideration, in that way. Leocadia took note
-of the wants of her idol; one day she observed that
-he was not well supplied with handkerchiefs and she
-hemmed and marked a dozen for him; the next day
-she noticed that he was expected to keep himself in
-cigars for a year on half a dollar, and she took upon
-herself the task of making them for him, furnishing
-the material herself gratis. She heard the fruit-women
-criticising Aunt G&aacute;spara&#39;s stinginess; she
-inferred from this that Segundo had a poor table,
-and she set herself to the task of devising appetizing
-and nutritious dishes for him; in addition to all
-which she ordered books from Orense, mended his
-clothes, and sewed on his buttons.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">All this she did with inexpressible delight, going
-about the house with a light, almost youthful step,
-rejuvenated by the sweet maternity of love, and so
-happy that she forgot to scold the school-children,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page027" id="page027"></a>[pg&nbsp;027]</span>
-thinking only of shortening their tasks that she
-might be all the sooner with Segundo. There was
-in her affection much that was generous and spiritual,
-and her happiest moments were those in which, as
-they sat side by side at the window, his head resting
-on her shoulder, she listened, while her imagination
-transformed the pots of carnations and sweet basil
-into a virgin forest, to the verses which he recited
-in a well-modulated voice, verses that seemed to
-Leocadia celestial music.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The medal had its obverse side, however. The
-mornings were full of bitterness when Flores would
-come with an angry and frowning face, her woolen
-shawl twisted and wrinkled and falling over her eyes,
-to say in short, abrupt phrases:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The eggs are all used; shall I get more? There
-is no sugar; which kind shall I buy&mdash;that dear loaf
-sugar that we bought last week? To-day I got coffee,
-two pounds of coffee, as if we had a gold mine.
-I won&#39;t buy any more cordial&mdash;you can go for it
-yourself&mdash;I won&#39;t.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What are you talking about, Flores? What is
-the matter with you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I say that if you like to give Ramon, the confectioner,
-twenty-four reals a bottle for <i>anisette</i>, when
-it is to be had for eight at the apothecary&#39;s, you can
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page028" id="page028"></a>[pg&nbsp;028]</span>
-do so, but that I am not going to put the money in
-that thief&#39;s hand; he will be asking you five dollars
-a bottle for it next.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia would come out of her reverie with a
-sigh, and go to the bureau drawer for the money,
-not without thinking that Flores was only too right;
-her savings, her couple of thousand reals laid by for
-an emergency, must be almost gone; it was better
-not to examine into the condition of the purse; better
-put off annoyances as long as possible. God
-would provide. And she would scold the old
-woman with feigned anger.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Go for the bottle; go&mdash;and don&#39;t make me
-angry. At eight the children will be here and I have
-my petticoat to iron yet. Make Minguitos his chocolate;
-you would be better employed in seeing that
-he has something to eat. And give him some cake.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes. I&#39;ll give him some, I&#39;ll give him some. If
-I didn&#39;t give the poor child something&mdash;&mdash;&quot; grumbled
-the servant, who at Minguitos&#39; name felt her anger
-increase. In the kitchen could be heard the furious
-knock given to the chocolate-pot to settle it on the
-fire and the angry sound of the mill, afterward, beating
-the chocolate into froth. Flores would enter
-the room of the deformed boy, who had not yet left
-his bed, and taking his hand in hers, say:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page029" id="page029"></a>[pg&nbsp;029]</span>
-&quot;Are you warm, child? I have brought you your
-chocolate; do you hear?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will mamma give it to me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will give it to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And mamma&mdash;what is she doing?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ironing some petticoats.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The little humpback would fix his eyes on Flores,
-raising his head with difficulty from between the
-double arch of the breast and back. His eyes were
-deep set, with large pupils; on his mouth, with its
-prominent jaws, rested a melancholy and distorted
-smile. Throwing his arms around the neck of Flores,
-and putting his lips close to her ear:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did the <i>other one</i> come yesterday?&quot; he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, child, yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will he come again to-day?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;ll come. Of course he&#39;ll come! Stop talking,
-<i>fillino</i>, stop talking and take your chocolate.
-It&#39;s as you like it&mdash;thin and with froth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t think I have any appetite for it. Put it
-there beside me.&quot;</p>
-
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page030" id="page030"></a>[pg&nbsp;030]</span></p>
-
-<h2>III.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">In Vilamorta there was a Casino, a real Casino,
-small indeed, and shabby, besides, but with its
-billiard-table, bought at second-hand, and its <i>boy</i>, an
-old man of seventy, who once a year dusted and
-brushed the green cover. For the only reunions in
-the Casino of Vilamorta were those of the rats and
-the moths who assembled daily, to amuse themselves
-by eating away the woodwork. The chief
-centers of reunion were the two apothecaries&#39; shops,
-that of Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia, fronting the Plaza and that
-of Agonde in the high street. Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia&#39;s
-shop, nestling in the shadowy corner of an archway,
-was dark; in the hours of meeting it was lighted by
-a smoky kerosene lamp; its furniture consisted of
-four grimy chairs and a bench.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">From the street all that was to be seen were dark
-mass-cloaks, overcoats, broad-brimmed hats, two or
-three clerical tonsures that shone at a distance like
-metal clasps against the dark background of the shop.
-Agonde&#39;s shop, on the contrary, was brightly illuminated
-and gloried in the possession of six glass globes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page031" id="page031"></a>[pg&nbsp;031]</span>
-of brilliant coloring and fantastic effect, three rows
-of shelves laden with imposing and scientific-looking
-white porcelain jars bearing Latin inscriptions in
-black letters, a divan, and two leather-covered armchairs.
-The two contrasting shops were also antagonistic;
-they had declared war to the knife against
-each other.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Agonde&#39;s shop, liberal and enlightened in its opinions,
-said of the reactionary shop that it was a center
-of unending conspiracies, where <i>El Cuartel Real</i>
-and all the rebel proclamations had been read during
-the civil war, and where for the past five years ammunition-belts
-were being diligently prepared for a
-Carlist party that never took the field; and according
-to the reactionary shop, that of Agonde was the
-headquarters of the Freemasons; where lampoons
-were printed on a little handpress and where gambling
-was shamelessly carried on. The meetings in
-the reactionary shop broke up with religious punctuality
-at ten, in winter, and eleven in summer, while
-the liberal shop continued to cast on the sidewalk
-until midnight the light of its two bright lamps and
-the blue, red, and emerald-green reflections of its glass
-globes; for which reasons the members of the liberal
-reunion called those of the other party <i>owls</i>, while
-those of the reactionary clique gave their opponents
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page032" id="page032"></a>[pg&nbsp;032]</span>
-the name of <i>members of the Casino of the Gaming
-Table</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo never put his foot over the threshold of
-the reactionary shop and, since the beginning of his
-acquaintance with Leocadia Otero, he had shunned
-that of Agonde also, for his vanity was wounded by
-the jests and gibes of the apothecary, who was noted
-for his waggish humor. One evening as Saturnino
-Agonde was crossing the Plaza of the Alamo at an
-unusually late hour&mdash;on his way the devil only knew
-whither&mdash;he had caught sight of Leocadia and
-Segundo seated at the window, and had heard the
-psalmody of the verses which the poet was declaiming.
-From that time Segundo had seen depicted on
-the countenance of Agonde, a practical man of a
-sanguine temperament, such contempt for sentimental
-trifling and for poetry that he instinctively
-avoided him as far as it was possible to do so. Occasionally,
-however, whenever he desired to read <i>El
-Imparcial</i>, to know what was going on, he would
-stop in at the shop for a few moments. He did so
-on the day after his conversation with the echo.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The meeting was very animated. Segundo&#39;s
-father was leaning back on the sofa with a newspaper
-resting on his knees; his brother-in-law, the
-notary Genday, Ramon, the confectioner, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page033" id="page033"></a>[pg&nbsp;033]</span>
-Agonde were hotly disputing with him. At the
-further end of the shop Carmelo, the tobacconist,
-Don Fermin, alias <i>Tropiezo</i>,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> the physician, the secretary
-of the Municipality and the Alcalde sat playing
-<i>tresillo</i> at a small table. When Segundo entered, he
-remarked something unusual in the air of his father
-and of the group that surrounded him, but certain
-that he would presently be told the cause, he
-silently dropped into an armchair, lighted a cigar,
-and took up the copy of <i>El Imparcial</i> that was
-lying on the counter.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a>
-<a href="#FNanchor_1_1">
-<span class="label">[1]</span></a>
-Trip.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, the papers here say nothing, absolutely
-nothing, about it,&quot; exclaimed the confectioner.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">From the tresillo table came the voice of the doctor
-confirming Ramon&#39;s doubts; the doctor, too, was
-of the opinion that the event in question could not
-happen without due notice of it being given in the
-papers.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You would die rather than believe anything,&quot;
-replied Agonde. &quot;I am certain of it, I tell you, and
-it seems to me that when I am certain of it&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And I too,&quot; affirmed Genday. &quot;If it is necessary
-to call witnesses to prove it, they are there. I know
-it from my own brother, who heard it from Mendez
-de las Vides; you can judge whether I have the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page034" id="page034"></a>[pg&nbsp;034]</span>
-news on good authority or not. Do you want further
-proof? Well, two armchairs, a handsome gilt
-bedstead, a great deal of china and a piano have
-been ordered from Orense for Las Vides. Are you
-convinced?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In any case they will not come as soon as you
-say,&quot; objected Tropiezo.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They will come at the time I have said. Don
-Victoriano wants to spend the holidays and the vintage
-season here; they say he longs to see his native
-place again, and that he has spoken of nothing
-all the winter but the journey.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is coming to die here,&quot; said Tropiezo; &quot;I
-heard that he was in a very bad state of health.
-You are going to be left without a leader.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Go to&mdash;&mdash;What a devil of a man, what an owl,
-always predicting misfortunes! Either hold your
-tongue, or talk sense. Attend to the game, as you
-ought to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo was gazing abstractedly at the glass
-globes of the shop, his attention seemingly occupied
-with the blue, green, and red points of light that
-sparkled in their center. He understood now the
-subject of their conversation&mdash;the expected arrival
-of Don Victoriano Andres de la Comba, the minister,
-the great political leader of the country, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page035" id="page035"></a>[pg&nbsp;035]</span>
-radical representative of the district. What mattered
-to Segundo the arrival of this pretentious
-coxcomb! And giving himself up to the enjoyment
-of his cigar, he allowed the noisy dispute to go on
-unheeded. Afterward he became absorbed in the
-reading of an article in <i>El Imparcial</i>, in which a new
-poet was warmly eulogized.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Meanwhile at the tresillo table matters were becoming
-complicated. The apothecary, who sat
-behind the Alcalde, was giving him advice&mdash;a delicate
-and difficult task.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The tobacconist and Don Fermin held all the
-good cards; they had the man between them&mdash;a
-ticklish position. The Alcalde was a thin shriveled-up
-old man, of a very timid disposition, who, before
-he ventured to play a card, would think a hundred
-years about it, calculating all the contingencies
-and all the possible combinations of which cards are
-capable. He did not want now to play that <i>solo</i>. It
-would be a great mistake! But the impetuous
-Agonde encouraged him, saying: &quot;Come! I buy it.&quot;
-Thus urged, the Alcalde came to a decision, but not
-without having first entered a protest:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Very well, I&#39;ll play it, but it is a piece of folly,
-gentlemen&mdash;so that you may not say I am afraid.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And all that he had foreseen happened; he found
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page036" id="page036"></a>[pg&nbsp;036]</span>
-himself between two fires: on the one side his king
-of hearts is trumped, on the other his opponent
-takes his knave of trumps with his queen. Don
-Fermin wins the trick without knowing how, while
-the tobacconist, who is smiling maliciously, keeps all
-his good cards. The Alcalde lifts his eyes appealingly
-to Agonde.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Didn&#39;t I tell you so? A nice fix we have got
-ourselves into! We shall lose the hand; it is lost
-already.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, man, no. What a coward you are&mdash;always
-afraid of everything. There you are hesitating as
-long about throwing a card as if your life depended
-on it. Play a trump! play a trump! That is the
-way cowards always lose&mdash;they are afraid to play
-their trumps.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The opponents winked at each other maliciously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>De posita non tibi</i>,&quot; exclaimed the tobacconist.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Si codillum non resultabit</i>,&quot; assented Don
-Fermin.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Alcalde, quaking with fear, proceeded, by
-Agonde&#39;s advice, to look through the tricks his
-partners had taken, in order to see how many trumps
-had been already played. Tropiezo and the tobacconist
-protested:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">What a mania he had for examining the cards!</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page037" id="page037"></a>[pg&nbsp;037]</span>
-The Alcalde, somewhat tranquillized, resolved at
-last to put an end to his uncertainty, and with a few
-bold and decisive plays the hand ended, each player
-winning three tricks.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A tie!&quot; exclaimed the tobacconist and the
-apothecary almost simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You see! Playing as badly as you could you
-haven&#39;t lost the hand,&quot; said Agonde. &quot;They needed
-all their cards to win what they did.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They were all absorbed in the game&mdash;whose interest
-was now at its height&mdash;with the exception of
-Segundo, who had abandoned himself to one of those
-idle reveries in which the activity of the imagination
-is stimulated by bodily ease. The voices of the
-players reached his ears like a distant murmur; he
-was a hundred leagues away; he was thinking of the
-article he had just been reading, of which certain
-expressions particularly encomiastic&mdash;mellifluous
-phrases in which the critic artfully glossed over the
-faults of the poet&mdash;had remained stamped on his
-memory. When would his turn come to be judged
-by the Madrid press? God alone knew. He lent
-his attention once more to the conversation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We must at least give him a serenade,&quot; declared
-Genday.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A serenade, indeed!&quot; responded Agonde. &quot;A
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page038" id="page038"></a>[pg&nbsp;038]</span>
-great thing that! Something more than a serenade&mdash;we
-must have some sort of a procession&mdash;a demonstration
-which will show that the people here are
-with him. We must appoint a committee to
-receive him with rockets and bands of music. Let
-those plotters at Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia&#39;s have something to
-rage about.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The name of the other shop produced a storm of
-exclamations, jests, and stamping of feet.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have you heard the news?&quot; asked the waggish
-Tropiezo. &quot;It seems that Nocedal has written a
-very flattering letter to Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia, saying that as
-he represents Don Carlos in Madrid so she, by reason
-of her merits, ought to represent him in Vilamorta.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Homeric bursts of laughter and a general huzza
-greeted this remark.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, that may be an invention; but it is true,
-true as gospel, that Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia sent Don Carlos
-her likeness with a complimentary inscription.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And the regiment? Have they fixed on the day
-on which it is to take the field?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Of course. They say that the Abbot of Lubrego
-is to command it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The hilarity of the assembly was redoubled, for
-the Abbot of Lubrego was nearing his seventieth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page039" id="page039"></a>[pg&nbsp;039]</span>
-year, and was so feeble that he could scarcely hold
-himself on his mule. A boy at this moment entered
-the shop, swinging in his hand a glass bottle.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don Saturnino!&quot; he cried, in a shrill voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is it you want?&quot; answered the druggist,
-mimicking his tones.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Give me some of what this smells like.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; said Agonde, putting the bottle to
-his nose. &quot;What does this smell like, Don Fermin?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let me see&mdash;it smells something like&mdash;laudanum,
-eh?&mdash;or arnica?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Arnica let it be, it is less dangerous. I hope it
-will have a good effect.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is time to retire, gentlemen,&quot; said the Lawyer
-Garc&iacute;a, consulting his silver timepiece.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Genday stood up and Segundo followed his example.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The tresillo party proceeded to settle accounts; calculating
-winnings and losses, centavo by centavo, by
-means of white counters and yellow counters. After
-the close atmosphere of the shop the cool air of the
-street was grateful; the night was mild and clear;
-the stars shone with a friendly light and Segundo,
-who was quick to perceive the poetic aspect of
-things, felt tempted to leave his father and his uncle
-without ceremony and walk along the road, alone,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page040" id="page040"></a>[pg&nbsp;040]</span>
-according to his custom, to enjoy the beauty of the
-night. But his Uncle Genday linked his arm
-through his, saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are to be congratulated, my boy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Congratulated, uncle?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Weren&#39;t you crazy to get away from here?
-Didn&#39;t you want to take your flight to some other
-place? Haven&#39;t you a hatred for office work?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good man,&quot; interposed the lawyer; &quot;he is crazy
-enough as it is, and you want to unsettle his mind
-still more&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hold your tongue, you fool! Don Victoriano is
-coming here, we will present the boy to him and ask
-him to give him a place. And he will give him one,
-and a good one too; for whether he thinks so or not,
-if he does not do what we ask him, the pancake will
-cost him a loaf. The district is not what he imagines
-it to be, and if his adherents do not keep their
-eyes open the clergy will play a trick upon them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And Primo? And Mendez de las Vides?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are no match for the priest. The day
-least expected they will be made a show of; they
-will hang their heads for shame. But you, my boy&mdash;think
-well about it. You are not in love with the
-law?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo shrugged his shoulders with a smile.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page041" id="page041"></a>[pg&nbsp;041]</span>
-&quot;Well, turn the matter over in your mind; think
-what would suit you best. For you must be something;
-you must stick your head in somewhere.
-Would you like a justiceship? a place in the post-office?
-in one of the departments?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They had turned the corner of the Plaza on their
-way to Garc&iacute;a&#39;s house and were passing under Leocadia&#39;s
-window when the fragrance of the carnations
-penetrated to Segundo&#39;s brain. He felt a poetic
-revulsion of feeling and, dilating his nostrils to inhale
-the perfume, he exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Neither justice nor post-office employee. Say
-no more on that point, uncle.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t insist, Clodio,&quot; said the lawyer bitterly.
-&quot;He wants to be nothing, nothing but a downright
-idler, to spend his life scribbling rhymes. Neither
-more nor less. The money must be handed out for
-the Institute, the University, the shirt-front, the
-frock coat, the polished boots, and then, when one
-thinks they are ready to do for themselves, back
-they come, to be a burden to one, to smoke and to
-eat at one&#39;s expense. I have three sons to spend my
-money, to squeeze me dry, and not one to give me
-any help. That is all these young gentlemen are
-good for.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo stopped, twisting the end of his mustache,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page042" id="page042"></a>[pg&nbsp;042]</span>
-with a frown on his face. They all stood still
-at the corner of the little plaza, as people are wont
-to do when a conversation changes to a dispute.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know what puts that into your head,
-father,&quot; declared the poet. &quot;Do you suppose that I
-propose to myself never to be anything more than
-Segundo Garc&iacute;a, the lawyer&#39;s son? If you do, you
-are greatly mistaken. You may be very anxious to
-be rid of the burden of supporting me, but you are
-not half as anxious as I am to relieve you of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then, what are you waiting for? Your
-uncle is proposing a variety of things to you and
-none of them suits you. Do you want to begin by
-being Minister?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The poet began to twist his mustache anew.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is no use in being impatient, father. I
-would make a very bad post-office clerk and a still
-worse justice. I don&#39;t want to tie myself down to
-any fixed career, in which everything is arranged
-beforehand and moves by routine. In that case I
-should be a lawyer like you or a notary like Uncle
-Genday. If we really find Don Victoriano disposed
-to do anything for me, ask some position&mdash;no matter
-what&mdash;without fixed duties, that will enable me
-to reside in Madrid. I will take care of the rest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will take care of the rest. Yes, yes, you say
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page043" id="page043"></a>[pg&nbsp;043]</span>
-well. You will draw upon me for little sums, eh?
-like your brother in the Philippine Islands. Let
-me tell you for your guidance, then, that you needn&#39;t
-do so. I didn&#39;t steal what I have, and I don&#39;t coin
-money.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am not asking anything from you!&quot; cried
-Segundo, in a burst of savage anger. &quot;Am I in
-your way? I will get out of it, then; I will go to
-America. That ends it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; said the lawyer, calming down. &quot;Provided
-you exact no more sacrifices from me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not one! not if I were starving!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The lawyer&#39;s door opened; old Aunt G&aacute;spara in
-her petticoat, looking like a fright, had come to let
-them in. Tied around her head was a cotton handkerchief
-which came so far over her face as almost to
-conceal her sour features. Segundo drew back at
-this picture of domestic life.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Aren&#39;t you coming in?&quot; asked his father.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am going with Uncle Genday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you coming back soon?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Directly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Walking down the square he communicated his
-plans to Genday. The latter, a short man, with a
-fiery temper, signified his approbation by movements
-quick and restless as those of a lizard. His nephew&#39;s
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page044" id="page044"></a>[pg&nbsp;044]</span>
-ideas were not displeasing to him. His active,
-scheming mind, the mind of an electoral agent and a
-clever notary, accepted vast projects more readily
-than the methodical mind of the lawyer Garc&iacute;a.
-Uncle and nephew were much of the same way of
-thinking as to the best manner of profiting by Don
-Victoriano&#39;s influence; conversing in this way they
-reached Genday&#39;s house, and the servant of the latter&mdash;a
-fresh-looking girl&mdash;opened the door for her
-master with all the flattering obsequiousness of a
-confirmed old bachelor&#39;s maid-servant. Instead of
-returning home Segundo, preoccupied and excited,
-walked down the plaza to the highroad, stopped at
-the first clump of chestnut trees he came to, and seating
-himself on the step of a wooden cross which the
-Jesuits had erected there during the last mission,
-gave himself up to the harmless diversion of contemplating
-the evening star, the constellations, and all
-the splendors of the heavenly bodies.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page045" id="page045"></a>[pg&nbsp;045]</span></p>
-
-<h2>IV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">During the tiresome <i>siestas</i> of Vilamorta, while
-the visitors to the springs digested their glasses of
-mineral water and compensated themselves for the
-loss of their morning sleep by a restorative nap, the
-amateur musicians of the popular band practiced
-by themselves the pieces they were shortly to execute
-together. From the shoemaker&#39;s shop came
-the melancholy notes of a flute; in the baker&#39;s resounded
-the lively and martial strains of the horn;
-in the tobacconist&#39;s moaned a clarionet; in the cloth-shop,
-the suppressed sighs of an ophicleide filled the
-air. Those who thus devoted themselves to the
-worship of Euterpe were clerks in shops, younger
-sons, the youthful element of Vilamorta. These
-snatches of melody rose with piercing sonorousness
-on the drowsy warm atmosphere. When the news
-spread that Don Victoriano Andres de la Comba and
-his family were expected to arrive within twenty-four
-hours in the town, to leave it again immediately
-for Las Vides, the brass band was tuned to the
-highest pitch and ready to deafen, with any number
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page046" id="page046"></a>[pg&nbsp;046]</span>
-of waltzes, dances, and quicksteps, the ears of the
-illustrious statesman.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In the town an unusual animation was noticeable.
-Agonde&#39;s house was opened, ventilated, and swept,
-clouds of dust issuing through the windows, at one
-of which, later on, appeared Agonde&#39;s sister, with a
-fringe of hair over her forehead and wearing a pearl-shell
-necklace. The housekeeper of the parish priest
-of Cebre, a famous cook, went busily about the
-kitchen, and the pounding of the mortar and the
-sizzling of oil could be heard. Two hours before
-the time of the arrival of the stage-coach from
-Orense, that is to say at three o&#39;clock in the afternoon,
-the committee of the notabilities of the Combista-radical
-party were already crossing the plaza,
-and Agonde stood waiting on the threshold of his
-shop, having sacrificed to the solemnity of the occasion
-his classic cap and velvet slippers, and wearing
-patent-leather boots and a frock coat which made
-him look more bull-necked and pot-bellied than ever.
-The coach from Orense was entering the town from
-the side next the wood, and, at the tinkling of the
-bells, the clatter of the hoofs of its eight mules and
-ponies, the creaking of its unwieldy bulk, the inhabitants
-of Vilamorta looked out of their windows and
-came to their doors; the reactionary shop only remained
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page047" id="page047"></a>[pg&nbsp;047]</span>
-closed and hostile. When the cumbrous
-vehicle turned into the square the excitement increased;
-barefooted children climbed on the coach
-steps, begging an <i>ochavo</i> in whining accents; the
-fruit-women sitting in the arches straightened themselves
-up to obtain a better view, and only Cansin,
-the clothier, his hands in his trousers&#39; pockets, his
-feet thrust into slippers, continued walking up and
-down his shop with an Olympic air of indifference.
-The overseer reined in the team, saying in soothing
-accents to a rebellious mule:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;E-e-e-e-e-e-h! There, there, Can&oacute;niga.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The brass band, drawn up before the town-hall,
-burst into a deafening prelude, and the first rocket
-whizzed into the air sending forth a shower of sparks.
-The crowd rushed <i>en masse</i> toward the door of the
-coach, to offer their hands, their arms, anything, and
-a stout lady and a priest, with a cotton checked
-handkerchief tied around his temples, alighted from
-it. Agonde, more amused than angry, made signs
-to the musicians and the rocket-throwers to desist
-from their task.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is not coming yet! he is not coming yet!&quot; he
-shouted. In effect, there were no other passengers
-in the omnibus. The overseer hastened to
-explain:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page048" id="page048"></a>[pg&nbsp;048]</span>
-&quot;They are just behind, not two steps off, as one
-might say. In Count de Vilar&#39;s carriage, in the
-barouche. On the Se&ntilde;ora&#39;s account. The luggage
-is here. And they paid for the seats as if they had
-occupied them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was not long before the measured trot of Count
-de Vilar&#39;s pair of horses was heard and the open
-carriage, of an old-fashioned style, rolled majestically
-into the plaza. Reclining on the back seat was a
-man enveloped, notwithstanding the heat, in a cloth
-cloak; at his side sat a lady in a gray linen duster,
-the fanciful brim of her traveling-hat standing out
-sharply against the pure blue of the sky. In the
-front seat sat a little girl of some ten years and a
-<i>mademoiselle</i>, a sort of transpyrenean nursery governess.
-Segundo, who had kept in the background at
-the arrival of the diligence, this time was less stubborn
-and the hand which, covered with a long Su&egrave;de
-glove, was stretched out in quest of a support, met
-with the energetic and nervous pressure of another
-hand. The Minister&#39;s lady looked with surprise at
-the gallant, gave him a reserved salutation and, taking
-the arm Agonde offered her, walked quickly into
-the apothecary&#39;s.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The statesman was slower in alighting. His adherents
-looked at him with surprise. He had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page049" id="page049"></a>[pg&nbsp;049]</span>
-changed greatly since his last visit to Vilamorta&mdash;then
-in the midst of the revolution&mdash;some eight or
-ten years before. His iron-gray hair, whiter on the
-temples, heightened the yellow hue of his complexion;
-the whites of his eyes, too, were yellow and
-streaked with little red veins; and his furrowed and
-withered countenance bore unmistakable traces of
-the anxieties of the struggle for social position, the
-vicissitudes of the political bench, and the sedentary
-labors of the forum. His frame hung loosely together,
-being wanting in the erectness which is the
-sign of physical vigor. When the handshakings
-began, however, and the &quot;Delighted to see you&mdash;&mdash;&quot; &quot;At
-last&mdash;&mdash;&quot; &quot;After an age&mdash;&mdash;&quot; resounded around
-him, the dying gladiator revived, straightened himself
-up, and an amiable smile parted his thin lips, lending
-a pleasing expression to the now stern mouth. He
-even opened his arms to Genday, who squirmed in
-them like an eel, and he clapped the Alcalde on the
-back. Garc&iacute;a, the lawyer, tried to attract attention
-to himself, to distinguish himself among the others,
-saying in the serious tone of one who expresses an
-opinion in a very delicate matter:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There, upstairs, upstairs now, to rest and to take
-some refreshment.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At last the commotion calmed down, the great
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page050" id="page050"></a>[pg&nbsp;050]</span>
-man entering the apothecary&#39;s, followed by Garc&iacute;a,
-Genday, the Alcalde, and Segundo.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They seated themselves in Agonde&#39;s little parlor,
-respectfully leaving to Don Victoriano the red rep
-sofa, around which they drew their chairs in a semi-circle.
-Shortly afterward the ladies made their appearance,
-and, now without her hat, it could be seen
-that Se&ntilde;ora de Comba was young and beautiful,
-seeming rather the elder sister than the mother of the
-little girl. The latter, with her luxuriant hair falling
-down her back and her precocious womanly seriousness,
-had the aspect of a sickly plant, while her
-mother, a smiling blonde, seemed overflowing with
-health. They spoke of the journey, of the fertile
-borders of the Avieiro, of the weather, of the road;
-the conversation was beginning to languish, when
-Agonde&#39;s sister entered opportunely, preceded by
-the housekeeper of the priest, carrying two enormous
-trays filled with smoking cups of chocolate, for supper
-was a meal unknown to the hosts. When the
-trays were set on the table and the chocolate handed
-around, the company grew more animated. The
-Vilamortans, finding a congenial subject on which to
-exercise their oratorical powers, began to press the
-strangers, to eulogize the excellence of the viands,
-and calling Se&ntilde;ora de la Comba by her baptismal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page051" id="page051"></a>[pg&nbsp;051]</span>
-name, and adding an affectionate diminutive to that
-of the little girl, they launched forth into exclamations
-and questions.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is the chocolate to your taste, Nieves?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you like it thin or thick?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nieves, take that morsel of cake for my sake; you
-will find it excellent; only we have the secret of
-making it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come, Victorini&ntilde;a, don&#39;t be bashful; that fresh
-butter goes very well with the hot bread.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A morsel of toasted sponge-cake. Ah-ha! You
-don&#39;t have cake like that in Madrid, eh?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; answered the girl, in a clear and affected
-voice. &quot;In Madrid we eat crullers and doughnuts
-with our chocolate.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is the fashion here to take sponge-cake with it,
-not crullers. Take that one on the top, that brown
-one. That&#39;s nothing, a bird could eat it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Don Victoriano joined in the conversation, praising
-the bread, saying he could not eat it, as it had
-been absolutely prohibited to him, for his malady
-required that he should abstain from starch and
-gluten in every form&mdash;indeed, he had bread sent
-him from France, bread prepared <i>ad hoc</i> without
-those elements&mdash;and as he spoke, he turned toward
-Agonde, who nodded with an air of intelligence,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page052" id="page052"></a>[pg&nbsp;052]</span>
-showing that he understood the Latin phrase. And
-Don Victoriano regretted doubly the prohibition
-now, for there was no bread to be compared to the
-Vilamorta bread&mdash;which was better of its kind than
-cake, yes indeed. The Vilamortans smiled, highly
-flattered, but Garc&iacute;a, with an eloquent shake of the
-head, said that the bread was deteriorating, that it
-was not now what it had formerly been, and that
-only Pellejo, the baker of the plaza, made it conscientiously,
-having the patience to select the wheat,
-grain by grain, not letting a single wormeaten one
-pass. It was for this reason that his loaves turned
-out so sweet and substantial. Then a discussion
-arose as to whether bread should be porous or the
-contrary, and as to whether hot bread was wholesome.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Don Victoriano, reanimated by these homely details,
-talked of his childhood, of the slices of bread
-spread with butter or molasses which he used to
-eat between meals, and when he added that his
-uncle, the priest, occasionally administered a sound
-drubbing to him, a smile once more softened the
-deep lines of his face. This expansion of feeling
-gave a sweeter expression to his countenance, effacing
-from it the traces left by years of strife, the scars
-of the wounds received in the battle of life, illuminating
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page053" id="page053"></a>[pg&nbsp;053]</span>
-it with a reflection from his vanished youth.
-How he longed to see again a grapevine in Las
-Vides from which he had robbed grapes a hundred
-times when he was a child.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you will rob them again now,&quot; exclaimed
-Clodio Genday gayly. &quot;We must tell the master of
-Las Vides to put a guard over the vine of Jaen.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The jest was received with demonstrations of
-hilarity, and the girl laughed with her shrill laugh at
-the idea of her papa robbing a grapevine. Segundo
-only smiled. His eyes were fixed on Don Victoriano,
-and he was thinking of what his life had been. He
-went over in his mind the history of the great man:
-At Segundo&#39;s age Don Victoriano, too, was an
-obscure lawyer, buried in Vilamorta, eager to break
-from the shell. He had gone to Madrid, where a
-celebrated jurisconsult had taken him as his assistant.
-The jurisconsult was a politician, and Victoriano followed
-in his footsteps. How did he begin to prosper?
-This period was shrouded in obscurity. Some
-said one thing, some another. Vilamorta found him,
-when it least expected, its candidate and representative.
-Once in Congress Don Victoriano&#39;s importance
-grew steadily, and when the Revolution of September
-came it found him in a sufficiently exalted
-position to be improvised a minister. The brief ministry
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page054" id="page054"></a>[pg&nbsp;054]</span>
-gave him neither time to wear out his popularity
-nor to give proof of special gifts, and, with his
-prestige almost intact, the Restoration admitted him
-as a member of a fusionist cabinet. He had just
-laid down the portfolio and come to re-establish his
-shattered health in his native place, where his influence
-was strong and incontestible, thanks to his alliance
-with the illustrious house of Mendez de las
-Vides. Segundo asked himself if a lot like Don Victoriano&#39;s
-would satisfy his aspirations. Don Victoriano
-had wealth&mdash;stocks in banks and shares in
-railways among whose directors the name of the able
-jurisconsult figured. Our versifier raised his eyebrows
-disdainfully and glanced at the Minister&#39;s
-wife; that graceful beauty certainly did not love her
-lord. She was the daughter of a younger son of the
-house of Las Vides&mdash;a magistrate; she had probably
-married her husband, allured by his position. No;
-most assuredly the poet did not envy the politician.
-Why had this man risen to the eminent position he
-occupied? What extraordinary gifts did he possess?
-A diffuse parliamentary orator, a passive minister,
-with some forensic ability&mdash;sum total, a mediocrity.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">While these reflections were passing through
-Segundo&#39;s mind, Se&ntilde;ora de Comba amused herself
-by examining minutely the dress and the appearance
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page055" id="page055"></a>[pg&nbsp;055]</span>
-of everyone present. She took in every detail,
-under her half-closed lids, of the toilet of Carmen
-Agonde, who was arrayed in a tight-fitting deep blue
-bodice that sent the blood to her plethoric cheeks.
-She next lowered her mocking glance to the patent-leather
-boots of the pharmacist, and then raised them
-again to Clodio Genday&#39;s fingers, stained by the
-cigar, and the purple and white checked velvet waistcoat
-of the lawyer García. Finally, her glance fell
-on Segundo, in critical examination of his attire.
-But another glance, steady and ardent, cast it back
-like a shield.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page056" id="page056"></a>[pg&nbsp;056]</span></p>
-
-<h2>V.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Agonde rose early on the following morning, and
-descended shortly afterward to his shop, leaving his
-guests wrapped in their slumbers, and Carmen
-charged, the moment they should stir, to pour the
-chocolate into their mouths. The apothecary desired
-to enjoy the effect produced in the town by
-Don Victoriano&#39;s sojourn in his house. He was
-reclining in his leather-covered easy-chair when he
-saw Tropiezo riding past on his gray mule, and
-called out to him:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hello! Hello! Where are you bound for so
-early?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For Doas, man. I have not a minute to spare.&quot;
-And saying this the doctor alighted from his mule,
-which he tied to an iron ring fastened in the wall.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is the case so urgent?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Urgent? That it is. The old woman, the grandmother
-of Ramon, the confectioner. It appears she
-has already received the last sacrament.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And it is only now they have sent for you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No; I went to see her yesterday, and I applied
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page057" id="page057"></a>[pg&nbsp;057]</span>
-two dozen leeches, that drew their fill of blood from
-her. She looked like a dying kid; she was very
-weak, and as thin as a wafer. Perhaps if I had given
-her something that I thought of, instead of applying
-leeches&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah! a trip,&quot; interrupted Agonde maliciously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Life is a series of trips,&quot; responded the doctor,
-shrugging his shoulders. &quot;And upstairs?&quot; he added,
-raising his eyes interrogatively to the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Snoring like princes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And he&mdash;how does he look?&quot; asked Don Fermin,
-lowering his voice and dwelling on every word.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He?&quot; repeated Agonde, following his example.
-&quot;So-so. Oldish. And very gray.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But what is the matter with him? Let us hear.
-For as to being sick, he is that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He has&mdash;a new disease&mdash;a very strange one, one
-of the latest fashion.&quot; And Agonde smiled maliciously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;New?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Agonde half-closed his eyes, bent toward Tropiezo,
-and whispered something in his ear.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Tropiezo burst into a laugh; suddenly he looked
-very serious, and tapping his nose repeatedly with
-his forefinger:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know, I know,&quot; he said emphatically. &quot;And the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page058" id="page058"></a>[pg&nbsp;058]</span>
-waters here, and some others in France, are the only
-cure for that disease. If he drinks a few glasses
-from the spring, he will be himself again.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Tropiezo emitted his dictamen leaning on the
-counter, forgetful of the mule that was stamping impatiently
-at the door.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And the Se&ntilde;ora&mdash;what does she say of her husband&#39;s
-state of health?&quot; he suddenly asked, with a
-wink.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What should she say of it, man? Probably she
-does not know that it is serious.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A look of derision lighted up the inexpressive
-features of the physician; he glanced at Agonde and
-smothering another burst of laughter, began:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The Se&ntilde;ora&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Chut!&quot; interrupted the apothecary furiously.
-The whole Comba family were making an irruption
-into the shop through the small door of the porch.
-Mother and daughter formed a charming group,
-both wearing wide-brimmed hats of coarse straw
-adorned with enormous bows of flame-colored bunting.
-Their &eacute;cru cotton gowns embroidered with red
-braid completed the rustic character of their costumes,
-reminding one of a bunch of poppies and
-straw. The girl&#39;s luxuriant dark hair hung loose over
-her shoulders, and the fair locks of the mother curled
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page059" id="page059"></a>[pg&nbsp;059]</span>
-in a tangled mass under the shade of her broad-brimmed
-hat. Nieves did not wear gloves nor was
-there visible on her face a trace of powder, or of any
-other of the cosmetics whose use is imputed unjustly
-by the women of the provinces to the Madridlenians;
-on the contrary, her rosy ears and neck showed
-signs of energetic friction with the towel and cold
-water. As for Don Victoriano, the ravages made in
-his countenance by care and sickness were still more
-apparent in the morning light; it was not, as
-Agonde had said, age that was visible there; it was
-virility, but tortured, exhausted, wounded to death.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why! Have you had chocolate already?&quot; asked
-Agonde, in confusion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, friend Saturnino, nor shall we take it, with
-your permission, until we return. Don&#39;t trouble
-yourself on our account. Victorini&ntilde;a has ransacked
-your pantry&mdash;your closets&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The child half opened a handkerchief which she
-held by the four corners, disclosing a provision of
-bread, cake, and the cheese of the country.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At least let me bring you a whole cheese. I will
-go see if there is not some fresh bread, just out of
-the oven&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Don Victoriano objected&mdash;let him not be deprived
-of the pleasure of going to breakfast in the poplar-grove
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page060" id="page060"></a>[pg&nbsp;060]</span>
-near the spring, just as he had done when a
-boy. Agonde remarked that those articles of food
-were not wholesome for him, to which Tropiezo,
-scratching the tip of his ear, responded sceptically:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bah! bah! bah! Those are new-fangled notions.
-What is wholesome for the body&mdash;can&#39;t they understand
-that&mdash;is what the body craves. If the
-gentleman likes bread&mdash;and for your malady, Se&ntilde;or
-Don Victoriano, there is nothing like the waters
-here. I don&#39;t know why people go to give their
-money to those French when we have better things
-at home than any they can give us.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Minister looked at Tropiezo with keen interest
-depicted on his countenance. He called to mind
-his last visit to Sanchez del Abrojo and the contraction
-of the lips with which the learned practitioner
-had said to him:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I would send you to Carlsbad or to Vichy, but
-those waters are not always beneficial. At times
-they hasten the natural course of a disease. Rest
-for a time, and diet yourself&mdash;we will see how you
-are when you return in the autumn.&quot; And what a
-look Sanchez del Abrojo put on when he said this!
-An impenetrable, sphinx-like expression. The positive
-assertion of Tropiezo awoke tumultuous hopes
-in Don Victoriano&#39;s breast. This village practitioner
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page061" id="page061"></a>[pg&nbsp;061]</span>
-must know a great deal from experience, more perhaps
-than the pompous doctors of the capital.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come, papa,&quot; said the child impatiently, pulling
-him by the sleeve.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They took the path toward the grove. Vilamorta,
-naturally given to early rising, was more full of
-activity at this hour than in the afternoon. The
-shops were open, the baskets of the fruit-venders
-were already filled with fruit. Cansin walked up
-and down his establishment with his hands in his
-pockets, affecting to have noticed nothing, so as not
-to be obliged to bid good-morning to Agonde and
-acknowledge his triumph. Pellejo, covered with
-flour, was haggling with three shopkeepers from
-Cebre, who wanted to buy some of his best wheat.
-Ramon, the confectioner, was dividing chocolate into
-squares on a large board placed on the counter and
-rapidly stamping them with a hot iron before they
-should have time to cool.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The morning was cloudless and the sun was
-already unusually hot. The party, augmented by
-Garc&iacute;a and Genday, walked through orchards and
-cornfields until they reached the entrance to the
-walk. Don Victoriano uttered an exclamation of
-joy. It was the same double row of elms bordering
-the river, the foaming and joyous Avieiro, that ran
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page062" id="page062"></a>[pg&nbsp;062]</span>
-on sparkling in gentle cascades, washing with a pleasant
-murmur the rocks, worn smooth by the action
-of the current. He recognized the thick osier plantations;
-he remembered all his longings of the day
-before and leaned, full of emotion, on the parapet of
-the walk. The scene was almost deserted; half a
-dozen melancholy and bilious-looking individuals,
-visitors to the springs, were walking slowly up and
-down, discussing their ailments in low tones, and
-eructating the bicarbonate of the waters. Nieves,
-leaning back on a stone bench, gazed at the river.
-The child touched her on the shoulder, saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mamma, the young man we saw yesterday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the opposite bank Segundo Garc&iacute;a was standing
-on a rock, absorbed in meditation, his straw hat
-pushed far back on his head, his hand resting on his
-hip, doubtless with the purpose of preserving his
-equilibrium in so dangerous a position. Nieves reproved
-the little girl, saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t be silly, child. You startled me. Salute
-the gentleman.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is not looking this way. Ah! now he is looking.
-Salute him, you, mamma. He is taking off
-his hat, he is going to fall! There! now he is safe.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Don Victoriano descended the stone steps leading
-to the spring. The abode of the naiad was a humble
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page063" id="page063"></a>[pg&nbsp;063]</span>
-grotto&mdash;a shed supported on rough posts, a small
-basin overflowing with the water from the spring,
-some wretched hovels for the bathers, and a strong
-and sickening odor of rotten eggs, caused by the
-stagnation of the sulphur water, were all that the
-fastidious tourist found there. Notwithstanding
-this, Don Victoriano&#39;s soul was filled with the purest
-joy. In this naiad he beheld his youth, his lost
-youth&mdash;the age of illusions, of hopes blooming as the
-banks of the Avieiro. How many mornings had he
-come to drink from the fountain, for a jest, to wash
-his face with the water, which enjoyed throughout
-the country the reputation of possessing extraordinary
-curative virtue for the eyes. Don Victoriano
-stretched out his hands, plunged them into the
-warm current, feeling it slip through his fingers with
-delight, and playing with it and caressing it as one
-caresses a loved being. But the undulating form of
-the naiad escaped from him as youth escapes from
-us&mdash;without the possibility of detaining it. Then
-the ex-Minister felt a thirst awaken in him to drink
-the waters. Beside him on the edge of the basin
-was a glass; and the keeper, a poor old man in his
-dotage, presented it to him with an idiotic smile.
-Don Victoriano drank, closing his eyes, with indescribable
-pleasure, enjoying the mysterious water,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page064" id="page064"></a>[pg&nbsp;064]</span>
-charmed by the magic arts of memory. When he
-had drained the glass he drew himself up and
-ascended the stairs with a firm and elastic step.
-Victorini&ntilde;a, who was breakfasting on bread and
-cheese in the avenue, was astonished when her father
-took a piece of bread from her lap, saying gayly:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We are all God&#39;s creatures.&quot;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page065" id="page065"></a>[pg&nbsp;065]</span></p>
-
-<h2>VI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Almost as much as by Don Victoriano&#39;s arrival
-was Vilamorta excited by the arrival of Se&ntilde;or de las
-Vides, accompanied by his steward, Primo Genday.
-This event happened on the afternoon of the memorable
-day on which Don Victoriano had infringed
-the commands of science by eating half a pound of
-fresh bread. At three o&#39;clock, under a blazing sun,
-Genday the elder and Mendez entered the plaza,
-the latter mounted on a powerful mule, the former
-on an ordinary nag.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Se&ntilde;or de las Vides was a little old man as dry as
-a vine branch. His carefully shaven cheeks, his thin
-lips and aristocratically pointed nose and chin, his
-shrewd, kind eyes, surrounded by innumerable crows&#39;
-feet, his intellectual profile, his beardless face, called
-loudly for the curled wig, the embroidered coat and
-the gold snuff-box of the Campomanes and Arandas.
-With his delicate and expressive countenance the
-countenance of Primo Genday contrasted strongly.
-The steward&#39;s complexion was white and red, he had
-the fine and transparent skin, showing the full veins
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page066" id="page066"></a>[pg&nbsp;066]</span>
-underneath, of those who are predisposed to hemiplegy.
-His eyes were of a greenish color, one of
-them being attached, as it were, to the lax and
-drooping lid, while the other rolled around with mischievous
-vivacity. His silvery curls gave him a distant
-resemblance to Louis Philippe, as he is represented
-on the coins which bear his effigy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">By a combination not unusual in small towns
-Primo Genday and his brother Clodio served under
-opposite political banners, both being in reality of
-one mind and both pursuing the same end; Clodio
-ranged himself on the side of the radicals, Primo was
-the support of the Carlist party, and in cases of
-emergency, in the electoral contests, they clasped
-hands over the fence. When the hoofs of Primo
-Genday&#39;s nag resounded on the paving-stones, the
-windows of the reactionary shop were opened and
-two or three hands were waved in friendly welcome.
-Primo paused, and Mendez continued on his way to
-Agonde&#39;s door, where he dismounted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He was received in Don Victoriano&#39;s arms, and
-then disappeared among the shadows of the staircase.
-The mule remained fastened to the ring,
-stamping impatiently, while the onlookers on the
-plaza contemplated with respect the nobleman&#39;s old-fashioned
-harness of embossed leather, ornamented
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page067" id="page067"></a>[pg&nbsp;067]</span>
-with silver, bright with use. One after another
-other mules and horses were brought to join the
-first comer. And the crowd assigned them their
-riders with considerable judgment. The chestnut
-nag of the alguazil, a fine animal, with a saddle and
-a silk headstall, was no doubt for the Minister. The
-black donkey with the side-saddle&mdash;who could doubt
-that it was for the Se&ntilde;ora? The other gentle white
-donkey they would give to the little girl. The
-Alcalde&#39;s ass was for the maid. Agonde would ride
-the mare he always rode, the Morena, that had
-more malanders on her head than hairs in her tail.
-During this time the radicals, Garc&iacute;a, Clodio, Genday,
-and Ramon, were discussing the respective
-merits of the animals and the condition of their trappings
-and calculating the probabilities of their being
-able to reach Las Vides before nightfall. The lawyer
-shook his head, saying emphatically and sententiously:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are taking their time about it if they expect
-to do that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And they are bringing the alguazil&#39;s horse for
-Don Victoriano!&quot; exclaimed the tobacconist.
-&quot;Tricky as the very devil! There will be a scene.
-When you rode him, Segundo, did he play you no
-trick?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page068" id="page068"></a>[pg&nbsp;068]</span>
-&quot;Me, no. But he is lively.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You shall see, you shall see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The travelers were now coming out of the house,
-and the cavalcade began to form. The ladies seated
-themselves in their side-saddles and the men settled
-their feet in their stirrups. Then the scene predicted
-by the tobacconist took place, to the great scandal
-and the further delay of the party. As soon as the
-alguazil&#39;s nag became aware of the presence of a
-female of his race he began to snuff the air excitedly,
-neighing fiercely. Don Victoriano gathered up the
-reins, but, before the animal had felt the iron in his
-mouth, he became so unmanageable, first rearing,
-then kicking violently, and finally turning his
-head around to try to bite his rider&#39;s legs,
-that Don Victoriano, somewhat pale, thought
-it prudent to dismount. Agonde, furious, dismounted
-also.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What an infernal animal!&quot; he cried. &quot;Here,
-brutes&mdash;who told you to bring the alguazil&#39;s horse?
-One would suppose you didn&#39;t know it was a wild
-beast. You&mdash;Alcalde, or you, Garc&iacute;a&mdash;quick, go for
-Requinto&#39;s mule; it is only two steps from here.
-Se&ntilde;or Don Victoriano, take my mule. And that
-tiger, to the stable with him!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; interrupted Segundo, &quot;I will ride him as he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page069" id="page069"></a>[pg&nbsp;069]</span>
-is already saddled. I will go with you as far as the
-cross.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And Segundo, providing himself with a strong
-switch, caught the nag by the mane and at a bound
-was in the saddle. Instead of leaning his weight on
-the stirrup he pressed the animal&#39;s sides between his
-legs, raining a shower of blows at the same time on
-his head. The animal, which was already beginning
-to curvet and prance again, gave a snort of pain,
-and now, quivering and subdued, obeyed his rider&#39;s
-touch. The cavalcade put itself in motion as soon
-as Requinto&#39;s mule was brought, after handshakings,
-waving of hats, and even a timid <i>viva</i>, from what
-quarter no one knew. The cort&eacute;ge proceeded along
-the highway, the mare and the mules heading the
-procession, the donkeys following behind, and at
-their side the nag, kept in order by dint of switching.
-The sun was sinking in the west, turning the
-dust of the road into gold; the chestnut trees cast
-lengthened shadows on the ground, and from the
-osier-brake came a pleasant breeze laden with moisture
-from the river.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo rode along in silence; Victorini&ntilde;a, delighted
-to be riding on a donkey, smiled, making
-fruitless efforts to hide with her frock her sharp
-knee-bones, which the shape of the saddle compelled
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page070" id="page070"></a>[pg&nbsp;070]</span>
-her to raise and uncover. Nieves, leaning back in
-her saddle, opened her rose-lined &eacute;cru lace parasol,
-and, as they started, drew from her bosom a diminutive
-watch, which she consulted for the hour. A few
-moments of embarrassed silence followed. At last
-Segundo felt that it was necessary to say something:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How are you doing, Victorini&ntilde;a?&quot; he said to the
-child. &quot;Are you comfortable?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, quite comfortable.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I warrant you would rather ride on my horse.
-If you are not afraid I will take you before
-me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The girl, whose embarrassment had now reached
-its height, lowered her eyes without answering; her
-mother, smiling graciously, however, now joined in
-the conversation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And tell me, Garc&iacute;a, why don&#39;t you address the
-child as <i>thou</i>? You treat her with so much ceremony!
-You will make her fancy she is a young
-lady already.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I should not dare to do so without her permission.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come, Victorini&ntilde;a, tell this gentleman he has
-your permission.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The child took refuge in that invincible muteness
-of growing girls whom an exquisite and precocious
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page071" id="page071"></a>[pg&nbsp;071]</span>
-sensibility renders painfully shy. A smile parted
-her lips, and at the same time her eyes filled with
-tears. Mademoiselle said something gently to her
-in French; meanwhile Nieves and Segundo, laughing
-confidentially at the incident, found the way
-smoothed for them to begin a conversation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When do you think we shall arrive at Las Vides?
-Is it a pretty place? Shall we be comfortable there?
-How will it agree with Victoriano? What sort of a
-life shall we lead? Shall we have many visitors?
-Is there a garden?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Las Vides is a beautiful place,&quot; said Segundo.
-&quot;It has an air of antiquity&mdash;a lordly air, as it were.
-I like the escutcheon, and a magnificent grapevine
-that covers the courtyard, and the camellias and
-lemon trees in the orchards, that look like good-sized
-chestnut trees, and the view of the river, and,
-above all, a pine grove that talks and even sings&mdash;don&#39;t
-laugh&mdash;that sings; yes, Se&ntilde;ora, and better
-than most professional singers. Don&#39;t you believe
-it? Well, you shall see for yourself presently.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves looked with lively curiosity at the young
-man and then hastily turned her glance aside, remembering
-the quick and nervous hand-pressure of
-the day before, when she was alighting from the
-carriage. For the second time in the space of a few
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page072" id="page072"></a>[pg&nbsp;072]</span>
-hours this young man had surprised her. Nieves led
-an extremely regular life in Madrid&mdash;the life of the
-middle classes, in which all the incidents are commonplace.
-She went to mass and shopped in the
-morning; in the afternoon she went to the Retiro,
-or made visits; in the evening she went to her parents&#39;
-house or to the theater with her husband; on
-rare occasions to some ball or banquet at the house
-of the Duke of Puenteanchas, a client of Don Victoriano&#39;s.
-When the latter received the portfolio it
-made little change in Nieves&#39; way of life. She received
-a few more salutations than before in the
-Retiro; the clerks in the shops were more attentive
-to her; the Duchess of Puenteanchas said some flattering
-things to her, calling her &quot;pet,&quot; and here ended
-for Nieves the pleasure of the ministry. The trip
-to Vilamorta, the picturesque country of which she
-had so often heard her father speak, was a novel
-incident in her monotonous life. Segundo seemed
-to her a curious detail of the journey. He looked
-at her and spoke to her in so odd a way. Bah, fancies!
-Between this young man and herself there was
-nothing in common. A passing acquaintance, like so
-many others to be met here at every step. So the
-pines sang, did they? A misfortune for Gayarre!
-And Nieves smiled graciously, dissembling her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page073" id="page073"></a>[pg&nbsp;073]</span>
-strange thoughts and went on asking questions, to
-which Segundo responded in expressive phrases.
-Night was beginning to fall. Suddenly, the cavalcade,
-leaving the highroad, turned into a path that
-led among pine groves and woods. At a turn of the
-path could be seen the picturesque dark stone cross,
-whose steps invited to prayer or to sentimental reverie.
-Agonde stopped here and took his leave of
-the party, and Segundo followed his example.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As the tinkling of the donkeys&#39; bells grew fainter
-in the distance Segundo felt an inexplicable sensation
-of loneliness and abandonment steal over him,
-as if he had just parted forever from persons who
-were dear to him or who played an important part in
-his life. &quot;A pretty fool I am!&quot; said the poet to himself.
-&quot;What have I to do with these people or they
-with me? Nieves has invited me to spend a few
-days at Las Vides, <i>en famille</i>. When Nieves returns
-to Madrid this winter she will speak of me as
-&#39;That lawyer&#39;s son, that we met at Vilamorta.&#39;
-Who am I? What position should I occupy in her
-house? An altogether secondary one. That of a
-boy who is treated with consideration because his
-father disposes of votes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">While Segundo was thus caviling, the apothecary
-overtook him, and horse and mule pursued their way
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page074" id="page074"></a>[pg&nbsp;074]</span>
-side by side. In the twilight the poet could distinguish
-the placid smile of Agonde, his red cheeks,
-looking redder in contrast to the lustrous black mustache,
-his expression of sensual amiability and epicurean
-beatitude. An enviable lot was the apothecary&#39;s.
-This man was happy in his comfortable and
-well-ordered shop, with his circle of friends, his cap
-and his embroidered slippers, taking life as one takes
-a glass of cordial, sipping it with enjoyment, in
-peace and harmony, along with the other guests at
-the banquet of life. Why should not Segundo be
-satisfied with what satisfied Agonde perfectly?
-Whence came this longing for something that was
-not precisely money, nor pleasure, nor fame, nor
-love&mdash;which partook of all these, which embraced
-them all and which perhaps nothing would satisfy?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Segundo.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Eh?&quot; he answered, turning his head toward
-Agonde.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How silent you are, my boy! What do you
-think of the Minister?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What would you have me think of him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And the Se&ntilde;ora? Come, you have noticed
-her, I warrant. She wears black silk stockings,
-like the priests. When she was mounting the
-donkey&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page075" id="page075"></a>[pg&nbsp;075]</span>
-&quot;I am going to take a gallop as far as Vilamorta.
-Do you care to join me, Saturnino?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Gallop with this mule? I should arrive there
-with my stomach in my mouth. Gallop you, if you
-have a fancy for doing so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The nag galloped for half a league or so, urged by
-his rider&#39;s whip. As they drew near the canebrake
-by the river, Segundo slackened his horse&#39;s gallop to
-a very slow walk. It was now almost dark and the
-cool mists rose, moist and clinging, from the bosom
-of the Avieiro. Segundo remembered that it was
-two or three days since he had put his foot in Leocadia&#39;s
-house. No doubt the schoolmistress was
-now fretting herself to death, weeping and watching
-for him. This thought brought sudden balm to
-Segundo&#39;s wounded spirit. How tenderly Leocadia
-loved him! With what joy did she welcome him!
-How deeply his poetry, his words, moved her! And
-he&mdash;why was it that he did not share her ardor?
-Of this exclusive, this absolute, boundless love,
-Segundo had never deigned to accept even the half;
-and of all the tender terms of endearment invented
-by the muse he chose for Leocadia the least poetical,
-the least romantic; as we separate the gold and
-silver in our purse from the baser coin, setting aside
-for the beggar the meanest copper, so did Segundo
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page076" id="page076"></a>[pg&nbsp;076]</span>
-dispense with niggard hand the treasures of his love.
-A hundred times had it happened to him, in his
-walks through the country, to fill his hat with violets,
-with hyacinths and branches of blackberry blossoms,
-only to throw them all into the river on reaching
-the village, in order not to carry them to
-Leocadia.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page077" id="page077"></a>[pg&nbsp;077]</span></p>
-
-<h2>VII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">While she distributed their tasks among the
-children, saying to one, &quot;Take care to make this
-hem straight,&quot; to another, &quot;Make this seam even, the
-stitch smaller,&quot; to a third, &quot;Use your handkerchief
-instead of your dress,&quot; and to still another, &quot;Sit
-still, child, don&#39;t move your feet,&quot; Leocadia cast a
-glance from time to time toward the plaza in the
-hope of seeing Segundo pass by. But no Segundo
-was to be seen. The flies settled themselves to
-sleep, buzzing, on the ceiling; the heat abated; the
-afternoon came, and the children went away. Leocadia
-felt a profound sadness take possession of her
-and, without waiting to put the house in order, she
-went to her room and threw herself on the bed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The glass door was pushed gently open, and some
-one entered softly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mamma,&quot; said the intruder, in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The schoolmistress did not answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mamma, mamma,&quot; repeated the hunchback, in a
-louder voice. &quot;Mamma!&quot; he shouted at last.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is that you? What do you want?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page078" id="page078"></a>[pg&nbsp;078]</span>
-&quot;Are you ill?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, child.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;As you went to bed&mdash;&mdash;&#39;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have a slight headache. There, leave me in
-peace.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Minguitos turned round and walked in silence
-toward the door. As her eyes fell on the protuberance
-of his back, a sharp pang pierced the heart of
-the schoolmistress. How many tears that hump had
-cost her in other days. She raised herself on her
-elbow.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Minguitos!&quot; she called.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is it, mamma?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t go away. How do you feel to-day?
-Have you any pain?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I feel pretty well, mamma. Only my chest
-hurts me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let me see; come here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia sat up in the bed and, taking the child&#39;s
-head between her hands, looked at him with a
-mother&#39;s hungry look. Minguitos&#39; face was long
-and of a melancholy cast; the prominent lower jaw
-was in keeping with the twisted and misshapen body
-that reminded one of a building shaken out of shape
-by an earthquake or a tree twisted by a hurricane.
-Minguitos&#39; deformity was not congenital. He had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page079" id="page079"></a>[pg&nbsp;079]</span>
-always been sickly, indeed, and it had always been
-remarked that his head seemed too heavy for his
-body, and that his legs seemed too frail to support
-him. Leocadia recalled one by one the incidents of
-his childhood. At five years old the boy had met
-with an accident&mdash;a fall down the stairs; from that
-day he lost all his liveliness; he walked little and
-never ran. He contracted a habit of sitting Turkish
-fashion, playing marbles for hours at a time. If he
-rose his legs soon warned him to sit down again.
-When he stood, his movements were vacillating and
-awkward. When he was quiet he felt no pain, but
-when he turned any part of his body, he experienced
-slight pains in the spinal column. The trouble increased
-with time; the boy complained of a feeling
-as if an iron band were compressing his chest. Then
-his mother, now thoroughly alarmed, consulted a
-famous physician, the best in Orense. He prescribed
-frictions with iodine, large doses of phosphates
-of lime, and sea-bathing. Leocadia hastened
-with the boy to a little sea-port. After taking two
-or three baths, the trouble increased; he could not
-bend his body; his spinal column was rigid and it
-was only when he was in a horizontal position that
-he felt any relief from his now severe pains. Sores
-appeared on his skin, and one morning when Leocadia
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page080" id="page080"></a>[pg&nbsp;080]</span>
-begged him with tears to straighten himself,
-and tried to lift him up by the arms, he uttered a
-horrible cry.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am broken in two, mamma&mdash;I am broken in
-two,&quot; he repeated with anguish, while his mother,
-with trembling fingers sought to find what had
-caused his cry.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was true! The backbone had bent outward,
-forming an angle on a level with his shoulderblades,
-the softened vertebr&aelig; had sunk and <i>cifosis</i>, the
-hump, the indelible mark of irremediable calamity,
-was to deform henceforth this child who was dearer
-to her than her life. The schoolmistress had had a
-moment of animal and sublime anguish, the anguish
-of the wild beast that sees its young mutilated. She
-had uttered shriek after shriek, cursing the doctor,
-cursing herself, tearing her hair and digging her nails
-into her flesh. Afterward tears had come and she
-had showered kisses, delirious, but soothing and
-sweet, on the boy, and her grief took a resigned
-form. During nine years Leocadia had had no other
-thought than to watch over her little cripple by night
-and by day, sheltering him in her love, amusing with
-ingenious inventions the idle hours of his sedentary
-childhood. A thousand incidents of this time recurred
-to Leocadia&#39;s memory. The boy suffered
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page081" id="page081"></a>[pg&nbsp;081]</span>
-from obstinate dyspn&oelig;a, due to the pressure of the
-sunken vertebr&aelig; on the respiratory organs, and his
-mother would get up in the middle of the night and
-go in her bare feet to listen to his breathing and to
-raise his pillows. As these recollections came to her
-mind Leocadia felt her heart melt and something
-stir within her like the remains of a great love, the
-warm ashes of an immense fire, and she experienced
-the unconscious reaction of maternity, the irresistible
-impulse which makes a mother see in her grown-up
-son only the infant she has nursed and protected, to
-whom she would have given her blood, if it had been
-necessary, instead of milk. And uttering a cry of
-love, pressing her feverish lips passionately to the
-pallid temples of the hunchback, she said, falling
-back naturally into the caressing expressions of the
-dialect:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Malpocadi&ntilde;o.</i> Who loves you? say, who loves
-you dearly? Who?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t love me, mamma. You don&#39;t love
-me,&quot; the boy returned, half-smiling, leaning his head
-with delight on the bosom that had sheltered his sad
-childhood. The mother, meantime, wildly kissed
-his hair, his neck, his eyes&mdash;as if to make up for lost
-time&mdash;lavishing upon him the honeyed words with
-which infants are beguiled, words profaned in hours
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page082" id="page082"></a>[pg&nbsp;082]</span>
-of passion, which overflowed in the pure channel of
-maternal love.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My treasure&mdash;my king&mdash;my glory.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At last the hunchback felt a tear fall on his cheek.
-Delicious assuagement! At first, the tears were
-large and round, scorching almost, but soon they
-came in a gentle shower and then ceased altogether,
-and there remained where they had fallen only a
-grateful sense of coolness. Passionate phrases
-rushed simultaneously from the lips of mother and
-son.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you love me dearly, dearly, dearly? As
-much as your whole life?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;As much, my life, my treasure.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will you always love me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Always, always, my joy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will you do something to please me, mamma?
-I want to ask you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A favor. Don&#39;t turn your face away!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The hunchback observed that his mother&#39;s form
-suddenly grew stiff and rigid as a bar of iron. He
-no longer felt the sweet warmth of her moist eyelids,
-and the gentle contact of her wet lashes on his
-cheek. In a voice that had a metallic sound Leocadia
-asked her son:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page083" id="page083"></a>[pg&nbsp;083]</span>
-&quot;And what is the favor you want? Let me hear
-it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Minguitos murmured without bitterness, with
-resignation:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothing, mamma, nothing. I was only in
-jest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But what was the favor you were going to ask
-me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothing, nothing, indeed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, you wanted to ask something,&quot; persisted the
-schoolmistress, seizing the pretext to give vent to her
-anger. &quot;Otherwise you are very deceitful and very
-sly. You keep everything hidden in your breast.
-Those are the lessons Flores teaches you; do you
-think I don&#39;t notice it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Saying this, she pushed the boy away from her,
-and sprang from the bed. In the hall outside
-almost at the same moment was heard a firm and
-youthful step. Leocadia trembled, and turning to
-Minguitos, stammered:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Go, go to Flores. Leave me alone. I do not feel
-well, and you make me worse,&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo&#39;s brow was clouded, and as soon as the
-joy of seeing him had subsided Leocadia was seized
-with the desire to restore him to good humor. She
-waited patiently for a fitting opportunity, however,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page084" id="page084"></a>[pg&nbsp;084]</span>
-and when this came, throwing her arms around his
-neck, she began with the complaint: Where had he
-kept himself? Why had he stayed away so long?
-The poet unburdened himself of his grievances. It
-was intolerable to follow in the train of a great man.
-And allowing himself to be carried away by the
-pleasure of speaking of what occupied his mind he
-described Don Victoriano and the radicals, he satirized
-Agonde&#39;s reception of his guests, his manner of
-entertaining them, spoke of the hopes he founded in
-the protection of the ex-Minister, giving them as a
-reason for the necessity of paying court to Don Victoriano.
-Leocadia fixed her dog-like look on Segundo&#39;s
-countenance.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And the Se&ntilde;ora and the girl&mdash;what are they
-like?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo half-closed his eyes the better to contemplate
-an attractive and charming image that presented
-itself to his mental vision, and to reflect that
-in the existence of Nieves he played no part whatsoever,
-it being manifest folly for him to think of
-Se&ntilde;ora de Comba, who did not think of him. This
-reflection, natural and simple enough, aroused his
-anger. There was awakened within him a keen
-longing for the unattainable, that insensate and unbridled
-desire with which the likeness of a beautiful
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page085" id="page085"></a>[pg&nbsp;085]</span>
-woman dead for centuries may inspire some dreamer
-in a museum.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But answer me&mdash;are those ladies handsome?&quot;
-the schoolmistress asked again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The mother, yes&quot;&mdash;answered Segundo, speaking
-with the careless frankness of one who is secure of
-his auditor. &quot;Her hair is fair, and her eyes are blue&mdash;a
-light blue that makes one think of the verses of
-Becquer.&quot; And he began to recite:</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;&#39;Tu pupila es azul, y cuando ries</span><br />
-<span class="i0">Su claridad suave me recuerda&mdash;&mdash;&#39;&quot;</span><br />
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia listened to him at first with eyes cast
-down; afterward with her face turned away from
-him. When he had finished the poem she said in an
-altered voice, with feigned calmness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They will invite you to go there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;To Las Vides, of course. I hear they intend to
-have a great deal of company.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes; they have given me a pressing invitation,
-but I shall not go. Uncle Clodio insists upon it that
-I ought to cultivate the friendship of Don Victoriano
-so that he may be of use to me in Madrid and help
-me to get a position there. But, child, to go and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page086" id="page086"></a>[pg&nbsp;086]</span>
-play a sorry part is not to my liking. This suit is
-the best I have, and it is in last year&#39;s fashion. If
-they play tresillo or give tips to the servants&mdash;and
-it is impossible to make my father understand this&mdash;and
-I shall not try to do so: God forbid. So that
-they shall not catch a sight of me in Las Vides.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When she heard what his intentions were, Leocadia&#39;s
-countenance cleared up, and rising, radiant
-with happiness, she ran to the kitchen. Flores was
-washing plates and cups and saucers by the light of
-a lamp, knocking them angrily together and rubbing
-savagely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The coffee-pot&mdash;did you clean it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Presently, presently,&quot; responded the old woman.
-&quot;Anyone would think that one was made of wood,
-that one is never to get tired&mdash;that one can do things
-flying.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Give it to me, I will clean it. Put more wood
-on the fire; it is going out and the beefsteak will be
-spoiled.&quot; And so saying Leocadia washed the coffee-pot,
-cleaning the filter with a knitting-needle,
-and put some fresh water down to boil in a new
-saucepan, throwing more wood on the fire.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, heap on wood,&quot; growled Flores, &quot;as we get
-it for nothing!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia, who was slicing some potatoes for the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page087" id="page087"></a>[pg&nbsp;087]</span>
-beefsteak, paid no attention to her. When she had
-cut up as many as she judged necessary, she washed
-her hands hastily in the jar of the drain, full of dirty
-water, on whose surface floated large patches of
-grease. She then hurried to the parlor where Segundo
-was waiting for her, and soon afterward Flores
-brought in the supper, which they ate, seated at a
-small side-table. By the time they had got to the
-coffee Segundo began to be more communicative.
-This coffee was what Leocadia most prided herself
-on. She had bought a set of English china, an imitation
-lacquer-box, a <i>vermeil</i> sugar-tongs and two
-small silver spoons, and she always placed on the
-table with the coffee a liquor-stand, supplied with
-cumin, rum, and anisette. At the third glass, of
-cumin, seeing the poet amiable and propitious,
-Leocadia put her arm around his neck. He drew
-back brusquely, noticing with strong repulsion the
-odor of cooking and of parsley with which the garments
-of the schoolmistress were impregnated.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At this moment precisely Minguitos, after letting
-his shoes drop on the floor, was drawing the coverlet
-around him with a sigh. Flores, seated on a low
-chair, began to recite the rosary. The sick child required,
-to put him to sleep, the monotonous murmur
-of the husky voice which had lulled him to rest,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page088" id="page088"></a>[pg&nbsp;088]</span>
-ever since his mother had ceased to keep him company
-at bedtime. The Ave Marias and Gloria Patris,
-mumbled rather than pronounced, little by little
-dulled thought and, by the time the litany was
-reached, sleep had stolen over him, and, half-unconscious,
-it was with difficulty he made the responses
-to the barbarous phrases of the old woman: &quot;Juana
-celi&mdash;Ora pro nobis&mdash;Sal-es-enfermorun&mdash;nobis&mdash;Refajos
-pecadorum&mdash;bis&mdash;Consolate flitorum&mdash;sss&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The only response was the labored, restless, uneven
-breathing that came through the sleeping boy&#39;s
-half-closed lips. Flores softly put out the tallow
-candle, took off her shoes, in order to make no noise,
-and stole out gently, feeling her way along the dining-room
-wall. From the moment in which Minguitos
-fell asleep there was no more rattling of dishes
-in the kitchen.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page089" id="page089"></a>[pg&nbsp;089]</span></p>
-
-<h2>VIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">It was late before the Swan blew out the tallow
-candle which Aunt G&aacute;spara placed every day, always
-with much grumbling, in his brass candlestick.
-Seated at the little table littered with books, he had
-before him a sheet of paper half covered with lines
-of unequal length, variegated with blots and corrections,
-little heaps of sand, and here and there a flourish.
-Segundo would not have slept all night if he
-had not first written down the poem which, from the
-moment he had left the cross, had been running
-through his brain. Only that, before taking up the
-pen, he seemed to have the poem already composed
-in his head, so that all he had to do was to turn the
-spigot and it would flow out in a stream, and when
-he took the pen in his hand the verses, instead of
-rushing forth, hid themselves or vanished. A few
-strophes fell on the paper, rounded, fluent, finished,
-with harmonious and opportune rhymes, with a
-certain sweetness and sonorousness extremely delightful
-to the author himself, who scribbled them
-down hastily before they should take flight. Of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page090" id="page090"></a>[pg&nbsp;090]</span>
-others, however, only the first two lines occurred
-to him, and, perhaps, the fourth&mdash;this last rounded,
-effective; but the third line was wanting and he
-must hunt for it, fill up the space, graft on the
-syllables to eke out the meter. The poet paused
-and looked up at the ceiling, biting the ends of his
-mustache, and then the idle pen traced, obeying the
-mechanical impulse of the hand, a cocked hat, a
-comet, or some other equally irrelevant design.
-Sometimes after rejecting seven or eight rhymes he
-would content himself with the ninth, which was
-neither better nor worse than the others. When a
-superfluous syllable would cause a line to halt, he
-must look for another adverb, another adjective.
-And the accents! If the poet could only enjoy the
-privilege, of saying, etern&eacute;l, for instance, instead of
-et&eacute;rnel, it would be so easy to write verses!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Confounded technical difficulties! The divine
-fire of inspiration glowed and burned in Segundo&#39;s
-mind, but as soon as he tried to transfer it to the
-paper, to give expression to what he felt&mdash;to condense,
-in words, a world of dreams, a psychic nebula&mdash;his
-mind became a blank. To unite the form with
-the idea, to imprison feeling in the golden links of
-rhyme! Ah, what a light and flowery chain in appearance,
-and how hard to weave in reality! How
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page091" id="page091"></a>[pg&nbsp;091]</span>
-deceptive the natural grace, the facile harmony of
-the master! How easy it seems to express simple,
-familiar images, to utter the chimeras of the imagination
-and the heart in easy and flowing meter, and
-yet how impossible it is, for him who is not called
-Becquer, to give his verse those palpitating, diaphanous,
-azure wings on which the Becquerian butterfly
-soars!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">While the Swan continues his task of effacing and
-correcting, Leocadia is in her bedroom, preparing to
-retire. On other nights she went to her room with
-a smile on her lips, her face glowing, her eyes humid
-and half-closed, with deep circles under them, her
-hair in disorder. And on those nights she was in no
-hurry to retire; she would busy herself arranging the
-articles on her bureau, she would even look at herself
-in the glass of her cheap toilet table. To-night
-her lips were dry, her cheeks pale, she went at once
-to bed, loosened her clothing, and let it fall on the
-floor, put out the light and buried her face in the
-cool, thick cotton sheets. She did not wish to think,
-all she wished was to forget and to sleep. She tried
-to lie still. A thousand needles seemed to pierce her
-flesh; she turned around, in search of a cool spot,
-then turned again in search of another, and presently
-she threw off the sheets. She felt a horrible restlessness,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page092" id="page092"></a>[pg&nbsp;092]</span>
-a savor of bitterness in her mouth. In the
-silence of the night she could hear the tumultuous
-beating of her heart; if she lay on her left side its
-noise almost deafened her. She tried to fix her
-thoughts on indifferent subjects, and repeated to herself
-with monotonous and persistent regularity&mdash;&quot;To-morrow
-is Sunday, the children will not come.&quot;
-In vain; her brain boiled, her blood burned as
-before. Leocadia was jealous.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Measureless, nameless torture! Hitherto the poor
-schoolmistress had not known the accompaniment of
-love, jealousy, whose barbed sting pierces the soul,
-whose consuming fire dries up the blood, whose
-chill freezes the heart, whose restless anguish makes
-the nerves quiver. Segundo scarcely noticed the
-young girls of Vilamorta; as for the peasant girls,
-they did not exist for him, he did not even regard
-them as women; so that Leocadia had attributed
-the poet&#39;s hours of coldness to the bad offices of the
-muses. But now! She recalled the poem, &quot;A los
-ojos azules,&quot; and his manner of reciting it. Those
-honeyed verses were to her gall and wormwood.
-Tears sprang to her eyes, and she broke into convulsive
-sobs which shook her frame and made the bedstead
-creak and the cornhusks of the mattress rustle.
-Still her overwrought brain did not suspend its
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page093" id="page093"></a>[pg&nbsp;093]</span>
-activity. There was not a doubt but that Segundo
-was in love with Se&ntilde;ora de Comba; but she was a
-married woman. Bah! in Madrid and in novels all
-the married women have lovers. And then, who
-could resist Segundo, a poet who was the rival of
-Becquer, who was young, handsome, ardent, when
-he wished to be so?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">What could Leocadia do to avert this great calamity?
-Was it not better to resign herself to it? Ah,
-resignation, that is easily said! Why had God denied
-her the power to express her feelings? Why
-had she not knelt before Segundo, begging him for a
-little love, describing to him and communicating to
-him the flame that consumed the marrow of her
-bones? Why had she remained mute when she had
-so many things to say? Segundo would not go to
-Las Vides; so much the better. He had no money;
-better still. He would accept no position, he would
-not leave Vilamorta, better and better. But what
-did it matter if after all Segundo did not love her;
-if he had turned away from her with a gesture which
-she could still see in the darkness, or rather in the
-lurid light of jealousy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">How warm the night was! How restless she felt!
-She got out of bed and threw herself on the floor,
-thinking to find some relief in the coolness of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page094" id="page094"></a>[pg&nbsp;094]</span>
-boards. Instead of feeling any alleviation she was
-seized with a fit of trembling. A lump seemed to
-rise in her throat that prevented her from breathing.
-She made an effort to stand up but found that
-she was not able; she felt a hysterical attack coming
-on, but she tried to restrain her cries, her sobs,
-her contortions, in order not to awaken Flores. For
-a time she succeeded; but at last the nervous crisis
-conquered; her rigid limbs writhed, she dug her nails
-into her throat, she rolled about and beat her temples
-against the floor. Then a cold perspiration
-broke out over her body, and for a moment she lost
-consciousness. When she returned to herself she
-was calm but exhausted. She rose to her feet, went
-back to bed, drew the clothing over her and sank
-into a sort of stupor, in which there was neither
-thought nor feeling. The beneficent sleep of early
-morning had wrapped her senses in oblivion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She woke late, unrested, exhausted, and, as it
-were, stupefied. She could scarcely manage to dress
-herself; it seemed to her as if a year had passed
-since the night before, and as for her jealous rage,
-her projects of resistance&mdash;how could she have
-thought of such things? All that mattered to her,
-all she desired, was that Segundo should be happy,
-that he should achieve his high destiny, that he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page095" id="page095"></a>[pg&nbsp;095]</span>
-should be famous. The rest was madness, a convulsion,
-an attack of the nerves to which she
-had given way, overcome by the sense of her
-loneliness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The schoolmistress opened the bureau-drawer in
-which she kept her savings and the money for the
-household expenses. Beside a pile of stockings was
-a slim and flabby purse. A short time ago it had
-contained a few thousand reals, all she possessed in
-money. Scarcely thirty dollars remained, and out
-of these she must pay Cansin for a black merino
-dress, the confectioner for liqueurs, and some friends
-at Orense for purchases made on her account. And
-she would not receive her little income until November.
-A brilliant prospect truly!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">After a moment of anguish caused by the struggle
-between her economical principles and her resolution,
-Leocadia washed her face, smoothed her hair,
-put on her dress and her silk manto and left the
-house. Being Sunday, the streets were full of people,
-and the cracked bell of the chapel kept up an
-incessant ringing. The plaza was full of bustle and
-animation. Before Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia&#39;s door, three or
-four mules, whose clerical riders were in the shop, were
-impatiently trying to protect themselves from the
-persistent attacks of the flies and hornets, shaking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page096" id="page096"></a>[pg&nbsp;096]</span>
-their heads, stamping their hoofs, and switching their
-flanks with their rough tails. And the fruit-venders,
-too, in the intervals between selling their wares and
-chatting and laughing with one another, were watchful
-to chase away the troublesome insects that settled
-on the cherries and tomatoes wherever the skin
-was broken, leaving uncovered the sweet pulp or the
-red flesh. But the grand conclave of the flies was
-held in the confectionery of Ramon. It was nauseating
-to see the insects buzzing blindly in the hot
-atmosphere, entangling their legs in the caramels,
-and then making desperate efforts to free themselves
-from their sweet captivity. A swarm of flies were
-buzzing around a m&eacute;ringue pie which adorned the
-center of the shelf, and Ramon having grown tired
-of defending it against their attacks, the invading
-army rifled it at their pleasure; around the plate lay
-the bodies of the flies which had perished in the
-attack; some dry and shriveled, others swollen and
-with white and livid abdomens.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia entered the back shop. Ramon was
-there, with his shirt-sleeves rolled up, exposing his
-brawny arms, shaking a saucepan gently to cool the
-egg-paste which it contained; then he proceeded to
-cut the paste with a hot knife, the sugar fizzing and
-sending forth a pleasant odor as it came in contact
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page097" id="page097"></a>[pg&nbsp;097]</span>
-with the hot metal. The confectioner passed the
-back of his hand across his perspiring brow.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">What did Leocadia want? Brizar anisette, eh?
-Well, it was all sold. &quot;You, Rosa, isn&#39;t it true that
-the anisette is all sold?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The confectioner&#39;s wife was seated in a corner of
-the kitchen, feeding a sickly-looking infant. She
-fixed her gloomy, morbidly jealous gaze on the
-schoolmistress and cried in a harsh voice:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you come for more anisette, remember the
-three bottles that are still unpaid for.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will pay them now,&quot; answered the schoolmistress,
-taking a handful of dollars from her pocket.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Never mind that now, there is no hurry,&quot; stammered
-the confectioner, ashamed of his wife&#39;s rudeness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Take it, Ramon. Why, it was to give it to you
-that I came.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you insist; but the deuce a hurry I was in.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia hastened away. Not to have remembered
-the confectioner&#39;s wife! Who would ask anything
-from Ramon before that jealous tigress, who,
-small as she was, and sickly as she looked, ruled her
-burly husband with a rod of iron. Perhaps Cansin&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The clothier was displaying his goods to a group
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page098" id="page098"></a>[pg&nbsp;098]</span>
-of countrywomen, one of whom persisted in declaring
-the bunting she was looking at to be cotton,
-rubbing it between her fingers to prove herself in the
-right. Cansin, on his side, was rubbing the cloth
-with exactly opposite views.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How should it be cotton, woman, how should it
-be cotton?&quot; he cried in his shrill voice, putting the
-cloth close to the buyer&#39;s face. Cansin appeared so
-angry that Leocadia did not venture to address him;
-she passed on, quickening her steps. She thought
-of her other suitor, the tavern-keeper. But she suddenly
-remembered, with a feeling of repulsion, his
-thick lips, his cheeks that seemed to drip blood.
-Turning over in her mind every possible means by
-which she might obtain the money she needed, a
-thought occurred to her. She rejected it, she
-weighed it, she accepted it. Quickening her pace,
-she walked toward the abode of the lawyer Garc&iacute;a.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At her first knock Aunt G&aacute;spara opened the door.
-What a meaning contraction of the brow and lips,
-what a sour face greeted her! Leocadia, abashed
-and covered with confusion, stood still on the
-threshold. The old woman, like a vigilant watch-dog,
-barred the entrance, ready to bark or bite at
-the first sign of danger.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What did you want?&quot; she growled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page099" id="page099"></a>[pg&nbsp;099]</span>
-&quot;To speak to Don Justo. May I?&quot; said the
-schoolmistress humbly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know. I&#39;ll see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And the dragon without further ceremony shut
-the door in Leocadia&#39;s face. Leocadia waited. At
-the end of ten minutes a harsh voice called to her:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come on!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The heart of the schoolmistress bounded within
-her. To go through the house in which Segundo
-was born! It was dark and shabby, cold and bare,
-like the abode of a miser, in which the furniture is
-made to do service until it falls to pieces with old
-age. Crossing a hall, Leocadia saw through a half-open
-door some garments belonging to Segundo
-hanging on a peg, and recognized them with a secret
-thrill. At the end of the hall was the lawyer&#39;s
-office, an ill-kept, untidy room, full of papers and
-dusty and uninteresting-looking books. Aunt G&aacute;spara
-withdrew, and Leocadia remained standing
-before the lawyer, who, without inviting her to be
-seated, said to her with a suspicious and hostile air,
-and in the severe tones of a judge:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And what can I do for you, Se&ntilde;ora Do&ntilde;a Leocadia?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A formula accompanied inwardly by the observation:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>[pg&nbsp;100]</span>
-&quot;I wager that the scheming schoolmistress has
-come to tell me that she is going to marry that crazy
-boy and that I shall have to support them both.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia fixed her dejected gaze on Garc&iacute;a&#39;s face,
-trying to discover in his dry and withered features
-some resemblance to the features of a beloved countenance.
-His face, indeed, resembled Segundo&#39;s in
-all but the expression, which was very different;
-that of the father&#39;s being as cautious and suspicious
-as the son&#39;s was dreamy and abstracted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Se&ntilde;or Don Justo&mdash;&mdash;&quot; stammered the schoolmistress.
-&quot;I am sorry to trouble you. I hope you will
-not take this visit amiss&mdash;they told me that you&mdash;&mdash;Se&ntilde;or&mdash;I
-need a loan&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Money!&quot; roared the lawyer, clenching his fists.
-&quot;You ask me for money!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, Se&ntilde;or, on some property&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah!&quot; (sudden transition in the lawyer, who became
-all softness and amiability). &quot;But how stupid
-I am! Come in, come in and sit down, Do&ntilde;a Leocadia.
-I hope you are quite well. Why, anyone
-might find himself in a difficulty. And what property
-is it? Talking together people come to an understanding,
-Se&ntilde;ora. Perhaps the vineyard of La
-Junqueira, or the other little one, El Adro? Of late
-years they have yielded little&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>[pg&nbsp;101]</span>
-The business was discussed and the promissory
-note was signed. Aunt G&aacute;spara meanwhile walked
-uneasily and with ghost-like tread, up and down the
-hall outside. When her brother issued from the
-room and gave her some orders she crossed herself
-hastily several times on the forehead and the breast.
-She then descended stealthily to the cellar, and, after
-some little delay, returned and emptied on the lawyer&#39;s
-table the contents of her apron, whence rolled
-four objects covered with dust and cobwebs, from
-which proceeded, as they struck the table, the peculiar
-sound produced by coin. These objects were
-an earthern savings-bank, a stocking, a leathern sack,
-and a little muslin bag.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">That afternoon Leocadia said to Segundo:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you know what, sweetheart? It is a pity that
-for the sake of a new suit or some such trifle you
-should lose the chance of establishing yourself and
-obtaining what you wish. See, I have a little money
-here that I have no particular use for. Do you want
-it, eh? I will give it to you now and you can return
-it to me by and by.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo drew himself up and, with a genuine outburst
-of offended dignity, exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Never propose anything like that to me again. I
-accept your attentions at times so as not to see you
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page102" id="page102"></a>[pg&nbsp;102]</span>
-breaking your heart at my refusal, but that you should
-clothe me and support me&mdash;no, that is too much.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Half an hour later the schoolmistress renewed
-her entreaties affectionately, availing herself of the
-opportunity, seeing the Swan somewhat pensive.
-Between him and her there ought to be no <i>mine</i> or
-<i>thine</i>. Why should he hesitate to accept what it
-afforded her so great a pleasure to give? Did her
-future by chance depend upon those few paltry dollars?
-With them he could present himself decently
-at Las Vides, publish his verses, go to Madrid. It
-would make her so happy to see him triumph, eclipse
-Campoamor, Nu&ntilde;ez de Arce, and all the rest! And
-what was there to prevent Segundo from returning
-her the money, and with interest, too? Talking
-thus, Leocadia filled a handkerchief tied at the four
-corners with ounces and <i>doblillos</i> and <i>centenes</i> and
-handed it to the poet, saying in a voice rendered
-husky by her emotion:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will you slight me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundi&ntilde;o took the unbeautiful, ungraceful head
-of the schoolmistress between his hands, and looking
-fixedly in the eyes that looked at him humid with
-happiness he said:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Leocadia, I know that you are the one human
-being in this world who loves me truly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page103" id="page103"></a>[pg&nbsp;103]</span>
-&quot;Segundi&ntilde;o, my life,&quot; she stammered, beside herself
-with happiness, &quot;it isn&#39;t worth mentioning. Just
-as I give you that&mdash;as I hope for salvation&mdash;I would
-give you the blood from my veins!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And what would Aunt G&aacute;spara have said had she
-known that several of the ounces from the stocking,
-the savings-bank, the sack, and the bag would return
-immediately, loyal and well-trained, to sleep, if not
-under the rafters of the cellar, at least under the
-roof of Don Justo?</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>[pg&nbsp;104]</span></p>
-
-<h2>IX.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">The grapevine of Las Vides which has such pleasant
-recollections for Don Victoriano Andres de la
-Comba, bears those large, substantial grapes of the
-light red and pale green hues which predominate in
-Flemish vineyards, which are known in the neighborhood
-by the name of <i>n&aacute;paro</i> or <i>Jaen</i> grapes. Its
-clusters hang in long corymbs of a gracefully irregular
-shape, half hiding themselves among the thick foliage.
-The vine casts a cool shade, and the murmur
-of a slender stream of water that falls into a rough
-stone basin in which vegetables lie soaking, adds to
-the air of peacefulness of the scene.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The massive building looks almost like a fortress;
-the main building is flanked by two square towers,
-low-roofed and pierced by deep-set windows; in the
-middle of the central building, above a long iron
-balcony, stands out the large escutcheon with the
-armorial bearings of the Mendez&mdash;five vine-leaves
-and a wolf&#39;s head dripping blood. This balcony
-commands a view of the mountain slope and of the
-river that winds below; at the side of one of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>[pg&nbsp;105]</span>
-towers is a wooden gallery, open to the sun, which
-projects over the garden, and where, thanks to the
-southern exposure, fine carnations grow luxuriantly
-in old pots filled with mold, and wooden boxes overflow
-with sweet basil, Santa Teresa&#39;s feathers, cactus,
-asclepias, and mallows&mdash;a sun-loving, rich, Arabian
-flora of intoxicating sweetness. The interior of the
-house is merely a series of whitewashed rooms with
-the rafters exposed and almost without furniture,
-excepting the central room, called the balcony-room,
-which is furnished with chairs with straw seats and
-wooden, lyre-shaped backs, of the style of the Empire.
-A mirror from which the quicksilver has almost disappeared,
-with a broad ebony frame ornamented
-with allegorical figures of gilded brass representing
-Ph&oelig;bus driving his chariot, hangs above the sofa.
-The pride of Las Vides is not the rooms, but the
-cellar, the immense wine-vault, dark, and echoing,
-and cool as the aisle of a cathedral, with its large vats
-ranged in a line on either side. This apartment, unrivaled
-in the Border, is the one which Se&ntilde;or de las
-Vides shows with most pride&mdash;this and his bedroom,
-which has the peculiarity of being impregnable, as it
-is built in the body of the wall and can be entered
-only through a narrow passage which scarcely affords
-room for a man to turn around.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>[pg&nbsp;106]</span>
-Mendez de las Vides resembled in no way the traditional
-type of the ignorant lord of the manor who
-makes a cross for his signature, a type very common
-in that inland country. On the contrary, Mendez
-prided himself on being learned and cultured. He
-wrote a good hand&mdash;the small, close handwriting
-characteristic of obstinate old age; he read well, settling
-his spectacles on his nose, holding the newspaper
-or the book at a distance, emphasizing the
-words in a measured voice. Only his culture was
-confined to a single epoch&mdash;that of the Encyclopedists,
-with whom his father became acquainted late
-in life, and he himself a century after their time.
-He read Holbach, Rousseau, Voltaire, and the fourteen
-volumes of Feij&oacute;o. He bore the stamp and
-seal of this epoch even in his person. In religion he
-was a deist, never neglecting, however, to go to mass
-and to eat fish in Holy Week; in politics he was
-inclined to uphold the prerogatives of the crown
-against the church. Since the arrival of Don Victoriano,
-however, some movement had taken place in
-the stratified ideas of the hidalgo of Las Vides. He
-admired English independence, the regard paid to
-the right of the individual combined with a respect
-for tradition and the civilizing influence of the aristocratic
-classes&mdash;a series of Saxon importations more
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>[pg&nbsp;107]</span>
-or less felicitous but to which Don Victoriano owed
-his political success. Uncle and nephew spent hour
-after hour discussing these abstruse problems of
-social science, while Nieves worked, listening with
-the hope of hearing the trot of some horse sound on
-the stones of the path announcing some visitor,
-some distraction in her idle existence.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To make the journey to Las Vides, Segundo borrowed
-the vicious nag of the alguazil. From the
-cross onward the road grew precipitous and difficult.
-Smooth, slippery rocks obstructed the way at times,
-so that the rider was obliged to hold a tight rein to
-keep the animal, whose hoofs slipped continually,
-drawing sparks from the stone, from falling headlong
-down the descent. The ground, parched by the
-heat, was rugged and uneven. The houses seemed
-to cling to the mountain-side, threatening to lose
-their hold at every moment and topple over into the
-river, and the indispensable pot of carnations, whose
-flowers peeped through the rails of the wooden balconies,
-reminded one of the flower with which a
-gypsy carelessly adorns her hair. Sometimes Segundo&#39;s
-way led through a pine grove, and he inhaled
-the balsamic odor of the resin and rode over a
-carpet of dry leaves which deadened the sound of
-his horse&#39;s hoofs; suddenly, between two fences, a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>[pg&nbsp;108]</span>
-narrow path, bordered by blackberry bushes, foxglove
-and honeysuckle would open before him, and
-not unfrequently he experienced the delightful sense
-of well-being produced by the coolness cast by umbrageous
-foliage during the heat of the day, as he
-rode through some verdant tunnel&mdash;under some
-lofty grape arbor supported on wooden posts, beholding
-above his head the bunches already ripening,
-and listening to the noisy twittering of the sparrows
-and the shrill whistle of the blackbird. Lizards ran
-along the moss-covered walls. When two or more
-paths met Segundo would rein in his horse, to inquire
-the way to Las Vides of the women who toiled
-wearily up the steep path, bending under their load
-of pine wood, or the children playing at the doors of
-the houses.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Far below ran the Avieiro, that, from the height at
-which Segundo regarded it, looked like a steel blade
-flashing and quivering in the sunshine. Before him
-was the mountain where, like the steps of a colossal
-amphitheater, rose one above another massive walls
-of whitish stone, erected for the support of the grapevines,
-the white stripes showing against the green
-background, forming an odd combination in which
-stood out here and there the red roof of some dovecote
-or some old homestead, the whole surmounted
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>[pg&nbsp;109]</span>
-by the darker green of the pine woods. Segundo at
-last saw below him the tiles of Las Vides. He descended
-a steep slope and found himself before the
-portico.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Under the grapevine were Victorina and Nieves.
-The child was amusing herself jumping the rope,
-which she did with extraordinary agility, the feet
-close together, without moving from one spot, the
-rope turning so rapidly that the graceful form of the
-jumper seemed to be enveloped in a sort of mist.
-Through the interstices in the foliage of the grapevine
-came large splashes of sunshine suddenly flooding
-the girl&#39;s form with light, in which her hair, her
-arms and her bare legs gleamed, for she wore only a
-loose navy blue blouse without sleeves. When she
-caught sight of Segundo she gave a little cry,
-dropped the rope and disappeared. Nieves, to make
-amends, rose from the bench where she had been
-working, with a smile on her lips and a slight flush
-of surprise on her cheeks, and extended her hand to
-the newcomer, who made haste to dismount from
-his horse.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And Se&ntilde;or Don Victoriano, how is he?&quot; he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, he is somewhere in the neighborhood; he is
-very well, and very much interested in the labors of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id="page110"></a>[pg&nbsp;110]</span>
-the country&mdash;very contented.&quot; Nieves said these
-words with the abstracted air with which we speak
-of things that possess only a slight interest for us.
-Segundo observed that the glance of the Minister&#39;s
-wife rested on his fine suit, which he had just received
-from Orense; and the idea that she might
-think it pretentious or ridiculous disturbed him so
-greatly for a time that he regretted not having worn
-his ordinary clothes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You frightened away Victorina,&quot; continued
-Nieves, smiling. &quot;Where can the silly child have
-disappeared to? No doubt she ran away because
-she had on only a blouse. You treat her like a
-woman, and she is growing unbearable. Come.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves gathered up the skirt of her morning gown
-of white cretonne spotted with rosebuds, and made
-her way intrepidly into the kitchen, which was on a
-level with the yard. Following the little Louis XV.
-heels covered by the Breton lace of her petticoat,
-Segundo passed through several rooms&mdash;the kitchen,
-the dining-room, the Rosary room, so called because
-in it Primo Genday said prayers with the servants,
-and finally the balcony room. Here Nieves stopped,
-saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will call to them if they chance to be in the
-vineyard.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>[pg&nbsp;111]</span>
-And leaning out of the window, she cried:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Uncle! Victoriano! Uncle!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Two voices responded.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is it? We are coming.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Finding nothing opportune to say, Segundo was
-silent. Her conscience at rest, now that she had
-called the elders, Nieves turned toward him and
-said, with the graciousness of a hostess who knows
-what are the duties of her position:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How good this is of you! We had not thought
-you would care to come before the vintage. And
-now that the holidays are approaching&mdash;indeed I
-supposed we should see you in Vilamorta before seeing
-you here, as Victoriano has determined to take
-a fortnight&#39;s course of the waters.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She leaned against the wall as she spoke, and
-Segundo tapped the toe of his boot with his whip.
-From the garden came the voice of Mendez:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nieves! Nieves! Come down, if it is all the
-same to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Excuse me, I am going for a parasol.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She soon returned, and Segundo offered her his
-arm. They descended into the garden through the
-gallery, and after the customary greetings were over
-Mendez protested against Segundo&#39;s returning that
-afternoon to Vilamorta.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>[pg&nbsp;112]</span>
-&quot;The idea! A pretty thing that would be! To
-expose yourself to the heat twice in the same day!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And Se&ntilde;or de las Vides, availing himself of an
-opportunity which no rural proprietor ever lets slip,
-took possession of the poet and gave himself up to
-the task of showing him over the estate. He explained
-to him at the same time his viticultural
-enterprises. He had been among the first to employ
-sulphur fumigation with success, and he was
-now using new manures which would perhaps solve
-the problem of grape cultivation. He was making
-experiments with the common wine of the Border,
-trying to make with it an imitation of the rich Bordeaux;
-to impart to it, with powdered lily-root, the
-bouquet, the fragrance, of the French wines. But
-he had to contend against the spirit of routine,
-fanaticism, as he said, confidentially lowering his
-voice and laying his hand on Segundo&#39;s shoulder.
-The other vine-growers accused him of disregarding
-the wholesome traditions of the country, of adulterating
-and making up wine. As if they themselves
-did not make it up. Only that they did so, using
-common drugs for the purpose&mdash;logwood and nightshade.
-He contented himself with employing
-rational methods, scientific discoveries, the improvements
-of modern chemistry, condemning the absurd
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>[pg&nbsp;113]</span>
-custom of using pitch in the skins, for although the
-people of the Border approved of the taste of pitch in
-the wine, saying that the pitch excited thirst, the
-exporters disliked, and with reason, the stickiness
-imparted by it. In short, if Segundo would like to
-see the wine vaults and the presses&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was no help for it. Nieves remained at the
-door, fearing to soil her dress. When they came out
-they proceeded to inspect the garden in detail. The
-garden, too, was a series of walls built one above another,
-like the steps of a stairs, sustaining narrow
-belts of earth, and this arrangement of the ground
-gave the vegetation an exuberance that was almost
-tropical. Camellias, peach trees, and lemon trees
-grew in wild luxuriance, laden at once with leaves,
-fruits, and blossoms. Bees and butterflies circled
-and hummed around them, sipping their sweets, wild
-with the joy of mere existence and drunken with the
-sunshine. They ascended by steep steps from wall
-to wall. Segundo gave his arm to Nieves and at the
-last step they paused to look at the river flowing
-below.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Look there,&quot; said Segundo, pointing to a distant
-hill on his left. &quot;There is the pine grove. I wager
-you have forgotten.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>[pg&nbsp;114]</span>
-&quot;I have not forgotten,&quot; responded Nieves, winking
-her blue eyes dazzled by the sun; &quot;the pine
-grove that sings. You see that I have not forgotten.
-And tell me, do you know if it will sing to-day? For
-I should greatly like to hear it sing this afternoon.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If a breeze rises. With the air as still as it is
-now, the pines will be almost motionless and almost
-silent. And I say <i>almost</i>, for they are never quite
-silent. The friction of their tops is sufficient to
-cause a peculiar vibration, to produce a murmur&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And does that happen,&quot; asked Nieves jestingly,
-&quot;only with the pines here or is it the same with all
-pines?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I cannot say,&quot; answered Segundo, looking at her
-fixedly. &quot;Perhaps the only pine grove that will ever
-sing for me will be that of Las Vides.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves lowered her eyes, and then glanced round,
-as if in search of Don Victoriano and Mendez, who
-were on one of the steps above them. Segundo
-observed the movement and with rude imperiousness
-said to Nieves:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let us join them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They rejoined their companions and did not again
-separate from them until they entered the dining-room,
-where Genday and Tropiezo were awaiting
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id="page115"></a>[pg&nbsp;115]</span>
-them. The last to arrive was the child, now modestly
-attired in a piqu&eacute; frock and long stockings.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The table at which they dined was placed, not in
-the center, but at one side of the dining-room; it
-was square and at the sides, instead of chairs, stood
-two oaken benches, dark with age, as seats for the
-guests. The head and foot of the table were left
-free for the service. Sober by nature, Segundo
-noticed with surprise the extraordinary quantity of
-food consumed by Don Victoriano, observing at the
-same time that his face was thinner than before.
-Now and then the statesman paused remorsefully,
-saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am eating ravenously.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Amphitryon protested, and Tropiezo and
-Genday expounded in turn liberal and consoling doctrines.
-&quot;Nature is very wise,&quot; said Se&ntilde;or de las Vides,
-who had not forgotten Rousseau, &quot;and he who obeys
-her cannot go astray.&quot; Primo Genday, fond of eating,
-like all plethoric people, added with a certain
-theological unction: &quot;In order that the soul may be
-disposed to serve God the reasonable requirements of
-the body must first be attended to.&quot; Tropiezo, on
-his side, pushed out his lower lip, denying the existence
-of certain new-fangled diseases. Since the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id="page116"></a>[pg&nbsp;116]</span>
-world began there had been people who suffered as
-Don Victoriano was suffering and no one had ever
-thought of depriving them of eating and drinking,
-quite the contrary. For the very reason that the
-disease was a wasting one it was necessary to eat
-well. Don Victoriano allowed himself to be easily
-persuaded. Those dishes of former times, those
-antiquated, miraculous cruet-stands in which the oil
-and the vinegar came from the same tube without
-ever mingling, that immense loaf placed on the table
-as a center-piece, were for him so many delightful
-relics of the past, which reminded him of happy
-hours, the irresponsible years of existence. At the
-dessert, when Primo Genday, still heated with a political
-discussion in which he had characterized the
-liberals as uncircumcised, suddenly grew very serious
-and proceeded to recite the Lord&#39;s Prayer, the Minister,
-a confirmed rationalist, was surprised at the
-devoutness with which he murmured&mdash;&quot;Our daily
-bread.&quot; <i>Caramba</i>, those memories of the days when
-one was young! Don Victoriano grew young again
-in going over those recollections of his boyish days.
-He even called to mind ephemeral engagements, flirtations
-of a fortnight with young ladies of the Border
-who, at the present time, must be withered old
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page117" id="page117"></a>[pg&nbsp;117]</span>
-maids or respectable mothers of families. A pretty
-fool he was! The ex-Minister laid down his napkin
-and rose to his feet.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you sleep the siesta?&quot; he asked Segundo.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, Se&ntilde;or.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nor I either; let us go and smoke a cigar
-together.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page118" id="page118"></a>[pg&nbsp;118]</span></p>
-
-<h2>X.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">They seated themselves near the window in the
-parlor in a couple of rocking-chairs brought from
-Orense. The garden and the vineyard breathed a
-lazy tranquillity, a silence so profound that the dull
-sound of the ripe peaches breaking from the branch
-and falling on the dry ground could be plainly
-heard. Through the open window came odors of
-fruit and honey. In the house unbroken silence
-reigned.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will you have a cigar?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thanks.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The cigars were lighted and Segundo, following
-Don Victoriano&#39;s example, began to rock himself.
-The rhythmical movement of the rocking-chairs, the
-drowsy quiet of the place, invited to a serious and
-confidential conversation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you, what do you do in Vilamorta? You
-are a lawyer, are you not. I think I have heard that
-it is your intention to succeed your father in his
-practice&mdash;a very intelligent man.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo felt that the occasion was propitious.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>[pg&nbsp;119]</span>
-The smoke of the cigars, diffusing itself through the
-atmosphere, softened the light, disposing him to
-confidence and dispelling his habitual reserve.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The thought of beginning now the career my
-father is just ending horrifies me,&quot; he said, in answer
-to the ex-Minister&#39;s question. &quot;That sordid struggle
-to gain a little money, more or less, those village
-intrigues, that miserable plotting and planning, that
-drawing-up of documents&mdash;I was made for none of
-those things, Se&ntilde;or Don Victoriano. It is not that
-I could not practice. I have been a fair student and
-my good memory always brought me safely through
-in the examinations. But for what does the profession
-of law serve? For a foundation, nothing more.
-It is a passport, a card of admission to some office.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well&mdash;&mdash;&quot; said Don Victoriano, shaking the ashes
-from his cigar, &quot;what you say is true, very true. What
-is learned at the University is of scarcely any use
-afterward. As for me, if it had not been for my
-apprenticeship with Don Juan Antonio Prado, who
-taught me to make a practical use of my legal
-knowledge and to know how many teeth there are
-in a comb, I should not have distinguished myself
-greatly by my Compostelan learning. My friend,
-what makes a man of one, what really profits one is
-this terrible apprenticeship, the position in which a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>[pg&nbsp;120]</span>
-boy finds himself when a pile of papers is set before
-him, and a pompous gentleman says to him, &#39;Study
-this question to-day and have ready for me by to-morrow
-a formulated opinion on it.&#39; There is the
-rub! That is what makes you sweat and bite your
-nails! There neither laziness nor ignorance will
-avail you. The thing must be done, and as it cannot
-be done by magic&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Even in Madrid and on a large scale the practice
-of the law has no attractions for me. I have
-other aspirations.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let us hear what they are.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo hesitated, restrained by a feeling of shyness,
-as if he had been going to narrate a dream or
-to descant on the delights of love. He followed
-with his eyes for a few moments the blue smoke
-curling upward and finally, the semi-obscurity of the
-room, secluded as a confessional, dissipated his reserve.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wish to follow the profession of literature,&quot; he
-returned.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The statesman stopped rocking himself and took
-his cigar from his mouth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But my boy, literature is not a profession!&quot; he
-said. &quot;There is no such thing as the profession of
-literature! Let us understand each other&mdash;have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page121" id="page121"></a>[pg&nbsp;121]</span>
-you ever been out of Vilamorta? I mean beyond
-Santiago and the neighboring towns?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, Se&ntilde;or.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then I can understand those illusions and those
-childish notions. They still believe here that a
-writer or a poet, from the mere fact of his being
-such, may aspire to&mdash;and what do you write?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Poetry.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t write prose at all?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;An occasional essay or newspaper article. Very
-little.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bravo! Well, if you trust to poetry to make
-your way in the world&mdash;I have remarked something
-curious in this place and I am going to tell you what
-it is. Verses are still read here with interest, and it
-seems the girls learn them by heart. But in the
-capital I assure you there is scarcely anyone who
-cares for poetry. You are twenty or thirty years
-behind the age here&mdash;at the height of the romantic
-period.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo, annoyed, said with some vehemence:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And Campoamor? And Nu&ntilde;ez de Arce? And
-Grilo? Are they not famous poets? Are they not
-popular?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Campoamor? They read him because he is very
-witty, and he sets the girls thinking and he makes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page122" id="page122"></a>[pg&nbsp;122]</span>
-the men laugh. He has his merit, and he amuses
-while he philosophizes. But remember that neither
-he nor Nu&ntilde;ez de Arce lives by writing verses.
-Much prosperity that would bring them! As to
-Grilo&mdash;well, he has his admirers among ladies of
-rank, and the Queen Mother publishes his poems,
-and as far as we can judge he has plenty of money.
-But convince yourself that no one will ever grow
-rich by following the road that leads to Parnassus.
-And this is when masters are in question, for of
-poets of a secondary rank, young men who string
-rhymes together with more or less facility, there are
-probably now in Madrid some two or three hundred.
-Have you ever heard of any of them? No;
-nor I either. A few friends praise them when they
-publish anything in some insignificant review. But
-there is no need to go on. In plain words, it is time
-lost.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo silently vented his anger on his cigar.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t take what I say as an offense,&quot; continued
-Don Victoriano. &quot;I know little about literature,
-although in my youthful days I wrote <i>quintillas</i>,
-like everybody else. Besides, I have seen nothing
-of what you have written, so that my opinion is
-impartial and my advice sincere.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My ambition,&quot; began Segundo at last, &quot;is not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page123" id="page123"></a>[pg&nbsp;123]</span>
-confined exclusively to lyric poetry. Perhaps later
-I might prefer the drama&mdash;or prose. Who knows?
-I only want to try my fortune.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Don Victoriano rose and stepped out into the balcony.
-Suddenly he returned, placed both hands on
-Segundo&#39;s shoulders, and putting his clean-shaven
-face close to the face of the poet, said with a pity
-which was not feigned:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Poor boy! How many, many disappointments
-are in store for you!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And as Segundo, astonished at this sudden
-effusion, remained silent, he continued:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Novice as you are, you have no means of knowing
-what you are doing. I am sorry for you. You
-are deluding yourself. In the present state of society,
-in order to attain eminence in anything, you
-must sweat blood like Christ in the garden of Gethsemane.
-If it is lyric poetry that is in question,
-God help you! If you write comedies or farces,
-you have an enviable fate before you&mdash;to flatter the
-actors, to have your manuscript lie neglected in the
-corner of a drawer, to have half an act cut out at a
-stroke; and then the dread of the first night, and of
-what comes after it&mdash;which may be the worst of all.
-If you become a journalist, you will not have ten
-minutes in the day to yourself, you will make the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page124" id="page124"></a>[pg&nbsp;124]</span>
-reputation of others, and you will never see even so
-much as the shadow of your own. If you write
-books&mdash;but who reads in Spain? And if you throw
-yourself into politics&mdash;ah, then indeed!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo, his eyes cast down, his gaze wandering
-over the pine knots in the boarded floor, listened
-without opening his lips to those convincing accents
-that seemed to tear away one by one the rose-leaves
-of his illusions, with the same strident sound with
-which the nail of the speaker flicked away the ash of
-his cigar. At last he raised his contracted face and
-looking at the statesman said, not without a touch
-of sarcasm in his voice:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;As for politics, Se&ntilde;or Don Victoriano, it seems
-to me that you ought not to speak ill of that. It
-has treated you well; you have no cause of complaint
-against it. For you politics has not been a
-stepmother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Don Victoriano&#39;s countenance changed, showing
-plainly the ravages disease had made in his organism;
-and rising to his feet a second time, he threw
-away his cigar and, walking up and down the room
-with hasty steps, he burst forth passionately, in
-words that rushed from his lips in a sudden flood, in
-an impetuous and unequal stream, like the stream of
-blood gushing from a severed artery:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page125" id="page125"></a>[pg&nbsp;125]</span>
-&quot;Don&#39;t touch that point. Be silent about that,
-boy. How do you, how does anybody know what
-those things are until he has thrown himself headlong
-into them and is caught fast and cannot escape!
-If I were to tell you&mdash;but it is impossible to tell
-one&#39;s whole life, day by day, to describe a battle
-which has lasted for years, without rest or respite.
-To struggle in order to make one&#39;s self known, to
-go on struggling to keep one&#39;s self from being forgotten,
-to pass from law to politics, from a wheel
-set with knives to a bed of live coals, to fight in
-Congress without faith, without conviction, because
-one must fight to keep the place one has won; and
-with all this not to have a free hour, not a tranquil
-moment, not have time for anything. One achieves
-fortune when one no longer has the inclination to
-enjoy it; one marries and has a family and&mdash;one has
-hardly liberty to accompany one&#39;s wife to the
-theater. Don&#39;t talk to me. A hell, a hell upon
-earth is what politics is. Would you believe&quot; (and
-here he uttered a round oath) &quot;that when my little
-girl was beginning to walk, I proposed to myself one
-day to have the pleasure of taking her out walking&mdash;a
-caprice, a whim. Well, I was going downstairs
-with the child in my arms, very contented,
-when lo, I found myself face to face with the Marquis
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id="page126"></a>[pg&nbsp;126]</span>
-of Cameros, a candidate for representative from
-Galicia, who had come to ask me for fifteen or
-twenty letters&mdash;written in my own hand so that they
-might prove more efficacious. And I was such a
-fool, man, I was such a fool, that instead of throwing
-the Marquis down the stairs, as I ought to have
-done, I walked back my two flights, gave the child
-to her nurse, and shut myself up in my office
-to prepare the election. And it was the
-same thing always; tell me, then, have I reason
-or not to abominate such folly, such humbug?
-Ah, what pains we are at to make ourselves
-miserable!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There could be no doubt of it; in the voice of the
-statesman there was the sound of repressed tears;
-in his throat smothered curses and blasphemies
-struggled for utterance. Segundo, to do something,
-threw open the window leading to the balcony.
-The sun was low in the heavens; the heat had grown
-less intense.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And worst of all&mdash;the consequences!&quot; continued
-Don Victoriano, pausing in his walk. &quot;You strive
-and struggle without pausing to reflect what will be
-the effect upon your health. You fight, like the
-knights of old, with visor down. But as you are not
-made of iron, but only of flesh and blood, when you
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page127" id="page127"></a>[pg&nbsp;127]</span>
-least expect it, you find yourself sick, sick, wounded,
-without knowing where. You do not lose blood,
-but you lose the sap of life, like a lemon that is
-squeezed.&quot; And the ex-Minister laughed bitterly.
-&quot;And you want to stop, to rest, to get back health at
-any cost, and you find that it is too late; you have
-not a drop of moisture left in your body. Well,
-keep on until there is an end to you. Much your
-labors and your triumphs have profited you! You
-have drawn down on yourself a doom from which
-there is no escape!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He spoke with gesticulations, thrusting his hands
-into his trousers pockets in an outburst of confidence,
-expressing himself with as little reserve as if
-he had been alone. And in reality he was talking
-to himself. His words were a monologue, the spoken
-utterance of the gloomy thoughts which Don Victoriano,
-thanks to heroic efforts, had hitherto been
-able to conceal in his own breast. The strange
-malady from which he suffered gave rise to horrible
-nightmares; he dreamed that he was turning into a
-loaf of sugar and that his intellect, his blood, his life,
-were flowing away from him, through a deep, deep
-channel, converted into syrup. In his waking moments
-his mind refused to accept, as one refused to
-accept a humiliation, so strange a malady. Sanchez
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>[pg&nbsp;128]</span>
-del Abrojo must be mistaken; his was some functional,
-transitory disorder, an ordinary ailment, the
-result of his sedentary life, and Tropiezo&#39;s old-fashioned
-remedies would perhaps after all prove more
-efficacious than those of science. And if they did
-not? The statesman felt a cold chill run through
-him that made his hair stand on end and constricted
-his heart. To die when he was scarcely past forty,
-with his mental powers unimpaired, with so many
-things begun, so many accomplished! And no
-doubt this consuming thirst, this insatiable voracity,
-this debilitating sensation of melting away, of fusion,
-of dissolving, were all fatal symptoms.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Suddenly Don Victoriano remembered the presence
-of Segundo, which he had almost forgotten.
-And laying both hands on his shoulders a second
-time, and fixing on the poet&#39;s eyes, his dry eyes,
-scorched by repressed tears, he cried:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you wish to hear the truth, and to receive
-good advice? Have you ambitions, aspirations,
-hopes? Well, I have had disappointments, and I
-desire to do you a service by recounting them to
-you now. Don&#39;t be a fool; stay here all your life;
-help your father, take up his practice when he lays
-it down, and marry that blooming daughter of
-Agonde. Never leave this land of fruits, of vines,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>[pg&nbsp;129]</span>
-whose climate is so delightful. What would I not
-give now never to have left it! No, my boy, remain
-quietly here; end a long life here surrounded by
-a numerous progeny. Have you observed how
-healthy your father is? It is a pleasure to see him,
-with his teeth so sound and perfect. I have not a
-single tooth that is not decayed; they say that it is
-one of the symptoms of my malady. Why, if your
-mother were living now you would be having little
-brothers and sisters.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo smiled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But, Se&ntilde;or Don Victoriano,&quot; he said, &quot;to act out
-your ideas would be to vegetate, not to live.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And what greater happiness than to vegetate,&quot;
-responded the statesman, looking out of the window.
-&quot;Do you think those trees there are not to
-be envied?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The garden, indeed, seen in the light of the setting
-sun, had a certain air of voluptuous bliss, as if it
-were enjoying a happy dream.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The lustrous leaves of the lemon trees and the
-camellias, the gummy trunks of the fruit trees,
-seemed to drink in with delight the fresh evening
-breeze, precursor of the vivifying dews of night.
-The golden atmosphere took on in the distance faint
-lilac tints. Innumerable noises began to make themselves
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>[pg&nbsp;130]</span>
-heard, preludes to songs of insects, to the concerts
-of the frogs and toads.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The pensive tranquillity of the scene was broken
-in upon by the quick trot of a mule, and Clodio Genday,
-out of breath, flung himself out of his saddle,
-and reeled into the garden. Gesticulating with his
-hands, with his head, with his whole body, he called,
-screamed, vociferated:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I have a nice piece of news for you, a nice
-piece of news! I will be there directly, I will be
-there directly!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They went to the head of the stairs leading to
-the garden, to meet him, and when he rushed upon
-them, like an arrow shot from a bow, they saw that
-he wore neither collar nor cravat, and that his dress
-was in the utmost disorder.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A mere bagatelle, Se&ntilde;or Don Victoriano&mdash;that
-they are playing a trick upon us; that they have
-played it already, that unless we take prompt measures
-we shall lose the district. You would not believe
-it, if I were to tell you of all the plans they
-have been laying, for a long time past, at Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia&#39;s
-shop. And we simpletons suspecting nothing.
-And all the priests are in the plot; the parish
-priests of Lubrego, of Boan, of Naya, and of Cebre.
-They have set up as a candidate Se&ntilde;orito de Romero
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page131" id="page131"></a>[pg&nbsp;131]</span>
-of Orense, who is willing to loosen his purse-strings.
-But where is Primo, that good-for-nothing, that scarecrow,
-who never found out a word of all this?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We will look for him, man. What do you tell
-me, what do you tell me? I never thought they
-would have dared&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And Don Victoriano, animated and excited, followed
-Clodio, who went shouting through the parlor:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Primo! Primo!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A little later Segundo saw the two brothers and
-the ex-Minister going through the garden disputing
-and gesticulating violently. Clodio was making
-charges against Primo, who tried to defend himself,
-while Don Victoriano acted as peacemaker. In his
-fury Clodio shook his clenched fist in Primo&#39;s face,
-almost laying violent hands upon him, while the culprit
-stammered, crossing himself hastily:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mercy, mercy, mercy! Ave Maria!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The poet watched them as they passed by, remarking
-the transformation that had taken place in Don
-Victoriano. As he turned away from the window
-he saw Nieves standing before him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And those gentlemen,&quot; she said to him graciously,
-&quot;have they left you all alone? The pines
-must at this time be singing. There is a breeze stirring.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id="page132"></a>[pg&nbsp;132]</span>
-&quot;Undoubtedly they will be singing now,&quot; returned
-the poet. &quot;I shall hear them as I ride back to Vilamorta.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves&#39; movement of surprise did not pass unnoticed
-by Segundo, who, looking her steadily in the
-face, added coldly and proudly: &quot;Unless you should
-command me to remain.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves was silent. She felt that courtesy required
-that she should make some effort to detain her
-guest, while at the same time to ask him to remain,
-they two being alone, seemed to her inexpedient
-and liable to misconstruction. At last she took a
-middle course, saying with a forced smile:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But why are you in such a hurry? And will you
-make us another visit?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We shall see each other later in Vilamorta.
-Good-by, Nieves, I will not disturb Don Victoriano.
-Say good-by to him for me and tell him he
-may count upon my father&#39;s services and upon
-mine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Without taking Nieves&#39; outstretched hand or looking
-at her he descended into the courtyard. He
-was settling his feet in the stirrups when he saw a
-little figure appear close beside him. It was Victorina,
-with her hands full of lumps of sugar, which
-she offered the nag. The animal eagerly pushed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id="page133"></a>[pg&nbsp;133]</span>
-out its under lip, which moved with the intelligent
-undulations of an elephant&#39;s trunk.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo interposed:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Child, he will bite you; he bites.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then he added gayly:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you want me to lift you up here? You
-don&#39;t? I wager I can lift you!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He lifted her up and seated her on the saddle-cloth,
-before him. She struggled to free herself and
-in her struggles her beautiful hair fell over the face
-and shoulders of Segundo, who was holding her
-tightly around the waist. He observed with some
-surprise that the girl&#39;s heart was beating tumultuously.
-Turning very pale Victorina cried:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mamma, mamma!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At last she succeeded in releasing herself and ran
-toward Nieves, who was laughing merrily at the incident.
-Half-way she stopped, retraced her steps,
-threw her arms around the horse&#39;s neck and pressed
-on his nose a warm kiss.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page134" id="page134"></a>[pg&nbsp;134]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Eight or ten days intervened between Segundo&#39;s
-visit to Las Vides and the return of Don Victoriano
-and his family to Vilamorta. Don Victoriano desired
-to drink the waters and at the same time to
-take measures to frustrate the dark machinations of
-Romero&#39;s partisans. His plan was a simple one&mdash;to
-offer Romero some other district, where he would
-not have to spend a penny, and thus removing the
-only rival who had any prestige in the country he
-would avoid the mortification of a defeat through
-Vilamorta. It was important to do this before October,
-the period at which the electoral contest was to
-take place. And while Genday, Garc&iacute;a, the Alcalde
-and the other Combistas managed the negotiation,
-Don Victoriano, installed in Agonde&#39;s house, drank
-two or three glasses of the salubrious waters every
-morning, after which he read his correspondence, and
-in the afternoon, when the sultry heat invited to a
-siesta, he read or wrote in the cool parlor of the
-apothecary.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo frequently accompanied him in these
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>[pg&nbsp;135]</span>
-hours of retirement. They talked together like two
-friends, and the statesman, far from insisting on the
-ideas he had expressed in Las Vides, encouraged the
-poet, offering him to endeavor to obtain a position
-for him in Madrid which should enable him to carry
-out his plans.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A position that will not take up much of your
-time, nor require much mental labor&mdash;I will see, I
-will see. I will be on the lookout for something.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo observed unmistakable signs of improved
-health in the wrinkled face of the Minister. Don
-Victoriano was experiencing the transitory benefit
-which mineral waters produce at first, stimulating
-the organism only to waste it all the more rapidly,
-perhaps, afterward. Both digestion and circulation
-had become more active, and perspiration, even,
-entirely suppressed by the disease, had become re-established,
-dilating the pores with grateful warmth
-and communicating to the dry fibers the elasticity
-of healthy flesh. As a candle flares up brightly before
-going out, so Don Victoriano seemed to be
-recovering strength when in reality he was wasting
-away. Fancying health was returning to him, he
-breathed with delight the narrow atmosphere of
-party intrigues, taking pleasure in disputing his district
-inch by inch, in winning over adherents and receiving
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id="page136"></a>[pg&nbsp;136]</span>
-demonstrations of sympathy, and secretly
-flattered by the absurd proposal made by his parishioners
-to the parish priest of Vilamorta, that incense
-should be burned before him. In the evening he
-amused himself patriarchally among Agonde&#39;s visitors,
-listening to the comical stories told of the
-clique at Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia&#39;s shop and enjoying the ripple
-of excitement occasioned by the proximity of
-the feasts. Little by little the innocent tresillo
-table of Agonde had become transformed into something
-much more wicked. Now, instead of four
-persons being seated at it, there was only one,
-around whom, their eyes fixed on his hands, the
-others stood grouped. The banker&#39;s left hand
-grasped the cards tightly while with the ball of his
-thumb he pushed up the last card until first the spot
-could be descried, then the number, then the knob of
-a club, the point of a diamond, the blue tail of a
-horse, the turreted crown of a king, and other hands
-took up stakes or took money from the pocket and
-laid it down on the fateful pieces of cardboard with
-the words:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;On the seven! On the four! The ace is in
-sight!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Through respect for Don Victoriano, Agonde refrained
-from dealing the cards when the latter was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page137" id="page137"></a>[pg&nbsp;137]</span>
-present, bridling with difficulty the only passion that
-could warm his blood and excite his placid nature,
-giving up his place to Jacinto Ruedas, a famous
-strolling gambler, known everywhere, who followed
-the scent of the gaming-table as others follow the
-scent of a banquet, a rare type, something between
-a swindler and a spy, who made low jests in a hoarse
-voice. The chroniclers do not state whether the
-civil authorities, that is to say, the judge of Vilamorta,
-made any attempt to interfere with the unlawful
-diversion in which the visitors to the pharmacy
-indulged, but it is an ascertained fact that, the
-judge having one leg shorter than the other, the
-pounding of his crutch on the sidewalk gave timely
-warning of his approach to the players. And as for
-the municipal authority, it is known to a certainty
-that one day, or to speak with more exactness, one
-night, he entered the apothecary&#39;s back shop like
-a bomb, holding in his hand money which he threw
-on a card, crying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Gentlemen, I am queen!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Be an ass, if you like!&quot; responded Agonde, pushing
-him away with marked disrespect.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This year Don Victoriano&#39;s presence and the open
-hostilities waged between his partisans and those of
-Romero gave a martial character to the feasts. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page138" id="page138"></a>[pg&nbsp;138]</span>
-Combists desired to render them more splendid and
-brilliant than ever before and the Romerists to render
-them a failure, as far as it was possible. In the
-main room of the townhall the monster balloon,
-which occupied the whole length of the apartment,
-was being repaired; its white sides were being covered
-with inscriptions, figures, emblems, and symbols,
-and around the floor were scattered tin kettles filled
-with paste, pots of vermilion, Sienna, and ochre,
-balls of packthread and cut paper figures. From
-the giant balloon sprung daily broods of smaller balloons,
-miniature balloons, made with remnants and
-fancifully decorated in pink and blue. At the meetings
-at Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia&#39;s they spoke contemptuously
-of these preparations and commented on the audacity
-of the inn-keeper&#39;s son, a mere dauber, who
-undertook to paint Don Victoriano&#39;s likeness on one
-of the divisions of the large balloon. The Romerist
-young ladies, compressing their lips and shrugging
-their shoulders, declared that they would attend
-neither the fire-works nor the ball, not if their adversaries
-were to offer novenas with that purpose to
-every saint in heaven.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the other hand, the young ladies of the Combist
-party formed a sort of court around Nieves.
-Every afternoon they called for her to take her out
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page139" id="page139"></a>[pg&nbsp;139]</span>
-walking; chief among these were Carmen Agonde,
-Florentina, the daughter of the Alcalde, Rosa, a
-niece of Tropiezo, and Clara, the eldest of Garc&iacute;a&#39;s
-daughters. This latter was running about barefooted,
-spending her time gathering blackberries in
-her apron, when she received the astounding news
-that her father had ordered a gown for her from
-Orense, that she might visit the Minister&#39;s lady.
-And the gown came with its fresh bows and its stiff
-linings and the girl, her face and hands washed, her
-hair combed, her feet covered with new kid boots,
-her eyes cast down and her hands crossed stiffly before
-her, went to swell Nieves&#39; train. Victorina
-took Clara Garc&iacute;a under her especial protection, arranged
-her dress and hair and made her a present of
-a bracelet, and they became inseparable companions.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They generally walked on the highroad, but as
-soon as Clara grew more intimate with Victorina she
-protested against this, declaring that the paths and
-the by-ways were much more amusing and that
-much prettier things were to be met with in them.
-And she pressed Victorina&#39;s arm saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Segundo knows lovely walks!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As chance would have it, that same afternoon, returning
-to the town, they caught sight of a man
-stealing along in the shadow of the houses, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page140" id="page140"></a>[pg&nbsp;140]</span>
-Clara, who was on the other side of the way, ran over
-to him, and threw her arm around his waist, crying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hey, Segundo; you can&#39;t escape from us now,
-we have caught you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The poet gave a brotherly push to Clara, and ceremoniously
-saluting Nieves, who returned his salutation
-with extreme cordiality, he said to her:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The idea of this girl&mdash;I am sure she has been
-making herself troublesome to you. You must excuse
-her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They sat down on one of the benches of the
-Plaza, to enjoy the fresh air, and when, on the following
-day the party walked out after the siesta, Segundo
-joined them, studiously avoiding Nieves as if
-some secret understanding, some mysterious complicity
-existed between them. He mingled among
-the girls and, laying aside his habitual reserve, he
-laughed and jested with Victorina, for whom he
-gathered, as they walked along the hedges, ripe
-blackberries, acorns, early chestnut burrs, and innumerable
-wild flowers, which the girl put into a
-little Russian leather satchel.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Sometimes Segundo led them along precipitous
-paths cut in the living rock, bordered by walls, supporting
-grapevines through which the expiring rays
-of the sun could scarcely penetrate. Again he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page141" id="page141"></a>[pg&nbsp;141]</span>
-would take them through bare and arid woods until
-they reached some old oak grove, some chestnut
-tree, inside whose trunk, decayed and split with age,
-Segundo would hide himself while the girls hand in
-hand danced around it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">One day he took them to the stone bridge that
-crossed the Avieiro, under whose arches the black
-water, cold and motionless, seems to be dreaming a
-sinister dream. And he told them how in this spot,
-where, owing to the water being deeper there and
-less exposed to the sun&#39;s rays, the largest trout gathered,
-a corpse had been found floating last month
-near the arch. He took them to hear the echo also,
-and all the girls were wild with delight, talking all
-together, without waiting for the wall to repeat their
-cries and shouts of laughter. On another afternoon
-he showed them a curious lake regarding which
-innumerable fables were told in the country&mdash;that
-it had no bottom, that it reached to the center of
-the earth, that submerged cities could be seen under
-its surface, that strange woods floated and unknown
-flowers grew in its waters. The so-called lake was
-in reality a large excavation, probably a Roman
-mine that had been flooded with water, which, imprisoned
-within the chain of hillocks of argillaceous
-tophus heaped up around it by the miners&#39; shovels,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page142" id="page142"></a>[pg&nbsp;142]</span>
-presented a sepulchral and fantastic aspect, the
-weird effect of the scene being heightened by the
-somber character of the marsh vegetation which
-covered the surface of the immense pool. When it
-began to grow dark the children declared that this
-lugubrious scene made them horribly afraid; the
-girls confessed to the same feeling, and started for
-the highroad running at the top of their speed, leaving
-Segundo and Nieves behind. This was the first
-time they had found themselves alone together, for
-the poet avoided such occasions. Nieves looked
-around uneasily and then, meeting Segundo&#39;s eyes
-fixed, ardent and questioning upon hers, lowered
-her gaze. Then the gloom of the landscape and the
-solemnity of the hour gave her a contraction of the
-heart, and without knowing what she was doing she
-began to run as the girls had done. She heard Segundo&#39;s
-footsteps behind her, and when she at last
-stopped, at a little distance from the highroad, she
-saw him smile and could not help smiling herself at
-her own folly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Heavens! What a silly fright!&quot; she cried, &quot;I have
-made myself ridiculous. I am as bad as the children!
-But that blessed pool is enough to make one
-afraid. Tell me, how is it that they have not taken
-views of it? It is very curious and picturesque.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page143" id="page143"></a>[pg&nbsp;143]</span>
-They returned by the highroad; it was now quite
-dark and Nieves, as if wishing to efface the impression
-made by her childish terror, showed herself
-gay and friendly with Segundo; two or three times
-her eyes encountered his and, doubtless through
-absent-mindedness, she did not turn them aside.
-They spoke of the walk of the following day; it
-must be along the banks of the river, which was more
-cheerful than the pond; the scenery there was beautiful,
-not gloomy like that of the pool.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In effect the road they followed on the next day
-was beautiful, although it was obstructed by the
-osier plantations and canebrakes and the intricate
-growth of the birches and the young poplars, which
-at times impeded their progress. Every now and
-then Segundo had to give his hand to Nieves and
-put aside the flexible young branches that struck
-against her face. Notwithstanding all his care, he
-was unable to save her from wetting her feet and
-leaving some fragments of the lace of her hat among
-the branches of a poplar. They stopped at a spot
-where the river, dividing, formed a sort of islet covered
-with cats-tails and gladioli. A rivulet running
-down the mountain-side mingled its waters silently
-and meekly with the waters of Avieiro. At the
-river&#39;s edge grew plants with dentated leaves and a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page144" id="page144"></a>[pg&nbsp;144]</span>
-variety of ferns and graceful aquatic plants. Segundo
-knelt down on the wet ground and began to
-gather some flowers.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Take them, Nieves,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She approached and, kneeling on one knee, he
-handed her a bunch of flowers of a pale turquoise
-blue, with slender stems, flowers of which she had
-hitherto seen only imitations, as adornments for
-hats, and that she had fancied had only a mythical
-existence; flowers of romance, that she had thought
-grew only on the banks of the Rhine, which is the
-home of everything romantic; flowers that have so
-beautiful a name&mdash;<i>Forget-me-not</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id="page145"></a>[pg&nbsp;145]</span></p>
-<h2>XII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves was what is called an exemplary wife,
-without a dark page in her history, without a thought
-of disloyalty to her husband, a coquette only in her
-dress and in the adornment of her person, and even
-in these practicing no alluring arts, content to obey
-slavishly the dictates of fashion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her ideal, if she had any, was to lead a comfortable,
-elegant existence, enjoying the consideration
-of the world. She had married when she was very
-young, Don Victoriano settling on her some thousands
-of dollars, and on the wedding-day her father
-had called her into his magisterial office and, keeping
-her standing before him as if she were a criminal,
-had charged her to respect and obey the husband
-she had chosen. She obeyed and respected him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And her obedience and respect were a torture to
-Don Victoriano, who sought in marriage a compensation
-for the long years he had spent in his law
-office; years of loneliness during which his arduous
-labors and confinement to business had prevented
-him from forming any tender tie or cultivating gentle
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page146" id="page146"></a>[pg&nbsp;146]</span>
-affections, permitting him at the most some hasty
-pleasure, some reckless and exciting adventure,
-which did not satisfy his heart. He fancied that the
-beautiful daughter of the President of the Court
-would requite him for all the tender joys he had
-missed and he found with vain and bitter disappointment
-that Nieves saw in him only the grave husband
-who is accepted with docility, without repugnance,
-nothing more. Respecting against his will
-the peace of this superficial being, he neither could
-nor dared disturb it, and he fretted his soul with
-unavailing longings, hastening to the crisis of maturity
-and multiplying the white patches that streaked
-his black hair.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When the child was born Don Victoriano hoped
-to repay himself with interest in new and holy
-caresses, to take solace in a pure oasis of affection.
-But the requirements of his position, the hurry of
-business, the complex obligations and the implacable
-cares of his existence, interposed themselves between
-him and a father&#39;s joys. He saw his daughter only
-from a distance, barely succeeding, when the coffee
-was brought in, in having her for awhile on his
-knee. And then came the first warnings of his
-disease.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">From the time in which his malady declared itself
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id="page147"></a>[pg&nbsp;147]</span>
-with all its afflicting symptoms, Nieves had still less
-of her husband&#39;s society than before; it seemed to
-her as if she had returned to the rosy days of her
-girlhood, when she flitted about like a butterfly and
-played at lovers with her companions, who wrote
-her fictitious love-letters of an innocent nature, which
-they put under her pillow.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She never had had much amusement since that
-time. A great deal of amusement was to be found
-in the routine of a methodical Madrid life! Yes,
-there was a period during which the Marquis de
-Cameros, a rich young client of Don Victoriano&#39;s,
-had come to the house with some frequency, and he
-had even been asked to dine with them three or four
-times, without ceremony. Nieves remembered that
-the Marquis had cast many furtive glances at her,
-and that they had always met him, by chance, at
-whatever theater they went to. It did not go beyond
-this.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves was now in the bloom of her second youth&mdash;between
-twenty-nine and thirty&mdash;terrible epoch in
-a woman&#39;s life; and if it brought her no red passion
-flowers, at least she wished to adorn herself with the
-romantic forget-me-nots of the poet. It seemed to
-Nieves that in the porcelain vase of her existence a
-flower had been wanting, and the fragile blue spray
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id="page148"></a>[pg&nbsp;148]</span>
-came to complete the beauty of the drawing-room
-toy. Bah! What harm was there in all this? It
-was a childish adventure. Those flowers, preserved
-between the leaves of a costly prayer-book, inspired
-her only with thoughts as pallid and sapless as the
-poor petals now pressed and dry.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She had fastened the blue spray in her bosom.
-How well it looked among the folds of the &eacute;cru lace!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me, mamma,&quot; Victorina had said to her that
-night before going to bed, &quot;did Segundo give you
-those pretty flowers?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I don&#39;t remember&mdash;yes, I think that Garc&iacute;a
-picked them for me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will you give them to me to keep in my little
-satchel?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Go, child, go to bed quickly. Mademoiselle, see
-that she says her prayers!&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>[pg&nbsp;149]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">The proximity of the feasts put an end to long
-walks. The promenaders confined themselves to
-walks on the highroad, returning soon to the town,
-where the plaza was crowded with busy people.
-The promenaders included the young ladies of the
-Combist party, gayly attired, parish priests, ill-shaven,
-of sickly aspect and dejected looking, gamblers
-of doubtful appearance and strangers from the
-Border&mdash;all types which Agonde criticised with mordacity,
-to Nieves&#39; great amusement.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you see those women there? They are the
-Se&ntilde;oritas de Gondas, three old maids and a young
-lady, whom they call their niece, but as they have
-no brother&mdash;&mdash;Those other two are the Molendes,
-from Cebre, very aristocratic people, God save the
-mark! The fat one thinks herself superior to Lucifer,
-and the other writes poetry, and what poetry!
-I tell Segundo Garc&iacute;a that he ought to propose to
-her; they would make an excellent pair. They are
-staying at Lamajosa&#39;s; there they are in their element,
-for Do&ntilde;a Mercedes Lamajosa, when any visitor
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id="page150"></a>[pg&nbsp;150]</span>
-comes, in order that it may be known that they
-are noble, says to her daughters: &#39;Girls, let one of
-you bring me my knitting; it must be in the press,
-where the letters-patent of nobility are.&#39; Those two
-handsome, well-dressed girls are the Caminos, daughters
-of the judge.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the eve of the fair the musicians paraded the
-streets morning and afternoon, deafening everybody
-with the noise of their triumphal strains. The
-plaza in front of the townhall was dotted with
-booths, which made a gay confusion of brilliant
-and discordant colors. Before the townhall were
-erected some odd-looking objects which with equal
-probability might be taken for instruments of torture,
-children&#39;s toys, or scarecrows, but which were in reality
-fireworks&mdash;trees and wheels which were to burn
-that night, with magnificent pomp, favored by the
-stillness of the atmosphere. From the window of
-the building issued, like a Titanic arm, the pole on
-which was to be hoisted the gigantic balloon, and
-along the balustrade ran a series of colored glasses,
-forming the letters V. A. D. L. C.&mdash;a delicate compliment
-to the representative of the district.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was already dark when Don Victoriano, accompanied
-by his wife and daughter, set out for the
-townhall to see the fireworks. It was with difficulty
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id="page151"></a>[pg&nbsp;151]</span>
-they made their way through the crowd which filled
-the plaza, where a thousand discordant noises filled
-the air&mdash;now the timbrel and castanets in some
-dance, now the buzz of the <i>zanfona</i>, now some slow
-and melancholy popular <i>copla</i>, now the shout of some
-aggressive and quarrelsome drunkard. Agonde gave
-his arm to Nieves, made way for her among the
-crowd, and explained to her the programme of the
-night&#39;s entertainment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Never was there seen a balloon like this year&#39;s,&quot;
-he said; &quot;it is the largest we have ever had here.
-The Romerists are furious.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And how has my likeness turned out?&quot; asked
-Don Victoriano with interest.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh! It is superb. Better than the likeness in
-<i>La Illustracion</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the door of the townhall the difficulties increased,
-and it was necessary to trample down without
-mercy the country-people&mdash;who had installed
-themselves there, determined not to budge an inch
-lest they should lose their places&mdash;before they were
-able to pass in.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;See what asses they are,&quot; said Agonde. &quot;It
-makes no difference whether you step over them
-or not, they won&#39;t rise. They have no place to
-sleep and they intend to pass the night here;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>[pg&nbsp;152]</span>
-to-morrow they will waken up and return to their
-villages.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They made their way as best they could over this
-motley heap in which men and women were crowded
-together, intertwined, entangled in repulsive promiscuity.
-Even on the steps of the stairs suspicious-looking
-groups were lying, or some drunken peasant
-snored, surfeited with <i>pulpo</i>, or some old woman sat
-counting her coppers in her lap. They entered the
-hall, which was illuminated only by the dim light
-shed by the colored glasses. Some young ladies
-already occupied the space in front of the windows,
-but the Alcalde, hat in hand, with innumerable apologies,
-made them draw their chairs closer together
-to make room for Nieves, Victorina, and Carmen
-Agonde, around whom an obsequious circle gathered;
-chairs were brought for the ladies, and the Alcalde
-took Don Victoriano to the Secretary&#39;s office, where
-a tray, with some bottles of Tostado and some atrocious
-cigars, awaited him. The young ladies and the
-children placed themselves in front, leaning on the
-railing of the balcony, running the risk of having
-some rocket fall upon them. Nieves remained a
-little behind, and drew her silver-woven Algerian
-shawl closer around her, for in this empty, gloomy
-hall the air was chill. At her side was an empty
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>[pg&nbsp;153]</span>
-chair, which was suddenly occupied by a figure
-whose outlines were dimly distinguishable in the
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, Garc&iacute;a,&quot; she cried, &quot;it is a cure for sore
-eyes. We haven&#39;t seen you for two days.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t see me now, either, Nieves,&quot; said the
-poet, leaning toward her and speaking in a low voice.
-&quot;It would be rather difficult to see one here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is true,&quot; answered Nieves, confused by this
-simple remark. &quot;Why have they not brought
-lights?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Because it would spoil the effect of the fireworks.
-Don&#39;t you prefer this species of semi-obscurity?&quot; he
-added, smiling, before he uttered it, at the choice
-phrase.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves was silent. Unconsciously she was fascinated
-by the situation, in which there was a delicate
-blending of danger and security which was not without
-a tinge of romance; she felt a sense of security
-in the proximity of the open window, the young
-girls crowded around it, the plaza, where the multitude
-swarmed like ants, and whence came noises like
-the roaring of the sea, and songs and confused cries
-full of tender melancholy; but at the same time the
-solitude and the darkness of the hall and the species
-of isolation in which she found herself with the Swan
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id="page154"></a>[pg&nbsp;154]</span>
-afforded one of those chance occasions which tempt
-women of weak principles, who are neither so imprudent
-as to throw themselves headlong into danger,
-nor so cautious as to fly from its shadow.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves remained silent, feeling Segundo&#39;s breath
-fanning her cheek. Suddenly both started. The
-first rocket was streaking the sky with a long trail
-of light, and the noise of the explosion, deadened
-though it was by distance, drew a cheer from the
-crowd in the plaza. After this advanced guard
-came, one after another, at regular intervals, with
-measured, hollow, deafening sound, eight bombs, the
-signal announced in the programme of the feasts for
-the beginning of the display. The window shook
-with the report and Nieves did not venture to raise
-her eyes to the sky, fearing, doubtless, to see it coming
-down with the reverberation of the bombs.
-After this the noise of the flying fireworks, chasing
-one another through the solitudes of space, seemed
-to her soft and pleasant.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The first of these were ordinary rockets, without
-any novelty whatever&mdash;a trail of light, a dull report,
-and a shower of sparks. But soon came the surprises,
-novelties, and marvels of art. There were
-fireworks that exploded, separating into three or four
-cascades of light that vanished with fantastic swiftness
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>[pg&nbsp;155]</span>
-in the depths of space; from others fell with
-mysterious slowness and noiselessness violet, green,
-and red lights, as if the angels had overturned in the
-skies a casket of amethysts, emeralds, and rubies.
-The lights descended slowly, like tears, and before
-they reached the ground suddenly went out. The
-prettiest were the rockets which sent down a rain of
-gold, a fantastic shower of sparks, a stream of drops
-of light as quickly lighted as extinguished. The
-delight of the crowd in the plaza, however, was
-greatest at the fireworks of three explosions and a
-snake. These were not without beauty; they exploded
-like simple rockets, sending forth a fiery
-lizard, a reptile which ran through the sky in serpentine
-curves, and then plunged suddenly into darkness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The scene was now wrapped in darkness, now
-flooded with light, when the plaza would seem to
-rise to a level with the window, with its swarm of
-people, the patches of color of the booths and the
-hundreds of human faces turned upward, beaming
-with delight at this favorite spectacle of the Galicians,
-a race which has preserved the Celtic love and admiration
-for pyrotechnic displays, for brilliantly illuminated
-nights in which they find a compensation for
-the cloudy horizon of the day.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id="page156"></a>[pg&nbsp;156]</span>
-Nieves, too, was pleased by the sudden alternations
-of light and darkness, a faithful image of the
-ambiguous condition of her soul. When the firmament
-was lighted up she watched with admiration
-the bright luminaries that gave a Venetian coloring
-to these pleasant moments. When everything was
-again enveloped in darkness she ventured to look at
-the poet, without seeing him, however, for her eyes,
-dazzled by the fireworks, were unable to distinguish
-the outlines of his face. The poet, on his side, kept
-his eyes fixed persistently on Nieves, and he saw her
-flooded with light, with that rare and beautiful
-moonlight glow produced by fireworks, and which
-adds a hundredfold to the softness and freshness of
-the features. He felt a keen impulse to condense in
-one ardent phrase all that the time had now come
-for saying, and he bent toward her&mdash;and at last he
-pronounced her name!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nieves!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Had you ever seen fireworks like these before?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No; it is a specialty of this province. I like
-them greatly. If I were a poet like you I would say
-pretty things about them. Come, invent something,
-you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Like them happiness brightens our existence, for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>[pg&nbsp;157]</span>
-a few brief moments, Nieves&mdash;but while it brightens,
-while we feel it&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo inwardly cursed the high-sounding
-phrase that he found himself unable to finish. What
-nonsense he was talking! Would it not be better
-to bend down a little lower and touch with his
-lips&mdash;&mdash;But what if she should scream? She would
-not scream, he would venture to swear. Courage!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In the balcony a great commotion was heard.
-Carmen Agonde called to Nieves:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nieves, come, come! The first tree&mdash;a wheel of
-fire&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves rose hastily and went and leaned over the
-balustrade, thinking that it would not do to attract
-attention sitting all the evening chatting with
-Segundo. The tree began to burn at one end, not
-without difficulty, apparently, spitting forth an
-occasional red spark; but suddenly the whole piece
-took fire&mdash;a flaming wheel, an enormous wafer of red
-and green light, which turned round and round, expanding
-and shaking out its fiery locks and making
-the air resound with a noise like the report of fire-arms.
-It was silent for a few brief instants and
-seemed on the point of going out, a cloud of rosy
-smoke enveloped it, through which shone a point of
-light, a golden sun, which soon began to turn with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id="page158"></a>[pg&nbsp;158]</span>
-dizzying rapidity, opening and spreading out into an
-aureole of rays. These went out one by one, and
-the sun, diminishing in size until it was no larger
-than a coal, lazily gave a few languid turns, and,
-sighing, expired.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As Nieves was returning to her seat she felt a pair
-of arms thrown around her neck. They were those
-of Victorina who, intoxicated with delight at the
-spectacle of the fireworks, cried in her thin voice:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mamma, mamma! How lovely! How beautiful!
-And Carmen says they are going to set off
-more trees and a wheel&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She stopped, seeing Segundo standing beside
-Nieves&#39; chair. She hung her head, ashamed of her
-childish enthusiasm, and, instead of returning to the
-window, she remained beside her mother, lavishing
-caresses upon her to disguise the shyness and timidity
-which always took possession of her when
-Segundo looked at her. Two other pieces were
-burning at two of the corners of the plaza, a pin-wheel
-and a vase, that sent forth showers of light,
-first golden, then blue. The child, notwithstanding
-her admiration for the fireworks, did not appear to
-have any intention of going to the window to see
-them, leaving Nieves and Segundo alone. The latter
-remained seated for some ten minutes longer, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page159" id="page159"></a>[pg&nbsp;159]</span>
-seeing that the child did not leave her mother&#39;s side,
-he rose quickly, seized by a sudden frenzy, and
-walked up and down the dimly-lighted hall with
-hasty steps, conscious that for the moment he was
-not sufficiently master of himself to maintain outward
-calmness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">By Heaven, he was well employed! Why had
-he been fool enough to let slip so favorable an opportunity!
-Nieves had encouraged him; he had not
-dreamed it; no; glances, smiles, slight but significant
-indications of liking and good-will; all these
-there had been, and they all counseled him to end so
-ambiguous and doubtful a situation. Ah! If this
-woman only loved him! And she should love him,
-and not in jest and as a pastime, but madly! Segundo
-would not be satisfied with less. His ambitious
-soul scorned easy and ephemeral triumphs&mdash;all
-or nothing. If the Madridlenian thought of flirting
-with him she would find herself mistaken; he
-would seize her by her butterfly wings and, even at
-the cost of breaking them, he would hold her fast;
-if one wished to retain a butterfly in his possession
-he must pierce it through the heart or press it to
-death. Segundo had done this a thousand times
-when he was a boy; he would do it now again; he
-was resolved upon it; whenever a light or mocking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page160" id="page160"></a>[pg&nbsp;160]</span>
-laugh, a reserved attitude or a tranquil look, showed
-Segundo that Se&ntilde;ora de Comba maintained her self-possession,
-his heart swelled with rage that threatened
-to suffocate him; and when he saw the child
-beside her mother, who was keeping up an animated
-conversation with the little girl, as if she were
-keeping her there as a protection, he determined
-that he would not let the night pass without knowing
-what were her feelings toward him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He returned to Nieves, but she had now risen and
-the child was drawing her by the hands to the window;
-this was the solemn and critical moment; the
-monster balloon had just been attached to the pole
-for the purpose of inflating it; and from the plaza
-came a loud buzz, a buzz of eager expectation. A
-phalanx of Combist artisans, among whom figured
-Ramon, the confectioner, were clearing a space
-around it sufficiently large to allow of the fuse burning
-freely, so that the difficult operation might be
-accomplished. The silhouettes of the workmen,
-illuminated by the light of the fuse, could be seen
-moving about, bending down, rising up, dancing a
-sort of mad dance. The darkness was no longer
-illuminated by the glare of the rockets, and the
-human sea looked black as a lake of pitch.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Still folded in innumerable folds, its sides clinging
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>[pg&nbsp;161]</span>
-together, the balloon swayed feebly, kissing the
-ground with its lips of wire, between which the ill-smelling
-fuse was beginning to burn brightly. The
-manufacturers of the colossal balloon proceeded to
-unfold it gently and affectionately, lighting below it
-other fuses to aid the principal one and hasten the
-rarification of air in its paper body. This began to
-distend itself, the folds opening out with a gentle,
-rustling sound, and the balloon, losing its former
-limp and lank appearance, began to be inflated in
-places. As yet the figures on its sides appeared of
-unnatural length, like figures reflected from the polished,
-convex surface of a coffee urn; but already
-several borders and mottoes began to make their
-appearance here and there, acquiring their natural
-proportions and positions and showing clearly the
-coarse red and blue daubs.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The difficulty was that the mouth of the balloon
-was too large, allowing the rarefied air to escape
-through it; and if the fuses were made to burn with
-greater force there was danger of setting the paper
-on fire and instantly reducing the superb machine to
-ashes&mdash;a terrible calamity which must be prevented
-at all costs. Therefore many arms were eagerly
-stretched out to support it, and when the balloon
-leaned to one side many hands made haste to sustain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162" id="page162"></a>[pg&nbsp;162]</span>
-it&mdash;all this to the accompaniment of cries,
-oaths, and maledictions.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In the plaza the surging crowd continued to increase,
-and the eager expectancy became momentarily
-greater. Carmen Agonde, with her mellow laugh,
-recounted to Nieves the plots that went on behind
-the scenes. Those who were trying to push their
-way to the front in order to overturn the fuses
-and prevent the ascent of the balloon belonged to
-the Romerist party; a good watch the maker of the
-fireworks had been obliged to keep to prevent them
-from wetting his powder trees; but the greatest
-hatred was to the balloon, on account of its bearing
-Don Victoriano&#39;s likeness; they had vowed and determined
-that so ridiculous and grotesque an object
-should not ascend into the air while they had life to
-prevent it; and that they themselves would construct
-another balloon, better than that of the townhall,
-and that this should be the only one to ascend.
-For this reason they applauded and uttered shouts
-of derision every time the gigantic balloon, unable
-to rise from the earth, fell down feebly to the right
-or to the left, while Don Victoriano&#39;s partisans directed
-their efforts on the one hand to protect from
-all injury the enormous bulk of the balloon, on the
-other to inflate it with warm air to make it rise.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page163" id="page163"></a>[pg&nbsp;163]</span>
-Nieves&#39; eyes were fixed attentively on the monster,
-but her thoughts were far away. Segundo had
-succeeded in pushing his way through the crowd in
-front of the window and was now sitting beside her,
-on her right. No one was observing them now, and
-the poet, without preface, passed his arm around
-Nieves&#39; waist, placing his hand boldly on the spot
-where, anatomically speaking, the heart is situated.
-Instead of the elastic and yielding curve of the form
-and the quickened pulsation of the organ, Segundo
-felt under his hand the hard surface of one of those
-long corset-breastplates full of whalebones, and furnished
-with steel springs, which fashion prescribes
-at the present day&mdash;an apparatus to which Nieves&#39;
-form owed much of its slender grace. Infernal corset!
-Segundo could have wished that his fingers
-were pincers to pierce through the fabric of her
-gown, through the steel whalebones, through her
-inner garments, through the flesh and through the
-very ribs and fasten themselves in her heart, and
-seize it red-hot and bleeding and crush, tear, annihilate
-it! Why could he not feel the throbbings of
-that heart? Leocadia&#39;s heart, or even Victorina&#39;s,
-bounded like a bird&#39;s when he touched it. And
-Segundo, enraged, pressed his hand with greater
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page164" id="page164"></a>[pg&nbsp;164]</span>
-force, undeterred by the fear of hurting Nieves, desiring,
-on the contrary, to strangle her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Surprised at Segundo&#39;s audacity, Nieves remained
-silent, not daring to make the slightest movement,
-lest by doing so she should attract attention, and
-protesting only by straightening her form and raising
-her eyes to his with a look of anguish, soon lowering
-them, however, unable to resist the expression
-in the eyes of the poet. The latter continued to
-search for the absent heart without succeeding in
-feeling anything more than the throbbing of his own
-arteries, of his pulse compressed against the unyielding
-surface of the corset. But fatigue finally
-conquered, his fingers relaxed their pressure, his arm
-fell down powerless, and rested without strength or
-illusion on the form, at once flexible and unyielding,
-the form of whalebone and steel.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Meanwhile the balloon, in defiance of the Romerist
-intriguers, continued to expand, as its enormous
-body was filled with gas and light, illuminating the
-plaza like a gigantic lantern. It swayed from side to
-side majestically, and on its immense surface could
-be read plainly all the inscriptions and laudatory
-phrases invented by the enthusiastic Combists. The
-effigy, or rather the colossal figure of Don Victoriano,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page165" id="page165"></a>[pg&nbsp;165]</span>
-which filled one of its sides completely, followed
-the curve of the balloon and stood out, so
-ugly and disproportioned that it was a pleasure to
-see it; it had two frying-pans for eyes, the pupils
-being two eggs fried in them, no doubt; for mouth
-a species of fish or lizard and for beard a tangled
-forest or map of blots of sienna and lampblack.
-Giant branches of green laurel crossed each other
-above the head of the colossus, matching the golden
-palms of his court dress, represented by daubs of
-ocher. And the balloon swelled and swelled, its distended
-sides grew ever tenser and tenser, and it
-pulled impatiently at the cord that held it, eager to
-break away and soar among the clouds. The Combists
-yelled with delight. Suddenly a murmur was
-heard, a low murmur of expectation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The cord had been dexterously cut and the balloon,
-majestic, magnificent, rose a few yards above
-the ground, bearing with it the apotheosis of Don
-Victoriano, the glory of his laurels, mottoes and emblems.
-In the balcony and in the plaza below
-resounded a salvo of applause and triumphal acclamations.
-Oh, vanity of human joys! It was not
-one Romerist stone only but three at least that at
-this instant, directed with unerring aim, pierced the
-sides of the paper monster, allowing the hot air, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id="page166"></a>[pg&nbsp;166]</span>
-vital current, to escape through the wounds. The
-balloon contracted, shriveled up like a worm when
-it is trodden upon, and finally, doubling over in the
-middle, gave itself up a prey to the devouring flames
-lighted by the fuse which in a second&#39;s space enveloped
-it in a fiery mantle.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the same moment that the balloon of the
-official candidate expired thus miserably, the little
-Romerist balloon, its swelling sides daubed with
-coarse designs, rose promptly and swiftly from a
-corner of the plaza, resolved not to pause in its
-ascent until it had reached the clouds.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page167" id="page167"></a>[pg&nbsp;167]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XIV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves spent a restless night and when she awoke
-in the morning the incidents of the preceding evening
-presented themselves to her mind vaguely and
-confusedly as if she had dreamed them; she could
-not believe in the reality of Segundo&#39;s singular
-hardihood, that taking possession of her, that audacious
-outrage, that she had not known how to resent.
-How compromising the position in which the
-daring of the poet had placed her! And what if
-anyone had noticed it? When she bade good-night
-to the girls who had been sitting with her at the
-window, they had smiled in a way that was&mdash;well,
-odd; Carmen Agonde, the fat girl with the sleepy
-eyes and placid temper, gave evidence at times of a
-strain of malice. But, no; how could they have
-observed anything? The shawl she had worn was
-large and had covered her whole figure. And
-Nieves took the shawl, put it on and looked at herself
-in the mirror, using a handglass to obtain a complete
-view of her person, in order to assure herself
-that, enveloped in this garment, it was impossible for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page168" id="page168"></a>[pg&nbsp;168]</span>
-an arm passed around her waist to be seen. She
-was engaged in this occupation when the door
-opened and someone entered. She started and
-dropped the glass.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was her husband, looking more sallow than ever,
-and bearing the traces of suffering stamped on his
-countenance. Nieves&#39; heart seemed to turn within
-her. Could it be possible that Don Victoriano suspected
-anything? Her apprehensions were soon relieved,
-however, when she heard him speak, with
-ill-disguised pique, of the insulting behavior of the
-Romerists and the destruction of the balloon. The
-Minister sought an outlet for his mortification by
-complaining of the pain of the pin-prick.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But did you ever see the like, child? What do
-you think of it?&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He then went on to complain of the noise of the
-fair, which had lasted all night and had not allowed
-him to close his eyes. Nieves agreed that it was
-extremely annoying; she, too, had been unable to
-sleep. The Minister opened the window and the
-noise reached them louder and more distinct. It
-resembled a grand chorale, or symphony, composed
-of human voices, the neighing of horses and mules,
-the grunting of pigs, the lowing of cows, calves, and
-oxen, hucksters&#39; criers, noises of quarreling, songs,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>[pg&nbsp;169]</span>
-blasphemies, and sounds of musical instruments.
-The flood-tide of the fair had submerged Vilamorta.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">From the window could be seen its waves, a surging
-sea of men and animals crowded together in inextricable
-confusion. Suddenly among the throng
-of peasants a drove of six or eight calves would rush
-with helpless terror; a led mule had cleared a space
-around him, dealing kicks to right and left, screams
-and groans of pain were heard on all sides, but those
-behind continued pushing those in front and the
-space was filled up again. The venders of felt hats
-were a curious sight as they walked about with their
-merchandise on their heads, towers of twenty or
-thirty hats piled one above another, like Chinese
-pagodas. Other venders carried for sale, on a portable
-counter slung from their necks by ribbons, balls
-of thread, tape, thimbles, and scissors; the venders
-of distaffs and spindles carried their wares suspended
-around their waists, from their breast, everywhere,
-as unskillful swimmers carry bladders, and the venders
-of frying-pans glittered in the sun like feudal
-warriors.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The confused din, the ceaseless movement of the
-multitude, and the mingling together of human
-beings and animals, made the brain dizzy, and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id="page170"></a>[pg&nbsp;170]</span>
-ear was wearied by the plaintive lowing of the cows
-under the drivers&#39; lash, the terrified cries of women,
-the brutal hilarity of drunken men who issued from
-the taverns with hats pushed far back on their heads,
-seeking an outlet for their superabundant energy by
-assaulting the men or pinching the girls. The latter,
-screaming with terror, escaped from the drunkards
-to fall, perhaps, on the horns of some ox or to
-receive a blow from the snout of some mule that
-bathed their foreheads and temples in its frothy
-saliva. But most terrifying of all was it to see
-infants carried high above their mothers&#39; heads,
-braving, like frail skiffs, the dangers of this
-stormy sea.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves remained for half an hour or so looking
-out of the window, and then, sight and hearing both
-weary, she withdrew. In the afternoon she watched
-the scene again for a while. The buying and selling
-was less brisk, and the better classes of the
-Border began to make their appearance at the fair.
-Agonde, who, absorbed in the desperate gambling
-that went on in the back shop, had kept himself invisible
-during the day, now went upstairs and, while
-he wiped the perspiration from his brow, pointed out
-to Nieves the notabilities of the place, as they
-passed by, naming to her in turn the archpriests,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page171" id="page171"></a>[pg&nbsp;171]</span>
-the parish priests, the physicians, and the
-gentry.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That very thin man, riding that horse that looks
-as if it had been strained through a colander, with
-silver trimmings in his saddle and silver spurs, is
-Se&ntilde;orito de Limioso, a scion of the house of the
-Cid&mdash;God save the mark! The Pazo of Limioso is
-situated in the neighborhood of Cebre. As for
-money, they have not an <i>ochavo</i>; they own a few
-barley-fields, and a couple of grapevines past yielding,
-that bring them in a trifle. But do you suppose
-that Se&ntilde;orito de Limioso would go into an inn to
-dine? No, Se&ntilde;ora; he carries his bread and cheese
-in his pocket, and he will sleep&mdash;Heaven knows
-where. As he is a Carlist they may let him stretch
-himself on the floor of Do&ntilde;a Eufrasia&#39;s back shop,
-with the saddle of his nag for a pillow, for on a day
-like this there are no mattresses to spare. And
-you may be sure that his servant&#39;s belt bulges
-out in the way it does, because he carries the nag&#39;s
-feed in it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You exaggerate, Agonde.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Exaggerate? No, indeed. You have no idea
-what those gentlemen are. Here they are called
-<i>Seven on a horse</i>, because they have one horse for all
-seven which they ride in pairs, in turn, and when
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page172" id="page172"></a>[pg&nbsp;172]</span>
-they are near the town they stop to ride in, one by
-one, armed with whip and spur, and the nag comes
-in seven different times, each time with a different
-rider. Why, see those ladies coming there, the one
-on a donkey, the other on a mule&mdash;the Se&ntilde;oritas de
-Loiro. They are friends of the Molendes. Look
-at the bundles they carry before them; they are the
-dresses for to-night&#39;s ball.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But are you really in earnest?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In earnest? Yes, indeed, Se&ntilde;ora. They have
-them all here, every article&mdash;the bustle, or whatever
-it may be called, that sticks out behind, the shoes,
-the petticoats, and even the rouge. And those are
-very refined, they come to the town to dress themselves;
-most of the young ladies, a few years ago,
-used to dress themselves in the pine wood near the
-echo of Santa Margarita. As they had no house in
-the town to stay at, and they were not going to lose
-the ball, at half-past ten or eleven they were among
-the pines, hooking their low-necked dresses, fastening
-on their bows and their gewgaws, and as fine as
-you please. All the gentry together, Nieves, if you
-will believe me, could not make up a dollar among
-them. They are people that, to avoid buying lard,
-or making broth, breakfast on wine and water.
-They hang up the loaf of wheaten bread among the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page173" id="page173"></a>[pg&nbsp;173]</span>
-rafters so that it may be out of reach and may last
-forever. I know them well&mdash;vanity, and nothing
-more.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The apothecary spoke angrily, multiplying instances,
-and exaggerating them in the telling, with
-the rage of the plebeian who eagerly seizes an opportunity
-to ridicule the poor aristocracy, relating anecdotes
-of everyone of the ladies and gentlemen&mdash;stories
-of poverty more or less skillfully disguised.
-Don Victoriano laughed, remembering some of the
-stories, now become proverbial in the country, while
-Nieves, her anxiety set at rest by her husband&#39;s laughter,
-began to think without terror, with a certain
-secret complacency, rather, of the episodes of the
-fireworks. She had feared to see Segundo among the
-crowd, but, as the night advanced and the brilliant
-colors of the booths faded into the surrounding darkness,
-and lights began to appear, and the singing of
-the drunkards grew hoarser, her mind became tranquil,
-and the danger seemed very remote, almost to
-have disappeared. In her inexperience she had
-fancied at first that the poet&#39;s arm would leave its
-trace, as it were, on her waist, and that the poet
-would seize the first opportunity to present himself
-before her, exacting and impassioned, betraying himself
-and compromising her. But the day passed by,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>[pg&nbsp;174]</span>
-serene and without incident, and Nieves experienced
-the inevitable impatience of the woman who waits in
-vain for the appearance of the man who occupies
-her thoughts. At last she remembered the ball.
-Segundo would certainly be there.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id="page175"></a>[pg&nbsp;175]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">And she adorned herself for the town ball with a
-certain illusion, with the same care as if she were
-dressing for a soir&eacute;e at the palace of Puenteancha.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Naturally the gown and the ornaments were very
-different from what they would have been in the
-latter case, but they were selected with no less care
-and consideration&mdash;a gown of white China cr&ecirc;pe,
-high-necked, and without a train, trimmed with
-Valenciennes lace, that fell in clinging folds, whose
-simplicity was completed by long dark Su&egrave;de gloves
-wrinkled at the wrist, reaching to the elbow. A
-black velvet ribbon, fastened by a diamond and
-sapphire horseshoe, encircled her neck. Her beautiful
-fair hair, arranged in the English fashion, curled
-slightly over the forehead.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She was almost ashamed of having selected this
-toilette when she crossed the muddy plaza, leaning
-on Agonde&#39;s arm, and heard the poor music, and
-found the entrance of the townhall crowded with
-country-people sitting on the floor, whom it was
-necessary to step over to reach the staircase. On
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page176" id="page176"></a>[pg&nbsp;176]</span>
-the landings ran the lees of the fair&mdash;a dark wine-colored
-rivulet. Agonde drew her aside.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t step there, Nieves; take care,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She felt repelled by this unsightly entrance, calling
-to mind the marble vestibule and staircase of the
-palace of Puenteancha, carpeted down the center,
-with plants arranged on either side. At the door of
-the apartment which she was now entering was a
-counter laden with cakes and confectionery, at which
-the wife of Ramon, the confectioner, holding in her
-arms the inevitable baby, presided, casting angry
-glances at the young ladies who had come to amuse
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves was given a seat in the most conspicuous
-part of the room, in front of the door. The whitewashed
-walls were not very clean, nor was the red
-cloth which covered the benches very fresh, nor did
-the badly snuffed candles in the tin chandelier produce
-a brilliant illumination. Owing to the large
-number of people present the heat was almost insupportable.
-In the center of the apartment the men
-stood grouped together&mdash;the youth of Vilamorta,
-visitors to the springs, strangers, gamblers, and the
-gentry from the neighboring country, mingling in
-one black mass. Every time the band struck up
-anew, deafening the ear with its sonorous strains, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page177" id="page177"></a>[pg&nbsp;177]</span>
-indefatigable dancers would leave the group and
-hurry off in search of their partners.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves watched the scene with amazement. The
-young ladies, with their large chignons and their
-clusters of curls, their faces daubed with coarse rice-powder,
-their bodices cut low around the throat,
-their long trains of cheap materials, continually
-trodden upon and torn by the heavy boots of the
-gallants, their clumsy, tastelessly arranged flowers,
-and their short-wristed gloves of thick kid, too small
-for their hands, all seemed to her strange and laughable.
-She remembered Agonde&#39;s descriptions, the
-toilet made in the pine grove, and fanned herself
-with her large black fan as if to drive off the pestilent
-air in which the whirl of the dance enveloped
-her. The dancers pursued their task earnestly, diligently,
-as if they were contending for a prize to
-be awarded to the one who should first get out of
-breath, moving, not with their own motion only, but
-impelled by the jostling, pushing, and crowding of
-those around them. And Nieves, accustomed to the
-elegant and measured dancing of the soir&eacute;es, wondered
-at the courage and resolution displayed by the dancers
-of Vilamorta. Some of the girls, whose flounces
-had been torn by some gallant&#39;s boot-heel, turned up
-their skirts, quickly tore off the whole trimming,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id="page178"></a>[pg&nbsp;178]</span>
-rolled it into a ball, which they threw into a corner,
-and then returned, smiling and contented, to the
-arms of their partners. In vain the men wiped the
-perspiration from their faces; their collars and shirt-fronts
-grew limp, their hair clung to their foreheads;
-the silk bodices of the ladies began to show stains
-of perspiration, and the marks of their partners&#39;
-hands. And the gymnastics continued, and the
-dust and the particles of perspiration vitiated the
-atmosphere, and the floor of the room trembled.
-There were handsome couples, blooming girls and
-gallant young men, who danced with the healthy
-gayety of youth, with sparkling eyes, overflowing
-with animation; and there were ridiculous couples,
-short men and tall women, stout women and beardless
-boys, a baldheaded old man and a stout, middle-aged
-woman. There were brothers who danced
-with their sisters through shyness, because they
-had not the courage to invite other young ladies to
-dance, and the secretary of the town council, married
-for many years to a rich Orensen who was old and very
-jealous, danced all the evening with his wife, dancing
-polkas and waltzes in the time of a <i>habanera</i> to keep
-from dying by asphyxiation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When Nieves entered the ballroom, the other
-women looked at her, first with curiosity, then with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page179" id="page179"></a>[pg&nbsp;179]</span>
-surprise. How strange to come so simply dressed!
-Not to wear a train a yard and a half long, nor a
-flower in her hair, nor bracelets nor satin shoes. Two
-or three ladies from Orense, who had cherished the
-expectation of making a sensation in the ball of
-Vilamorta, began to whisper among themselves,
-criticising the artistic negligence of her attire, the
-modesty of the white, high-necked bodice, and the
-grace of the small head, with its elegantly arranged
-hair, vaporous as the engravings in <i>La Illustracion</i>.
-The Orensens determined to copy the fashion-plate,
-the Vilamortans and the women of the Border, on
-the contrary, criticised the Minister&#39;s lady bitterly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She is dressed almost as if she would dress at
-home.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She does it because she doesn&#39;t want to wear her
-good clothes here. Of course for a ball here&mdash;&mdash;She
-thinks probably that we know nothing. But she
-might at least have dressed her hair a little better.
-And how easy it is to see that she is bored; look,
-why, she seems to be asleep.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And a little while ago she seemed as if she
-couldn&#39;t sit still a moment&mdash;she kept tapping the
-floor with her foot as if she were impatient to be
-gone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And it was true; Nieves was bored. And if the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>[pg&nbsp;180]</span>
-young ladies who censured her could only have
-known the cause!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She could see Segundo nowhere, anxiously as she
-looked for him, at first with furtive glances, then
-openly and without disguise. At last Garc&iacute;a came
-to salute her, and then she could restrain herself no
-longer, and making an effort to speak in a natural
-and easy tone, she asked:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And the boy? It is a wonder he is not here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who? Segundo? Segundo is&mdash;so eccentric. If
-you could only guess what he is doing now. Reading
-verses or composing them. We must leave him
-to his whims.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And the lawyer waved his hands with a gesture
-that seemed to say that the eccentricities of genius
-must be respected, while in his own mind he said:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is most likely with that damned old woman.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The truth is that nothing in the world would have
-induced the poet, under the circumstances, to come
-to a ball like the present one, to be obliged to dance
-with the young country girls of his acquaintance, to
-perspire and to be pulled about like the other young
-men. And his absence, the result of his &aelig;sthetic
-feeling, produced a marvelous effect on Nieves, effacing
-the last remnant of fear, stimulating her coquettish
-instincts, and piquing her curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>[pg&nbsp;181]</span>
-At the same time, in the radical circle that surrounded
-Don Victoriano and his wife, the approaching
-departure of the Minister and Nieves for Las
-Vides to be present at the vintage was discussed&mdash;a
-project that delighted the Minister as an unexpected
-holiday delights a schoolboy. The persons whom
-the hidalgo had invited or intended to invite for
-the festive occasion were named, and when Agonde
-uttered Segundo&#39;s name Nieves raised her eyes, and
-a look of animation lighted up her face, while she
-said to herself:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is fully capable of not going.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page182" id="page182"></a>[pg&nbsp;182]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XVI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">A great day for Las Vides is the day appointed
-by the town council for the inauguration of the vintage.
-The whole year is passed in looking forward
-to and preparing for the beautiful harvest time.
-The vine is still clothed in purple and gold, but it
-has already begun to drop a part of its rich garniture
-as a bride drops her veil, the wasps settle in
-clusters on the grapes, announcing to man that they
-are now ripe. The last days of September, serene
-and peaceful, are at hand. To the vintage without
-delay!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Neither Primo Genday nor Mendez takes a moment&#39;s
-rest. The bands of vintagers who come from
-distant parishes to hire themselves out must be attended
-to, must have their tasks assigned them; the
-work of gathering in the grapes must be organized
-so that it may be advantageously and harmoniously
-conducted. For the labors of the vintage resemble,
-somewhat, a great battle in which an extraordinary
-expenditure of energy is required from the soldier,
-a waste of muscle and of blood, but in which he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page183" id="page183"></a>[pg&nbsp;183]</span>
-must be supplied, in return, with everything necessary
-to recruit his strength during his moments of
-repose. In order that the vintagers might engage in
-their arduous labors with cheerfulness and alacrity, it
-was necessary to have at hand in the cellar the cask of
-must from which the carters might drink at discretion
-when they returned exhausted from the task
-of carrying the heavy <i>coleiro</i>, or basket, filled with
-grapes up the steep ascents; it was necessary that
-they should have an abundant supply of the thick
-wine flavored with mutton suet, the sardines and the
-barley-bread, when the voracious appetite of the
-bands demanded them; to which end the fire was
-always kept burning on the hearth at Las Vides and
-the enormous kettles in which the mess was cooked
-were always kept filled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When in addition to this the presence of numerous
-and distinguished guests be considered, some
-idea may be formed of the bustle of the manor-house
-during these incomparable days. Its walls
-sheltered, besides the Comba family, Saturnino and
-Carmen Agonde, the young and amiable curate of
-Naya, the portly arch-priest of Loiro, Tropiezo,
-Clodio Genday, Se&ntilde;orita de Limioso and the two
-Se&ntilde;oritas de Molende. Every class was here represented,
-so that Las Vides was a sort of microcosm or
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page184" id="page184"></a>[pg&nbsp;184]</span>
-brief compendium of the world of the province&mdash;the
-priests attracted by Primo Genday, the radicals by
-the head of the house of Mendez. And all these
-people of conditions so diverse, finding themselves
-associated together, gave themselves up to the enjoyment
-of the occasion in the greatest possible harmony
-and concord.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To the merriment of the vintagers the merriment
-of the guests responded like an echo. It was impossible
-to resist the influence of the Bacchic joyousness,
-the delirious gayety which seemed to float in
-the atmosphere. Among all the delightful spectacles
-which Nature has to offer, there is none more
-delightful than that of her fruitfulness in the vintage
-time, the baskets heaped full of clusters of ruddy or
-dark red grapes, which robust men, almost naked,
-like fauns, carry and empty into the vat or wine-press;
-the laughter of the vintagers hidden among
-the foliage, disputing, challenging each other from
-vine to vine to sing, a gayety which is followed by a
-reaction at nightfall&mdash;as is usually the case with all
-violent expressions of feeling in which there is a
-great expenditure of muscular strength; the merry
-challenges ending in some prolonged Celtic wail,
-some plaintive <i>a-la&aacute;-la&aacute;</i>. The pagan sensation of
-well-being, the exhilaration produced by the pure air
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id="page185"></a>[pg&nbsp;185]</span>
-of the country, the mere joy of existence, communicated
-themselves to the spectators of these delightful
-scenes, and at night, while the chorus of fauns and
-Bacchantes danced to the sound of the flute and the
-timbrel, the gentry diverted themselves with childish
-frolics in the great house.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The young ladies slept all together in a large, bare
-apartment, the Rosary-room, the male guests being
-lodged by Mendez in another spacious room called
-the screen-room, because in it was a screen, as ugly
-as it was antique; the arch-priest only being excluded
-from this community of lodging, his obesity and his
-habit of snoring making it impossible for any person
-of even average sensibility to tolerate him as a
-roommate; and the gay and mischievous party
-being thus divided into two sections, there came to be
-established between them a sort of merry warfare, so
-that the occupants of the Rosary-room thought of
-nothing but playing tricks on the occupants of the
-screen-room, from which resulted innumerable witty
-inventions and amusing skirmishes. Between the
-two camps there was a neutral one&mdash;that of the
-Comba family, whose slumbers were respected and
-who were exempt in the matter of practical jokes,
-although the feminine band often took Nieves as
-their confidante and counselor.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>[pg&nbsp;186]</span>
-&quot;Nieves, come here, Nieves; see, how foolish Carmen
-Agonde is; she says she likes the arch-priest,
-that barrel, better than Don Eugeni&ntilde;o, the parish
-priest of Naya, because it makes her laugh, she says,
-to see him perspiring and to look at the rolls of fat
-in the back of his neck. And say, Nieves, what
-trick shall we play to-night on Don Eugeni&ntilde;o? And
-on Ramon Limioso, who has been daring us all
-day?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was Teresa Molende, a masculine-looking black-eyed
-brunette, a good specimen of the mountaineer,
-who spoke thus.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They must pay for the trick they played on
-us yesterday,&quot; added her sister Elvira, the sentimental
-poetess.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What was that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You must know that they locked Carmen up.
-They are the very mischief! They shut her up in
-Mendez&#39;s room. What is there that they won&#39;t
-think of! They tied her hands behind her back with
-a silk handkerchief, tied another handkerchief over
-her mouth, so that she couldn&#39;t scream, and left her
-there like a mouse in a mouse-trap. And we, hunting
-and hunting for Carmen, and no Carmen to be
-seen. And there we were thinking all sorts of things
-until Mendez went up to his room to go to bed and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>[pg&nbsp;187]</span>
-found her there. Of course they had that silly
-creature to deal with, for if it had been I&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They would shut you up too,&quot; declared Carmen.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Me!&quot; exclaimed the Amazon, drawing up her
-portly figure. &quot;They would be the ones to get shut
-up!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But they entrapped me into it,&quot; affirmed Carmen,
-looking as if she were just ready to cry. &quot;See,
-Nieves, they said to me: &#39;Put your hands behind
-you, Carmi&ntilde;a, and we&#39;ll put a five-dollar piece in
-them,&#39; and I put them behind me, and they were so
-treacherous as to tie them together.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves joined in the laughter of the two sisters.
-It could not be denied that this simplicity was very
-amusing. Nieves seemed to be in a new world in
-which routine, the worn-out conventionalities of Madrid
-society, did not exist. True, such noisy and ingenuous
-diversions might at times verge on impropriety
-or coarseness, but sometimes they were really entertaining.
-From the moment the guests rose from
-table in the afternoon nothing was thought of but
-frolic and fun. Teresa had proposed to herself not
-to allow Tropiezo to eat a meal in peace, and with
-the utmost dexterity she would catch flies on the
-wing, which she would throw slyly into his soup, or
-she would pour vinegar into his glass instead of wine,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id="page188"></a>[pg&nbsp;188]</span>
-or rub pitch on his napkin so that it might stick to
-his mouth. For the arch-priest they had another
-trick&mdash;they would draw him on to talk of ceremonies,
-a subject on which he loved to expatiate, and
-when his attention was engaged, take away his plate
-slyly, which was like tearing a piece of his heart out
-of his breast.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At night, in the parlor of the turbid mirrors, in
-which were the piano and the rocking-chairs, a gay
-company assembled; they sang fragments of <i>El Juramento</i>,
-and <i>El Grumete</i>; they played at hide-and-seek,
-and, without hiding, played <i>brisea</i> with <i>malilla</i>
-counters; when they grew tired of cards, they had
-recourse to forfeits, to mind-reading, and other
-amusements. And the frolicsome rustic nature once
-aroused, they passed on to romping games&mdash;fool in
-the middle, hoodman-blind, and others which have
-the zest imparted by physical exercise&mdash;shouts,
-pushes and slaps.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then they would retire to their rooms, still excited
-by their sports, and this was the hour when
-their merriment was at its height, when they played
-the wildest pranks; when they fastened lighted
-tapers to the bodies of crickets and sent them under
-the bedroom doors; when they took the slats out of
-Tropiezo&#39;s bedstead so that when he lay down he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page189" id="page189"></a>[pg&nbsp;189]</span>
-might fall to the ground and bruise his ribs. In the
-halls could be heard smothered bursts of laughter
-and stealthy footsteps, white forms would be seen
-scurrying away, and doors would be hastily locked
-and barricaded with articles of furniture, while from
-behind them a mellow voice could be heard crying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are coming!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Fasten the door well, girls! Don&#39;t open, not if
-the king himself were to knock!&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page190" id="page190"></a>[pg&nbsp;190]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XVII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo was the last of the guests to arrive at
-Las Vides. As he cared but little for games and as
-Nieves did not take any very active part in them
-either, they would often have found themselves
-thrown for society upon each other had it not been
-for Victorina, who, from the moment Segundo appeared,
-never left her mother&#39;s side, and Elvira
-Molende who, from the very instant of his arrival,
-clung to the poet like the ivy to the wall, directing
-on him a battery of sighs and glances, and treating
-him to sentimental confidences and rhapsodies sweet
-enough to surfeit a confectioner&#39;s boy. From the
-moment in which Segundo set foot in Las Vides,
-Elvira lost all her animation, and assumed a languishing
-and romantic air, which made her cheeks
-appear hollower and the circles under her eyes
-deeper than ever. Her form acquired the melancholy
-droop of the willow and, giving up sports and
-pranks, she devoted herself exclusively to the Swan.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As it was moonlight, and the evenings were enjoyable
-out of doors, as soon as the sun had set, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>[pg&nbsp;191]</span>
-the labors of the day were ended, and the vintagers
-assembled for a dance, some of the guests would
-assemble together also in the garden, generally at
-the foot of a high wall bordered with leafy camellias,
-or they would stop and sit down for a chat at some
-inviting spot on their way home from a walk. Elvira
-knew by heart a great many verses, both good and
-bad, generally of a melancholy kind&mdash;sentimental
-and elegiac; she was familiar with all the flowers of
-poetry, all the tender verses which constituted the
-poetic wealth of the locality, and uttered by her thin
-lips, in the silvery tones of her gentle voice, with the
-soft accents of her native land, the Galician verses,
-like an Andalusian moral maxim in the sensual
-mouth of a gypsy, had a peculiar and impressive
-beauty&mdash;the sensibility of a race crystallized in a
-poetic gem, in a tear of love. These plaintive verses
-were interrupted at times by mocking bursts of laughter,
-as the gay sounds of the castanets strike in on
-the melancholy notes of the bagpipes. The poems
-in dialect acquired a new beauty, their freshness and
-sylvan aroma seemed to augment by being recited
-by the soft tones of a woman&#39;s voice, on the edge of
-a pine wood and under the shadow of a grapevine,
-on a serene moonlight night; and the rhyme became
-a vague and dreamy melop&oelig;ia, like that of certain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id="page192"></a>[pg&nbsp;192]</span>
-German ballads; a labial music interspersed with
-soft diphthongs, tender <i>&ntilde;</i>&#39;s, <i>x</i>&#39;s of a more melodious
-sound than the hissing Castilian <i>ch</i>. Generally, after
-the recitations came singing. Don Eugenio, who
-was a Borderer, knew some Portuguese <i>fados</i>, and
-Elvira was unrivaled in her rendering of the popular
-and melancholy song of Curros, which seems made
-for Druidical nights, for nights illuminated by the
-solemn light of the moon.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo&#39;s heart thrilled with gratified vanity
-when Elvira recited shyly, in alternation with the
-verses of the popular and admired poets of the
-country, songs of the Swan, which had appeared in
-periodicals of Vigo or Orense. Segundo had never
-written in dialect, and yet Elvira had a book in
-which she pasted all the productions of the unknown
-Swan; Teresa, joining in the animated conversation
-with the best intentions in the word, betrayed
-her sister:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She writes verses too. Come, child, recite something
-of your own. She has a copy-book full of
-things invented, composed by herself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The poetess, after the indispensable excuses and
-denials, recited two or three little things, almost
-without poetic form, weak, sincere in the midst of
-their sentimental falseness&mdash;verses of the kind which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page193" id="page193"></a>[pg&nbsp;193]</span>
-reveal no artistic faculty, but which are the sure indication
-that the author or authoress feels an unsatisfied
-desire, longs for fame or for love, as the inarticulate
-cry of the infant expresses its hunger. Segundo
-twisted his mustache, Nieves lowered her eyes
-and played with the tassels of her fan, impatient and
-somewhat bored and nervous. This occurred two or
-three days after the arrival of Segundo who, in spite
-of all his attempts, had not yet been able to succeed
-in saying a word in private to Nieves.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How uncultured these young ladies are!&quot; said
-Se&ntilde;ora de Comba to herself, while aloud she said,
-&quot;How lovely, how tender! It sounds like some of
-Grilo&#39;s verses.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page194" id="page194"></a>[pg&nbsp;194]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XVIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">It was something different from poetry that
-formed the theme of conversation of the head of
-the house of Las Vides, the Gendays, and the arch-priest,
-installed on the balcony under the pretext of
-enjoying the moonlight, but in reality to discuss the
-important question of the vintage.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A fine crop! Yes, indeed, a fine crop! The grape
-had not a trace of o&iuml;dium; it was clean, full, and so
-ripe that it was as sticky to the touch as if it had
-been dipped in honey. There was not a doubt but
-that the new wine of this year was better than the
-old wine of last year. Last year&#39;s vintage was an
-absolute failure! Hail to-day, rain to-morrow! The
-grape with so much rain had burst before it was time
-to gather it, and had not an atom of pulp; the result
-was a wine that scarcely left a stain on the shirt-sleeves
-of the muleteers.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the recollection of so great a calamity, Mendez
-pressed his thin lips together, and the arch-priest
-breathed hard. And the conversation continued,
-sustained by Primo Genday, who, with much verbosity,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>[pg&nbsp;195]</span>
-spitting and laughter, recounted details of
-harvests of twenty years before, declaring:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This year&#39;s crop is exactly like the crop of &#39;61.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Exactly,&quot; assented Mendez. &quot;As for the Rebeco,
-it will not give a load less this year, and the
-Grilloa&mdash;I don&#39;t know but that it will give us six or
-seven more. It is a great vine, the Grilloa!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">After these cheerful prognostications of a rich harvest,
-Mendez described with satisfaction to his attentive
-audience some improvements which he had
-introduced into the cultivation of the vine. He had
-most of his casks secured with iron hoops; they were
-more expensive than wooden ones, but they lasted
-longer and they saved the troublesome labor of making
-new hoops for each harvest; he was thinking
-too, by way of experiment, of setting up a wine-press,
-doing away with the repulsive spectacle of the
-trampling of the grapes by human feet, and in order
-that the pressed skins and the pulp of the grapes
-might not go to waste, he would distill from them a
-refined alcohol which Agonde would buy from him
-at its weight in gold.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Lulled by the grave voices discussing important
-agricultural questions on the balcony, Don Victoriano,
-somewhat fatigued by his expedition to the
-vineyards, sat smoking in the rocking-chair, buried
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page196" id="page196"></a>[pg&nbsp;196]</span>
-in painful meditations. Since his return from the
-springs he had been growing weaker day by day;
-the temporary improvement had vanished; the
-debility, the unnatural appetite, the thirst, and the
-desiccation of the body had increased. He remembered
-that Sanchez del Abrojo had told him that a
-slight perspiration would be of the greatest benefit
-to him, and when he observed, after he had been
-drinking the waters for a few days, the re-establishment
-of this function, his joy knew no bounds. But
-what was his terror when he found that his shirt,
-stiff and hard, adhered to his skin as if it had been
-soaked in syrup. He touched a fold of the sleeve
-with his lips and perceived a sweetish taste. It was
-plain! He perspired sugar! The glucose secretion
-was, then, uncontrollable, and by a tremendous irony
-of fate all the bitterness of his existence had come
-to end in this strange elaboration of sweet substances.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For some days past he had noticed another alarming
-symptom. His sight was becoming affected.
-As the aqueous humor of the eye dried up the crystalline
-lens became clouded, producing the cataract
-of diabetes. Don Victoriano had chills. He regretted
-now having put himself into the homicidal
-hands of Tropiezo and drunk the waters. There
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page197" id="page197"></a>[pg&nbsp;197]</span>
-was not a doubt but that he was being wrongly
-treated. From this day forth a strict regimen, a
-diet of fruits, fecula, and milk. To live, to live, but
-for a year, and to be able to hide his malady! If
-the electors saw their candidate blind and dying,
-they would desert to Romero. The humiliation of
-losing the coming election seemed to him intolerable.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Bursts of silvery laughter, and youthful exclamations
-proceeding from the garden, changed the current
-of his thoughts. Why was it that Nieves did
-not perceive the serious condition of her husband&#39;s
-health? He wished to dissemble before the whole
-world, but before his wife&mdash;&mdash;Ah, if his wife belonged
-to him she ought to be beside him now, consoling
-and soothing him by her caresses instead of
-diverting herself and frolicking among the camellias,
-like a child. If she was beautiful and fresh and
-her husband sickly, so much the worse for her.
-Let her put up with it, as was her duty. Bah!
-What nonsense! Nieves did not love him, had
-never loved him!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The noise and laughter below increased. Victorina
-and Teresa, the verses being exhausted, had
-proposed a game of hide-and-seek. Victorina was
-crying at every moment, &quot;Teresa&#39;s it!&quot; &quot;Segundo&#39;s
-it!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page198" id="page198"></a>[pg&nbsp;198]</span>
-The garden was very well adapted for this exercise
-because of its almost labyrinthine intricacy,
-owing to the fact of its being laid out in sloping terraces
-supported on walls and separated by rows of
-umbrageous trees, communicating with each other
-by uneven steps, as is the case with all the estates in
-this hilly country. Thus it was that the play was
-very noisy, as the seeker had great difficulty in finding
-those who were hiding.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves endeavored to hide herself securely, through
-laziness so as not to have to run after the others.
-Chance provided her with a superb hiding-place, a
-large lemon tree situated at one end of a terrace,
-near some steps which afforded an easy means of
-escape. She hid herself here in the densest part of
-the foliage, drawing her light gown closely around
-her so that it might not betray her. She had been
-only a few moments in her hiding-place when a
-shadow passed before her and a voice murmured
-softly:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nieves!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh!&quot; she cried, startled. &quot;Who has found me
-out here?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No one has found you; there is no one looking
-for you but me,&quot; cried Segundo vehemently, penetrating
-into Nieves&#39; hiding-place with such impetuosity
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>[pg&nbsp;199]</span>
-that the late blossoms which whitened the branches
-of the giant tree showered their petals over their
-heads, and the branches swayed rhythmically.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For Heaven&#39;s sake, Garc&iacute;a!&quot; she cried, &quot;for
-Heaven&#39;s sake, don&#39;t be imprudent&mdash;go away, or
-let me go. If the others should come and find us
-here what would they say? For Heaven&#39;s sake,
-go!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You wish me to go?&quot; said the poet. &quot;But,
-Se&ntilde;ora, even if they should find me here, there
-would be nothing strange in that; a little while ago
-I was with Teresa Molende behind the camellias
-there; either we are playing or we are not playing.
-But if you desire it&mdash;to please you&mdash;&mdash;But before
-I go I wish to ask you a question&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Somewhere else&mdash;in the parlor,&quot; stammered
-Nieves, lending an anxious ear to the distant noises
-and cries of the game.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In the parlor! Surrounded by everybody! No,
-that cannot be. No, now, do you hear me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I hear you,&quot; she returned in a voice rendered
-almost inaudible by terror.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then, I adore you, Nieves; I adore you, and
-you love me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hist! Silence, silence! They are coming. I
-think I hear steps.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page200" id="page200"></a>[pg&nbsp;200]</span>
-&quot;No, it is the leaves. Tell me that you love me
-and I will go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are coming! For Heaven&#39;s sake! I shall
-die of terror! Enough of jesting, Garc&iacute;a, I entreat
-you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You know perfectly well that I am not jesting.
-Have you forgotten the night of the fireworks? If
-you did not love me you would have released yourself
-from my arm on that night, or you would have
-cried out. You look at me sometimes&mdash;you return
-my glances. You cannot deny it!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo was close to Nieves, speaking with fiery
-impetuosity, but without touching her, although the
-fragrant, rustling branches of their shelter closed
-around them, inviting them to closer proximity.
-But Segundo remembered the cold hard whalebones,
-and Nieves drew back, trembling. Yes,
-trembling with fear. She might cry out, indeed, but
-if Segundo persisted in remaining how annoying it
-would be! What a mortification! What gossip it
-would give rise to! After all the poet was right&mdash;the
-night of the fireworks she had been culpably
-weak and she was paying for it now. And what
-would Segundo do if she gave him the <i>yes</i> he asked
-for? He repeated his proud and vehement assertion:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id="page201"></a>[pg&nbsp;201]</span>
-&quot;You love me, Nieves. You love me. Tell me
-that you love me, only once, and I will go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Not far off could be heard the contralto voice of
-Teresa Molende calling to her companions:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nieves&mdash;where is she? Victorina, Carmen, come
-in, the dew is falling!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And another shrill voice, that of Elvira, woke the
-echoes:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Segundo! Segundo! We are going in!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In fact that almost imperceptible mizzle, which refreshes
-the sultry nights of Galicia, was falling; the
-lustrous leaves of the lemon tree in which Nieves sat,
-shrinking back from Segundo, were wet with the
-night dew. The poet leaned toward her and his
-hands touched her hands chilled with cold and terror.
-He crushed them between both his own.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me that you love me, or&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But, good Heavens, they are calling me! They
-are noticing my absence. I am cold!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me the truth then. Otherwise there is no
-human power that can tear me from here&mdash;come
-what will. Is it so hard to say a single word?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And what do you want me to say, tell me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you love me, yes or no?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you will let me go&mdash;go to the house?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page202" id="page202"></a>[pg&nbsp;202]</span>
-&quot;Anything you wish&mdash;but first tell me, do you
-love me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The <i>yes</i> was almost inaudible. It was an aspiration,
-a prolonged <i>s</i>. Segundo crushed her wrists in
-his grasp.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you love me as I love you? Answer plainly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This time Nieves, making an effort, pronounced
-an unequivocal <i>yes</i>. Segundo released her hands,
-raised his own to his lips with a passionate gesture
-of gratitude, and springing down the stairs, disappeared
-among the trees.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>[pg&nbsp;203]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XIX.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves drew a long breath. She felt dazed. She
-shook her wrists, hurt by the pressure of Segundo&#39;s
-fingers, and arranged her hair, wet with the night
-dew, and disordered by the contact of the branches.
-What had she said after all? Anything, no matter
-what, to escape from so compromising a situation.
-She was to blame for having withdrawn from
-the others and hidden herself in so retired a spot.
-And with that desire to give publicity to unimportant
-actions which seizes people when they have
-something to conceal she called out:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Teresa! Elvira! Carmen! Carmen!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nieves! where are you, Nieves?&quot; came in answer
-from various quarters.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here, beside the big lemon tree. Wait for me,
-I am coming!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When they entered the house, Nieves, who had
-to some extent recovered her composure, began to
-reflect on what had passed and could not but wonder
-at herself. To say <i>yes</i> to Segundo. She had
-uttered the word partly under compulsion, but she
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id="page204"></a>[pg&nbsp;204]</span>
-had uttered it. How daring the poet had been. It
-seemed impossible that the son of the lawyer of Vilamorta
-should be so determined. She was a lady of
-distinction, highly respected, her husband had just
-been Minister. And Garc&iacute;a&#39;s family, what were
-they&mdash;nobodies; the father wore collars frayed at
-the edges that were a sight to see; they kept no servant;
-the sisters ran about barefooted half the time.
-Even Segundo himself&mdash;he had an unmistakable
-provincial air and a strong Galician accent. He
-could not indeed be called ugly; there was something
-remarkable in his face and in his manner. He spoke
-with so much passion! As if he commanded instead
-of entreating! What a masterful air he had! And
-there was something flattering to one&#39;s vanity in having
-a suitor of this kind, so ardent and so daring.
-Who had ever fallen in love with Nieves before?
-There were three or four who had made gallant
-speeches to her&mdash;one who had watched her through
-his opera-glass. Everyone in Madrid treated her
-with that indifference and consideration which respectable
-ladies inspire.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For the rest, this persistency of Segundo&#39;s was to
-a certain extent compromising. Would people notice
-it? Would her husband notice it? Bah! Her
-husband thought only of his ailments, of the elections.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page205" id="page205"></a>[pg&nbsp;205]</span>
-He scarcely ever spoke to her of anything
-else. But what if he should notice it? How horrible,
-good Heavens! And the girls who had been
-playing hide and seek, might they not suspect something?
-Elvira seemed more languishing and sighed
-more frequently than usual. Elvira admired Segundo.
-He&mdash;no, he did not pay the slightest attention
-to her. And Segundo&#39;s verses sounded well,
-they were beautiful; they were worthy of a place in
-<i>La Ilustracion</i>. In short, as they would be obliged
-to return to Madrid before the elections, there was
-hardly any real danger. She would always preserve
-a pleasant recollection of the summer. The thing
-was to avoid&mdash;to avoid&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves did not venture to tell herself what it was
-necessary to avoid, nor had she settled this point
-when she entered the parlor, where the game of tresillo
-was already going on. Se&ntilde;ora de Comba
-seated herself at the piano and played several quick
-airs&mdash;polkas and rigadoons, for the girls to dance.
-When she stopped they cried out for another air.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nieves, the <i>mu&ntilde;eira</i>!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The <i>riveirana</i>, please!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you know the whole of it, Nieves?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The whole of it&mdash;why, did I not hear it in the
-feasts?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page206" id="page206"></a>[pg&nbsp;206]</span>
-&quot;Let us have it then, come.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who will dance it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who knows how to dance it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Several voices answered immediately:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Teresa Molende; ah! it is a pleasure to see her
-dance it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And who will be her partner?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ramonci&ntilde;e Limioso here, he dances it to perfection.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Teresa laughed in the deep, sonorous tones of a
-man, declaring solemnly that she had forgotten the
-mu&ntilde;eira&mdash;that she never knew it well. From the
-tresillo table came a protest&mdash;from the master of the
-house, Mendez: Teresina danced it to perfection.
-Let her not try to excuse herself; no excuse would
-avail her; there was not in all the Border a girl who
-danced the riveirana with more grace; it was true
-indeed that the taste and the skill for these old customs
-of the country were fast disappearing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Teresa yielded, not without once more affirming
-her incompetence. And after fastening up her skirt
-with pins, so that it might not impede her movements
-she stopped laughing and assumed a modest
-and ingenuous air, veiling her large lustrous eyes
-under her thick lashes, dropping her head on her
-breast, letting her arms fall by her sides, swaying
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>[pg&nbsp;207]</span>
-them slightly, rubbing the balls of the thumbs and
-the forefingers together, and thus, moving with very
-short steps, her feet close together, keeping time to
-the music, she made the tour of the room, with perfect
-decorum, her eyes fixed on the floor, stopping
-finally at the head of the room. While this was
-taking place, Se&ntilde;orito de Limioso took off his short
-jacket, remaining in his shirt-sleeves, put on his hat,
-and asked for an indispensable article.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Victorina, the castanets.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The child ran and brought two pairs of castanets.
-The Se&ntilde;orito secured the cord between
-his fingers and after a haughty flourish, began his
-r&ocirc;le. Teresita&#39;s partner was as lean and shriveled
-as Don Quixote himself, and, like the Manchego
-hidalgo, it was undeniable that he had a
-distinguished and stately air, scrupulously as he
-imitated the awkward movements of a rustic. He
-took his place before Teresa and danced a quick
-measure, courteously but urgently wooing her to listen
-to his suit. At times he touched the floor with
-the sole of his foot, at others with his heel or toe
-only, almost twisting his ankles out of joint with
-the rapidity of his movements, while he played the
-castanets energetically, the castanets in Teresa&#39;s
-hands responding with a faint and timid tinkle.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page208" id="page208"></a>[pg&nbsp;208]</span>
-Pushing his hat back on his head the gallant looked
-boldly at his partner, approached his face to hers;
-pursued her, urged his suit in a thousand different
-ways, Teresa never altering her humble and submissive
-attitude nor he his conquering air, his gymnastics,
-and his resolute movements of attack.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was primitive love, the wooing of the heroic
-ages, represented in this expressive Cantabrian dance,
-warlike and rude; the woman dominated by the
-strength of the man and, better than enamored,
-afraid; all which was more piquant in view of the
-Amazon-like type of Teresa and the habitual shyness
-and circumspection of the Se&ntilde;orito. There
-was an instant, however, in which the gallant peeped
-through the barbarous conqueror, and in the midst
-of a most complicated and rapid measure he bent his
-knee before the beauty, describing the figure known
-as <i>punto del sacramento</i>. It was only for a moment
-however; springing to his feet he gave his partner a
-tender push and they stood back to back, touching
-each other, caressing each other, and amorously rubbing
-shoulder against shoulder and spine against
-spine. In two minutes they suddenly drew apart
-and with a few complicated movements of the
-ankles and a few rapid turns, during which Teresa&#39;s
-skirts whirled around her, the riveirana came to an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page209" id="page209"></a>[pg&nbsp;209]</span>
-end and a storm of applause burst from the spectators.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">While the Se&ntilde;orito wiped the perspiration from
-his brow and Teresa unpinned her skirt, Nieves, who
-had risen from the piano, looked around and noticed
-Segundo&#39;s absence. Elvira made the same observation
-but aloud. Agonde gave them the clew to the
-mystery.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No doubt he is at this moment in the pine
-grove or on the river-bank. There is scarcely a
-night in which he does not make eccentric expeditions
-of the kind; in Vilamorta he does the
-same thing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And how is the door to be closed if he does not
-come? That boy is crazy,&quot; declared Primo Genday.
-&quot;We are not all going to do without our sleep, we
-who have to get up early to our work, for that
-featherhead. Hey, do you understand me? I will
-shut up the house and let him manage in the best
-way he can. Ave Maria!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mendez and Don Victoriano protested in the
-name of courtesy and hospitality, and until midnight
-the door of Las Vides remained open, awaiting Segundo&#39;s
-return. As he had not come by that time,
-however, Genday went himself to bar the door muttering
-between his teeth:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page210" id="page210"></a>[pg&nbsp;210]</span>
-&quot;Ave Mar&mdash; Let him sleep out of doors if he has
-a fancy for doing so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo, in fact, was at this time on his way to
-the pine grove. He was in a state of intense excitement,
-and he felt that it would be impossible for him
-in his present mood to meet anyone or to take part
-in any conversation. Nieves, so reserved, so beautiful,
-had said yes to him. The dreams of an ideal
-love which had tormented his spirit were not, then,
-destined never to be realized, nor would fame be unattainable
-when love was already within his ardent
-and eager grasp. With these thoughts passing
-through his mind he ascended the steep path and
-walked enraptured through the pine grove. At
-times he would lean against the dark trunk of some
-pine, his brow bared to the breeze, drinking in the
-cool night air, and listening, as in a dream, to the
-mysterious voices of the trees and the murmur of the
-river that ran below. Ah, what moments of happiness,
-what supreme joys, were promised him by this
-love, which flattered his pride, excited his imagination
-and satisfied his egotism, the delicate egotism
-of a poet, avid of love, of enjoyments which the
-imagination idealizes and the muse may sing without
-degradation! All that he had pictured in his verses
-was to be realized in his life; and his song would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page211" id="page211"></a>[pg&nbsp;211]</span>
-ring forth more clearly and inspiration would flow
-more freely, and he would write, in blood, verses that
-would cause his readers&#39; hearts to thrill with emotion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In defiance of duty and reason Nieves loved him&mdash;she
-had told him so. The poet smiled scornfully
-when he thought of Don Victoriano, with the profound
-contempt of the idealist for the practical man
-inept in spiritual things. Then he looked around
-him. The pine grove had a gloomy air at this hour.
-And it was cold. Besides it must be late. They
-would be wondering at his absence in Las Vides.
-Had Nieves retired? With these thoughts passing
-through his mind he descended the rugged path and
-reached the door ten minutes after the careful hand
-of Genday had secured the bolt. The <i>contretemps</i>
-did not alarm Segundo; he would have to scale
-some wall; and the romance of the incident almost
-pleased him. How should he effect an entrance?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Undoubtedly the easiest way would be by the garden,
-into which he could lower himself from the
-brow of the hill&mdash;a question of a few scratches, but
-he would be in his own room in ten minutes&#39; time,
-without encountering the dogs that were keeping
-watch in the yard, or any member of the household,
-as that side of the house, the side where the dining-room
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page212" id="page212"></a>[pg&nbsp;212]</span>
-was situated, was uninhabited. And upon
-this course he decided. He turned back and
-ascended the top of the hill, not without some difficulty.
-From thence he could command a view of
-the gallery and a good part of the garden. He
-studied the nature of the declivity, so as to avoid
-falling on the wall and perhaps breaking his leg.
-The hill was bare and without vegetation and the
-figure of the Swan stood out boldly against the
-background of the sky.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When Segundo fixed his eyes on the gallery for
-the purpose of deciding on the safest place for a
-descent, he saw something that troubled his senses
-with a sweet intoxication, something that gave him
-one of those delightful surprises which make the
-blood rush to the heart to send it coursing back
-joyful and ardent through the veins. In the semi-obscurity
-of the gallery, standing among the flower-pots,
-his keen gaze descried, without the possibility
-of a doubt as to the reality of the vision, a white
-figure, the silhouette of a woman, whose attitude
-seemed to indicate that she too had seen him, had
-observed him, that she was waiting for him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Fancy swiftly sketched out and filled in the details
-of the scene&mdash;a colloquy, a divine colloquy of love
-with Nieves, among the carnations and the vines,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page213" id="page213"></a>[pg&nbsp;213]</span>
-alone, without any other witnesses than the moon,
-already setting, and the flowers, envious of so much
-happiness. And with a swift movement he rolled
-down the steep declivity, landing on the hard wall.
-The fruit trees hid the path from him, and two or
-three times he lost his way; at last he found himself
-at the foot of the staircase leading to the gallery,
-and he raised his eyes to satisfy himself as to the
-reality of the lovely apparition. A woman dressed in
-white was indeed waiting there, leaning over the
-wooden balustrade of the balcony; but the distance
-did not now admit of any optical illusion; it was Elvira
-Molende, in a percale wrapper, her hair hanging
-loose about her shoulders, as if she were an actress
-rehearsing the r&ocirc;le of <i>Sonnambula</i>. How eagerly
-the poor girl was leaning over the balustrade! The
-poet would swear that she even called his name
-softly, with a tender lisp.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And he passed on. He made the tour of the garden,
-entered the courtyard by the inner door, which
-was not closed at night, and knocked loudly at the
-door of the kitchen. The servant opened it for him,
-cursing to himself the young gentlemen who stayed
-up late at night because they were not obliged to
-rise early in the morning to open the cellar for the
-grape-tramplers.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page214" id="page214"></a>[pg&nbsp;214]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XX.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">As the time occupied in the gathering of the
-grapes and the elaboration of the wine in the spacious
-cellar of Mendez was so prolonged, and as in
-that part of the country everyone has his own crop,
-however small, to gather in, part of the guests went
-away, desirous of attending to their own vineyards.
-Se&ntilde;orito de Limioso needed to see for himself how,
-between o&iuml;dium, the blackbirds, the neighbors, and
-the wasps, not a single bunch of grapes had been
-left him; the Se&ntilde;oritas de Molende had to hang up
-with their own hands the grapes of their famous
-Tostado, renowned throughout the country; and for
-similar reasons Saturnino Agonde, the arch-priest,
-and the curate of Naya took their leave one by one,
-the court of Las Vides being reduced to Carmen
-Agonde, maid of honor, Clodio Genday, Aulic councilor,
-Tropiezo, court physician, and Segundo, who
-might well be the page or the troubadour charged
-to divert the ch&acirc;telaine with his ditties.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo was consumed with a feverish impatience
-hitherto unknown to him. Since the day of the interview
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page215" id="page215"></a>[pg&nbsp;215]</span>
-in the lemon tree Nieves had shunned every
-occasion of being alone with him; and the feverish
-dream that haunted his sleep, the intolerable anguish
-which consumed him, was that he had advanced no
-further than the fugitive <i>yes</i>, which he sometimes
-even doubted he had heard. He could not endure
-this slow torture, this ceaseless martyrdom; he
-would have been less unhappy if instead of encouraging
-him Nieves had requited his love with open
-scorn. It was not the brutal desire for positive victories
-which thus tormented him; all he wished was
-to convince himself that he was really loved, and
-that under that steely corset a tender heart throbbed.
-And so mad was his passion that when he found it
-impossible to approach Nieves, he was seized by an
-almost irresistible impulse to cry out, &quot;Nieves, tell
-me again that you love me!&quot; Always, always obstacles
-between the two; the child was always at
-her mother&#39;s side. Of what avail was it to be rid of
-Elvira Molende who, since the memorable night on
-which she had kept guard in the gallery, had looked
-at the poet with an expression that was half satirical,
-half mournful? The departure of the poetess removed
-an obstacle, indeed, but it did not put an
-end to his difficulties.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo suffered in his vanity, wounded by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page216" id="page216"></a>[pg&nbsp;216]</span>
-systematic reserve of Nieves, as well as in his love,
-his ardent longing for the impossible. It was already
-October; the ex-Minister spoke of taking his departure
-immediately, and although Segundo counted
-on establishing himself in Madrid later on through
-his influence, and meeting Nieves again, an infallible
-instinct told him that between Nieves and himself
-there existed no other bond of union than their
-temporary sojourn in Las Vides, the poetic influences
-of the season, the accident of living under the
-same roof, and that if this dream did not take shape
-before their separation it would be as ephemeral as
-the vine leaves that were now falling around them,
-withered and sapless.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Autumn was parting with its glories; the wrinkled
-and knotted vine stalks, the dry and shrunken vine
-branches, lay bare to view, and the wind moaned
-sadly, stripping their leaves from the boughs of the
-fruit trees. One day Victorina asked Segundo:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When are we going to the pine grove to hear it
-sing?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Whenever you like, child. This afternoon if
-your mother wishes it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The child conveyed the proposition to Nieves.
-For some time past Victorina had been more than
-usually demonstrative toward her mother, leaning
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page217" id="page217"></a>[pg&nbsp;217]</span>
-her head upon Nieves&#39; breast, hiding her cheek in
-her neck, passing her hands over her hair and her
-shoulders while she would repeat softly, in a voice
-that seemed to ask for a caress:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mamma! mamma!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But the eyes of the miniature woman, half-veiled
-by their long lashes, were fixed with loving, longing
-glance, not on her mother, but on the poet, whose
-words the child drank in eagerly, turning very red if
-he chanced to make some jesting remark to her or
-gave any other indication of being aware of her
-presence.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves objected a little at first, not wishing to
-appear credulous or superstitious.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But what has put such an idea into your head?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mamma, when Segundo says that the pines sing,
-they sing, mamma, there is not a doubt of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you don&#39;t know,&quot; said Nieves, bestowing on
-the poet a smile in which there was more sugar than
-salt&mdash;&quot;that Segundo writes poetry, and that people
-who write poetry are permitted to&mdash;to invent&mdash;a
-little?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, Se&ntilde;ora,&quot; cried Segundo. &quot;Do not teach
-your child what is not true. Do not deceive her.
-In society it often happens that we utter with the
-lips sentiments that are far from the heart, but in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page218" id="page218"></a>[pg&nbsp;218]</span>
-poetry we lay bare the feelings of the inmost soul,
-feelings which in the world we are obliged to hide in
-our own breasts, through respect&mdash;or through prudence.
-Believe me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Say, mamma, are we going there to-day?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;To the pine grove.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you are very anxious to go. What an obstinate
-child! But indeed I too am curious to hear
-this orchestra.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Only Nieves, Victorina, Carmen, Segundo, and
-Tropiezo took part in the expedition. The elders
-remained behind smoking and looking on at the
-important operation of covering and closing some of
-the vats which contained the must, now fermented.
-As Mendez saw the party about to start, he called
-out in a tone of paternal warning:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Take care with the descent. The pine needles in
-this hot weather are as slippery as if they had been
-rubbed with soap. The ladies must be helped down.
-You, Victorina, don&#39;t be crazy; don&#39;t go rushing
-about there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The famous pine grove was distant some quarter
-of a league, but they spent fully three-quarters of an
-hour in making the ascent, along a path as steep,
-narrow, and rugged as the ascent to heaven is said to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page219" id="page219"></a>[pg&nbsp;219]</span>
-be, and which long before reaching the wood was
-carpeted with the polished, smooth, dry pine needles,
-which, if they rendered the descent more easy than
-was agreeable, compensated for it by making the
-ascent extremely difficult, causing the foot to slip,
-and fatiguing the ankles and the knees. Nieves
-stopped from time to time to take breath, and was
-at last fain to avail herself of the support of the
-plump arm of Carmen Agonde.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Caramba</i>, this is like practicing gymnastics!
-Whoever escapes being killed when we are going
-back will be very lucky.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lean well on me, lean well on me,&quot; said the
-sturdy country girl. &quot;Many a limb has been broken
-here already, no doubt. This ascent is terrible!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They reached the summit at last. The prospect
-was beautiful, with that species of beauty that borders
-on sublimity. The pine wood seemed to hang
-over an abyss. Between the trunks of the trees
-could be caught glimpses of the mountains, of an
-ashen blue blending into violet in the distance; on
-the other side of the pine wood, that which overlooked
-the river, the ground fell abruptly in a steep,
-almost perpendicular descent, while far below flowed
-the Avieiro, not winding peacefully along, but noisy
-and foaming, roused into rage by the barrier opposed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page220" id="page220"></a>[pg&nbsp;220]</span>
-to its progress by some sharp black rocks and separating
-into numerous currents that curled around the
-bowlders like angry green snakes covered with silver
-scales. To the roaring and sobbing of the river the
-pine wood kept accompaniment with its perpetual
-plaint intoned by the summits of the trees, which
-swayed and vibrated to the kisses of the breeze,
-dolorous kisses that drew from them an incessant
-moan.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The excursionists, impressed by the tragic aspect
-of the scene, remained mute. Only the child broke
-the silence, speaking in tones as hushed as if she
-were in a church.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, it is true, mamma! The pines sing. Do
-you hear them? It sounds like the chorus of bishops
-in &#39;L&#39;Africaine.&#39; They even seem to speak&mdash;listen&mdash;in
-bass voices&mdash;like that passage in the &#39;Huguenots&mdash;&mdash;&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves agreed that the murmur of the pines was
-in truth musical and solemn. Segundo, leaning
-against a tree, looked down at the river foaming below;
-Victorina approached him, but he stopped her
-and made her go back.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, my child,&quot; he said; &quot;don&#39;t come near; it is a
-little dangerous; if you should lose your footing and
-roll down that declivity&mdash;&mdash;Go back, go back.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page221" id="page221"></a>[pg&nbsp;221]</span>
-As nothing further occurred to them to say about
-the pines, the excursionists began to think of returning
-home; Nieves was a little uneasy about the descent,
-and she wished to undertake it before the sun
-should set.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, indeed, we shall break some of our bones,
-Don Fermin,&quot; she said to the doctor. &quot;Now, indeed,
-you may begin to get your bandages and splints
-ready.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is another road,&quot; said Segundo, emerging
-from his abstraction. &quot;And one which is much less
-toilsome and much more level than this.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, talk to us now about the other road,&quot; cried
-Tropiezo, true to his habit of voting with the opposition.
-&quot;It is even worse than the one by which we
-came.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How should it be worse, man? It is a little
-longer, but as it is not so steep it is the best in the
-end. It skirts the pine wood.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you want to tell me which is the best road&mdash;me
-who know the whole country as well as I know
-my own house? You cannot go by that road; I
-know what I am saying.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And I say that you can, and I will prove it to
-you. For once in your life don&#39;t be stubborn. I
-came by it not many days ago. Do you remember,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page222" id="page222"></a>[pg&nbsp;222]</span>
-Nieves, the night we played hide-and-seek in the
-garden, the night they barred me out and I got over
-the wall?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Had it not been for the thick shade cast by the
-pine trees and the fading daylight, it would have
-been seen that Nieves blushed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let us take whichever road is easiest and most
-level,&quot; she said, evading an answer. &quot;I am very awkward
-about walking over rough roads.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo offered his arm, saying jestingly:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That blessed Tropiezo knows as much about
-roads as he does about the art of healing. Come,
-and you shall see that we will be the gainers by it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Tropiezo, on his side, was saying to Carmen
-Agonde, shaking his head obstinately:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, we will please ourselves and go by the cut,
-and arrive before they do, safe and sound, with the
-help of God.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Victorina, according to her custom, was going to
-her mother&#39;s side, when the doctor called out to her:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here, take hold of the end of my stick or you
-will slip. Your mamma will have enough to do to
-keep herself from falling. And God save us from
-a <i>trip</i>,&quot; he added, laughing loudly at his jest.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The voices and footsteps receded in the distance,
-and Segundo and Nieves continued on their way in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page223" id="page223"></a>[pg&nbsp;223]</span>
-silence. The precipitous character of the path along
-which they walked inspired Nieves with something
-like fear. It was a little path cut on the slope of
-the pine wood, on the very edge of the precipice,
-almost overhanging the river. Although Segundo
-gave Nieves the least dangerous side, that next the
-wood, leaving himself scarcely a foothold, so that he
-was obliged to place one foot horizontally before the
-other, in walking, this did not set her fears at rest or
-make the adventure seem any the less dangerous to
-her. Her terror was increased a hundredfold when
-she saw that they were alone.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are they not coming?&quot; she asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We will overtake them in less than ten minutes.
-They are going by the other road,&quot; answered Segundo,
-without adding a single word of endearment,
-or even pressing the arm which trembled with terror
-within his.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let us go on, then,&quot; said Nieves, in tones of
-urgent entreaty. &quot;I am anxious to be home.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why?&quot; asked the poet, suddenly standing still.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am tired&mdash;out of breath&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you shall rest and take a drink of water if
-you desire it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And with rash hardihood Segundo, without waiting
-for an answer, drew Nieves down the slope and,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page224" id="page224"></a>[pg&nbsp;224]</span>
-skirting the rock, stopped on a narrow ledge which
-projected over the river. By the fading sunset light
-they discried a crystal thread of water trickling down
-the black front of the rock.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Drink, if you wish&mdash;in the palm of your hand,
-for we have no glass,&quot; said Segundo.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves mechanically released Segundo&#39;s arm,
-scarcely conscious of what she was doing, and took
-a step toward the stream; but the ground at the
-base of the rock, kept moist by the dripping of the
-water, was overgrown with humid vegetation as slippery
-as sea-weed, and as she set her foot upon it she
-slipped and lost her balance. In her vertigo, she
-saw the river roaring menacingly below, the sharp
-rocks waiting to receive her and mangle her flesh,
-and she already felt the chill air of the abyss. A
-hand clutched her by her gown, by her flesh, perhaps;
-held her up and drew her back to safety. She
-dropped her head on Segundo&#39;s shoulder and the
-latter, for the first time, felt Nieves&#39; heart beat under
-his hand. And how quickly it beat! It beat with
-fear. The poet bent over her, and on her very lips
-breathed this question:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you love me? tell me, do you love me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The answer was inaudible, for even if the words
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page225" id="page225"></a>[pg&nbsp;225]</span>
-had been formed in her throat her sealed lips were
-unable to articulate them. During this short space
-of time, which was for them an eternity, there
-flashed across Segundo&#39;s brain a thought potent and
-destructive as the electric spark. The poet stood
-fronting the precipice, Nieves with her back toward
-it, kept from falling over its edge only by the arm
-of her savior. A movement forward, a stronger
-pressure of his lips to hers, would be sufficient to
-make them both lose their balance and precipitate
-them into the abyss. It would be a beautiful ending&mdash;worthy
-of the ambitious soul of a poet. Thinking
-of it Segundo found it alluring and desirable, and
-yet the instinct of self-preservation, an animal impulse,
-but one more powerful than the romantic idea,
-placed between the thought and the action an insuperable
-barrier. He pleased himself, in imagination,
-with the picture of the two bodies clasped in
-each other&#39;s arms, borne along by the current of the
-river. He even saw in fancy the scene of the discovery
-of the corpses, the exclamations; the profound
-impression that such an event would cause in
-the district; and <i>something</i>, some poetic feeling that
-stirred and thrilled in his youthful soul, urged him
-to take the leap; but at the same time a cold fear
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page226" id="page226"></a>[pg&nbsp;226]</span>
-congealed his blood, obliging him to proceed slowly,
-not toward the abyss, but in an opposite direction,
-toward the path.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">All this, short enough in the telling, was instantaneous
-in the thinking. Segundo felt a cold chill
-strike through him, putting to flight thoughts of
-love as well as of death. It was the chill communicated
-to him by the lips of Nieves, who had fainted
-in his arms.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He dipped his handkerchief in the spring and
-applied it to her temples and wrists. She half
-opened her eyes. They could hear Tropiezo talking,
-Carmen laughing; they were coming doubtless
-in search of them, to triumph over them. Nieves,
-when she came back to consciousness and found
-herself still alone, did not make the slightest effort
-to free herself from the poet&#39;s embrace.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page227" id="page227"></a>[pg&nbsp;227]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XXI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">As if by tacit agreement the hero and heroine of
-the adventure made light of the danger they had
-run, to their companions in the excursion in the first
-place, and afterward to the elders at Las Vides.
-Segundo observed a certain reticence regarding the
-particulars of the occurrence. Nieves, on the contrary,
-was more talkative than usual, speaking with
-nervous loquacity, going over the most insignificant
-details a hundred times. She had slipped; Garc&iacute;a
-had reached out his hand to her; she had caught it,
-and as she was&mdash;well&mdash;timid, she had been a little
-frightened, although there was not the slightest
-occasion for being so. But the obstinate Tropiezo,
-with mild scorn, contradicted her. Good Heavens,
-how mistaken she was! No danger? Why, it was
-only by a miracle that Nieves was not now floating
-in the Avieiro. The ground there was as slippery
-as soap, and the stones below were as sharp as razors,
-and the current was so strong that&mdash;&mdash;Nieves
-denied the danger, making an effort to laugh; but the
-terror of the accident had left unmistakable traces
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page228" id="page228"></a>[pg&nbsp;228]</span>
-upon her countenance, changing its warm healthy pallor
-to a sickly hue, producing dark circles under her
-eyes, and making her features twitch convulsively.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo longed to say a few words to her, to ask
-her to grant him an interview; he comprehended
-that he must avail himself of these first moments,
-while her soul was still under the softening influence
-of gratitude and fright which made her cold heart
-palpitate beneath the whalebone of her stays. In
-the brief scene of the precipice the arrival of Tropiezo
-had allowed Nieves no time to respond explicitly
-to the poet&#39;s ardor, and Segundo wished to
-come to some agreement with her, to devise some
-means of seeing each other and talking to each other
-alone, to establish the fact at once that all these
-anxieties, these vigils, these intrigues, were love and
-requited love&mdash;a mutual passion, in short. When
-and how should he find the desired opportunity of
-establishing an understanding with Nieves?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It may be said that in the history of every love
-affair there exists a first period in which obstacles accumulate
-and difficulties, seemingly insurmountable,
-arise, driving to despair the lover who has made up
-his mind to conquer them, and that there comes,
-too, a second period in which the mysterious force
-of desire and the power of the will sweep away
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id="page229"></a>[pg&nbsp;229]</span>
-these obstacles, and circumstances, for the moment
-favorable, aid the lovers. So it happened on the
-night of this memorable day. As Victorina had
-been somewhat frightened, hearing of the danger
-her mother had been in, she had been sent to bed
-early, and Carmen Agonde had remained with her to
-put her asleep by telling her stories. The principal
-witnesses being thus removed and the elders plunged
-in one of their interminable viticultural, agricultural,
-and sociological discussions, Nieves, who had gone
-out on the balcony for air&mdash;for she felt as if she had
-a lump in her throat which prevented her from
-breathing&mdash;had an opportunity to chat for ten minutes
-with Segundo, who was standing near the window,
-not far from the rocking-chairs.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Occasionally they would raise their voices and
-speak on indifferent subjects&mdash;the afternoon&#39;s accident,
-the strange singing of the pines. And low,
-very low, the diplomatic negotiation of the poet followed
-its course. An interview, a conversation with
-some degree of freedom. Why, of course it could
-be! Why could it not take place in the gallery that
-very night? No one was going to think of going
-there to spy out what was passing. He could let
-himself down easily into the garden&mdash;&mdash;He could
-not? She was very timid&mdash;&mdash;It would be wrong?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page230" id="page230"></a>[pg&nbsp;230]</span>
-Why?&mdash;She was tired and not very well&mdash;&mdash;Yes, he
-understood. She would prefer the daytime, perhaps.
-Well, the other would be better, but&mdash;&mdash;Without
-fail? At the hour of the siesta? In the
-parlor? No; nobody ever went there; everyone
-was asleep. On her word of honor?&mdash;Thanks. Yes,
-it was necessary to dissemble so as not to attract
-attention.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Meantime the gentlemen at the tresillo table
-talked of the vintage and its consequences. The
-poor country girls earned a good deal of money at
-the work. Apropos of which Don Victoriano gave
-expression to some of his favorite ideas, referring to
-English legislature, and eulogizing the wisdom of
-that great nation whose laws regulating labor give
-evidence of a careful study of the problems it involves,
-and of some regard for the welfare of women
-and children. With these serious disquisitions
-the evening ended, every owl retiring to his olive
-tree.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves, seated at her toilet table, her open dressing-case
-and a small silver-framed mirror before her,
-was taking out, one by one, the tortoise-shell hair-pins
-which fastened her hair. Mademoiselle gathered
-them together and arranged them neatly in a
-box and braided Nieves&#39; hair, after which the latter
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id="page231"></a>[pg&nbsp;231]</span>
-threw herself back in her seat and drew a deep
-breath; suddenly she looked up.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you could make me a cup of lime tea,&quot; she
-said, &quot;in your own room, without troubling anybody?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Frenchwoman left the room and Nieves
-leaned her elbow thoughtfully on the table, resting
-her cheek in the palm of her hand, without moving
-her eyes from the mirror. Her face was deathly
-pale. No, this life could not continue; if it did it
-would carry her to her grave. She was very nervous&mdash;what
-terrors! What anxiety, what moments of
-anguish she had suffered! She had seen death face
-to face, and had had more frights, more fears, more
-misery in a single day than in all the previous years
-of her existence put together. If this were love in
-truth there was little that was pleasing in it; such
-agitations were not suited to her. It was one thing
-to like to be pretty, and to be told so, and even to
-have a passionate adorer, and another to suffer these
-incessant anxieties, these surprises that bring one&#39;s
-heart to one&#39;s mouth and expose one to the risk of
-disgrace and destroy one&#39;s health. And the poets
-say that this is happiness. It may be so for them&mdash;as
-for the poor women&mdash;&mdash;And why had she not the
-courage to tell Segundo that there must be an end
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page232" id="page232"></a>[pg&nbsp;232]</span>
-to this, to say to him: &quot;I can endure these alarms
-no longer. I am afraid. I am miserable!&quot; Ah, she
-was afraid of him, too. He was capable of killing
-her; his handsome black eyes sent forth at times
-electric sparks and phosphoric gleams. And then
-he always took the lead, he dominated her, he mastered
-her. Through him she had been on the point
-of falling into the river, of being dashed to pieces on
-the rocks. Holy Virgin! Why, only half an hour
-ago did he not almost force her to agree to a meeting
-in the gallery? Which would be a great piece of
-madness, since it would be impossible for her to go
-to that part of the house without her absence being
-noticed by Mademoiselle, or someone else, and its
-cause being discovered. Good Heavens! All this
-was terrible, terrible! And to-morrow she must go
-to the parlor at the hour of the siesta. Well, then,
-she would take a bold resolution. She would go,
-yes, but she would go to clear up this misunderstanding,
-to give Segundo some plain talk that
-would make him place some restraint upon himself;
-that he should love her, very good; she had no
-objection to that, that was well enough; but to
-compromise her in this way, that was a thing unheard
-of; she would entreat him to return to Vilamorta;
-they would soon go to Madrid. Ah, how
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>[pg&nbsp;233]</span>
-long that blessed Mademoiselle delayed with the
-lime tea.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The door opened to admit, not Mademoiselle, but
-Don Victoriano. There was nothing to surprise her
-in his appearance; he slept in a sort of cabinet near
-his wife&#39;s room and separated from it by a passageway,
-and every night before retiring he gave a kiss to
-the child, whose bed was beside her mother&#39;s; nevertheless
-Nieves felt a chill creep over her, and she
-instinctively turned her back to the light, coughing
-to hide her agitation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The truth was that Don Victoriano looked very
-serious, even stern. He had not indeed been very
-cheerful or communicative ever since his illness had
-assumed a serious character; but in addition to his
-air of dejection there was an indefinable something,
-a darker gloom on his face than usual, a cloud pregnant
-with storm. Nieves, observing that he did not
-approach the child&#39;s bed, cast down her eyes and
-affected to be occupied in smoothing her hair with
-the ivory comb.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How do you feel, child? Have you recovered
-from your fright?&quot; asked her husband.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No; I am still a little&mdash;&mdash;I have asked for
-some lime tea.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You did well. See, Nieves&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page234" id="page234"></a>[pg&nbsp;234]</span>
-&quot;Well&mdash;well?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;See, Nieves, we must go to Madrid at once.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Whenever you wish. You know that I&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, the thing is that it is necessary, indispensable.
-I must put myself seriously under treatment,
-child; for if things continue as they are now it will
-soon be all over with me. I had the weakness to
-put myself in the hands of that ass, Don Fermin.
-God forgive me for it! and I fear,&quot; he added, smiling
-bitterly, &quot;that I have made a fatal mistake. Let
-us see if Sanchez del Abrojo will get me out of the
-scrape&mdash;I doubt it greatly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Heavens, how apprehensive you are!&quot; exclaimed
-Nieves, breathing freely once more and availing herself
-of the resource offered to her by Don Victoriano&#39;s
-illness. &quot;Anyone would think you had an
-incurable disease. When you are once in Madrid
-and Sanchez has you under his care&mdash;in a couple of
-months you will not even remember this trifling indisposition.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bravo! child, bravo! I don&#39;t wish to hurt your
-feelings or to seem unkind, but what you say proves
-that you neither look at me, nor care a straw about
-my health, nor pay any attention to me whatever,
-which&mdash;forgive me&mdash;is not creditable to you. My
-disease is a serious, a very serious one&mdash;it is a disease
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id="page235"></a>[pg&nbsp;235]</span>
-that carries people off in fine style. I am being
-converted into sugar, my sight is failing, my head
-aches, I have no blood left, and you, serene and gay,
-sporting about like a child. A wife who loved her
-husband would not act in this way. You have
-troubled yourself neither about the state of my body
-nor the state of my mind. You are enjoying yourself,
-having a fine time, and as for the rest&mdash;a great
-deal it matters to you!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves rose to her feet, tremulous, almost weeping.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What are you saying? I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t distress yourself, child; don&#39;t cry. You are
-young and well; I am wasted and sickly. So much
-the worse for me. But listen to me. Although I
-seem to you dry and serious, I loved you tenderly,
-Nieves, I love you still, as much as I love that child
-who is sleeping there, I swear it to you before God!
-And you might&mdash;you might love me a little&mdash;like a
-daughter&mdash;and take some interest in me. The
-trouble would not be for long now&mdash;I feel so sick.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves drew near him with an affectionate movement
-and he touched her forehead with his parched
-lips, pressing her to him at the same time. Then he
-added:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have still another observation to make, another
-sermon to preach to you, child.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page236" id="page236"></a>[pg&nbsp;236]</span>
-&quot;What is it?&quot; murmured his wife smiling, but terrified.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That boy Garc&iacute;a&mdash;don&#39;t be alarmed, child, there
-is no need for that&mdash;that boy looks at you sometimes
-in a very curious way, as if he were making love to
-you. No, I am not doubting you. You are and
-you have always been an irreproachable wife&mdash;I am
-not accusing you, nor do I attach any importance
-to such folly. But, although you may not believe
-it, the young men here are very daring; they are
-shyer in appearance than those of the capital, but
-they are bolder in reality. I spent my youthful
-years here, and I know them. I am only putting
-you on your guard so that you may keep that jackanapes
-within bounds. For the rest of the time we
-are to remain in this place, avoid those long walks
-and all those other rusticities which they indulge in
-here. A lady like you among these people is a sort
-of queen, and it is not proper that they should take
-the same liberties with you as with the Se&ntilde;oritas de
-Molende or others like them&mdash;but I have already
-told you that such a thought has not even crossed
-my mind. It is one thing that this village Swan
-should have fallen in love with you, and have given
-you his hand to help you over the rocks, and another
-that I should insult you, child!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id="page237"></a>[pg&nbsp;237]</span>
-Shortly afterward Mademoiselle entered with the
-steaming cup of tea. And greatly Nieves needed
-it. Her nerves were in a state of the utmost tension.
-She was on the verge of a hysterical attack.
-She even felt nausea when she took the first few
-spoonfuls. Mademoiselle offered her some anti-hysterical
-drops. Nieves drank the remedy, and
-with a few yawns and two or three tears the attack
-passed off. She thought she would go to bed, and
-went into her bedroom. There she saw something
-which renewed her uneasiness&mdash;Victorina, instead
-of being asleep, lay with eyes wide open. She had
-probably heard every word of the conversation.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id="page238"></a>[pg&nbsp;238]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XXII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">She had in fact heard it all, from beginning to
-end. And the words of the conjugal dialogue were
-whirling around in her brain, mingling confusedly together,
-stamping themselves in characters of fire on
-her virgin memory. She repeated them to herself,
-she tried to understand their meaning, she weighed
-them, she drew conclusions from them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">No one can tell which is the precise moment that
-divides day from night, sleeping from waking, youth
-from maturity, and innocence from knowledge.
-Who can fix the moment in which the child, passing
-into adolescence, observes in herself that undefinable
-something which may perhaps be called consciousness
-of sex, in which vague presentiment is
-changed into swift intuition, in which, without an
-exact notion of the realities of life, she divines all
-that experience will corroborate and accentuate later
-on, in which she understands the importance of a
-sign, the significance of an act, the character of a relationship,
-the value of a glance, and the meaning of
-a reticence. The moment in which her eyes, hitherto
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page239" id="page239"></a>[pg&nbsp;239]</span>
-open only to external life, acquire power to
-scrutinize the inner life also, and losing their superficial
-brilliancy, the clear reflection of her ingenuous
-purity, acquire the concentrated and undefinable expression
-which constitutes the <i>glance of a grown
-person</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This moment arrived for Victorina at the age of
-eleven, on the night we have mentioned, overhearing
-a dialogue between her father and mother.
-Motionless, with bated breath, her feet cold, her
-head burning, the child heard everything, and afterward,
-in the dim light of the bedroom, united broken
-links, remembering certain incidents, and at last
-understood without attaching much importance to
-what she understood, reasoning, however, with singular
-precocity, owing, perhaps, to the painful activity
-with which imagination works in the silence of night
-and the repose of the bed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It is certain that the child slept badly, tossing
-about restlessly in her monastic little bed. Two
-ideas, especially, seemed to pierce her brain like
-nails. Her father was ill, very ill, and he was annoyed
-and displeased, besides, because Segundo had
-fallen in love with her mamma. With her mamma.
-Not with her! With her who preserved all the
-flowers he had given her like relics.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page240" id="page240"></a>[pg&nbsp;240]</span>
-The sorrows of childhood know neither limit nor
-consolation. When we are older and more storms
-have passed over us, and we have seen with astonishment
-that man can survive griefs which we had
-thought unsurvivable, and that the heavens do not
-fall because we have lost what we love, it may almost
-be said that absolute despair, which is the heritage
-of childhood, does not exist. It was evident to Victorina
-that her father was dying and that her mother
-was wicked, and Segundo a villain, and that the
-world had come to an end&mdash;and that she too, she
-too, desired to die. If it were possible for the hair
-to turn white at eleven, Victorina would have become
-white on the night in which suffering changed
-her from a bashful, timid, blushing child to a moral
-being, capable of the greatest heroism.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nor did Nieves enjoy the balmy sweets of slumber.
-Her husband&#39;s words had made her thoughtful.
-Was Don Victoriano&#39;s illness a fatal one? It
-might be so! He looked greatly altered, poor fellow.
-And Nieves felt a touch of grief and apprehension.
-Why, who could doubt that she loved her
-husband, or that she should regret his death? She
-did not feel for him any passionate love, such as is
-described in novels&mdash;but affection&mdash;yes. Heaven
-grant the malady might be a trifling one. And if it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page241" id="page241"></a>[pg&nbsp;241]</span>
-were not? And if she were to be left a wi&mdash;&mdash; She
-did not dare to complete the word even in her
-thoughts. To think of such a thing seemed like indulging
-in wicked desires. No, but the fact was
-that women, when their husbands die, were&mdash;Holy
-Virgin! It must be a terrible grief. Well, but <i>if it
-happened</i>? Segundo&mdash;Heavens, what folly! Most
-assuredly such an absurdity had never entered his
-head. The Garc&iacute;as&mdash;nobodies. And here a vivid
-picture of all Segundo&#39;s relations and their manner
-of living presented itself to her mind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She would willingly have absented herself from
-the rendezvous on the following day, because her
-husband had begun to suspect something and the
-situation was a compromising one, although in the
-place designated for the interview the meeting between
-them might always be attributed to chance.
-On the other hand if she failed to meet him, Segundo,
-who was so enamored, was fully capable of creating
-a scandal, of going to look for her in her
-room, of forcing an entrance into it through the
-window.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">After all, thinking well over the matter, she
-judged it most prudent to comply with her promise
-and to entreat Segundo to&mdash;forget her&mdash;or at least
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page242" id="page242"></a>[pg&nbsp;242]</span>
-not to compromise her. That was the best course
-to pursue.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves passed the morning in a state of complete
-prostration; she scarcely tasted a morsel at breakfast
-and during the meal she kept her eyes turned
-away from Segundo, fearing lest her husband should
-surprise some furtive glance of intelligence between
-them. To make matters worse, Segundo, desirous
-of reminding her with his eyes of her promise, looked
-at her on this day oftener than usual. Fortunately
-Don Victoriano&#39;s attention seemed to be all given to
-satisfying his voracious appetite for eating and drinking.
-The meal being finished everyone retired as
-usual to take the siesta. Nieves went to her room.
-She found Victorina there, lying on the bed. For
-greater precaution she asked her:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you going to sleep the siesta, my pet?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;To sleep, no. But I am comfortable here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves looked at herself in the glass and saw that
-she was pale. She washed her teeth, and after satisfying
-herself by a rapid glance that her husband was
-resting in the other room, she stole softly into the
-parlor. She was trembling. This atmosphere of
-storm and danger, grateful to the sea-fowl, was fatal
-to the domestic bird. It was no life to be always
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page243" id="page243"></a>[pg&nbsp;243]</span>
-shuddering with fear, her blood curdled by fright.
-It was not to live. It was not to breathe. She
-would end by becoming crazy. Had she not fancied
-just now that she heard steps behind her, as if someone
-were following her? Two or three times she
-had stopped and leaned, fainting, against the wall of
-the corridor, vowing in her own mind that she would
-never put herself in such a dilemma again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When she reached the parlor she stopped, half
-startled. It was so silent and drowsy in the semi-obscurity,
-with the half-closed shutters through
-which entered a single sunbeam full of dancing
-golden motes, with its sleepy mirrors that were too
-lazy to reflect anything from their turbid surfaces,
-its drowsy asthmatic clock, whose face looked like a
-human countenance watching her and coughing disapprovingly.
-Suddenly she heard quick, youthful
-foot-steps and Segundo, audacious, impassioned,
-threw himself at her feet and clasped his arms around
-her. She tried to restrain him, to advise him, to explain
-to him. The poet refused to heed her, he continued
-pouring forth exclamations of gratitude and
-love and then, rising to his feet, he drew her toward
-him with the irresistible force of a passion which
-does not stop to consider consequences.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When Don Victoriano saw the child enter his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page244" id="page244"></a>[pg&nbsp;244]</span>
-room, white as wax, livid, almost, darting fire from
-her eyes, in one of those horror-inspired attitudes
-which can neither be feigned nor imitated, he sprang
-from the bed where he had been lying awake smoking
-a cigar. The child said to him, in a choking
-voice:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come, papa! come, papa!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">What were the thoughts that passed through her
-father&#39;s mind? It was never known why he followed
-his daughter without putting to her a single question.
-On the threshold of the parlor father and
-child paused. Nieves uttered a shrill scream and
-Segundo, with an impassioned and manly gesture,
-placed himself before her to shield her with his
-body. An unnecessary defense. In the figure of
-the man standing on the threshold there was nothing
-of menace; what there was in it to inspire terror
-was precisely its air of stupor and helplessness; it
-seemed a corpse, a specter overwhelmed with impotent
-despair&mdash;the face, green rather than sallow, the
-eyes opened, dull and fixed, the hands and feet trembling.
-The man was making fruitless efforts to
-speak; paralysis had begun with the tongue; he tried
-in vain to move it in his mouth, to form sounds.
-Horrible conflict! The words struggled for utterance
-but remained unuttered; his face changed from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page245" id="page245"></a>[pg&nbsp;245]</span>
-livid to red, the blood becoming congested in it, and
-the child, clasping her father around the waist, seeing
-this combat between the spirit and the body,
-cried:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Help! help! Papa is dying!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nieves, not daring to approach her husband, but
-comprehending that something very serious was the
-matter, screamed too for help. And at the various
-doors appeared one after another Primo Genday and
-Tropiezo in their shirt-sleeves, and Mendez with a
-cotton handkerchief tied over his ears.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo stood silent in the middle of the room,
-uncertain what course to pursue. To leave the room
-would be cowardly, to remain&mdash;&mdash;Tropiezo shook
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Go, flying, to Vilamorta, boy!&quot; he said. &quot;Tell
-Doroteo, the cabman, to go to Orense and bring
-back a doctor with him&mdash;the best he can find. I
-don&#39;t want to make a trip this time,&quot; he added with
-a wink. &quot;Run, hurry off!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Swan approached Nieves, who had thrown
-herself on the sofa and was weeping, her face covered
-with her dainty handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They want me to go for a doctor, Nieves.
-What shall I do?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Go!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page246" id="page246"></a>[pg&nbsp;246]</span>
-&quot;Shall I return?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No&mdash;for God&#39;s sake leave me. Go bring the
-doctor! go bring the doctor!&quot; And she sobbed
-more violently than before.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">In spite of all Segundo&#39;s haste, the physician did
-not arrive in Las Vides until early on the morning
-of the following day. He did not think the case an
-unusual one. This disease often terminated in this
-way, in paralysis; it was one of the most frequent
-complications of the terrible malady. He added
-that it would be well to remove the patient to
-Orense, taking suitable precautions. The removal
-was effected without much difficulty, and Don Victoriano
-lived for a few days longer. Twenty-four
-hours after the interment Nieves and Victorina,
-attired in the deepest mourning, departed for the
-capital.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page247" id="page247"></a>[pg&nbsp;247]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XXIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">The black pall of winter has fallen over Vilamorta.
-It is raining, and in the wet and muddy main street
-and plaza no one is to be seen but occasionally some
-countryman, riding enveloped in his grass cloth cloak,
-his horse&#39;s hoofs clattering on the stone pavement,
-raising showers of mud. There are now no fruit-venders
-for the simple reason that there is no fruit;
-all is deserted, damp, muddy, and gloomy; Cansin, in
-listing slippers, a comforter around his neck, walks
-up and down unceasingly before his door, to prevent
-chilblains; the Alcalde avails himself of a very narrow
-arch in front of his house to pass away the afternoon,
-walking ten steps up and ten steps down,
-stamping energetically to keep his feet warm&mdash;an
-exercise which he affirms to be indispensable to his
-digestion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now indeed the little town seems lifeless! There
-are neither visitors to the springs nor strangers from
-the surrounding country, neither fairs nor vintages.
-Everywhere reigns the stillness and solitude of the
-tomb, and a moisture so persistent that it covers
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page248" id="page248"></a>[pg&nbsp;248]</span>
-with a minute green vegetation the stones of the
-houses in course of construction. These little towns
-in winter are enough to make the most cheerful person
-low-spirited; they are the very acme of tedium,
-the quintessence of dullness&mdash;the disinclination to arrange
-one&#39;s hair, to change one&#39;s dress, the interminable
-evenings, the persistent rain, the gloomy cold,
-the ashen atmosphere, the leaden sky!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In the midst of this species of lethargy in which
-Vilamorta is plunged there are, however, some happy
-beings, beings who are now at the summit of felicity,
-although soon destined to end their existence in the
-most tragic manner; beings who, by their natural
-instinct alone, have divined the philosophy of Epicurus
-and practice it, and eat, drink, and make merry,
-and neither fear death nor think of the unexplored
-region which opens its gates to the dying, beings
-who receive the rain on their smooth skins with
-rejoicing, beings for whom the mud is a luxurious
-bath in which they roll and wallow with delight,
-abandoning the discomfort and narrowness of their
-lairs and sties. They are the indisputable lords and
-masters of Vilamorta at this season of the year;
-they who with their pomps and exploits supply the
-reunions at the apothecary&#39;s with food for conversation,
-and entertainment for familiar gatherings in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page249" id="page249"></a>[pg&nbsp;249]</span>
-which their respective sizes are discussed and they
-are studied from the point of view of their personal
-qualities, heated discussions taking place as to
-whether the short or the long ear, the curly tail, the
-hoof more or less curved upward, and the snout more
-or less pointed, augur the more succulent flesh and
-the more abundant fat. Comparisons are made.
-Pellejo&#39;s hog is superb as far as size is concerned, but
-its flesh, of an erysipelatous rosy hue, and its immense
-flabby belly, betray the hog of relaxed muscle,
-nourished on bakehouse refuse; a magnificent
-swine, that of the Alcalde, which has been fed on
-chestnuts, not so large as the other, but what hams
-it will make! What hams! And what bacon!
-And what a back, broad enough to ride upon! This
-will be the swine of the season. There are not wanting
-those who affirm, however, that the queen of the
-swine of Vilamorta is the pig of Aunt G&aacute;spara,
-Garc&iacute;a&#39;s pig. The haunches of this magnificent
-animal look like a highroad; it once came near being
-suffocated by its own fat; its teats touch its hoofs and
-kiss the mud of the road. Who can calculate how
-many pounds of lard it will yield, and the black puddings
-it will fill with its blood, and the sausages that
-its intestines will make?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It stops raining for a week; the cold grows more
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page250" id="page250"></a>[pg&nbsp;250]</span>
-intense, frost falls, whitening the grass of the paths
-and hardening the ground. This is the signal for the
-hecatomb, for which the auspices are now favorable,
-for, in addition to the cold, the moon is in her last
-quarter; if she were on the wane the flesh would
-spoil. The hour has come for wielding the knife.
-And through the long nights of Vilamorta resound
-at the most unexpected moments desperate grunts&mdash;first
-grunts of fury, that express the impotent rage
-of the victim at finding himself bound to the bench,
-and reveal in the degenerate domestic pig the descendant
-of the wild mountain boar; then of pain,
-when the knife penetrates the flesh, an almost human
-cry when its blade pierces the heart, and at last a
-series of despairing groans which grow fainter and
-fainter as life and strength escape with the warm
-stream of blood.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This bloodcurdling drama was being enacted in
-the house of the lawyer Garc&iacute;a at eleven o&#39;clock on
-a clear frosty December night. The girls, wild with
-delight, and dying with curiosity, crowded around
-the expiring pig, in whose heart and throat the
-butcher, with rolled up sleeves and bare arms, was
-about to plunge the knife. Segundo, shut up in his
-bedroom, had before him some sheets of paper, more
-or less covered with scrawls. He was writing verses.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page251" id="page251"></a>[pg&nbsp;251]</span>
-But as the sounds of the tragedy reached him, he
-dropped his pen with dismay. He had inherited
-from his mother a profound horror of the spectacle
-of the killing; it usually cost his mother ten or twelve
-days of suffering, during which she was unable to
-eat food, sickened by the sight of the blood, the
-intestines and the viscera, so like human intestines
-and human viscera, the greasy flitches of bacon
-hanging from the roof, and the strong and stimulating
-odor of the black pudding and spices. Segundo
-abhorred even the name of pig, and in the morbid
-condition of his mind, in the nervous excitement
-which consumed him, it was an indescribable martyrdom
-to be unable to set his foot outside the door
-without stumbling against and entangling himself
-among the accursed and repulsive animals, or seeing,
-through the half-open doors, portions of their bodies
-hanging on hooks. All Vilamorta smelled of pig-killing,
-of warm entrails; Segundo did not know at
-last where to hide himself, and intrenched himself in
-his own room, closing the doors and windows tightly,
-secluding himself from the external world in order
-to live with his dreams and fancies in a realm where
-there were no hogs, and where only pine groves, blue
-flowers and precipices existed. Insufficient precaution
-to free himself from the torture of that brutal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page252" id="page252"></a>[pg&nbsp;252]</span>
-epoch of the year, since here in his own house he was
-besieged by the drama of gluttony and realism.
-The poet seized his hat and hurried out of the room.
-He must flee where these grunts could not penetrate,
-where those smells should not surround him.
-He walked along the hall, closing his eyes in order
-not to see, by the light of the candle which one of
-the children was holding, Aunt G&aacute;spara with her
-skeleton-like arm, bare to the elbow, stirring a red
-and frothing liquid in a large earthern pan. When
-they saw Segundo leaving the house the sisters burst
-into shouts of laughter, and called to him, offering
-him grotesque delicacies, ignoble spoils of the dying.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia had not retired; she felt ill and she was
-dozing in a chair, wrapped in a shawl and shivering
-with cold; she opened the door quickly to Segundo,
-asking him in alarm if anything had happened. Nothing,
-indeed. They were killing the pig at home&mdash;a
-Toledan night; they would not let him sleep. Besides,
-the night was so cold&mdash;he felt somewhat indisposed&mdash;as
-if he had a chill. Would she make him a
-cup of coffee, or better still, a rum punch?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Both, my heart, this very instant!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia recovered her spirits and her energy as
-if by enchantment. Soon there rose from the punch-bowl
-the sapphire flame of the punch. In its glare
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>[pg&nbsp;253]</span>
-the schoolmistress&#39;s face seemed very thin. It had
-lost its former healthy color, a warm brown like that
-of the crust of a well-baked loaf. The pangs of disappointed
-love were revealed in the pallor of her
-cheeks, in the feverish brightness of her eyes, the
-purplish hue of her lips. Grief had given her prosaic
-features an almost poetic stamp; as she had grown
-thinner her eyes looked larger; she was not now the
-robust woman, with firm flesh and fresh-colored lips,
-who, pitted though she was by the smallpox, could
-still draw a coarse compliment from the tavern-keeper;
-the fire of an imperious, uncontrollable, and
-exacting passion was consuming her inwardly&mdash;the
-love which comes late in life, that devouring love
-which reason cannot conquer, nor time uproot, nor
-circumstances change, which fixes its talons in the
-vitals and releases its prey only when it has destroyed
-it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And this love was of so singular a nature that,&mdash;insatiable,
-volcanic, desperate, as it was,&mdash;far from
-dictating acts of violence to Leocadia and drawing
-from her furious reproaches, it inspired her with a
-self-abnegation and a generosity without limits, banishing
-from her mind every thought of self.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The summer, the vintage season, the whole period
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>[pg&nbsp;254]</span>
-during which she had scarcely seen Segundo, when
-she knew he had not given her a passing thought,
-that he was devoting himself to another woman, had
-been horrible for her; and yet not a jealous word,
-not a complaint had crossed her lips, nor did she
-once regret having given Segundo the money; and
-when she saw the poet, her joy was so genuine, so
-profound, that it effaced, as if by magic, the remembrance
-of her sufferings and repaid her for them a
-hundredfold.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now there was an additional reason why she
-should lavish her affection upon the poet. He too
-was suffering, he was ill. What was the matter with
-him? He himself did not know: hypochondria, the
-grief of separation, spleen, the impatient disgust
-produced by the contrast of his mean surroundings
-with the dreams that filled his imagination. A constant
-inappetency, depression of spirits, an uneasy
-sensation in the stomach, nerves on the stretch, like
-the strings of a guitar. And his love for Nieves was
-not like Leocadia&#39;s love, one of those passions that absorb
-the whole being, affect the heart, attenuate the
-flesh, and subjugate the soul. Nieves lived only in
-his imagination, in his vanity, in his lyrics, in his
-romantic reveries, those eternal inspirers of love.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page255" id="page255"></a>[pg&nbsp;255]</span>
-Nieves was the visible incarnation, in beautiful and
-alluring form, of his longings for fame, his literary
-ambition.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia had served the punch and was pouring
-out the coffee when, her hand trembling with pleasure
-and emotion, she spilled some of the hot liquid,
-scalding herself slightly; she took no notice of the
-burn, however, but went on, with the same solicitude
-as always, to minister to Segundo&#39;s comfort. Thinking
-to please and interest the poet she asked him for
-news of the volume of poems which he had in hand,
-and which was to spread his fame far beyond Vilamorta,
-so soon as it should be published in Orense.
-Segundo did not show much enthusiasm at this
-prospect.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In Orense,&quot; he said, &quot;in Orense&mdash;&mdash;Do you
-know that I have changed my mind? Either I shall
-publish it in Madrid or I shall not publish it at all.
-The loss to Spanish literature would not be so very
-great.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And why don&#39;t you want to publish it now in
-Orense?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will tell you. Roberto Blanquez is right in the
-advice he gives me in a letter he has just written me
-from Madrid. You know that Roberto is in a situation
-there. He says that no one reads books published
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page256" id="page256"></a>[pg&nbsp;256]</span>
-in the provinces; that he has noticed the contempt
-with which books that do not bear the imprint
-of some publishing house of the capital are
-looked upon there. And besides, that they delay
-a century here in printing a volume, and when it is
-printed it is full of errors, and unattractive in appearance&mdash;in
-short, that they do not take. And
-therefore&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then, let the book be published in Madrid.
-How much would it cost?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Child, the prices Roberto tells me are enough to
-frighten one. It seems that the affair would cost a
-fortune. No publisher will buy verses or even
-share with the author the expense of publishing
-them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia answered only by a smile. The little
-parlor had a look of homelike comfort. Although
-winter had despoiled the balcony of its charms, turning
-the sweet basil yellow and withering the carnations,
-within, the hissing of the coffee-pot, the alcoholic
-vapor of the punch, the quietude, the solicitous
-affection of the schoolmistress, all seemed to temper
-and soften the atmosphere. Segundo felt a pleasant
-drowsiness stealing over him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will you give me a blanket from your bed?&quot; he
-said to the schoolmistress. &quot;There is not a spot at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page257" id="page257"></a>[pg&nbsp;257]</span>
-home where I could rest to-night. I might sleep a
-little on the sofa here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will be cold.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall be in heaven. Go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia left the room, and returned dragging in
-with her an unwieldy bulk&mdash;a mattress; then she
-brought a blanket; then, pillows. Total, a complete
-bed. For all that was wanting&mdash;only the
-sheets&mdash;she brought them also.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page258" id="page258"></a>[pg&nbsp;258]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XXIV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia did not vacillate on the following day.
-She knew the way and she went straight to the lawyer&#39;s
-house. The latter received her with a frowning
-brow. Did people think he was coining money?
-Leocadia had now no land to sell; what she brought
-was of trifling value. If she made up her mind to
-mortgage the house he would speak to his brother-in-law
-Clodio, who had some money saved, and who
-would like to have some such piece of property.
-Leocadia breathed a sigh of regret, it was not with
-her as with the peasantry&mdash;she had no attachment
-to land, but the house! So neat, so pretty,
-so comfortable, arranged according to her own
-taste!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pshaw, by paying the amount of the mortgage
-you can have it back the moment you wish.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">So it was settled. Clodio handed out the money,
-tempted by the hope of obtaining, at half its value,
-so cozy a nest in which to end his bachelor existence.
-In the evening Leocadia asked Segundo to
-show her the manuscript of his poems and to read
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page259" id="page259"></a>[pg&nbsp;259]</span>
-some of them to her. Frequent mention was made
-in them, with reticences and transparent allusions, of
-certain blue flowers, of the murmur of a pine wood,
-of a precipice, and of various other things which
-Leocadia knew well were not inventions, but had
-their explanation in past, and to her unknown,
-events. The schoolmistress divined a love story
-whose heroine could be no one but Nieves Mendez.
-But what she could not understand, what she could
-not explain, was how Se&ntilde;ora de Comba, now a
-widow, and free to reward Segundo&#39;s love, did not
-do so immediately. The verses breathed profound
-despondency, ardent passion, and intense bitterness.
-Now Leocadia understood Segundo&#39;s sadness, his
-dejection, his mental anguish. How much he must
-suffer in secret! Poets, by their nature, must suffer
-more and crueler tortures than the rest of humanity.
-There was not a doubt of it&mdash;this separation, these
-memories were killing Segundo slowly. Leocadia
-hesitated how to begin the conversation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;See, listen. Those verses are beautiful and deserve
-to be printed in letters of gold. It just happens,
-child, that I received some money a few days
-ago from Orense. Do you know what I was thinking
-of the other night while you were asleep in the
-little bed I arranged for you? That it would be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page260" id="page260"></a>[pg&nbsp;260]</span>
-better for you to go yourself to publish them&mdash;yonder&mdash;to
-Madrid.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To her great surprise she saw that Segundo&#39;s face
-clouded. To go to Madrid now! Impossible; he
-must first learn something of Nieves. The last
-tragic scene of his love affair, the d&eacute;nouement of her
-sudden widowhood, raised between them a barrier
-difficult to pass. Nieves was rich, and if Segundo
-should go to her now and throw himself at her feet,
-he would not be the lover asking her to requite his
-love, but the suitor to her hand, alleging anterior
-rights and basing on them his aspirations to replace
-her defunct husband. And Segundo, who had accepted
-money from Leocadia, felt his pride rebel at
-the thought that Nieves might take him for a fortune-hunter,
-or might scorn him for his obscurity
-and his poverty. But did not Nieves love him?
-Had she not told him so? Why, then, did she not
-send him some message. True, he had made no
-attempt to communicate with the beautiful widow,
-or to refresh her memory. He feared to do it awkwardly,
-inopportunely, and so reopen the wound
-caused by the death of her husband.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The volume of verses&mdash;an excellent idea! The
-volume of verses was the one means of recovering
-his place in Nieves&#39; recollection worthily, borne on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page261" id="page261"></a>[pg&nbsp;261]</span>
-the wings of popular applause. If this volume were
-read, admired, praised, it would win fame for its
-author; the difference between his own and Nieves&#39;
-social position, which might now make his pretensions
-appear ridiculous, would disappear. &quot;To
-marry!&quot; said Segundo to himself. Marriage seemed
-to him a secondary matter. Let Nieves only love
-him. It was love he asked, not marriage. Sitting
-at Leocadia&#39;s very table he wrote to Blanquez, giving
-him instructions, and prepared the manuscript to
-post it, and made out the index and the title-page
-with the impatient joy of one who, expecting to win a
-fortune, buys a ticket in the lottery. When he was
-gone Leocadia remained sunk in thought. Segundo
-had no desire to go to Madrid. Then the gleam of
-happiness that flashed across her mind at the thought
-that Segundo should establish himself in Vilamorta
-was quenched by two considerations&mdash;one was that
-Segundo would die of tedium here; the other that
-she could not long continue to supply his wants. In
-mortgaging the house she had burned her last cartridge.
-What should she mortgage now&mdash;herself?
-And she smiled sadly. In the hall resounded the
-steps of the neglected little cripple, on his way to
-bed, where Flores would soon lull him to sleep with
-her solecisms and barbarous litanies. The mother
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page262" id="page262"></a>[pg&nbsp;262]</span>
-sighed. And this being, this being who had no support
-but her&mdash;what should he live on? When ruin
-had overtaken her, and she could no longer give him
-food or shelter, what a mute and continual reproach
-would the presence of the unhappy child be to her!
-And how could she set him to work?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To work! This word brought to her mind the
-plans she had matured in those hours of sleeplessness
-and despair in which all the past is retraced in
-thought and new plans are formed for the future
-and every possible course of action is deliberated
-upon. It was plain that Minguitos was unfitted for
-the material labor of cultivating the ground, or for
-making shoes, or grinding chocolate, like that good-looking
-Ramon; but he knew how to read and write
-and in arithmetic, with a little help from Leocadia,
-he would be a prodigy. To sit behind a counter
-kills nobody; to attend to a customer, to answer his
-questions, take the money, enter down what is sold,
-are rather entertaining occupations that cheer the
-mind than fatiguing labors. In this way the little
-hunchback would be amused and would lose a little
-of his terror of strangers, his morbid fear of being
-laughed at.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A few years before if anyone had proposed to Leocadia
-to separate her from her child, to deprive him
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page263" id="page263"></a>[pg&nbsp;263]</span>
-of the shelter of her loving arms, she would have
-insulted him. Now it seemed to her so easy and
-natural a solution of the question to make him a
-clerk in a shop. Something, nevertheless, still
-thrilled in the depths of her mother&#39;s heart, some
-fibers still closely attached to the soul, that bled,
-that hurt. She must tear them away quickly. It
-was all for the good of the child, to make a man of
-him, so that to-day or to-morrow&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia held two or three consultations with
-Cansin, who had a cousin in Orense, the proprietor
-of a cloth shop; and Cansin, dilating upon his
-influence with him, and the importance of the favor,
-gave the schoolmistress a warm letter of recommendation
-to him. Leocadia went to the city, saw
-the shopkeeper, and the conditions on which he
-agreed to receive Minguitos were agreed upon. The
-boy would be fed and lodged, his clothes washed,
-and he would receive an occasional suit, made from
-the remnants of cloth left over in the shop. As to
-pay, he would be paid nothing until he should have
-acquired a thorough knowledge of the business&mdash;for
-a couple of years or so. And was he very much
-deformed? Because that would not be very pleasant
-for the customers. And was he honest? He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page264" id="page264"></a>[pg&nbsp;264]</span>
-had never taken any money out of his mother&#39;s
-drawer, had he?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia returned home with her soul steeped in
-gall. How should she tell Minguitos and Flores?
-Especially Flores! Impossible, impossible&mdash;she
-would create a scandal that would alarm the neighborhood.
-And she had promised to take Minguitos
-without fail on the following Monday! A stratagem
-occurred to her. She said that a relative of hers
-lived in Orense and that she wished to take the child
-there to make his acquaintance. She depicted the
-journey in glowing colors, so that Minguitos might
-think he was going on a pleasure trip. Did he not
-want to see Orense again? It was a magnificent
-town. She would show him the hot springs, the
-Cathedral. The child, with an instinctive horror of
-public places, of coming in contact with strangers,
-sorrowfully shook his head; and as for the old servant,
-as if she divined what was going on, she raged
-and stormed all the week. When Sunday came and
-mother and son were about to take their departure
-in the stage-coach Flores threw her arms around the
-neck of the boy as he was mounting the step, and
-embraced him with the tremulous and doting fondness
-of a grandmother, covering his face with kisses,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page265" id="page265"></a>[pg&nbsp;265]</span>
-and moistening it with the saliva on her withered
-lips. She spent the rest of the day sitting in the
-doorway, muttering words of rage, or of tender pity,
-her forehead pressed between her hands in an attitude
-of despair.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia, once they were in the diligence, tried to
-convince the boy that the change was for his good;
-describing to him the pleasant life that awaited him
-in that fine shop situated in the most central part of
-Orense, which was so lively, where he would have
-very little to do, and where he had the hope of earning,
-if not to-day, to-morrow, a little money for himself.
-At her first words the boy fixed on his mother
-his astonished eyes, in which a look of intelligence
-gradually began to dawn. Minguitos was quick
-of comprehension. He drew up close to his
-mother, and laid his head down on her lap without
-speaking.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As he continued silent, Leocadia said to him:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is the matter with you? Does your head
-ache?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No; let me sleep so&mdash;for a little&mdash;until we reach
-Orense.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And thus he remained, quiet and silent, lulled to
-sleep, apparently, by the creaking of the diligence
-and the deafening noise of the windows rattling in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page266" id="page266"></a>[pg&nbsp;266]</span>
-their sashes. When they reached the city Leocadia
-touched him on the shoulder, saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We have arrived.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They alighted from the stagecoach and then only
-did Leocadia observe that her lap was moist and
-that, on the spot where the boy had rested his forehead,
-sparkled two or three crystal drops. But on
-finding himself among strangers, in the gloomy
-shop crowded with rolls of dark cloth, the hunchback&#39;s
-attitude ceased to be resigned; he caught
-hold of his mother&#39;s skirt with a despairing impulse,
-uttering a single cry in which were concentrated all
-his reproaches, all his affection:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;M-a-a-a-m-m-a&mdash;m-a-a-a-m-m-a!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This cry still resounded through Leocadia&#39;s heart
-when, on her arrival at Vilamorta, she saw Flores
-lying in wait for her in the doorway. Lying in wait
-is the exact expression, for Flores threw herself upon
-her, the moment she appeared, like a bulldog, like a
-wild animal asking for and demanding her young.
-And as a man in a fit of rage throws at his adversary
-whatever he finds nearest his hand so Flores
-heaped on Leocadia every species of insult, all
-sorts of injurious and opprobrious epithets, crying,
-in a voice that trembled with rage and hatred:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page267" id="page267"></a>[pg&nbsp;267]</span>
-&quot;Thief, thief, wretch! What have you done with
-your child, thief? Go, drunkard, vagabond, go drink
-your liqueurs&mdash;and your child, perhaps, dying of
-hunger! Reprobate, wolf, traitress, where is the
-child? Where is the little angel? Where have you
-hidden him, schemer? In such a hurry you were to
-get rid of him so as to be left alone with your
-trumpery young gentleman! Wolf, wolf&mdash;if I had
-a gun, as sure as I am standing here, I would send a
-charge of shot into you!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia, her face pale, her eyes red with weeping,
-put out her hand to stop the mouth of the frenzied
-old woman; but the latter caught her fingers
-between her toothless gums, biting them and slavering
-them with the foam of her fury, and when the
-schoolmistress went upstairs, the old woman followed
-her, crying after her in hoarse and sinister
-accents:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will never have the grace of God, wolf&mdash;God
-and the Holy Virgin will punish you! Go, go,
-rejoice now because you have carried out your evil
-designs! May you be forever accursed, accursed,
-accursed!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The malediction made Leocadia shudder. The
-house, with Minguitos away, seemed like a tomb.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page268" id="page268"></a>[pg&nbsp;268]</span>
-Flores had neither made the dinner nor lighted the
-lamp. Leocadia, too sick at heart to do either,
-threw herself on the bed, dressed as she was, and,
-later on, undressed herself and went to bed without
-tasting a morsel of food.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page269" id="page269"></a>[pg&nbsp;269]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XXV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">With what interest did Segundo read the letters
-of Roberto Blanquez giving him news of his book.
-Roberto was a few years older than the Swan; the
-difference in their ages was not so great as to prevent
-their having been very good friends when they were at
-college together, though it was great enough to have
-given Blanquez so much more experience than the
-poet as to enable him to serve as his guide and mentor.
-Blanquez, too, had had his poetic epoch, when he
-had written Galician verses; he now devoted himself
-to the prose of a modest clerkship, and wrote official
-articles. Madrid was enlightening him, and, with the
-natural penetration of one in whose veins flowed Galician
-blood, he was gradually acquiring a knowledge of
-practical life. He entertained for Segundo a fanatic
-admiration and a sincere attachment, one of those
-college attachments which last a lifetime. Segundo
-wrote to him with entire confidence&mdash;some cousins of
-Blanquez were acquainted with the mother of Nieves
-Mendez, and through this channel Segundo occasionally
-received tidings of his lady-love. Blanquez
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page270" id="page270"></a>[pg&nbsp;270]</span>
-was not ignorant of the episodes of the summer.
-And in the beginning his news was very satisfactory:
-&quot;Nieves lives in the greatest retirement&mdash;my cousins
-have given me news of her. She scarcely ever leaves
-the house except to go to mass. The child is not
-well. The physicians say it is the age. They are
-going to send her to a convent of the Sacred Heart
-to be educated. They say the mother looks superb,
-my boy. It seems they have been left very well off.
-The book will soon appear now. Yesterday I chose
-the paper for the edition and the linen paper for the
-hundred copies <i>de luxe</i>. The type will be Elzevir,
-which is at present the most fashionable. The title-page&mdash;they
-make them beautiful now, in six colors&mdash;would
-you like it to represent something fanciful,
-something allegorical?&quot; In this style were Roberto&#39;s
-letters, source of illusions for Segundo, sole food for
-his imagination through all that long and gloomy
-winter, in that out-of-the-way corner of the world,
-in the midst of his prosaic domestic surroundings,
-his mind filled with the recollections of his unhappy
-passion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">March had arrived, that uncertain month of sunshine
-and showers which heralds in the spring with
-affluence of violets and primroses, when the cold
-begins to lessen, and in the pale blue sky white
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page271" id="page271"></a>[pg&nbsp;271]</span>
-clouds float like streamers, when Segundo received
-that most precious of all objects, that object the
-sight of which makes the heart palpitate with joy
-and longing, mingled with an undefinable fear
-resembling, somewhat, the feeling with which the
-new-made father regards his first-born&mdash;his first
-printed book. It seemed to him a dream that the
-book should be there, before his eyes, in his hands,
-with the satin-smooth white cover on which the
-artist had gracefully twined around a group of pine
-trees a few sprays of forget-me-nots; with its pea-green
-paper, that gave it an antique air, the compositions
-headed by three mysterious asterisks. Looking
-at his verses thus, free from blots, finished and
-correct, the thought standing out clearly in distinct
-black characters on the delicately tinted page, he
-almost felt as if they had issued from his brain just
-as they were, smoothly flowing and with perfect
-rhymes, without corrections or unmeaning syllables
-put in to fill out the meter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia was even more moved by the sight of
-the book than its author had been. She shed tears
-of joy. The fame of the poet was, in a sense, her
-work! For two or three days she was happy, forgetting
-the bad news which Flores brought her
-every Sunday from Orense; from Orense, where
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page272" id="page272"></a>[pg&nbsp;272]</span>
-Leocadia did not dare to go herself, fearing to yield
-to the entreaties and melt before the prayers of the
-child, but where palpitated those fibers of her heart
-which still bled, and which Flores wrung with torture
-by her account of the sufferings of Minguitos,
-who declined visibly in health, and who always complained
-that they made sport of him in the shop and
-cast up his deformity to him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Unsolvable mysteries of the human heart!
-Segundo, who despised his native place, who believed&mdash;nor
-was he mistaken&mdash;that there was not in
-Vilamorta a single person capable of judging of the
-merits of a poem, could not refrain from going one
-evening to Saturnino Agonde&#39;s and drawing carelessly
-the volume from his pocket, throwing it on
-the counter and saying with affected indifference:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What do you think of that book, my boy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the instant he repented of his weakness, so
-many were the nonsensical remarks and absurd jokes
-with which the beautiful volume inspired the irreverent
-assemblage. He wished he had never shown
-it. He had drawn all this upon himself. If the
-public did not treat him better than his fellow-townsmen!
-Man can never isolate himself completely
-from his surroundings&mdash;the circle in which he moves
-must always have an interest for him. However
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page273" id="page273"></a>[pg&nbsp;273]</span>
-little importance Segundo might attach to the opinions
-of the Vilamortans, and although their approbation
-would assuredly not have raised him in his
-own estimation, their stupid mockery wounded and
-embittered his soul. He went home hurt and
-pained. He spent a feverish night&mdash;one of those
-nights in which great projects are conceived and
-decisive resolutions adopted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His resolutions and his plans he summed up in the
-letter he wrote to Blanquez. The latter did not
-answer by return of mail; days passed, and Segundo
-went every morning to the post-office, always meeting
-with the same laconic answer. At last one day
-he received a voluminous registered letter.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page274" id="page274"></a>[pg&nbsp;274]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XXVI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">As he opened it, several newspapers fell out, containing
-notices marked by a cross of the volume of
-poems just published, entitled &quot;Songs of Absence,&quot;
-this being the name chosen by Segundo for his volume
-of rhymes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">These were accompanied by a letter of four pages
-from Roberto. What it might contain was of such
-vital importance to Segundo, so great the influence
-it might exercise over his future, that he laid it aside
-fearing, he knew not why, to read it, wishing to defer
-what he so eagerly desired. The letter lay open
-before him and certain names, certain words frequently
-repeated, caught his eye. The name of the
-widowed Se&ntilde;ora de Comba was often mentioned in
-it. To calm his agitation, which was purely nervous,
-he took up the newspapers, resolving to read
-first the marked paragraphs. He traversed the <i>via
-crucis</i>, in the fullest signification of the words.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><i>El Imperial</i> gave a noisy boom to Galicia and, as a
-proof that the country produced poets in the same
-abundance as it produced exquisite peaches and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page275" id="page275"></a>[pg&nbsp;275]</span>
-beautiful flowers mentioned, without naming him, the
-author of &quot;Songs of Absence,&quot; a beautiful volume
-just published. And not a line more, not a word of
-criticism, nothing to indicate that anybody in the
-office of the popular daily had taken the trouble
-even to cut the leaves of the book. <i>El Liberal</i>, better
-informed, declared, in three lines, that &quot;Songs
-of Absence&quot; gave evidence of the author&#39;s great
-facility in versification. <i>La Epoca</i>, in the most obscure
-corner of its department, &quot;New Books,&quot; eulogized the
-typographical elegance of the book; disapproved of
-the romantic savor of the title and of the title-page,
-and deplored in trenchant phrases that the poet
-should have sought inspiration in the barren theme
-of absence when there were so many wholesome,
-cheerful and fruitful subjects on which to write.
-<i>El Dia</i>&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Ah, as for <i>El Dia</i>, it gave Segundo a castigation
-in style: not one of those angry, predetermined, energetic
-castigations, in which the lash is taken up with
-both hands to crush a powerful and dangerous adversary,
-but a contemptuous cut of the whip, a flick
-with the nail, as it were, as one might brush away a
-troublesome insect; one of those summary criticisms
-in which the critic does not take the trouble to adduce
-proof or argument in support of his criticisms,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page276" id="page276"></a>[pg&nbsp;276]</span>
-whose justice he deems so evident as not to require
-demonstration; an execution by a few jests, but
-jests of a kind that extinguish a new author, crush
-him, relegate him forever to the limbo of obscurity.
-The critic said that now when verses of supreme
-merit lacked readers it was greatly to be deplored
-that the press should be made to groan with rhymes
-of an inferior quality; that now when Becquer had
-been placed in the pantheon of the immortals it was
-a crime to treat him with the disrespect of stupidly
-imitating him, mutilating and counterfeiting his best
-thoughts; and finally, that it was to be regretted
-that estimable young men, endowed, perhaps, with
-admirable capabilities for trade, or for the career of
-an apothecary or a notary, should spend their
-parents&#39; money in costly editions of verses which no
-one would either buy or read.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Underneath this philippic Roberto Blanquez had
-written: &quot;Pay no attention to this ass. Read my
-article.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And indeed in an obscure, insignificant sheet, one
-of those innumerable periodicals that see the light
-in Madrid without Madrid ever seeing them, Blanquez
-poured forth the gall of his wounded friendship
-and patriotism&mdash;taking the critic to task, eulogizing
-Segundo&#39;s book and declaring him the worthy compeer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page277" id="page277"></a>[pg&nbsp;277]</span>
-of Becquer, with the difference that the former
-was a little sweeter, a little more dreamy, a little
-more melancholy, as being the son of a land as beautiful
-as it was unfortunate, and which was fairer than
-Andalusia, than Switzerland, or than any other
-country on the face of the globe; ending by saying
-that if Becquer had been born in Galicia he would
-feel, think, and write like <i>The Swan of Vilamorta</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo seized the bundle of newspapers and,
-after looking at them for a moment fixedly and with
-a gloomy brow, tore them into pieces, large at first,
-then small, then smaller still, which he threw out of
-the window to hover for a moment in the air like
-butterflies or like the silvery petals of the flower of
-illusion, and then fall into the nearest pool. Segundo
-smiled bitterly. &quot;There goes fame,&quot; he said to himself.
-&quot;Now I think I am calmer. Let us see what
-the letter says.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Of this letter we need cite here only certain passages,
-supplementing them with the comments made
-on them in his mind by the reader.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;According to your request I went to the house
-of Se&ntilde;ora de Comba to deliver to her the copy, so
-carefully wrapped up and sealed, which you sent me
-for that purpose.&quot;&mdash;Of course. It contained an inscription
-which I did not want her to think that you
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page278" id="page278"></a>[pg&nbsp;278]</span>
-might have read.&mdash;&quot;She has a beautiful house, hangings
-and natural flowers everywhere.&quot;&mdash;Everything
-pertaining to her is like that, beautiful and refined.&mdash;&quot;But
-I was obliged to return several times before
-she would receive me, the moment was always inopportune.&quot;&mdash;She
-does not receive indiscriminately all
-who may chance to present themselves.&mdash;&quot;At last
-she received me, after innumerable ceremonies and
-formalities. She is very beautiful close by, more
-beautiful, even, than at a distance, and it seems impossible
-that she should have a daughter twelve
-years old; she looks at most twenty-four or twenty-five.&quot;&mdash;What
-news Roberto has to tell me.&mdash;&quot;The
-moment I told her I had come on your part&quot;&mdash;Let
-us hear&mdash;&quot;she became&mdash;what shall I say?&quot;&mdash;red&mdash;&quot;displeased
-and annoyed, my boy, and in addition so
-serious, that I was quite taken aback, and did not
-know what to do.&quot;&mdash;Infamous! Infamous!&mdash;&quot;She
-was afraid that I&quot;&mdash;Let us hear; let us finish, let us
-finish.&mdash;&quot;She refused to receive the book, in spite
-of my urgent entreaties&quot;&mdash;but this is inconceivable.
-Ah, what a woman!&mdash;&quot;because she says it would remind
-her too forcibly of that place and of the death
-of her husband, whom God keep in his glory; and
-consequently she begs you to excuse her&quot;&mdash;wretch!&mdash;&quot;from
-opening the package and reading
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page279" id="page279"></a>[pg&nbsp;279]</span>
-your verse, for which she thanks you.&quot;&mdash;Ha! ha!
-ha!&mdash;Bravo! What an actress!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Notwithstanding all this, as you had charged me
-explicitly to deliver it to her, I determined not to
-take the book back with me and, taking up my hat
-and saluting her, I laid your package on a table. On
-the following morning, however, it came back to me
-unopened, with all its seals intact.&quot;&mdash;And I did not
-throw her into the Avieiro that day when our
-lips&mdash;the more fool I! Well, let us finish.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In view of the little widow&#39;s conduct I imagine
-that you must have invented all that about the window
-and the precipice; you must have told it to me
-to fool me or, as you are so imaginative, you dreamed
-that it happened and you took the dream for reality.&quot;&mdash;He
-does well to mock me.&mdash;&quot;At all events,
-my boy, if you were interested in the widow, think
-no more about her. I know to a certainty, through
-my cousins, who have it for a fact from their father,
-that at the expiration of the period of her mourning
-she is to marry a certain Marquis de Cameros who
-represented at one time a district in Lugo.&quot;&mdash;Yes,
-yes, I understand.&mdash;&quot;The thing is serious, for, according
-to what my cousins say, the house linen is being
-embroidered already with the coronet of a marchioness.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page280" id="page280"></a>[pg&nbsp;280]</span>
-The letter was torn still more slowly and into
-still smaller pieces than the newspapers. With
-the fragments Segundo made a ball which he
-threw far into the middle of the pool. &quot;Such is
-love,&quot; he said to himself, laughing bitterly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He began to walk up and down the room, at first
-with a certain monotonous regularity, then restlessly
-and with fury. Clara, the eldest of his sisters, half
-opened the door of the room, saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Aunt Gáspara says you are to come.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What for?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dinner is ready.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Segundo took his hat and rushing into the street
-walked toward the river, filled with that species of
-fury which one who has just received some mental
-shock, some bitter disappointment, is apt to feel at
-being called on to take part in any of the ordinary
-concerns of life.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page281" id="page281"></a>[pg&nbsp;281]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XXVII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">What a walk was his along the marshy borders of
-the Avieiro! At times he hurried on without any
-motive for accelerating his steps, and again, equally
-without motive, stood still, his gaze riveted on some
-object but in reality seeing nothing. One regret,
-a gnawing grief, pierced his soul when he recalled
-the past. As in a shipwreck there is for each of the
-passengers some one particular object whose loss he
-deplores more bitterly than that of all his other possessions,
-so Segundo, of all his past life, regretted
-one instant above every other, an instant which he
-would have given all he possessed to live over
-again&mdash;that during which he had stood with Nieves
-on the edge of the precipice, when he might have
-obtained a worthy and glorious death, carrying with
-him into the abyss the precious treasure of his illusions,
-and the form of the woman who for that one
-unforgettable instant only, had truly loved him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A coward then, and a coward now!&quot; thought
-the poet, calling all his resolution to his aid but finding
-himself unable to summon the necessary courage
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page282" id="page282"></a>[pg&nbsp;282]</span>
-to throw himself at once into the cold and muddy
-waters of the river. What moments of anguish!
-Giddy with suffering he seated himself on a stone
-on the river bank and watched with idiotic vacancy
-of expression the circles formed on the bosom of the
-river by the drops of rain that fell slantingly from
-the gray sky, as they expanded and were lost in
-other circles that pressed upon them on all sides,
-while new circles took their place, to be lost in their
-turn in yet other circles, covering the surface of the
-water with a wavy design resembling the silver work
-called <i>guilloch&eacute;</i>. The poet did not even notice that
-these same rain-drops that fell thick and fast on the
-surface of the Avieiro fell also on his hat and shoulders,
-ran down his forehead and, making their way
-between his collar and his skin, trickled down his
-neck. He noticed it only when the chill they produced
-made him shiver and he rose and walked
-slowly home, where dinner was already over and no
-one thought of offering him even so much as a cup
-of broth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Two or three days later a fever declared itself,
-which was at first slight, but soon grew serious.
-Tropiezo called it a gastric and catarrhal fever,
-and truth compels us to say that he administered
-remedies not altogether inappropriate; gastric
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page283" id="page283"></a>[pg&nbsp;283]</span>
-and catarrhal fevers are, for physicians whose
-knowledge is derived chiefly from experience,
-a perfect boon from Heaven, a glorious field
-in which they may count every battle a victory;
-a beaten path in which they run no risk of
-going astray. It will not lead them to the unknown
-pole of science, but at least it will betray them into
-no abyss.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As Tropiezo was leaving García&#39;s house one evening,
-after his customary visit to Segundo, muffled up
-to the ears in his comforter, he saw, standing beside
-the lawyer&#39;s door in the shadow cast by the contiguous
-wall, a woman clad in an old morning gown
-and with her head bare. The night was bright and
-Don Fermin was able to distinguish her features,
-but it was not without some difficulty that he recognized
-her to be Leocadia, so altered and aged did
-the poor schoolmistress look. Her countenance betrayed
-the keenest anxiety as she asked the doctor:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And what news, Don Fermin? How is Segundo
-getting on?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, good evening, Leocadia. Do you know that
-at first I did not recognize you?&mdash;Well, very well;
-there is no cause for uneasiness. To-day I ordered
-him some of the <i>puchero</i> and some soup. It was
-nothing&mdash;a cold caught by getting a wetting. But
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page284" id="page284"></a>[pg&nbsp;284]</span>
-the boy seems a little preoccupied, and he was for a
-time so sad and dejected that I thought he was
-never going to get back his appetite. At this season
-it is necessary to go warmly clad; we have a
-fine day, and then, when you least expect it, back
-come the rain and the cold again. And you&mdash;how
-are you getting on? They tell me that you have
-not been well, either. You must take care of yourself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is nothing the matter with me, Don Fermin.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So much the better. Any news of the boy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is in Orense, poor child. He can&#39;t get used
-to it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He will get used to it by and by. Of course&mdash;accustomed
-to be petted. Well, Leocadia, good-night.
-Go home, my dear woman, go home.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Don Fermin proceeded on his way, drawing his
-comforter up closer around his ears. That woman
-was mad; she had not taken the disease lightly, it
-seemed. And how altered she was! How old she
-had grown in these last few months! Old women
-were worse than young girls when they fell in love.
-He had done wisely, very wisely in telling her nothing
-about Segundo&#39;s new plans. She was capable
-of tearing down the house if he had told her. No,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page285" id="page285"></a>[pg&nbsp;285]</span>
-silence, silence. A shut mouth catches no flies. Let
-her find it out through someone else besides him.
-And with these sensible ideas and worthy intentions
-Tropiezo reached Agonde&#39;s, and before a quarter of
-an hour had elapsed unbosomed himself of his news:
-Segundo Garc&iacute;a was going to America to seek his
-fortune&mdash;as soon as he should be entirely well, of
-course. He would take the steamer at Corunna.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The occasion was a favorable one for the company
-to lament once more in concert the death of Don
-Victoriano Andres de la Comba, protector and father
-of all the Vilamortans in want of situations, a useful
-representative and an untiring worker for the district.
-If he were alive now most assuredly a young
-man of so much ability&mdash;a poet&mdash;that night the party
-all agreed that Segundo had ability and was a poet&mdash;would
-not be obliged to go across the raging seas in
-quest of a decent situation. But since they had lost
-Don Victoriano, Vilamorta was without a voice in
-the regions of influence and favor, for Se&ntilde;orito de
-Romero, the present representative of the district,
-belonged to the class of docile representatives who
-give no trouble to the Government, who vote when
-their votes are wanted, and who hold themselves
-cheap, valuing themselves at no more than a few
-tobacco shops, and half a dozen or so of official
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page286" id="page286"></a>[pg&nbsp;286]</span>
-appointments. Agonde took his revenge that night,
-expatiating on his favorite theme, and abusing the
-pernicious Eufrasian influence which was responsible
-for the decadence of Vilamorta, on account of
-which its youth were obliged to emigrate to the New
-World. The apothecary expounded his theories&mdash;he
-liked the representative of a district to show himself
-in it occasionally. Otherwise of what use was
-he? In his eyes the ideal representative was that
-famous politician from whom the barber of the town
-he represented had asked a place, basing his request
-on the fact that, owing to the distribution of appointments
-among the persons of his station in the
-town, there were no customers left for him to shave
-and he was starving. The Alcalde here interposed,
-saying that he had it on very good authority that
-Se&ntilde;orito de Romero intended to interest himself in
-earnest for Vilamorta; the confectioner and some
-others of those present confirmed this statement, and
-then arose a discussion in which it was proved beyond
-a doubt that a dead representative has no
-friends and that the new representative of the district
-had already, in the very stronghold of the former
-Combista radicals, friends and adherents.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page287" id="page287"></a>[pg&nbsp;287]</span></p>
-
-<h2>XXVIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">The Swan has left his native lake, or rather, his
-pool; he has crossed the Atlantic on the wings of
-steam. Will he ever return? Will he come back
-with a sallow countenance, a disordered liver, and
-some thousands of dollars, in bills of exchange, in
-his pocketbook, to end his life where it began, as
-the ship disabled by storms receives its last repairs
-in the dockyard in which it was built? Will the
-black vomit, that terrible malady of the Antilles, the
-scourge of the Iberians who seek to emulate Columbus
-conquering a new world, attack him on his
-arrival on the young continent? Will he remain in
-the tropics, riding in his carriage, united in the bonds
-of matrimony to some Creole? Will he preside one
-day over one of those diminutive republics, in which
-the doctors are generals and the generals doctors?
-Will his melancholy be cured by the salty kiss of
-the ocean breeze, by the contact of virgin soil, the
-sharp spur of necessity, that, pushing him into the
-conflict, will say to him, &quot;Work&quot;?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">History may perhaps at some future day relate
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page288" id="page288"></a>[pg&nbsp;288]</span>
-the story of the metamorphosis of the Swan, of his
-wanderings and his vicissitudes; but years must first
-elapse, for it was only yesterday, as one might say,
-that Segundo Garc&iacute;a quitted Vilamorta, leaving the
-schoolmistress behind him dissolved in tears. And
-the story of the schoolmistress is the only episode
-in the chronicle of the Swan which we can at present
-bring to an end.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Leocadia was the theme of much gossip in Vilamorta.
-She was seriously ill, according to some, according
-to others, ruined, and according to many,
-touched in her mind. She had been seen haunting the
-neighborhood of Segundo&#39;s house on various nights
-during the poet&#39;s illness; it was affirmed that she had
-sold her land and that her house was mortgaged to
-Clodio Genday; but the strangest thing of all, that
-which was most bitterly censured, was her neglect of
-her son after having cared for him and watched over
-him from his infancy, never going to Orense to see
-him, while old Flores went there constantly, bringing
-back worse and worse news of the child every time she
-went&mdash;that he was wasting away, that he spit blood,
-that he was dying of grief, that he would not last a
-month. Leocadia, as she listened, would let her
-chin fall upon her breast, and at times her shoulders
-would move convulsively, as if she were weeping.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page289" id="page289"></a>[pg&nbsp;289]</span>
-Otherwise she appeared calm, although she was very
-silent and had lost her former activity. She helped
-Flores in the kitchen, attended to the children of
-the school, swept and dusted&mdash;all like an automaton,
-while Flores, who pitilessly spied out every occasion
-to find fault with her, took pleasure in crying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Woman, you have left this side of the pan dirty&mdash;woman,
-you haven&#39;t mended your skirt&mdash;woman,
-what are you thinking about? I am going to Orense
-to-day and you will have to take care of the <i>puchero</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the end of the summer Clodio demanded the
-interest on his loan and Leocadia was unable to pay
-it; she was notified accordingly that, after the necessary
-legal proceedings, the creditor would avail himself
-of his legal right to take possession of the house.
-This was a terrible blow for Leocadia.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It will sometimes happen that a prisoner, a distinguished
-personage, a king, it may be, shut up
-through an adverse fate within the walls of a dungeon,
-stripped of his grandeur, deprived of all that
-once constituted his happiness, will bear his ills for
-years with resignation, calm in appearance although
-dejected, but if some day, by the cruel tyranny of
-his jailors, this prisoner is deprived of some bauble,
-some trifling object for which he had conceived an
-affection, the grief pent up within his bosom will
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page290" id="page290"></a>[pg&nbsp;290]</span>
-burst its bounds, and the wildest manifestations of
-grief will follow. Something like this happened to
-Leocadia when she learned that she must abandon
-forever the beloved little house where she had spent
-in Segundo&#39;s company hours unique in her existence;
-the little house in which she was mistress, which had
-been rebuilt with her savings, the little house lately
-so neat and so attractive, of which she was so proud.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Flores heard her on several nights sobbing loudly,
-but when on one or two occasions, moved by an involuntary
-feeling of pity, the old woman went into
-her room to ask her what ailed her, if she could do
-anything for her, Leocadia, covering her face with
-the bedclothes, had answered in a dull voice: &quot;There
-is nothing the matter with me, woman; let me sleep.
-You will not even let me sleep!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">During those days her moods varied constantly
-and she formed a thousand different plans. She
-talked of going to live in Orense, of giving up the
-school and taking sewing to do in the house; she
-talked, too, of accepting the proposal of Clodio Genday,
-who, having dismissed his young servant, for
-what reason no one knew, offered to take Leocadia
-as his housekeeper, by which arrangement she would
-remain in her house, Flores, of course, being dismissed.
-None of these plans lasted for more than
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page291" id="page291"></a>[pg&nbsp;291]</span>
-a very short time, but were all in turn rejected to
-give place to others no less ephemeral; and while
-the schoolmistress was thus engaged in forming and
-rejecting plans the time was fast approaching
-when she should find herself without a shelter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">One market day Leocadia went to purchase
-various articles urgently needed by Flores, among
-others a sieve and a new chocolate-pot, the old one
-being no longer fit for use. The movement of the
-crowd, the jostling of the hucksters, and the glare of
-the autumnal sun made her head, weak from want
-of sleep, from fasting, and from suffering&mdash;slightly
-dizzy. She stopped before a stall where sieves
-were sold, a sort of variety booth, where innumerable
-indispensable trifles were for sale&mdash;chocolate-beaters,
-frying-pans, saucepans, kerosene lamps. In a corner
-were two articles of merchandise in great request in
-the place&mdash;consisting of pink paper, soft, like brown
-paper, and some whitish powder, resembling spoiled
-flour. Leocadia&#39;s glance fell on these, and the vender,
-thinking she wished to buy some, began to extol
-their properties, explaining that the pink sheets
-moistened and placed on a plate, would not leave
-a fly alive in the neighborhood, and that the white
-powder was <i>seneca</i>, for killing mice, the manner of
-using it being to mix it well with cheese and place
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page292" id="page292"></a>[pg&nbsp;292]</span>
-the mixture, made into little balls, in their haunts.
-Leocadia asked the price and told the vender to
-give her a small quantity, and the woman, to appear
-generous, took up a good portion on the spatula,
-wrapped it up in paper, and gave it to her for a
-trifling sum. The drug indeed was of little value,
-being very common in that part of the country,
-where native arsenic abounds in the calcareous spar
-forming one of the banks of the Avieiro, and arsenic,
-acid&mdash;rat-poison&mdash;is sold openly in the fairs, rather
-than in drug shops. The schoolmistress put away
-the powder, bought, through complaisance, half a
-dozen of the pink slips of paper, and on her return
-home punctually delivered to Flores the articles she
-had been commissioned to purchase.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Flores noticed that after dinner Leocadia shut
-herself up in her bedroom, where the old woman
-could hear her talking aloud as if she were praying.
-Accustomed to her eccentricities the servant thought
-nothing about the matter. When she had ended
-her prayer, the schoolmistress stepped out on the
-balcony, where she stood gazing for a long time at
-the flower-pots; she then went into the parlor and
-looked for a good while also at the sofa, the chairs,
-the little table, the spots which reminded her of the
-past. Then she went into the kitchen. Flores
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page293" id="page293"></a>[pg&nbsp;293]</span>
-declared afterward&mdash;but in such cases who is there
-that does not lay claim to a prophetic instinct&mdash;that
-Leocadia&#39;s manner on entering had attracted her attention.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have you any fresh water?&quot; she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Give me a glass of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Flores affirmed that, as she took the glass, the
-hand of the schoolmistress trembled, as if she had a
-chill, and the strangest part of the matter was that,
-although there was no sugar in the water, Leocadia
-asked for a spoon, which she put into the glass. An
-hour, or perhaps an hour and a half passed, when
-Flores heard Leocadia groan. She hurried to her
-room and saw her lying on the bed, her face frightfully
-pale, making desperate and fruitless efforts to
-vomit. Then a cold perspiration broke out on the
-forehead of the sick woman, and she remained motionless
-and speechless. Flores, terrified, ran for
-Don Fermin, urging him to hurry, saying this was
-no jesting matter. When Don Fermin arrived out
-of breath, he asked:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is this, Leocadia? What is the matter
-with you; my dear woman, what is the matter with
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Opening her dilated eyes, she murmured:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page294" id="page294"></a>[pg&nbsp;294]</span>
-&quot;Nothing, Don Fermin, nothing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Standing on the table at the head of the bed was
-the glass; it contained no water, but the bottom and
-the sides of the vessel were coated with a white
-powder which had remained undissolved and which
-the schoolmistress, not wishing to leave it there, had
-scraped off in places with the spoon. It is proper to
-say, on this occasion also, that the illustrious Tropiezo
-made no mistake in the treatment of so simple
-a case. Tropiezo had already fought some battles
-with this common toxic substance and knew its
-tricks; he had recourse, without a moment&#39;s delay,
-to the use of powerful emetics and of oil. Only
-the poison, having gained the start of him, had already
-entered into the circulation and ran through the
-veins of the schoolmistress, chilling her blood.
-When the nausea and the vomiting ceased several
-little red spots&mdash;an eruption similar to that of scarlet-fever&mdash;made
-their appearance on Leocadia&#39;s
-pallid face. This symptom lasted until death came
-to set her sad spirit free and release it from its sufferings,
-which was toward daybreak. Shortly before
-her death, during an interval of freedom from pain,
-Leocadia, making a sign to Flores to come nearer,
-whispered in her ear: &quot;Promise me&mdash;that the child
-shall not know it&mdash;by the soul of your mother&mdash;don&#39;t
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page295" id="page295"></a>[pg&nbsp;295]</span>
-tell him&mdash;don&#39;t tell him the manner of my
-death.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A few days later Tropiezo was defending himself
-to the party at Agonde&#39;s who, for the pleasure
-of making him angry, were accusing him of
-being responsible for the death of the schoolmistress.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For one thing, they called me too late, much too
-late,&quot; he said; &quot;when the woman was almost in her
-death agony. For another, she had taken a quantity
-of arsenic which was not large enough to produce
-vomiting, but which was too small to cause
-merely a colic and be done with it. Where I made
-the mistake was in waiting so long before sending
-for the priest. I did it with the best intentions, so
-as not to frighten her and hoping we might yet pull
-her through. When extreme unction was administered
-she had no senses left to know what was going
-on.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So that,&quot; said Agonde maliciously, &quot;where you
-are called in, either the soul or the body is sure to
-meet with a trip.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The company applauded the joke, and there followed
-funereal jests mingled with expressions of
-pity. Clodio Genday, the creditor of the deceased,
-moved about uneasily in his chair. What stupid
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page296" id="page296"></a>[pg&nbsp;296]</span>
-conversation, <i>canario</i>! Let them talk of more cheerful
-subjects!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And they talked of very cheerful and satisfactory
-subjects indeed. Se&ntilde;orito de Romero had promised
-to put a telegraph-office in Vilamorta; and the
-newspapers were saying that, owing to the increasing
-importance of the viticultural interests of the
-Border, a branch railroad was needed for which the
-engineers were soon coming to survey the ground.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large">THE ANGLOMANIACS.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>A Story of New York Society To-day.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center">By MRS. BURTON HARRISON.</p>
-
-<hr class="hrsm"/>
-
-<p class="center">A Volume, 12mo, on Extra Fine Laid Paper, Dainty Binding,
-$1.00. Also in &quot;Cassell&#39;s Sunshine Series,&quot; paper, 50c.</p>
-
-<hr class="hrsm"/>
-
-<p class="indent">This is the story that has attracted such wide attention while
-running through the <i>Century Magazine</i>. There has been no such
-picture of New York social life painted within the memory of the
-present generation. The satire is as keen as a rapier point, while the
-story itself has its marked pathetic side. Never has the subject of
-Anglomania been so cleverly treated as in these pages, and it is not
-to be wondered at that society is deeply agitated as to the authorship
-of a story which touches it in its most vulnerable part.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">&quot;This delicious satire from the pungent pen of an anonymous writer
-must be read to be appreciated. From the introduction on board the
-Etruria to the final, when the heroine waves adieu to her English Lord, it
-is life, real, true American life, and we blush at the truth of the picture.
-There is no line not replete with scathing sarcasm, no character which we
-have not seen and known.... Read this book and see human nature;
-ponder upon what is there written, and while it may not make you wise, it
-certainly will make you think upon what is a great and growing social
-evil.&quot;&mdash;<i>Norristown Daily Herald.</i></p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The heroine is the daughter of an honest money-making old father
-and an ignorant but ambitious mother, whose money has enabled the
-mother and daughter to make their way into the circle of the &#39;Four
-Hundred.&#39;&quot;&mdash;<i>N. Y. Herald.</i></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large">CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap"><span class="small">104 &amp; 106 Fourth Avenue, New York</span></span>.</p>
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<i><span class="large">LORD HOUGHTON&#39;S</span></i>
-<i><span class="large">LIFE AND LETTERS.</span></i>
-<span class="i2">THE LIFE, LETTERS, AND FRIENDSHIPS OF</span><br />
-<span class="i2">RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES, FIRST LORD</span><br />
-<span class="i2">HOUGHTON. BY T. WEMYSS REID. INTRODUCTION</span><br />
-<span class="i2">BY RICHARD HENRY STODDARD.</span><br />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">In two vols., with portraits. Price, $5.00.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A perfect storehouse of interesting things, grave and gay,
-political, philosophical, literary, social, witty.&quot;&mdash;<i>London Times.</i></p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The book of the season, and an enduring literary masterpiece.&quot;&mdash;<i>The
-Star</i>, London.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In this biography, not his acquaintances only, but his friends,
-are counted by hundreds, and they are found in every country.&quot;&mdash;<i>The
-Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, in The Speaker.</i></p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A charming book, on almost every page of which there is
-something to arrest the attention of the intelligent reader.&quot;&mdash;<i>The
-Western Daily Press.</i></p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;These charming volumes are more interesting than most
-novels, and fuller of good stories than any jest-book. Every page is
-full of meat&mdash;sweetbread be it understood, and not meat from the
-joint.&quot;&mdash;<i>The Spectator</i>, London.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We can only strongly recommend the reader to get the &#39;Life
-and Letters&#39; as soon as he can, and he will thank Mr. Wemyss Reid
-for having furnished him with the means of passing as many agreeable
-evenings as it will take him to read through the book.&quot;&mdash;<i>The
-New York Herald.</i></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large">CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY,</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="small">104 &amp; 106 Fourth Avenue, New York.</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<div class="tnote">
-
-<h2>Transcriber Notes:</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents of
-the speakers. Those words were retained as-is. Possible misspellings
-in dialogues are not corrected if there is a chance that the
-misspellings were deliberate.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected
-unless otherwise noted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 22, &quot;aquiring&quot; was replaced with &quot;acquiring&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 23, &quot;induge&quot; was replaced with &quot;indulge&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 72, &quot;recived&quot; was replaced with &quot;received&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 84, &quot;decribed&quot; was replaced with &quot;described&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 99, &quot;Dona&quot; was replaced with &quot;Do&ntilde;a&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 106, &quot;countrary&quot; was replaced with &quot;contrary&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 121, &quot;Nunez&quot; was replaced with &quot;Nu&ntilde;ez&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 127, &quot;outbrust&quot; was replaced with &quot;outburst&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 129, &quot;volputuous&quot; was replaced with &quot;voluptuous&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 130, &quot;Gesticulatng&quot; was replaced with &quot;Gesticulating&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 169, &quot;Vila morta&quot; was replaced with &quot;Vilamorta&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 181, &quot;aproaching&quot; was replaced with &quot;approaching&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 187, &quot;tolerate him&quot; was replaced with &quot;to tolerate him&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 193, &quot;expreses&quot; was replaced with &quot;expresses&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 200, an extra single quotation mark was deleted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 238, &quot;consiousness&quot; was replaced with &quot;consciousness&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 240, &quot;thought ful&quot; was replaced with &quot;thoughtful&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 277, &quot;passsages&quot; was replaced with &quot;passages&quot;.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Swan of Vilamorta, by Emilia Pardo Bazán
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