VERA
by Villiers de l'Isle-Adam
From Contes Cruels
Translated by Hamish Miles
Scanned into the electronic domain by Larry Roberts - larrybob@io.com
[To MME. LA COMTESSE D' OSMOY]
The form of the body is more
essential to him than its substance.
LA PHYSIOLOGIE MODERNE.
Love, said Solomon, is stronger than Death. And
truly, its mysterious power knows no bounds.
Not many years since, an autumn evening was
falling over Paris. Towards the gloomy Faubourg Saint-Germain carriages
were driving, with lamps already lit, returning belatedly from the
afternoon drive in the Bois. Before the gateway of a vast seigniorial
mansion, set about with immemorial gardens, one of them drew up. The
arch was surmounted by a stone escutcheon with the arms of the ancient
family of the Counts d'Athol, to wit: on a field azure, a mullet
argent, with the motto Pallida Victrix under the coronet with
its upturned ermine of the princely cap. The heavy folding doors swung
apart, and there descended a man between thirty and thirty-five, in
mourning clothes, his face of deathly pallor. On the steps silent
attendants raised aloft their torches, but with no eye for them he
mounted the flight and went within. It was the Count d'Athol.
With unsteady tread he ascended the white
staircases leading to the room where, that very morning, he had laid
within a coffin, velvet-lined and covered with violets, amid billowing
cambric, the lady of his delight, his bride of the gathering paleness,
Vera, his despair.
At the top the quiet door swung across the
carpet. He lifted the hangings.
All the objects in the room were just where the
Countess had left them the evening before. Death, in his suddenness,
had hurled the bolt. Last night his loved one had swooned in such
penetrating joys, had surrendered in embraces so perfect, that her
heart, weary with ecstasy, had given way. Suddenly her lips had been
covered with a flood of mortal scarlet, and she had barely had time to
give her husband one kiss of farewell, smiling, with not one word; and
then her long lashes, like veils of mourning, had fallen over the
lovely light of her eyes.
This day without a name had passed.
Towards noon the Count d'Athol, after the dread
ceremonies of the family vault, had dismissed the bleak escort at the
cemetery. Shutting himself up within the four marble walls, alone with
her whom he had buried, he had closed behind him the iron door of the
mausoleum. Incense was burning on a tripod before the coffin, bestarred
by a shining crown of lamps over the pillow of this young woman, who
was now no more.
Standing there lost in his thoughts, with his
only sentiment a hopeless longing, he had stayed all day long in the
tomb. At six o'clock, when dusk fell, he had come out from the sacred
enclosure. Closing the sepulchre, he had torn the silver key from the
lock, and, stretching up on the topmost step of the threshold, he had
cast it softly into the interior of the tomb. Through the trefoil over
the doorway, he thrust it on to the pavement inside.--Why had he done
this? Doubtless from some mysterious resolve to return no more.
And now he was viewing again the widowed chamber.
The window, under the great drapings of mauve
cashmere with their broideries of gold, stood open; one last ray of
evening lit up the great portrait of the departed one in its frame of
old wood. Looking around him, the Count saw the robe lying where, the
evening before, it had been flung upon the chair; on the mantel lay the
jewels, the necklace of pearls, the half-closed fan, the heavy flasks
of perfume which She no longer inhaled. On the ebony bed with its
twisted pillars, still unmade, beside the pillow where the mask of the
divine, the adored head, was still visible amidst the lace, his eye
fell on the handkerchief stained with drops of blood, whereon for an
instant the wings of her youthful spirit had quivered; on the open
piano, upholding a melody forever unfinished; on the Indian flowers
which she had gathered with her own hands in the conservatory, and
which now were dying in vases of old Saxony ware; and there at the foot
of the bed, on the tiny slippers of oriental velvet, on which glittered
a laughing device of her name, stitched with pearls: Qui verra Ve'ra
l'ai- mera. And only yesterday morning the bare feet of the loved one
were still playing there, kissed at every step by the swan's-down!--And
there, there in the shadow, was the clock whose spring he had snapped,
so that never again should it tell other hours.
Thus had she vanished...! But whither...?
And living now?--To what end...? It was impossible, it was absurd!
And the Count plunged into the darkness of
unknown thoughts.
He thought of all the past existence.--Six months
had gone by since this marriage. Was it not abroad, at an embassy ball,
that he had set eyes upon her for the first time? Yes. That moment rose
up again before his eyes, in all its distinctness. She appeared to him
there, radiant. That night their glances had met, and inwardly they had
recognized their affinity, their obligation to a lasting love.
Deceitful talk, observant smiles, insinuations,
all the difficulties thrust up by the world to delay the inevitable
happiness of those who belong to each other--everything had vanished
before the calm certitude which, at that very moment, they had
exchanged. Weary of the insipid pomposities of her circle, Vera had
come to meet him with the first hindrance that showed itself, and so
straightened out in queenly fashion those dreary preliminaries which
squander the precious days of life.
But ah! at their first words the empty comments
of outsiders seemed no more than a flight of night-birds passing back
into their darkness. What smiles they exchanged! What ineffable
embraces were theirs!
And yet their nature was strange, strange in the
extreme! They were two beings gifted with marvelous senses, but
exclusively terrestrial. Sensations were prolonged within them with
disturbing intensity, and in experiencing them they lost consciousness
of themselves. On the other hand, certain ideas, those of the soul for
instance, of the infinite, of God Himself, were as if veiled
from their understanding. The faith of great numbers of living persons
in supernatural things was for them only a matter for vague
astonishment; a sealed book wherewith they had no concern, being
qualified neither to justify nor to condemn. And so, recognizing fully
that the world was something foreign to themselves, they had isolated
themselves immediately upon their union in this ancient sombre mansion,
where the noises of the outside world were deadened by the dense
foliage of the gardens.
There the two lovers plunged into the ocean of
those enjoyments, languorous and perverse, in which the spirit is
merged with the mysteries of the flesh. They exhausted the violence of
desires, the tremors, the distraught longings of their tenderness. They
became each the very heart-beat of the other. In them the spirit flowed
so completely into the body that their forms seemed to them to be
instruments of comprehension, and that the blazing links of their
kisses chained them together in a fusion of the ideal. A long-drawn
rapture! And suddenly--the spell was broken! The terrible accident
sundered them. Their arms had been entwined. What shadow had seized
from his arms his dead beloved? Dead? No: is the soul of the
violoncello snatched away in the cry of its breaking string?
The hours passed.
Through the casement he watched the night
advancing in the heavens: and Night became personal to
him--seeming like a queen walking into exile, with melancholy on her
brow, while Venus, the diamond clasp of her mourning gown, gleamed
there above the trees, alone, lost in the depths of azure.
"It is Vera," he thought.
At the name, spoken under his breath, he shivered
like a man awakening, and then, straightening himself, looked round
him.
The objects in the room were now lighted by a
glow which till then had been indefinite, that of a sanctuary-lamp,
turning the darkness into deep blue; and now the night which had
climbed the firmament made it seem like another star in here. It was
the incense-perfumed lamp of an ikon, a family reliquary belonging to
Vera. The triptych of precious antique wood was hung by its platted
Russian esparto between the mirror and the picture. A reflection from
the gold of its interior fell quivering on to the necklace, among the
jewels on the mantel.
The circling halo of the Madonna in her sky-blue
gown shone, patterned into a rose by the Byzantine cross, whose
delicate red outline, melted in the reflection, darkened with a
tincture of blood this orient gleaming in its pearls. From her
childhood Vera had used to cast her great eyes of compassion on the
pure and maternal features of the hereditary Madonna; her nature, alas!
allowed her to consecrate only a superstitious love to the
figure, but this she offered sometimes, naively and thoughtfully, when
she passed in front of the lamp.
At the sight of this the Count, touched in the
most secret places of his soul, straightened himself, and quickly blew
out the holy flame. Then, feeling with outstretched hand in the gloom
for a bell-cord, he rang.
A servant appeared, an old man attired in black.
In his hand was a lamp; he set it down before the portrait of the
Countess. A shiver of superstitious terror ran through him as he turned
and saw his master standing erect and smiling as if nothing had come to
pass.
"Raymond," said the Count in calm tones, "we
are worn out with fatigue this evening, the Countess and I. You
will serve supper about ten o'clock.--And by the way, we have made up
our minds that from to-morrow we shall isolate ourselves here more
completely than ever. None of my servants, except yourself, must pass
the night under this roof. You will send them three years' wages, and
they must go. Then you will close the bar of the gateway, and light the
torches downstairs in the dining-room; you will be enough for our
needs. For the future we shall receive nobody."
The old man was trembling, watching him
attentively.
The Count lit a cigar and went down into the
gardens.
At first the servant imagined that grief, too
crushing, too desperate, had unhinged his master's mind. He had been
familiar with him from his childhood, and instantly understood that the
shock of too sudden an awakening could easily be fatal to this
sleep-walker. His duty, to begin with, was respect for such a secret
He bowed his head. A devoted complicity in this
religious phantasy...? To obey...? To continue to serve them
without taking heed of Death?--What a strange fancy! Would it endure
for one night...? To-morrow perhaps, alas...!
Who could tell...? Maybe... But after all, a sacred project! What right
had he to reflect like this...?
He left the chamber, carried out his orders to
the letter, and that same evening the unwonted mode of life began.
A terrible mirage--this is what had to be brought
into being!
The pain of the first days faded quickly away.
Raymond, at first with stupefaction, afterwards from a sort of
deference and fondness, had adapted himself so skillfully to a natural
demeanour, that before three weeks had passed he felt at moments that
he was himself the dupe of his good-will. The suppressed thought was
fading! Sometimes, experiencing a kind of dizziness, he felt compelled
to assure himself that the Countess was no more, positively was dead.
He became adept in the melancholy pretence, and every moment he grew
more forgetful of reality. Before long he needed to reflect more than
once to convince himself and pull himself together. He realized clearly
that in the end he would surrender utterly to the terrifying magnetism
wherewith the Count, little by little, was infusing the atmosphere
around them. A fear came over him, a quiet, uncertain fear.
D'Athol, in fact, was living in an absolute
denial of the fact of his loved one's death. So closely was the form of
the young woman fused with his own that he could not but find her
always with him. Now, on a garden seat on sunny days, he was reading
aloud the poems that she loved. Now, in the evening, by the fireside,
with two cups of tea on the little round table, he was chattering with
the Illusion, who, for his eyes, sat smiling there in the other
arm-chair.
Days, nights, weeks sped by. Neither one nor the
other knew what they were bringing to pass. And strange happenings were
now taking place, so that it became hard to distinguish how far the
real and the imaginary coincided. A presence floated in the air. A form
was struggling to become visible, to weave some pattern of its being
upon the space no longer within its measure.
D'Athol lived a twofold life, like a visionary.
The glimpse of a pale and gentle face, caught in a flash, within the
twinkling of an eye; a faint chord struck on the piano, suddenly; a
kiss that closed his lips at the instant of his speaking; the
affinities of feminine thoughts which awoke within him in
response to the words he uttered; a doubling of his own self which made
him feel as if he were in some fluid mist; the perfume, the
intoxicating, sweet perfume of his beloved by his side; and at night,
betwixt waking and sleeping, words which he heard
low-spoken--everything pointed to one thing: a negation of Death
exalted finally into an unknown force!
Once d'Athol felt and saw her so clearly beside
him that he took her in his arms. But with the movement she vanished.
"Poor child!" he murmured, smiling, and fell
asleep again, like a lover repulsed by his smiling, drowsy mistress.
On her birthday, he placed in pleasantry
some everlastings amid the bouquet of flowers which he laid on Vera's
pillow.
"Because she imagines that she's dead!" said he.
In the end, by reason of the deep and
all-compelling will of d'Athol, who thus from the strength of his love
wrought the very life and presence of his wife into the lonely mansion,
this mode of life acquired a gloomy and persuasive magic. Raymond
himself no longer felt any alarm, having become gradually used to these
impressions.
The glimpse of a black velvet robe at the bend of
a pathway; the call of a laughing voice in the drawing-room; a bell
rung when he awoke in the morning, just at it used to be--all this had
become familiar to him: the dead woman, one might have thought, was
playing with the invisible, as a child might. So well beloved did she
feel herself! It was altogether natural.
A year had gone by.
On the evening of the Anniversary the Count was
sitting by the fire in Vera's room. He had just finished reading her
the last verses of a Florentine tale, Callimachus, and he
closed the book.
"Douschka," he said, pouring himself out
some tea," do you remember the Vallee-des-Roses, and the banks of the
Lahn, and the castle of Quatre-Tours? Do you? Didn't that story bring
them back to you?"
He rose, and in the bluish glass he saw himself
paler than his wont. He took up a bracelet of pearls in a goblet and
gazed at them attentively. Vera had taken the pearls from her arm (had
she not?) just a little time ago, before disrobing, and the pearls were
still warm, and their water softened, as by the warmth of her flesh.
And here was the opal of that Siberian necklace; so well did it love
Vera's fair bosom that, when sometimes she forgot it for awhile, it
would grow pale in its golden network, as if sick and languishing. (For
that, in days gone by, the Countess used to love her devoted trinket!)
And now this evening, the opal was gleaming as if it had just been left
off, as if it were still infused with the rare magnetism of the dead
beauty. As he set down the necklace and the precious stone, the count
touched accidentally the cambric handkerchief: the drops of blood upon
it were damp and red, like carnations on snow! And there, on the
piano-- who had turned the last page of that melody out of the past?
Why, the sacred lamp had relit itself, there in the reliquary! Yes, its
gilded flame threw a mystic light upon the face of the Madonna and on
her closed eyes! And those eastern flowers, new-gathered, opening and
blooming in those old Saxony vases--whose hand had just placed them
there? The whole room seemed to be happy, seemed to be gifted with
life, in some fashion more significant, more intense than usual. But
nothing could surprise the Count! So normal did all appear to him, that
he did not so much as notice the hour striking on that clock which
through the whole long year had stood still.
That evening one would have said that, from out
of the depths of the darkness, the Countess Vera was striving (and
striving how adorably!) to come back to this room, whose every corner
was impregnate with her own self! She had left behind so much of
herself there! Everything that had gone to make up her existence was
drawing her back thither. Her charm hung suspended in its air. The
prolonged force sprung from her husband's impassioned will must have
loosened the vague bonds of the Invisible about her...
She was necessitated there. All that she
loved was there.
She must have longed, surely, to come and smile
to herself in that mysterious mirror wherein so often she had admired
the lilies of her countenance. Yes, down there amid the violets, there
beneath the cold and darkened lamps in the vault, in her loneliness,
she had started, the lovely one, the dead one; she had shuddered, the
divine one, shuddered as she gazed on the silver key flung upon the
slabs. She longed to come to him, she in her turn! And her will
vanished in the idea of the incense and the isolation. Death is a final
and binding term only for those who cherish hopes from the heavens; but
for her was not the final term the embrace of Death and the Heavens and
Life? And there, in the gloom, the solitary kiss of her husband was
drawing forth her own lips. And the vanished sound of the melodies, the
intoxicating words of days gone by, the stuffs which had covered her
body and still held its perfume, those magical jewels which still in
their obscure sympathy longed for her, and above all the overwhelming
and absolute impression of her presence, a feeling shared in the end
even by the things themselves-- everything had been calling, had been
drawing her thither for so long now, and by such insensible degrees,
that, cured at last of somnolent Death, there was lacking nothing, save
only Her alone.
Ah, Ideas are living beings! The Count had
hollowed out in the air the shape of his love, and necessity demanded
that into this void should pour the only being that was homogeneous to
it, for otherwise the Universe would have crashed into chaos. And at
that instant the impression came, final, simple, absolute, that She
must be there, there in the room! Of this he was as calmly certain
as of his own existence, and all the objects about him were saturated
with this conviction. One saw it there! And now, since nothing was
lacking save only Vera herself, outwardly and tangibly there, it
was inevitably ordained that there she should be, and that for an
instant the great Dream of Life and Death should set its infinite gates
ajar! By faith the pathway of resurrection had been driven right to
her! Joyfully a clear burst of musical laughter lit up the nuptial bed.
The Count turned round. And there, before his eyes, creature of memory
and of will, ethereal, an elbow leaning on the lace of the pillow, one
hand buried in her thick black hair, her lips deliciously parted in a
smile that held a paradise of rare delights, lovely with the beauty
that breaks the heart, there at last the Countess Vera was gazing on
him, and sleep still lingering within her eyes.
"Roger!" spoke the distant voice.
He came over to her side. In joy, in divine,
oblivious, deathless joy, their lips were united!
And then they perceived, then, that they
were in reality but one single being.
The hours flew by in their strange flight,
brushing with the tips of their wings this ecstasy wherein heaven and
earth for the first time were mingled.
Suddenly, as if struck by some fatal memory, the
Count d'Athol started.
"Ah, I remember!" he cried." I remember now! What
am I doing?--You, you are dead!"
And at that moment, when that word was spoken,
the mystic lamp before the ikon was extinguished. The pale, thin light
of morning--a dreary, grey, raining morning--filtered through the gaps
of the curtain into the room. The candles grew pale and went out, and
there was only the acrid smoke from their glowing wicks; beneath a
layer of chilling ashes the fire disappeared; within a few minutes the
flowers faded and shrivelled up; and little by little the pendulum of
the clock slowed down once more into immobility. The certitude of all
the objects took sudden flight. The opal stone, turned dead, gleamed no
longer; the stains of blood upon the cambric by her side had faded
likewise; and the vision, in all its ardent whiteness, effacing itself
between those despairing arms which sought in vain to clasp it still,
returned into thin air. It was lost. One far faint sigh of farewell,
distinct, reached even to the soul of the Count. He rose. He had just
perceived that he was alone. His dream had melted away at one single
touch. With one single word he had snapped the magnetic thread of his
glittering pattern. And the atmosphere now was that of the dead.
Like those tear-shaped drops of glass, of chance
formation, so solid that a hammer-blow on their thick part will not
shatter them, yet such that they will crumble instantly into an
impalpable dust if the narrow end, finer than a needle's point, be
broken--all had vanished.
"Oh!" he murmured, "then all is over!--She is
lost...
and all alone!--What path can bring me to you now? Show me the road
that can lead me to you!"
Suddenly, as if in reply, a shining object fell
with a metallic ring from off the nuptial bed, onto the black fur: a
ray of that hateful, earthly day lit it up. Stooping down, the forsaken
one seized it, and, as he recognized the object, his face was illumined
with a sublime smile. It was the key of the tomb.
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