Then
she went out with an air of resignation which seemed to imply:
"What a dreadful thing for parents to have a child like this!"
A moment later she returned to say that they were still at the
ice stage and that it was impossible for the butler to deliver the
note at once, in front of everybody; but that when the finger-bowls
were put round he would find a way of slipping it into Mamma's
hand. At once my anxiety subsided; it was now no longer (as it had
been a moment ago) until to-morrow that I had lost my mother, for
my little line was going—to annoy her, no doubt, and doubly so
because this contrivance would make me ridiculous in Swann's
eyes—but was going all the same to admit me, invisibly and by
stealth, into the same room as herself, was going to whisper from
me into her ear; for that forbidden and unfriendly dining-room,
where but a moment ago the ice itself—with burned nuts in it—and
the finger-bowls seemed to me to be concealing pleasures that were
mischievous and of a mortal sadness because Mamma was tasting of
them and I was far away, had opened its doors to me and, like a
ripe fruit which bursts through its skin, was going to pour out
into my intoxicated heart the gushing sweetness of Mamma's
attention while she was reading what I had written. Now I was no
longer separated from her; the barriers were down; an exquisite
thread was binding us. Besides, that was not all, for surely Mamma
would come.
As for the agony through which I had just passed, I imagined
that Swann would have laughed heartily at it if he had read my
letter and had guessed its purpose; whereas, on the contrary, as I
was to learn in due course, a similar anguish had been the bane of
his life for many years, and no one perhaps could have understood
my feelings at that moment so well as himself; to him, that anguish
which lies in knowing that the creature one adores is in some place
of enjoyment where oneself is not and cannot follow—to him that
anguish came through Love, to which it is in a sense predestined,
by which it must be equipped and adapted; but when, as had befallen
me, such an anguish possesses one's soul before Love has yet
entered into one's life, then it must drift, awaiting Love's
coming, vague and free, without precise attachment, at the disposal
of one sentiment to-day, of another to-morrow, of filial piety or
affection for a comrade. And the joy with which I first bound
myself apprentice, when Françoise returned to tell me that my
letter would be delivered; Swann, too, had known well that false
joy which a friend can give us, or some relative of the woman we
love, when on his arrival at the house or theatre where she is to
be found, for some ball or party or 'first-night' at which he is to
meet her, he sees us wandering outside, desperately awaiting some
opportunity of communicating with her. He recognises us, greets us
familiarly, and asks what we are doing there. And when we invent a
story of having some urgent message to give to his relative or
friend, he assures us that nothing could be more simple, takes us
in at the door, and promises to send her down to us in five
minutes. How much we love him—as at that moment I loved
Françoise—the good-natured intermediary who by a single word has
made supportable, human, almost propitious the inconceivable,
infernal scene of gaiety in the thick of which we had been
imagining swarms of enemies, perverse and seductive, beguiling away
from us, even making laugh at us, the woman whom we love. If we are
to judge of them by him, this relative who has accosted us and who
is himself an initiate in those cruel mysteries, then the other
guests cannot be so very demoniacal. Those inaccessible and
torturing hours into which she had gone to taste of unknown
pleasures—behold, a breach in the wall, and we are through it.
Behold, one of the moments whose series will go to make up their
sum, a moment as genuine as the rest, if not actually more
important to ourself because our mistress is more intensely a part
of it; we picture it to ourselves, we possess it, we intervene upon
it, almost we have created it: namely, the moment in which he goes
to tell her that we are waiting there below. And very probably the
other moments of the party will not be essentially different, will
contain nothing else so exquisite or so well able to make us
suffer, since this kind friend has assured us that "Of course, she
will be delighted to come down! It will be far more amusing for her
to talk to you than to be bored up there." Alas! Swann had learned
by experience that the good intentions of a third party are
powerless to control a woman who is annoyed to find herself pursued
even into a ball-room by a man whom she does not love. Too often,
the kind friend comes down again alone.
My mother did not appear, but with no attempt to safeguard my
self-respect (which depended upon her keeping up the fiction that
she had asked me to let her know the result of my search for
something or other) made Françoise tell me, in so many words "There
is no answer"—words I have so often, since then, heard the
hall-porters in 'mansions' and the flunkeys in gambling-clubs and
the like, repeat to some poor girl, who replies in bewilderment:
"What! he's said nothing? It's not possible. You did give him my
letter, didn't you? Very well, I shall wait a little longer." And
just as she invariably protests that she does not need the extra
gas which the porter offers to light for her, and sits on there,
hearing nothing further, except an occasional remark on the weather
which the porter exchanges with a messenger whom he will send off
suddenly, when he notices the time, to put some customer's wine on
the ice; so, having declined Françoise's offer to make me some tea
or to stay beside me, I let her go off again to the servants' hall,
and lay down and shut my eyes, and tried not to hear the voices of
my family who were drinking their coffee in the garden.
But after a few seconds I realised that, by writing that line to
Mamma, by approaching—at the risk of making her angry—so near to
her that I felt I could reach out and grasp the moment in which I
should see her again, I had cut myself off from the possibility of
going to sleep until I actually had seen her, and my heart began to
beat more and more painfully as I increased my agitation by
ordering myself to keep calm and to acquiesce in my ill-fortune.
Then, suddenly, my anxiety subsided, a feeling of intense happiness
coursed through me, as when a strong medicine begins to take effect
and one's pain vanishes: I had formed a resolution to abandon all
attempts to go to sleep without seeing Mamma, and had decided to
kiss her at all costs, even with the certainty of being in disgrace
with her for long afterwards, when she herself came up to bed. The
tranquillity which followed my anguish made me extremely alert, no
less than my sense of expectation, my thirst for and my fear of
danger.
Noiselessly I opened the window and sat down on the foot of my
bed; hardly daring to move in case they should hear me from below.
Things outside seemed also fixed in mute expectation, so as not to
disturb the moonlight which, duplicating each of them and throwing
it back by the extension, forwards, of a shadow denser and more
concrete than its substance, had made the whole landscape seem at
once thinner and longer, like a map which, after being folded up,
is spread out upon the ground. What had to move—a leaf of the
chestnut-tree, for instance—moved. But its minute shuddering,
complete, finished to the least detail and with utmost delicacy of
gesture, made no discord with the rest of the scene, and yet was
not merged in it, remaining clearly outlined. Exposed upon this
surface of silence, which absorbed nothing from them, the most
distant sounds, those which must have come from gardens at the far
end of the town, could be distinguished with such exact 'finish'
that the impression they gave of coming from a distance seemed due
only to their 'pianissimo' execution, like those movements on muted
strings so well performed by the orchestra of the Conservatoire
that, although one does not lose a single note, one thinks all the
same that they are being played somewhere outside, a long way from
the concert hall, so that all the old subscribers, and my
grandmother's sisters too, when Swann had given them his seats,
used to strain their ears as if they had caught the distant
approach of an army on the march, which had not yet rounded the
corner of the Rue de Trévise.
I was well aware that I had placed myself in a position than
which none could be counted upon to involve me in graver
consequences at my parents' hands; consequences far graver, indeed,
than a stranger would have imagined, and such as (he would have
thought) could follow only some really shameful fault. But in the
system of education which they had given me faults were not
classified in the same order as in that of other children, and I
had been taught to place at the head of the list (doubtless because
there was no other class of faults from which I needed to be more
carefully protected) those in which I can now distinguish the
common feature that one succumbs to them by yielding to a nervous
impulse. But such words as these last had never been uttered in my
hearing; no one had yet accounted for my temptations in a way which
might have led me to believe that there was some excuse for my
giving in to them, or that I was actually incapable of holding out
against them. Yet I could easily recognise this class of
transgressions by the anguish of mind which preceded, as well as by
the rigour of the punishment which followed them; and I knew that
what I had just done was in the same category as certain other sins
for which I had been severely chastised, though infinitely more
serious than they. When I went out to meet my mother as she herself
came up to bed, and when she saw that I had remained up so as to
say good night to her again in the passage, I should not be allowed
to stay in the house a day longer, I should be packed off to school
next morning; so much was certain. Very good: had I been obliged,
the next moment, to hurl myself out of the window, I should still
have preferred such a fate. For what I wanted now was Mamma, and to
say good night to her. I had gone too far along the road which led
to the realisation of this desire to be able to retrace my
steps.
I could hear my parents' footsteps as they went with Swann; and,
when the rattle of the gate assured me that he had really gone, I
crept to the window. Mamma was asking my father if he had thought
the lobster good, and whether M. Swann had had some of the
coffee-and-pistachio ice. "I thought it rather so-so," she was
saying; "next time we shall have to try another flavour."
"I can't tell you," said my great-aunt, "what a change I find in
Swann. He is quite antiquated!" She had grown so accustomed to
seeing Swann always in the same stage of adolescence that it was a
shock to her to find him suddenly less young than the age she still
attributed to him. And the others too were beginning to remark in
Swann that abnormal, excessive, scandalous senescence, meet only in
a celibate, in one of that class for whom it seems that the great
day which knows no morrow must be longer than for other men, since
for such a one it is void of promise, and from its dawn the moments
steadily accumulate without any subsequent partition among his
offspring.
"I fancy he has a lot of trouble with that wretched wife of his,
who 'lives' with a certain Monsieur de Charlus, as all Combray
knows. It's the talk of the town."
My mother observed that, in spite of this, he had looked much
less unhappy of late.
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