Page:The Writings of Prosper Merimee-Volume 7.djvu/30

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

xiv PROSPER MERIMEE

haps unconsciously, in the most trifling matters. Is it not, for instance, your pride which is satisfied when I kiss your hand ? This, you have said to me, makes you happy, and to this sensation you abandon yourself, because a demon- stration of humihty is gratifying to your pride."

Four months later, while he is absent from Paris, after a more serious misunderstanding: "You are one of those chilly women of the North, who are governed only by the mind. . . . Farewell, since we can be friends only at a distance. When we have grown old, perhaps we shall meet again with pleasure." Then, with a word of affec- tion, he recovers his serenity. But the antagonism of their temperaments is bound to reappear. "Seldom do I reproach you, except for that lack of frankness, which keeps me constantly in a rage with you, compelled as I am always to search for your meaning under a disguise. . . . Why is it, when we have become all we are to each other, that you must reflect for several days before replying frankly to the simplest question of mine ? . . . Be- tween your reason and your heart, I never feel sure which will win; you do not know yourself, but you give the pref- erence always to your reason. ... If you have com- mitted any wrong, it is assuredly that preference which you give to your pride over all the tenderness of your nature. The first sentiment is to the second as a colossus to a pygmy. And that pride of yours is at bottom nothing but a kind of selfishness."

All this ended in a warm and lasting friendship. But do you not consider admirable his delightful manner of love-making? They met in the Louvre, at Versailles,