[An Old Maid by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link bookAn Old Maid CHAPTER VII 57/58
If Mademoiselle Cormon had been a reader or a student, and if there had existed in the department of the Orne a professor of anthropology, or even had she read Ariosto, the frightful disasters of her conjugal life would never have occurred.
She would probably have known why the Italian poet makes Angelica prefer Medoro, who was a blond Chevalier de Valois, to Orlando, whose mare was dead, and who knew no better than to fly into a passion.
Is not Medoro the mythic form for all courtiers of feminine royalty, and Orlando the myth of disorderly, furious, and impotent revolutions, which destroy but cannot produce? We publish, but without assuming any responsibility for it, this opinion of a pupil of Monsieur Ballanche. No information has reached us as to the fate of the negroes' heads in diamonds.
You may see Madame du Val-Noble every evening at the Opera. Thanks to the education given her by the Chevalier de Valois, she has almost the air of a well-bred woman. Madame du Bousquier still lives; is not that as much as to say she still suffers? After reaching the age of sixty--the period at which women allow themselves to make confessions--she said confidentially to Madame du Coudrai, that she had never been able to endure the idea of dying an old maid. ADDENDUM The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy. (Note: The Collection of Antiquities is a companion piece to The Old Maid.
In other Addendum appearances they are combined under the title of The Jealousies of a Country Town.) Bordin The Gondreville Mystery The Seamy Side of History The Commission in Lunacy Bousquier, Du (or Du Croisier or Du Bourguier) The Collection of Antiquities (companion piece) The Middle Classes Bousquier, Madame du (du Croisier) (Mlle.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|