[The Alkahest by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link bookThe Alkahest CHAPTER III 1/18
The marriage took place at the beginning of the year 1795.
Husband and wife came to Douai that the first days of their union might be spent in the patriarchal house of the Claes,--the treasures of which were increased by those of Mademoiselle de Temninck, who brought with her several fine pictures of Murillo and Velasquez, the diamonds of her mother, and the magnificent wedding-gifts, made to her by her brother, the Duke of Casa-Real. Few women were ever happier than Madame Claes.
Her happiness lasted for fifteen years without a cloud, diffusing itself like a vivid light into every nook and detail of her life.
Most men have inequalities of character which produce discord, and deprive their households of the harmony which is the ideal of a home; the majority are blemished with some littleness or meanness, and meanness of any kind begets bickering. One man is honorable and diligent, but hard and crabbed; another kindly, but obstinate; this one loves his wife, yet his will is arbitrary and uncertain; that other, preoccupied by ambition, pays off his affections as he would a debt, bestows the luxuries of wealth but deprives the daily life of happiness,--in short, the average man of social life is essentially incomplete, without being signally to blame.
Men of talent are as variable as barometers; genius alone is intrinsically good. For this reason unalloyed happiness is found at the two extremes of the moral scale.
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