Very woman (Sixtine)
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Very Woman, by Remy de Gourmont, Translated by J. L. Barrets
When Nature produces these masterpieces, she rarely offers them to the man who could best appreciate and be worthy of possessing them. Kant: Essay on the Beautiful .
They walked side by side, under the gloomy old firs whose heavy branches leaned towards the yellowing lawn.
Countess Aubry, with her charm of a negotiator of worldly loves, had just hastily brought them together, as though they were predestined for each other.
They were slightly acquainted already. They remembered having met during the past winter in the Marigny Avenue Salon, that haunt of miscarried glories, and, during the past week that they had been staying at the Château de Rabodanges (among several invalids of distinction) they had succeeded in exchanging a few vaguely suggestive words, a few affected witticisms, not without disdain for such a vain communion.
The one knew that Madame Sixtine Magne, a widow, had never held out her neck towards a new necklace—and believed it. The other knew that Hubert d'Entragues had dedicated himself, by inclination rather than by necessity, to the imperious craft of a man of letters. Her first impulse had been to consider him a cavalry captain, but the name captivated her, that name faded in history, so far as a pretty woman was concerned, and which a young man restored to all its freshness, under her eyes. Amorous and royal reminiscences whose auricular remembrance had remained in her head like a viol sound, like ripplings on fading silks, and suddenly with rustlings of steel—an admission with which her preciosity amused itself, perhaps, for she was very artful, through pride.
Entragues, on his side, was at the point of confessing to the young woman that she dazzled his imagination, but he would have had to tell her at the same time the origin—too fantastic not to be futile—of this wound, and he feared to have the air of inventing a tale.
Then, he reflected, her mind would work, she would try to please me, forcing herself to deliberate charms. The experiment would be warped. I want to know what is in her; I want to penetrate coldly into the mysterious brambles of this sacred wood.
Remy de Gourmont
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VERY WOMAN
(SIXTINE)
A CEREBRAL NOVEL
REMY DE GOURMONT
CONTENTS
THE DEAD LEAVES
MADAME DU BOYS
TRAVEL NOTES
REFLECTIONS
MORE TRAVEL NOTES
DREAM FIGURE
MARCELLE AND MARCELINE
THE TRANSPARENT CURTAIN OF TIME
THE PROMENADE OF SIN
THE UNLEAVENED DOUGH
DIAMOND DUST
THE ADORER
CHRISTUS PATIENS
THE FAUN
THE CARNAL HOUR
THE IDEAL BEES
THE ADORER
A COMPLETE WOMAN
NEW SUGGESTIONS
THE TWENTY-EIGHTH OF DECEMBER
THE MYSTIC BARK
THE SIMONIAC
THE ADORER
THE COLOR OF MARRIAGE
DEPARTURE
THE ADORER
THE EDUCATION OF MAIDENS
THE ESTHETIC THRILL
PANTOMIME
THE MAN AND THE PRETTY BEAST
THE INFAMY OF BEING HAPPY
INTOXICATION
AN EVENING IN SOCIETY
POETIC RAPTURE
THE ADORER
ANGER
THE ADORER
PRIDE
THE KEY TO THE COFFER
ULTIMATE PEACE