Story: the bed
Guy de Maupassant
On
a hot afternoon during last summer, the large auction rooms seemed asleep, and
the auctioneers were knocking down the various lots in a listless manner. In a
back room, on the first floor, two or three lots of old silk, ecclesiastical
vestments, were lying in a corner.
They were copes for solemn occasions, and graceful chasubles, on which
embroidered flowers surrounded symbolic letters on a yellowish ground, which
had become cream-colored, although it had originally been white. Some
second-hand dealers were there, two or three men with dirty beards, and a fat
woman with a big stomach, one of those women who deal in second-hand finery,
and who manage illicit love affairs, who are brokers in old and young human
flesh, just as much as they are in new and old clothes.
Presently a beautiful Louis XV. chasuble was put up for sale, which was as
pretty as the dress of a marchioness of that period; it had retained all its colours,
and was embroidered with lilies of the valley round the cross, and long blue
iris, which came up to the foot of the sacred emblem, and wreaths of roses in
the corners. When I had bought it, I noticed that there was a faint scent about
it, as if it were permeated with the remains of incense, or rather, as if it
were still pervaded by those delicate, sweet scents of by-gone years, which
seemed to be only the memory of perfumes, the soul of evaporated essences.
When I got it home, I wished to have a small chair of the same period covered
with it; and as I was handling it in order to take the necessary measures, I
felt some paper beneath my fingers, and when I cut the lining, some letters
fell at my feet. They were yellow with age, and the faint ink was the colour of
rust, and outside the sheet, which was folded in the fashion of years long
past, it was addressed in a delicate hand: To Monsieur l’Abbé d’Argence
The first three lines merely settled places of meeting, but here is the third:
"My Friend; I am very unwell, ill in fact, and I cannot leave my bed. The
rain is beating against my windows, and I lie dreaming comfortably and warmly
on my eider-down coverlet. I have a book of which I am very fond, and which
seems as if it really applied to me. Shall I tell you what it is? No, for you
would only scold me. Then, when I have read a little, I think, and will tell
you what about.
"Having been in bed for three days, I think about my bed, and even in my
sleep I meditate on it still, and I have concluded that the bed constitutes our
whole life; for we were born in it, we live in it, and we shall die in it. If,
therefore, I had Monsieur de Crébillon’s pen, I should write the history of a
bed, and what exciting and terrible, as well as delightful moving occurrences
would not such a book contain! What lessons and what subjects for moralizing
could one not draw from it, for everyone?
"You know my bed, my friend, but you will never guess how many things I
have discovered in it within the last three days, and how much more I love it,
in consequence. It seems to me to be inhabited, haunted, if I may say so, by a
number of people I never thought of, who, nevertheless, have left something of
themselves in that couch.
"Ah! I cannot understand people who buy new beds, beds to which no
memories or cares are attached. Mine, ours, which is so shabby, and so
spacious, must have held many existences in it, from birth to the grave. Think
of that, my friend; think of it all; review all those lives, a great part of
which was spent between these four posts, surrounded by these hangings
embroidered by human figures, which have seen so many things. What have they
seen during the three centuries since they were first put up?
"Here is a young woman lying on this bed. From time to time, she sighs,
and then she groans and cries out; her mother is with her, and presently a
little creature that makes a noise like a cat mewing, and which is all shrivelled
and wrinkled, comes from her. It is a male child to which she has given birth,
and the young mother feels happy in spite of her pain; she is nearly suffocated
with joy at that first cry, and stretches out her arms, and those around her
shed tears of pleasure; for that little morsel of humanity which has come from
her means the continuation of the family, the perpetuation of the blood, of the
heart, and of the soul of the old people, who are looking on, trembling with
excitement.
"Then, here are two lovers, who for the first time are flesh to flesh
together in that tabernacle of life. They tremble; but transported with
delight, they have the delicious sensation of being close together, and by degrees,
their lips meet. That divine kiss makes them one, that kiss, which is the gate
of a terrestrial heaven, that kiss which speaks of human delights, which
continually promises them, announces them, and precedes them. And their bed is
agitated like the tempestuous sea, and it bends and murmurs, and itself seems
to become animated and joyous, for the maddening mystery of love is being
accomplished on it. What is there sweeter, what more perfect in this world than
those embraces, which make one single being out of two, and which give to both
of them at the same moment the same thought, the same expectation, and the same
maddening pleasure, which descends upon them like a celestial and devouring
fire?
"Do you remember those lines from some old poet, which you read to me last
year? I do not remember who wrote them, but it may have been Rousard:
"When you and I in bed shall lie,
Lascivious we shall be,
Enlaced, playing a thousand tricks,
Of lovers, gamesomely.
"I
should like to have that verse embroidered on the top of my bed, where Pyramus
and Thisbe are continually looking at me out of their tapestry eyes.
"And think of death, my friend; of all those who have breathed out their
last sigh to God in this bed. For it is also the tomb of hopes ended, the door
which closes everything, after having been the one which lets in the world.
What cries, what anguish, what sufferings, what groans, how many arms stretched
out towards the past; what appeals to happiness that has vanished for ever;
what convulsions, what death-rattles, what gaping lips and distorted eyes have
there not been in this bed, from which I am writing to you, during the three
centuries that it has sheltered human beings!
"The bed, you must remember, is the symbol of life; I have discovered this
within the last three days. There is nothing good except the bed, and are not
some of our best moments spent in sleep?
"But then again, we suffer in bed! It is the refuge of those who are ill
and suffering; a place of repose and comfort for worn-out bodies, and, in a
word, the bed is part and parcel of humanity.
"Many other thoughts have struck me, but I have no time to note them down
for you, and then, should I remember them all? Besides that, I am so tired that
I mean to retire to my pillows, stretch myself out at full length, and sleep a
little. But be sure and come to see me at three o’clock to-morrow; perhaps I
may be better, and able to prove it to you.
"Good-bye, my friend;
here are
The With affection,
Ruben
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