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One O'clock in the Morning
At last! I am alone! Nothing can be heard but the rumbling
of a few belated and weary cabs. For a few hours at least silence
will be ours, if not sleep. At last! the tyranny of the human
face has disappeared, and now there will be no one but myself
to make me suffer.
At last! I am allowed to relax in a bath of darkness! First
a double turn of the key in the lock. This turn of the key will,
it seems to me, increase my solitude and strengthen the barricades that, for the moment, separate me from the world.
Horrible life! Horrible city! Let us glance back over the
events of the day: saw several writers, one of them asking me
if you culd go to Russia by land (he thought Russia was
an island, I suppose); disagreed liberally with the editor of a
review who to all my objections kept saying: "Here we are on
the side of respectability," implying that all the other periodicals
were run by rascals; bowed to twenty or more persons of whom
fifteen were unknown to me; distributed hand shakes in about
the same proportion without having first taken the precaution
of buying gloves; to kill time during a shower, dropped in on a
dancer who asked me to design her a costume for Venustre;
went to pay court to a theatrical director who in dismissing
me said: "Perhaps you would do well to see Z....; he is the
dullest, stupidest and most celebrated of our authors; with him
you might get somewhere. Consult him and then we'll see";
boasted (why?) of several ugly things I never did, and cravenly
denied some other misdeeds that I had accomplished with the
greatest delight; offese of fanfaronnade, crime against human
dignity; refused a slight favor to a friend and gave a written
recommendation to a perfect rogue; Lord! let's hope that's all!
Dissatisfied with everything, dissatisfied with myself, I long
to redeem myself and to restore my pride in the silence and
solitude of the night. Souls of those whom I have loved, souls
of those whom I have sung, strengthen me, sustain me, keep me
from the vanities of the world and its contaminating fumes; and
You, dear God! grant me grace to produce a few beautiful verses
to prove to myself that I am not the lowest of men, that I am
not inferior to those whom I despise.
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