0160 Un instant après je prenais congé de la marquise
Si Swann était arrivé alors avant même que je l’eusse reprise, cette lettre de la sincérité de laquelle je trouvais qu’il avait été si insensé de ne pas s’être laissé persuader, peut-être aurait-il vu que c’était lui qui avait raison. Car m’approchant de Gilberte qui, renversée sur sa chaise, me disait de prendre la lettre et ne me la tendait pas, je me sentis si attiré par son corps que je lui dis:
— Voyons, empêchez-moi de l’attraper nous allons voir qui sera le plus fort.
Elle la mit dans son dos, je passai mes mains derrière son cou, en soulevant les nattes de cheveux qu’elle portait sur les épaules, soit que ce fût encore de son âge, soit que sa mère voulût la faire paraître plus longtemps enfant, afin de se rajeunir elle-même; nous luttions, arc-boutés. Je tâchais de l’attirer, elle résistait; ses pommettes enflammées par l’effort étaient rouges et rondes comme des cerises; elle riait comme si je l’eusse chatouillée; je la tenais serrée entre mes jambes comme un arbuste après lequel j’aurais voulu grimper; et, au milieu de la gymnastique que je faisais, sans qu’en fût à peine augmenté l’essoufflement que me donnaient l’exercice musculaire et l’ardeur du jeu, je répandis, comme quelques gouttes de sueur arrachées par l’effort, mon plaisir auquel je ne pus pas même m’attarder le temps d’en connaître le goût; aussitôt je pris la lettre. Alors, Gilberte me dit avec bonté:
— «Vous savez, si vous voulez, nous pouvons lutter encore un peu.»
Peut-être avait-elle obscurément senti que mon jeu avait un autre objet que celui que j’avais avoué, mais n’avait-elle pas su remarquer que je l’avais atteint. Et moi qui craignais qu’elle s’en fût aperçue (et un certain mouvement rétractile et contenu de pudeur offensée qu’elle eut un instant après, me donna à penser que je n’avais pas eu tort de le craindre), j’acceptai de lutter encore, de peur qu’elle pût croire que je ne m’étais proposé d’autre but que celui après quoi je n’avais plus envie que de rester tranquille auprès d’elle.


0160 A moment later I said good-bye to the ‘marquise
Marcel Proust
"Remembrance of Things Past" (In Search of Lost Time),
translated by C. K. Scott Moncrieff (1889-1930)
A moment later I said good-bye to the ‘marquise,’ and went out accompanied by Françoise, whom I left to return to Gilberte. I caught sight of her at once, on a chair, behind the clump of laurels. She was there so as not to be seen by her friends: they were playing at hide-and-seek. I went and sat down by her side. She had on a flat cap which drooped forwards over her eyes, giving her the same ‘underhand,’ brooding, crafty look which I had remarked in her that first time at Comb ray. I asked her if there was not some way for me to have it out with her father, face to face. Gilberte said that she had suggested that to him, but that he had not thought it of any use. “Look,” she went on, “don’t go away without your letter; I must run along to the others, as they haven’t caught me.”
Had Swann appeared on the scene then before I had recovered it, this letter, by the sincerity of which I felt that he had been so unreasonable in not letting himself be convinced, perhaps he would have seen that it was he who had been in the right. For as I approached Gilberte, who, leaning back in her chair, told me to take the letter but did not hold it out to me, I felt myself so irresistibly attracted by her body that I said to her: “Look! You try to stop me from getting it; we’ll see which is the stronger.”
She thrust it behind her back; I put my arms round her neck, raising the plaits of hair which she wore over her shoulders, either because she was still of an age for that or because her mother chose to make her look a child for a little longer so that she herself might still seem young; and we wrestled, locked together. I tried to pull her towards me, she resisted; her cheeks, inflamed by the effort, were as red and round as two cherries; she laughed as though I were tickling her; I held her gripped between my legs like a young tree which I was trying to climb; and, in the middle of my gymnastics, when I was already out of breath with the muscular exercise and the heat of the game, I felt, as it were a few drops of sweat wrung from me by the effort, my pleasure express itself in a form which I could not even pause for a moment to analyse; immediately I snatched the letter from her. Whereupon Gilberte said, good-naturedly:
“You know, if you like, we might go on wrestling for a little.”
Perhaps she was dimly conscious that my game had had another object than that which I had avowed, but too dimly to have been able to see that I had attained it. And I, who was afraid that she had seen (and a slight recoil, as though of offended modesty which she made and checked a moment later made me think that my fear had not been unfounded), agreed to go on wrestling, lest she should suppose that I had indeed no other object than that, after which I wished only to sit quietly by her side.