Une page de Proust au hasard:
1316 - Mon ami, merci de toutes les bonnes choses
Je sentis que cette dernière phrase n’était qu’une 67 phrase et qu’Albertine n’aurait pas pu garder, pour jusqu’à sa mort, un si doux souvenir de cette promenade où elle n’avait certainement eu aucun plaisir puisqu’elle était impatiente de me quitter. Mais j’admirai aussi comme la cycliste, la golfeuse de Balbec, qui n’avait rien lu qu’Esther avant de me connaître, était douée et combien j’avais eu raison de trouver qu’elle s’était chez moi enrichie de qualités nouvelles qui la faisaient différente et plus complète. Et ainsi, la phrase que je lui avais dite à Balbec : « Je crois que mon amitié vous serait précieuse, que je suis justement la personne qui pourrait vous apporter ce qui vous manque » - je lui avais mis comme dédicace sur une photographie : « avec la certitude d’être providentiel », - cette phrase, que je disais sans y croire et uniquement pour lui faire trouver bénéfice à me voir et passer sur l’ennui qu’elle y pouvait avoir, cette phrase se trouvait, elle aussi, avoir été vraie. De même, en somme, quand je lui avais dit que je ne voulais pas la voir par peur de l’aimer, j’avais dit cela parce qu’au contraire je savais que dans la fréquentation constante mon amour s’amortissait et que la séparation l’exaltait, mais en réalité la fréquentation constante avait fait naître un besoin d’elle infiniment plus fort que l’amour des premiers temps de Balbec.
SUR LE MEME THEME:
- THE SWEET CHEAT GONE - PROUST
- ALBERTINE DISPARUE - The Sweet Cheat Gone - LE CHAGRIN ET L'OUBLI - Grief and Oblivion
- PROUST The Sweet Cheat Gone : Grief and Oblivion (Remembrance of Things Past)
- 1366 - Je ramenais avec moi les filles qui m’eussent le moins plu, je lissais des bandeaux à la vierge
- 1365 - Associées maintenant au souvenir de mon amour, les particularités physiques





1316 My dear, thank you for all the nice things
Marcel Proust
"Remembrance of Things Past" (In Search of Lost Time),
translated by C. K. Scott Moncrieff (1889-1930)
“My dear, thank you for all the nice things that you say to me, I am at your orders to countermand the Rolls, if you think that I can help in any way, as I am sure I can. You have only to let me know the name of your agent. You would let yourself be taken in by these people whose only thought is of selling things, and what would you do with a motorcar, you who never stir out of the house? I am deeply touched that you have kept a happy memory of our last drive together. You may be sure that for my part I shall never forget that drive in a twofold twilight (since night was falling and we were about to part) and that it will be effaced from my memory only when the darkness is complete.”
I felt that this final phrase was merely a phrase and that Albertine could not possibly retain until her death any such pleasant memory of this drive from which she had certainly derived no pleasure since she had been impatient to leave me. But I was impressed also, when I thought of the bicyclist, the golfer of Balbec, who had read nothing but Esther before she made my acquaintance, to find how richly endowed she was and how right I had been in thinking that she had in my house enriched herself with fresh qualities which made her different and more complete. And thus, the words that I had said to her at Balbec: “I feel that my friendship would be of value to you, that I am just the person who could give you what you lack”—I had written this upon a photograph which I gave her—“with the certainty that I was being providential”—these words, which I uttered without believing them and simply that she might find some advantage in my society which would outweigh any possible boredom, these words turned out to have been true as well. Similarly, for that matter, when I said to her that I did not wish to see her for fear of falling in love with her, I had said this because on the contrary I knew that in frequent intercourse my love grew cold and that separation kindled it, but in reality our frequent intercourse had given rise to a need of her that was infinitely stronger than my love in the first weeks at Balbec.