I admit I have an ugly fondness for generalizations, so perhaps I may be forgiven when I declare that there is always something weird about a girl who majors
in French. She has entered into her course of study, first of all, knowing full well that it can only lead to her becoming a French teacher, a grim affair, the
least of whose evils is poor pay, and the prospect of which should have been sufficient to send her straight into business or public relations. She has been
betrayed into the study of French, heedless of the terrible consequences, by her enchantment with this language, which has ruined more young American women
than any other foreign tongue. Second, if her studies were confined simply to grammar and vocabulary, then perhaps the French major would develop no
differently from those who study Spanish or German, but the unlucky girl who pursues her studies past the second year comes inevitably and headlong into
contact with French Literature, potentially one of the most destructive forces known to mankind; and she begins to relish such previously unglamorous elements
of her vocabulary as langueur and funeste, and, speaking English, inverts her adjectives to let one know that she sometimes even thinks in French. The writers
she comes to appreciate -- Breton, Baudelaire, Sartre, de Sade, Cocteau -- have an alienating effect, especially on her attitude toward love, and her manner of
expressing her emotions becomes difficult and theatrical; while those French writers whose influence might be healthy, such as Stendhal or Flaubert, she
dislikes and takes to reading in translation, where their effects on her thought and speech is negligible; or she willfully misreads Madame Bovary and La
Chartreuse, making dark romances of them. I gathered that she, in particular, considered herself "linked by destiny" (liee par le destin) both to
Nadja and to O. That is how a female French major thinks.