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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Commission in Lunacy, by Honore de Balzac
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Commission in Lunacy
+
+Author: Honore de Balzac
+
+Translator: Clara Bell
+
+Release Date: August, 1998 [Etext #1410]
+Posting Date: February 24, 2010
+Last Updated: November 22, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Bickers, and Dagny
+
+
+
+
+
+THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY
+
+
+By Honore De Balzac
+
+
+Translated By Clara Bell
+
+
+
+ DEDICATION
+
+ Dedicated to Monsieur le Contre-Amiral Bazoche,
+ Governor of the Isle of Bourbon, by the grateful writer.
+ DE BALZAC.
+
+
+
+
+THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY
+
+
+In 1828, at about one o’clock one morning, two persons came out of
+a large house in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, near the
+Elysee-Bourbon. One was the famous doctor, Horace Bianchon; the other
+was one of the most elegant men in Paris, the Baron de Rastignac; they
+were friends of long standing. Each had sent away his carriage, and
+no cab was to be seen in the street; but the night was fine, and the
+pavement dry.
+
+“We will walk as far as the boulevard,” said Eugene de Rastignac to
+Bianchon. “You can get a hackney cab at the club; there is always one to
+be found there till daybreak. Come with me as far as my house.”
+
+“With pleasure.”
+
+“Well, and what have you to say about it?”
+
+“About that woman?” said the doctor coldly.
+
+“There I recognize my Bianchon!” exclaimed Rastignac.
+
+“Why, how?”
+
+“Well, my dear fellow, you speak of the Marquise d’Espard as if she were
+a case for your hospital.”
+
+“Do you want to know what I think, Eugene? If you throw over Madame de
+Nucingen for this Marquise, you will swap a one-eyed horse for a blind
+one.”
+
+“Madame de Nucingen is six-and-thirty, Bianchon.”
+
+“And this woman is three-and-thirty,” said the doctor quickly.
+
+“Her worst enemies only say six-and-twenty.”
+
+“My dear boy, when you really want to know a woman’s age, look at her
+temples and the tip of her nose. Whatever women may achieve with their
+cosmetics, they can do nothing against those incorruptible witnesses to
+their experiences. There each year of life has left its stigmata. When a
+woman’s temples are flaccid, seamed, withered in a particular way; when
+at the tip of her nose you see those minute specks, which look like the
+imperceptible black smuts which are shed in London by the chimneys
+in which coal is burnt.... Your servant, sir! That woman is more than
+thirty. She may be handsome, witty, loving--whatever you please, but
+she is past thirty, she is arriving at maturity. I do not blame men who
+attach themselves to that kind of woman; only, a man of your superior
+distinction must not mistake a winter pippin for a little summer apple,
+smiling on the bough, and waiting for you to crunch it. Love never
+goes to study the registers of birth and marriage; no one loves a woman
+because she is handsome or ugly, stupid or clever; we love because we
+love.”
+
+“Well, for my part, I love for quite other reasons. She is Marquise
+d’Espard; she was a Blamont-Chauvry; she is the fashion; she has soul;
+her foot is as pretty as the Duchesse de Berri’s; she has perhaps a
+hundred thousand francs a year--some day, perhaps, I may marry her! In
+short, she will put me into a position which will enable me to pay my
+debts.”
+
+“I thought you were rich,” interrupted Bianchon.
+
+“Bah! I have twenty thousand francs a year--just enough to keep up
+my stables. I was thoroughly done, my dear fellow, in that Nucingen
+business; I will tell you about that.--I have got my sisters married;
+that is the clearest profit I can show since we last met; and I would
+rather have them provided for than have five hundred thousand francs a
+year. No, what would you have me do? I am ambitious. To what can
+Madame de Nucingen lead? A year more and I shall be shelved, stuck in a
+pigeon-hole like a married man. I have all the discomforts of marriage
+and of single life, without the advantages of either; a false position
+to which every man must come who remains tied too long to the same
+apron-string.”
+
+“So you think you will come upon a treasure here?” said Bianchon. “Your
+Marquise, my dear fellow, does not hit my fancy at all.”
+
+“Your liberal opinions blur your eyesight. If Madame d’Espard were a
+Madame Rabourdin...”
+
+“Listen to me. Noble or simple, she would still have no soul; she would
+still be a perfect type of selfishness. Take my word for it, medical men
+are accustomed to judge of people and things; the sharpest of us read
+the soul while we study the body. In spite of that pretty boudoir where
+we have spent this evening, in spite of the magnificence of the house,
+it is quite possible that Madame la Marquise is in debt.”
+
+“What makes you think so?”
+
+“I do not assert it; I am supposing. She talked of her soul as Louis
+XVIII. used to talk of his heart. I tell you this: That fragile, fair
+woman, with her chestnut hair, who pities herself that she may be
+pitied, enjoys an iron constitution, an appetite like a wolf’s, and
+the strength and cowardice of a tiger. Gauze, and silk, and muslin were
+never more cleverly twisted round a lie! Ecco.”
+
+“Bianchon, you frighten me! You have learned a good many things, then,
+since we lived in the Maison Vauquer?”
+
+“Yes, since then, my boy, I have seen puppets, both dolls and manikins.
+I know something of the ways of the fine ladies whose bodies we attend
+to, saving that which is dearest to them, their child--if they love
+it--or their pretty faces, which they always worship. A man spends
+his nights by their pillow, wearing himself to death to spare them the
+slightest loss of beauty in any part; he succeeds, he keeps their secret
+like the dead; they send to ask for his bill, and think it horribly
+exorbitant. Who saved them? Nature. Far from recommending him, they
+speak ill of him, fearing lest he should become the physician of their
+best friends.
+
+“My dear fellow, those women of whom you say, ‘They are angels!’
+I--I--have seen stripped of the little grimaces under which they hide
+their soul, as well as of the frippery under which they disguise their
+defects--without manners and without stays; they are not beautiful.
+
+“We saw a great deal of mud, a great deal of dirt, under the waters of
+the world when we were aground for a time on the shoals of the Maison
+Vauquer.--What we saw there was nothing. Since I have gone into high
+society, I have seen monsters dressed in satin, Michonneaus in white
+gloves, Poirets bedizened with orders, fine gentlemen doing more
+usurious business than old Gobseck! To the shame of mankind, when I have
+wanted to shake hands with Virtue, I have found her shivering in a loft,
+persecuted by calumny, half-starving on a income or a salary of fifteen
+hundred francs a year, and regarded as crazy, or eccentric, or imbecile.
+
+“In short, my dear boy, the Marquise is a woman of fashion, and I have
+a particular horror of that kind of woman. Do you want to know why? A
+woman who has a lofty soul, fine taste, gentle wit, a generously warm
+heart, and who lives a simple life, has not a chance of being the
+fashion. Ergo: A woman of fashion and a man in power are analogous; but
+there is this difference: the qualities by which a man raises himself
+above others ennoble him and are a glory to him; whereas the qualities
+by which a woman gains power for a day are hideous vices; she belies her
+nature to hide her character, and to live the militant life of the world
+she must have iron strength under a frail appearance.
+
+“I, as a physician, know that a sound stomach excludes a good heart.
+Your woman of fashion feels nothing; her rage for pleasure has its
+source in a longing to heat up her cold nature, a craving for excitement
+and enjoyment, like an old man who stands night after night by
+the footlights at the opera. As she has more brain than heart, she
+sacrifices genuine passion and true friends to her triumph, as a general
+sends his most devoted subalterns to the front in order to win a battle.
+The woman of fashion ceases to be a woman; she is neither mother, nor
+wife, nor lover. She is, medically speaking, sex in the brain. And your
+Marquise, too, has all the characteristics of her monstrosity, the beak
+of a bird of prey, the clear, cold eye, the gentle voice--she is as
+polished as the steel of a machine, she touches everything except the
+heart.”
+
+“There is some truth in what you say, Bianchon.”
+
+“Some truth?” replied Bianchon. “It is all true. Do you suppose that
+I was not struck to the heart by the insulting politeness by which
+she made me measure the imaginary distance which her noble birth sets
+between us? That I did not feel the deepest pity for her cat-like
+civilities when I remembered what her object was? A year hence she will
+not write one word to do me the slightest service, and this evening she
+pelted me with smiles, believing that I can influence my uncle Popinot,
+on whom the success of her case----”
+
+“Would you rather she should have played the fool with you, my dear
+fellow?--I accept your diatribe against women of fashion; but you are
+beside the mark. I should always prefer for a wife a Marquise d’Espard
+to the most devout and devoted creature on earth. Marry an angel! you
+would have to go and bury your happiness in the depths of the country!
+The wife of a politician is a governing machine, a contrivance that
+makes compliments and courtesies. She is the most important and most
+faithful tool which an ambitious man can use; a friend, in short, who
+may compromise herself without mischief, and whom he may belie without
+harmful results. Fancy Mahomet in Paris in the nineteenth century! His
+wife would be a Rohan, a Duchesse de Chevreuse of the Fronde, as keen
+and as flattering as an Ambassadress, as wily as Figaro. Your loving
+wives lead nowhere; a woman of the world leads to everything; she is the
+diamond with which a man cuts every window when he has not the golden
+key which unlocks every door. Leave humdrum virtues to the humdrum,
+ambitious vices to the ambitious.
+
+“Besides, my dear fellow, do you imagine that the love of a Duchesse
+de Langeais, or de Maufrigneuse, or of a Lady Dudley does not bestow
+immense pleasure? If only you knew how much value the cold, severe style
+of such a woman gives to the smallest evidence of their affection! What
+a delight it is to see a periwinkle piercing through the snow! A smile
+from below a fan contradicts the reserve of an assumed attitude, and is
+worth all the unbridled tenderness of your middle-class women with
+their mortgaged devotion; for, in love, devotion is nearly akin to
+speculation.
+
+“And, then, a woman of fashion, a Blamont-Chauvry, has her virtues too!
+Her virtues are fortune, power, effect, a certain contempt of all that
+is beneath her----”
+
+“Thank you!” said Bianchon.
+
+“Old curmudgeon!” said Rastignac, laughing. “Come--do not be so common,
+do like your friend Desplein; be a Baron, a Knight of Saint-Michael;
+become a peer of France, and marry your daughters to dukes.”
+
+“I! May the five hundred thousand devils----”
+
+“Come, come! Can you be superior only in medicine? Really, you distress
+me...”
+
+“I hate that sort of people; I long for a revolution to deliver us from
+them for ever.”
+
+“And so, my dear Robespierre of the lancet, you will not go to-morrow to
+your uncle Popinot?”
+
+“Yes, I will,” said Bianchon; “for you I would go to hell to fetch
+water...”
+
+“My good friend, you really touch me. I have sworn that a commission
+shall sit on the Marquis. Why, here is even a long-saved tear to thank
+you.”
+
+“But,” Bianchon went on, “I do not promise to succeed as you wish with
+Jean-Jules Popinot. You do not know him. However, I will take him to see
+your Marquise the day after to-morrow; she may get round him if she can.
+I doubt it. If all the truffles, all the Duchesses, all the mistresses,
+and all the charmers in Paris were there in the full bloom of their
+beauty; if the King promised him the _Prairie_, and the Almighty gave
+him the Order of Paradise with the revenues of Purgatory, not one of all
+these powers would induce him to transfer a single straw from one saucer
+of his scales into the other. He is a judge, as Death is Death.”
+
+The two friends had reached the office of the Minister for Foreign
+Affairs, at the corner of the Boulevard des Capucines.
+
+“Here you are at home,” said Bianchon, laughing, as he pointed to the
+ministerial residence. “And here is my carriage,” he added, calling a
+hackney cab. “And these--express our fortune.”
+
+“You will be happy at the bottom of the sea, while I am still struggling
+with the tempests on the surface, till I sink and go to ask you for a
+corner in your grotto, old fellow!”
+
+“Till Saturday,” replied Bianchon.
+
+“Agreed,” said Rastignac. “And you promise me Popinot?”
+
+“I will do all my conscience will allow. Perhaps this appeal for a
+commission covers some little dramorama, to use a word of our good bad
+times.”
+
+“Poor Bianchon! he will never be anything but a good fellow,” said
+Rastignac to himself as the cab drove off.
+
+
+
+“Rastignac has given me the most difficult negotiation in the world,”
+ said Bianchon to himself, remembering, as he rose next morning, the
+delicate commission intrusted to him. “However, I have never asked
+the smallest service from my uncle in Court, and have paid more than a
+thousand visits gratis for him. And, after all, we are not apt to mince
+matters between ourselves. He will say Yes or No, and there an end.”
+
+After this little soliloquy the famous physician bent his steps, at
+seven in the morning, towards the Rue du Fouarre, where dwelt Monsieur
+Jean-Jules Popinot, judge of the Lower Court of the Department of
+the Seine. The Rue du Fouarre--an old word meaning straw--was in the
+thirteenth century the most important street in Paris. There stood the
+Schools of the University, where the voices of Abelard and of Gerson
+were heard in the world of learning. It is now one of the dirtiest
+streets of the Twelfth Arrondissement, the poorest quarter of Paris,
+that in which two-thirds of the population lack firing in winter, which
+leaves most brats at the gate of the Foundling Hospital, which sends
+most beggars to the poorhouse, most rag-pickers to the street corners,
+most decrepit old folks to bask against the walls on which the sun
+shines, most delinquents to the police courts.
+
+Half-way down this street, which is always damp, and where the gutter
+carries to the Seine the blackened waters from some dye-works, there is
+an old house, restored no doubt under Francis I., and built of bricks
+held together by a few courses of masonry. That it is substantial seems
+proved by the shape of its front wall, not uncommonly seen in some
+parts of Paris. It bellies, so to speak, in a manner caused by the
+protuberance of its first floor, crushed under the weight of the second
+and third, but upheld by the strong wall of the ground floor. At first
+sight it would seem as though the piers between the windows, though
+strengthened by the stone mullions, must give way, but the observer
+presently perceives that, as in the tower at Bologna, the old bricks and
+old time-eaten stones of this house persistently preserve their centre
+of gravity.
+
+At every season of the year the solid piers of the ground floor have the
+yellow tone and the imperceptible sweating surface that moisture gives
+to stone. The passer-by feels chilled as he walks close to this wall,
+where worn corner-stones ineffectually shelter him from the wheels of
+vehicles. As is always the case in houses built before carriages were
+in use, the vault of the doorway forms a very low archway not unlike
+the barbican of a prison. To the right of this entrance there are three
+windows, protected outside by iron gratings of so close a pattern, that
+the curious cannot possibly see the use made of the dark, damp rooms
+within, and the panes too are dirty and dusty; to the left are two
+similar windows, one of which is sometimes open, exposing to view the
+porter, his wife, and his children; swarming, working, cooking, eating,
+and screaming, in a floored and wainscoted room where everything is
+dropping to pieces, and into which you descend two steps--a depth which
+seems to suggest the gradual elevation of the soil of Paris.
+
+If on a rainy day some foot-passenger takes refuge under the long vault,
+with projecting lime-washed beams, which leads from the door to
+the staircase, he will hardly fail to pause and look at the picture
+presented by the interior of this house. To the left is a square
+garden-plot, allowing of not more than four long steps in each
+direction, a garden of black soil, with trellises bereft of vines, and
+where, in default of vegetation under the shade of two trees, papers
+collect, old rags, potsherds, bits of mortar fallen from the roof; a
+barren ground, where time has shed on the walls, and on the trunks and
+branches of the trees, a powdery deposit like cold soot. The two parts
+of the house, set at a right angle, derive light from this garden-court
+shut in by two adjoining houses built on wooden piers, decrepit and
+ready to fall, where on each floor some grotesque evidence is to be seen
+of the craft pursued by some lodger within. Here long poles are hung
+with immense skeins of dyed worsted put out to dry; there, on ropes,
+dance clean-washed shirts; higher up, on a shelf, volumes display their
+freshly marbled edges; women sing, husbands whistle, children shout; the
+carpenter saws his planks, a copper-turner makes the metal screech;
+all kinds of industries combine to produce a noise which the number of
+instruments renders distracting.
+
+The general system of decoration in this passage, which is neither
+courtyard, garden, nor vaulted way, though a little of all, consists of
+wooden pillars resting on square stone blocks, and forming arches. Two
+archways open on to the little garden; two others, facing the front
+gateway, lead to a wooden staircase, with an iron balustrade that was
+once a miracle of smith’s work, so whimsical are the shapes given to the
+metal; the worn steps creak under every tread. The entrance to each flat
+has an architrave dark with dirt, grease, and dust, and outer doors,
+covered with Utrecht velvet set with brass nails, once gilt, in a
+diamond pattern. These relics of splendor show that in the time of Louis
+XIV. the house was the residence of some councillor to the Parlement,
+some rich priests, or some treasurer of the ecclesiastical revenue. But
+these vestiges of former luxury bring a smile to the lips by the artless
+contrast of past and present.
+
+M. Jean-Jules Popinot lived on the first floor of this house, where the
+gloom, natural to all first floors in Paris houses, was increased by the
+narrowness of the street. This old tenement was known to all the twelfth
+arrondissement, on which Providence had bestowed this lawyer, as it
+gives a beneficent plant to cure or alleviate every malady. Here is a
+sketch of a man whom the brilliant Marquise d’Espard hoped to fascinate.
+
+M. Popinot, as is seemly for a magistrate, was always dressed in
+black--a style which contributed to make him ridiculous in the eyes of
+those who were in the habit of judging everything from a superficial
+examination. Men who are jealous of maintaining the dignity required
+by this color ought to devote themselves to constant and minute care of
+their person; but our dear M. Popinot was incapable of forcing himself
+to the puritanical cleanliness which black demands. His trousers, always
+threadbare, looked like camlet--the stuff of which attorneys’ gowns
+are made; and his habitual stoop set them, in time, in such innumerable
+creases, that in places they were traced with lines, whitish, rusty, or
+shiny, betraying either sordid avarice, or the most unheeding poverty.
+His coarse worsted stockings were twisted anyhow in his ill-shaped
+shoes. His linen had the tawny tinge acquired by long sojourn in a
+wardrobe, showing that the late lamented Madame Popinot had had a mania
+for much linen; in the Flemish fashion, perhaps, she had given herself
+the trouble of a great wash no more than twice a year. The old man’s
+coat and waistcoat were in harmony with his trousers, shoes, stockings,
+and linen. He always had the luck of his carelessness; for, the first
+day he put on a new coat, he unfailingly matched it with the rest of his
+costume by staining it with incredible promptitude. The good man waited
+till his housekeeper told him that his hat was too shabby before buying
+a new one. His necktie was always crumpled and starchless, and he never
+set his dog-eared shirt collar straight after his judge’s bands had
+disordered it. He took no care of his gray hair, and shaved but twice
+a week. He never wore gloves, and generally kept his hands stuffed into
+his empty trousers’ pockets; the soiled pocket-holes, almost always
+torn, added a final touch to the slovenliness of his person.
+
+Any one who knows the Palais de Justice at Paris, where every variety
+of black attire may be studied, can easily imagine the appearance of M.
+Popinot. The habit of sitting for days at a time modifies the structure
+of the body, just as the fatigue of hearing interminable pleadings tells
+on the expression of a magistrate’s face. Shut up as he is in courts
+ridiculously small, devoid of architectural dignity, and where the air
+is quickly vitiated, a Paris judge inevitably acquires a countenance
+puckered and seamed by reflection, and depressed by weariness; his
+complexion turns pallid, acquiring an earthy or greenish hue according
+to his individual temperament. In short, within a given time the most
+blooming young man is turned into an “inasmuch” machine--an instrument
+which applies the Code to individual cases with the indifference of
+clockwork.
+
+Hence, nature, having bestowed on M. Popinot a not too pleasing
+exterior, his life as a lawyer had not improved it. His frame was
+graceless and angular. His thick knees, huge feet, and broad hands
+formed a contrast with a priest-like face having a vague resemblance
+to a calf’s head, meek to unmeaningness, and but little brightened by
+divergent bloodless eyes, divided by a straight flat nose, surmounted
+by a flat forehead, flanked by enormous ears, flabby and graceless. His
+thin, weak hair showed the baldness through various irregular partings.
+
+One feature only commended this face to the physiognomist. This man
+had a mouth to whose lips divine kindness lent its sweetness. They were
+wholesome, full, red lips, finely wrinkled, sinuous, mobile, by which
+nature had given expression to noble feelings; lips which spoke to the
+heart and proclaimed the man’s intelligence and lucidity, a gift of
+second-sight, and a heavenly temper; and you would have judged him
+wrongly from looking merely at his sloping forehead, his fireless eyes,
+and his shambling gait. His life answered to his countenance; it was
+full of secret labor, and hid the virtue of a saint. His superior
+knowledge of law proved so strong a recommendation at a time when
+Napoleon was reorganizing it in 1808 and 1811, that, by the advice of
+Cambaceres, he was one of the first men named to sit on the Imperial
+High Court of Justice at Paris. Popinot was no schemer. Whenever any
+demand was made, any request preferred for an appointment, the Minister
+would overlook Popinot, who never set foot in the house of the High
+Chancellor or the Chief Justice. From the High Court he was sent down to
+the Common Court, and pushed to the lowest rung of the ladder by active
+struggling men. There he was appointed supernumerary judge. There was
+a general outcry among the lawyers: “Popinot a supernumerary!” Such
+injustice struck the legal world with dismay--the attorneys, the
+registrars, everybody but Popinot himself, who made no complaint. The
+first clamor over, everybody was satisfied that all was for the best
+in the best of all possible worlds, which must certainly be the legal
+world. Popinot remained supernumerary judge till the day when the most
+famous Great Seal under the Restoration avenged the oversights heaped on
+this modest and uncomplaining man by the Chief Justices of the Empire.
+After being a supernumerary for twelve years, M. Popinot would no doubt
+die a puisne judge of the Court of the Seine.
+
+To account for the obscure fortunes of one of the superior men of the
+legal profession, it is necessary to enter here into some details which
+will serve to reveal his life and character, and which will, at the same
+time, display some of the wheels of the great machine known as Justice.
+M. Popinot was classed by the three Presidents who successively
+controlled the Court of the Seine under the category of possible judges,
+the stuff of which judges are made. Thus classified, he did not achieve
+the reputation for capacity which his previous labors had deserved.
+Just as a painter is invariably included in a category as a landscape
+painter, a portrait painter, a painter of history, of sea pieces, or of
+genre, by a public consisting of artists, connoisseurs, and simpletons,
+who, out of envy, or critical omnipotence, or prejudice, fence in his
+intellect, assuming, one and all, that there are ganglions in every
+brain--a narrow judgment which the world applies to writers, to
+statesmen, to everybody who begins with some specialty before being
+hailed as omniscient; so Popinot’s fate was sealed, and he was hedged
+round to do a particular kind of work. Magistrates, attorneys, pleaders,
+all who pasture on the legal common, distinguish two elements in
+every case--law and equity. Equity is the outcome of facts, law is the
+application of principles to facts. A man may be right in equity but
+wrong in law, without any blame to the judge. Between his conscience and
+the facts there is a whole gulf of determining reasons unknown to the
+judge, but which condemn or legitimatize the act. A judge is not God;
+the duty is to adapt facts to principles, to judge cases of infinite
+variety while measuring them by a fixed standard.
+
+France employs about six thousand judges; no generation has six thousand
+great men at her command, much less can she find them in the legal
+profession. Popinot, in the midst of the civilization of Paris, was just
+a very clever cadi, who, by the character of his mind, and by dint of
+rubbing the letter of the law into the essence of facts, had learned to
+see the error of spontaneous and violent decisions. By the help of his
+judicial second-sight he could pierce the double casing of lies in
+which advocates hide the heart of a trial. He was a judge, as the great
+Desplein was a surgeon; he probed men’s consciences as the anatomist
+probed their bodies. His life and habits had led him to an exact
+appreciation of their most secret thoughts by a thorough study of facts.
+
+He sifted a case as Cuvier sifted the earth’s crust. Like that great
+thinker, he proceeded from deduction to deduction before drawing his
+conclusions, and reconstructed the past career of a conscience as Cuvier
+reconstructed an Anoplotherium. When considering a brief he would often
+wake in the night, startled by a gleam of truth suddenly sparkling
+in his brain. Struck by the deep injustice, which is the end of these
+contests, in which everything is against the honest man, everything
+to the advantage of the rogue, he often summed up in favor of equity
+against law in such cases as bore on questions of what may be termed
+divination. Hence he was regarded by his colleagues as a man not of
+a practical mind; his arguments on two lines of deduction made their
+deliberations lengthy. When Popinot observed their dislike to listening
+to him he gave his opinion briefly; it was said that he was not a good
+judge in this class of cases; but as his gift of discrimination was
+remarkable, his opinion lucid, and his penetration profound, he was
+considered to have a special aptitude for the laborious duties of an
+examining judge. So an examining judge he remained during the greater
+part of his legal career.
+
+Although his qualifications made him eminently fitted for its difficult
+functions, and he had the reputation of being so learned in criminal
+law that his duty was a pleasure to him, the kindness of his heart
+constantly kept him in torture, and he was nipped as in a vise between
+his conscience and his pity. The services of an examining judge are
+better paid than those of a judge in civil actions, but they do not
+therefore prove a temptation; they are too onerous. Popinot, a man of
+modest and virtuous learning, without ambition, an indefatigable
+worker, never complained of his fate; he sacrificed his tastes and
+his compassionate soul to the public good, and allowed himself to be
+transported to the noisome pools of criminal examinations, where he
+showed himself alike severe and beneficent. His clerk sometimes would
+give the accused some money to buy tobacco, or a warm winter garment,
+as he led him back from the judge’s office to the Souriciere, the
+mouse-trap--the House of Detention where the accused are kept under the
+orders of the Examining Judge. He knew how to be an inflexible judge
+and a charitable man. And no one extracted a confession so easily as
+he without having recourse to judicial trickery. He had, too, all the
+acumen of an observer. This man, apparently so foolishly good-natured,
+simple, and absent-minded, could guess all the cunning of a prison
+wag, unmask the astutest street huzzy, and subdue a scoundrel. Unusual
+circumstances had sharpened his perspicacity; but to relate these we
+must intrude on his domestic history, for in him the judge was the
+social side of the man; another man, greater and less known, existed
+within.
+
+Twelve years before the beginning of this story, in 1816, during the
+terrible scarcity which coincided disastrously with the stay in
+France of the so-called Allies, Popinot was appointed President of the
+Commission Extraordinary formed to distribute food to the poor of his
+neighborhood, just when he had planned to move from the Rue du Fouarre,
+which he as little liked to live in as his wife did. The great lawyer,
+the clear-sighted criminal judge, whose superiority seemed to his
+colleagues a form of aberration, had for five years been watching legal
+results without seeing their causes. As he scrambled up into the lofts,
+as he saw the poverty, as he studied the desperate necessities which
+gradually bring the poor to criminal acts, as he estimated their long
+struggles, compassion filled his soul. The judge then became the Saint
+Vincent de Paul of these grown-up children, these suffering toilers.
+The transformation was not immediately complete. Beneficence has its
+temptations as vice has. Charity consumes a saint’s purse, as roulette
+consumes the possessions of a gambler, quite gradually. Popinot went
+from misery to misery, from charity to charity; then, by the time he had
+lifted all the rags which cover public pauperism, like a bandage under
+which an inflamed wound lies festering, at the end of a year he had
+become the Providence incarnate of that quarter of the town. He was
+a member of the Benevolent Committee and of the Charity Organization.
+Wherever any gratuitous services were needed he was ready, and did
+everything without fuss, like the man with the short cloak, who spends
+his life in carrying soup round the markets and other places where there
+are starving folks.
+
+Popinot was fortunate in acting on a larger circle and in a higher
+sphere; he had an eye on everything, he prevented crime, he gave work to
+the unemployed, he found a refuge for the helpless, he distributed
+aid with discernment wherever danger threatened, he made himself the
+counselor of the widow, the protector of homeless children, the sleeping
+partner of small traders. No one at the Courts, no one in Paris, knew of
+this secret life of Popinot’s. There are virtues so splendid that they
+necessitate obscurity; men make haste to hide them under a bushel. As to
+those whom the lawyer succored, they, hard at work all day and tired
+at night, were little able to sing his praises; theirs was the
+gracelessness of children, who can never pay because they owe too much.
+There is such compulsory ingratitude; but what heart that has sown good
+to reap gratitude can think itself great?
+
+By the end of the second year of his apostolic work, Popinot had turned
+the storeroom at the bottom of his house into a parlor, lighted by the
+three iron-barred windows. The walls and ceiling of this spacious room
+were whitewashed, and the furniture consisted of wooden benches like
+those seen in schools, a clumsy cupboard, a walnut-wood writing-table,
+and an armchair. In the cupboard were his registers of donations, his
+tickets for orders for bread, and his diary. He kept his ledger like a
+tradesman, that he might not be ruined by kindness. All the sorrows of
+the neighborhood were entered and numbered in a book, where each had its
+little account, as merchants’ customers have theirs. When there was any
+question as to a man or a family needing help, the lawyer could always
+command information from the police.
+
+Lavienne, a man made for his master, was his aide-de-camp. He redeemed
+or renewed pawn-tickets, and visited the districts most threatened with
+famine, while his master was in court.
+
+From four till seven in the morning in summer, from six till nine
+in winter, this room was full of women, children, and paupers, while
+Popinot gave audience. There was no need for a stove in winter; the
+crowd was so dense that the air was warmed; only, Lavienne strewed straw
+on the wet floor. By long use the benches were as polished as varnished
+mahogany; at the height of a man’s shoulders the wall had a coat of
+dark, indescribable color, given to it by the rags and tattered clothes
+of these poor creatures. The poor wretches loved Popinot so well that
+when they assembled before his door was opened, before daybreak on a
+winter’s morning, the women warming themselves with their foot-brasiers,
+the men swinging their arms for circulation, never a sound had disturbed
+his sleep. Rag-pickers and other toilers of the night knew the house,
+and often saw a light burning in the lawyer’s private room at unholy
+hours. Even thieves, as they passed by, said, “That is his house,” and
+respected it. The morning he gave to the poor, the mid-day hours to
+criminals, the evening to law work.
+
+Thus the gift of observation that characterized Popinot was necessarily
+bifrons; he could guess the virtues of a pauper--good feelings nipped,
+fine actions in embryo, unrecognized self-sacrifice, just as he could
+read at the bottom of a man’s conscience the faintest outlines of a
+crime, the slenderest threads of wrongdoing, and infer all the rest.
+
+Popinot’s inherited fortune was a thousand crowns a year. His wife,
+sister to M. Bianchon _Senior_, a doctor at Sancerre, had brought him
+about twice as much. She, dying five years since, had left her fortune
+to her husband. As the salary of a supernumerary judge is not large,
+and Popinot had been a fully salaried judge only for four years, we may
+guess his reasons for parsimony in all that concerned his person and
+mode of life, when we consider how small his means were and how great
+his beneficence. Besides, is not such indifference to dress as stamped
+Popinot an absent-minded man, a distinguishing mark of scientific
+attainment, of art passionately pursued, of a perpetually active mind?
+To complete this portrait, it will be enough to add that Popinot was one
+of the few judges of the Court of the Seine on whom the ribbon of the
+Legion of Honor had not been conferred.
+
+Such was the man who had been instructed by the President of the
+Second Chamber of the Court--to which Popinot had belonged since his
+reinstatement among the judges in civil law--to examine the Marquis
+d’Espard at the request of his wife, who sued for a Commission in
+Lunacy.
+
+The Rue du Fouarre, where so many unhappy wretches swarmed in the early
+morning, would be deserted by nine o’clock, and as gloomy and squalid as
+ever. Bianchon put his horse to a trot in order to find his uncle in the
+midst of his business. It was not without a smile that he thought of the
+curious contrast the judge’s appearance would make in Madame d’Espard’s
+room; but he promised himself that he would persuade him to dress in a
+way that should not be too ridiculous.
+
+“If only my uncle happens to have a new coat!” said Bianchon to himself,
+as he turned into the Rue du Fouarre, where a pale light shone from
+the parlor windows. “I shall do well, I believe, to talk that over with
+Lavienne.”
+
+At the sound of wheels half a score of startled paupers came out from
+under the gateway, and took off their hats on recognizing Bianchon; for
+the doctor, who treated gratuitously the sick recommended to him by the
+lawyer, was not less well known than he to the poor creatures assembled
+there.
+
+Bianchon found his uncle in the middle of the parlor, where the benches
+were occupied by patients presenting such grotesque singularities of
+costume as would have made the least artistic passer-by turn round
+to gaze at them. A draughtsman--a Rembrandt, if there were one in our
+day--might have conceived of one of his finest compositions from seeing
+these children of misery, in artless attitudes, and all silent.
+
+Here was the rugged countenance of an old man with a white beard and
+an apostolic head--a Saint Peter ready to hand; his chest, partly
+uncovered, showed salient muscles, the evidence of an iron constitution
+which had served him as a fulcrum to resist a whole poem of sorrows.
+There a young woman was suckling her youngest-born to keep it from
+crying, while another of about five stood between her knees. Her white
+bosom, gleaming amid rags, the baby with its transparent flesh-tints,
+and the brother, whose attitude promised a street arab in the future,
+touched the fancy with pathos by its almost graceful contrast with the
+long row of faces crimson with cold, in the midst of which sat this
+family group. Further away, an old woman, pale and rigid, had the
+repulsive look of rebellious pauperism, eager to avenge all its past
+woes in one day of violence.
+
+There, again, was the young workman, weakly and indolent, whose brightly
+intelligent eye revealed fine faculties crushed by necessity struggled
+with in vain, saying nothing of his sufferings, and nearly dead for lack
+of an opportunity to squeeze between the bars of the vast stews where
+the wretched swim round and round and devour each other.
+
+The majority were women; their husbands, gone to their work, left it
+to them, no doubt, to plead the cause of the family with the ingenuity
+which characterizes the woman of the people, who is almost always queen
+in her hovel. You would have seen a torn bandana on every head, on every
+form a skirt deep in mud, ragged kerchiefs, worn and dirty jackets, but
+eyes that burnt like live coals. It was a horrible assemblage, raising
+at first sight a feeling of disgust, but giving a certain sense of
+terror the instant you perceived that the resignation of these souls,
+all engaged in the struggle for every necessary of life, was purely
+fortuitous, a speculation on benevolence. The two tallow candles which
+lighted the parlor flickered in a sort of fog caused by the fetid
+atmosphere of the ill-ventilated room.
+
+The magistrate himself was not the least picturesque figure in the midst
+of this assembly. He had on his head a rusty cotton night-cap; as he had
+no cravat, his neck was visible, red with cold and wrinkled, in contrast
+with the threadbare collar of his old dressing-gown. His worn face had
+the half-stupid look that comes of absorbed attention. His lips, like
+those of all men who work, were puckered up like a bag with the strings
+drawn tight. His knitted brows seemed to bear the burden of all the
+sorrows confided to him: he felt, analyzed, and judged them all. As
+watchful as a Jew money-lender, he never raised his eyes from his books
+and registers but to look into the very heart of the persons he was
+examining, with the flashing glance by which a miser expresses his
+alarm.
+
+Lavienne, standing behind his master, ready to carry out his orders,
+served no doubt as a sort of police, and welcomed newcomers by
+encouraging them to get over their shyness. When the doctor appeared
+there was a stir on the benches. Lavienne turned his head, and was
+strangely surprised to see Bianchon.
+
+“Ah! It is you, old boy!” exclaimed Popinot, stretching himself. “What
+brings you so early?”
+
+“I was afraid lest you should make an official visit about which I wish
+to speak to you before I could see you.”
+
+“Well,” said the lawyer, addressing a stout little woman who was still
+standing close to him, “if you do not tell me what it is you want, I
+cannot guess it, child.”
+
+“Make haste,” said Lavienne. “Do not waste other people’s time.”
+
+“Monsieur,” said the woman at last, turning red, and speaking so low as
+only to be heard by Popinot and Lavienne, “I have a green-grocery truck,
+and I have my last baby to nurse, and I owe for his keep. Well, I had
+hidden my little bit of money----”
+
+“Yes; and your man took it?” said Popinot, guessing the sequel.
+
+“Yes, sir.”
+
+“What is your name?”
+
+“La Pomponne.”
+
+“And your husband’s?”
+
+“Toupinet.”
+
+“Rue du Petit-Banquier?” said Popinot, turning over his register. “He
+is in prison,” he added, reading a note at the margin of the section in
+which this family was described.
+
+“For debt, my kind monsieur.”
+
+Popinot shook his head.
+
+“But I have nothing to buy any stock for my truck; the landlord came
+yesterday and made me pay up; otherwise I should have been turned out.”
+
+Lavienne bent over his master, and whispered in his ear.
+
+“Well, how much do you want to buy fruit in the market?”
+
+“Why, my good monsieur, to carry on my business, I should want--Yes, I
+should certainly want ten francs.”
+
+Popinot signed to Lavienne, who took ten francs out of a large bag, and
+handed them to the woman, while the lawyer made a note of the loan in
+his ledger. As he saw the thrill of delight that made the poor hawker
+tremble, Bianchon understood the apprehensions that must have agitated
+her on her way to the lawyer’s house.
+
+“You next,” said Lavienne to the old man with the white beard.
+
+Bianchon drew the servant aside, and asked him how long this audience
+would last.
+
+“Monsieur has had two hundred persons this morning, and there are eight
+to be turned off,” said Lavienne. “You will have time to pay your early
+visit, sir.”
+
+“Here, my boy,” said the lawyer, turning round and taking Horace by the
+arm; “here are two addresses near this--one in the Rue de Seine, and the
+other in the Rue de l’Arbalete. Go there at once. Rue de Seine, a young
+girl has just asphyxiated herself; and Rue de l’Arbalete, you will find
+a man to remove to your hospital. I will wait breakfast for you.”
+
+Bianchon returned an hour later. The Rue du Fouarre was deserted; day
+was beginning to dawn there; his uncle had gone up to his rooms; the
+last poor wretch whose misery the judge had relieved was departing, and
+Lavienne’s money bag was empty.
+
+“Well, how are they going on?” asked the old lawyer, as the doctor came
+in.
+
+“The man is dead,” replied Bianchon; “the girl will get over it.”
+
+Since the eye and hand of a woman had been lacking, the flat in which
+Popinot lived had assumed an aspect in harmony with its master’s. The
+indifference of a man who is absorbed in one dominant idea had set its
+stamp of eccentricity on everything. Everywhere lay unconquerable
+dust, every object was adapted to a wrong purpose with a pertinacity
+suggestive of a bachelor’s home. There were papers in the flower vases,
+empty ink-bottles on the tables, plates that had been forgotten, matches
+used as tapers for a minute when something had to be found, drawers or
+boxes half-turned out and left unfinished; in short, all the confusion
+and vacancies resulting from plans for order never carried out. The
+lawyer’s private room, especially disordered by this incessant rummage,
+bore witness to his unresting pace, the hurry of a man overwhelmed with
+business, hunted by contradictory necessities. The bookcase looked as
+if it had been sacked; there were books scattered over everything,
+some piled up open, one on another, others on the floor face downwards;
+registers of proceedings laid on the floor in rows, lengthwise, in front
+of the shelves; and that floor had not been polished for two years.
+
+The tables and shelves were covered with ex votos, the offerings of
+the grateful poor. On a pair of blue glass jars which ornamented the
+chimney-shelf there were two glass balls, of which the core was made up
+of many-colored fragments, giving them the appearance of some singular
+natural product. Against the wall hung frames of artificial flowers, and
+decorations in which Popinot’s initials were surrounded by hearts and
+everlasting flowers. Here were boxes of elaborate and useless cabinet
+work; there letter-weights carved in the style of work done by
+convicts in penal servitude. These masterpieces of patience, enigmas of
+gratitude, and withered bouquets gave the lawyer’s room the appearance
+of a toyshop. The good man used these works of art as hiding-places
+which he filled with bills, worn-out pens, and scraps of paper. All
+these pathetic witnesses to his divine charity were thick with dust,
+dingy, and faded.
+
+Some birds, beautifully stuffed, but eaten by moth, perched in this
+wilderness of trumpery, presided over by an Angora cat, Madame Popinot’s
+pet, restored to her no doubt with all the graces of life by some
+impecunious naturalist, who thus repaid a gift of charity with a
+perennial treasure. Some local artist whose heart had misguided his
+brush had painted portraits of M. and Madame Popinot. Even in the
+bedroom there were embroidered pin-cushions, landscapes in cross-stitch,
+and crosses in folded paper, so elaborately cockled as to show the
+senseless labor they had cost.
+
+The window-curtains were black with smoke, and the hangings absolutely
+colorless. Between the fireplace and the large square table at which the
+magistrate worked, the cook had set two cups of coffee on a small table,
+and two armchairs, in mahogany and horsehair, awaited the uncle and
+nephew. As daylight, darkened by the windows, could not penetrate to
+this corner, the cook had left two dips burning, whose unsnuffed wicks
+showed a sort of mushroom growth, giving the red light which promises
+length of life to the candle from slowness of combustion--a discovery
+due to some miser.
+
+“My dear uncle, you ought to wrap yourself more warmly when you go down
+to that parlor.”
+
+“I cannot bear to keep them waiting, poor souls!--Well, and what do you
+want of me?”
+
+“I have come to ask you to dine to-morrow with the Marquise d’Espard.”
+
+“A relation of ours?” asked Popinot, with such genuine absence of mind
+that Bianchon laughed.
+
+“No, uncle; the Marquise d’Espard is a high and puissant lady, who has
+laid before the Courts a petition desiring that a Commission in Lunacy
+should sit on her husband, and you are appointed----”
+
+“And you want me to dine with her! Are you mad?” said the lawyer, taking
+up the code of proceedings. “Here, only read this article, prohibiting
+any magistrate’s eating or drinking in the house of either of two
+parties whom he is called upon to decide between. Let her come and see
+me, your Marquise, if she has anything to say to me. I was, in fact,
+to go to examine her husband to-morrow, after working the case up
+to-night.”
+
+He rose, took up a packet of papers that lay under a weight where he
+could see it, and after reading the title, he said:
+
+“Here is the affidavit. Since you take an interest in this high and
+puissant lady, let us see what she wants.”
+
+Popinot wrapped his dressing-gown across his body, from which it was
+constantly slipping and leaving his chest bare; he sopped his bread in
+the half-cold coffee, and opened the petition, which he read, allowing
+himself to throw in a parenthesis now and then, and some discussions, in
+which his nephew took part:--
+
+“‘To Monsieur the President of the Civil Tribunal of the Lower Court of
+the Department of the Seine, sitting at the Palais de Justice.
+
+“‘Madame Jeanne Clementine Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, wife of
+M. Charles Maurice Marie Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis
+d’Espard’--a very good family--‘landowner, the said Mme. d’Espard living
+in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, No. 104, and the said M. d’Espard
+in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, No. 22,’--to be sure, the
+President told me he lived in this part of the town--‘having for her
+solicitor Maitre Desroches’--Desroches! a pettifogging jobber, a man
+looked down upon by his brother lawyers, and who does his clients no
+good--”
+
+“Poor fellow!” said Bianchon, “unluckily he has no money, and he rushes
+round like the devil in holy water--That is all.”
+
+“‘Has the honor to submit to you, Monsieur the President, that for a
+year past the moral and intellectual powers of her husband, M. d’Espard,
+have undergone so serious a change, that at the present day they have
+reached the state of dementia and idiocy provided for by Article 448 of
+the Civil Code, and require the application of the remedies set forth
+by that article, for the security of his fortune and his person, and to
+guard the interest of his children whom he keeps to live with him.
+
+“‘That, in point of fact, the mental condition of M. d’Espard, which
+for some years has given grounds for alarm based on the system he has
+pursued in the management of his affairs, has reached, during the last
+twelvemonth, a deplorable depth of depression; that his infirm will was
+the first thing to show the results of the malady; and that its effete
+state leaves M. the Marquis d’Espard exposed to all the perils of his
+incompetency, as is proved by the following facts:
+
+“‘For a long time all the income accruing from M. d’Espard’s estates are
+paid, without any reasonable cause, or even temporary advantage,
+into the hands of an old woman, whose repulsive ugliness is generally
+remarked on, named Madame Jeanrenaud, living sometimes in Paris, Rue
+de la Vrilliere, No. 8, sometimes at Villeparisis, near Claye, in the
+Department of Seine et Marne, and for the benefit of her son, aged
+thirty-six, an officer in the ex-Imperial Guards, whom the Marquis
+d’Espard has placed by his influence in the King’s Guards, as Major in
+the First Regiment of Cuirassiers. These two persons, who in 1814
+were in extreme poverty, have since then purchased house-property of
+considerable value; among other items, quite recently, a large house
+in the Grand Rue Verte, where the said Jeanrenaud is laying out
+considerable sums in order to settle there with the woman Jeanrenaud,
+intending to marry: these sums amount already to more than a hundred
+thousand francs. The marriage has been arranged by the intervention of
+M. d’Espard with his banker, one Mongenod, whose niece he has asked
+in marriage for the said Jeanrenaud, promising to use his influence
+to procure him the title and dignity of baron. This has in fact been
+secured by His Majesty’s letters patent, dated December 29th of last
+year, at the request of the Marquis d’Espard, as can be proved by His
+Excellency the Keeper of the Seals, if the Court should think proper to
+require his testimony.
+
+“‘That no reason, not even such as morality and the law would concur in
+disapproving, can justify the influence which the said Mme. Jeanrenaud
+exerts over M. d’Espard, who, indeed, sees her very seldom; nor account
+for his strange affection for the said Baron Jeanrenaud, Major with whom
+he has but little intercourse. And yet their power is so considerable,
+that whenever they need money, if only to gratify a mere whim, this
+lady, or her son----’ Heh, heh! _No reason even such as morality and the
+law concur in disapproving!_ What does the clerk or the attorney mean to
+insinuate?” said Popinot.
+
+Bianchon laughed.
+
+“‘This lady, or her son, obtain whatever they ask of the Marquis
+d’Espard without demur; and if he has not ready money, M. d’Espard draws
+bills to be paid by the said Mongenod, who has offered to give evidence
+to that effect for the petitioner.
+
+“‘That, moreover, in further proof of these facts, lately, on the
+occasion of the renewal of the leases on the Espard estate, the farmers
+having paid a considerable premium for the renewal of their leases on
+the old terms, M. Jeanrenaud at once secured the payment of it into his
+own hands.
+
+“‘That the Marquis d’Espard parts with these sums of money so little of
+his own free-will, that when he was spoken to on the subject he seemed
+to remember nothing of the matter; that whenever anybody of any weight
+has questioned him as to his devotion to these two persons, his replies
+have shown so complete an absence of ideas and of sense of his own
+interests, that there obviously must be some occult cause at work to
+which the petitioner begs to direct the eye of justice, inasmuch as it
+is impossible but that this cause should be criminal, malignant, and
+wrongful, or else of a nature to come under medical jurisdiction;
+unless this influence is of the kind which constitutes an abuse of moral
+power--such as can only be described by the word _possession_----‘The
+devil!” exclaimed Popinot. “What do you say to that, doctor. These are
+strange statements.”
+
+“They might certainly,” said Bianchon, “be an effect of magnetic force.”
+
+“Then do you believe in Mesmer’s nonsense, and his tub, and seeing
+through walls?”
+
+“Yes, uncle,” said the doctor gravely. “As I heard you read that
+petition I thought of that. I assure you that I have verified, in
+another sphere of action, several analogous facts proving the unlimited
+influence one man may acquire over another. In contradiction to the
+opinion of my brethren, I am perfectly convinced of the power of the
+will regarded as a motor force. All collusion and charlatanism apart,
+I have seen the results of such a possession. Actions promised during
+sleep by a magnetized patient to the magnetizer have been scrupulously
+performed on waking. The will of one had become the will of the other.”
+
+“Every kind of action?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Even a criminal act?”
+
+“Even a crime.”
+
+“If it were not from you, I would not listen to such a thing.”
+
+“I will make you witness it,” said Bianchon.
+
+“Hm, hm,” muttered the lawyer. “But supposing that this so-called
+possession fell under this class of facts, it would be difficult to
+prove it as legal evidence.”
+
+“If this woman Jeanrenaud is so hideously old and ugly, I do not see
+what other means of fascination she can have used,” observed Bianchon.
+
+“But,” observed the lawyer, “in 1814, the time at which this fascination
+is supposed to have taken place, this woman was fourteen years younger;
+if she had been connected with M. d’Espard ten years before that, these
+calculations take us back four-and-twenty years, to a time when the lady
+may have been young and pretty, and have won for herself and her son a
+power over M. d’Espard which some men do not know how to evade. Though
+the source of this power is reprehensible in the sight of justice, it
+is justifiable in the eye of nature. Madame Jeanrenaud may have been
+aggrieved by the marriage, contracted probably at about that time,
+between the Marquis d’Espard and Mademoiselle de Blamont-Chauvry, and at
+the bottom of all this there may be nothing more than the rivalry of
+two women, since the Marquis had for a long time lived apart from Mme.
+d’Espard.”
+
+“But her repulsive ugliness, uncle?”
+
+“Power of fascination is in direct proportion to ugliness,” said the
+lawyer; “that is the old story. And then think of the smallpox, doctor.
+But to proceed.
+
+“‘That so long ago as in 1815, in order to supply the sums of money
+required by these two persons, the Marquis d’Espard went with his two
+children to live in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, in
+rooms quite unworthy of his name and rank’--well, we may live as
+we please--‘that he keeps his two children there, the Comte Clement
+d’Espard and Vicomte Camille d’Espard, in a style of living quite
+unsuited to their future prospects, their name and fortune; that he
+often wants money, to such a point, that not long since the landlord,
+one Mariast, put in an execution on the furniture in the rooms; that
+when this execution was carried out in his presence, the Marquis
+d’Espard helped the bailiff, whom he treated like a man of rank, paying
+him all the marks of attention and respect which he would have shown to
+a person of superior birth and dignity to himself.’”
+
+The uncle and nephew glanced at each other and laughed.
+
+“‘That, moreover, every act of his life, besides the facts with
+reference to the widow Jeanrenaud and the Baron Jeanrenaud, her son, are
+those of a madman; that for nearly ten years he has given his thoughts
+exclusively to China, its customs, manners, and history; that he refers
+everything to a Chinese origin; that when he is questioned on the
+subject, he confuses the events of the day and the business of
+yesterday with facts relating to China; that he censures the acts of
+the Government and the conduct of the King, though he is personally much
+attached to him, by comparing them with the politics of China;
+
+“‘That this monomania has driven the Marquis d’Espard to conduct devoid
+of all sense: against the customs of men of rank, and, in opposition to
+his own professed ideas as to the duties of the nobility, he has joined
+a commercial undertaking, for which he constantly draws bills which, as
+they fall due, threaten both his honor and his fortune, since they
+stamp him as a trader, and in default of payment may lead to his being
+declared insolvent; that these debts, which are owing to stationers,
+printers, lithographers, and print-colorists, who have supplied the
+materials for his publication, called A Picturesque History of China,
+now coming out in parts, are so heavy that these tradesmen have
+requested the petitioner to apply for a Commission in Lunacy with regard
+to the Marquis d’Espard in order to save their own credit.’”
+
+“The man is mad!” exclaimed Bianchon.
+
+“You think so, do you?” said his uncle. “If you listen to only one bell,
+you hear only one sound.”
+
+“But it seems to me----” said Bianchon.
+
+“But it seems to me,” said Popinot, “that if any relation of mine wanted
+to get hold of the management of my affairs, and if, instead of being a
+humble lawyer, whose colleagues can, any day, verify what his condition
+is, I were a duke of the realm, an attorney with a little cunning, like
+Desroches, might bring just such a petition against me.
+
+“‘That his children’s education has been neglected for this monomania;
+and that he has taught them, against all the rules of education, the
+facts of Chinese history, which contradict the tenets of the Catholic
+Church. He also has them taught the Chinese dialects.’”
+
+“Here Desroches strikes me as funny,” said Bianchon.
+
+“The petition is drawn up by his head-clerk Godeschal, who, as you know,
+is not strong in Chinese,” said the lawyer.
+
+“‘That he often leaves his children destitute of the most necessary
+things; that the petitioner, notwithstanding her entreaties, can never
+see them; that the said Marquis d’Espard brings them to her only once a
+year; that, knowing the privations to which they are exposed, she makes
+vain efforts to give them the things most necessary for their
+existence, and which they require----’ Oh! Madame la Marquise, this is
+preposterous. By proving too much you prove nothing.--My dear boy,” said
+the old man, laying the document on his knee, “where is the mother who
+ever lacked heart and wit and yearning to such a degree as to fall
+below the inspirations suggested by her animal instinct? A mother is as
+cunning to get at her children as a girl can be in the conduct of a love
+intrigue. If your Marquise really wanted to give her children food and
+clothes, the Devil himself would not have hindered her, heh? That is
+rather too big a fable for an old lawyer to swallow!--To proceed.
+
+“‘That at the age the said children have now attained it is necessary
+that steps should be taken to preserve them from the evil effects of
+such an education; that they should be provided for as beseems their
+rank, and that they should cease to have before their eyes the sad
+example of their father’s conduct;
+
+“‘That there are proofs in support of these allegations which the Court
+can easily order to be produced. Many times has M. d’Espard spoken
+of the judge of the Twelfth Arrondissement as a mandarin of the third
+class; he often speaks of the professors of the College Henri IV. as
+“men of letters”’--and that offends them! ‘In speaking of the simplest
+things, he says, “They were not done so in China;” in the course of
+the most ordinary conversation he will sometimes allude to Madame
+Jeanrenaud, or sometimes to events which happened in the time of Louis
+XIV., and then sit plunged in the darkest melancholy; sometimes he
+fancies he is in China. Several of his neighbors, among others one Edme
+Becker, medical student, and Jean Baptiste Fremiot, a professor, living
+under the same roof, are of opinion, after frequent intercourse with the
+Marquis d’Espard, that his monomania with regard to everything Chinese
+is the result of a scheme laid by the said Baron Jeanrenaud and the
+widow his mother to bring about the deadening of all the Marquis
+d’Espard’s mental faculties, since the only service which Mme.
+Jeanrenaud appears to render M. d’Espard is to procure him everything
+that relates to the Chinese Empire;
+
+“‘Finally, that the petitioner is prepared to show to the Court that the
+moneys absorbed by the said Baron and Mme. Jeanrenaud between 1814 and
+1828 amount to not less than one million francs.
+
+“‘In confirmation of the facts herein set forth, the petitioner can
+bring the evidence of persons who are in the habit of seeing the Marquis
+d’Espard, whose names and professions are subjoined, many of whom
+have urged her to demand a commission in lunacy to declare M. d’Espard
+incapable of managing his own affairs, as being the only way to preserve
+his fortune from the effects of his maladministration and his children
+from his fatal influence.
+
+“‘Taking all this into consideration, M. le President, and the
+affidavits subjoined, the petitioner desires that it may please you,
+inasmuch as the foregoing facts sufficiently prove the insanity and
+incompetency of the Marquis d’Espard herein described with his titles
+and residence, to order that, to the end that he may be declared
+incompetent by law, this petition and the documents in evidence may be
+laid before the King’s public prosecutor; and that you will charge one
+of the judges of this Court to make his report to you on any day you may
+be pleased to name, and thereupon to pronounce judgment,’ etc.
+
+“And here,” said Popinot, “is the President’s order instructing
+me!--Well, what does the Marquise d’Espard want with me? I know
+everything. But I shall go to-morrow with my registrar to see M. le
+Marquis, for this does not seem at all clear to me.”
+
+“Listen, my dear uncle, I have never asked the least little favor of you
+that had to do with your legal functions; well, now I beg you to show
+Madame d’Espard the kindness which her situation deserves. If she came
+here, you would listen to her?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Well, then, go and listen to her in her own house. Madame d’Espard is
+a sickly, nervous, delicate woman, who would faint in your rat-hole of a
+place. Go in the evening, instead of accepting her dinner, since the law
+forbids your eating or drinking at your client’s expense.”
+
+“And does not the law forbid you from taking any legacy from your dead?”
+ said Popinot, fancying that he saw a touch of irony on his nephew’s
+lips.
+
+“Come, uncle, if it were only to enable you to get at the truth of this
+business, grant my request. You will come as the examining judge, since
+matters do not seem to you very clear. Deuce take it! It is as necessary
+to cross-question the Marquise as it is to examine the Marquis.”
+
+“You are right,” said the lawyer. “It is quite possible that it is she
+who is mad. I will go.”
+
+“I will call for you. Write down in your engagement book: ‘To-morrow
+evening at nine, Madame d’Espard.’--Good!” said Bianchon, seeing his
+uncle make a note of the engagement.
+
+
+
+Next evening at nine Bianchon mounted his uncle’s dusty staircase, and
+found him at work on the statement of some complicated judgment. The
+coat Lavienne had ordered of the tailor had not been sent, so Popinot
+put on his old stained coat, and was the Popinot unadorned whose
+appearance made those laugh who did not know the secrets of his
+private life. Bianchon, however, obtained permission to pull his cravat
+straight, and to button his coat, and he hid the stains by crossing the
+breast of it with the right side over the left, and so displaying the
+new front of the cloth. But in a minute the judge rucked the coat
+up over his chest by the way in which he stuffed his hands into his
+pockets, obeying an irresistible habit. Thus the coat, deeply wrinkled
+both in front and behind, made a sort of hump in the middle of the back,
+leaving a gap between the waistcoat and trousers through which his shirt
+showed. Bianchon, to his sorrow, only discovered this crowning absurdity
+at the moment when his uncle entered the Marquise’s room.
+
+A brief sketch of the person and the career of the lady in whose
+presence the doctor and the judge now found themselves is necessary for
+an understanding of her interview with Popinot.
+
+Madame d’Espard had, for the last seven years, been very much the
+fashion in Paris, where Fashion can raise and drop by turns various
+personages who, now great and now small, that is to say, in view or
+forgotten, are at last quite intolerable--as discarded ministers are,
+and every kind of decayed sovereignty. These flatterers of the past,
+odious with their stale pretensions, know everything, speak ill of
+everything, and, like ruined profligates, are friends with all the
+world. Since her husband had separated from her in 1815, Madame d’Espard
+must have married in the beginning of 1812. Her children, therefore,
+were aged respectively fifteen and thirteen. By what luck was the mother
+of a family, about three-and-thirty years of age, still the fashion?
+
+Though Fashion is capricious, and no one can foresee who shall be her
+favorites, though she often exalts a banker’s wife, or some woman of
+very doubtful elegance and beauty, it certainly seems supernatural when
+Fashion puts on constitutional airs and gives promotion for age. But
+in this case Fashion had done as the world did, and accepted Madame
+d’Espard as still young.
+
+The Marquise, who was thirty-three by her register of birth, was
+twenty-two in a drawing-room in the evening. But by what care, what
+artifice! Elaborate curls shaded her temples. She condemned herself to
+live in twilight, affecting illness so as to sit under the protecting
+tones of light filtered through muslin. Like Diane de Poitiers, she used
+cold water in her bath, and, like her again, the Marquise slept on a
+horse-hair mattress, with morocco-covered pillows to preserve her hair;
+she ate very little, only drank water, and observed monastic regularity
+in the smallest actions of her life.
+
+This severe system has, it is said, been carried so far as to the use of
+ice instead of water, and nothing but cold food, by a famous Polish lady
+of our day who spends a life, now verging on a century old, after the
+fashion of a town belle. Fated to live as long as Marion Delorme, whom
+history has credited with surviving to be a hundred and thirty, the old
+vice-queen of Poland, at the age of nearly a hundred, has the heart
+and brain of youth, a charming face, an elegant shape; and in her
+conversation, sparkling with brilliancy like faggots in the fire, she
+can compare the men and books of our literature with the men and books
+of the eighteenth century. Living in Warsaw, she orders her caps of
+Herbault in Paris. She is a great lady with the amiability of a mere
+girl; she swims, she runs like a schoolboy, and can sink on to a sofa
+with the grace of a young coquette; she mocks at death, and laughs at
+life. After having astonished the Emperor Alexander, she can still amaze
+the Emperor Nicholas by the splendor of her entertainments. She can
+still bring tears to the eyes of a youthful lover, for her age is
+whatever she pleases, and she has the exquisite self-devotion of a
+grisette. In short, she is herself a fairy tale, unless, indeed, she is
+a fairy.
+
+Had Madame d’Espard known Madame Zayonseck? Did she mean to imitate
+her career? Be that as it may, the Marquise proved the merits of the
+treatment; her complexion was clear, her brow unwrinkled, her figure,
+like that of Henri II.’s lady-love, preserved the litheness, the
+freshness, the covered charms which bring a woman love and keep it
+alive. The simple precautions of this course, suggested by art and
+nature, and perhaps by experience, had met in her with a general system
+which confirmed the results. The Marquise was absolutely indifferent
+to everything that was not herself: men amused her, but no man had
+ever caused her those deep agitations which stir both natures to their
+depths, and wreck one on the other. She knew neither hatred nor love.
+When she was offended, she avenged herself coldly, quietly, at her
+leisure, waiting for the opportunity to gratify the ill-will she
+cherished against anybody who dwelt in her unfavorable remembrance. She
+made no fuss, she did not excite herself, she talked, because she knew
+that by two words a woman may cause the death of three men.
+
+She had parted from M. d’Espard with the greatest satisfaction. Had he
+not taken with him two children who at present were troublesome, and in
+the future would stand in the way of her pretensions? Her most intimate
+friends, as much as her least persistent admirers, seeing about her none
+of Cornelia’s jewels, who come and go, and unconsciously betray their
+mother’s age, took her for quite a young woman. The two boys, about
+whom she seemed so anxious in her petition, were, like their father, as
+unknown in the world as the northwest passage is unknown to navigators.
+M. d’Espard was supposed to be an eccentric personage who had deserted
+his wife without having the smallest cause for complaint against her.
+
+Mistress of herself at two-and-twenty, and mistress of her fortune of
+twenty-six thousand francs a year, the Marquise hesitated long before
+deciding on a course of action and ordering her life. Though she
+benefited by the expenses her husband had incurred in his house, though
+she had all the furniture, the carriages, the horses, in short, all the
+details of a handsome establishment, she lived a retired life during the
+years 1816, 17, and 18, a time when families were recovering from the
+disasters resulting from political tempests. She belonged to one of the
+most important and illustrious families of the Faubourg Saint-Germain,
+and her parents advised her to live with them as much as possible after
+the separation forced upon her by her husband’s inexplicable caprice.
+
+In 1820 the Marquise roused herself from her lethargy; she went to
+Court, appeared at parties, and entertained in her own house. From 1821
+to 1827 she lived in great style, and made herself remarked for her
+taste and her dress; she had a day, an hour, for receiving visits, and
+ere long she had seated herself on the throne, occupied before her by
+Madame la Vicomtesse de Beauseant, the Duchesse de Langeais, and Madame
+Firmiani--who on her marriage with M. de Camps had resigned the sceptre
+in favor of the Duchesse de Maufrigneuse, from whom Madame d’Espard
+snatched it. The world knew nothing beyond this of the private live
+of the Marquise d’Espard. She seemed likely to shine for long on the
+Parisian horizon, like the sun near its setting, but which will never
+set.
+
+The Marquise was on terms of great intimacy with a duchess as famous for
+her beauty as for her attachment to a prince just now in banishment,
+but accustomed to play a leading part in every prospective government.
+Madame d’Espard was also a friend of a foreign lady, with whom a famous
+and very wily Russian diplomate was in the habit of discussing public
+affairs. And then an antiquated countess, who was accustomed to shuffle
+the cards for the great game of politics, had adopted her in a maternal
+fashion. Thus, to any man of high ambitions, Madame d’Espard was
+preparing a covert but very real influence to follow the public and
+frivolous ascendency she now owed to fashion. Her drawing-room
+was acquiring political individuality: “What do they say at Madame
+d’Espard’s?” “Are they against the measure in Madame d’Espard’s
+drawing-room?” were questions repeated by a sufficient number of
+simpletons to give the flock of the faithful who surrounded her the
+importance of a coterie. A few damaged politicians whose wounds she had
+bound up, and whom she flattered, pronounced her as capable in diplomacy
+as the wife of the Russian ambassador to London. The Marquise had indeed
+several times suggested to deputies or to peers words and ideas that had
+rung through Europe. She had often judged correctly of certain events on
+which her circle of friends dared not express an opinion. The principal
+persons about the Court came in the evening to play whist in her rooms.
+
+Then she also had the qualities of her defects; she was thought to
+be--and she was--indiscreet. Her friendship seemed to be staunch; she
+worked for her proteges with a persistency which showed that she cared
+less for patronage than for increased influence. This conduct was based
+on her dominant passion, Vanity. Conquests and pleasure, which so many
+women love, to her seemed only means to an end; she aimed at living on
+every point of the largest circle that life can describe.
+
+Among the men still young, and to whom the future belonged, who crowded
+her drawing-room on great occasions, were to be seen MM. de Marsay and
+de Ronquerolles, de Montriveau, de la Roche-Hugon, de Serizy, Ferraud,
+Maxime de Trailles, de Listomere, the two Vandenesses, du Chatelet,
+and others. She would frequently receive a man whose wife she would not
+admit, and her power was great enough to induce certain ambitious men to
+submit to these hard conditions, such as two famous royalist bankers, M.
+de Nucingen and Ferdinand du Tillet. She had so thoroughly studied the
+strength and the weakness of Paris life, that her conduct had never
+given any man the smallest advantage over her. An enormous price might
+have been set on a note or letter by which she might have compromised
+herself, without one being produced.
+
+If an arid soul enabled her to play her part to the life, her person was
+no less available for it. She had a youthful figure. Her voice was, at
+will, soft and fresh, or clear and hard. She possessed in the highest
+degree the secret of that aristocratic pose by which a woman wipes out
+the past. The Marquise knew well the art of setting an immense space
+between herself and the sort of man who fancies he may be familiar after
+some chance advances. Her imposing gaze could deny everything. In her
+conversation fine and beautiful sentiments and noble resolutions flowed
+naturally, as it seemed, from a pure heart and soul; but in reality she
+was all self, and quite capable of blasting a man who was clumsy in
+his negotiations, at the very time when she was shamelessly making a
+compromise for the benefit of her own interest.
+
+Rastignac, in trying to fasten on to this woman, had discerned her to
+be the cleverest of tools, but he had not yet used it; far from handling
+it, he was already finding himself crushed by it. This young Condottiere
+of the brain, condemned, like Napoleon, to give battle constantly, while
+knowing that a single defeat would prove the grave of his fortunes, had
+met a dangerous adversary in his protectress. For the first time in his
+turbulent life, he was playing a game with a partner worthy of him. He
+saw a place as Minister in the conquest of Madame d’Espard, so he was
+her tool till he could make her his--a perilous beginning.
+
+The Hotel d’Espard needed a large household, and the Marquise had
+a great number of servants. The grand receptions were held in the
+ground-floor rooms, but she lived on the first floor of the house. The
+perfect order of a fine staircase splendidly decorated, and rooms fitted
+in the dignified style which formerly prevailed at Versailles, spoke of
+an immense fortune. When the judge saw the carriage gates thrown open
+to admit his nephew’s cab, he took in with a rapid glance the lodge, the
+porter, the courtyard, the stables, the arrangement of the house,
+the flowers that decorated the stairs, the perfect cleanliness of the
+banisters, walls, and carpets, and counted the footmen in livery who, as
+the bell rang, appeared on the landing. His eyes, which only yesterday
+in his parlor had sounded the dignity of misery under the muddy clothing
+of the poor, now studied with the same penetrating vision the furniture
+and splendor of the rooms he passed through, to pierce the misery of
+grandeur.
+
+“M. Popinot--M. Bianchon.”
+
+The two names were pronounced at the door of the boudoir where the
+Marquise was sitting, a pretty room recently refurnished, and looking
+out on the garden behind the house. At the moment Madame d’Espard was
+seated in one of the old rococo armchairs of which Madame had set the
+fashion. Rastignac was at her left hand on a low chair, in which he
+looked settled like an Italian lady’s “cousin.” A third person was
+standing by the corner of the chimney-piece. As the shrewd doctor had
+suspected, the Marquise was a woman of a parched and wiry constitution.
+But for her regimen her complexion must have taken the ruddy tone
+that is produced by constant heat; but she added to the effect of her
+acquired pallor by the strong colors of the stuffs she hung her rooms
+with, or in which she dressed. Reddish-brown, marone, bistre with a
+golden light in it, suited her to perfection. Her boudoir, copied from
+that of a famous lady then at the height of fashion in London, was in
+tan-colored velvet; but she had added various details of ornament which
+moderated the pompous splendor of this royal hue. Her hair was dressed
+like a girl’s in bands ending in curls, which emphasized the rather
+long oval of her face; but an oval face is as majestic as a round one is
+ignoble. The mirrors, cut with facets to lengthen or flatten the face at
+will, amply proved the rule as applied to the physiognomy.
+
+On seeing Popinot, who stood in the doorway craning his neck like a
+startled animal, with his left hand in his pocket, and the right hand
+holding a hat with a greasy lining, the Marquise gave Rastignac a look
+wherein lay a germ of mockery. The good man’s rather foolish appearance
+was so completely in harmony with his grotesque figure and scared looks,
+that Rastignac, catching sight of Bianchon’s dejected expression of
+humiliation through his uncle, could not help laughing, and turned away.
+The Marquise bowed a greeting, and made a great effort to rise from her
+seat, falling back again, not without grace, with an air of apologizing
+for her incivility by affected weakness.
+
+At this instant the person who was standing between the fireplace and
+the door bowed slightly, and pushed forward two chairs, which he offered
+by a gesture to the doctor and the judge; then, when they had seated
+themselves, he leaned against the wall again, crossing his arms.
+
+A word as to this man. There is living now, in our day, a
+painter--Decamps--who possesses in the very highest degree the art of
+commanding your interest in everything he sets before your eyes, whether
+it be a stone or a man. In this respect his pencil is more skilful than
+his brush. He will sketch an empty room and leave a broom against the
+wall. If he chooses, you shall shudder; you shall believe that this
+broom has just been the instrument of crime, and is dripping with blood;
+it shall be the broom which the widow Bancal used to clean out the room
+where Fualdes was murdered. Yes, the painter will touzle that broom like
+a man in a rage; he will make each hair of it stand on-end as though
+it were on your own bristling scalp; he will make it the interpreter
+between the secret poem of his imagination and the poem that shall have
+its birth in yours. After terrifying you by the aspect of that broom,
+to-morrow he will draw another, and lying by it a cat, asleep, but
+mysterious in its sleep, shall tell you that this broom is that on which
+the wife of a German cobbler rides off to the Sabbath on the Brocken. Or
+it will be a quite harmless broom, on which he will hang the coat of a
+clerk in the Treasury. Decamps had in his brush what Paganini had in his
+bow--a magnetically communicative power.
+
+Well, I should have to transfer to my style that striking genius, that
+marvelous knack of the pencil, to depict the upright, tall, lean man
+dressed in black, with black hair, who stood there without speaking a
+word. This gentleman had a face like a knife-blade, cold and harsh, with
+a color like Seine water when it was muddy and strewn with fragments
+of charcoal from a sunken barge. He looked at the floor, listening and
+passing judgment. His attitude was terrifying. He stood there like
+the dreadful broom to which Decamps has given the power of revealing a
+crime. Now and then, in the course of conversation, the Marquise tried
+to get some tacit advice; but however eager her questioning, he was as
+grave and as rigid as the statue of the Commendatore.
+
+The worthy Popinot, sitting on the edge of his chair in front of the
+fire, his hat between his knees, stared at the gilt chandeliers, the
+clock, and the curiosities with which the chimney-shelf was covered,
+the velvet and trimmings of the curtains, and all the costly and elegant
+nothings that a woman of fashion collects about her. He was roused from
+his homely meditations by Madame d’Espard, who addressed him in a piping
+tone:
+
+“Monsieur, I owe you a million thanks----”
+
+“A million thanks,” thought he to himself, “that is too many; it does
+not mean one.”
+
+“For the trouble you condescend----”
+
+“Condescend!” thought he; “she is laughing at me.”
+
+“To take in coming to see an unhappy client, who is too ill to go
+out----”
+
+Here the lawyer cut the Marquise short by giving her an inquisitorial
+look, examining the sanitary condition of the unhappy client.
+
+“As sound as a bell,” said he to himself.
+
+“Madame,” said he, assuming a respectful mien, “you owe me nothing.
+Although my visit to you is not in strict accordance with the practice
+of the Court, we ought to spare no pains to discover the truth in cases
+of this kind. Our judgment is then guided less by the letter of the law
+than by the promptings of our conscience. Whether I seek the truth here
+or in my own consulting-room, so long as I find it, all will be well.”
+
+While Popinot was speaking, Rastignac was shaking hands with Bianchon;
+the Marquise welcomed the doctor with a little bow full of gracious
+significance.
+
+“Who is that?” asked Bianchon in a whisper of Rastignac, indicating the
+dark man.
+
+“The Chevalier d’Espard, the Marquis’ brother.”
+
+“Your nephew told me,” said the Marquise to Popinot, “how much you are
+occupied, and I know too that you are so good as to wish to conceal your
+kind actions, so as to release those whom you oblige from the burden of
+gratitude. The work in Court is most fatiguing, it would seem. Why have
+they not twice as many judges?”
+
+“Ah, madame, that would not be difficult; we should be none the worse if
+they had. But when that happens, fowls will cut their teeth!”
+
+As he heard this speech, so entirely in character with the lawyer’s
+appearance, the Chevalier measured him from head to foot, out of one
+eye, as much as to say, “We shall easily manage him.”
+
+The Marquise looked at Rastignac, who bent over her. “That is the
+sort of man,” murmured the dandy in her ear, “who is trusted to pass
+judgments on the life and interests of private individuals.”
+
+Like most men who have grown old in a business, Popinot readily let
+himself follow the habits he had acquired, more particularly habits of
+mind. His conversation was all of “the shop.” He was fond of questioning
+those he talked to, forcing them to unexpected conclusions, making them
+tell more than they wished to reveal. Pozzo di Borgo, it is said, used
+to amuse himself by discovering other folks’ secrets, and entangling
+them in his diplomatic snares, and thus, by invincible habit, showed
+how his mind was soaked in wiliness. As soon as Popinot had surveyed
+the ground, so to speak, on which he stood, he saw that it would
+be necessary to have recourse to the cleverest subtleties, the most
+elaborately wrapped up and disguised, which were in use in the Courts,
+to detect the truth.
+
+Bianchon sat cold and stern, as a man who has made up his mind to endure
+torture without revealing his sufferings; but in his heart he wished
+that his uncle could only trample on this woman as we trample on a
+viper--a comparison suggested to him by the Marquise’s long dress, by
+the curve of her attitude, her long neck, small head, and undulating
+movements.
+
+“Well, monsieur,” said Madame d’Espard, “however great my dislike to be
+or seem selfish, I have been suffering too long not to wish that you may
+settle matters at once. Shall I soon get a favorable decision?”
+
+“Madame, I will do my best to bring matters to a conclusion,” said
+Popinot, with an air of frank good-nature. “Are you ignorant of the
+reason which made the separation necessary which now subsists between
+you and the Marquis d’Espard?”
+
+“Yes, monsieur,” she replied, evidently prepared with a story to tell.
+“At the beginning of 1816 M. d’Espard, whose temper had completely
+changed within three months or so, proposed that we should go to live
+on one of his estates near Briancon, without any regard for my health,
+which that climate would have destroyed, or for my habits of life; I
+refused to go. My refusal gave rise to such unjustifiable reproaches on
+his part, that from that hour I had my suspicions as to the soundness of
+his mind. On the following day he left me, leaving me his house and
+the free use of my own income, and he went to live in the Rue de la
+Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, taking with him my two children----”
+
+“One moment, madame,” said the lawyer, interrupting her. “What was that
+income?”
+
+“Twenty-six thousand francs a year,” she replied parenthetically. “I
+at once consulted old M. Bordin as to what I ought to do,” she went
+on; “but it seems that there are so many difficulties in the way of
+depriving a father of the care of his children, that I was forced to
+resign myself to remaining alone at the age of twenty-two--an age
+at which many young women do very foolish things. You have read my
+petition, no doubt, monsieur; you know the principal facts on which I
+rely to procure a Commission in Lunacy with regard to M. d’Espard?”
+
+“Have you ever applied to him, madame, to obtain the care of your
+children?”
+
+“Yes, monsieur; but in vain. It is very hard on a mother to be deprived
+of the affection of her children, particularly when they can give her
+such happiness as every woman clings to.”
+
+“The elder must be sixteen,” said Popinot.
+
+“Fifteen,” said the Marquise eagerly.
+
+Here Bianchon and Rastignac looked at each other. Madame d’Espard bit
+her lips.
+
+“What can the age of my children matter to you?”
+
+“Well, madame,” said the lawyer, without seeming to attach any
+importance to his words, “a lad of fifteen and his brother, of thirteen,
+I suppose, have legs and their wits about them; they might come to see
+you on the sly. If they do not, it is because they obey their father,
+and to obey him in that matter they must love him very dearly.”
+
+“I do not understand,” said the Marquise.
+
+“You do not know, perhaps,” replied Popinot, “that in your petition
+your attorney represents your children as being very unhappy with their
+father?”
+
+Madame d’Espard replied with charming innocence:
+
+“I do not know what my attorney may have put into my mouth.”
+
+“Forgive my inferences,” said Popinot, “but Justice weighs everything.
+What I ask you, madame, is suggested by my wish thoroughly to understand
+the matter. By your account M. d’Espard deserted you on the most
+frivolous pretext. Instead of going to Briancon, where he wished to take
+you, he remained in Paris. This point is not clear. Did he know this
+Madame Jeanrenaud before his marriage?”
+
+“No, monsieur,” replied the Marquise, with some asperity, visible only
+to Rastignac and the Chevalier d’Espard.
+
+She was offended at being cross-examined by this lawyer when she had
+intended to beguile his judgment; but as Popinot still looked stupid
+from sheer absence of mind, she ended by attributing his interrogatory
+to the Questioning Spirit of Voltaire’s bailiff.
+
+“My parents,” she went on, “married me at the age of sixteen to M.
+d’Espard, whose name, fortune, and mode of life were such as my family
+looked for in the man who was to be my husband. M. d’Espard was then
+six-and-twenty; he was a gentleman in the English sense of the word;
+his manners pleased me, he seemed to have plenty of ambition, and I like
+ambitious people,” she added, looking at Rastignac. “If M. d’Espard
+had never met that Madame Jeanrenaud, his character, his learning, his
+acquirements would have raised him--as his friends then believed--to
+high office in the Government. King Charles X., at that time Monsieur,
+had the greatest esteem for him, and a peer’s seat, an appointment at
+Court, some important post certainly would have been his. That woman
+turned his head, and has ruined all the prospects of my family.”
+
+“What were M. d’Espard’s religious opinions at that time?”
+
+“He was, and is still, a very pious man.”
+
+“You do not suppose that Madame Jeanrenaud may have influenced him by
+mysticism?”
+
+“No, monsieur.”
+
+“You have a very fine house, madame,” said Popinot suddenly, taking his
+hands out of his pockets, and rising to pick up his coat-tails and warm
+himself. “This boudoir is very nice, those chairs are magnificent, the
+whole apartment is sumptuous. You must indeed be most unhappy when,
+seeing yourself here, you know that your children are ill lodged, ill
+clothed, and ill fed. I can imagine nothing more terrible for a mother.”
+
+“Yes, indeed. I should be so glad to give the poor little fellows some
+amusement, while their father keeps them at work from morning till night
+at that wretched history of China.”
+
+“You give handsome balls; they would enjoy them, but they might acquire
+a taste for dissipation. However, their father might send them to you
+once or twice in the course of the winter.”
+
+“He brings them here on my birthday and on New Year’s Day. On those days
+M. d’Espard does me the favor of dining here with them.”
+
+“It is very singular behaviour,” said the judge, with an air of
+conviction. “Have you ever seen this Dame Jeanrenaud?”
+
+“My brother-in-law one day, out of interest in his brother----”
+
+“Ah! monsieur is M. d’Espard’s brother?” said the lawyer, interrupting
+her.
+
+The Chevalier bowed, but did not speak.
+
+“M. d’Espard, who has watched this affair, took me to the Oratoire,
+where this woman goes to sermon, for she is a Protestant. I saw her;
+she is not in the least attractive; she looks like a butcher’s wife,
+extremely fat, horribly marked with the smallpox; she has feet and hands
+like a man’s, she squints, in short, she is monstrous!”
+
+“It is inconceivable,” said the judge, looking like the most imbecile
+judge in the whole kingdom. “And this creature lives near here, Rue
+Verte, in a fine house? There are no plain folk left, it would seem?”
+
+“In a mansion on which her son has spent absurd sums.”
+
+“Madame,” said Popinot, “I live in the Faubourg Saint-Marceau; I know
+nothing of such expenses. What do you call absurd sums?”
+
+“Well,” said the Marquise, “a stable with five horses and three
+carriages, a phaeton, a brougham, and a cabriolet.”
+
+“That costs a large sum, then?” asked Popinot in surprise.
+
+“Enormous sums!” said Rastignac, intervening. “Such an establishment
+would cost, for the stables, the keeping the carriages in order, and
+the liveries for the men, between fifteen and sixteen thousand francs a
+year.”
+
+“Should you think so, madame?” said the judge, looking much astonished.
+
+“Yes, at least,” replied the Marquise.
+
+“And the furniture, too, must have cost a lot of money?”
+
+“More than a hundred thousand francs,” replied Madame d’Espard, who
+could not help smiling at the lawyer’s vulgarity.
+
+“Judges, madame, are apt to be incredulous; it is what they are paid
+for, and I am incredulous. The Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother must have
+fleeced M. d’Espard most preposterously, if what you say is correct.
+There is a stable establishment which, by your account, costs sixteen
+thousand francs a year. Housekeeping, servants’ wages, and the gross
+expenses of the house itself must run to twice as much; that makes a
+total of from fifty to sixty thousand francs a year. Do you suppose that
+these people, formerly so extremely poor, can have so large a fortune? A
+million yields scarcely forty thousand a year.”
+
+“Monsieur, the mother and son invested the money given them by M.
+d’Espard in the funds when they were at 60 to 80. I should think their
+income must be more than sixty thousand francs. And then the son has
+fine appointments.”
+
+“If they spend sixty thousand francs a year,” said the judge, “how much
+do you spend?”
+
+“Well,” said Madame d’Espard, “about the same.” The Chevalier started a
+little, the Marquise colored; Bianchon looked at Rastignac; but Popinot
+preserved an expression of simplicity which quite deceived Madame
+d’Espard. The chevalier took no part in the conversation; he saw that
+all was lost.
+
+“These people, madame, might be indicted before the superior Court,”
+ said Popinot.
+
+“That was my opinion,” exclaimed the Marquise, enchanted. “If threatened
+with the police, they would have come to terms.”
+
+“Madame,” said Popinot, “when M. d’Espard left you, did he not give
+you a power of attorney enabling you to manage and control your own
+affairs?”
+
+“I do not understand the object of all these questions,” said the
+Marquise with petulance. “It seems to me that if you would only consider
+the state in which I am placed by my husband’s insanity, you ought to be
+troubling yourself about him, and not about me.”
+
+“We are coming to that, madame,” said the judge. “Before placing in
+your hands, or in any others, the control of M. d’Espard’s property,
+supposing he were pronounced incapable, the Court must inquire as to how
+you have managed your own. If M. d’Espard gave you the power, he would
+have shown confidence in you, and the Court would recognize the fact.
+Had you any power from him? You might have bought or sold house property
+or invested money in business?”
+
+“No, monsieur, the Blamont-Chauvrys are not in the habit of trading,”
+ said she, extremely nettled in her pride as an aristocrat, and
+forgetting the business in hand. “My property is intact, and M. d’Espard
+gave me no power to act.”
+
+The Chevalier put his hand over his eyes not to betray the vexation
+he felt at his sister-in-law’s short-sightedness, for she was ruining
+herself by her answers. Popinot had gone straight to the mark in spite
+of his apparent doublings.
+
+“Madame,” said the lawyer, indicating the Chevalier, “this gentleman, of
+course, is your near connection? May we speak openly before these other
+gentlemen?”
+
+“Speak on,” said the Marquise, surprised at this caution.
+
+“Well, madame, granting that you spend only sixty thousand francs
+a year, to any one who sees your stables, your house, your train of
+servants, and a style of housekeeping which strikes me as far more
+luxurious than that of the Jeanrenauds, that sum would seem well laid
+out.”
+
+The Marquise bowed an agreement.
+
+“But,” continued the judge, “if you have no more than twenty-six
+thousand francs a year, you may have a hundred thousand francs of debt.
+The Court would therefore have a right to imagine that the motives which
+prompt you to ask that your husband may be deprived of the control of
+his property are complicated by self-interest and the need of paying
+your debts--if--you--have--any. The requests addressed to me have
+interested me in your position; consider fully and make your confession.
+If my suppositions have hit the truth, there is yet time to avoid the
+blame which the Court would have a perfect right to express in the
+saving clauses of the verdict if you could not show your attitude to be
+absolutely honorable and clear.
+
+“It is our duty to examine the motives of the applicant as well as
+to listen to the plea of the witness under examination, to ascertain
+whether the petitioner may not have been prompted by passion, by a
+desire for money, which is unfortunately too common----”
+
+The Marquise was on Saint Laurence’s gridiron.
+
+“And I must have explanations on this point. Madame, I have no wish to
+call you to account; I only want to know how you have managed to live at
+the rate of sixty thousand francs a year, and that for some years past.
+There are plenty of women who achieve this in their housekeeping, but
+you are not one of those. Tell me, you may have the most legitimate
+resources, a royal pension, or some claim on the indemnities lately
+granted; but even then you must have had your husband’s authority to
+receive them.”
+
+The Marquise did not speak.
+
+“You must remember,” Popinot went on, “that M. d’Espard may wish to
+enter a protest, and his counsel will have a right to find out whether
+you have any creditors. This boudoir is newly furnished, your rooms are
+not now furnished with the things left to you by M. d’Espard in 1816.
+If, as you did me the honor of informing me, furniture is costly for
+the Jeanrenauds, it must be yet more so for you, who are a great
+lady. Though I am a judge, I am but a man; I may be wrong--tell me so.
+Remember the duties imposed on me by the law, and the rigorous inquiries
+it demands, when the case before it is the suspension from all his
+functions of the father of a family in the prime of life. So you will
+pardon me, Madame la Marquise, for laying all these difficulties before
+you; it will be easy for you to give me an explanation.
+
+“When a man is pronounced incapable of the control of his own affairs, a
+trustee has to be appointed. Who will be the trustee?”
+
+“His brother,” said the Marquise.
+
+The Chevalier bowed. There was a short silence, very uncomfortable for
+the five persons who were present. The judge, in sport as it were,
+had laid open the woman’s sore place. Popinot’s countenance of common,
+clumsy good-nature, at which the Marquise, the Chevalier, and Rastignac
+had been inclined to laugh, had gained importance in their eyes. As
+they stole a look at him, they discerned the various expressions of
+that eloquent mouth. The ridiculous mortal was a judge of acumen. His
+studious notice of the boudoir was accounted for: he had started from
+the gilt elephant supporting the chimney-clock, examining all this
+luxury, and had ended by reading this woman’s soul.
+
+“If the Marquis d’Espard is mad about China, I see that you are not less
+fond of its products,” said Popinot, looking at the porcelain on the
+chimney-piece. “But perhaps it was from M. le Marquis that you had these
+charming Oriental pieces,” and he pointed to some precious trifles.
+
+This irony, in very good taste, made Bianchon smile, and petrified
+Rastignac, while the Marquise bit her thin lips.
+
+“Instead of being the protector of a woman placed in a cruel dilemma--an
+alternative between losing her fortune and her children, and being
+regarded as her husband’s enemy,” she said, “you accuse me, monsieur!
+You suspect my motives! You must own that your conduct is strange!”
+
+“Madame,” said the judge eagerly, “the caution exercised by the Court in
+such cases as these might have given you, in any other judge, a perhaps
+less indulgent critic than I am.--And do you suppose that M. d’Espard’s
+lawyer will show you any great consideration? Will he not be suspicious
+of motives which may be perfectly pure and disinterested? Your life will
+be at his mercy; he will inquire into it without qualifying his search
+by the respectful deference I have for you.”
+
+“I am much obliged to you, monsieur,” said the Marquise satirically.
+“Admitting for the moment that I owe thirty thousand or fifty thousand
+francs, in the first place, it would be a mere trifle to the d’Espards
+and the Blamont-Chauvrys. But if my husband is not in the possession
+of his mental faculties, would that prevent his being pronounced
+incapable?”
+
+“No, madame,” said Popinot.
+
+“Although you have questioned me with a sort of cunning which I
+should not have suspected in a judge, and under circumstances where
+straightforwardness would have answered your purpose,” she went on, “I
+will tell you without subterfuge that my position in the world, and the
+efforts I have to make to keep up my connection, are not in the least
+to my taste. I began my life by a long period of solitude; but my
+children’s interest appealed to me; I felt that I must fill their
+father’s place. By receiving my friends, by keeping up all this
+connection, by contracting these debts, I have secured their future
+welfare; I have prepared for them a brilliant career where they will
+find help and favor; and to have what has thus been acquired, many a man
+of business, lawyer or banker, would gladly pay all it has cost me.”
+
+“I appreciate your devoted conduct, madame,” replied Popinot. “It does
+you honor, and I blame you for nothing. A judge belongs to all: he must
+know and weigh every fact.”
+
+Madame d’Espard’s tact and practice in estimating men made
+her understand that M. Popinot was not to be influenced by any
+consideration. She had counted on an ambitious lawyer, she had found
+a man of conscience. She at once thought of finding other means for
+securing the success of her side.
+
+The servants brought in tea.
+
+“Have you any further explanations to give me, madame?” said Popinot,
+seeing these preparations.
+
+“Monsieur,” she replied haughtily, “do your business your own way;
+question M. d’Espard, and you will pity me, I am sure.” She raised her
+head, looking Popinot in the face with pride, mingled with impertinence;
+the worthy man bowed himself out respectfully.
+
+“A nice man is your uncle,” said Rastignac to Bianchon. “Is he really
+so dense? Does not he know what the Marquise d’Espard is, what her
+influence means, her unavowed power over people? The Keeper of the Seals
+will be with her to-morrow----”
+
+“My dear fellow, how can I help it?” said Bianchon. “Did not I warn you?
+He is not a man you can get over.”
+
+“No,” said Rastignac; “he is a man you must run over.”
+
+The doctor was obliged to make his bow to the Marquise and her mute
+Chevalier to catch up Popinot, who, not being the man to endure an
+embarrassing position, was pacing through the rooms.
+
+“That woman owes a hundred thousand crowns,” said the judge, as he
+stepped into his nephew’s cab.
+
+“And what do you think of the case?”
+
+“I,” said the judge. “I never have an opinion till I have gone into
+everything. To-morrow early I will send to Madame Jeanrenaud to call on
+me in my private office at four o’clock, to make her explain the facts
+which concern her, for she is compromised.”
+
+“I should very much like to know what the end will be.”
+
+“Why, bless me, do not you see that the Marquise is the tool of that
+tall lean man who never uttered a word? There is a strain of Cain in
+him, but of the Cain who goes to the Law Courts for his bludgeon, and
+there, unluckily for him, we keep more than one Damocles’ sword.”
+
+“Oh, Rastignac! what brought you into that boat, I wonder?” exclaimed
+Bianchon.
+
+“Ah, we are used to seeing these little family conspiracies,”
+ said Popinot. “Not a year passes without a number of verdicts of
+‘insufficient evidence’ against applications of this kind. In our state
+of society such an attempt brings no dishonor, while we send a poor
+devil to the galleys who breaks a pane of glass dividing him from a bowl
+full of gold. Our Code is not faultless.”
+
+“But these are the facts?”
+
+“My boy, do you not know all the judicial romances with which clients
+impose on their attorneys? If the attorneys condemned themselves to
+state nothing but the truth, they would not earn enough to keep their
+office open.”
+
+
+
+Next day, at four in the afternoon, a very stout dame, looking a good
+deal like a cask dressed up in a gown and belt, mounted Judge Popinot’s
+stairs, perspiring and panting. She had, with great difficulty, got out
+of a green landau, which suited her to a miracle; you could not think of
+the woman without the landau, or the landau without the woman.
+
+“It is I, my dear sir,” said she, appearing in the doorway of the
+judge’s room. “Madame Jeanrenaud, whom you summoned exactly as if I were
+a thief, neither more nor less.”
+
+The common words were spoken in a common voice, broken by the wheezing
+of asthma, and ending in a cough.
+
+“When I go through a damp place, I can’t tell you what I suffer, sir. I
+shall never make old bones, saving your presence. However, here I am.”
+
+The lawyer was quite amazed at the appearance of this supposed Marechale
+d’Ancre. Madame Jeanrenaud’s face was pitted with an infinite number of
+little holes, was very red, with a pug nose and a low forehead, and was
+as round as a ball; for everything about the good woman was round. She
+had the bright eyes of a country woman, an honest gaze, a cheerful tone,
+and chestnut hair held in place by a bonnet cap under a green bonnet
+decked with a shabby bunch of auriculas. Her stupendous bust was a thing
+to laugh at, for it made one fear some grotesque explosion every time
+she coughed. Her enormous legs were of the shape which make the Paris
+street boy describe such a woman as being built on piles. The widow wore
+a green gown trimmed with chinchilla, which looked on her as a splash of
+dirty oil would look on a bride’s veil. In short, everything about her
+harmonized with her last words: “Here I am.”
+
+“Madame,” said Popinot, “you are suspected of having used some seductive
+arts to induce M. d’Espard to hand over to you very considerable sums of
+money.”
+
+“Of what! of what!” cried she. “Of seductive arts? But, my dear sir, you
+are a man to be respected, and, moreover, as a lawyer you ought to have
+some good sense. Look at me! Tell me if I am likely to seduce any one.
+I cannot tie my own shoes, nor even stoop. For these twenty years past,
+the Lord be praised, I have not dared to put on a pair of stays under
+pain of sudden death. I was as thin as an asparagus stalk when I was
+seventeen, and pretty too--I may say so now. So I married Jeanrenaud, a
+good fellow, and headman on the salt-barges. I had my boy, who is a fine
+young man; he is my pride, and it is not holding myself cheap to say
+he is my best piece of work. My little Jeanrenaud was a soldier who did
+Napoleon credit, and who served in the Imperial Guard. But, alas! at the
+death of my old man, who was drowned, times changed for the worse. I had
+the smallpox. I was kept two years in my room without stirring, and I
+came out of it the size you see me, hideous for ever, and as wretched as
+could be. These are my seductive arts.”
+
+“But what, then, can the reasons be that have induced M. d’Espard to
+give you sums----”
+
+“Hugious sums, monsieur, say the word; I do not mind. But as to his
+reasons, I am not at liberty to explain them.”
+
+“You are wrong. At this moment, his family, very naturally alarmed, are
+about to bring an action----”
+
+“Heavens above us!” said the good woman, starting up. “Is it possible
+that he should be worried on my account? That king of men, a man that
+has not his match! Rather than he should have the smallest trouble, or
+hair less on his head I could almost say, we would return every sou,
+monsieur. Write that down on your papers. Heaven above us! I will go at
+once and tell Jeanrenaud what is going on! A pretty thing indeed!”
+
+And the little old woman went out, rolled herself downstairs, and
+disappeared.
+
+“That one tells no lies,” said Popinot to himself. “Well, to-morrow I
+shall know the whole story, for I shall go to see the Marquis d’Espard.”
+
+People who have outlived the age when a man wastes his vitality at
+random, know how great an influence may be exercised on more important
+events by apparently trivial incidents, and will not be surprised at the
+weight here given to the following minor fact. Next day Popinot had
+an attack of coryza, a complaint which is not dangerous, and generally
+known by the absurd and inadequate name of a cold in the head.
+
+The judge, who could not suppose that the delay could be serious,
+feeling himself a little feverish, kept his room, and did not go to see
+the Marquis d’Espard. This day lost was, to this affair, what on the Day
+of Dupes the cup of soup had been, taken by Marie de Medici, which, by
+delaying her meeting with Louis XIII., enabled Richelieu to arrive at
+Saint-Germain before her, and recapture his royal slave.
+
+Before accompanying the lawyer and his registering clerk to the Marquis
+d’Espard’s house, it may be as well to glance at the home and the
+private affairs of this father of sons whom his wife’s petition
+represented to be a madman.
+
+Here and there in the old parts of Paris a few buildings may still be
+seen in which the archaeologist can discern an intention of decorating
+the city, and that love of property, which leads the owner to give a
+durable character to the structure. The house in which M. d’Espard was
+then living, in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, was one of
+these old mansions, built in stone, and not devoid of a certain richness
+of style; but time had blackened the stone, and revolutions in the town
+had damaged it both outside and inside. The dignitaries who formerly
+dwelt in the neighborhood of the University having disappeared with
+the great ecclesiastical foundations, this house had become the home
+of industries and of inhabitants whom it was never destined to shelter.
+During the last century a printing establishment had worn down the
+polished floors, soiled the carved wood, blackened the walls, and
+altered the principal internal arrangements. Formerly the residence of
+a Cardinal, this fine house was now divided among plebeian tenants. The
+character of the architecture showed that it had been built under the
+reigns of Henry III., Henry IV., and Louis XIII., at the time when the
+hotels Mignon and Serpente were erected in the same neighborhood, with
+the palace of the Princess Palatine, and the Sorbonne. An old man
+could remember having heard it called, in the last century, the hotel
+Duperron, so it seemed probable that the illustrious Cardinal of that
+name had built, or perhaps merely lived in it.
+
+There still exists, indeed, in the corner of the courtyard, a perron or
+flight of several outer steps by which the house is entered; and the way
+into the garden on the garden front is down a similar flight of steps.
+In spite of dilapidations, the luxury lavished by the architect on the
+balustrade and entrance porch crowning these two perrons suggests the
+simple-minded purpose of commemorating the owner’s name, a sort of
+sculptured pun which our ancestors often allowed themselves. Finally,
+in support of this evidence, archaeologists can still discern in the
+medallions which show on the principal front some traces of the cords of
+the Roman hat.
+
+M. le Marquis d’Espard lived on the ground floor, in order, no doubt, to
+enjoy the garden, which might be called spacious for that neighborhood,
+and which lay open for his children’s health. The situation of the
+house, in a street on a steep hill, as its name indicates, secured these
+ground-floor rooms against ever being damp. M. d’Espard had taken them,
+no doubt, for a very moderate price, rents being low at the time when
+he settled in that quarter, in order to be among the schools and to
+superintend his boys’ education. Moreover, the state in which he found
+the place, with everything to repair, had no doubt induced the owner to
+be accommodating. Thus M. d’Espard had been able to go to some expense
+to settle himself suitably without being accused of extravagance. The
+loftiness of the rooms, the paneling, of which nothing survived but the
+frames, the decoration of the ceilings, all displayed the dignity which
+the prelacy stamped on whatever it attempted or created, and which
+artists discern to this day in the smallest relic that remains, though
+it be but a book, a dress, the panel of a bookcase, or an armchair.
+
+The Marquis had the rooms painted in the rich brown tones loved of
+the Dutch and of the citizens of Old Paris, hues which lend such good
+effects to the painter of genre. The panels were hung with plain paper
+in harmony with the paint. The window curtains were of inexpensive
+materials, but chosen so as to produce a generally happy result; the
+furniture was not too crowded and judiciously placed. Any one on going
+into this home could not resist a sense of sweet peacefulness, produced
+by the perfect calm, the stillness which prevailed, by the unpretentious
+unity of color, the keeping of the picture, in the words a painter might
+use. A certain nobleness in the details, the exquisite cleanliness of
+the furniture, and a perfect concord of men and things, all brought the
+word “suavity” to the lips.
+
+Few persons were admitted to the rooms used by the Marquis and his two
+sons, whose life might perhaps seem mysterious to their neighbors. In a
+wing towards the street, on the third floor, there are three large rooms
+which had been left in the state of dilapidation and grotesque bareness
+to which they had been reduced by the printing works. These three rooms,
+devoted to the evolution of the Picturesque History of China, were
+contrived to serve as a writing-room, a depository, and a private room,
+where M. d’Espard sat during part of the day; for after breakfast till
+four in the afternoon the Marquis remained in this room on the third
+floor to work at the publication he had undertaken. Visitors wanting to
+see him commonly found him there, and often the two boys on their return
+from school resorted thither. Thus the ground-floor rooms were a sort
+of sanctuary where the father and sons spent their time from the hour
+of dinner till the next day, and his domestic life was carefully closed
+against the public eye.
+
+His only servants were a cook--an old woman who had long been attached
+to his family--and a man-servant forty years old, who was with him
+when he married Mademoiselle de Blamont. His children’s nurse had also
+remained with them, and the minute care to which the apartment bore
+witness revealed the sense of order and the maternal affections expended
+by this woman in her master’s interest, in the management of his house,
+and the charge of his children. These three good souls, grave, and
+uncommunicative folk, seemed to have entered into the idea which ruled
+the Marquis’ domestic life. And the contrast between their habits and
+those of most servants was a peculiarity which cast an air of mystery
+over the house, and fomented the calumny to which M. d’Espard himself
+lent occasion. Very laudable motives had made him determine never to
+be on visiting terms with any of the other tenants in the house. In
+undertaking to educate his boys he wished to keep them from all contact
+with strangers. Perhaps, too, he wished to avoid the intrusion of
+neighbors.
+
+In a man of his rank, at a time when the Quartier Latin was distracted
+by Liberalism, such conduct was sure to rouse in opposition a host of
+petty passions, of feelings whose folly is only to be measured by their
+meanness, the outcome of porters’ gossip and malevolent tattle from door
+to door, all unknown to M. d’Espard and his retainers. His man-servant
+was stigmatized as a Jesuit, his cook as a sly fox; the nurse was in
+collusion with Madame Jeanrenaud to rob the madman. The madman was
+the Marquis. By degrees the other tenants came to regard as proofs of
+madness a number of things they had noticed in M. d’Espard, and passed
+through the sieve of their judgment without discerning any reasonable
+motive for them.
+
+Having no belief in the success of the History of China, they had
+managed to convince the landlord of the house that M. d’Espard had no
+money just at a time when, with the forgetfulness which often befalls
+busy men, he had allowed the tax-collector to send him a summons for
+non-payment of arrears. The landlord forthwith claimed his quarter’s
+rent from January 1st by sending in a receipt, which the porter’s wife
+had amused herself by detaining. On the 15th a summons to pay was served
+on M. d’Espard, the portress had delivered it at her leisure, and
+he supposed it to be some misunderstanding, not conceiving of any
+incivility from a man in whose house he had been living for twelve
+years. The Marquis was actually seized by a bailiff at the time when his
+man-servant had gone to carry the money for the rent to the landlord.
+
+This arrest, assiduously reported to the persons with whom he was in
+treaty for his undertaking, had alarmed some of them who were already
+doubtful of M. d’Espard’s solvency in consequence of the enormous sums
+which Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother were said to be receiving from
+him. And, indeed, these suspicions on the part of the tenants, the
+creditors, and the landlord had some excuse in the Marquis’ extreme
+economy in housekeeping. He conducted it as a ruined man might. His
+servants always paid in ready money for the most trifling necessaries
+of life, and acted as not choosing to take credit; if now they had asked
+for anything on credit, it would probably have been refused, calumnious
+gossip had been so widely believed in the neighborhood. There are
+tradesmen who like those of their customers who pay badly when they
+see them often, while they hate others, and very good ones, who hold
+themselves on too high a level to allow of any familiarity as CHUMS, a
+vulgar but expressive word. Men are made so; in almost every class they
+will allow to a gossip, or a vulgar soul that flatters them, facilities
+and favors they refuse to the superiority they resent, in whatever
+form it may show itself. The shopkeeper who rails at the Court has his
+courtiers.
+
+In short, the manners of the Marquis and his children were certain to
+arouse ill-feeling in their neighbors, and to work them up by degrees to
+the pitch of malevolence when men do not hesitate at an act of meanness
+if only it may damage the adversary they have themselves created.
+
+M. d’Espard was a gentleman, as his wife was a lady, by birth and
+breeding; noble types, already so rare in France that the observer
+can easily count the persons who perfectly realize them. These two
+characters are based on primitive ideas, on beliefs that may be called
+innate, on habits formed in infancy, and which have ceased to exist. To
+believe in pure blood, in a privileged race, to stand in thought above
+other men, must we not from birth have measured the distance which
+divides patricians from the mob? To command, must we not have never
+met our equal? And finally, must not education inculcate the ideas with
+which Nature inspires those great men on whose brow she has placed a
+crown before their mother has ever set a kiss there? These ideas, this
+education, are no longer possible in France, where for forty years past
+chance has arrogated the right of making noblemen by dipping them in the
+blood of battles, by gilding them with glory, by crowning them with the
+halo of genius; where the abolition of entail and of eldest sonship,
+by frittering away estates, compels the nobleman to attend to his own
+business instead of attending to affairs of state, and where personal
+greatness can only be such greatness as is acquired by long and patient
+toil: quite a new era.
+
+Regarded as a relic of that great institution know as feudalism, M.
+d’Espard deserved respectful admiration. If he believed himself to be by
+blood the superior of other men, he also believed in all the obligations
+of nobility; he had the virtues and the strength it demands. He had
+brought up his children in his own principles, and taught them from the
+cradle the religion of their caste. A deep sense of their own dignity,
+pride of name, the conviction that they were by birth great, gave rise
+in them to a kingly pride, the courage of knights, and the protecting
+kindness of a baronial lord; their manners, harmonizing with their
+notions, would have become princes, and offended all the world of the
+Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve--a world, above all others, of
+equality, where every one believed that M. d’Espard was ruined, and
+where all, from the lowest to the highest, refused the privileges of
+nobility to a nobleman without money, because they were all ready to
+allow an enriched bourgeois to usurp them. Thus the lack of communion
+between this family and other persons was as much moral as it was
+physical.
+
+In the father and the children alike, their personality harmonized with
+the spirit within. M. d’Espard, at this time about fifty, might have
+sat as a model to represent the aristocracy of birth in the nineteenth
+century. He was slight and fair; there was in the outline and general
+expression of his face a native distinction which spoke of lofty
+sentiments, but it bore the impress of a deliberate coldness which
+commanded respect a little too decidedly. His aquiline nose bent at the
+tip from left to right, a slight crookedness which was not devoid of
+grace; his blue eyes, his high forehead, prominent enough at the brows
+to form a thick ridge that checked the light and shaded his eyes, all
+indicated a spirit of rectitude, capable of perseverance and perfect
+loyalty, while it gave a singular look to his countenance. This
+penthouse forehead might, in fact, hint at a touch of madness, and his
+thick-knitted eyebrows added to the apparent eccentricity. He had the
+white well-kept hands of a gentleman; his foot was high and narrow. His
+hesitating speech--not merely as to his pronunciation, which was that
+of a stammerer, but also in the expression of his ideas, his thought
+and language--produced on the mind of the hearer the impression of a
+man who, in familiar phraseology, comes and goes, feels his way, tries
+everything, breaks off his gestures, and finishes nothing. This defect
+was purely superficial, and in contrast with the decisiveness of a
+firmly-set mouth, and the strongly-marked character of his physiognomy.
+His rather jerky gait matched his mode of speech. These peculiarities
+helped to affirm his supposed insanity. In spite of his elegant
+appearance, he was systematically parsimonious in his personal expenses,
+and wore the same black frock-coat for three or four years, brushed with
+extreme care by his old man-servant.
+
+As to the children, they both were handsome, and endowed with a grace
+which did not exclude an expression of aristocratic disdain. They had
+the bright coloring, the clear eye, the transparent flesh which reveal
+habits of purity, regularity of life, and a due proportion of work and
+play. They both had black hair and blue eyes, and a twist in their nose,
+like their father; but their mother, perhaps, had transmitted to them
+the dignity of speech, of look and mien, which are hereditary in the
+Blamont-Chauvrys. Their voices, as clear as crystal, had an emotional
+quality, the softness which proves so seductive; they had, in short, the
+voice a woman would willingly listen to after feeling the flame of their
+looks. But, above all, they had the modesty of pride, a chaste reserve,
+a _touch-me-not_ which at a maturer age might have seemed intentional
+coyness, so much did their demeanor inspire a wish to know them. The
+elder, Comte Clement de Negrepelisse, was close upon his sixteenth year.
+For the last two years he had ceased to wear the pretty English round
+jacket which his brother, Vicomte Camille d’Espard, still wore. The
+Count, who for the last six months went no more to the College Henri
+IV., was dressed in the style of a young man enjoying the first
+pleasures of fashion. His father had not wished to condemn him to a
+year’s useless study of philosophy; he was trying to give his knowledge
+some consistency by the study of transcendental mathematics. At the
+same time, the Marquis was having him taught Eastern languages, the
+international law of Europe, heraldry, and history from the original
+sources, charters, early documents, and collections of edicts. Camille
+had lately begun to study rhetoric.
+
+The day when Popinot arranged to go to question M. d’Espard was a
+Thursday, a holiday. At about nine in the morning, before their father
+was awake, the brothers were playing in the garden. Clement was
+finding it hard to refuse his brother, who was anxious to go to the
+shooting-gallery for the first time, and who begged him to second his
+request to the Marquis. The Viscount always rather took advantage of his
+weakness, and was very fond of wrestling with his brother. So the couple
+were quarreling and fighting in play like schoolboys. As they ran in
+the garden, chasing each other, they made so much noise as to wake their
+father, who came to the window without their perceiving him in the heat
+of the fray. The Marquis amused himself with watching his two children
+twisted together like snakes, their faces flushed by the exertion of
+their strength; their complexion was rose and white, their eyes flashed
+sparks, their limbs writhed like cords in the fire; they fell, sprang up
+again, and caught each other like athletes in a circus, affording their
+father one of those moments of happiness which would make amends for the
+keenest anxieties of a busy life. Two other persons, one on the second
+and one on the first floor, were also looking into the garden, and
+saying that the old madman was amusing himself by making his children
+fight. Immediately a number of heads appeared at the windows; the
+Marquis, noticing them, called a word to his sons, who at once climbed
+up to the window and jumped into his room, and Clement obtained the
+permission asked by Camille.
+
+All through the house every one was talking of the Marquis’ new form of
+insanity. When Popinot arrived at about twelve o’clock, accompanied by
+his clerk, the portress, when asked for M. d’Espard, conducted him to
+the third floor, telling him “as how M. d’Espard, no longer ago than
+that very morning, had set on his two children to fight, and laughed
+like the monster he was on seeing the younger biting the elder till he
+bled, and as how no doubt he longed to see them kill each other.--Don’t
+ask me the reason why,” she added; “he doesn’t show himself!”
+
+Just as the woman spoke these decisive words, she had brought the judge
+to the landing on the third floor, face to face with a door covered with
+notices announcing the successive numbers of the Picturesque History of
+China. The muddy floor, the dirty banisters, the door where the printers
+had left their marks, the dilapidated window, and the ceiling on which
+the apprentices had amused themselves with drawing monstrosities with
+the smoky flare of their tallow dips, the piles of paper and litter
+heaped up in the corners, intentionally or from sheer neglect--in short,
+every detail of the picture lying before his eyes, agreed so well
+with the facts alleged by the Marquise that the judge, in spite of his
+impartiality, could not help believing them.
+
+“There you are, gentlemen,” said the porter’s wife; “there is the
+manifactor, where the Chinese swallow up enough to feed the whole
+neighborhood.”
+
+The clerk looked at the judge with a smile, and Popinot found it hard to
+keep his countenance. They went together into the outer room, where
+sat an old man, who, no doubt, performed the functions of office clerk,
+shopman, and cashier. This old man was the Maitre Jacques of China.
+Along the walls ran long shelves, on which the published numbers lay in
+piles. A partition in wood, with a grating lined with green curtains,
+cut off the end of the room, forming a private office. A till with a
+slit to admit or disgorge crown pieces indicated the cash-desk.
+
+“M. d’Espard?” said Popinot, addressing the man, who wore a gray blouse.
+
+The shopman opened the door into the next room, where the lawyer and
+his companion saw a venerable old man, white-headed and simply dressed,
+wearing the Cross of Saint-Louis, seated at a desk. He ceased comparing
+some sheets of colored prints to look up at the two visitors. This room
+was an unpretentious office, full of books and proof-sheets. There was
+a black wood table at which some one, at the moment absent, no doubt was
+accustomed to work.
+
+“The Marquis d’Espard?” said Popinot.
+
+“No, monsieur,” said the old man, rising; “what do you want with him?”
+ he added, coming forward, and showing by his demeanor the dignified
+manners and habits due to a gentlemanly education.
+
+“We wish to speak with him on business exclusively personal to himself,”
+ replied Popinot.
+
+“D’Espard, here are some gentlemen who want to see you,” then said the
+old man, going into the furthest room, where the Marquis was sitting by
+the fire reading the newspaper.
+
+This innermost room had a shabby carpet, the windows were hung with gray
+holland curtains; the furniture consisted of a few mahogany chairs, two
+armchairs, a desk with a revolving front, an ordinary office table, and
+on the chimney-shelf, a dingy clock and two old candlesticks. The old
+man led the way for Popinot and his registrar, and pulled forward two
+chairs, as though he were master of the place; M. d’Espard left it to
+him. After the preliminary civilities, during which the judge watched
+the supposed lunatic, the Marquis naturally asked what was the object of
+this visit. On this Popinot glanced significantly at the old gentleman
+and the Marquis.
+
+“I believe, Monsieur le Marquis,” said he, “that the character of my
+functions, and the inquiry that has brought me here, make it desirable
+that we should be alone, though it is understood by law that in such
+cases the inquiries have a sort of family publicity. I am judge on the
+Inferior Court of Appeal for the Department of the Seine, and charged
+by the President with the duty of examining you as to certain facts
+set forth in a petition for a Commission in Lunacy on the part of the
+Marquise d’Espard.”
+
+The old man withdrew. When the lawyer and the Marquis were alone, the
+clerk shut the door, and seated himself unceremoniously at the office
+table, where he laid out his papers and prepared to take down his notes.
+Popinot had still kept his eye on M. d’Espard; he was watching the
+effect on him of this crude statement, so painful for a man in full
+possession of his reason. The Marquis d’Espard, whose face was usually
+pale, as are those of fair men, suddenly turned scarlet with anger; he
+trembled for an instant, sat down, laid his paper on the chimney-piece,
+and looked down. In a moment he had recovered his gentlemanly dignity,
+and looked steadily at the judge, as if to read in his countenance the
+indications of his character.
+
+“How is it, monsieur,” he asked, “that I have had no notice of such a
+petition?”
+
+“Monsieur le Marquis, persons on whom such a commission is held not
+being supposed to have the use of their reason, any notice of the
+petition is unnecessary. The duty of the Court chiefly consists in
+verifying the allegations of the petitioner.”
+
+“Nothing can be fairer,” replied the Marquis. “Well, then, monsieur, be
+so good as to tell me what I ought to do----”
+
+“You have only to answer my questions, omitting nothing. However
+delicate the reasons may be which may have led you to act in such a
+manner as to give Madame d’Espard a pretext for her petition, speak
+without fear. It is unnecessary to assure you that lawyers know their
+duties, and that in such cases the profoundest secrecy----”
+
+“Monsieur,” said the Marquis, whose face expressed the sincerest pain,
+“if my explanations should lead to any blame being attached to Madame
+d’Espard’s conduct, what will be the result?”
+
+“The Court may add its censure to its reasons for its decision.”
+
+“Is such censure optional? If I were to stipulate with you, before
+replying, that nothing should be said that could annoy Madame d’Espard
+in the event of your report being in my favor, would the Court take my
+request into consideration?”
+
+The judge looked at the Marquis, and the two men exchanged sentiments of
+equal magnanimity.
+
+“Noel,” said Popinot to his registrar, “go into the other room. If you
+can be of use, I will call you in.--If, as I am inclined to think,” he
+went on, speaking to the Marquis when the clerk had gone out, “I find
+that there is some misunderstanding in this case, I can promise you,
+monsieur, that on your application the Court will act with due courtesy.
+
+“There is a leading fact put forward by Madame d’Espard, the most
+serious of all, of which I must beg for an explanation,” said the judge
+after a pause. “It refers to the dissipation of your fortune to the
+advantage of a certain Madame Jeanrenaud, the widow of a bargemaster--or
+rather, to that of her son, Colonel Jeanrenaud, for whom you are said to
+have procured an appointment, to have exhausted your influence with the
+King, and at last to have extended such protection as secures him a good
+marriage. The petition suggests that such a friendship is more devoted
+than any feelings, even those which morality must disapprove----”
+
+A sudden flush crimsoned the Marquis’ face and forehead, tears even
+started to his eyes, for his eyelashes were wet, then wholesome pride
+crushed the emotions, which in a man are accounted a weakness.
+
+“To tell you the truth, monsieur,” said the Marquis, in a broken voice,
+“you place me in a strange dilemma. The motives of my conduct were to
+have died with me. To reveal them I must disclose to you some secret
+wounds, must place the honor of my family in your keeping, and must
+speak of myself, a delicate matter, as you will fully understand. I
+hope, monsieur, that it will all remain a secret between us. You will,
+no doubt, be able to find in the formulas of the law one which
+will allow of judgment being pronounced without any betrayal of my
+confidences.”
+
+“So far as that goes, it is perfectly possible, Monsieur le Marquis.”
+
+“Some time after my marriage,” said M. d’Espard, “my wife having run
+into considerable expenses, I was obliged to have recourse to borrowing.
+You know what was the position of noble families during the Revolution;
+I had not been able to keep a steward or a man of business. Nowadays
+gentlemen are for the most part obliged to manage their affairs
+themselves. Most of my title-deeds had been brought to Paris, from
+Languedoc, Provence, or le Comtat, by my father, who dreaded, and not
+without reason, the inquisition which family title-deeds, and what was
+then styled the ‘parchments’ of the privileged class, brought down on
+the owners.
+
+“Our name is Negrepelisse; d’Espard is a title acquired in the time of
+Henri IV. by a marriage which brought us the estates and titles of the
+house of d’Espard, on condition of our bearing an escutcheon of pretence
+on our coat-of-arms, those of the house of d’Espard, an old family of
+Bearn, connected in the female line with that of Albret: quarterly, paly
+of or and sable; and azure two griffins’ claws armed, gules in saltire,
+with the famous motto Des partem leonis. At the time of this alliance
+we lost Negrepelisse, a little town which was as famous during the
+religious struggles as was my ancestor who then bore the name. Captain
+de Negrepelisse was ruined by the burning of all his property, for the
+Protestants did not spare a friend of Montluc’s.
+
+“The Crown was unjust to M. de Negrepelisse; he received neither a
+marshal’s baton, nor a post as governor, nor any indemnity; King Charles
+IX., who was fond of him, died without being able to reward him; Henri
+IV. arranged his marriage with Mademoiselle d’Espard, and secured
+him the estates of that house, but all those of the Negrepelisses had
+already passed into the hands of his creditors.
+
+“My great-grandfather, the Marquis d’Espard, was, like me, placed early
+in life at the head of his family by the death of his father, who, after
+dissipating his wife’s fortune, left his son nothing but the entailed
+estates of the d’Espards, burdened with a jointure. The young Marquis
+was all the more straitened for money because he held a post at Court.
+Being in great favor with Louis XIV., the King’s goodwill brought him
+a fortune. But here, monsieur, a blot stained our escutcheon, an
+unconfessed and horrible stain of blood and disgrace which I am making
+it my business to wipe out. I discovered the secret among the deeds
+relating to the estate of Negrepelisse and the packets of letters.”
+
+At this solemn moment the Marquis spoke without hesitation or any of the
+repetition habitual with him; but it is a matter of common observation
+that persons who, in ordinary life, are afflicted with these two
+defects, are freed from them as soon as any passionate emotion underlies
+their speech.
+
+“The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes was decreed,” he went on. “You
+are no doubt aware, monsieur, that this was an opportunity for many
+favorites to make their fortunes. Louis XIV. bestowed on the magnates
+about his Court the confiscated lands of those Protestant families who
+did not take the prescribed steps for the sale of their property. Some
+persons in high favor went ‘Protestant-hunting,’ as the phrase was. I
+have ascertained beyond a doubt that the fortune enjoyed to this day by
+two ducal families is derived from lands seized from hapless merchants.
+
+“I will not attempt to explain to you, a man of law, all the manoeuvres
+employed to entrap the refugees who had large fortunes to carry away. It
+is enough to say that the lands of Negrepelisse, comprising twenty-two
+churches and rights over the town, and those of Gravenges which had
+formerly belonged to us, were at that time in the hands of a Protestant
+family. My grandfather recovered them by gift from Louis XIV. This gift
+was effected by documents hall-marked by atrocious iniquity. The owner
+of these two estates, thinking he would be able to return, had gone
+through the form of a sale, and was going to Switzerland to join his
+family, whom he had sent in advance. He wished, no doubt, to take
+advantage of every delay granted by the law, so as to settle the
+concerns of his business.
+
+“This man was arrested by order of the governor, the trustee confessed
+the truth, the poor merchant was hanged, and my ancestor had the two
+estates. I would gladly have been able to ignore the share he took in
+the plot; but the governor was his uncle on the mother’s side, and I
+have unfortunately read the letter in which he begged him to apply to
+Deodatus, the name agreed upon by the Court to designate the King. In
+this letter there is a tone of jocosity with reference to the victim,
+which filled me with horror. In the end, the sums of money sent by the
+refugee family to ransom the poor man were kept by the governor, who
+despatched the merchant all the same.”
+
+The Marquis paused, as though the memory of it were still too heavy for
+him to bear.
+
+“This unfortunate family were named Jeanrenaud,” he went on. “That name
+is enough to account for my conduct. I could never think without keen
+pain of the secret disgrace that weighed on my family. That fortune
+enabled my grandfather to marry a demoiselle de Navarreins-Lansac,
+heiress to the younger branch of that house, who were at that time much
+richer than the elder branch of the Navarreins. My father thus became
+one of the largest landowners in the kingdom. He was able to marry
+my mother, a Grandlieu of the younger branch. Though ill-gotten, this
+property has been singularly profitable.
+
+“For my part, being determined to remedy the mischief, I wrote
+to Switzerland, and knew no peace till I was on the traces of the
+Protestant victim’s heirs. At last I discovered that the Jeanrenauds,
+reduced to abject want, had left Fribourg and returned to live in
+France. Finally, I found a M. Jeanrenaud, lieutenant in a cavalry
+regiment under Napoleon, the sole heir of this unhappy family. In my
+eyes, monsieur, the rights of the Jeanrenauds were clear. To establish a
+prescriptive right is it not necessary that there should have been some
+possibility of proceeding against those who are in the enjoyment of it?
+To whom could these refugees have appealed? Their Court of Justice was
+on high, or rather, monsieur, it was here,” and the Marquis struck his
+hand on his heart. “I did not choose that my children should be able to
+think of me as I have thought of my father and of my ancestors. I aim at
+leaving them an unblemished inheritance and escutcheon. I did not choose
+that nobility should be a lie in my person. And, after all,
+politically speaking, ought those emigres who are now appealing
+against revolutionary confiscations, to keep the property derived from
+antecedent confiscations by positive crimes?
+
+“I found in M. Jeanrenaud and his mother the most perverse honesty; to
+hear them you would suppose that they were robbing me. In spite of all
+I could say, they will accept no more than the value of the lands at
+the time when the King bestowed them on my family. The price was settled
+between us at the sum of eleven hundred thousand francs, which I was
+to pay at my convenience and without interest. To achieve this I had
+to forego my income for a long time. And then, monsieur, began the
+destruction of some illusions I had allowed myself as to Madame
+d’Espard’s character. When I proposed to her that we should leave Paris
+and go into the country, where we could live respected on half of her
+income, and so more rapidly complete a restitution of which I spoke to
+her without going into the more serious details, Madame d’Espard treated
+me as a madman. I then understood my wife’s real character. She would
+have approved of my grandfather’s conduct without a scruple, and have
+laughed at the Huguenots. Terrified by her coldness, and her little
+affection for her children, whom she abandoned to me without regret,
+I determined to leave her the command of her fortune, after paying our
+common debts. It was no business of hers, as she told me, to pay for
+my follies. As I then had not enough to live on and pay for my sons’
+education, I determined to educate them myself, to make them gentlemen
+and men of feeling. By investing my money in the funds I have been
+enabled to pay off my obligation sooner than I had dared to hope, for
+I took advantage of the opportunities afforded by the improvement
+in prices. If I had kept four thousand francs a year for my boys and
+myself, I could only have paid off twenty thousand crowns a year, and it
+would have taken almost eighteen years to achieve my freedom. As it is,
+I have lately repaid the whole of the eleven hundred thousand
+francs that were due. Thus I enjoy the happiness of having made this
+restitution without doing my children the smallest wrong.
+
+“These, monsieur, are the reasons for the payments made to Madame
+Jeanrenaud and her son.”
+
+“So Madame d’Espard knew the motives of your retirement?” said the
+judge, controlling the emotion he felt at this narrative.
+
+“Yes, monsieur.”
+
+Popinot gave an expressive shrug; he rose and opened the door into the
+next room.
+
+“Noel, you can go,” said he to his clerk.
+
+“Monsieur,” he went on, “though what you have told me is enough to
+enlighten me thoroughly, I should like to hear what you have to say to
+the other facts put forward in the petition. For instance, you are here
+carrying on a business such as is not habitually undertaken by a man of
+rank.”
+
+“We cannot discuss that matter here,” said the Marquis, signing to the
+judge to quit the room. “Nouvion,” said he to the old man, “I am going
+down to my rooms; the children will soon be in; dine with us.”
+
+“Then, Monsieur le Marquis,” said Popinot on the stairs, “that is not
+your apartment?”
+
+“No, monsieur; I took those rooms for the office of this undertaking.
+You see,” and he pointed to an advertisement sheet, “the History is
+being brought out by one of the most respectable firms in Paris, and not
+by me.”
+
+The Marquis showed the lawyer into the ground-floor rooms, saying, “This
+is my apartment.”
+
+Popinot was quite touched by the poetry, not aimed at but pervading this
+dwelling. The weather was lovely, the windows were open, the air from
+the garden brought in a wholesome earthy smell, the sunshine brightened
+and gilded the woodwork, of a rather gloomy brown. At the sight Popinot
+made up his mind that a madman would hardly be capable of inventing the
+tender harmony of which he was at that moment conscious.
+
+“I should like just such an apartment,” thought he. “You think of
+leaving this part of town?” he inquired.
+
+“I hope so,” replied the Marquis. “But I shall remain till my younger
+son has finished his studies, and till the children’s character is
+thoroughly formed, before introducing them to the world and to their
+mother’s circle. Indeed, after giving them the solid information
+they possess, I intend to complete it by taking them to travel to
+the capitals of Europe, that they may see men and things, and become
+accustomed to speak the languages they have learned. And, monsieur,”
+ he went on, giving the judge a chair in the drawing-room, “I could not
+discuss the book on China with you, in the presence of an old friend of
+my family, the Comte de Nouvion, who, having emigrated, has returned
+to France without any fortune whatever, and who is my partner in this
+concern, less for my profit than his. Without telling him what my
+motives were, I explained to him that I was as poor as he, but that I
+had enough money to start a speculation in which he might be usefully
+employed. My tutor was the Abbe Grozier, whom Charles X. on my
+recommendation appointed Keeper of the Books at the Arsenal, which were
+returned to that Prince when he was still Monsieur. The Abbe Grozier was
+deeply learned with regard to China, its manners and customs; he made
+me heir to this knowledge at an age when it is difficult not to become a
+fanatic for the things we learn. At five-and-twenty I knew Chinese,
+and I confess I have never been able to check myself in an exclusive
+admiration for that nation, who conquered their conquerors, whose annals
+extend back indisputably to a period more remote than mythological or
+Bible times, who by their immutable institutions have preserved
+the integrity of their empire, whose monuments are gigantic, whose
+administration is perfect, among whom revolutions are impossible, who
+have regarded ideal beauty as a barren element in art, who have carried
+luxury and industry to such a pitch that we cannot outdo them in
+anything, while they are our equals in things where we believe ourselves
+superior.
+
+“Still, monsieur, though I often make a jest of comparing China with the
+present condition of European states, I am not a Chinaman, I am a French
+gentleman. If you entertain any doubts as to the financial side of this
+undertaking, I can prove to you that at this moment we have two
+thousand five hundred subscribers to this work, which is literary,
+iconographical, statistical, and religious; its importance has been
+generally appreciated; our subscribers belong to every nation in Europe,
+we have but twelve hundred in France. Our book will cost about three
+hundred francs, and the Comte de Nouvion will derive from it from six to
+seven thousand francs a year, for his comfort was the real motive of the
+undertaking. For my part, I aimed only at the possibility of affording
+my children some pleasures. The hundred thousand francs I have made,
+quite in spite of myself, will pay for their fencing lessons, horses,
+dress, and theatres, pay the masters who teach them accomplishments,
+procure them canvases to spoil, the books they may wish to buy, in
+short, all the little fancies which a father finds so much pleasure in
+gratifying. If I had been compelled to refuse these indulgences to my
+poor boys, who are so good and work so hard, the sacrifice I made to the
+honor of my name would have been doubly painful.
+
+“In point of fact, the twelve years I have spent in retirement from the
+world to educate my children have led to my being completely forgotten
+at Court. I have given up the career of politics; I have lost my
+historical fortune, and all the distinctions which I might have acquired
+and bequeathed to my children; but our house will have lost nothing;
+my boys will be men of mark. Though I have missed the senatorship, they
+will win it nobly by devoting themselves to the affairs of the country,
+and doing such service as is not soon forgotten. While purifying the
+past record of my family, I have insured it a glorious future; and is
+not that to have achieved a noble task, though in secret and without
+glory?--And now, monsieur, have you any other explanations to ask me?”
+
+At this instant the tramp of horses was heard in the courtyard.
+
+“Here they are!” said the Marquis. In a moment the two lads, fashionably
+but plainly dressed, came into the room, booted, spurred, and gloved,
+and flourishing their riding-whips. Their beaming faces brought in the
+freshness of the outer air; they were brilliant with health. They both
+grasped their father’s hand, giving him a look, as friends do, a glance
+of unspoken affection, and then they bowed coldly to the lawyer. Popinot
+felt that it was quite unnecessary to question the Marquis as to his
+relations towards his sons.
+
+“Have you enjoyed yourselves?” asked the Marquis.
+
+“Yes, father; I knocked down six dolls in twelve shots at the first
+trial!” cried Camille.
+
+“And where did you ride?”
+
+“In the Bois; we saw my mother.”
+
+“Did she stop?”
+
+“We were riding so fast just then that I daresay she did not see us,”
+ replied the young Count.
+
+“But, then, why did you not go to speak to her?”
+
+“I fancy I have noticed, father, that she does not care that we should
+speak to her in public,” said Clement in an undertone. “We are a little
+too big.”
+
+The judge’s hearing was keen enough to catch these words, which brought
+a cloud to the Marquis’ brow. Popinot took pleasure in contemplating the
+picture of the father and his boys. His eyes went back with a sense
+of pathos to M. d’Espard’s face; his features, his expression, and his
+manner all expressed honesty in its noblest aspect, intellectual and
+chivalrous honesty, nobility in all its beauty.
+
+“You--you see, monsieur,” said the Marquis, and his hesitation had
+returned, “you see that Justice may look in--in here at any time--yes,
+at any time--here. If there is anybody crazy, it can only be the
+children--the children--who are a little crazy about their father,
+and the father who is very crazy about his children--but that sort of
+madness rings true.”
+
+At this juncture Madame Jeanrenaud’s voice was heard in the ante-room,
+and the good woman came bustling in, in spite of the man-servant’s
+remonstrances.
+
+“I take no roundabout ways, I can tell you!” she exclaimed. “Yes,
+Monsieur le Marquis, I want to speak to you, this very minute,” she went
+on, with a comprehensive bow to the company. “By George, and I am too
+late as it is, since Monsieur the criminal Judge is before me.”
+
+“Criminal!” cried the two boys.
+
+“Good reason why I did not find you at your own house, since you are
+here. Well, well! the Law is always to the fore when there is mischief
+brewing.--I came, Monsieur le Marquis, to tell you that my son and I are
+of one mind to give you everything back, since our honor is threatened.
+My son and I, we had rather give you back everything than cause you
+the smallest trouble. My word, they must be as stupid as pans without
+handles to call you a lunatic----”
+
+“A lunatic! My father?” exclaimed the boys, clinging to the Marquis.
+“What is this?”
+
+“Silence, madame,” said Popinot.
+
+“Children, leave us,” said the Marquis.
+
+The two boys went into the garden without a word, but very much alarmed.
+
+“Madame,” said the judge, “the moneys paid to you by Monsieur le Marquis
+were legally due, though given to you in virtue of a very far-reaching
+theory of honesty. If all the people possessed of confiscated goods, by
+whatever cause, even if acquired by treachery, were compelled to make
+restitution every hundred and fifty years, there would be few legitimate
+owners in France. The possessions of Jacques Coeur enriched twenty noble
+families; the confiscations pronounced by the English to the advantage
+of their adherents at the time when they held a part of France made the
+fortune of several princely houses.
+
+“Our law allows M. d’Espard to dispose of his income without accounting
+for it, or suffering him to be accused of its misapplication. A
+Commission in Lunacy can only be granted when a man’s actions are devoid
+of reason; but in this case, the remittances made to you have a reason
+based on the most sacred and most honorable motives. Hence you may keep
+it all without remorse, and leave the world to misinterpret a noble
+action. In Paris, the highest virtue is the object of the foulest
+calumny. It is, unfortunately, the present condition of society that
+makes the Marquis’ actions sublime. For the honor of my country, I would
+that such deeds were regarded as a matter of course; but, as things are,
+I am forced by comparison to look upon M. d’Espard as a man to whom a
+crown should be awarded, rather than that he should be threatened with a
+Commission in Lunacy.
+
+“In the course of a long professional career, I have seen and heard
+nothing that has touched me more deeply than that I have just seen and
+heard. But it is not extraordinary that virtue should wear its noblest
+aspect when it is practised by men of the highest class.
+
+“Having heard me express myself in this way, I hope, Monsieur le
+Marquis, that you feel certain of my silence, and that you will not
+for a moment be uneasy as to the decision pronounced in the case--if it
+comes before the Court.”
+
+“There, now! Well said,” cried Madame Jeanrenaud. “That is something
+like a judge! Look here, my dear sir, I would hug you if I were not so
+ugly; you speak like a book.”
+
+The Marquis held out his hand to Popinot, who gently pressed it with
+a look full of sympathetic comprehension at this great man in private
+life, and the Marquis responded with a pleasant smile. These two
+natures, both so large and full--one commonplace but divinely kind, the
+other lofty and sublime--had fallen into unison gently, without a jar,
+without a flash of passion, as though two pure lights had been merged
+into one. The father of a whole district felt himself worthy to grasp
+the hand of this man who was doubly noble, and the Marquis felt in the
+depths of his soul an instinct that told him that the judge’s hand
+was one of those from which the treasures of inexhaustible beneficence
+perennially flow.
+
+“Monsieur le Marquis,” added Popinot, with a bow, “I am happy to be able
+to tell you that, from the first words of this inquiry, I regarded my
+clerk as quite unnecessary.”
+
+He went close to M. d’Espard, led him into the window-bay, and said: “It
+is time that you should return home, monsieur. I believe that Madame la
+Marquise has acted in this matter under an influence which you ought at
+once to counteract.”
+
+Popinot withdrew. He looked back several times as he crossed the
+courtyard, touched by the recollection of the scene. It was one of those
+which take root in the memory to blossom again in certain hours when the
+soul seeks consolation.
+
+“Those rooms would just suit me,” said he to himself as he reached home.
+“If M. d’Espard leaves them, I will take up his lease.”
+
+
+
+The next day, at about ten in the morning, Popinot, who had written out
+his report the previous evening, made his way to the Palais de Justice,
+intending to have prompt and righteous justice done. As he went to the
+robing-room to put on his gown and bands, the usher told him that the
+President of his Court begged him to attend in his private room, where
+he was waiting for him. Popinot forthwith obeyed.
+
+“Good-morning, my dear Popinot,” said the President, “I have been
+waiting for you.”
+
+“Why, Monsieur le President, is anything wrong?”
+
+“A mere silly trifle,” said the President. “The Keeper of the Seals,
+with whom I had the honor of dining yesterday, led me apart into a
+corner. He had heard that you had been to tea with Madame d’Espard, in
+whose case you were employed to make inquiries. He gave me to understand
+that it would be as well that you should not sit on this case----”
+
+“But, Monsieur le President, I can prove that I left Madame d’Espard’s
+house at the moment when tea was brought in. And my conscience----”
+
+“Yes, yes; the whole Bench, the two Courts, all the profession know you.
+I need not repeat what I said about you to his Eminence; but, you know,
+‘Caesar’s wife must not be suspected.’ So we shall not make this
+foolish trifle a matter of discipline, but only of proprieties. Between
+ourselves, it is not on your account, but on that of the Bench.”
+
+“But, monsieur, if you only knew the kind of woman----” said the judge,
+trying to pull his report out of his pocket.
+
+“I am perfectly certain that you have proceeded in this matter with the
+strictest independence of judgment. I myself, in the provinces, have
+often taken more than a cup of tea with the people I had to try; but the
+fact that the Keeper of the Seals should have mentioned it, and that you
+might be talked about, is enough to make the Court avoid any discussion
+of the matter. Any conflict with public opinion must always be dangerous
+for a constitutional body, even when the right is on its side against
+the public, because their weapons are not equal. Journalism may say or
+suppose anything, and our dignity forbids us even to reply. In fact,
+I have spoken of the matter to your President, and M. Camusot has been
+appointed in your place on your retirement, which you will signify.
+It is a family matter, so to speak. And I now beg you to signify your
+retirement from the case as a personal favor. To make up, you will get
+the Cross of the Legion of Honor, which has so long been due to you. I
+make that my business.”
+
+When he saw M. Camusot, a judge recently called to Paris from a
+provincial Court of the same class, as he went forward bowing to the
+Judge and the President, Popinot could not repress an ironical smile.
+This pale, fair young man, full of covert ambition, looked ready to hang
+and unhang, at the pleasure of any earthy king, the innocent and the
+guilty alike, and to follow the example of a Laubardemont rather than
+that of a Mole.
+
+Popinot withdrew with a bow; he scorned to deny the lying accusation
+that had been brought against him.
+
+
+PARIS, February 1836.
+
+
+
+
+ADDENDUM
+
+The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.
+
+Note: The Commission in Lunacy is also known as The Interdiction and is
+referred to by that title in certain of the addendums.
+
+ Bianchon, Horace
+ Father Goriot
+ The Atheist’s Mass
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ A Bachelor’s Establishment
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ The Government Clerks
+ Pierrette
+ A Study of Woman
+ Scenes from a Courtesan’s Life
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Magic Skin
+ A Second Home
+ A Prince of Bohemia
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ The Muse of the Department
+ The Imaginary Mistress
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Betty
+ The Country Parson
+ In addition, M. Bianchon narrated the following:
+ Another Study of Woman
+ La Grande Breteche
+
+ Bordin
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+
+ Camusot de Marville
+ Cousin Pons
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+ Scenes from a Cuortesan’s Life
+
+ Desroches (son)
+ A Bachelor’s Establishment
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Start in Life
+ A Woman of Thirty
+ The Government Clerks
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan’s Life
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ A Man of Business
+ The Middle Classes
+
+ Espard, Charles-Maurice-Marie-Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis d’
+ Scenes from a Courtesan’s Life
+
+ Espard, Chevalier d’
+ Scenes from a Courtesan’s Life
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+
+ Espard, Jeanne-Clementine-Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, Marquise d’
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan’s Life
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ Another Study of Woman
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ Beatrix
+
+ Godeschal, Francois-Claude-Marie
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Bachelor’s Establishment
+ A Start in Life
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Pons
+
+ Grozier, Abbe
+ Lost Illusions
+
+ Jeanrenaud
+ Albert Savarus
+
+ Mongenod, Frederic
+ The Seamy Side of History
+
+ Negrepelisse, De
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+
+ Nucingen, Baronne Delphine de
+ Father Goriot
+ The Thirteen
+ Eugenie Grandet
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Melmoth Reconciled
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan’s Life
+ Modeste Mignon
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ Another Study of Woman
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ The Member for Arcis
+
+ Popinot, Jean-Jules
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Middle Classes
+
+ Rabourdin, Madame
+ The Government Clerks
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg’s The Commission in Lunacy, by Honore de Balzac
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+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Commission in Lunacy, by Honore de Balzac
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Commission in Lunacy, by Honore de Balzac
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Commission in Lunacy
+
+Author: Honore de Balzac
+
+Translator: Clara Bell
+
+Release Date: February 24, 2010 [EBook #1410]
+Last Updated: November 22, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Bickers, and Dagny, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Honore De Balzac
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Translated By Clara Bell
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ DEDICATION
+
+ Dedicated to Monsieur le Contre-Amiral Bazoche,
+ Governor of the Isle of Bourbon, by the grateful writer.
+ DE BALZAC.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0002"> ADDENDUM </a>
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1828, at about one o&rsquo;clock one morning, two persons came out of a large
+ house in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, near the Elysee-Bourbon. One
+ was the famous doctor, Horace Bianchon; the other was one of the most
+ elegant men in Paris, the Baron de Rastignac; they were friends of long
+ standing. Each had sent away his carriage, and no cab was to be seen in
+ the street; but the night was fine, and the pavement dry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will walk as far as the boulevard,&rdquo; said Eugene de Rastignac to
+ Bianchon. &ldquo;You can get a hackney cab at the club; there is always one to
+ be found there till daybreak. Come with me as far as my house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, and what have you to say about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About that woman?&rdquo; said the doctor coldly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There I recognize my Bianchon!&rdquo; exclaimed Rastignac.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, how?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, my dear fellow, you speak of the Marquise d&rsquo;Espard as if she were a
+ case for your hospital.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you want to know what I think, Eugene? If you throw over Madame de
+ Nucingen for this Marquise, you will swap a one-eyed horse for a blind
+ one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame de Nucingen is six-and-thirty, Bianchon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And this woman is three-and-thirty,&rdquo; said the doctor quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her worst enemies only say six-and-twenty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear boy, when you really want to know a woman&rsquo;s age, look at her
+ temples and the tip of her nose. Whatever women may achieve with their
+ cosmetics, they can do nothing against those incorruptible witnesses to
+ their experiences. There each year of life has left its stigmata. When a
+ woman&rsquo;s temples are flaccid, seamed, withered in a particular way; when at
+ the tip of her nose you see those minute specks, which look like the
+ imperceptible black smuts which are shed in London by the chimneys in
+ which coal is burnt.... Your servant, sir! That woman is more than thirty.
+ She may be handsome, witty, loving&mdash;whatever you please, but she is
+ past thirty, she is arriving at maturity. I do not blame men who attach
+ themselves to that kind of woman; only, a man of your superior distinction
+ must not mistake a winter pippin for a little summer apple, smiling on the
+ bough, and waiting for you to crunch it. Love never goes to study the
+ registers of birth and marriage; no one loves a woman because she is
+ handsome or ugly, stupid or clever; we love because we love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, for my part, I love for quite other reasons. She is Marquise
+ d&rsquo;Espard; she was a Blamont-Chauvry; she is the fashion; she has soul; her
+ foot is as pretty as the Duchesse de Berri&rsquo;s; she has perhaps a hundred
+ thousand francs a year&mdash;some day, perhaps, I may marry her! In short,
+ she will put me into a position which will enable me to pay my debts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought you were rich,&rdquo; interrupted Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bah! I have twenty thousand francs a year&mdash;just enough to keep up my
+ stables. I was thoroughly done, my dear fellow, in that Nucingen business;
+ I will tell you about that.&mdash;I have got my sisters married; that is
+ the clearest profit I can show since we last met; and I would rather have
+ them provided for than have five hundred thousand francs a year. No, what
+ would you have me do? I am ambitious. To what can Madame de Nucingen lead?
+ A year more and I shall be shelved, stuck in a pigeon-hole like a married
+ man. I have all the discomforts of marriage and of single life, without
+ the advantages of either; a false position to which every man must come
+ who remains tied too long to the same apron-string.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you think you will come upon a treasure here?&rdquo; said Bianchon. &ldquo;Your
+ Marquise, my dear fellow, does not hit my fancy at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your liberal opinions blur your eyesight. If Madame d&rsquo;Espard were a
+ Madame Rabourdin...&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen to me. Noble or simple, she would still have no soul; she would
+ still be a perfect type of selfishness. Take my word for it, medical men
+ are accustomed to judge of people and things; the sharpest of us read the
+ soul while we study the body. In spite of that pretty boudoir where we
+ have spent this evening, in spite of the magnificence of the house, it is
+ quite possible that Madame la Marquise is in debt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What makes you think so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not assert it; I am supposing. She talked of her soul as Louis
+ XVIII. used to talk of his heart. I tell you this: That fragile, fair
+ woman, with her chestnut hair, who pities herself that she may be pitied,
+ enjoys an iron constitution, an appetite like a wolf&rsquo;s, and the strength
+ and cowardice of a tiger. Gauze, and silk, and muslin were never more
+ cleverly twisted round a lie! Ecco.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bianchon, you frighten me! You have learned a good many things, then,
+ since we lived in the Maison Vauquer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, since then, my boy, I have seen puppets, both dolls and manikins. I
+ know something of the ways of the fine ladies whose bodies we attend to,
+ saving that which is dearest to them, their child&mdash;if they love it&mdash;or
+ their pretty faces, which they always worship. A man spends his nights by
+ their pillow, wearing himself to death to spare them the slightest loss of
+ beauty in any part; he succeeds, he keeps their secret like the dead; they
+ send to ask for his bill, and think it horribly exorbitant. Who saved
+ them? Nature. Far from recommending him, they speak ill of him, fearing
+ lest he should become the physician of their best friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear fellow, those women of whom you say, &lsquo;They are angels!&rsquo; I&mdash;I&mdash;have
+ seen stripped of the little grimaces under which they hide their soul, as
+ well as of the frippery under which they disguise their defects&mdash;without
+ manners and without stays; they are not beautiful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We saw a great deal of mud, a great deal of dirt, under the waters of the
+ world when we were aground for a time on the shoals of the Maison Vauquer.&mdash;What
+ we saw there was nothing. Since I have gone into high society, I have seen
+ monsters dressed in satin, Michonneaus in white gloves, Poirets bedizened
+ with orders, fine gentlemen doing more usurious business than old Gobseck!
+ To the shame of mankind, when I have wanted to shake hands with Virtue, I
+ have found her shivering in a loft, persecuted by calumny, half-starving
+ on a income or a salary of fifteen hundred francs a year, and regarded as
+ crazy, or eccentric, or imbecile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In short, my dear boy, the Marquise is a woman of fashion, and I have a
+ particular horror of that kind of woman. Do you want to know why? A woman
+ who has a lofty soul, fine taste, gentle wit, a generously warm heart, and
+ who lives a simple life, has not a chance of being the fashion. Ergo: A
+ woman of fashion and a man in power are analogous; but there is this
+ difference: the qualities by which a man raises himself above others
+ ennoble him and are a glory to him; whereas the qualities by which a woman
+ gains power for a day are hideous vices; she belies her nature to hide her
+ character, and to live the militant life of the world she must have iron
+ strength under a frail appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I, as a physician, know that a sound stomach excludes a good heart. Your
+ woman of fashion feels nothing; her rage for pleasure has its source in a
+ longing to heat up her cold nature, a craving for excitement and
+ enjoyment, like an old man who stands night after night by the footlights
+ at the opera. As she has more brain than heart, she sacrifices genuine
+ passion and true friends to her triumph, as a general sends his most
+ devoted subalterns to the front in order to win a battle. The woman of
+ fashion ceases to be a woman; she is neither mother, nor wife, nor lover.
+ She is, medically speaking, sex in the brain. And your Marquise, too, has
+ all the characteristics of her monstrosity, the beak of a bird of prey,
+ the clear, cold eye, the gentle voice&mdash;she is as polished as the
+ steel of a machine, she touches everything except the heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is some truth in what you say, Bianchon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some truth?&rdquo; replied Bianchon. &ldquo;It is all true. Do you suppose that I was
+ not struck to the heart by the insulting politeness by which she made me
+ measure the imaginary distance which her noble birth sets between us? That
+ I did not feel the deepest pity for her cat-like civilities when I
+ remembered what her object was? A year hence she will not write one word
+ to do me the slightest service, and this evening she pelted me with
+ smiles, believing that I can influence my uncle Popinot, on whom the
+ success of her case&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would you rather she should have played the fool with you, my dear
+ fellow?&mdash;I accept your diatribe against women of fashion; but you are
+ beside the mark. I should always prefer for a wife a Marquise d&rsquo;Espard to
+ the most devout and devoted creature on earth. Marry an angel! you would
+ have to go and bury your happiness in the depths of the country! The wife
+ of a politician is a governing machine, a contrivance that makes
+ compliments and courtesies. She is the most important and most faithful
+ tool which an ambitious man can use; a friend, in short, who may
+ compromise herself without mischief, and whom he may belie without harmful
+ results. Fancy Mahomet in Paris in the nineteenth century! His wife would
+ be a Rohan, a Duchesse de Chevreuse of the Fronde, as keen and as
+ flattering as an Ambassadress, as wily as Figaro. Your loving wives lead
+ nowhere; a woman of the world leads to everything; she is the diamond with
+ which a man cuts every window when he has not the golden key which unlocks
+ every door. Leave humdrum virtues to the humdrum, ambitious vices to the
+ ambitious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Besides, my dear fellow, do you imagine that the love of a Duchesse de
+ Langeais, or de Maufrigneuse, or of a Lady Dudley does not bestow immense
+ pleasure? If only you knew how much value the cold, severe style of such a
+ woman gives to the smallest evidence of their affection! What a delight it
+ is to see a periwinkle piercing through the snow! A smile from below a fan
+ contradicts the reserve of an assumed attitude, and is worth all the
+ unbridled tenderness of your middle-class women with their mortgaged
+ devotion; for, in love, devotion is nearly akin to speculation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, then, a woman of fashion, a Blamont-Chauvry, has her virtues too!
+ Her virtues are fortune, power, effect, a certain contempt of all that is
+ beneath her&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you!&rdquo; said Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old curmudgeon!&rdquo; said Rastignac, laughing. &ldquo;Come&mdash;do not be so
+ common, do like your friend Desplein; be a Baron, a Knight of
+ Saint-Michael; become a peer of France, and marry your daughters to
+ dukes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I! May the five hundred thousand devils&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come! Can you be superior only in medicine? Really, you distress
+ me...&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hate that sort of people; I long for a revolution to deliver us from
+ them for ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so, my dear Robespierre of the lancet, you will not go to-morrow to
+ your uncle Popinot?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I will,&rdquo; said Bianchon; &ldquo;for you I would go to hell to fetch
+ water...&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My good friend, you really touch me. I have sworn that a commission shall
+ sit on the Marquis. Why, here is even a long-saved tear to thank you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; Bianchon went on, &ldquo;I do not promise to succeed as you wish with
+ Jean-Jules Popinot. You do not know him. However, I will take him to see
+ your Marquise the day after to-morrow; she may get round him if she can. I
+ doubt it. If all the truffles, all the Duchesses, all the mistresses, and
+ all the charmers in Paris were there in the full bloom of their beauty; if
+ the King promised him the <i>Prairie</i>, and the Almighty gave him the
+ Order of Paradise with the revenues of Purgatory, not one of all these
+ powers would induce him to transfer a single straw from one saucer of his
+ scales into the other. He is a judge, as Death is Death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two friends had reached the office of the Minister for Foreign
+ Affairs, at the corner of the Boulevard des Capucines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here you are at home,&rdquo; said Bianchon, laughing, as he pointed to the
+ ministerial residence. &ldquo;And here is my carriage,&rdquo; he added, calling a
+ hackney cab. &ldquo;And these&mdash;express our fortune.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will be happy at the bottom of the sea, while I am still struggling
+ with the tempests on the surface, till I sink and go to ask you for a
+ corner in your grotto, old fellow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Till Saturday,&rdquo; replied Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed,&rdquo; said Rastignac. &ldquo;And you promise me Popinot?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will do all my conscience will allow. Perhaps this appeal for a
+ commission covers some little dramorama, to use a word of our good bad
+ times.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor Bianchon! he will never be anything but a good fellow,&rdquo; said
+ Rastignac to himself as the cab drove off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rastignac has given me the most difficult negotiation in the world,&rdquo; said
+ Bianchon to himself, remembering, as he rose next morning, the delicate
+ commission intrusted to him. &ldquo;However, I have never asked the smallest
+ service from my uncle in Court, and have paid more than a thousand visits
+ gratis for him. And, after all, we are not apt to mince matters between
+ ourselves. He will say Yes or No, and there an end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this little soliloquy the famous physician bent his steps, at seven
+ in the morning, towards the Rue du Fouarre, where dwelt Monsieur
+ Jean-Jules Popinot, judge of the Lower Court of the Department of the
+ Seine. The Rue du Fouarre&mdash;an old word meaning straw&mdash;was in the
+ thirteenth century the most important street in Paris. There stood the
+ Schools of the University, where the voices of Abelard and of Gerson were
+ heard in the world of learning. It is now one of the dirtiest streets of
+ the Twelfth Arrondissement, the poorest quarter of Paris, that in which
+ two-thirds of the population lack firing in winter, which leaves most
+ brats at the gate of the Foundling Hospital, which sends most beggars to
+ the poorhouse, most rag-pickers to the street corners, most decrepit old
+ folks to bask against the walls on which the sun shines, most delinquents
+ to the police courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half-way down this street, which is always damp, and where the gutter
+ carries to the Seine the blackened waters from some dye-works, there is an
+ old house, restored no doubt under Francis I., and built of bricks held
+ together by a few courses of masonry. That it is substantial seems proved
+ by the shape of its front wall, not uncommonly seen in some parts of
+ Paris. It bellies, so to speak, in a manner caused by the protuberance of
+ its first floor, crushed under the weight of the second and third, but
+ upheld by the strong wall of the ground floor. At first sight it would
+ seem as though the piers between the windows, though strengthened by the
+ stone mullions, must give way, but the observer presently perceives that,
+ as in the tower at Bologna, the old bricks and old time-eaten stones of
+ this house persistently preserve their centre of gravity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At every season of the year the solid piers of the ground floor have the
+ yellow tone and the imperceptible sweating surface that moisture gives to
+ stone. The passer-by feels chilled as he walks close to this wall, where
+ worn corner-stones ineffectually shelter him from the wheels of vehicles.
+ As is always the case in houses built before carriages were in use, the
+ vault of the doorway forms a very low archway not unlike the barbican of a
+ prison. To the right of this entrance there are three windows, protected
+ outside by iron gratings of so close a pattern, that the curious cannot
+ possibly see the use made of the dark, damp rooms within, and the panes
+ too are dirty and dusty; to the left are two similar windows, one of which
+ is sometimes open, exposing to view the porter, his wife, and his
+ children; swarming, working, cooking, eating, and screaming, in a floored
+ and wainscoted room where everything is dropping to pieces, and into which
+ you descend two steps&mdash;a depth which seems to suggest the gradual
+ elevation of the soil of Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If on a rainy day some foot-passenger takes refuge under the long vault,
+ with projecting lime-washed beams, which leads from the door to the
+ staircase, he will hardly fail to pause and look at the picture presented
+ by the interior of this house. To the left is a square garden-plot,
+ allowing of not more than four long steps in each direction, a garden of
+ black soil, with trellises bereft of vines, and where, in default of
+ vegetation under the shade of two trees, papers collect, old rags,
+ potsherds, bits of mortar fallen from the roof; a barren ground, where
+ time has shed on the walls, and on the trunks and branches of the trees, a
+ powdery deposit like cold soot. The two parts of the house, set at a right
+ angle, derive light from this garden-court shut in by two adjoining houses
+ built on wooden piers, decrepit and ready to fall, where on each floor
+ some grotesque evidence is to be seen of the craft pursued by some lodger
+ within. Here long poles are hung with immense skeins of dyed worsted put
+ out to dry; there, on ropes, dance clean-washed shirts; higher up, on a
+ shelf, volumes display their freshly marbled edges; women sing, husbands
+ whistle, children shout; the carpenter saws his planks, a copper-turner
+ makes the metal screech; all kinds of industries combine to produce a
+ noise which the number of instruments renders distracting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general system of decoration in this passage, which is neither
+ courtyard, garden, nor vaulted way, though a little of all, consists of
+ wooden pillars resting on square stone blocks, and forming arches. Two
+ archways open on to the little garden; two others, facing the front
+ gateway, lead to a wooden staircase, with an iron balustrade that was once
+ a miracle of smith&rsquo;s work, so whimsical are the shapes given to the metal;
+ the worn steps creak under every tread. The entrance to each flat has an
+ architrave dark with dirt, grease, and dust, and outer doors, covered with
+ Utrecht velvet set with brass nails, once gilt, in a diamond pattern.
+ These relics of splendor show that in the time of Louis XIV. the house was
+ the residence of some councillor to the Parlement, some rich priests, or
+ some treasurer of the ecclesiastical revenue. But these vestiges of former
+ luxury bring a smile to the lips by the artless contrast of past and
+ present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Jean-Jules Popinot lived on the first floor of this house, where the
+ gloom, natural to all first floors in Paris houses, was increased by the
+ narrowness of the street. This old tenement was known to all the twelfth
+ arrondissement, on which Providence had bestowed this lawyer, as it gives
+ a beneficent plant to cure or alleviate every malady. Here is a sketch of
+ a man whom the brilliant Marquise d&rsquo;Espard hoped to fascinate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Popinot, as is seemly for a magistrate, was always dressed in black&mdash;a
+ style which contributed to make him ridiculous in the eyes of those who
+ were in the habit of judging everything from a superficial examination.
+ Men who are jealous of maintaining the dignity required by this color
+ ought to devote themselves to constant and minute care of their person;
+ but our dear M. Popinot was incapable of forcing himself to the
+ puritanical cleanliness which black demands. His trousers, always
+ threadbare, looked like camlet&mdash;the stuff of which attorneys&rsquo; gowns
+ are made; and his habitual stoop set them, in time, in such innumerable
+ creases, that in places they were traced with lines, whitish, rusty, or
+ shiny, betraying either sordid avarice, or the most unheeding poverty. His
+ coarse worsted stockings were twisted anyhow in his ill-shaped shoes. His
+ linen had the tawny tinge acquired by long sojourn in a wardrobe, showing
+ that the late lamented Madame Popinot had had a mania for much linen; in
+ the Flemish fashion, perhaps, she had given herself the trouble of a great
+ wash no more than twice a year. The old man&rsquo;s coat and waistcoat were in
+ harmony with his trousers, shoes, stockings, and linen. He always had the
+ luck of his carelessness; for, the first day he put on a new coat, he
+ unfailingly matched it with the rest of his costume by staining it with
+ incredible promptitude. The good man waited till his housekeeper told him
+ that his hat was too shabby before buying a new one. His necktie was
+ always crumpled and starchless, and he never set his dog-eared shirt
+ collar straight after his judge&rsquo;s bands had disordered it. He took no care
+ of his gray hair, and shaved but twice a week. He never wore gloves, and
+ generally kept his hands stuffed into his empty trousers&rsquo; pockets; the
+ soiled pocket-holes, almost always torn, added a final touch to the
+ slovenliness of his person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any one who knows the Palais de Justice at Paris, where every variety of
+ black attire may be studied, can easily imagine the appearance of M.
+ Popinot. The habit of sitting for days at a time modifies the structure of
+ the body, just as the fatigue of hearing interminable pleadings tells on
+ the expression of a magistrate&rsquo;s face. Shut up as he is in courts
+ ridiculously small, devoid of architectural dignity, and where the air is
+ quickly vitiated, a Paris judge inevitably acquires a countenance puckered
+ and seamed by reflection, and depressed by weariness; his complexion turns
+ pallid, acquiring an earthy or greenish hue according to his individual
+ temperament. In short, within a given time the most blooming young man is
+ turned into an &ldquo;inasmuch&rdquo; machine&mdash;an instrument which applies the
+ Code to individual cases with the indifference of clockwork.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence, nature, having bestowed on M. Popinot a not too pleasing exterior,
+ his life as a lawyer had not improved it. His frame was graceless and
+ angular. His thick knees, huge feet, and broad hands formed a contrast
+ with a priest-like face having a vague resemblance to a calf&rsquo;s head, meek
+ to unmeaningness, and but little brightened by divergent bloodless eyes,
+ divided by a straight flat nose, surmounted by a flat forehead, flanked by
+ enormous ears, flabby and graceless. His thin, weak hair showed the
+ baldness through various irregular partings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One feature only commended this face to the physiognomist. This man had a
+ mouth to whose lips divine kindness lent its sweetness. They were
+ wholesome, full, red lips, finely wrinkled, sinuous, mobile, by which
+ nature had given expression to noble feelings; lips which spoke to the
+ heart and proclaimed the man&rsquo;s intelligence and lucidity, a gift of
+ second-sight, and a heavenly temper; and you would have judged him wrongly
+ from looking merely at his sloping forehead, his fireless eyes, and his
+ shambling gait. His life answered to his countenance; it was full of
+ secret labor, and hid the virtue of a saint. His superior knowledge of law
+ proved so strong a recommendation at a time when Napoleon was reorganizing
+ it in 1808 and 1811, that, by the advice of Cambaceres, he was one of the
+ first men named to sit on the Imperial High Court of Justice at Paris.
+ Popinot was no schemer. Whenever any demand was made, any request
+ preferred for an appointment, the Minister would overlook Popinot, who
+ never set foot in the house of the High Chancellor or the Chief Justice.
+ From the High Court he was sent down to the Common Court, and pushed to
+ the lowest rung of the ladder by active struggling men. There he was
+ appointed supernumerary judge. There was a general outcry among the
+ lawyers: &ldquo;Popinot a supernumerary!&rdquo; Such injustice struck the legal world
+ with dismay&mdash;the attorneys, the registrars, everybody but Popinot
+ himself, who made no complaint. The first clamor over, everybody was
+ satisfied that all was for the best in the best of all possible worlds,
+ which must certainly be the legal world. Popinot remained supernumerary
+ judge till the day when the most famous Great Seal under the Restoration
+ avenged the oversights heaped on this modest and uncomplaining man by the
+ Chief Justices of the Empire. After being a supernumerary for twelve
+ years, M. Popinot would no doubt die a puisne judge of the Court of the
+ Seine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To account for the obscure fortunes of one of the superior men of the
+ legal profession, it is necessary to enter here into some details which
+ will serve to reveal his life and character, and which will, at the same
+ time, display some of the wheels of the great machine known as Justice. M.
+ Popinot was classed by the three Presidents who successively controlled
+ the Court of the Seine under the category of possible judges, the stuff of
+ which judges are made. Thus classified, he did not achieve the reputation
+ for capacity which his previous labors had deserved. Just as a painter is
+ invariably included in a category as a landscape painter, a portrait
+ painter, a painter of history, of sea pieces, or of genre, by a public
+ consisting of artists, connoisseurs, and simpletons, who, out of envy, or
+ critical omnipotence, or prejudice, fence in his intellect, assuming, one
+ and all, that there are ganglions in every brain&mdash;a narrow judgment
+ which the world applies to writers, to statesmen, to everybody who begins
+ with some specialty before being hailed as omniscient; so Popinot&rsquo;s fate
+ was sealed, and he was hedged round to do a particular kind of work.
+ Magistrates, attorneys, pleaders, all who pasture on the legal common,
+ distinguish two elements in every case&mdash;law and equity. Equity is the
+ outcome of facts, law is the application of principles to facts. A man may
+ be right in equity but wrong in law, without any blame to the judge.
+ Between his conscience and the facts there is a whole gulf of determining
+ reasons unknown to the judge, but which condemn or legitimatize the act. A
+ judge is not God; the duty is to adapt facts to principles, to judge cases
+ of infinite variety while measuring them by a fixed standard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ France employs about six thousand judges; no generation has six thousand
+ great men at her command, much less can she find them in the legal
+ profession. Popinot, in the midst of the civilization of Paris, was just a
+ very clever cadi, who, by the character of his mind, and by dint of
+ rubbing the letter of the law into the essence of facts, had learned to
+ see the error of spontaneous and violent decisions. By the help of his
+ judicial second-sight he could pierce the double casing of lies in which
+ advocates hide the heart of a trial. He was a judge, as the great Desplein
+ was a surgeon; he probed men&rsquo;s consciences as the anatomist probed their
+ bodies. His life and habits had led him to an exact appreciation of their
+ most secret thoughts by a thorough study of facts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sifted a case as Cuvier sifted the earth&rsquo;s crust. Like that great
+ thinker, he proceeded from deduction to deduction before drawing his
+ conclusions, and reconstructed the past career of a conscience as Cuvier
+ reconstructed an Anoplotherium. When considering a brief he would often
+ wake in the night, startled by a gleam of truth suddenly sparkling in his
+ brain. Struck by the deep injustice, which is the end of these contests,
+ in which everything is against the honest man, everything to the advantage
+ of the rogue, he often summed up in favor of equity against law in such
+ cases as bore on questions of what may be termed divination. Hence he was
+ regarded by his colleagues as a man not of a practical mind; his arguments
+ on two lines of deduction made their deliberations lengthy. When Popinot
+ observed their dislike to listening to him he gave his opinion briefly; it
+ was said that he was not a good judge in this class of cases; but as his
+ gift of discrimination was remarkable, his opinion lucid, and his
+ penetration profound, he was considered to have a special aptitude for the
+ laborious duties of an examining judge. So an examining judge he remained
+ during the greater part of his legal career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although his qualifications made him eminently fitted for its difficult
+ functions, and he had the reputation of being so learned in criminal law
+ that his duty was a pleasure to him, the kindness of his heart constantly
+ kept him in torture, and he was nipped as in a vise between his conscience
+ and his pity. The services of an examining judge are better paid than
+ those of a judge in civil actions, but they do not therefore prove a
+ temptation; they are too onerous. Popinot, a man of modest and virtuous
+ learning, without ambition, an indefatigable worker, never complained of
+ his fate; he sacrificed his tastes and his compassionate soul to the
+ public good, and allowed himself to be transported to the noisome pools of
+ criminal examinations, where he showed himself alike severe and
+ beneficent. His clerk sometimes would give the accused some money to buy
+ tobacco, or a warm winter garment, as he led him back from the judge&rsquo;s
+ office to the Souriciere, the mouse-trap&mdash;the House of Detention
+ where the accused are kept under the orders of the Examining Judge. He
+ knew how to be an inflexible judge and a charitable man. And no one
+ extracted a confession so easily as he without having recourse to judicial
+ trickery. He had, too, all the acumen of an observer. This man, apparently
+ so foolishly good-natured, simple, and absent-minded, could guess all the
+ cunning of a prison wag, unmask the astutest street huzzy, and subdue a
+ scoundrel. Unusual circumstances had sharpened his perspicacity; but to
+ relate these we must intrude on his domestic history, for in him the judge
+ was the social side of the man; another man, greater and less known,
+ existed within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twelve years before the beginning of this story, in 1816, during the
+ terrible scarcity which coincided disastrously with the stay in France of
+ the so-called Allies, Popinot was appointed President of the Commission
+ Extraordinary formed to distribute food to the poor of his neighborhood,
+ just when he had planned to move from the Rue du Fouarre, which he as
+ little liked to live in as his wife did. The great lawyer, the
+ clear-sighted criminal judge, whose superiority seemed to his colleagues a
+ form of aberration, had for five years been watching legal results without
+ seeing their causes. As he scrambled up into the lofts, as he saw the
+ poverty, as he studied the desperate necessities which gradually bring the
+ poor to criminal acts, as he estimated their long struggles, compassion
+ filled his soul. The judge then became the Saint Vincent de Paul of these
+ grown-up children, these suffering toilers. The transformation was not
+ immediately complete. Beneficence has its temptations as vice has. Charity
+ consumes a saint&rsquo;s purse, as roulette consumes the possessions of a
+ gambler, quite gradually. Popinot went from misery to misery, from charity
+ to charity; then, by the time he had lifted all the rags which cover
+ public pauperism, like a bandage under which an inflamed wound lies
+ festering, at the end of a year he had become the Providence incarnate of
+ that quarter of the town. He was a member of the Benevolent Committee and
+ of the Charity Organization. Wherever any gratuitous services were needed
+ he was ready, and did everything without fuss, like the man with the short
+ cloak, who spends his life in carrying soup round the markets and other
+ places where there are starving folks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Popinot was fortunate in acting on a larger circle and in a higher sphere;
+ he had an eye on everything, he prevented crime, he gave work to the
+ unemployed, he found a refuge for the helpless, he distributed aid with
+ discernment wherever danger threatened, he made himself the counselor of
+ the widow, the protector of homeless children, the sleeping partner of
+ small traders. No one at the Courts, no one in Paris, knew of this secret
+ life of Popinot&rsquo;s. There are virtues so splendid that they necessitate
+ obscurity; men make haste to hide them under a bushel. As to those whom
+ the lawyer succored, they, hard at work all day and tired at night, were
+ little able to sing his praises; theirs was the gracelessness of children,
+ who can never pay because they owe too much. There is such compulsory
+ ingratitude; but what heart that has sown good to reap gratitude can think
+ itself great?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the end of the second year of his apostolic work, Popinot had turned
+ the storeroom at the bottom of his house into a parlor, lighted by the
+ three iron-barred windows. The walls and ceiling of this spacious room
+ were whitewashed, and the furniture consisted of wooden benches like those
+ seen in schools, a clumsy cupboard, a walnut-wood writing-table, and an
+ armchair. In the cupboard were his registers of donations, his tickets for
+ orders for bread, and his diary. He kept his ledger like a tradesman, that
+ he might not be ruined by kindness. All the sorrows of the neighborhood
+ were entered and numbered in a book, where each had its little account, as
+ merchants&rsquo; customers have theirs. When there was any question as to a man
+ or a family needing help, the lawyer could always command information from
+ the police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lavienne, a man made for his master, was his aide-de-camp. He redeemed or
+ renewed pawn-tickets, and visited the districts most threatened with
+ famine, while his master was in court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From four till seven in the morning in summer, from six till nine in
+ winter, this room was full of women, children, and paupers, while Popinot
+ gave audience. There was no need for a stove in winter; the crowd was so
+ dense that the air was warmed; only, Lavienne strewed straw on the wet
+ floor. By long use the benches were as polished as varnished mahogany; at
+ the height of a man&rsquo;s shoulders the wall had a coat of dark, indescribable
+ color, given to it by the rags and tattered clothes of these poor
+ creatures. The poor wretches loved Popinot so well that when they
+ assembled before his door was opened, before daybreak on a winter&rsquo;s
+ morning, the women warming themselves with their foot-brasiers, the men
+ swinging their arms for circulation, never a sound had disturbed his
+ sleep. Rag-pickers and other toilers of the night knew the house, and
+ often saw a light burning in the lawyer&rsquo;s private room at unholy hours.
+ Even thieves, as they passed by, said, &ldquo;That is his house,&rdquo; and respected
+ it. The morning he gave to the poor, the mid-day hours to criminals, the
+ evening to law work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the gift of observation that characterized Popinot was necessarily
+ bifrons; he could guess the virtues of a pauper&mdash;good feelings
+ nipped, fine actions in embryo, unrecognized self-sacrifice, just as he
+ could read at the bottom of a man&rsquo;s conscience the faintest outlines of a
+ crime, the slenderest threads of wrongdoing, and infer all the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Popinot&rsquo;s inherited fortune was a thousand crowns a year. His wife, sister
+ to M. Bianchon <i>Senior</i>, a doctor at Sancerre, had brought him about
+ twice as much. She, dying five years since, had left her fortune to her
+ husband. As the salary of a supernumerary judge is not large, and Popinot
+ had been a fully salaried judge only for four years, we may guess his
+ reasons for parsimony in all that concerned his person and mode of life,
+ when we consider how small his means were and how great his beneficence.
+ Besides, is not such indifference to dress as stamped Popinot an
+ absent-minded man, a distinguishing mark of scientific attainment, of art
+ passionately pursued, of a perpetually active mind? To complete this
+ portrait, it will be enough to add that Popinot was one of the few judges
+ of the Court of the Seine on whom the ribbon of the Legion of Honor had
+ not been conferred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the man who had been instructed by the President of the Second
+ Chamber of the Court&mdash;to which Popinot had belonged since his
+ reinstatement among the judges in civil law&mdash;to examine the Marquis
+ d&rsquo;Espard at the request of his wife, who sued for a Commission in Lunacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rue du Fouarre, where so many unhappy wretches swarmed in the early
+ morning, would be deserted by nine o&rsquo;clock, and as gloomy and squalid as
+ ever. Bianchon put his horse to a trot in order to find his uncle in the
+ midst of his business. It was not without a smile that he thought of the
+ curious contrast the judge&rsquo;s appearance would make in Madame d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s
+ room; but he promised himself that he would persuade him to dress in a way
+ that should not be too ridiculous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If only my uncle happens to have a new coat!&rdquo; said Bianchon to himself,
+ as he turned into the Rue du Fouarre, where a pale light shone from the
+ parlor windows. &ldquo;I shall do well, I believe, to talk that over with
+ Lavienne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the sound of wheels half a score of startled paupers came out from
+ under the gateway, and took off their hats on recognizing Bianchon; for
+ the doctor, who treated gratuitously the sick recommended to him by the
+ lawyer, was not less well known than he to the poor creatures assembled
+ there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bianchon found his uncle in the middle of the parlor, where the benches
+ were occupied by patients presenting such grotesque singularities of
+ costume as would have made the least artistic passer-by turn round to gaze
+ at them. A draughtsman&mdash;a Rembrandt, if there were one in our day&mdash;might
+ have conceived of one of his finest compositions from seeing these
+ children of misery, in artless attitudes, and all silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was the rugged countenance of an old man with a white beard and an
+ apostolic head&mdash;a Saint Peter ready to hand; his chest, partly
+ uncovered, showed salient muscles, the evidence of an iron constitution
+ which had served him as a fulcrum to resist a whole poem of sorrows. There
+ a young woman was suckling her youngest-born to keep it from crying, while
+ another of about five stood between her knees. Her white bosom, gleaming
+ amid rags, the baby with its transparent flesh-tints, and the brother,
+ whose attitude promised a street arab in the future, touched the fancy
+ with pathos by its almost graceful contrast with the long row of faces
+ crimson with cold, in the midst of which sat this family group. Further
+ away, an old woman, pale and rigid, had the repulsive look of rebellious
+ pauperism, eager to avenge all its past woes in one day of violence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, again, was the young workman, weakly and indolent, whose brightly
+ intelligent eye revealed fine faculties crushed by necessity struggled
+ with in vain, saying nothing of his sufferings, and nearly dead for lack
+ of an opportunity to squeeze between the bars of the vast stews where the
+ wretched swim round and round and devour each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The majority were women; their husbands, gone to their work, left it to
+ them, no doubt, to plead the cause of the family with the ingenuity which
+ characterizes the woman of the people, who is almost always queen in her
+ hovel. You would have seen a torn bandana on every head, on every form a
+ skirt deep in mud, ragged kerchiefs, worn and dirty jackets, but eyes that
+ burnt like live coals. It was a horrible assemblage, raising at first
+ sight a feeling of disgust, but giving a certain sense of terror the
+ instant you perceived that the resignation of these souls, all engaged in
+ the struggle for every necessary of life, was purely fortuitous, a
+ speculation on benevolence. The two tallow candles which lighted the
+ parlor flickered in a sort of fog caused by the fetid atmosphere of the
+ ill-ventilated room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate himself was not the least picturesque figure in the midst
+ of this assembly. He had on his head a rusty cotton night-cap; as he had
+ no cravat, his neck was visible, red with cold and wrinkled, in contrast
+ with the threadbare collar of his old dressing-gown. His worn face had the
+ half-stupid look that comes of absorbed attention. His lips, like those of
+ all men who work, were puckered up like a bag with the strings drawn
+ tight. His knitted brows seemed to bear the burden of all the sorrows
+ confided to him: he felt, analyzed, and judged them all. As watchful as a
+ Jew money-lender, he never raised his eyes from his books and registers
+ but to look into the very heart of the persons he was examining, with the
+ flashing glance by which a miser expresses his alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lavienne, standing behind his master, ready to carry out his orders,
+ served no doubt as a sort of police, and welcomed newcomers by encouraging
+ them to get over their shyness. When the doctor appeared there was a stir
+ on the benches. Lavienne turned his head, and was strangely surprised to
+ see Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! It is you, old boy!&rdquo; exclaimed Popinot, stretching himself. &ldquo;What
+ brings you so early?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was afraid lest you should make an official visit about which I wish to
+ speak to you before I could see you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the lawyer, addressing a stout little woman who was still
+ standing close to him, &ldquo;if you do not tell me what it is you want, I
+ cannot guess it, child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make haste,&rdquo; said Lavienne. &ldquo;Do not waste other people&rsquo;s time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; said the woman at last, turning red, and speaking so low as
+ only to be heard by Popinot and Lavienne, &ldquo;I have a green-grocery truck,
+ and I have my last baby to nurse, and I owe for his keep. Well, I had
+ hidden my little bit of money&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; and your man took it?&rdquo; said Popinot, guessing the sequel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is your name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;La Pomponne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your husband&rsquo;s?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Toupinet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rue du Petit-Banquier?&rdquo; said Popinot, turning over his register. &ldquo;He is
+ in prison,&rdquo; he added, reading a note at the margin of the section in which
+ this family was described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For debt, my kind monsieur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Popinot shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I have nothing to buy any stock for my truck; the landlord came
+ yesterday and made me pay up; otherwise I should have been turned out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lavienne bent over his master, and whispered in his ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, how much do you want to buy fruit in the market?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, my good monsieur, to carry on my business, I should want&mdash;Yes,
+ I should certainly want ten francs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Popinot signed to Lavienne, who took ten francs out of a large bag, and
+ handed them to the woman, while the lawyer made a note of the loan in his
+ ledger. As he saw the thrill of delight that made the poor hawker tremble,
+ Bianchon understood the apprehensions that must have agitated her on her
+ way to the lawyer&rsquo;s house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You next,&rdquo; said Lavienne to the old man with the white beard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bianchon drew the servant aside, and asked him how long this audience
+ would last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur has had two hundred persons this morning, and there are eight to
+ be turned off,&rdquo; said Lavienne. &ldquo;You will have time to pay your early
+ visit, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, my boy,&rdquo; said the lawyer, turning round and taking Horace by the
+ arm; &ldquo;here are two addresses near this&mdash;one in the Rue de Seine, and
+ the other in the Rue de l&rsquo;Arbalete. Go there at once. Rue de Seine, a
+ young girl has just asphyxiated herself; and Rue de l&rsquo;Arbalete, you will
+ find a man to remove to your hospital. I will wait breakfast for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bianchon returned an hour later. The Rue du Fouarre was deserted; day was
+ beginning to dawn there; his uncle had gone up to his rooms; the last poor
+ wretch whose misery the judge had relieved was departing, and Lavienne&rsquo;s
+ money bag was empty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, how are they going on?&rdquo; asked the old lawyer, as the doctor came
+ in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The man is dead,&rdquo; replied Bianchon; &ldquo;the girl will get over it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the eye and hand of a woman had been lacking, the flat in which
+ Popinot lived had assumed an aspect in harmony with its master&rsquo;s. The
+ indifference of a man who is absorbed in one dominant idea had set its
+ stamp of eccentricity on everything. Everywhere lay unconquerable dust,
+ every object was adapted to a wrong purpose with a pertinacity suggestive
+ of a bachelor&rsquo;s home. There were papers in the flower vases, empty
+ ink-bottles on the tables, plates that had been forgotten, matches used as
+ tapers for a minute when something had to be found, drawers or boxes
+ half-turned out and left unfinished; in short, all the confusion and
+ vacancies resulting from plans for order never carried out. The lawyer&rsquo;s
+ private room, especially disordered by this incessant rummage, bore
+ witness to his unresting pace, the hurry of a man overwhelmed with
+ business, hunted by contradictory necessities. The bookcase looked as if
+ it had been sacked; there were books scattered over everything, some piled
+ up open, one on another, others on the floor face downwards; registers of
+ proceedings laid on the floor in rows, lengthwise, in front of the
+ shelves; and that floor had not been polished for two years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tables and shelves were covered with ex votos, the offerings of the
+ grateful poor. On a pair of blue glass jars which ornamented the
+ chimney-shelf there were two glass balls, of which the core was made up of
+ many-colored fragments, giving them the appearance of some singular
+ natural product. Against the wall hung frames of artificial flowers, and
+ decorations in which Popinot&rsquo;s initials were surrounded by hearts and
+ everlasting flowers. Here were boxes of elaborate and useless cabinet
+ work; there letter-weights carved in the style of work done by convicts in
+ penal servitude. These masterpieces of patience, enigmas of gratitude, and
+ withered bouquets gave the lawyer&rsquo;s room the appearance of a toyshop. The
+ good man used these works of art as hiding-places which he filled with
+ bills, worn-out pens, and scraps of paper. All these pathetic witnesses to
+ his divine charity were thick with dust, dingy, and faded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some birds, beautifully stuffed, but eaten by moth, perched in this
+ wilderness of trumpery, presided over by an Angora cat, Madame Popinot&rsquo;s
+ pet, restored to her no doubt with all the graces of life by some
+ impecunious naturalist, who thus repaid a gift of charity with a perennial
+ treasure. Some local artist whose heart had misguided his brush had
+ painted portraits of M. and Madame Popinot. Even in the bedroom there were
+ embroidered pin-cushions, landscapes in cross-stitch, and crosses in
+ folded paper, so elaborately cockled as to show the senseless labor they
+ had cost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The window-curtains were black with smoke, and the hangings absolutely
+ colorless. Between the fireplace and the large square table at which the
+ magistrate worked, the cook had set two cups of coffee on a small table,
+ and two armchairs, in mahogany and horsehair, awaited the uncle and
+ nephew. As daylight, darkened by the windows, could not penetrate to this
+ corner, the cook had left two dips burning, whose unsnuffed wicks showed a
+ sort of mushroom growth, giving the red light which promises length of
+ life to the candle from slowness of combustion&mdash;a discovery due to
+ some miser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear uncle, you ought to wrap yourself more warmly when you go down to
+ that parlor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot bear to keep them waiting, poor souls!&mdash;Well, and what do
+ you want of me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have come to ask you to dine to-morrow with the Marquise d&rsquo;Espard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A relation of ours?&rdquo; asked Popinot, with such genuine absence of mind
+ that Bianchon laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, uncle; the Marquise d&rsquo;Espard is a high and puissant lady, who has
+ laid before the Courts a petition desiring that a Commission in Lunacy
+ should sit on her husband, and you are appointed&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you want me to dine with her! Are you mad?&rdquo; said the lawyer, taking
+ up the code of proceedings. &ldquo;Here, only read this article, prohibiting any
+ magistrate&rsquo;s eating or drinking in the house of either of two parties whom
+ he is called upon to decide between. Let her come and see me, your
+ Marquise, if she has anything to say to me. I was, in fact, to go to
+ examine her husband to-morrow, after working the case up to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rose, took up a packet of papers that lay under a weight where he could
+ see it, and after reading the title, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is the affidavit. Since you take an interest in this high and
+ puissant lady, let us see what she wants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Popinot wrapped his dressing-gown across his body, from which it was
+ constantly slipping and leaving his chest bare; he sopped his bread in the
+ half-cold coffee, and opened the petition, which he read, allowing himself
+ to throw in a parenthesis now and then, and some discussions, in which his
+ nephew took part:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;To Monsieur the President of the Civil Tribunal of the Lower Court of
+ the Department of the Seine, sitting at the Palais de Justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Madame Jeanne Clementine Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, wife of M. Charles
+ Maurice Marie Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;&mdash;a
+ very good family&mdash;&lsquo;landowner, the said Mme. d&rsquo;Espard living in the
+ Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, No. 104, and the said M. d&rsquo;Espard in the Rue
+ de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, No. 22,&rsquo;&mdash;to be sure, the President
+ told me he lived in this part of the town&mdash;&lsquo;having for her solicitor
+ Maitre Desroches&rsquo;&mdash;Desroches! a pettifogging jobber, a man looked
+ down upon by his brother lawyers, and who does his clients no good&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor fellow!&rdquo; said Bianchon, &ldquo;unluckily he has no money, and he rushes
+ round like the devil in holy water&mdash;That is all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Has the honor to submit to you, Monsieur the President, that for a year
+ past the moral and intellectual powers of her husband, M. d&rsquo;Espard, have
+ undergone so serious a change, that at the present day they have reached
+ the state of dementia and idiocy provided for by Article 448 of the Civil
+ Code, and require the application of the remedies set forth by that
+ article, for the security of his fortune and his person, and to guard the
+ interest of his children whom he keeps to live with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That, in point of fact, the mental condition of M. d&rsquo;Espard, which for
+ some years has given grounds for alarm based on the system he has pursued
+ in the management of his affairs, has reached, during the last
+ twelvemonth, a deplorable depth of depression; that his infirm will was
+ the first thing to show the results of the malady; and that its effete
+ state leaves M. the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard exposed to all the perils of his
+ incompetency, as is proved by the following facts:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;For a long time all the income accruing from M. d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s estates are
+ paid, without any reasonable cause, or even temporary advantage, into the
+ hands of an old woman, whose repulsive ugliness is generally remarked on,
+ named Madame Jeanrenaud, living sometimes in Paris, Rue de la Vrilliere,
+ No. 8, sometimes at Villeparisis, near Claye, in the Department of Seine
+ et Marne, and for the benefit of her son, aged thirty-six, an officer in
+ the ex-Imperial Guards, whom the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard has placed by his
+ influence in the King&rsquo;s Guards, as Major in the First Regiment of
+ Cuirassiers. These two persons, who in 1814 were in extreme poverty, have
+ since then purchased house-property of considerable value; among other
+ items, quite recently, a large house in the Grand Rue Verte, where the
+ said Jeanrenaud is laying out considerable sums in order to settle there
+ with the woman Jeanrenaud, intending to marry: these sums amount already
+ to more than a hundred thousand francs. The marriage has been arranged by
+ the intervention of M. d&rsquo;Espard with his banker, one Mongenod, whose niece
+ he has asked in marriage for the said Jeanrenaud, promising to use his
+ influence to procure him the title and dignity of baron. This has in fact
+ been secured by His Majesty&rsquo;s letters patent, dated December 29th of last
+ year, at the request of the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard, as can be proved by His
+ Excellency the Keeper of the Seals, if the Court should think proper to
+ require his testimony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That no reason, not even such as morality and the law would concur in
+ disapproving, can justify the influence which the said Mme. Jeanrenaud
+ exerts over M. d&rsquo;Espard, who, indeed, sees her very seldom; nor account
+ for his strange affection for the said Baron Jeanrenaud, Major with whom
+ he has but little intercourse. And yet their power is so considerable,
+ that whenever they need money, if only to gratify a mere whim, this lady,
+ or her son&mdash;&mdash;&rsquo; Heh, heh! <i>No reason even such as morality and
+ the law concur in disapproving!</i> What does the clerk or the attorney
+ mean to insinuate?&rdquo; said Popinot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bianchon laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;This lady, or her son, obtain whatever they ask of the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard
+ without demur; and if he has not ready money, M. d&rsquo;Espard draws bills to
+ be paid by the said Mongenod, who has offered to give evidence to that
+ effect for the petitioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That, moreover, in further proof of these facts, lately, on the occasion
+ of the renewal of the leases on the Espard estate, the farmers having paid
+ a considerable premium for the renewal of their leases on the old terms,
+ M. Jeanrenaud at once secured the payment of it into his own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard parts with these sums of money so little of
+ his own free-will, that when he was spoken to on the subject he seemed to
+ remember nothing of the matter; that whenever anybody of any weight has
+ questioned him as to his devotion to these two persons, his replies have
+ shown so complete an absence of ideas and of sense of his own interests,
+ that there obviously must be some occult cause at work to which the
+ petitioner begs to direct the eye of justice, inasmuch as it is impossible
+ but that this cause should be criminal, malignant, and wrongful, or else
+ of a nature to come under medical jurisdiction; unless this influence is
+ of the kind which constitutes an abuse of moral power&mdash;such as can
+ only be described by the word <i>possession</i>&mdash;&mdash;&lsquo;The devil!&rdquo;
+ exclaimed Popinot. &ldquo;What do you say to that, doctor. These are strange
+ statements.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They might certainly,&rdquo; said Bianchon, &ldquo;be an effect of magnetic force.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then do you believe in Mesmer&rsquo;s nonsense, and his tub, and seeing through
+ walls?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, uncle,&rdquo; said the doctor gravely. &ldquo;As I heard you read that petition
+ I thought of that. I assure you that I have verified, in another sphere of
+ action, several analogous facts proving the unlimited influence one man
+ may acquire over another. In contradiction to the opinion of my brethren,
+ I am perfectly convinced of the power of the will regarded as a motor
+ force. All collusion and charlatanism apart, I have seen the results of
+ such a possession. Actions promised during sleep by a magnetized patient
+ to the magnetizer have been scrupulously performed on waking. The will of
+ one had become the will of the other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every kind of action?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even a criminal act?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even a crime.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it were not from you, I would not listen to such a thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will make you witness it,&rdquo; said Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hm, hm,&rdquo; muttered the lawyer. &ldquo;But supposing that this so-called
+ possession fell under this class of facts, it would be difficult to prove
+ it as legal evidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If this woman Jeanrenaud is so hideously old and ugly, I do not see what
+ other means of fascination she can have used,&rdquo; observed Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; observed the lawyer, &ldquo;in 1814, the time at which this fascination
+ is supposed to have taken place, this woman was fourteen years younger; if
+ she had been connected with M. d&rsquo;Espard ten years before that, these
+ calculations take us back four-and-twenty years, to a time when the lady
+ may have been young and pretty, and have won for herself and her son a
+ power over M. d&rsquo;Espard which some men do not know how to evade. Though the
+ source of this power is reprehensible in the sight of justice, it is
+ justifiable in the eye of nature. Madame Jeanrenaud may have been
+ aggrieved by the marriage, contracted probably at about that time, between
+ the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard and Mademoiselle de Blamont-Chauvry, and at the
+ bottom of all this there may be nothing more than the rivalry of two
+ women, since the Marquis had for a long time lived apart from Mme.
+ d&rsquo;Espard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But her repulsive ugliness, uncle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Power of fascination is in direct proportion to ugliness,&rdquo; said the
+ lawyer; &ldquo;that is the old story. And then think of the smallpox, doctor.
+ But to proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That so long ago as in 1815, in order to supply the sums of money
+ required by these two persons, the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard went with his two
+ children to live in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, in rooms
+ quite unworthy of his name and rank&rsquo;&mdash;well, we may live as we please&mdash;&lsquo;that
+ he keeps his two children there, the Comte Clement d&rsquo;Espard and Vicomte
+ Camille d&rsquo;Espard, in a style of living quite unsuited to their future
+ prospects, their name and fortune; that he often wants money, to such a
+ point, that not long since the landlord, one Mariast, put in an execution
+ on the furniture in the rooms; that when this execution was carried out in
+ his presence, the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard helped the bailiff, whom he treated
+ like a man of rank, paying him all the marks of attention and respect
+ which he would have shown to a person of superior birth and dignity to
+ himself.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The uncle and nephew glanced at each other and laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That, moreover, every act of his life, besides the facts with reference
+ to the widow Jeanrenaud and the Baron Jeanrenaud, her son, are those of a
+ madman; that for nearly ten years he has given his thoughts exclusively to
+ China, its customs, manners, and history; that he refers everything to a
+ Chinese origin; that when he is questioned on the subject, he confuses the
+ events of the day and the business of yesterday with facts relating to
+ China; that he censures the acts of the Government and the conduct of the
+ King, though he is personally much attached to him, by comparing them with
+ the politics of China;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That this monomania has driven the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard to conduct devoid of
+ all sense: against the customs of men of rank, and, in opposition to his
+ own professed ideas as to the duties of the nobility, he has joined a
+ commercial undertaking, for which he constantly draws bills which, as they
+ fall due, threaten both his honor and his fortune, since they stamp him as
+ a trader, and in default of payment may lead to his being declared
+ insolvent; that these debts, which are owing to stationers, printers,
+ lithographers, and print-colorists, who have supplied the materials for
+ his publication, called A Picturesque History of China, now coming out in
+ parts, are so heavy that these tradesmen have requested the petitioner to
+ apply for a Commission in Lunacy with regard to the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard in
+ order to save their own credit.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The man is mad!&rdquo; exclaimed Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think so, do you?&rdquo; said his uncle. &ldquo;If you listen to only one bell,
+ you hear only one sound.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it seems to me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; said Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it seems to me,&rdquo; said Popinot, &ldquo;that if any relation of mine wanted
+ to get hold of the management of my affairs, and if, instead of being a
+ humble lawyer, whose colleagues can, any day, verify what his condition
+ is, I were a duke of the realm, an attorney with a little cunning, like
+ Desroches, might bring just such a petition against me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That his children&rsquo;s education has been neglected for this monomania; and
+ that he has taught them, against all the rules of education, the facts of
+ Chinese history, which contradict the tenets of the Catholic Church. He
+ also has them taught the Chinese dialects.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here Desroches strikes me as funny,&rdquo; said Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The petition is drawn up by his head-clerk Godeschal, who, as you know,
+ is not strong in Chinese,&rdquo; said the lawyer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That he often leaves his children destitute of the most necessary
+ things; that the petitioner, notwithstanding her entreaties, can never see
+ them; that the said Marquis d&rsquo;Espard brings them to her only once a year;
+ that, knowing the privations to which they are exposed, she makes vain
+ efforts to give them the things most necessary for their existence, and
+ which they require&mdash;&mdash;&rsquo; Oh! Madame la Marquise, this is
+ preposterous. By proving too much you prove nothing.&mdash;My dear boy,&rdquo;
+ said the old man, laying the document on his knee, &ldquo;where is the mother
+ who ever lacked heart and wit and yearning to such a degree as to fall
+ below the inspirations suggested by her animal instinct? A mother is as
+ cunning to get at her children as a girl can be in the conduct of a love
+ intrigue. If your Marquise really wanted to give her children food and
+ clothes, the Devil himself would not have hindered her, heh? That is
+ rather too big a fable for an old lawyer to swallow!&mdash;To proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That at the age the said children have now attained it is necessary that
+ steps should be taken to preserve them from the evil effects of such an
+ education; that they should be provided for as beseems their rank, and
+ that they should cease to have before their eyes the sad example of their
+ father&rsquo;s conduct;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;That there are proofs in support of these allegations which the Court
+ can easily order to be produced. Many times has M. d&rsquo;Espard spoken of the
+ judge of the Twelfth Arrondissement as a mandarin of the third class; he
+ often speaks of the professors of the College Henri IV. as &ldquo;men of
+ letters&rdquo;&rsquo;&mdash;and that offends them! &lsquo;In speaking of the simplest
+ things, he says, &ldquo;They were not done so in China;&rdquo; in the course of the
+ most ordinary conversation he will sometimes allude to Madame Jeanrenaud,
+ or sometimes to events which happened in the time of Louis XIV., and then
+ sit plunged in the darkest melancholy; sometimes he fancies he is in
+ China. Several of his neighbors, among others one Edme Becker, medical
+ student, and Jean Baptiste Fremiot, a professor, living under the same
+ roof, are of opinion, after frequent intercourse with the Marquis
+ d&rsquo;Espard, that his monomania with regard to everything Chinese is the
+ result of a scheme laid by the said Baron Jeanrenaud and the widow his
+ mother to bring about the deadening of all the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s mental
+ faculties, since the only service which Mme. Jeanrenaud appears to render
+ M. d&rsquo;Espard is to procure him everything that relates to the Chinese
+ Empire;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Finally, that the petitioner is prepared to show to the Court that the
+ moneys absorbed by the said Baron and Mme. Jeanrenaud between 1814 and
+ 1828 amount to not less than one million francs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;In confirmation of the facts herein set forth, the petitioner can bring
+ the evidence of persons who are in the habit of seeing the Marquis
+ d&rsquo;Espard, whose names and professions are subjoined, many of whom have
+ urged her to demand a commission in lunacy to declare M. d&rsquo;Espard
+ incapable of managing his own affairs, as being the only way to preserve
+ his fortune from the effects of his maladministration and his children
+ from his fatal influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Taking all this into consideration, M. le President, and the affidavits
+ subjoined, the petitioner desires that it may please you, inasmuch as the
+ foregoing facts sufficiently prove the insanity and incompetency of the
+ Marquis d&rsquo;Espard herein described with his titles and residence, to order
+ that, to the end that he may be declared incompetent by law, this petition
+ and the documents in evidence may be laid before the King&rsquo;s public
+ prosecutor; and that you will charge one of the judges of this Court to
+ make his report to you on any day you may be pleased to name, and
+ thereupon to pronounce judgment,&rsquo; etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And here,&rdquo; said Popinot, &ldquo;is the President&rsquo;s order instructing me!&mdash;Well,
+ what does the Marquise d&rsquo;Espard want with me? I know everything. But I
+ shall go to-morrow with my registrar to see M. le Marquis, for this does
+ not seem at all clear to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen, my dear uncle, I have never asked the least little favor of you
+ that had to do with your legal functions; well, now I beg you to show
+ Madame d&rsquo;Espard the kindness which her situation deserves. If she came
+ here, you would listen to her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, go and listen to her in her own house. Madame d&rsquo;Espard is a
+ sickly, nervous, delicate woman, who would faint in your rat-hole of a
+ place. Go in the evening, instead of accepting her dinner, since the law
+ forbids your eating or drinking at your client&rsquo;s expense.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And does not the law forbid you from taking any legacy from your dead?&rdquo;
+ said Popinot, fancying that he saw a touch of irony on his nephew&rsquo;s lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, uncle, if it were only to enable you to get at the truth of this
+ business, grant my request. You will come as the examining judge, since
+ matters do not seem to you very clear. Deuce take it! It is as necessary
+ to cross-question the Marquise as it is to examine the Marquis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right,&rdquo; said the lawyer. &ldquo;It is quite possible that it is she who
+ is mad. I will go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will call for you. Write down in your engagement book: &lsquo;To-morrow
+ evening at nine, Madame d&rsquo;Espard.&rsquo;&mdash;Good!&rdquo; said Bianchon, seeing his
+ uncle make a note of the engagement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next evening at nine Bianchon mounted his uncle&rsquo;s dusty staircase, and
+ found him at work on the statement of some complicated judgment. The coat
+ Lavienne had ordered of the tailor had not been sent, so Popinot put on
+ his old stained coat, and was the Popinot unadorned whose appearance made
+ those laugh who did not know the secrets of his private life. Bianchon,
+ however, obtained permission to pull his cravat straight, and to button
+ his coat, and he hid the stains by crossing the breast of it with the
+ right side over the left, and so displaying the new front of the cloth.
+ But in a minute the judge rucked the coat up over his chest by the way in
+ which he stuffed his hands into his pockets, obeying an irresistible
+ habit. Thus the coat, deeply wrinkled both in front and behind, made a
+ sort of hump in the middle of the back, leaving a gap between the
+ waistcoat and trousers through which his shirt showed. Bianchon, to his
+ sorrow, only discovered this crowning absurdity at the moment when his
+ uncle entered the Marquise&rsquo;s room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A brief sketch of the person and the career of the lady in whose presence
+ the doctor and the judge now found themselves is necessary for an
+ understanding of her interview with Popinot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame d&rsquo;Espard had, for the last seven years, been very much the fashion
+ in Paris, where Fashion can raise and drop by turns various personages
+ who, now great and now small, that is to say, in view or forgotten, are at
+ last quite intolerable&mdash;as discarded ministers are, and every kind of
+ decayed sovereignty. These flatterers of the past, odious with their stale
+ pretensions, know everything, speak ill of everything, and, like ruined
+ profligates, are friends with all the world. Since her husband had
+ separated from her in 1815, Madame d&rsquo;Espard must have married in the
+ beginning of 1812. Her children, therefore, were aged respectively fifteen
+ and thirteen. By what luck was the mother of a family, about
+ three-and-thirty years of age, still the fashion?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though Fashion is capricious, and no one can foresee who shall be her
+ favorites, though she often exalts a banker&rsquo;s wife, or some woman of very
+ doubtful elegance and beauty, it certainly seems supernatural when Fashion
+ puts on constitutional airs and gives promotion for age. But in this case
+ Fashion had done as the world did, and accepted Madame d&rsquo;Espard as still
+ young.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquise, who was thirty-three by her register of birth, was
+ twenty-two in a drawing-room in the evening. But by what care, what
+ artifice! Elaborate curls shaded her temples. She condemned herself to
+ live in twilight, affecting illness so as to sit under the protecting
+ tones of light filtered through muslin. Like Diane de Poitiers, she used
+ cold water in her bath, and, like her again, the Marquise slept on a
+ horse-hair mattress, with morocco-covered pillows to preserve her hair;
+ she ate very little, only drank water, and observed monastic regularity in
+ the smallest actions of her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This severe system has, it is said, been carried so far as to the use of
+ ice instead of water, and nothing but cold food, by a famous Polish lady
+ of our day who spends a life, now verging on a century old, after the
+ fashion of a town belle. Fated to live as long as Marion Delorme, whom
+ history has credited with surviving to be a hundred and thirty, the old
+ vice-queen of Poland, at the age of nearly a hundred, has the heart and
+ brain of youth, a charming face, an elegant shape; and in her
+ conversation, sparkling with brilliancy like faggots in the fire, she can
+ compare the men and books of our literature with the men and books of the
+ eighteenth century. Living in Warsaw, she orders her caps of Herbault in
+ Paris. She is a great lady with the amiability of a mere girl; she swims,
+ she runs like a schoolboy, and can sink on to a sofa with the grace of a
+ young coquette; she mocks at death, and laughs at life. After having
+ astonished the Emperor Alexander, she can still amaze the Emperor Nicholas
+ by the splendor of her entertainments. She can still bring tears to the
+ eyes of a youthful lover, for her age is whatever she pleases, and she has
+ the exquisite self-devotion of a grisette. In short, she is herself a
+ fairy tale, unless, indeed, she is a fairy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Madame d&rsquo;Espard known Madame Zayonseck? Did she mean to imitate her
+ career? Be that as it may, the Marquise proved the merits of the
+ treatment; her complexion was clear, her brow unwrinkled, her figure, like
+ that of Henri II.&lsquo;s lady-love, preserved the litheness, the freshness, the
+ covered charms which bring a woman love and keep it alive. The simple
+ precautions of this course, suggested by art and nature, and perhaps by
+ experience, had met in her with a general system which confirmed the
+ results. The Marquise was absolutely indifferent to everything that was
+ not herself: men amused her, but no man had ever caused her those deep
+ agitations which stir both natures to their depths, and wreck one on the
+ other. She knew neither hatred nor love. When she was offended, she
+ avenged herself coldly, quietly, at her leisure, waiting for the
+ opportunity to gratify the ill-will she cherished against anybody who
+ dwelt in her unfavorable remembrance. She made no fuss, she did not excite
+ herself, she talked, because she knew that by two words a woman may cause
+ the death of three men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had parted from M. d&rsquo;Espard with the greatest satisfaction. Had he not
+ taken with him two children who at present were troublesome, and in the
+ future would stand in the way of her pretensions? Her most intimate
+ friends, as much as her least persistent admirers, seeing about her none
+ of Cornelia&rsquo;s jewels, who come and go, and unconsciously betray their
+ mother&rsquo;s age, took her for quite a young woman. The two boys, about whom
+ she seemed so anxious in her petition, were, like their father, as unknown
+ in the world as the northwest passage is unknown to navigators. M.
+ d&rsquo;Espard was supposed to be an eccentric personage who had deserted his
+ wife without having the smallest cause for complaint against her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mistress of herself at two-and-twenty, and mistress of her fortune of
+ twenty-six thousand francs a year, the Marquise hesitated long before
+ deciding on a course of action and ordering her life. Though she benefited
+ by the expenses her husband had incurred in his house, though she had all
+ the furniture, the carriages, the horses, in short, all the details of a
+ handsome establishment, she lived a retired life during the years 1816,
+ 17, and 18, a time when families were recovering from the disasters
+ resulting from political tempests. She belonged to one of the most
+ important and illustrious families of the Faubourg Saint-Germain, and her
+ parents advised her to live with them as much as possible after the
+ separation forced upon her by her husband&rsquo;s inexplicable caprice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1820 the Marquise roused herself from her lethargy; she went to Court,
+ appeared at parties, and entertained in her own house. From 1821 to 1827
+ she lived in great style, and made herself remarked for her taste and her
+ dress; she had a day, an hour, for receiving visits, and ere long she had
+ seated herself on the throne, occupied before her by Madame la Vicomtesse
+ de Beauseant, the Duchesse de Langeais, and Madame Firmiani&mdash;who on
+ her marriage with M. de Camps had resigned the sceptre in favor of the
+ Duchesse de Maufrigneuse, from whom Madame d&rsquo;Espard snatched it. The world
+ knew nothing beyond this of the private live of the Marquise d&rsquo;Espard. She
+ seemed likely to shine for long on the Parisian horizon, like the sun near
+ its setting, but which will never set.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquise was on terms of great intimacy with a duchess as famous for
+ her beauty as for her attachment to a prince just now in banishment, but
+ accustomed to play a leading part in every prospective government. Madame
+ d&rsquo;Espard was also a friend of a foreign lady, with whom a famous and very
+ wily Russian diplomate was in the habit of discussing public affairs. And
+ then an antiquated countess, who was accustomed to shuffle the cards for
+ the great game of politics, had adopted her in a maternal fashion. Thus,
+ to any man of high ambitions, Madame d&rsquo;Espard was preparing a covert but
+ very real influence to follow the public and frivolous ascendency she now
+ owed to fashion. Her drawing-room was acquiring political individuality:
+ &ldquo;What do they say at Madame d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s?&rdquo; &ldquo;Are they against the measure in
+ Madame d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s drawing-room?&rdquo; were questions repeated by a sufficient
+ number of simpletons to give the flock of the faithful who surrounded her
+ the importance of a coterie. A few damaged politicians whose wounds she
+ had bound up, and whom she flattered, pronounced her as capable in
+ diplomacy as the wife of the Russian ambassador to London. The Marquise
+ had indeed several times suggested to deputies or to peers words and ideas
+ that had rung through Europe. She had often judged correctly of certain
+ events on which her circle of friends dared not express an opinion. The
+ principal persons about the Court came in the evening to play whist in her
+ rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she also had the qualities of her defects; she was thought to be&mdash;and
+ she was&mdash;indiscreet. Her friendship seemed to be staunch; she worked
+ for her proteges with a persistency which showed that she cared less for
+ patronage than for increased influence. This conduct was based on her
+ dominant passion, Vanity. Conquests and pleasure, which so many women
+ love, to her seemed only means to an end; she aimed at living on every
+ point of the largest circle that life can describe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the men still young, and to whom the future belonged, who crowded
+ her drawing-room on great occasions, were to be seen MM. de Marsay and de
+ Ronquerolles, de Montriveau, de la Roche-Hugon, de Serizy, Ferraud, Maxime
+ de Trailles, de Listomere, the two Vandenesses, du Chatelet, and others.
+ She would frequently receive a man whose wife she would not admit, and her
+ power was great enough to induce certain ambitious men to submit to these
+ hard conditions, such as two famous royalist bankers, M. de Nucingen and
+ Ferdinand du Tillet. She had so thoroughly studied the strength and the
+ weakness of Paris life, that her conduct had never given any man the
+ smallest advantage over her. An enormous price might have been set on a
+ note or letter by which she might have compromised herself, without one
+ being produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If an arid soul enabled her to play her part to the life, her person was
+ no less available for it. She had a youthful figure. Her voice was, at
+ will, soft and fresh, or clear and hard. She possessed in the highest
+ degree the secret of that aristocratic pose by which a woman wipes out the
+ past. The Marquise knew well the art of setting an immense space between
+ herself and the sort of man who fancies he may be familiar after some
+ chance advances. Her imposing gaze could deny everything. In her
+ conversation fine and beautiful sentiments and noble resolutions flowed
+ naturally, as it seemed, from a pure heart and soul; but in reality she
+ was all self, and quite capable of blasting a man who was clumsy in his
+ negotiations, at the very time when she was shamelessly making a
+ compromise for the benefit of her own interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rastignac, in trying to fasten on to this woman, had discerned her to be
+ the cleverest of tools, but he had not yet used it; far from handling it,
+ he was already finding himself crushed by it. This young Condottiere of
+ the brain, condemned, like Napoleon, to give battle constantly, while
+ knowing that a single defeat would prove the grave of his fortunes, had
+ met a dangerous adversary in his protectress. For the first time in his
+ turbulent life, he was playing a game with a partner worthy of him. He saw
+ a place as Minister in the conquest of Madame d&rsquo;Espard, so he was her tool
+ till he could make her his&mdash;a perilous beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hotel d&rsquo;Espard needed a large household, and the Marquise had a great
+ number of servants. The grand receptions were held in the ground-floor
+ rooms, but she lived on the first floor of the house. The perfect order of
+ a fine staircase splendidly decorated, and rooms fitted in the dignified
+ style which formerly prevailed at Versailles, spoke of an immense fortune.
+ When the judge saw the carriage gates thrown open to admit his nephew&rsquo;s
+ cab, he took in with a rapid glance the lodge, the porter, the courtyard,
+ the stables, the arrangement of the house, the flowers that decorated the
+ stairs, the perfect cleanliness of the banisters, walls, and carpets, and
+ counted the footmen in livery who, as the bell rang, appeared on the
+ landing. His eyes, which only yesterday in his parlor had sounded the
+ dignity of misery under the muddy clothing of the poor, now studied with
+ the same penetrating vision the furniture and splendor of the rooms he
+ passed through, to pierce the misery of grandeur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. Popinot&mdash;M. Bianchon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two names were pronounced at the door of the boudoir where the
+ Marquise was sitting, a pretty room recently refurnished, and looking out
+ on the garden behind the house. At the moment Madame d&rsquo;Espard was seated
+ in one of the old rococo armchairs of which Madame had set the fashion.
+ Rastignac was at her left hand on a low chair, in which he looked settled
+ like an Italian lady&rsquo;s &ldquo;cousin.&rdquo; A third person was standing by the corner
+ of the chimney-piece. As the shrewd doctor had suspected, the Marquise was
+ a woman of a parched and wiry constitution. But for her regimen her
+ complexion must have taken the ruddy tone that is produced by constant
+ heat; but she added to the effect of her acquired pallor by the strong
+ colors of the stuffs she hung her rooms with, or in which she dressed.
+ Reddish-brown, marone, bistre with a golden light in it, suited her to
+ perfection. Her boudoir, copied from that of a famous lady then at the
+ height of fashion in London, was in tan-colored velvet; but she had added
+ various details of ornament which moderated the pompous splendor of this
+ royal hue. Her hair was dressed like a girl&rsquo;s in bands ending in curls,
+ which emphasized the rather long oval of her face; but an oval face is as
+ majestic as a round one is ignoble. The mirrors, cut with facets to
+ lengthen or flatten the face at will, amply proved the rule as applied to
+ the physiognomy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On seeing Popinot, who stood in the doorway craning his neck like a
+ startled animal, with his left hand in his pocket, and the right hand
+ holding a hat with a greasy lining, the Marquise gave Rastignac a look
+ wherein lay a germ of mockery. The good man&rsquo;s rather foolish appearance
+ was so completely in harmony with his grotesque figure and scared looks,
+ that Rastignac, catching sight of Bianchon&rsquo;s dejected expression of
+ humiliation through his uncle, could not help laughing, and turned away.
+ The Marquise bowed a greeting, and made a great effort to rise from her
+ seat, falling back again, not without grace, with an air of apologizing
+ for her incivility by affected weakness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this instant the person who was standing between the fireplace and the
+ door bowed slightly, and pushed forward two chairs, which he offered by a
+ gesture to the doctor and the judge; then, when they had seated
+ themselves, he leaned against the wall again, crossing his arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A word as to this man. There is living now, in our day, a painter&mdash;Decamps&mdash;who
+ possesses in the very highest degree the art of commanding your interest
+ in everything he sets before your eyes, whether it be a stone or a man. In
+ this respect his pencil is more skilful than his brush. He will sketch an
+ empty room and leave a broom against the wall. If he chooses, you shall
+ shudder; you shall believe that this broom has just been the instrument of
+ crime, and is dripping with blood; it shall be the broom which the widow
+ Bancal used to clean out the room where Fualdes was murdered. Yes, the
+ painter will touzle that broom like a man in a rage; he will make each
+ hair of it stand on-end as though it were on your own bristling scalp; he
+ will make it the interpreter between the secret poem of his imagination
+ and the poem that shall have its birth in yours. After terrifying you by
+ the aspect of that broom, to-morrow he will draw another, and lying by it
+ a cat, asleep, but mysterious in its sleep, shall tell you that this broom
+ is that on which the wife of a German cobbler rides off to the Sabbath on
+ the Brocken. Or it will be a quite harmless broom, on which he will hang
+ the coat of a clerk in the Treasury. Decamps had in his brush what
+ Paganini had in his bow&mdash;a magnetically communicative power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, I should have to transfer to my style that striking genius, that
+ marvelous knack of the pencil, to depict the upright, tall, lean man
+ dressed in black, with black hair, who stood there without speaking a
+ word. This gentleman had a face like a knife-blade, cold and harsh, with a
+ color like Seine water when it was muddy and strewn with fragments of
+ charcoal from a sunken barge. He looked at the floor, listening and
+ passing judgment. His attitude was terrifying. He stood there like the
+ dreadful broom to which Decamps has given the power of revealing a crime.
+ Now and then, in the course of conversation, the Marquise tried to get
+ some tacit advice; but however eager her questioning, he was as grave and
+ as rigid as the statue of the Commendatore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worthy Popinot, sitting on the edge of his chair in front of the fire,
+ his hat between his knees, stared at the gilt chandeliers, the clock, and
+ the curiosities with which the chimney-shelf was covered, the velvet and
+ trimmings of the curtains, and all the costly and elegant nothings that a
+ woman of fashion collects about her. He was roused from his homely
+ meditations by Madame d&rsquo;Espard, who addressed him in a piping tone:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur, I owe you a million thanks&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A million thanks,&rdquo; thought he to himself, &ldquo;that is too many; it does not
+ mean one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the trouble you condescend&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Condescend!&rdquo; thought he; &ldquo;she is laughing at me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To take in coming to see an unhappy client, who is too ill to go out&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the lawyer cut the Marquise short by giving her an inquisitorial
+ look, examining the sanitary condition of the unhappy client.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As sound as a bell,&rdquo; said he to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; said he, assuming a respectful mien, &ldquo;you owe me nothing.
+ Although my visit to you is not in strict accordance with the practice of
+ the Court, we ought to spare no pains to discover the truth in cases of
+ this kind. Our judgment is then guided less by the letter of the law than
+ by the promptings of our conscience. Whether I seek the truth here or in
+ my own consulting-room, so long as I find it, all will be well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Popinot was speaking, Rastignac was shaking hands with Bianchon; the
+ Marquise welcomed the doctor with a little bow full of gracious
+ significance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is that?&rdquo; asked Bianchon in a whisper of Rastignac, indicating the
+ dark man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Chevalier d&rsquo;Espard, the Marquis&rsquo; brother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your nephew told me,&rdquo; said the Marquise to Popinot, &ldquo;how much you are
+ occupied, and I know too that you are so good as to wish to conceal your
+ kind actions, so as to release those whom you oblige from the burden of
+ gratitude. The work in Court is most fatiguing, it would seem. Why have
+ they not twice as many judges?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, madame, that would not be difficult; we should be none the worse if
+ they had. But when that happens, fowls will cut their teeth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he heard this speech, so entirely in character with the lawyer&rsquo;s
+ appearance, the Chevalier measured him from head to foot, out of one eye,
+ as much as to say, &ldquo;We shall easily manage him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquise looked at Rastignac, who bent over her. &ldquo;That is the sort of
+ man,&rdquo; murmured the dandy in her ear, &ldquo;who is trusted to pass judgments on
+ the life and interests of private individuals.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like most men who have grown old in a business, Popinot readily let
+ himself follow the habits he had acquired, more particularly habits of
+ mind. His conversation was all of &ldquo;the shop.&rdquo; He was fond of questioning
+ those he talked to, forcing them to unexpected conclusions, making them
+ tell more than they wished to reveal. Pozzo di Borgo, it is said, used to
+ amuse himself by discovering other folks&rsquo; secrets, and entangling them in
+ his diplomatic snares, and thus, by invincible habit, showed how his mind
+ was soaked in wiliness. As soon as Popinot had surveyed the ground, so to
+ speak, on which he stood, he saw that it would be necessary to have
+ recourse to the cleverest subtleties, the most elaborately wrapped up and
+ disguised, which were in use in the Courts, to detect the truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bianchon sat cold and stern, as a man who has made up his mind to endure
+ torture without revealing his sufferings; but in his heart he wished that
+ his uncle could only trample on this woman as we trample on a viper&mdash;a
+ comparison suggested to him by the Marquise&rsquo;s long dress, by the curve of
+ her attitude, her long neck, small head, and undulating movements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, monsieur,&rdquo; said Madame d&rsquo;Espard, &ldquo;however great my dislike to be or
+ seem selfish, I have been suffering too long not to wish that you may
+ settle matters at once. Shall I soon get a favorable decision?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame, I will do my best to bring matters to a conclusion,&rdquo; said
+ Popinot, with an air of frank good-nature. &ldquo;Are you ignorant of the reason
+ which made the separation necessary which now subsists between you and the
+ Marquis d&rsquo;Espard?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, monsieur,&rdquo; she replied, evidently prepared with a story to tell. &ldquo;At
+ the beginning of 1816 M. d&rsquo;Espard, whose temper had completely changed
+ within three months or so, proposed that we should go to live on one of
+ his estates near Briancon, without any regard for my health, which that
+ climate would have destroyed, or for my habits of life; I refused to go.
+ My refusal gave rise to such unjustifiable reproaches on his part, that
+ from that hour I had my suspicions as to the soundness of his mind. On the
+ following day he left me, leaving me his house and the free use of my own
+ income, and he went to live in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve,
+ taking with him my two children&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One moment, madame,&rdquo; said the lawyer, interrupting her. &ldquo;What was that
+ income?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Twenty-six thousand francs a year,&rdquo; she replied parenthetically. &ldquo;I at
+ once consulted old M. Bordin as to what I ought to do,&rdquo; she went on; &ldquo;but
+ it seems that there are so many difficulties in the way of depriving a
+ father of the care of his children, that I was forced to resign myself to
+ remaining alone at the age of twenty-two&mdash;an age at which many young
+ women do very foolish things. You have read my petition, no doubt,
+ monsieur; you know the principal facts on which I rely to procure a
+ Commission in Lunacy with regard to M. d&rsquo;Espard?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you ever applied to him, madame, to obtain the care of your
+ children?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, monsieur; but in vain. It is very hard on a mother to be deprived of
+ the affection of her children, particularly when they can give her such
+ happiness as every woman clings to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The elder must be sixteen,&rdquo; said Popinot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fifteen,&rdquo; said the Marquise eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Bianchon and Rastignac looked at each other. Madame d&rsquo;Espard bit her
+ lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What can the age of my children matter to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, madame,&rdquo; said the lawyer, without seeming to attach any importance
+ to his words, &ldquo;a lad of fifteen and his brother, of thirteen, I suppose,
+ have legs and their wits about them; they might come to see you on the
+ sly. If they do not, it is because they obey their father, and to obey him
+ in that matter they must love him very dearly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not understand,&rdquo; said the Marquise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do not know, perhaps,&rdquo; replied Popinot, &ldquo;that in your petition your
+ attorney represents your children as being very unhappy with their
+ father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame d&rsquo;Espard replied with charming innocence:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not know what my attorney may have put into my mouth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive my inferences,&rdquo; said Popinot, &ldquo;but Justice weighs everything.
+ What I ask you, madame, is suggested by my wish thoroughly to understand
+ the matter. By your account M. d&rsquo;Espard deserted you on the most frivolous
+ pretext. Instead of going to Briancon, where he wished to take you, he
+ remained in Paris. This point is not clear. Did he know this Madame
+ Jeanrenaud before his marriage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, monsieur,&rdquo; replied the Marquise, with some asperity, visible only to
+ Rastignac and the Chevalier d&rsquo;Espard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was offended at being cross-examined by this lawyer when she had
+ intended to beguile his judgment; but as Popinot still looked stupid from
+ sheer absence of mind, she ended by attributing his interrogatory to the
+ Questioning Spirit of Voltaire&rsquo;s bailiff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My parents,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;married me at the age of sixteen to M.
+ d&rsquo;Espard, whose name, fortune, and mode of life were such as my family
+ looked for in the man who was to be my husband. M. d&rsquo;Espard was then
+ six-and-twenty; he was a gentleman in the English sense of the word; his
+ manners pleased me, he seemed to have plenty of ambition, and I like
+ ambitious people,&rdquo; she added, looking at Rastignac. &ldquo;If M. d&rsquo;Espard had
+ never met that Madame Jeanrenaud, his character, his learning, his
+ acquirements would have raised him&mdash;as his friends then believed&mdash;to
+ high office in the Government. King Charles X., at that time Monsieur, had
+ the greatest esteem for him, and a peer&rsquo;s seat, an appointment at Court,
+ some important post certainly would have been his. That woman turned his
+ head, and has ruined all the prospects of my family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What were M. d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s religious opinions at that time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was, and is still, a very pious man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do not suppose that Madame Jeanrenaud may have influenced him by
+ mysticism?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, monsieur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have a very fine house, madame,&rdquo; said Popinot suddenly, taking his
+ hands out of his pockets, and rising to pick up his coat-tails and warm
+ himself. &ldquo;This boudoir is very nice, those chairs are magnificent, the
+ whole apartment is sumptuous. You must indeed be most unhappy when, seeing
+ yourself here, you know that your children are ill lodged, ill clothed,
+ and ill fed. I can imagine nothing more terrible for a mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, indeed. I should be so glad to give the poor little fellows some
+ amusement, while their father keeps them at work from morning till night
+ at that wretched history of China.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You give handsome balls; they would enjoy them, but they might acquire a
+ taste for dissipation. However, their father might send them to you once
+ or twice in the course of the winter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He brings them here on my birthday and on New Year&rsquo;s Day. On those days
+ M. d&rsquo;Espard does me the favor of dining here with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is very singular behaviour,&rdquo; said the judge, with an air of
+ conviction. &ldquo;Have you ever seen this Dame Jeanrenaud?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My brother-in-law one day, out of interest in his brother&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! monsieur is M. d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s brother?&rdquo; said the lawyer, interrupting
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier bowed, but did not speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. d&rsquo;Espard, who has watched this affair, took me to the Oratoire, where
+ this woman goes to sermon, for she is a Protestant. I saw her; she is not
+ in the least attractive; she looks like a butcher&rsquo;s wife, extremely fat,
+ horribly marked with the smallpox; she has feet and hands like a man&rsquo;s,
+ she squints, in short, she is monstrous!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is inconceivable,&rdquo; said the judge, looking like the most imbecile
+ judge in the whole kingdom. &ldquo;And this creature lives near here, Rue Verte,
+ in a fine house? There are no plain folk left, it would seem?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a mansion on which her son has spent absurd sums.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; said Popinot, &ldquo;I live in the Faubourg Saint-Marceau; I know
+ nothing of such expenses. What do you call absurd sums?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Marquise, &ldquo;a stable with five horses and three carriages,
+ a phaeton, a brougham, and a cabriolet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That costs a large sum, then?&rdquo; asked Popinot in surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enormous sums!&rdquo; said Rastignac, intervening. &ldquo;Such an establishment would
+ cost, for the stables, the keeping the carriages in order, and the
+ liveries for the men, between fifteen and sixteen thousand francs a year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Should you think so, madame?&rdquo; said the judge, looking much astonished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, at least,&rdquo; replied the Marquise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the furniture, too, must have cost a lot of money?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More than a hundred thousand francs,&rdquo; replied Madame d&rsquo;Espard, who could
+ not help smiling at the lawyer&rsquo;s vulgarity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Judges, madame, are apt to be incredulous; it is what they are paid for,
+ and I am incredulous. The Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother must have
+ fleeced M. d&rsquo;Espard most preposterously, if what you say is correct. There
+ is a stable establishment which, by your account, costs sixteen thousand
+ francs a year. Housekeeping, servants&rsquo; wages, and the gross expenses of
+ the house itself must run to twice as much; that makes a total of from
+ fifty to sixty thousand francs a year. Do you suppose that these people,
+ formerly so extremely poor, can have so large a fortune? A million yields
+ scarcely forty thousand a year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur, the mother and son invested the money given them by M. d&rsquo;Espard
+ in the funds when they were at 60 to 80. I should think their income must
+ be more than sixty thousand francs. And then the son has fine
+ appointments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If they spend sixty thousand francs a year,&rdquo; said the judge, &ldquo;how much do
+ you spend?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Madame d&rsquo;Espard, &ldquo;about the same.&rdquo; The Chevalier started a
+ little, the Marquise colored; Bianchon looked at Rastignac; but Popinot
+ preserved an expression of simplicity which quite deceived Madame
+ d&rsquo;Espard. The chevalier took no part in the conversation; he saw that all
+ was lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These people, madame, might be indicted before the superior Court,&rdquo; said
+ Popinot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was my opinion,&rdquo; exclaimed the Marquise, enchanted. &ldquo;If threatened
+ with the police, they would have come to terms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; said Popinot, &ldquo;when M. d&rsquo;Espard left you, did he not give you a
+ power of attorney enabling you to manage and control your own affairs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not understand the object of all these questions,&rdquo; said the Marquise
+ with petulance. &ldquo;It seems to me that if you would only consider the state
+ in which I am placed by my husband&rsquo;s insanity, you ought to be troubling
+ yourself about him, and not about me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are coming to that, madame,&rdquo; said the judge. &ldquo;Before placing in your
+ hands, or in any others, the control of M. d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s property, supposing
+ he were pronounced incapable, the Court must inquire as to how you have
+ managed your own. If M. d&rsquo;Espard gave you the power, he would have shown
+ confidence in you, and the Court would recognize the fact. Had you any
+ power from him? You might have bought or sold house property or invested
+ money in business?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, monsieur, the Blamont-Chauvrys are not in the habit of trading,&rdquo; said
+ she, extremely nettled in her pride as an aristocrat, and forgetting the
+ business in hand. &ldquo;My property is intact, and M. d&rsquo;Espard gave me no power
+ to act.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier put his hand over his eyes not to betray the vexation he
+ felt at his sister-in-law&rsquo;s short-sightedness, for she was ruining herself
+ by her answers. Popinot had gone straight to the mark in spite of his
+ apparent doublings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; said the lawyer, indicating the Chevalier, &ldquo;this gentleman, of
+ course, is your near connection? May we speak openly before these other
+ gentlemen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak on,&rdquo; said the Marquise, surprised at this caution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, madame, granting that you spend only sixty thousand francs a year,
+ to any one who sees your stables, your house, your train of servants, and
+ a style of housekeeping which strikes me as far more luxurious than that
+ of the Jeanrenauds, that sum would seem well laid out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquise bowed an agreement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; continued the judge, &ldquo;if you have no more than twenty-six thousand
+ francs a year, you may have a hundred thousand francs of debt. The Court
+ would therefore have a right to imagine that the motives which prompt you
+ to ask that your husband may be deprived of the control of his property
+ are complicated by self-interest and the need of paying your debts&mdash;if&mdash;you&mdash;have&mdash;any.
+ The requests addressed to me have interested me in your position; consider
+ fully and make your confession. If my suppositions have hit the truth,
+ there is yet time to avoid the blame which the Court would have a perfect
+ right to express in the saving clauses of the verdict if you could not
+ show your attitude to be absolutely honorable and clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is our duty to examine the motives of the applicant as well as to
+ listen to the plea of the witness under examination, to ascertain whether
+ the petitioner may not have been prompted by passion, by a desire for
+ money, which is unfortunately too common&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquise was on Saint Laurence&rsquo;s gridiron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I must have explanations on this point. Madame, I have no wish to
+ call you to account; I only want to know how you have managed to live at
+ the rate of sixty thousand francs a year, and that for some years past.
+ There are plenty of women who achieve this in their housekeeping, but you
+ are not one of those. Tell me, you may have the most legitimate resources,
+ a royal pension, or some claim on the indemnities lately granted; but even
+ then you must have had your husband&rsquo;s authority to receive them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquise did not speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must remember,&rdquo; Popinot went on, &ldquo;that M. d&rsquo;Espard may wish to enter
+ a protest, and his counsel will have a right to find out whether you have
+ any creditors. This boudoir is newly furnished, your rooms are not now
+ furnished with the things left to you by M. d&rsquo;Espard in 1816. If, as you
+ did me the honor of informing me, furniture is costly for the Jeanrenauds,
+ it must be yet more so for you, who are a great lady. Though I am a judge,
+ I am but a man; I may be wrong&mdash;tell me so. Remember the duties
+ imposed on me by the law, and the rigorous inquiries it demands, when the
+ case before it is the suspension from all his functions of the father of a
+ family in the prime of life. So you will pardon me, Madame la Marquise,
+ for laying all these difficulties before you; it will be easy for you to
+ give me an explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When a man is pronounced incapable of the control of his own affairs, a
+ trustee has to be appointed. Who will be the trustee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His brother,&rdquo; said the Marquise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chevalier bowed. There was a short silence, very uncomfortable for the
+ five persons who were present. The judge, in sport as it were, had laid
+ open the woman&rsquo;s sore place. Popinot&rsquo;s countenance of common, clumsy
+ good-nature, at which the Marquise, the Chevalier, and Rastignac had been
+ inclined to laugh, had gained importance in their eyes. As they stole a
+ look at him, they discerned the various expressions of that eloquent
+ mouth. The ridiculous mortal was a judge of acumen. His studious notice of
+ the boudoir was accounted for: he had started from the gilt elephant
+ supporting the chimney-clock, examining all this luxury, and had ended by
+ reading this woman&rsquo;s soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard is mad about China, I see that you are not less
+ fond of its products,&rdquo; said Popinot, looking at the porcelain on the
+ chimney-piece. &ldquo;But perhaps it was from M. le Marquis that you had these
+ charming Oriental pieces,&rdquo; and he pointed to some precious trifles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This irony, in very good taste, made Bianchon smile, and petrified
+ Rastignac, while the Marquise bit her thin lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Instead of being the protector of a woman placed in a cruel dilemma&mdash;an
+ alternative between losing her fortune and her children, and being
+ regarded as her husband&rsquo;s enemy,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you accuse me, monsieur! You
+ suspect my motives! You must own that your conduct is strange!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; said the judge eagerly, &ldquo;the caution exercised by the Court in
+ such cases as these might have given you, in any other judge, a perhaps
+ less indulgent critic than I am.&mdash;And do you suppose that M.
+ d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s lawyer will show you any great consideration? Will he not be
+ suspicious of motives which may be perfectly pure and disinterested? Your
+ life will be at his mercy; he will inquire into it without qualifying his
+ search by the respectful deference I have for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am much obliged to you, monsieur,&rdquo; said the Marquise satirically.
+ &ldquo;Admitting for the moment that I owe thirty thousand or fifty thousand
+ francs, in the first place, it would be a mere trifle to the d&rsquo;Espards and
+ the Blamont-Chauvrys. But if my husband is not in the possession of his
+ mental faculties, would that prevent his being pronounced incapable?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, madame,&rdquo; said Popinot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Although you have questioned me with a sort of cunning which I should not
+ have suspected in a judge, and under circumstances where
+ straightforwardness would have answered your purpose,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;I
+ will tell you without subterfuge that my position in the world, and the
+ efforts I have to make to keep up my connection, are not in the least to
+ my taste. I began my life by a long period of solitude; but my children&rsquo;s
+ interest appealed to me; I felt that I must fill their father&rsquo;s place. By
+ receiving my friends, by keeping up all this connection, by contracting
+ these debts, I have secured their future welfare; I have prepared for them
+ a brilliant career where they will find help and favor; and to have what
+ has thus been acquired, many a man of business, lawyer or banker, would
+ gladly pay all it has cost me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I appreciate your devoted conduct, madame,&rdquo; replied Popinot. &ldquo;It does you
+ honor, and I blame you for nothing. A judge belongs to all: he must know
+ and weigh every fact.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s tact and practice in estimating men made her understand
+ that M. Popinot was not to be influenced by any consideration. She had
+ counted on an ambitious lawyer, she had found a man of conscience. She at
+ once thought of finding other means for securing the success of her side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servants brought in tea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you any further explanations to give me, madame?&rdquo; said Popinot,
+ seeing these preparations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; she replied haughtily, &ldquo;do your business your own way;
+ question M. d&rsquo;Espard, and you will pity me, I am sure.&rdquo; She raised her
+ head, looking Popinot in the face with pride, mingled with impertinence;
+ the worthy man bowed himself out respectfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A nice man is your uncle,&rdquo; said Rastignac to Bianchon. &ldquo;Is he really so
+ dense? Does not he know what the Marquise d&rsquo;Espard is, what her influence
+ means, her unavowed power over people? The Keeper of the Seals will be
+ with her to-morrow&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear fellow, how can I help it?&rdquo; said Bianchon. &ldquo;Did not I warn you?
+ He is not a man you can get over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Rastignac; &ldquo;he is a man you must run over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor was obliged to make his bow to the Marquise and her mute
+ Chevalier to catch up Popinot, who, not being the man to endure an
+ embarrassing position, was pacing through the rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That woman owes a hundred thousand crowns,&rdquo; said the judge, as he stepped
+ into his nephew&rsquo;s cab.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what do you think of the case?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I,&rdquo; said the judge. &ldquo;I never have an opinion till I have gone into
+ everything. To-morrow early I will send to Madame Jeanrenaud to call on me
+ in my private office at four o&rsquo;clock, to make her explain the facts which
+ concern her, for she is compromised.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should very much like to know what the end will be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, bless me, do not you see that the Marquise is the tool of that tall
+ lean man who never uttered a word? There is a strain of Cain in him, but
+ of the Cain who goes to the Law Courts for his bludgeon, and there,
+ unluckily for him, we keep more than one Damocles&rsquo; sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Rastignac! what brought you into that boat, I wonder?&rdquo; exclaimed
+ Bianchon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, we are used to seeing these little family conspiracies,&rdquo; said
+ Popinot. &ldquo;Not a year passes without a number of verdicts of &lsquo;insufficient
+ evidence&rsquo; against applications of this kind. In our state of society such
+ an attempt brings no dishonor, while we send a poor devil to the galleys
+ who breaks a pane of glass dividing him from a bowl full of gold. Our Code
+ is not faultless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But these are the facts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My boy, do you not know all the judicial romances with which clients
+ impose on their attorneys? If the attorneys condemned themselves to state
+ nothing but the truth, they would not earn enough to keep their office
+ open.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, at four in the afternoon, a very stout dame, looking a good deal
+ like a cask dressed up in a gown and belt, mounted Judge Popinot&rsquo;s stairs,
+ perspiring and panting. She had, with great difficulty, got out of a green
+ landau, which suited her to a miracle; you could not think of the woman
+ without the landau, or the landau without the woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is I, my dear sir,&rdquo; said she, appearing in the doorway of the judge&rsquo;s
+ room. &ldquo;Madame Jeanrenaud, whom you summoned exactly as if I were a thief,
+ neither more nor less.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The common words were spoken in a common voice, broken by the wheezing of
+ asthma, and ending in a cough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I go through a damp place, I can&rsquo;t tell you what I suffer, sir. I
+ shall never make old bones, saving your presence. However, here I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lawyer was quite amazed at the appearance of this supposed Marechale
+ d&rsquo;Ancre. Madame Jeanrenaud&rsquo;s face was pitted with an infinite number of
+ little holes, was very red, with a pug nose and a low forehead, and was as
+ round as a ball; for everything about the good woman was round. She had
+ the bright eyes of a country woman, an honest gaze, a cheerful tone, and
+ chestnut hair held in place by a bonnet cap under a green bonnet decked
+ with a shabby bunch of auriculas. Her stupendous bust was a thing to laugh
+ at, for it made one fear some grotesque explosion every time she coughed.
+ Her enormous legs were of the shape which make the Paris street boy
+ describe such a woman as being built on piles. The widow wore a green gown
+ trimmed with chinchilla, which looked on her as a splash of dirty oil
+ would look on a bride&rsquo;s veil. In short, everything about her harmonized
+ with her last words: &ldquo;Here I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; said Popinot, &ldquo;you are suspected of having used some seductive
+ arts to induce M. d&rsquo;Espard to hand over to you very considerable sums of
+ money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of what! of what!&rdquo; cried she. &ldquo;Of seductive arts? But, my dear sir, you
+ are a man to be respected, and, moreover, as a lawyer you ought to have
+ some good sense. Look at me! Tell me if I am likely to seduce any one. I
+ cannot tie my own shoes, nor even stoop. For these twenty years past, the
+ Lord be praised, I have not dared to put on a pair of stays under pain of
+ sudden death. I was as thin as an asparagus stalk when I was seventeen,
+ and pretty too&mdash;I may say so now. So I married Jeanrenaud, a good
+ fellow, and headman on the salt-barges. I had my boy, who is a fine young
+ man; he is my pride, and it is not holding myself cheap to say he is my
+ best piece of work. My little Jeanrenaud was a soldier who did Napoleon
+ credit, and who served in the Imperial Guard. But, alas! at the death of
+ my old man, who was drowned, times changed for the worse. I had the
+ smallpox. I was kept two years in my room without stirring, and I came out
+ of it the size you see me, hideous for ever, and as wretched as could be.
+ These are my seductive arts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what, then, can the reasons be that have induced M. d&rsquo;Espard to give
+ you sums&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hugious sums, monsieur, say the word; I do not mind. But as to his
+ reasons, I am not at liberty to explain them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are wrong. At this moment, his family, very naturally alarmed, are
+ about to bring an action&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heavens above us!&rdquo; said the good woman, starting up. &ldquo;Is it possible that
+ he should be worried on my account? That king of men, a man that has not
+ his match! Rather than he should have the smallest trouble, or hair less
+ on his head I could almost say, we would return every sou, monsieur. Write
+ that down on your papers. Heaven above us! I will go at once and tell
+ Jeanrenaud what is going on! A pretty thing indeed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the little old woman went out, rolled herself downstairs, and
+ disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That one tells no lies,&rdquo; said Popinot to himself. &ldquo;Well, to-morrow I
+ shall know the whole story, for I shall go to see the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People who have outlived the age when a man wastes his vitality at random,
+ know how great an influence may be exercised on more important events by
+ apparently trivial incidents, and will not be surprised at the weight here
+ given to the following minor fact. Next day Popinot had an attack of
+ coryza, a complaint which is not dangerous, and generally known by the
+ absurd and inadequate name of a cold in the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The judge, who could not suppose that the delay could be serious, feeling
+ himself a little feverish, kept his room, and did not go to see the
+ Marquis d&rsquo;Espard. This day lost was, to this affair, what on the Day of
+ Dupes the cup of soup had been, taken by Marie de Medici, which, by
+ delaying her meeting with Louis XIII., enabled Richelieu to arrive at
+ Saint-Germain before her, and recapture his royal slave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before accompanying the lawyer and his registering clerk to the Marquis
+ d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s house, it may be as well to glance at the home and the private
+ affairs of this father of sons whom his wife&rsquo;s petition represented to be
+ a madman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here and there in the old parts of Paris a few buildings may still be seen
+ in which the archaeologist can discern an intention of decorating the
+ city, and that love of property, which leads the owner to give a durable
+ character to the structure. The house in which M. d&rsquo;Espard was then
+ living, in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, was one of these old
+ mansions, built in stone, and not devoid of a certain richness of style;
+ but time had blackened the stone, and revolutions in the town had damaged
+ it both outside and inside. The dignitaries who formerly dwelt in the
+ neighborhood of the University having disappeared with the great
+ ecclesiastical foundations, this house had become the home of industries
+ and of inhabitants whom it was never destined to shelter. During the last
+ century a printing establishment had worn down the polished floors, soiled
+ the carved wood, blackened the walls, and altered the principal internal
+ arrangements. Formerly the residence of a Cardinal, this fine house was
+ now divided among plebeian tenants. The character of the architecture
+ showed that it had been built under the reigns of Henry III., Henry IV.,
+ and Louis XIII., at the time when the hotels Mignon and Serpente were
+ erected in the same neighborhood, with the palace of the Princess
+ Palatine, and the Sorbonne. An old man could remember having heard it
+ called, in the last century, the hotel Duperron, so it seemed probable
+ that the illustrious Cardinal of that name had built, or perhaps merely
+ lived in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There still exists, indeed, in the corner of the courtyard, a perron or
+ flight of several outer steps by which the house is entered; and the way
+ into the garden on the garden front is down a similar flight of steps. In
+ spite of dilapidations, the luxury lavished by the architect on the
+ balustrade and entrance porch crowning these two perrons suggests the
+ simple-minded purpose of commemorating the owner&rsquo;s name, a sort of
+ sculptured pun which our ancestors often allowed themselves. Finally, in
+ support of this evidence, archaeologists can still discern in the
+ medallions which show on the principal front some traces of the cords of
+ the Roman hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. le Marquis d&rsquo;Espard lived on the ground floor, in order, no doubt, to
+ enjoy the garden, which might be called spacious for that neighborhood,
+ and which lay open for his children&rsquo;s health. The situation of the house,
+ in a street on a steep hill, as its name indicates, secured these
+ ground-floor rooms against ever being damp. M. d&rsquo;Espard had taken them, no
+ doubt, for a very moderate price, rents being low at the time when he
+ settled in that quarter, in order to be among the schools and to
+ superintend his boys&rsquo; education. Moreover, the state in which he found the
+ place, with everything to repair, had no doubt induced the owner to be
+ accommodating. Thus M. d&rsquo;Espard had been able to go to some expense to
+ settle himself suitably without being accused of extravagance. The
+ loftiness of the rooms, the paneling, of which nothing survived but the
+ frames, the decoration of the ceilings, all displayed the dignity which
+ the prelacy stamped on whatever it attempted or created, and which artists
+ discern to this day in the smallest relic that remains, though it be but a
+ book, a dress, the panel of a bookcase, or an armchair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis had the rooms painted in the rich brown tones loved of the
+ Dutch and of the citizens of Old Paris, hues which lend such good effects
+ to the painter of genre. The panels were hung with plain paper in harmony
+ with the paint. The window curtains were of inexpensive materials, but
+ chosen so as to produce a generally happy result; the furniture was not
+ too crowded and judiciously placed. Any one on going into this home could
+ not resist a sense of sweet peacefulness, produced by the perfect calm,
+ the stillness which prevailed, by the unpretentious unity of color, the
+ keeping of the picture, in the words a painter might use. A certain
+ nobleness in the details, the exquisite cleanliness of the furniture, and
+ a perfect concord of men and things, all brought the word &ldquo;suavity&rdquo; to the
+ lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few persons were admitted to the rooms used by the Marquis and his two
+ sons, whose life might perhaps seem mysterious to their neighbors. In a
+ wing towards the street, on the third floor, there are three large rooms
+ which had been left in the state of dilapidation and grotesque bareness to
+ which they had been reduced by the printing works. These three rooms,
+ devoted to the evolution of the Picturesque History of China, were
+ contrived to serve as a writing-room, a depository, and a private room,
+ where M. d&rsquo;Espard sat during part of the day; for after breakfast till
+ four in the afternoon the Marquis remained in this room on the third floor
+ to work at the publication he had undertaken. Visitors wanting to see him
+ commonly found him there, and often the two boys on their return from
+ school resorted thither. Thus the ground-floor rooms were a sort of
+ sanctuary where the father and sons spent their time from the hour of
+ dinner till the next day, and his domestic life was carefully closed
+ against the public eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His only servants were a cook&mdash;an old woman who had long been
+ attached to his family&mdash;and a man-servant forty years old, who was
+ with him when he married Mademoiselle de Blamont. His children&rsquo;s nurse had
+ also remained with them, and the minute care to which the apartment bore
+ witness revealed the sense of order and the maternal affections expended
+ by this woman in her master&rsquo;s interest, in the management of his house,
+ and the charge of his children. These three good souls, grave, and
+ uncommunicative folk, seemed to have entered into the idea which ruled the
+ Marquis&rsquo; domestic life. And the contrast between their habits and those of
+ most servants was a peculiarity which cast an air of mystery over the
+ house, and fomented the calumny to which M. d&rsquo;Espard himself lent
+ occasion. Very laudable motives had made him determine never to be on
+ visiting terms with any of the other tenants in the house. In undertaking
+ to educate his boys he wished to keep them from all contact with
+ strangers. Perhaps, too, he wished to avoid the intrusion of neighbors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a man of his rank, at a time when the Quartier Latin was distracted by
+ Liberalism, such conduct was sure to rouse in opposition a host of petty
+ passions, of feelings whose folly is only to be measured by their
+ meanness, the outcome of porters&rsquo; gossip and malevolent tattle from door
+ to door, all unknown to M. d&rsquo;Espard and his retainers. His man-servant was
+ stigmatized as a Jesuit, his cook as a sly fox; the nurse was in collusion
+ with Madame Jeanrenaud to rob the madman. The madman was the Marquis. By
+ degrees the other tenants came to regard as proofs of madness a number of
+ things they had noticed in M. d&rsquo;Espard, and passed through the sieve of
+ their judgment without discerning any reasonable motive for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having no belief in the success of the History of China, they had managed
+ to convince the landlord of the house that M. d&rsquo;Espard had no money just
+ at a time when, with the forgetfulness which often befalls busy men, he
+ had allowed the tax-collector to send him a summons for non-payment of
+ arrears. The landlord forthwith claimed his quarter&rsquo;s rent from January
+ 1st by sending in a receipt, which the porter&rsquo;s wife had amused herself by
+ detaining. On the 15th a summons to pay was served on M. d&rsquo;Espard, the
+ portress had delivered it at her leisure, and he supposed it to be some
+ misunderstanding, not conceiving of any incivility from a man in whose
+ house he had been living for twelve years. The Marquis was actually seized
+ by a bailiff at the time when his man-servant had gone to carry the money
+ for the rent to the landlord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This arrest, assiduously reported to the persons with whom he was in
+ treaty for his undertaking, had alarmed some of them who were already
+ doubtful of M. d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s solvency in consequence of the enormous sums
+ which Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother were said to be receiving from him.
+ And, indeed, these suspicions on the part of the tenants, the creditors,
+ and the landlord had some excuse in the Marquis&rsquo; extreme economy in
+ housekeeping. He conducted it as a ruined man might. His servants always
+ paid in ready money for the most trifling necessaries of life, and acted
+ as not choosing to take credit; if now they had asked for anything on
+ credit, it would probably have been refused, calumnious gossip had been so
+ widely believed in the neighborhood. There are tradesmen who like those of
+ their customers who pay badly when they see them often, while they hate
+ others, and very good ones, who hold themselves on too high a level to
+ allow of any familiarity as CHUMS, a vulgar but expressive word. Men are
+ made so; in almost every class they will allow to a gossip, or a vulgar
+ soul that flatters them, facilities and favors they refuse to the
+ superiority they resent, in whatever form it may show itself. The
+ shopkeeper who rails at the Court has his courtiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, the manners of the Marquis and his children were certain to
+ arouse ill-feeling in their neighbors, and to work them up by degrees to
+ the pitch of malevolence when men do not hesitate at an act of meanness if
+ only it may damage the adversary they have themselves created.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. d&rsquo;Espard was a gentleman, as his wife was a lady, by birth and
+ breeding; noble types, already so rare in France that the observer can
+ easily count the persons who perfectly realize them. These two characters
+ are based on primitive ideas, on beliefs that may be called innate, on
+ habits formed in infancy, and which have ceased to exist. To believe in
+ pure blood, in a privileged race, to stand in thought above other men,
+ must we not from birth have measured the distance which divides patricians
+ from the mob? To command, must we not have never met our equal? And
+ finally, must not education inculcate the ideas with which Nature inspires
+ those great men on whose brow she has placed a crown before their mother
+ has ever set a kiss there? These ideas, this education, are no longer
+ possible in France, where for forty years past chance has arrogated the
+ right of making noblemen by dipping them in the blood of battles, by
+ gilding them with glory, by crowning them with the halo of genius; where
+ the abolition of entail and of eldest sonship, by frittering away estates,
+ compels the nobleman to attend to his own business instead of attending to
+ affairs of state, and where personal greatness can only be such greatness
+ as is acquired by long and patient toil: quite a new era.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Regarded as a relic of that great institution know as feudalism, M.
+ d&rsquo;Espard deserved respectful admiration. If he believed himself to be by
+ blood the superior of other men, he also believed in all the obligations
+ of nobility; he had the virtues and the strength it demands. He had
+ brought up his children in his own principles, and taught them from the
+ cradle the religion of their caste. A deep sense of their own dignity,
+ pride of name, the conviction that they were by birth great, gave rise in
+ them to a kingly pride, the courage of knights, and the protecting
+ kindness of a baronial lord; their manners, harmonizing with their
+ notions, would have become princes, and offended all the world of the Rue
+ de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve&mdash;a world, above all others, of
+ equality, where every one believed that M. d&rsquo;Espard was ruined, and where
+ all, from the lowest to the highest, refused the privileges of nobility to
+ a nobleman without money, because they were all ready to allow an enriched
+ bourgeois to usurp them. Thus the lack of communion between this family
+ and other persons was as much moral as it was physical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the father and the children alike, their personality harmonized with
+ the spirit within. M. d&rsquo;Espard, at this time about fifty, might have sat
+ as a model to represent the aristocracy of birth in the nineteenth
+ century. He was slight and fair; there was in the outline and general
+ expression of his face a native distinction which spoke of lofty
+ sentiments, but it bore the impress of a deliberate coldness which
+ commanded respect a little too decidedly. His aquiline nose bent at the
+ tip from left to right, a slight crookedness which was not devoid of
+ grace; his blue eyes, his high forehead, prominent enough at the brows to
+ form a thick ridge that checked the light and shaded his eyes, all
+ indicated a spirit of rectitude, capable of perseverance and perfect
+ loyalty, while it gave a singular look to his countenance. This penthouse
+ forehead might, in fact, hint at a touch of madness, and his thick-knitted
+ eyebrows added to the apparent eccentricity. He had the white well-kept
+ hands of a gentleman; his foot was high and narrow. His hesitating speech&mdash;not
+ merely as to his pronunciation, which was that of a stammerer, but also in
+ the expression of his ideas, his thought and language&mdash;produced on
+ the mind of the hearer the impression of a man who, in familiar
+ phraseology, comes and goes, feels his way, tries everything, breaks off
+ his gestures, and finishes nothing. This defect was purely superficial,
+ and in contrast with the decisiveness of a firmly-set mouth, and the
+ strongly-marked character of his physiognomy. His rather jerky gait
+ matched his mode of speech. These peculiarities helped to affirm his
+ supposed insanity. In spite of his elegant appearance, he was
+ systematically parsimonious in his personal expenses, and wore the same
+ black frock-coat for three or four years, brushed with extreme care by his
+ old man-servant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the children, they both were handsome, and endowed with a grace
+ which did not exclude an expression of aristocratic disdain. They had the
+ bright coloring, the clear eye, the transparent flesh which reveal habits
+ of purity, regularity of life, and a due proportion of work and play. They
+ both had black hair and blue eyes, and a twist in their nose, like their
+ father; but their mother, perhaps, had transmitted to them the dignity of
+ speech, of look and mien, which are hereditary in the Blamont-Chauvrys.
+ Their voices, as clear as crystal, had an emotional quality, the softness
+ which proves so seductive; they had, in short, the voice a woman would
+ willingly listen to after feeling the flame of their looks. But, above
+ all, they had the modesty of pride, a chaste reserve, a <i>touch-me-not</i>
+ which at a maturer age might have seemed intentional coyness, so much did
+ their demeanor inspire a wish to know them. The elder, Comte Clement de
+ Negrepelisse, was close upon his sixteenth year. For the last two years he
+ had ceased to wear the pretty English round jacket which his brother,
+ Vicomte Camille d&rsquo;Espard, still wore. The Count, who for the last six
+ months went no more to the College Henri IV., was dressed in the style of
+ a young man enjoying the first pleasures of fashion. His father had not
+ wished to condemn him to a year&rsquo;s useless study of philosophy; he was
+ trying to give his knowledge some consistency by the study of
+ transcendental mathematics. At the same time, the Marquis was having him
+ taught Eastern languages, the international law of Europe, heraldry, and
+ history from the original sources, charters, early documents, and
+ collections of edicts. Camille had lately begun to study rhetoric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day when Popinot arranged to go to question M. d&rsquo;Espard was a
+ Thursday, a holiday. At about nine in the morning, before their father was
+ awake, the brothers were playing in the garden. Clement was finding it
+ hard to refuse his brother, who was anxious to go to the shooting-gallery
+ for the first time, and who begged him to second his request to the
+ Marquis. The Viscount always rather took advantage of his weakness, and
+ was very fond of wrestling with his brother. So the couple were quarreling
+ and fighting in play like schoolboys. As they ran in the garden, chasing
+ each other, they made so much noise as to wake their father, who came to
+ the window without their perceiving him in the heat of the fray. The
+ Marquis amused himself with watching his two children twisted together
+ like snakes, their faces flushed by the exertion of their strength; their
+ complexion was rose and white, their eyes flashed sparks, their limbs
+ writhed like cords in the fire; they fell, sprang up again, and caught
+ each other like athletes in a circus, affording their father one of those
+ moments of happiness which would make amends for the keenest anxieties of
+ a busy life. Two other persons, one on the second and one on the first
+ floor, were also looking into the garden, and saying that the old madman
+ was amusing himself by making his children fight. Immediately a number of
+ heads appeared at the windows; the Marquis, noticing them, called a word
+ to his sons, who at once climbed up to the window and jumped into his
+ room, and Clement obtained the permission asked by Camille.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All through the house every one was talking of the Marquis&rsquo; new form of
+ insanity. When Popinot arrived at about twelve o&rsquo;clock, accompanied by his
+ clerk, the portress, when asked for M. d&rsquo;Espard, conducted him to the
+ third floor, telling him &ldquo;as how M. d&rsquo;Espard, no longer ago than that very
+ morning, had set on his two children to fight, and laughed like the
+ monster he was on seeing the younger biting the elder till he bled, and as
+ how no doubt he longed to see them kill each other.&mdash;Don&rsquo;t ask me the
+ reason why,&rdquo; she added; &ldquo;he doesn&rsquo;t show himself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as the woman spoke these decisive words, she had brought the judge to
+ the landing on the third floor, face to face with a door covered with
+ notices announcing the successive numbers of the Picturesque History of
+ China. The muddy floor, the dirty banisters, the door where the printers
+ had left their marks, the dilapidated window, and the ceiling on which the
+ apprentices had amused themselves with drawing monstrosities with the
+ smoky flare of their tallow dips, the piles of paper and litter heaped up
+ in the corners, intentionally or from sheer neglect&mdash;in short, every
+ detail of the picture lying before his eyes, agreed so well with the facts
+ alleged by the Marquise that the judge, in spite of his impartiality,
+ could not help believing them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There you are, gentlemen,&rdquo; said the porter&rsquo;s wife; &ldquo;there is the
+ manifactor, where the Chinese swallow up enough to feed the whole
+ neighborhood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clerk looked at the judge with a smile, and Popinot found it hard to
+ keep his countenance. They went together into the outer room, where sat an
+ old man, who, no doubt, performed the functions of office clerk, shopman,
+ and cashier. This old man was the Maitre Jacques of China. Along the walls
+ ran long shelves, on which the published numbers lay in piles. A partition
+ in wood, with a grating lined with green curtains, cut off the end of the
+ room, forming a private office. A till with a slit to admit or disgorge
+ crown pieces indicated the cash-desk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M. d&rsquo;Espard?&rdquo; said Popinot, addressing the man, who wore a gray blouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shopman opened the door into the next room, where the lawyer and his
+ companion saw a venerable old man, white-headed and simply dressed,
+ wearing the Cross of Saint-Louis, seated at a desk. He ceased comparing
+ some sheets of colored prints to look up at the two visitors. This room
+ was an unpretentious office, full of books and proof-sheets. There was a
+ black wood table at which some one, at the moment absent, no doubt was
+ accustomed to work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Marquis d&rsquo;Espard?&rdquo; said Popinot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, monsieur,&rdquo; said the old man, rising; &ldquo;what do you want with him?&rdquo; he
+ added, coming forward, and showing by his demeanor the dignified manners
+ and habits due to a gentlemanly education.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We wish to speak with him on business exclusively personal to himself,&rdquo;
+ replied Popinot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;D&rsquo;Espard, here are some gentlemen who want to see you,&rdquo; then said the old
+ man, going into the furthest room, where the Marquis was sitting by the
+ fire reading the newspaper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This innermost room had a shabby carpet, the windows were hung with gray
+ holland curtains; the furniture consisted of a few mahogany chairs, two
+ armchairs, a desk with a revolving front, an ordinary office table, and on
+ the chimney-shelf, a dingy clock and two old candlesticks. The old man led
+ the way for Popinot and his registrar, and pulled forward two chairs, as
+ though he were master of the place; M. d&rsquo;Espard left it to him. After the
+ preliminary civilities, during which the judge watched the supposed
+ lunatic, the Marquis naturally asked what was the object of this visit. On
+ this Popinot glanced significantly at the old gentleman and the Marquis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe, Monsieur le Marquis,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that the character of my
+ functions, and the inquiry that has brought me here, make it desirable
+ that we should be alone, though it is understood by law that in such cases
+ the inquiries have a sort of family publicity. I am judge on the Inferior
+ Court of Appeal for the Department of the Seine, and charged by the
+ President with the duty of examining you as to certain facts set forth in
+ a petition for a Commission in Lunacy on the part of the Marquise
+ d&rsquo;Espard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man withdrew. When the lawyer and the Marquis were alone, the
+ clerk shut the door, and seated himself unceremoniously at the office
+ table, where he laid out his papers and prepared to take down his notes.
+ Popinot had still kept his eye on M. d&rsquo;Espard; he was watching the effect
+ on him of this crude statement, so painful for a man in full possession of
+ his reason. The Marquis d&rsquo;Espard, whose face was usually pale, as are
+ those of fair men, suddenly turned scarlet with anger; he trembled for an
+ instant, sat down, laid his paper on the chimney-piece, and looked down.
+ In a moment he had recovered his gentlemanly dignity, and looked steadily
+ at the judge, as if to read in his countenance the indications of his
+ character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is it, monsieur,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;that I have had no notice of such a
+ petition?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur le Marquis, persons on whom such a commission is held not being
+ supposed to have the use of their reason, any notice of the petition is
+ unnecessary. The duty of the Court chiefly consists in verifying the
+ allegations of the petitioner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing can be fairer,&rdquo; replied the Marquis. &ldquo;Well, then, monsieur, be so
+ good as to tell me what I ought to do&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have only to answer my questions, omitting nothing. However delicate
+ the reasons may be which may have led you to act in such a manner as to
+ give Madame d&rsquo;Espard a pretext for her petition, speak without fear. It is
+ unnecessary to assure you that lawyers know their duties, and that in such
+ cases the profoundest secrecy&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; said the Marquis, whose face expressed the sincerest pain, &ldquo;if
+ my explanations should lead to any blame being attached to Madame
+ d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s conduct, what will be the result?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Court may add its censure to its reasons for its decision.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is such censure optional? If I were to stipulate with you, before
+ replying, that nothing should be said that could annoy Madame d&rsquo;Espard in
+ the event of your report being in my favor, would the Court take my
+ request into consideration?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The judge looked at the Marquis, and the two men exchanged sentiments of
+ equal magnanimity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Noel,&rdquo; said Popinot to his registrar, &ldquo;go into the other room. If you can
+ be of use, I will call you in.&mdash;If, as I am inclined to think,&rdquo; he
+ went on, speaking to the Marquis when the clerk had gone out, &ldquo;I find that
+ there is some misunderstanding in this case, I can promise you, monsieur,
+ that on your application the Court will act with due courtesy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is a leading fact put forward by Madame d&rsquo;Espard, the most serious
+ of all, of which I must beg for an explanation,&rdquo; said the judge after a
+ pause. &ldquo;It refers to the dissipation of your fortune to the advantage of a
+ certain Madame Jeanrenaud, the widow of a bargemaster&mdash;or rather, to
+ that of her son, Colonel Jeanrenaud, for whom you are said to have
+ procured an appointment, to have exhausted your influence with the King,
+ and at last to have extended such protection as secures him a good
+ marriage. The petition suggests that such a friendship is more devoted
+ than any feelings, even those which morality must disapprove&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sudden flush crimsoned the Marquis&rsquo; face and forehead, tears even
+ started to his eyes, for his eyelashes were wet, then wholesome pride
+ crushed the emotions, which in a man are accounted a weakness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To tell you the truth, monsieur,&rdquo; said the Marquis, in a broken voice,
+ &ldquo;you place me in a strange dilemma. The motives of my conduct were to have
+ died with me. To reveal them I must disclose to you some secret wounds,
+ must place the honor of my family in your keeping, and must speak of
+ myself, a delicate matter, as you will fully understand. I hope, monsieur,
+ that it will all remain a secret between us. You will, no doubt, be able
+ to find in the formulas of the law one which will allow of judgment being
+ pronounced without any betrayal of my confidences.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So far as that goes, it is perfectly possible, Monsieur le Marquis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some time after my marriage,&rdquo; said M. d&rsquo;Espard, &ldquo;my wife having run into
+ considerable expenses, I was obliged to have recourse to borrowing. You
+ know what was the position of noble families during the Revolution; I had
+ not been able to keep a steward or a man of business. Nowadays gentlemen
+ are for the most part obliged to manage their affairs themselves. Most of
+ my title-deeds had been brought to Paris, from Languedoc, Provence, or le
+ Comtat, by my father, who dreaded, and not without reason, the inquisition
+ which family title-deeds, and what was then styled the &lsquo;parchments&rsquo; of the
+ privileged class, brought down on the owners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our name is Negrepelisse; d&rsquo;Espard is a title acquired in the time of
+ Henri IV. by a marriage which brought us the estates and titles of the
+ house of d&rsquo;Espard, on condition of our bearing an escutcheon of pretence
+ on our coat-of-arms, those of the house of d&rsquo;Espard, an old family of
+ Bearn, connected in the female line with that of Albret: quarterly, paly
+ of or and sable; and azure two griffins&rsquo; claws armed, gules in saltire,
+ with the famous motto Des partem leonis. At the time of this alliance we
+ lost Negrepelisse, a little town which was as famous during the religious
+ struggles as was my ancestor who then bore the name. Captain de
+ Negrepelisse was ruined by the burning of all his property, for the
+ Protestants did not spare a friend of Montluc&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Crown was unjust to M. de Negrepelisse; he received neither a
+ marshal&rsquo;s baton, nor a post as governor, nor any indemnity; King Charles
+ IX., who was fond of him, died without being able to reward him; Henri IV.
+ arranged his marriage with Mademoiselle d&rsquo;Espard, and secured him the
+ estates of that house, but all those of the Negrepelisses had already
+ passed into the hands of his creditors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My great-grandfather, the Marquis d&rsquo;Espard, was, like me, placed early in
+ life at the head of his family by the death of his father, who, after
+ dissipating his wife&rsquo;s fortune, left his son nothing but the entailed
+ estates of the d&rsquo;Espards, burdened with a jointure. The young Marquis was
+ all the more straitened for money because he held a post at Court. Being
+ in great favor with Louis XIV., the King&rsquo;s goodwill brought him a fortune.
+ But here, monsieur, a blot stained our escutcheon, an unconfessed and
+ horrible stain of blood and disgrace which I am making it my business to
+ wipe out. I discovered the secret among the deeds relating to the estate
+ of Negrepelisse and the packets of letters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this solemn moment the Marquis spoke without hesitation or any of the
+ repetition habitual with him; but it is a matter of common observation
+ that persons who, in ordinary life, are afflicted with these two defects,
+ are freed from them as soon as any passionate emotion underlies their
+ speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes was decreed,&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;You are
+ no doubt aware, monsieur, that this was an opportunity for many favorites
+ to make their fortunes. Louis XIV. bestowed on the magnates about his
+ Court the confiscated lands of those Protestant families who did not take
+ the prescribed steps for the sale of their property. Some persons in high
+ favor went &lsquo;Protestant-hunting,&rsquo; as the phrase was. I have ascertained
+ beyond a doubt that the fortune enjoyed to this day by two ducal families
+ is derived from lands seized from hapless merchants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not attempt to explain to you, a man of law, all the manoeuvres
+ employed to entrap the refugees who had large fortunes to carry away. It
+ is enough to say that the lands of Negrepelisse, comprising twenty-two
+ churches and rights over the town, and those of Gravenges which had
+ formerly belonged to us, were at that time in the hands of a Protestant
+ family. My grandfather recovered them by gift from Louis XIV. This gift
+ was effected by documents hall-marked by atrocious iniquity. The owner of
+ these two estates, thinking he would be able to return, had gone through
+ the form of a sale, and was going to Switzerland to join his family, whom
+ he had sent in advance. He wished, no doubt, to take advantage of every
+ delay granted by the law, so as to settle the concerns of his business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This man was arrested by order of the governor, the trustee confessed the
+ truth, the poor merchant was hanged, and my ancestor had the two estates.
+ I would gladly have been able to ignore the share he took in the plot; but
+ the governor was his uncle on the mother&rsquo;s side, and I have unfortunately
+ read the letter in which he begged him to apply to Deodatus, the name
+ agreed upon by the Court to designate the King. In this letter there is a
+ tone of jocosity with reference to the victim, which filled me with
+ horror. In the end, the sums of money sent by the refugee family to ransom
+ the poor man were kept by the governor, who despatched the merchant all
+ the same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis paused, as though the memory of it were still too heavy for
+ him to bear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This unfortunate family were named Jeanrenaud,&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;That name is
+ enough to account for my conduct. I could never think without keen pain of
+ the secret disgrace that weighed on my family. That fortune enabled my
+ grandfather to marry a demoiselle de Navarreins-Lansac, heiress to the
+ younger branch of that house, who were at that time much richer than the
+ elder branch of the Navarreins. My father thus became one of the largest
+ landowners in the kingdom. He was able to marry my mother, a Grandlieu of
+ the younger branch. Though ill-gotten, this property has been singularly
+ profitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For my part, being determined to remedy the mischief, I wrote to
+ Switzerland, and knew no peace till I was on the traces of the Protestant
+ victim&rsquo;s heirs. At last I discovered that the Jeanrenauds, reduced to
+ abject want, had left Fribourg and returned to live in France. Finally, I
+ found a M. Jeanrenaud, lieutenant in a cavalry regiment under Napoleon,
+ the sole heir of this unhappy family. In my eyes, monsieur, the rights of
+ the Jeanrenauds were clear. To establish a prescriptive right is it not
+ necessary that there should have been some possibility of proceeding
+ against those who are in the enjoyment of it? To whom could these refugees
+ have appealed? Their Court of Justice was on high, or rather, monsieur, it
+ was here,&rdquo; and the Marquis struck his hand on his heart. &ldquo;I did not choose
+ that my children should be able to think of me as I have thought of my
+ father and of my ancestors. I aim at leaving them an unblemished
+ inheritance and escutcheon. I did not choose that nobility should be a lie
+ in my person. And, after all, politically speaking, ought those emigres
+ who are now appealing against revolutionary confiscations, to keep the
+ property derived from antecedent confiscations by positive crimes?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I found in M. Jeanrenaud and his mother the most perverse honesty; to
+ hear them you would suppose that they were robbing me. In spite of all I
+ could say, they will accept no more than the value of the lands at the
+ time when the King bestowed them on my family. The price was settled
+ between us at the sum of eleven hundred thousand francs, which I was to
+ pay at my convenience and without interest. To achieve this I had to
+ forego my income for a long time. And then, monsieur, began the
+ destruction of some illusions I had allowed myself as to Madame d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s
+ character. When I proposed to her that we should leave Paris and go into
+ the country, where we could live respected on half of her income, and so
+ more rapidly complete a restitution of which I spoke to her without going
+ into the more serious details, Madame d&rsquo;Espard treated me as a madman. I
+ then understood my wife&rsquo;s real character. She would have approved of my
+ grandfather&rsquo;s conduct without a scruple, and have laughed at the
+ Huguenots. Terrified by her coldness, and her little affection for her
+ children, whom she abandoned to me without regret, I determined to leave
+ her the command of her fortune, after paying our common debts. It was no
+ business of hers, as she told me, to pay for my follies. As I then had not
+ enough to live on and pay for my sons&rsquo; education, I determined to educate
+ them myself, to make them gentlemen and men of feeling. By investing my
+ money in the funds I have been enabled to pay off my obligation sooner
+ than I had dared to hope, for I took advantage of the opportunities
+ afforded by the improvement in prices. If I had kept four thousand francs
+ a year for my boys and myself, I could only have paid off twenty thousand
+ crowns a year, and it would have taken almost eighteen years to achieve my
+ freedom. As it is, I have lately repaid the whole of the eleven hundred
+ thousand francs that were due. Thus I enjoy the happiness of having made
+ this restitution without doing my children the smallest wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These, monsieur, are the reasons for the payments made to Madame
+ Jeanrenaud and her son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So Madame d&rsquo;Espard knew the motives of your retirement?&rdquo; said the judge,
+ controlling the emotion he felt at this narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, monsieur.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Popinot gave an expressive shrug; he rose and opened the door into the
+ next room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Noel, you can go,&rdquo; said he to his clerk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;though what you have told me is enough to
+ enlighten me thoroughly, I should like to hear what you have to say to the
+ other facts put forward in the petition. For instance, you are here
+ carrying on a business such as is not habitually undertaken by a man of
+ rank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We cannot discuss that matter here,&rdquo; said the Marquis, signing to the
+ judge to quit the room. &ldquo;Nouvion,&rdquo; said he to the old man, &ldquo;I am going
+ down to my rooms; the children will soon be in; dine with us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, Monsieur le Marquis,&rdquo; said Popinot on the stairs, &ldquo;that is not your
+ apartment?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, monsieur; I took those rooms for the office of this undertaking. You
+ see,&rdquo; and he pointed to an advertisement sheet, &ldquo;the History is being
+ brought out by one of the most respectable firms in Paris, and not by me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis showed the lawyer into the ground-floor rooms, saying, &ldquo;This
+ is my apartment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Popinot was quite touched by the poetry, not aimed at but pervading this
+ dwelling. The weather was lovely, the windows were open, the air from the
+ garden brought in a wholesome earthy smell, the sunshine brightened and
+ gilded the woodwork, of a rather gloomy brown. At the sight Popinot made
+ up his mind that a madman would hardly be capable of inventing the tender
+ harmony of which he was at that moment conscious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like just such an apartment,&rdquo; thought he. &ldquo;You think of leaving
+ this part of town?&rdquo; he inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope so,&rdquo; replied the Marquis. &ldquo;But I shall remain till my younger son
+ has finished his studies, and till the children&rsquo;s character is thoroughly
+ formed, before introducing them to the world and to their mother&rsquo;s circle.
+ Indeed, after giving them the solid information they possess, I intend to
+ complete it by taking them to travel to the capitals of Europe, that they
+ may see men and things, and become accustomed to speak the languages they
+ have learned. And, monsieur,&rdquo; he went on, giving the judge a chair in the
+ drawing-room, &ldquo;I could not discuss the book on China with you, in the
+ presence of an old friend of my family, the Comte de Nouvion, who, having
+ emigrated, has returned to France without any fortune whatever, and who is
+ my partner in this concern, less for my profit than his. Without telling
+ him what my motives were, I explained to him that I was as poor as he, but
+ that I had enough money to start a speculation in which he might be
+ usefully employed. My tutor was the Abbe Grozier, whom Charles X. on my
+ recommendation appointed Keeper of the Books at the Arsenal, which were
+ returned to that Prince when he was still Monsieur. The Abbe Grozier was
+ deeply learned with regard to China, its manners and customs; he made me
+ heir to this knowledge at an age when it is difficult not to become a
+ fanatic for the things we learn. At five-and-twenty I knew Chinese, and I
+ confess I have never been able to check myself in an exclusive admiration
+ for that nation, who conquered their conquerors, whose annals extend back
+ indisputably to a period more remote than mythological or Bible times, who
+ by their immutable institutions have preserved the integrity of their
+ empire, whose monuments are gigantic, whose administration is perfect,
+ among whom revolutions are impossible, who have regarded ideal beauty as a
+ barren element in art, who have carried luxury and industry to such a
+ pitch that we cannot outdo them in anything, while they are our equals in
+ things where we believe ourselves superior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still, monsieur, though I often make a jest of comparing China with the
+ present condition of European states, I am not a Chinaman, I am a French
+ gentleman. If you entertain any doubts as to the financial side of this
+ undertaking, I can prove to you that at this moment we have two thousand
+ five hundred subscribers to this work, which is literary, iconographical,
+ statistical, and religious; its importance has been generally appreciated;
+ our subscribers belong to every nation in Europe, we have but twelve
+ hundred in France. Our book will cost about three hundred francs, and the
+ Comte de Nouvion will derive from it from six to seven thousand francs a
+ year, for his comfort was the real motive of the undertaking. For my part,
+ I aimed only at the possibility of affording my children some pleasures.
+ The hundred thousand francs I have made, quite in spite of myself, will
+ pay for their fencing lessons, horses, dress, and theatres, pay the
+ masters who teach them accomplishments, procure them canvases to spoil,
+ the books they may wish to buy, in short, all the little fancies which a
+ father finds so much pleasure in gratifying. If I had been compelled to
+ refuse these indulgences to my poor boys, who are so good and work so
+ hard, the sacrifice I made to the honor of my name would have been doubly
+ painful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In point of fact, the twelve years I have spent in retirement from the
+ world to educate my children have led to my being completely forgotten at
+ Court. I have given up the career of politics; I have lost my historical
+ fortune, and all the distinctions which I might have acquired and
+ bequeathed to my children; but our house will have lost nothing; my boys
+ will be men of mark. Though I have missed the senatorship, they will win
+ it nobly by devoting themselves to the affairs of the country, and doing
+ such service as is not soon forgotten. While purifying the past record of
+ my family, I have insured it a glorious future; and is not that to have
+ achieved a noble task, though in secret and without glory?&mdash;And now,
+ monsieur, have you any other explanations to ask me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this instant the tramp of horses was heard in the courtyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here they are!&rdquo; said the Marquis. In a moment the two lads, fashionably
+ but plainly dressed, came into the room, booted, spurred, and gloved, and
+ flourishing their riding-whips. Their beaming faces brought in the
+ freshness of the outer air; they were brilliant with health. They both
+ grasped their father&rsquo;s hand, giving him a look, as friends do, a glance of
+ unspoken affection, and then they bowed coldly to the lawyer. Popinot felt
+ that it was quite unnecessary to question the Marquis as to his relations
+ towards his sons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you enjoyed yourselves?&rdquo; asked the Marquis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, father; I knocked down six dolls in twelve shots at the first
+ trial!&rdquo; cried Camille.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And where did you ride?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the Bois; we saw my mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did she stop?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We were riding so fast just then that I daresay she did not see us,&rdquo;
+ replied the young Count.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, then, why did you not go to speak to her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fancy I have noticed, father, that she does not care that we should
+ speak to her in public,&rdquo; said Clement in an undertone. &ldquo;We are a little
+ too big.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The judge&rsquo;s hearing was keen enough to catch these words, which brought a
+ cloud to the Marquis&rsquo; brow. Popinot took pleasure in contemplating the
+ picture of the father and his boys. His eyes went back with a sense of
+ pathos to M. d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s face; his features, his expression, and his manner
+ all expressed honesty in its noblest aspect, intellectual and chivalrous
+ honesty, nobility in all its beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&mdash;you see, monsieur,&rdquo; said the Marquis, and his hesitation had
+ returned, &ldquo;you see that Justice may look in&mdash;in here at any time&mdash;yes,
+ at any time&mdash;here. If there is anybody crazy, it can only be the
+ children&mdash;the children&mdash;who are a little crazy about their
+ father, and the father who is very crazy about his children&mdash;but that
+ sort of madness rings true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this juncture Madame Jeanrenaud&rsquo;s voice was heard in the ante-room, and
+ the good woman came bustling in, in spite of the man-servant&rsquo;s
+ remonstrances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I take no roundabout ways, I can tell you!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;Yes, Monsieur
+ le Marquis, I want to speak to you, this very minute,&rdquo; she went on, with a
+ comprehensive bow to the company. &ldquo;By George, and I am too late as it is,
+ since Monsieur the criminal Judge is before me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Criminal!&rdquo; cried the two boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good reason why I did not find you at your own house, since you are here.
+ Well, well! the Law is always to the fore when there is mischief brewing.&mdash;I
+ came, Monsieur le Marquis, to tell you that my son and I are of one mind
+ to give you everything back, since our honor is threatened. My son and I,
+ we had rather give you back everything than cause you the smallest
+ trouble. My word, they must be as stupid as pans without handles to call
+ you a lunatic&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A lunatic! My father?&rdquo; exclaimed the boys, clinging to the Marquis. &ldquo;What
+ is this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Silence, madame,&rdquo; said Popinot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Children, leave us,&rdquo; said the Marquis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two boys went into the garden without a word, but very much alarmed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; said the judge, &ldquo;the moneys paid to you by Monsieur le Marquis
+ were legally due, though given to you in virtue of a very far-reaching
+ theory of honesty. If all the people possessed of confiscated goods, by
+ whatever cause, even if acquired by treachery, were compelled to make
+ restitution every hundred and fifty years, there would be few legitimate
+ owners in France. The possessions of Jacques Coeur enriched twenty noble
+ families; the confiscations pronounced by the English to the advantage of
+ their adherents at the time when they held a part of France made the
+ fortune of several princely houses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our law allows M. d&rsquo;Espard to dispose of his income without accounting
+ for it, or suffering him to be accused of its misapplication. A Commission
+ in Lunacy can only be granted when a man&rsquo;s actions are devoid of reason;
+ but in this case, the remittances made to you have a reason based on the
+ most sacred and most honorable motives. Hence you may keep it all without
+ remorse, and leave the world to misinterpret a noble action. In Paris, the
+ highest virtue is the object of the foulest calumny. It is, unfortunately,
+ the present condition of society that makes the Marquis&rsquo; actions sublime.
+ For the honor of my country, I would that such deeds were regarded as a
+ matter of course; but, as things are, I am forced by comparison to look
+ upon M. d&rsquo;Espard as a man to whom a crown should be awarded, rather than
+ that he should be threatened with a Commission in Lunacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the course of a long professional career, I have seen and heard
+ nothing that has touched me more deeply than that I have just seen and
+ heard. But it is not extraordinary that virtue should wear its noblest
+ aspect when it is practised by men of the highest class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Having heard me express myself in this way, I hope, Monsieur le Marquis,
+ that you feel certain of my silence, and that you will not for a moment be
+ uneasy as to the decision pronounced in the case&mdash;if it comes before
+ the Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, now! Well said,&rdquo; cried Madame Jeanrenaud. &ldquo;That is something like
+ a judge! Look here, my dear sir, I would hug you if I were not so ugly;
+ you speak like a book.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis held out his hand to Popinot, who gently pressed it with a
+ look full of sympathetic comprehension at this great man in private life,
+ and the Marquis responded with a pleasant smile. These two natures, both
+ so large and full&mdash;one commonplace but divinely kind, the other lofty
+ and sublime&mdash;had fallen into unison gently, without a jar, without a
+ flash of passion, as though two pure lights had been merged into one. The
+ father of a whole district felt himself worthy to grasp the hand of this
+ man who was doubly noble, and the Marquis felt in the depths of his soul
+ an instinct that told him that the judge&rsquo;s hand was one of those from
+ which the treasures of inexhaustible beneficence perennially flow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur le Marquis,&rdquo; added Popinot, with a bow, &ldquo;I am happy to be able
+ to tell you that, from the first words of this inquiry, I regarded my
+ clerk as quite unnecessary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went close to M. d&rsquo;Espard, led him into the window-bay, and said: &ldquo;It
+ is time that you should return home, monsieur. I believe that Madame la
+ Marquise has acted in this matter under an influence which you ought at
+ once to counteract.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Popinot withdrew. He looked back several times as he crossed the
+ courtyard, touched by the recollection of the scene. It was one of those
+ which take root in the memory to blossom again in certain hours when the
+ soul seeks consolation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those rooms would just suit me,&rdquo; said he to himself as he reached home.
+ &ldquo;If M. d&rsquo;Espard leaves them, I will take up his lease.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, at about ten in the morning, Popinot, who had written out
+ his report the previous evening, made his way to the Palais de Justice,
+ intending to have prompt and righteous justice done. As he went to the
+ robing-room to put on his gown and bands, the usher told him that the
+ President of his Court begged him to attend in his private room, where he
+ was waiting for him. Popinot forthwith obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-morning, my dear Popinot,&rdquo; said the President, &ldquo;I have been waiting
+ for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Monsieur le President, is anything wrong?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mere silly trifle,&rdquo; said the President. &ldquo;The Keeper of the Seals, with
+ whom I had the honor of dining yesterday, led me apart into a corner. He
+ had heard that you had been to tea with Madame d&rsquo;Espard, in whose case you
+ were employed to make inquiries. He gave me to understand that it would be
+ as well that you should not sit on this case&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Monsieur le President, I can prove that I left Madame d&rsquo;Espard&rsquo;s
+ house at the moment when tea was brought in. And my conscience&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes; the whole Bench, the two Courts, all the profession know you. I
+ need not repeat what I said about you to his Eminence; but, you know,
+ &lsquo;Caesar&rsquo;s wife must not be suspected.&rsquo; So we shall not make this foolish
+ trifle a matter of discipline, but only of proprieties. Between ourselves,
+ it is not on your account, but on that of the Bench.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, monsieur, if you only knew the kind of woman&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; said the
+ judge, trying to pull his report out of his pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am perfectly certain that you have proceeded in this matter with the
+ strictest independence of judgment. I myself, in the provinces, have often
+ taken more than a cup of tea with the people I had to try; but the fact
+ that the Keeper of the Seals should have mentioned it, and that you might
+ be talked about, is enough to make the Court avoid any discussion of the
+ matter. Any conflict with public opinion must always be dangerous for a
+ constitutional body, even when the right is on its side against the
+ public, because their weapons are not equal. Journalism may say or suppose
+ anything, and our dignity forbids us even to reply. In fact, I have spoken
+ of the matter to your President, and M. Camusot has been appointed in your
+ place on your retirement, which you will signify. It is a family matter,
+ so to speak. And I now beg you to signify your retirement from the case as
+ a personal favor. To make up, you will get the Cross of the Legion of
+ Honor, which has so long been due to you. I make that my business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he saw M. Camusot, a judge recently called to Paris from a provincial
+ Court of the same class, as he went forward bowing to the Judge and the
+ President, Popinot could not repress an ironical smile. This pale, fair
+ young man, full of covert ambition, looked ready to hang and unhang, at
+ the pleasure of any earthy king, the innocent and the guilty alike, and to
+ follow the example of a Laubardemont rather than that of a Mole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Popinot withdrew with a bow; he scorned to deny the lying accusation that
+ had been brought against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PARIS, February 1836.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ADDENDUM
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Note: The Commission in Lunacy is also known as The Interdiction and is
+ referred to by that title in certain of the addendums.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Bianchon, Horace
+ Father Goriot
+ The Atheist&rsquo;s Mass
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ A Bachelor&rsquo;s Establishment
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ The Government Clerks
+ Pierrette
+ A Study of Woman
+ Scenes from a Courtesan&rsquo;s Life
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Magic Skin
+ A Second Home
+ A Prince of Bohemia
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ The Muse of the Department
+ The Imaginary Mistress
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Betty
+ The Country Parson
+ In addition, M. Bianchon narrated the following:
+ Another Study of Woman
+ La Grande Breteche
+
+ Bordin
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+
+ Camusot de Marville
+ Cousin Pons
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+ Scenes from a Cuortesan&rsquo;s Life
+
+ Desroches (son)
+ A Bachelor&rsquo;s Establishment
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Start in Life
+ A Woman of Thirty
+ The Government Clerks
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan&rsquo;s Life
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ A Man of Business
+ The Middle Classes
+
+ Espard, Charles-Maurice-Marie-Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis d&rsquo;
+ Scenes from a Courtesan&rsquo;s Life
+
+ Espard, Chevalier d&rsquo;
+ Scenes from a Courtesan&rsquo;s Life
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+
+ Espard, Jeanne-Clementine-Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, Marquise d&rsquo;
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan&rsquo;s Life
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ Another Study of Woman
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ Beatrix
+
+ Godeschal, Francois-Claude-Marie
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Bachelor&rsquo;s Establishment
+ A Start in Life
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Pons
+
+ Grozier, Abbe
+ Lost Illusions
+
+ Jeanrenaud
+ Albert Savarus
+
+ Mongenod, Frederic
+ The Seamy Side of History
+
+ Negrepelisse, De
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+
+ Nucingen, Baronne Delphine de
+ Father Goriot
+ The Thirteen
+ Eugenie Grandet
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Melmoth Reconciled
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan&rsquo;s Life
+ Modeste Mignon
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ Another Study of Woman
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ The Member for Arcis
+
+ Popinot, Jean-Jules
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Middle Classes
+
+ Rabourdin, Madame
+ The Government Clerks
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/old/1410.txt b/old/1410.txt
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+++ b/old/1410.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Commission in Lunacy, by Honore de Balzac
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Commission in Lunacy
+
+Author: Honore de Balzac
+
+Translator: Clara Bell
+
+Release Date: August, 1998 [Etext #1410]
+Posting Date: February 24, 2010
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Bickers, and Dagny
+
+
+
+
+
+THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY
+
+
+By Honore De Balzac
+
+
+Translated By Clara Bell
+
+
+
+ DEDICATION
+
+ Dedicated to Monsieur le Contre-Amiral Bazoche,
+ Governor of the Isle of Bourbon, by the grateful writer.
+ DE BALZAC.
+
+
+
+
+THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY
+
+
+In 1828, at about one o'clock one morning, two persons came out of
+a large house in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, near the
+Elysee-Bourbon. One was the famous doctor, Horace Bianchon; the other
+was one of the most elegant men in Paris, the Baron de Rastignac; they
+were friends of long standing. Each had sent away his carriage, and
+no cab was to be seen in the street; but the night was fine, and the
+pavement dry.
+
+"We will walk as far as the boulevard," said Eugene de Rastignac to
+Bianchon. "You can get a hackney cab at the club; there is always one to
+be found there till daybreak. Come with me as far as my house."
+
+"With pleasure."
+
+"Well, and what have you to say about it?"
+
+"About that woman?" said the doctor coldly.
+
+"There I recognize my Bianchon!" exclaimed Rastignac.
+
+"Why, how?"
+
+"Well, my dear fellow, you speak of the Marquise d'Espard as if she were
+a case for your hospital."
+
+"Do you want to know what I think, Eugene? If you throw over Madame de
+Nucingen for this Marquise, you will swap a one-eyed horse for a blind
+one."
+
+"Madame de Nucingen is six-and-thirty, Bianchon."
+
+"And this woman is three-and-thirty," said the doctor quickly.
+
+"Her worst enemies only say six-and-twenty."
+
+"My dear boy, when you really want to know a woman's age, look at her
+temples and the tip of her nose. Whatever women may achieve with their
+cosmetics, they can do nothing against those incorruptible witnesses to
+their experiences. There each year of life has left its stigmata. When a
+woman's temples are flaccid, seamed, withered in a particular way; when
+at the tip of her nose you see those minute specks, which look like the
+imperceptible black smuts which are shed in London by the chimneys
+in which coal is burnt.... Your servant, sir! That woman is more than
+thirty. She may be handsome, witty, loving--whatever you please, but
+she is past thirty, she is arriving at maturity. I do not blame men who
+attach themselves to that kind of woman; only, a man of your superior
+distinction must not mistake a winter pippin for a little summer apple,
+smiling on the bough, and waiting for you to crunch it. Love never
+goes to study the registers of birth and marriage; no one loves a woman
+because she is handsome or ugly, stupid or clever; we love because we
+love."
+
+"Well, for my part, I love for quite other reasons. She is Marquise
+d'Espard; she was a Blamont-Chauvry; she is the fashion; she has soul;
+her foot is as pretty as the Duchesse de Berri's; she has perhaps a
+hundred thousand francs a year--some day, perhaps, I may marry her! In
+short, she will put me into a position which will enable me to pay my
+debts."
+
+"I thought you were rich," interrupted Bianchon.
+
+"Bah! I have twenty thousand francs a year--just enough to keep up
+my stables. I was thoroughly done, my dear fellow, in that Nucingen
+business; I will tell you about that.--I have got my sisters married;
+that is the clearest profit I can show since we last met; and I would
+rather have them provided for than have five hundred thousand francs a
+year. No, what would you have me do? I am ambitious. To what can
+Madame de Nucingen lead? A year more and I shall be shelved, stuck in a
+pigeon-hole like a married man. I have all the discomforts of marriage
+and of single life, without the advantages of either; a false position
+to which every man must come who remains tied too long to the same
+apron-string."
+
+"So you think you will come upon a treasure here?" said Bianchon. "Your
+Marquise, my dear fellow, does not hit my fancy at all."
+
+"Your liberal opinions blur your eyesight. If Madame d'Espard were a
+Madame Rabourdin..."
+
+"Listen to me. Noble or simple, she would still have no soul; she would
+still be a perfect type of selfishness. Take my word for it, medical men
+are accustomed to judge of people and things; the sharpest of us read
+the soul while we study the body. In spite of that pretty boudoir where
+we have spent this evening, in spite of the magnificence of the house,
+it is quite possible that Madame la Marquise is in debt."
+
+"What makes you think so?"
+
+"I do not assert it; I am supposing. She talked of her soul as Louis
+XVIII. used to talk of his heart. I tell you this: That fragile, fair
+woman, with her chestnut hair, who pities herself that she may be
+pitied, enjoys an iron constitution, an appetite like a wolf's, and
+the strength and cowardice of a tiger. Gauze, and silk, and muslin were
+never more cleverly twisted round a lie! Ecco."
+
+"Bianchon, you frighten me! You have learned a good many things, then,
+since we lived in the Maison Vauquer?"
+
+"Yes, since then, my boy, I have seen puppets, both dolls and manikins.
+I know something of the ways of the fine ladies whose bodies we attend
+to, saving that which is dearest to them, their child--if they love
+it--or their pretty faces, which they always worship. A man spends
+his nights by their pillow, wearing himself to death to spare them the
+slightest loss of beauty in any part; he succeeds, he keeps their secret
+like the dead; they send to ask for his bill, and think it horribly
+exorbitant. Who saved them? Nature. Far from recommending him, they
+speak ill of him, fearing lest he should become the physician of their
+best friends.
+
+"My dear fellow, those women of whom you say, 'They are angels!'
+I--I--have seen stripped of the little grimaces under which they hide
+their soul, as well as of the frippery under which they disguise their
+defects--without manners and without stays; they are not beautiful.
+
+"We saw a great deal of mud, a great deal of dirt, under the waters of
+the world when we were aground for a time on the shoals of the Maison
+Vauquer.--What we saw there was nothing. Since I have gone into high
+society, I have seen monsters dressed in satin, Michonneaus in white
+gloves, Poirets bedizened with orders, fine gentlemen doing more
+usurious business than old Gobseck! To the shame of mankind, when I have
+wanted to shake hands with Virtue, I have found her shivering in a loft,
+persecuted by calumny, half-starving on a income or a salary of fifteen
+hundred francs a year, and regarded as crazy, or eccentric, or imbecile.
+
+"In short, my dear boy, the Marquise is a woman of fashion, and I have
+a particular horror of that kind of woman. Do you want to know why? A
+woman who has a lofty soul, fine taste, gentle wit, a generously warm
+heart, and who lives a simple life, has not a chance of being the
+fashion. Ergo: A woman of fashion and a man in power are analogous; but
+there is this difference: the qualities by which a man raises himself
+above others ennoble him and are a glory to him; whereas the qualities
+by which a woman gains power for a day are hideous vices; she belies her
+nature to hide her character, and to live the militant life of the world
+she must have iron strength under a frail appearance.
+
+"I, as a physician, know that a sound stomach excludes a good heart.
+Your woman of fashion feels nothing; her rage for pleasure has its
+source in a longing to heat up her cold nature, a craving for excitement
+and enjoyment, like an old man who stands night after night by
+the footlights at the opera. As she has more brain than heart, she
+sacrifices genuine passion and true friends to her triumph, as a general
+sends his most devoted subalterns to the front in order to win a battle.
+The woman of fashion ceases to be a woman; she is neither mother, nor
+wife, nor lover. She is, medically speaking, sex in the brain. And your
+Marquise, too, has all the characteristics of her monstrosity, the beak
+of a bird of prey, the clear, cold eye, the gentle voice--she is as
+polished as the steel of a machine, she touches everything except the
+heart."
+
+"There is some truth in what you say, Bianchon."
+
+"Some truth?" replied Bianchon. "It is all true. Do you suppose that
+I was not struck to the heart by the insulting politeness by which
+she made me measure the imaginary distance which her noble birth sets
+between us? That I did not feel the deepest pity for her cat-like
+civilities when I remembered what her object was? A year hence she will
+not write one word to do me the slightest service, and this evening she
+pelted me with smiles, believing that I can influence my uncle Popinot,
+on whom the success of her case----"
+
+"Would you rather she should have played the fool with you, my dear
+fellow?--I accept your diatribe against women of fashion; but you are
+beside the mark. I should always prefer for a wife a Marquise d'Espard
+to the most devout and devoted creature on earth. Marry an angel! you
+would have to go and bury your happiness in the depths of the country!
+The wife of a politician is a governing machine, a contrivance that
+makes compliments and courtesies. She is the most important and most
+faithful tool which an ambitious man can use; a friend, in short, who
+may compromise herself without mischief, and whom he may belie without
+harmful results. Fancy Mahomet in Paris in the nineteenth century! His
+wife would be a Rohan, a Duchesse de Chevreuse of the Fronde, as keen
+and as flattering as an Ambassadress, as wily as Figaro. Your loving
+wives lead nowhere; a woman of the world leads to everything; she is the
+diamond with which a man cuts every window when he has not the golden
+key which unlocks every door. Leave humdrum virtues to the humdrum,
+ambitious vices to the ambitious.
+
+"Besides, my dear fellow, do you imagine that the love of a Duchesse
+de Langeais, or de Maufrigneuse, or of a Lady Dudley does not bestow
+immense pleasure? If only you knew how much value the cold, severe style
+of such a woman gives to the smallest evidence of their affection! What
+a delight it is to see a periwinkle piercing through the snow! A smile
+from below a fan contradicts the reserve of an assumed attitude, and is
+worth all the unbridled tenderness of your middle-class women with
+their mortgaged devotion; for, in love, devotion is nearly akin to
+speculation.
+
+"And, then, a woman of fashion, a Blamont-Chauvry, has her virtues too!
+Her virtues are fortune, power, effect, a certain contempt of all that
+is beneath her----"
+
+"Thank you!" said Bianchon.
+
+"Old curmudgeon!" said Rastignac, laughing. "Come--do not be so common,
+do like your friend Desplein; be a Baron, a Knight of Saint-Michael;
+become a peer of France, and marry your daughters to dukes."
+
+"I! May the five hundred thousand devils----"
+
+"Come, come! Can you be superior only in medicine? Really, you distress
+me..."
+
+"I hate that sort of people; I long for a revolution to deliver us from
+them for ever."
+
+"And so, my dear Robespierre of the lancet, you will not go to-morrow to
+your uncle Popinot?"
+
+"Yes, I will," said Bianchon; "for you I would go to hell to fetch
+water..."
+
+"My good friend, you really touch me. I have sworn that a commission
+shall sit on the Marquis. Why, here is even a long-saved tear to thank
+you."
+
+"But," Bianchon went on, "I do not promise to succeed as you wish with
+Jean-Jules Popinot. You do not know him. However, I will take him to see
+your Marquise the day after to-morrow; she may get round him if she can.
+I doubt it. If all the truffles, all the Duchesses, all the mistresses,
+and all the charmers in Paris were there in the full bloom of their
+beauty; if the King promised him the _Prairie_, and the Almighty gave
+him the Order of Paradise with the revenues of Purgatory, not one of all
+these powers would induce him to transfer a single straw from one saucer
+of his scales into the other. He is a judge, as Death is Death."
+
+The two friends had reached the office of the Minister for Foreign
+Affairs, at the corner of the Boulevard des Capucines.
+
+"Here you are at home," said Bianchon, laughing, as he pointed to the
+ministerial residence. "And here is my carriage," he added, calling a
+hackney cab. "And these--express our fortune."
+
+"You will be happy at the bottom of the sea, while I am still struggling
+with the tempests on the surface, till I sink and go to ask you for a
+corner in your grotto, old fellow!"
+
+"Till Saturday," replied Bianchon.
+
+"Agreed," said Rastignac. "And you promise me Popinot?"
+
+"I will do all my conscience will allow. Perhaps this appeal for a
+commission covers some little dramorama, to use a word of our good bad
+times."
+
+"Poor Bianchon! he will never be anything but a good fellow," said
+Rastignac to himself as the cab drove off.
+
+
+
+"Rastignac has given me the most difficult negotiation in the world,"
+said Bianchon to himself, remembering, as he rose next morning, the
+delicate commission intrusted to him. "However, I have never asked
+the smallest service from my uncle in Court, and have paid more than a
+thousand visits gratis for him. And, after all, we are not apt to mince
+matters between ourselves. He will say Yes or No, and there an end."
+
+After this little soliloquy the famous physician bent his steps, at
+seven in the morning, towards the Rue du Fouarre, where dwelt Monsieur
+Jean-Jules Popinot, judge of the Lower Court of the Department of
+the Seine. The Rue du Fouarre--an old word meaning straw--was in the
+thirteenth century the most important street in Paris. There stood the
+Schools of the University, where the voices of Abelard and of Gerson
+were heard in the world of learning. It is now one of the dirtiest
+streets of the Twelfth Arrondissement, the poorest quarter of Paris,
+that in which two-thirds of the population lack firing in winter, which
+leaves most brats at the gate of the Foundling Hospital, which sends
+most beggars to the poorhouse, most rag-pickers to the street corners,
+most decrepit old folks to bask against the walls on which the sun
+shines, most delinquents to the police courts.
+
+Half-way down this street, which is always damp, and where the gutter
+carries to the Seine the blackened waters from some dye-works, there is
+an old house, restored no doubt under Francis I., and built of bricks
+held together by a few courses of masonry. That it is substantial seems
+proved by the shape of its front wall, not uncommonly seen in some
+parts of Paris. It bellies, so to speak, in a manner caused by the
+protuberance of its first floor, crushed under the weight of the second
+and third, but upheld by the strong wall of the ground floor. At first
+sight it would seem as though the piers between the windows, though
+strengthened by the stone mullions, must give way, but the observer
+presently perceives that, as in the tower at Bologna, the old bricks and
+old time-eaten stones of this house persistently preserve their centre
+of gravity.
+
+At every season of the year the solid piers of the ground floor have the
+yellow tone and the imperceptible sweating surface that moisture gives
+to stone. The passer-by feels chilled as he walks close to this wall,
+where worn corner-stones ineffectually shelter him from the wheels of
+vehicles. As is always the case in houses built before carriages were
+in use, the vault of the doorway forms a very low archway not unlike
+the barbican of a prison. To the right of this entrance there are three
+windows, protected outside by iron gratings of so close a pattern, that
+the curious cannot possibly see the use made of the dark, damp rooms
+within, and the panes too are dirty and dusty; to the left are two
+similar windows, one of which is sometimes open, exposing to view the
+porter, his wife, and his children; swarming, working, cooking, eating,
+and screaming, in a floored and wainscoted room where everything is
+dropping to pieces, and into which you descend two steps--a depth which
+seems to suggest the gradual elevation of the soil of Paris.
+
+If on a rainy day some foot-passenger takes refuge under the long vault,
+with projecting lime-washed beams, which leads from the door to
+the staircase, he will hardly fail to pause and look at the picture
+presented by the interior of this house. To the left is a square
+garden-plot, allowing of not more than four long steps in each
+direction, a garden of black soil, with trellises bereft of vines, and
+where, in default of vegetation under the shade of two trees, papers
+collect, old rags, potsherds, bits of mortar fallen from the roof; a
+barren ground, where time has shed on the walls, and on the trunks and
+branches of the trees, a powdery deposit like cold soot. The two parts
+of the house, set at a right angle, derive light from this garden-court
+shut in by two adjoining houses built on wooden piers, decrepit and
+ready to fall, where on each floor some grotesque evidence is to be seen
+of the craft pursued by some lodger within. Here long poles are hung
+with immense skeins of dyed worsted put out to dry; there, on ropes,
+dance clean-washed shirts; higher up, on a shelf, volumes display their
+freshly marbled edges; women sing, husbands whistle, children shout; the
+carpenter saws his planks, a copper-turner makes the metal screech;
+all kinds of industries combine to produce a noise which the number of
+instruments renders distracting.
+
+The general system of decoration in this passage, which is neither
+courtyard, garden, nor vaulted way, though a little of all, consists of
+wooden pillars resting on square stone blocks, and forming arches. Two
+archways open on to the little garden; two others, facing the front
+gateway, lead to a wooden staircase, with an iron balustrade that was
+once a miracle of smith's work, so whimsical are the shapes given to the
+metal; the worn steps creak under every tread. The entrance to each flat
+has an architrave dark with dirt, grease, and dust, and outer doors,
+covered with Utrecht velvet set with brass nails, once gilt, in a
+diamond pattern. These relics of splendor show that in the time of Louis
+XIV. the house was the residence of some councillor to the Parlement,
+some rich priests, or some treasurer of the ecclesiastical revenue. But
+these vestiges of former luxury bring a smile to the lips by the artless
+contrast of past and present.
+
+M. Jean-Jules Popinot lived on the first floor of this house, where the
+gloom, natural to all first floors in Paris houses, was increased by the
+narrowness of the street. This old tenement was known to all the twelfth
+arrondissement, on which Providence had bestowed this lawyer, as it
+gives a beneficent plant to cure or alleviate every malady. Here is a
+sketch of a man whom the brilliant Marquise d'Espard hoped to fascinate.
+
+M. Popinot, as is seemly for a magistrate, was always dressed in
+black--a style which contributed to make him ridiculous in the eyes of
+those who were in the habit of judging everything from a superficial
+examination. Men who are jealous of maintaining the dignity required
+by this color ought to devote themselves to constant and minute care of
+their person; but our dear M. Popinot was incapable of forcing himself
+to the puritanical cleanliness which black demands. His trousers, always
+threadbare, looked like camlet--the stuff of which attorneys' gowns
+are made; and his habitual stoop set them, in time, in such innumerable
+creases, that in places they were traced with lines, whitish, rusty, or
+shiny, betraying either sordid avarice, or the most unheeding poverty.
+His coarse worsted stockings were twisted anyhow in his ill-shaped
+shoes. His linen had the tawny tinge acquired by long sojourn in a
+wardrobe, showing that the late lamented Madame Popinot had had a mania
+for much linen; in the Flemish fashion, perhaps, she had given herself
+the trouble of a great wash no more than twice a year. The old man's
+coat and waistcoat were in harmony with his trousers, shoes, stockings,
+and linen. He always had the luck of his carelessness; for, the first
+day he put on a new coat, he unfailingly matched it with the rest of his
+costume by staining it with incredible promptitude. The good man waited
+till his housekeeper told him that his hat was too shabby before buying
+a new one. His necktie was always crumpled and starchless, and he never
+set his dog-eared shirt collar straight after his judge's bands had
+disordered it. He took no care of his gray hair, and shaved but twice
+a week. He never wore gloves, and generally kept his hands stuffed into
+his empty trousers' pockets; the soiled pocket-holes, almost always
+torn, added a final touch to the slovenliness of his person.
+
+Any one who knows the Palais de Justice at Paris, where every variety
+of black attire may be studied, can easily imagine the appearance of M.
+Popinot. The habit of sitting for days at a time modifies the structure
+of the body, just as the fatigue of hearing interminable pleadings tells
+on the expression of a magistrate's face. Shut up as he is in courts
+ridiculously small, devoid of architectural dignity, and where the air
+is quickly vitiated, a Paris judge inevitably acquires a countenance
+puckered and seamed by reflection, and depressed by weariness; his
+complexion turns pallid, acquiring an earthy or greenish hue according
+to his individual temperament. In short, within a given time the most
+blooming young man is turned into an "inasmuch" machine--an instrument
+which applies the Code to individual cases with the indifference of
+clockwork.
+
+Hence, nature, having bestowed on M. Popinot a not too pleasing
+exterior, his life as a lawyer had not improved it. His frame was
+graceless and angular. His thick knees, huge feet, and broad hands
+formed a contrast with a priest-like face having a vague resemblance
+to a calf's head, meek to unmeaningness, and but little brightened by
+divergent bloodless eyes, divided by a straight flat nose, surmounted
+by a flat forehead, flanked by enormous ears, flabby and graceless. His
+thin, weak hair showed the baldness through various irregular partings.
+
+One feature only commended this face to the physiognomist. This man
+had a mouth to whose lips divine kindness lent its sweetness. They were
+wholesome, full, red lips, finely wrinkled, sinuous, mobile, by which
+nature had given expression to noble feelings; lips which spoke to the
+heart and proclaimed the man's intelligence and lucidity, a gift of
+second-sight, and a heavenly temper; and you would have judged him
+wrongly from looking merely at his sloping forehead, his fireless eyes,
+and his shambling gait. His life answered to his countenance; it was
+full of secret labor, and hid the virtue of a saint. His superior
+knowledge of law proved so strong a recommendation at a time when
+Napoleon was reorganizing it in 1808 and 1811, that, by the advice of
+Cambaceres, he was one of the first men named to sit on the Imperial
+High Court of Justice at Paris. Popinot was no schemer. Whenever any
+demand was made, any request preferred for an appointment, the Minister
+would overlook Popinot, who never set foot in the house of the High
+Chancellor or the Chief Justice. From the High Court he was sent down to
+the Common Court, and pushed to the lowest rung of the ladder by active
+struggling men. There he was appointed supernumerary judge. There was
+a general outcry among the lawyers: "Popinot a supernumerary!" Such
+injustice struck the legal world with dismay--the attorneys, the
+registrars, everybody but Popinot himself, who made no complaint. The
+first clamor over, everybody was satisfied that all was for the best
+in the best of all possible worlds, which must certainly be the legal
+world. Popinot remained supernumerary judge till the day when the most
+famous Great Seal under the Restoration avenged the oversights heaped on
+this modest and uncomplaining man by the Chief Justices of the Empire.
+After being a supernumerary for twelve years, M. Popinot would no doubt
+die a puisne judge of the Court of the Seine.
+
+To account for the obscure fortunes of one of the superior men of the
+legal profession, it is necessary to enter here into some details which
+will serve to reveal his life and character, and which will, at the same
+time, display some of the wheels of the great machine known as Justice.
+M. Popinot was classed by the three Presidents who successively
+controlled the Court of the Seine under the category of possible judges,
+the stuff of which judges are made. Thus classified, he did not achieve
+the reputation for capacity which his previous labors had deserved.
+Just as a painter is invariably included in a category as a landscape
+painter, a portrait painter, a painter of history, of sea pieces, or of
+genre, by a public consisting of artists, connoisseurs, and simpletons,
+who, out of envy, or critical omnipotence, or prejudice, fence in his
+intellect, assuming, one and all, that there are ganglions in every
+brain--a narrow judgment which the world applies to writers, to
+statesmen, to everybody who begins with some specialty before being
+hailed as omniscient; so Popinot's fate was sealed, and he was hedged
+round to do a particular kind of work. Magistrates, attorneys, pleaders,
+all who pasture on the legal common, distinguish two elements in
+every case--law and equity. Equity is the outcome of facts, law is the
+application of principles to facts. A man may be right in equity but
+wrong in law, without any blame to the judge. Between his conscience and
+the facts there is a whole gulf of determining reasons unknown to the
+judge, but which condemn or legitimatize the act. A judge is not God;
+the duty is to adapt facts to principles, to judge cases of infinite
+variety while measuring them by a fixed standard.
+
+France employs about six thousand judges; no generation has six thousand
+great men at her command, much less can she find them in the legal
+profession. Popinot, in the midst of the civilization of Paris, was just
+a very clever cadi, who, by the character of his mind, and by dint of
+rubbing the letter of the law into the essence of facts, had learned to
+see the error of spontaneous and violent decisions. By the help of his
+judicial second-sight he could pierce the double casing of lies in
+which advocates hide the heart of a trial. He was a judge, as the great
+Desplein was a surgeon; he probed men's consciences as the anatomist
+probed their bodies. His life and habits had led him to an exact
+appreciation of their most secret thoughts by a thorough study of facts.
+
+He sifted a case as Cuvier sifted the earth's crust. Like that great
+thinker, he proceeded from deduction to deduction before drawing his
+conclusions, and reconstructed the past career of a conscience as Cuvier
+reconstructed an Anoplotherium. When considering a brief he would often
+wake in the night, startled by a gleam of truth suddenly sparkling
+in his brain. Struck by the deep injustice, which is the end of these
+contests, in which everything is against the honest man, everything
+to the advantage of the rogue, he often summed up in favor of equity
+against law in such cases as bore on questions of what may be termed
+divination. Hence he was regarded by his colleagues as a man not of
+a practical mind; his arguments on two lines of deduction made their
+deliberations lengthy. When Popinot observed their dislike to listening
+to him he gave his opinion briefly; it was said that he was not a good
+judge in this class of cases; but as his gift of discrimination was
+remarkable, his opinion lucid, and his penetration profound, he was
+considered to have a special aptitude for the laborious duties of an
+examining judge. So an examining judge he remained during the greater
+part of his legal career.
+
+Although his qualifications made him eminently fitted for its difficult
+functions, and he had the reputation of being so learned in criminal
+law that his duty was a pleasure to him, the kindness of his heart
+constantly kept him in torture, and he was nipped as in a vise between
+his conscience and his pity. The services of an examining judge are
+better paid than those of a judge in civil actions, but they do not
+therefore prove a temptation; they are too onerous. Popinot, a man of
+modest and virtuous learning, without ambition, an indefatigable
+worker, never complained of his fate; he sacrificed his tastes and
+his compassionate soul to the public good, and allowed himself to be
+transported to the noisome pools of criminal examinations, where he
+showed himself alike severe and beneficent. His clerk sometimes would
+give the accused some money to buy tobacco, or a warm winter garment,
+as he led him back from the judge's office to the Souriciere, the
+mouse-trap--the House of Detention where the accused are kept under the
+orders of the Examining Judge. He knew how to be an inflexible judge
+and a charitable man. And no one extracted a confession so easily as
+he without having recourse to judicial trickery. He had, too, all the
+acumen of an observer. This man, apparently so foolishly good-natured,
+simple, and absent-minded, could guess all the cunning of a prison
+wag, unmask the astutest street huzzy, and subdue a scoundrel. Unusual
+circumstances had sharpened his perspicacity; but to relate these we
+must intrude on his domestic history, for in him the judge was the
+social side of the man; another man, greater and less known, existed
+within.
+
+Twelve years before the beginning of this story, in 1816, during the
+terrible scarcity which coincided disastrously with the stay in
+France of the so-called Allies, Popinot was appointed President of the
+Commission Extraordinary formed to distribute food to the poor of his
+neighborhood, just when he had planned to move from the Rue du Fouarre,
+which he as little liked to live in as his wife did. The great lawyer,
+the clear-sighted criminal judge, whose superiority seemed to his
+colleagues a form of aberration, had for five years been watching legal
+results without seeing their causes. As he scrambled up into the lofts,
+as he saw the poverty, as he studied the desperate necessities which
+gradually bring the poor to criminal acts, as he estimated their long
+struggles, compassion filled his soul. The judge then became the Saint
+Vincent de Paul of these grown-up children, these suffering toilers.
+The transformation was not immediately complete. Beneficence has its
+temptations as vice has. Charity consumes a saint's purse, as roulette
+consumes the possessions of a gambler, quite gradually. Popinot went
+from misery to misery, from charity to charity; then, by the time he had
+lifted all the rags which cover public pauperism, like a bandage under
+which an inflamed wound lies festering, at the end of a year he had
+become the Providence incarnate of that quarter of the town. He was
+a member of the Benevolent Committee and of the Charity Organization.
+Wherever any gratuitous services were needed he was ready, and did
+everything without fuss, like the man with the short cloak, who spends
+his life in carrying soup round the markets and other places where there
+are starving folks.
+
+Popinot was fortunate in acting on a larger circle and in a higher
+sphere; he had an eye on everything, he prevented crime, he gave work to
+the unemployed, he found a refuge for the helpless, he distributed
+aid with discernment wherever danger threatened, he made himself the
+counselor of the widow, the protector of homeless children, the sleeping
+partner of small traders. No one at the Courts, no one in Paris, knew of
+this secret life of Popinot's. There are virtues so splendid that they
+necessitate obscurity; men make haste to hide them under a bushel. As to
+those whom the lawyer succored, they, hard at work all day and tired
+at night, were little able to sing his praises; theirs was the
+gracelessness of children, who can never pay because they owe too much.
+There is such compulsory ingratitude; but what heart that has sown good
+to reap gratitude can think itself great?
+
+By the end of the second year of his apostolic work, Popinot had turned
+the storeroom at the bottom of his house into a parlor, lighted by the
+three iron-barred windows. The walls and ceiling of this spacious room
+were whitewashed, and the furniture consisted of wooden benches like
+those seen in schools, a clumsy cupboard, a walnut-wood writing-table,
+and an armchair. In the cupboard were his registers of donations, his
+tickets for orders for bread, and his diary. He kept his ledger like a
+tradesman, that he might not be ruined by kindness. All the sorrows of
+the neighborhood were entered and numbered in a book, where each had its
+little account, as merchants' customers have theirs. When there was any
+question as to a man or a family needing help, the lawyer could always
+command information from the police.
+
+Lavienne, a man made for his master, was his aide-de-camp. He redeemed
+or renewed pawn-tickets, and visited the districts most threatened with
+famine, while his master was in court.
+
+From four till seven in the morning in summer, from six till nine
+in winter, this room was full of women, children, and paupers, while
+Popinot gave audience. There was no need for a stove in winter; the
+crowd was so dense that the air was warmed; only, Lavienne strewed straw
+on the wet floor. By long use the benches were as polished as varnished
+mahogany; at the height of a man's shoulders the wall had a coat of
+dark, indescribable color, given to it by the rags and tattered clothes
+of these poor creatures. The poor wretches loved Popinot so well that
+when they assembled before his door was opened, before daybreak on a
+winter's morning, the women warming themselves with their foot-brasiers,
+the men swinging their arms for circulation, never a sound had disturbed
+his sleep. Rag-pickers and other toilers of the night knew the house,
+and often saw a light burning in the lawyer's private room at unholy
+hours. Even thieves, as they passed by, said, "That is his house," and
+respected it. The morning he gave to the poor, the mid-day hours to
+criminals, the evening to law work.
+
+Thus the gift of observation that characterized Popinot was necessarily
+bifrons; he could guess the virtues of a pauper--good feelings nipped,
+fine actions in embryo, unrecognized self-sacrifice, just as he could
+read at the bottom of a man's conscience the faintest outlines of a
+crime, the slenderest threads of wrongdoing, and infer all the rest.
+
+Popinot's inherited fortune was a thousand crowns a year. His wife,
+sister to M. Bianchon _Senior_, a doctor at Sancerre, had brought him
+about twice as much. She, dying five years since, had left her fortune
+to her husband. As the salary of a supernumerary judge is not large,
+and Popinot had been a fully salaried judge only for four years, we may
+guess his reasons for parsimony in all that concerned his person and
+mode of life, when we consider how small his means were and how great
+his beneficence. Besides, is not such indifference to dress as stamped
+Popinot an absent-minded man, a distinguishing mark of scientific
+attainment, of art passionately pursued, of a perpetually active mind?
+To complete this portrait, it will be enough to add that Popinot was one
+of the few judges of the Court of the Seine on whom the ribbon of the
+Legion of Honor had not been conferred.
+
+Such was the man who had been instructed by the President of the
+Second Chamber of the Court--to which Popinot had belonged since his
+reinstatement among the judges in civil law--to examine the Marquis
+d'Espard at the request of his wife, who sued for a Commission in
+Lunacy.
+
+The Rue du Fouarre, where so many unhappy wretches swarmed in the early
+morning, would be deserted by nine o'clock, and as gloomy and squalid as
+ever. Bianchon put his horse to a trot in order to find his uncle in the
+midst of his business. It was not without a smile that he thought of the
+curious contrast the judge's appearance would make in Madame d'Espard's
+room; but he promised himself that he would persuade him to dress in a
+way that should not be too ridiculous.
+
+"If only my uncle happens to have a new coat!" said Bianchon to himself,
+as he turned into the Rue du Fouarre, where a pale light shone from
+the parlor windows. "I shall do well, I believe, to talk that over with
+Lavienne."
+
+At the sound of wheels half a score of startled paupers came out from
+under the gateway, and took off their hats on recognizing Bianchon; for
+the doctor, who treated gratuitously the sick recommended to him by the
+lawyer, was not less well known than he to the poor creatures assembled
+there.
+
+Bianchon found his uncle in the middle of the parlor, where the benches
+were occupied by patients presenting such grotesque singularities of
+costume as would have made the least artistic passer-by turn round
+to gaze at them. A draughtsman--a Rembrandt, if there were one in our
+day--might have conceived of one of his finest compositions from seeing
+these children of misery, in artless attitudes, and all silent.
+
+Here was the rugged countenance of an old man with a white beard and
+an apostolic head--a Saint Peter ready to hand; his chest, partly
+uncovered, showed salient muscles, the evidence of an iron constitution
+which had served him as a fulcrum to resist a whole poem of sorrows.
+There a young woman was suckling her youngest-born to keep it from
+crying, while another of about five stood between her knees. Her white
+bosom, gleaming amid rags, the baby with its transparent flesh-tints,
+and the brother, whose attitude promised a street arab in the future,
+touched the fancy with pathos by its almost graceful contrast with the
+long row of faces crimson with cold, in the midst of which sat this
+family group. Further away, an old woman, pale and rigid, had the
+repulsive look of rebellious pauperism, eager to avenge all its past
+woes in one day of violence.
+
+There, again, was the young workman, weakly and indolent, whose brightly
+intelligent eye revealed fine faculties crushed by necessity struggled
+with in vain, saying nothing of his sufferings, and nearly dead for lack
+of an opportunity to squeeze between the bars of the vast stews where
+the wretched swim round and round and devour each other.
+
+The majority were women; their husbands, gone to their work, left it
+to them, no doubt, to plead the cause of the family with the ingenuity
+which characterizes the woman of the people, who is almost always queen
+in her hovel. You would have seen a torn bandana on every head, on every
+form a skirt deep in mud, ragged kerchiefs, worn and dirty jackets, but
+eyes that burnt like live coals. It was a horrible assemblage, raising
+at first sight a feeling of disgust, but giving a certain sense of
+terror the instant you perceived that the resignation of these souls,
+all engaged in the struggle for every necessary of life, was purely
+fortuitous, a speculation on benevolence. The two tallow candles which
+lighted the parlor flickered in a sort of fog caused by the fetid
+atmosphere of the ill-ventilated room.
+
+The magistrate himself was not the least picturesque figure in the midst
+of this assembly. He had on his head a rusty cotton night-cap; as he had
+no cravat, his neck was visible, red with cold and wrinkled, in contrast
+with the threadbare collar of his old dressing-gown. His worn face had
+the half-stupid look that comes of absorbed attention. His lips, like
+those of all men who work, were puckered up like a bag with the strings
+drawn tight. His knitted brows seemed to bear the burden of all the
+sorrows confided to him: he felt, analyzed, and judged them all. As
+watchful as a Jew money-lender, he never raised his eyes from his books
+and registers but to look into the very heart of the persons he was
+examining, with the flashing glance by which a miser expresses his
+alarm.
+
+Lavienne, standing behind his master, ready to carry out his orders,
+served no doubt as a sort of police, and welcomed newcomers by
+encouraging them to get over their shyness. When the doctor appeared
+there was a stir on the benches. Lavienne turned his head, and was
+strangely surprised to see Bianchon.
+
+"Ah! It is you, old boy!" exclaimed Popinot, stretching himself. "What
+brings you so early?"
+
+"I was afraid lest you should make an official visit about which I wish
+to speak to you before I could see you."
+
+"Well," said the lawyer, addressing a stout little woman who was still
+standing close to him, "if you do not tell me what it is you want, I
+cannot guess it, child."
+
+"Make haste," said Lavienne. "Do not waste other people's time."
+
+"Monsieur," said the woman at last, turning red, and speaking so low as
+only to be heard by Popinot and Lavienne, "I have a green-grocery truck,
+and I have my last baby to nurse, and I owe for his keep. Well, I had
+hidden my little bit of money----"
+
+"Yes; and your man took it?" said Popinot, guessing the sequel.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+"La Pomponne."
+
+"And your husband's?"
+
+"Toupinet."
+
+"Rue du Petit-Banquier?" said Popinot, turning over his register. "He
+is in prison," he added, reading a note at the margin of the section in
+which this family was described.
+
+"For debt, my kind monsieur."
+
+Popinot shook his head.
+
+"But I have nothing to buy any stock for my truck; the landlord came
+yesterday and made me pay up; otherwise I should have been turned out."
+
+Lavienne bent over his master, and whispered in his ear.
+
+"Well, how much do you want to buy fruit in the market?"
+
+"Why, my good monsieur, to carry on my business, I should want--Yes, I
+should certainly want ten francs."
+
+Popinot signed to Lavienne, who took ten francs out of a large bag, and
+handed them to the woman, while the lawyer made a note of the loan in
+his ledger. As he saw the thrill of delight that made the poor hawker
+tremble, Bianchon understood the apprehensions that must have agitated
+her on her way to the lawyer's house.
+
+"You next," said Lavienne to the old man with the white beard.
+
+Bianchon drew the servant aside, and asked him how long this audience
+would last.
+
+"Monsieur has had two hundred persons this morning, and there are eight
+to be turned off," said Lavienne. "You will have time to pay your early
+visit, sir."
+
+"Here, my boy," said the lawyer, turning round and taking Horace by the
+arm; "here are two addresses near this--one in the Rue de Seine, and the
+other in the Rue de l'Arbalete. Go there at once. Rue de Seine, a young
+girl has just asphyxiated herself; and Rue de l'Arbalete, you will find
+a man to remove to your hospital. I will wait breakfast for you."
+
+Bianchon returned an hour later. The Rue du Fouarre was deserted; day
+was beginning to dawn there; his uncle had gone up to his rooms; the
+last poor wretch whose misery the judge had relieved was departing, and
+Lavienne's money bag was empty.
+
+"Well, how are they going on?" asked the old lawyer, as the doctor came
+in.
+
+"The man is dead," replied Bianchon; "the girl will get over it."
+
+Since the eye and hand of a woman had been lacking, the flat in which
+Popinot lived had assumed an aspect in harmony with its master's. The
+indifference of a man who is absorbed in one dominant idea had set its
+stamp of eccentricity on everything. Everywhere lay unconquerable
+dust, every object was adapted to a wrong purpose with a pertinacity
+suggestive of a bachelor's home. There were papers in the flower vases,
+empty ink-bottles on the tables, plates that had been forgotten, matches
+used as tapers for a minute when something had to be found, drawers or
+boxes half-turned out and left unfinished; in short, all the confusion
+and vacancies resulting from plans for order never carried out. The
+lawyer's private room, especially disordered by this incessant rummage,
+bore witness to his unresting pace, the hurry of a man overwhelmed with
+business, hunted by contradictory necessities. The bookcase looked as
+if it had been sacked; there were books scattered over everything,
+some piled up open, one on another, others on the floor face downwards;
+registers of proceedings laid on the floor in rows, lengthwise, in front
+of the shelves; and that floor had not been polished for two years.
+
+The tables and shelves were covered with ex votos, the offerings of
+the grateful poor. On a pair of blue glass jars which ornamented the
+chimney-shelf there were two glass balls, of which the core was made up
+of many-colored fragments, giving them the appearance of some singular
+natural product. Against the wall hung frames of artificial flowers, and
+decorations in which Popinot's initials were surrounded by hearts and
+everlasting flowers. Here were boxes of elaborate and useless cabinet
+work; there letter-weights carved in the style of work done by
+convicts in penal servitude. These masterpieces of patience, enigmas of
+gratitude, and withered bouquets gave the lawyer's room the appearance
+of a toyshop. The good man used these works of art as hiding-places
+which he filled with bills, worn-out pens, and scraps of paper. All
+these pathetic witnesses to his divine charity were thick with dust,
+dingy, and faded.
+
+Some birds, beautifully stuffed, but eaten by moth, perched in this
+wilderness of trumpery, presided over by an Angora cat, Madame Popinot's
+pet, restored to her no doubt with all the graces of life by some
+impecunious naturalist, who thus repaid a gift of charity with a
+perennial treasure. Some local artist whose heart had misguided his
+brush had painted portraits of M. and Madame Popinot. Even in the
+bedroom there were embroidered pin-cushions, landscapes in cross-stitch,
+and crosses in folded paper, so elaborately cockled as to show the
+senseless labor they had cost.
+
+The window-curtains were black with smoke, and the hangings absolutely
+colorless. Between the fireplace and the large square table at which the
+magistrate worked, the cook had set two cups of coffee on a small table,
+and two armchairs, in mahogany and horsehair, awaited the uncle and
+nephew. As daylight, darkened by the windows, could not penetrate to
+this corner, the cook had left two dips burning, whose unsnuffed wicks
+showed a sort of mushroom growth, giving the red light which promises
+length of life to the candle from slowness of combustion--a discovery
+due to some miser.
+
+"My dear uncle, you ought to wrap yourself more warmly when you go down
+to that parlor."
+
+"I cannot bear to keep them waiting, poor souls!--Well, and what do you
+want of me?"
+
+"I have come to ask you to dine to-morrow with the Marquise d'Espard."
+
+"A relation of ours?" asked Popinot, with such genuine absence of mind
+that Bianchon laughed.
+
+"No, uncle; the Marquise d'Espard is a high and puissant lady, who has
+laid before the Courts a petition desiring that a Commission in Lunacy
+should sit on her husband, and you are appointed----"
+
+"And you want me to dine with her! Are you mad?" said the lawyer, taking
+up the code of proceedings. "Here, only read this article, prohibiting
+any magistrate's eating or drinking in the house of either of two
+parties whom he is called upon to decide between. Let her come and see
+me, your Marquise, if she has anything to say to me. I was, in fact,
+to go to examine her husband to-morrow, after working the case up
+to-night."
+
+He rose, took up a packet of papers that lay under a weight where he
+could see it, and after reading the title, he said:
+
+"Here is the affidavit. Since you take an interest in this high and
+puissant lady, let us see what she wants."
+
+Popinot wrapped his dressing-gown across his body, from which it was
+constantly slipping and leaving his chest bare; he sopped his bread in
+the half-cold coffee, and opened the petition, which he read, allowing
+himself to throw in a parenthesis now and then, and some discussions, in
+which his nephew took part:--
+
+"'To Monsieur the President of the Civil Tribunal of the Lower Court of
+the Department of the Seine, sitting at the Palais de Justice.
+
+"'Madame Jeanne Clementine Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, wife of
+M. Charles Maurice Marie Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis
+d'Espard'--a very good family--'landowner, the said Mme. d'Espard living
+in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, No. 104, and the said M. d'Espard
+in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, No. 22,'--to be sure, the
+President told me he lived in this part of the town--'having for her
+solicitor Maitre Desroches'--Desroches! a pettifogging jobber, a man
+looked down upon by his brother lawyers, and who does his clients no
+good--"
+
+"Poor fellow!" said Bianchon, "unluckily he has no money, and he rushes
+round like the devil in holy water--That is all."
+
+"'Has the honor to submit to you, Monsieur the President, that for a
+year past the moral and intellectual powers of her husband, M. d'Espard,
+have undergone so serious a change, that at the present day they have
+reached the state of dementia and idiocy provided for by Article 448 of
+the Civil Code, and require the application of the remedies set forth
+by that article, for the security of his fortune and his person, and to
+guard the interest of his children whom he keeps to live with him.
+
+"'That, in point of fact, the mental condition of M. d'Espard, which
+for some years has given grounds for alarm based on the system he has
+pursued in the management of his affairs, has reached, during the last
+twelvemonth, a deplorable depth of depression; that his infirm will was
+the first thing to show the results of the malady; and that its effete
+state leaves M. the Marquis d'Espard exposed to all the perils of his
+incompetency, as is proved by the following facts:
+
+"'For a long time all the income accruing from M. d'Espard's estates are
+paid, without any reasonable cause, or even temporary advantage,
+into the hands of an old woman, whose repulsive ugliness is generally
+remarked on, named Madame Jeanrenaud, living sometimes in Paris, Rue
+de la Vrilliere, No. 8, sometimes at Villeparisis, near Claye, in the
+Department of Seine et Marne, and for the benefit of her son, aged
+thirty-six, an officer in the ex-Imperial Guards, whom the Marquis
+d'Espard has placed by his influence in the King's Guards, as Major in
+the First Regiment of Cuirassiers. These two persons, who in 1814
+were in extreme poverty, have since then purchased house-property of
+considerable value; among other items, quite recently, a large house
+in the Grand Rue Verte, where the said Jeanrenaud is laying out
+considerable sums in order to settle there with the woman Jeanrenaud,
+intending to marry: these sums amount already to more than a hundred
+thousand francs. The marriage has been arranged by the intervention of
+M. d'Espard with his banker, one Mongenod, whose niece he has asked
+in marriage for the said Jeanrenaud, promising to use his influence
+to procure him the title and dignity of baron. This has in fact been
+secured by His Majesty's letters patent, dated December 29th of last
+year, at the request of the Marquis d'Espard, as can be proved by His
+Excellency the Keeper of the Seals, if the Court should think proper to
+require his testimony.
+
+"'That no reason, not even such as morality and the law would concur in
+disapproving, can justify the influence which the said Mme. Jeanrenaud
+exerts over M. d'Espard, who, indeed, sees her very seldom; nor account
+for his strange affection for the said Baron Jeanrenaud, Major with whom
+he has but little intercourse. And yet their power is so considerable,
+that whenever they need money, if only to gratify a mere whim, this
+lady, or her son----' Heh, heh! _No reason even such as morality and the
+law concur in disapproving!_ What does the clerk or the attorney mean to
+insinuate?" said Popinot.
+
+Bianchon laughed.
+
+"'This lady, or her son, obtain whatever they ask of the Marquis
+d'Espard without demur; and if he has not ready money, M. d'Espard draws
+bills to be paid by the said Mongenod, who has offered to give evidence
+to that effect for the petitioner.
+
+"'That, moreover, in further proof of these facts, lately, on the
+occasion of the renewal of the leases on the Espard estate, the farmers
+having paid a considerable premium for the renewal of their leases on
+the old terms, M. Jeanrenaud at once secured the payment of it into his
+own hands.
+
+"'That the Marquis d'Espard parts with these sums of money so little of
+his own free-will, that when he was spoken to on the subject he seemed
+to remember nothing of the matter; that whenever anybody of any weight
+has questioned him as to his devotion to these two persons, his replies
+have shown so complete an absence of ideas and of sense of his own
+interests, that there obviously must be some occult cause at work to
+which the petitioner begs to direct the eye of justice, inasmuch as it
+is impossible but that this cause should be criminal, malignant, and
+wrongful, or else of a nature to come under medical jurisdiction;
+unless this influence is of the kind which constitutes an abuse of moral
+power--such as can only be described by the word _possession_----'The
+devil!" exclaimed Popinot. "What do you say to that, doctor. These are
+strange statements."
+
+"They might certainly," said Bianchon, "be an effect of magnetic force."
+
+"Then do you believe in Mesmer's nonsense, and his tub, and seeing
+through walls?"
+
+"Yes, uncle," said the doctor gravely. "As I heard you read that
+petition I thought of that. I assure you that I have verified, in
+another sphere of action, several analogous facts proving the unlimited
+influence one man may acquire over another. In contradiction to the
+opinion of my brethren, I am perfectly convinced of the power of the
+will regarded as a motor force. All collusion and charlatanism apart,
+I have seen the results of such a possession. Actions promised during
+sleep by a magnetized patient to the magnetizer have been scrupulously
+performed on waking. The will of one had become the will of the other."
+
+"Every kind of action?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Even a criminal act?"
+
+"Even a crime."
+
+"If it were not from you, I would not listen to such a thing."
+
+"I will make you witness it," said Bianchon.
+
+"Hm, hm," muttered the lawyer. "But supposing that this so-called
+possession fell under this class of facts, it would be difficult to
+prove it as legal evidence."
+
+"If this woman Jeanrenaud is so hideously old and ugly, I do not see
+what other means of fascination she can have used," observed Bianchon.
+
+"But," observed the lawyer, "in 1814, the time at which this fascination
+is supposed to have taken place, this woman was fourteen years younger;
+if she had been connected with M. d'Espard ten years before that, these
+calculations take us back four-and-twenty years, to a time when the lady
+may have been young and pretty, and have won for herself and her son a
+power over M. d'Espard which some men do not know how to evade. Though
+the source of this power is reprehensible in the sight of justice, it
+is justifiable in the eye of nature. Madame Jeanrenaud may have been
+aggrieved by the marriage, contracted probably at about that time,
+between the Marquis d'Espard and Mademoiselle de Blamont-Chauvry, and at
+the bottom of all this there may be nothing more than the rivalry of
+two women, since the Marquis had for a long time lived apart from Mme.
+d'Espard."
+
+"But her repulsive ugliness, uncle?"
+
+"Power of fascination is in direct proportion to ugliness," said the
+lawyer; "that is the old story. And then think of the smallpox, doctor.
+But to proceed.
+
+"'That so long ago as in 1815, in order to supply the sums of money
+required by these two persons, the Marquis d'Espard went with his two
+children to live in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, in
+rooms quite unworthy of his name and rank'--well, we may live as
+we please--'that he keeps his two children there, the Comte Clement
+d'Espard and Vicomte Camille d'Espard, in a style of living quite
+unsuited to their future prospects, their name and fortune; that he
+often wants money, to such a point, that not long since the landlord,
+one Mariast, put in an execution on the furniture in the rooms; that
+when this execution was carried out in his presence, the Marquis
+d'Espard helped the bailiff, whom he treated like a man of rank, paying
+him all the marks of attention and respect which he would have shown to
+a person of superior birth and dignity to himself.'"
+
+The uncle and nephew glanced at each other and laughed.
+
+"'That, moreover, every act of his life, besides the facts with
+reference to the widow Jeanrenaud and the Baron Jeanrenaud, her son, are
+those of a madman; that for nearly ten years he has given his thoughts
+exclusively to China, its customs, manners, and history; that he refers
+everything to a Chinese origin; that when he is questioned on the
+subject, he confuses the events of the day and the business of
+yesterday with facts relating to China; that he censures the acts of
+the Government and the conduct of the King, though he is personally much
+attached to him, by comparing them with the politics of China;
+
+"'That this monomania has driven the Marquis d'Espard to conduct devoid
+of all sense: against the customs of men of rank, and, in opposition to
+his own professed ideas as to the duties of the nobility, he has joined
+a commercial undertaking, for which he constantly draws bills which, as
+they fall due, threaten both his honor and his fortune, since they
+stamp him as a trader, and in default of payment may lead to his being
+declared insolvent; that these debts, which are owing to stationers,
+printers, lithographers, and print-colorists, who have supplied the
+materials for his publication, called A Picturesque History of China,
+now coming out in parts, are so heavy that these tradesmen have
+requested the petitioner to apply for a Commission in Lunacy with regard
+to the Marquis d'Espard in order to save their own credit.'"
+
+"The man is mad!" exclaimed Bianchon.
+
+"You think so, do you?" said his uncle. "If you listen to only one bell,
+you hear only one sound."
+
+"But it seems to me----" said Bianchon.
+
+"But it seems to me," said Popinot, "that if any relation of mine wanted
+to get hold of the management of my affairs, and if, instead of being a
+humble lawyer, whose colleagues can, any day, verify what his condition
+is, I were a duke of the realm, an attorney with a little cunning, like
+Desroches, might bring just such a petition against me.
+
+"'That his children's education has been neglected for this monomania;
+and that he has taught them, against all the rules of education, the
+facts of Chinese history, which contradict the tenets of the Catholic
+Church. He also has them taught the Chinese dialects.'"
+
+"Here Desroches strikes me as funny," said Bianchon.
+
+"The petition is drawn up by his head-clerk Godeschal, who, as you know,
+is not strong in Chinese," said the lawyer.
+
+"'That he often leaves his children destitute of the most necessary
+things; that the petitioner, notwithstanding her entreaties, can never
+see them; that the said Marquis d'Espard brings them to her only once a
+year; that, knowing the privations to which they are exposed, she makes
+vain efforts to give them the things most necessary for their
+existence, and which they require----' Oh! Madame la Marquise, this is
+preposterous. By proving too much you prove nothing.--My dear boy," said
+the old man, laying the document on his knee, "where is the mother who
+ever lacked heart and wit and yearning to such a degree as to fall
+below the inspirations suggested by her animal instinct? A mother is as
+cunning to get at her children as a girl can be in the conduct of a love
+intrigue. If your Marquise really wanted to give her children food and
+clothes, the Devil himself would not have hindered her, heh? That is
+rather too big a fable for an old lawyer to swallow!--To proceed.
+
+"'That at the age the said children have now attained it is necessary
+that steps should be taken to preserve them from the evil effects of
+such an education; that they should be provided for as beseems their
+rank, and that they should cease to have before their eyes the sad
+example of their father's conduct;
+
+"'That there are proofs in support of these allegations which the Court
+can easily order to be produced. Many times has M. d'Espard spoken
+of the judge of the Twelfth Arrondissement as a mandarin of the third
+class; he often speaks of the professors of the College Henri IV. as
+"men of letters"'--and that offends them! 'In speaking of the simplest
+things, he says, "They were not done so in China;" in the course of
+the most ordinary conversation he will sometimes allude to Madame
+Jeanrenaud, or sometimes to events which happened in the time of Louis
+XIV., and then sit plunged in the darkest melancholy; sometimes he
+fancies he is in China. Several of his neighbors, among others one Edme
+Becker, medical student, and Jean Baptiste Fremiot, a professor, living
+under the same roof, are of opinion, after frequent intercourse with the
+Marquis d'Espard, that his monomania with regard to everything Chinese
+is the result of a scheme laid by the said Baron Jeanrenaud and the
+widow his mother to bring about the deadening of all the Marquis
+d'Espard's mental faculties, since the only service which Mme.
+Jeanrenaud appears to render M. d'Espard is to procure him everything
+that relates to the Chinese Empire;
+
+"'Finally, that the petitioner is prepared to show to the Court that the
+moneys absorbed by the said Baron and Mme. Jeanrenaud between 1814 and
+1828 amount to not less than one million francs.
+
+"'In confirmation of the facts herein set forth, the petitioner can
+bring the evidence of persons who are in the habit of seeing the Marquis
+d'Espard, whose names and professions are subjoined, many of whom
+have urged her to demand a commission in lunacy to declare M. d'Espard
+incapable of managing his own affairs, as being the only way to preserve
+his fortune from the effects of his maladministration and his children
+from his fatal influence.
+
+"'Taking all this into consideration, M. le President, and the
+affidavits subjoined, the petitioner desires that it may please you,
+inasmuch as the foregoing facts sufficiently prove the insanity and
+incompetency of the Marquis d'Espard herein described with his titles
+and residence, to order that, to the end that he may be declared
+incompetent by law, this petition and the documents in evidence may be
+laid before the King's public prosecutor; and that you will charge one
+of the judges of this Court to make his report to you on any day you may
+be pleased to name, and thereupon to pronounce judgment,' etc.
+
+"And here," said Popinot, "is the President's order instructing
+me!--Well, what does the Marquise d'Espard want with me? I know
+everything. But I shall go to-morrow with my registrar to see M. le
+Marquis, for this does not seem at all clear to me."
+
+"Listen, my dear uncle, I have never asked the least little favor of you
+that had to do with your legal functions; well, now I beg you to show
+Madame d'Espard the kindness which her situation deserves. If she came
+here, you would listen to her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, then, go and listen to her in her own house. Madame d'Espard is
+a sickly, nervous, delicate woman, who would faint in your rat-hole of a
+place. Go in the evening, instead of accepting her dinner, since the law
+forbids your eating or drinking at your client's expense."
+
+"And does not the law forbid you from taking any legacy from your dead?"
+said Popinot, fancying that he saw a touch of irony on his nephew's
+lips.
+
+"Come, uncle, if it were only to enable you to get at the truth of this
+business, grant my request. You will come as the examining judge, since
+matters do not seem to you very clear. Deuce take it! It is as necessary
+to cross-question the Marquise as it is to examine the Marquis."
+
+"You are right," said the lawyer. "It is quite possible that it is she
+who is mad. I will go."
+
+"I will call for you. Write down in your engagement book: 'To-morrow
+evening at nine, Madame d'Espard.'--Good!" said Bianchon, seeing his
+uncle make a note of the engagement.
+
+
+
+Next evening at nine Bianchon mounted his uncle's dusty staircase, and
+found him at work on the statement of some complicated judgment. The
+coat Lavienne had ordered of the tailor had not been sent, so Popinot
+put on his old stained coat, and was the Popinot unadorned whose
+appearance made those laugh who did not know the secrets of his
+private life. Bianchon, however, obtained permission to pull his cravat
+straight, and to button his coat, and he hid the stains by crossing the
+breast of it with the right side over the left, and so displaying the
+new front of the cloth. But in a minute the judge rucked the coat
+up over his chest by the way in which he stuffed his hands into his
+pockets, obeying an irresistible habit. Thus the coat, deeply wrinkled
+both in front and behind, made a sort of hump in the middle of the back,
+leaving a gap between the waistcoat and trousers through which his shirt
+showed. Bianchon, to his sorrow, only discovered this crowning absurdity
+at the moment when his uncle entered the Marquise's room.
+
+A brief sketch of the person and the career of the lady in whose
+presence the doctor and the judge now found themselves is necessary for
+an understanding of her interview with Popinot.
+
+Madame d'Espard had, for the last seven years, been very much the
+fashion in Paris, where Fashion can raise and drop by turns various
+personages who, now great and now small, that is to say, in view or
+forgotten, are at last quite intolerable--as discarded ministers are,
+and every kind of decayed sovereignty. These flatterers of the past,
+odious with their stale pretensions, know everything, speak ill of
+everything, and, like ruined profligates, are friends with all the
+world. Since her husband had separated from her in 1815, Madame d'Espard
+must have married in the beginning of 1812. Her children, therefore,
+were aged respectively fifteen and thirteen. By what luck was the mother
+of a family, about three-and-thirty years of age, still the fashion?
+
+Though Fashion is capricious, and no one can foresee who shall be her
+favorites, though she often exalts a banker's wife, or some woman of
+very doubtful elegance and beauty, it certainly seems supernatural when
+Fashion puts on constitutional airs and gives promotion for age. But
+in this case Fashion had done as the world did, and accepted Madame
+d'Espard as still young.
+
+The Marquise, who was thirty-three by her register of birth, was
+twenty-two in a drawing-room in the evening. But by what care, what
+artifice! Elaborate curls shaded her temples. She condemned herself to
+live in twilight, affecting illness so as to sit under the protecting
+tones of light filtered through muslin. Like Diane de Poitiers, she used
+cold water in her bath, and, like her again, the Marquise slept on a
+horse-hair mattress, with morocco-covered pillows to preserve her hair;
+she ate very little, only drank water, and observed monastic regularity
+in the smallest actions of her life.
+
+This severe system has, it is said, been carried so far as to the use of
+ice instead of water, and nothing but cold food, by a famous Polish lady
+of our day who spends a life, now verging on a century old, after the
+fashion of a town belle. Fated to live as long as Marion Delorme, whom
+history has credited with surviving to be a hundred and thirty, the old
+vice-queen of Poland, at the age of nearly a hundred, has the heart
+and brain of youth, a charming face, an elegant shape; and in her
+conversation, sparkling with brilliancy like faggots in the fire, she
+can compare the men and books of our literature with the men and books
+of the eighteenth century. Living in Warsaw, she orders her caps of
+Herbault in Paris. She is a great lady with the amiability of a mere
+girl; she swims, she runs like a schoolboy, and can sink on to a sofa
+with the grace of a young coquette; she mocks at death, and laughs at
+life. After having astonished the Emperor Alexander, she can still amaze
+the Emperor Nicholas by the splendor of her entertainments. She can
+still bring tears to the eyes of a youthful lover, for her age is
+whatever she pleases, and she has the exquisite self-devotion of a
+grisette. In short, she is herself a fairy tale, unless, indeed, she is
+a fairy.
+
+Had Madame d'Espard known Madame Zayonseck? Did she mean to imitate
+her career? Be that as it may, the Marquise proved the merits of the
+treatment; her complexion was clear, her brow unwrinkled, her figure,
+like that of Henri II.'s lady-love, preserved the litheness, the
+freshness, the covered charms which bring a woman love and keep it
+alive. The simple precautions of this course, suggested by art and
+nature, and perhaps by experience, had met in her with a general system
+which confirmed the results. The Marquise was absolutely indifferent
+to everything that was not herself: men amused her, but no man had
+ever caused her those deep agitations which stir both natures to their
+depths, and wreck one on the other. She knew neither hatred nor love.
+When she was offended, she avenged herself coldly, quietly, at her
+leisure, waiting for the opportunity to gratify the ill-will she
+cherished against anybody who dwelt in her unfavorable remembrance. She
+made no fuss, she did not excite herself, she talked, because she knew
+that by two words a woman may cause the death of three men.
+
+She had parted from M. d'Espard with the greatest satisfaction. Had he
+not taken with him two children who at present were troublesome, and in
+the future would stand in the way of her pretensions? Her most intimate
+friends, as much as her least persistent admirers, seeing about her none
+of Cornelia's jewels, who come and go, and unconsciously betray their
+mother's age, took her for quite a young woman. The two boys, about
+whom she seemed so anxious in her petition, were, like their father, as
+unknown in the world as the northwest passage is unknown to navigators.
+M. d'Espard was supposed to be an eccentric personage who had deserted
+his wife without having the smallest cause for complaint against her.
+
+Mistress of herself at two-and-twenty, and mistress of her fortune of
+twenty-six thousand francs a year, the Marquise hesitated long before
+deciding on a course of action and ordering her life. Though she
+benefited by the expenses her husband had incurred in his house, though
+she had all the furniture, the carriages, the horses, in short, all the
+details of a handsome establishment, she lived a retired life during the
+years 1816, 17, and 18, a time when families were recovering from the
+disasters resulting from political tempests. She belonged to one of the
+most important and illustrious families of the Faubourg Saint-Germain,
+and her parents advised her to live with them as much as possible after
+the separation forced upon her by her husband's inexplicable caprice.
+
+In 1820 the Marquise roused herself from her lethargy; she went to
+Court, appeared at parties, and entertained in her own house. From 1821
+to 1827 she lived in great style, and made herself remarked for her
+taste and her dress; she had a day, an hour, for receiving visits, and
+ere long she had seated herself on the throne, occupied before her by
+Madame la Vicomtesse de Beauseant, the Duchesse de Langeais, and Madame
+Firmiani--who on her marriage with M. de Camps had resigned the sceptre
+in favor of the Duchesse de Maufrigneuse, from whom Madame d'Espard
+snatched it. The world knew nothing beyond this of the private live
+of the Marquise d'Espard. She seemed likely to shine for long on the
+Parisian horizon, like the sun near its setting, but which will never
+set.
+
+The Marquise was on terms of great intimacy with a duchess as famous for
+her beauty as for her attachment to a prince just now in banishment,
+but accustomed to play a leading part in every prospective government.
+Madame d'Espard was also a friend of a foreign lady, with whom a famous
+and very wily Russian diplomate was in the habit of discussing public
+affairs. And then an antiquated countess, who was accustomed to shuffle
+the cards for the great game of politics, had adopted her in a maternal
+fashion. Thus, to any man of high ambitions, Madame d'Espard was
+preparing a covert but very real influence to follow the public and
+frivolous ascendency she now owed to fashion. Her drawing-room
+was acquiring political individuality: "What do they say at Madame
+d'Espard's?" "Are they against the measure in Madame d'Espard's
+drawing-room?" were questions repeated by a sufficient number of
+simpletons to give the flock of the faithful who surrounded her the
+importance of a coterie. A few damaged politicians whose wounds she had
+bound up, and whom she flattered, pronounced her as capable in diplomacy
+as the wife of the Russian ambassador to London. The Marquise had indeed
+several times suggested to deputies or to peers words and ideas that had
+rung through Europe. She had often judged correctly of certain events on
+which her circle of friends dared not express an opinion. The principal
+persons about the Court came in the evening to play whist in her rooms.
+
+Then she also had the qualities of her defects; she was thought to
+be--and she was--indiscreet. Her friendship seemed to be staunch; she
+worked for her proteges with a persistency which showed that she cared
+less for patronage than for increased influence. This conduct was based
+on her dominant passion, Vanity. Conquests and pleasure, which so many
+women love, to her seemed only means to an end; she aimed at living on
+every point of the largest circle that life can describe.
+
+Among the men still young, and to whom the future belonged, who crowded
+her drawing-room on great occasions, were to be seen MM. de Marsay and
+de Ronquerolles, de Montriveau, de la Roche-Hugon, de Serizy, Ferraud,
+Maxime de Trailles, de Listomere, the two Vandenesses, du Chatelet,
+and others. She would frequently receive a man whose wife she would not
+admit, and her power was great enough to induce certain ambitious men to
+submit to these hard conditions, such as two famous royalist bankers, M.
+de Nucingen and Ferdinand du Tillet. She had so thoroughly studied the
+strength and the weakness of Paris life, that her conduct had never
+given any man the smallest advantage over her. An enormous price might
+have been set on a note or letter by which she might have compromised
+herself, without one being produced.
+
+If an arid soul enabled her to play her part to the life, her person was
+no less available for it. She had a youthful figure. Her voice was, at
+will, soft and fresh, or clear and hard. She possessed in the highest
+degree the secret of that aristocratic pose by which a woman wipes out
+the past. The Marquise knew well the art of setting an immense space
+between herself and the sort of man who fancies he may be familiar after
+some chance advances. Her imposing gaze could deny everything. In her
+conversation fine and beautiful sentiments and noble resolutions flowed
+naturally, as it seemed, from a pure heart and soul; but in reality she
+was all self, and quite capable of blasting a man who was clumsy in
+his negotiations, at the very time when she was shamelessly making a
+compromise for the benefit of her own interest.
+
+Rastignac, in trying to fasten on to this woman, had discerned her to
+be the cleverest of tools, but he had not yet used it; far from handling
+it, he was already finding himself crushed by it. This young Condottiere
+of the brain, condemned, like Napoleon, to give battle constantly, while
+knowing that a single defeat would prove the grave of his fortunes, had
+met a dangerous adversary in his protectress. For the first time in his
+turbulent life, he was playing a game with a partner worthy of him. He
+saw a place as Minister in the conquest of Madame d'Espard, so he was
+her tool till he could make her his--a perilous beginning.
+
+The Hotel d'Espard needed a large household, and the Marquise had
+a great number of servants. The grand receptions were held in the
+ground-floor rooms, but she lived on the first floor of the house. The
+perfect order of a fine staircase splendidly decorated, and rooms fitted
+in the dignified style which formerly prevailed at Versailles, spoke of
+an immense fortune. When the judge saw the carriage gates thrown open
+to admit his nephew's cab, he took in with a rapid glance the lodge, the
+porter, the courtyard, the stables, the arrangement of the house,
+the flowers that decorated the stairs, the perfect cleanliness of the
+banisters, walls, and carpets, and counted the footmen in livery who, as
+the bell rang, appeared on the landing. His eyes, which only yesterday
+in his parlor had sounded the dignity of misery under the muddy clothing
+of the poor, now studied with the same penetrating vision the furniture
+and splendor of the rooms he passed through, to pierce the misery of
+grandeur.
+
+"M. Popinot--M. Bianchon."
+
+The two names were pronounced at the door of the boudoir where the
+Marquise was sitting, a pretty room recently refurnished, and looking
+out on the garden behind the house. At the moment Madame d'Espard was
+seated in one of the old rococo armchairs of which Madame had set the
+fashion. Rastignac was at her left hand on a low chair, in which he
+looked settled like an Italian lady's "cousin." A third person was
+standing by the corner of the chimney-piece. As the shrewd doctor had
+suspected, the Marquise was a woman of a parched and wiry constitution.
+But for her regimen her complexion must have taken the ruddy tone
+that is produced by constant heat; but she added to the effect of her
+acquired pallor by the strong colors of the stuffs she hung her rooms
+with, or in which she dressed. Reddish-brown, marone, bistre with a
+golden light in it, suited her to perfection. Her boudoir, copied from
+that of a famous lady then at the height of fashion in London, was in
+tan-colored velvet; but she had added various details of ornament which
+moderated the pompous splendor of this royal hue. Her hair was dressed
+like a girl's in bands ending in curls, which emphasized the rather
+long oval of her face; but an oval face is as majestic as a round one is
+ignoble. The mirrors, cut with facets to lengthen or flatten the face at
+will, amply proved the rule as applied to the physiognomy.
+
+On seeing Popinot, who stood in the doorway craning his neck like a
+startled animal, with his left hand in his pocket, and the right hand
+holding a hat with a greasy lining, the Marquise gave Rastignac a look
+wherein lay a germ of mockery. The good man's rather foolish appearance
+was so completely in harmony with his grotesque figure and scared looks,
+that Rastignac, catching sight of Bianchon's dejected expression of
+humiliation through his uncle, could not help laughing, and turned away.
+The Marquise bowed a greeting, and made a great effort to rise from her
+seat, falling back again, not without grace, with an air of apologizing
+for her incivility by affected weakness.
+
+At this instant the person who was standing between the fireplace and
+the door bowed slightly, and pushed forward two chairs, which he offered
+by a gesture to the doctor and the judge; then, when they had seated
+themselves, he leaned against the wall again, crossing his arms.
+
+A word as to this man. There is living now, in our day, a
+painter--Decamps--who possesses in the very highest degree the art of
+commanding your interest in everything he sets before your eyes, whether
+it be a stone or a man. In this respect his pencil is more skilful than
+his brush. He will sketch an empty room and leave a broom against the
+wall. If he chooses, you shall shudder; you shall believe that this
+broom has just been the instrument of crime, and is dripping with blood;
+it shall be the broom which the widow Bancal used to clean out the room
+where Fualdes was murdered. Yes, the painter will touzle that broom like
+a man in a rage; he will make each hair of it stand on-end as though
+it were on your own bristling scalp; he will make it the interpreter
+between the secret poem of his imagination and the poem that shall have
+its birth in yours. After terrifying you by the aspect of that broom,
+to-morrow he will draw another, and lying by it a cat, asleep, but
+mysterious in its sleep, shall tell you that this broom is that on which
+the wife of a German cobbler rides off to the Sabbath on the Brocken. Or
+it will be a quite harmless broom, on which he will hang the coat of a
+clerk in the Treasury. Decamps had in his brush what Paganini had in his
+bow--a magnetically communicative power.
+
+Well, I should have to transfer to my style that striking genius, that
+marvelous knack of the pencil, to depict the upright, tall, lean man
+dressed in black, with black hair, who stood there without speaking a
+word. This gentleman had a face like a knife-blade, cold and harsh, with
+a color like Seine water when it was muddy and strewn with fragments
+of charcoal from a sunken barge. He looked at the floor, listening and
+passing judgment. His attitude was terrifying. He stood there like
+the dreadful broom to which Decamps has given the power of revealing a
+crime. Now and then, in the course of conversation, the Marquise tried
+to get some tacit advice; but however eager her questioning, he was as
+grave and as rigid as the statue of the Commendatore.
+
+The worthy Popinot, sitting on the edge of his chair in front of the
+fire, his hat between his knees, stared at the gilt chandeliers, the
+clock, and the curiosities with which the chimney-shelf was covered,
+the velvet and trimmings of the curtains, and all the costly and elegant
+nothings that a woman of fashion collects about her. He was roused from
+his homely meditations by Madame d'Espard, who addressed him in a piping
+tone:
+
+"Monsieur, I owe you a million thanks----"
+
+"A million thanks," thought he to himself, "that is too many; it does
+not mean one."
+
+"For the trouble you condescend----"
+
+"Condescend!" thought he; "she is laughing at me."
+
+"To take in coming to see an unhappy client, who is too ill to go
+out----"
+
+Here the lawyer cut the Marquise short by giving her an inquisitorial
+look, examining the sanitary condition of the unhappy client.
+
+"As sound as a bell," said he to himself.
+
+"Madame," said he, assuming a respectful mien, "you owe me nothing.
+Although my visit to you is not in strict accordance with the practice
+of the Court, we ought to spare no pains to discover the truth in cases
+of this kind. Our judgment is then guided less by the letter of the law
+than by the promptings of our conscience. Whether I seek the truth here
+or in my own consulting-room, so long as I find it, all will be well."
+
+While Popinot was speaking, Rastignac was shaking hands with Bianchon;
+the Marquise welcomed the doctor with a little bow full of gracious
+significance.
+
+"Who is that?" asked Bianchon in a whisper of Rastignac, indicating the
+dark man.
+
+"The Chevalier d'Espard, the Marquis' brother."
+
+"Your nephew told me," said the Marquise to Popinot, "how much you are
+occupied, and I know too that you are so good as to wish to conceal your
+kind actions, so as to release those whom you oblige from the burden of
+gratitude. The work in Court is most fatiguing, it would seem. Why have
+they not twice as many judges?"
+
+"Ah, madame, that would not be difficult; we should be none the worse if
+they had. But when that happens, fowls will cut their teeth!"
+
+As he heard this speech, so entirely in character with the lawyer's
+appearance, the Chevalier measured him from head to foot, out of one
+eye, as much as to say, "We shall easily manage him."
+
+The Marquise looked at Rastignac, who bent over her. "That is the
+sort of man," murmured the dandy in her ear, "who is trusted to pass
+judgments on the life and interests of private individuals."
+
+Like most men who have grown old in a business, Popinot readily let
+himself follow the habits he had acquired, more particularly habits of
+mind. His conversation was all of "the shop." He was fond of questioning
+those he talked to, forcing them to unexpected conclusions, making them
+tell more than they wished to reveal. Pozzo di Borgo, it is said, used
+to amuse himself by discovering other folks' secrets, and entangling
+them in his diplomatic snares, and thus, by invincible habit, showed
+how his mind was soaked in wiliness. As soon as Popinot had surveyed
+the ground, so to speak, on which he stood, he saw that it would
+be necessary to have recourse to the cleverest subtleties, the most
+elaborately wrapped up and disguised, which were in use in the Courts,
+to detect the truth.
+
+Bianchon sat cold and stern, as a man who has made up his mind to endure
+torture without revealing his sufferings; but in his heart he wished
+that his uncle could only trample on this woman as we trample on a
+viper--a comparison suggested to him by the Marquise's long dress, by
+the curve of her attitude, her long neck, small head, and undulating
+movements.
+
+"Well, monsieur," said Madame d'Espard, "however great my dislike to be
+or seem selfish, I have been suffering too long not to wish that you may
+settle matters at once. Shall I soon get a favorable decision?"
+
+"Madame, I will do my best to bring matters to a conclusion," said
+Popinot, with an air of frank good-nature. "Are you ignorant of the
+reason which made the separation necessary which now subsists between
+you and the Marquis d'Espard?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur," she replied, evidently prepared with a story to tell.
+"At the beginning of 1816 M. d'Espard, whose temper had completely
+changed within three months or so, proposed that we should go to live
+on one of his estates near Briancon, without any regard for my health,
+which that climate would have destroyed, or for my habits of life; I
+refused to go. My refusal gave rise to such unjustifiable reproaches on
+his part, that from that hour I had my suspicions as to the soundness of
+his mind. On the following day he left me, leaving me his house and
+the free use of my own income, and he went to live in the Rue de la
+Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, taking with him my two children----"
+
+"One moment, madame," said the lawyer, interrupting her. "What was that
+income?"
+
+"Twenty-six thousand francs a year," she replied parenthetically. "I
+at once consulted old M. Bordin as to what I ought to do," she went
+on; "but it seems that there are so many difficulties in the way of
+depriving a father of the care of his children, that I was forced to
+resign myself to remaining alone at the age of twenty-two--an age
+at which many young women do very foolish things. You have read my
+petition, no doubt, monsieur; you know the principal facts on which I
+rely to procure a Commission in Lunacy with regard to M. d'Espard?"
+
+"Have you ever applied to him, madame, to obtain the care of your
+children?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur; but in vain. It is very hard on a mother to be deprived
+of the affection of her children, particularly when they can give her
+such happiness as every woman clings to."
+
+"The elder must be sixteen," said Popinot.
+
+"Fifteen," said the Marquise eagerly.
+
+Here Bianchon and Rastignac looked at each other. Madame d'Espard bit
+her lips.
+
+"What can the age of my children matter to you?"
+
+"Well, madame," said the lawyer, without seeming to attach any
+importance to his words, "a lad of fifteen and his brother, of thirteen,
+I suppose, have legs and their wits about them; they might come to see
+you on the sly. If they do not, it is because they obey their father,
+and to obey him in that matter they must love him very dearly."
+
+"I do not understand," said the Marquise.
+
+"You do not know, perhaps," replied Popinot, "that in your petition
+your attorney represents your children as being very unhappy with their
+father?"
+
+Madame d'Espard replied with charming innocence:
+
+"I do not know what my attorney may have put into my mouth."
+
+"Forgive my inferences," said Popinot, "but Justice weighs everything.
+What I ask you, madame, is suggested by my wish thoroughly to understand
+the matter. By your account M. d'Espard deserted you on the most
+frivolous pretext. Instead of going to Briancon, where he wished to take
+you, he remained in Paris. This point is not clear. Did he know this
+Madame Jeanrenaud before his marriage?"
+
+"No, monsieur," replied the Marquise, with some asperity, visible only
+to Rastignac and the Chevalier d'Espard.
+
+She was offended at being cross-examined by this lawyer when she had
+intended to beguile his judgment; but as Popinot still looked stupid
+from sheer absence of mind, she ended by attributing his interrogatory
+to the Questioning Spirit of Voltaire's bailiff.
+
+"My parents," she went on, "married me at the age of sixteen to M.
+d'Espard, whose name, fortune, and mode of life were such as my family
+looked for in the man who was to be my husband. M. d'Espard was then
+six-and-twenty; he was a gentleman in the English sense of the word;
+his manners pleased me, he seemed to have plenty of ambition, and I like
+ambitious people," she added, looking at Rastignac. "If M. d'Espard
+had never met that Madame Jeanrenaud, his character, his learning, his
+acquirements would have raised him--as his friends then believed--to
+high office in the Government. King Charles X., at that time Monsieur,
+had the greatest esteem for him, and a peer's seat, an appointment at
+Court, some important post certainly would have been his. That woman
+turned his head, and has ruined all the prospects of my family."
+
+"What were M. d'Espard's religious opinions at that time?"
+
+"He was, and is still, a very pious man."
+
+"You do not suppose that Madame Jeanrenaud may have influenced him by
+mysticism?"
+
+"No, monsieur."
+
+"You have a very fine house, madame," said Popinot suddenly, taking his
+hands out of his pockets, and rising to pick up his coat-tails and warm
+himself. "This boudoir is very nice, those chairs are magnificent, the
+whole apartment is sumptuous. You must indeed be most unhappy when,
+seeing yourself here, you know that your children are ill lodged, ill
+clothed, and ill fed. I can imagine nothing more terrible for a mother."
+
+"Yes, indeed. I should be so glad to give the poor little fellows some
+amusement, while their father keeps them at work from morning till night
+at that wretched history of China."
+
+"You give handsome balls; they would enjoy them, but they might acquire
+a taste for dissipation. However, their father might send them to you
+once or twice in the course of the winter."
+
+"He brings them here on my birthday and on New Year's Day. On those days
+M. d'Espard does me the favor of dining here with them."
+
+"It is very singular behaviour," said the judge, with an air of
+conviction. "Have you ever seen this Dame Jeanrenaud?"
+
+"My brother-in-law one day, out of interest in his brother----"
+
+"Ah! monsieur is M. d'Espard's brother?" said the lawyer, interrupting
+her.
+
+The Chevalier bowed, but did not speak.
+
+"M. d'Espard, who has watched this affair, took me to the Oratoire,
+where this woman goes to sermon, for she is a Protestant. I saw her;
+she is not in the least attractive; she looks like a butcher's wife,
+extremely fat, horribly marked with the smallpox; she has feet and hands
+like a man's, she squints, in short, she is monstrous!"
+
+"It is inconceivable," said the judge, looking like the most imbecile
+judge in the whole kingdom. "And this creature lives near here, Rue
+Verte, in a fine house? There are no plain folk left, it would seem?"
+
+"In a mansion on which her son has spent absurd sums."
+
+"Madame," said Popinot, "I live in the Faubourg Saint-Marceau; I know
+nothing of such expenses. What do you call absurd sums?"
+
+"Well," said the Marquise, "a stable with five horses and three
+carriages, a phaeton, a brougham, and a cabriolet."
+
+"That costs a large sum, then?" asked Popinot in surprise.
+
+"Enormous sums!" said Rastignac, intervening. "Such an establishment
+would cost, for the stables, the keeping the carriages in order, and
+the liveries for the men, between fifteen and sixteen thousand francs a
+year."
+
+"Should you think so, madame?" said the judge, looking much astonished.
+
+"Yes, at least," replied the Marquise.
+
+"And the furniture, too, must have cost a lot of money?"
+
+"More than a hundred thousand francs," replied Madame d'Espard, who
+could not help smiling at the lawyer's vulgarity.
+
+"Judges, madame, are apt to be incredulous; it is what they are paid
+for, and I am incredulous. The Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother must have
+fleeced M. d'Espard most preposterously, if what you say is correct.
+There is a stable establishment which, by your account, costs sixteen
+thousand francs a year. Housekeeping, servants' wages, and the gross
+expenses of the house itself must run to twice as much; that makes a
+total of from fifty to sixty thousand francs a year. Do you suppose that
+these people, formerly so extremely poor, can have so large a fortune? A
+million yields scarcely forty thousand a year."
+
+"Monsieur, the mother and son invested the money given them by M.
+d'Espard in the funds when they were at 60 to 80. I should think their
+income must be more than sixty thousand francs. And then the son has
+fine appointments."
+
+"If they spend sixty thousand francs a year," said the judge, "how much
+do you spend?"
+
+"Well," said Madame d'Espard, "about the same." The Chevalier started a
+little, the Marquise colored; Bianchon looked at Rastignac; but Popinot
+preserved an expression of simplicity which quite deceived Madame
+d'Espard. The chevalier took no part in the conversation; he saw that
+all was lost.
+
+"These people, madame, might be indicted before the superior Court,"
+said Popinot.
+
+"That was my opinion," exclaimed the Marquise, enchanted. "If threatened
+with the police, they would have come to terms."
+
+"Madame," said Popinot, "when M. d'Espard left you, did he not give
+you a power of attorney enabling you to manage and control your own
+affairs?"
+
+"I do not understand the object of all these questions," said the
+Marquise with petulance. "It seems to me that if you would only consider
+the state in which I am placed by my husband's insanity, you ought to be
+troubling yourself about him, and not about me."
+
+"We are coming to that, madame," said the judge. "Before placing in
+your hands, or in any others, the control of M. d'Espard's property,
+supposing he were pronounced incapable, the Court must inquire as to how
+you have managed your own. If M. d'Espard gave you the power, he would
+have shown confidence in you, and the Court would recognize the fact.
+Had you any power from him? You might have bought or sold house property
+or invested money in business?"
+
+"No, monsieur, the Blamont-Chauvrys are not in the habit of trading,"
+said she, extremely nettled in her pride as an aristocrat, and
+forgetting the business in hand. "My property is intact, and M. d'Espard
+gave me no power to act."
+
+The Chevalier put his hand over his eyes not to betray the vexation
+he felt at his sister-in-law's short-sightedness, for she was ruining
+herself by her answers. Popinot had gone straight to the mark in spite
+of his apparent doublings.
+
+"Madame," said the lawyer, indicating the Chevalier, "this gentleman, of
+course, is your near connection? May we speak openly before these other
+gentlemen?"
+
+"Speak on," said the Marquise, surprised at this caution.
+
+"Well, madame, granting that you spend only sixty thousand francs
+a year, to any one who sees your stables, your house, your train of
+servants, and a style of housekeeping which strikes me as far more
+luxurious than that of the Jeanrenauds, that sum would seem well laid
+out."
+
+The Marquise bowed an agreement.
+
+"But," continued the judge, "if you have no more than twenty-six
+thousand francs a year, you may have a hundred thousand francs of debt.
+The Court would therefore have a right to imagine that the motives which
+prompt you to ask that your husband may be deprived of the control of
+his property are complicated by self-interest and the need of paying
+your debts--if--you--have--any. The requests addressed to me have
+interested me in your position; consider fully and make your confession.
+If my suppositions have hit the truth, there is yet time to avoid the
+blame which the Court would have a perfect right to express in the
+saving clauses of the verdict if you could not show your attitude to be
+absolutely honorable and clear.
+
+"It is our duty to examine the motives of the applicant as well as
+to listen to the plea of the witness under examination, to ascertain
+whether the petitioner may not have been prompted by passion, by a
+desire for money, which is unfortunately too common----"
+
+The Marquise was on Saint Laurence's gridiron.
+
+"And I must have explanations on this point. Madame, I have no wish to
+call you to account; I only want to know how you have managed to live at
+the rate of sixty thousand francs a year, and that for some years past.
+There are plenty of women who achieve this in their housekeeping, but
+you are not one of those. Tell me, you may have the most legitimate
+resources, a royal pension, or some claim on the indemnities lately
+granted; but even then you must have had your husband's authority to
+receive them."
+
+The Marquise did not speak.
+
+"You must remember," Popinot went on, "that M. d'Espard may wish to
+enter a protest, and his counsel will have a right to find out whether
+you have any creditors. This boudoir is newly furnished, your rooms are
+not now furnished with the things left to you by M. d'Espard in 1816.
+If, as you did me the honor of informing me, furniture is costly for
+the Jeanrenauds, it must be yet more so for you, who are a great
+lady. Though I am a judge, I am but a man; I may be wrong--tell me so.
+Remember the duties imposed on me by the law, and the rigorous inquiries
+it demands, when the case before it is the suspension from all his
+functions of the father of a family in the prime of life. So you will
+pardon me, Madame la Marquise, for laying all these difficulties before
+you; it will be easy for you to give me an explanation.
+
+"When a man is pronounced incapable of the control of his own affairs, a
+trustee has to be appointed. Who will be the trustee?"
+
+"His brother," said the Marquise.
+
+The Chevalier bowed. There was a short silence, very uncomfortable for
+the five persons who were present. The judge, in sport as it were,
+had laid open the woman's sore place. Popinot's countenance of common,
+clumsy good-nature, at which the Marquise, the Chevalier, and Rastignac
+had been inclined to laugh, had gained importance in their eyes. As
+they stole a look at him, they discerned the various expressions of
+that eloquent mouth. The ridiculous mortal was a judge of acumen. His
+studious notice of the boudoir was accounted for: he had started from
+the gilt elephant supporting the chimney-clock, examining all this
+luxury, and had ended by reading this woman's soul.
+
+"If the Marquis d'Espard is mad about China, I see that you are not less
+fond of its products," said Popinot, looking at the porcelain on the
+chimney-piece. "But perhaps it was from M. le Marquis that you had these
+charming Oriental pieces," and he pointed to some precious trifles.
+
+This irony, in very good taste, made Bianchon smile, and petrified
+Rastignac, while the Marquise bit her thin lips.
+
+"Instead of being the protector of a woman placed in a cruel dilemma--an
+alternative between losing her fortune and her children, and being
+regarded as her husband's enemy," she said, "you accuse me, monsieur!
+You suspect my motives! You must own that your conduct is strange!"
+
+"Madame," said the judge eagerly, "the caution exercised by the Court in
+such cases as these might have given you, in any other judge, a perhaps
+less indulgent critic than I am.--And do you suppose that M. d'Espard's
+lawyer will show you any great consideration? Will he not be suspicious
+of motives which may be perfectly pure and disinterested? Your life will
+be at his mercy; he will inquire into it without qualifying his search
+by the respectful deference I have for you."
+
+"I am much obliged to you, monsieur," said the Marquise satirically.
+"Admitting for the moment that I owe thirty thousand or fifty thousand
+francs, in the first place, it would be a mere trifle to the d'Espards
+and the Blamont-Chauvrys. But if my husband is not in the possession
+of his mental faculties, would that prevent his being pronounced
+incapable?"
+
+"No, madame," said Popinot.
+
+"Although you have questioned me with a sort of cunning which I
+should not have suspected in a judge, and under circumstances where
+straightforwardness would have answered your purpose," she went on, "I
+will tell you without subterfuge that my position in the world, and the
+efforts I have to make to keep up my connection, are not in the least
+to my taste. I began my life by a long period of solitude; but my
+children's interest appealed to me; I felt that I must fill their
+father's place. By receiving my friends, by keeping up all this
+connection, by contracting these debts, I have secured their future
+welfare; I have prepared for them a brilliant career where they will
+find help and favor; and to have what has thus been acquired, many a man
+of business, lawyer or banker, would gladly pay all it has cost me."
+
+"I appreciate your devoted conduct, madame," replied Popinot. "It does
+you honor, and I blame you for nothing. A judge belongs to all: he must
+know and weigh every fact."
+
+Madame d'Espard's tact and practice in estimating men made
+her understand that M. Popinot was not to be influenced by any
+consideration. She had counted on an ambitious lawyer, she had found
+a man of conscience. She at once thought of finding other means for
+securing the success of her side.
+
+The servants brought in tea.
+
+"Have you any further explanations to give me, madame?" said Popinot,
+seeing these preparations.
+
+"Monsieur," she replied haughtily, "do your business your own way;
+question M. d'Espard, and you will pity me, I am sure." She raised her
+head, looking Popinot in the face with pride, mingled with impertinence;
+the worthy man bowed himself out respectfully.
+
+"A nice man is your uncle," said Rastignac to Bianchon. "Is he really
+so dense? Does not he know what the Marquise d'Espard is, what her
+influence means, her unavowed power over people? The Keeper of the Seals
+will be with her to-morrow----"
+
+"My dear fellow, how can I help it?" said Bianchon. "Did not I warn you?
+He is not a man you can get over."
+
+"No," said Rastignac; "he is a man you must run over."
+
+The doctor was obliged to make his bow to the Marquise and her mute
+Chevalier to catch up Popinot, who, not being the man to endure an
+embarrassing position, was pacing through the rooms.
+
+"That woman owes a hundred thousand crowns," said the judge, as he
+stepped into his nephew's cab.
+
+"And what do you think of the case?"
+
+"I," said the judge. "I never have an opinion till I have gone into
+everything. To-morrow early I will send to Madame Jeanrenaud to call on
+me in my private office at four o'clock, to make her explain the facts
+which concern her, for she is compromised."
+
+"I should very much like to know what the end will be."
+
+"Why, bless me, do not you see that the Marquise is the tool of that
+tall lean man who never uttered a word? There is a strain of Cain in
+him, but of the Cain who goes to the Law Courts for his bludgeon, and
+there, unluckily for him, we keep more than one Damocles' sword."
+
+"Oh, Rastignac! what brought you into that boat, I wonder?" exclaimed
+Bianchon.
+
+"Ah, we are used to seeing these little family conspiracies,"
+said Popinot. "Not a year passes without a number of verdicts of
+'insufficient evidence' against applications of this kind. In our state
+of society such an attempt brings no dishonor, while we send a poor
+devil to the galleys who breaks a pane of glass dividing him from a bowl
+full of gold. Our Code is not faultless."
+
+"But these are the facts?"
+
+"My boy, do you not know all the judicial romances with which clients
+impose on their attorneys? If the attorneys condemned themselves to
+state nothing but the truth, they would not earn enough to keep their
+office open."
+
+
+
+Next day, at four in the afternoon, a very stout dame, looking a good
+deal like a cask dressed up in a gown and belt, mounted Judge Popinot's
+stairs, perspiring and panting. She had, with great difficulty, got out
+of a green landau, which suited her to a miracle; you could not think of
+the woman without the landau, or the landau without the woman.
+
+"It is I, my dear sir," said she, appearing in the doorway of the
+judge's room. "Madame Jeanrenaud, whom you summoned exactly as if I were
+a thief, neither more nor less."
+
+The common words were spoken in a common voice, broken by the wheezing
+of asthma, and ending in a cough.
+
+"When I go through a damp place, I can't tell you what I suffer, sir. I
+shall never make old bones, saving your presence. However, here I am."
+
+The lawyer was quite amazed at the appearance of this supposed Marechale
+d'Ancre. Madame Jeanrenaud's face was pitted with an infinite number of
+little holes, was very red, with a pug nose and a low forehead, and was
+as round as a ball; for everything about the good woman was round. She
+had the bright eyes of a country woman, an honest gaze, a cheerful tone,
+and chestnut hair held in place by a bonnet cap under a green bonnet
+decked with a shabby bunch of auriculas. Her stupendous bust was a thing
+to laugh at, for it made one fear some grotesque explosion every time
+she coughed. Her enormous legs were of the shape which make the Paris
+street boy describe such a woman as being built on piles. The widow wore
+a green gown trimmed with chinchilla, which looked on her as a splash of
+dirty oil would look on a bride's veil. In short, everything about her
+harmonized with her last words: "Here I am."
+
+"Madame," said Popinot, "you are suspected of having used some seductive
+arts to induce M. d'Espard to hand over to you very considerable sums of
+money."
+
+"Of what! of what!" cried she. "Of seductive arts? But, my dear sir, you
+are a man to be respected, and, moreover, as a lawyer you ought to have
+some good sense. Look at me! Tell me if I am likely to seduce any one.
+I cannot tie my own shoes, nor even stoop. For these twenty years past,
+the Lord be praised, I have not dared to put on a pair of stays under
+pain of sudden death. I was as thin as an asparagus stalk when I was
+seventeen, and pretty too--I may say so now. So I married Jeanrenaud, a
+good fellow, and headman on the salt-barges. I had my boy, who is a fine
+young man; he is my pride, and it is not holding myself cheap to say
+he is my best piece of work. My little Jeanrenaud was a soldier who did
+Napoleon credit, and who served in the Imperial Guard. But, alas! at the
+death of my old man, who was drowned, times changed for the worse. I had
+the smallpox. I was kept two years in my room without stirring, and I
+came out of it the size you see me, hideous for ever, and as wretched as
+could be. These are my seductive arts."
+
+"But what, then, can the reasons be that have induced M. d'Espard to
+give you sums----"
+
+"Hugious sums, monsieur, say the word; I do not mind. But as to his
+reasons, I am not at liberty to explain them."
+
+"You are wrong. At this moment, his family, very naturally alarmed, are
+about to bring an action----"
+
+"Heavens above us!" said the good woman, starting up. "Is it possible
+that he should be worried on my account? That king of men, a man that
+has not his match! Rather than he should have the smallest trouble, or
+hair less on his head I could almost say, we would return every sou,
+monsieur. Write that down on your papers. Heaven above us! I will go at
+once and tell Jeanrenaud what is going on! A pretty thing indeed!"
+
+And the little old woman went out, rolled herself downstairs, and
+disappeared.
+
+"That one tells no lies," said Popinot to himself. "Well, to-morrow I
+shall know the whole story, for I shall go to see the Marquis d'Espard."
+
+People who have outlived the age when a man wastes his vitality at
+random, know how great an influence may be exercised on more important
+events by apparently trivial incidents, and will not be surprised at the
+weight here given to the following minor fact. Next day Popinot had
+an attack of coryza, a complaint which is not dangerous, and generally
+known by the absurd and inadequate name of a cold in the head.
+
+The judge, who could not suppose that the delay could be serious,
+feeling himself a little feverish, kept his room, and did not go to see
+the Marquis d'Espard. This day lost was, to this affair, what on the Day
+of Dupes the cup of soup had been, taken by Marie de Medici, which, by
+delaying her meeting with Louis XIII., enabled Richelieu to arrive at
+Saint-Germain before her, and recapture his royal slave.
+
+Before accompanying the lawyer and his registering clerk to the Marquis
+d'Espard's house, it may be as well to glance at the home and the
+private affairs of this father of sons whom his wife's petition
+represented to be a madman.
+
+Here and there in the old parts of Paris a few buildings may still be
+seen in which the archaeologist can discern an intention of decorating
+the city, and that love of property, which leads the owner to give a
+durable character to the structure. The house in which M. d'Espard was
+then living, in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, was one of
+these old mansions, built in stone, and not devoid of a certain richness
+of style; but time had blackened the stone, and revolutions in the town
+had damaged it both outside and inside. The dignitaries who formerly
+dwelt in the neighborhood of the University having disappeared with
+the great ecclesiastical foundations, this house had become the home
+of industries and of inhabitants whom it was never destined to shelter.
+During the last century a printing establishment had worn down the
+polished floors, soiled the carved wood, blackened the walls, and
+altered the principal internal arrangements. Formerly the residence of
+a Cardinal, this fine house was now divided among plebeian tenants. The
+character of the architecture showed that it had been built under the
+reigns of Henry III., Henry IV., and Louis XIII., at the time when the
+hotels Mignon and Serpente were erected in the same neighborhood, with
+the palace of the Princess Palatine, and the Sorbonne. An old man
+could remember having heard it called, in the last century, the hotel
+Duperron, so it seemed probable that the illustrious Cardinal of that
+name had built, or perhaps merely lived in it.
+
+There still exists, indeed, in the corner of the courtyard, a perron or
+flight of several outer steps by which the house is entered; and the way
+into the garden on the garden front is down a similar flight of steps.
+In spite of dilapidations, the luxury lavished by the architect on the
+balustrade and entrance porch crowning these two perrons suggests the
+simple-minded purpose of commemorating the owner's name, a sort of
+sculptured pun which our ancestors often allowed themselves. Finally,
+in support of this evidence, archaeologists can still discern in the
+medallions which show on the principal front some traces of the cords of
+the Roman hat.
+
+M. le Marquis d'Espard lived on the ground floor, in order, no doubt, to
+enjoy the garden, which might be called spacious for that neighborhood,
+and which lay open for his children's health. The situation of the
+house, in a street on a steep hill, as its name indicates, secured these
+ground-floor rooms against ever being damp. M. d'Espard had taken them,
+no doubt, for a very moderate price, rents being low at the time when
+he settled in that quarter, in order to be among the schools and to
+superintend his boys' education. Moreover, the state in which he found
+the place, with everything to repair, had no doubt induced the owner to
+be accommodating. Thus M. d'Espard had been able to go to some expense
+to settle himself suitably without being accused of extravagance. The
+loftiness of the rooms, the paneling, of which nothing survived but the
+frames, the decoration of the ceilings, all displayed the dignity which
+the prelacy stamped on whatever it attempted or created, and which
+artists discern to this day in the smallest relic that remains, though
+it be but a book, a dress, the panel of a bookcase, or an armchair.
+
+The Marquis had the rooms painted in the rich brown tones loved of
+the Dutch and of the citizens of Old Paris, hues which lend such good
+effects to the painter of genre. The panels were hung with plain paper
+in harmony with the paint. The window curtains were of inexpensive
+materials, but chosen so as to produce a generally happy result; the
+furniture was not too crowded and judiciously placed. Any one on going
+into this home could not resist a sense of sweet peacefulness, produced
+by the perfect calm, the stillness which prevailed, by the unpretentious
+unity of color, the keeping of the picture, in the words a painter might
+use. A certain nobleness in the details, the exquisite cleanliness of
+the furniture, and a perfect concord of men and things, all brought the
+word "suavity" to the lips.
+
+Few persons were admitted to the rooms used by the Marquis and his two
+sons, whose life might perhaps seem mysterious to their neighbors. In a
+wing towards the street, on the third floor, there are three large rooms
+which had been left in the state of dilapidation and grotesque bareness
+to which they had been reduced by the printing works. These three rooms,
+devoted to the evolution of the Picturesque History of China, were
+contrived to serve as a writing-room, a depository, and a private room,
+where M. d'Espard sat during part of the day; for after breakfast till
+four in the afternoon the Marquis remained in this room on the third
+floor to work at the publication he had undertaken. Visitors wanting to
+see him commonly found him there, and often the two boys on their return
+from school resorted thither. Thus the ground-floor rooms were a sort
+of sanctuary where the father and sons spent their time from the hour
+of dinner till the next day, and his domestic life was carefully closed
+against the public eye.
+
+His only servants were a cook--an old woman who had long been attached
+to his family--and a man-servant forty years old, who was with him
+when he married Mademoiselle de Blamont. His children's nurse had also
+remained with them, and the minute care to which the apartment bore
+witness revealed the sense of order and the maternal affections expended
+by this woman in her master's interest, in the management of his house,
+and the charge of his children. These three good souls, grave, and
+uncommunicative folk, seemed to have entered into the idea which ruled
+the Marquis' domestic life. And the contrast between their habits and
+those of most servants was a peculiarity which cast an air of mystery
+over the house, and fomented the calumny to which M. d'Espard himself
+lent occasion. Very laudable motives had made him determine never to
+be on visiting terms with any of the other tenants in the house. In
+undertaking to educate his boys he wished to keep them from all contact
+with strangers. Perhaps, too, he wished to avoid the intrusion of
+neighbors.
+
+In a man of his rank, at a time when the Quartier Latin was distracted
+by Liberalism, such conduct was sure to rouse in opposition a host of
+petty passions, of feelings whose folly is only to be measured by their
+meanness, the outcome of porters' gossip and malevolent tattle from door
+to door, all unknown to M. d'Espard and his retainers. His man-servant
+was stigmatized as a Jesuit, his cook as a sly fox; the nurse was in
+collusion with Madame Jeanrenaud to rob the madman. The madman was
+the Marquis. By degrees the other tenants came to regard as proofs of
+madness a number of things they had noticed in M. d'Espard, and passed
+through the sieve of their judgment without discerning any reasonable
+motive for them.
+
+Having no belief in the success of the History of China, they had
+managed to convince the landlord of the house that M. d'Espard had no
+money just at a time when, with the forgetfulness which often befalls
+busy men, he had allowed the tax-collector to send him a summons for
+non-payment of arrears. The landlord forthwith claimed his quarter's
+rent from January 1st by sending in a receipt, which the porter's wife
+had amused herself by detaining. On the 15th a summons to pay was served
+on M. d'Espard, the portress had delivered it at her leisure, and
+he supposed it to be some misunderstanding, not conceiving of any
+incivility from a man in whose house he had been living for twelve
+years. The Marquis was actually seized by a bailiff at the time when his
+man-servant had gone to carry the money for the rent to the landlord.
+
+This arrest, assiduously reported to the persons with whom he was in
+treaty for his undertaking, had alarmed some of them who were already
+doubtful of M. d'Espard's solvency in consequence of the enormous sums
+which Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother were said to be receiving from
+him. And, indeed, these suspicions on the part of the tenants, the
+creditors, and the landlord had some excuse in the Marquis' extreme
+economy in housekeeping. He conducted it as a ruined man might. His
+servants always paid in ready money for the most trifling necessaries
+of life, and acted as not choosing to take credit; if now they had asked
+for anything on credit, it would probably have been refused, calumnious
+gossip had been so widely believed in the neighborhood. There are
+tradesmen who like those of their customers who pay badly when they
+see them often, while they hate others, and very good ones, who hold
+themselves on too high a level to allow of any familiarity as CHUMS, a
+vulgar but expressive word. Men are made so; in almost every class they
+will allow to a gossip, or a vulgar soul that flatters them, facilities
+and favors they refuse to the superiority they resent, in whatever
+form it may show itself. The shopkeeper who rails at the Court has his
+courtiers.
+
+In short, the manners of the Marquis and his children were certain to
+arouse ill-feeling in their neighbors, and to work them up by degrees to
+the pitch of malevolence when men do not hesitate at an act of meanness
+if only it may damage the adversary they have themselves created.
+
+M. d'Espard was a gentleman, as his wife was a lady, by birth and
+breeding; noble types, already so rare in France that the observer
+can easily count the persons who perfectly realize them. These two
+characters are based on primitive ideas, on beliefs that may be called
+innate, on habits formed in infancy, and which have ceased to exist. To
+believe in pure blood, in a privileged race, to stand in thought above
+other men, must we not from birth have measured the distance which
+divides patricians from the mob? To command, must we not have never
+met our equal? And finally, must not education inculcate the ideas with
+which Nature inspires those great men on whose brow she has placed a
+crown before their mother has ever set a kiss there? These ideas, this
+education, are no longer possible in France, where for forty years past
+chance has arrogated the right of making noblemen by dipping them in the
+blood of battles, by gilding them with glory, by crowning them with the
+halo of genius; where the abolition of entail and of eldest sonship,
+by frittering away estates, compels the nobleman to attend to his own
+business instead of attending to affairs of state, and where personal
+greatness can only be such greatness as is acquired by long and patient
+toil: quite a new era.
+
+Regarded as a relic of that great institution know as feudalism, M.
+d'Espard deserved respectful admiration. If he believed himself to be by
+blood the superior of other men, he also believed in all the obligations
+of nobility; he had the virtues and the strength it demands. He had
+brought up his children in his own principles, and taught them from the
+cradle the religion of their caste. A deep sense of their own dignity,
+pride of name, the conviction that they were by birth great, gave rise
+in them to a kingly pride, the courage of knights, and the protecting
+kindness of a baronial lord; their manners, harmonizing with their
+notions, would have become princes, and offended all the world of the
+Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve--a world, above all others, of
+equality, where every one believed that M. d'Espard was ruined, and
+where all, from the lowest to the highest, refused the privileges of
+nobility to a nobleman without money, because they were all ready to
+allow an enriched bourgeois to usurp them. Thus the lack of communion
+between this family and other persons was as much moral as it was
+physical.
+
+In the father and the children alike, their personality harmonized with
+the spirit within. M. d'Espard, at this time about fifty, might have
+sat as a model to represent the aristocracy of birth in the nineteenth
+century. He was slight and fair; there was in the outline and general
+expression of his face a native distinction which spoke of lofty
+sentiments, but it bore the impress of a deliberate coldness which
+commanded respect a little too decidedly. His aquiline nose bent at the
+tip from left to right, a slight crookedness which was not devoid of
+grace; his blue eyes, his high forehead, prominent enough at the brows
+to form a thick ridge that checked the light and shaded his eyes, all
+indicated a spirit of rectitude, capable of perseverance and perfect
+loyalty, while it gave a singular look to his countenance. This
+penthouse forehead might, in fact, hint at a touch of madness, and his
+thick-knitted eyebrows added to the apparent eccentricity. He had the
+white well-kept hands of a gentleman; his foot was high and narrow. His
+hesitating speech--not merely as to his pronunciation, which was that
+of a stammerer, but also in the expression of his ideas, his thought
+and language--produced on the mind of the hearer the impression of a
+man who, in familiar phraseology, comes and goes, feels his way, tries
+everything, breaks off his gestures, and finishes nothing. This defect
+was purely superficial, and in contrast with the decisiveness of a
+firmly-set mouth, and the strongly-marked character of his physiognomy.
+His rather jerky gait matched his mode of speech. These peculiarities
+helped to affirm his supposed insanity. In spite of his elegant
+appearance, he was systematically parsimonious in his personal expenses,
+and wore the same black frock-coat for three or four years, brushed with
+extreme care by his old man-servant.
+
+As to the children, they both were handsome, and endowed with a grace
+which did not exclude an expression of aristocratic disdain. They had
+the bright coloring, the clear eye, the transparent flesh which reveal
+habits of purity, regularity of life, and a due proportion of work and
+play. They both had black hair and blue eyes, and a twist in their nose,
+like their father; but their mother, perhaps, had transmitted to them
+the dignity of speech, of look and mien, which are hereditary in the
+Blamont-Chauvrys. Their voices, as clear as crystal, had an emotional
+quality, the softness which proves so seductive; they had, in short, the
+voice a woman would willingly listen to after feeling the flame of their
+looks. But, above all, they had the modesty of pride, a chaste reserve,
+a _touch-me-not_ which at a maturer age might have seemed intentional
+coyness, so much did their demeanor inspire a wish to know them. The
+elder, Comte Clement de Negrepelisse, was close upon his sixteenth year.
+For the last two years he had ceased to wear the pretty English round
+jacket which his brother, Vicomte Camille d'Espard, still wore. The
+Count, who for the last six months went no more to the College Henri
+IV., was dressed in the style of a young man enjoying the first
+pleasures of fashion. His father had not wished to condemn him to a
+year's useless study of philosophy; he was trying to give his knowledge
+some consistency by the study of transcendental mathematics. At the
+same time, the Marquis was having him taught Eastern languages, the
+international law of Europe, heraldry, and history from the original
+sources, charters, early documents, and collections of edicts. Camille
+had lately begun to study rhetoric.
+
+The day when Popinot arranged to go to question M. d'Espard was a
+Thursday, a holiday. At about nine in the morning, before their father
+was awake, the brothers were playing in the garden. Clement was
+finding it hard to refuse his brother, who was anxious to go to the
+shooting-gallery for the first time, and who begged him to second his
+request to the Marquis. The Viscount always rather took advantage of his
+weakness, and was very fond of wrestling with his brother. So the couple
+were quarreling and fighting in play like schoolboys. As they ran in
+the garden, chasing each other, they made so much noise as to wake their
+father, who came to the window without their perceiving him in the heat
+of the fray. The Marquis amused himself with watching his two children
+twisted together like snakes, their faces flushed by the exertion of
+their strength; their complexion was rose and white, their eyes flashed
+sparks, their limbs writhed like cords in the fire; they fell, sprang up
+again, and caught each other like athletes in a circus, affording their
+father one of those moments of happiness which would make amends for the
+keenest anxieties of a busy life. Two other persons, one on the second
+and one on the first floor, were also looking into the garden, and
+saying that the old madman was amusing himself by making his children
+fight. Immediately a number of heads appeared at the windows; the
+Marquis, noticing them, called a word to his sons, who at once climbed
+up to the window and jumped into his room, and Clement obtained the
+permission asked by Camille.
+
+All through the house every one was talking of the Marquis' new form of
+insanity. When Popinot arrived at about twelve o'clock, accompanied by
+his clerk, the portress, when asked for M. d'Espard, conducted him to
+the third floor, telling him "as how M. d'Espard, no longer ago than
+that very morning, had set on his two children to fight, and laughed
+like the monster he was on seeing the younger biting the elder till he
+bled, and as how no doubt he longed to see them kill each other.--Don't
+ask me the reason why," she added; "he doesn't show himself!"
+
+Just as the woman spoke these decisive words, she had brought the judge
+to the landing on the third floor, face to face with a door covered with
+notices announcing the successive numbers of the Picturesque History of
+China. The muddy floor, the dirty banisters, the door where the printers
+had left their marks, the dilapidated window, and the ceiling on which
+the apprentices had amused themselves with drawing monstrosities with
+the smoky flare of their tallow dips, the piles of paper and litter
+heaped up in the corners, intentionally or from sheer neglect--in short,
+every detail of the picture lying before his eyes, agreed so well
+with the facts alleged by the Marquise that the judge, in spite of his
+impartiality, could not help believing them.
+
+"There you are, gentlemen," said the porter's wife; "there is the
+manifactor, where the Chinese swallow up enough to feed the whole
+neighborhood."
+
+The clerk looked at the judge with a smile, and Popinot found it hard to
+keep his countenance. They went together into the outer room, where
+sat an old man, who, no doubt, performed the functions of office clerk,
+shopman, and cashier. This old man was the Maitre Jacques of China.
+Along the walls ran long shelves, on which the published numbers lay in
+piles. A partition in wood, with a grating lined with green curtains,
+cut off the end of the room, forming a private office. A till with a
+slit to admit or disgorge crown pieces indicated the cash-desk.
+
+"M. d'Espard?" said Popinot, addressing the man, who wore a gray blouse.
+
+The shopman opened the door into the next room, where the lawyer and
+his companion saw a venerable old man, white-headed and simply dressed,
+wearing the Cross of Saint-Louis, seated at a desk. He ceased comparing
+some sheets of colored prints to look up at the two visitors. This room
+was an unpretentious office, full of books and proof-sheets. There was
+a black wood table at which some one, at the moment absent, no doubt was
+accustomed to work.
+
+"The Marquis d'Espard?" said Popinot.
+
+"No, monsieur," said the old man, rising; "what do you want with him?"
+he added, coming forward, and showing by his demeanor the dignified
+manners and habits due to a gentlemanly education.
+
+"We wish to speak with him on business exclusively personal to himself,"
+replied Popinot.
+
+"D'Espard, here are some gentlemen who want to see you," then said the
+old man, going into the furthest room, where the Marquis was sitting by
+the fire reading the newspaper.
+
+This innermost room had a shabby carpet, the windows were hung with gray
+holland curtains; the furniture consisted of a few mahogany chairs, two
+armchairs, a desk with a revolving front, an ordinary office table, and
+on the chimney-shelf, a dingy clock and two old candlesticks. The old
+man led the way for Popinot and his registrar, and pulled forward two
+chairs, as though he were master of the place; M. d'Espard left it to
+him. After the preliminary civilities, during which the judge watched
+the supposed lunatic, the Marquis naturally asked what was the object of
+this visit. On this Popinot glanced significantly at the old gentleman
+and the Marquis.
+
+"I believe, Monsieur le Marquis," said he, "that the character of my
+functions, and the inquiry that has brought me here, make it desirable
+that we should be alone, though it is understood by law that in such
+cases the inquiries have a sort of family publicity. I am judge on the
+Inferior Court of Appeal for the Department of the Seine, and charged
+by the President with the duty of examining you as to certain facts
+set forth in a petition for a Commission in Lunacy on the part of the
+Marquise d'Espard."
+
+The old man withdrew. When the lawyer and the Marquis were alone, the
+clerk shut the door, and seated himself unceremoniously at the office
+table, where he laid out his papers and prepared to take down his notes.
+Popinot had still kept his eye on M. d'Espard; he was watching the
+effect on him of this crude statement, so painful for a man in full
+possession of his reason. The Marquis d'Espard, whose face was usually
+pale, as are those of fair men, suddenly turned scarlet with anger; he
+trembled for an instant, sat down, laid his paper on the chimney-piece,
+and looked down. In a moment he had recovered his gentlemanly dignity,
+and looked steadily at the judge, as if to read in his countenance the
+indications of his character.
+
+"How is it, monsieur," he asked, "that I have had no notice of such a
+petition?"
+
+"Monsieur le Marquis, persons on whom such a commission is held not
+being supposed to have the use of their reason, any notice of the
+petition is unnecessary. The duty of the Court chiefly consists in
+verifying the allegations of the petitioner."
+
+"Nothing can be fairer," replied the Marquis. "Well, then, monsieur, be
+so good as to tell me what I ought to do----"
+
+"You have only to answer my questions, omitting nothing. However
+delicate the reasons may be which may have led you to act in such a
+manner as to give Madame d'Espard a pretext for her petition, speak
+without fear. It is unnecessary to assure you that lawyers know their
+duties, and that in such cases the profoundest secrecy----"
+
+"Monsieur," said the Marquis, whose face expressed the sincerest pain,
+"if my explanations should lead to any blame being attached to Madame
+d'Espard's conduct, what will be the result?"
+
+"The Court may add its censure to its reasons for its decision."
+
+"Is such censure optional? If I were to stipulate with you, before
+replying, that nothing should be said that could annoy Madame d'Espard
+in the event of your report being in my favor, would the Court take my
+request into consideration?"
+
+The judge looked at the Marquis, and the two men exchanged sentiments of
+equal magnanimity.
+
+"Noel," said Popinot to his registrar, "go into the other room. If you
+can be of use, I will call you in.--If, as I am inclined to think," he
+went on, speaking to the Marquis when the clerk had gone out, "I find
+that there is some misunderstanding in this case, I can promise you,
+monsieur, that on your application the Court will act with due courtesy.
+
+"There is a leading fact put forward by Madame d'Espard, the most
+serious of all, of which I must beg for an explanation," said the judge
+after a pause. "It refers to the dissipation of your fortune to the
+advantage of a certain Madame Jeanrenaud, the widow of a bargemaster--or
+rather, to that of her son, Colonel Jeanrenaud, for whom you are said to
+have procured an appointment, to have exhausted your influence with the
+King, and at last to have extended such protection as secures him a good
+marriage. The petition suggests that such a friendship is more devoted
+than any feelings, even those which morality must disapprove----"
+
+A sudden flush crimsoned the Marquis' face and forehead, tears even
+started to his eyes, for his eyelashes were wet, then wholesome pride
+crushed the emotions, which in a man are accounted a weakness.
+
+"To tell you the truth, monsieur," said the Marquis, in a broken voice,
+"you place me in a strange dilemma. The motives of my conduct were to
+have died with me. To reveal them I must disclose to you some secret
+wounds, must place the honor of my family in your keeping, and must
+speak of myself, a delicate matter, as you will fully understand. I
+hope, monsieur, that it will all remain a secret between us. You will,
+no doubt, be able to find in the formulas of the law one which
+will allow of judgment being pronounced without any betrayal of my
+confidences."
+
+"So far as that goes, it is perfectly possible, Monsieur le Marquis."
+
+"Some time after my marriage," said M. d'Espard, "my wife having run
+into considerable expenses, I was obliged to have recourse to borrowing.
+You know what was the position of noble families during the Revolution;
+I had not been able to keep a steward or a man of business. Nowadays
+gentlemen are for the most part obliged to manage their affairs
+themselves. Most of my title-deeds had been brought to Paris, from
+Languedoc, Provence, or le Comtat, by my father, who dreaded, and not
+without reason, the inquisition which family title-deeds, and what was
+then styled the 'parchments' of the privileged class, brought down on
+the owners.
+
+"Our name is Negrepelisse; d'Espard is a title acquired in the time of
+Henri IV. by a marriage which brought us the estates and titles of the
+house of d'Espard, on condition of our bearing an escutcheon of pretence
+on our coat-of-arms, those of the house of d'Espard, an old family of
+Bearn, connected in the female line with that of Albret: quarterly, paly
+of or and sable; and azure two griffins' claws armed, gules in saltire,
+with the famous motto Des partem leonis. At the time of this alliance
+we lost Negrepelisse, a little town which was as famous during the
+religious struggles as was my ancestor who then bore the name. Captain
+de Negrepelisse was ruined by the burning of all his property, for the
+Protestants did not spare a friend of Montluc's.
+
+"The Crown was unjust to M. de Negrepelisse; he received neither a
+marshal's baton, nor a post as governor, nor any indemnity; King Charles
+IX., who was fond of him, died without being able to reward him; Henri
+IV. arranged his marriage with Mademoiselle d'Espard, and secured
+him the estates of that house, but all those of the Negrepelisses had
+already passed into the hands of his creditors.
+
+"My great-grandfather, the Marquis d'Espard, was, like me, placed early
+in life at the head of his family by the death of his father, who, after
+dissipating his wife's fortune, left his son nothing but the entailed
+estates of the d'Espards, burdened with a jointure. The young Marquis
+was all the more straitened for money because he held a post at Court.
+Being in great favor with Louis XIV., the King's goodwill brought him
+a fortune. But here, monsieur, a blot stained our escutcheon, an
+unconfessed and horrible stain of blood and disgrace which I am making
+it my business to wipe out. I discovered the secret among the deeds
+relating to the estate of Negrepelisse and the packets of letters."
+
+At this solemn moment the Marquis spoke without hesitation or any of the
+repetition habitual with him; but it is a matter of common observation
+that persons who, in ordinary life, are afflicted with these two
+defects, are freed from them as soon as any passionate emotion underlies
+their speech.
+
+"The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes was decreed," he went on. "You
+are no doubt aware, monsieur, that this was an opportunity for many
+favorites to make their fortunes. Louis XIV. bestowed on the magnates
+about his Court the confiscated lands of those Protestant families who
+did not take the prescribed steps for the sale of their property. Some
+persons in high favor went 'Protestant-hunting,' as the phrase was. I
+have ascertained beyond a doubt that the fortune enjoyed to this day by
+two ducal families is derived from lands seized from hapless merchants.
+
+"I will not attempt to explain to you, a man of law, all the manoeuvres
+employed to entrap the refugees who had large fortunes to carry away. It
+is enough to say that the lands of Negrepelisse, comprising twenty-two
+churches and rights over the town, and those of Gravenges which had
+formerly belonged to us, were at that time in the hands of a Protestant
+family. My grandfather recovered them by gift from Louis XIV. This gift
+was effected by documents hall-marked by atrocious iniquity. The owner
+of these two estates, thinking he would be able to return, had gone
+through the form of a sale, and was going to Switzerland to join his
+family, whom he had sent in advance. He wished, no doubt, to take
+advantage of every delay granted by the law, so as to settle the
+concerns of his business.
+
+"This man was arrested by order of the governor, the trustee confessed
+the truth, the poor merchant was hanged, and my ancestor had the two
+estates. I would gladly have been able to ignore the share he took in
+the plot; but the governor was his uncle on the mother's side, and I
+have unfortunately read the letter in which he begged him to apply to
+Deodatus, the name agreed upon by the Court to designate the King. In
+this letter there is a tone of jocosity with reference to the victim,
+which filled me with horror. In the end, the sums of money sent by the
+refugee family to ransom the poor man were kept by the governor, who
+despatched the merchant all the same."
+
+The Marquis paused, as though the memory of it were still too heavy for
+him to bear.
+
+"This unfortunate family were named Jeanrenaud," he went on. "That name
+is enough to account for my conduct. I could never think without keen
+pain of the secret disgrace that weighed on my family. That fortune
+enabled my grandfather to marry a demoiselle de Navarreins-Lansac,
+heiress to the younger branch of that house, who were at that time much
+richer than the elder branch of the Navarreins. My father thus became
+one of the largest landowners in the kingdom. He was able to marry
+my mother, a Grandlieu of the younger branch. Though ill-gotten, this
+property has been singularly profitable.
+
+"For my part, being determined to remedy the mischief, I wrote
+to Switzerland, and knew no peace till I was on the traces of the
+Protestant victim's heirs. At last I discovered that the Jeanrenauds,
+reduced to abject want, had left Fribourg and returned to live in
+France. Finally, I found a M. Jeanrenaud, lieutenant in a cavalry
+regiment under Napoleon, the sole heir of this unhappy family. In my
+eyes, monsieur, the rights of the Jeanrenauds were clear. To establish a
+prescriptive right is it not necessary that there should have been some
+possibility of proceeding against those who are in the enjoyment of it?
+To whom could these refugees have appealed? Their Court of Justice was
+on high, or rather, monsieur, it was here," and the Marquis struck his
+hand on his heart. "I did not choose that my children should be able to
+think of me as I have thought of my father and of my ancestors. I aim at
+leaving them an unblemished inheritance and escutcheon. I did not choose
+that nobility should be a lie in my person. And, after all,
+politically speaking, ought those emigres who are now appealing
+against revolutionary confiscations, to keep the property derived from
+antecedent confiscations by positive crimes?
+
+"I found in M. Jeanrenaud and his mother the most perverse honesty; to
+hear them you would suppose that they were robbing me. In spite of all
+I could say, they will accept no more than the value of the lands at
+the time when the King bestowed them on my family. The price was settled
+between us at the sum of eleven hundred thousand francs, which I was
+to pay at my convenience and without interest. To achieve this I had
+to forego my income for a long time. And then, monsieur, began the
+destruction of some illusions I had allowed myself as to Madame
+d'Espard's character. When I proposed to her that we should leave Paris
+and go into the country, where we could live respected on half of her
+income, and so more rapidly complete a restitution of which I spoke to
+her without going into the more serious details, Madame d'Espard treated
+me as a madman. I then understood my wife's real character. She would
+have approved of my grandfather's conduct without a scruple, and have
+laughed at the Huguenots. Terrified by her coldness, and her little
+affection for her children, whom she abandoned to me without regret,
+I determined to leave her the command of her fortune, after paying our
+common debts. It was no business of hers, as she told me, to pay for
+my follies. As I then had not enough to live on and pay for my sons'
+education, I determined to educate them myself, to make them gentlemen
+and men of feeling. By investing my money in the funds I have been
+enabled to pay off my obligation sooner than I had dared to hope, for
+I took advantage of the opportunities afforded by the improvement
+in prices. If I had kept four thousand francs a year for my boys and
+myself, I could only have paid off twenty thousand crowns a year, and it
+would have taken almost eighteen years to achieve my freedom. As it is,
+I have lately repaid the whole of the eleven hundred thousand
+francs that were due. Thus I enjoy the happiness of having made this
+restitution without doing my children the smallest wrong.
+
+"These, monsieur, are the reasons for the payments made to Madame
+Jeanrenaud and her son."
+
+"So Madame d'Espard knew the motives of your retirement?" said the
+judge, controlling the emotion he felt at this narrative.
+
+"Yes, monsieur."
+
+Popinot gave an expressive shrug; he rose and opened the door into the
+next room.
+
+"Noel, you can go," said he to his clerk.
+
+"Monsieur," he went on, "though what you have told me is enough to
+enlighten me thoroughly, I should like to hear what you have to say to
+the other facts put forward in the petition. For instance, you are here
+carrying on a business such as is not habitually undertaken by a man of
+rank."
+
+"We cannot discuss that matter here," said the Marquis, signing to the
+judge to quit the room. "Nouvion," said he to the old man, "I am going
+down to my rooms; the children will soon be in; dine with us."
+
+"Then, Monsieur le Marquis," said Popinot on the stairs, "that is not
+your apartment?"
+
+"No, monsieur; I took those rooms for the office of this undertaking.
+You see," and he pointed to an advertisement sheet, "the History is
+being brought out by one of the most respectable firms in Paris, and not
+by me."
+
+The Marquis showed the lawyer into the ground-floor rooms, saying, "This
+is my apartment."
+
+Popinot was quite touched by the poetry, not aimed at but pervading this
+dwelling. The weather was lovely, the windows were open, the air from
+the garden brought in a wholesome earthy smell, the sunshine brightened
+and gilded the woodwork, of a rather gloomy brown. At the sight Popinot
+made up his mind that a madman would hardly be capable of inventing the
+tender harmony of which he was at that moment conscious.
+
+"I should like just such an apartment," thought he. "You think of
+leaving this part of town?" he inquired.
+
+"I hope so," replied the Marquis. "But I shall remain till my younger
+son has finished his studies, and till the children's character is
+thoroughly formed, before introducing them to the world and to their
+mother's circle. Indeed, after giving them the solid information
+they possess, I intend to complete it by taking them to travel to
+the capitals of Europe, that they may see men and things, and become
+accustomed to speak the languages they have learned. And, monsieur,"
+he went on, giving the judge a chair in the drawing-room, "I could not
+discuss the book on China with you, in the presence of an old friend of
+my family, the Comte de Nouvion, who, having emigrated, has returned
+to France without any fortune whatever, and who is my partner in this
+concern, less for my profit than his. Without telling him what my
+motives were, I explained to him that I was as poor as he, but that I
+had enough money to start a speculation in which he might be usefully
+employed. My tutor was the Abbe Grozier, whom Charles X. on my
+recommendation appointed Keeper of the Books at the Arsenal, which were
+returned to that Prince when he was still Monsieur. The Abbe Grozier was
+deeply learned with regard to China, its manners and customs; he made
+me heir to this knowledge at an age when it is difficult not to become a
+fanatic for the things we learn. At five-and-twenty I knew Chinese,
+and I confess I have never been able to check myself in an exclusive
+admiration for that nation, who conquered their conquerors, whose annals
+extend back indisputably to a period more remote than mythological or
+Bible times, who by their immutable institutions have preserved
+the integrity of their empire, whose monuments are gigantic, whose
+administration is perfect, among whom revolutions are impossible, who
+have regarded ideal beauty as a barren element in art, who have carried
+luxury and industry to such a pitch that we cannot outdo them in
+anything, while they are our equals in things where we believe ourselves
+superior.
+
+"Still, monsieur, though I often make a jest of comparing China with the
+present condition of European states, I am not a Chinaman, I am a French
+gentleman. If you entertain any doubts as to the financial side of this
+undertaking, I can prove to you that at this moment we have two
+thousand five hundred subscribers to this work, which is literary,
+iconographical, statistical, and religious; its importance has been
+generally appreciated; our subscribers belong to every nation in Europe,
+we have but twelve hundred in France. Our book will cost about three
+hundred francs, and the Comte de Nouvion will derive from it from six to
+seven thousand francs a year, for his comfort was the real motive of the
+undertaking. For my part, I aimed only at the possibility of affording
+my children some pleasures. The hundred thousand francs I have made,
+quite in spite of myself, will pay for their fencing lessons, horses,
+dress, and theatres, pay the masters who teach them accomplishments,
+procure them canvases to spoil, the books they may wish to buy, in
+short, all the little fancies which a father finds so much pleasure in
+gratifying. If I had been compelled to refuse these indulgences to my
+poor boys, who are so good and work so hard, the sacrifice I made to the
+honor of my name would have been doubly painful.
+
+"In point of fact, the twelve years I have spent in retirement from the
+world to educate my children have led to my being completely forgotten
+at Court. I have given up the career of politics; I have lost my
+historical fortune, and all the distinctions which I might have acquired
+and bequeathed to my children; but our house will have lost nothing;
+my boys will be men of mark. Though I have missed the senatorship, they
+will win it nobly by devoting themselves to the affairs of the country,
+and doing such service as is not soon forgotten. While purifying the
+past record of my family, I have insured it a glorious future; and is
+not that to have achieved a noble task, though in secret and without
+glory?--And now, monsieur, have you any other explanations to ask me?"
+
+At this instant the tramp of horses was heard in the courtyard.
+
+"Here they are!" said the Marquis. In a moment the two lads, fashionably
+but plainly dressed, came into the room, booted, spurred, and gloved,
+and flourishing their riding-whips. Their beaming faces brought in the
+freshness of the outer air; they were brilliant with health. They both
+grasped their father's hand, giving him a look, as friends do, a glance
+of unspoken affection, and then they bowed coldly to the lawyer. Popinot
+felt that it was quite unnecessary to question the Marquis as to his
+relations towards his sons.
+
+"Have you enjoyed yourselves?" asked the Marquis.
+
+"Yes, father; I knocked down six dolls in twelve shots at the first
+trial!" cried Camille.
+
+"And where did you ride?"
+
+"In the Bois; we saw my mother."
+
+"Did she stop?"
+
+"We were riding so fast just then that I daresay she did not see us,"
+replied the young Count.
+
+"But, then, why did you not go to speak to her?"
+
+"I fancy I have noticed, father, that she does not care that we should
+speak to her in public," said Clement in an undertone. "We are a little
+too big."
+
+The judge's hearing was keen enough to catch these words, which brought
+a cloud to the Marquis' brow. Popinot took pleasure in contemplating the
+picture of the father and his boys. His eyes went back with a sense
+of pathos to M. d'Espard's face; his features, his expression, and his
+manner all expressed honesty in its noblest aspect, intellectual and
+chivalrous honesty, nobility in all its beauty.
+
+"You--you see, monsieur," said the Marquis, and his hesitation had
+returned, "you see that Justice may look in--in here at any time--yes,
+at any time--here. If there is anybody crazy, it can only be the
+children--the children--who are a little crazy about their father,
+and the father who is very crazy about his children--but that sort of
+madness rings true."
+
+At this juncture Madame Jeanrenaud's voice was heard in the ante-room,
+and the good woman came bustling in, in spite of the man-servant's
+remonstrances.
+
+"I take no roundabout ways, I can tell you!" she exclaimed. "Yes,
+Monsieur le Marquis, I want to speak to you, this very minute," she went
+on, with a comprehensive bow to the company. "By George, and I am too
+late as it is, since Monsieur the criminal Judge is before me."
+
+"Criminal!" cried the two boys.
+
+"Good reason why I did not find you at your own house, since you are
+here. Well, well! the Law is always to the fore when there is mischief
+brewing.--I came, Monsieur le Marquis, to tell you that my son and I are
+of one mind to give you everything back, since our honor is threatened.
+My son and I, we had rather give you back everything than cause you
+the smallest trouble. My word, they must be as stupid as pans without
+handles to call you a lunatic----"
+
+"A lunatic! My father?" exclaimed the boys, clinging to the Marquis.
+"What is this?"
+
+"Silence, madame," said Popinot.
+
+"Children, leave us," said the Marquis.
+
+The two boys went into the garden without a word, but very much alarmed.
+
+"Madame," said the judge, "the moneys paid to you by Monsieur le Marquis
+were legally due, though given to you in virtue of a very far-reaching
+theory of honesty. If all the people possessed of confiscated goods, by
+whatever cause, even if acquired by treachery, were compelled to make
+restitution every hundred and fifty years, there would be few legitimate
+owners in France. The possessions of Jacques Coeur enriched twenty noble
+families; the confiscations pronounced by the English to the advantage
+of their adherents at the time when they held a part of France made the
+fortune of several princely houses.
+
+"Our law allows M. d'Espard to dispose of his income without accounting
+for it, or suffering him to be accused of its misapplication. A
+Commission in Lunacy can only be granted when a man's actions are devoid
+of reason; but in this case, the remittances made to you have a reason
+based on the most sacred and most honorable motives. Hence you may keep
+it all without remorse, and leave the world to misinterpret a noble
+action. In Paris, the highest virtue is the object of the foulest
+calumny. It is, unfortunately, the present condition of society that
+makes the Marquis' actions sublime. For the honor of my country, I would
+that such deeds were regarded as a matter of course; but, as things are,
+I am forced by comparison to look upon M. d'Espard as a man to whom a
+crown should be awarded, rather than that he should be threatened with a
+Commission in Lunacy.
+
+"In the course of a long professional career, I have seen and heard
+nothing that has touched me more deeply than that I have just seen and
+heard. But it is not extraordinary that virtue should wear its noblest
+aspect when it is practised by men of the highest class.
+
+"Having heard me express myself in this way, I hope, Monsieur le
+Marquis, that you feel certain of my silence, and that you will not
+for a moment be uneasy as to the decision pronounced in the case--if it
+comes before the Court."
+
+"There, now! Well said," cried Madame Jeanrenaud. "That is something
+like a judge! Look here, my dear sir, I would hug you if I were not so
+ugly; you speak like a book."
+
+The Marquis held out his hand to Popinot, who gently pressed it with
+a look full of sympathetic comprehension at this great man in private
+life, and the Marquis responded with a pleasant smile. These two
+natures, both so large and full--one commonplace but divinely kind, the
+other lofty and sublime--had fallen into unison gently, without a jar,
+without a flash of passion, as though two pure lights had been merged
+into one. The father of a whole district felt himself worthy to grasp
+the hand of this man who was doubly noble, and the Marquis felt in the
+depths of his soul an instinct that told him that the judge's hand
+was one of those from which the treasures of inexhaustible beneficence
+perennially flow.
+
+"Monsieur le Marquis," added Popinot, with a bow, "I am happy to be able
+to tell you that, from the first words of this inquiry, I regarded my
+clerk as quite unnecessary."
+
+He went close to M. d'Espard, led him into the window-bay, and said: "It
+is time that you should return home, monsieur. I believe that Madame la
+Marquise has acted in this matter under an influence which you ought at
+once to counteract."
+
+Popinot withdrew. He looked back several times as he crossed the
+courtyard, touched by the recollection of the scene. It was one of those
+which take root in the memory to blossom again in certain hours when the
+soul seeks consolation.
+
+"Those rooms would just suit me," said he to himself as he reached home.
+"If M. d'Espard leaves them, I will take up his lease."
+
+
+
+The next day, at about ten in the morning, Popinot, who had written out
+his report the previous evening, made his way to the Palais de Justice,
+intending to have prompt and righteous justice done. As he went to the
+robing-room to put on his gown and bands, the usher told him that the
+President of his Court begged him to attend in his private room, where
+he was waiting for him. Popinot forthwith obeyed.
+
+"Good-morning, my dear Popinot," said the President, "I have been
+waiting for you."
+
+"Why, Monsieur le President, is anything wrong?"
+
+"A mere silly trifle," said the President. "The Keeper of the Seals,
+with whom I had the honor of dining yesterday, led me apart into a
+corner. He had heard that you had been to tea with Madame d'Espard, in
+whose case you were employed to make inquiries. He gave me to understand
+that it would be as well that you should not sit on this case----"
+
+"But, Monsieur le President, I can prove that I left Madame d'Espard's
+house at the moment when tea was brought in. And my conscience----"
+
+"Yes, yes; the whole Bench, the two Courts, all the profession know you.
+I need not repeat what I said about you to his Eminence; but, you know,
+'Caesar's wife must not be suspected.' So we shall not make this
+foolish trifle a matter of discipline, but only of proprieties. Between
+ourselves, it is not on your account, but on that of the Bench."
+
+"But, monsieur, if you only knew the kind of woman----" said the judge,
+trying to pull his report out of his pocket.
+
+"I am perfectly certain that you have proceeded in this matter with the
+strictest independence of judgment. I myself, in the provinces, have
+often taken more than a cup of tea with the people I had to try; but the
+fact that the Keeper of the Seals should have mentioned it, and that you
+might be talked about, is enough to make the Court avoid any discussion
+of the matter. Any conflict with public opinion must always be dangerous
+for a constitutional body, even when the right is on its side against
+the public, because their weapons are not equal. Journalism may say or
+suppose anything, and our dignity forbids us even to reply. In fact,
+I have spoken of the matter to your President, and M. Camusot has been
+appointed in your place on your retirement, which you will signify.
+It is a family matter, so to speak. And I now beg you to signify your
+retirement from the case as a personal favor. To make up, you will get
+the Cross of the Legion of Honor, which has so long been due to you. I
+make that my business."
+
+When he saw M. Camusot, a judge recently called to Paris from a
+provincial Court of the same class, as he went forward bowing to the
+Judge and the President, Popinot could not repress an ironical smile.
+This pale, fair young man, full of covert ambition, looked ready to hang
+and unhang, at the pleasure of any earthy king, the innocent and the
+guilty alike, and to follow the example of a Laubardemont rather than
+that of a Mole.
+
+Popinot withdrew with a bow; he scorned to deny the lying accusation
+that had been brought against him.
+
+
+PARIS, February 1836.
+
+
+
+
+ADDENDUM
+
+The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.
+
+Note: The Commission in Lunacy is also known as The Interdiction and is
+referred to by that title in certain of the addendums.
+
+ Bianchon, Horace
+ Father Goriot
+ The Atheist's Mass
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ The Government Clerks
+ Pierrette
+ A Study of Woman
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Magic Skin
+ A Second Home
+ A Prince of Bohemia
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ The Muse of the Department
+ The Imaginary Mistress
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Betty
+ The Country Parson
+ In addition, M. Bianchon narrated the following:
+ Another Study of Woman
+ La Grande Breteche
+
+ Bordin
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+
+ Camusot de Marville
+ Cousin Pons
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+ Scenes from a Cuortesan's Life
+
+ Desroches (son)
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Start in Life
+ A Woman of Thirty
+ The Government Clerks
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ A Man of Business
+ The Middle Classes
+
+ Espard, Charles-Maurice-Marie-Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis d'
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+
+ Espard, Chevalier d'
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+
+ Espard, Jeanne-Clementine-Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, Marquise d'
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ Another Study of Woman
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ Beatrix
+
+ Godeschal, Francois-Claude-Marie
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ A Start in Life
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Pons
+
+ Grozier, Abbe
+ Lost Illusions
+
+ Jeanrenaud
+ Albert Savarus
+
+ Mongenod, Frederic
+ The Seamy Side of History
+
+ Negrepelisse, De
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+
+ Nucingen, Baronne Delphine de
+ Father Goriot
+ The Thirteen
+ Eugenie Grandet
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Melmoth Reconciled
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ Modeste Mignon
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ Another Study of Woman
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ The Member for Arcis
+
+ Popinot, Jean-Jules
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Middle Classes
+
+ Rabourdin, Madame
+ The Government Clerks
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Commission in Lunacy, by Honore de Balzac
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Commission in Lunacy, by Honore de Balzac
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
+
+
+Title: The Commission in Lunacy
+
+Author: Honore de Balzac
+
+Release Date: July 2, 2004 [EBook #1410]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dagny, and John Bickers
+
+
+
+
+ THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY
+
+ BY
+
+ HONORE DE BALZAC
+
+
+
+ Translated By
+
+ Clara Bell
+
+
+
+ DEDICATION
+
+Dedicated to Monsieur le Contre-Amiral Bazoche,
+Governor of the Isle of Bourbon, by the grateful writer.
+DE BALZAC.
+
+
+
+In 1828, at about one o'clock one morning, two persons came out of
+a large house in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, near the
+Elysee-Bourbon. One was the famous doctor, Horace Bianchon; the other
+was one of the most elegant men in Paris, the Baron de Rastignac;
+they were friends of long standing. Each had sent away his carriage,
+and no cab was to be seen in the street; but the night was fine, and
+the pavement dry.
+
+"We will walk as far as the boulevard," said Eugene de Rastignac to
+Bianchon. "You can get a hackney cab at the club; there is always one
+to be found there till daybreak. Come with me as far as my house."
+
+"With pleasure."
+
+"Well, and what have you to say about it?"
+
+"About that woman?" said the doctor coldly.
+
+"There I recognize my Bianchon!" exclaimed Rastignac.
+
+"Why, how?"
+
+"Well, my dear fellow, you speak of the Marquise d'Espard as if she
+were a case for your hospital."
+
+"Do you want to know what I think, Eugene? If you throw over Madame de
+Nucingen for this Marquise, you will swap a one-eyed horse for a blind
+one."
+
+"Madame de Nucingen is six-and-thirty, Bianchon."
+
+"And this woman is three-and-thirty," said the doctor quickly.
+
+"Her worst enemies only say six-and-twenty."
+
+"My dear boy, when you really want to know a woman's age, look at her
+temples and the tip of her nose. Whatever women may achieve with their
+cosmetics, they can do nothing against those incorruptible witnesses
+to their experiences. There each year of life has left its stigmata.
+When a woman's temples are flaccid, seamed, withered in a particular
+way; when at the tip of her nose you see those minute specks, which
+look like the imperceptible black smuts which are shed in London by
+the chimneys in which coal is burnt. . . . Your servant, sir! That
+woman is more than thirty. She may be handsome, witty, loving
+--whatever you please, but she is past thirty, she is arriving at
+maturity. I do not blame men who attach themselves to that kind of
+woman; only, a man of your superior distinction must not mistake a
+winter pippin for a little summer apple, smiling on the bough, and
+waiting for you to crunch it. Love never goes to study the registers
+of birth and marriage; no one loves a woman because she is handsome or
+ugly, stupid or clever; we love because we love."
+
+"Well, for my part, I love for quite other reasons. She is Marquise
+d'Espard; she was a Blamont-Chauvry; she is the fashion; she has soul;
+her foot is as pretty as the Duchesse de Berri's; she has perhaps a
+hundred thousand francs a year--some day, perhaps, I may marry her! In
+short, she will put me into a position which will enable me to pay my
+debts."
+
+"I thought you were rich," interrupted Bianchon.
+
+"Bah! I have twenty thousand francs a year--just enough to keep up my
+stables. I was thoroughly done, my dear fellow, in that Nucingen
+business; I will tell you about that.--I have got my sisters married;
+that is the clearest profit I can show since we last met; and I would
+rather have them provided for than have five hundred thousand francs a
+year. No, what would you have me do? I am ambitious. To what can
+Madame de Nucingen lead? A year more and I shall be shelved, stuck in
+a pigeon-hole like a married man. I have all the discomforts of
+marriage and of single life, without the advantages of either; a false
+position to which every man must come who remains tied too long to the
+same apron-string."
+
+"So you think you will come upon a treasure here?" said Bianchon.
+"Your Marquise, my dear fellow, does not hit my fancy at all."
+
+"Your liberal opinions blur your eyesight. If Madame d'Espard were a
+Madame Rabourdin . . ."
+
+"Listen to me. Noble or simple, she would still have no soul; she
+would still be a perfect type of selfishness. Take my word for it,
+medical men are accustomed to judge of people and things; the sharpest
+of us read the soul while we study the body. In spite of that pretty
+boudoir where we have spent this evening, in spite of the magnificence
+of the house, it is quite possible that Madame la Marquise is in
+debt."
+
+"What makes you think so?"
+
+"I do not assert it; I am supposing. She talked of her soul as Louis
+XVIII. used to talk of his heart. I tell you this: That fragile, fair
+woman, with her chestnut hair, who pities herself that she may be
+pitied, enjoys an iron constitution, an appetite like a wolf's, and
+the strength and cowardice of a tiger. Gauze, and silk, and muslin
+were never more cleverly twisted round a lie! Ecco."
+
+"Bianchon, you frighten me! You have learned a good many things, then,
+since we lived in the Maison Vauquer?"
+
+"Yes, since then, my boy, I have seen puppets, both dolls and
+manikins. I know something of the ways of the fine ladies whose bodies
+we attend to, saving that which is dearest to them, their child--if
+they love it--or their pretty faces, which they always worship. A man
+spends his nights by their pillow, wearing himself to death to spare
+them the slightest loss of beauty in any part; he succeeds, he keeps
+their secret like the dead; they send to ask for his bill, and think
+it horribly exorbitant. Who saved them? Nature. Far from recommending
+him, they speak ill of him, fearing lest he should become the
+physician of their best friends.
+
+"My dear fellow, those women of whom you say, 'They are angels!' I
+--I--have seen stripped of the little grimaces under which they hide
+their soul, as well as of the frippery under which they disguise their
+defects--without manners and without stays; they are not beautiful.
+
+"We saw a great deal of mud, a great deal of dirt, under the waters of
+the world when we were aground for a time on the shoals of the Maison
+Vauquer.--What we saw there was nothing. Since I have gone into high
+society, I have seen monsters dressed in satin, Michonneaus in white
+gloves, Poirets bedizened with orders, fine gentlemen doing more
+usurious business than old Gobseck! To the shame of mankind, when I
+have wanted to shake hands with Virtue, I have found her shivering in
+a loft, persecuted by calumny, half-starving on a income or a salary
+of fifteen hundred francs a year, and regarded as crazy, or eccentric,
+or imbecile.
+
+"In short, my dear boy, the Marquise is a woman of fashion, and I have
+a particular horror of that kind of woman. Do you want to know why? A
+woman who has a lofty soul, fine taste, gentle wit, a generously warm
+heart, and who lives a simple life, has not a chance of being the
+fashion. Ergo: A woman of fashion and a man in power are analogous;
+but there is this difference: the qualities by which a man raises
+himself above others ennoble him and are a glory to him; whereas the
+qualities by which a woman gains power for a day are hideous vices;
+she belies her nature to hide her character, and to live the militant
+life of the world she must have iron strength under a frail
+appearance.
+
+"I, as a physician, know that a sound stomach excludes a good heart.
+Your woman of fashion feels nothing; her rage for pleasure has its
+source in a longing to heat up her cold nature, a craving for
+excitement and enjoyment, like an old man who stands night after night
+by the footlights at the opera. As she has more brain than heart, she
+sacrifices genuine passion and true friends to her triumph, as a
+general sends his most devoted subalterns to the front in order to win
+a battle. The woman of fashion ceases to be a woman; she is neither
+mother, nor wife, nor lover. She is, medically speaking, sex in the
+brain. And your Marquise, too, has all the characteristics of her
+monstrosity, the beak of a bird of prey, the clear, cold eye, the
+gentle voice--she is as polished as the steel of a machine, she
+touches everything except the heart."
+
+"There is some truth in what you say, Bianchon."
+
+"Some truth?" replied Bianchon. "It is all true. Do you suppose that I
+was not struck to the heart by the insulting politeness by which she
+made me measure the imaginary distance which her noble birth sets
+between us? That I did not feel the deepest pity for her cat-like
+civilities when I remembered what her object was? A year hence she
+will not write one word to do me the slightest service, and this
+evening she pelted me with smiles, believing that I can influence my
+uncle Popinot, on whom the success of her case----"
+
+"Would you rather she should have played the fool with you, my dear
+fellow?--I accept your diatribe against women of fashion; but you are
+beside the mark. I should always prefer for a wife a Marquise d'Espard
+to the most devout and devoted creature on earth. Marry an angel! you
+would have to go and bury your happiness in the depths of the country!
+The wife of a politician is a governing machine, a contrivance that
+makes compliments and courtesies. She is the most important and most
+faithful tool which an ambitious man can use; a friend, in short, who
+may compromise herself without mischief, and whom he may belie without
+harmful results. Fancy Mahomet in Paris in the nineteenth century! His
+wife would be a Rohan, a Duchesse de Chevreuse of the Fronde, as keen
+and as flattering as an Ambassadress, as wily as Figaro. Your loving
+wives lead nowhere; a woman of the world leads to everything; she is
+the diamond with which a man cuts every window when he has not the
+golden key which unlocks every door. Leave humdrum virtues to the
+humdrum, ambitious vices to the ambitious.
+
+"Besides, my dear fellow, do you imagine that the love of a Duchesse
+de Langeais, or de Maufrigneuse, or of a Lady Dudley does not bestow
+immense pleasure? If only you knew how much value the cold, severe
+style of such a woman gives to the smallest evidence of their
+affection! What a delight it is to see a periwinkle piercing through
+the snow! A smile from below a fan contradicts the reserve of an
+assumed attitude, and is worth all the unbridled tenderness of your
+middle-class women with their mortgaged devotion; for, in love,
+devotion is nearly akin to speculation.
+
+"And, then, a woman of fashion, a Blamont-Chauvry, has her virtues
+too! Her virtues are fortune, power, effect, a certain contempt of all
+that is beneath her----"
+
+"Thank you!" said Bianchon.
+
+"Old curmudgeon!" said Rastignac, laughing. "Come--do not be so
+common, do like your friend Desplein; be a Baron, a Knight of
+Saint-Michael; become a peer of France, and marry your daughters
+to dukes."
+
+"I! May the five hundred thousand devils----"
+
+"Come, come! Can you be superior only in medicine? Really, you
+distress me . . ."
+
+"I hate that sort of people; I long for a revolution to deliver us
+from them for ever."
+
+"And so, my dear Robespierre of the lancet, you will not go to-morrow
+to your uncle Popinot?"
+
+"Yes, I will," said Bianchon; "for you I would go to hell to fetch
+water . . ."
+
+"My good friend, you really touch me. I have sworn that a commission
+shall sit on the Marquis. Why, here is even a long-saved tear to thank
+you."
+
+"But," Bianchon went on, "I do not promise to succeed as you wish with
+Jean-Jules Popinot. You do not know him. However, I will take him to
+see your Marquise the day after to-morrow; she may get round him if
+she can. I doubt it. If all the truffles, all the Duchesses, all the
+mistresses, and all the charmers in Paris were there in the full bloom
+of their beauty; if the King promised him the /Prairie/, and the
+Almighty gave him the Order of Paradise with the revenues of
+Purgatory, not one of all these powers would induce him to transfer a
+single straw from one saucer of his scales into the other. He is a
+judge, as Death is Death."
+
+The two friends had reached the office of the Minister for Foreign
+Affairs, at the corner of the Boulevard des Capucines.
+
+"Here you are at home," said Bianchon, laughing, as he pointed to the
+ministerial residence. "And here is my carriage," he added, calling a
+hackney cab. "And these--express our fortune."
+
+"You will be happy at the bottom of the sea, while I am still
+struggling with the tempests on the surface, till I sink and go to ask
+you for a corner in your grotto, old fellow!"
+
+"Till Saturday," replied Bianchon.
+
+"Agreed," said Rastignac. "And you promise me Popinot?"
+
+"I will do all my conscience will allow. Perhaps this appeal for a
+commission covers some little dramorama, to use a word of our good bad
+times."
+
+"Poor Bianchon! he will never be anything but a good fellow," said
+Rastignac to himself as the cab drove off.
+
+
+
+"Rastignac has given me the most difficult negotiation in the world,"
+said Bianchon to himself, remembering, as he rose next morning, the
+delicate commission intrusted to him. "However, I have never asked the
+smallest service from my uncle in Court, and have paid more than a
+thousand visits gratis for him. And, after all, we are not apt to
+mince matters between ourselves. He will say Yes or No, and there an
+end."
+
+After this little soliloquy the famous physician bent his steps, at
+seven in the morning, towards the Rue du Fouarre, where dwelt Monsieur
+Jean-Jules Popinot, judge of the Lower Court of the Department of the
+Seine. The Rue du Fouarre--an old word meaning straw--was in the
+thirteenth century the most important street in Paris. There stood the
+Schools of the University, where the voices of Abelard and of Gerson
+were heard in the world of learning. It is now one of the dirtiest
+streets of the Twelfth Arrondissement, the poorest quarter of Paris,
+that in which two-thirds of the population lack firing in winter,
+which leaves most brats at the gate of the Foundling Hospital, which
+sends most beggars to the poorhouse, most rag-pickers to the street
+corners, most decrepit old folks to bask against the walls on which
+the sun shines, most delinquents to the police courts.
+
+Half-way down this street, which is always damp, and where the gutter
+carries to the Seine the blackened waters from some dye-works, there
+is an old house, restored no doubt under Francis I., and built of
+bricks held together by a few courses of masonry. That it is
+substantial seems proved by the shape of its front wall, not
+uncommonly seen in some parts of Paris. It bellies, so to speak, in a
+manner caused by the protuberance of its first floor, crushed under
+the weight of the second and third, but upheld by the strong wall of
+the ground floor. At first sight it would seem as though the piers
+between the windows, though strengthened by the stone mullions, must
+give way, but the observer presently perceives that, as in the tower
+at Bologna, the old bricks and old time-eaten stones of this house
+persistently preserve their centre of gravity.
+
+At every season of the year the solid piers of the ground floor have
+the yellow tone and the imperceptible sweating surface that moisture
+gives to stone. The passer-by feels chilled as he walks close to this
+wall, where worn corner-stones ineffectually shelter him from the
+wheels of vehicles. As is always the case in houses built before
+carriages were in use, the vault of the doorway forms a very low
+archway not unlike the barbican of a prison. To the right of this
+entrance there are three windows, protected outside by iron gratings
+of so close a pattern, that the curious cannot possibly see the use
+made of the dark, damp rooms within, and the panes too are dirty and
+dusty; to the left are two similar windows, one of which is sometimes
+open, exposing to view the porter, his wife, and his children;
+swarming, working, cooking, eating, and screaming, in a floored and
+wainscoted room where everything is dropping to pieces, and into which
+you descend two steps--a depth which seems to suggest the gradual
+elevation of the soil of Paris.
+
+If on a rainy day some foot-passenger takes refuge under the long
+vault, with projecting lime-washed beams, which leads from the door to
+the staircase, he will hardly fail to pause and look at the picture
+presented by the interior of this house. To the left is a square
+garden-plot, allowing of not more than four long steps in each
+direction, a garden of black soil, with trellises bereft of vines, and
+where, in default of vegetation under the shade of two trees, papers
+collect, old rags, potsherds, bits of mortar fallen from the roof; a
+barren ground, where time has shed on the walls, and on the trunks and
+branches of the trees, a powdery deposit like cold soot. The two parts
+of the house, set at a right angle, derive light from this
+garden-court shut in by two adjoining houses built on wooden piers,
+decrepit and ready to fall, where on each floor some grotesque evidence
+is to be seen of the craft pursued by some lodger within. Here long
+poles are hung with immense skeins of dyed worsted put out to dry;
+there, on ropes, dance clean-washed shirts; higher up, on a shelf,
+volumes display their freshly marbled edges; women sing, husbands
+whistle, children shout; the carpenter saws his planks, a copper-turner
+makes the metal screech; all kinds of industries combine to produce a
+noise which the number of instruments renders distracting.
+
+The general system of decoration in this passage, which is neither
+courtyard, garden, nor vaulted way, though a little of all, consists
+of wooden pillars resting on square stone blocks, and forming arches.
+Two archways open on to the little garden; two others, facing the
+front gateway, lead to a wooden staircase, with an iron balustrade
+that was once a miracle of smith's work, so whimsical are the shapes
+given to the metal; the worn steps creak under every tread. The
+entrance to each flat has an architrave dark with dirt, grease, and
+dust, and outer doors, covered with Utrecht velvet set with brass
+nails, once gilt, in a diamond pattern. These relics of splendor show
+that in the time of Louis XIV. the house was the residence of some
+councillor to the Parlement, some rich priests, or some treasurer of
+the ecclesiastical revenue. But these vestiges of former luxury bring
+a smile to the lips by the artless contrast of past and present.
+
+M. Jean-Jules Popinot lived on the first floor of this house, where
+the gloom, natural to all first floors in Paris houses, was increased
+by the narrowness of the street. This old tenement was known to all
+the twelfth arrondissement, on which Providence had bestowed this
+lawyer, as it gives a beneficent plant to cure or alleviate every
+malady. Here is a sketch of a man whom the brilliant Marquise d'Espard
+hoped to fascinate.
+
+M. Popinot, as is seemly for a magistrate, was always dressed in black
+--a style which contributed to make him ridiculous in the eyes of
+those who were in the habit of judging everything from a superficial
+examination. Men who are jealous of maintaining the dignity required
+by this color ought to devote themselves to constant and minute care
+of their person; but our dear M. Popinot was incapable of forcing
+himself to the puritanical cleanliness which black demands. His
+trousers, always threadbare, looked like camlet--the stuff of which
+attorneys' gowns are made; and his habitual stoop set them, in time,
+in such innumerable creases, that in places they were traced with
+lines, whitish, rusty, or shiny, betraying either sordid avarice, or
+the most unheeding poverty. His coarse worsted stockings were twisted
+anyhow in his ill-shaped shoes. His linen had the tawny tinge acquired
+by long sojourn in a wardrobe, showing that the late lamented Madame
+Popinot had had a mania for much linen; in the Flemish fashion,
+perhaps, she had given herself the trouble of a great wash no more
+than twice a year. The old man's coat and waistcoat were in harmony
+with his trousers, shoes, stockings, and linen. He always had the luck
+of his carelessness; for, the first day he put on a new coat, he
+unfailingly matched it with the rest of his costume by staining it
+with incredible promptitude. The good man waited till his housekeeper
+told him that his hat was too shabby before buying a new one. His
+necktie was always crumpled and starchless, and he never set his
+dog-eared shirt collar straight after his judge's bands had disordered
+it. He took no care of his gray hair, and shaved but twice a week. He
+never wore gloves, and generally kept his hands stuffed into his empty
+trousers' pockets; the soiled pocket-holes, almost always torn, added
+a final touch to the slovenliness of his person.
+
+Any one who knows the Palais de Justice at Paris, where every variety
+of black attire may be studied, can easily imagine the appearance of
+M. Popinot. The habit of sitting for days at a time modifies the
+structure of the body, just as the fatigue of hearing interminable
+pleadings tells on the expression of a magistrate's face. Shut up as
+he is in courts ridiculously small, devoid of architectural dignity,
+and where the air is quickly vitiated, a Paris judge inevitably
+acquires a countenance puckered and seamed by reflection, and
+depressed by weariness; his complexion turns pallid, acquiring an
+earthy or greenish hue according to his individual temperament. In
+short, within a given time the most blooming young man is turned into
+an "inasmuch" machine--an instrument which applies the Code to
+individual cases with the indifference of clockwork.
+
+Hence, nature, having bestowed on M. Popinot a not too pleasing
+exterior, his life as a lawyer had not improved it. His frame was
+graceless and angular. His thick knees, huge feet, and broad hands
+formed a contrast with a priest-like face having a vague resemblance
+to a calf's head, meek to unmeaningness, and but little brightened by
+divergent bloodless eyes, divided by a straight flat nose, surmounted
+by a flat forehead, flanked by enormous ears, flabby and graceless.
+His thin, weak hair showed the baldness through various irregular
+partings.
+
+One feature only commended this face to the physiognomist. This man
+had a mouth to whose lips divine kindness lent its sweetness. They
+were wholesome, full, red lips, finely wrinkled, sinuous, mobile, by
+which nature had given expression to noble feelings; lips which spoke
+to the heart and proclaimed the man's intelligence and lucidity, a
+gift of second-sight, and a heavenly temper; and you would have judged
+him wrongly from looking merely at his sloping forehead, his fireless
+eyes, and his shambling gait. His life answered to his countenance; it
+was full of secret labor, and hid the virtue of a saint. His superior
+knowledge of law proved so strong a recommendation at a time when
+Napoleon was reorganizing it in 1808 and 1811, that, by the advice of
+Cambaceres, he was one of the first men named to sit on the Imperial
+High Court of Justice at Paris. Popinot was no schemer. Whenever any
+demand was made, any request preferred for an appointment, the
+Minister would overlook Popinot, who never set foot in the house of
+the High Chancellor or the Chief Justice. From the High Court he was
+sent down to the Common Court, and pushed to the lowest rung of the
+ladder by active struggling men. There he was appointed supernumerary
+judge. There was a general outcry among the lawyers: "Popinot a
+supernumerary!" Such injustice struck the legal world with dismay--the
+attorneys, the registrars, everybody but Popinot himself, who made no
+complaint. The first clamor over, everybody was satisfied that all was
+for the best in the best of all possible worlds, which must certainly
+be the legal world. Popinot remained supernumerary judge till the day
+when the most famous Great Seal under the Restoration avenged the
+oversights heaped on this modest and uncomplaining man by the Chief
+Justices of the Empire. After being a supernumerary for twelve years,
+M. Popinot would no doubt die a puisne judge of the Court of the
+Seine.
+
+To account for the obscure fortunes of one of the superior men of the
+legal profession, it is necessary to enter here into some details
+which will serve to reveal his life and character, and which will, at
+the same time, display some of the wheels of the great machine known
+as Justice. M. Popinot was classed by the three Presidents who
+successively controlled the Court of the Seine under the category of
+possible judges, the stuff of which judges are made. Thus classified,
+he did not achieve the reputation for capacity which his previous
+labors had deserved. Just as a painter is invariably included in a
+category as a landscape painter, a portrait painter, a painter of
+history, of sea pieces, or of genre, by a public consisting of
+artists, connoisseurs, and simpletons, who, out of envy, or critical
+omnipotence, or prejudice, fence in his intellect, assuming, one and
+all, that there are ganglions in every brain--a narrow judgment which
+the world applies to writers, to statesmen, to everybody who begins
+with some specialty before being hailed as omniscient; so Popinot's
+fate was sealed, and he was hedged round to do a particular kind of
+work. Magistrates, attorneys, pleaders, all who pasture on the legal
+common, distinguish two elements in every case--law and equity. Equity
+is the outcome of facts, law is the application of principles to
+facts. A man may be right in equity but wrong in law, without any
+blame to the judge. Between his conscience and the facts there is a
+whole gulf of determining reasons unknown to the judge, but which
+condemn or legitimatize the act. A judge is not God; the duty is to
+adapt facts to principles, to judge cases of infinite variety while
+measuring them by a fixed standard.
+
+France employs about six thousand judges; no generation has six
+thousand great men at her command, much less can she find them in the
+legal profession. Popinot, in the midst of the civilization of Paris,
+was just a very clever cadi, who, by the character of his mind, and by
+dint of rubbing the letter of the law into the essence of facts, had
+learned to see the error of spontaneous and violent decisions. By the
+help of his judicial second-sight he could pierce the double casing of
+lies in which advocates hide the heart of a trial. He was a judge, as
+the great Desplein was a surgeon; he probed men's consciences as the
+anatomist probed their bodies. His life and habits had led him to an
+exact appreciation of their most secret thoughts by a thorough study
+of facts.
+
+He sifted a case as Cuvier sifted the earth's crust. Like that great
+thinker, he proceeded from deduction to deduction before drawing his
+conclusions, and reconstructed the past career of a conscience as
+Cuvier reconstructed an Anoplotherium. When considering a brief he
+would often wake in the night, startled by a gleam of truth suddenly
+sparkling in his brain. Struck by the deep injustice, which is the end
+of these contests, in which everything is against the honest man,
+everything to the advantage of the rogue, he often summed up in favor
+of equity against law in such cases as bore on questions of what may
+be termed divination. Hence he was regarded by his colleagues as a man
+not of a practical mind; his arguments on two lines of deduction made
+their deliberations lengthy. When Popinot observed their dislike to
+listening to him he gave his opinion briefly; it was said that he was
+not a good judge in this class of cases; but as his gift of
+discrimination was remarkable, his opinion lucid, and his penetration
+profound, he was considered to have a special aptitude for the
+laborious duties of an examining judge. So an examining judge he
+remained during the greater part of his legal career.
+
+Although his qualifications made him eminently fitted for its
+difficult functions, and he had the reputation of being so learned in
+criminal law that his duty was a pleasure to him, the kindness of his
+heart constantly kept him in torture, and he was nipped as in a vise
+between his conscience and his pity. The services of an examining
+judge are better paid than those of a judge in civil actions, but they
+do not therefore prove a temptation; they are too onerous. Popinot, a
+man of modest and virtuous learning, without ambition, an
+indefatigable worker, never complained of his fate; he sacrificed his
+tastes and his compassionate soul to the public good, and allowed
+himself to be transported to the noisome pools of criminal
+examinations, where he showed himself alike severe and beneficent. His
+clerk sometimes would give the accused some money to buy tobacco, or a
+warm winter garment, as he led him back from the judge's office to the
+Souriciere, the mouse-trap--the House of Detention where the accused
+are kept under the orders of the Examining Judge. He knew how to be an
+inflexible judge and a charitable man. And no one extracted a
+confession so easily as he without having recourse to judicial
+trickery. He had, too, all the acumen of an observer. This man,
+apparently so foolishly good-natured, simple, and absent-minded, could
+guess all the cunning of a prison wag, unmask the astutest street
+huzzy, and subdue a scoundrel. Unusual circumstances had sharpened his
+perspicacity; but to relate these we must intrude on his domestic
+history, for in him the judge was the social side of the man; another
+man, greater and less known, existed within.
+
+Twelve years before the beginning of this story, in 1816, during the
+terrible scarcity which coincided disastrously with the stay in France
+of the so-called Allies, Popinot was appointed President of the
+Commission Extraordinary formed to distribute food to the poor of his
+neighborhood, just when he had planned to move from the Rue du
+Fouarre, which he as little liked to live in as his wife did. The
+great lawyer, the clear-sighted criminal judge, whose superiority
+seemed to his colleagues a form of aberration, had for five years been
+watching legal results without seeing their causes. As he scrambled up
+into the lofts, as he saw the poverty, as he studied the desperate
+necessities which gradually bring the poor to criminal acts, as he
+estimated their long struggles, compassion filled his soul. The judge
+then became the Saint Vincent de Paul of these grown-up children,
+these suffering toilers. The transformation was not immediately
+complete. Beneficence has its temptations as vice has. Charity
+consumes a saint's purse, as roulette consumes the possessions of a
+gambler, quite gradually. Popinot went from misery to misery, from
+charity to charity; then, by the time he had lifted all the rags which
+cover public pauperism, like a bandage under which an inflamed wound
+lies festering, at the end of a year he had become the Providence
+incarnate of that quarter of the town. He was a member of the
+Benevolent Committee and of the Charity Organization. Wherever any
+gratuitous services were needed he was ready, and did everything
+without fuss, like the man with the short cloak, who spends his life
+in carrying soup round the markets and other places where there are
+starving folks.
+
+Popinot was fortunate in acting on a larger circle and in a higher
+sphere; he had an eye on everything, he prevented crime, he gave work
+to the unemployed, he found a refuge for the helpless, he distributed
+aid with discernment wherever danger threatened, he made himself the
+counselor of the widow, the protector of homeless children, the
+sleeping partner of small traders. No one at the Courts, no one in
+Paris, knew of this secret life of Popinot's. There are virtues so
+splendid that they necessitate obscurity; men make haste to hide them
+under a bushel. As to those whom the lawyer succored, they, hard at
+work all day and tired at night, were little able to sing his praises;
+theirs was the gracelessness of children, who can never pay because
+they owe too much. There is such compulsory ingratitude; but what
+heart that has sown good to reap gratitude can think itself great?
+
+By the end of the second year of his apostolic work, Popinot had
+turned the storeroom at the bottom of his house into a parlor, lighted
+by the three iron-barred windows. The walls and ceiling of this
+spacious room were whitewashed, and the furniture consisted of wooden
+benches like those seen in schools, a clumsy cupboard, a walnut-wood
+writing-table, and an armchair. In the cupboard were his registers of
+donations, his tickets for orders for bread, and his diary. He kept
+his ledger like a tradesman, that he might not be ruined by kindness.
+All the sorrows of the neighborhood were entered and numbered in a
+book, where each had its little account, as merchants' customers have
+theirs. When there was any question as to a man or a family needing
+help, the lawyer could always command information from the police.
+
+Lavienne, a man made for his master, was his aide-de-camp. He redeemed
+or renewed pawn-tickets, and visited the districts most threatened
+with famine, while his master was in court.
+
+From four till seven in the morning in summer, from six till nine in
+winter, this room was full of women, children, and paupers, while
+Popinot gave audience. There was no need for a stove in winter; the
+crowd was so dense that the air was warmed; only, Lavienne strewed
+straw on the wet floor. By long use the benches were as polished as
+varnished mahogany; at the height of a man's shoulders the wall had a
+coat of dark, indescribable color, given to it by the rags and
+tattered clothes of these poor creatures. The poor wretches loved
+Popinot so well that when they assembled before his door was opened,
+before daybreak on a winter's morning, the women warming themselves
+with their foot-brasiers, the men swinging their arms for circulation,
+never a sound had disturbed his sleep. Rag-pickers and other toilers
+of the night knew the house, and often saw a light burning in the
+lawyer's private room at unholy hours. Even thieves, as they passed
+by, said, "That is his house," and respected it. The morning he gave
+to the poor, the mid-day hours to criminals, the evening to law work.
+
+Thus the gift of observation that characterized Popinot was
+necessarily bifrons; he could guess the virtues of a pauper--good
+feelings nipped, fine actions in embryo, unrecognized self-sacrifice,
+just as he could read at the bottom of a man's conscience the faintest
+outlines of a crime, the slenderest threads of wrongdoing, and infer
+all the rest.
+
+Popinot's inherited fortune was a thousand crowns a year. His wife,
+sister to M. Bianchon /Senior/, a doctor at Sancerre, had brought him
+about twice as much. She, dying five years since, had left her fortune
+to her husband. As the salary of a supernumerary judge is not large,
+and Popinot had been a fully salaried judge only for four years, we
+may guess his reasons for parsimony in all that concerned his person
+and mode of life, when we consider how small his means were and how
+great his beneficence. Besides, is not such indifference to dress as
+stamped Popinot an absent-minded man, a distinguishing mark of
+scientific attainment, of art passionately pursued, of a perpetually
+active mind? To complete this portrait, it will be enough to add that
+Popinot was one of the few judges of the Court of the Seine on whom
+the ribbon of the Legion of Honor had not been conferred.
+
+Such was the man who had been instructed by the President of the
+Second Chamber of the Court--to which Popinot had belonged since his
+reinstatement among the judges in civil law--to examine the Marquis
+d'Espard at the request of his wife, who sued for a Commission in
+Lunacy.
+
+The Rue du Fouarre, where so many unhappy wretches swarmed in the
+early morning, would be deserted by nine o'clock, and as gloomy and
+squalid as ever. Bianchon put his horse to a trot in order to find his
+uncle in the midst of his business. It was not without a smile that he
+thought of the curious contrast the judge's appearance would make in
+Madame d'Espard's room; but he promised himself that he would persuade
+him to dress in a way that should not be too ridiculous.
+
+"If only my uncle happens to have a new coat!" said Bianchon to
+himself, as he turned into the Rue du Fouarre, where a pale light
+shone from the parlor windows. "I shall do well, I believe, to talk
+that over with Lavienne."
+
+At the sound of wheels half a score of startled paupers came out from
+under the gateway, and took off their hats on recognizing Bianchon;
+for the doctor, who treated gratuitously the sick recommended to him
+by the lawyer, was not less well known than he to the poor creatures
+assembled there.
+
+Bianchon found his uncle in the middle of the parlor, where the
+benches were occupied by patients presenting such grotesque
+singularities of costume as would have made the least artistic
+passer-by turn round to gaze at them. A draughtsman--a Rembrandt, if
+there were one in our day--might have conceived of one of his finest
+compositions from seeing these children of misery, in artless
+attitudes, and all silent.
+
+Here was the rugged countenance of an old man with a white beard and
+an apostolic head--a Saint Peter ready to hand; his chest, partly
+uncovered, showed salient muscles, the evidence of an iron
+constitution which had served him as a fulcrum to resist a whole poem
+of sorrows. There a young woman was suckling her youngest-born to keep
+it from crying, while another of about five stood between her knees.
+Her white bosom, gleaming amid rags, the baby with its transparent
+flesh-tints, and the brother, whose attitude promised a street arab in
+the future, touched the fancy with pathos by its almost graceful
+contrast with the long row of faces crimson with cold, in the midst of
+which sat this family group. Further away, an old woman, pale and
+rigid, had the repulsive look of rebellious pauperism, eager to avenge
+all its past woes in one day of violence.
+
+There, again, was the young workman, weakly and indolent, whose
+brightly intelligent eye revealed fine faculties crushed by necessity
+struggled with in vain, saying nothing of his sufferings, and nearly
+dead for lack of an opportunity to squeeze between the bars of the
+vast stews where the wretched swim round and round and devour each
+other.
+
+The majority were women; their husbands, gone to their work, left it
+to them, no doubt, to plead the cause of the family with the ingenuity
+which characterizes the woman of the people, who is almost always
+queen in her hovel. You would have seen a torn bandana on every head,
+on every form a skirt deep in mud, ragged kerchiefs, worn and dirty
+jackets, but eyes that burnt like live coals. It was a horrible
+assemblage, raising at first sight a feeling of disgust, but giving a
+certain sense of terror the instant you perceived that the resignation
+of these souls, all engaged in the struggle for every necessary of
+life, was purely fortuitous, a speculation on benevolence. The two
+tallow candles which lighted the parlor flickered in a sort of fog
+caused by the fetid atmosphere of the ill-ventilated room.
+
+The magistrate himself was not the least picturesque figure in the
+midst of this assembly. He had on his head a rusty cotton night-cap;
+as he had no cravat, his neck was visible, red with cold and wrinkled,
+in contrast with the threadbare collar of his old dressing-gown. His
+worn face had the half-stupid look that comes of absorbed attention.
+His lips, like those of all men who work, were puckered up like a bag
+with the strings drawn tight. His knitted brows seemed to bear the
+burden of all the sorrows confided to him: he felt, analyzed, and
+judged them all. As watchful as a Jew money-lender, he never raised
+his eyes from his books and registers but to look into the very heart
+of the persons he was examining, with the flashing glance by which a
+miser expresses his alarm.
+
+Lavienne, standing behind his master, ready to carry out his orders,
+served no doubt as a sort of police, and welcomed newcomers by
+encouraging them to get over their shyness. When the doctor appeared
+there was a stir on the benches. Lavienne turned his head, and was
+strangely surprised to see Bianchon.
+
+"Ah! It is you, old boy!" exclaimed Popinot, stretching himself. "What
+brings you so early?"
+
+"I was afraid lest you should make an official visit about which I
+wish to speak to you before I could see you."
+
+"Well," said the lawyer, addressing a stout little woman who was still
+standing close to him, "if you do not tell me what it is you want, I
+cannot guess it, child."
+
+"Make haste," said Lavienne. "Do not waste other people's time."
+
+"Monsieur," said the woman at last, turning red, and speaking so low
+as only to be heard by Popinot and Lavienne, "I have a green-grocery
+truck, and I have my last baby to nurse, and I owe for his keep. Well,
+I had hidden my little bit of money----"
+
+"Yes; and your man took it?" said Popinot, guessing the sequel.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+"La Pomponne."
+
+"And your husband's?"
+
+"Toupinet."
+
+"Rue du Petit-Banquier?" said Popinot, turning over his register. "He
+is in prison," he added, reading a note at the margin of the section
+in which this family was described.
+
+"For debt, my kind monsieur."
+
+Popinot shook his head.
+
+"But I have nothing to buy any stock for my truck; the landlord came
+yesterday and made me pay up; otherwise I should have been turned
+out."
+
+Lavienne bent over his master, and whispered in his ear.
+
+"Well, how much do you want to buy fruit in the market?"
+
+"Why, my good monsieur, to carry on my business, I should want--Yes, I
+should certainly want ten francs."
+
+Popinot signed to Lavienne, who took ten francs out of a large bag,
+and handed them to the woman, while the lawyer made a note of the loan
+in his ledger. As he saw the thrill of delight that made the poor
+hawker tremble, Bianchon understood the apprehensions that must have
+agitated her on her way to the lawyer's house.
+
+"You next," said Lavienne to the old man with the white beard.
+
+Bianchon drew the servant aside, and asked him how long this audience
+would last.
+
+"Monsieur has had two hundred persons this morning, and there are
+eight to be turned off," said Lavienne. "You will have time to pay
+your early visit, sir."
+
+"Here, my boy," said the lawyer, turning round and taking Horace by
+the arm; "here are two addresses near this--one in the Rue de Seine,
+and the other in the Rue de l'Arbalete. Go there at once. Rue de
+Seine, a young girl has just asphyxiated herself; and Rue de
+l'Arbalete, you will find a man to remove to your hospital. I will
+wait breakfast for you."
+
+Bianchon returned an hour later. The Rue du Fouarre was deserted; day
+was beginning to dawn there; his uncle had gone up to his rooms; the
+last poor wretch whose misery the judge had relieved was departing,
+and Lavienne's money bag was empty.
+
+"Well, how are they going on?" asked the old lawyer, as the doctor
+came in.
+
+"The man is dead," replied Bianchon; "the girl will get over it."
+
+Since the eye and hand of a woman had been lacking, the flat in which
+Popinot lived had assumed an aspect in harmony with its master's. The
+indifference of a man who is absorbed in one dominant idea had set its
+stamp of eccentricity on everything. Everywhere lay unconquerable
+dust, every object was adapted to a wrong purpose with a pertinacity
+suggestive of a bachelor's home. There were papers in the flower
+vases, empty ink-bottles on the tables, plates that had been
+forgotten, matches used as tapers for a minute when something had to
+be found, drawers or boxes half-turned out and left unfinished; in
+short, all the confusion and vacancies resulting from plans for order
+never carried out. The lawyer's private room, especially disordered by
+this incessant rummage, bore witness to his unresting pace, the hurry
+of a man overwhelmed with business, hunted by contradictory
+necessities. The bookcase looked as if it had been sacked; there were
+books scattered over everything, some piled up open, one on another,
+others on the floor face downwards; registers of proceedings laid on
+the floor in rows, lengthwise, in front of the shelves; and that floor
+had not been polished for two years.
+
+The tables and shelves were covered with ex votos, the offerings of
+the grateful poor. On a pair of blue glass jars which ornamented the
+chimney-shelf there were two glass balls, of which the core was made
+up of many-colored fragments, giving them the appearance of some
+singular natural product. Against the wall hung frames of artificial
+flowers, and decorations in which Popinot's initials were surrounded
+by hearts and everlasting flowers. Here were boxes of elaborate and
+useless cabinet work; there letter-weights carved in the style of work
+done by convicts in penal servitude. These masterpieces of patience,
+enigmas of gratitude, and withered bouquets gave the lawyer's room the
+appearance of a toyshop. The good man used these works of art as
+hiding-places which he filled with bills, worn-out pens, and scraps of
+paper. All these pathetic witnesses to his divine charity were thick
+with dust, dingy, and faded.
+
+Some birds, beautifully stuffed, but eaten by moth, perched in this
+wilderness of trumpery, presided over by an Angora cat, Madame
+Popinot's pet, restored to her no doubt with all the graces of life by
+some impecunious naturalist, who thus repaid a gift of charity with a
+perennial treasure. Some local artist whose heart had misguided his
+brush had painted portraits of M. and Madame Popinot. Even in the
+bedroom there were embroidered pin-cushions, landscapes in
+cross-stitch, and crosses in folded paper, so elaborately cockled as to
+show the senseless labor they had cost.
+
+The window-curtains were black with smoke, and the hangings absolutely
+colorless. Between the fireplace and the large square table at which
+the magistrate worked, the cook had set two cups of coffee on a small
+table, and two armchairs, in mahogany and horsehair, awaited the uncle
+and nephew. As daylight, darkened by the windows, could not penetrate
+to this corner, the cook had left two dips burning, whose unsnuffed
+wicks showed a sort of mushroom growth, giving the red light which
+promises length of life to the candle from slowness of combustion--a
+discovery due to some miser.
+
+"My dear uncle, you ought to wrap yourself more warmly when you go
+down to that parlor."
+
+"I cannot bear to keep them waiting, poor souls!--Well, and what do
+you want of me?"
+
+"I have come to ask you to dine to-morrow with the Marquise d'Espard."
+
+"A relation of ours?" asked Popinot, with such genuine absence of mind
+that Bianchon laughed.
+
+"No, uncle; the Marquise d'Espard is a high and puissant lady, who has
+laid before the Courts a petition desiring that a Commission in Lunacy
+should sit on her husband, and you are appointed----"
+
+"And you want me to dine with her! Are you mad?" said the lawyer,
+taking up the code of proceedings. "Here, only read this article,
+prohibiting any magistrate's eating or drinking in the house of either
+of two parties whom he is called upon to decide between. Let her come
+and see me, your Marquise, if she has anything to say to me. I was, in
+fact, to go to examine her husband to-morrow, after working the case
+up to-night."
+
+He rose, took up a packet of papers that lay under a weight where he
+could see it, and after reading the title, he said:
+
+"Here is the affidavit. Since you take an interest in this high and
+puissant lady, let us see what she wants."
+
+Popinot wrapped his dressing-gown across his body, from which it was
+constantly slipping and leaving his chest bare; he sopped his bread in
+the half-cold coffee, and opened the petition, which he read, allowing
+himself to throw in a parenthesis now and then, and some discussions,
+in which his nephew took part:--
+
+"'To Monsieur the President of the Civil Tribunal of the Lower Court
+of the Department of the Seine, sitting at the Palais de Justice.
+
+"'Madame Jeanne Clementine Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, wife of M.
+Charles Maurice Marie Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis
+d'Espard'--a very good family--'landowner, the said Mme. d'Espard
+living in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, No. 104, and the said M.
+d'Espard in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, No. 22,'--to be
+sure, the President told me he lived in this part of the town--'having
+for her solicitor Maitre Desroches'--Desroches! a pettifogging jobber,
+a man looked down upon by his brother lawyers, and who does his
+clients no good--"
+
+"Poor fellow!" said Bianchon, "unluckily he has no money, and he
+rushes round like the devil in holy water--That is all."
+
+"'Has the honor to submit to you, Monsieur the President, that for a
+year past the moral and intellectual powers of her husband, M.
+d'Espard, have undergone so serious a change, that at the present day
+they have reached the state of dementia and idiocy provided for by
+Article 448 of the Civil Code, and require the application of the
+remedies set forth by that article, for the security of his fortune
+and his person, and to guard the interest of his children whom he
+keeps to live with him.
+
+"'That, in point of fact, the mental condition of M. d'Espard, which
+for some years has given grounds for alarm based on the system he has
+pursued in the management of his affairs, has reached, during the last
+twelvemonth, a deplorable depth of depression; that his infirm will
+was the first thing to show the results of the malady; and that its
+effete state leaves M. the Marquis d'Espard exposed to all the perils
+of his incompetency, as is proved by the following facts:
+
+"'For a long time all the income accruing from M. d'Espard's estates
+are paid, without any reasonable cause, or even temporary advantage,
+into the hands of an old woman, whose repulsive ugliness is generally
+remarked on, named Madame Jeanrenaud, living sometimes in Paris, Rue
+de la Vrilliere, No. 8, sometimes at Villeparisis, near Claye, in the
+Department of Seine et Marne, and for the benefit of her son, aged
+thirty-six, an officer in the ex-Imperial Guards, whom the Marquis
+d'Espard has placed by his influence in the King's Guards, as Major in
+the First Regiment of Cuirassiers. These two persons, who in 1814 were
+in extreme poverty, have since then purchased house-property of
+considerable value; among other items, quite recently, a large house
+in the Grand Rue Verte, where the said Jeanrenaud is laying out
+considerable sums in order to settle there with the woman Jeanrenaud,
+intending to marry: these sums amount already to more than a hundred
+thousand francs. The marriage has been arranged by the intervention of
+M. d'Espard with his banker, one Mongenod, whose niece he has asked in
+marriage for the said Jeanrenaud, promising to use his influence to
+procure him the title and dignity of baron. This has in fact been
+secured by His Majesty's letters patent, dated December 29th of last
+year, at the request of the Marquis d'Espard, as can be proved by His
+Excellency the Keeper of the Seals, if the Court should think proper
+to require his testimony.
+
+"'That no reason, not even such as morality and the law would concur
+in disapproving, can justify the influence which the said Mme.
+Jeanrenaud exerts over M. d'Espard, who, indeed, sees her very seldom;
+nor account for his strange affection for the said Baron Jeanrenaud,
+Major with whom he has but little intercourse. And yet their power is
+so considerable, that whenever they need money, if only to gratify a
+mere whim, this lady, or her son----' Heh, heh! /No reason even such as
+morality and the law concur in disapproving!/ What does the clerk or
+the attorney mean to insinuate?" said Popinot.
+
+Bianchon laughed.
+
+"'This lady, or her son, obtain whatever they ask of the Marquis
+d'Espard without demur; and if he has not ready money, M. d'Espard
+draws bills to be paid by the said Mongenod, who has offered to give
+evidence to that effect for the petitioner.
+
+"'That, moreover, in further proof of these facts, lately, on the
+occasion of the renewal of the leases on the Espard estate, the
+farmers having paid a considerable premium for the renewal of their
+leases on the old terms, M. Jeanrenaud at once secured the payment of
+it into his own hands.
+
+"'That the Marquis d'Espard parts with these sums of money so little
+of his own free-will, that when he was spoken to on the subject he
+seemed to remember nothing of the matter; that whenever anybody of any
+weight has questioned him as to his devotion to these two persons, his
+replies have shown so complete an absence of ideas and of sense of his
+own interests, that there obviously must be some occult cause at work
+to which the petitioner begs to direct the eye of justice, inasmuch as
+it is impossible but that this cause should be criminal, malignant,
+and wrongful, or else of a nature to come under medical jurisdiction;
+unless this influence is of the kind which constitutes an abuse of
+moral power--such as can only be described by the word /possession/
+----'The devil!" exclaimed Popinot. "What do you say to that, doctor.
+These are strange statements."
+
+"They might certainly," said Bianchon, "be an effect of magnetic
+force."
+
+"Then do you believe in Mesmer's nonsense, and his tub, and seeing
+through walls?"
+
+"Yes, uncle," said the doctor gravely. "As I heard you read that
+petition I thought of that. I assure you that I have verified, in
+another sphere of action, several analogous facts proving the
+unlimited influence one man may acquire over another. In contradiction
+to the opinion of my brethren, I am perfectly convinced of the power
+of the will regarded as a motor force. All collusion and charlatanism
+apart, I have seen the results of such a possession. Actions promised
+during sleep by a magnetized patient to the magnetizer have been
+scrupulously performed on waking. The will of one had become the will
+of the other."
+
+"Every kind of action?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Even a criminal act?"
+
+"Even a crime."
+
+"If it were not from you, I would not listen to such a thing."
+
+"I will make you witness it," said Bianchon.
+
+"Hm, hm," muttered the lawyer. "But supposing that this so-called
+possession fell under this class of facts, it would be difficult to
+prove it as legal evidence."
+
+"If this woman Jeanrenaud is so hideously old and ugly, I do not see
+what other means of fascination she can have used," observed Bianchon.
+
+"But," observed the lawyer, "in 1814, the time at which this
+fascination is supposed to have taken place, this woman was fourteen
+years younger; if she had been connected with M. d'Espard ten years
+before that, these calculations take us back four-and-twenty years, to
+a time when the lady may have been young and pretty, and have won for
+herself and her son a power over M. d'Espard which some men do not
+know how to evade. Though the source of this power is reprehensible in
+the sight of justice, it is justifiable in the eye of nature. Madame
+Jeanrenaud may have been aggrieved by the marriage, contracted
+probably at about that time, between the Marquis d'Espard and
+Mademoiselle de Blamont-Chauvry, and at the bottom of all this there
+may be nothing more than the rivalry of two women, since the Marquis
+had for a long time lived apart from Mme. d'Espard."
+
+"But her repulsive ugliness, uncle?"
+
+"Power of fascination is in direct proportion to ugliness," said the
+lawyer; "that is the old story. And then think of the smallpox,
+doctor. But to proceed.
+
+"'That so long ago as in 1815, in order to supply the sums of money
+required by these two persons, the Marquis d'Espard went with his two
+children to live in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, in rooms
+quite unworthy of his name and rank'--well, we may live as we please
+--'that he keeps his two children there, the Comte Clement d'Espard
+and Vicomte Camille d'Espard, in a style of living quite unsuited to
+their future prospects, their name and fortune; that he often wants
+money, to such a point, that not long since the landlord, one Mariast,
+put in an execution on the furniture in the rooms; that when this
+execution was carried out in his presence, the Marquis d'Espard helped
+the bailiff, whom he treated like a man of rank, paying him all the
+marks of attention and respect which he would have shown to a person
+of superior birth and dignity to himself.'"
+
+The uncle and nephew glanced at each other and laughed.
+
+"'That, moreover, every act of his life, besides the facts with
+reference to the widow Jeanrenaud and the Baron Jeanrenaud, her son,
+are those of a madman; that for nearly ten years he has given his
+thoughts exclusively to China, its customs, manners, and history; that
+he refers everything to a Chinese origin; that when he is questioned
+on the subject, he confuses the events of the day and the business of
+yesterday with facts relating to China; that he censures the acts of
+the Government and the conduct of the King, though he is personally
+much attached to him, by comparing them with the politics of China;
+
+"'That this monomania has driven the Marquis d'Espard to conduct
+devoid of all sense: against the customs of men of rank, and, in
+opposition to his own professed ideas as to the duties of the
+nobility, he has joined a commercial undertaking, for which he
+constantly draws bills which, as they fall due, threaten both his
+honor and his fortune, since they stamp him as a trader, and in
+default of payment may lead to his being declared insolvent; that
+these debts, which are owing to stationers, printers, lithographers,
+and print-colorists, who have supplied the materials for his
+publication, called A Picturesque History of China, now coming out in
+parts, are so heavy that these tradesmen have requested the petitioner
+to apply for a Commission in Lunacy with regard to the Marquis
+d'Espard in order to save their own credit.'"
+
+"The man is mad!" exclaimed Bianchon.
+
+"You think so, do you?" said his uncle. "If you listen to only one
+bell, you hear only one sound."
+
+"But it seems to me----" said Bianchon.
+
+"But it seems to me," said Popinot, "that if any relation of mine
+wanted to get hold of the management of my affairs, and if, instead of
+being a humble lawyer, whose colleagues can, any day, verify what his
+condition is, I were a duke of the realm, an attorney with a little
+cunning, like Desroches, might bring just such a petition against me.
+
+"'That his children's education has been neglected for this
+monomania; and that he has taught them, against all the rules of
+education, the facts of Chinese history, which contradict the tenets
+of the Catholic Church. He also has them taught the Chinese
+dialects.'"
+
+"Here Desroches strikes me as funny," said Bianchon.
+
+"The petition is drawn up by his head-clerk Godeschal, who, as you
+know, is not strong in Chinese," said the lawyer.
+
+"'That he often leaves his children destitute of the most necessary
+things; that the petitioner, notwithstanding her entreaties, can never
+see them; that the said Marquis d'Espard brings them to her only once
+a year; that, knowing the privations to which they are exposed, she
+makes vain efforts to give them the things most necessary for their
+existence, and which they require----' Oh! Madame la Marquise, this is
+preposterous. By proving too much you prove nothing.--My dear boy,"
+said the old man, laying the document on his knee, "where is the
+mother who ever lacked heart and wit and yearning to such a degree as
+to fall below the inspirations suggested by her animal instinct? A
+mother is as cunning to get at her children as a girl can be in the
+conduct of a love intrigue. If your Marquise really wanted to give her
+children food and clothes, the Devil himself would not have hindered
+her, heh? That is rather too big a fable for an old lawyer to swallow!
+--To proceed.
+
+"'That at the age the said children have now attained it is necessary
+that steps should be taken to preserve them from the evil effects of
+such an education; that they should be provided for as beseems their
+rank, and that they should cease to have before their eyes the sad
+example of their father's conduct;
+
+"'That there are proofs in support of these allegations which the
+Court can easily order to be produced. Many times has M. d'Espard
+spoken of the judge of the Twelfth Arrondissement as a mandarin of the
+third class; he often speaks of the professors of the College Henri
+IV. as "men of letters"'--and that offends them! 'In speaking of the
+simplest things, he says, "They were not done so in China;" in the
+course of the most ordinary conversation he will sometimes allude to
+Madame Jeanrenaud, or sometimes to events which happened in the time
+of Louis XIV., and then sit plunged in the darkest melancholy;
+sometimes he fancies he is in China. Several of his neighbors, among
+others one Edme Becker, medical student, and Jean Baptiste Fremiot, a
+professor, living under the same roof, are of opinion, after frequent
+intercourse with the Marquis d'Espard, that his monomania with regard
+to everything Chinese is the result of a scheme laid by the said Baron
+Jeanrenaud and the widow his mother to bring about the deadening of
+all the Marquis d'Espard's mental faculties, since the only service
+which Mme. Jeanrenaud appears to render M. d'Espard is to procure him
+everything that relates to the Chinese Empire;
+
+"'Finally, that the petitioner is prepared to show to the Court that
+the moneys absorbed by the said Baron and Mme. Jeanrenaud between 1814
+and 1828 amount to not less than one million francs.
+
+"'In confirmation of the facts herein set forth, the petitioner can
+bring the evidence of persons who are in the habit of seeing the
+Marquis d'Espard, whose names and professions are subjoined, many of
+whom have urged her to demand a commission in lunacy to declare M.
+d'Espard incapable of managing his own affairs, as being the only way
+to preserve his fortune from the effects of his maladministration and
+his children from his fatal influence.
+
+"'Taking all this into consideration, M. le President, and the
+affidavits subjoined, the petitioner desires that it may please you,
+inasmuch as the foregoing facts sufficiently prove the insanity and
+incompetency of the Marquis d'Espard herein described with his titles
+and residence, to order that, to the end that he may be declared
+incompetent by law, this petition and the documents in evidence may be
+laid before the King's public prosecutor; and that you will charge one
+of the judges of this Court to make his report to you on any day you
+may be pleased to name, and thereupon to pronounce judgment,' etc.
+
+"And here," said Popinot, "is the President's order instructing me!
+--Well, what does the Marquise d'Espard want with me? I know
+everything. But I shall go to-morrow with my registrar to see M. le
+Marquis, for this does not seem at all clear to me."
+
+"Listen, my dear uncle, I have never asked the least little favor of
+you that had to do with your legal functions; well, now I beg you to
+show Madame d'Espard the kindness which her situation deserves. If she
+came here, you would listen to her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, then, go and listen to her in her own house. Madame d'Espard is
+a sickly, nervous, delicate woman, who would faint in your rat-hole of
+a place. Go in the evening, instead of accepting her dinner, since the
+law forbids your eating or drinking at your client's expense."
+
+"And does not the law forbid you from taking any legacy from your
+dead?" said Popinot, fancying that he saw a touch of irony on his
+nephew's lips.
+
+"Come, uncle, if it were only to enable you to get at the truth of
+this business, grant my request. You will come as the examining judge,
+since matters do not seem to you very clear. Deuce take it! It is as
+necessary to cross-question the Marquise as it is to examine the
+Marquis."
+
+"You are right," said the lawyer. "It is quite possible that it is she
+who is mad. I will go."
+
+"I will call for you. Write down in your engagement book: 'To-morrow
+evening at nine, Madame d'Espard.'--Good!" said Bianchon, seeing his
+uncle make a note of the engagement.
+
+
+
+Next evening at nine Bianchon mounted his uncle's dusty staircase, and
+found him at work on the statement of some complicated judgment. The
+coat Lavienne had ordered of the tailor had not been sent, so Popinot
+put on his old stained coat, and was the Popinot unadorned whose
+appearance made those laugh who did not know the secrets of his
+private life. Bianchon, however, obtained permission to pull his
+cravat straight, and to button his coat, and he hid the stains by
+crossing the breast of it with the right side over the left, and so
+displaying the new front of the cloth. But in a minute the judge
+rucked the coat up over his chest by the way in which he stuffed his
+hands into his pockets, obeying an irresistible habit. Thus the coat,
+deeply wrinkled both in front and behind, made a sort of hump in the
+middle of the back, leaving a gap between the waistcoat and trousers
+through which his shirt showed. Bianchon, to his sorrow, only
+discovered this crowning absurdity at the moment when his uncle
+entered the Marquise's room.
+
+A brief sketch of the person and the career of the lady in whose
+presence the doctor and the judge now found themselves is necessary
+for an understanding of her interview with Popinot.
+
+Madame d'Espard had, for the last seven years, been very much the
+fashion in Paris, where Fashion can raise and drop by turns various
+personages who, now great and now small, that is to say, in view or
+forgotten, are at last quite intolerable--as discarded ministers are,
+and every kind of decayed sovereignty. These flatterers of the past,
+odious with their stale pretensions, know everything, speak ill of
+everything, and, like ruined profligates, are friends with all the
+world. Since her husband had separated from her in 1815, Madame
+d'Espard must have married in the beginning of 1812. Her children,
+therefore, were aged respectively fifteen and thirteen. By what luck
+was the mother of a family, about three-and-thirty years of age, still
+the fashion?
+
+Though Fashion is capricious, and no one can foresee who shall be her
+favorites, though she often exalts a banker's wife, or some woman of
+very doubtful elegance and beauty, it certainly seems supernatural
+when Fashion puts on constitutional airs and gives promotion for age.
+But in this case Fashion had done as the world did, and accepted
+Madame d'Espard as still young.
+
+The Marquise, who was thirty-three by her register of birth, was
+twenty-two in a drawing-room in the evening. But by what care, what
+artifice! Elaborate curls shaded her temples. She condemned herself to
+live in twilight, affecting illness so as to sit under the protecting
+tones of light filtered through muslin. Like Diane de Poitiers, she
+used cold water in her bath, and, like her again, the Marquise slept
+on a horse-hair mattress, with morocco-covered pillows to preserve her
+hair; she ate very little, only drank water, and observed monastic
+regularity in the smallest actions of her life.
+
+This severe system has, it is said, been carried so far as to the use
+of ice instead of water, and nothing but cold food, by a famous Polish
+lady of our day who spends a life, now verging on a century old, after
+the fashion of a town belle. Fated to live as long as Marion Delorme,
+whom history has credited with surviving to be a hundred and thirty,
+the old vice-queen of Poland, at the age of nearly a hundred, has the
+heart and brain of youth, a charming face, an elegant shape; and in
+her conversation, sparkling with brilliancy like faggots in the fire,
+she can compare the men and books of our literature with the men and
+books of the eighteenth century. Living in Warsaw, she orders her caps
+of Herbault in Paris. She is a great lady with the amiability of a
+mere girl; she swims, she runs like a schoolboy, and can sink on to a
+sofa with the grace of a young coquette; she mocks at death, and
+laughs at life. After having astonished the Emperor Alexander, she can
+still amaze the Emperor Nicholas by the splendor of her
+entertainments. She can still bring tears to the eyes of a youthful
+lover, for her age is whatever she pleases, and she has the exquisite
+self-devotion of a grisette. In short, she is herself a fairy tale,
+unless, indeed, she is a fairy.
+
+Had Madame d'Espard known Madame Zayonseck? Did she mean to imitate
+her career? Be that as it may, the Marquise proved the merits of the
+treatment; her complexion was clear, her brow unwrinkled, her figure,
+like that of Henri II.'s lady-love, preserved the litheness, the
+freshness, the covered charms which bring a woman love and keep it
+alive. The simple precautions of this course, suggested by art and
+nature, and perhaps by experience, had met in her with a general
+system which confirmed the results. The Marquise was absolutely
+indifferent to everything that was not herself: men amused her, but no
+man had ever caused her those deep agitations which stir both natures
+to their depths, and wreck one on the other. She knew neither hatred
+nor love. When she was offended, she avenged herself coldly, quietly,
+at her leisure, waiting for the opportunity to gratify the ill-will
+she cherished against anybody who dwelt in her unfavorable
+remembrance. She made no fuss, she did not excite herself, she talked,
+because she knew that by two words a woman may cause the death of
+three men.
+
+She had parted from M. d'Espard with the greatest satisfaction. Had he
+not taken with him two children who at present were troublesome, and
+in the future would stand in the way of her pretensions? Her most
+intimate friends, as much as her least persistent admirers, seeing
+about her none of Cornelia's jewels, who come and go, and
+unconsciously betray their mother's age, took her for quite a young
+woman. The two boys, about whom she seemed so anxious in her petition,
+were, like their father, as unknown in the world as the northwest
+passage is unknown to navigators. M. d'Espard was supposed to be an
+eccentric personage who had deserted his wife without having the
+smallest cause for complaint against her.
+
+Mistress of herself at two-and-twenty, and mistress of her fortune of
+twenty-six thousand francs a year, the Marquise hesitated long before
+deciding on a course of action and ordering her life. Though she
+benefited by the expenses her husband had incurred in his house,
+though she had all the furniture, the carriages, the horses, in short,
+all the details of a handsome establishment, she lived a retired life
+during the years 1816, 17, and 18, a time when families were
+recovering from the disasters resulting from political tempests. She
+belonged to one of the most important and illustrious families of the
+Faubourg Saint-Germain, and her parents advised her to live with them
+as much as possible after the separation forced upon her by her
+husband's inexplicable caprice.
+
+In 1820 the Marquise roused herself from her lethargy; she went to
+Court, appeared at parties, and entertained in her own house. From
+1821 to 1827 she lived in great style, and made herself remarked for
+her taste and her dress; she had a day, an hour, for receiving visits,
+and ere long she had seated herself on the throne, occupied before her
+by Madame la Vicomtesse de Beauseant, the Duchesse de Langeais, and
+Madame Firmiani--who on her marriage with M. de Camps had resigned the
+sceptre in favor of the Duchesse de Maufrigneuse, from whom Madame
+d'Espard snatched it. The world knew nothing beyond this of the
+private live of the Marquise d'Espard. She seemed likely to shine for
+long on the Parisian horizon, like the sun near its setting, but which
+will never set.
+
+The Marquise was on terms of great intimacy with a duchess as famous
+for her beauty as for her attachment to a prince just now in
+banishment, but accustomed to play a leading part in every prospective
+government. Madame d'Espard was also a friend of a foreign lady, with
+whom a famous and very wily Russian diplomate was in the habit of
+discussing public affairs. And then an antiquated countess, who was
+accustomed to shuffle the cards for the great game of politics, had
+adopted her in a maternal fashion. Thus, to any man of high ambitions,
+Madame d'Espard was preparing a covert but very real influence to
+follow the public and frivolous ascendency she now owed to fashion.
+Her drawing-room was acquiring political individuality: "What do they
+say at Madame d'Espard's?" "Are they against the measure in Madame
+d'Espard's drawing-room?" were questions repeated by a sufficient
+number of simpletons to give the flock of the faithful who surrounded
+her the importance of a coterie. A few damaged politicians whose
+wounds she had bound up, and whom she flattered, pronounced her as
+capable in diplomacy as the wife of the Russian ambassador to London.
+The Marquise had indeed several times suggested to deputies or to
+peers words and ideas that had rung through Europe. She had often
+judged correctly of certain events on which her circle of friends
+dared not express an opinion. The principal persons about the Court
+came in the evening to play whist in her rooms.
+
+Then she also had the qualities of her defects; she was thought to be
+--and she was--indiscreet. Her friendship seemed to be staunch; she
+worked for her proteges with a persistency which showed that she cared
+less for patronage than for increased influence. This conduct was
+based on her dominant passion, Vanity. Conquests and pleasure, which
+so many women love, to her seemed only means to an end; she aimed at
+living on every point of the largest circle that life can describe.
+
+Among the men still young, and to whom the future belonged, who
+crowded her drawing-room on great occasions, were to be seen MM. de
+Marsay and de Ronquerolles, de Montriveau, de la Roche-Hugon, de
+Serizy, Ferraud, Maxime de Trailles, de Listomere, the two
+Vandenesses, du Chatelet, and others. She would frequently receive a
+man whose wife she would not admit, and her power was great enough to
+induce certain ambitious men to submit to these hard conditions, such
+as two famous royalist bankers, M. de Nucingen and Ferdinand du
+Tillet. She had so thoroughly studied the strength and the weakness of
+Paris life, that her conduct had never given any man the smallest
+advantage over her. An enormous price might have been set on a note or
+letter by which she might have compromised herself, without one being
+produced.
+
+If an arid soul enabled her to play her part to the life, her person
+was no less available for it. She had a youthful figure. Her voice
+was, at will, soft and fresh, or clear and hard. She possessed in the
+highest degree the secret of that aristocratic pose by which a woman
+wipes out the past. The Marquise knew well the art of setting an
+immense space between herself and the sort of man who fancies he may
+be familiar after some chance advances. Her imposing gaze could deny
+everything. In her conversation fine and beautiful sentiments and
+noble resolutions flowed naturally, as it seemed, from a pure heart
+and soul; but in reality she was all self, and quite capable of
+blasting a man who was clumsy in his negotiations, at the very time
+when she was shamelessly making a compromise for the benefit of her
+own interest.
+
+Rastignac, in trying to fasten on to this woman, had discerned her to
+be the cleverest of tools, but he had not yet used it; far from
+handling it, he was already finding himself crushed by it. This young
+Condottiere of the brain, condemned, like Napoleon, to give battle
+constantly, while knowing that a single defeat would prove the grave
+of his fortunes, had met a dangerous adversary in his protectress. For
+the first time in his turbulent life, he was playing a game with a
+partner worthy of him. He saw a place as Minister in the conquest of
+Madame d'Espard, so he was her tool till he could make her his--a
+perilous beginning.
+
+The Hotel d'Espard needed a large household, and the Marquise had a
+great number of servants. The grand receptions were held in the
+ground-floor rooms, but she lived on the first floor of the house. The
+perfect order of a fine staircase splendidly decorated, and rooms
+fitted in the dignified style which formerly prevailed at Versailles,
+spoke of an immense fortune. When the judge saw the carriage gates
+thrown open to admit his nephew's cab, he took in with a rapid glance
+the lodge, the porter, the courtyard, the stables, the arrangement of
+the house, the flowers that decorated the stairs, the perfect
+cleanliness of the banisters, walls, and carpets, and counted the
+footmen in livery who, as the bell rang, appeared on the landing. His
+eyes, which only yesterday in his parlor had sounded the dignity of
+misery under the muddy clothing of the poor, now studied with the same
+penetrating vision the furniture and splendor of the rooms he passed
+through, to pierce the misery of grandeur.
+
+"M. Popinot--M. Bianchon."
+
+The two names were pronounced at the door of the boudoir where the
+Marquise was sitting, a pretty room recently refurnished, and looking
+out on the garden behind the house. At the moment Madame d'Espard was
+seated in one of the old rococo armchairs of which Madame had set the
+fashion. Rastignac was at her left hand on a low chair, in which he
+looked settled like an Italian lady's "cousin." A third person was
+standing by the corner of the chimney-piece. As the shrewd doctor had
+suspected, the Marquise was a woman of a parched and wiry
+constitution. But for her regimen her complexion must have taken the
+ruddy tone that is produced by constant heat; but she added to the
+effect of her acquired pallor by the strong colors of the stuffs she
+hung her rooms with, or in which she dressed. Reddish-brown, marone,
+bistre with a golden light in it, suited her to perfection. Her
+boudoir, copied from that of a famous lady then at the height of
+fashion in London, was in tan-colored velvet; but she had added
+various details of ornament which moderated the pompous splendor of
+this royal hue. Her hair was dressed like a girl's in bands ending in
+curls, which emphasized the rather long oval of her face; but an oval
+face is as majestic as a round one is ignoble. The mirrors, cut with
+facets to lengthen or flatten the face at will, amply proved the rule
+as applied to the physiognomy.
+
+On seeing Popinot, who stood in the doorway craning his neck like a
+startled animal, with his left hand in his pocket, and the right hand
+holding a hat with a greasy lining, the Marquise gave Rastignac a look
+wherein lay a germ of mockery. The good man's rather foolish
+appearance was so completely in harmony with his grotesque figure and
+scared looks, that Rastignac, catching sight of Bianchon's dejected
+expression of humiliation through his uncle, could not help laughing,
+and turned away. The Marquise bowed a greeting, and made a great
+effort to rise from her seat, falling back again, not without grace,
+with an air of apologizing for her incivility by affected weakness.
+
+At this instant the person who was standing between the fireplace and
+the door bowed slightly, and pushed forward two chairs, which he
+offered by a gesture to the doctor and the judge; then, when they had
+seated themselves, he leaned against the wall again, crossing his
+arms.
+
+A word as to this man. There is living now, in our day, a painter
+--Decamps--who possesses in the very highest degree the art of
+commanding your interest in everything he sets before your eyes,
+whether it be a stone or a man. In this respect his pencil is more
+skilful than his brush. He will sketch an empty room and leave a broom
+against the wall. If he chooses, you shall shudder; you shall believe
+that this broom has just been the instrument of crime, and is dripping
+with blood; it shall be the broom which the widow Bancal used to clean
+out the room where Fualdes was murdered. Yes, the painter will touzle
+that broom like a man in a rage; he will make each hair of it stand
+on-end as though it were on your own bristling scalp; he will make it
+the interpreter between the secret poem of his imagination and the
+poem that shall have its birth in yours. After terrifying you by the
+aspect of that broom, to-morrow he will draw another, and lying by it
+a cat, asleep, but mysterious in its sleep, shall tell you that this
+broom is that on which the wife of a German cobbler rides off to the
+Sabbath on the Brocken. Or it will be a quite harmless broom, on which
+he will hang the coat of a clerk in the Treasury. Decamps had in his
+brush what Paganini had in his bow--a magnetically communicative
+power.
+
+Well, I should have to transfer to my style that striking genius, that
+marvelous knack of the pencil, to depict the upright, tall, lean man
+dressed in black, with black hair, who stood there without speaking a
+word. This gentleman had a face like a knife-blade, cold and harsh,
+with a color like Seine water when it was muddy and strewn with
+fragments of charcoal from a sunken barge. He looked at the floor,
+listening and passing judgment. His attitude was terrifying. He stood
+there like the dreadful broom to which Decamps has given the power of
+revealing a crime. Now and then, in the course of conversation, the
+Marquise tried to get some tacit advice; but however eager her
+questioning, he was as grave and as rigid as the statue of the
+Commendatore.
+
+The worthy Popinot, sitting on the edge of his chair in front of the
+fire, his hat between his knees, stared at the gilt chandeliers, the
+clock, and the curiosities with which the chimney-shelf was covered,
+the velvet and trimmings of the curtains, and all the costly and
+elegant nothings that a woman of fashion collects about her. He was
+roused from his homely meditations by Madame d'Espard, who addressed
+him in a piping tone:
+
+"Monsieur, I owe you a million thanks----"
+
+"A million thanks," thought he to himself, "that is too many; it does
+not mean one."
+
+"For the trouble you condescend----"
+
+"Condescend!" thought he; "she is laughing at me."
+
+"To take in coming to see an unhappy client, who is too ill to go
+out----"
+
+Here the lawyer cut the Marquise short by giving her an inquisitorial
+look, examining the sanitary condition of the unhappy client.
+
+"As sound as a bell," said he to himself.
+
+"Madame," said he, assuming a respectful mien, "you owe me nothing.
+Although my visit to you is not in strict accordance with the practice
+of the Court, we ought to spare no pains to discover the truth in
+cases of this kind. Our judgment is then guided less by the letter of
+the law than by the promptings of our conscience. Whether I seek the
+truth here or in my own consulting-room, so long as I find it, all
+will be well."
+
+While Popinot was speaking, Rastignac was shaking hands with Bianchon;
+the Marquise welcomed the doctor with a little bow full of gracious
+significance.
+
+"Who is that?" asked Bianchon in a whisper of Rastignac, indicating
+the dark man.
+
+"The Chevalier d'Espard, the Marquis' brother."
+
+"Your nephew told me," said the Marquise to Popinot, "how much you are
+occupied, and I know too that you are so good as to wish to conceal
+your kind actions, so as to release those whom you oblige from the
+burden of gratitude. The work in Court is most fatiguing, it would
+seem. Why have they not twice as many judges?"
+
+"Ah, madame, that would not be difficult; we should be none the worse
+if they had. But when that happens, fowls will cut their teeth!"
+
+As he heard this speech, so entirely in character with the lawyer's
+appearance, the Chevalier measured him from head to foot, out of one
+eye, as much as to say, "We shall easily manage him."
+
+The Marquise looked at Rastignac, who bent over her. "That is the sort
+of man," murmured the dandy in her ear, "who is trusted to pass
+judgments on the life and interests of private individuals."
+
+Like most men who have grown old in a business, Popinot readily let
+himself follow the habits he had acquired, more particularly habits of
+mind. His conversation was all of "the shop." He was fond of
+questioning those he talked to, forcing them to unexpected
+conclusions, making them tell more than they wished to reveal. Pozzo
+di Borgo, it is said, used to amuse himself by discovering other
+folks' secrets, and entangling them in his diplomatic snares, and
+thus, by invincible habit, showed how his mind was soaked in wiliness.
+As soon as Popinot had surveyed the ground, so to speak, on which he
+stood, he saw that it would be necessary to have recourse to the
+cleverest subtleties, the most elaborately wrapped up and disguised,
+which were in use in the Courts, to detect the truth.
+
+Bianchon sat cold and stern, as a man who has made up his mind to
+endure torture without revealing his sufferings; but in his heart he
+wished that his uncle could only trample on this woman as we trample
+on a viper--a comparison suggested to him by the Marquise's long
+dress, by the curve of her attitude, her long neck, small head, and
+undulating movements.
+
+"Well, monsieur," said Madame d'Espard, "however great my dislike to
+be or seem selfish, I have been suffering too long not to wish that
+you may settle matters at once. Shall I soon get a favorable
+decision?"
+
+"Madame, I will do my best to bring matters to a conclusion," said
+Popinot, with an air of frank good-nature. "Are you ignorant of the
+reason which made the separation necessary which now subsists between
+you and the Marquis d'Espard?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur," she replied, evidently prepared with a story to tell.
+"At the beginning of 1816 M. d'Espard, whose temper had completely
+changed within three months or so, proposed that we should go to live
+on one of his estates near Briancon, without any regard for my health,
+which that climate would have destroyed, or for my habits of life; I
+refused to go. My refusal gave rise to such unjustifiable reproaches
+on his part, that from that hour I had my suspicions as to the
+soundness of his mind. On the following day he left me, leaving me his
+house and the free use of my own income, and he went to live in the
+Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, taking with him my two
+children----"
+
+"One moment, madame," said the lawyer, interrupting her. "What was
+that income?"
+
+"Twenty-six thousand francs a year," she replied parenthetically. "I
+at once consulted old M. Bordin as to what I ought to do," she went
+on; "but it seems that there are so many difficulties in the way of
+depriving a father of the care of his children, that I was forced to
+resign myself to remaining alone at the age of twenty-two--an age at
+which many young women do very foolish things. You have read my
+petition, no doubt, monsieur; you know the principal facts on which I
+rely to procure a Commission in Lunacy with regard to M. d'Espard?"
+
+"Have you ever applied to him, madame, to obtain the care of your
+children?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur; but in vain. It is very hard on a mother to be
+deprived of the affection of her children, particularly when they can
+give her such happiness as every woman clings to."
+
+"The elder must be sixteen," said Popinot.
+
+"Fifteen," said the Marquise eagerly.
+
+Here Bianchon and Rastignac looked at each other. Madame d'Espard bit
+her lips.
+
+"What can the age of my children matter to you?"
+
+"Well, madame," said the lawyer, without seeming to attach any
+importance to his words, "a lad of fifteen and his brother, of
+thirteen, I suppose, have legs and their wits about them; they might
+come to see you on the sly. If they do not, it is because they obey
+their father, and to obey him in that matter they must love him very
+dearly."
+
+"I do not understand," said the Marquise.
+
+"You do not know, perhaps," replied Popinot, "that in your petition
+your attorney represents your children as being very unhappy with
+their father?"
+
+Madame d'Espard replied with charming innocence:
+
+"I do not know what my attorney may have put into my mouth."
+
+"Forgive my inferences," said Popinot, "but Justice weighs everything.
+What I ask you, madame, is suggested by my wish thoroughly to
+understand the matter. By your account M. d'Espard deserted you on the
+most frivolous pretext. Instead of going to Briancon, where he wished
+to take you, he remained in Paris. This point is not clear. Did he
+know this Madame Jeanrenaud before his marriage?"
+
+"No, monsieur," replied the Marquise, with some asperity, visible only
+to Rastignac and the Chevalier d'Espard.
+
+She was offended at being cross-examined by this layer when she had
+intended to beguile his judgment; but as Popinot still looked stupid
+from sheer absence of mind, she ended by attributing his interrogatory
+to the Questioning Spirit of Voltaire's bailiff.
+
+"My parents," she went on, "married me at the age of sixteen to M.
+d'Espard, whose name, fortune, and mode of life were such as my family
+looked for in the man who was to be my husband. M. d'Espard was then
+six-and-twenty; he was a gentleman in the English sense of the word;
+his manners pleased me, he seemed to have plenty of ambition, and I
+like ambitious people," she added, looking at Rastignac. "If M.
+d'Espard had never met that Madame Jeanrenaud, his character, his
+learning, his acquirements would have raised him--as his friends then
+believed--to high office in the Government. King Charles X., at that
+time Monsieur, had the greatest esteem for him, and a peer's seat, an
+appointment at Court, some important post certainly would have been
+his. That woman turned his head, and has ruined all the prospects of
+my family."
+
+"What were M. d'Espard's religious opinions at that time?"
+
+"He was, and is still, a very pious man."
+
+"You do not suppose that Madame Jeanrenaud may have influenced him by
+mysticism?"
+
+"No, monsieur."
+
+"You have a very fine house, madame," said Popinot suddenly, taking
+his hands out of his pockets, and rising to pick up his coat-tails and
+warm himself. "This boudoir is very nice, those chairs are
+magnificent, the whole apartment is sumptuous. You must indeed be most
+unhappy when, seeing yourself here, you know that your children are
+ill lodged, ill clothed, and ill fed. I can imagine nothing more
+terrible for a mother."
+
+"Yes, indeed. I should be so glad to give the poor little fellows some
+amusement, while their father keeps them at work from morning till
+night at that wretched history of China."
+
+"You give handsome balls; they would enjoy them, but they might
+acquire a taste for dissipation. However, their father might send them
+to you once or twice in the course of the winter."
+
+"He brings them here on my birthday and on New Year's Day. On those
+days M. d'Espard does me the favor of dining here with them."
+
+"It is very singular behaviour," said the judge, with an air of
+conviction. "Have you ever seen this Dame Jeanrenaud?"
+
+"My brother-in-law one day, out of interest in his brother----"
+
+"Ah! monsieur is M. d'Espard's brother?" said the lawyer, interrupting
+her.
+
+The Chevalier bowed, but did not speak.
+
+"M. d'Espard, who has watched this affair, took me to the Oratoire,
+where this woman goes to sermon, for she is a Protestant. I saw her;
+she is not in the least attractive; she looks like a butcher's wife,
+extremely fat, horribly marked with the smallpox; she has feet and
+hands like a man's, she squints, in short, she is monstrous!"
+
+"It is inconceivable," said the judge, looking like the most imbecile
+judge in the whole kingdom. "And this creature lives near here, Rue
+Verte, in a fine house? There are no plain folk left, it would seem?"
+
+"In a mansion on which her son has spent absurd sums."
+
+"Madame," said Popinot, "I live in the Faubourg Saint-Marceau; I know
+nothing of such expenses. What do you call absurd sums?"
+
+"Well," said the Marquise, "a stable with five horses and three
+carriages, a phaeton, a brougham, and a cabriolet."
+
+"That costs a large sum, then?" asked Popinot in surprise.
+
+"Enormous sums!" said Rastignac, intervening. "Such an establishment
+would cost, for the stables, the keeping the carriages in order, and
+the liveries for the men, between fifteen and sixteen thousand francs
+a year."
+
+"Should you think so, madame?" said the judge, looking much
+astonished.
+
+"Yes, at least," replied the Marquise.
+
+"And the furniture, too, must have cost a lot of money?"
+
+"More than a hundred thousand francs," replied Madame d'Espard, who
+could not help smiling at the lawyer's vulgarity.
+
+"Judges, madame, are apt to be incredulous; it is what they are paid
+for, and I am incredulous. The Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother must
+have fleeced M. d'Espard most preposterously, if what you say is
+correct. There is a stable establishment which, by your account, costs
+sixteen thousand francs a year. Housekeeping, servants' wages, and the
+gross expenses of the house itself must run to twice as much; that
+makes a total of from fifty to sixty thousand francs a year. Do you
+suppose that these people, formerly so extremely poor, can have so
+large a fortune? A million yields scarcely forty thousand a year."
+
+"Monsieur, the mother and son invested the money given them by M.
+d'Espard in the funds when they were at 60 to 80. I should think their
+income must be more than sixty thousand francs. And then the son has
+fine appointments."
+
+"If they spend sixty thousand francs a year," said the judge, "how
+much do you spend?"
+
+"Well," said Madame d'Espard, "about the same." The Chevalier started
+a little, the Marquise colored; Bianchon looked at Rastignac; but
+Popinot preserved an expression of simplicity which quite deceived
+Madame d'Espard. The chevalier took no part in the conversation; he
+saw that all was lost.
+
+"These people, madame, might be indicted before the superior Court,"
+said Popinot.
+
+"That was my opinion," exclaimed the Marquise, enchanted. "If
+threatened with the police, they would have come to terms."
+
+"Madame," said Popinot, "when M. d'Espard left you, did he not give
+you a power of attorney enabling you to manage and control your own
+affairs?"
+
+"I do not understand the object of all these questions," said the
+Marquise with petulance. "It seems to me that if you would only
+consider the state in which I am placed by my husband's insanity, you
+ought to be troubling yourself about him, and not about me."
+
+"We are coming to that, madame," said the judge. "Before placing in
+your hands, or in any others, the control of M. d'Espard's property,
+supposing he were pronounced incapable, the Court must inquire as to
+how you have managed your own. If M. d'Espard gave you the power, he
+would have shown confidence in you, and the Court would recognize the
+fact. Had you any power from him? You might have bought or sold house
+property or invested money in business?"
+
+"No, monsieur, the Blamont-Chauvrys are not in the habit of trading,"
+said she, extremely nettled in her pride as an aristocrat, and
+forgetting the business in hand. "My property is intact, and M.
+d'Espard gave me no power to act."
+
+The Chevalier put his hand over his eyes not to betray the vexation he
+felt at his sister-in-law's short-sightedness, for she was ruining
+herself by her answers. Popinot had gone straight to the mark in spite
+of his apparent doublings.
+
+"Madame," said the lawyer, indicating the Chevalier, "this gentleman,
+of course, is your near connection? May we speak openly before these
+other gentlemen?"
+
+"Speak on," said the Marquise, surprised at this caution.
+
+"Well, madame, granting that you spend only sixty thousand francs a
+year, to any one who sees your stables, your house, your train of
+servants, and a style of housekeeping which strikes me as far more
+luxurious than that of the Jeanrenauds, that sum would seem well laid
+out."
+
+The Marquise bowed an agreement.
+
+"But," continued the judge, "if you have no more than twenty-six
+thousand francs a year, you may have a hundred thousand francs of
+debt. The Court would therefore have a right to imagine that the
+motives which prompt you to ask that your husband may be deprived of
+the control of his property are complicated by self-interest and the
+need of paying your debts--if--you--have--any. The requests addressed
+to me have interested me in your position; consider fully and make
+your confession. If my suppositions have hit the truth, there is yet
+time to avoid the blame which the Court would have a perfect right to
+express in the saving clauses of the verdict if you could not show
+your attitude to be absolutely honorable and clear.
+
+"It is our duty to examine the motives of the applicant as well as to
+listen to the plea of the witness under examination, to ascertain
+whether the petitioner may not have been prompted by passion, by a
+desire for money, which is unfortunately too common----"
+
+The Marquise was on Saint Laurence's gridiron.
+
+"And I must have explanations on this point. Madame, I have no wish to
+call you to account; I only want to know how you have managed to live
+at the rate of sixty thousand francs a year, and that for some years
+past. There are plenty of women who achieve this in their
+housekeeping, but you are not one of those. Tell me, you may have the
+most legitimate resources, a royal pension, or some claim on the
+indemnities lately granted; but even then you must have had your
+husband's authority to receive them."
+
+The Marquise did not speak.
+
+"You must remember," Popinot went on, "that M. d'Espard may wish to
+enter a protest, and his counsel will have a right to find out whether
+you have any creditors. This boudoir is newly furnished, your rooms
+are not now furnished with the things left to you by M. d'Espard in
+1816. If, as you did me the honor of informing me, furniture is costly
+for the Jeanrenauds, it must be yet more so for you, who are a great
+lady. Though I am a judge, I am but a man; I may be wrong--tell me so.
+Remember the duties imposed on me by the law, and the rigorous
+inquiries it demands, when the case before it is the suspension from
+all his functions of the father of a family in the prime of life. So
+you will pardon me, Madame la Marquise, for laying all these
+difficulties before you; it will be easy for you to give me an
+explanation.
+
+"When a man is pronounced incapable of the control of his own affairs,
+a trustee has to be appointed. Who will be the trustee?"
+
+"His brother," said the Marquise.
+
+The Chevalier bowed. There was a short silence, very uncomfortable for
+the five persons who were present. The judge, in sport as it were, had
+laid open the woman's sore place. Popinot's countenance of common,
+clumsy good-nature, at which the Marquise, the Chevalier, and
+Rastignac had been inclined to laugh, had gained importance in their
+eyes. As they stole a look at him, they discerned the various
+expressions of that eloquent mouth. The ridiculous mortal was a judge
+of acumen. His studious notice of the boudoir was accounted for: he
+had started from the gilt elephant supporting the chimney-clock,
+examining all this luxury, and had ended by reading this woman's soul.
+
+"If the Marquis d'Espard is mad about China, I see that you are not
+less fond of its products," said Popinot, looking at the porcelain on
+the chimney-piece. "But perhaps it was from M. le Marquis that you had
+these charming Oriental pieces," and he pointed to some precious
+trifles.
+
+This irony, in very good taste, made Bianchon smile, and petrified
+Rastignac, while the Marquise bit her thin lips.
+
+"Instead of being the protector of a woman placed in a cruel dilemma
+--an alternative between losing her fortune and her children, and being
+regarded as her husband's enemy," she said, "you accuse me, monsieur!
+You suspect my motives! You must own that your conduct is strange!"
+
+"Madame," said the judge eagerly, "the caution exercised by the Court
+in such cases as these might have given you, in any other judge, a
+perhaps less indulgent critic than I am.--And do you suppose that M.
+d'Espard's lawyer will show you any great consideration? Will he not
+be suspicious of motives which may be perfectly pure and
+disinterested? Your life will be at his mercy; he will inquire into it
+without qualifying his search by the respectful deference I have for
+you."
+
+"I am much obliged to you, monsieur," said the Marquise satirically.
+"Admitting for the moment that I owe thirty thousand or fifty thousand
+francs, in the first place, it would be a mere trifle to the d'Espards
+and the Blamont-Chauvrys. But if my husband is not in the possession
+of his mental faculties, would that prevent his being pronounced
+incapable?"
+
+"No, madame," said Popinot.
+
+"Although you have questioned me with a sort of cunning which I should
+not have suspected in a judge, and under circumstances where
+straightforwardness would have answered your purpose," she went on, "I
+will tell you without subterfuge that my position in the world, and
+the efforts I have to make to keep up my connection, are not in the
+least to my taste. I began my life by a long period of solitude; but
+my children's interest appealed to me; I felt that I must fill their
+father's place. By receiving my friends, by keeping up all this
+connection, by contracting these debts, I have secured their future
+welfare; I have prepared for them a brilliant career where they will
+find help and favor; and to have what has thus been acquired, many a
+man of business, lawyer or banker, would gladly pay all it has cost
+me."
+
+"I appreciate your devoted conduct, madame," replied Popinot. "It does
+you honor, and I blame you for nothing. A judge belongs to all: he
+must know and weigh every fact."
+
+Madame d'Espard's tact and practice in estimating men made her
+understand that M. Popinot was not to be influenced by any
+consideration. She had counted on an ambitious lawyer, she had found a
+man of conscience. She at once thought of finding other means for
+securing the success of her side.
+
+The servants brought in tea.
+
+"Have you any further explanations to give me, madame?" said Popinot,
+seeing these preparations.
+
+"Monsieur," she replied haughtily, "do your business your own way;
+question M. d'Espard, and you will pity me, I am sure." She raised her
+head, looking Popinot in the face with pride, mingled with
+impertinence; the worthy man bowed himself out respectfully.
+
+"A nice man is your uncle," said Rastignac to Bianchon. "Is he really
+so dense? Does not he know what the Marquise d'Espard is, what her
+influence means, her unavowed power over people? The Keeper of the
+Seals will be with her to-morrow----"
+
+"My dear fellow, how can I help it?" said Bianchon. "Did not I warn
+you? He is not a man you can get over."
+
+"No," said Rastignac; "he is a man you must run over."
+
+The doctor was obliged to make his bow to the Marquise and her mute
+Chevalier to catch up Popinot, who, not being the man to endure an
+embarrassing position, was pacing through the rooms.
+
+"That woman owes a hundred thousand crowns," said the judge, as he
+stepped into his nephew's cab.
+
+"And what do you think of the case?"
+
+"I," said the judge. "I never have an opinion till I have gone into
+everything. To-morrow early I will send to Madame Jeanrenaud to call
+on me in my private office at four o'clock, to make her explain the
+facts which concern her, for she is compromised."
+
+"I should very much like to know what the end will be."
+
+"Why, bless me, do not you see that the Marquise is the tool of that
+tall lean man who never uttered a word? There is a strain of Cain in
+him, but of the Cain who goes to the Law Courts for his bludgeon, and
+there, unluckily for him, we keep more than one Damocles' sword."
+
+"Oh, Rastignac! what brought you into that boat, I wonder?" exclaimed
+Bianchon.
+
+"Ah, we are used to seeing these little family conspiracies," said
+Popinot. "Not a year passes without a number of verdicts of
+'insufficient evidence' against applications of this kind. In our
+state of society such an attempt brings no dishonor, while we send a
+poor devil to the galleys who breaks a pane of glass dividing him from
+a bowl full of gold. Our Code is not faultless."
+
+"But these are the facts?"
+
+"My boy, do you not know all the judicial romances with which clients
+impose on their attorneys? If the attorneys condemned themselves to
+state nothing but the truth, they would not earn enough to keep their
+office open."
+
+
+
+Next day, at four in the afternoon, a very stout dame, looking a good
+deal like a cask dressed up in a gown and belt, mounted Judge
+Popinot's stairs, perspiring and panting. She had, with great
+difficulty, got out of a green landau, which suited her to a miracle;
+you could not think of the woman without the landau, or the landau
+without the woman.
+
+"It is I, my dear sir," said she, appearing in the doorway of the
+judge's room. "Madame Jeanrenaud, whom you summoned exactly as if I
+were a thief, neither more nor less."
+
+The common words were spoken in a common voice, broken by the wheezing
+of asthma, and ending in a cough.
+
+"When I go through a damp place, I can't tell you what I suffer, sir.
+I shall never make old bones, saving your presence. However, here I
+am."
+
+The lawyer was quite amazed at the appearance of this supposed
+Marechale d'Ancre. Madame Jeanrenaud's face was pitted with an
+infinite number of little holes, was very red, with a pug nose and a
+low forehead, and was as round as a ball; for everything about the
+good woman was round. She had the bright eyes of a country woman, an
+honest gaze, a cheerful tone, and chestnut hair held in place by a
+bonnet cap under a green bonnet decked with a shabby bunch of
+auriculas. Her stupendous bust was a thing to laugh at, for it made
+one fear some grotesque explosion every time she coughed. Her enormous
+legs were of the shape which make the Paris street boy describe such a
+woman as being built on piles. The widow wore a green gown trimmed
+with chinchilla, which looked on her as a splash of dirty oil would
+look on a bride's veil. In short, everything about her harmonized with
+her last words: "Here I am."
+
+"Madame," said Popinot, "you are suspected of having used some
+seductive arts to induce M. d'Espard to hand over to you very
+considerable sums of money."
+
+"Of what! of what!" cried she. "Of seductive arts? But, my dear sir,
+you are a man to be respected, and, moreover, as a lawyer you ought to
+have some good sense. Look at me! Tell me if I am likely to seduce any
+one. I cannot tie my own shoes, nor even stoop. For these twenty years
+past, the Lord be praised, I have not dared to put on a pair of stays
+under pain of sudden death. I was as thin as an asparagus stalk when I
+was seventeen, and pretty too--I may say so now. So I married
+Jeanrenaud, a good fellow, and headman on the salt-barges. I had my
+boy, who is a fine young man; he is my pride, and it is not holding
+myself cheap to say he is my best piece of work. My little Jeanrenaud
+was a soldier who did Napoleon credit, and who served in the Imperial
+Guard. But, alas! at the death of my old man, who was drowned, times
+changed for the worse. I had the smallpox. I was kept two years in my
+room without stirring, and I came out of it the size you see me,
+hideous for ever, and as wretched as could be. These are my seductive
+arts."
+
+"But what, then, can the reasons be that have induced M. d'Espard to
+give you sums----"
+
+"Hugious sums, monsieur, say the word; I do not mind. But as to his
+reasons, I am not at liberty to explain them."
+
+"You are wrong. At this moment, his family, very naturally alarmed,
+are about to bring an action----"
+
+"Heavens above us!" said the good woman, starting up. "Is it possible
+that he should be worried on my account? That king of men, a man that
+has not his match! Rather than he should have the smallest trouble, or
+hair less on his head I could almost say, we would return every sou,
+monsieur. Write that down on your papers. Heaven above us! I will go
+at once and tell Jeanrenaud what is going on! A pretty thing indeed!"
+
+And the little old woman went out, rolled herself downstairs, and
+disappeared.
+
+"That one tells no lies," said Popinot to himself. "Well, to-morrow I
+shall know the whole story, for I shall go to see the Marquis
+d'Espard."
+
+People who have outlived the age when a man wastes his vitality at
+random, know how great an influence may be exercised on more important
+events by apparently trivial incidents, and will not be surprised at
+the weight here given to the following minor fact. Next day Popinot
+had an attack of coryza, a complaint which is not dangerous, and
+generally known by the absurd and inadequate name of a cold in the
+head.
+
+The judge, who could not suppose that the delay could be serious,
+feeling himself a little feverish, kept his room, and did not go to
+see the Marquis d'Espard. This day lost was, to this affair, what on
+the Day of Dupes the cup of soup had been, taken by Marie de Medici,
+which, by delaying her meeting with Louis XIII., enabled Richelieu to
+arrive at Saint-Germain before her, and recapture his royal slave.
+
+Before accompanying the lawyer and his registering clerk to the
+Marquis d'Espard's house, it may be as well to glance at the home and
+the private affairs of this father of sons whom his wife's petition
+represented to be a madman.
+
+Here and there in the old parts of Paris a few buildings may still be
+seen in which the archaeologist can discern an intention of decorating
+the city, and that love of property, which leads the owner to give a
+durable character to the structure. The house in which M. d'Espard was
+then living, in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, was one of
+these old mansions, built in stone, and not devoid of a certain
+richness of style; but time had blackened the stone, and revolutions
+in the town had damaged it both outside and inside. The dignitaries
+who formerly dwelt in the neighborhood of the University having
+disappeared with the great ecclesiastical foundations, this house had
+become the home of industries and of inhabitants whom it was never
+destined to shelter. During the last century a printing establishment
+had worn down the polished floors, soiled the carved wood, blackened
+the walls, and altered the principal internal arrangements. Formerly
+the residence of a Cardinal, this fine house was now divided among
+plebeian tenants. The character of the architecture showed that it had
+been built under the reigns of Henry III., Henry IV., and Louis XIII.,
+at the time when the hotels Mignon and Serpente were erected in the
+same neighborhood, with the palace of the Princess Palatine, and the
+Sorbonne. An old man could remember having heard it called, in the
+last century, the hotel Duperron, so it seemed probable that the
+illustrious Cardinal of that name had built, or perhaps merely lived
+in it.
+
+There still exists, indeed, in the corner of the courtyard, a perron
+or flight of several outer steps by which the house is entered; and
+the way into the garden on the garden front is down a similar flight
+of steps. In spite of dilapidations, the luxury lavished by the
+architect on the balustrade and entrance porch crowning these two
+perrons suggests the simple-minded purpose of commemorating the
+owner's name, a sort of sculptured pun which our ancestors often
+allowed themselves. Finally, in support of this evidence,
+archaeologists can still discern in the medallions which show on the
+principal front some traces of the cords of the Roman hat.
+
+M. le Marquis d'Espard lived on the ground floor, in order, no doubt,
+to enjoy the garden, which might be called spacious for that
+neighborhood, and which lay open for his children's health. The
+situation of the house, in a street on a steep hill, as its name
+indicates, secured these ground-floor rooms against ever being damp.
+M. d'Espard had taken them, no doubt, for a very moderate price, rents
+being low at the time when he settled in that quarter, in order to be
+among the schools and to superintend his boys' education. Moreover,
+the state in which he found the place, with everything to repair, had
+no doubt induced the owner to be accommodating. Thus M. d'Espard had
+been able to go to some expense to settle himself suitably without
+being accused of extravagance. The loftiness of the rooms, the
+paneling, of which nothing survived but the frames, the decoration of
+the ceilings, all displayed the dignity which the prelacy stamped on
+whatever it attempted or created, and which artists discern to this
+day in the smallest relic that remains, though it be but a book, a
+dress, the panel of a bookcase, or an armchair.
+
+The Marquis had the rooms painted in the rich brown tones loved of the
+Dutch and of the citizens of Old Paris, hues which lend such good
+effects to the painter of genre. The panels were hung with plain paper
+in harmony with the paint. The window curtains were of inexpensive
+materials, but chosen so as to produce a generally happy result; the
+furniture was not too crowded and judiciously placed. Any one on going
+into this home could not resist a sense of sweet peacefulness,
+produced by the perfect calm, the stillness which prevailed, by the
+unpretentious unity of color, the keeping of the picture, in the words
+a painter might use. A certain nobleness in the details, the exquisite
+cleanliness of the furniture, and a perfect concord of men and things,
+all brought the word "suavity" to the lips.
+
+Few persons were admitted to the rooms used by the Marquis and his two
+sons, whose life might perhaps seem mysterious to their neighbors. In
+a wing towards the street, on the third floor, there are three large
+rooms which had been left in the state of dilapidation and grotesque
+bareness to which they had been reduced by the printing works. These
+three rooms, devoted to the evolution of the Picturesque History of
+China, were contrived to serve as a writing-room, a depository, and a
+private room, where M. d'Espard sat during part of the day; for after
+breakfast till four in the afternoon the Marquis remained in this room
+on the third floor to work at the publication he had undertaken.
+Visitors wanting to see him commonly found him there, and often the
+two boys on their return from school resorted thither. Thus the
+ground-floor rooms were a sort of sanctuary where the father and sons
+spent their time from the hour of dinner till the next day, and his
+domestic life was carefully closed against the public eye.
+
+His only servants were a cook--an old woman who had long been attached
+to his family--and a man-servant forty years old, who was with him
+when he married Mademoiselle de Blamont. His children's nurse had also
+remained with them, and the minute care to which the apartment bore
+witness revealed the sense of order and the maternal affections
+expended by this woman in her master's interest, in the management of
+his house, and the charge of his children. These three good souls,
+grave, and uncommunicative folk, seemed to have entered into the idea
+which ruled the Marquis' domestic life. And the contrast between their
+habits and those of most servants was a peculiarity which cast an air
+of mystery over the house, and fomented the calumny to which M.
+d'Espard himself lent occasion. Very laudable motives had made him
+determine never to be on visiting terms with any of the other tenants
+in the house. In undertaking to educate his boys he wished to keep
+them from all contact with strangers. Perhaps, too, he wished to avoid
+the intrusion of neighbors.
+
+In a man of his rank, at a time when the Quartier Latin was distracted
+by Liberalism, such conduct was sure to rouse in opposition a host of
+petty passions, of feelings whose folly is only to be measured by
+their meanness, the outcome of porters' gossip and malevolent tattle
+from door to door, all unknown to M. d'Espard and his retainers. His
+man-servant was stigmatized as a Jesuit, his cook as a sly fox; the
+nurse was in collusion with Madame Jeanrenaud to rob the madman. The
+madman was the Marquis. By degrees the other tenants came to regard as
+proofs of madness a number of things they had noticed in M. d'Espard,
+and passed through the sieve of their judgment without discerning any
+reasonable motive for them.
+
+Having no belief in the success of the History of China, they had
+managed to convince the landlord of the house that M. d'Espard had no
+money just at a time when, with the forgetfulness which often befalls
+busy men, he had allowed the tax-collector to send him a summons for
+non-payment of arrears. The landlord forthwith claimed his quarter's
+rent from January 1st by sending in a receipt, which the porter's wife
+had amused herself by detaining. On the 15th a summons to pay was
+served on M. d'Espard, the portress had delivered it at her leisure,
+and he supposed it to be some misunderstanding, not conceiving of any
+incivility from a man in whose house he had been living for twelve
+years. The Marquis was actually seized by a bailiff at the time when
+his man-servant had gone to carry the money for the rent to the
+landlord.
+
+This arrest, assiduously reported to the persons with whom he was in
+treaty for his undertaking, had alarmed some of them who were already
+doubtful of M. d'Espard's solvency in consequence of the enormous sums
+which Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother were said to be receiving from
+him. And, indeed, these suspicions on the part of the tenants, the
+creditors, and the landlord had some excuse in the Marquis' extreme
+economy in housekeeping. He conducted it as a ruined man might. His
+servants always paid in ready money for the most trifling necessaries
+of life, and acted as not choosing to take credit; if now they had
+asked for anything on credit, it would probably have been refused,
+calumnious gossip had been so widely believed in the neighborhood.
+There are tradesmen who like those of their customers who pay badly
+when they see them often, while they hate others, and very good ones,
+who hold themselves on too high a level to allow of any familiarity as
+CHUMS, a vulgar but expressive word. Men are made so; in almost every
+class they will allow to a gossip, or a vulgar soul that flatters
+them, facilities and favors they refuse to the superiority they
+resent, in whatever form it may show itself. The shopkeeper who rails
+at the Court has his courtiers.
+
+In short, the manners of the Marquis and his children were certain to
+arouse ill-feeling in their neighbors, and to work them up by degrees
+to the pitch of malevolence when men do not hesitate at an act of
+meanness if only it may damage the adversary they have themselves
+created.
+
+M. d'Espard was a gentleman, as his wife was a lady, by birth and
+breeding; noble types, already so rare in France that the observer can
+easily count the persons who perfectly realize them. These two
+characters are based on primitive ideas, on beliefs that may be called
+innate, on habits formed in infancy, and which have ceased to exist.
+To believe in pure blood, in a privileged race, to stand in thought
+above other men, must we not from birth have measured the distance
+which divides patricians from the mob? To command, must we not have
+never met our equal? And finally, must not education inculcate the
+ideas with which Nature inspires those great men on whose brow she has
+placed a crown before their mother has ever set a kiss there? These
+ideas, this education, are no longer possible in France, where for
+forty years past chance has arrogated the right of making noblemen by
+dipping them in the blood of battles, by gilding them with glory, by
+crowning them with the halo of genius; where the abolition of entail
+and of eldest sonship, by frittering away estates, compels the
+nobleman to attend to his own business instead of attending to affairs
+of state, and where personal greatness can only be such greatness as
+is acquired by long and patient toil: quite a new era.
+
+Regarded as a relic of that great institution know as feudalism, M.
+d'Espard deserved respectful admiration. If he believed himself to be
+by blood the superior of other men, he also believed in all the
+obligations of nobility; he had the virtues and the strength it
+demands. He had brought up his children in his own principles, and
+taught them from the cradle the religion of their caste. A deep sense
+of their own dignity, pride of name, the conviction that they were by
+birth great, gave rise in them to a kingly pride, the courage of
+knights, and the protecting kindness of a baronial lord; their
+manners, harmonizing with their notions, would have become princes,
+and offended all the world of the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve
+--a world, above all others, of equality, where every one believed
+that M. d'Espard was ruined, and where all, from the lowest to the
+highest, refused the privileges of nobility to a nobleman without
+money, because they were all ready to allow an enriched bourgeois to
+usurp them. Thus the lack of communion between this family and other
+persons was as much moral as it was physical.
+
+In the father and the children alike, their personality harmonized
+with the spirit within. M. d'Espard, at this time about fifty, might
+have sat as a model to represent the aristocracy of birth in the
+nineteenth century. He was slight and fair; there was in the outline
+and general expression of his face a native distinction which spoke of
+lofty sentiments, but it bore the impress of a deliberate coldness
+which commanded respect a little too decidedly. His aquiline nose bent
+at the tip from left to right, a slight crookedness which was not
+devoid of grace; his blue eyes, his high forehead, prominent enough at
+the brows to form a thick ridge that checked the light and shaded his
+eyes, all indicated a spirit of rectitude, capable of perseverance and
+perfect loyalty, while it gave a singular look to his countenance.
+This penthouse forehead might, in fact, hint at a touch of madness,
+and his thick-knitted eyebrows added to the apparent eccentricity. He
+had the white well-kept hands of a gentleman; his foot was high and
+narrow. His hesitating speech--not merely as to his pronunciation,
+which was that of a stammerer, but also in the expression of his
+ideas, his thought and language--produced on the mind of the hearer
+the impression of a man who, in familiar phraseology, comes and goes,
+feels his way, tries everything, breaks off his gestures, and finishes
+nothing. This defect was purely superficial, and in contrast with the
+decisiveness of a firmly-set mouth, and the strongly-marked character
+of his physiognomy. His rather jerky gait matched his mode of speech.
+These peculiarities helped to affirm his supposed insanity. In spite
+of his elegant appearance, he was systematically parsimonious in his
+personal expenses, and wore the same black frock-coat for three or
+four years, brushed with extreme care by his old man-servant.
+
+As to the children, they both were handsome, and endowed with a grace
+which did not exclude an expression of aristocratic disdain. They had
+the bright coloring, the clear eye, the transparent flesh which reveal
+habits of purity, regularity of life, and a due proportion of work and
+play. They both had black hair and blue eyes, and a twist in their
+nose, like their father; but their mother, perhaps, had transmitted to
+them the dignity of speech, of look and mien, which are hereditary in
+the Blamont-Chauvrys. Their voices, as clear as crystal, had an
+emotional quality, the softness which proves so seductive; they had,
+in short, the voice a woman would willingly listen to after feeling
+the flame of their looks. But, above all, they had the modesty of
+pride, a chaste reserve, a /touch-me-not/ which at a maturer age might
+have seemed intentional coyness, so much did their demeanor inspire a
+wish to know them. The elder, Comte Clement de Negrepelisse, was close
+upon his sixteenth year. For the last two years he had ceased to wear
+the pretty English round jacket which his brother, Vicomte Camille
+d'Espard, still wore. The Count, who for the last six months went no
+more to the College Henri IV., was dressed in the style of a young man
+enjoying the first pleasures of fashion. His father had not wished to
+condemn him to a year's useless study of philosophy; he was trying to
+give his knowledge some consistency by the study of transcendental
+mathematics. At the same time, the Marquis was having him taught
+Eastern languages, the international law of Europe, heraldry, and
+history from the original sources, charters, early documents, and
+collections of edicts. Camille had lately begun to study rhetoric.
+
+The day when Popinot arranged to go to question M. d'Espard was a
+Thursday, a holiday. At about nine in the morning, before their father
+was awake, the brothers were playing in the garden. Clement was
+finding it hard to refuse his brother, who was anxious to go to the
+shooting-gallery for the first time, and who begged him to second his
+request to the Marquis. The Viscount always rather took advantage of
+his weakness, and was very fond of wrestling with his brother. So the
+couple were quarreling and fighting in play like schoolboys. As they
+ran in the garden, chasing each other, they made so much noise as to
+wake their father, who came to the window without their perceiving him
+in the heat of the fray. The Marquis amused himself with watching his
+two children twisted together like snakes, their faces flushed by the
+exertion of their strength; their complexion was rose and white, their
+eyes flashed sparks, their limbs writhed like cords in the fire; they
+fell, sprang up again, and caught each other like athletes in a
+circus, affording their father one of those moments of happiness which
+would make amends for the keenest anxieties of a busy life. Two other
+persons, one on the second and one on the first floor, were also
+looking into the garden, and saying that the old madman was amusing
+himself by making his children fight. Immediately a number of heads
+appeared at the windows; the Marquis, noticing them, called a word to
+his sons, who at once climbed up to the window and jumped into his
+room, and Clement obtained the permission asked by Camille.
+
+All through the house every one was talking of the Marquis' new form
+of insanity. When Popinot arrived at about twelve o'clock, accompanied
+by his clerk, the portress, when asked for M. d'Espard, conducted him
+to the third floor, telling him "as how M. d'Espard, no longer ago
+than that very morning, had set on his two children to fight, and
+laughed like the monster he was on seeing the younger biting the elder
+till he bled, and as how no doubt he longed to see them kill each
+other.--Don't ask me the reason why," she added; "he doesn't show
+himself!"
+
+Just as the woman spoke these decisive words, she had brought the
+judge to the landing on the third floor, face to face with a door
+covered with notices announcing the successive numbers of the
+Picturesque History of China. The muddy floor, the dirty banisters,
+the door where the printers had left their marks, the dilapidated
+window, and the ceiling on which the apprentices had amused themselves
+with drawing monstrosities with the smoky flare of their tallow dips,
+the piles of paper and litter heaped up in the corners, intentionally
+or from sheer neglect--in short, every detail of the picture lying
+before his eyes, agreed so well with the facts alleged by the Marquise
+that the judge, in spite of his impartiality, could not help believing
+them.
+
+"There you are, gentlemen," said the porter's wife; "there is the
+manifactor, where the Chinese swallow up enough to feed the whole
+neighborhood."
+
+The clerk looked at the judge with a smile, and Popinot found it hard
+to keep his countenance. They went together into the outer room, where
+sat an old man, who, no doubt, performed the functions of office
+clerk, shopman, and cashier. This old man was the Maitre Jacques of
+China. Along the walls ran long shelves, on which the published
+numbers lay in piles. A partition in wood, with a grating lined with
+green curtains, cut off the end of the room, forming a private office.
+A till with a slit to admit or disgorge crown pieces indicated the
+cash-desk.
+
+"M. d'Espard?" said Popinot, addressing the man, who wore a gray
+blouse.
+
+The shopman opened the door into the next room, where the lawyer and
+his companion saw a venerable old man, white-headed and simply
+dressed, wearing the Cross of Saint-Louis, seated at a desk. He ceased
+comparing some sheets of colored prints to look up at the two
+visitors. This room was an unpretentious office, full of books and
+proof-sheets. There was a black wood table at which some one, at the
+moment absent, no doubt was accustomed to work.
+
+"The Marquis d'Espard?" said Popinot.
+
+"No, monsieur," said the old man, rising; "what do you want with him?"
+he added, coming forward, and showing by his demeanor the dignified
+manners and habits due to a gentlemanly education.
+
+"We wish to speak with him on business exclusively personal to
+himself," replied Popinot.
+
+"D'Espard, here are some gentlemen who want to see you," then said the
+old man, going into the furthest room, where the Marquis was sitting
+by the fire reading the newspaper.
+
+This innermost room had a shabby carpet, the windows were hung with
+gray holland curtains; the furniture consisted of a few mahogany
+chairs, two armchairs, a desk with a revolving front, an ordinary
+office table, and on the chimney-shelf, a dingy clock and two old
+candlesticks. The old man led the way for Popinot and his registrar,
+and pulled forward two chairs, as though he were master of the place;
+M. d'Espard left it to him. After the preliminary civilities, during
+which the judge watched the supposed lunatic, the Marquis naturally
+asked what was the object of this visit. On this Popinot glanced
+significantly at the old gentleman and the Marquis.
+
+"I believe, Monsieur le Marquis," said he, "that the character of my
+functions, and the inquiry that has brought me here, make it desirable
+that we should be alone, though it is understood by law that in such
+cases the inquiries have a sort of family publicity. I am judge on the
+Inferior Court of Appeal for the Department of the Seine, and charged
+by the President with the duty of examining you as to certain facts
+set forth in a petition for a Commission in Lunacy on the part of the
+Marquise d'Espard."
+
+The old man withdrew. When the lawyer and the Marquis were alone, the
+clerk shut the door, and seated himself unceremoniously at the office
+table, where he laid out his papers and prepared to take down his
+notes. Popinot had still kept his eye on M. d'Espard; he was watching
+the effect on him of this crude statement, so painful for a man in
+full possession of his reason. The Marquis d'Espard, whose face was
+usually pale, as are those of fair men, suddenly turned scarlet with
+anger; he trembled for an instant, sat down, laid his paper on the
+chimney-piece, and looked down. In a moment he had recovered his
+gentlemanly dignity, and looked steadily at the judge, as if to read
+in his countenance the indications of his character.
+
+"How is it, monsieur," he asked, "that I have had no notice of such a
+petition?"
+
+"Monsieur le Marquis, persons on whom such a commission is held not
+being supposed to have the use of their reason, any notice of the
+petition is unnecessary. The duty of the Court chiefly consists in
+verifying the allegations of the petitioner."
+
+"Nothing can be fairer," replied the Marquis. "Well, then, monsieur,
+be so good as to tell me what I ought to do----"
+
+"You have only to answer my questions, omitting nothing. However
+delicate the reasons may be which may have led you to act in such a
+manner as to give Madame d'Espard a pretext for her petition, speak
+without fear. It is unnecessary to assure you that lawyers know their
+duties, and that in such cases the profoundest secrecy----"
+
+"Monsieur," said the Marquis, whose face expressed the sincerest pain,
+"if my explanations should lead to any blame being attached to Madame
+d'Espard's conduct, what will be the result?"
+
+"The Court may add its censure to its reasons for its decision."
+
+"Is such censure optional? If I were to stipulate with you, before
+replying, that nothing should be said that could annoy Madame d'Espard
+in the event of your report being in my favor, would the Court take my
+request into consideration?"
+
+The judge looked at the Marquis, and the two men exchanged sentiments
+of equal magnanimity.
+
+"Noel," said Popinot to his registrar, "go into the other room. If you
+can be of use, I will call you in.--If, as I am inclined to think," he
+went on, speaking to the Marquis when the clerk had gone out, "I find
+that there is some misunderstanding in this case, I can promise you,
+monsieur, that on your application the Court will act with due
+courtesy.
+
+"There is a leading fact put forward by Madame d'Espard, the most
+serious of all, of which I must beg for an explanation," said the
+judge after a pause. "It refers to the dissipation of your fortune to
+the advantage of a certain Madame Jeanrenaud, the widow of a
+bargemaster--or rather, to that of her son, Colonel Jeanrenaud, for
+whom you are said to have procured an appointment, to have exhausted
+your influence with the King, and at last to have extended such
+protection as secures him a good marriage. The petition suggests that
+such a friendship is more devoted than any feelings, even those which
+morality must disapprove----"
+
+A sudden flush crimsoned the Marquis' face and forehead, tears even
+started to his eyes, for his eyelashes were wet, then wholesome pride
+crushed the emotions, which in a man are accounted a weakness.
+
+"To tell you the truth, monsieur," said the Marquis, in a broken
+voice, "you place me in a strange dilemma. The motives of my conduct
+were to have died with me. To reveal them I must disclose to you some
+secret wounds, must place the honor of my family in your keeping, and
+must speak of myself, a delicate matter, as you will fully understand.
+I hope, monsieur, that it will all remain a secret between us. You
+will, no doubt, be able to find in the formulas of the law one which
+will allow of judgment being pronounced without any betrayal of my
+confidences."
+
+"So far as that goes, it is perfectly possible, Monsieur le Marquis."
+
+"Some time after my marriage," said M. d'Espard, "my wife having run
+into considerable expenses, I was obliged to have recourse to
+borrowing. You know what was the position of noble families during the
+Revolution; I had not been able to keep a steward or a man of
+business. Nowadays gentlemen are for the most part obliged to manage
+their affairs themselves. Most of my title-deeds had been brought to
+Paris, from Languedoc, Provence, or le Comtat, by my father, who
+dreaded, and not without reason, the inquisition which family
+title-deeds, and what was then styled the 'parchments' of the
+privileged class, brought down on the owners.
+
+"Our name is Negrepelisse; d'Espard is a title acquired in the time of
+Henri IV. by a marriage which brought us the estates and titles of the
+house of d'Espard, on condition of our bearing an escutcheon of
+pretence on our coat-of-arms, those of the house of d'Espard, an old
+family of Bearn, connected in the female line with that of Albret:
+quarterly, paly of or and sable; and azure two griffins' claws armed,
+gules in saltire, with the famous motto Des partem leonis. At the time
+of this alliance we lost Negrepelisse, a little town which was as
+famous during the religious struggles as was my ancestor who then bore
+the name. Captain de Negrepelisse was ruined by the burning of all his
+property, for the Protestants did not spare a friend of Montluc's.
+
+"The Crown was unjust to M. de Negrepelisse; he received neither a
+marshal's baton, nor a post as governor, nor any indemnity; King
+Charles IX., who was fond of him, died without being able to reward
+him; Henri IV. arranged his marriage with Mademoiselle d'Espard, and
+secured him the estates of that house, but all those of the
+Negrepelisses had already passed into the hands of his creditors.
+
+"My great-grandfather, the Marquis d'Espard, was, like me, placed
+early in life at the head of his family by the death of his father,
+who, after dissipating his wife's fortune, left his son nothing but
+the entailed estates of the d'Espards, burdened with a jointure. The
+young Marquis was all the more straitened for money because he held a
+post at Court. Being in great favor with Louis XIV., the King's
+goodwill brought him a fortune. But here, monsieur, a blot stained our
+escutcheon, an unconfessed and horrible stain of blood and disgrace
+which I am making it my business to wipe out. I discovered the secret
+among the deeds relating to the estate of Negrepelisse and the packets
+of letters."
+
+At this solemn moment the Marquis spoke without hesitation or any of
+the repetition habitual with him; but it is a matter of common
+observation that persons who, in ordinary life, are afflicted with
+these two defects, are freed from them as soon as any passionate
+emotion underlies their speech.
+
+"The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes was decreed," he went on. "You
+are no doubt aware, monsieur, that this was an opportunity for many
+favorites to make their fortunes. Louis XIV. bestowed on the magnates
+about his Court the confiscated lands of those Protestant families who
+did not take the prescribed steps for the sale of their property. Some
+persons in high favor went 'Protestant-hunting,' as the phrase was. I
+have ascertained beyond a doubt that the fortune enjoyed to this day
+by two ducal families is derived from lands seized from hapless
+merchants.
+
+"I will not attempt to explain to you, a man of law, all the
+manoeuvres employed to entrap the refugees who had large fortunes to
+carry away. It is enough to say that the lands of Negrepelisse,
+comprising twenty-two churches and rights over the town, and those of
+Gravenges which had formerly belonged to us, were at that time in the
+hands of a Protestant family. My grandfather recovered them by gift
+from Louis XIV. This gift was effected by documents hall-marked by
+atrocious iniquity. The owner of these two estates, thinking he would
+be able to return, had gone through the form of a sale, and was going
+to Switzerland to join his family, whom he had sent in advance. He
+wished, no doubt, to take advantage of every delay granted by the law,
+so as to settle the concerns of his business.
+
+"This man was arrested by order of the governor, the trustee confessed
+the truth, the poor merchant was hanged, and my ancestor had the two
+estates. I would gladly have been able to ignore the share he took in
+the plot; but the governor was his uncle on the mother's side, and I
+have unfortunately read the letter in which he begged him to apply to
+Deodatus, the name agreed upon by the Court to designate the King. In
+this letter there is a tone of jocosity with reference to the victim,
+which filled me with horror. In the end, the sums of money sent by the
+refugee family to ransom the poor man were kept by the governor, who
+despatched the merchant all the same."
+
+The Marquis paused, as though the memory of it were still too heavy
+for him to bear.
+
+"This unfortunate family were named Jeanrenaud," he went on. "That
+name is enough to account for my conduct. I could never think without
+keen pain of the secret disgrace that weighed on my family. That
+fortune enabled my grandfather to marry a demoiselle de
+Navarreins-Lansac, heiress to the younger branch of that house, who
+were at that time much richer than the elder branch of the Navarreins.
+My father thus became one of the largest landowners in the kingdom. He
+was able to marry my mother, a Grandlieu of the younger branch. Though
+ill-gotten, this property has been singularly profitable.
+
+"For my part, being determined to remedy the mischief, I wrote to
+Switzerland, and knew no peace till I was on the traces of the
+Protestant victim's heirs. At last I discovered that the Jeanrenauds,
+reduced to abject want, had left Fribourg and returned to live in
+France. Finally, I found a M. Jeanrenaud, lieutenant in a cavalry
+regiment under Napoleon, the sole heir of this unhappy family. In my
+eyes, monsieur, the rights of the Jeanrenauds were clear. To establish
+a prescriptive right is it not necessary that there should have been
+some possibility of proceeding against those who are in the enjoyment
+of it? To whom could these refugees have appealed? Their Court of
+Justice was on high, or rather, monsieur, it was here," and the
+Marquis struck his hand on his heart. "I did not choose that my
+children should be able to think of me as I have thought of my father
+and of my ancestors. I aim at leaving them an unblemished inheritance
+and escutcheon. I did not choose that nobility should be a lie in my
+person. And, after all, politically speaking, ought those emigres who
+are now appealing against revolutionary confiscations, to keep the
+property derived from antecedent confiscations by positive crimes?
+
+"I found in M. Jeanrenaud and his mother the most perverse honesty; to
+hear them you would suppose that they were robbing me. In spite of all
+I could say, they will accept no more than the value of the lands at
+the time when the King bestowed them on my family. The price was
+settled between us at the sum of eleven hundred thousand francs, which
+I was to pay at my convenience and without interest. To achieve this I
+had to forego my income for a long time. And then, monsieur, began the
+destruction of some illusions I had allowed myself as to Madame
+d'Espard's character. When I proposed to her that we should leave
+Paris and go into the country, where we could live respected on half
+of her income, and so more rapidly complete a restitution of which I
+spoke to her without going into the more serious details, Madame
+d'Espard treated me as a madman. I then understood my wife's real
+character. She would have approved of my grandfather's conduct without
+a scruple, and have laughed at the Huguenots. Terrified by her
+coldness, and her little affection for her children, whom she
+abandoned to me without regret, I determined to leave her the command
+of her fortune, after paying our common debts. It was no business of
+hers, as she told me, to pay for my follies. As I then had not enough
+to live on and pay for my sons' education, I determined to educate
+them myself, to make them gentlemen and men of feeling. By investing
+my money in the funds I have been enabled to pay off my obligation
+sooner than I had dared to hope, for I took advantage of the
+opportunities afforded by the improvement in prices. If I had kept
+four thousand francs a year for my boys and myself, I could only have
+paid off twenty thousand crowns a year, and it would have taken almost
+eighteen years to achieve my freedom. As it is, I have lately repaid
+the whole of the eleven hundred thousand francs that were due. Thus I
+enjoy the happiness of having made this restitution without doing my
+children the smallest wrong.
+
+"These, monsieur, are the reasons for the payments made to Madame
+Jeanrenaud and her son."
+
+"So Madame d'Espard knew the motives of your retirement?" said the
+judge, controlling the emotion he felt at this narrative.
+
+"Yes, monsieur."
+
+Popinot gave an expressive shrug; he rose and opened the door into the
+next room.
+
+"Noel, you can go," said he to his clerk.
+
+"Monsieur," he went on, "though what you have told me is enough to
+enlighten me thoroughly, I should like to hear what you have to say to
+the other facts put forward in the petition. For instance, you are
+here carrying on a business such as is not habitually undertaken by a
+man of rank."
+
+"We cannot discuss that matter here," said the Marquis, signing to the
+judge to quit the room. "Nouvion," said he to the old man, "I am going
+down to my rooms; the children will soon be in; dine with us."
+
+"Then, Monsieur le Marquis," said Popinot on the stairs, "that is not
+your apartment?"
+
+"No, monsieur; I took those rooms for the office of this undertaking.
+You see," and he pointed to an advertisement sheet, "the History is
+being brought out by one of the most respectable firms in Paris, and
+not by me."
+
+The Marquis showed the lawyer into the ground-floor rooms, saying,
+"This is my apartment."
+
+Popinot was quite touched by the poetry, not aimed at but pervading
+this dwelling. The weather was lovely, the windows were open, the air
+from the garden brought in a wholesome earthy smell, the sunshine
+brightened and gilded the woodwork, of a rather gloomy brown. At the
+sight Popinot made up his mind that a madman would hardly be capable
+of inventing the tender harmony of which he was at that moment
+conscious.
+
+"I should like just such an apartment," thought he. "You think of
+leaving this part of town?" he inquired.
+
+"I hope so," replied the Marquis. "But I shall remain till my younger
+son has finished his studies, and till the children's character is
+thoroughly formed, before introducing them to the world and to their
+mother's circle. Indeed, after giving them the solid information they
+possess, I intend to complete it by taking them to travel to the
+capitals of Europe, that they may see men and things, and become
+accustomed to speak the languages they have learned. And, monsieur,"
+he went on, giving the judge a chair in the drawing-room, "I could not
+discuss the book on China with you, in the presence of an old friend
+of my family, the Comte de Nouvion, who, having emigrated, has
+returned to France without any fortune whatever, and who is my partner
+in this concern, less for my profit than his. Without telling him what
+my motives were, I explained to him that I was as poor as he, but that
+I had enough money to start a speculation in which he might be
+usefully employed. My tutor was the Abbe Grozier, whom Charles X. on
+my recommendation appointed Keeper of the Books at the Arsenal, which
+were returned to that Prince when he was still Monsieur. The Abbe
+Grozier was deeply learned with regard to China, its manners and
+customs; he made me heir to this knowledge at an age when it is
+difficult not to become a fanatic for the things we learn. At
+five-and-twenty I knew Chinese, and I confess I have never been able to
+check myself in an exclusive admiration for that nation, who conquered
+their conquerors, whose annals extend back indisputably to a period
+more remote than mythological or Bible times, who by their immutable
+institutions have preserved the integrity of their empire, whose
+monuments are gigantic, whose administration is perfect, among whom
+revolutions are impossible, who have regarded ideal beauty as a barren
+element in art, who have carried luxury and industry to such a pitch
+that we cannot outdo them in anything, while they are our equals in
+things where we believe ourselves superior.
+
+"Still, monsieur, though I often make a jest of comparing China with
+the present condition of European states, I am not a Chinaman, I am a
+French gentleman. If you entertain any doubts as to the financial side
+of this undertaking, I can prove to you that at this moment we have
+two thousand five hundred subscribers to this work, which is literary,
+iconographical, statistical, and religious; its importance has been
+generally appreciated; our subscribers belong to every nation in
+Europe, we have but twelve hundred in France. Our book will cost about
+three hundred francs, and the Comte de Nouvion will derive from it
+from six to seven thousand francs a year, for his comfort was the real
+motive of the undertaking. For my part, I aimed only at the
+possibility of affording my children some pleasures. The hundred
+thousand francs I have made, quite in spite of myself, will pay for
+their fencing lessons, horses, dress, and theatres, pay the masters
+who teach them accomplishments, procure them canvases to spoil, the
+books they may wish to buy, in short, all the little fancies which a
+father finds so much pleasure in gratifying. If I had been compelled
+to refuse these indulgences to my poor boys, who are so good and work
+so hard, the sacrifice I made to the honor of my name would have been
+doubly painful.
+
+"In point of fact, the twelve years I have spent in retirement from
+the world to educate my children have led to my being completely
+forgotten at Court. I have given up the career of politics; I have
+lost my historical fortune, and all the distinctions which I might
+have acquired and bequeathed to my children; but our house will have
+lost nothing; my boys will be men of mark. Though I have missed the
+senatorship, they will win it nobly by devoting themselves to the
+affairs of the country, and doing such service as is not soon
+forgotten. While purifying the past record of my family, I have
+insured it a glorious future; and is not that to have achieved a noble
+task, though in secret and without glory?--And now, monsieur, have you
+any other explanations to ask me?"
+
+At this instant the tramp of horses was heard in the courtyard.
+
+"Here they are!" said the Marquis. In a moment the two lads,
+fashionably but plainly dressed, came into the room, booted, spurred,
+and gloved, and flourishing their riding-whips. Their beaming faces
+brought in the freshness of the outer air; they were brilliant with
+health. They both grasped their father's hand, giving him a look, as
+friends do, a glance of unspoken affection, and then they bowed coldly
+to the lawyer. Popinot felt that it was quite unnecessary to question
+the Marquis as to his relations towards his sons.
+
+"Have you enjoyed yourselves?" asked the Marquis.
+
+"Yes, father; I knocked down six dolls in twelve shots at the first
+trial!" cried Camille.
+
+"And where did you ride?"
+
+"In the Bois; we saw my mother."
+
+"Did she stop?"
+
+"We were riding so fast just then that I daresay she did not see us,"
+replied the young Count.
+
+"But, then, why did you not go to speak to her?"
+
+"I fancy I have noticed, father, that she does not care that we should
+speak to her in public," said Clement in an undertone. "We are a
+little too big."
+
+The judge's hearing was keen enough to catch these words, which
+brought a cloud to the Marquis' brow. Popinot took pleasure in
+contemplating the picture of the father and his boys. His eyes went
+back with a sense of pathos to M. d'Espard's face; his features, his
+expression, and his manner all expressed honesty in its noblest
+aspect, intellectual and chivalrous honesty, nobility in all its
+beauty.
+
+"You--you see, monsieur," said the Marquis, and his hesitation had
+returned, "you see that Justice may look in--in here at any time--yes,
+at any time--here. If there is anybody crazy, it can only be the
+children--the children--who are a little crazy about their father, and
+the father who is very crazy about his children--but that sort of
+madness rings true."
+
+At this juncture Madame Jeanrenaud's voice was heard in the ante-room,
+and the good woman came bustling in, in spite of the man-servant's
+remonstrances.
+
+"I take no roundabout ways, I can tell you!" she exclaimed. "Yes,
+Monsieur le Marquis, I want to speak to you, this very minute," she
+went on, with a comprehensive bow to the company. "By George, and I am
+too late as it is, since Monsieur the criminal Judge is before me."
+
+"Criminal!" cried the two boys.
+
+"Good reason why I did not find you at your own house, since you are
+here. Well, well! the Law is always to the fore when there is mischief
+brewing.--I came, Monsieur le Marquis, to tell you that my son and I
+are of one mind to give you everything back, since our honor is
+threatened. My son and I, we had rather give you back everything than
+cause you the smallest trouble. My word, they must be as stupid as
+pans without handles to call you a lunatic----"
+
+"A lunatic! My father?" exclaimed the boys, clinging to the Marquis.
+"What is this?"
+
+"Silence, madame," said Popinot.
+
+"Children, leave us," said the Marquis.
+
+The two boys went into the garden without a word, but very much
+alarmed.
+
+"Madame," said the judge, "the moneys paid to you by Monsieur le
+Marquis were legally due, though given to you in virtue of a very
+far-reaching theory of honesty. If all the people possessed of
+confiscated goods, by whatever cause, even if acquired by treachery,
+were compelled to make restitution every hundred and fifty years,
+there would be few legitimate owners in France. The possessions of
+Jacques Coeur enriched twenty noble families; the confiscations
+pronounced by the English to the advantage of their adherents at the
+time when they held a part of France made the fortune of several
+princely houses.
+
+"Our law allows M. d'Espard to dispose of his income without
+accounting for it, or suffering him to be accused of its
+misapplication. A Commission in Lunacy can only be granted when a
+man's actions are devoid of reason; but in this case, the remittances
+made to you have a reason based on the most sacred and most honorable
+motives. Hence you may keep it all without remorse, and leave the
+world to misinterpret a noble action. In Paris, the highest virtue is
+the object of the foulest calumny. It is, unfortunately, the present
+condition of society that makes the Marquis' actions sublime. For the
+honor of my country, I would that such deeds were regarded as a matter
+of course; but, as things are, I am forced by comparison to look upon
+M. d'Espard as a man to whom a crown should be awarded, rather than
+that he should be threatened with a Commission in Lunacy.
+
+"In the course of a long professional career, I have seen and heard
+nothing that has touched me more deeply than that I have just seen and
+heard. But it is not extraordinary that virtue should wear its noblest
+aspect when it is practised by men of the highest class.
+
+"Having heard me express myself in this way, I hope, Monsieur le
+Marquis, that you feel certain of my silence, and that you will not
+for a moment be uneasy as to the decision pronounced in the case--if
+it comes before the Court."
+
+"There, now! Well said," cried Madame Jeanrenaud. "That is something
+like a judge! Look here, my dear sir, I would hug you if I were not so
+ugly; you speak like a book."
+
+The Marquis held out his hand to Popinot, who gently pressed it with a
+look full of sympathetic comprehension at this great man in private
+life, and the Marquis responded with a pleasant smile. These two
+natures, both so large and full--one commonplace but divinely kind,
+the other lofty and sublime--had fallen into unison gently, without a
+jar, without a flash of passion, as though two pure lights had been
+merged into one. The father of a whole district felt himself worthy to
+grasp the hand of this man who was doubly noble, and the Marquis felt
+in the depths of his soul an instinct that told him that the judge's
+hand was one of those from which the treasures of inexhaustible
+beneficence perennially flow.
+
+"Monsieur le Marquis," added Popinot, with a bow, "I am happy to be
+able to tell you that, from the first words of this inquiry, I
+regarded my clerk as quite unnecessary."
+
+He went close to M. d'Espard, led him into the window-bay, and said:
+"It is time that you should return home, monsieur. I believe that
+Madame la Marquise has acted in this matter under an influence which
+you ought at once to counteract."
+
+Popinot withdrew. He looked back several times as he crossed the
+courtyard, touched by the recollection of the scene. It was one of
+those which take root in the memory to blossom again in certain hours
+when the soul seeks consolation.
+
+"Those rooms would just suit me," said he to himself as he reached
+home. "If M. d'Espard leaves them, I will take up his lease."
+
+
+
+The next day, at about ten in the morning, Popinot, who had written
+out his report the previous evening, made his way to the Palais de
+Justice, intending to have prompt and righteous justice done. As he
+went to the robing-room to put on his gown and bands, the usher told
+him that the President of his Court begged him to attend in his
+private room, where he was waiting for him. Popinot forthwith obeyed.
+
+"Good-morning, my dear Popinot," said the President, "I have been
+waiting for you."
+
+"Why, Monsieur le President, is anything wrong?"
+
+"A mere silly trifle," said the President. "The Keeper of the Seals,
+with whom I had the honor of dining yesterday, led me apart into a
+corner. He had heard that you had been to tea with Madame d'Espard, in
+whose case you were employed to make inquiries. He gave me to
+understand that it would be as well that you should not sit on this
+case----"
+
+"But, Monsieur le President, I can prove that I left Madame d'Espard's
+house at the moment when tea was brought in. And my conscience----"
+
+"Yes, yes; the whole Bench, the two Courts, all the profession know
+you. I need not repeat what I said about you to his Eminence; but, you
+know, 'Caesar's wife must not be suspected.' So we shall not make this
+foolish trifle a matter of discipline, but only of proprieties.
+Between ourselves, it is not on your account, but on that of the
+Bench."
+
+"But, monsieur, if you only knew the kind of woman----" said the
+judge, trying to pull his report out of his pocket.
+
+"I am perfectly certain that you have proceeded in this matter with
+the strictest independence of judgment. I myself, in the provinces,
+have often taken more than a cup of tea with the people I had to try;
+but the fact that the Keeper of the Seals should have mentioned it,
+and that you might be talked about, is enough to make the Court avoid
+any discussion of the matter. Any conflict with public opinion must
+always be dangerous for a constitutional body, even when the right is
+on its side against the public, because their weapons are not equal.
+Journalism may say or suppose anything, and our dignity forbids us
+even to reply. In fact, I have spoken of the matter to your President,
+and M. Camusot has been appointed in your place on your retirement,
+which you will signify. It is a family matter, so to speak. And I now
+beg you to signify your retirement from the case as a personal favor.
+To make up, you will get the Cross of the Legion of Honor, which has
+so long been due to you. I make that my business."
+
+When he saw M. Camusot, a judge recently called to Paris from a
+provincial Court of the same class, as he went forward bowing to the
+Judge and the President, Popinot could not repress an ironical smile.
+This pale, fair young man, full of covert ambition, looked ready to
+hang and unhang, at the pleasure of any earthy king, the innocent and
+the guilty alike, and to follow the example of a Laubardemont rather
+than that of a Mole.
+
+Popinot withdrew with a bow; he scorned to deny the lying accusation
+that had been brought against him.
+
+
+
+PARIS, February 1836.
+
+
+
+
+ADDENDUM
+
+The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.
+
+Note: The Commission in Lunacy is also known as The Interdiction and
+is referred to by that title in certain of the addendums.
+
+Bianchon, Horace
+ Father Goriot
+ The Atheist's Mass
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ The Government Clerks
+ Pierrette
+ A Study of Woman
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Magic Skin
+ A Second Home
+ A Prince of Bohemia
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ The Muse of the Department
+ The Imaginary Mistress
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Betty
+ The Country Parson
+In addition, M. Bianchon narrated the following:
+ Another Study of Woman
+ La Grande Breteche
+
+Bordin
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+
+Camusot de Marville
+ Cousin Pons
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+ Scenes from a Cuortesan's Life
+
+Desroches (son)
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Start in Life
+ A Woman of Thirty
+ The Government Clerks
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ A Man of Business
+ The Middle Classes
+
+Espard, Charles-Maurice-Marie-Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis d'
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+
+Espard, Chevalier d'
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+
+Espard, Jeanne-Clementine-Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, Marquise d'
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ Another Study of Woman
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ Beatrix
+
+Godeschal, Francois-Claude-Marie
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ A Start in Life
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Pons
+
+Grozier, Abbe
+ Lost Illusions
+
+Jeanrenaud
+ Albert Savarus
+
+Mongenod, Frederic
+ The Seamy Side of History
+
+Negrepelisse, De
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+
+Nucingen, Baronne Delphine de
+ Father Goriot
+ The Thirteen
+ Eugenie Grandet
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Melmoth Reconciled
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ Modeste Mignon
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ Another Study of Woman
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ The Member for Arcis
+
+Popinot, Jean-Jules
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Middle Classes
+
+Rabourdin, Madame
+ The Government Clerks
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Commission in Lunacy, by Honore de Balzac
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Commission in Lunacy by Balzac
+#27 in our series Honore de Balzac
+
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+The Commission in Lunacy
+
+by Honore de Balzac
+
+Translated by Clara Bell
+
+August, 1998 [Etext #1410]
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Commission in Lunacy by Balzac
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+*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+Etext prepared by Dagny, dagnyj@hotmail.com
+and John Bickers, jbickers@templar.actrix.gen.nz
+
+
+
+
+
+THE COMMISSION IN LUNACY
+
+BY
+
+HONORE DE BALZAC
+
+
+
+Translated By
+Clara Bell
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+Dedicated to Monsieur le Contre-Amiral Bazoche,
+Governor of the Isle of Bourbon, by the grateful writer.
+DE BALZAC.
+
+
+
+In 1828, at about one o'clock one morning, two persons came out of a
+large house in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, near the Elysee-
+Bourbon. One was the famous doctor, Horace Bianchon; the other was one
+of the most elegant men in Paris, the Baron de Rastignac; they were
+friends of long standing. Each had sent away his carriage, and no cab
+was to be seen in the street; but the night was fine, and the pavement
+dry.
+
+"We will walk as far as the boulevard," said Eugene de Rastignac to
+Bianchon. "You can get a hackney cab at the club; there is always one
+to be found there till daybreak. Come with me as far as my house."
+
+"With pleasure."
+
+"Well, and what have you to say about it?"
+
+"About that woman?" said the doctor coldly.
+
+"There I recognize my Bianchon!" exclaimed Rastignac.
+
+"Why, how?"
+
+"Well, my dear fellow, you speak of the Marquise d'Espard as if she
+were a case for your hospital."
+
+"Do you want to know what I think, Eugene? If you throw over Madame de
+Nucingen for this Marquise, you will swap a one-eyed horse for a blind
+one."
+
+"Madame de Nucingen is six-and-thirty, Bianchon."
+
+"And this woman is three-and-thirty," said the doctor quickly.
+
+"Her worst enemies only say six-and-twenty."
+
+"My dear boy, when you really want to know a woman's age, look at her
+temples and the tip of her nose. Whatever women may achieve with their
+cosmetics, they can do nothing against those incorruptible witnesses
+to their experiences. There each year of life has left its stigmata.
+When a woman's temples are flaccid, seamed, withered in a particular
+way; when at the tip of her nose you see those minute specks, which
+look like the imperceptible black smuts which are shed in London by
+the chimneys in which coal is burnt. . . . Your servant, sir! That
+woman is more than thirty. She may be handsome, witty, loving--
+whatever you please, but she is past thirty, she is arriving at
+maturity. I do not blame men who attach themselves to that kind of
+woman; only, a man of your superior distinction must not mistake a
+winter pippin for a little summer apple, smiling on the bough, and
+waiting for you to crunch it. Love never goes to study the registers
+of birth and marriage; no one loves a woman because she is handsome or
+ugly, stupid or clever; we love because we love."
+
+"Well, for my part, I love for quite other reasons. She is Marquise
+d'Espard; she was a Blamont-Chauvry; she is the fashion; she has soul;
+her foot is as pretty as the Duchesse de Berri's; she has perhaps a
+hundred thousand francs a year--some day, perhaps, I may marry her! In
+short, she will put me into a position which will enable me to pay my
+debts."
+
+"I thought you were rich," interrupted Bianchon.
+
+"Bah! I have twenty thousand francs a year--just enough to keep up my
+stables. I was thoroughly done, my dear fellow, in that Nucingen
+business; I will tell you about that.--I have got my sisters married;
+that is the clearest profit I can show since we last met; and I would
+rather have them provided for than have five hundred thousand francs a
+year. No, what would you have me do? I am ambitious. To what can
+Madame de Nucingen lead? A year more and I shall be shelved, stuck in
+a pigeon-hole like a married man. I have all the discomforts of
+marriage and of single life, without the advantages of either; a false
+position to which every man must come who remains tied too long to the
+same apron-string."
+
+"So you think you will come upon a treasure here?" said Bianchon.
+"Your Marquise, my dear fellow, does not hit my fancy at all."
+
+"Your liberal opinions blur your eyesight. If Madame d'Espard were a
+Madame Rabourdin . . ."
+
+"Listen to me. Noble or simple, she would still have no soul; she
+would still be a perfect type of selfishness. Take my word for it,
+medical men are accustomed to judge of people and things; the sharpest
+of us read the soul while we study the body. In spite of that pretty
+boudoir where we have spent this evening, in spite of the magnificence
+of the house, it is quite possible that Madame la Marquise is in
+debt."
+
+"What makes you think so?"
+
+"I do not assert it; I am supposing. She talked of her soul as Louis
+XVIII. used to talk of his heart. I tell you this: That fragile, fair
+woman, with her chestnut hair, who pities herself that she may be
+pitied, enjoys an iron constitution, an appetite like a wolf's, and
+the strength and cowardice of a tiger. Gauze, and silk, and muslin
+were never more cleverly twisted round a lie! Ecco."
+
+"Bianchon, you frighten me! You have learned a good many things, then,
+since we lived in the Maison Vauquer?"
+
+"Yes, since then, my boy, I have seen puppets, both dolls and
+manikins. I know something of the ways of the fine ladies whose bodies
+we attend to, saving that which is dearest to them, their child--if
+they love it--or their pretty faces, which they always worship. A man
+spends his nights by their pillow, wearing himself to death to spare
+them the slightest loss of beauty in any part; he succeeds, he keeps
+their secret like the dead; they send to ask for his bill, and think
+it horribly exorbitant. Who saved them? Nature. Far from recommending
+him, they speak ill of him, fearing lest he should become the
+physician of their best friends.
+
+"My dear fellow, those women of whom you say, 'They are angels!' I--
+I--have seen stripped of the little grimaces under which they hide
+their soul, as well as of the frippery under which they disguise their
+defects--without manners and without stays; they are not beautiful.
+
+"We saw a great deal of mud, a great deal of dirt, under the waters of
+the world when we were aground for a time on the shoals of the Maison
+Vauquer.--What we saw there was nothing. Since I have gone into high
+society, I have seen monsters dressed in satin, Michonneaus in white
+gloves, Poirets bedizened with orders, fine gentlemen doing more
+usurious business than old Gobseck! To the shame of mankind, when I
+have wanted to shake hands with Virtue, I have found her shivering in
+a loft, persecuted by calumny, half-starving on a income or a salary
+of fifteen hundred francs a year, and regarded as crazy, or eccentric,
+or imbecile.
+
+"In short, my dear boy, the Marquise is a woman of fashion, and I have
+a particular horror of that kind of woman. Do you want to know why? A
+woman who has a lofty soul, fine taste, gentle wit, a generously warm
+heart, and who lives a simple life, has not a chance of being the
+fashion. Ergo: A woman of fashion and a man in power are analogous;
+but there is this difference: the qualities by which a man raises
+himself above others ennoble him and are a glory to him; whereas the
+qualities by which a woman gains power for a day are hideous vices;
+she belies her nature to hide her character, and to live the militant
+life of the world she must have iron strength under a frail
+appearance.
+
+"I, as a physician, know that a sound stomach excludes a good heart.
+Your woman of fashion feels nothing; her rage for pleasure has its
+source in a longing to heat up her cold nature, a craving for
+excitement and enjoyment, like an old man who stands night after night
+by the footlights at the opera. As she has more brain than heart, she
+sacrifices genuine passion and true friends to her triumph, as a
+general sends his most devoted subalterns to the front in order to win
+a battle. The woman of fashion ceases to be a woman; she is neither
+mother, nor wife, nor lover. She is, medically speaking, sex in the
+brain. And your Marquise, too, has all the characteristics of her
+monstrosity, the beak of a bird of prey, the clear, cold eye, the
+gentle voice--she is as polished as the steel of a machine, she
+touches everything except the heart."
+
+"There is some truth in what you say, Bianchon."
+
+"Some truth?" replied Bianchon. "It is all true. Do you suppose that I
+was not struck to the heart by the insulting politeness by which she
+made me measure the imaginary distance which her noble birth sets
+between us? That I did not feel the deepest pity for her cat-like
+civilities when I remembered what her object was? A year hence she
+will not write one word to do me the slightest service, and this
+evening she pelted me with smiles, believing that I can influence my
+uncle Popinot, on whom the success of her case----"
+
+"Would you rather she should have played the fool with you, my dear
+fellow?--I accept your diatribe against women of fashion; but you are
+beside the mark. I should always prefer for a wife a Marquise d'Espard
+to the most devout and devoted creature on earth. Marry an angel! you
+would have to go and bury your happiness in the depths of the country!
+The wife of a politician is a governing machine, a contrivance that
+makes compliments and courtesies. She is the most important and most
+faithful tool which an ambitious man can use; a friend, in short, who
+may compromise herself without mischief, and whom he may belie without
+harmful results. Fancy Mahomet in Paris in the nineteenth century! His
+wife would be a Rohan, a Duchesse de Chevreuse of the Fronde, as keen
+and as flattering as an Ambassadress, as wily as Figaro. Your loving
+wives lead nowhere; a woman of the world leads to everything; she is
+the diamond with which a man cuts every window when he has not the
+golden key which unlocks every door. Leave humdrum virtues to the
+humdrum, ambitious vices to the ambitious.
+
+"Besides, my dear fellow, do you imagine that the love of a Duchesse
+de Langeais, or de Maufrigneuse, or of a Lady Dudley does not bestow
+immense pleasure? If only you knew how much value the cold, severe
+style of such a woman gives to the smallest evidence of their
+affection! What a delight it is to see a periwinkle piercing through
+the snow! A smile from below a fan contradicts the reserve of an
+assumed attitude, and is worth all the unbridled tenderness of your
+middle-class women with their mortgaged devotion; for, in love,
+devotion is nearly akin to speculation.
+
+"And, then, a woman of fashion, a Blamont-Chauvry, has her virtues
+too! Her virtues are fortune, power, effect, a certain contempt of all
+that is beneath her----"
+
+"Thank you!" said Bianchon.
+
+"Old curmudgeon!" said Rastignac, laughing. "Come--do not be so
+common, do like your friend Desplein; be a Baron, a Knight of Saint-
+Michael; become a peer of France, and marry your daughters to dukes."
+
+"I! May the five hundred thousand devils----"
+
+"Come, come! Can you be superior only in medicine? Really, you
+distress me . . ."
+
+"I hate that sort of people; I long for a revolution to deliver us
+from them for ever."
+
+"And so, my dear Robespierre of the lancet, you will not go to-morrow
+to your uncle Popinot?"
+
+"Yes, I will," said Bianchon; "for you I would go to hell to fetch
+water . . ."
+
+"My good friend, you really touch me. I have sworn that a commission
+shall sit on the Marquis. Why, here is even a long-saved tear to thank
+you."
+
+"But," Bianchon went on, "I do not promise to succeed as you wish with
+Jean-Jules Popinot. You do not know him. However, I will take him to
+see your Marquise the day after to-morrow; she may get round him if
+she can. I doubt it. If all the truffles, all the Duchesses, all the
+mistresses, and all the charmers in Paris were there in the full bloom
+of their beauty; if the King promised him the PRAIRIE, and the
+Almighty gave him the Order of Paradise with the revenues of
+Purgatory, not one of all these powers would induce him to transfer a
+single straw from one saucer of his scales into the other. He is a
+judge, as Death is Death."
+
+The two friends had reached the office of the Minister for Foreign
+Affairs, at the corner of the Boulevard des Capucines.
+
+"Here you are at home," said Bianchon, laughing, as he pointed to the
+ministerial residence. "And here is my carriage," he added, calling a
+hackney cab. "And these--express our fortune."
+
+"You will be happy at the bottom of the sea, while I am still
+struggling with the tempests on the surface, till I sink and go to ask
+you for a corner in your grotto, old fellow!"
+
+"Till Saturday," replied Bianchon.
+
+"Agreed," said Rastignac. "And you promise me Popinot?"
+
+"I will do all my conscience will allow. Perhaps this appeal for a
+commission covers some little dramorama, to use a word of our good bad
+times."
+
+"Poor Bianchon! he will never be anything but a good fellow," said
+Rastignac to himself as the cab drove off.
+
+
+
+"Rastignac has given me the most difficult negotiation in the world,"
+said Bianchon to himself, remembering, as he rose next morning, the
+delicate commission intrusted to him. "However, I have never asked the
+smallest service from my uncle in Court, and have paid more than a
+thousand visits gratis for him. And, after all, we are not apt to
+mince matters between ourselves. He will say Yes or No, and there an
+end."
+
+After this little soliloquy the famous physician bent his steps, at
+seven in the morning, towards the Rue du Fouarre, where dwelt Monsieur
+Jean-Jules Popinot, judge of the Lower Court of the Department of the
+Seine. The Rue du Fouarre--an old word meaning straw--was in the
+thirteenth century the most important street in Paris. There stood the
+Schools of the University, where the voices of Abelard and of Gerson
+were heard in the world of learning. It is now one of the dirtiest
+streets of the Twelfth Arrondissement, the poorest quarter of Paris,
+that in which two-thirds of the population lack firing in winter,
+which leaves most brats at the gate of the Foundling Hospital, which
+sends most beggars to the poorhouse, most rag-pickers to the street
+corners, most decrepit old folks to bask against the walls on which
+the sun shines, most delinquents to the police courts.
+
+Half-way down this street, which is always damp, and where the gutter
+carries to the Seine the blackened waters from some dye-works, there
+is an old house, restored no doubt under Francis I., and built of
+bricks held together by a few courses of masonry. That it is
+substantial seems proved by the shape of its front wall, not
+uncommonly seen in some parts of Paris. It bellies, so to speak, in a
+manner caused by the protuberance of its first floor, crushed under
+the weight of the second and third, but upheld by the strong wall of
+the ground floor. At first sight it would seem as though the piers
+between the windows, though strengthened by the stone mullions, must
+give way, but the observer presently perceives that, as in the tower
+at Bologna, the old bricks and old time-eaten stones of this house
+persistently preserve their centre of gravity.
+
+At every season of the year the solid piers of the ground floor have
+the yellow tone and the imperceptible sweating surface that moisture
+gives to stone. The passer-by feels chilled as he walks close to this
+wall, where worn corner-stones ineffectually shelter him from the
+wheels of vehicles. As is always the case in houses built before
+carriages were in use, the vault of the doorway forms a very low
+archway not unlike the barbican of a prison. To the right of this
+entrance there are three windows, protected outside by iron gratings
+of so close a pattern, that the curious cannot possibly see the use
+made of the dark, damp rooms within, and the panes too are dirty and
+dusty; to the left are two similar windows, one of which is sometimes
+open, exposing to view the porter, his wife, and his children;
+swarming, working, cooking, eating, and screaming, in a floored and
+wainscoted room where everything is dropping to pieces, and into which
+you descend two steps--a depth which seems to suggest the gradual
+elevation of the soil of Paris.
+
+If on a rainy day some foot-passenger takes refuge under the long
+vault, with projecting lime-washed beams, which leads from the door to
+the staircase, he will hardly fail to pause and look at the picture
+presented by the interior of this house. To the left is a square
+garden-plot, allowing of not more than four long steps in each
+direction, a garden of black soil, with trellises bereft of vines, and
+where, in default of vegetation under the shade of two trees, papers
+collect, old rags, potsherds, bits of mortar fallen from the roof; a
+barren ground, where time has shed on the walls, and on the trunks and
+branches of the trees, a powdery deposit like cold soot. The two parts
+of the house, set at a right angle, derive light from this garden-
+court shut in by two adjoining houses built on wooden piers, decrepit
+and ready to fall, where on each floor some grotesque evidence is to
+be seen of the craft pursued by some lodger within. Here long poles
+are hung with immense skeins of dyed worsted put out to dry; there, on
+ropes, dance clean-washed shirts; higher up, on a shelf, volumes
+display their freshly marbled edges; women sing, husbands whistle,
+children shout; the carpenter saws his planks, a copper-turner makes
+the metal screech; all kinds of industries combine to produce a noise
+which the number of instruments renders distracting.
+
+The general system of decoration in this passage, which is neither
+courtyard, garden, nor vaulted way, though a little of all, consists
+of wooden pillars resting on square stone blocks, and forming arches.
+Two archways open on to the little garden; two others, facing the
+front gateway, lead to a wooden staircase, with an iron balustrade
+that was once a miracle of smith's work, so whimsical are the shapes
+given to the metal; the worn steps creak under every tread. The
+entrance to each flat has an architrave dark with dirt, grease, and
+dust, and outer doors, covered with Utrecht velvet set with brass
+nails, once gilt, in a diamond pattern. These relics of splendor show
+that in the time of Louis XIV. the house was the residence of some
+councillor to the Parlement, some rich priests, or some treasurer of
+the ecclesiastical revenue. But these vestiges of former luxury bring
+a smile to the lips by the artless contrast of past and present.
+
+M. Jean-Jules Popinot lived on the first floor of this house, where
+the gloom, natural to all first floors in Paris houses, was increased
+by the narrowness of the street. This old tenement was known to all
+the twelfth arrondissement, on which Providence had bestowed this
+lawyer, as it gives a beneficent plant to cure or alleviate every
+malady. Here is a sketch of a man whom the brilliant Marquise d'Espard
+hoped to fascinate.
+
+M. Popinot, as is seemly for a magistrate, was always dressed in black
+--a style which contributed to make him ridiculous in the eyes of
+those who were in the habit of judging everything from a superficial
+examination. Men who are jealous of maintaining the dignity required
+by this color ought to devote themselves to constant and minute care
+of their person; but our dear M. Popinot was incapable of forcing
+himself to the puritanical cleanliness which black demands. His
+trousers, always threadbare, looked like camlet--the stuff of which
+attorneys' gowns are made; and his habitual stoop set them, in time,
+in such innumerable creases, that in places they were traced with
+lines, whitish, rusty, or shiny, betraying either sordid avarice, or
+the most unheeding poverty. His coarse worsted stockings were twisted
+anyhow in his ill-shaped shoes. His linen had the tawny tinge acquired
+by long sojourn in a wardrobe, showing that the late lamented Madame
+Popinot had had a mania for much linen; in the Flemish fashion,
+perhaps, she had given herself the trouble of a great wash no more
+than twice a year. The old man's coat and waistcoat were in harmony
+with his trousers, shoes, stockings, and linen. He always had the luck
+of his carelessness; for, the first day he put on a new coat, he
+unfailingly matched it with the rest of his costume by staining it
+with incredible promptitude. The good man waited till his housekeeper
+told him that his hat was too shabby before buying a new one. His
+necktie was always crumpled and starchless, and he never set his dog-
+eared shirt collar straight after his judge's bands had disordered it.
+He took no care of his gray hair, and shaved but twice a week. He
+never wore gloves, and generally kept his hands stuffed into his empty
+trousers' pockets; the soiled pocket-holes, almost always torn, added
+a final touch to the slovenliness of his person.
+
+Any one who knows the Palais de Justice at Paris, where every variety
+of black attire may be studied, can easily imagine the appearance of
+M. Popinot. The habit of sitting for days at a time modifies the
+structure of the body, just as the fatigue of hearing interminable
+pleadings tells on the expression of a magistrate's face. Shut up as
+he is in courts ridiculously small, devoid of architectural dignity,
+and where the air is quickly vitiated, a Paris judge inevitably
+acquires a countenance puckered and seamed by reflection, and
+depressed by weariness; his complexion turns pallid, acquiring an
+earthy or greenish hue according to his individual temperament. In
+short, within a given time the most blooming young man is turned into
+an "inasmuch" machine--an instrument which applies the Code to
+individual cases with the indifference of clockwork.
+
+Hence, nature, having bestowed on M. Popinot a not too pleasing
+exterior, his life as a lawyer had not improved it. His frame was
+graceless and angular. His thick knees, huge feet, and broad hands
+formed a contrast with a priest-like face having a vague resemblance
+to a calf's head, meek to unmeaningness, and but little brightened by
+divergent bloodless eyes, divided by a straight flat nose, surmounted
+by a flat forehead, flanked by enormous ears, flabby and graceless.
+His thin, weak hair showed the baldness through various irregular
+partings.
+
+One feature only commended this face to the physiognomist. This man
+had a mouth to whose lips divine kindness lent its sweetness. They
+were wholesome, full, red lips, finely wrinkled, sinuous, mobile, by
+which nature had given expression to noble feelings; lips which spoke
+to the heart and proclaimed the man's intelligence and lucidity, a
+gift of second-sight, and a heavenly temper; and you would have judged
+him wrongly from looking merely at his sloping forehead, his fireless
+eyes, and his shambling gait. His life answered to his countenance; it
+was full of secret labor, and hid the virtue of a saint. His superior
+knowledge of law proved so strong a recommendation at a time when
+Napoleon was reorganizing it in 1808 and 1811, that, by the advice of
+Cambaceres, he was one of the first men named to sit on the Imperial
+High Court of Justice at Paris. Popinot was no schemer. Whenever any
+demand was made, any request preferred for an appointment, the
+Minister would overlook Popinot, who never set foot in the house of
+the High Chancellor or the Chief Justice. From the High Court he was
+sent down to the Common Court, and pushed to the lowest rung of the
+ladder by active struggling men. There he was appointed supernumerary
+judge. There was a general outcry among the lawyers: "Popinot a
+supernumerary!" Such injustice struck the legal world with dismay--the
+attorneys, the registrars, everybody but Popinot himself, who made no
+complaint. The first clamor over, everybody was satisfied that all was
+for the best in the best of all possible worlds, which must certainly
+be the legal world. Popinot remained supernumerary judge till the day
+when the most famous Great Seal under the Restoration avenged the
+oversights heaped on this modest and uncomplaining man by the Chief
+Justices of the Empire. After being a supernumerary for twelve years,
+M. Popinot would no doubt die a puisne judge of the Court of the
+Seine.
+
+To account for the obscure fortunes of one of the superior men of the
+legal profession, it is necessary to enter here into some details
+which will serve to reveal his life and character, and which will, at
+the same time, display some of the wheels of the great machine known
+as Justice. M. Popinot was classed by the three Presidents who
+successively controlled the Court of the Seine under the category of
+possible judges, the stuff of which judges are made. Thus classified,
+he did not achieve the reputation for capacity which his previous
+labors had deserved. Just as a painter is invariably included in a
+category as a landscape painter, a portrait painter, a painter of
+history, of sea pieces, or of genre, by a public consisting of
+artists, connoisseurs, and simpletons, who, out of envy, or critical
+omnipotence, or prejudice, fence in his intellect, assuming, one and
+all, that there are ganglions in every brain--a narrow judgment which
+the world applies to writers, to statesmen, to everybody who begins
+with some specialty before being hailed as omniscient; so Popinot's
+fate was sealed, and he was hedged round to do a particular kind of
+work. Magistrates, attorneys, pleaders, all who pasture on the legal
+common, distinguish two elements in every case--law and equity. Equity
+is the outcome of facts, law is the application of principles to
+facts. A man may be right in equity but wrong in law, without any
+blame to the judge. Between his conscience and the facts there is a
+whole gulf of determining reasons unknown to the judge, but which
+condemn or legitimatize the act. A judge is not God; the duty is to
+adapt facts to principles, to judge cases of infinite variety while
+measuring them by a fixed standard.
+
+France employs about six thousand judges; no generation has six
+thousand great men at her command, much less can she find them in the
+legal profession. Popinot, in the midst of the civilization of Paris,
+was just a very clever cadi, who, by the character of his mind, and by
+dint of rubbing the letter of the law into the essence of facts, had
+learned to see the error of spontaneous and violent decisions. By the
+help of his judicial second-sight he could pierce the double casing of
+lies in which advocates hide the heart of a trial. He was a judge, as
+the great Desplein was a surgeon; he probed men's consciences as the
+anatomist probed their bodies. His life and habits had led him to an
+exact appreciation of their most secret thoughts by a thorough study
+of facts.
+
+He sifted a case as Cuvier sifted the earth's crust. Like that great
+thinker, he proceeded from deduction to deduction before drawing his
+conclusions, and reconstructed the past career of a conscience as
+Cuvier reconstructed an Anoplotherium. When considering a brief he
+would often wake in the night, startled by a gleam of truth suddenly
+sparkling in his brain. Struck by the deep injustice, which is the end
+of these contests, in which everything is against the honest man,
+everything to the advantage of the rogue, he often summed up in favor
+of equity against law in such cases as bore on questions of what may
+be termed divination. Hence he was regarded by his colleagues as a man
+not of a practical mind; his arguments on two lines of deduction made
+their deliberations lengthy. When Popinot observed their dislike to
+listening to him he gave his opinion briefly; it was said that he was
+not a good judge in this class of cases; but as his gift of
+discrimination was remarkable, his opinion lucid, and his penetration
+profound, he was considered to have a special aptitude for the
+laborious duties of an examining judge. So an examining judge he
+remained during the greater part of his legal career.
+
+Although his qualifications made him eminently fitted for its
+difficult functions, and he had the reputation of being so learned in
+criminal law that his duty was a pleasure to him, the kindness of his
+heart constantly kept him in torture, and he was nipped as in a vise
+between his conscience and his pity. The services of an examining
+judge are better paid than those of a judge in civil actions, but they
+do not therefore prove a temptation; they are too onerous. Popinot, a
+man of modest and virtuous learning, without ambition, an
+indefatigable worker, never complained of his fate; he sacrificed his
+tastes and his compassionate soul to the public good, and allowed
+himself to be transported to the noisome pools of criminal
+examinations, where he showed himself alike severe and beneficent. His
+clerk sometimes would give the accused some money to buy tobacco, or a
+warm winter garment, as he led him back from the judge's office to the
+Souriciere, the mouse-trap--the House of Detention where the accused
+are kept under the orders of the Examining Judge. He knew how to be an
+inflexible judge and a charitable man. And no one extracted a
+confession so easily as he without having recourse to judicial
+trickery. He had, too, all the acumen of an observer. This man,
+apparently so foolishly good-natured, simple, and absent-minded, could
+guess all the cunning of a prison wag, unmask the astutest street
+huzzy, and subdue a scoundrel. Unusual circumstances had sharpened his
+perspicacity; but to relate these we must intrude on his domestic
+history, for in him the judge was the social side of the man; another
+man, greater and less known, existed within.
+
+Twelve years before the beginning of this story, in 1816, during the
+terrible scarcity which coincided disastrously with the stay in France
+of the so-called Allies, Popinot was appointed President of the
+Commission Extraordinary formed to distribute food to the poor of his
+neighborhood, just when he had planned to move from the Rue du
+Fouarre, which he as little liked to live in as his wife did. The
+great lawyer, the clear-sighted criminal judge, whose superiority
+seemed to his colleagues a form of aberration, had for five years been
+watching legal results without seeing their causes. As he scrambled up
+into the lofts, as he saw the poverty, as he studied the desperate
+necessities which gradually bring the poor to criminal acts, as he
+estimated their long struggles, compassion filled his soul. The judge
+then became the Saint Vincent de Paul of these grown-up children,
+these suffering toilers. The transformation was not immediately
+complete. Beneficence has its temptations as vice has. Charity
+consumes a saint's purse, as roulette consumes the possessions of a
+gambler, quite gradually. Popinot went from misery to misery, from
+charity to charity; then, by the time he had lifted all the rags which
+cover public pauperism, like a bandage under which an inflamed wound
+lies festering, at the end of a year he had become the Providence
+incarnate of that quarter of the town. He was a member of the
+Benevolent Committee and of the Charity Organization. Wherever any
+gratuitous services were needed he was ready, and did everything
+without fuss, like the man with the short cloak, who spends his life
+in carrying soup round the markets and other places where there are
+starving folks.
+
+Popinot was fortunate in acting on a larger circle and in a higher
+sphere; he had an eye on everything, he prevented crime, he gave work
+to the unemployed, he found a refuge for the helpless, he distributed
+aid with discernment wherever danger threatened, he made himself the
+counselor of the widow, the protector of homeless children, the
+sleeping partner of small traders. No one at the Courts, no one in
+Paris, knew of this secret life of Popinot's. There are virtues so
+splendid that they necessitate obscurity; men make haste to hide them
+under a bushel. As to those whom the lawyer succored, they, hard at
+work all day and tired at night, were little able to sing his praises;
+theirs was the gracelessness of children, who can never pay because
+they owe too much. There is such compulsory ingratitude; but what
+heart that has sown good to reap gratitude can think itself great?
+
+By the end of the second year of his apostolic work, Popinot had
+turned the storeroom at the bottom of his house into a parlor, lighted
+by the three iron-barred windows. The walls and ceiling of this
+spacious room were whitewashed, and the furniture consisted of wooden
+benches like those seen in schools, a clumsy cupboard, a walnut-wood
+writing-table, and an armchair. In the cupboard were his registers of
+donations, his tickets for orders for bread, and his diary. He kept
+his ledger like a tradesman, that he might not be ruined by kindness.
+All the sorrows of the neighborhood were entered and numbered in a
+book, where each had its little account, as merchants' customers have
+theirs. When there was any question as to a man or a family needing
+help, the lawyer could always command information from the police.
+
+Lavienne, a man made for his master, was his aide-de-camp. He redeemed
+or renewed pawn-tickets, and visited the districts most threatened
+with famine, while his master was in court.
+
+From four till seven in the morning in summer, from six till nine in
+winter, this room was full of women, children, and paupers, while
+Popinot gave audience. There was no need for a stove in winter; the
+crowd was so dense that the air was warmed; only, Lavienne strewed
+straw on the wet floor. By long use the benches were as polished as
+varnished mahogany; at the height of a man's shoulders the wall had a
+coat of dark, indescribable color, given to it by the rags and
+tattered clothes of these poor creatures. The poor wretches loved
+Popinot so well that when they assembled before his door was opened,
+before daybreak on a winter's morning, the women warming themselves
+with their foot-brasiers, the men swinging their arms for circulation,
+never a sound had disturbed his sleep. Rag-pickers and other toilers
+of the night knew the house, and often saw a light burning in the
+lawyer's private room at unholy hours. Even thieves, as they passed
+by, said, "That is his house," and respected it. The morning he gave
+to the poor, the mid-day hours to criminals, the evening to law work.
+
+Thus the gift of observation that characterized Popinot was
+necessarily bifrons; he could guess the virtues of a pauper--good
+feelings nipped, fine actions in embryo, unrecognized self-sacrifice,
+just as he could read at the bottom of a man's conscience the faintest
+outlines of a crime, the slenderest threads of wrongdoing, and infer
+all the rest.
+
+Popinot's inherited fortune was a thousand crowns a year. His wife,
+sister to M. Bianchon SENIOR, a doctor at Sancerre, had brought him
+about twice as much. She, dying five years since, had left her fortune
+to her husband. As the salary of a supernumerary judge is not large,
+and Popinot had been a fully salaried judge only for four years, we
+may guess his reasons for parsimony in all that concerned his person
+and mode of life, when we consider how small his means were and how
+great his beneficence. Besides, is not such indifference to dress as
+stamped Popinot an absent-minded man, a distinguishing mark of
+scientific attainment, of art passionately pursued, of a perpetually
+active mind? To complete this portrait, it will be enough to add that
+Popinot was one of the few judges of the Court of the Seine on whom
+the ribbon of the Legion of Honor had not been conferred.
+
+Such was the man who had been instructed by the President of the
+Second Chamber of the Court--to which Popinot had belonged since his
+reinstatement among the judges in civil law--to examine the Marquis
+d'Espard at the request of his wife, who sued for a Commission in
+Lunacy.
+
+The Rue du Fouarre, where so many unhappy wretches swarmed in the
+early morning, would be deserted by nine o'clock, and as gloomy and
+squalid as ever. Bianchon put his horse to a trot in order to find his
+uncle in the midst of his business. It was not without a smile that he
+thought of the curious contrast the judge's appearance would make in
+Madame d'Espard's room; but he promised himself that he would persuade
+him to dress in a way that should not be too ridiculous.
+
+"If only my uncle happens to have a new coat!" said Bianchon to
+himself, as he turned into the Rue du Fouarre, where a pale light
+shone from the parlor windows. "I shall do well, I believe, to talk
+that over with Lavienne."
+
+At the sound of wheels half a score of startled paupers came out from
+under the gateway, and took off their hats on recognizing Bianchon;
+for the doctor, who treated gratuitously the sick recommended to him
+by the lawyer, was not less well known than he to the poor creatures
+assembled there.
+
+Bianchon found his uncle in the middle of the parlor, where the
+benches were occupied by patients presenting such grotesque
+singularities of costume as would have made the least artistic passer-
+by turn round to gaze at them. A draughtsman--a Rembrandt, if there
+were one in our day--might have conceived of one of his finest
+compositions from seeing these children of misery, in artless
+attitudes, and all silent.
+
+Here was the rugged countenance of an old man with a white beard and
+an apostolic head--a Saint Peter ready to hand; his chest, partly
+uncovered, showed salient muscles, the evidence of an iron
+constitution which had served him as a fulcrum to resist a whole poem
+of sorrows. There a young woman was suckling her youngest-born to keep
+it from crying, while another of about five stood between her knees.
+Her white bosom, gleaming amid rags, the baby with its transparent
+flesh-tints, and the brother, whose attitude promised a street arab in
+the future, touched the fancy with pathos by its almost graceful
+contrast with the long row of faces crimson with cold, in the midst of
+which sat this family group. Further away, an old woman, pale and
+rigid, had the repulsive look of rebellious pauperism, eager to avenge
+all its past woes in one day of violence.
+
+There, again, was the young workman, weakly and indolent, whose
+brightly intelligent eye revealed fine faculties crushed by necessity
+struggled with in vain, saying nothing of his sufferings, and nearly
+dead for lack of an opportunity to squeeze between the bars of the
+vast stews where the wretched swim round and round and devour each
+other.
+
+The majority were women; their husbands, gone to their work, left it
+to them, no doubt, to plead the cause of the family with the ingenuity
+which characterizes the woman of the people, who is almost always
+queen in her hovel. You would have seen a torn bandana on every head,
+on every form a skirt deep in mud, ragged kerchiefs, worn and dirty
+jackets, but eyes that burnt like live coals. It was a horrible
+assemblage, raising at first sight a feeling of disgust, but giving a
+certain sense of terror the instant you perceived that the resignation
+of these souls, all engaged in the struggle for every necessary of
+life, was purely fortuitous, a speculation on benevolence. The two
+tallow candles which lighted the parlor flickered in a sort of fog
+caused by the fetid atmosphere of the ill-ventilated room.
+
+The magistrate himself was not the least picturesque figure in the
+midst of this assembly. He had on his head a rusty cotton night-cap;
+as he had no cravat, his neck was visible, red with cold and wrinkled,
+in contrast with the threadbare collar of his old dressing-gown. His
+worn face had the half-stupid look that comes of absorbed attention.
+His lips, like those of all men who work, were puckered up like a bag
+with the strings drawn tight. His knitted brows seemed to bear the
+burden of all the sorrows confided to him: he felt, analyzed, and
+judged them all. As watchful as a Jew money-lender, he never raised
+his eyes from his books and registers but to look into the very heart
+of the persons he was examining, with the flashing glance by which a
+miser expresses his alarm.
+
+Lavienne, standing behind his master, ready to carry out his orders,
+served no doubt as a sort of police, and welcomed newcomers by
+encouraging them to get over their shyness. When the doctor appeared
+there was a stir on the benches. Lavienne turned his head, and was
+strangely surprised to see Bianchon.
+
+"Ah! It is you, old boy!" exclaimed Popinot, stretching himself. "What
+brings you so early?"
+
+"I was afraid lest you should make an official visit about which I
+wish to speak to you before I could see you."
+
+"Well," said the lawyer, addressing a stout little woman who was still
+standing close to him, "if you do not tell me what it is you want, I
+cannot guess it, child."
+
+"Make haste," said Lavienne. "Do not waste other people's time."
+
+"Monsieur," said the woman at last, turning red, and speaking so low
+as only to be heard by Popinot and Lavienne, "I have a green-grocery
+truck, and I have my last baby to nurse, and I owe for his keep. Well,
+I had hidden my little bit of money----"
+
+"Yes; and your man took it?" said Popinot, guessing the sequel.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+"La Pomponne."
+
+"And your husband's?"
+
+"Toupinet."
+
+"Rue du Petit-Banquier?" said Popinot, turning over his register. "He
+is in prison," he added, reading a note at the margin of the section
+in which this family was described.
+
+"For debt, my kind monsieur."
+
+Popinot shook his head.
+
+"But I have nothing to buy any stock for my truck; the landlord came
+yesterday and made me pay up; otherwise I should have been turned
+out."
+
+Lavienne bent over his master, and whispered in his ear.
+
+"Well, how much do you want to buy fruit in the market?"
+
+"Why, my good monsieur, to carry on my business, I should want--Yes, I
+should certainly want ten francs."
+
+Popinot signed to Lavienne, who took ten francs out of a large bag,
+and handed them to the woman, while the lawyer made a note of the loan
+in his ledger. As he saw the thrill of delight that made the poor
+hawker tremble, Bianchon understood the apprehensions that must have
+agitated her on her way to the lawyer's house.
+
+"You next," said Lavienne to the old man with the white beard.
+
+Bianchon drew the servant aside, and asked him how long this audience
+would last.
+
+"Monsieur has had two hundred persons this morning, and there are
+eight to be turned off," said Lavienne. "You will have time to pay
+your early visit, sir."
+
+"Here, my boy," said the lawyer, turning round and taking Horace by
+the arm; "here are two addresses near this--one in the Rue de Seine,
+and the other in the Rue de l'Arbalete. Go there at once. Rue de
+Seine, a young girl has just asphyxiated herself; and Rue de
+l'Arbalete, you will find a man to remove to your hospital. I will
+wait breakfast for you."
+
+Bianchon returned an hour later. The Rue du Fouarre was deserted; day
+was beginning to dawn there; his uncle had gone up to his rooms; the
+last poor wretch whose misery the judge had relieved was departing,
+and Lavienne's money bag was empty.
+
+"Well, how are they going on?" asked the old lawyer, as the doctor
+came in.
+
+"The man is dead," replied Bianchon; "the girl will get over it."
+
+Since the eye and hand of a woman had been lacking, the flat in which
+Popinot lived had assumed an aspect in harmony with its master's. The
+indifference of a man who is absorbed in one dominant idea had set its
+stamp of eccentricity on everything. Everywhere lay unconquerable
+dust, every object was adapted to a wrong purpose with a pertinacity
+suggestive of a bachelor's home. There were papers in the flower
+vases, empty ink-bottles on the tables, plates that had been
+forgotten, matches used as tapers for a minute when something had to
+be found, drawers or boxes half-turned out and left unfinished; in
+short, all the confusion and vacancies resulting from plans for order
+never carried out. The lawyer's private room, especially disordered by
+this incessant rummage, bore witness to his unresting pace, the hurry
+of a man overwhelmed with business, hunted by contradictory
+necessities. The bookcase looked as if it had been sacked; there were
+books scattered over everything, some piled up open, one on another,
+others on the floor face downwards; registers of proceedings laid on
+the floor in rows, lengthwise, in front of the shelves; and that floor
+had not been polished for two years.
+
+The tables and shelves were covered with ex votos, the offerings of
+the grateful poor. On a pair of blue glass jars which ornamented the
+chimney-shelf there were two glass balls, of which the core was made
+up of many-colored fragments, giving them the appearance of some
+singular natural product. Against the wall hung frames of artificial
+flowers, and decorations in which Popinot's initials were surrounded
+by hearts and everlasting flowers. Here were boxes of elaborate and
+useless cabinet work; there letter-weights carved in the style of work
+done by convicts in penal servitude. These masterpieces of patience,
+enigmas of gratitude, and withered bouquets gave the lawyer's room the
+appearance of a toyshop. The good man used these works of art as
+hiding-places which he filled with bills, worn-out pens, and scraps of
+paper. All these pathetic witnesses to his divine charity were thick
+with dust, dingy, and faded.
+
+Some birds, beautifully stuffed, but eaten by moth, perched in this
+wilderness of trumpery, presided over by an Angora cat, Madame
+Popinot's pet, restored to her no doubt with all the graces of life by
+some impecunious naturalist, who thus repaid a gift of charity with a
+perennial treasure. Some local artist whose heart had misguided his
+brush had painted portraits of M. and Madame Popinot. Even in the
+bedroom there were embroidered pin-cushions, landscapes in cross-
+stitch, and crosses in folded paper, so elaborately cockled as to show
+the senseless labor they had cost.
+
+The window-curtains were black with smoke, and the hangings absolutely
+colorless. Between the fireplace and the large square table at which
+the magistrate worked, the cook had set two cups of coffee on a small
+table, and two armchairs, in mahogany and horsehair, awaited the uncle
+and nephew. As daylight, darkened by the windows, could not penetrate
+to this corner, the cook had left two dips burning, whose unsnuffed
+wicks showed a sort of mushroom growth, giving the red light which
+promises length of life to the candle from slowness of combustion--a
+discovery due to some miser.
+
+"My dear uncle, you ought to wrap yourself more warmly when you go
+down to that parlor."
+
+"I cannot bear to keep them waiting, poor souls!--Well, and what do
+you want of me?"
+
+"I have come to ask you to dine to-morrow with the Marquise d'Espard."
+
+"A relation of ours?" asked Popinot, with such genuine absence of mind
+that Bianchon laughed.
+
+"No, uncle; the Marquise d'Espard is a high and puissant lady, who has
+laid before the Courts a petition desiring that a Commission in Lunacy
+should sit on her husband, and you are appointed----"
+
+"And you want me to dine with her! Are you mad?" said the lawyer,
+taking up the code of proceedings. "Here, only read this article,
+prohibiting any magistrate's eating or drinking in the house of either
+of two parties whom he is called upon to decide between. Let her come
+and see me, your Marquise, if she has anything to say to me. I was, in
+fact, to go to examine her husband to-morrow, after working the case
+up to-night."
+
+He rose, took up a packet of papers that lay under a weight where he
+could see it, and after reading the title, he said:
+
+"Here is the affidavit. Since you take an interest in this high and
+puissant lady, let us see what she wants."
+
+Popinot wrapped his dressing-gown across his body, from which it was
+constantly slipping and leaving his chest bare; he sopped his bread in
+the half-cold coffee, and opened the petition, which he read, allowing
+himself to throw in a parenthesis now and then, and some discussions,
+in which his nephew took part:--
+
+" 'To Monsieur the President of the Civil Tribunal of the Lower Court
+of the Department of the Seine, sitting at the Palais de Justice.
+
+" 'Madame Jeanne Clementine Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, wife of M.
+Charles Maurice Marie Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis
+d'Espard'--a very good family--'landowner, the said Mme. d'Espard
+living in the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, No. 104, and the said M.
+d'Espard in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, No. 22,'--to be
+sure, the President told me he lived in this part of the town--'having
+for her solicitor Maitre Desroches'--Desroches! a pettifogging jobber,
+a man looked down upon by his brother lawyers, and who does his
+clients no good--"
+
+"Poor fellow!" said Bianchon, "unluckily he has no money, and he
+rushes round like the devil in holy water--That is all."
+
+" 'Has the honor to submit to you, Monsieur the President, that for a
+year past the moral and intellectual powers of her husband, M.
+d'Espard, have undergone so serious a change, that at the present day
+they have reached the state of dementia and idiocy provided for by
+Article 448 of the Civil Code, and require the application of the
+remedies set forth by that article, for the security of his fortune
+and his person, and to guard the interest of his children whom he
+keeps to live with him.
+
+" 'That, in point of fact, the mental condition of M. d'Espard, which
+for some years has given grounds for alarm based on the system he has
+pursued in the management of his affairs, has reached, during the last
+twelvemonth, a deplorable depth of depression; that his infirm will
+was the first thing to show the results of the malady; and that its
+effete state leaves M. the Marquis d'Espard exposed to all the perils
+of his incompetency, as is proved by the following facts:
+
+" 'For a long time all the income accruing from M. d'Espard's estates
+are paid, without any reasonable cause, or even temporary advantage,
+into the hands of an old woman, whose repulsive ugliness is generally
+remarked on, named Madame Jeanrenaud, living sometimes in Paris, Rue
+de la Vrilliere, No. 8, sometimes at Villeparisis, near Claye, in the
+Department of Seine et Marne, and for the benefit of her son, aged
+thirty-six, an officer in the ex-Imperial Guards, whom the Marquis
+d'Espard has placed by his influence in the King's Guards, as Major in
+the First Regiment of Cuirassiers. These two persons, who in 1814 were
+in extreme poverty, have since then purchased house-property of
+considerable value; among other items, quite recently, a large house
+in the Grand Rue Verte, where the said Jeanrenaud is laying out
+considerable sums in order to settle there with the woman Jeanrenaud,
+intending to marry: these sums amount already to more than a hundred
+thousand francs. The marriage has been arranged by the intervention of
+M. d'Espard with his banker, one Mongenod, whose niece he has asked in
+marriage for the said Jeanrenaud, promising to use his influence to
+procure him the title and dignity of baron. This has in fact been
+secured by His Majesty's letters patent, dated December 29th of last
+year, at the request of the Marquis d'Espard, as can be proved by His
+Excellency the Keeper of the Seals, if the Court should think proper
+to require his testimony.
+
+" 'That no reason, not even such as morality and the law would concur
+in disapproving, can justify the influence which the said Mme.
+Jeanrenaud exerts over M. d'Espard, who, indeed, sees her very seldom;
+nor account for his strange affection for the said Baron Jeanrenaud,
+Major with whom he has but little intercourse. And yet their power is
+so considerable, that whenever they need money, if only to gratify a
+mere whim, this lady, or her son----' Heh, heh! NO REASON EVEN SUCH AS
+MORALITY AND THE LAW CONCUR IN DISAPPROVING! What does the clerk or
+the attorney mean to insinuate?" said Popinot.
+
+Bianchon laughed.
+
+" 'This lady, or her son, obtain whatever they ask of the Marquis
+d'Espard without demur; and if he has not ready money, M. d'Espard
+draws bills to be paid by the said Mongenod, who has offered to give
+evidence to that effect for the petitioner.
+
+" 'That, moreover, in further proof of these facts, lately, on the
+occasion of the renewal of the leases on the Espard estate, the
+farmers having paid a considerable premium for the renewal of their
+leases on the old terms, M. Jeanrenaud at once secured the payment of
+it into his own hands.
+
+" 'That the Marquis d'Espard parts with these sums of money so little
+of his own free-will, that when he was spoken to on the subject he
+seemed to remember nothing of the matter; that whenever anybody of any
+weight has questioned him as to his devotion to these two persons, his
+replies have shown so complete an absence of ideas and of sense of his
+own interests, that there obviously must be some occult cause at work
+to which the petitioner begs to direct the eye of justice, inasmuch as
+it is impossible but that this cause should be criminal, malignant,
+and wrongful, or else of a nature to come under medical jurisdiction;
+unless this influence is of the kind which constitutes an abuse of
+moral power--such as can only be described by the word POSSESSION----'
+The devil!" exclaimed Popinot. "What do you say to that, doctor. These
+are strange statements."
+
+"They might certainly," said Bianchon, "be an effect of magnetic
+force."
+
+"Then do you believe in Mesmer's nonsense, and his tub, and seeing
+through walls?"
+
+"Yes, uncle," said the doctor gravely. "As I heard you read that
+petition I thought of that. I assure you that I have verified, in
+another sphere of action, several analogous facts proving the
+unlimited influence one man may acquire over another. In contradiction
+to the opinion of my brethren, I am perfectly convinced of the power
+of the will regarded as a motor force. All collusion and charlatanism
+apart, I have seen the results of such a possession. Actions promised
+during sleep by a magnetized patient to the magnetizer have been
+scrupulously performed on waking. The will of one had become the will
+of the other."
+
+"Every kind of action?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Even a criminal act?"
+
+"Even a crime."
+
+"If it were not from you, I would not listen to such a thing."
+
+"I will make you witness it," said Bianchon.
+
+"Hm, hm," muttered the lawyer. "But supposing that this so-called
+possession fell under this class of facts, it would be difficult to
+prove it as legal evidence."
+
+"If this woman Jeanrenaud is so hideously old and ugly, I do not see
+what other means of fascination she can have used," observed Bianchon.
+
+"But," observed the lawyer, "in 1814, the time at which this
+fascination is supposed to have taken place, this woman was fourteen
+years younger; if she had been connected with M. d'Espard ten years
+before that, these calculations take us back four-and-twenty years, to
+a time when the lady may have been young and pretty, and have won for
+herself and her son a power over M. d'Espard which some men do not
+know how to evade. Though the source of this power is reprehensible in
+the sight of justice, it is justifiable in the eye of nature. Madame
+Jeanrenaud may have been aggrieved by the marriage, contracted
+probably at about that time, between the Marquis d'Espard and
+Mademoiselle de Blamont-Chauvry, and at the bottom of all this there
+may be nothing more than the rivalry of two women, since the Marquis
+had for a long time lived apart from Mme. d'Espard."
+
+"But her repulsive ugliness, uncle?"
+
+"Power of fascination is in direct proportion to ugliness," said the
+lawyer; "that is the old story. And then think of the smallpox,
+doctor. But to proceed.
+
+" 'That so long ago as in 1815, in order to supply the sums of money
+required by these two persons, the Marquis d'Espard went with his two
+children to live in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, in rooms
+quite unworthy of his name and rank'--well, we may live as we please--
+'that he keeps his two children there, the Comte Clement d'Espard and
+Vicomte Camille d'Espard, in a style of living quite unsuited to their
+future prospects, their name and fortune; that he often wants money,
+to such a point, that not long since the landlord, one Mariast, put in
+an execution on the furniture in the rooms; that when this execution
+was carried out in his presence, the Marquis d'Espard helped the
+bailiff, whom he treated like a man of rank, paying him all the marks
+of attention and respect which he would have shown to a person of
+superior birth and dignity to himself.' "
+
+The uncle and nephew glanced at each other and laughed.
+
+" 'That, moreover, every act of his life, besides the facts with
+reference to the widow Jeanrenaud and the Baron Jeanrenaud, her son,
+are those of a madman; that for nearly ten years he has given his
+thoughts exclusively to China, its customs, manners, and history; that
+he refers everything to a Chinese origin; that when he is questioned
+on the subject, he confuses the events of the day and the business of
+yesterday with facts relating to China; that he censures the acts of
+the Government and the conduct of the King, though he is personally
+much attached to him, by comparing them with the politics of China;
+
+" 'That this monomania has driven the Marquis d'Espard to conduct
+devoid of all sense: against the customs of men of rank, and, in
+opposition to his own professed ideas as to the duties of the
+nobility, he has joined a commercial undertaking, for which he
+constantly draws bills which, as they fall due, threaten both his
+honor and his fortune, since they stamp him as a trader, and in
+default of payment may lead to his being declared insolvent; that
+these debts, which are owing to stationers, printers, lithographers,
+and print-colorists, who have supplied the materials for his
+publication, called A Picturesque History of China, now coming out in
+parts, are so heavy that these tradesmen have requested the petitioner
+to apply for a Commission in Lunacy with regard to the Marquis
+d'Espard in order to save their own credit.' "
+
+"The man is mad!" exclaimed Bianchon.
+
+"You think so, do you?" said his uncle. "If you listen to only one
+bell, you hear only one sound."
+
+"But it seems to me----" said Bianchon.
+
+"But it seems to me," said Popinot, "that if any relation of mine
+wanted to get hold of the management of my affairs, and if, instead of
+being a humble lawyer, whose colleagues can, any day, verify what his
+condition is, I were a duke of the realm, an attorney with a little
+cunning, like Desroches, might bring just such a petition against me.
+
+" 'That his children's education has been neglected for this
+monomania; and that he has taught them, against all the rules of
+education, the facts of Chinese history, which contradict the tenets
+of the Catholic Church. He also has them taught the Chinese
+dialects.' "
+
+"Here Desroches strikes me as funny," said Bianchon.
+
+"The petition is drawn up by his head-clerk Godeschal, who, as you
+know, is not strong in Chinese," said the lawyer.
+
+" 'That he often leaves his children destitute of the most necessary
+things; that the petitioner, notwithstanding her entreaties, can never
+see them; that the said Marquis d'Espard brings them to her only once
+a year; that, knowing the privations to which they are exposed, she
+makes vain efforts to give them the things most necessary for their
+existence, and which they require----' Oh! Madame la Marquise, this is
+preposterous. By proving too much you prove nothing.--My dear boy,"
+said the old man, laying the document on his knee, "where is the
+mother who ever lacked heart and wit and yearning to such a degree as
+to fall below the inspirations suggested by her animal instinct? A
+mother is as cunning to get at her children as a girl can be in the
+conduct of a love intrigue. If your Marquise really wanted to give her
+children food and clothes, the Devil himself would not have hindered
+her, heh? That is rather too big a fable for an old lawyer to swallow!
+--To proceed.
+
+" 'That at the age the said children have now attained it is necessary
+that steps should be taken to preserve them from the evil effects of
+such an education; that they should be provided for as beseems their
+rank, and that they should cease to have before their eyes the sad
+example of their father's conduct;
+
+" 'That there are proofs in support of these allegations which the
+Court can easily order to be produced. Many times has M. d'Espard
+spoken of the judge of the Twelfth Arrondissement as a mandarin of the
+third class; he often speaks of the professors of the College Henri
+IV. as "men of letters" '--and that offends them! 'In speaking of the
+simplest things, he says, "They were not done so in China;" in the
+course of the most ordinary conversation he will sometimes allude to
+Madame Jeanrenaud, or sometimes to events which happened in the time
+of Louis XIV., and then sit plunged in the darkest melancholy;
+sometimes he fancies he is in China. Several of his neighbors, among
+others one Edme Becker, medical student, and Jean Baptiste Fremiot, a
+professor, living under the same roof, are of opinion, after frequent
+intercourse with the Marquis d'Espard, that his monomania with regard
+to everything Chinese is the result of a scheme laid by the said Baron
+Jeanrenaud and the widow his mother to bring about the deadening of
+all the Marquis d'Espard's mental faculties, since the only service
+which Mme. Jeanrenaud appears to render M. d'Espard is to procure him
+everything that relates to the Chinese Empire;
+
+" 'Finally, that the petitioner is prepared to show to the Court that
+the moneys absorbed by the said Baron and Mme. Jeanrenaud between 1814
+and 1828 amount to not less than one million francs.
+
+" 'In confirmation of the facts herein set forth, the petitioner can
+bring the evidence of persons who are in the habit of seeing the
+Marquis d'Espard, whose names and professions are subjoined, many of
+whom have urged her to demand a commission in lunacy to declare M.
+d'Espard incapable of managing his own affairs, as being the only way
+to preserve his fortune from the effects of his maladministration and
+his children from his fatal influence.
+
+" 'Taking all this into consideration, M. le President, and the
+affidavits subjoined, the petitioner desires that it may please you,
+inasmuch as the foregoing facts sufficiently prove the insanity and
+incompetency of the Marquis d'Espard herein described with his titles
+and residence, to order that, to the end that he may be declared
+incompetent by law, this petition and the documents in evidence may be
+laid before the King's public prosecutor; and that you will charge one
+of the judges of this Court to make his report to you on any day you
+may be pleased to name, and thereupon to pronounce judgment,' etc.
+
+"And here," said Popinot, "is the President's order instructing me!--
+Well, what does the Marquise d'Espard want with me? I know everything.
+But I shall go to-morrow with my registrar to see M. le Marquis, for
+this does not seem at all clear to me."
+
+"Listen, my dear uncle, I have never asked the least little favor of
+you that had to do with your legal functions; well, now I beg you to
+show Madame d'Espard the kindness which her situation deserves. If she
+came here, you would listen to her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, then, go and listen to her in her own house. Madame d'Espard is
+a sickly, nervous, delicate woman, who would faint in your rat-hole of
+a place. Go in the evening, instead of accepting her dinner, since the
+law forbids your eating or drinking at your client's expense."
+
+"And does not the law forbid you from taking any legacy from your
+dead?" said Popinot, fancying that he saw a touch of irony on his
+nephew's lips.
+
+"Come, uncle, if it were only to enable you to get at the truth of
+this business, grant my request. You will come as the examining judge,
+since matters do not seem to you very clear. Deuce take it! It is as
+necessary to cross-question the Marquise as it is to examine the
+Marquis."
+
+"You are right," said the lawyer. "It is quite possible that it is she
+who is mad. I will go."
+
+"I will call for you. Write down in your engagement book: 'To-morrow
+evening at nine, Madame d'Espard.'--Good!" said Bianchon, seeing his
+uncle make a note of the engagement.
+
+
+
+Next evening at nine Bianchon mounted his uncle's dusty staircase, and
+found him at work on the statement of some complicated judgment. The
+coat Lavienne had ordered of the tailor had not been sent, so Popinot
+put on his old stained coat, and was the Popinot unadorned whose
+appearance made those laugh who did not know the secrets of his
+private life. Bianchon, however, obtained permission to pull his
+cravat straight, and to button his coat, and he hid the stains by
+crossing the breast of it with the right side over the left, and so
+displaying the new front of the cloth. But in a minute the judge
+rucked the coat up over his chest by the way in which he stuffed his
+hands into his pockets, obeying an irresistible habit. Thus the coat,
+deeply wrinkled both in front and behind, made a sort of hump in the
+middle of the back, leaving a gap between the waistcoat and trousers
+through which his shirt showed. Bianchon, to his sorrow, only
+discovered this crowning absurdity at the moment when his uncle
+entered the Marquise's room.
+
+A brief sketch of the person and the career of the lady in whose
+presence the doctor and the judge now found themselves is necessary
+for an understanding of her interview with Popinot.
+
+Madame d'Espard had, for the last seven years, been very much the
+fashion in Paris, where Fashion can raise and drop by turns various
+personages who, now great and now small, that is to say, in view or
+forgotten, are at last quite intolerable--as discarded ministers are,
+and every kind of decayed sovereignty. These flatterers of the past,
+odious with their stale pretensions, know everything, speak ill of
+everything, and, like ruined profligates, are friends with all the
+world. Since her husband had separated from her in 1815, Madame
+d'Espard must have married in the beginning of 1812. Her children,
+therefore, were aged respectively fifteen and thirteen. By what luck
+was the mother of a family, about three-and-thirty years of age, still
+the fashion?
+
+Though Fashion is capricious, and no one can foresee who shall be her
+favorites, though she often exalts a banker's wife, or some woman of
+very doubtful elegance and beauty, it certainly seems supernatural
+when Fashion puts on constitutional airs and gives promotion for age.
+But in this case Fashion had done as the world did, and accepted
+Madame d'Espard as still young.
+
+The Marquise, who was thirty-three by her register of birth, was
+twenty-two in a drawing-room in the evening. But by what care, what
+artifice! Elaborate curls shaded her temples. She condemned herself to
+live in twilight, affecting illness so as to sit under the protecting
+tones of light filtered through muslin. Like Diane de Poitiers, she
+used cold water in her bath, and, like her again, the Marquise slept
+on a horse-hair mattress, with morocco-covered pillows to preserve her
+hair; she ate very little, only drank water, and observed monastic
+regularity in the smallest actions of her life.
+
+This severe system has, it is said, been carried so far as to the use
+of ice instead of water, and nothing but cold food, by a famous Polish
+lady of our day who spends a life, now verging on a century old, after
+the fashion of a town belle. Fated to live as long as Marion Delorme,
+whom history has credited with surviving to be a hundred and thirty,
+the old vice-queen of Poland, at the age of nearly a hundred, has the
+heart and brain of youth, a charming face, an elegant shape; and in
+her conversation, sparkling with brilliancy like faggots in the fire,
+she can compare the men and books of our literature with the men and
+books of the eighteenth century. Living in Warsaw, she orders her caps
+of Herbault in Paris. She is a great lady with the amiability of a
+mere girl; she swims, she runs like a schoolboy, and can sink on to a
+sofa with the grace of a young coquette; she mocks at death, and
+laughs at life. After having astonished the Emperor Alexander, she can
+still amaze the Emperor Nicholas by the splendor of her
+entertainments. She can still bring tears to the eyes of a youthful
+lover, for her age is whatever she pleases, and she has the exquisite
+self-devotion of a grisette. In short, she is herself a fairy tale,
+unless, indeed, she is a fairy.
+
+Had Madame d'Espard known Madame Zayonseck? Did she mean to imitate
+her career? Be that as it may, the Marquise proved the merits of the
+treatment; her complexion was clear, her brow unwrinkled, her figure,
+like that of Henri II.'s lady-love, preserved the litheness, the
+freshness, the covered charms which bring a woman love and keep it
+alive. The simple precautions of this course, suggested by art and
+nature, and perhaps by experience, had met in her with a general
+system which confirmed the results. The Marquise was absolutely
+indifferent to everything that was not herself: men amused her, but no
+man had ever caused her those deep agitations which stir both natures
+to their depths, and wreck one on the other. She knew neither hatred
+nor love. When she was offended, she avenged herself coldly, quietly,
+at her leisure, waiting for the opportunity to gratify the ill-will
+she cherished against anybody who dwelt in her unfavorable
+remembrance. She made no fuss, she did not excite herself, she talked,
+because she knew that by two words a woman may cause the death of
+three men.
+
+She had parted from M. d'Espard with the greatest satisfaction. Had he
+not taken with him two children who at present were troublesome, and
+in the future would stand in the way of her pretensions? Her most
+intimate friends, as much as her least persistent admirers, seeing
+about her none of Cornelia's jewels, who come and go, and
+unconsciously betray their mother's age, took her for quite a young
+woman. The two boys, about whom she seemed so anxious in her petition,
+were, like their father, as unknown in the world as the northwest
+passage is unknown to navigators. M. d'Espard was supposed to be an
+eccentric personage who had deserted his wife without having the
+smallest cause for complaint against her.
+
+Mistress of herself at two-and-twenty, and mistress of her fortune of
+twenty-six thousand francs a year, the Marquise hesitated long before
+deciding on a course of action and ordering her life. Though she
+benefited by the expenses her husband had incurred in his house,
+though she had all the furniture, the carriages, the horses, in short,
+all the details of a handsome establishment, she lived a retired life
+during the years 1816, 17, and 18, a time when families were
+recovering from the disasters resulting from political tempests. She
+belonged to one of the most important and illustrious families of the
+Faubourg Saint-Germain, and her parents advised her to live with them
+as much as possible after the separation forced upon her by her
+husband's inexplicable caprice.
+
+In 1820 the Marquise roused herself from her lethargy; she went to
+Court, appeared at parties, and entertained in her own house. From
+1821 to 1827 she lived in great style, and made herself remarked for
+her taste and her dress; she had a day, an hour, for receiving visits,
+and ere long she had seated herself on the throne, occupied before her
+by Madame la Vicomtesse de Beauseant, the Duchesse de Langeais, and
+Madame Firmiani--who on her marriage with M. de Camps had resigned the
+sceptre in favor of the Duchesse de Maufrigneuse, from whom Madame
+d'Espard snatched it. The world knew nothing beyond this of the
+private live of the Marquise d'Espard. She seemed likely to shine for
+long on the Parisian horizon, like the sun near its setting, but which
+will never set.
+
+The Marquise was on terms of great intimacy with a duchess as famous
+for her beauty as for her attachment to a prince just now in
+banishment, but accustomed to play a leading part in every prospective
+government. Madame d'Espard was also a friend of a foreign lady, with
+whom a famous and very wily Russian diplomate was in the habit of
+discussing public affairs. And then an antiquated countess, who was
+accustomed to shuffle the cards for the great game of politics, had
+adopted her in a maternal fashion. Thus, to any man of high ambitions,
+Madame d'Espard was preparing a covert but very real influence to
+follow the public and frivolous ascendency she now owed to fashion.
+Her drawing-room was acquiring political individuality: "What do they
+say at Madame d'Espard's?" "Are they against the measure in Madame
+d'Espard's drawing-room?" were questions repeated by a sufficient
+number of simpletons to give the flock of the faithful who surrounded
+her the importance of a coterie. A few damaged politicians whose
+wounds she had bound up, and whom she flattered, pronounced her as
+capable in diplomacy as the wife of the Russian ambassador to London.
+The Marquise had indeed several times suggested to deputies or to
+peers words and ideas that had rung through Europe. She had often
+judged correctly of certain events on which her circle of friends
+dared not express an opinion. The principal persons about the Court
+came in the evening to play whist in her rooms.
+
+Then she also had the qualities of her defects; she was thought to be
+--and she was--indiscreet. Her friendship seemed to be staunch; she
+worked for her proteges with a persistency which showed that she cared
+less for patronage than for increased influence. This conduct was
+based on her dominant passion, Vanity. Conquests and pleasure, which
+so many women love, to her seemed only means to an end; she aimed at
+living on every point of the largest circle that life can describe.
+
+Among the men still young, and to whom the future belonged, who
+crowded her drawing-room on great occasions, were to be seen MM. de
+Marsay and de Ronquerolles, de Montriveau, de la Roche-Hugon, de
+Serizy, Ferraud, Maxime de Trailles, de Listomere, the two
+Vandenesses, du Chatelet, and others. She would frequently receive a
+man whose wife she would not admit, and her power was great enough to
+induce certain ambitious men to submit to these hard conditions, such
+as two famous royalist bankers, M. de Nucingen and Ferdinand du
+Tillet. She had so thoroughly studied the strength and the weakness of
+Paris life, that her conduct had never given any man the smallest
+advantage over her. An enormous price might have been set on a note or
+letter by which she might have compromised herself, without one being
+produced.
+
+If an arid soul enabled her to play her part to the life, her person
+was no less available for it. She had a youthful figure. Her voice
+was, at will, soft and fresh, or clear and hard. She possessed in the
+highest degree the secret of that aristocratic pose by which a woman
+wipes out the past. The Marquise knew well the art of setting an
+immense space between herself and the sort of man who fancies he may
+be familiar after some chance advances. Her imposing gaze could deny
+everything. In her conversation fine and beautiful sentiments and
+noble resolutions flowed naturally, as it seemed, from a pure heart
+and soul; but in reality she was all self, and quite capable of
+blasting a man who was clumsy in his negotiations, at the very time
+when she was shamelessly making a compromise for the benefit of her
+own interest.
+
+Rastignac, in trying to fasten on to this woman, had discerned her to
+be the cleverest of tools, but he had not yet used it; far from
+handling it, he was already finding himself crushed by it. This young
+Condottiere of the brain, condemned, like Napoleon, to give battle
+constantly, while knowing that a single defeat would prove the grave
+of his fortunes, had met a dangerous adversary in his protectress. For
+the first time in his turbulent life, he was playing a game with a
+partner worthy of him. He saw a place as Minister in the conquest of
+Madame d'Espard, so he was her tool till he could make her his--a
+perilous beginning.
+
+The Hotel d'Espard needed a large household, and the Marquise had a
+great number of servants. The grand receptions were held in the
+ground-floor rooms, but she lived on the first floor of the house. The
+perfect order of a fine staircase splendidly decorated, and rooms
+fitted in the dignified style which formerly prevailed at Versailles,
+spoke of an immense fortune. When the judge saw the carriage gates
+thrown open to admit his nephew's cab, he took in with a rapid glance
+the lodge, the porter, the courtyard, the stables, the arrangement of
+the house, the flowers that decorated the stairs, the perfect
+cleanliness of the banisters, walls, and carpets, and counted the
+footmen in livery who, as the bell rang, appeared on the landing. His
+eyes, which only yesterday in his parlor had sounded the dignity of
+misery under the muddy clothing of the poor, now studied with the same
+penetrating vision the furniture and splendor of the rooms he passed
+through, to pierce the misery of grandeur.
+
+"M. Popinot--M. Bianchon."
+
+The two names were pronounced at the door of the boudoir where the
+Marquise was sitting, a pretty room recently refurnished, and looking
+out on the garden behind the house. At the moment Madame d'Espard was
+seated in one of the old rococo armchairs of which Madame had set the
+fashion. Rastignac was at her left hand on a low chair, in which he
+looked settled like an Italian lady's "cousin." A third person was
+standing by the corner of the chimney-piece. As the shrewd doctor had
+suspected, the Marquise was a woman of a parched and wiry
+constitution. But for her regimen her complexion must have taken the
+ruddy tone that is produced by constant heat; but she added to the
+effect of her acquired pallor by the strong colors of the stuffs she
+hung her rooms with, or in which she dressed. Reddish-brown, marone,
+bistre with a golden light in it, suited her to perfection. Her
+boudoir, copied from that of a famous lady then at the height of
+fashion in London, was in tan-colored velvet; but she had added
+various details of ornament which moderated the pompous splendor of
+this royal hue. Her hair was dressed like a girl's in bands ending in
+curls, which emphasized the rather long oval of her face; but an oval
+face is as majestic as a round one is ignoble. The mirrors, cut with
+facets to lengthen or flatten the face at will, amply proved the rule
+as applied to the physiognomy.
+
+On seeing Popinot, who stood in the doorway craning his neck like a
+startled animal, with his left hand in his pocket, and the right hand
+holding a hat with a greasy lining, the Marquise gave Rastignac a look
+wherein lay a germ of mockery. The good man's rather foolish
+appearance was so completely in harmony with his grotesque figure and
+scared looks, that Rastignac, catching sight of Bianchon's dejected
+expression of humiliation through his uncle, could not help laughing,
+and turned away. The Marquise bowed a greeting, and made a great
+effort to rise from her seat, falling back again, not without grace,
+with an air of apologizing for her incivility by affected weakness.
+
+At this instant the person who was standing between the fireplace and
+the door bowed slightly, and pushed forward two chairs, which he
+offered by a gesture to the doctor and the judge; then, when they had
+seated themselves, he leaned against the wall again, crossing his
+arms.
+
+A word as to this man. There is living now, in our day, a painter--
+Decamps--who possesses in the very highest degree the art of
+commanding your interest in everything he sets before your eyes,
+whether it be a stone or a man. In this respect his pencil is more
+skilful than his brush. He will sketch an empty room and leave a broom
+against the wall. If he chooses, you shall shudder; you shall believe
+that this broom has just been the instrument of crime, and is dripping
+with blood; it shall be the broom which the widow Bancal used to clean
+out the room where Fualdes was murdered. Yes, the painter will touzle
+that broom like a man in a rage; he will make each hair of it stand
+on-end as though it were on your own bristling scalp; he will make it
+the interpreter between the secret poem of his imagination and the
+poem that shall have its birth in yours. After terrifying you by the
+aspect of that broom, to-morrow he will draw another, and lying by it
+a cat, asleep, but mysterious in its sleep, shall tell you that this
+broom is that on which the wife of a German cobbler rides off to the
+Sabbath on the Brocken. Or it will be a quite harmless broom, on which
+he will hang the coat of a clerk in the Treasury. Decamps had in his
+brush what Paganini had in his bow--a magnetically communicative
+power.
+
+Well, I should have to transfer to my style that striking genius, that
+marvelous knack of the pencil, to depict the upright, tall, lean man
+dressed in black, with black hair, who stood there without speaking a
+word. This gentleman had a face like a knife-blade, cold and harsh,
+with a color like Seine water when it was muddy and strewn with
+fragments of charcoal from a sunken barge. He looked at the floor,
+listening and passing judgment. His attitude was terrifying. He stood
+there like the dreadful broom to which Decamps has given the power of
+revealing a crime. Now and then, in the course of conversation, the
+Marquise tried to get some tacit advice; but however eager her
+questioning, he was as grave and as rigid as the statue of the
+Commendatore.
+
+The worthy Popinot, sitting on the edge of his chair in front of the
+fire, his hat between his knees, stared at the gilt chandeliers, the
+clock, and the curiosities with which the chimney-shelf was covered,
+the velvet and trimmings of the curtains, and all the costly and
+elegant nothings that a woman of fashion collects about her. He was
+roused from his homely meditations by Madame d'Espard, who addressed
+him in a piping tone:
+
+"Monsieur, I owe you a million thanks----"
+
+"A million thanks," thought he to himself, "that is too many; it does
+not mean one."
+
+"For the trouble you condescend----"
+
+"Condescend!" thought he; "she is laughing at me."
+
+"To take in coming to see an unhappy client, who is too ill to go
+out----"
+
+Here the lawyer cut the Marquise short by giving her an inquisitorial
+look, examining the sanitary condition of the unhappy client.
+
+"As sound as a bell," said he to himself.
+
+"Madame," said he, assuming a respectful mien, "you owe me nothing.
+Although my visit to you is not in strict accordance with the practice
+of the Court, we ought to spare no pains to discover the truth in
+cases of this kind. Our judgment is then guided less by the letter of
+the law than by the promptings of our conscience. Whether I seek the
+truth here or in my own consulting-room, so long as I find it, all
+will be well."
+
+While Popinot was speaking, Rastignac was shaking hands with Bianchon;
+the Marquise welcomed the doctor with a little bow full of gracious
+significance.
+
+"Who is that?" asked Bianchon in a whisper of Rastignac, indicating
+the dark man.
+
+"The Chevalier d'Espard, the Marquis' brother."
+
+"Your nephew told me," said the Marquise to Popinot, "how much you are
+occupied, and I know too that you are so good as to wish to conceal
+your kind actions, so as to release those whom you oblige from the
+burden of gratitude. The work in Court is most fatiguing, it would
+seem. Why have they not twice as many judges?"
+
+"Ah, madame, that would not be difficult; we should be none the worse
+if they had. But when that happens, fowls will cut their teeth!"
+
+As he heard this speech, so entirely in character with the lawyer's
+appearance, the Chevalier measured him from head to foot, out of one
+eye, as much as to say, "We shall easily manage him."
+
+The Marquise looked at Rastignac, who bent over her. "That is the sort
+of man," murmured the dandy in her ear, "who is trusted to pass
+judgments on the life and interests of private individuals."
+
+Like most men who have grown old in a business, Popinot readily let
+himself follow the habits he had acquired, more particularly habits of
+mind. His conversation was all of "the shop." He was fond of
+questioning those he talked to, forcing them to unexpected
+conclusions, making them tell more than they wished to reveal. Pozzo
+di Borgo, it is said, used to amuse himself by discovering other
+folks' secrets, and entangling them in his diplomatic snares, and
+thus, by invincible habit, showed how his mind was soaked in wiliness.
+As soon as Popinot had surveyed the ground, so to speak, on which he
+stood, he saw that it would be necessary to have recourse to the
+cleverest subtleties, the most elaborately wrapped up and disguised,
+which were in use in the Courts, to detect the truth.
+
+Bianchon sat cold and stern, as a man who has made up his mind to
+endure torture without revealing his sufferings; but in his heart he
+wished that his uncle could only trample on this woman as we trample
+on a viper--a comparison suggested to him by the Marquise's long
+dress, by the curve of her attitude, her long neck, small head, and
+undulating movements.
+
+"Well, monsieur," said Madame d'Espard, "however great my dislike to
+be or seem selfish, I have been suffering too long not to wish that
+you may settle matters at once. Shall I soon get a favorable
+decision?"
+
+"Madame, I will do my best to bring matters to a conclusion," said
+Popinot, with an air of frank good-nature. "Are you ignorant of the
+reason which made the separation necessary which now subsists between
+you and the Marquis d'Espard?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur," she replied, evidently prepared with a story to tell.
+"At the beginning of 1816 M. d'Espard, whose temper had completely
+changed within three months or so, proposed that we should go to live
+on one of his estates near Briancon, without any regard for my health,
+which that climate would have destroyed, or for my habits of life; I
+refused to go. My refusal gave rise to such unjustifiable reproaches
+on his part, that from that hour I had my suspicions as to the
+soundness of his mind. On the following day he left me, leaving me his
+house and the free use of my own income, and he went to live in the
+Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, taking with him my two
+children----"
+
+"One moment, madame," said the lawyer, interrupting her. "What was
+that income?"
+
+"Twenty-six thousand francs a year," she replied parenthetically. "I
+at once consulted old M. Bordin as to what I ought to do," she went
+on; "but it seems that there are so many difficulties in the way of
+depriving a father of the care of his children, that I was forced to
+resign myself to remaining alone at the age of twenty-two--an age at
+which many young women do very foolish things. You have read my
+petition, no doubt, monsieur; you know the principal facts on which I
+rely to procure a Commission in Lunacy with regard to M. d'Espard?"
+
+"Have you ever applied to him, madame, to obtain the care of your
+children?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur; but in vain. It is very hard on a mother to be
+deprived of the affection of her children, particularly when they can
+give her such happiness as every woman clings to."
+
+"The elder must be sixteen," said Popinot.
+
+"Fifteen," said the Marquise eagerly.
+
+Here Bianchon and Rastignac looked at each other. Madame d'Espard bit
+her lips.
+
+"What can the age of my children matter to you?"
+
+"Well, madame," said the lawyer, without seeming to attach any
+importance to his words, "a lad of fifteen and his brother, of
+thirteen, I suppose, have legs and their wits about them; they might
+come to see you on the sly. If they do not, it is because they obey
+their father, and to obey him in that matter they must love him very
+dearly."
+
+"I do not understand," said the Marquise.
+
+"You do not know, perhaps," replied Popinot, "that in your petition
+your attorney represents your children as being very unhappy with
+their father?"
+
+Madame d'Espard replied with charming innocence:
+
+"I do not know what my attorney may have put into my mouth."
+
+"Forgive my inferences," said Popinot, "but Justice weighs everything.
+What I ask you, madame, is suggested by my wish thoroughly to
+understand the matter. By your account M. d'Espard deserted you on the
+most frivolous pretext. Instead of going to Briancon, where he wished
+to take you, he remained in Paris. This point is not clear. Did he
+know this Madame Jeanrenaud before his marriage?"
+
+"No, monsieur," replied the Marquise, with some asperity, visible only
+to Rastignac and the Chevalier d'Espard.
+
+She was offended at being cross-examined by this layer when she had
+intended to beguile his judgment; but as Popinot still looked stupid
+from sheer absence of mind, she ended by attributing his interrogatory
+to the Questioning Spirit of Voltaire's bailiff.
+
+"My parents," she went on, "married me at the age of sixteen to M.
+d'Espard, whose name, fortune, and mode of life were such as my family
+looked for in the man who was to be my husband. M. d'Espard was then
+six-and-twenty; he was a gentleman in the English sense of the word;
+his manners pleased me, he seemed to have plenty of ambition, and I
+like ambitious people," she added, looking at Rastignac. "If M.
+d'Espard had never met that Madame Jeanrenaud, his character, his
+learning, his acquirements would have raised him--as his friends then
+believed--to high office in the Government. King Charles X., at that
+time Monsieur, had the greatest esteem for him, and a peer's seat, an
+appointment at Court, some important post certainly would have been
+his. That woman turned his head, and has ruined all the prospects of
+my family."
+
+"What were M. d'Espard's religious opinions at that time?"
+
+"He was, and is still, a very pious man."
+
+"You do not suppose that Madame Jeanrenaud may have influenced him by
+mysticism?"
+
+"No, monsieur."
+
+"You have a very fine house, madame," said Popinot suddenly, taking
+his hands out of his pockets, and rising to pick up his coat-tails and
+warm himself. "This boudoir is very nice, those chairs are
+magnificent, the whole apartment is sumptuous. You must indeed be most
+unhappy when, seeing yourself here, you know that your children are
+ill lodged, ill clothed, and ill fed. I can imagine nothing more
+terrible for a mother."
+
+"Yes, indeed. I should be so glad to give the poor little fellows some
+amusement, while their father keeps them at work from morning till
+night at that wretched history of China."
+
+"You give handsome balls; they would enjoy them, but they might
+acquire a taste for dissipation. However, their father might send them
+to you once or twice in the course of the winter."
+
+"He brings them here on my birthday and on New Year's Day. On those
+days M. d'Espard does me the favor of dining here with them."
+
+"It is very singular behaviour," said the judge, with an air of
+conviction. "Have you ever seen this Dame Jeanrenaud?"
+
+"My brother-in-law one day, out of interest in his brother----"
+
+"Ah! monsieur is M. d'Espard's brother?" said the lawyer, interrupting
+her.
+
+The Chevalier bowed, but did not speak.
+
+"M. d'Espard, who has watched this affair, took me to the Oratoire,
+where this woman goes to sermon, for she is a Protestant. I saw her;
+she is not in the least attractive; she looks like a butcher's wife,
+extremely fat, horribly marked with the smallpox; she has feet and
+hands like a man's, she squints, in short, she is monstrous!"
+
+"It is inconceivable," said the judge, looking like the most imbecile
+judge in the whole kingdom. "And this creature lives near here, Rue
+Verte, in a fine house? There are no plain folk left, it would seem?"
+
+"In a mansion on which her son has spent absurd sums."
+
+"Madame," said Popinot, "I live in the Faubourg Saint-Marceau; I know
+nothing of such expenses. What do you call absurd sums?"
+
+"Well," said the Marquise, "a stable with five horses and three
+carriages, a phaeton, a brougham, and a cabriolet."
+
+"That costs a large sum, then?" asked Popinot in surprise.
+
+"Enormous sums!" said Rastignac, intervening. "Such an establishment
+would cost, for the stables, the keeping the carriages in order, and
+the liveries for the men, between fifteen and sixteen thousand francs
+a year."
+
+"Should you think so, madame?" said the judge, looking much
+astonished.
+
+"Yes, at least," replied the Marquise.
+
+"And the furniture, too, must have cost a lot of money?"
+
+"More than a hundred thousand francs," replied Madame d'Espard, who
+could not help smiling at the lawyer's vulgarity.
+
+"Judges, madame, are apt to be incredulous; it is what they are paid
+for, and I am incredulous. The Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother must
+have fleeced M. d'Espard most preposterously, if what you say is
+correct. There is a stable establishment which, by your account, costs
+sixteen thousand francs a year. Housekeeping, servants' wages, and the
+gross expenses of the house itself must run to twice as much; that
+makes a total of from fifty to sixty thousand francs a year. Do you
+suppose that these people, formerly so extremely poor, can have so
+large a fortune? A million yields scarcely forty thousand a year."
+
+"Monsieur, the mother and son invested the money given them by M.
+d'Espard in the funds when they were at 60 to 80. I should think their
+income must be more than sixty thousand francs. And then the son has
+fine appointments."
+
+"If they spend sixty thousand francs a year," said the judge, "how
+much do you spend?"
+
+"Well," said Madame d'Espard, "about the same." The Chevalier started
+a little, the Marquise colored; Bianchon looked at Rastignac; but
+Popinot preserved an expression of simplicity which quite deceived
+Madame d'Espard. The chevalier took no part in the conversation; he
+saw that all was lost.
+
+"These people, madame, might be indicted before the superior Court,"
+said Popinot.
+
+"That was my opinion," exclaimed the Marquise, enchanted. "If
+threatened with the police, they would have come to terms."
+
+"Madame," said Popinot, "when M. d'Espard left you, did he not give
+you a power of attorney enabling you to manage and control your own
+affairs?"
+
+"I do not understand the object of all these questions," said the
+Marquise with petulance. "It seems to me that if you would only
+consider the state in which I am placed by my husband's insanity, you
+ought to be troubling yourself about him, and not about me."
+
+"We are coming to that, madame," said the judge. "Before placing in
+your hands, or in any others, the control of M. d'Espard's property,
+supposing he were pronounced incapable, the Court must inquire as to
+how you have managed your own. If M. d'Espard gave you the power, he
+would have shown confidence in you, and the Court would recognize the
+fact. Had you any power from him? You might have bought or sold house
+property or invested money in business?"
+
+"No, monsieur, the Blamont-Chauvrys are not in the habit of trading,"
+said she, extremely nettled in her pride as an aristocrat, and
+forgetting the business in hand. "My property is intact, and M.
+d'Espard gave me no power to act."
+
+The Chevalier put his hand over his eyes not to betray the vexation he
+felt at his sister-in-law's short-sightedness, for she was ruining
+herself by her answers. Popinot had gone straight to the mark in spite
+of his apparent doublings.
+
+"Madame," said the lawyer, indicating the Chevalier, "this gentleman,
+of course, is your near connection? May we speak openly before these
+other gentlemen?"
+
+"Speak on," said the Marquise, surprised at this caution.
+
+"Well, madame, granting that you spend only sixty thousand francs a
+year, to any one who sees your stables, your house, your train of
+servants, and a style of housekeeping which strikes me as far more
+luxurious than that of the Jeanrenauds, that sum would seem well laid
+out."
+
+The Marquise bowed an agreement.
+
+"But," continued the judge, "if you have no more than twenty-six
+thousand francs a year, you may have a hundred thousand francs of
+debt. The Court would therefore have a right to imagine that the
+motives which prompt you to ask that your husband may be deprived of
+the control of his property are complicated by self-interest and the
+need of paying your debts--if--you--have--any. The requests addressed
+to me have interested me in your position; consider fully and make
+your confession. If my suppositions have hit the truth, there is yet
+time to avoid the blame which the Court would have a perfect right to
+express in the saving clauses of the verdict if you could not show
+your attitude to be absolutely honorable and clear.
+
+"It is our duty to examine the motives of the applicant as well as to
+listen to the plea of the witness under examination, to ascertain
+whether the petitioner may not have been prompted by passion, by a
+desire for money, which is unfortunately too common----"
+
+The Marquise was on Saint Laurence's gridiron.
+
+"And I must have explanations on this point. Madame, I have no wish to
+call you to account; I only want to know how you have managed to live
+at the rate of sixty thousand francs a year, and that for some years
+past. There are plenty of women who achieve this in their
+housekeeping, but you are not one of those. Tell me, you may have the
+most legitimate resources, a royal pension, or some claim on the
+indemnities lately granted; but even then you must have had your
+husband's authority to receive them."
+
+The Marquise did not speak.
+
+"You must remember," Popinot went on, "that M. d'Espard may wish to
+enter a protest, and his counsel will have a right to find out whether
+you have any creditors. This boudoir is newly furnished, your rooms
+are not now furnished with the things left to you by M. d'Espard in
+1816. If, as you did me the honor of informing me, furniture is costly
+for the Jeanrenauds, it must be yet more so for you, who are a great
+lady. Though I am a judge, I am but a man; I may be wrong--tell me so.
+Remember the duties imposed on me by the law, and the rigorous
+inquiries it demands, when the case before it is the suspension from
+all his functions of the father of a family in the prime of life. So
+you will pardon me, Madame la Marquise, for laying all these
+difficulties before you; it will be easy for you to give me an
+explanation.
+
+"When a man is pronounced incapable of the control of his own affairs,
+a trustee has to be appointed. Who will be the trustee?"
+
+"His brother," said the Marquise.
+
+The Chevalier bowed. There was a short silence, very uncomfortable for
+the five persons who were present. The judge, in sport as it were, had
+laid open the woman's sore place. Popinot's countenance of common,
+clumsy good-nature, at which the Marquise, the Chevalier, and
+Rastignac had been inclined to laugh, had gained importance in their
+eyes. As they stole a look at him, they discerned the various
+expressions of that eloquent mouth. The ridiculous mortal was a judge
+of acumen. His studious notice of the boudoir was accounted for: he
+had started from the gilt elephant supporting the chimney-clock,
+examining all this luxury, and had ended by reading this woman's soul.
+
+"If the Marquis d'Espard is mad about China, I see that you are not
+less fond of its products," said Popinot, looking at the porcelain on
+the chimney-piece. "But perhaps it was from M. le Marquis that you had
+these charming Oriental pieces," and he pointed to some precious
+trifles.
+
+This irony, in very good taste, made Bianchon smile, and petrified
+Rastignac, while the Marquise bit her thin lips.
+
+"Instead of being the protector of a woman placed in a cruel dilemma--
+an alternative between losing her fortune and her children, and being
+regarded as her husband's enemy," she said, "you accuse me, monsieur!
+You suspect my motives! You must own that your conduct is strange!"
+
+"Madame," said the judge eagerly, "the caution exercised by the Court
+in such cases as these might have given you, in any other judge, a
+perhaps less indulgent critic than I am.--And do you suppose that M.
+d'Espard's lawyer will show you any great consideration? Will he not
+be suspicious of motives which may be perfectly pure and
+disinterested? Your life will be at his mercy; he will inquire into it
+without qualifying his search by the respectful deference I have for
+you."
+
+"I am much obliged to you, monsieur," said the Marquise satirically.
+"Admitting for the moment that I owe thirty thousand or fifty thousand
+francs, in the first place, it would be a mere trifle to the d'Espards
+and the Blamont-Chauvrys. But if my husband is not in the possession
+of his mental faculties, would that prevent his being pronounced
+incapable?"
+
+"No, madame," said Popinot.
+
+"Although you have questioned me with a sort of cunning which I should
+not have suspected in a judge, and under circumstances where
+straightforwardness would have answered your purpose," she went on, "I
+will tell you without subterfuge that my position in the world, and
+the efforts I have to make to keep up my connection, are not in the
+least to my taste. I began my life by a long period of solitude; but
+my children's interest appealed to me; I felt that I must fill their
+father's place. By receiving my friends, by keeping up all this
+connection, by contracting these debts, I have secured their future
+welfare; I have prepared for them a brilliant career where they will
+find help and favor; and to have what has thus been acquired, many a
+man of business, lawyer or banker, would gladly pay all it has cost
+me."
+
+"I appreciate your devoted conduct, madame," replied Popinot. "It does
+you honor, and I blame you for nothing. A judge belongs to all: he
+must know and weigh every fact."
+
+Madame d'Espard's tact and practice in estimating men made her
+understand that M. Popinot was not to be influenced by any
+consideration. She had counted on an ambitious lawyer, she had found a
+man of conscience. She at once thought of finding other means for
+securing the success of her side.
+
+The servants brought in tea.
+
+"Have you any further explanations to give me, madame?" said Popinot,
+seeing these preparations.
+
+"Monsieur," she replied haughtily, "do your business your own way;
+question M. d'Espard, and you will pity me, I am sure." She raised her
+head, looking Popinot in the face with pride, mingled with
+impertinence; the worthy man bowed himself out respectfully.
+
+"A nice man is your uncle," said Rastignac to Bianchon. "Is he really
+so dense? Does not he know what the Marquise d'Espard is, what her
+influence means, her unavowed power over people? The Keeper of the
+Seals will be with her to-morrow----"
+
+"My dear fellow, how can I help it?" said Bianchon. "Did not I warn
+you? He is not a man you can get over."
+
+"No," said Rastignac; "he is a man you must run over."
+
+The doctor was obliged to make his bow to the Marquise and her mute
+Chevalier to catch up Popinot, who, not being the man to endure an
+embarrassing position, was pacing through the rooms.
+
+"That woman owes a hundred thousand crowns," said the judge, as he
+stepped into his nephew's cab.
+
+"And what do you think of the case?"
+
+"I," said the judge. "I never have an opinion till I have gone into
+everything. To-morrow early I will send to Madame Jeanrenaud to call
+on me in my private office at four o'clock, to make her explain the
+facts which concern her, for she is compromised."
+
+"I should very much like to know what the end will be."
+
+"Why, bless me, do not you see that the Marquise is the tool of that
+tall lean man who never uttered a word? There is a strain of Cain in
+him, but of the Cain who goes to the Law Courts for his bludgeon, and
+there, unluckily for him, we keep more than one Damocles' sword."
+
+"Oh, Rastignac! what brought you into that boat, I wonder?" exclaimed
+Bianchon.
+
+"Ah, we are used to seeing these little family conspiracies," said
+Popinot. "Not a year passes without a number of verdicts of
+'insufficient evidence' against applications of this kind. In our
+state of society such an attempt brings no dishonor, while we send a
+poor devil to the galleys who breaks a pane of glass dividing him from
+a bowl full of gold. Our Code is not faultless."
+
+"But these are the facts?"
+
+"My boy, do you not know all the judicial romances with which clients
+impose on their attorneys? If the attorneys condemned themselves to
+state nothing but the truth, they would not earn enough to keep their
+office open."
+
+
+
+Next day, at four in the afternoon, a very stout dame, looking a good
+deal like a cask dressed up in a gown and belt, mounted Judge
+Popinot's stairs, perspiring and panting. She had, with great
+difficulty, got out of a green landau, which suited her to a miracle;
+you could not think of the woman without the landau, or the landau
+without the woman.
+
+"It is I, my dear sir," said she, appearing in the doorway of the
+judge's room. "Madame Jeanrenaud, whom you summoned exactly as if I
+were a thief, neither more nor less."
+
+The common words were spoken in a common voice, broken by the wheezing
+of asthma, and ending in a cough.
+
+"When I go through a damp place, I can't tell you what I suffer, sir.
+I shall never make old bones, saving your presence. However, here I
+am."
+
+The lawyer was quite amazed at the appearance of this supposed
+Marechale d'Ancre. Madame Jeanrenaud's face was pitted with an
+infinite number of little holes, was very red, with a pug nose and a
+low forehead, and was as round as a ball; for everything about the
+good woman was round. She had the bright eyes of a country woman, an
+honest gaze, a cheerful tone, and chestnut hair held in place by a
+bonnet cap under a green bonnet decked with a shabby bunch of
+auriculas. Her stupendous bust was a thing to laugh at, for it made
+one fear some grotesque explosion every time she coughed. Her enormous
+legs were of the shape which make the Paris street boy describe such a
+woman as being built on piles. The widow wore a green gown trimmed
+with chinchilla, which looked on her as a splash of dirty oil would
+look on a bride's veil. In short, everything about her harmonized with
+her last words: "Here I am."
+
+"Madame," said Popinot, "you are suspected of having used some
+seductive arts to induce M. d'Espard to hand over to you very
+considerable sums of money."
+
+"Of what! of what!" cried she. "Of seductive arts? But, my dear sir,
+you are a man to be respected, and, moreover, as a lawyer you ought to
+have some good sense. Look at me! Tell me if I am likely to seduce any
+one. I cannot tie my own shoes, nor even stoop. For these twenty years
+past, the Lord be praised, I have not dared to put on a pair of stays
+under pain of sudden death. I was as thin as an asparagus stalk when I
+was seventeen, and pretty too--I may say so now. So I married
+Jeanrenaud, a good fellow, and headman on the salt-barges. I had my
+boy, who is a fine young man; he is my pride, and it is not holding
+myself cheap to say he is my best piece of work. My little Jeanrenaud
+was a soldier who did Napoleon credit, and who served in the Imperial
+Guard. But, alas! at the death of my old man, who was drowned, times
+changed for the worse. I had the smallpox. I was kept two years in my
+room without stirring, and I came out of it the size you see me,
+hideous for ever, and as wretched as could be. These are my seductive
+arts."
+
+"But what, then, can the reasons be that have induced M. d'Espard to
+give you sums----"
+
+"Hugious sums, monsieur, say the word; I do not mind. But as to his
+reasons, I am not at liberty to explain them."
+
+"You are wrong. At this moment, his family, very naturally alarmed,
+are about to bring an action----"
+
+"Heavens above us!" said the good woman, starting up. "Is it possible
+that he should be worried on my account? That king of men, a man that
+has not his match! Rather than he should have the smallest trouble, or
+hair less on his head I could almost say, we would return every sou,
+monsieur. Write that down on your papers. Heaven above us! I will go
+at once and tell Jeanrenaud what is going on! A pretty thing indeed!"
+
+And the little old woman went out, rolled herself downstairs, and
+disappeared.
+
+"That one tells no lies," said Popinot to himself. "Well, to-morrow I
+shall know the whole story, for I shall go to see the Marquis
+d'Espard."
+
+People who have outlived the age when a man wastes his vitality at
+random, know how great an influence may be exercised on more important
+events by apparently trivial incidents, and will not be surprised at
+the weight here given to the following minor fact. Next day Popinot
+had an attack of coryza, a complaint which is not dangerous, and
+generally known by the absurd and inadequate name of a cold in the
+head.
+
+The judge, who could not suppose that the delay could be serious,
+feeling himself a little feverish, kept his room, and did not go to
+see the Marquis d'Espard. This day lost was, to this affair, what on
+the Day of Dupes the cup of soup had been, taken by Marie de Medici,
+which, by delaying her meeting with Louis XIII., enabled Richelieu to
+arrive at Saint-Germain before her, and recapture his royal slave.
+
+Before accompanying the lawyer and his registering clerk to the
+Marquis d'Espard's house, it may be as well to glance at the home and
+the private affairs of this father of sons whom his wife's petition
+represented to be a madman.
+
+Here and there in the old parts of Paris a few buildings may still be
+seen in which the archaeologist can discern an intention of decorating
+the city, and that love of property, which leads the owner to give a
+durable character to the structure. The house in which M. d'Espard was
+then living, in the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve, was one of
+these old mansions, built in stone, and not devoid of a certain
+richness of style; but time had blackened the stone, and revolutions
+in the town had damaged it both outside and inside. The dignitaries
+who formerly dwelt in the neighborhood of the University having
+disappeared with the great ecclesiastical foundations, this house had
+become the home of industries and of inhabitants whom it was never
+destined to shelter. During the last century a printing establishment
+had worn down the polished floors, soiled the carved wood, blackened
+the walls, and altered the principal internal arrangements. Formerly
+the residence of a Cardinal, this fine house was now divided among
+plebeian tenants. The character of the architecture showed that it had
+been built under the reigns of Henry III., Henry IV., and Louis XIII.,
+at the time when the hotels Mignon and Serpente were erected in the
+same neighborhood, with the palace of the Princess Palatine, and the
+Sorbonne. An old man could remember having heard it called, in the
+last century, the hotel Duperron, so it seemed probable that the
+illustrious Cardinal of that name had built, or perhaps merely lived
+in it.
+
+There still exists, indeed, in the corner of the courtyard, a perron
+or flight of several outer steps by which the house is entered; and
+the way into the garden on the garden front is down a similar flight
+of steps. In spite of dilapidations, the luxury lavished by the
+architect on the balustrade and entrance porch crowning these two
+perrons suggests the simple-minded purpose of commemorating the
+owner's name, a sort of sculptured pun which our ancestors often
+allowed themselves. Finally, in support of this evidence,
+archaeologists can still discern in the medallions which show on the
+principal front some traces of the cords of the Roman hat.
+
+M. le Marquis d'Espard lived on the ground floor, in order, no doubt,
+to enjoy the garden, which might be called spacious for that
+neighborhood, and which lay open for his children's health. The
+situation of the house, in a street on a steep hill, as its name
+indicates, secured these ground-floor rooms against ever being damp.
+M. d'Espard had taken them, no doubt, for a very moderate price, rents
+being low at the time when he settled in that quarter, in order to be
+among the schools and to superintend his boys' education. Moreover,
+the state in which he found the place, with everything to repair, had
+no doubt induced the owner to be accommodating. Thus M. d'Espard had
+been able to go to some expense to settle himself suitably without
+being accused of extravagance. The loftiness of the rooms, the
+paneling, of which nothing survived but the frames, the decoration of
+the ceilings, all displayed the dignity which the prelacy stamped on
+whatever it attempted or created, and which artists discern to this
+day in the smallest relic that remains, though it be but a book, a
+dress, the panel of a bookcase, or an armchair.
+
+The Marquis had the rooms painted in the rich brown tones loved of the
+Dutch and of the citizens of Old Paris, hues which lend such good
+effects to the painter of genre. The panels were hung with plain paper
+in harmony with the paint. The window curtains were of inexpensive
+materials, but chosen so as to produce a generally happy result; the
+furniture was not too crowded and judiciously placed. Any one on going
+into this home could not resist a sense of sweet peacefulness,
+produced by the perfect calm, the stillness which prevailed, by the
+unpretentious unity of color, the keeping of the picture, in the words
+a painter might use. A certain nobleness in the details, the exquisite
+cleanliness of the furniture, and a perfect concord of men and things,
+all brought the word "suavity" to the lips.
+
+Few persons were admitted to the rooms used by the Marquis and his two
+sons, whose life might perhaps seem mysterious to their neighbors. In
+a wing towards the street, on the third floor, there are three large
+rooms which had been left in the state of dilapidation and grotesque
+bareness to which they had been reduced by the printing works. These
+three rooms, devoted to the evolution of the Picturesque History of
+China, were contrived to serve as a writing-room, a depository, and a
+private room, where M. d'Espard sat during part of the day; for after
+breakfast till four in the afternoon the Marquis remained in this room
+on the third floor to work at the publication he had undertaken.
+Visitors wanting to see him commonly found him there, and often the
+two boys on their return from school resorted thither. Thus the
+ground-floor rooms were a sort of sanctuary where the father and sons
+spent their time from the hour of dinner till the next day, and his
+domestic life was carefully closed against the public eye.
+
+His only servants were a cook--an old woman who had long been attached
+to his family--and a man-servant forty years old, who was with him
+when he married Mademoiselle de Blamont. His children's nurse had also
+remained with them, and the minute care to which the apartment bore
+witness revealed the sense of order and the maternal affections
+expended by this woman in her master's interest, in the management of
+his house, and the charge of his children. These three good souls,
+grave, and uncommunicative folk, seemed to have entered into the idea
+which ruled the Marquis' domestic life. And the contrast between their
+habits and those of most servants was a peculiarity which cast an air
+of mystery over the house, and fomented the calumny to which M.
+d'Espard himself lent occasion. Very laudable motives had made him
+determine never to be on visiting terms with any of the other tenants
+in the house. In undertaking to educate his boys he wished to keep
+them from all contact with strangers. Perhaps, too, he wished to avoid
+the intrusion of neighbors.
+
+In a man of his rank, at a time when the Quartier Latin was distracted
+by Liberalism, such conduct was sure to rouse in opposition a host of
+petty passions, of feelings whose folly is only to be measured by
+their meanness, the outcome of porters' gossip and malevolent tattle
+from door to door, all unknown to M. d'Espard and his retainers. His
+man-servant was stigmatized as a Jesuit, his cook as a sly fox; the
+nurse was in collusion with Madame Jeanrenaud to rob the madman. The
+madman was the Marquis. By degrees the other tenants came to regard as
+proofs of madness a number of things they had noticed in M. d'Espard,
+and passed through the sieve of their judgment without discerning any
+reasonable motive for them.
+
+Having no belief in the success of the History of China, they had
+managed to convince the landlord of the house that M. d'Espard had no
+money just at a time when, with the forgetfulness which often befalls
+busy men, he had allowed the tax-collector to send him a summons for
+non-payment of arrears. The landlord forthwith claimed his quarter's
+rent from January 1st by sending in a receipt, which the porter's wife
+had amused herself by detaining. On the 15th a summons to pay was
+served on M. d'Espard, the portress had delivered it at her leisure,
+and he supposed it to be some misunderstanding, not conceiving of any
+incivility from a man in whose house he had been living for twelve
+years. The Marquis was actually seized by a bailiff at the time when
+his man-servant had gone to carry the money for the rent to the
+landlord.
+
+This arrest, assiduously reported to the persons with whom he was in
+treaty for his undertaking, had alarmed some of them who were already
+doubtful of M. d'Espard's solvency in consequence of the enormous sums
+which Baron Jeanrenaud and his mother were said to be receiving from
+him. And, indeed, these suspicions on the part of the tenants, the
+creditors, and the landlord had some excuse in the Marquis' extreme
+economy in housekeeping. He conducted it as a ruined man might. His
+servants always paid in ready money for the most trifling necessaries
+of life, and acted as not choosing to take credit; if now they had
+asked for anything on credit, it would probably have been refused,
+calumnious gossip had been so widely believed in the neighborhood.
+There are tradesmen who like those of their customers who pay badly
+when they see them often, while they hate others, and very good ones,
+who hold themselves on too high a level to allow of any familiarity as
+CHUMS, a vulgar but expressive word. Men are made so; in almost every
+class they will allow to a gossip, or a vulgar soul that flatters
+them, facilities and favors they refuse to the superiority they
+resent, in whatever form it may show itself. The shopkeeper who rails
+at the Court has his courtiers.
+
+In short, the manners of the Marquis and his children were certain to
+arouse ill-feeling in their neighbors, and to work them up by degrees
+to the pitch of malevolence when men do not hesitate at an act of
+meanness if only it may damage the adversary they have themselves
+created.
+
+M. d'Espard was a gentleman, as his wife was a lady, by birth and
+breeding; noble types, already so rare in France that the observer can
+easily count the persons who perfectly realize them. These two
+characters are based on primitive ideas, on beliefs that may be called
+innate, on habits formed in infancy, and which have ceased to exist.
+To believe in pure blood, in a privileged race, to stand in thought
+above other men, must we not from birth have measured the distance
+which divides patricians from the mob? To command, must we not have
+never met our equal? And finally, must not education inculcate the
+ideas with which Nature inspires those great men on whose brow she has
+placed a crown before their mother has ever set a kiss there? These
+ideas, this education, are no longer possible in France, where for
+forty years past chance has arrogated the right of making noblemen by
+dipping them in the blood of battles, by gilding them with glory, by
+crowning them with the halo of genius; where the abolition of entail
+and of eldest sonship, by frittering away estates, compels the
+nobleman to attend to his own business instead of attending to affairs
+of state, and where personal greatness can only be such greatness as
+is acquired by long and patient toil: quite a new era.
+
+Regarded as a relic of that great institution know as feudalism, M.
+d'Espard deserved respectful admiration. If he believed himself to be
+by blood the superior of other men, he also believed in all the
+obligations of nobility; he had the virtues and the strength it
+demands. He had brought up his children in his own principles, and
+taught them from the cradle the religion of their caste. A deep sense
+of their own dignity, pride of name, the conviction that they were by
+birth great, gave rise in them to a kingly pride, the courage of
+knights, and the protecting kindness of a baronial lord; their
+manners, harmonizing with their notions, would have become princes,
+and offended all the world of the Rue de la Montagne-Sainte-Genevieve
+--a world, above all others, of equality, where every one believed
+that M. d'Espard was ruined, and where all, from the lowest to the
+highest, refused the privileges of nobility to a nobleman without
+money, because they were all ready to allow an enriched bourgeois to
+usurp them. Thus the lack of communion between this family and other
+persons was as much moral as it was physical.
+
+In the father and the children alike, their personality harmonized
+with the spirit within. M. d'Espard, at this time about fifty, might
+have sat as a model to represent the aristocracy of birth in the
+nineteenth century. He was slight and fair; there was in the outline
+and general expression of his face a native distinction which spoke of
+lofty sentiments, but it bore the impress of a deliberate coldness
+which commanded respect a little too decidedly. His aquiline nose bent
+at the tip from left to right, a slight crookedness which was not
+devoid of grace; his blue eyes, his high forehead, prominent enough at
+the brows to form a thick ridge that checked the light and shaded his
+eyes, all indicated a spirit of rectitude, capable of perseverance and
+perfect loyalty, while it gave a singular look to his countenance.
+This penthouse forehead might, in fact, hint at a touch of madness,
+and his thick-knitted eyebrows added to the apparent eccentricity. He
+had the white well-kept hands of a gentleman; his foot was high and
+narrow. His hesitating speech--not merely as to his pronunciation,
+which was that of a stammerer, but also in the expression of his
+ideas, his thought and language--produced on the mind of the hearer
+the impression of a man who, in familiar phraseology, comes and goes,
+feels his way, tries everything, breaks off his gestures, and finishes
+nothing. This defect was purely superficial, and in contrast with the
+decisiveness of a firmly-set mouth, and the strongly-marked character
+of his physiognomy. His rather jerky gait matched his mode of speech.
+These peculiarities helped to affirm his supposed insanity. In spite
+of his elegant appearance, he was systematically parsimonious in his
+personal expenses, and wore the same black frock-coat for three or
+four years, brushed with extreme care by his old man-servant.
+
+As to the children, they both were handsome, and endowed with a grace
+which did not exclude an expression of aristocratic disdain. They had
+the bright coloring, the clear eye, the transparent flesh which reveal
+habits of purity, regularity of life, and a due proportion of work and
+play. They both had black hair and blue eyes, and a twist in their
+nose, like their father; but their mother, perhaps, had transmitted to
+them the dignity of speech, of look and mien, which are hereditary in
+the Blamont-Chauvrys. Their voices, as clear as crystal, had an
+emotional quality, the softness which proves so seductive; they had,
+in short, the voice a woman would willingly listen to after feeling
+the flame of their looks. But, above all, they had the modesty of
+pride, a chaste reserve, a TOUCH-ME-NOT which at a maturer age might
+have seemed intentional coyness, so much did their demeanor inspire a
+wish to know them. The elder, Comte Clement de Negrepelisse, was close
+upon his sixteenth year. For the last two years he had ceased to wear
+the pretty English round jacket which his brother, Vicomte Camille
+d'Espard, still wore. The Count, who for the last six months went no
+more to the College Henri IV., was dressed in the style of a young man
+enjoying the first pleasures of fashion. His father had not wished to
+condemn him to a year's useless study of philosophy; he was trying to
+give his knowledge some consistency by the study of transcendental
+mathematics. At the same time, the Marquis was having him taught
+Eastern languages, the international law of Europe, heraldry, and
+history from the original sources, charters, early documents, and
+collections of edicts. Camille had lately begun to study rhetoric.
+
+The day when Popinot arranged to go to question M. d'Espard was a
+Thursday, a holiday. At about nine in the morning, before their father
+was awake, the brothers were playing in the garden. Clement was
+finding it hard to refuse his brother, who was anxious to go to the
+shooting-gallery for the first time, and who begged him to second his
+request to the Marquis. The Viscount always rather took advantage of
+his weakness, and was very fond of wrestling with his brother. So the
+couple were quarreling and fighting in play like schoolboys. As they
+ran in the garden, chasing each other, they made so much noise as to
+wake their father, who came to the window without their perceiving him
+in the heat of the fray. The Marquis amused himself with watching his
+two children twisted together like snakes, their faces flushed by the
+exertion of their strength; their complexion was rose and white, their
+eyes flashed sparks, their limbs writhed like cords in the fire; they
+fell, sprang up again, and caught each other like athletes in a
+circus, affording their father one of those moments of happiness which
+would make amends for the keenest anxieties of a busy life. Two other
+persons, one on the second and one on the first floor, were also
+looking into the garden, and saying that the old madman was amusing
+himself by making his children fight. Immediately a number of heads
+appeared at the windows; the Marquis, noticing them, called a word to
+his sons, who at once climbed up to the window and jumped into his
+room, and Clement obtained the permission asked by Camille.
+
+All through the house every one was talking of the Marquis' new form
+of insanity. When Popinot arrived at about twelve o'clock, accompanied
+by his clerk, the portress, when asked for M. d'Espard, conducted him
+to the third floor, telling him "as how M. d'Espard, no longer ago
+than that very morning, had set on his two children to fight, and
+laughed like the monster he was on seeing the younger biting the elder
+till he bled, and as how no doubt he longed to see them kill each
+other.--Don't ask me the reason why," she added; "he doesn't show
+himself!"
+
+Just as the woman spoke these decisive words, she had brought the
+judge to the landing on the third floor, face to face with a door
+covered with notices announcing the successive numbers of the
+Picturesque History of China. The muddy floor, the dirty banisters,
+the door where the printers had left their marks, the dilapidated
+window, and the ceiling on which the apprentices had amused themselves
+with drawing monstrosities with the smoky flare of their tallow dips,
+the piles of paper and litter heaped up in the corners, intentionally
+or from sheer neglect--in short, every detail of the picture lying
+before his eyes, agreed so well with the facts alleged by the Marquise
+that the judge, in spite of his impartiality, could not help believing
+them.
+
+"There you are, gentlemen," said the porter's wife; "there is the
+manifactor, where the Chinese swallow up enough to feed the whole
+neighborhood."
+
+The clerk looked at the judge with a smile, and Popinot found it hard
+to keep his countenance. They went together into the outer room, where
+sat an old man, who, no doubt, performed the functions of office
+clerk, shopman, and cashier. This old man was the Maitre Jacques of
+China. Along the walls ran long shelves, on which the published
+numbers lay in piles. A partition in wood, with a grating lined with
+green curtains, cut off the end of the room, forming a private office.
+A till with a slit to admit or disgorge crown pieces indicated the
+cash-desk.
+
+"M. d'Espard?" said Popinot, addressing the man, who wore a gray
+blouse.
+
+The shopman opened the door into the next room, where the lawyer and
+his companion saw a venerable old man, white-headed and simply
+dressed, wearing the Cross of Saint-Louis, seated at a desk. He ceased
+comparing some sheets of colored prints to look up at the two
+visitors. This room was an unpretentious office, full of books and
+proof-sheets. There was a black wood table at which some one, at the
+moment absent, no doubt was accustomed to work.
+
+"The Marquis d'Espard?" said Popinot.
+
+"No, monsieur," said the old man, rising; "what do you want with him?"
+he added, coming forward, and showing by his demeanor the dignified
+manners and habits due to a gentlemanly education.
+
+"We wish to speak with him on business exclusively personal to
+himself," replied Popinot.
+
+"D'Espard, here are some gentlemen who want to see you," then said the
+old man, going into the furthest room, where the Marquis was sitting
+by the fire reading the newspaper.
+
+This innermost room had a shabby carpet, the windows were hung with
+gray holland curtains; the furniture consisted of a few mahogany
+chairs, two armchairs, a desk with a revolving front, an ordinary
+office table, and on the chimney-shelf, a dingy clock and two old
+candlesticks. The old man led the way for Popinot and his registrar,
+and pulled forward two chairs, as though he were master of the place;
+M. d'Espard left it to him. After the preliminary civilities, during
+which the judge watched the supposed lunatic, the Marquis naturally
+asked what was the object of this visit. On this Popinot glanced
+significantly at the old gentleman and the Marquis.
+
+"I believe, Monsieur le Marquis," said he, "that the character of my
+functions, and the inquiry that has brought me here, make it desirable
+that we should be alone, though it is understood by law that in such
+cases the inquiries have a sort of family publicity. I am judge on the
+Inferior Court of Appeal for the Department of the Seine, and charged
+by the President with the duty of examining you as to certain facts
+set forth in a petition for a Commission in Lunacy on the part of the
+Marquise d'Espard."
+
+The old man withdrew. When the lawyer and the Marquis were alone, the
+clerk shut the door, and seated himself unceremoniously at the office
+table, where he laid out his papers and prepared to take down his
+notes. Popinot had still kept his eye on M. d'Espard; he was watching
+the effect on him of this crude statement, so painful for a man in
+full possession of his reason. The Marquis d'Espard, whose face was
+usually pale, as are those of fair men, suddenly turned scarlet with
+anger; he trembled for an instant, sat down, laid his paper on the
+chimney-piece, and looked down. In a moment he had recovered his
+gentlemanly dignity, and looked steadily at the judge, as if to read
+in his countenance the indications of his character.
+
+"How is it, monsieur," he asked, "that I have had no notice of such a
+petition?"
+
+"Monsieur le Marquis, persons on whom such a commission is held not
+being supposed to have the use of their reason, any notice of the
+petition is unnecessary. The duty of the Court chiefly consists in
+verifying the allegations of the petitioner."
+
+"Nothing can be fairer," replied the Marquis. "Well, then, monsieur,
+be so good as to tell me what I ought to do----"
+
+"You have only to answer my questions, omitting nothing. However
+delicate the reasons may be which may have led you to act in such a
+manner as to give Madame d'Espard a pretext for her petition, speak
+without fear. It is unnecessary to assure you that lawyers know their
+duties, and that in such cases the profoundest secrecy----"
+
+"Monsieur," said the Marquis, whose face expressed the sincerest pain,
+"if my explanations should lead to any blame being attached to Madame
+d'Espard's conduct, what will be the result?"
+
+"The Court may add its censure to its reasons for its decision."
+
+"Is such censure optional? If I were to stipulate with you, before
+replying, that nothing should be said that could annoy Madame d'Espard
+in the event of your report being in my favor, would the Court take my
+request into consideration?"
+
+The judge looked at the Marquis, and the two men exchanged sentiments
+of equal magnanimity.
+
+"Noel," said Popinot to his registrar, "go into the other room. If you
+can be of use, I will call you in.--If, as I am inclined to think," he
+went on, speaking to the Marquis when the clerk had gone out, "I find
+that there is some misunderstanding in this case, I can promise you,
+monsieur, that on your application the Court will act with due
+courtesy.
+
+"There is a leading fact put forward by Madame d'Espard, the most
+serious of all, of which I must beg for an explanation," said the
+judge after a pause. "It refers to the dissipation of your fortune to
+the advantage of a certain Madame Jeanrenaud, the widow of a
+bargemaster--or rather, to that of her son, Colonel Jeanrenaud, for
+whom you are said to have procured an appointment, to have exhausted
+your influence with the King, and at last to have extended such
+protection as secures him a good marriage. The petition suggests that
+such a friendship is more devoted than any feelings, even those which
+morality must disapprove----"
+
+A sudden flush crimsoned the Marquis' face and forehead, tears even
+started to his eyes, for his eyelashes were wet, then wholesome pride
+crushed the emotions, which in a man are accounted a weakness.
+
+"To tell you the truth, monsieur," said the Marquis, in a broken
+voice, "you place me in a strange dilemma. The motives of my conduct
+were to have died with me. To reveal them I must disclose to you some
+secret wounds, must place the honor of my family in your keeping, and
+must speak of myself, a delicate matter, as you will fully understand.
+I hope, monsieur, that it will all remain a secret between us. You
+will, no doubt, be able to find in the formulas of the law one which
+will allow of judgment being pronounced without any betrayal of my
+confidences."
+
+"So far as that goes, it is perfectly possible, Monsieur le Marquis."
+
+"Some time after my marriage," said M. d'Espard, "my wife having run
+into considerable expenses, I was obliged to have recourse to
+borrowing. You know what was the position of noble families during the
+Revolution; I had not been able to keep a steward or a man of
+business. Nowadays gentlemen are for the most part obliged to manage
+their affairs themselves. Most of my title-deeds had been brought to
+Paris, from Languedoc, Provence, or le Comtat, by my father, who
+dreaded, and not without reason, the inquisition which family title-
+deeds, and what was then styled the 'parchments' of the privileged
+class, brought down on the owners.
+
+"Our name is Negrepelisse; d'Espard is a title acquired in the time of
+Henri IV. by a marriage which brought us the estates and titles of the
+house of d'Espard, on condition of our bearing an escutcheon of
+pretence on our coat-of-arms, those of the house of d'Espard, an old
+family of Bearn, connected in the female line with that of Albret:
+quarterly, paly of or and sable; and azure two griffins' claws armed,
+gules in saltire, with the famous motto Des partem leonis. At the time
+of this alliance we lost Negrepelisse, a little town which was as
+famous during the religious struggles as was my ancestor who then bore
+the name. Captain de Negrepelisse was ruined by the burning of all his
+property, for the Protestants did not spare a friend of Montluc's.
+
+"The Crown was unjust to M. de Negrepelisse; he received neither a
+marshal's baton, nor a post as governor, nor any indemnity; King
+Charles IX., who was fond of him, died without being able to reward
+him; Henri IV. arranged his marriage with Mademoiselle d'Espard, and
+secured him the estates of that house, but all those of the
+Negrepelisses had already passed into the hands of his creditors.
+
+"My great-grandfather, the Marquis d'Espard, was, like me, placed
+early in life at the head of his family by the death of his father,
+who, after dissipating his wife's fortune, left his son nothing but
+the entailed estates of the d'Espards, burdened with a jointure. The
+young Marquis was all the more straitened for money because he held a
+post at Court. Being in great favor with Louis XIV., the King's
+goodwill brought him a fortune. But here, monsieur, a blot stained our
+escutcheon, an unconfessed and horrible stain of blood and disgrace
+which I am making it my business to wipe out. I discovered the secret
+among the deeds relating to the estate of Negrepelisse and the packets
+of letters."
+
+At this solemn moment the Marquis spoke without hesitation or any of
+the repetition habitual with him; but it is a matter of common
+observation that persons who, in ordinary life, are afflicted with
+these two defects, are freed from them as soon as any passionate
+emotion underlies their speech.
+
+"The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes was decreed," he went on. "You
+are no doubt aware, monsieur, that this was an opportunity for many
+favorites to make their fortunes. Louis XIV. bestowed on the magnates
+about his Court the confiscated lands of those Protestant families who
+did not take the prescribed steps for the sale of their property. Some
+persons in high favor went 'Protestant-hunting,' as the phrase was. I
+have ascertained beyond a doubt that the fortune enjoyed to this day
+by two ducal families is derived from lands seized from hapless
+merchants.
+
+"I will not attempt to explain to you, a man of law, all the
+manoeuvres employed to entrap the refugees who had large fortunes to
+carry away. It is enough to say that the lands of Negrepelisse,
+comprising twenty-two churches and rights over the town, and those of
+Gravenges which had formerly belonged to us, were at that time in the
+hands of a Protestant family. My grandfather recovered them by gift
+from Louis XIV. This gift was effected by documents hall-marked by
+atrocious iniquity. The owner of these two estates, thinking he would
+be able to return, had gone through the form of a sale, and was going
+to Switzerland to join his family, whom he had sent in advance. He
+wished, no doubt, to take advantage of every delay granted by the law,
+so as to settle the concerns of his business.
+
+"This man was arrested by order of the governor, the trustee confessed
+the truth, the poor merchant was hanged, and my ancestor had the two
+estates. I would gladly have been able to ignore the share he took in
+the plot; but the governor was his uncle on the mother's side, and I
+have unfortunately read the letter in which he begged him to apply to
+Deodatus, the name agreed upon by the Court to designate the King. In
+this letter there is a tone of jocosity with reference to the victim,
+which filled me with horror. In the end, the sums of money sent by the
+refugee family to ransom the poor man were kept by the governor, who
+despatched the merchant all the same."
+
+The Marquis paused, as though the memory of it were still too heavy
+for him to bear.
+
+"This unfortunate family were named Jeanrenaud," he went on. "That
+name is enough to account for my conduct. I could never think without
+keen pain of the secret disgrace that weighed on my family. That
+fortune enabled my grandfather to marry a demoiselle de Navarreins-
+Lansac, heiress to the younger branch of that house, who were at that
+time much richer than the elder branch of the Navarreins. My father
+thus became one of the largest landowners in the kingdom. He was able
+to marry my mother, a Grandlieu of the younger branch. Though ill-
+gotten, this property has been singularly profitable.
+
+"For my part, being determined to remedy the mischief, I wrote to
+Switzerland, and knew no peace till I was on the traces of the
+Protestant victim's heirs. At last I discovered that the Jeanrenauds,
+reduced to abject want, had left Fribourg and returned to live in
+France. Finally, I found a M. Jeanrenaud, lieutenant in a cavalry
+regiment under Napoleon, the sole heir of this unhappy family. In my
+eyes, monsieur, the rights of the Jeanrenauds were clear. To establish
+a prescriptive right is it not necessary that there should have been
+some possibility of proceeding against those who are in the enjoyment
+of it? To whom could these refugees have appealed? Their Court of
+Justice was on high, or rather, monsieur, it was here," and the
+Marquis struck his hand on his heart. "I did not choose that my
+children should be able to think of me as I have thought of my father
+and of my ancestors. I aim at leaving them an unblemished inheritance
+and escutcheon. I did not choose that nobility should be a lie in my
+person. And, after all, politically speaking, ought those emigres who
+are now appealing against revolutionary confiscations, to keep the
+property derived from antecedent confiscations by positive crimes?
+
+"I found in M. Jeanrenaud and his mother the most perverse honesty; to
+hear them you would suppose that they were robbing me. In spite of all
+I could say, they will accept no more than the value of the lands at
+the time when the King bestowed them on my family. The price was
+settled between us at the sum of eleven hundred thousand francs, which
+I was to pay at my convenience and without interest. To achieve this I
+had to forego my income for a long time. And then, monsieur, began the
+destruction of some illusions I had allowed myself as to Madame
+d'Espard's character. When I proposed to her that we should leave
+Paris and go into the country, where we could live respected on half
+of her income, and so more rapidly complete a restitution of which I
+spoke to her without going into the more serious details, Madame
+d'Espard treated me as a madman. I then understood my wife's real
+character. She would have approved of my grandfather's conduct without
+a scruple, and have laughed at the Huguenots. Terrified by her
+coldness, and her little affection for her children, whom she
+abandoned to me without regret, I determined to leave her the command
+of her fortune, after paying our common debts. It was no business of
+hers, as she told me, to pay for my follies. As I then had not enough
+to live on and pay for my sons' education, I determined to educate
+them myself, to make them gentlemen and men of feeling. By investing
+my money in the funds I have been enabled to pay off my obligation
+sooner than I had dared to hope, for I took advantage of the
+opportunities afforded by the improvement in prices. If I had kept
+four thousand francs a year for my boys and myself, I could only have
+paid off twenty thousand crowns a year, and it would have taken almost
+eighteen years to achieve my freedom. As it is, I have lately repaid
+the whole of the eleven hundred thousand francs that were due. Thus I
+enjoy the happiness of having made this restitution without doing my
+children the smallest wrong.
+
+"These, monsieur, are the reasons for the payments made to Madame
+Jeanrenaud and her son."
+
+"So Madame d'Espard knew the motives of your retirement?" said the
+judge, controlling the emotion he felt at this narrative.
+
+"Yes, monsieur."
+
+Popinot gave an expressive shrug; he rose and opened the door into the
+next room.
+
+"Noel, you can go," said he to his clerk.
+
+"Monsieur," he went on, "though what you have told me is enough to
+enlighten me thoroughly, I should like to hear what you have to say to
+the other facts put forward in the petition. For instance, you are
+here carrying on a business such as is not habitually undertaken by a
+man of rank."
+
+"We cannot discuss that matter here," said the Marquis, signing to the
+judge to quit the room. "Nouvion," said he to the old man, "I am going
+down to my rooms; the children will soon be in; dine with us."
+
+"Then, Monsieur le Marquis," said Popinot on the stairs, "that is not
+your apartment?"
+
+"No, monsieur; I took those rooms for the office of this undertaking.
+You see," and he pointed to an advertisement sheet, "the History is
+being brought out by one of the most respectable firms in Paris, and
+not by me."
+
+The Marquis showed the lawyer into the ground-floor rooms, saying,
+"This is my apartment."
+
+Popinot was quite touched by the poetry, not aimed at but pervading
+this dwelling. The weather was lovely, the windows were open, the air
+from the garden brought in a wholesome earthy smell, the sunshine
+brightened and gilded the woodwork, of a rather gloomy brown. At the
+sight Popinot made up his mind that a madman would hardly be capable
+of inventing the tender harmony of which he was at that moment
+conscious.
+
+"I should like just such an apartment," thought he. "You think of
+leaving this part of town?" he inquired.
+
+"I hope so," replied the Marquis. "But I shall remain till my younger
+son has finished his studies, and till the children's character is
+thoroughly formed, before introducing them to the world and to their
+mother's circle. Indeed, after giving them the solid information they
+possess, I intend to complete it by taking them to travel to the
+capitals of Europe, that they may see men and things, and become
+accustomed to speak the languages they have learned. And, monsieur,"
+he went on, giving the judge a chair in the drawing-room, "I could not
+discuss the book on China with you, in the presence of an old friend
+of my family, the Comte de Nouvion, who, having emigrated, has
+returned to France without any fortune whatever, and who is my partner
+in this concern, less for my profit than his. Without telling him what
+my motives were, I explained to him that I was as poor as he, but that
+I had enough money to start a speculation in which he might be
+usefully employed. My tutor was the Abbe Grozier, whom Charles X. on
+my recommendation appointed Keeper of the Books at the Arsenal, which
+were returned to that Prince when he was still Monsieur. The Abbe
+Grozier was deeply learned with regard to China, its manners and
+customs; he made me heir to this knowledge at an age when it is
+difficult not to become a fanatic for the things we learn. At five-
+and-twenty I knew Chinese, and I confess I have never been able to
+check myself in an exclusive admiration for that nation, who conquered
+their conquerors, whose annals extend back indisputably to a period
+more remote than mythological or Bible times, who by their immutable
+institutions have preserved the integrity of their empire, whose
+monuments are gigantic, whose administration is perfect, among whom
+revolutions are impossible, who have regarded ideal beauty as a barren
+element in art, who have carried luxury and industry to such a pitch
+that we cannot outdo them in anything, while they are our equals in
+things where we believe ourselves superior.
+
+"Still, monsieur, though I often make a jest of comparing China with
+the present condition of European states, I am not a Chinaman, I am a
+French gentleman. If you entertain any doubts as to the financial side
+of this undertaking, I can prove to you that at this moment we have
+two thousand five hundred subscribers to this work, which is literary,
+iconographical, statistical, and religious; its importance has been
+generally appreciated; our subscribers belong to every nation in
+Europe, we have but twelve hundred in France. Our book will cost about
+three hundred francs, and the Comte de Nouvion will derive from it
+from six to seven thousand francs a year, for his comfort was the real
+motive of the undertaking. For my part, I aimed only at the
+possibility of affording my children some pleasures. The hundred
+thousand francs I have made, quite in spite of myself, will pay for
+their fencing lessons, horses, dress, and theatres, pay the masters
+who teach them accomplishments, procure them canvases to spoil, the
+books they may wish to buy, in short, all the little fancies which a
+father finds so much pleasure in gratifying. If I had been compelled
+to refuse these indulgences to my poor boys, who are so good and work
+so hard, the sacrifice I made to the honor of my name would have been
+doubly painful.
+
+"In point of fact, the twelve years I have spent in retirement from
+the world to educate my children have led to my being completely
+forgotten at Court. I have given up the career of politics; I have
+lost my historical fortune, and all the distinctions which I might
+have acquired and bequeathed to my children; but our house will have
+lost nothing; my boys will be men of mark. Though I have missed the
+senatorship, they will win it nobly by devoting themselves to the
+affairs of the country, and doing such service as is not soon
+forgotten. While purifying the past record of my family, I have
+insured it a glorious future; and is not that to have achieved a noble
+task, though in secret and without glory?--And now, monsieur, have you
+any other explanations to ask me?"
+
+At this instant the tramp of horses was heard in the courtyard.
+
+"Here they are!" said the Marquis. In a moment the two lads,
+fashionably but plainly dressed, came into the room, booted, spurred,
+and gloved, and flourishing their riding-whips. Their beaming faces
+brought in the freshness of the outer air; they were brilliant with
+health. They both grasped their father's hand, giving him a look, as
+friends do, a glance of unspoken affection, and then they bowed coldly
+to the lawyer. Popinot felt that it was quite unnecessary to question
+the Marquis as to his relations towards his sons.
+
+"Have you enjoyed yourselves?" asked the Marquis.
+
+"Yes, father; I knocked down six dolls in twelve shots at the first
+trial!" cried Camille.
+
+"And where did you ride?"
+
+"In the Bois; we saw my mother."
+
+"Did she stop?"
+
+"We were riding so fast just then that I daresay she did not see us,"
+replied the young Count.
+
+"But, then, why did you not go to speak to her?"
+
+"I fancy I have noticed, father, that she does not care that we should
+speak to her in public," said Clement in an undertone. "We are a
+little too big."
+
+The judge's hearing was keen enough to catch these words, which
+brought a cloud to the Marquis' brow. Popinot took pleasure in
+contemplating the picture of the father and his boys. His eyes went
+back with a sense of pathos to M. d'Espard's face; his features, his
+expression, and his manner all expressed honesty in its noblest
+aspect, intellectual and chivalrous honesty, nobility in all its
+beauty.
+
+"You--you see, monsieur," said the Marquis, and his hesitation had
+returned, "you see that Justice may look in--in here at any time--yes,
+at any time--here. If there is anybody crazy, it can only be the
+children--the children--who are a little crazy about their father, and
+the father who is very crazy about his children--but that sort of
+madness rings true."
+
+At this juncture Madame Jeanrenaud's voice was heard in the ante-room,
+and the good woman came bustling in, in spite of the man-servant's
+remonstrances.
+
+"I take no roundabout ways, I can tell you!" she exclaimed. "Yes,
+Monsieur le Marquis, I want to speak to you, this very minute," she
+went on, with a comprehensive bow to the company. "By George, and I am
+too late as it is, since Monsieur the criminal Judge is before me."
+
+"Criminal!" cried the two boys.
+
+"Good reason why I did not find you at your own house, since you are
+here. Well, well! the Law is always to the fore when there is mischief
+brewing.--I came, Monsieur le Marquis, to tell you that my son and I
+are of one mind to give you everything back, since our honor is
+threatened. My son and I, we had rather give you back everything than
+cause you the smallest trouble. My word, they must be as stupid as
+pans without handles to call you a lunatic----"
+
+"A lunatic! My father?" exclaimed the boys, clinging to the Marquis.
+"What is this?"
+
+"Silence, madame," said Popinot.
+
+"Children, leave us," said the Marquis.
+
+The two boys went into the garden without a word, but very much
+alarmed.
+
+"Madame," said the judge, "the moneys paid to you by Monsieur le
+Marquis were legally due, though given to you in virtue of a very far-
+reaching theory of honesty. If all the people possessed of confiscated
+goods, by whatever cause, even if acquired by treachery, were
+compelled to make restitution every hundred and fifty years, there
+would be few legitimate owners in France. The possessions of Jacques
+Coeur enriched twenty noble families; the confiscations pronounced by
+the English to the advantage of their adherents at the time when they
+held a part of France made the fortune of several princely houses.
+
+"Our law allows M. d'Espard to dispose of his income without
+accounting for it, or suffering him to be accused of its
+misapplication. A Commission in Lunacy can only be granted when a
+man's actions are devoid of reason; but in this case, the remittances
+made to you have a reason based on the most sacred and most honorable
+motives. Hence you may keep it all without remorse, and leave the
+world to misinterpret a noble action. In Paris, the highest virtue is
+the object of the foulest calumny. It is, unfortunately, the present
+condition of society that makes the Marquis' actions sublime. For the
+honor of my country, I would that such deeds were regarded as a matter
+of course; but, as things are, I am forced by comparison to look upon
+M. d'Espard as a man to whom a crown should be awarded, rather than
+that he should be threatened with a Commission in Lunacy.
+
+"In the course of a long professional career, I have seen and heard
+nothing that has touched me more deeply than that I have just seen and
+heard. But it is not extraordinary that virtue should wear its noblest
+aspect when it is practised by men of the highest class.
+
+"Having heard me express myself in this way, I hope, Monsieur le
+Marquis, that you feel certain of my silence, and that you will not
+for a moment be uneasy as to the decision pronounced in the case--if
+it comes before the Court."
+
+"There, now! Well said," cried Madame Jeanrenaud. "That is something
+like a judge! Look here, my dear sir, I would hug you if I were not so
+ugly; you speak like a book."
+
+The Marquis held out his hand to Popinot, who gently pressed it with a
+look full of sympathetic comprehension at this great man in private
+life, and the Marquis responded with a pleasant smile. These two
+natures, both so large and full--one commonplace but divinely kind,
+the other lofty and sublime--had fallen into unison gently, without a
+jar, without a flash of passion, as though two pure lights had been
+merged into one. The father of a whole district felt himself worthy to
+grasp the hand of this man who was doubly noble, and the Marquis felt
+in the depths of his soul an instinct that told him that the judge's
+hand was one of those from which the treasures of inexhaustible
+beneficence perennially flow.
+
+"Monsieur le Marquis," added Popinot, with a bow, "I am happy to be
+able to tell you that, from the first words of this inquiry, I
+regarded my clerk as quite unnecessary."
+
+He went close to M. d'Espard, led him into the window-bay, and said:
+"It is time that you should return home, monsieur. I believe that
+Madame la Marquise has acted in this matter under an influence which
+you ought at once to counteract."
+
+Popinot withdrew. He looked back several times as he crossed the
+courtyard, touched by the recollection of the scene. It was one of
+those which take root in the memory to blossom again in certain hours
+when the soul seeks consolation.
+
+"Those rooms would just suit me," said he to himself as he reached
+home. "If M. d'Espard leaves them, I will take up his lease."
+
+
+
+The next day, at about ten in the morning, Popinot, who had written
+out his report the previous evening, made his way to the Palais de
+Justice, intending to have prompt and righteous justice done. As he
+went to the robing-room to put on his gown and bands, the usher told
+him that the President of his Court begged him to attend in his
+private room, where he was waiting for him. Popinot forthwith obeyed.
+
+"Good-morning, my dear Popinot," said the President, "I have been
+waiting for you."
+
+"Why, Monsieur le President, is anything wrong?"
+
+"A mere silly trifle," said the President. "The Keeper of the Seals,
+with whom I had the honor of dining yesterday, led me apart into a
+corner. He had heard that you had been to tea with Madame d'Espard, in
+whose case you were employed to make inquiries. He gave me to
+understand that it would be as well that you should not sit on this
+case----"
+
+"But, Monsieur le President, I can prove that I left Madame d'Espard's
+house at the moment when tea was brought in. And my conscience----"
+
+"Yes, yes; the whole Bench, the two Courts, all the profession know
+you. I need not repeat what I said about you to his Eminence; but, you
+know, 'Caesar's wife must not be suspected.' So we shall not make this
+foolish trifle a matter of discipline, but only of proprieties.
+Between ourselves, it is not on your account, but on that of the
+Bench."
+
+"But, monsieur, if you only knew the kind of woman----" said the
+judge, trying to pull his report out of his pocket.
+
+"I am perfectly certain that you have proceeded in this matter with
+the strictest independence of judgment. I myself, in the provinces,
+have often taken more than a cup of tea with the people I had to try;
+but the fact that the Keeper of the Seals should have mentioned it,
+and that you might be talked about, is enough to make the Court avoid
+any discussion of the matter. Any conflict with public opinion must
+always be dangerous for a constitutional body, even when the right is
+on its side against the public, because their weapons are not equal.
+Journalism may say or suppose anything, and our dignity forbids us
+even to reply. In fact, I have spoken of the matter to your President,
+and M. Camusot has been appointed in your place on your retirement,
+which you will signify. It is a family matter, so to speak. And I now
+beg you to signify your retirement from the case as a personal favor.
+To make up, you will get the Cross of the Legion of Honor, which has
+so long been due to you. I make that my business."
+
+When he saw M. Camusot, a judge recently called to Paris from a
+provincial Court of the same class, as he went forward bowing to the
+Judge and the President, Popinot could not repress an ironical smile.
+This pale, fair young man, full of covert ambition, looked ready to
+hang and unhang, at the pleasure of any earthy king, the innocent and
+the guilty alike, and to follow the example of a Laubardemont rather
+than that of a Mole.
+
+Popinot withdrew with a bow; he scorned to deny the lying accusation
+that had been brought against him.
+
+
+
+PARIS, February 1836.
+
+
+
+
+ADDENDUM
+
+The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.
+
+Note: The Commission in Lunacy is also known as The Interdiction and
+is referred to by that title in certain of the addendums.
+
+Bianchon, Horace
+ Father Goriot
+ The Atheist's Mass
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ The Government Clerks
+ Pierrette
+ A Study of Woman
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Magic Skin
+ A Second Home
+ A Prince of Bohemia
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ The Muse of the Department
+ The Imaginary Mistress
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Betty
+ The Country Parson
+In addition, M. Bianchon narrated the following:
+ Another Study of Woman
+ La Grande Breteche
+
+Bordin
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+
+Camusot de Marville
+ Cousin Pons
+ Jealousies of a Country Town
+ Scenes from a Cuortesan's Life
+
+Desroches (son)
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Start in Life
+ A Woman of Thirty
+ The Government Clerks
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ A Man of Business
+ The Middle Classes
+
+Espard, Charles-Maurice-Marie-Andoche, Comte de Negrepelisse, Marquis d'
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+
+Espard, Chevalier d'
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+
+Espard, Jeanne-Clementine-Athenais de Blamont-Chauvry, Marquise d'
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ Letters of Two Brides
+ Another Study of Woman
+ The Gondreville Mystery
+ The Secrets of a Princess
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ Beatrix
+
+Godeschal, Francois-Claude-Marie
+ Colonel Chabert
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ A Start in Life
+ The Middle Classes
+ Cousin Pons
+
+Grozier, Abbe
+ Lost Illusions
+
+Jeanrenaud
+ Albert Savarus
+
+Mongenod, Frederic
+ The Seamy Side of History
+
+Negrepelisse, De
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+
+Nucingen, Baronne Delphine de
+ Father Goriot
+ The Thirteen
+ Eugenie Grandet
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Melmoth Reconciled
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
+ Modeste Mignon
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ Another Study of Woman
+ A Daughter of Eve
+ The Member for Arcis
+
+Popinot, Jean-Jules
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Honorine
+ The Seamy Side of History
+ The Middle Classes
+
+Rabourdin, Madame
+ The Government Clerks
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of The Commission in Lunacy
+
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