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-The Project Gutenberg Etext of Eve and David by Honore de Balzac
-#52 in our series by Balzac
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-Distinguished Provincial at Paris by Balzac #50[adpapxxx.xxx]1559
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-Eve and David
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-by Honore de Balzac
-
-Translated by Ellen Marriage
-
-February, 1999 [Etext #1639]
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-The Project Gutenberg Etext of Eve and David by Honore de Balzac
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-
-EVE AND DAVID
-
-by HONORE DE BALZAC
-
-
-
-
-Translated By
-Ellen Marriage
-
-
-
-
-PREPARER'S NOTE
-
-Eve and David is part three of a trilogy. Eve and David's story
-begins in part one, Two Poets. Part one also introduces Eve's
-brother, Lucien. Part two, A Distinguished Provincial at Paris,
-centers on Lucien's life in Paris. For part 3 the action once more
-returns to Eve and David in Angouleme. In many references parts 1
-and 3 are combined under the title Lost Illusions.
-
-
-
-
-EVE AND DAVID
-
-
-
-
-Lucien had gone to Paris; and David Sechard, with the courage and
-intelligence of the ox which painters give the Evangelist for
-accompanying symbol, set himself to make the large fortune for which
-he had wished that evening down by the Charente, when he sat with Eve
-by the weir, and she gave him her hand and her heart. He wanted to
-make the money quickly, and less for himself than for Eve's sake and
-Lucien's. He would place his wife amid the elegant and comfortable
-surroundings that were hers by right, and his strong arm should
-sustain her brother's ambitions--this was the programme that he saw
-before his eyes in letters of fire.
-
-Journalism and politics, the immense development of the book trade, of
-literature and of the sciences; the increase of public interest in
-matters touching the various industries in the country; in fact, the
-whole social tendency of the epoch following the establishment of the
-Restoration produced an enormous increase in the demand for paper. The
-supply required was almost ten times as large as the quantity in which
-the celebrated Ouvrard speculated at the outset of the Revolution.
-Then Ouvrard could buy up first the entire stock of paper and then the
-manufacturers; but in the year 1821 there were so many paper-mills in
-France, that no one could hope to repeat his success; and David had
-neither audacity enough nor capital enough for such speculation.
-Machinery for producing paper in any length was just coming into use
-in England. It was one of the most urgent needs of the time,
-therefore, that the paper trade should keep pace with the requirements
-of the French system of civil government, a system by which the right
-of discussion was to be extended to every man, and the whole fabric
-based upon continual expression of individual opinion; a grave
-misfortune, for the nation that deliberates is but little wont to act.
-
-So, strange coincidence! while Lucien was drawn into the great
-machinery of journalism, where he was like to leave his honor and his
-intelligence torn to shreds, David Sechard, at the back of his
-printing-house, foresaw all the practical consequences of the
-increased activity of the periodical press. He saw the direction in
-which the spirit of the age was tending, and sought to find means to
-the required end. He saw also that there was a fortune awaiting the
-discoverer of cheap paper, and the event has justified his
-clearsightedness. Within the last fifteen years, the Patent Office has
-received more than a hundred applications from persons claiming to
-have discovered cheap substances to be employed in the manufacture of
-paper. David felt more than ever convinced that this would be no
-brilliant triumph, it is true, but a useful and immensely profitable
-discovery; and after his brother-in-law went to Paris, he became more
-and more absorbed in the problem which he had set himself to solve.
-
-The expenses of his marriage and of Lucien's journey to Paris had
-exhausted all his resources; he confronted the extreme of poverty at
-the very outset of married life. He had kept one thousand francs for
-the working expenses of the business, and owed a like sum, for which
-he had given a bill to Postel the druggist. So here was a double
-problem for this deep thinker; he must invent a method of making cheap
-paper, and that quickly; he must make the discovery, in fact, in order
-to apply the proceeds to the needs of the household and of the
-business. What words can describe the brain that can forget the cruel
-preoccupations caused by hidden want, by the daily needs of a family
-and the daily drudgery of a printer's business, which requires such
-minute, painstaking care; and soar, with the enthusiasm and
-intoxication of the man of science, into the regions of the unknown in
-quest of a secret which daily eludes the most subtle experiment? And
-the inventor, alas! as will shortly be seen, has plenty of woes to
-endure, besides the ingratitude of the many; idle folk that can do
-nothing themselves tell them, "Such a one is a born inventor; he could
-not do otherwise. He no more deserves credit for his invention than a
-prince for being born to rule! He is simply exercising his natural
-faculties, and his work is its own reward," and the people believe
-them.
-
-Marriage brings profound mental and physical perturbations into a
-girl's life; and if she marries under the ordinary conditions of lower
-middle-class life, she must moreover begin to study totally new
-interests and initiate herself in the intricacies of business. With
-marriage, therefore, she enters upon a phase of her existence when she
-is necessarily on the watch before she can act. Unfortunately, David's
-love for his wife retarded this training; he dared not tell her the
-real state of affairs on the day after their wedding, nor for some
-time afterwards. His father's avarice condemned him to the most
-grinding poverty, but he could not bring himself to spoil the
-honeymoon by beginning his wife's commercial education and prosaic
-apprenticeship to his laborious craft. So it came to pass that
-housekeeping, no less than working expenses, ate up the thousand
-francs, his whole fortune. For four months David gave no thought to
-the future, and his wife remained in ignorance. The awakening was
-terrible! Postel's bill fell due; there was no money to meet it, and
-Eve knew enough of the debt and its cause to give up her bridal
-trinkets and silver.
-
-That evening Eve tried to induce David to talk of their affairs, for
-she had noticed that he was giving less attention to the business and
-more to the problem of which he had once spoken to her. Since the
-first few weeks of married life, in fact, David spent most of his time
-in the shed in the backyard, in the little room where he was wont to
-mould his ink-rollers. Three months after his return to Angouleme, he
-had replaced the old fashioned round ink-balls by rollers made of
-strong glue and treacle, and an ink-table, on which the ink was evenly
-distributed, an improvement so obvious that Cointet Brothers no sooner
-saw it than they adopted the plan themselves.
-
-By the partition wall of this kitchen, as it were, David had set up a
-little furnace with a copper pan, ostensibly to save the cost of fuel
-over the recasting of his rollers, though the moulds had not been used
-twice, and hung there rusting upon the wall. Nor was this all; a solid
-oak door had been put in by his orders, and the walls were lined with
-sheet-iron; he even replaced the dirty window sash by panes of ribbed
-glass, so that no one without could watch him at his work.
-
-When Eve began to speak about the future, he looked uneasily at her,
-and cut her short at the first word by saying, "I know all that you
-must think, child, when you see that the workshop is left to itself,
-and that I am dead, as it were, to all business interests; but see,"
-he continued, bringing her to the window, and pointing to the
-mysterious shed, "there lies our fortune. For some months yet we must
-endure our lot, but let us bear it patiently; leave me to solve the
-problem of which I told you, and all our troubles will be at an end."
-
-David was so good, his devotion was so thoroughly to be taken upon his
-word, that the poor wife, with a wife's anxiety as to daily expenses,
-determined to spare her husband the household cares and to take the
-burden upon herself. So she came down from the pretty blue-and-white
-room, where she sewed and talked contentedly with her mother, took
-possession of one of the two dens at the back of the printing-room,
-and set herself to learn the business routine of typography. Was it
-not heroism in a wife who expected ere long to be a mother?
-
-During the past few months David's workmen had left him one by one;
-there was not enough work for them to do. Cointet Brothers, on the
-other hand, were overwhelmed with orders; they were employing all the
-workmen of the department; the alluring prospect of high wages even
-brought them a few from Bordeaux, more especially apprentices, who
-thought themselves sufficiently expert to cancel their articles and go
-elsewhere. When Eve came to look into the affairs of Sechard's
-printing works, she discovered that he employed three persons in all.
-
-First in order stood Cerizet, an apprentice of Didot's, whom David had
-chosen to train. Most foremen have some one favorite among the great
-numbers of workers under them, and David had brought Cerizet to
-Angouleme, where he had been learning more of the business. Marion, as
-much attached to the house as a watch-dog, was the second; and the
-third was Kolb, an Alsacien, at one time a porter in the employ of the
-Messrs. Didot. Kolb had been drawn for military service, chance
-brought him to Angouleme, and David recognized the man's face at a
-review just as his time was about to expire. Kolb came to see David,
-and was smitten forthwith by the charms of the portly Marion; she
-possessed all the qualities which a man of his class looks for in a
-wife--the robust health that bronzes the cheeks, the strength of a man
-(Marion could lift a form of type with ease), the scrupulous honesty
-on which an Alsacien sets such store, the faithful service which
-bespeaks a sterling character, and finally, the thrift which had saved
-a little sum of a thousand francs, besides a stock of clothing and
-linen, neat and clean, as country linen can be. Marion herself, a big,
-stout woman of thirty-six, felt sufficiently flattered by the
-admiration of a cuirassier, who stood five feet seven in his
-stockings, a well-built warrior, strong as a bastion, and not
-unnaturally suggested that he should become a printer. So, by the time
-Kolb received his full discharge, Marion and David between them had
-transformed him into a tolerably creditable "bear," though their pupil
-could neither read nor write.
-
-Job printing, as it is called, was not so abundant at this season but
-that Cerizet could manage it without help. Cerizet, compositor,
-clicker, and foreman, realized in his person the "phenomenal
-triplicity" of Kant; he set up type, read proof, took orders, and made
-out invoices; but the most part of the time he had nothing to do, and
-used to read novels in his den at the back of the workshop while he
-waited for an order for a bill-head or a trade circular. Marion,
-trained by old Sechard, prepared and wetted down the paper, helped
-Kolb with the printing, hung the sheets to dry, and cut them to size;
-yet cooked the dinner, none the less, and did her marketing very early
-of a morning.
-
-Eve told Cerizet to draw out a balance-sheet for the last six months,
-and found that the gross receipts amounted to eight hundred francs. On
-the other hand, wages at the rate of three francs per day--two francs
-to Cerizet, and one to Kolb--reached a total of six hundred francs;
-and as the goods supplied for the work printed and delivered amounted
-to some hundred odd francs, it was clear to Eve that David had been
-carrying on business at a loss during the first half-year of their
-married life. There was nothing to show for rent, nothing for Marion's
-wages, nor for the interest on capital represented by the plant, the
-license, and the ink; nothing, finally, by way of allowance for the
-host of things included in the technical expression "wear and tear," a
-word which owes its origin to the cloths and silks which are used to
-moderate the force of the impression, and to save wear to the type; a
-square of stuff (the blanket) being placed between the platen and the
-sheet of paper in the press.
-
-Eve made a rough calculation of the resources of the printing office
-and of the output, and saw how little hope there was for a business
-drained dry by the all-devouring activity of the brothers Cointet; for
-by this time the Cointets were not only contract printers to the town
-and the prefecture, and printers to the Diocese by special appointment
---they were paper-makers and proprietors of a newspaper to boot. That
-newspaper, sold two years ago by the Sechards, father and son, for
-twenty-two thousand francs, was now bringing in eighteen thousand
-francs per annum. Eve began to understand the motives lurking beneath
-the apparent generosity of the brothers Cointet; they were leaving the
-Sechard establishment just sufficient work to gain a pittance, but not
-enough to establish a rival house.
-
-When Eve took the management of the business, she began by taking
-stock. She set Kolb and Marion and Cerizet to work, and the workshop
-was put to rights, cleaned out, and set in order. Then one evening
-when David came in from a country excursion, followed by an old woman
-with a huge bundle tied up in a cloth, Eve asked counsel of him as to
-the best way of turning to profit the odds and ends left them by old
-Sechard, promising that she herself would look after the business.
-Acting upon her husband's advice, Mme. Sechard sorted all the remnants
-of paper which she found, and printed old popular legends in double
-columns upon a single sheet, such as peasants paste on their walls,
-the histories of The Wandering Jew, Robert the Devil, La Belle
-Maguelonne and sundry miracles. Eve sent Kolb out as a hawker.
-
-Cerizet had not a moment to spare now; he was composing the naive
-pages, with the rough cuts that adorned them, from morning to night;
-Marion was able to manage the taking off; and all domestic cares fell
-to Mme. Chardon, for Eve was busy coloring the prints. Thanks to
-Kolb's activity and honesty, Eve sold three thousand broad sheets at a
-penny apiece, and made three hundred francs in all at a cost of thirty
-francs.
-
-But when every peasant's hut and every little wine-shop for twenty
-leagues round was papered with these legends, a fresh speculation must
-be discovered; the Alsacien could not go beyond the limits of the
-department. Eve, turning over everything in the whole printing house,
-had found a collection of figures for printing a "Shepherd's
-Calendar," a kind of almanac meant for those who cannot read,
-letterpress being replaced by symbols, signs, and pictures in colored
-inks, red, black and blue. Old Sechard, who could neither read nor
-write himself, had made a good deal of money at one time by bringing
-out an almanac in hieroglyph. It was in book form, a single sheet
-folded to make one hundred and twenty-eight pages.
-
-Thoroughly satisfied with the success of the broad sheets, a piece of
-business only undertaken by country printing offices, Mme. Sechard
-invested all the proceeds in the Shepherd's Calendar, and began it
-upon a large scale. Millions of copies of this work are sold annually
-in France. It is printed upon even coarser paper than the Almanac of
-Liege, a ream (five hundred sheets) costing in the first instance
-about four francs; while the printed sheets sell at the rate of a
-halfpenny apiece--twenty-five francs per ream.
-
-Mme. Sechard determined to use one hundred reams for the first
-impression; fifty thousand copies would bring in two thousand francs.
-A man so deeply absorbed in his work as David in his researches is
-seldom observant; yet David, taking a look round his workshop, was
-astonished to hear the groaning of a press and to see Cerizet always
-on his feet, setting up type under Mme. Sechard's direction. There was
-a pretty triumph for Eve on the day when David came in to see what she
-was doing, and praised the idea, and thought the calendar an excellent
-stroke of business. Furthermore, David promised to give advice in the
-matter of colored inks, for an almanac meant to appeal to the eye; and
-finally, he resolved to recast the ink-rollers himself in his
-mysterious workshop, so as to help his wife as far as he could in her
-important little enterprise.
-
-But just as the work began with strenuous industry, there came letters
-from Lucien in Paris, heart-sinking letters that told his mother and
-sister and brother-in-law of his failure and distress; and when Eve,
-Mme. Chardon, and David each secretly sent money to their poet, it
-must be plain to the reader that the three hundred francs they sent
-were like their very blood. The overwhelming news, the disheartening
-sense that work as bravely as she might, she made so little, left Eve
-looking forward with a certain dread to an event which fills the cup
-of happiness to the full. The time was coming very near now, and to
-herself she said, "If my dear David has not reached the end of his
-researches before my confinement, what will become of us? And who will
-look after our poor printing office and the business that is growing
-up?"
-
-The Shepherd's Calendar ought by rights to have been ready before the
-1st of January, but Cerizet was working unaccountably slowly; all the
-work of composing fell to him; and Mme. Sechard, knowing so little,
-could not find fault, and was fain to content herself with watching
-the young Parisian.
-
-Cerizet came from the great Foundling Hospital in Paris. He had been
-apprenticed to the MM. Didot, and between the ages of fourteen and
-seventeen he was David Sechard's fanatical worshiper. David put him
-under one of the cleverest workmen, and took him for his copy-holder,
-his page. Cerizet's intelligence naturally interested David; he won
-the lad's affection by procuring amusements now and again for him, and
-comforts from which he was cut off by poverty. Nature had endowed
-Cerizet with an insignificant, rather pretty little countenance, red
-hair, and a pair of dull blue eyes; he had come to Angouleme and
-brought the manners of the Parisian street-boy with him. He was
-formidable by reason of a quick, sarcastic turn and a spiteful
-disposition. Perhaps David looked less strictly after him in
-Angouleme; or, perhaps, as the lad grew older, his mentor put more
-trust in him, or in the sobering influences of a country town; but be
-that as it may, Cerizet (all unknown to his sponsor) was going
-completely to the bad, and the printer's apprentice was acting the
-part of a Don Juan among little work girls. His morality, learned in
-Paris drinking-saloons, laid down the law of self-interest as the sole
-rule of guidance; he knew, moreover, that next year he would be "drawn
-for a soldier," to use the popular expression, saw that he had no
-prospects, and ran into debt, thinking that soon he should be in the
-army, and none of his creditors would run after him. David still
-possessed some ascendency over the young fellow, due not to his
-position as master, nor yet to the interest that he had taken in his
-pupil, but to the great intellectual power which the sometime street-
-boy fully recognized.
-
-Before long Cerizet began to fraternize with the Cointets' workpeople,
-drawn to them by the mutual attraction of blouse and jacket, and the
-class feeling, which is, perhaps, strongest of all in the lowest ranks
-of society. In their company Cerizet forgot the little good doctrine
-which David had managed to instil into him; but, nevertheless, when
-the others joked the boy about the presses in his workshop ("old
-sabots," as the "bears" contemptuously called them), and showed him
-the magnificent machines, twelve in number, now at work in the
-Cointets' great printing office, where the single wooden press was
-only used for experiments, Cerizet would stand up for David and fling
-out at the braggarts.
-
-"My gaffer will go farther with his 'sabots' than yours with their
-cast-iron contrivances that turn out mass books all day long," he
-would boast. "He is trying to find out a secret that will lick all the
-printing offices in France and Navarre."
-
-"And meantime you take your orders from a washer-woman, you snip of a
-foreman, on two francs a day."
-
-"She is pretty though," retorted Cerizet; "it is better to have her to
-look at than the phizes of your gaffers."
-
-"And do you live by looking at his wife?"
-
-From the region of the wineshop, or from the door of the printing
-office, where these bickerings took place, a dim light began to break
-in upon the brothers Cointet as to the real state of things in the
-Sechard establishment. They came to hear of Eve's experiment, and held
-it expedient to stop these flights at once, lest the business should
-begin to prosper under the poor young wife's management.
-
-"Let us give her a rap over the knuckles, and disgust her with the
-business," said the brothers Cointet.
-
-One of the pair, the practical printer, spoke to Cerizet, and asked
-him to do the proof-reading for them by piecework, to relieve their
-reader, who had more than he could manage. So it came to pass that
-Cerizet earned more by a few hours' work of an evening for the
-brothers Cointet than by a whole day's work for David Sechard. Other
-transactions followed; the Cointets seeing no small aptitude in
-Cerizet, he was told that it was a pity that he should be in a
-position so little favorable to his interests.
-
-"You might be foreman some day in a big printing office, making six
-francs a day," said one of the Cointets one day, "and with your
-intelligence you might come to have a share in the business."
-
-"Where is the use of my being a good foreman?" returned Cerizet. "I am
-an orphan, I shall be drawn for the army next year, and if I get a bad
-number who is there to pay some one else to take my place?"
-
-"If you make yourself useful," said the well-to-do printer, "why
-should not somebody advance the money?"
-
-"It won't be my gaffer in any case!" said Cerizet.
-
-"Pooh! Perhaps by that time he will have found out the secret."
-
-The words were spoken in a way that could not but rouse the worst
-thoughts in the listener; and Cerizet gave the papermaker and printer
-a very searching look.
-
-"I do not know what he is busy about," he began prudently, as the
-master said nothing, "but he is not the kind of man to look for
-capitals in the lower case!"
-
-"Look here, my friend," said the printer, taking up half-a-dozen
-sheets of the diocesan prayer-book and holding them out to Cerizet,
-"if you can correct these for us by to-morrow, you shall have eighteen
-francs to-morrow for them. We are not shabby here; we put our
-competitor's foreman in the way of making money. As a matter of fact,
-we might let Mme. Sechard go too far to draw back with her Shepherd's
-Calendar, and ruin her; very well, we give you permission to tell her
-that we are bringing out a Shepherd's Calendar of our own, and to call
-her attention too to the fact that she will not be the first in the
-field."
-
-Cerizet's motive for working so slowly on the composition of the
-almanac should be clear enough by this time.
-
-When Eve heard that the Cointets meant to spoil her poor little
-speculation, dread seized upon her; at first she tried to see a proof
-of attachment in Cerizet's hypocritical warning of competition; but
-before long she saw signs of an over-keen curiosity in her sole
-compositor--the curiosity of youth, she tried to think.
-
-"Cerizet," she said one morning, "you stand about on the threshold,
-and wait for M. Sechard in the passage, to pry into his private
-affairs; when he comes out into the yard to melt down the rollers, you
-are there looking at him, instead of getting on with the almanac.
-These things are not right, especially when you see that I, his wife,
-respect his secrets, and take so much trouble on myself to leave him
-free to give himself up to his work. If you had not wasted time, the
-almanac would be finished by now, and Kolb would be selling it, and
-the Cointets could have done us no harm."
-
-"Eh! madame," answered Cerizet. "Here am I doing five francs' worth of
-composing for two francs a day, and don't you think that that is
-enough? Why, if I did not read proofs of an evening for the Cointets,
-I might feed myself on husks."
-
-"You are turning ungrateful early," said Eve, deeply hurt, not so much
-by Cerizet's grumbling as by his coarse tone, threatening attitude,
-and aggressive stare; "you will get on in life."
-
-"Not with a woman to order me about though, for it is not often that
-the month has thirty days in it then."
-
-Feeling wounded in her womanly dignity, Eve gave Cerizet a withering
-look and went upstairs again. At dinner-time she spoke to David.
-
-"Are you sure, dear, of that little rogue Cerizet?"
-
-"Cerizet!" said David. "Why, he was my youngster; I trained him, I
-took him on as my copy-holder. I put him to composing; anything that
-he is he owes to me, in fact! You might as well ask a father if he is
-sure of his child."
-
-Upon this, Eve told her husband that Cerizet was reading proofs for
-the Cointets.
-
-"Poor fellow! he must live," said David, humbled by the consciousness
-that he had not done his duty as a master.
-
-"Yes, but there is a difference, dear, between Kolb and Cerizet--Kolb
-tramps about twenty leagues every day, spends fifteen or twenty sous,
-and brings us back seven and eight and sometimes nine francs of sales;
-and when his expenses are paid, he never asks for more than his wages.
-Kolb would sooner cut off his hand than work a lever for the Cointets;
-Kolb would not peer among the things that you throw out into the yard
-if people offered him a thousand crowns to do it; but Cerizet picks
-them up and looks at them."
-
-It is hard for noble natures to think evil, to believe in ingratitude;
-only through rough experience do they learn the extent of human
-corruption; and even when there is nothing left them to learn in this
-kind, they rise to an indulgence which is the last degree of contempt.
-
-"Pooh! pure Paris street-boy's curiosity," cried David.
-
-"Very well, dear, do me the pleasure to step downstairs and look at
-the work done by this boy of yours, and tell me then whether he ought
-not to have finished our almanac this month."
-
-David went into the workshop after dinner, and saw that the calendar
-should have been set up in a week. Then, when he heard that the
-Cointets were bringing out a similar almanac, he came to the rescue.
-He took command of the printing office, Kolb helped at home instead of
-selling broadsheets. Kolb and Marion pulled off the impressions from
-one form while David worked another press with Cerizet, and
-superintended the printing in various inks. Every sheet must be
-printed four separate times, for which reason none but small houses
-will attempt to produce a Shepherd's calendar, and that only in the
-country where labor is cheap, and the amount of capital employed in
-the business is so small that the interest amounts to little.
-Wherefore, a press which turns out beautiful work cannot compete in
-the printing of such sheets, coarse though they may be.
-
-So, for the first time since old Sechard retired, two presses were at
-work in the old house. The calendar was, in its way, a masterpiece;
-but Eve was obliged to sell it for less than a halfpenny, for the
-Cointets were supplying hawkers at the rate of three centimes per
-copy. Eve made no loss on the copies sold to hawkers; on Kolb's sales,
-made directly, she gained; but her little speculation was spoiled.
-Cerizet saw that his fair employer distrusted him; in his own
-conscience he posed as the accuser, and said to himself, "You suspect
-me, do you? I will have my revenge," for the Paris street-boy is made
-on this wise. Cerizet accordingly took pay out of all proportion to
-the work of proof-reading done for the Cointets, going to their office
-every evening for the sheets, and returning them in the morning. He
-came to be on familiar terms with them through the daily chat, and at
-length saw a chance of escaping the military service, a bait held out
-to him by the brothers. So far from requiring prompting from the
-Cointets, he was the first to propose the espionage and exploitation
-of David's researches.
-
-Eve saw how little she could depend upon Cerizet, and to find another
-Kolb was simply impossible; she made up her mind to dismiss her one
-compositor, for the insight of a woman who loves told her that Cerizet
-was a traitor; but as this meant a deathblow to the business, she took
-a man's resolution. She wrote to M. Metivier, with whom David and the
-Cointets and almost every papermaker in the department had business
-relations, and asked him to put the following advertisement into a
-trade paper:
-
-"FOR SALE, as a going concern, a Printing Office, with License and
-Plant; situated at Angouleme. Apply for particulars to M. Metivier,
-Rue Serpente."
-
-The Cointets saw the advertisement. "That little woman has a head on
-her shoulders," they said. "It is time that we took her business under
-our own control, by giving her enough work to live upon; we might find
-a real competitor in David's successor; it is in our interest to keep
-an eye upon that workshop."
-
-The Cointets went to speak to David Sechard, moved thereto by this
-thought. Eve saw them, knew that her stratagem had succeeded at once,
-and felt a thrill of the keenest joy. They stated their proposal. They
-had more work than they could undertake, their presses could not keep
-pace with the work, would M. Sechard print for them? They had sent to
-Bordeaux for workmen, and could find enough to give full employment to
-David's three presses.
-
-"Gentlemen," said Eve, while Cerizet went across to David's workshop
-to announce the two printers, "while my husband was with the MM. Didot
-he came to know of excellent workers, honest and industrious men; he
-will choose his successor, no doubt, from among the best of them. If
-he sold his business outright for some twenty thousand francs, it
-might bring us in a thousand francs per annum; that would be better
-than losing a thousand yearly over such trade as you leave us. Why did
-you envy us the poor little almanac speculation, especially as we have
-always brought it out?"
-
-"Oh, why did you not give us notice, madame? We would not have
-interfered with you," one of the brothers answered blandly (he was
-known as the "tall Cointet").
-
-"Oh, come gentlemen! you only began your almanac after Cerizet told
-you that I was bringing out mine."
-
-She spoke briskly, looking full at "the tall Cointet" as she spoke. He
-lowered his eyes; Cerizet's treachery was proven to her.
-
-This brother managed the business and the paper-mill; he was by far
-the cleverer man of business of the two. Jean showed no small ability
-in the conduct of the printing establishment, but in intellectual
-capacity he might be said to take colonel's rank, while Boniface was a
-general. Jean left the command to Boniface. This latter was thin and
-spare in person; his face, sallow as an altar candle, was mottled with
-reddish patches; his lips were pinched; there was something in his
-eyes that reminded you of a cat's eyes. Boniface Cointet never excited
-himself; he would listen to the grossest insults with the serenity of
-a bigot, and reply in a smooth voice. He went to mass, he went to
-confession, he took the sacrament. Beneath his caressing manners,
-beneath an almost spiritless look, lurked the tenacity and ambition of
-the priest, and the greed of the man of business consumed with a
-thirst for riches and honors. In the year 1820 "tall Cointet" wanted
-all that the bourgeoisie finally obtained by the Revolution of 1830.
-In his heart he hated the aristocrats, and in religion he was
-indifferent; he was as much or as little of a bigot as Bonaparte was a
-member of the Mountain; yet his vertebral column bent with a
-flexibility wonderful to behold before the noblesse and the official
-hierarchy; for the powers that be, he humbled himself, he was meek and
-obsequious. One final characteristic will describe him for those who
-are accustomed to dealings with all kinds of men, and can appreciate
-its value--Cointet concealed the expression of his eyes by wearing
-colored glasses, ostensibly to preserve his sight from the reflection
-of the sunlight on the white buildings in the streets; for Angouleme,
-being set upon a hill, is exposed to the full glare of the sun. Tall
-Cointet was really scarcely above middle height; he looked much taller
-than he actually was by reason of the thinness, which told of overwork
-and a brain in continual ferment. His lank, sleek gray hair, cut in
-somewhat ecclesiastical fashion; the black trousers, black stockings,
-black waistcoat, and long puce-colored greatcoat (styled a levite in
-the south), all completed his resemblance to a Jesuit.
-
-Boniface was called "tall Cointet" to distinguish him from his
-brother, "fat Cointet," and the nicknames expressed a difference in
-character as well as a physical difference between a pair of equally
-redoubtable personages. As for Jean Cointet, a jolly, stout fellow,
-with a face from a Flemish interior, colored by the southern sun of
-Angouleme, thick-set, short and paunchy as Sancho Panza; with a smile
-on his lips and a pair of sturdy shoulders, he was a striking contrast
-to his older brother. Nor was the difference only physical and
-intellectual. Jean might almost be called Liberal in politics; he
-belonged to the Left Centre, only went to mass on Sundays, and lived
-on a remarkably good understanding with the Liberal men of business.
-There were those in L'Houmeau who said that this divergence between
-the brothers was more apparent than real. Tall Cointet turned his
-brother's seeming good nature to advantage very skilfully. Jean was
-his bludgeon. It was Jean who gave all the hard words; it was Jean who
-conducted the executions which little beseemed the elder brother's
-benevolence. Jean took the storms department; he would fly into a
-rage, and propose terms that nobody would think of accepting, to pave
-the way for his brother's less unreasonable propositions. And by such
-policy the pair attained their ends, sooner or later.
-
-Eve, with a woman's tact, had soon divined the characters of the two
-brothers; she was on her guard with foes so formidable. David,
-informed beforehand of everything by his wife, lent a profoundly
-inattentive mind to his enemies' proposals.
-
-"Come to an understanding with my wife," he said, as he left the
-Cointets in the office and went back to his laboratory. "Mme. Sechard
-knows more about the business than I do myself. I am interested in
-something that will pay better than this poor place; I hope to find a
-way to retrieve the losses that I have made through you----"
-
-"And how?" asked the fat Cointet, chuckling.
-
-Eve gave her husband a look that meant, "Be careful!"
-
-"You will be my tributaries," said David, "and all other consumers of
-papers besides."
-
-"Then what are you investigating?" asked the hypocritical Boniface
-Cointet.
-
-Boniface's question slipped out smoothly and insinuatingly, and again
-Eve's eyes implored her husband to give an answer that was no answer,
-or to say nothing at all.
-
-"I am trying to produce paper at fifty per cent less than the present
-cost price," and he went. He did not see the glances exchanged between
-the brothers. "That is an inventor, a man of his build cannot sit with
-his hands before him.--Let us exploit him," said Boniface's eyes. "How
-can we do it?" said Jean's.
-
-Mme. Sechard spoke. "David treats me just in the same way," she said.
-"If I show any curiosity, he feels suspicious of my name, no doubt,
-and out comes that remark of his; it is only a formula, after all."
-
-"If your husband can work out the formula, he will certainly make a
-fortune more quickly than by printing; I am not surprised that he
-leaves the business to itself," said Boniface, looking across the
-empty workshop, where Kolb, seated upon a wetting-board, was rubbing
-his bread with a clove of garlic; "but it would not suit our views to
-see this place in the hands of an energetic, pushing, ambitious
-competitor," he continued, "and perhaps it might be possible to arrive
-at an understanding. Suppose, for instance, that you consented for a
-consideration to allow us to put in one of our own men to work your
-presses for our benefit, but nominally for you; the thing is sometimes
-done in Paris. We would find the fellow work enough to enable him to
-rent your place and pay you well, and yet make a profit for himself."
-
-"It depends on the amount," said Eve Sechard. "What is your offer?"
-she added, looking at Boniface to let him see that she understood his
-scheme perfectly well.
-
-"What is your own idea?" Jean Cointet put in briskly.
-
-"Three thousand francs for six months," said she.
-
-"Why, my dear young lady, you were proposing to sell the place
-outright for twenty thousand francs," said Boniface with much suavity.
-"The interest on twenty thousand francs is only twelve hundred francs
-per annum at six per cent."
-
-For a moment Eve was thrown into confusion; she saw the need for
-discretion in matters of business.
-
-"You wish to use our presses and our name as well," she said; "and, as
-I have already shown you, I can still do a little business. And then
-we pay rent to M. Sechard senior, who does not load us with presents."
-
-After two hours of debate, Eve obtained two thousand francs for six
-months, one thousand to be paid in advance. When everything was
-concluded, the brothers informed her that they meant to put in Cerizet
-as lessee of the premises. In spite of herself, Eve started with
-surprise.
-
-"Isn't it better to have somebody who knows the workshop?" asked the
-fat Cointet.
-
-Eve made no reply; she took leave of the brothers, vowing inwardly to
-look after Cerizet.
-
-"Well, here are our enemies in the place!" laughed David, when Eve
-brought out the papers for his signature at dinner-time.
-
-"Pshaw!" said she, "I will answer for Kolb and Marion; they alone
-would look after things. Besides, we shall be making an income of four
-thousand francs from the workshop, which only costs us money as it is;
-and looking forward, I see a year in which you may realize your
-hopes."
-
-"You were born to be the wife of a scientific worker, as you said by
-the weir," said David, grasping her hand tenderly.
-
-But though the Sechard household had money sufficient that winter,
-they were none the less subjected to Cerizet's espionage, and all
-unconsciously became dependent upon Boniface Cointet.
-
-"We have them now!" the manager of the paper-mill had exclaimed as he
-left the house with his brother the printer. "They will begin to
-regard the rent as regular income; they will count upon it and run
-themselves into debt. In six months' time we will decline to renew the
-agreement, and then we shall see what this man of genius has at the
-bottom of his mind; we will offer to help him out of his difficulty by
-taking him into partnership and exploiting his discovery."
-
-Any shrewd man of business who should have seen tall Cointet's face as
-he uttered those words, "taking him into partnership," would have
-known that it behooves a man to be even more careful in the selection
-of the partner whom he takes before the Tribunal of Commerce than in
-the choice of the wife whom he weds at the Mayor's office. Was it not
-enough already, and more than enough, that the ruthless hunters were
-on the track of the quarry? How should David and his wife, with Kolb
-and Marion to help them, escape the toils of a Boniface Cointet?
-
-A draft for five hundred francs came from Lucien, and this, with
-Cerizet's second payment, enabled them to meet all the expenses of
-Mme. Sechard's confinement. Eve and the mother and David had thought
-that Lucien had forgotten them, and rejoiced over this token of
-remembrance as they rejoiced over his success, for his first exploits
-in journalism made even more noise in Angouleme than in Paris.
-
-But David, thus lulled into a false security, was to receive a
-staggering blow, a cruel letter from Lucien:--
-
- Lucien to David.
-
- "MY DEAR DAVID,--I have drawn three bills on you, and negotiated
- them with Metivier; they fall due in one, two, and three months'
- time. I took this hateful course, which I know will burden you
- heavily, because the one alternative was suicide. I will explain
- my necessity some time, and I will try besides to send the amounts
- as the bills fall due.
-
- "Burn this letter; say nothing to my mother and sister; for, I
- confess it, I have counted upon you, upon the heroism known so
- well to your despairing brother,
-
- "LUCIEN DE RUBEMPRE."
-
-By this time Eve had recovered from her confinement.
-
-"Your brother, poor fellow, is in desperate straits," David told her.
-"I have sent him three bills for a thousand francs at one, two, and
-three months; just make a note of them," and he went out into the
-fields to escape his wife's questionings.
-
-But Eve had felt very uneasy already. It was six months since Lucien
-had written to them. She talked over the news with her mother till her
-forebodings grew so dark that she made up her mind to dissipate them.
-She would take a bold step in her despair.
-
-Young M. de Rastignac had come to spend a few days with his family. He
-had spoken of Lucien in terms that set Paris gossip circulating in
-Angouleme, till at last it reached the journalist's mother and sister.
-Eve went to Mme. de Rastignac, asked the favor of an interview with
-her son, spoke of all her fears, and asked him for the truth. In a
-moment Eve heard of her brother's connection with the actress Coralie,
-of his duel with Michel Chrestien, arising out of his own treacherous
-behavior to Daniel d'Arthez; she received, in short, a version of
-Lucien's history, colored by the personal feeling of a clever and
-envious dandy. Rastignac expressed sincere admiration for the
-abilities so terribly compromised, and a patriotic fear for the future
-of a native genius; spite and jealousy masqueraded as pity and
-friendliness. He spoke of Lucien's blunders. It seemed that Lucien had
-forfeited the favor of a very great person, and that a patent
-conferring the right to bear the name and arms of Rubempre had
-actually been made out and subsequently torn up.
-
-"If your brother, madame, had been well advised, he would have been on
-the way to honors, and Mme. de Bargeton's husband by this time; but
-what can you expect? He deserted her and insulted her. She is now Mme.
-la Comtesse Sixte du Chatelet, to her own great regret, for she loved
-Lucien."
-
-"Is it possible!" exclaimed Mme. Sechard.
-
-"Your brother is like a young eagle, blinded by the first rays of
-glory and luxury. When an eagle falls, who can tell how far he may
-sink before he drops to the bottom of some precipice? The fall of a
-great man is always proportionately great."
-
-Eve came away with a great dread in her heart; those last words
-pierced her like an arrow. She had been wounded to the quick. She said
-not a word to anybody, but again and again a tear rolled down her
-cheeks, and fell upon the child at her breast. So hard is it to give
-up illusions sanctioned by family feeling, illusions that have grown
-with our growth, that Eve had doubted Eugene de Rastignac. She would
-rather hear a true friend's account of her brother. Lucien had given
-them d'Arthez's address in the days when he was full of enthusiasm for
-the brotherhood; she wrote a pathetic letter to d'Arthez, and received
-the following reply:--
-
- D'Arthez to Mme. Sechard.
-
- "MADAME,--You ask me to tell you the truth about the life that
- your brother is leading in Paris; you are anxious for
- enlightenment as to his prospects; and to encourage a frank answer
- on my part, you repeat certain things that M. de Rastignac has
- told you, asking me if they are true. With regard to the purely
- personal matter, madame, M. de Rastignac's confidences must be
- corrected in Lucien's favor. Your brother wrote a criticism of my
- book, and brought it to me in remorse, telling me that he could
- not bring himself to publish it, although obedience to the orders
- of his party might endanger one who was very dear to him. Alas!
- madame, a man of letters must needs comprehend all passions, since
- it is his pride to express them; I understood that where a
- mistress and a friend are involved, the friend is inevitably
- sacrificed. I smoothed your brother's way; I corrected his
- murderous article myself, and gave it my full approval.
-
- "You ask whether Lucien has kept my friendship and esteem; to this
- it is difficult to make an answer. Your brother is on a road that
- leads him to ruin. At this moment I still feel sorry for him;
- before long I shall have forgotten him, of set purpose, not so
- much on account of what he has done already as for that which he
- inevitably will do. Your Lucien is not a poet, he has the poetic
- temper; he dreams, he does not think; he spends himself in
- emotion, he does not create. He is, in fact--permit me to say it--
- a womanish creature that loves to shine, the Frenchman's great
- failing. Lucien will always sacrifice his best friend for the
- pleasure of displaying his own wit. He would not hesitate to sign
- a pact with the Devil to-morrow if so he might secure a few years
- of luxurious and glorious life. Nay, has he not done worse
- already? He has bartered his future for the short-lived delights
- of living openly with an actress. So far, he has not seen the
- dangers of his position; the girl's youth and beauty and devotion
- (for she worships him) have closed his eyes to the truth; he
- cannot see that no glory or success or fortune can induce the
- world to accept the position. Very well, as it is now, so it will
- be with each new temptation--your brother will not look beyond the
- enjoyment of the moment. Do not be alarmed: Lucien will never go
- so far as a crime, he has not the strength of character; but he
- would take the fruits of a crime, he would share the benefit but
- not the risk--a thing that seems abhorrent to the whole world,
- even to scoundrels. Oh, he would despise himself, he would repent;
- but bring him once more to the test, and he would fail again; for
- he is weak of will, he cannot resist the allurements of pleasure,
- nor forego the least of his ambitions. He is indolent, like all
- who would fain be poets; he thinks it clever to juggle with the
- difficulties of life instead of facing and overcoming them. He
- will be brave at one time, cowardly at another, and deserves
- neither credit for his courage, nor blame for his cowardice.
- Lucien is like a harp with strings that are slackened or tightened
- by the atmosphere. He might write a great book in a glad or angry
- mood, and care nothing for the success that he had desired for so
- long.
-
- "When he first came to Paris he fell under the influence of an
- unprincipled young fellow, and was dazzled by his companion's
- adroitness and experience in the difficulties of a literary life.
- This juggler completely bewitched Lucien; he dragged him into a
- life which a man cannot lead and respect himself, and, unluckily
- for Lucien, love shed its magic over the path. The admiration that
- is given too readily is a sign of want of judgment; a poet ought
- not to be paid in the same coin as a dancer on the tight-rope. We
- all felt hurt when intrigue and literary rascality were preferred
- to the courage and honor of those who counseled Lucien rather to
- face the battle than to filch success, to spring down into the
- arena rather than become a trumpet in the orchestra.
-
- "Society, madame, oddly enough, shows plentiful indulgence to
- young men of Lucien's stamp; they are popular, the world is
- fascinated by their external gifts and good looks. Nothing is
- asked of them, all their sins are forgiven; they are treated like
- perfect natures, others are blind to their defects, they are the
- world's spoiled children. And, on the other hand, the world is
- stern beyond measure to strong and complete natures. Perhaps in
- this apparently flagrant injustice society acts sublimely, taking
- a harlequin at his just worth, asking nothing of him but
- amusement, promptly forgetting him; and asking divine great deeds
- of those before whom she bends the knee. Everything is judged by
- laws of its being; the diamond must be flawless; the ephemeral
- creation of fashion may be flimsy, bizarre, inconsequent. So
- Lucien may perhaps succeed to admiration in spite of his mistakes;
- he has only to profit by some happy vein or to be among good
- companions; but if an evil angel crosses his path, he will go to
- the very depths of hell. 'Tis a brilliant assemblage of good
- qualities embroidered upon too slight a tissue; time wears the
- flowers away till nothing but the web is left; and if that is poor
- stuff, you behold a rag at the last. So long as Lucien is young,
- people will like him; but where will he be as a man of thirty?
- That is the question which those who love him sincerely are bound
- to ask themselves. If I alone had come to think in this way of
- Lucien, I might perhaps have spared you the pain which my plain
- speaking will give you; but to evade the questions put by your
- anxiety, and to answer a cry of anguish like your letter with
- commonplaces, seemed to me alike unworthy of you and of me, whom
- you esteem too highly; and besides, those of my friends who knew
- Lucien are unanimous in their judgment. So it appeared to me to be
- a duty to put the truth before you, terrible though it may be.
- Anything may be expected of Lucien, anything good or evil. That is
- our opinion, and this letter is summed up in that sentence. If the
- vicissitudes of his present way of life (a very wretched and
- slippery one) should bring the poet back to you, use all your
- influence to keep him among you; for until his character has
- acquired stability, Paris will not be safe for him. He used to
- speak of you, you and your husband, as his guardian angels; he has
- forgotten you, no doubt; but he will remember you again when
- tossed by tempest, with no refuge left to him but his home. Keep
- your heart for him, madame; he will need it.
-
- "Permit me, madame, to convey to you the expression of the sincere
- respect of a man to whom your rare qualities are known, a man who
- honors your mother's fears so much, that he desires to style
- himself your devoted servant,
-
- "D'ARTHEZ."
-
-
-
-Two days after the letter came, Eve was obliged to find a wet-nurse;
-her milk had dried up. She had made a god of her brother; now, in her
-eyes, he was depraved through the exercise of his noblest faculties;
-he was wallowing in the mire. She, noble creature that she was, was
-incapable of swerving from honesty and scrupulous delicacy, from all
-the pious traditions of the hearth, which still burns so clearly and
-sheds its light abroad in quiet country homes. Then David had been
-right in his forecasts! The leaden hues of grief overspread Eve's
-white brow. She told her husband her secret in one of the pellucid
-talks in which married lovers tell everything to each other. The tones
-of David's voice brought comfort. Though the tears stood in his eyes
-when he knew that grief had dried his wife's fair breast, and knew
-Eve's despair that she could not fulfil a mother's duties, he held out
-reassuring hopes.
-
-"Your brother's imagination has let him astray, you see, child. It is
-so natural that a poet should wish for blue and purple robes, and
-hurry as eagerly after festivals as he does. It is a bird that loves
-glitter and luxury with such simple sincerity, that God forgives him
-if man condemns him for it."
-
-"But he is draining our lives!" exclaimed poor Eve.
-
-"He is draining our lives just now, but only a few months ago he saved
-us by sending us the first fruits of his earnings," said the good
-David. He had the sense to see that his wife was in despair, was going
-beyond the limit, and that love for Lucien would very soon come back.
-"Fifty years ago, or thereabouts, Mercier said in his Tableau de Paris
-that a man cannot live by literature, poetry, letters, or science, by
-the creatures of his brain, in short; and Lucien, poet that he is,
-would not believe the experience of five centuries. The harvests that
-are watered with ink are only reaped ten or twelve years after the
-sowing, if indeed there is any harvest after all. Lucien has taken the
-green wheat for the sheaves. He will have learned something of life,
-at any rate. He was the dupe of a woman at the outset; he was sure to
-be duped afterwards by the world and false friends. He has bought his
-experience dear, that is all. Our ancestors used to say, 'If the son
-of the house brings back his two ears and his honor safe, all is
-well----' "
-
-"Honor!" poor Eve broke in. "Oh, but Lucien has fallen in so many
-ways! Writing against his conscience! Attacking his best friend!
-Living upon an actress! Showing himself in public with her. Bringing
-us to lie on straw----"
-
-"Oh, that is nothing----!" cried David, and suddenly stopped short.
-The secret of Lucien's forgery had nearly escaped him, and, unluckily,
-his start left a vague, uneasy impression on Eve.
-
-"What do you mean by nothing?" she answered. "And where shall we find
-the money to meet bills for three thousand francs?"
-
-"We shall be obliged to renew the lease with Cerizet, to begin with,"
-said David. "The Cointets have been allowing him fifteen per cent on
-the work done for them, and in that way alone he has made six hundred
-francs, besides contriving to make five hundred francs by job
-printing."
-
-"If the Cointets know that, perhaps they will not renew the lease.
-They will be afraid of him, for Cerizet is a dangerous man."
-
-"Eh! what is that to me!" cried David, "we shall be rich in a very
-little while. When Lucien is rich, dear angel, he will have nothing
-but good qualities."
-
-"Oh! David, my dear, my dear; what is this that you have said
-unthinkingly? Then Lucien fallen into the clutches of poverty would
-not have the force of character to resist evil? And you think just as
-M. d'Arthez thinks! No one is great unless he has strength of
-character, and Lucien is weak. An angel must not be tempted--what is
-that?"
-
-"What but a nature that is noble only in its own region, its own
-sphere, its heaven? I will spare him the struggle; Lucien is not meant
-for it. Look here! I am so near the end now that I can talk to you
-about the means."
-
-He drew several sheets of white paper from his pocket, brandished them
-in triumph, and laid them on his wife's lap.
-
-"A ream of this paper, royal size, would cost five francs at the
-most," he added, while Eve handled the specimens with almost childish
-surprise.
-
-"Why, how did you make these sample bits?" she asked.
-
-"With an old kitchen sieve of Marion's."
-
-"And are you not satisfied yet?" asked Eve.
-
-"The problem does not lie in the manufacturing process; it is a
-question of the first cost of the pulp. Alas, child, I am only a late
-comer in a difficult path. As long ago as 1794, Mme. Masson tried to
-use printed paper a second time; she succeeded, but what a price it
-cost! The Marquis of Salisbury tried to use straw as a material in
-1800, and the same idea occurred to Seguin in France in 1801. Those
-sheets in your hand are made from the common rush, the arundo
-phragmites, but I shall try nettles and thistles; for if the material
-is to continue to be cheap, one must look for something that will grow
-in marshes and waste lands where nothing else can be grown. The whole
-secret lies in the preparation of the stems. At present my method is
-not quite simple enough. Still, in spite of this difficulty, I feel
-sure that I can give the French paper trade the privilege of our
-literature; papermaking will be for France what coal and iron and
-coarse potter's clay are for England--a monopoly. I mean to be the
-Jacquart of the trade."
-
-Eve rose to her feet. David's simple-mindedness had roused her to
-enthusiasm, to admiration; she held out her arms to him and held him
-tightly to her, while she laid her head upon his shoulder.
-
-"You give me my reward as if I had succeeded already," he said.
-
-For all answer, Eve held up her sweet face, wet with tears, to his,
-and for a moment she could not speak.
-
-"The kiss was not for the man of genius," she said, "but for my
-comforter. Here is a rising glory for the glory that has set; and, in
-the midst of my grief for the brother that has fallen so low, my
-husband's greatness is revealed to me.--Yes, you will be great, great
-like the Graindorges, the Rouvets, and Van Robais, and the Persian who
-discovered madder, like all the men you have told me about; great men
-whom nobody remembers, because their good deeds were obscure
-industrial triumphs."
-
-
-
-"What are they doing just now?"
-
-It was Boniface Cointet who spoke. He was walking up and down outside
-in the Place du Murier with Cerizet watching the silhouettes of the
-husband and wife on the blinds. He always came at midnight for a chat
-with Cerizet, for the latter played the spy upon his former master's
-every movement.
-
-"He is showing her the paper he made this morning, no doubt," said
-Cerizet.
-
-"What is it made of?" asked the paper manufacturer.
-
-"Impossible to guess," answered Cerizet; "I made a hole in the roof
-and scrambled up and watched the gaffer; he was boiling pulp in a
-copper pan all last night. There was a heap of stuff in a corner, but
-I could make nothing of it; it looked like a heap of tow, as near as I
-could make out."
-
-"Go no farther," said Boniface Cointet in unctuous tones; "it would
-not be right. Mme. Sechard will offer to renew your lease; tell her
-that you are thinking of setting up for yourself. Offer her half the
-value of the plant and license, and, if she takes the bid, come to me.
-In any case, spin the matter out. . . . Have they no money?"
-
-"Not a sou," said Cerizet.
-
-"Not a sou," repeated tall Cointet.--"I have them now," said he to
-himself.
-
-Metivier, paper manufacturers' wholesale agent, and Cointet Brothers,
-printers and paper manufacturers, were also bankers in all but name.
-This surreptitious banking system defies all the ingenuity of the
-Inland Revenue Department. Every banker is required to take out a
-license which, in Paris, costs five hundred francs; but no hitherto
-devised method of controlling commerce can detect the delinquents, or
-compel them to pay their due to the Government. And though Metivier
-and the Cointets were "outside brokers," in the language of the Stock
-Exchange, none the less among them they could set some hundreds of
-thousands of francs moving every three months in the markets of Paris,
-Bordeaux, and Angouleme. Now it so fell out that that very evening
-Cointet Brothers had received Lucien's forged bills in the course of
-business. Upon this debt, tall Cointet forthwith erected a formidable
-engine, pointed, as will presently be seen, against the poor, patient
-inventor.
-
-By seven o'clock next morning, Boniface Cointet was taking a walk by
-the mill stream that turned the wheels in his big factory; the sound
-of the water covered his talk, for he was talking with a companion, a
-young man of nine-and-twenty, who had been appointed attorney to the
-Court of First Instance in Angouleme some six weeks ago. The young
-man's name was Pierre Petit-Claud.
-
-"You are a schoolfellow of David Sechard's, are you not?" asked tall
-Cointet by way of greeting to the young attorney. Petit-Claud had lost
-no time in answering the wealthy manufacturer's summons.
-
-"Yes, sir," said Petit-Claud, keeping step with tall Cointet.
-
-"Have you renewed the acquaintance?"
-
-"We have met once or twice at most since he came back. It could hardly
-have been otherwise. In Paris I was buried away in the office or at
-the courts on week-days, and on Sundays and holidays I was hard at
-work studying, for I had only myself to look to." (Tall Cointet nodded
-approvingly.) "When we met again, David and I, he asked me what I had
-done with myself. I told him that after I had finished my time at
-Poitiers, I had risen to be Maitre Olivet's head-clerk, and that some
-time or other I hoped to make a bid for his berth. I know a good deal
-more of Lucien Chardon (de Rubempre he calls himself now), he was Mme.
-de Bargeton's lover, our great poet, David Sechard's brother-in-law,
-in fact."
-
-"Then you can go and tell David of your appointment, and offer him
-your services," said tall Cointet.
-
-"One can't do that," said the young attorney.
-
-"He has never had a lawsuit, and he has no attorney, so one can do
-that," said Cointet, scanning the other narrowly from behind his
-colored spectacles.
-
-A certain quantity of gall mingled with the blood in Pierre Petit-
-Claud's veins; his father was a tailor in L'Houmeau, and his
-schoolfellows had looked down upon him. His complexion was of the
-muddy and unwholesome kind which tells a tale of bad health, late
-hours and penury, and almost always of a bad disposition. The best
-description of him may be given in two familiar expressions--he was
-sharp and snappish. His cracked voice suited his sour face, meagre
-look, and magpie eyes of no particular color. A magpie eye, according
-to Napoleon, is a sure sign of dishonesty. "Look at So-and-so," he
-said to Las Cases at Saint Helena, alluding to a confidential servant
-whom he had been obliged to dismiss for malversation. "I do not know
-how I could have been deceived in him for so long; he has a magpie
-eye." Tall Cointet, surveying the weedy little lawyer, noted his face
-pitted with smallpox, the thin hair, and the forehead, bald already,
-receding towards a bald cranium; saw, too, the confession of weakness
-in his attitude with the hand on the hip. "Here is my man," said he to
-himself.
-
-As a matter of fact, this Petit-Claud, who had drunk scorn like water,
-was eaten up with a strong desire to succeed in life; he had no money,
-but nevertheless he had the audacity to buy his employer's connection
-for thirty thousand francs, reckoning upon a rich marriage to clear
-off the debt, and looking to his employer, after the usual custom, to
-find him a wife, for an attorney always has an interest in marrying
-his successor, because he is the sooner paid off. But if Petit-Claud
-counted upon his employer, he counted yet more upon himself. He had
-more than average ability, and that of a kind not often found in the
-provinces, and rancor was the mainspring of his power. A mighty hatred
-makes a mighty effort.
-
-There is a great difference between a country attorney and an attorney
-in Paris; tall Cointet was too clever not to know this, and to turn
-the meaner passions that move a pettifogging lawyer to good account.
-An eminent attorney in Paris, and there are many who may be so
-qualified, is bound to possess to some extent the diplomate's
-qualities; he had so much business to transact, business in which
-large interests are involved; questions of such wide interest are
-submitted to him that he does not look upon procedure as machinery for
-bringing money into his pocket, but as a weapon of attack and defence.
-A country attorney, on the other hand, cultivates the science of
-costs, broutille, as it is called in Paris, a host of small items that
-swell lawyers' bills and require stamped paper. These weighty matters
-of the law completely fill the country attorney's mind; he has a bill
-of costs always before his eyes, whereas his brother of Paris thinks
-of nothing but his fees. The fee is a honorarium paid by a client over
-and above the bill of costs, for the more or less skilful conduct of
-his case. One-half of the bill of costs goes to the Treasury, whereas
-the entire fee belongs to the attorney. Let us admit frankly that the
-fees received are seldom as large as the fees demanded and deserved by
-a clever lawyer. Wherefore, in Paris, attorneys, doctors, and
-barristers, like courtesans with a chance-come lover, take very
-considerable precautions against the gratitude of clients. The client
-before and after the lawsuit would furnish a subject worthy of
-Meissonier; there would be brisk bidding among attorneys for the
-possession of two such admirable bits of genre.
-
-There is yet another difference between the Parisian and the country
-attorney. An attorney in Paris very seldom appears in court, though he
-is sometimes called upon to act as arbitrator (refere). Barristers, at
-the present day, swarm in the provinces; but in 1822 the country
-attorney very often united the functions of solicitor and counsel. As
-a result of this double life, the attorney acquired the peculiar
-intellectual defects of the barrister, and retained the heavy
-responsibilities of the attorney. He grew talkative and fluent, and
-lost his lucidity of judgment, the first necessity for the conduct of
-affairs. If a man of more than ordinary ability tries to do the work
-of two men, he is apt to find that the two men are mediocrities. The
-Paris attorney never spends himself in forensic eloquence; and as he
-seldom attempts to argue for and against, he has some hope of
-preserving his mental rectitude. It is true that he brings the balista
-of the law to work, and looks for the weapons in the armory of
-judicial contradictions, but he keeps his own convictions as to the
-case, while he does his best to gain the day. In a word, a man loses
-his head not so much by thinking as by uttering thoughts. The spoken
-word convinces the utterer; but a man can act against his own bad
-judgment without warping it, and contrive to win in a bad cause
-without maintaining that it is a good one, like the barrister. Perhaps
-for this very reason an old attorney is the more likely of the two to
-make a good judge.
-
-A country attorney, as we have seen, has plenty of excuses for his
-mediocrity; he takes up the cause of petty passions, he undertakes
-pettifogging business, he lives by charging expenses, he strains the
-Code of procedure and pleads in court. In a word, his weak points are
-legion; and if by chance you come across a remarkable man practising
-as a country attorney, he is indeed above the average level.
-
-"I thought, sir, that you sent for me on your own affairs," said
-Petit-Claud, and a glance that put an edge on his words fell upon tall
-Cointet's impenetrable blue spectacles.
-
-"Let us have no beating about the bush," returned Boniface Cointet.
-"Listen to me."
-
-After that beginning, big with mysterious import, Cointet set himself
-down upon a bench, and beckoned Petit-Claud to do likewise.
-
-"When M. du Hautoy came to Angouleme in 1804, on his way to his
-consulship at Valence, he made the acquaintance of Mme. de Senonches,
-then Mlle. Zephirine, and had a daughter by her," added Cointet for
-the attorney's ear----"Yes," he continued, as Petit-Claud gave a
-start; "yes, and Mlle. Zephirine's marriage with M. de Senoches soon
-followed the birth of the child. The girl was brought up in my
-mother's house; she is the Mlle. Francoise de la Haye in whom Mme. de
-Senoches takes an interest; she is her godmother in the usual style.
-Now, my mother farmed land belonging to old Mme. de Cardanet, Mlle.
-Zephirine's grandmother; and as she knew the secret of the sole
-heiress of the Cardanets and the Senonches of the older branch, they
-made me trustee for the little sum which M. Francois du Hautoy meant
-for the girl's fortune. I made my own fortune with those ten thousand
-francs, which amount to thirty thousand at the present day. Mme. de
-Senonches is sure to give the wedding clothes, and some plate and
-furniture to her goddaughter. Now, I can put you in the way of
-marrying the girl, my lad," said Cointet, slapping Petit-Claud on the
-knee; "and when you marry Francoise de la Haye, you will have a large
-number of the aristocracy of Angouleme as your clients. This
-understanding between us (under the rose) will open up magnificent
-prospects for you. Your position will be as much as any one could
-want; in fact, they don't ask better, I know."
-
-"What is to be done?" Petit-Claud asked eagerly. "You have an
-attorney, Maitre Cachan----"
-
-"And, moreover, I shall not leave Cachan at once for you; I shall only
-be your client later on," said Cointet significantly. "What is to be
-done, do you ask, my friend? Eh! why, David Sechard's business. The
-poor devil has three thousand francs' worth of bills to meet; he will
-not meet them; you will stave off legal proceedings in such a way as
-to increase the expenses enormously. Don't trouble yourself; go on,
-pile on items. Doublon, my process-server, will act under Cachan's
-directions, and he will lay on like a blacksmith. A word to the wise
-is sufficient. Now, young man?----"
-
-An eloquent pause followed, and the two men looked at each other.
-
-"We have never seen each other," Cointet resumed; "I have not said a
-syllable to you; you know nothing about M. du Hautoy, nor Mme. de
-Senonches, nor Mlle. de la Haye; only, when the time comes, two months
-hence, you will propose for the young lady. If we should want to see
-each other, you will come here after dark. Let us have nothing in
-writing."
-
-"Then you mean to ruin Sechard?" asked Petit-Claud.
-
-"Not exactly; but he must be in jail for some time----"
-
-"And what is the object?"
-
-"Do you think that I am noodle enough to tell you that? If you have
-wit enough to find out, you will have sense enough to hold your
-tongue."
-
-"Old Sechard has plenty of money," said Petit-Claud. He was beginning
-already to enter into Boniface Cointet's notions, and foresaw a
-possible cause of failure.
-
-"So long as the father lives, he will not give his son a farthing; and
-the old printer has no mind as yet to send in an order for his funeral
-cards."
-
-"Agreed!" said Petit-Claud, promptly making up his mind. "I don't ask
-you for guarantees; I am an attorney. If any one plays me a trick,
-there will be an account to settle between us."
-
-"The rogue will go far," thought Cointet; he bade Petit-Claud good-
-morning.
-
-The day after this conference was the 30th of April, and the Cointets
-presented the first of the three bills forged by Lucien. Unluckily,
-the bill was brought to poor Mme. Sechard; and she, seeing at once
-that the signature was not in her husband's handwriting, sent for
-David and asked him point-blank:
-
-"You did not put your name to that bill, did you?"
-
-"No," said he; "your brother was so pressed for time that he signed
-for me."
-
-Eve returned the bill to the bank messenger sent by the Cointets.
-
-"We cannot meet it," she said; then, feeling that her strength was
-failing, she went up to her room. David followed her.
-
-"Go quickly to the Cointets, dear," Eve said faintly; "they will have
-some consideration for you; beg them to wait; and call their attention
-besides to the fact that when Cerizet's lease is renewed, they will
-owe you a thousand francs."
-
-David went forthwith to his enemies. Now, any foreman may become a
-master printer, but there are not always the makings of a good man of
-business in a skilled typographer; David knew very little of business;
-when, therefore, with a heavily-beating heart and a sensation of
-throttling, David had put his excuses badly enough and formulated his
-request, the answer--"This is nothing to do with us; the bill has been
-passed on to us by Metivier; Metivier will pay us. Apply to M.
-Metivier"--cut him short at once.
-
-"Oh!" cried Eve when she heard the result, "as soon as the bill is
-returned to M. Metivier, we may be easy."
-
-At two o'clock the next day, Victor-Ange-Hermenegilde Doublon,
-bailiff, made protest for non-payment at two o'clock, a time when the
-Place du Murier is full of people; so that though Doublon was careful
-to stand and chat at the back door with Marion and Kolb, the news of
-the protest was known all over the business world of Angouleme that
-evening. Tall Cointet had enjoined it upon Master Doublon to show the
-Sechards the greatest consideration; but when all was said and done,
-could the bailiff's hypocritical regard for appearances save Eve and
-David from the disgrace of a suspension of payment? Let each judge for
-himself. A tolerably long digression of this kind will seem all too
-short; and ninety out of every hundred readers shall seize with
-avidity upon details that possess all the piquancy of novelty, thus
-establishing yet once again the trust of the well-known axiom, that
-there is nothing so little known as that which everybody is supposed
-to know--the Law of the Land, to wit.
-
-And of a truth, for the immense majority of Frenchmen, a minute
-description of some part of the machinery of banking will be as
-interesting as any chapter of foreign travel. When a tradesman living
-in one town gives a bill to another tradesman elsewhere (as David was
-supposed to have done for Lucien's benefit), the transaction ceases to
-be a simple promissory note, given in the way of business by one
-tradesman to another in the same place, and becomes in some sort a
-letter of exchange. When, therefore, Metivier accepted Lucien's three
-bills, he was obliged to send them for collection to his
-correspondents in Angouleme--to Cointet Brothers, that is to say.
-Hence, likewise, a certain initial loss for Lucien in exchange on
-Angouleme, taking the practical shape of an abatement of so much per
-cent over and above the discount. In this way Sechard's bills had
-passed into circulation in the bank. You would not believe how greatly
-the quality of banker, united with the august title of creditor,
-changes the debtor's position. For instance, when a bill has been
-passed through the bank (please note that expression), and transferred
-from the money market in Paris to the financial world of Angouleme, if
-that bill is protested, then the bankers in Angouleme must draw up a
-detailed account of the expenses of protest and return; 'tis a duty
-which they owe to themselves. Joking apart, no account of the most
-romantic adventure could be more mildly improbable than this of the
-journey made by a bill. Behold a certain article in the Code of
-commerce authorizing the most ingenious pleasantries after
-Mascarille's manner, and the interpretation thereof shall make
-apparent manifold atrocities lurking beneath the formidable word
-"legal."
-
-Master Doublon registered the protest and went himself with it to MM.
-Cointet Brothers. The firm had a standing account with their bailiff;
-he gave them six months' credit; and the lynxes of Angouleme
-practically took a twelvemonth, though tall Cointet would say month by
-month to the lynxes' jackal, "Do you want any money, Doublon?" Nor was
-this all. Doublon gave the influential house a rebate upon every
-transaction; it was the merest trifle, one franc fifty centimes on a
-protest, for instance.
-
-Tall Cointet quietly sat himself down at his desk and took out a small
-sheet of paper with a thirty-five centime stamp upon it, chatting as
-he did so with Doublon as to the standing of some of the local
-tradesmen.
-
-"Well, are you satisfied with young Gannerac?"
-
-"He is not doing badly. Lord, a carrier drives a trade----"
-
-"Drives a trade, yes; but, as a matter of fact, his expenses are a
-heavy pull on him; his wife spends a good deal, so they tell me----"
-
-"Of HIS money?" asked Doublon, with a knowing look.
-
-The lynx meanwhile had finished ruling his sheet of paper, and now
-proceeded to trace the ominous words at the head of the following
-account in bold characters:--
-
- ACCOUNT OF EXPENSES OF PROTEST AND RETURN.
-
- To one bill for ONE THOUSAND FRANCS, bearing date of February the
- tenth, eighteen hundred and twenty-two, drawn by SECHARD JUNIOR of
- Angouleme, to order of LUCIEN CHARDON, otherwise DE RUBEMPRE,
- endorsed to order of METIVIER, and finally to our order, matured
- the thirtieth of April last, protested by DOUBLON, process-server,
- on the first of May, eighteen hundred and twenty-two.
- fr. c.
- Principal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1000 --
- Expenses of Protest. . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 35
- Bank charges, one-half per cent. . . . . . . 5 --
- Brokerage, one-quarter per cent. . . . . . . 2 50
- Stamp on re-draft and present account. . . . 1 35
- Interest and postage . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 --
- ____ ____
- 1024 20
- Exchange at the rate of one and a quarter
- per cent on 1024 fr. 20 c.. . . . . . . . 13 25
- ____ ____
- Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1037 45
-
- One thousand and thirty-seven francs forty-five centimes, for
- which we repay ourselves by our draft at sight upon M. Metivier,
- Rue Serpente, Paris, payable to order of M. Gannerac of L'Houmeau.
-
- ANGOULEME, May 2, 1822 COINTET BROTHERS.
-
-At the foot of this little memorandum, drafted with the ease that
-comes of long practice (for the writer chatted with Doublon as he
-wrote), there appeared the subjoined form of declaration:--
-
- "We, the undersigned, Postel of L'Houmeau, pharmaceutical chemist,
- and Gannerac, forwarding agent, merchant of this town, hereby
- certify that the present rate of exchange on Paris is one and a
- quarter per cent.
-
- "ANGOULEME, May 2, 1822."
-
-"Here, Doublon, be so good as to step round and ask Postel and
-Gannerac to put their names to this declaration, and bring it back
-with you to-morrow morning."
-
-And Doublon, quite accustomed as he was to these instruments of
-torture, forthwith went, as if it were the simplest thing in the
-world. Evidently the protest might have been sent in an envelope, as
-in Paris, and even so all Angouleme was sure to hear of the poor
-Sechards' unlucky predicament. How they all blamed his want of
-business energy! His excessive fondness for his wife had been the ruin
-of him, according to some; others maintained that it was his affection
-for his brother-in-law; and what shocking conclusions did they not
-draw from these premises! A man ought never to embrace the interests
-of his kith and kin. Old Sechard's hard-hearted conduct met with
-approval, and people admired him for his treatment of his son!
-
-And now, all you who for any reason whatsoever should forget to "honor
-your engagements," look well into the methods of the banking business,
-by which one thousand francs may be made to pay interest at the rate
-of twenty-eight francs in ten minutes, without breaking the law of the
-land.
-
-The thousand francs, the one incontestable item in the account, comes
-first.
-
-The second item is shared between the bailiff and the Inland Revenue
-Department. The six francs due to the State for providing a piece of
-stamped paper, and putting the debtor's mortification on record, will
-probably ensure a long life to this abuse; and as you already know,
-one franc fifty centimes from this item found its way into the
-banker's pockets in the shape of Doublon's rebate.
-
-"Bank charges one-half per cent," runs the third item, which appears
-upon the ingenious plea that if a banker has not received payment, he
-has for all practical purposes discounted a bill. And although the
-contrary may be the case, if you fail to receive a thousand francs, it
-seems to be very much the same thing as if you had paid them away.
-Everybody who has discounted a bill knows that he has to pay more than
-the six per cent fixed by law; for a small percentage appears under
-the humble title of "charges," representing a premium on the financial
-genius and skill with which the capitalist puts his money out to
-interest. The more money he makes out of you, the more he asks.
-Wherefore it would be undoubtedly cheaper to discount a bill with a
-fool, if fools there be in the profession of bill-discounting.
-
-The law requires the banker to obtain a stock-broker's certificate for
-the rate of exchange. When a place is so unlucky as to boast no stock
-exchange, two merchants act instead. This is the significance of the
-item "brokerage"; it is a fixed charge of a quarter per cent on the
-amount of the protested bill. The custom is to consider the amount as
-paid to the merchants who act for the stock-broker, and the banker
-quietly puts the money into his cash-box. So much for the third item
-in this delightful account.
-
-The fourth includes the cost of the piece of stamped paper on which
-the account itself appears, as well as the cost of the stamp for
-re-draft, as it is ingeniously named, viz., the banker's draft upon
-his colleague in Paris.
-
-The fifth is a charge for postage and the legal interest due upon the
-amount for the time that it may happen to be absent from the banker's
-strong box.
-
-The final item, the exchange, is the object for which the bank exists,
-which is to say, for the transmission of sums of money from one place
-to another.
-
-Now, sift this account thoroughly, and what do you find? The method of
-calculation closely resembles Polichinelle's arithmetic in Lablache's
-Neapolitan song, "fifteen and five make twenty-two." The signatures of
-Messieurs Postel and Gannerac were obviously given to oblige in the
-way of business; the Cointets would act at need for Gannerac as
-Gannerac acted for the Cointets. It was a practical application of the
-well-known proverb, "Reach me the rhubarb and I will pass you the
-senna." Cointet Brothers, moreover, kept a standing account with
-Metivier; there was no need of a re-draft, and no re-draft was made. A
-returned bill between the two firms simply meant a debit or credit
-entry and another line in a ledger.
-
-This highly-colored account, therefore, is reduced to the one thousand
-francs, with an additional thirteen francs for expenses of protest,
-and half per cent for a month's delay, one thousand and eighteen
-francs it may be in all.
-
-Suppose that in a large banking-house a bill for a thousand francs is
-daily protested on an average, then the banker receives twenty-eight
-francs a day by the grace of God and the constitution of the banking
-system, that all powerful invention due to the Jewish intellect of the
-Middle Ages, which after six centuries still controls monarchs and
-peoples. In other words, a thousand francs would bring such a house
-twenty-eight francs per day, or ten thousand two hundred and twenty
-francs per annum. Triple the average of protests, and consequently of
-expenses, and you shall derive an income of thirty thousand francs per
-annum, interest upon purely fictitious capital. For which reason,
-nothing is more lovingly cultivated than these little "accounts of
-expenses."
-
-If David Sechard had come to pay his bill on the 3rd of May, that is,
-the day after it was protested, MM. Cointet Brothers would have met
-him at once with, "We have returned your bill to M. Metivier,"
-although, as a matter of fact, the document would have been lying upon
-the desk. A banker has a right to make out the account of expenses on
-the evening of the day when the bill is protested, and he uses the
-right to "sweat the silver crowns," in the country banker's phrase.
-
-The Kellers, with correspondents all over the world, make twenty
-thousand francs per annum by charges for postage alone; accounts of
-expenses of protest pay for Mme. la Baronne de Nucingen's dresses,
-opera box, and carriage. The charge for postage is a more shocking
-swindle, because a house will settle ten matters of business in as
-many lines of a single letter. And of the tithe wrung from misfortune,
-the Government, strange to say! takes its share, and the national
-revenue is swelled by a tax on commercial failure. And the Bank? from
-the august height of a counting-house she flings an observation, full
-of commonsense, at the debtor, "How is it?" asks she, "that you cannot
-meet your bill?" and, unluckily, there is no reply to the question.
-Wherefore, the "account of expenses" is an account bristling with
-dreadful fictions, fit to cause any debtor, who henceforth shall
-reflect upon this instructive page, a salutary shudder.
-
-On the 4th of May, Metivier received the account from Cointet
-Brothers, with instructions to proceed against M. Lucien Chardon,
-otherwise de Rubempre, with the utmost rigor of the law.
-
-Eve also wrote to M. Metivier, and a few days later received an answer
-which reassured her completely:--
-
- To M. Sechard, Junior, Printer, Angouleme.
-
- "I have duly received your esteemed favor of the 5th instant. From
- your explanation of the bill due on April 30th, I understand that
- you have obliged your brother-in-law, M. de Rubempre, who is
- spending so much that it will be doing you a service to summons
- him. His present position is such that he is likely to delay
- payment for long. If your brother-in-law should refuse payment, I
- shall rely upon the credit of your old-established house.--I sign
- myself now, as ever, your obedient servant,
- "Metivier."
-
-"Well," said Eve, commenting upon the letter to David, "Lucien will
-know when they summons him that we could not pay."
-
-What a change wrought in Eve those few words meant! The love that grew
-deeper as she came to know her husband's character better and better,
-was taking the place of love for her brother in her heart. But to how
-many illusions had she not bade farewell?
-
-And now let us trace out the whole history of the bill and the account
-of expenses in the business world of Paris. The law enacts that the
-third holder, the technical expression for the third party into whose
-hands the bill passes, is at liberty to proceed for the whole amount
-against any one of the various endorsers who appears to him to be most
-likely to make prompt payment. M. Metivier, using this discretion,
-served a summons upon Lucien. Behold the successive stages of the
-proceedings, all of them perfectly futile. Metivier, with the Cointets
-behind him, knew that Lucien was not in a position to pay, but
-insolvency in fact is not insolvency in law until it has been formally
-proved.
-
-Formal proof of Lucien's inability to pay was obtained in the
-following manner:
-
-On the 5th of May, Metivier's process-server gave Lucien notice of the
-protest and an account of the expense thereof, and summoned him to
-appear before the Tribunal of Commerce, or County Court, of Paris, to
-hear a vast number of things: this, among others, that he was liable
-to imprisonment as a merchant. By the time that Lucien, hard pressed
-and hunted down on all sides, read this jargon, he received notice of
-judgment against him by default. Coralie, his mistress, ignorant of
-the whole matter, imagined that Lucien had obliged his brother-in-law,
-and handed him all the documents together--too late. An actress sees
-so much of bailiffs, duns, and writs, upon the stage, that she looks
-on all stamped paper as a farce.
-
-Tears filled Lucien's eyes; he was unhappy on Sechard's account, he
-was ashamed of the forgery, he wished to pay, he desired to gain time.
-Naturally he took counsel of his friends. But by the time Lousteau,
-Blondet, Bixiou, and Nathan had told the poet to snap his fingers at a
-court only established for tradesmen, Lucien was already in the
-clutches of the law. He beheld upon his door the little yellow placard
-which leaves its reflection on the porter's countenance, and exercises
-a most astringent influence upon credit; striking terror into the
-heart of the smallest tradesman, and freezing the blood in the veins
-of a poet susceptible enough to care about the bits of wood, silken
-rags, dyed woolen stuffs, and multifarious gimcracks entitled
-furniture.
-
-When the broker's men came for Coralie's furniture, the author of the
-Marguerites fled to a friend of Bixiou's, one Desroches, a barrister,
-who burst out laughing at the sight of Lucien in such a state about
-nothing at all.
-
-"That is nothing, my dear fellow. Do you want to gain time?"
-
-"Yes, as much possible."
-
-"Very well, apply for stay of execution. Go and look up Masson, he is
-a solicitor in the Commercial Court, and a friend of mine. Take your
-documents to him. He will make a second application for you, and give
-notice of objection to the jurisdiction of the court. There is not the
-least difficulty; you are a journalist, your name is well known
-enough. If they summons you before a civil court, come to me about it,
-that will be my affair; I engage to send anybody who offers to annoy
-the fair Coralie about his business."
-
-On the 28th of May, Lucien's case came on in the civil court, and
-judgment was given before Desroches expected it. Lucien's creditor was
-pushing on the proceedings against him. A second execution was put in,
-and again Coralie's pilasters were gilded with placards. Desroches
-felt rather foolish; a colleague had "caught him napping," to use his
-own expression. He demurred, not without reason, that the furniture
-belonged to Mlle. Coralie, with whom Lucien was living, and demanded
-an order for inquiry. Thereupon the judge referred the matter to the
-registrar for inquiry, the furniture was proved to belong to the
-actress, and judgment was entered accordingly. Metivier appealed, and
-judgment was confirmed on appeal on the 30th of June.
-
-On the 7th of August, Maitre Cachan received by the coach a bulky
-package endorsed, "Metivier versus Sechard and Lucien Chardon."
-
-The first document was a neat little bill, of which a copy (accuracy
-guaranteed) is here given for the reader's benefit:--
-
- To Bill due the last day of April, drawn by
- SECHARD, JUNIOR, to order of LUCIEN DE
- RUBEMPRE, together with expenses of fr. c.
- protest and return. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1037 45
- May 5th--Serving notice of protest and
- summons to appear before the
- Tribunal of Commerce in
- Paris, May 7th . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 75
- " 7th--Judgment by default and
- warrant of arrest. . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 --
- " 10th--Notification of judgment . . . . . . . . . 8 50
- " 12th--Warrant of execution . . . . . . . . . . . 5 50
- " 14th--Inventory and appraisement
- previous to execution. . . . . . . . . . . 16 --
- " 18th--Expenses of affixing placards. . . . . . . 15 25
- " 19th--Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 --
- " 24th--Verification of inventory, and
- application for stay of execution
- on the part of the said
- Lucien de Rubempre, objecting
- to the jurisdiction of the Court. . . . . . 12 --
- " 27th--Order of the Court upon application
- duly repeated, and transfer of
- of case to the Civil Court. . . . . . . . . 35 --
- ____ ____
- Carried forward. . . . . . . . . . . . 1177 45
-
- fr. c.
- Brought forward 1177 45
- May 28th--Notice of summary proceedings in
- the Civil Court at the instance
- of Metivier, represented by
- counsel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 50
- June 2nd--Judgment, after hearing both
- parties, condemning Lucien for
- expenses of protest and return;
- the plaintiff to bear costs
- of proceedings in the
- Commercial Court. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150 --
- " 6th--Notification of judgment. . . . . . . . . . 10 --
-
- " 15th--Warrant of execution. . . . . . . . . . . . 5 50
- " 19th--Inventory and appraisement preparatory
- to execution; interpleader summons by
- the Demoiselle Coralie, claiming goods
- and chattels taken in execution; demand
- for immediate special inquiry before
- further proceedings be taken . . . . . . . 20 --
- " " --Judge's order referring matter to
- registrar for immediate special inquiry. . 40 --
- " " --Judgment in favor of the said
- Mademoiselle Coralie . . . . . . . . . . . 250 --
- " 20th--Appeal by Metivier . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 --
- " 30th--Confirmation of judgment . . . . . . . . . 250 --
- ____ ____
- Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1926 45
- __________
-
- Bill matured May 31st, with expenses of fr. c.
- protest and return. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1037 45
- Serving notice of protest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 75
- ____ ____
- Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1046 20
-
- Bill matured June 30th, with expenses of
- protest and return. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1037 45
- Serving notice of protest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 75
- ____ ____
- Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1046 20
- __________
-
-This document was accompanied by a letter from Metivier, instructing
-Maitre Cachan, notary of Angouleme, to prosecute David Sechard with
-the utmost rigor of the law. Wherefore Maitre Victor-Ange-Hermenegilde
-Doublon summoned David Sechard before the Tribunal of Commerce in
-Angouleme for the sum-total of four thousand and eighteen francs
-eighty-five centimes, the amount of the three bills and expenses
-already incurred. On the morning of the very day when Doublon served
-the writ upon Eve, requiring her to pay a sum so enormous in her eyes,
-there came a letter like a thunderbolt from Metivier:--
-
- To Monsieur Sechard, Junior, Printer, Angouleme.
-
- "SIR,--Your brother-in-law, M. Chardon, is so shamelessly
- dishonest, that he declares his furniture to be the property of an
- actress with whom he is living. You ought to have informed me
- candidly of these circumstances, and not have allowed me to go to
- useless expense over law proceedings. I have received no answer
- to my letter of the 10th of May last. You must not, therefore,
- take it amiss if I ask for immediate repayment of the three bills
- and the expenses to which I have been put.--Yours, etc.,
- "METIVIER."
-
-Eve had heard nothing during these months, and supposed, in her
-ignorance of commercial law, that her brother had made reparation for
-his sins by meeting the forged bills.
-
-"Be quick, and go at once to Petit-Claud, dear," she said; "tell him
-about it, and ask his advice."
-
-David hurried to his schoolfellow's office.
-
-"When you came to tell me of your appointment and offered me your
-services, I did not think that I should need them so soon," he said.
-
-Petit-Claud studied the fine face of this man who sat opposite him in
-the office chair, and scarcely listened to the details of the case,
-for he knew more of them already than the speaker. As soon as he saw
-Sechard's anxiety, he said to himself, "The trick has succeeded."
-
-This kind of comedy is often played in an attorney's office. "Why are
-the Cointets persecuting him?" Petit-Claud wondered within himself,
-for the attorney can use his wit to read his clients' thoughts as
-clearly as the ideas of their opponents, and it is his business to see
-both sides of the judicial web.
-
-"You want to gain time," he said at last, when Sechard had come to an
-end. "How long do you want? Something like three or four months?"
-
-"Oh! four months! that would be my salvation," exclaimed David. Petit-
-Claud appeared to him as an angel.
-
-"Very well. No one shall lay hands on any of your furniture, and no
-one shall arrest you for four months----But it will cost you a great
-deal," said Petit-Claud.
-
-"Eh! what does that matter to me?" cried Sechard.
-
-"You are expecting some money to come in; but are you sure of it?"
-asked Petit-Claud, astonished at the way in which his client walked
-into the toils.
-
-"In three months' time I shall have plenty of money," said the
-inventor, with an inventor's hopeful confidence.
-
-"Your father is still above ground," suggested Petit-Claud; "he is in
-no hurry to leave his vines."
-
-"Do you think that I am counting on my father's death?" returned
-David. "I am on the track of a trade secret, the secret of making a
-sheet of paper as strong as Dutch paper, without a thread of cotton in
-it, and at a cost of fifty per cent less than cotton pulp."
-
-"There is a fortune in that!" exclaimed Petit-Claud. He knew now what
-the tall Cointet meant.
-
-"A large fortune, my friend, for in ten years' time the demand for
-paper will be ten times larger than it is to-day. Journalism will be
-the craze of our day."
-
-"Nobody knows your secret?"
-
-"Nobody except my wife."
-
-"You have not told any one what you mean to do--the Cointets, for
-example?"
-
-"I did say something about it, but in general terms, I think."
-
-A sudden spark of generosity flashed through Petit-Claud's rancorous
-soul; he tried to reconcile Sechard's interests with the Cointet's
-projects and his own.
-
-"Listen, David, we are old schoolfellows, you and I; I will fight your
-case; but understand this clearly--the defence, in the teeth of the
-law, will cost you five or six thousand francs! Do not compromise your
-prospects. I think you will be compelled to share the profits of your
-invention with some one of our paper manufacturers. Let us see now.
-You will think twice before you buy or build a paper mill; and there
-is the cost of the patent besides. All this means time, and money too.
-The servers of writs will be down upon you too soon, perhaps, although
-we are going to give them the slip----"
-
-"I have my secret," said David, with the simplicity of the man of
-books.
-
-"Well and good, your secret will be your plank of safety," said Petit-
-Claud; his first loyal intention of avoiding a lawsuit by a compromise
-was frustrated. "I do not wish to know it; but mind this that I tell
-you. Work in the bowels of the earth if you can, so that no one may
-watch you and gain a hint from your ways of working, or your plank
-will be stolen from under your feet. An inventor and a simpleton often
-live in the same skin. Your mind runs so much on your secrets that you
-cannot think of everything. People will begin to have their suspicions
-at last, and the place is full of paper manufacturers. So many
-manufacturers, so many enemies for you! You are like a beaver with the
-hunters about you; do not give them your skin----"
-
-"Thank you, dear fellow, I have told myself all this," exclaimed
-Sechard, "but I am obliged to you for showing so much concern for me
-and for your forethought. It does not really matter to me myself. An
-income of twelve hundred francs would be enough for me, and my father
-ought by rights to leave me three times as much some day. Love and
-thought make up my life--a divine life. I am working for Lucien's sake
-and for my wife's."
-
-"Come, give me this power of attorney, and think of nothing but your
-discovery. If there should be any danger of arrest, I will let you
-know in time, for we must think of all possibilities. And let me tell
-you again to allow no one of whom you are not so sure as you are of
-yourself to come into your place."
-
-"Cerizet did not care to continue the lease of the plant and premises,
-hence our little money difficulties. We have no one at home now but
-Marion and Kolb, an Alsacien as trusty as a dog, and my wife and her
-mother----"
-
-"One word," said Petit-Claud, "don't trust that dog----"
-
-"You do not know him," exclaimed David; "he is like a second self."
-
-"May I try him?"
-
-"Yes," said Sechard.
-
-"There, good-bye, but send Mme. Sechard to me; I must have a power of
-attorney from your wife. And bear in mind, my friend, that there is a
-fire burning in your affairs," said Petit-Claud, by way of warning of
-all the troubles gathering in the law courts to burst upon David's
-head.
-
-"Here am I with one foot in Burgundy and the other in Champagne," he
-added to himself as he closed the office door on David.
-
-Harassed by money difficulties, beset with fears for his wife's
-health, stung to the quick by Lucien's disgrace, David had worked on
-at his problem. He had been trying to find a single process to replace
-the various operations of pounding and maceration to which all flax or
-cotton or rags, any vegetable fibre, in fact, must be subjected; and
-as he went to Petit-Claud's office, he abstractedly chewed a bit of
-nettle stalk that had been steeping in water. On his way home,
-tolerably satisfied with his interview, he felt a little pellet
-sticking between his teeth. He laid it on his hand, flattened it out,
-and saw that the pulp was far superior to any previous result. The
-want of cohesion is the great drawback of all vegetable fibre; straw,
-for instance, yields a very brittle paper, which may almost be called
-metallic and resonant. These chances only befall bold inquirers into
-Nature's methods!
-
-"Now," said he to himself, "I must contrive to do by machinery and
-some chemical agency the thing that I myself have done unconsciously."
-
-When his wife saw him, his face was radiant with belief in victory.
-There were traces of tears in Eve's face.
-
-"Oh! my darling, do not trouble yourself; Petit-Claud will guarantee
-that we shall not be molested for several months to come. There will
-be a good deal of expense over it; but, as Petit-Claud said when he
-came to the door with me, 'A Frenchman has a right to keep his
-creditors waiting, provided he repays them capital, interest, and
-costs.'--Very well, then, we shall do that----"
-
-"And live meanwhile?" asked poor Eve, who thought of everything.
-
-"Ah! that is true," said David, carrying his hand to his ear after the
-unaccountable fashion of most perplexed mortals.
-
-"Mother will look after little Lucien, and I can go back to work
-again," said she.
-
-"Eve! oh, my Eve!" cried David, holding his wife closely to him.--"At
-Saintes, not very far from here, in the sixteenth century, there lived
-one of the very greatest of Frenchmen, for he was not merely the
-inventor of glaze, he was the glorious precursor of Buffon and Cuvier
-besides; he was the first geologist, good, simple soul that he was.
-Bernard Palissy endured the martyrdom appointed for all seekers into
-secrets but his wife and children and all his neighbors were against
-him. His wife used to sell his tools; nobody understood him, he
-wandered about the countryside, he was hunted down, they jeered at
-him. But I--am loved----"
-
-"Dearly loved!" said Eve, with the quiet serenity of the love that is
-sure of itself.
-
-"And so may well endure all that poor Bernard Palissy suffered--
-Bernard Palissy, the discoverer of Ecouen ware, the Huguenot excepted
-by Charles IX. on the day of Saint-Bartholomew. He lived to be rich
-and honored in his old age, and lectured on the 'Science of Earths,'
-as he called it, in the face of Europe."
-
-"So long as my fingers can hold an iron, you shall want for nothing,"
-cried the poor wife, in tones that told of the deepest devotion. "When
-I was Mme. Prieur's forewoman I had a friend among the girls, Basine
-Clerget, a cousin of Postel's, a very good child; well, Basine told me
-the other day when she brought back the linen, that she was taking
-Mme. Prieur's business; I will work for her."
-
-"Ah! you shall not work there for long," said David; "I have found
-out----"
-
-Eve, watching his face, saw the sublime belief in success which
-sustains the inventor, the belief that gives him courage to go forth
-into the virgin forests of the country of Discovery; and, for the
-first time in her life, she answered that confident look with a half-
-sad smile. David bent his head mournfully.
-
-"Oh! my dear! I am not laughing! I did not doubt! It was not a sneer!"
-cried Eve, on her knees before her husband. "But I see plainly now
-that you were right to tell me nothing about your experiments and your
-hopes. Ah! yes, dear, an inventor should endure the long painful
-travail of a great idea alone, he should not utter a word of it even
-to his wife. . . . A woman is a woman still. This Eve of yours could
-not help smiling when she heard you say, 'I have found out,' for the
-seventeenth time this month."
-
-David burst out laughing so heartily at his own expense that Eve
-caught his hand in hers and kissed it reverently. It was a delicious
-moment for them both, one of those roses of love and tenderness that
-grow beside the desert paths of the bitterest poverty, nay, at times
-in yet darker depths.
-
-As the storm of misfortune grew, Eve's courage redoubled; the
-greatness of her husband's nature, his inventor's simplicity, the
-tears that now and again she saw in the eyes of this dreamer of dreams
-with the tender heart,--all these things aroused in her an unsuspected
-energy of resistance. Once again she tried the plan that had succeeded
-so well already. She wrote to M. Metivier, reminding him that the
-printing office was for sale, offered to pay him out of the proceeds,
-and begged him not to ruin David with needless costs. Metivier
-received the heroic letter, and shammed dead. His head-clerk replied
-that in the absence of M. Metivier he could not take it upon himself
-to stay proceedings, for his employer had made it a rule to let the
-law take its course. Eve wrote again, offering this time to renew the
-bills and pay all the costs hitherto incurred. To this the clerk
-consented, provided that Sechard senior guaranteed payment. So Eve
-walked over to Marsac, taking Kolb and her mother with her. She braved
-the old vinedresser, and so charming was she, that the old man's face
-relaxed, and the puckers smoothed out at the sight of her; but when,
-with inward quakings, she came to speak of a guarantee, she beheld a
-sudden and complete change of the tippleographic countenance.
-
-"If I allowed my son to put his hand to the lips of my cash box
-whenever he had a mind, he would plunge it deep into the vitals, he
-would take all I have!" cried old Sechard. "That is the way with
-children; they eat up their parents' purse. What did I do myself, eh?
-_I_ never cost my parents a farthing. Your printing office is standing
-idle. The rats and the mice do all the printing that is done in
-it. . . . You have a pretty face; I am very fond of you; you are a
-careful, hard-working woman; but that son of mine!--Do you know what
-David is? I'll tell you--he is a scholar that will never do a stroke
-of work! If I had reared him, as I was reared myself, without knowing
-his letters, and if I had made a 'bear' of him, like his father before
-him, he would have money saved and put out to interest by now. . . .
-Oh! he is my cross, that fellow is, look you! And, unluckily, he is
-all the family I have, for there is never like to be a later edition.
-And when he makes you unhappy----"
-
-Eve protested with a vehement gesture of denial.
-
-"Yes, he does," affirmed old Sechard; "you had to find a wet-nurse for
-the child. Come, come, I know all about it, you are in the county
-court, and the whole town is talking about you. I was only a 'bear,'
-_I_ have no book learning, _I_ was not foreman at the Didots', the
-first printers in the world; but yet I never set eyes on a bit of
-stamped paper. Do you know what I say to myself as I go to and fro
-among my vines, looking after them and getting in my vintage, and
-doing my bits of business?--I say to myself, 'You are taking a lot of
-trouble, poor old chap; working to pile one silver crown on another,
-you will leave a fine property behind you, and the bailiffs and the
-lawyers will get it all; . . . or else it will go in nonsensical
-notions and crotchets.'--Look you here, child; you are the mother of
-yonder little lad; it seemed to me as I held him at the font with Mme.
-Chardon that I could see his old grandfather's copper nose on his
-face; very well, think less of Sechard and more of that little rascal.
-I can trust no one but you; you will prevent him from squandering my
-property--my poor property."
-
-"But, dear papa Sechard, your son will be a credit to you, you will
-see; he will make money and be a rich man one of these days, and wear
-the Cross of the Legion of Honor at his buttonhole."
-
-"What is he going to do to get it?"
-
-"You will see. But, meanwhile, would a thousand crowns ruin you? A
-thousand crowns would put an end to the proceedings. Well, if you
-cannot trust him, lend the money to me; I will pay it back; you could
-make it a charge on my portion, on my earnings----"
-
-"Then has some one brought David into a court of law?" cried the
-vinedresser, amazed to find that the gossip was really true. "See what
-comes of knowing how to write your name! And how about my rent! Oh!
-little girl, I must go to Angouleme at once and ask Cachan's advice,
-and see that I am straight. You did right well to come over.
-Forewarned is forearmed."
-
-After two hours of argument Eve was fain to go, defeated by the
-unanswerable dictum, "Women never understand business." She had come
-with a faint hope, she went back again almost heartbroken, and reached
-home just in time to receive notice of judgment; Sechard must pay
-Metivier in full. The appearance of a bailiff at a house door is an
-event in a country town, and Doublon had come far too often of late.
-The whole neighborhood was talking about the Sechards. Eve dared not
-leave her house; she dreaded to hear the whispers as she passed.
-
-"Oh! my brother, my brother!" cried poor Eve, as she hurried into the
-passage and up the stairs, "I can never forgive you, unless it
-was----"
-
-"Alas! it was that, or suicide," said David, who had followed her.
-
-"Let us say no more about it," she said quietly. "The woman who
-dragged him down into the depths of Paris has much to answer for; and
-your father, my David, is quite inexorable! Let us bear it in
-silence."
-
-A discreet rapping at the door cut short some word of love on David's
-lips. Marion appeared, towing the big, burly Kolb after her across the
-outer room.
-
-"Madame," said Marion, "we have known, Kolb and I, that you and the
-master were very much put about; and as we have eleven hundred francs
-of savings between us, we thought we could not do better than put them
-in the mistress' hands----"
-
-"Die misdress," echoed Kolb fervently.
-
-"Kolb," cried David, "you and I will never part. Pay a thousand francs
-on account to Maitre Cachan, and take a receipt for it; we will keep
-the rest. And, Kolb, no power on earth must extract a word from you as
-to my work, or my absences from home, or the things you may see me
-bring back; and if I send you to look for plants for me, you know, no
-human being must set eyes on you. They will try to corrupt you, my
-good Kolb; they will offer you thousands, perhaps tens of thousands of
-francs, to tell----"
-
-"Dey may offer me millions," cried Kolb, "but not ein vort from me
-shall dey traw. Haf I not peen in der army, and know my orders?"
-
-"Well, you are warned. March, and ask M. Petit-Claud to go with you as
-witness."
-
-"Yes," said the Alsacien. "Some tay I hope to be rich enough to dust
-der chacket of dat man of law. I don't like his gountenance."
-
-"Kolb is a good man, madame," said Big Marion; "he is as strong as a
-Turk, and as meek as a lamb. Just the one that would make a woman
-happy. It was his notion, too, to invest our savings this way--
-'safings,' as he calls them. Poor man, if he doesn't speak right, he
-thinks right, and I understand him all the same. He has a notion of
-working for somebody else, so as to save us his keep----"
-
-"Surely we shall be rich, if it is only to repay these good folk,"
-said David, looking at his wife.
-
-Eve thought it quite simple; it was no surprise to her to find other
-natures on a level with her own. The dullest--nay, the most
-indifferent--observer could have seen all the beauty of her nature in
-her way of receiving this service.
-
-"You will be rich some day, dear master," said Marion; "your bread is
-ready baked. Your father has just bought another farm, he is putting
-by money for you; that he is."
-
-And under the circumstances, did not Marion show an exquisite delicacy
-of feeling by belittling, as it were, her kindness in this way?
-
-French procedure, like all things human, has its defects;
-nevertheless, the sword of justice, being a two-edged weapon, is
-excellently adapted alike for attack or defence. Procedure, moreover,
-has its amusing side; for when opposed, lawyers arrive at an
-understanding, as they well may do, without exchanging a word; through
-their manner of conducting their case, a suit becomes a kind of war
-waged on the lines laid down by the first Marshal Biron, who, at the
-siege of Rouen, it may be remembered, received his son's project for
-taking the city in two days with the remark, "You must be in a great
-hurry to go and plant cabbages!" Let two commanders-in-chief spare
-their troops as much as possible, let them imitate the Austrian
-generals who give the men time to eat their soup though they fail to
-effect a juncture, and escape reprimand from the Aulic Council; let
-them avoid all decisive measures, and they shall carry on a war for
-ever. Maitre Cachan, Petit-Claud, and Doublon, did better than the
-Austrian generals; they took for their example Quintus Fabius
-Cunctator--the Austrian of antiquity.
-
-Petit-Claud, malignant as a mule, was not long in finding out all the
-advantages of his position. No sooner had Boniface Cointet guaranteed
-his costs than he vowed to lead Cachan a dance, and to dazzle the
-paper manufacturer with a brilliant display of genius in the creation
-of items to be charged to Metivier. Unluckily for the fame of the
-young forensic Figaro, the writer of this history is obliged to pass
-over the scene of his exploits in as great a hurry as if he trod on
-burning coals; but a single bill of costs, in the shape of the
-specimen sent from Paris, will no doubt suffice for the student of
-contemporary manners. Let us follow the example set us by the
-Bulletins of the Grande Armee, and give a summary of Petit-Claud's
-valiant feats and exploits in the province of pure law; they will be
-the better appreciated for concise treatment.
-
-David Sechard was summoned before the Tribunal of Commerce at
-Angouleme for the 3rd of July, made default, and notice of judgment
-was served on the 8th. On the 10th, Doublon obtained an execution
-warrant, and attempted to put in an execution on the 12th. On this
-Petit-Claud applied for an interpleader summons, and served notice on
-Metivier for that day fortnight. Metivier made application for a
-hearing without delay, and on the 19th, Sechard's application was
-dismissed. Hard upon this followed notice of judgment, authorizing the
-issue of an execution warrant on the 22nd, a warrant of arrest on the
-23rd, and bailiff's inventory previous to the execution on the 24th.
-Metivier, Doublon, Cachan & Company were proceeding at this furious
-pace, when Petit-Claud suddenly pulled them up, and stayed execution
-by lodging notice of appeal on the Court-Royal. Notice of appeal, duly
-reiterated on the 25th of July, drew Metivier off to Poitiers.
-
-"Come!" said Petit-Claud to himself, "there we are likely to stop for
-some time to come."
-
-No sooner was the storm passed over to Poitiers, and an attorney
-practising in the Court-Royal instructed to defend the case, than
-Petit-Claud, a champion facing both ways, made application in Mme.
-Sechard's name for the immediate separation of her estate from her
-husband's; using "all diligence" (in legal language) to such purpose,
-that he obtained an order from the court on the 28th, and inserted
-notice at once in the Charente Courier. Now David the lover had
-settled ten thousand francs upon his wife in the marriage contract,
-making over to her as security the fixtures of the printing office and
-the household furniture; and Petit-Claud therefore constituted Mme.
-Sechard her husband's creditor for that small amount, drawing up a
-statement of her claims on the estate in the presence of a notary on
-the 1st of August.
-
-While Petit-Claud was busy securing the household property of his
-clients, he gained the day at Poitiers on the point of law on which
-the demurrer and appeals were based. He held that, as the court of the
-Seine had ordered the plaintiff to pay costs of proceedings in the
-Paris commercial court, David was so much the less liable for expenses
-of litigation incurred upon Lucien's account. The Court-Royal took
-this view of the case, and judgment was entered accordingly. David
-Sechard was ordered to pay the amount in dispute in the Angouleme
-Court, less the law expenses incurred in Paris; these Metivier must
-pay, and each side must bear its own costs in the appeal to the Court-
-Royal.
-
-David Sechard was duly notified of the result on the 17th of August.
-On the 18th the judgment took the practical shape of an order to pay
-capital, interest, and costs, followed up by notice of an execution
-for the morrow. Upon this Petit-Claud intervened and put in a claim
-for the furniture as the wife's property duly separated from her
-husband's; and what was more, Petit-Claud produced Sechard senior upon
-the scene of action. The old vinegrower had become his client on this
-wise. He came to Angouleme on the day after Eve's visit, and went to
-Maitre Cachan for advice. His son owed him arrears of rent; how could
-he come by this rent in the scrimmage in which his son was engaged?
-
-"I am engaged by the other side," pronounced Cachan, "and I cannot
-appear for the father when I am suing the son; but go to Petit-Claud,
-he is very clever, he may perhaps do even better for you than I should
-do."
-
-Cachan and Petit-Claud met at the Court.
-
-"I have sent you Sechard senior," said Cachan; "take the case for me
-in exchange." Lawyers do each other services of this kind in country
-towns as well as in Paris.
-
-The day after Sechard senior gave Petit-Claud his confidence, the tall
-Cointet paid a visit to his confederate.
-
-"Try to give old Sechard a lesson," he said. "He is the kind of man
-that will never forgive his son for costing him a thousand francs or
-so; the outlay will dry up any generous thoughts in his mind, if he
-ever has any."
-
-"Go back to your vines," said Petit-Claud to his new client. "Your son
-is not very well off; do not eat him out of house and home. I will
-send for you when the time comes."
-
-On behalf of Sechard senior, therefore, Petit-Claud claimed that the
-presses, being fixtures, were so much the more to be regarded as tools
-and implements of trade, and the less liable to seizure, in that the
-house had been a printing office since the reign of Louis XIV. Cachan,
-on Metivier's account, waxed indignant at this. In Paris Lucien's
-furniture had belonged to Coralie, and here again in Angouleme David's
-goods and chattels all belonged to his wife or his father; pretty
-things were said in court. Father and son were summoned; such claims
-could not be allowed to stand.
-
-"We mean to unmask the frauds intrenched behind bad faith of the most
-formidable kind; here is the defence of dishonesty bristling with the
-plainest and most innocent articles of the Code, and why?--to avoid
-repayment of three thousand francs; obtained how?--from poor
-Metivier's cash box! And yet there are those who dare to say a word
-against bill-discounters! What times we live in! . . . Now, I put it
-to you--what is this but taking your neighbor's money? . . . You will
-surely not sanction a claim which would bring immorality to the very
-core of justice!"
-
-Cachan's eloquence produced an effect on the court. A divided judgment
-was given in favor of Mme. Sechard, the house furniture being held to
-be her property; and against Sechard senior, who was ordered to pay
-costs--four hundred and thirty-four francs, sixty-five centimes.
-
-"It is kind of old Sechard," laughed the lawyers; "he would have a
-finger in the pie, so let him pay!"
-
-Notice of judgment was given on the 26th of August; the presses and
-plant could be seized on the 28th. Placards were posted. Application
-was made for an order empowering them to sell on the spot.
-Announcements of the sale appeared in the papers, and Doublon
-flattered himself that the inventory should be verified and the
-auction take place on the 2nd of September.
-
-By this time David Sechard owed Metivier five thousand two hundred and
-seventy-five francs, twenty-five centimes (to say nothing of
-interest), by formal judgment confirmed by appeal, the bill of costs
-having been duly taxed. Likewise to Petit-Claud he owed twelve hundred
-francs, exclusive of the fees, which were left to David's generosity
-with the generous confidence displayed by the hackney coachman who has
-driven you so quickly over the road on which you desire to go.
-
-Mme. Sechard owed Petit-Claud something like three hundred and fifty
-francs and fees besides; and of old Sechard, besides four hundred and
-thirty-four francs, sixty-five centimes, the little attorney demanded
-a hundred crowns by way of fee. Altogether, the Sechard family owed
-about ten thousand francs. This is what is called "putting fire into
-the bed straw."
-
-Apart from the utility of these documents to other nations who thus
-may behold the battery of French law in action, the French legislator
-ought to know the lengths to which the abuse of procedure may be
-carried, always supposing that the said legislator can find time for
-reading. Surely some sort of regulation might be devised, some way of
-forbidding lawyers to carry on a case until the sum in dispute is more
-than eaten up in costs? Is there not something ludicrous in the idea
-of submitting a square yard of soil and an estate of thousands of
-acres to the same legal formalities? These bare outlines of the
-history of the various stages of procedure should open the eyes of
-Frenchmen to the meaning of the words "legal formalities, justice, and
-costs," little as the immense majority of the nations know about them.
-
-Five thousand pounds' weight of type in the printing office were worth
-two thousand francs as old metal; the three presses were valued at six
-hundred francs; the rest of the plant would fetch the price of old
-iron and firewood. The household furniture would have brought in a
-thousand francs at most. The whole personal property of Sechard junior
-therefore represented the sum of four thousand francs; and Cachan and
-Petit-Claud made claims for seven thousand francs in costs already
-incurred, to say nothing of expenses to come, for the blossom gave
-promise of fine fruits enough, as the reader will shortly see. Surely
-the lawyers of France and Navarre, nay, even of Normandy herself, will
-not refuse Petit-Claud his meed of admiration and respect? Surely,
-too, kind hearts will give Marion and Kolb a tear of sympathy?
-
-All through the war Kolb sat on a chair in the doorway, acting as
-watch-dog, when David had nothing else for him to do. It was Kolb who
-received all the notifications, and a clerk of Petit-Claud's kept
-watch over Kolb. No sooner were the placards announcing the auction
-put up on the premises than Kolb tore them down; he hurried round the
-town after the bill-poster, tearing the placards from the walls.
-
-"Ah, scountrels!" he cried, "to dorment so goot a man; and they calls
-it chustice!"
-
-Marion made half a franc a day by working half time in a paper mill as
-a machine tender, and her wages contributed to the support of the
-household. Mme. Chardon went back uncomplainingly to her old
-occupation, sitting up night after night, and bringing home her wages
-at the end of the week. Poor Mme. Chardon! Twice already she had made
-a nine days' prayer for those she loved, wondering that God should be
-deaf to her petitions, and blind to the light of the candles on His
-altar.
-
-On the 2nd of September, a letter came from Lucien, the first since
-the letter of the winter, which David had kept from his wife's
-knowledge--the announcement of the three bills which bore David's
-signature. This time Lucien wrote to Eve.
-
-"The third since he left us!" she said. Poor sister, she was afraid to
-open the envelope that covered the fatal sheet.
-
-She was feeding the little one when the post came in; they could not
-afford a wet-nurse now, and the child was being brought up by hand.
-Her state of mind may be imagined, and David's also, when he had been
-roused to read the letter, for David had been at work all night, and
-only lay down at daybreak.
-
- Lucien to Eve.
-
- "PARIS, August 29th.
-
- "MY DEAR SISTER,--Two days ago, at five o'clock in the morning,
- one of God's noblest creatures breathed her last in my arms; she
- was the one woman on earth capable of loving me as you and mother
- and David love me, giving me besides that unselfish affection,
- something that neither mother nor sister can give--the utmost
- bliss of love. Poor Coralie, after giving up everything for my
- sake, may perhaps have died for me--for me, who at this moment
- have not the wherewithal to bury her. She could have solaced my
- life; you, and you alone, my dear good angels, can console me for
- her death. God has forgiven her, I think, the innocent girl, for
- she died like a Christian. Oh, this Paris! Eve, Paris is the glory
- and the shame of France. Many illusions I have lost here already,
- and I have others yet to lose, when I begin to beg for the little
- money needed before I can lay the body of my angel in consecrated
- earth.
- "Your unhappy brother,
- "Lucien."
-
- "P. S. I must have given you much trouble by my heedlessness; some
- day you will know all, and you will forgive me. You must be quite
- easy now; a worthy merchant, a M. Camusot, to whom I once caused
- cruel pangs, promised to arrange everything, seeing that Coralie
- and I were so much distressed."
-
-"The sheet is still moist with his tears," said Eve, looking at the
-letter with a heart so full of sympathy that something of the old love
-for Lucien shone in her eyes.
-
-"Poor fellow, he must have suffered cruelly if he has been loved as he
-says!" exclaimed Eve's husband, happy in his love; and these two
-forgot all their own troubles at this cry of a supreme sorrow. Just at
-that moment Marion rushed in.
-
-"Madame," she panted, "here they are! Here they are!"
-
-"Who is here?"
-
-"Doublon and his men, bad luck to them! Kolb will not let them come
-in; they have come to sell us up."
-
-"No, no, they are not going to sell you up, never fear," cried a voice
-in the next room, and Petit-Claud appeared upon the scene. "I have
-just lodged notice of appeal. We ought not to sit down under a
-judgment that attaches a stigma of bad faith to us. I did not think it
-worth while to fight the case here. I let Cachan talk to gain time for
-you; I am sure of gaining the day at Poitiers----"
-
-"But how much will it cost to win the day?" asked Mme. Sechard.
-
-"Fees if you win, one thousand francs if we lose our case."
-
-"Oh, dear!" cried poor Eve; "why, the remedy is worse than the
-disease!"
-
-Petit-Claud was not a little confused at this cry of innocence
-enlightened by the progress of the flames of litigation. It struck him
-too that Eve was a very beautiful woman. In the middle of the
-discussion old Sechard arrived, summoned by Petit-Claud. The old man's
-presence in the chamber where his little grandson in the cradle lay
-smiling at misfortune completed the scene. The young attorney at once
-addressed the newcomer with:
-
-"You owe me seven hundred francs for the interpleader, Papa Sechard;
-but you can charge the amount to your son in addition to the arrears
-of rent."
-
-The vinedresser felt the sting of the sarcasm conveyed by Petit-
-Claud's tone and manner.
-
-"It would have cost you less to give security for the debt at first,"
-said Eve, leaving the cradle to greet her father-in-law with a kiss.
-
-David, quite overcome by the sight of the crowd outside the house (for
-Kolb's resistance to Doublon's men had collected a knot of people),
-could only hold out a hand to his father; he did not say a word.
-
-"And how, pray, do I come to owe you seven hundred francs?" the old
-man asked, looking at Petit-Claud.
-
-"Why, in the first place, I am engaged by you. Your rent is in
-question; so, as far as I am concerned, you and our debtor are one and
-the same person. If your son does not pay my costs in the case, you
-must pay them yourself.--But this is nothing. In a few hours David
-will be put in prison; will you allow him to go?"
-
-"What does he owe?"
-
-"Something like five or six thousand francs, besides the amounts owing
-to you and to his wife."
-
-The speech roused all the old man's suspicions at once. He looked
-round the little blue-and-white bedroom at the touching scene before
-his eyes--at a beautiful woman weeping over a cradle, at David bowed
-down by anxieties, and then again at the lawyer. This was a trap set
-for him by that lawyer; perhaps they wanted to work upon his paternal
-feelings, to get money out of him? That was what it all meant. He took
-alarm. He went over to the cradle and fondled the child, who held out
-both little arms to him. No heir to an English peerage could be more
-tenderly cared for than this little one in that house of trouble; his
-little embroidered cap was lined with pale pink.
-
-"Eh! let David get out of it as best he may. I am thinking of this
-child here," cried the old grandfather, "and the child's mother will
-approve of that. David that knows so much must know how to pay his
-debts."
-
-"Now I will just put your meaning into plain language," said Petit-
-Claud ironically. "Look here, Papa Sechard, you are jealous of your
-son. Hear the truth! you put David into his present position by
-selling the business to him for three times its value. You ruined him
-to make an extortionate bargain! Yes, don't you shake your head; you
-sold the newspaper to the Cointets and pocketed all the proceeds, and
-that was as much as the whole business was worth. You bear David a
-grudge, not merely because you have plundered him, but because, also,
-your own son is a man far above yourself. You profess to be
-prodigiously fond of your grandson, to cloak your want of feeling for
-your son and his wife, because you ought to pay down money hic et nunc
-for them, while you need only show a posthumous affection for your
-grandson. You pretend to be fond of the little fellow, lest you should
-be taxed with want of feeling for your own flesh and blood. That is
-the bottom of it, Papa Sechard."
-
-"Did you fetch me over to hear this?" asked the old man, glowering at
-his lawyer, his daughter-in-law, and his son in turn.
-
-"Monsieur!" protested poor Eve, turning to Petit-Claud, "have you
-vowed to ruin us? My husband had never uttered a word against his
-father." (Here the old man looked cunningly at her.) "David has told
-me scores of times that you loved him in your way," she added, looking
-at her father-in-law, and understanding his suspicions.
-
-Petit-Claud was only following out the tall Cointet's instructions. He
-was widening the breach between the father and son, lest Sechard
-senior should extricate David from his intolerable position. "The day
-that David Sechard goes to prison shall be the day of your
-introduction to Mme. de Senonches," the "tall Cointet" had said no
-longer ago than yesterday.
-
-Mme. Sechard, with the quick insight of love, had divined Petit-
-Claud's mercenary hostility, even as she had once before felt
-instinctively that Cerizet was a traitor. As for David, his
-astonishment may be imagined; he could not understand how Petit-Claud
-came to know so much of his father's nature and his own history.
-Upright and honorable as he was, he did not dream of the relations
-between his lawyer and the Cointets; nor, for that matter, did he know
-that the Cointets were at work behind Metivier. Meanwhile old Sechard
-took his son's silence as an insult, and Petit-Claud, taking advantage
-of his client's bewilderment, beat a retreat.
-
-"Good-bye, my dear David; you have had warning, notice of appeal
-doesn't invalidate the warrant for arrest. It is the only course left
-open to your creditors, and it will not be long before they take it.
-So, go away at once----Or, rather, if you will take my advice, go to
-the Cointets and see them about it. They have capital. If your
-invention is perfected and answers the purpose, go into partnership
-with them. After all, they are very good fellows----"
-
-"Your invention?" broke in old Sechard.
-
-"Why, do you suppose that your son is fool enough to let his business
-slip away from him without thinking of something else?" exclaimed the
-attorney. "He is on the brink of the discovery of a way of making
-paper at a cost of three francs per ream, instead of ten, he tells
-me."
-
-"One more dodge for taking me in! You are all as thick as thieves in a
-fair. If David has found out such a plan, he has no need of me--he is
-a millionaire! Good-bye, my dears, and a good-day to you all," and the
-old man disappeared down the staircase.
-
-"Find some way of hiding yourself," was Petit-Claud's parting word to
-David, and with that he hurried out to exasperate old Sechard still
-further. He found the vinegrower growling to himself outside in the
-Place du Murier, went with him as far as L'Houmeau, and there left him
-with a threat of putting in an execution for the costs due to him
-unless they were paid before the week was out.
-
-"I will pay you if you will show me how to disinherit my son without
-injuring my daughter-in-law or the boy," said old Sechard, and they
-parted forthwith.
-
-"How well the 'tall Cointet' knows the folk he is dealing with! It is
-just as he said; those seven hundred francs will prevent the father
-from paying seven thousand," the little lawyer thought within himself
-as he climbed the path to Angouleme. "Still, that old slyboots of a
-paper-maker must not overreach us; it is time to ask him for something
-besides promises."
-
-
-
-"Well, David dear, what do you mean to do?" asked Eve, when the lawyer
-had followed her father-in-law.
-
-"Marion, put your biggest pot on the fire!" called David; "I have my
-secret fast."
-
-At this Eve put on her bonnet and shawl and walking shoes with
-feverish haste.
-
-"Kolb, my friend, get ready to go out," she said, "and come with me;
-if there is any way out of this hell, I must find it."
-
-When Eve had gone out, Marion spoke to David. "Do be sensible, sir,"
-she said, "or the mistress will fret herself to death. Make some money
-to pay off your debts, and then you can try to find treasure at your
-ease----"
-
-"Don't talk, Marion, said David; "I am going to overcome my last
-difficulty, and then I can apply for the patent and the improvement on
-the patent at the same time."
-
-This "improvement on the patent" is the curse of the French patentee.
-A man may spend ten years of his life in working out some obscure
-industrial problem; and when he has invented some piece of machinery,
-or made a discovery of some kind, he takes out a patent and imagines
-that he has a right to his own invention; then there comes a
-competitor; and unless the first inventor has foreseen all possible
-contingencies, the second comer makes an "improvement on the patent"
-with a screw or a nut, and takes the whole thing out of his hands. The
-discovery of a cheap material for paper pulp, therefore, is by no
-means the conclusion of the whole matter. David Sechard was anxiously
-looking ahead on all sides lest the fortune sought in the teeth of
-such difficulties should be snatched out of his hands at the last.
-Dutch paper as flax paper is still called, though it is no longer made
-in Holland, is slightly sized; but every sheet is sized separately by
-hand, and this increases the cost of production. If it were possible
-to discover some way of sizing the paper in the pulping-trough, with
-some inexpensive glue, like that in use to-day (though even now it is
-not quite perfect), there would be no "improvement on the patent" to
-fear. For the past month, accordingly, David had been making
-experiments in sizing pulp. He had two discoveries before him.
-
-Eve went to see her mother. Fortunately, it so happened that Mme.
-Chardon was nursing the deputy-magistrate's wife, who had just given
-the Milauds of Nevers an heir presumptive; and Eve, in her distrust of
-all attorneys and notaries, took into her head to apply for advice to
-the legal guardian of widows and orphans. She wanted to know if she
-could relieve David from his embarrassments by taking them upon
-herself and selling her claims upon the estate, and besides, she had
-some hope of discovering the truth as to Petit-Claud's unaccountable
-conduct. The official, struck with Mme. Sechard's beauty, received her
-not only with the respect due to a woman but with a sort of courtesy
-to which Eve was not accustomed. She saw in the magistrate's face an
-expression which, since her marriage, she had seen in no eyes but
-Kolb's; and for a beautiful woman like Eve, this expression is the
-criterion by which men are judged. When passion, or self-interest, or
-age dims that spark of unquestioning fealty that gleams in a young
-man's eyes, a woman feels a certain mistrust of him, and begins to
-observe him critically. The Cointets, Cerizet, and Petit-Claud--all
-the men whom Eve felt instinctively to be her enemies--had turned
-hard, indifferent eyes on her; with the deputy-magistrate, therefore,
-she felt at ease, although, in spite of his kindly courtesy, he swept
-all her hopes away by his first words.
-
-"It is not certain, madame, that the Court-Royal will reverse the
-judgment of the court restricting your lien on your husband's
-property, for payment of moneys due to you by the terms of your
-marriage-contract, to household goods and chattels. Your privilege
-ought not to be used to defraud the other creditors. But in any case,
-you will be allowed to take your share of the proceeds with the other
-creditors, and your father-in-law likewise, as a privileged creditor,
-for arrears of rent. When the court has given the order, other points
-may be raised as to the 'contribution,' as we call it, when a schedule
-of the debts is drawn up, and the creditors are paid a dividend in
-proportion to their claims.
-
-"Then M. Petit-Claud is bringing us to bankruptcy," she cried.
-
-"Petit-Claud is carrying out your husband's instructions," said the
-magistrate; "he is anxious to gain time, so his attorney says. In my
-opinion, you would perhaps do better to waive the appeal and buy in at
-the sale the indispensable implements for carrying on the business;
-you and your father-in-law together might do this, you to the extent
-of your claim through your marriage contract, and he for his arrears
-of rent. But that would be bringing the matter to an end too soon
-perhaps. The lawyers are making a good thing out of your case."
-
-"But then I should be entirely in M. Sechard's father's hands. I
-should owe him the hire of the machinery as well as the house-rent;
-and my husband would still be open to further proceedings from M.
-Metivier, for M. Metivier would have had almost nothing."
-
-"That is true, madame."
-
-"Very well, then we should be even worse off than we are."
-
-"The arm of the law, madame, is at the creditor's disposal. You have
-received three thousand francs, and you must of necessity repay the
-money."
-
-"Oh, sir, can you think that we are capable----" Eve suddenly came to
-a stop. She saw that her justification might injure her brother.
-
-"Oh! I know quite well that it is an obscure affair, that the debtors
-on the one side are honest, scrupulous, and even behaving handsomely;
-and the creditor, on the other, is only a cat's-paw----"
-
-Eve, aghast, looked at him with bewildered eyes.
-
-"You can understand," he continued, with a look full of homely
-shrewdness, "that we on the bench have plenty of time to think over
-all that goes on under our eyes, while the gentlemen in court are
-arguing with each other."
-
-Eve went home in despair over her useless effort. That evening at
-seven o'clock, Doublon came with the notification of imprisonment for
-debt. The proceedings had reached the acute stage.
-
-"After this, I can only go out after nightfall," said David.
-
-Eve and Mme. Chardon burst into tears. To be in hiding was for them a
-shameful thing. As for Kolb and Marion, they were more alarmed for
-David because they had long since made up their minds that there was
-no guile in their master's nature; so frightened were they on his
-account, that they came upstairs under pretence of asking whether they
-could do anything, and found Eve and Mme. Chardon in tears; the three
-whose life had been so straightforward hitherto were overcome by the
-thought that David must go into hiding. And how, moreover, could they
-hope to escape the invisible spies who henceforth would dog every
-least movement of a man, unluckily so absent-minded?
-
-"Gif montame vill vait ein liddle kvarter hour, she can regonnoitre
-der enemy's camp," put in Kolb. "You shall see dot I oonderstand mein
-pizness; for gif I look like ein German, I am ein drue Vrenchman, and
-vat is more, I am ver' conning."
-
-"Oh! madame, do let him go," begged Marion. "He is only thinking of
-saving his master; he hasn't another thought in his head. Kolb is not
-an Alsacien, he is--eh! well--a regular Newfoundland dog for rescuing
-folk."
-
-"Go, my good Kolb," said David; "we have still time to do something."
-
-Kolb hurried off to pay a visit to the bailiff; and it so fell out
-that David's enemies were in Doublon's office, holding a council as to
-the best way of securing him.
-
-The arrest of a debtor is an unheard-of thing in the country, an
-abnormal proceeding if ever there was one. Everybody, in the first
-place, knows everybody else, and creditor and debtor being bound to
-meet each other daily all their lives long, nobody likes to take this
-odious course. When a defaulter--to use the provincial term for a
-debtor, for they do not mince their words in the provinces when
-speaking of this legalized method of helping yourself to another man's
-goods--when a defaulter plans a failure on a large scale, he takes
-sanctuary in Paris. Paris is a kind of City of Refuge for provincial
-bankrupts, an almost impenetrable retreat; the writ of the pursuing
-bailiff has no force beyond the limits of his jurisdiction, and there
-are other obstacles rendering it almost invalid. Wherefore the Paris
-bailiff is empowered to enter the house of a third party to seize the
-person of the debtor, while for the bailiff of the provinces the
-domicile is absolutely inviolable. The law probably makes this
-exception as to Paris, because there it is the rule for two or more
-families to live under the same roof; but in the provinces the bailiff
-who wishes to make forcible entry must have an order from the Justice
-of the Peace; and so wide a discretion is allowed the Justice of the
-Peace, that he is practically able to give or withhold assistance to
-the bailiffs. To the honor of the Justices, it should be said, that
-they dislike the office, and are by no means anxious to assist blind
-passions or revenge.
-
-There are, besides, other and no less serious difficulties in the way
-of arrest for debt--difficulties which tend to temper the severity of
-legislation, and public opinion not infrequently makes a dead letter
-of the law. In great cities there are poor or degraded wretches
-enough; poverty and vice know no scruples, and consent to play the
-spy, but in a little country town, people know each other too well to
-earn wages of the bailiff; the meanest creature who should lend
-himself to dirty work of this kind would be forced to leave the place.
-In the absence of recognized machinery, therefore, the arrest of a
-debtor is a problem presenting no small difficulty; it becomes a kind
-of strife of ingenuity between the bailiff and the debtor, and matter
-for many pleasant stories in the newspapers.
-
-Cointet the elder did not choose to appear in the affair; but the fat
-Cointet openly said that he was acting for Metivier, and went to
-Doublon, taking Cerizet with him. Cerizet was his foreman now, and had
-promised his co-operation in return for a thousand-franc note. Doublon
-could reckon upon two of his understrappers, and thus the Cointets had
-four bloodhounds already on the victim's track. At the actual time of
-arrest, Doublon could furthermore count upon the police force, who are
-bound, if required, to assist a bailiff in the performance of his
-duty. The two men, Doublon himself, and the visitors were all closeted
-together in the private office, beyond the public office, on the
-ground floor.
-
-A tolerably wide-paved lobby, a kind of passage-way, led to the public
-office. The gilded scutcheons of the court, with the word "Bailiff"
-printed thereon in large black letters, hung outside on the house wall
-on either side the door. Both office windows gave upon the street, and
-were protected by heavy iron bars; but the private office looked into
-the garden at the back, wherein Doublon, an adorer of Pomona, grew
-espaliers with marked success. Opposite the office door you beheld the
-door of the kitchen, and, beyond the kitchen, the staircase that
-ascended to the first story. The house was situated in a narrow street
-at the back of the new Law Courts, then in process of construction,
-and only finished after 1830.--These details are necessary if Kolb's
-adventures are to be intelligible to the reader.
-
-It was Kolb's idea to go to the bailiff, to pretend to be willing to
-betray his master, and in this way to discover the traps which would
-be laid for David. Kolb told the servant who opened the door that he
-wanted to speak to M. Doublon on business. The servant was busy
-washing up her plates and dishes, and not very well pleased at Kolb's
-interruption; she pushed open the door of the outer office, and bade
-him wait there till her master was at liberty; then, as he was a
-stranger to her, she told the master in the private office that "a
-man" wanted to speak to him. Now, "a man" so invariably means "a
-peasant," that Doublon said, "Tell him to wait," and Kolb took a seat
-close to the door of the private office. There were voices talking
-within.
-
-"Ah, by the by, how do you mean to set about it? For, if we can catch
-him to-morrow, it will be so much time saved." It was the fat Cointet
-who spoke.
-
-"Nothing easier; the gaffer has come fairly by his nickname," said
-Cerizet.
-
-At the sound of the fat Cointet's voice, Kolb guessed at once that
-they were talking about his master, especially as the sense of the
-words began to dawn upon him; but, when he recognized Cerizet's tones,
-his astonishment grew more and more.
-
-"Und dat fellow haf eaten his pread!" he thought, horror-stricken.
-
-"We must do it in this way, boys," said Doublon. "We will post our
-men, at good long intervals, about the Rue de Beaulieu and the Place
-du Murier in every direction, so that we can follow the gaffer (I like
-that word) without his knowledge. We will not lose sight of him until
-he is safe inside the house where he means to lie in hiding (as he
-thinks); there we will leave him in peace for awhile; then some fine
-day we will come across him before sunrise or sunset."
-
-"But what is he doing now, at this moment? He may be slipping through
-our fingers," said the fat Cointet.
-
-"He is in his house," answered Doublon; "if he left it, I should know.
-I have one witness posted in the Place du Murier, another at the
-corner of the Law Courts, and another thirty paces from the house. If
-our man came out, they would whistle; he could not make three paces
-from his door but I should know of it at once from the signal."
-
-(Bailiffs speak of their understrappers by the polite title of
-"witnesses.")
-
-Here was better hap than Kolb had expected! He went noiselessly out of
-the office, and spoke to the maid in the kitchen.
-
-"Meestair Touplon ees encaged for som time to kom," he said; "I vill
-kom back early to-morrow morning."
-
-A sudden idea had struck the Alsacien, and he proceeded to put it into
-execution. Kolb had served in a cavalry regiment; he hurried off to
-see a livery stable-keeper, an acquaintance of his, picked out a
-horse, had it saddled, and rushed back to the Place du Murier. He
-found Madame Eve in the lowest depths of despondency.
-
-"What is it, Kolb?" asked David, when the Alsacien's face looked in
-upon them, scared but radiant.
-
-"You have scountrels all arount you. De safest way ees to hide de
-master. Haf montame thought of hiding the master anywheres?"
-
-When Kolb, honest fellow, had explained the whole history of Cerizet's
-treachery, of the circle traced about the house, and of the fat
-Cointet's interest in the affair, and given the family some inkling of
-the schemes set on foot by the Cointets against the master,--then
-David's real position gradually became fatally clear.
-
-"It is the Cointet's doing!" cried poor Eve, aghast at the news; "THEY
-are proceeding against you! that accounts for Metivier's
-hardness. . . . They are paper-makers--David! they want your secret!"
-
-"But what can we do to escape them?" exclaimed Mme. Chardon.
-
-"If de misdress had some liddle blace vere the master could pe
-hidden," said Kolb; "I bromise to take him dere so dot nopody shall
-know."
-
-"Wait till nightfall, and go to Basine Clerget," said Eve. "I will go
-now and arrange it all with her. In this case, Basine will be like
-another self to me."
-
-"Spies will follow you," David said at last, recovering some presence
-of mind. "How can we find a way of communicating with Basine if none
-of us can go to her?"
-
-"Montame kan go," said Kolb. "Here ees my scheme--I go out mit der
-master, ve draws der vischtlers on our drack. Montame kan go to
-Montemoiselle Clerchet; nopody vill vollow her. I haf a horse; I take
-de master oop behint; und der teufel is in it if they katches us."
-
-"Very well; good-bye, dear," said poor Eve, springing to her husband's
-arms; "none of us can go to see you, the risk is too great. We must
-say good-bye for the whole time that your imprisonment lasts. We will
-write to each other; Basine will post your letters, and I will write
-under cover to her."
-
-No sooner did David and Kolb come out of the house than they heard a
-sharp whistle, and were followed to the livery stable. Once there,
-Kolb took his master up behind him, with a caution to keep tight hold.
-
-"Veestle avay, mind goot vriends! I care not von rap," cried Kolb.
-"You vill not datch an old trooper," and the old cavalry man clapped
-both spurs to his horse, and was out into the country and the darkness
-not merely before the spies could follow, but before they had time to
-discover the direction that he took.
-
-Eve meanwhile went out on the tolerably ingenious pretext of asking
-advise of Postel, sat awhile enduring the insulting pity that spends
-itself in words, left the Postel family, and stole away unseen to
-Basine Clerget, told her troubles, and asked for help and shelter.
-Basine, for greater safety, had brought Eve into her bedroom, and now
-she opened the door of a little closet, lighted only by a skylight in
-such a way that prying eyes could not see into it. The two friends
-unstopped the flue which opened into the chimney of the stove in the
-workroom, where the girls heated their irons. Eve and Basine spread
-ragged coverlets over the brick floor to deaden any sound that David
-might make, put in a truckle bed, a stove for his experiments, and a
-table and a chair. Basine promised to bring food in the night; and as
-no one had occasion to enter her room, David might defy his enemies
-one and all, or even detectives.
-
-"At last!" Eve said, with her arms about her friend, "at last he is in
-safety."
-
-Eve went back to Postel to submit a fresh doubt that had occurred to
-her, she said. She would like the opinion of such an experienced
-member of the Chamber of Commerce; she so managed that he escorted her
-home, and listened patiently to his commiseration.
-
-"Would this have happened if you had married me?"--all the little
-druggist's remarks were pitched in this key.
-
-Then he went home again to find Mme. Postel jealous of Mme. Sechard,
-and furious with her spouse for his polite attention to that beautiful
-woman. The apothecary advanced the opinion that little red-haired
-women were preferable to tall, dark women, who, like fine horses, were
-always in the stable, he said. He gave proofs of his sincerity, no
-doubt, for Mme. Postel was very sweet to him next day.
-
-"We may be easy," Eve said to her mother and Marion, whom she found
-still "in a taking," in the latter's phrase.
-
-"Oh! they are gone," said Marion, when Eve looked unthinkingly round
-the room.
-
-
-
-One league out of Angouleme on the main road to Paris, Kolb stopped.
-
-"Vere shall we go?"
-
-"To Marsac," said David; "since we are on the way already, I will try
-once more to soften my father's heart."
-
-"I would rader mount to der assault of a pattery," said Kolb, "your
-resbected fader haf no heart whatefer."
-
-The ex-pressman had no belief in his son; he judged him from the
-outside point of view, and waited for results. He had no idea, to
-begin with, that he had plundered David, nor did he make allowance for
-the very different circumstances under which they had begun life; he
-said to himself, "I set him up with a printing-house, just as I found
-it myself; and he, knowing a thousand times more than I did, cannot
-keep it going." He was mentally incapable of understanding his son; he
-laid the blame of failure upon him, and even prided himself, as it
-were on his superiority to a far greater intellect than his own, with
-the thought, "I am securing his bread for him."
-
-Moralists will never succeed in making us comprehend the full extent
-of the influence of sentiment upon self-interest, an influence every
-whit as strong as the action of interest upon our sentiments; for
-every law of our nature works in two ways, and acts and reacts upon
-us.
-
-David, on his side, understood his father, and in his sublime charity
-forgave him. Kolb and David reached Marsac at eight o'clock, and
-suddenly came in upon the old man as he was finishing his dinner,
-which, by force of circumstances, came very near bedtime.
-
-"I see you because there is no help for it," said old Sechard with a
-sour smile.
-
-"Und how should you and mein master meet? He soars in der shkies, and
-you are always mit your vines! You bay for him, that's vot you are a
-fader for----"
-
-"Come, Kolb, off with you. Put up the horse at Mme. Courtois' so as to
-save inconvenience here; fathers are always in the right, remember
-that."
-
-Kolb went off, growling like a chidden dog, obedient but protesting;
-and David proposed to give his father indisputable proof of his
-discovery, while reserving his secret. He offered to give him an
-interest in the affair in return for money paid down; a sufficient sum
-to release him from his present difficulties, with or without a
-further amount of capital to be employed in developing the invention.
-
-"And how are you going to prove to me that you can make good paper
-that costs nothing out of nothing, eh?" asked the ex-printer, giving
-his son a glance, vinous, it may be, but keen, inquisitive, and
-covetous; a look like a flash of lightning from a sodden cloud; for
-the old "bear," faithful to his traditions, never went to bed without
-a nightcap, consisting of a couple of bottles of excellent old wine,
-which he "tippled down" of an evening, to use his own expression.
-
-"Nothing simpler," said David; "I have none of the paper about me, for
-I came here to be out of Doublon's way; and having come so far, I
-thought I might as well come to you at Marsac as borrow of a money-
-lender. I have nothing on me but my clothes. Shut me up somewhere on
-the premises, so that nobody can come in and see me at work, and----"
-
-"What? you will not let me see you at your work then?" asked the old
-man, with an ugly look at his son.
-
-"You have given me to understand plainly, father, that in matters of
-business there is no question of father and son----"
-
-"Ah! you distrust the father that gave you life!"
-
-"No; the other father who took away the means of earning a
-livelihood."
-
-"Each for himself, you are right!" said the old man. "Very good, I
-will put you in the cellar."
-
-"I will go down there with Kolb. You must let me have a large pot for
-my pulp," said David; then he continued, without noticing the quick
-look his father gave him,--"and you must find artichoke and asparagus
-stalks for me, and nettles, and the reeds that you cut by the stream
-side, and to-morrow morning I will come out of your cellar with some
-splendid paper."
-
-"If you can do that," hiccoughed the "bear," "I will let you have,
-perhaps--I will see, that is, if I can let you have--pshaw! twenty-
-five thousand francs. On condition, mind, that you make as much for me
-every year."
-
-"Put me to the proof, I am quite willing," cried David. "Kolb! take
-the horse and go to Mansle, quick, buy a large hair sieve for me of a
-cooper, and some glue of the grocer, and come back again as soon as
-you can."
-
-"There! drink," said old Sechard, putting down a bottle of wine, a
-loaf, and the cold remains of the dinner. "You will need your
-strength. I will go and look for your bits of green stuff; green rags
-you use for your pulp, and a trifle too green, I am afraid."
-
-Two hours later, towards eleven o'clock that night, David and Kolb
-took up their quarters in a little out-house against the cellar wall;
-they found the floor paved with runnel tiles, and all the apparatus
-used in Angoumois for the manufacture of Cognac brandy.
-
-"Pans and firewood! Why, it is as good as a factory made on purpose!"
-cried David.
-
-"Very well, good-night," said old Sechard; "I shall lock you in, and
-let both the dogs loose; nobody will bring you any paper, I am sure.
-You show me those sheets to-morrow, and I give you my word I will be
-your partner and the business will be straightforward and properly
-managed."
-
-David and Kolb, locked into the distillery, spent nearly two hours in
-macerating the stems, using a couple of logs for mallets. The fire
-blazed up, the water boiled. About two o'clock in the morning, Kolb
-heard a sound which David was too busy to notice, a kind of deep
-breath like a suppressed hiccough. Snatching up one of the two lighted
-dips, he looked round the walls, and beheld old Sechard's empurpled
-countenance filling up a square opening above a door hitherto hidden
-by a pile of empty casks in the cellar itself. The cunning old man had
-brought David and Kolb into his underground distillery by the outer
-door, through which the casks were rolled when full. The inner door
-had been made so that he could roll his puncheons straight from the
-cellar into the distillery, instead of taking them round through the
-yard.
-
-"Aha! thees eies not fair blay, you vant to shvindle your son!" cried
-the Alsacien. "Do you kow vot you do ven you trink ein pottle of vine?
-You gif goot trink to ein bad scountrel."
-
-"Oh, father!" cried David.
-
-"I came to see if you wanted anything," said old Sechard, half sobered
-by this time.
-
-"Und it was for de inderest vot you take in us dot you brought der
-liddle ladder!" commented Kolb, as he pushed the casks aside and flung
-open the door; and there, in fact, on a short step-ladder, the old man
-stood in his shirt.
-
-"Risking your health!" said David.
-
-"I think I must be walking in my sleep," said old Sechard, coming down
-in confusion. "Your want of confidence in your father set me dreaming;
-I dreamed you were making a pact with the Devil to do impossible
-things."
-
-"Der teufel," said Kolb; "dot is your own bassion for de liddle
-goldfinches."
-
-"Go back to bed again, father," said David; "lock us in if you will,
-but you may save yourself the trouble of coming down again. Kolb will
-mount guard."
-
-At four o'clock in the morning David came out of the distillery; he
-had been careful to leave no sign of his occupation behind him; but he
-brought out some thirty sheets of paper that left nothing to be
-desired in fineness, whiteness, toughness, and strength, all of them
-bearing by way of water-mark the impress of the uneven hairs of the
-sieve. The old man took up the samples and put his tongue to them, the
-lifelong habit of the pressman, who tests papers in this way. He felt
-it between his thumb and finger, crumpled and creased it, put it
-through all the trials by which a printer assays the quality of a
-sample submitted to him, and when it was found wanting in no respect,
-he still would not allow that he was beaten.
-
-"We have yet to know how it takes an impression," he said, to avoid
-praising his son.
-
-"Funny man!" exclaimed Kolb.
-
-The old man was cool enough now. He cloaked his feigned hesitation
-with paternal dignity.
-
-"I wish to tell you in fairness, father, that even now it seems to me
-that paper costs more than it ought to do; I want to solve the problem
-of sizing it in the pulping-trough. I have just that one improvement
-to make."
-
-"Oho! so you are trying to trick me!"
-
-"Well, shall I tell you? I can size the pulp as it is, but so far I
-cannot do it evenly, and the surface is as rough as a burr!"
-
-"Very good, size your pulp in the trough, and you shall have my
-money."
-
-"Mein master will nefer see de golor of your money," declared Kolb.
-
-"Father," he began, "I have never borne you any grudge for making over
-the business to me at such an exorbitant valuation; I have seen the
-father through it all. I have said to myself--'The old man has worked
-very hard, and he certainly gave me a better bringing up than I had a
-right to expect; let him enjoy the fruits of his toil in peace, and in
-his own way.--I even gave up my mother's money to you. I began
-encumbered with debt, and bore all the burdens that you put upon me
-without a murmur. Well, harassed for debts that were not of my making,
-with no bread in the house, and my feet held to the flames, I have
-found out the secret. I have struggled on patiently till my strength
-is exhausted. It is perhaps your duty to help me, but do not give ME a
-thought; think of a woman and a little one" (David could not keep back
-the tears at this); "think of them, and give them help and protection.
---Kolb and Marion have given me their savings; will you do less?" he
-cried at last, seeing that his father was as cold as the impression-
-stone.
-
-"And that was not enough for you," said the old man, without the
-slightest sense of shame; "why, you would waste the wealth of the
-Indies! Good-night! I am too ignorant to lend a hand in schemes got up
-on purpose to exploit me. A monkey will never gobble down a bear"
-(alluding to the workshop nicknames); "I am a vinegrower, I am not a
-banker. And what is more, look you, business between father and son
-never turns out well. Stay and eat your dinner here; you shan't say
-that you came for nothing."
-
-There are some deep-hearted natures that can force their own pain down
-into inner depths unsuspected by those dearest to them; and with them,
-when anguish forces its way to the surface and is visible, it is only
-after a mighty upheaval. David's nature was one of these. Eve had
-thoroughly understood the noble character of the man. But now that the
-depths had been stirred, David's father took the wave of anguish that
-passed over his son's features for a child's trick, an attempt to "get
-round" his father, and his bitter grief for mortification over the
-failure of the attempt. Father and son parted in anger.
-
-David and Kolb reached Angouleme on the stroke of midnight. They came
-back on foot, and steathily, like burglars. Before one o'clock in the
-morning David was installed in the impenetrable hiding-place prepared
-by his wife in Basine Clerget's house. No one saw him enter it, and
-the pity that henceforth should shelter David was the most resourceful
-pity of all--the pity of a work-girl.
-
-Kolb bragged that day that he had saved his master on horseback, and
-only left him in a carrier's van well on the way to Limoges. A
-sufficient provision of raw material had been laid up in Basine's
-cellar, and Kolb, Marion, Mme. Sechard, and her mother had no
-communication with the house.
-
-Two days after the scene at Marsac, old Sechard came hurrying to
-Angouleme and his daughter-in-law. Covetousness had brought him. There
-were three clear weeks ahead before the vintage began, and he thought
-he would be on the look-out for squalls, to use his own expression. To
-this end he took up his quarters in one of the attics which he had
-reserved by the terms of the lease, wilfully shutting his eyes to the
-bareness and want that made his son's home desolate. If they owed him
-rent, they could well afford to keep him. He ate his food from a
-tinned iron plate, and made no marvel at it. "I began in the same
-way," he told his daughter-in-law, when she apologized for the absence
-of silver spoons.
-
-Marion was obliged to run into debt for necessaries for them all. Kolb
-was earning a franc for daily wage as a brick-layer's laborer; and at
-last poor Eve, who, for the sake of her husband and child, had
-sacrificed her last resources to entertain David's father, saw that
-she had only ten francs left. She had hoped to the last to soften the
-old miser's heart by her affectionate respect, and patience, and
-pretty attentions; but old Sechard was obdurate as ever. When she saw
-him turn the same cold eyes on her, the same look that the Cointets
-had given her, and Petit-Claud and Cerizet, she tried to watch and
-guess old Sechard's intentions. Trouble thrown away! Old Sechard,
-never sober, never drunk, was inscrutable; intoxication is a double
-veil. If the old man's tipsiness was sometimes real, it was quite
-often feigned for the purpose of extracting David's secret from his
-wife. Sometimes he coaxed, sometimes he frightened his daughter-in-
-law.
-
-"I will drink up my property; I WILL BUY AN ANNUITY," he would
-threaten when Eve told him that she knew nothing.
-
-The humiliating struggle was wearing her out; she kept silence at
-last, lest she should show disrespect to her husband's father.
-
-"But, father," she said one day when driven to extremity, "there is a
-very simple way of finding out everything. Pay David's debts; he will
-come home, and you can settle it between you."
-
-"Ha! that is what you want to get out of me, is it?" he cried. "It is
-as well to know!"
-
-But if Sechard had no belief in his son, he had plenty of faith in the
-Cointets. He went to consult them, and the Cointets dazzled him of set
-purpose, telling him that his son's experiments might mean millions of
-francs.
-
-"If David can prove that he has succeeded, I shall not hesitate to go
-into partnership with him, and reckon his discovery as half the
-capital," the tall Cointet told him.
-
-The suspicious old man learned a good deal over nips of brandy with
-the work-people, and something more by questioning Petit-Claud and
-feigning stupidity; and at length he felt convinced that the Cointets
-were the real movers behind Metivier; they were plotting to ruin
-Sechard's printing establishment, and to lure him (Sechard) on to pay
-his son's debts by holding out the discovery as a bait. The old man of
-the people did not suspect that Petit-Claud was in the plot, nor had
-he any idea of the toils woven to ensnare the great secret. A day came
-at last when he grew angry and out of patience with the daughter-in-
-law who would not so much as tell him where David was hiding; he
-determined to force the laboratory door, for he had discovered that
-David was wont to make his experiments in the workshop where the
-rollers were melted down.
-
-He came downstairs very early one morning and set to work upon the
-lock.
-
-"Hey! Papa Sechard, what are you doing there?" Marion called out. (She
-had risen at daybreak to go to her papermill, and now she sprang
-across to the workshop.)
-
-"I am in my own house, am I not?" said the old man, in some confusion.
-
-"Oh, indeed, are you turning thief in your old age? You are not drunk
-this time either----I shall go straight to the mistress and tell her."
-
-"Hold your tongue, Marion," said Sechard, drawing two crowns of six
-francs each from his pocket. "There----"
-
-"I will hold my tongue, but don't you do it again," said Marion,
-shaking her finger at him, "or all Angouleme shall hear of it."
-
-The old man had scarcely gone out, however, when Marion went up to her
-mistress.
-
-"Look, madame," she said, "I have had twelve francs out of your
-father-in-law, and here they are----"
-
-"How did you do it?"
-
-"What was he wanting to do but to take a look at the master's pots and
-pans and stuff, to find out the secret, forsooth. I knew quite well
-that there was nothing in the little place, but I frightened him and
-talked as if he were setting about robbing his son, and he gave me
-twelve francs to say nothing about it."
-
-Just at that moment Basine came in radiant, and with a letter for her
-friend, a letter from David written on magnificent paper, which she
-handed over when they were alone.
-
- "MY ADORED EVE,--I am writing to you the first letter on my first
- sheet of paper made by the new process. I have solved the problem
- of sizing the pulp in the trough at last. A pound of pulp costs
- five sous, even supposing that the raw material is grown on good
- soil with special culture; three francs' worth of sized pulp will
- make a ream of paper, at twelve pounds to the ream. I am quite
- sure that I can lessen the weight of books by one-half. The
- envelope, the letter, and samples enclosed are all manufactured in
- different ways. I kiss you; you shall have wealth now to add to
- our happiness, everything else we had before."
-
-"There!" said Eve, handing the samples to her father-in-law, "when the
-vintage is over let your son have the money, give him a chance to make
-his fortune, and you shall be repaid ten times over; he has succeeded
-at last!"
-
-Old Sechard hurried at once to the Cointets. Every sample was tested
-and minutely examined; the prices, from three to ten francs per ream,
-were noted on each separate slip; some were sized, others unsized;
-some were of almost metallic purity, others soft as Japanese paper; in
-color there was every possible shade of white. If old Sechard and the
-two Cointets had been Jews examining diamonds, their eyes could not
-have glistened more eagerly.
-
-"Your son is on the right track," the fat Cointet said at length.
-
-"Very well, pay his debts," returned old Sechard.
-
-"By all means, if he will take us into partnership," said the tall
-Cointet.
-
-"You are extortioners!" cried old Sechard. "You have been suing him
-under Metivier's name, and you mean me to buy you off; that is the
-long and the short of it. Not such a fool, gentlemen----"
-
-The brothers looked at one another, but they contrived to hide their
-surprise at the old miser's shrewdness.
-
-"We are not millionaires," said fat Cointet; "we do not discount bills
-for amusement. We should think ourselves well off if we could pay
-ready money for our bits of accounts for rags, and we still give bills
-to our dealer."
-
-"The experiment ought to be tried first on a much larger scale," the
-tall Cointet said coldly; "sometimes you try a thing with a saucepan
-and succeed, and fail utterly when you experiment with bulk. You
-should help your son out of difficulties."
-
-"Yes; but when my son is at liberty, would he take me as his partner?"
-
-"That is no business of ours," said the fat Cointet. "My good man, do
-you suppose that when you have paid some ten thousand francs for your
-son, that there is an end of it? It will cost two thousand francs to
-take out a patent; there will be journeys to Paris; and before going
-to any expense, it would be prudent to do as my brother suggests, and
-make a thousand reams or so; to try several whole batches to make
-sure. You see, there is nothing you must be so much on your guard
-against as an inventor."
-
-"I have a liking for bread ready buttered myself," added the tall
-Cointet.
-
-All through that night the old man ruminated over this dilemma--"If I
-pay David's debts, he will be set at liberty, and once set at liberty,
-he need not share his fortune with me unless he chooses. He knows very
-well that I cheated him over the first partnership, and he will not
-care to try a second; so it is to my interest to keep him shut up, the
-wretched boy."
-
-The Cointets knew enough of Sechard senior to see that they should
-hunt in couples. All three said to themselves--"Experiments must be
-tried before the discovery can take any practical shape. David Sechard
-must be set at liberty before those experiments can be made; and David
-Sechard, set at liberty, will slip through our fingers."
-
-Everybody involved, moreover, had his own little afterthought.
-
-Petit-Claud, for instance, said, "As soon as I am married, I will slip
-my neck out of the Cointets' yoke; but till then I shall hold on."
-
-The tall Cointet thought, "I would rather have David under lock and
-key, and then I should be master of the situation."
-
-Old Sechard, too, thought, "If I pay my son's debts, he will repay me
-with a 'Thank you!' "
-
-Eve, hard pressed (for the old man threatened now to turn her out of
-the house), would neither reveal her husband's hiding-place, nor even
-send proposals of a safe-conduct. She could not feel sure of finding
-so safe a refuge a second time.
-
-"Set your son at liberty," she told her father-in-law, "and then you
-shall know everything."
-
-The four interested persons sat, as it were, with a banquet spread
-before them, none of them daring to begin, each one suspicious and
-watchful of his neighbor. A few days after David went into hiding,
-Petit-Claud went to the mill to see the tall Cointet.
-
-"I have done my best," he said; "David has gone into prison of his own
-accord somewhere or other; he is working out some improvement there in
-peace. It is no fault of mine if you have not gained your end; are you
-going to keep your promise?"
-
-"Yes, if we succeed," said the tall Cointet. "Old Sechard was here
-only a day or two ago; he came to ask us some questions as to paper-
-making. The old miser has got wind of his son's invention; he wants to
-turn it to his own account, so there is some hope of a partnership.
-You are with the father and the son----"
-
-"Be the third person in the trinity and give them up," smiled Petit-
-Claud.
-
-"Yes," said Cointet. "When you have David in prison, or bound to us by
-a deed of partnership, you shall marry Mlle. de la Haye."
-
-"Is that your ultimatum?"
-
-"My sine qua non," said Cointet, "since we are speaking in foreign
-languages."
-
-"Then here is mine in plain language," Petit-Claud said drily.
-
-"Ah! let us have it," answered Cointet, with some curiosity.
-
-"You will present me to-morrow to Mme. de Sononches, and do something
-definite for me; you will keep your word, in short; or I will clear
-off Sechard's debts myself, sell my practice, and go into partnership
-with him. I will not be duped. You have spoken out, and I am doing the
-same. I have given proof, give me proof of your sincerity. You have
-all, and I have nothing. If you won't do fairly by me, I know your
-cards, and I shall play for my own hand."
-
-The tall Cointet took his hat and umbrella, his face at the same time
-taking its Jesuitical expression, and out he went, bidding Petit-Claud
-come with him.
-
-"You shall see, my friend, whether I have prepared your way for you,"
-said he.
-
-The shrewd paper-manufacturer saw his danger at a glance; and saw,
-too, that with a man like Petit-Claud it was better to play above
-board. Partly to be prepared for contingencies, partly to satisfy his
-conscience, he had dropped a word or two to the point in the ear of
-the ex-consul-general, under the pretext of putting Mlle. de la Haye's
-financial position before that gentleman.
-
-"I have the man for Francoise," he had said; "for with thirty thousand
-francs of dot, a girl must not expect too much nowadays."
-
-"We will talk it over later on," answered Francis du Hautoy, ex-
-consul-general. "Mme. de Senonches' positon has altered very much
-since Mme. de Bargeton went away; we very likely might marry Francoise
-to some elderly country gentleman."
-
-"She would disgrace herself if you did," Cointet returned in his dry
-way. "Better marry her to some capable, ambitious young man; you could
-help him with your influence, and he would make a good position for
-his wife."
-
-"We shall see," said Francis du Hautoy; "her godmother ought to be
-consulted first, in any case."
-
-When M. de Bargeton died, his wife sold the great house in the Rue du
-Minage. Mme. de Senonches, finding her own house scarcely large
-enough, persuaded M. de Senonches to buy the Hotel de Bargeton, the
-cradle of Lucien Chardon's ambitions, the scene of the earliest events
-in his career. Zephirine de Senonches had it in mind to succeed to
-Mme. de Bargeton; she, too, would be a kind of queen in Angouleme; she
-would have "a salon," and be a great lady, in short. There was a
-schism in Angouleme, a strife dating from the late M. de Bargeton's
-duel with M. de Chandour. Some maintained that Louise de Negrepelisse
-was blameless, others believed in Stanislas de Chandour's scandals.
-Mme. de Senonches declared for the Bargetons, and began by winning
-over that faction. Many frequenters of the Hotel de Bargeton had been
-so accustomed for years to their nightly game of cards in the house
-that they could not leave it, and Mme. de Senonches turned this fact
-to account. She received every evening, and certainly gained all the
-ground lost by Amelie de Chandour, who set up for a rival.
-
-Francis du Hautoy, living in the inmost circle of nobility in
-Angouleme, went so far as to think of marrying Francoise to old M. de
-Severac, Mme. du Brossard having totally failed to capture that
-gentleman for her daughter; and when Mme. de Bargeton reappeared as
-the prefect's wife, Zephirine's hopes for her dear goddaughter waxed
-high, indeed. The Comtesse du Chatelet, so she argued, would be sure
-to use her influence for her champion.
-
-Boniface Cointet had Angouleme at his fingers' ends; he saw all the
-difficulties at a glance, and resolved to sweep them out of the way by
-a bold stroke that only a Tartuffe's brain could invent. The puny
-lawyer was not a little amused to find his fellow-conspirator keeping
-his word with him; not a word did Petit-Claud utter; he respected the
-musings of his companion, and they walked the whole way from the
-paper-mill to the Rue du Minage in silence.
-
-"Monsieur and madame are at breakfast"--this announcement met the ill-
-timed visitors on the steps.
-
-"Take in our names, all the same," said the tall Cointet; and feeling
-sure of his position, he followed immediately behind the servant and
-introduced his companion to the elaborately-affected Zephirine, who
-was breakfasting in company with M. Francis du Hautoy and Mlle. de la
-Haye. M. de Senonches had gone, as usual, for a day's shooting over M.
-de Pimentel's land.
-
-"M. Petit-Claud is the young lawyer of whom I spoke to you, madame; he
-will go through the trust accounts when your fair ward comes of age."
-
-The ex-diplomatist made a quick scrutiny of Petit-Claud, who, for his
-part, was looking furtively at the "fair ward." As for Zephirine, who
-heard of the matter for the first time, her surprise was so great that
-she dropped her fork.
-
-Mlle. de la Haye, a shrewish young woman with an ill-tempered face, a
-waist that could scarcely be called slender, a thin figure, and
-colorless, fair hair, in spite of a certain little air that she had,
-was by no means easy to marry. The "parentage unknown" on her birth
-certificate was the real bar to her entrance into the sphere where her
-godmother's affection stove to establish her. Mlle. de la Haye,
-ignorant of her real position, was very hard to please; the richest
-merchant in L'Houmeau had found no favor in her sight. Cointet saw the
-sufficiently significant expression of the young lady's face at the
-sight of the little lawyer, and turning, beheld a precisely similar
-grimace on Petit-Claud's countenance. Mme. de Senonches and Francis
-looked at each other, as if in search of an excuse for getting rid of
-the visitors. All this Cointet saw. He asked M. du Hautoy for the
-favor of a few minutes' speech with him, and the pair went together
-into the drawing-room.
-
-"Fatherly affection is blinding you, sir," he said bluntly. "You will
-not find it an easy thing to marry your daughter; and, acting in your
-interest throughout, I have put you in a position from which you
-cannot draw back; for I am fond of Francoise, she is my ward. Now--
-Petit-Claud knows EVERYTHING! His overweening ambition is a guarantee
-for our dear child's happiness; for, in the first place, Francoise
-will do as she likes with her husband; and, in the second, he wants
-your influence. You can ask the new prefect for the post of crown
-attorney for him in the court here. M. Milaud is definitely appointed
-to Nevers, Petit-Claud will sell his practice, you will have no
-difficulty in obtaining a deputy public prosecutor's place for him;
-and it will not be long before he becomes attorney for the crown,
-president of the court, deputy, what you will."
-
-Francis went back to the dining-room and behaved charmingly to his
-daughter's suitor. He gave Mme. de Senonches a look, and brought the
-scene to a close with an invitation to dine with them on the morrow;
-Petit-Claud must come and discuss the business in hand. He even went
-downstairs and as far as the corner with the visitors, telling Petit-
-Claud that after Cointet's recommendation, both he and Mme. de
-Senonches were disposed to approve all that Mlle. de la Haye's trustee
-had arranged for the welfare of that little angel.
-
-"Oh!" cried Petit-Claud, as they came away, "what a plain girl! I have
-been taken in----"
-
-"She looks a lady-like girl," returned Cointet, "and besides, if she
-were a beauty, would they give her to you? Eh! my dear fellow, thirty
-thousand francs and the influence of Mme. de Senonches and the
-Comtesse du Chatelet! Many a small landowner would be wonderfully glad
-of the chance, and all the more so since M. Francis du Hautoy is never
-likely to marry, and all that he has will go to the girl. Your
-marriage is as good as settled."
-
-"How?"
-
-"That is what I am just going to tell you," returned Cointet, and he
-gave his companion an account of his recent bold stroke. "M. Milaud is
-just about to be appointed attorney for the crown at Nevers, my dear
-fellow," he continued; "sell your practice, and in ten years' time you
-will be Keeper of the Seals. You are not the kind of a man to draw
-back from any service required of you by the Court."
-
-"Very well," said Petit-Claud, his zeal stirred by the prospect of
-such a career, "very well, be in the Place du Murier to-morrow at
-half-past four; I will see old Sechard in the meantime; we will have a
-deed of partnership drawn up, and the father and the son shall be
-bound thereby, and delivered to the third person of the trinity--
-Cointet, to wit."
-
-
-
-To return to Lucien in Paris. On the morrow of the loss announced in
-his letter, he obtained a visa for his passport, bought a stout holly
-stick, and went to the Rue d'Enfer to take a place in the little
-market van, which took him as far as Longjumeau for half a franc. He
-was going home to Angouleme. At the end of the first day's tramp he
-slept in a cowshed, two leagues from Arpajon. He had come no farther
-than Orleans before he was very weary, and almost ready to break down,
-but there he found a boatman willing to bring him as far as Tours for
-three francs, and food during the journey cost him but forty sous.
-Five days of walking brought him from Tours to Poitiers, and left him
-with but five francs in his pockets, but he summoned up all his
-remaining strength for the journey before him.
-
-He was overtaken by night in the open country, and had made up his
-mind to sleep out of doors, when a traveling carriage passed by,
-slowly climbing the hillside, and, all unknown to the postilion, the
-occupants, and the servant, he managed to slip in among the luggage,
-crouching in between two trunks lest he should be shaken off by the
-jolting of the carriage--and so he slept.
-
-He awoke with the sun shining into his eyes, and the sound of voices
-in his ears. The carriage had come to a standstill. Looking about him,
-he knew that he was at Mansle, the little town where he had waited for
-Mme. de Bargeton eighteen months before, when his heart was full of
-hope and love and joy. A group of post-boys eyed him curiously and
-suspiciously, covered with dust as he was, wedged in among the
-luggage. Lucien jumped down, but before he could speak two travelers
-stepped out of the caleche, and the words died away on his lips; for
-there stood the new Prefect of the Charente, Sixte du Chatelet, and
-his wife, Louise de Negrepelisse.
-
-"Chance gave us a traveling-companion, if we had but known!" said the
-Countess. "Come in with us, monsieur."
-
-Lucien gave the couple a distant bow and a half-humbled half-defiant
-glance; then he turned away into a cross-country road in search of
-some farmhouse, where he might make a breakfast on milk and bread, and
-rest awhile, and think quietly over the future. He still had three
-francs left. On and on he walked with the hurrying pace of fever,
-noticing as he went, down by the riverside, that the country grew more
-and more picturesque. It was near mid-day when he came upon a sheet of
-water with willows growing about the margin, and stopped for awhile to
-rest his eyes on the cool, thick-growing leaves; and something of the
-grace of the fields entered into his soul.
-
-In among the crests of the willows, he caught a glimpse of a mill
-near-by on a branch stream, and of the thatched roof of the mill-house
-where the house-leeks were growing. For all ornament, the quaint
-cottage was covered with jessamine and honeysuckle and climbing hops,
-and the garden about it was gay with phloxes and tall, juicy-leaved
-plants. Nets lay drying in the sun along a paved causeway raised above
-the highest flood level, and secured by massive piles. Ducks were
-swimming in the clear mill-pond below the currents of water roaring
-over the wheel. As the poet came nearer he heard the clack of the
-mill, and saw the good-natured, homely woman of the house knitting on
-a garden bench, and keeping an eye upon a little one who was chasing
-the hens about.
-
-Lucien came forward. "My good woman," he said, "I am tired out; I have
-a fever on me, and I have only three francs; will you undertake to
-give me brown bread and milk, and let me sleep in the barn for a week?
-I shall have time to write to my people, and they will either come to
-fetch me or send me money."
-
-"I am quite willing, always supposing that my husband has no
-objection.--Hey! little man!"
-
-The miller came up, gave Lucien a look over, and took his pipe out of
-his mouth to remark, "Three francs for a weeks board? You might as
-well pay nothing at all."
-
-"Perhaps I shall end as a miller's man," thought the poet, as his eyes
-wandered over the lovely country. Then the miller's wife made a bed
-ready for him, and Lucien lay down and slept so long that his hostess
-was frightened.
-
-"Courtois," she said, next day at noon, "just go in and see whether
-that young man is dead or alive; he has been lying there these
-fourteen hours."
-
-The miller was busy spreading out his fishing-nets and lines. "It is
-my belief," he said, "that the pretty fellow yonder is some starveling
-play-actor without a brass farthing to bless himself with."
-
-"What makes you think that, little man?" asked the mistress of the
-mill.
-
-"Lord, he is not a prince, nor a lord, nor a member of parliament, nor
-a bishop; why are his hands as white as if he did nothing?"
-
-"Then it is very strange that he does not feel hungry and wake up,"
-retorted the miller's wife; she had just prepared breakfast for
-yesterday's chance guest. "A play-actor, is he?" she continued. "Where
-will he be going? It is too early yet for the fair at Angouleme."
-
-But neither the miller nor his wife suspected that (actors, princes,
-and bishops apart) there is a kind of being who is both prince and
-actor, and invested besides with a magnificent order of priesthood--
-that the Poet seems to do nothing, yet reigns over all humanity when
-he can paint humanity.
-
-"What can he be?" Courtois asked of his wife.
-
-"Suppose it should be dangerous to take him in?" queried she.
-
-"Pooh! thieves look more alive than that; we should have been robbed
-by this time," returned her spouse.
-
-"I am neither a prince nor a thief, nor a bishop nor an actor," Lucien
-said wearily; he must have overheard the colloquy through the window,
-and now he suddenly appeared. "I am poor, I am tired out, I have come
-on foot from Paris. My name is Lucien de Rubempre, and my father was
-M. Chardon, who used to have Postel's business in L'Houmeau. My sister
-married David Sechard, the printer in the Place du Murier at
-Angouleme."
-
-"Stop a bit," said the miller, "that printer is the son of the old
-skinflint who farms his own land at Marsac, isn't he?"
-
-"The very same," said Lucien.
-
-"He is a queer kind of father, he is!" Courtois continued. "He is
-worth two hundred thousand francs and more, without counting his
-money-box, and he has sold his son up, they say."
-
-When body and soul have been broken by a prolonged painful struggle,
-there comes a crisis when a strong nature braces itself for greater
-effort; but those who give way under the strain either die or sink
-into unconsciousness like death. That hour of crisis had struck for
-Lucien; at the vague rumor of the catastrophe that had befallen David
-he seemed almost ready to succumb. "Oh! my sister!" he cried. "Oh,
-God! what have I done? Base wretch that I am!"
-
-He dropped down on the wooden bench, looking white and powerless as a
-dying man; the miller's wife brought out a bowl of milk and made him
-drink, but he begged the miller to help him back to his bed, and asked
-to be forgiven for bringing a dying man into their house. He thought
-his last hour had come. With the shadow of death, thoughts of religion
-crossed a brain so quick to conceive picturesque fancies; he would see
-the cure, he would confess and receive the last sacraments. The moan,
-uttered in the faint voice by a young man with such a comely face and
-figure, went to Mme. Courtois' heart.
-
-"I say, little man, just take the horse and go to Marsac and ask Dr.
-Marron to come and see this young man; he is in a very bad way, it
-seems to me, and you might bring the cure as well. Perhaps they may
-know more about that printer in the Place du Murier than you do, for
-Postel married M. Marron's daughter."
-
-Courtois departed. The miller's wife tried to make Lucien take food;
-like all country-bred folk, she was full of the idea that sick folk
-must be made to eat. He took no notice of her, but gave way to a
-violent storm of remorseful grief, a kind of mental process of
-counter-irritation, which relieved him.
-
-The Courtois' mill lies a league away from Marsac, the town of the
-district, and the half-way between Mansle and Angouleme; so it was not
-long before the good miller came back with the doctor and the cure.
-Both functionaries had heard rumors coupling Lucien's name with the
-name of Mme. de Bargeton; and now when the whole department was
-talking of the lady's marriage to the new Prefect and her return to
-Angouleme as the Comtesse du Chatelet, both cure and doctor were
-consumed with a violent curiosity to know why M. de Bargeton's widow
-had not married the young poet with whom she had left Angouleme. And
-when they heard, furthermore, that Lucien was at the mill, they were
-eager to know whether the poet had come to the rescue of his brother-
-in-law. Curiosity and humanity alike prompted them to go at once to
-the dying man. Two hours after Courtois set out, Lucien heard the
-rattle of old iron over the stony causeway, the country doctor's
-ramshackle chaise came up to the door, and out stepped MM. Marron, for
-the cure was the doctor's uncle. Lucien's bedside visitors were as
-intimate with David's father as country neighbors usually are in a
-small vine-growing township. The doctor looked at the dying man, felt
-his pulse, and examined his tongue; then he looked at the miller's
-wife, and smiled reassuringly.
-
-"Mme. Courtois," said he, "if, as I do not doubt, you have a bottle of
-good wine somewhere in the cellar, and a fat eel in your fish-pond,
-put them before your patient, it is only exhaustion; there is nothing
-the matter with him. Our great man will be on his feet again
-directly."
-
-"Ah! monsieur," said Lucien, "it is not the body, it is the mind that
-ails. These good people have told me tidings that nearly killed me; I
-have just heard the bad news of my sister, Mme. Sechard. Mme. Courtois
-says that your daughter is married to Postel, monsieur, so you must
-know something of David Sechard's affairs; oh, for heaven's sake,
-monsieur, tell me what you know!"
-
-"Why, he must be in prison," began the doctor; "his father would not
-help him----"
-
-"IN PRISON!" repeated Lucien, "and why?"
-
-"Because some bills came from Paris; he had overlooked them, no doubt,
-for he does not pay much attention to his business, they say," said
-Dr. Marron.
-
-"Pray leave me with M. le Cure," said the poet, with a visible change
-of countenance. The doctor and the miller and his wife went out of the
-room, and Lucien was left alone with the old priest.
-
-"Sir," he said, "I feel that death is near, and I deserve to die. I am
-a very miserable wretch; I can only cast myself into the arms of
-religion. I, sir, _I_ have brought all these troubles on my sister and
-brother, for David Sechard has been a brother to me. I drew those
-bills that David could not meet! . . . I have ruined him. In my
-terrible misery, I forgot the crime. A millionaire put an end to the
-proceedings, and I quite believed that he had met the bills; but
-nothing of the kind has been done, it seems." And Lucien told the tale
-of his sorrows. The story, as he told it in his feverish excitement,
-was worthy of the poet. He besought the cure to go to Angouleme and to
-ask for news of Eve and his mother, Mme. Chardon, and to let him know
-the truth, and whether it was still possible to repair the evil.
-
-"I shall live till you come back, sir," he added, as the hot tears
-fell. "If my mother, and sister, and David do not cast me off, I shall
-not die."
-
-Lucien's remorse was terrible to see, the tears, the eloquence, the
-young white face with the heartbroken, despairing look, the tales of
-sorrow upon sorrow till human strength could no more endure, all these
-things aroused the cure's pity and interest.
-
-"In the provinces, as in Paris," he said, "you must believe only half
-of all that you hear. Do not alarm yourself; a piece of hearsay, three
-leagues away from Angouleme, is sure to be far from the truth. Old
-Sechard, our neighbor, left Marsac some days ago; very likely he is
-busy settling his son's difficulties. I am going to Angouleme; I will
-come back and tell you whether you can return home; your confessions
-and repentance will help to plead your cause."
-
-The cure did not know that Lucien had repented so many times during
-the last eighteen months, that penitence, however impassioned, had
-come to be a kind of drama with him, played to perfection, played so
-far in all good faith, but none the less a drama. To the cure
-succeeded the doctor. He saw that the patient was passing through a
-nervous crisis, and the danger was beginning to subside. The doctor-
-nephew spoke as comfortably as the cure-uncle, and at length the
-patient was persuaded to take nourishment.
-
-Meanwhile the cure, knowing the manners and customs of the
-countryside, had gone to Mansle; the coach from Ruffec to Angouleme
-was due to pass about that time, and he found a vacant place in it. He
-would go to his grand-nephew Postel in L'Houmeau (David's former
-rival) and make inquiries of him. From the assiduity with which the
-little druggist assisted his venerable relative to alight from the
-abominable cage which did duty as a coach between Ruffec and
-Angouleme, it was apparent to the meanest understanding that M. and
-Mme. Postel founded their hopes of future ease upon the old cure's
-will.
-
-"Have you breakfasted? Will you take something? We did not in the
-least expect you! This is a pleasant surprise!" Out came questions
-innumerable in a breath.
-
-Mme. Postel might have been born to be the wife of an apothecary in
-L'Houmeau. She was a common-looking woman, about the same height as
-little Postel himself, such good looks as she possessed being entirely
-due to youth and health. Her florid auburn hair grew very low upon her
-forehead. Her demeanor and language were in keeping with homely
-features, a round countenance, the red cheeks of a country damsel, and
-eyes that might almost be described as yellow. Everything about her
-said plainly enough that she had been married for expectations of
-money. After a year of married life, therefore, she ruled the house;
-and Postel, only too happy to have discovered the heiress, meekly
-submitted to his wife. Mme. Leonie Postel, nee Marron, was nursing her
-first child, the darling of the old cure, the doctor, and Postel, a
-repulsive infant, with a strong likeness to both parents.
-
-"Well, uncle," said Leonie, "what has brought you to Angouleme, since
-you will not take anything, and no sooner come in than you talk of
-going?"
-
-But when the venerable ecclesiastic brought out the names of David
-Sechard and Eve, little Postel grew very red, and Leonie, his wife,
-felt it incumbent upon her to give him a jealous glance--the glance
-that a wife never fails to give when she is perfectly sure of her
-husband, and gives a look into the past by way of a caution for the
-future.
-
-"What have yonder folk done to you, uncle, that you should mix
-yourself up in their affairs?" inquired Leonie, with very perceptible
-tartness.
-
-"They are in trouble, my girl," said the cure, and he told the Postels
-about Lucien at the Courtois' mill.
-
-"Oh! so that is the way he came back from Paris, is it?" exclaimed
-Postel. "Yet he had some brains, poor fellow, and he was ambitious,
-too. He went out to look for wool, and comes home shorn. But what does
-he want here? His sister is frightfully poor; for all these geniuses,
-David and Lucien alike, know very little about business. There was
-some talk of him at the Tribunal, and, as judge, I was obliged to sign
-the warrant of execution. It was a painful duty. I do not know whether
-the sister's circumstances are such that Lucien can go to her; but in
-any case the little room that he used to occupy here is at liberty,
-and I shall be pleased to offer it to him."
-
-"That is right, Postel," said the priest; he bestowed a kiss on the
-infant slumbering in Leonie's arms, and, adjusting his cocked hat,
-prepared to walk out of the shop.
-
-"You will dine with us, uncle, of course," said Mme. Postel; "if once
-you meddle in these people's affairs, it will be some time before you
-have done. My husband will drive you back again in his little pony-
-cart."
-
-Husband and wife stood watching their valued, aged relative on his way
-into Angouleme. "He carries himself well for his age, all the same,"
-remarked the druggist.
-
-By this time David had been in hiding for eleven days in a house only
-two doors away from the druggist's shop, which the worthy ecclesiastic
-had just quitted to climb the steep path into Angouleme with the news
-of Lucien's present condition.
-
-When the Abbe Marron debouched upon the Place du Murier he found three
-men, each one remarkable in his own way, and all of them bearing with
-their whole weight upon the present and future of the hapless
-voluntary prisoner. There stood old Sechard, the tall Cointet, and his
-confederate, the puny limb of the law, three men representing three
-phases of greed as widely different as the outward forms of the
-speakers. The first had it in his mind to sell his own son; the
-second, to betray his client; and the third, while bargaining for both
-iniquities, was inwardly resolved to pay for neither. It was nearly
-five o'clock. Passers-by on their way home to dinner stopped a moment
-to look at the group.
-
-"What the devil can old Sechard and the tall Cointet have to say to
-each other?" asked the more curious.
-
-"There was something on foot concerning that miserable wretch that
-leaves his wife and child and mother-in-law to starve," suggested
-some.
-
-"Talk of sending a boy to Paris to learn his trade!" said a provincial
-oracle.
-
-"M. le Cure, what brings you here, eh?" exclaimed old Sechard,
-catching sight of the Abbe as soon as he appeared.
-
-"I have come on account of your family," answered the old man.
-
-"Here is another of my son's notions!" exclaimed old Sechard.
-
-"It would not cost you much to make everybody happy all round," said
-the priest, looking at the windows of the printing-house. Mme.
-Sechard's beautiful face appeared at that moment between the curtains;
-she was hushing her child's cries by tossing him in her arms and
-singing to him.
-
-"Are you bringing news of my son?" asked old Sechard, "or what is more
-to the purpose--money?"
-
-"No," answered M. Marron, "I am bringing the sister news of her
-brother."
-
-"Of Lucien?" cried Petit-Claud.
-
-"Yes. He walked all the way from Paris, poor young man. I found him at
-the Courtois' house; he was worn out with misery and fatigue. Oh! he
-is very much to be pitied."
-
-Petit-Claud took the tall Cointet by the arm, saying aloud, "If we are
-going to dine with Mme. de Senonches, it is time to dress." When they
-had come away a few paces, he added, for his companion's benefit,
-"Catch the cub, and you will soon have the dam; we have David now----"
-
-"I have found you a wife, find me a partner," said the tall Cointet
-with a treacherous smile.
-
-"Lucien is an old school-fellow of mine; we used to be chums. I shall
-be sure to hear something from him in a week's time. Have the banns
-put up, and I will engage to put David in prison. When he is on the
-jailer's register I shall have done my part."
-
-"Ah!" exclaimed the tall Cointet under his breath, "we might have the
-patent taken out in our name; that would be the thing!"
-
-A shiver ran through the meagre little attorney when he heard those
-words.
-
-Meanwhile Eve beheld her father-in-law enter with the Abbe Marron, who
-had let fall a word which unfolded the whole tragedy.
-
-"Here is our cure, Mme. Sechard," the old man said, addressing his
-daughter-in-law, "and pretty tales about your brother he has to tell
-us, no doubt!"
-
-"Oh!" cried poor Eve, cut to the heart; "what can have happened now?"
-
-The cry told so unmistakably of many sorrows, of great dread on so
-many grounds, that the Abbe Marron made haste to say, "Reassure
-yourself, madame; he is living."
-
-Eve turned to the vinegrower.
-
-"Father," she said, "perhaps you will be good enough to go to my
-mother; she must hear all that this gentleman has to tell us of
-Lucien."
-
-The old man went in search of Mme. Chardon, and addressed her in this
-wise:
-
-"Go and have it out with the Abbe Marron; he is a good sort, priest
-though he is. Dinner will be late, no doubt. I shall come back again
-in an hour," and the old man went out. Insensible as he was to
-everything but the clink of money and the glitter of gold, he left
-Mme. Chardon without caring to notice the effect of the shock that he
-had given her.
-
-Mme. Chardon had changed so greatly during the last eighteen months,
-that in that short time she no longer looked like the same woman. The
-troubles hanging over both of her children, her abortive hopes for
-Lucien, the unexpected deterioration in one in whose powers and
-honesty she had for so long believed,--all these things had told
-heavily upon her. Mme. Chardon was not only noble by birth, she was
-noble by nature; she idolized her children; consequently, during the
-last six months she had suffered as never before since her widowhood.
-Lucien might have borne the name of Lucien de Rubempre by royal
-letters patent; he might have founded the family anew, revived the
-title, and borne the arms; he might have made a great name--he had
-thrown the chance away; nay, he had fallen into the mire!
-
-For Mme. Chardon the mother was a harder judge than Eve the sister.
-When she heard of the bills, she looked upon Lucien as lost. A mother
-is often fain to shut her eyes, but she always knows the child that
-she held at her breast, the child that has been always with her in the
-house; and so when Eve and David discussed Lucien's chances of success
-in Paris, and Lucien's mother to all appearance shared Eve's
-illusions, in her inmost heart there was a tremor of fear lest David
-should be right, for a mother's consciousness bore a witness to the
-truth of his words. So well did she know Eve's sensitive nature, that
-she could not bring herself to speak of her fears; she was obliged to
-choke them down and keep such silence as mothers alone can keep when
-they know how to love their children.
-
-And Eve, on her side, had watched her mother, and saw the ravages of
-hidden grief with a feeling of dread; her mother was not growing old,
-she was failing from day to day. Mother and daughter lived a live of
-generous deception, and neither was deceived. The brutal old
-vinegrower's speech was the last drop that filled the cup of
-affliction to overflowing. The words struck a chill to Mme. Chardon's
-heart.
-
-"Here is my mother, monsieur," said Eve, and the Abbe, looking up, saw
-a white-haired woman with a face as thin and worn as the features of
-some aged nun, and yet grown beautiful with the calm and sweet
-expression that devout submission gives to the faces of women who walk
-by the will of God, as the saying is. Then the Abbe understood the
-lives of the mother and daughter, and had no more sympathy left for
-Lucien; he shuddered to think of all that the victims had endured.
-
-"Mother," said Eve, drying her eyes as she spoke, "poor Lucien is not
-very far away, he is at Marsac."
-
-"And why is he not here?" asked Mme. Chardon.
-
-Then the Abbe told the whole story as Lucien had told it to him--the
-misery of the journey, the troubles of the last days in Paris. He
-described the poet's agony of mind when he heard of the havoc wrought
-at home by his imprudence, and his apprehension as to the reception
-awaiting him at Angouleme.
-
-"He has doubts of us; has it come to this?" said Mme. Chardon.
-
-"The unhappy young man has come back to you on foot, enduring the most
-terrible hardships by the way; he is prepared to enter the humblest
-walks in life--if so he may make reparation."
-
-"Monsieur," Lucien's sister said, "in spite of the wrong he has done
-us, I love my brother still, as we love the dead body when the soul
-has left it; and even so, I love him more than many sisters love their
-brothers. He has made us poor indeed; but let him come to us, he shall
-share the last crust of bread, anything indeed that he has left us.
-Oh, if he had never left us, monsieur, we should not have lost our
-heart's treasure."
-
-"And the woman who took him from us brought him back on her carriage!"
-exclaimed Mme. Chardon. "He went away sitting by Mme. de Bargeton's
-side in her caleche, and he came back behind it."
-
-"Can I do anything for you?" asked the good cure, seeking an
-opportunity to take leave.
-
-"A wound in the purse is not fatal, they say, monsieur," said Mme.
-Chardon, "but the patient must be his own doctor."
-
-"If you have sufficient influence with my father-in-law to induce him
-to help his son, you would save a whole family," said Eve.
-
-"He has no belief in you, and he seemed to me to be very much
-exasperated against your husband," answered the old cure. He retained
-an impression, from the ex-pressman's rambling talk, that the
-Sechards' affairs were a kind of wasps' nest with which it was
-imprudent to meddle, and his mission being fulfilled, he went to dine
-with his nephew Postel. That worthy, like the rest of Angouleme,
-maintained that the father was in the right, and soon dissipated any
-little benevolence that the old gentleman was disposed to feel towards
-the son and his family.
-
-"With those that squander money something may be done," concluded
-little Postel, "but those that make experiments are the ruin of you."
-
-The cure went home; his curiosity was thoroughly satisfied, and this
-is the end and object of the exceeding interest taken in other
-people's business in the provinces. In the course of the evening the
-poet was duly informed of all that had passed in the Sechard family,
-and the journey was represented as a pilgrimage undertaken from
-motives of the purest charity.
-
-"You have run your brother-in-law and sister into debt to the amount
-of ten or twelve thousand francs," said the Abbe as he drew to an end,
-"and nobody hereabouts has that trifling amount to lend a neighbor, my
-dear sir. We are not rich in Angoumois. When you spoke to me of your
-bills, I thought that a much smaller amount was involved."
-
-Lucien thanked the old man for his good offices. "The promise of
-forgiveness which you have brought is for me a priceless gift."
-
-Very early the next morning Lucien set out from Marsac, and reached
-Angouleme towards nine o'clock. He carried nothing but his walking-
-stick; the short jacket that he wore was considerably the worst for
-his journey, his black trousers were whitened with dust, and a pair of
-worn boots told sufficiently plainly that their owner belonged to the
-hapless tribe of tramps. He knew well enough that the contrast between
-his departure and return was bound to strike his fellow-townsmen; he
-did not try to hide the fact from himself. But just then, with his
-heart swelling beneath the oppression of remorse awakened in him by
-the old cure's story, he accepted his punishment for the moment, and
-made up his mind to brave the eyes of his acquaintances. Within
-himself he said, "I am behaving heroically."
-
-Poetic temperaments of this stamp begin as their own dupes. He walked
-up through L'Houmeau, shame at the manner of his return struggling
-with the charm of old associations as he went. His heart beat quickly
-as he passed Postel's shop; but, very luckily for him, the only
-persons inside it were Leonie and her child. And yet, vanity was still
-so strong in him, that he could feel glad that his father's name had
-been painted out on the shop-front; for Postel, since his marriage,
-had redecorated his abode, and the word "Pharmacy" now alone appeared
-there, in the Paris fashion, in big letters.
-
-When Lucien reached the steps by the Palet Gate, he felt the influence
-of his native air, his misfortunes no longer weighed upon him. "I
-shall see them again!" he said to himself, with a thrill of delight.
-
-He reached the Place du Murier, and had not met a soul, a piece of
-luck that he scarcely hoped for, he who once had gone about his native
-place with a conqueror's air. Marion and Kolb, on guard at the door,
-flew out upon the steps, crying out, "Here he is!"
-
-Lucien saw the familiar workshop and courtyard, and on the staircase
-met his mother and sister, and for a moment, while their arms were
-about him, all three almost forgot their troubles. In family life we
-almost always compound with our misfortunes; we make a sort of bed to
-rest upon; and, if it is hard, hope to make it tolerable. If Lucien
-looked the picture of despair, poetic charm was not wanting to the
-picture. His face had been tanned by the sunlight of the open road,
-and the deep sadness visible in his features overshadowed his poet's
-brow. The change in him told so plainly of sufferings endured, his
-face was so worn by sharp misery, that no one could help pitying him.
-Imagination had fared forth into the world and found sad reality at
-the home-coming. Eve was smiling in the midst of her joy, as the
-saints smile upon martyrdom. The face of a young and very fair woman
-grows sublimely beautiful at the touch of grief; Lucien remembered the
-innocent girlish face that he saw last before he went to Paris, and
-the look of gravity that had come over it spoke so eloquently that he
-could not but feel a painful impression. The first quick, natural
-outpouring of affection was followed at once by a reaction on either
-side; they were afraid to speak; and when Lucien almost involuntarily
-looked round for another who should have been there, Eve burst into
-tears, and Lucien did the same, but Mme. Chardon's haggard face showed
-no sign of emotion. Eve rose to her feet and went downstairs, partly
-to spare her brother a word of reproach, partly to speak to Marion.
-
-"Lucien is so fond of strawberries, child, we must find some
-strawberries for him."
-
-"Oh, I was sure that you would want to welcome M. Lucien; you shall
-have a nice little breakfast and a good dinner, too."
-
-"Lucien," said Mme. Chardon when the mother and son were left alone,
-"you have a great deal to repair here. You went away that we all might
-be proud of you; you have plunged us into want. You have all but
-destroyed your brother's opportunity of making a fortune that he only
-cared to win for the sake of his new family. Nor is this all that you
-have destroyed----" said the mother.
-
-There was a dreadful pause; Lucien took his mother's reproaches in
-silence.
-
-"Now begin to work," Mme. Chardon went on more gently. "You tried to
-revive the noble family of whom I come; I do not blame you for it. But
-the man who undertakes such a task needs money above all things, and
-must bear a high heart in him; both were wanting in your case. We
-believed in you once, our belief has been shaken. This was a hard-
-working, contented household, making its way with difficulty; you have
-troubled their peace. The first offence may be forgiven, but it must
-be the last. We are in a very difficult position here; you must be
-careful, and take your sister's advice, Lucien. The school of trouble
-is a very hard one, but Eve has learned much by her lessons; she has
-grown grave and thoughtful, she is a mother. In her devotion to our
-dear David she has taken all the family burdens upon herself; indeed,
-through your wrongdoing she has come to be my only comfort."
-
-"You might be still more severe, my mother," Lucien said, as he kissed
-her. "I accept your forgiveness, for I will not need it a second
-time."
-
-Eve came into the room, saw her brother's humble attitude, and knew
-that he had been forgiven. Her kindness brought a smile for him to her
-lips, and Lucien answered with tear-filled eyes. A living presence
-acts like a charm, changing the most hostile positions of lovers or of
-families, no matter how just the resentment. Is it that affection
-finds out the ways of the heart, and we love to fall into them again?
-Does the phenomenon come within the province of the science of
-magnetism? Or is it reason that tells us that we must either forgive
-or never see each other again? Whether the cause be referred to
-mental, physical, or spiritual conditions, everyone knows the effect;
-every one has felt that the looks, the actions or gestures of the
-beloved awaken some vestige of tenderness in those most deeply sinned
-against and grievously wronged. Though it is hard for the mind to
-forget, though we still smart under the injury, the heart returns to
-its allegiance in spite of all. Poor Eve listened to her brother's
-confidences until breakfast-time; and whenever she looked at him she
-was no longer mistress of her eyes; in that intimate talk she could
-not control her voice. And with the comprehension of the conditions of
-literary life in Paris, she understood that the struggle had been too
-much for Lucien's strength. The poet's delight as he caressed his
-sister's child, his deep grief over David's absence, mingled with joy
-at seeing his country and his own folk again, the melancholy words
-that he let fall,--all these things combined to make that day a
-festival. When Marion brought in the strawberries, he was touched to
-see that Eve had remembered his taste in spite of her distress, and
-she, his sister, must make ready a room for the prodigal brother and
-busy herself for Lucien. It was a truce, as it were, to misery. Old
-Sechard himself assisted to bring about this revulsion of feeling in
-the two women--"You are making as much of him as if he were bringing
-you any amount of money!"
-
-"And what has my brother done that we should not make much of him?"
-cried Eve, jealously screening Lucien.
-
-Nevertheless, when the first expansion was over, shades of truth came
-out. It was not long before Lucien felt the difference between the old
-affection and the new. Eve respected David from the depths of her
-heart; Lucien was beloved for his own sake, as we love a mistress
-still in spite of the disasters she causes. Esteem, the very
-foundation on which affection is based, is the solid stuff to which
-affection owes I know not what of certainty and security by which we
-live; and this was lacking between Mme. Chardon and her son, between
-the sister and the brother. Mother and daughter did not put entire
-confidence in him, as they would have done if he had not lost his
-honor; and he felt this. The opinion expressed in d'Arthez's letter
-was Eve's own estimate of her brother; unconsciously she revealed it
-by her manner, tones, and gestures. Oh! Lucien was pitied, that was
-true; but as for all that he had been, the pride of the household, the
-great man of the family, the hero of the fireside,--all this, like
-their fair hopes of him, was gone, never to return. They were so
-afraid of his heedlessness that he was not told where David was
-hidden. Lucien wanted to see his brother; but this Eve, insensible to
-the caresses which accompanied his curious questionings, was not the
-Eve of L'Houmeau, for whom a glance from him had been an order that
-must be obeyed. When Lucien spoke of making reparation, and talked as
-though he could rescue David, Eve only answered:
-
-"Do not interfere; we have enemies of the most treacherous and
-dangerous kind."
-
-Lucien tossed his head, as one who should say, "I have measured myself
-against Parisians," and the look in his sister's eyes said
-unmistakably, "Yes, but you were defeated."
-
-"Nobody cares for me now," Lucien thought. "In the home circle, as in
-the world without, success is a necessity."
-
-The poet tried to explain their lack of confidence in him; he had not
-been at home two days before a feeling of vexation rather than of
-angry bitterness gained hold on him. He applied Parisian standards to
-the quiet, temperate existence of the provinces, quite forgetting that
-the narrow, patient life of the household was the result of his own
-misdoings.
-
-"They are bourgeoises, they cannot understand me," he said, setting
-himself apart from his sister and mother and David, now that they
-could no longer be deceived as to his real character and his future.
-
-Many troubles and shocks of fortune had quickened the intuitive sense
-in both the women. Eve and Mme. Chardon guessed the thoughts in
-Lucien's inmost soul; they felt that he misjudged them; they saw him
-mentally isolating himself.
-
-"Paris has changed him very much," they said between themselves. They
-were indeed reaping the harvest of egoism which they themselves had
-fostered.
-
-It was inevitable but that the leaven should work in all three; and
-this most of all in Lucien, because he felt that he was so heavily to
-blame. As for Eve, she was just the kind of sister to beg an erring
-brother to "Forgive me for your trespasses;" but when the union of two
-souls had been as perfect since life's very beginnings, as it had been
-with Eve and Lucien, any blow dealt to that fair ideal is fatal.
-Scoundrels can draw knives on each other and make it up again
-afterwards, while a look or a word is enough to sunder two lovers for
-ever. In the recollection of an almost perfect life of heart and heart
-lies the secret of many an estrangement that none can explain. Two may
-live together without full trust in their hearts if only their past
-holds no memories of complete and unclouded love; but for those who
-once have known that intimate life, it becomes intolerable to keep
-perpetual watch over looks and words. Great poets know this; Paul and
-Virginie die before youth is over; can we think of Paul and Virginie
-estranged? Let us know that, to the honor of Lucien and Eve, the grave
-injury done was not the source of the pain; it was entirely a matter
-of feeling upon either side, for the poet in fault, as for the sister
-who was in no way to blame. Things had reached the point when the
-slightest misunderstanding, or little quarrel, or a fresh
-disappointment in Lucien would end in final estrangement. Money
-difficulties may be arranged, but feelings are inexorable.
-
-Next day Lucien received a copy of the local paper. He turned pale
-with pleasure when he saw his name at the head of one of the first
-"leaders" in that highly respectable sheet, which like the provincial
-academies that Voltaire compared to a well-bred miss, was never talked
-about.
-
- "Let Franche-Comte boast of giving the light to Victor Hugo, to
- Charles Nodier, and Cuvier," ran the article, "Brittany of
- producing a Chateaubriand and a Lammenais, Normandy of Casimir
- Delavigne, and Touraine of the author of Eloa; Angoumois that gave
- birth, in the days of Louis XIII., to our illustrious fellow-
- countryman Guez, better known under the name of Balzac, our
- Angoumois need no longer envy Limousin her Dupuytren, nor
- Auvergne, the country of Montlosier, nor Bordeaux, birthplace of
- so many great men; for we too have our poet!--The writer of the
- beautiful sonnets entitled the Marguerites unites his poet's fame
- to the distinction of a prose writer, for to him we also owe the
- magnificent romance of The Archer of Charles IX. Some day our
- nephews will be proud to be the fellow-townsmen of Lucien Chardon,
- a rival of Petrarch!!!"
-
-(The country newspapers of those days were sown with notes of
-admiration, as reports of English election speeches are studded with
-"cheers" in brackets.)
-
- "In spite of his brilliant success in Paris, our young poet has
- not forgotten the Hotel de Bargeton, the cradle of his triumphs;
- nor the fact that the wife of M. le Comte du Chatelet, our
- Prefect, encouraged his early footsteps in the pathway of the
- Muses. He has come back among us once more! All L'Houmeau was
- thrown into excitement yesterday by the appearance of our Lucien
- de Rubempre. The news of his return produced a profound sensation
- throughout the town. Angouleme certainly will not allow L'Houmeau
- to be beforehand in doing honor to the poet who in journalism and
- literature has so gloriously represented our town in Paris. Lucien
- de Rubempre, a religious and Royalist poet, has braved the fury of
- parties; he has come home, it is said, for repose after the
- fatigue of a struggle which would try the strength of an even
- greater intellectual athlete than a poet and a dreamer.
-
- "There is some talk of restoring our great poet to the title of
- the illustrious house of de Rubempre, of which his mother, Madame
- Chardon, is the last survivor, and it is added that Mme. la
- Comtesse du Chatelet was the first to think of this eminently
- politic idea. The revival of an ancient and almost extinct family
- by young talent and newly won fame is another proof that the
- immortal author of the Charter still cherishes the desire
- expressed by the words 'Union and oblivion.'
-
- "Our poet is staying with his sister, Mme. Sechard."
-
-Under the heading "Angouleme" followed some items of news:--
-
- "Our Prefect, M. le Comte du Chatelet, Gentleman in Ordinary to
- His Majesty, has just been appointed Extraordinary Councillor of
- State.
-
- "All the authorities called yesterday on M. le Prefet.
-
- "Mme. la Comtesse du Chatelet will receive on Thursdays.
-
- "The Mayor of Escarbas, M. de Negrepelisse, the representative of
- the younger branch of the d'Espard family, and father of Mme. du
- Chatelet, recently raised to the rank of a Count and Peer of
- France and a Commander of the Royal Order of St. Louis, has been
- nominated for the presidency of the electoral college of Angouleme
- at the forthcoming elections."
-
-"There!" said Lucien, taking the paper to his sister. Eve read the
-article with attention, and returned with the sheet with a thoughtful
-air.
-
-"What do you say to that?" asked he, surprised at a reserve that
-seemed so like indifference.
-
-"The Cointets are proprietors of that paper, dear," she said; "they
-put in exactly what they please, and it is not at all likely that the
-prefecture or the palace have forced their hands. Can you imagine that
-your old rival the prefect would be generous enough to sing your
-praises? Have you forgotten that the Cointets are suing us under
-Metivier's name? and that they are trying to turn David's discovery to
-their own advantage? I do not know the source of this paragraph, but
-it makes me uneasy. You used to rouse nothing but envious feeling and
-hatred here; a prophet has no honor in his own country, and they
-slandered you, and now in a moment it is all changed----"
-
-"You do not know the vanity of country towns," said Lucien. "A whole
-little town in the south turned out not so long ago to welcome a young
-man that had won the first prize in some competition; they looked on
-him as a budding great man."
-
-"Listen, dear Lucien; I do not want to preach to you, I will say
-everything in a very few words--you must suspect every little thing
-here."
-
-"You are right," said Lucien, but he was surprised at his sister's
-lack of enthusiasm. He himself was full of delight to find his
-humiliating and shame-stricken return to Angouleme changed into a
-triumph in this way.
-
-"You have no belief in the little fame that has cost so dear!" he said
-again after a long silence. Something like a storm had been gathering
-in his heart during the past hour. For all answer Eve gave him a look,
-and Lucien felt ashamed of his accusation.
-
-Dinner was scarcely over when a messenger came from the prefecture
-with a note addressed to M. Chardon. That note appeared to decide the
-day for the poet's vanity; the world contending against the family for
-him had won.
-
-"M. le Comte Sixte du Chatelet and Mme. la Comtesse du Chatelet
-request the honor of M. Lucien Chardon's company at dinner on the
-fifteenth of September. R. S. V. P."
-
-Enclosed with the invitation there was a card--
-
- LE COMTE SIXTE DU CHATELET,
- Gentleman of the Bedchamber, Prefect of the Charente,
- Councillor of State.
-
-"You are in favor," said old Sechard; "they are talking about you in
-the town as if you were somebody! Angouleme and L'Houmeau are
-disputing as to which shall twist wreaths for you."
-
-"Eve, dear," Lucien whispered to his sister, "I am exactly in the same
-condition as I was before in L'Houmeau when Mme. de Bargeton sent me
-the first invitation--I have not a dress suit for the prefect's
-dinner-party."
-
-"Do you really mean to accept the invitation?" Eve asked in alarm, and
-a dispute sprang up between the brother and sister. Eve's provincial
-good sense told her that if you appear in society, it must be with a
-smiling face and faultless costume. "What will come of the prefect's
-dinner?" she wondered. "What has Lucien to do with the great people of
-Angouleme? Are they plotting something against him?" but she kept
-these thoughts to herself.
-
-Lucien spoke the last word at bedtime: "You do not know my influence.
-The prefect's wife stands in fear of a journalist; and besides, Louise
-de Negrepelisse lives on in the Comtesse du Chatelet, and a woman with
-her influence can rescue David. I am going to tell her about my
-brother's invention, and it would be a mere nothing to her to obtain a
-subsidy of ten thousand francs from the Government for him."
-
-At eleven o'clock that night the whole household was awakened by the
-town band, reinforced by the military band from the barracks. The
-Place du Murier was full of people. The young men of Angouleme were
-giving Lucien Chardon de Rubempre a serenade. Lucien went to his
-sister's window and made a speech after the last performance.
-
-"I thank my fellow-townsmen for the honor that they do me," he said in
-the midst of a great silence; "I will strive to be worthy of it; they
-will pardon me if I say no more; I am so much moved by this incident
-that I cannot speak."
-
-"Hurrah for the writer of The Archer of Charles IX.! . . . Hurrah for
-the poet of the Marguerites! . . . Long live Lucien de Rubempre!"
-
-After these three salvos, taken up by some few voices, three crowns
-and a quantity of bouquets were adroitly flung into the room through
-the open window. Ten minutes later the Place du Murier was empty, and
-silence prevailed in the streets.
-
-"I would rather have ten thousand francs," said old Sechard, fingering
-the bouquets and garlands with a satirical expression. "You gave them
-daisies, and they give you posies in return; you deal in flowers."
-
-"So that is your opinion of the honors shown me by my fellow-townsmen,
-is it?" asked Lucien. All his melancholy had left him, his face was
-radiant with good humor. "If you knew mankind, Papa Sechard, you would
-see that no moment in one's life comes twice. Such a triumph as this
-can only be due to genuine enthusiasm! . . . My dear mother, my good
-sister, this wipes out many mortifications."
-
-Lucien kissed them; for when joy overflows like a torrent flood, we
-are fain to pour it out into a friend's heart. "When an author is
-intoxicated with success, he will hug his porter if there is nobody
-else on hand," according to Bixiou.
-
-"Why, darling, why are you crying?" he said, looking into Eve's face.
-"Ah! I know, you are crying for joy!"
-
-"Oh me!" said her mother, shaking her head as she spoke. "Lucien has
-forgotten everything already; not merely his own troubles, but ours as
-well."
-
-Mother and daughter separated, and neither dared to utter all her
-thoughts.
-
-In a country eaten up with the kind of social insubordination
-disguised by the word Equality, a triumph of any kind whatsoever is a
-sort of miracle which requires, like some other miracles for that
-matter, the co-operation of skilled labor. Out of ten ovations offered
-to ten living men, selected for this distinction by a grateful
-country, you may be quite sure that nine are given from considerations
-connected as remotely as possible with the conspicuous merits of the
-renowned recipient. What was Voltaire's apotheosis at the Theatre-
-Francais but the triumph of eighteenth century philosophy? A triumph
-in France means that everybody else feels that he is adorning his own
-temples with the crown that he sets on the idol's head.
-
-The women's presentiments proved correct. The distinguished
-provincial's reception was antipathetic to Angoumoisin immobility; it
-was too evidently got up by some interested persons or by enthusiastic
-stage mechanics, a suspicious combination. Eve, moreover, like most of
-her sex, was distrustful by instinct, even when reason failed to
-justify her suspicions to herself. "Who can be so fond of Lucien that
-he could rouse the town for him?" she wondered as she fell asleep.
-"The Marguerites are not published yet; how can they compliment him on
-a future success?"
-
-The ovation was, in fact, the work of Petit-Claud.
-
-Petit-Claud had dined with Mme. de Senonches, for the first time, on
-the evening of the day that brought the cure of Marsac to Angouleme
-with the news of Lucien's return. That same evening he made formal
-application for the hand of Mlle. de la Haye. It was a family dinner,
-one of the solemn occasions marked not so much by the number of the
-guests as by the splendor of their toilettes. Consciousness of the
-performance weighs upon the family party, and every countenance looks
-significant. Francoise was on exhibition. Mme. de Senonches had
-sported her most elaborate costume for the occasion; M. du Hautoy wore
-a black coat; M. de Senonches had returned from his visit to the
-Pimentels on the receipt of a note from his wife, informing him that
-Mme. du Chatelet was to appear at their house for the first time since
-her arrival, and that a suitor in form for Francoise would appear on
-the scenes. Boniface Cointet also was there, in his best maroon coat
-of clerical cut, with a diamond pin worth six thousand francs
-displayed in his shirt frill--the revenge of the rich merchant upon a
-poverty-stricken aristocracy.
-
-Petit-Claud himself, scoured and combed, had carefully removed his
-gray hairs, but he could not rid himself of his wizened air. The puny
-little man of law, tightly buttoned into his clothes, reminded you of
-a torpid viper; for if hope had brought a spark of life into his
-magpie eyes, his face was icily rigid, and so well did he assume an
-air of gravity, that an ambitious public prosecutor could not have
-been more dignified.
-
-Mme. de Senonches had told her intimate friends that her ward would
-meet her betrothed that evening, and that Mme. du Chatelet would
-appear at the Hotel de Senonches for the first time; and having
-particularly requested them to keep these matters secret, she expected
-to find her rooms crowded. The Comte and Comtesse du Chatelet had left
-cards everywhere officially, but they meant the honor of a personal
-visit to play a part in their policy. So aristocratic Angouleme was in
-such a prodigious ferment of curiosity, that certain of the Chandour
-camp proposed to go to the Hotel de Bargeton that evening. (They
-persistently declined to call the house by its new name.)
-
-Proofs of the Countess' influence had stirred up ambition in many
-quarters; and not only so, it was said that the lady had changed so
-much for the better that everybody wished to see and judge for
-himself. Petit-Claud learned great news on the way to the house;
-Cointet told him that Zephirine had asked leave to present her dear
-Francoise's betrothed to the Countess, and that the Countess had
-granted the favor. Petit-Claud had seen at once that Lucien's return
-put Louise de Negrepelisse in a false position; and now, in a moment,
-he flattered himself that he saw a way to take advantage of it.
-
-M. and Mme. de Senonches had undertaken such heavy engagements when
-they bought the house, that, in provincial fashion, they thought it
-imprudent to make any changes in it. So when Madame du Chatelet was
-announced, Zephirine went up to her with--"Look, dear Louise, you are
-still in your old home!" indicating, as she spoke, the little
-chandelier, the paneled wainscot, and the furniture, which once had
-dazzled Lucien.
-
-"I wish least of all to remember it, dear," Madame la Prefete answered
-graciously, looking round on the assemblage.
-
-Every one admitted that Louise de Negrepelisse was not like the same
-woman. If the provincial had undergone a change, the woman herself had
-been transformed by those eighteen months in Paris, by the first
-happiness of a still recent second marriage, and the kind of dignity
-that power confers. The Comtesse du Chatelet bore the same resemblance
-to Mme. de Bargeton that a girl of twenty bears to her mother.
-
-She wore a charming cap of lace and flowers, fastened by a diamond-
-headed pin; the ringlets that half hid the contours of her face added
-to her look of youth, and suited her style of beauty. Her foulard
-gown, designed by the celebrated Victorine, with a pointed bodice,
-exquisitely fringed, set off her figure to advantage; and a silken
-lace scarf, adroitly thrown about a too long neck, partly concealed
-her shoulders. She played with the dainty scent-bottle, hung by a
-chain from her bracelet; she carried her fan and her handkerchief with
-ease--pretty trifles, as dangerous as a sunken reef for the provincial
-dame. The refined taste shown in the least details, the carriage and
-manner modeled upon Mme. d'Espard, revealed a profound study of the
-Faubourg Saint-Germain.
-
-As for the elderly beau of the Empire, he seemed since his marriage to
-have followed the example of the species of melon that turns from
-green to yellow in a night. All the youth that Sixte had lost seemed
-to appear in his wife's radiant countenance; provincial pleasantries
-passed from ear to ear, circulating the more readily because the women
-were furious at the new superiority of the sometime queen of
-Angouleme; and the persistent intruder paid the penalty of his wife's
-offence.
-
-The rooms were almost as full as on that memorable evening of Lucien's
-readings from Chenier. Some faces were missing: M. de Chandour and
-Amelie, M. de Pimental and the Rastignacs--and M. de Bargeton was no
-longer there; but the Bishop came, as before, with his vicars-general
-in his train. Petit-Claud was much impressed by the sight of the great
-world of Angouleme. Four months ago he had no hope of entering the
-circle, to-day he felt his detestation of "the classes" sensibly
-diminished. He thought the Comtesse du Chatelet a most fascinating
-woman. "It is she who can procure me the appointment of deputy public
-prosecutor," he said to himself.
-
-Louise chatted for an equal length of time with each of the women; her
-tone varied with the importance of the person addressed and the
-position taken up by the latter with regard to her journey to Paris
-with Lucien. The evening was half over when she withdrew to the
-boudoir with the Bishop. Zephirine came over to Petit-Claud, and laid
-her hand on his arm. His heart beat fast as his hostess brought him to
-the room where Lucien's troubles first began, and were now about to
-come to a crisis.
-
-"This is M. Petit-Claud, dear; I recommend him to you the more warmly
-because anything that you may do for him will doubtless benefit my
-ward."
-
-"You are an attorney, are you not, monsieur?" said the august
-Negrepelisse, scanning Petit-Claud.
-
-"Alas! yes, MADAME LA COMTESSE." (The son of the tailor in L'Houmeau
-had never once had occasion to use those three words in his life
-before, and his mouth was full of them.) "But it rests with you,
-Madame la Comtesse, whether or no I shall act for the Crown. M. Milaud
-is going to Nevers, it is said----"
-
-"But a man is usually second deputy and then first deputy, is he not?"
-broke in the Countess. "I should like to see you in the first deputy's
-place at once. But I should like first to have some assurance of your
-devotion to the cause of our legitimate sovereigns, to religion, and
-more especially to M. de Villele, if I am to interest myself on your
-behalf to obtain the favor."
-
-Petit-Claud came nearer. "Madame," he said in her ear, "I am the man
-to yield the King absolute obedience."
-
-"That is just what WE want to-day," said the Countess, drawing back a
-little to make him understand that she had no wish for promises given
-under his breath. "So long as you satisfy Mme. de Senonches, you can
-count upon me," she added, with a royal movement of her fan.
-
-Petit-Claud looked toward the door of the boudoir, and saw Cointet
-standing there. "Madame," he said, "Lucien is here, in Angouleme."
-
-"Well, sir?" asked the Countess, in tones that would have put an end
-to all power of speech in an ordinary man.
-
-"Mme. la Comtesse does not understand," returned Petit-Claud, bringing
-out that most respectful formula again. "How does Mme. la Comtesse
-wish that the great man of her making should be received in Angouleme?
-There is no middle course; he must be received or despised here."
-
-This was a dilemma to which Louise de Negrepelisse had never given a
-thought; it touched her closely, yet rather for the sake of the past
-than of the future. And as for Petit-Claud, his plan for arresting
-David Sechard depended upon the lady's actual feelings towards Lucien.
-He waited.
-
-"M. Petit-Claud," said the Countess, with haughty dignity, "you mean
-to be on the side of the Government. Learn that the first principle of
-government is this--never to have been in the wrong, and that the
-instinct of power and the sense of dignity is even stronger in women
-than in governments."
-
-"That is just what I thought, madame," he answered quickly, observing
-the Countess meanwhile with attention the more profound because it was
-scarcely visible. "Lucien came here in the depths of misery. But if he
-must receive an ovation, I can compel him to leave Angouleme by the
-means of the ovation itself. His sister and brother-in-law, David
-Sechard, are hard pressed for debts."
-
-In the Countess' haughty face there was a swift, barely perceptible
-change; it was not satisfaction, but the repression of satisfaction.
-Surprised that Petit-Claud should have guessed her wishes, she gave
-him a glance as she opened her fan, and Francoise de la Haye's
-entrance at that moment gave her time to find an answer.
-
-"It will not be long before you are public prosecutor, monsieur," she
-said, with a significant smile. That speech did not commit her in any
-way, but it was explicit enough. Francoise had come in to thank the
-Countess.
-
-"Oh! madame, then I shall owe the happiness of my life to you," she
-exclaimed, bending girlishly to add in the Countess' ear, "To marry a
-petty provincial attorney would be like being burned by slow fires."
-
-It was Francis, with his knowledge of officialdom, who had prompted
-Zephirine to make this set upon Louise.
-
-"In the very earliest days after promotion," so the ex-consul-general
-told his fair friend, "everybody, prefect, or monarch, or man of
-business, is burning to exert his influence for his friends; but a
-patron soon finds out the inconveniences of patronage, and then turns
-from fire to ice. Louise will do more now for Petit-Claud than she
-would do for her husband in three months' time."
-
-"Madame la Comtesse is thinking of all that our poet's triumph
-entails?" continued Petit-Claud. "She should receive Lucien before
-there is an end of the nine-days' wonder."
-
-The Countess terminated the audience with a bow, and rose to speak
-with Mme. de Pimentel, who came to the boudoir. The news of old
-Negrepelisse's elevation to a marquisate had greatly impressed the
-Marquise; she judged it expedient to be amiable to a woman so clever
-as to rise the higher for an apparent fall.
-
-"Do tell me, dear, why you took the trouble to put your father in the
-House of Peers?" said the Marquise, in the course of a little
-confidential conversation, in which she bent the knee before the
-superiority of "her dear Louise."
-
-"They were all the more ready to grant the favor because my father has
-no son to succeed him, dear, and his vote will always be at the
-disposal of the Crown; but if we should have sons, I quite expect that
-my oldest will succeed to his grandfather's name, title, and peerage."
-
-Mme. de Pimentel saw, to her annoyance, that it was idle to expect a
-mother ambitious for children not yet in existence to further her own
-private designs of raising M. de Pimentel to a peerage.
-
-"I have the Countess," Petit-Claud told Cointet when they came away.
-"I can promise you your partnership. I shall be deputy prosecutor
-before the month is out, and Sechard will be in your power. Try to
-find a buyer for my connection; it has come to be the first in
-Angouleme in my hands during the last five months----"
-
-"Once put YOU on the horse, and there is no need to do more," said
-Cointet, half jealous of his own work.
-
-The causes of Lucien's triumphant reception in his native town must
-now be plain to everybody. Louise du Chatelet followed the example of
-that King of France who left the Duke of Orleans unavenged; she chose
-to forget the insults received in Paris by Mme. de Bargeton. She would
-patronize Lucien, and overwhelming him with her patronage, would
-completely crush him and get rid of him by fair means. Petit-Claud
-knew the whole tale of the cabals in Paris through town gossip, and
-shrewdly guessed how a woman must hate the man who would not love when
-she was fain of his love.
-
-The ovation justified the past of Louise de Negrepelisse. The next day
-Petit-Claud appeared at Mme. Sechard's house, heading a deputation of
-six young men of the town, all of them Lucien's schoolfellows. He
-meant to finish his work, to intoxicate Lucien completely, and to have
-him in his power. Lucien's old schoolfellows at the Angouleme grammar-
-school wished to invite the author of the Marguerites and The Archer
-of Charles IX. to a banquet given in honor of the great man arisen
-from their ranks.
-
-"Come, this is your doing, Petit-Claud!" exclaimed Lucien.
-
-"Your return has stirred our conceit," said Petit-Claud; "we made it a
-point of honor to get up a subscription, and we will have a tremendous
-affair for you. The masters and the headmaster will be there, and, at
-the present rate, we shall, no doubt, have the authorities too."
-
-"For what day?" asked Lucien.
-
-"Sunday next."
-
-"That is quite out of the question," said Lucien. "I cannot accept an
-invitation for the next ten days, but then I will gladly----"
-
-"Very well," said Petit-Claud, "so be it then, in ten days' time."
-
-Lucien behaved charmingly to his old schoolfellows, and they regarded
-him with almost respectful admiration. He talked away very wittily for
-half an hour; he had been set upon a pedestal, and wished to justify
-the opinion of his fellow-townsmen; so he stood with his hands thrust
-into his pockets, and held forth from the height to which he had been
-raised. He was modest and good-natured, as befitted genius in
-dressing-gown and slippers; he was the athlete, wearied by a wrestling
-bout with Paris, and disenchanted above all things; he congratulated
-the comrades who had never left the dear old province, and so forth,
-and so forth. They were delighted with him. He took Petit-Claud aside,
-and asked him for the real truth about David's affairs, reproaching
-him for allowing his brother-in-law to go into hiding, and tried to
-match his wits against the little lawyer. Petit-Claud made an effort
-over himself, and gave his acquaintance to understand that he (Petit-
-Claud) was only an insignificant little country attorney, with no sort
-of craft nor subtlety.
-
-The whole machinery of modern society is so infinitely more complex
-than in ancient times, that the subdivision of human faculty is the
-result. The great men of the days of old were perforce universal
-geniuses, appearing at rare intervals like lighted torches in an
-antique world. In the course of ages the intellect began to work on
-special lines, but the great man still could "take all knowledge for
-his province." A man "full cautelous," as was said of Louis XI., for
-instance, could apply that special faculty in every direction, but
-to-day the single quality is subdivided, and every profession has its
-special craft. A peasant or a pettifogging solicitor might very easily
-overreach an astute diplomate over a bargain in some remote country
-village; and the wiliest journalist may prove the veriest simpleton in
-a piece of business. Lucien could but be a puppet in the hands of
-Petit-Claud.
-
-That guileful practitioner, as might have been expected, had written
-the article himself; Angouleme and L'Houmeau, thus put on their
-mettle, thought it incumbent upon them to pay honor to Lucien. His
-fellow-citizens, assembled in the Place du Murier, were Cointets'
-workpeople from the papermills and printing-house, with a sprinkling
-of Lucien's old schoolfellows and the clerks in the employ of
-Messieurs Petit-Claud and Cachan. As for the attorney himself, he was
-once more Lucien's chum of old days; and he thought, not without
-reason, that before very long he should learn David's whereabouts in
-some unguarded moment. And if David came to grief through Lucien's
-fault, the poet would find Angouleme too hot to hold him. Petit-Claud
-meant to secure his hold; he posed, therefore, as Lucien's inferior.
-
-"What better could I have done?" he said accordingly. "My old chum's
-sister was involved, it is true, but there are some positions that
-simply cannot be maintained in a court of law. David asked me on the
-first of June to ensure him a quiet life for three months; he had a
-quiet life until September, and even so I have kept his property out
-of his creditors' power, for I shall gain my case in the Court-Royal;
-I contend that the wife is a privileged creditor, and her claim is
-absolute, unless there is evidence of intent to defraud. As for you,
-you have come back in misfortune, but you are a genius."--(Lucien
-turned about as if the incense were burned too close to his face.)--
-"Yes, my dear fellow, a GENIUS. I have read your Archer of Charles
-IX.; it is more than a romance, it is literature. Only two living men
-could have written the preface--Chateaubriand and Lucien."
-
-Lucien accepted that d'Arthez had written the preface. Ninety-nine
-writers out of a hundred would have done the same.
-
-"Well, nobody here seemed to have heard of you!" Petit-Claud
-continued, with apparent indignation. "When I saw the general
-indifference, I made up my mind to change all that. I wrote that
-article in the paper----"
-
-"What? did you write it?" exclaimed Lucien.
-
-"I myself. Angouleme and L'Houmeau were stirred to rivalry; I arranged
-for a meeting of your old schoolfellows, and got up yesterday's
-serenade; and when once the enthusiasm began to grow, we started a
-committee for the dinner. 'If David is in hiding,' said I to myself,
-'Lucien shall be crowned at any rate.' And I have done even better
-than that," continued Petit-Claud; "I have seen the Comtesse du
-Chatelet and made her understand that she owes it to herself to
-extricate David from his position; she can do it, and she ought to do
-it. If David had really discovered the secret of which he spoke to me,
-the Government ought to lend him a hand, it would not ruin the
-Government; and think what a fine thing for a prefect to have half the
-credit of the great invention for the well-timed help. It would set
-people talking about him as an enlightened administrator.--Your sister
-has taken fright at our musketry practice; she was scared of the
-smoke. A battle in the law-courts costs quite as much as a battle on
-the field; but David has held his ground, he has his secret. They
-cannot stop him, and they will not pull him up now."
-
-"Thanks, my dear fellow; I see that I can take you into my confidence;
-you shall help me to carry out my plan."
-
-Petit-Claud looked at Lucien, and his gimlet face was a point of
-interrogation.
-
-"I intend to rescue Sechard," Lucien said, with a certain importance.
-"I brought his misfortunes upon him; I mean to make full
-reparation. . . . I have more influence over Louise----"
-
-"Who is Louise?"
-
-"The Comtesse du Chatelet!"
-
-Petit-Claud started.
-
-"I have more influence over her than she herself suspects," said
-Lucien; "only, my dear fellow, if I can do something with your
-authorities here, I have no decent clothes."--Petit-Claud made as
-though he would offer his purse.
-
-"Thank you," said Lucien, grasping Petit-Claud's hand. "In ten days'
-time I will pay a visit to the Countess and return your call."
-
-The shook hands like old comrades, and separated.
-
-"He ought to be a poet" said Petit-Claud to himself; "he is quite
-mad."
-
-"There are no friends like one's school friends; it is a true saying,"
-Lucien thought at he went to find his sister.
-
-"What can Petit-Claud have promised to do that you should be so
-friendly with him, my Lucien?" asked Eve. "Be on your guard with him."
-
-"With HIM?" cried Lucien. "Listen, Eve," he continued, seeming to
-bethink himself; "you have no faith in me now; you do not trust me, so
-it is not likely you will trust Petit-Claud; but in ten or twelve days
-you will change your mind," he added, with a touch of fatuity. And he
-went to his room, and indited the following epistle to Lousteau:--
-
- Lucien to Lousteau.
-
- "MY FRIEND,--Of the pair of us, I alone can remember that bill for
- a thousand francs that I once lent you; and I know how things will
- be with you when you open this letter too well, alas! not to add
- immediately that I do not expect to be repaid in current coin of
- the realm; no, I will take it in credit from you, just as one
- would ask Florine for pleasure. We have the same tailor;
- therefore, you can order a complete outfit for me on the shortest
- possible notice. I am not precisely wearing Adam's costume, but I
- cannot show myself here. To my astonishment, the honors paid by
- the departments to a Parisian celebrity awaited me. I am the hero
- of a banquet, for all the world as if I were a Deputy of the Left.
- Now, after that, do you understand that I must have a black coat?
- Promise to pay; have it put down to your account, try the
- advertisement dodge, rehearse an unpublished scene between Don
- Juan and M. Dimanche, for I must have a gala suit at all costs. I
- have nothing, nothing but rags: start with that; it is August, the
- weather is magnificent, ergo see that I receive by the end of the
- week a charming morning suit, dark bronze-green jacket, and three
- waistcoats, one a brimstone yellow, one a plaid, and the third
- must be white; furthermore, let there be three pairs of trousers
- of the most fetching kind--one pair of white English stuff, one
- pair of nankeen, and a third of thin black kerseymere; lastly,
- send a black dress-coat and a black satin waistcoat. If you have
- picked up another Florine somewhere, I beg her good offices for
- two cravats. So far this is nothing; I count upon you and your
- skill in these matters; I am not much afraid of the tailor. But
- the ingenuity of poverty, assuredly the most active of all poisons
- at work in the system of man (id est the Parisian), an ingenuity
- that would catch Satan himself napping, has failed so far to
- discover a way to obtain a hat on credit!--How many a time, my
- dear friend, have we deplored this! When one of us shall bring a
- hat that costs one thousand francs into fashion, then, and not
- till then, can we afford to wear them; until that day comes we are
- bound to have cash enough in our pockets to pay for a hat. Ah!
- what an ill turn the Comedie-Francaise did us with, 'Lafleur, you
- will put gold in my pockets!'
-
- "I write with a profound sense of all the difficulties involved by
- the demand. Enclose with the above a pair of boots, a pair of
- pumps, a hat, half a dozen pairs of gloves. 'Tis asking the
- impossible; I know it. But what is a literary life but a
- periodical recurrence of the impossible? Work the miracle, write a
- long article, or play some small scurvy trick, and I will hold
- your debt as fully discharged--this is all I say to you. It is a
- debt of honor after all, my dear fellow, and due these twelve
- months; you ought to blush for yourself if you have any blushes
- left.
-
- "Joking apart, my dear Lousteau, I am in serious difficulties, as
- you may judge for yourself when I tell you that Mme. de Bargeton
- has married Chatelet, and Chatelet is prefect of Angouleme. The
- precious pair can do a good deal for my brother-in-law; he is in
- hiding at this moment on account of that letter of exchange, and
- the horrid business is all my doing. So it is a question of
- appearing before Mme. la Prefete and regaining my influence at all
- costs. It is shocking, is it not, that David Sechard's fate should
- hang upon a neat pair of shoes, a pair of open-worked gray silk
- stockings (mind you, remember them), and a new hat? I shall give
- out that I am sick and ill, and take to my bed, like Duvicquet, to
- save the trouble of replying to the pressing invitations of my
- fellow-townsmen. My fellow-townsmen, dear boy, have treated me to
- a fine serenade. MY FELLOW-TOWNSMEN, forsooth! I begin to wonder
- how many fools go to make up that word, since I learned that two
- or three of my old schoolfellows worked up the capital of the
- Angoumois to this pitch of enthusiasm.
-
- "If you could contrive to slip a few lines as to my reception in
- among the news items, I should be several inches taller for it
- here; and besides, I should make Mme. la Prefete feel that, if I
- have not friends, I have some credit, at any rate, with the
- Parisian press. I give up none of my hopes, and I will return the
- compliment. If you want a good, solid, substantial article for
- some magazine or other, I have time enough now to think something
- out. I only say the word, my dear friend; I count upon you as you
- may count upon me, and I am yours sincerely.
-
- "LUCIEN DE R.
-
- "P. S.--Send the things to the coach office to wait until called
- for."
-
-Lucien held up his head again. In this mood he wrote the letter, and
-as he wrote his thoughts went back to Paris. He had spent six days in
-the provinces, and the uneventful quietness of provincial life had
-already entered into his soul; his mind returned to those dear old
-miserable days with a vague sense of regret. The Comtesse du Chatelet
-filled his thoughts for a whole week; and at last he came to attach so
-much importance to his reappearance, that he hurried down to the coach
-office in L'Houmeau after nightfall in a perfect agony of suspense,
-like a woman who has set her last hopes upon a new dress, and waits in
-despair until it arrives.
-
-"Ah! Lousteau, all your treasons are forgiven," he said to himself, as
-he eyed the packages, and knew from the shape of them that everything
-had been sent. Inside the hatbox he found a note from Lousteau:--
-
- FLORINE'S DRAWING-ROOM.
-
- "MY DEAR BOY,--The tailor behaved very well; but as thy profound
- retrospective glance led thee to forbode, the cravats, the hats,
- and the silk hosen perplexed our souls, for there was nothing in
- our purse to be perplexed thereby. As said Blondet, so say we;
- there is a fortune awaiting the establishment which will supply
- young men with inexpensive articles on credit; for when we do not
- pay in the beginning, we pay dear in the end. And by the by, did
- not the great Napoleon, who missed a voyage to the Indies for want
- of boots, say that, 'If a thing is easy, it is never done?' So
- everything went well--except the boots. I beheld a vision of thee,
- fully dressed, but without a hat! appareled in waistcoats, yet
- shoeless! and bethought me of sending a pair of moccasins given to
- Florine as a curiosity by an American. Florine offered the huge
- sum of forty francs, that we might try our luck at play for you.
- Nathan, Blondet, and I had such luck (as we were not playing for
- ourselves) that we were rich enough to ask La Torpille, des
- Lupeaulx's sometime 'rat,' to supper. Frascati certainly owed us
- that much. Florine undertook the shopping, and added three fine
- shirts to the purchases. Nathan sends you a cane. Blondet, who won
- three hundred francs, is sending you a gold chain; and the gold
- watch, the size of a forty-franc piece, is from La Torpille; some
- idiot gave the thing to her, and it will not go. 'Trumpery
- rubbish,' she says, 'like the man that owned it.' Bixiou, who came
- to find us up at the Rocher de Cancale, wished to enclose a bottle
- of Portugal water in the package. Said our first comic man, 'If
- this can make him happy, let him have it!' growling it out in a
- deep bass voice with the bourgeois pomposity that he can act to
- the life. Which things, my dear boy, ought to prove to you how
- much we care for our friends in adversity. Florine, whom I have
- had the weakness to forgive, begs you to send us an article on
- Nathan's hat. Fare thee well, my son. I can only commiserate you
- on finding yourself back in the same box from which you emerged
- when you discovered your old comrade.
-
- "ETIENNE L."
-
-"Poor fellows! They have been gambling for me," said Lucien; he was
-quite touched by the letter. A waft of the breeze from an unhealthy
-country, from the land where one has suffered most, may seem to bring
-the odors of Paradise; and in a dull life there is an indefinable
-sweetness in memories of past pain.
-
-Eve was struck dumb with amazement when her brother came down in his
-new clothes. She did not recognize him.
-
-"Now I can walk out in Beaulieu," he cried; "they shall not say it of
-me that I came back in rags. Look, here is a watch which I shall
-return to you, for it is mine; and, like its owner, it is erratic in
-its ways."
-
-"What a child he is!" exclaimed Eve. "It is impossible to bear you any
-grudge."
-
-"Then do you imagine, my dear girl, that I sent for all this with the
-silly idea of shining in Angouleme? I don't care THAT for Angouleme"
-(twirling his cane with the engraved gold knob). "I intend to repair
-the wrong I have done, and this is my battle array."
-
-Lucien's success in this kind was his one real triumph; but the
-triumph, be it said, was immense. If admiration freezes some people's
-tongues, envy loosens at least as many more, and if women lost their
-heads over Lucien, men slandered him. He might have cried, in the
-words of the songwriter, "I thank thee, my coat!" He left two cards at
-the prefecture, and another upon Petit-Claud. The next day, the day of
-the banquet, the following paragraph appeared under the heading
-"Angouleme" in the Paris newspapers:--
-
- "ANGOULEME.
-
- "The return of the author of The Archer of Charles IX. has been
- the signal for an ovation which does equal honor to the town and
- to M. Lucien de Rubempre, the young poet who has made so brilliant
- a beginning; the writer of the one French historical novel not
- written in the style of Scott, and of a preface which may be
- called a literary event. The town hastened to offer him a
- patriotic banquet on his return. The name of the recently-
- appointed prefect is associated with the public demonstration in
- honor of the author of the Marquerites, whose talent received such
- warm encouragement from Mme. du Chatelet at the outset of his
- career."
-
-In France, when once the impulse is given, nobody can stop. The
-colonel of the regiment offered to put his band at the disposal of the
-committee. The landlord of the Bell (renowned for truffled turkeys,
-despatched in the most wonderful porcelain jars to the uttermost parts
-of the earth), the famous innkeeper of L'Houmeau, would supply the
-repast. At five o'clock some forty persons, all in state and festival
-array, were assembled in his largest ball, decorated with hangings,
-crowns of laurel, and bouquets. The effect was superb. A crowd of
-onlookers, some hundred persons, attracted for the most part by the
-military band in the yard, represented the citizens of Angouleme.
-
-Petit-Claud went to the window. "All Angouleme is here," he said,
-looking out.
-
-"I can make nothing of this," remarked little Postel to his wife (they
-had come out to hear the band play). "Why, the prefect and the
-receiver-general, and the colonel and the superintendent of the powder
-factory, and our mayor and deputy, and the headmaster of the school,
-and the manager of the foundry at Ruelle, and the public prosecutor,
-M. Milaud, and all the authorities, have just gone in!"
-
-The bank struck up as they sat down to table with variations on the
-air Vive le roy, vive la France, a melody which has never found
-popular favor. It was then five o'clock in the evening; it was eight
-o'clock before dessert was served. Conspicuous among the sixty-five
-dishes appeared an Olympus in confectionery, surmounted by a figure of
-France modeled in chocolate, to give the signal for toasts and
-speeches.
-
-"Gentlemen," called the prefect, rising to his feet, "the King! the
-rightful ruler of France! To what do we owe the generation of poets
-and thinkers who maintain the sceptre of letters in the hands of
-France, if not to the peace which the Bourbons have restored----"
-
-"Long live the King!" cried the assembled guests (ministerialists
-predominated).
-
-The venerable headmaster rose.
-
-"To the hero of the day," he said, "to the young poet who combines the
-gift of the prosateur with the charm and poetic faculty of Petrarch in
-that sonnet-form which Boileau declares to be so difficult."
-
-Cheers.
-
-The colonel rose next. "Gentlemen, to the Royalist! for the hero of
-this evening had the courage to fight for sound principles!"
-
-"Bravo!" cried the prefect, leading the applause.
-
-Then Petit-Claud called upon all Lucien's schoolfellows there present.
-"To the pride of the grammar-school of Angouleme! to the venerable
-headmaster so dear to us all, to whom the acknowledgment for some part
-of our triumph is due!"
-
-The old headmaster dried his eyes; he had not expected this toast.
-Lucien rose to his feet, the whole room was suddenly silent, and the
-poet's face grew white. In that pause the old headmaster, who sat on
-his left, crowned him with a laurel wreath. A round of applause
-followed, and when Lucien spoke it was with tears in his eyes and a
-sob in his throat.
-
-"He is drunk," remarked the attorney-general-designate to his
-neighbor, Petit-Claud.
-
-"My dear fellow-countrymen, my dear comrades," Lucien said at last, "I
-could wish that all France might witness this scene; for thus men rise
-to their full stature, and in such ways as these our land demands
-great deeds and noble work of us. And when I think of the little that
-I have done, and of this great honor shown to me to-day, I can only
-feel confused and impose upon the future the task of justifying your
-reception of me. The recollection of this moment will give me renewed
-strength for efforts to come. Permit me to indicate for your homage my
-earliest muse and protectress, and to associate her name with that of
-my birthplace; so--to the Comtesse du Chatelet and the noble town of
-Angouleme!"
-
-"He came out of that pretty well!" said the public prosecutor, nodding
-approval; "our speeches were all prepared, and his was improvised."
-
-At ten o'clock the party began to break up, and little knots of guests
-went home together. David Sechard heard the unwonted music.
-
-"What is going on in L'Houmeau?" he asked of Basine.
-
-"They are giving a dinner to your brother-in-law, Lucien----"
-
-"I know that he would feel sorry to miss me there," he said.
-
-At midnight Petit-Claud walked home with Lucien. As they reached the
-Place du Murier, Lucien said, "Come life, come death, we are friends,
-my dear fellow."
-
-"My marriage contract," said the lawyer, "with Mlle. Francoise de la
-Haye will be signed to-morrow at Mme. de Senonches' house; do me the
-pleasure of coming. Mme. de Senonches implored me to bring you, and
-you will meet Mme. du Chatelet; they are sure to tell her of your
-speech, and she will feel flattered by it."
-
-"I knew what I was about," said Lucien.
-
-"Oh! you will save David."
-
-"I am sure I shall," the poet replied.
-
-Just at that moment David appeared as if by magic in the Place du
-Murier. This was how it had come about. He felt that he was in a
-rather difficult position; his wife insisted that Lucien must neither
-go to David nor know of his hiding-place; and Lucien all the while was
-writing the most affectionate letters, saying that in a few days' time
-all should be set right; and even as Basine Clerget explained the
-reason why the band played, she put two letters into his hands. The
-first was from Eve.
-
- "DEAREST," she wrote, "do as if Lucien were not here; do not
- trouble yourself in the least; our whole security depends upon the
- fact that your enemies cannot find you; get that idea firmly into
- your head. I have more confidence in Kolb and Marion and Basine
- than in my own brother; such is my misfortune. Alas! poor Lucien
- is not the ingenuous and tender-hearted poet whom we used to know;
- and it is simply because he is trying to interfere on your behalf,
- and because he imagines that he can discharge our debts (and this
- from pride, my David), that I am afraid of him. Some fine clothes
- have been sent from Paris for him, and five gold pieces in a
- pretty purse. He gave the money to me, and we are living on it.
-
- "We have one enemy the less. Your father has gone, thanks to
- Petit-Claud. Petit-Claud unraveled his designs, and put an end to
- them at once by telling him that you would do nothing without
- consulting him, and that he (Petit-Claud) would not allow you to
- concede a single point in the matter of the invention until you
- had been promised an indemnity of thirty thousand francs; fifteen
- thousand to free you from embarrassment, and fifteen thousand more
- to be yours in any case, whether your invention succeeds or no. I
- cannot understand Petit-Claud. I embrace you, dear, a wife's kiss
- for her husband in trouble. Our little Lucien is well. How strange
- it is to watch him grow rosy and strong, like a flower, in these
- stormy days! Mother prays God for you now, as always, and sends
- love only less tender than mine.--Your
- "EVE."
-
-As a matter of fact, Petit-Claud and the Cointets had taken fright at
-old Sechard's peasant shrewdness, and got rid of him so much the more
-easily because it was now vintage time at Marsac. Eve's letter
-enclosed another from Lucien:--
-
- "MY DEAR DAVID,--Everything is going well. I am armed cap-a-pie;
- to-day I open the campaign, and in forty-eight hours I shall have
- made great progress. How glad I shall be to embrace you when you
- are free again and my debts are all paid! My mother and sister
- persist in mistrusting me; their suspicion wounds me to the quick.
- As if I did not know already that you are hiding with Basine, for
- every time that Basine comes to the house I hear news of you and
- receive answers to my letters; and besides, it is plain that my
- sister could not find any one else to trust. It hurts me cruelly
- to think that I shall be so near you to-day, and yet that you will
- not be present at this banquet in my honor. I owe my little
- triumph to the vainglory of Angouleme; in a few days it will be
- quite forgotten, and you alone would have taken a real pleasure in
- it. But, after all, in a little while you will pardon everything
- to one who counts it more than all the triumphs in the world to be
- your brother,
- "LUCIEN."
-
-Two forces tugged sharply at David's heart; he adored his wife; and if
-he held Lucien in somewhat less esteem, his friendship was scarcely
-diminished. In solitude our feelings have unrestricted play; and a man
-preoccupied like David, with all-absorbing thoughts, will give way to
-impulses for which ordinary life would have provided a sufficient
-counterpoise. As he read Lucien's letter to the sound of military
-music, and heard of this unlooked-for recognition, he was deeply
-touched by that expression of regret. He had known how it would be. A
-very slight expression of feeling appeals irresistibly to a sensitive
-soul, for they are apt to credit others with like depths. How should
-the drop fall unless the cup were full to the brim?
-
-So at midnight, in spite of all Basine's entreaties, David must go to
-see Lucien.
-
-"Nobody will be out in the streets at this time of night," he said; "I
-shall not be seen, and they cannot arrest me. Even if I should meet
-people, I can make use of Kolb's way of going into hiding. And
-besides, it is so intolerably long since I saw my wife and child."
-
-The reasoning was plausible enough; Basine gave way, and David went.
-Petit-Claud was just taking leave as he came up and at his cry of
-"LUCIEN!" the two brothers flung their arms about each other with
-tears in their eyes.
-
-Life holds not many moments such as these. Lucien's heart went out in
-response to this friendship for its own sake. There was never question
-of debtor and creditor between them, and the offender met with no
-reproaches save his own. David, generous and noble that he was, was
-longing to bestow pardon; he meant first of all to read Lucien a
-lecture, and scatter the clouds that overspread the love of the
-brother and sister; and with these ends in view, the lack of money and
-its consequent dangers disappeared entirely from his mind.
-
-"Go home," said Petit-Claud, addressing his client; "take advantage of
-your imprudence to see your wife and child again, at any rate; and you
-must not be seen, mind you!--How unlucky!" he added, when he was alone
-in the Place du Murier. "If only Cerizet were here----"
-
-The buildings magniloquently styled the Angouleme Law Courts were then
-in process of construction. Petit-Claud muttered these words to
-himself as he passed by the hoardings, and heard a tap upon the
-boards, and a voice issuing from a crack between two planks.
-
-"Here I am," said Cerizet; "I saw David coming out of L'Houmeau. I was
-beginning to have my suspicions about his retreat, and now I am sure;
-and I know where to have him. But I want to know something of Lucien's
-plans before I set the snare for David; and here are you sending him
-into the house! Find some excuse for stopping here, at least, and when
-David and Lucien come out, send them round this way; they will think
-they are quite alone, and I shall overhear their good-bye."
-
-"You are a very devil," muttered Petit-Claud.
-
-"Well, I'm blessed if a man wouldn't do anything for the thing you
-promised me."
-
-Petit-Claud walked away from the hoarding, and paced up and down in
-the Place du Murier; he watched the windows of the room where the
-family sat together, and thought of his own prospects to keep up his
-courage. Cerizet's cleverness had given him the chance of striking the
-final blow. Petit-Claud was a double-dealer of the profoundly cautious
-stamp that is never caught by the bait of a present satisfaction, nor
-entangled by a personal attachment, after his first initiation into
-the strategy of self-seeking and the instability of the human heart.
-So, from the very first, he had put little trust in Cointet. He
-foresaw that his marriage negotiations might very easily be broken
-off, saw also that in that case he could not accuse Cointet of bad
-faith, and he had taken his measures accordingly. But since his
-success at the Hotel de Bargeton, Petit-Claud's game was above board.
-A certain under-plot of his was useless now, and even dangerous to a
-man with his political ambitions. He had laid the foundations of his
-future importance in the following manner:--
-
-Gannerac and a few of the wealthy men of business in L'Houmeau formed
-a sort of Liberal clique in constant communication (through commercial
-channels) with the leaders of the Opposition. The Villele ministry,
-accepted by the dying Louis XVIII., gave the signal for a change of
-tactics in the Opposition camp; for, since the death of Napoleon, the
-liberals had ceased to resort to the dangerous expedient of
-conspiracy. They were busy organizing resistance by lawful means
-throughout the provinces, and aiming at securing control of the great
-bulk of electors by convincing the masses. Petit-Claud, a rabid
-Liberal, and a man of L'Houmeau, was the instigator, the secret
-counselor, and the very life of this movement in the lower town, which
-groaned under the tyranny of the aristocrats at the upper end. He was
-the first to see the danger of leaving the whole press of the
-department in the control of the Cointets; the Opposition must have
-its organ; it would not do to be behind other cities.
-
-"If each one of us gives Gannerac a bill for five hundred francs, he
-would have some twenty thousand francs and more; we might buy up
-Sechard's printing-office, and we could do as we liked with the
-master-printer if we lent him the capital," Petit-Claud had said.
-
-Others had taken up the idea, and in this way Petit-Claud strengthened
-his position with regard to David on the one side and the Cointets on
-the other. Casting about him for a tool for his party, he naturally
-thought that a rogue of Cerizet's calibre was the very man for the
-purpose.
-
-"If you can find Sechard's hiding-place and put him in our hands,
-somebody will lend you twenty thousand francs to buy his business, and
-very likely there will be a newspaper to print. So, set about it," he
-had said.
-
-Petit-Claud put more faith in Cerizet's activity than in all the
-Doublons in existence; and then it was that he promised Cointet that
-Sechard should be arrested. But now that the little lawyer cherished
-hopes of office, he saw that he must turn his back upon the Liberals;
-and, meanwhile, the amount for the printing-office had been subscribed
-in L'Houmeau. Petit-Claud decided to allow things to take their
-natural course.
-
-"Pooh!" he thought, "Cerizet will get into trouble with his paper, and
-give me an opportunity of displaying my talents."
-
-He walked up to the door of the printing-office and spoke to Kolb, the
-sentinel. "Go up and warn David that he had better go now," he said,
-"and take every precaution. I am going home; it is one o'clock."
-
-Marion came to take Kolb's place. Lucien and David came down together
-and went out, Kolb a hundred paces ahead of them, and Marion at the
-same distance behind. The two friends walked past the hoarding, Lucien
-talking eagerly the while.
-
-"My plan is extremely simple, David; but how could I tell you about it
-while Eve was there? She would never understand. I am quite sure that
-at the bottom of Louise's heart there is a feeling that I can rouse,
-and I should like to arouse it if it is only to avenge myself upon
-that idiot the prefect. If our love affair only lasts for a week, I
-will contrive to send an application through her for the subvention of
-twenty thousand francs for you. I am going to see her again to-morrow
-in the little boudoir where our old affair of the heart began; Petit-
-Claud says that the room is the same as ever; I shall play my part in
-the comedy; and I will send word by Basine to-morrow morning to tell
-you whether the actor was hissed. You may be at liberty by then, who
-knows?--Now do you understand how it was that I wanted clothes from
-Paris? One cannot act the lover's part in rags."
-
-At six o'clock that morning Cerizet went to Petit-Claud.
-
-"Doublon can be ready to take his man to-morrow at noon, I will answer
-for it," he said; "I know one of Mlle. Clerget's girls, do you
-understand?" Cerizet unfolded his plan, and Petit-Claud hurried to
-find Cointet.
-
-"If M. Francis du Hautoy will settle his property on Francoise, you
-shall sign a deed of partnership with Sechard in two days. I shall not
-be married for a week after the contract is signed, so we shall both
-be within the terms of our little agreement, tit for tat. To-night,
-however, we must keep a close watch over Lucien and Mme. la Comtesse
-du Chatelet, for the whole business lies in that. . . . If Lucien
-hopes to succeed through the Countess' influence, I have David
-safe----"
-
-"You will be Keeper of the Seals yet, it is my belief," said Cointet.
-
-"And why not? No one objects to M. de Peyronnet," said Petit-Claud. He
-had not altogether sloughed his skin of Liberalism.
-
-Mlle. de la Haye's ambiguous position brought most of the upper town
-to the signing of the marriage contract. The comparative poverty of
-the young couple and the absence of a corbeille quickened the interest
-that people love to exhibit; for it is with beneficence as with
-ovations, we prefer the deeds of charity which gratify self-love. The
-Marquise de Pimentel, the Comtesse du Chatelet, M. de Senonches, and
-one or two frequenters of the house had given Francoise a few wedding
-presents, which made great talk in the city. These pretty trifles,
-together with the trousseau which Zephirine had been preparing for the
-past twelve months, the godfather's jewels, and the usual wedding
-gifts, consoled Francoise and roused the curiosity of some mothers of
-daughters.
-
-Petit-Claud and Cointet had both remarked that their presence in the
-Angouleme Olympus was endured rather than courted. Cointet was
-Francoise's trustee and quasi-guardian; and if Petit-Claud was to sign
-the contract, Petit-Claud's presence was as necessary as the
-attendance of the man to be hanged at an execution; but though, once
-married, Mme. Petit-Claud might keep her right of entry to her
-godmother's house, Petit-Claud foresaw some difficulty on his own
-account, and resolved to be beforehand with these haughty personages.
-
-He felt ashamed of his parents. He had sent his mother to stay at
-Mansle; now he begged her to say that she was out of health and to
-give her consent in writing. So humiliating was it to be without
-relations, protectors, or witnesses to his signature, that Petit-Claud
-thought himself in luck that he could bring a presentable friend at
-the Countess' request. He called to take up Lucien, and they drove to
-the Hotel de Bargeton.
-
-On that memorable evening the poet dressed to outshine every man
-present. Mme. de Senonches had spoken of him as the hero of the hour,
-and a first interview between two estranged lovers is the kind of
-scene that provincials particularly love. Lucien had come to be the
-lion of the evening; he was said to be so handsome, so much changed,
-so wonderful, that every well-born woman in Angouleme was curious to
-see him again. Following the fashion of the transition period between
-the eighteenth century small clothes and the vulgar costume of the
-present day, he wore tight-fitting black trousers. Men still showed
-their figures in those days, to the utter despair of lean, clumsily-
-made mortals; and Lucien was an Apollo. The open-work gray silk
-stockings, the neat shoes, and the black satin waistcoat were
-scrupulously drawn over his person, and seemed to cling to him. His
-forehead looked the whiter by contrast with the thick, bright curls
-that rose above it with studied grace. The proud eyes were radiant.
-The hands, small as a woman's, never showed to better advantage than
-when gloved. He had modeled himself upon de Marsay, the famous
-Parisian dandy, holding his hat and cane in one hand, and keeping the
-other free for the very occasional gestures which illustrated his
-talk.
-
-Lucien had quite intended to emulate the famous false modesty of those
-who bend their heads to pass beneath the Porte Saint-Denis, and to
-slip unobserved into the room; but Petit-Claud, having but one friend,
-made him useful. He brought Lucien almost pompously through a crowded
-room to Mme. de Senonches. The poet heard a murmur as he passed; not
-so very long ago that hum of voices would have turned his head, to-day
-he was quite different; he did not doubt that he himself was greater
-than the whole Olympus put together.
-
-"Madame," he said, addressing Mme. de Senonches, "I have already
-congratulated my friend Petit-Claud (a man with the stuff in him of
-which Keepers of the Seals are made) on the honor of his approaching
-connection with you, slight as are the ties between godmother and
-goddaughter----" (this with the air of a man uttering an epigram, by
-no means lost upon any woman in the room, for every woman was
-listening without appearing to do so.) "And as for myself," he
-continued, "I am delighted to have the opportunity of paying my homage
-to you."
-
-He spoke easily and fluently, as some great lord might speak under the
-roof of his inferiors; and as he listened to Zephirine's involved
-reply, he cast a glance over the room to consider the effect that he
-wished to make. The pause gave him time to discover Francis du Hautoy
-and the prefect; to bow gracefully to each with the proper shade of
-difference in his smile, and, finally, to approach Mme. du Chatelet as
-if he had just caught sight of her. That meeting was the real event of
-the evening. No one so much as thought of the marriage contract lying
-in the adjoining bedroom, whither Francoise and the notary led guest
-after guest to sign the document. Lucien made a step towards Louise de
-Negrepelisse, and then spoke with that grace of manner now associated,
-for her, with memories of Paris.
-
-"Do I owe to you, madame, the pleasure of an invitation to dine at the
-Prefecture the day after to-morrow?" he said.
-
-"You owe it solely to your fame, monsieur," Louise answered drily,
-somewhat taken aback by the turn of a phrase by which Lucien
-deliberately tried to wound her pride.
-
-"Ah! Madame la Comtesse, I cannot bring you the guest if the man is in
-disgrace," said Lucien, and, without waiting for an answer, he turned
-and greeted the Bishop with stately grace.
-
-"Your lordship's prophecy has been partially fulfilled," he said, and
-there was a winning charm in his tones; "I will endeavor to fulfil it
-to the letter. I consider myself very fortunate since this evening
-brings me an opportunity of paying my respects to you."
-
-Lucien drew the Bishop into a conversation that lasted for ten
-minutes. The women looked on Lucien as a phenomenon. His unexpected
-insolence had struck Mme. du Chatelet dumb; she could not find an
-answer. Looking round the room, she saw that every woman admired
-Lucien; she watched group after group repeating the phrases by which
-Lucien crushed her with seeming disdain, and her heart contracted with
-a spasm of mortification.
-
-"Suppose that he should not come to the Prefecture after this, what
-talk there would be!" she thought. "Where did he learn this pride? Can
-Mlle. des Touches have taken a fancy for him? . . . He is so handsome.
-They say that she hurried to see him in Paris the day after that
-actress died. . . . Perhaps he has come to the rescue of his
-brother-in-law, and happened to be behind our caleche at Mansle by
-accident. Lucien looked at us very strangely that morning."
-
-A crowd of thoughts crossed Louise's brain, and unluckily for her, she
-continued to ponder visibly as she watched Lucien. He was talking with
-the Bishop as if he were the king of the room; making no effort to
-find any one out, waiting till others came to him, looking round about
-him with varying expression, and as much at his ease as his model de
-Marsay. M. de Senonches appeared at no great distance, but Lucien
-still stood beside the prelate.
-
-At the end of ten minutes Louise could contain herself no longer. She
-rose and went over to the Bishop and said:
-
-"What is being said, my lord, that you smile so often?"
-
-Lucien drew back discreetly, and left Mme. du Chatelet with his
-lordship.
-
-"Ah! Mme. la Comtesse, what a clever young fellow he is! He was
-explaining to me that he owed all he is to you----"
-
-"_I_ am not ungrateful, madame," said Lucien, with a reproachful
-glance that charmed the Countess.
-
-"Let us have an understanding," she said, beckoning him with her fan.
-"Come into the boudoir. My Lord Bishop, you shall judge between us."
-
-"She has found a funny task for his lordship," said one of the
-Chandour camp, sufficiently audibly.
-
-"Judge between us!" repeated Lucien, looking from the prelate to the
-lady; "then, is one of us in fault?"
-
-Louise de Negrepelisse sat down on the sofa in the familiar boudoir.
-She made the Bishop sit on one side and Lucien on the other, then she
-began to speak. But Lucien, to the joy and surprise of his old love,
-honored her with inattention; her words fell unheeded on his ears; he
-sat like Pasta in Tancredi, with the words O patria! upon her lips,
-the music of the great cavatina Dell Rizzo might have passed into his
-face. Indeed, Coralie's pupil had contrived to bring the tears to his
-eyes.
-
-"Oh! Louise, how I loved you!" he murmured, careless of the Bishop's
-presence, heedless of the conversation, as soon as he knew that the
-Countess had seen the tears.
-
-"Dry your eyes, or you will ruin me here a second time," she said in
-an aside that horrified the prelate.
-
-"And once is enough," was Lucien's quick retort. "That speech from
-Mme. d'Espard's cousin would dry the eyes of a weeping Magdalene. Oh
-me! for a little moment old memories, and lost illusions, and my
-twentieth year came back to me, and you have----"
-
-His lordship hastily retreated to the drawing-room at this; it seemed
-to him that his dignity was like to be compromised by this sentimental
-pair. Every one ostentatiously refrained from interrupting them, and a
-quarter of an hour went by; till at last Sixte du Chatelet, vexed by
-the laughter and talk, and excursions to the boudoir door, went in
-with a countenance distinctly overclouded, and found Louise and Lucien
-talking excitedly.
-
-"Madame," said Sixte in his wife's ear, "you know Angouleme better
-than I do, and surely you should think of your position as Mme. la
-Prefete and of the Government?"
-
-"My dear," said Louise, scanning her responsible editor with a
-haughtiness that made him quake, "I am talking with M. de Rubempre of
-matters which interest you. It is a question of rescuing an inventor
-about to fall a victim to the basest machinations; you will help us.
-As to those ladies yonder, and their opinion of me, you shall see how
-I will freeze the venom of their tongues."
-
-She came out of the boudoir on Lucien's arm, and drew him across to
-sign the contract with a great lady's audacity.
-
-"Write your name after mine," she said, handing him the pen. And
-Lucien submissively signed in the place indicated beneath her name.
-
-"M. de Senonches, would you have recognized M. de Rubempre?" she
-continued, and the insolent sportsman was compelled to greet Lucien.
-
-She returned to the drawing-room on Lucien's arm, and seated him on
-the awe-inspiring central sofa between herself and Zephirine. There,
-enthroned like a queen, she began, at first in a low voice, a
-conversation in which epigram evidently was not wanting. Some of her
-old friends, and several women who paid court to her, came to join the
-group, and Lucien soon became the hero of the circle. The Countess
-drew him out on the subject of life in Paris; his satirical talk
-flowed with spontaneous and incredible spirit; he told anecdotes of
-celebrities, those conversational luxuries which the provincial
-devours with such avidity. His wit was as much admired as his good
-looks. And Mme. la Comtesse Sixte du Chatelet, preparing Lucien's
-triumph so patiently, sat like a player enraptured with the sound of
-his instrument; she gave him opportunities for a reply; she looked
-round the circle for applause so openly, that not a few of the women
-began to think that their return together was something more than a
-coincidence, and that Lucien and Louise, loving with all their hearts,
-had been separated by a double treason. Pique, very likely, had
-brought about this ill-starred match with Chatelet. And a reaction set
-in against the prefect.
-
-Before the Countess rose to go at one o'clock in the morning, she
-turned to Lucien and said in a low voice, "Do me the pleasure of
-coming punctually to-morrow evening." Then, with the friendliest
-little nod, she went, saying a few words to Chatelet, who was looking
-for his hat.
-
-"If Mme. du Chatelet has given me a correct idea of the state of
-affairs, count on me, my dear Lucien," said the prefect, preparing to
-hurry after his wife. She was going away without him, after the Paris
-fashion. "Your brother-in-law may consider that his troubles are at an
-end," he added as he went.
-
-"M. le Comte surely owes me so much," smiled Lucien.
-
-Cointet and Petit-Claud heard these farewell speeches.
-
-"Well, well, we are done for now," Cointet muttered in his
-confederate's ear. Petit-Claud, thunderstruck by Lucien's success,
-amazed by his brilliant wit and varying charm, was gazing at Francoise
-de la Haye; the girl's whole face was full of admiration for Lucien.
-"Be like your friend," she seemed to say to her betrothed. A gleam of
-joy flitted over Petit-Claud's countenance.
-
-"We still have a whole day before the prefect's dinner; I will answer
-for everything."
-
-An hour later, as Petit-Claud and Lucien walked home together, Lucien
-talked of his success. "Well, my dear fellow, I came, I saw, I
-conquered! Sechard will be very happy in a few hours' time."
-
-"Just what I wanted to know," thought Petit-Claud. Aloud he said--"I
-thought you were simply a poet, Lucien, but you are a Lauzun too, that
-is to say--twice a poet," and they shook hands--for the last time, as
-it proved.
-
-"Good news, dear Eve," said Lucien, waking his sister, "David will
-have no debts in less than a month!"
-
-"How is that?"
-
-"Well, my Louise is still hidden by Mme. du Chatelet's petticoat. She
-loves me more than ever; she will send a favorable report of our
-discovery to the Minister of the Interior through her husband. So we
-have only to endure our troubles for one month, while I avenge myself
-on the prefect and complete the happiness of his married life."
-
-Eve listened, and thought that she must be dreaming.
-
-"I saw the little gray drawing-room where I trembled like a child two
-years ago; it seemed as if scales fell from my eyes when I saw the
-furniture and the pictures and the faces again. How Paris changes
-one's ideas!"
-
-"Is that a good thing?" asked Eve, at last beginning to understand.
-
-"Come, come; you are still asleep. We will talk about it to-morrow
-after breakfast."
-
-Cerizet's plot was exceedingly simple, a commonplace stratagem
-familiar to the provincial bailiff. Its success entirely depends upon
-circumstances, and in this case it was certain, so intimate was
-Cerizet's knowledge of the characters and hopes of those concerned.
-Cerizet had been a kind of Don Juan among the young work-girls, ruling
-his victims by playing one off against another. Since he had been the
-Cointet's extra foreman, he had singled out one of Basine Clerget's
-assistants, a girl almost as handsome as Mme. Sechard. Henriette
-Signol's parents owned a small vineyard two leagues out of Angouleme,
-on the road to Saintes. The Signols, like everybody else in the
-country, could not afford to keep their only child at home; so they
-meant her to go out to service, in country phrase. The art of clear-
-starching is a part of every country housemaid's training; and so
-great was Mme. Prieur's reputation, that the Signols sent Henriette to
-her as apprentice, and paid for their daughter's board and lodging.
-
-Mme. Prieur was one of the old-fashioned mistresses, who consider that
-they fill a parent's place towards their apprentices. They were part
-of the family; she took them with her to church, and looked
-scrupulously after them. Henriette Signol was a tall, fine-looking
-girl, with bold eyes, and long, thick, dark hair, and the pale, very
-fair complexion of girls in the South--white as a magnolia flower. For
-which reasons Henriette was one of the first on whom Cerizet cast his
-eyes; but Henriette came of "honest farmer folk," and only yielded at
-last to jealousy, to bad example, and the treacherous promise of
-subsequent marriage. By this time Cerizet was the Cointet's foreman.
-When he learned that the Signols owned a vineyard worth some ten or
-twelve thousand francs, and a tolerably comfortable cottage, he
-hastened to make it impossible for Henriette to marry any one else.
-Affairs had reached this point when Petit-Claud held out the prospect
-of a printing office and twenty thousand francs of borrowed capital,
-which was to prove a yoke upon the borrower's neck. Cerizet was
-dazzled, the offer turned his head; Henriette Signol was now only an
-obstacle in the way of his ambitions, and he neglected the poor girl.
-Henriette, in her despair, clung more closely to her seducer as he
-tried to shake her off. When Cerizet began to suspect that David was
-hiding in Basine's house, his views with regard to Henriette underwent
-another change, though he treated her as before. A kind of frenzy
-works in a girl's brain when she must marry her seducer to conceal her
-dishonor, and Cerizet was on the watch to turn this madness to his own
-account.
-
-During the morning of the day when Lucien had set himself to reconquer
-his Louise, Cerizet told Basine's secret to Henriette, giving her to
-understand at the same time that their marriage and future prospects
-depended upon the discovery of David's hiding-place. Thus instructed,
-Henriette easily made certain of the fact that David was in Basine
-Clerget's inner room. It never occurred to the girl that she was doing
-wrong to act the spy, and Cerizet involved her in the guilt of
-betrayal by this first step.
-
-Lucien was still sleeping while Cerizet, closeted with Petit-Claud,
-heard the history of the important trifles with which all Angouleme
-presently would ring.
-
-The Cointets' foreman gave a satisfied nod as Petit-Claud came to an
-end. "Lucien surely has written you a line since he came back, has he
-not?" he asked.
-
-"This is all that I have," answered the lawyer, and he held out a note
-on Mme. Sechard's writing-paper.
-
-"Very well," said Cerizet, "let Doublon be in wait at the Palet Gate
-about ten minutes before sunset; tell him to post his gendarmes, and
-you shall have our man."
-
-"Are you sure of YOUR part of the business?" asked Petit-Claud,
-scanning Cerizet.
-
-"I rely on chance," said the ex-street boy, "and she is a saucy huzzy;
-she does not like honest folk.
-
-"You must succeed," said Cerizet. "You have pushed me into this dirty
-business; you may as well let me have a few banknotes to wipe off the
-stains."--Then detecting a look that he did not like in the attorney's
-face, he continued, with a deadly glance, "If you have cheated me,
-sir, if you don't buy the printing-office for me within a week--you
-will leave a young widow;" he lowered his voice.
-
-"If we have David on the jail register at six o'clock, come round to
-M. Gannerac's at nine, and we will settle your business," said Petit-
-Claud peremptorily.
-
-"Agreed. Your will shall be done, governor," said Cerizet.
-
-Cerizet understood the art of washing paper, a dangerous art for the
-Treasury. He washed out Lucien's four lines and replaced them,
-imitating the handwriting with a dexterity which augured ill for his
-own future:--
-
- "MY DEAR DAVID,--Your business is settled; you need not fear to go
- to the prefect. You can go out at sunset. I will come to meet you
- and tell you what to do at the prefecture.--Your brother,
- "LUCIEN."
-
-At noon Lucien wrote to David, telling him of his evening's success.
-The prefect would be sure to lend his influence, he said; he was full
-of enthusiasm over the invention, and was drawing up a report that
-very day to send to the Government. Marion carried the letter to
-Basine, taking some of Lucien's linen to the laundry as a pretext for
-the errand.
-
-Petit-Claud had told Cerizet that a letter would in all probability be
-sent. Cerizet called for Mlle. Signol, and the two walked by the
-Charente. Henriette's integrity must have held out for a long while,
-for the walk lasted for two hours. A whole future of happiness and
-ease and the interests of a child were at stake, and Cerizet asked a
-mere trifle of her. He was very careful besides to say nothing of the
-consequences of that trifle. She was only to carry a letter and a
-message, that was all; but it was the greatness of the reward for the
-trifling service that frightened Henriette. Nevertheless, Cerizet
-gained her consent at last; she would help him in his stratagem.
-
-At five o'clock Henriette must go out and come in again, telling
-Basine Clerget that Mme. Sechard wanted to speak to her at once.
-Fifteen minutes after Basine's departure she must go upstairs, knock
-at the door of the inner room, and give David the forged note. That
-was all. Cerizet looked to chance to manage the rest.
-
-
-
-For the first time in twelve months, Eve felt the iron grasp of
-necessity relax a little. She began at last to hope. She, too, would
-enjoy her brother's visit; she would show herself abroad on the arm of
-a man feted in his native town, adored by the women, beloved by the
-proud Comtesse du Chatelet. She dressed herself prettily, and proposed
-to walk out after dinner with her brother to Beaulieu. In September
-all Angouleme comes out at that hour to breathe the fresh air.
-
-"Oh! that is the beautiful Mme. Sechard," voices said here and there.
-
-"I should never have believed it of her," said a woman.
-
-"The husband is in hiding, and the wife walks abroad," said Mme.
-Postel for young Mme. Sechard's benefit.
-
-"Oh, let us go home," said poor Eve; "I have made a mistake."
-
-A few minutes before sunset, the sound of a crowd rose from the steps
-that lead down to L'Houmeau. Apparently some crime had been committed,
-for persons coming from L'Houmeau were talking among themselves.
-Curiosity drew Lucien and Eve towards the steps.
-
-"A thief has just been arrested no doubt, the man looks as pale as
-death," one of these passers-by said to the brother and sister. The
-crowd grew larger.
-
-Lucien and Eve watched a group of some thirty children, old women and
-men, returning from work, clustering about the gendarmes, whose gold-
-laced caps gleamed above the heads of the rest. About a hundred
-persons followed the procession, the crowd gathering like a storm
-cloud.
-
-"Oh! it is my husband!" Eve cried out.
-
-"DAVID!" exclaimed Lucien.
-
-"It is his wife," said voices, and the crowd made way.
-
-"What made you come out?" asked Lucien.
-
-"Your letter," said David, haggard and white.
-
-"I knew it!" said Eve, and she fainted away. Lucien raised his sister,
-and with the help of two strangers he carried her home; Marion laid
-her in bed, and Kolb rushed off for a doctor. Eve was still insensible
-when the doctor arrived; and Lucien was obliged to confess to his
-mother that he was the cause of David's arrest; for he, of course,
-knew nothing of the forged letter and Cerizet's stratagem. Then he
-went up to his room and locked himself in, struck dumb by the
-malediction in his mother's eyes.
-
-In the dead of night he wrote one more letter amid constant
-interruptions; the reader can divine the agony of the writer's mind
-from those phrases, jerked out, as it were, one by one:--
-
- "MY BELOVED SISTER,--We have seen each other for the last time. My
- resolution is final, and for this reason. In many families there
- is one unlucky member, a kind of disease in their midst. I am that
- unlucky one in our family. The observation is not mine; it was
- made at a friendly supper one evening at the Rocher de Cancale by
- a diplomate who has seen a great deal of the world. While we
- laughed and joked, he explained the reason why some young lady or
- some other remained unmarried, to the astonishment of the world--
- it was 'a touch of her father,' he said, and with that he unfolded
- his theory of inherited weaknesses. He told us how such and such a
- family would have flourished but for the mother; how it was that a
- son had ruined his father, or a father had stripped his children
- of prospects and respectability. It was said laughingly, but we
- thought of so many cases in point in ten minutes that I was struck
- with the theory. The amount of truth in it furnished all sorts of
- wild paradoxes, which journalists maintain cleverly enough for
- their own amusement when there is nobody else at hand to mystify.
- I bring bad luck to our family. My heart is full of love for you,
- yet I behave like an enemy. The blow dealt unintentionally is the
- cruelest blow of all. While I was leading a bohemian life in
- Paris, a life made up of pleasure and misery; taking good
- fellowship for friendship, forsaking my true friends for those who
- wished to exploit me, and succeeded; forgetful of you, or
- remembering you only to cause you trouble,--all that while you
- were walking in the humble path of hard work, making your way
- slowly but surely to the fortune which I tried so madly to snatch.
- While you grew better, I grew worse; a fatal element entered into
- my life through my own choice. Yes, unbounded ambition makes an
- obscure existence simply impossible for me. I have tastes and
- remembrances of past pleasures that poison the enjoyments within
- my reach; once I should have been satisfied with them, now it is
- too late. Oh, dear Eve, no one can think more hardly of me than I
- do myself; my condemnation is absolute and pitiless. The struggle
- in Paris demands steady effort; my will power is spasmodic, my
- brain works intermittently. The future is so appalling that I do
- not care to face it, and the present is intolerable.
-
- "I wanted to see you again. I should have done better to stay in
- exile all my days. But exile without means of subsistence would be
- madness; I will not add another folly to the rest. Death is better
- than a maimed life; I cannot think of myself in any position in
- which my overweening vanity would not lead me into folly.
-
- "Some human beings are like the figure 0, another must be put
- before it, and they acquire ten times their value. I am nothing
- unless a strong inexorable will is wedded to mine. Mme. de
- Bargeton was in truth my wife; when I refused to leave Coralie for
- her I spoiled my life. You and David might have been excellent
- pilots for me, but you are not strong enough to tame my weakness,
- which in some sort eludes control. I like an easy life, a life
- without cares; to clear an obstacle out of my way I can descend to
- baseness that sticks at nothing. I was born a prince. I have more
- than the requisite intellectual dexterity for success, but only by
- moments; and the prizes of a career so crowded by ambitious
- competitors are to those who expend no more than the necessary
- strength, and retain a sufficient reserve when they reach the
- goal.
-
- "I shall do harm again with the best intentions in the world. Some
- men are like oaks, I am a delicate shrub it may be, and I
- forsooth, must needs aspire to be a forest cedar.
-
- "There you have my bankrupt's schedule. The disproportion between
- my powers and my desires, my want of balance, in short, will bring
- all my efforts to nothing. There are many such characters among
- men of letters, many men whose intellectual powers and character
- are always at variance, who will one thing and wish another. What
- would become of me? I can see it all beforehand, as I think of
- this and that great light that once shone on Paris, now utterly
- forgotten. On the threshold of old age I shall be a man older than
- my age, needy and without a name. My whole soul rises up against
- the thought of such a close; I will not be a social rag. Ah, dear
- sister, loved and worshiped at least as much for your severity at
- the last as for your tenderness at the first--if we have paid so
- dear for my joy at seeing you all once more, you and David may
- perhaps some day think that you could grudge no price however high
- for a little last happiness for an unhappy creature who loved you.
- Do not try to find me, Eve; do not seek to know what becomes of
- me. My intellect for once shall be backed by my will.
- Renunciation, my angel, is daily death of self; my renunciation
- will only last for one day; I will take advantage now of that
- day. . . .
-
- "TWO O'CLOCK.
-
- "Yes, I have quite made up my mind. Farewell for ever, dear Eve.
- There is something sweet in the thought that I shall live only in
- your hearts henceforth, and I wish no other burying place. Once
- more, farewell. . . . That is the last word from your brother
-
- "LUCIEN."
-
-Lucien read the letter over, crept noiselessly down stairs, and left
-it in the child's cradle; amid falling tears he set a last kiss on the
-forehead of his sleeping sister; then he went out. He put out his
-candle in the gray dusk, took a last look at the old house, stole
-softly along the passage, and opened the street door; but in spite of
-his caution, he awakened Kolb, who slept on a mattress on the workshop
-floor.
-
-"Who goes there?" cried Kolb.
-
-"It is I, Lucien; I am going away, Kolb."
-
-"You vould haf done better gif you at nefer kom," Kolb muttered
-audibly.
-
-"I should have done better still if I had never come into the world,"
-Lucien answered. "Good-bye, Kolb; I don't bear you any grudge for
-thinking as I think myself. Tell David that I was sorry I could not
-bid him good-bye, and say that this was my last thought."
-
-By the time the Alsacien was up and dressed, Lucien had shut the house
-door, and was on his way towards the Charente by the Promenade de
-Beaulieu. He might have been going to a festival, for he had put on
-his new clothes from Paris and his dandy's trinkets for a drowning
-shroud. Something in Lucien's tone had struck Kolb. At first the man
-thought of going to ask his mistress whether she knew that her brother
-had left the house; but as the deepest silence prevailed, he concluded
-that the departure had been arranged beforehand, and lay down again
-and slept.
-
-Little, considering the gravity of the question, has been written on
-the subject of suicide; it has not been studied. Perhaps it is a
-disease that cannot be observed. Suicide is one effect of a sentiment
-which we will call self-esteem, if you will, to prevent confusion by
-using the word "honor." When a man despises himself, and sees that
-others despise him, when real life fails to fulfil his hopes, then
-comes the moment when he takes his life, and thereby does homage to
-society--shorn of his virtues or his splendor, he does not care to
-face his fellows. Among atheists--Christians being without the
-question of suicide--among atheists, whatever may be said to the
-contrary, none but a base coward can take up a dishonored life.
-
-There are three kinds of suicide--the first is only the last and acute
-stage of a long illness, and this kind belongs distinctly to
-pathology; the second is the suicide of despair; and the third the
-suicide based on logical argument. Despair and deductive reasoning had
-brought Lucien to this pass, but both varieties are curable; it is
-only the pathological suicide that is inevitable. Not infrequently you
-find all three causes combined, as in the case of Jean-Jacques
-Rousseau.
-
-Lucien having made up his mind fell to considering methods. The poet
-would fain die as became a poet. At first he thought of throwing
-himself into the Charente and making an end then and there; but as he
-came down the steps from Beaulieu for the last time, he heard the
-whole town talking of his suicide; he saw the horrid sight of a
-drowned dead body, and thought of the recognition and the inquest;
-and, like some other suicides, felt that vanity reached beyond death.
-
-He remembered the day spent at Courtois' mill, and his thoughts
-returned to the round pool among the willows that he saw as he came
-along by the little river, such a pool as you often find on small
-streams, with a still, smooth surface that conceals great depths
-beneath. The water is neither green nor blue nor white nor tawny; it
-is like a polished steel mirror. No sword-grass grows about the
-margin; there are no blue water forget-me-nots, nor broad lily leaves;
-the grass at the brim is short and thick, and the weeping willows that
-droop over the edge grow picturesquely enough. It is easy to imagine a
-sheer precipice beneath filled with water to the brim. Any man who
-should have the courage to fill his pockets with pebbles would not
-fail to find death, and never be seen thereafter.
-
-At the time while he admired the lovely miniature of a landscape, the
-poet had thought to himself, " 'Tis a spot to make your mouth water
-for a noyade."
-
-He thought of it now as he went down into L'Houmeau; and when he took
-his way towards Marsac, with the last sombre thoughts gnawing at his
-heart, it was with the firm resolve to hide his death. There should be
-no inquest held over him, he would not be laid in earth; no one should
-see him in the hideous condition of the corpse that floats on the
-surface of the water. Before long he reached one of the slopes, common
-enough on all French highroads, and commonest of all between Angouleme
-and Poitiers. He saw the coach from Bordeaux to Paris coming up at
-full speed behind him, and knew that the passengers would probably
-alight to walk up the hill. He did not care to be seen just then.
-Turning off sharply into a beaten track, he began to pick the flowers
-in a vineyard hard by.
-
-When Lucien came back to the road with a great bunch of the yellow
-stone-crop which grows everywhere upon the stony soil of the
-vineyards, he came out upon a traveler dressed in black from head to
-foot. The stranger wore powder, there were silver buckles on his shoes
-of Orleans leather, and his brown face was scarred and seamed as if he
-had fallen into the fire in infancy. The traveler, so obviously
-clerical in his dress, was walking slowly and smoking a cigar. He
-turned as Lucien jumped down from the vineyard into the road. The deep
-melancholy on the handsome young face, the poet's symbolical flowers,
-and his elegant dress seemed to strike the stranger. He looked at
-Lucien with something of the expression of a hunter that has found his
-quarry at last after long and fruitless search. He allowed Lucien to
-come alongside in nautical phrase; then he slackened his pace, and
-appeared to look along the road up the hill; Lucien, following the
-direction of his eyes, saw a light traveling carriage with two horses,
-and a post-boy standing beside it.
-
-"You have allowed the coach to pass you, monsieur; you will lose your
-place unless you care to take a seat in my caleche and overtake the
-mail, for it is rather quicker traveling post than by the public
-conveyance." The traveler spoke with extreme politeness and a very
-marked Spanish accent.
-
-Without waiting for an answer, he drew a cigar-case from his pocket,
-opened it, and held it out to Lucien.
-
-"I am not on a journey," said Lucien, "and I am too near the end of my
-stage to indulge in the pleasure of smoking----"
-
-"You are very severe with yourself," returned the Spaniard. "Though I
-am a canon of the cathedral of Toledo, I occasionally smoke a
-cigarette. God gave us tobacco to allay our passions and our pains.
-You seem to be downcast, or at any rate, you carry the symbolical
-flower of sorrow in your hand, like the rueful god Hymen. Come! all
-your troubles will vanish away with the smoke," and again the
-ecclesiastic held out his little straw case; there was something
-fascinating in his manner, and kindliness towards Lucien lighted up
-his eyes.
-
-"Forgive me, father" Lucien answered stiffly; "there is no cigar that
-can scatter my troubles." Tears came to his eyes at the words.
-
-"It must surely be Divine Providence that prompted me to take a little
-exercise to shake off a traveler's morning drowsiness," said the
-churchman. "A divine prompting to fulfil my mission here on earth by
-consoling you.--What great trouble can you have at your age?"
-
-"Your consolations, father, can do nothing for me. You are a Spaniard,
-I am a Frenchman; you believe in the commandments of the Church, I am
-an atheist."
-
-"Santa Virgen del Pilar! you are an atheist!" cried the other, laying
-a hand on Lucien's arm with maternal solicitude. "Ah! here is one of
-the curious things I promised myself to see in Paris. We, in Spain, do
-not believe in atheists. There is no country but France where one can
-have such opinions at nineteen years."
-
-"Oh! I am an atheist in the fullest sense of the word. I have no
-belief in God, in society, in happiness. Take a good look at me,
-father; for in a few hours' time life will be over for me. My last sun
-has risen," said Lucien; with a sort of rhetorical effect he waved his
-hand towards the sky.
-
-"How so; what have you done that you must die? Who has condemned you
-to die?"
-
-"A tribunal from which there is no appeal--I myself."
-
-"You, child!" cried the priest. "Have you killed a man? Is the
-scaffold waiting for you? Let us reason together a little. If you are
-resolved, as you say, to return to nothingness, everything on earth is
-indifferent to you, is it not?"
-
-Lucien bowed assent.
-
-"Very well, then; can you not tell me about your troubles? Some little
-affair of the heart has taken a bad turn, no doubt?"
-
-Lucien shrugged his shoulders very significantly.
-
-"Are you resolved to kill yourself to escape dishonor, or do you
-despair of life? Very good. You can kill yourself at Poitiers quite as
-easily as at Angouleme, and at Tours it will be no harder than at
-Poitiers. The quicksands of the Loire never give up their prey----"
-
-"No, father," said Lucien; "I have settled it all. Not three weeks ago
-I chanced upon the most charming raft that can ferry a man sick and
-tired of this life into the other world----"
-
-"The other world? You are not an atheist."
-
-"Oh! by another world I mean my next transformation, animal or plant."
-
-"Have you some incurable disease?"
-
-"Yes, father."
-
-"Ah! now we come to the point. What is it?"
-
-"Poverty."
-
-The priest looked at Lucien. "The diamond does not know its own
-value," he said, and there was an inexpressible charm, and a touch of
-something like irony in his smile.
-
-"None but a priest could flatter a poor man about to die," exclaimed
-Lucien.
-
-"You are not going to die," the Spaniard returned authoritatively.
-
-"I have heard many times of men that were robbed on the highroad, but
-I have never yet heard of one that found a fortune there," said
-Lucien.
-
-"You will hear of one now," said the priest, glancing towards the
-carriage to measure the time still left for their walk together.
-"Listen to me," he continued, with his cigar between his teeth; "if
-you are poor, that is no reason why you should die. I need a
-secretary, for mine has just died at Barcelona. I am in the same
-position as the famous Baron Goertz, minister of Charles XII. He was
-traveling toward Sweden (just as I am going to Paris), and in some
-little town or other he chanced upon the son of a goldsmith, a young
-man of remarkable good looks, though they could scarcely equal yours.
-. . . Baron Goertz discerned intelligence in the young man (just as I
-see poetry on your brow); he took him into his traveling carriage, as
-I shall take you very shortly; and of a boy condemned to spend his
-days in burnishing spoons and forks and making trinkets in some little
-town like Angouleme, he made a favorite, as you shall be mine.
-
-"Arrived at Stockholm, he installed his secretary and overwhelmed him
-with work. The young man spent his nights in writing, and, like all
-great workers, he contracted a bad habit, a trick--he took to chewing
-paper. The late M. de Malesherbes use to rap people over the knuckles;
-and he did this once, by the by, to somebody or other whose suit
-depended upon him. The handsome young secretary began by chewing blank
-paper, found it insipid for a while, and acquired a taste for
-manuscript as having more flavor. People did not smoke as yet in those
-days. At last, from flavor to flavor, he began to chew parchment and
-swallow it. Now, at that time a treaty was being negotiated between
-Russia and Sweden. The States-General insisted that Charles XII.
-should make peace (much as they tried in France to make Napoleon treat
-for peace in 1814) and the basis of these negotiations was the treaty
-between the two powers with regard to Finland. Goertz gave the
-original into his secretary's keeping; but when the time came for
-laying the draft before the States-General, a trifling difficulty
-arose; the treaty was not to be found. The States-General believed
-that the Minister, pandering to the King's wishes, had taken it into
-his head to get rid of the document. Baron Goertz was, in fact,
-accused of this, and the secretary owned that he had eaten the treaty.
-He was tried and convicted and condemned to death.--But you have not
-come to that yet, so take a cigar and smoke till we reach the
-caleche."
-
-Lucien took a cigar and lit it, Spanish fashion, at the priest's
-cigar. "He is right," he thought; "I can take my life at any time."
-
-"It often happens that a young man's fortunes take a turn when despair
-is darkest," the Spaniard continued. "That is what I wished to tell
-you, but I preferred to prove it by a case in point. Here was the
-handsome young secretary lying under sentence of death, and his case
-the more desperate because, as he had been condemned by the States-
-General, the King could not pardon him, but he connived at his escape.
-The secretary stole away in a fishing-boat with a few crowns in his
-pocket, and reached the court of Courland with a letter of
-introduction from Goertz, explaining his secretary's adventures and
-his craze for paper. The Duke of Courland was a spendthrift; he had a
-steward and a pretty wife--three several causes of ruin. He placed the
-charming young stranger with his steward.
-
-"If you can imagine that the sometime secretary had been cured of his
-depraved taste by a sentence of death, you do not know the grip that a
-man's failings have upon him; let a man discover some satisfaction for
-himself, and the headsman will not keep him from it.--How is it that
-the vice has this power? Is it inherent strength in the vice, or
-inherent weakness in human nature? Are there certain tastes that
-should be regarded as verging on insanity? For myself, I cannot help
-laughing at the moralists who try to expel such diseases by fine
-phrases.--Well, it so fell out that the steward refused a demand for
-money; and the Duke taking fright at this, called for an audit. Sheer
-imbecility! Nothing easier than to make out a balance-sheet; the
-difficulty never lies there. The steward gave his secretary all the
-necessary documents for compiling a schedule of the civil list of
-Courland. He had nearly finished it when, in the dead of night, the
-unhappy paper-eater discovered that he was chewing up one of the
-Duke's discharges for a considerable sum. He had eaten half the
-signature! Horror seized upon him; he fled to the Duchess, flung
-himself at her feet, told her of his craze, and implored the aid of
-his sovereign lady, implored her in the middle of the night. The
-handsome young face made such an impression on the Duchess that she
-married him as soon as she was left a widow. And so in the mid-
-eighteenth century, in a land where the king-at-arms is king, the
-goldsmith's son became a prince, and something more. On the death of
-Catherine I. he was regent; he ruled the Empress Anne, and tried to be
-the Richelieu of Russia. Very well, young man; now know this--if you
-are handsomer than Biron, I, simple canon that I am, am worth more
-than a Baron Goertz. So get in; we will find a duchy of Courland for
-you in Paris, or failing the duchy, we shall certainly find the
-duchess."
-
-The Spanish priest laid a hand on Lucien's arm, and literally forced
-him into the traveling carriage. The postilion shut the door.
-
-"Now speak; I am listening," said the canon of Toledo, to Lucien's
-bewilderment. "I am an old priest; you can tell me everything, there
-is nothing to fear. So far we have only run through our patrimony or
-squandered mamma's money. We have made a flitting from our creditors,
-and we are honor personified down to the tips of our elegant little
-boots. . . . Come, confess, boldly; it will be just as if you were
-talking to yourself."
-
-Lucien felt like that hero of an Eastern tale, the fisher who tried to
-drown himself in mid-ocean, and sank down to find himself a king of
-countries under the sea. The Spanish priest seemed so really
-affectionate, that the poet hesitated no longer; between Angouleme and
-Ruffec he told the story of his whole life, omitting none of his
-misdeeds, and ended with the final catastrophe which he had brought
-about. The tale only gained in poetic charm because this was the third
-time he had told it in the past fortnight. Just as he made an end they
-passed the house of the Rastignac family.
-
-"Young Rastignac left that place for Paris," said Lucien; "he is
-certainly not my equal, but he has had better luck."
-
-The Spaniard started at the name. "Oh!" he said.
-
-"Yes. That shy little place belongs to his father. As I was telling
-you just now, he was the lover of Mme. de Nucingen, the famous
-banker's wife. I drifted into poetry; he was cleverer, he took the
-practical side."
-
-The priest stopped the caleche; and was so far curious as to walk down
-the little avenue that led to the house, showing more interest in the
-place than Lucien expected from a Spanish ecclesiastic.
-
-"Then, do you know the Rastignacs?" asked Lucien.
-
-"I know every one in Paris," said the Spaniard, taking his place again
-in the carriage. "And so for want of ten or twelve thousand francs,
-you were about to take your life; you are a child, you know neither
-men nor things. A man's future is worth the value that he chooses to
-set upon it, and you value yours at twelve thousand francs! Well, I
-will give more than that for you any time. As for your brother-in-
-law's imprisonment, it is the merest trifle. If this dear M. Sechard
-has made a discovery, he will be a rich man some day, and a rich man
-has never been imprisoned for debt. You do not seem to me to be strong
-in history. History is of two kinds--there is the official history
-taught in schools, a lying compilation ad usum delphini; and there is
-the secret history which deals with the real causes of events--a
-scandalous chronicle. Let me tell you briefly a little story which you
-have not heard. There was, once upon a time, a man, young and
-ambitious, and a priest to boot. He wanted to enter upon a political
-career, so he fawned on the Queen's favorite; the favorite took an
-interest in him, gave him the rank of minister, and a seat at the
-council board. One evening somebody wrote to the young aspirant,
-thinking to do him a service (never do a service, by the by, unless
-you are asked), and told him that his benefactor's life was in danger.
-The King's wrath was kindled against his rival; to-morrow, if the
-favorite went to the palace, he would certainly be stabbed; so said
-the letter. Well, now, young man, what would you have done?"
-
-"I should have gone at once to warn my benefactor," Lucien exclaimed
-quickly.
-
-"You are indeed the child which your story reveals!" said the priest.
-"Our man said to himself, 'If the King is resolved to go to such
-lengths, it is all over with my benefactor; I must receive this letter
-too late;' so he slept on till the favorite was stabbed----"
-
-"He was a monster!" said Lucien, suspecting that the priest meant to
-sound him.
-
-"So are all great men; this one was the Cardinal de Richelieu, and his
-benefactor was the Marechal d'Ancre. You really do not know your
-history of France, you see. Was I not right when I told you that
-history as taught in schools is simply a collection of facts and
-dates, more than doubtful in the first place, and with no bearing
-whatever on the gist of the matter. You are told that such a person as
-Jeanne Darc once existed; where is the use of that? Have you never
-drawn your own conclusions from that fact? never seen that if France
-had accepted the Angevin dynasty of the Plantagenets, the two peoples
-thus reunited would be ruling the world to-day, and the islands that
-now brew political storms for the continent would be French provinces?
-. . . Why, have you so much as studied the means by which simple
-merchants like the Medicis became Grand Dukes of Tuscany?"
-
-"A poet in France is not bound to be 'as learned as a Benedictine,' "
-said Lucien.
-
-"Well, they became Grand-Dukes as Richelieu became a minister. If you
-had looked into history for the causes of events instead of getting
-the headings by heart, you would have found precepts for your guidance
-in this life. These real facts taken at random from among so many
-supply you with the axiom--'Look upon men, and on women most of all,
-as your instruments; but never let them see this.' If some one higher
-in place can be useful to you, worship him as your god; and never
-leave him until he has paid the price of your servility to the last
-farthing. In your intercourse with men, in short, be grasping and mean
-as a Jew; all that the Jew does for money, you must do for power. And
-besides all this, when a man has fallen from power, care no more for
-him than if he had ceased to exist. And do you ask why you must do
-these things? You mean to rule the world, do you not? You must begin
-by obeying and studying it. Scholars study books; politicians study
-men, and their interests and the springs of action. Society and
-mankind in masses are fatalists; they bow down and worship the
-accomplished fact. Do you know why I am giving you this little history
-lesson? It seems to me that your ambition is boundless----"
-
-"Yes, father."
-
-"I saw that myself," said the priest. "But at this moment you are
-thinking, 'Here is this Spanish canon inventing anecdotes and
-straining history to prove to me that I have too much virtue----' "
-
-Lucien began to smile; his thoughts had been read so clearly.
-
-"Very well, let us take facts that every schoolboy knows. One day
-France is almost entirely overrun by the English; the King has only a
-single province left. Two figures arise from among the people--a poor
-herd girl, that very Jeanne Darc of whom we were speaking, and a
-burgher named Jacques Coeur. The girl brings the power of virginity,
-the strength of her arm; the burgher gives his gold, and the kingdom
-is saved. The maid is taken prisoner, and the King, who could have
-ransomed her, leaves her to be burned alive. The King allows his
-courtier to accuse the great burgher of capital crime, and they rob
-him and divide all his wealth among themselves. The spoils of an
-innocent man, hunted down, brought to bay, and driven into exile by
-the Law, went to enrich five noble houses; and the father of the
-Archbishop of Bourges left the kingdom for ever without one sou of all
-his possessions in France, and no resource but moneys remitted to
-Arabs and Saracens in Egypt. It is open to you to say that these
-examples are out of date, that three centuries of public education
-have since elapsed, and that the outlines of those ages are more or
-less dim figures. Well, young man, do you believe in the last demi-god
-of France, in Napoleon? One of his generals was in disgrace all
-through his career; Napoleon made him a marshal grudgingly, and never
-sent him on service if he could help it. That marshal was Kellermann.
-Do you know the reason of the grudge? . . . Kellermann saved France
-and the First Consul at Marengo by a brilliant charge; the ranks
-applauded under fire and in the thick of the carnage. That heroic
-charge was not even mentioned in the bulletin. Napoleon's coolness
-toward Kellermann, Fouche's fall, and Talleyrand's disgrace were all
-attributable to the same cause; it is the ingratitude of a Charles
-VII., or a Richelieu, or ----"
-
-"But, father," said Lucien, "suppose that you should save my life and
-make my fortune, you are making the ties of gratitude somewhat
-slight."
-
-"Little rogue," said the Abbe, smiling as he pinched Lucien's ear with
-an almost royal familiarity. "If you are ungrateful to me, it will be
-because you are a strong man, and I shall bend before you. But you are
-not that just yet; as a simple 'prentice you have tried to be master
-too soon, the common fault of Frenchmen of your generation. Napoleon's
-example has spoiled them all. You send in your resignation because you
-have not the pair of epaulettes that you fancied. But have you
-attempted to bring the full force of your will and every action of
-your life to bear upon your one idea?"
-
-"Alas! no."
-
-"You have been inconsistent, as the English say," smiled the canon.
-
-"What I have been matters nothing now," said Lucien, "if I can be
-nothing in the future."
-
-"If at the back of all your good qualities there is power semper
-virens," continued the priest, not averse to show that he had a little
-Latin, "nothing in this world can resist you. I have taken enough of a
-liking for you already----"
-
-Lucien smiled incredulously.
-
-"Yes," said the priest, in answer to the smile, "you interest me as
-much as if you had been my son; and I am strong enough to afford to
-talk to you as openly as you have just done to me. Do you know what it
-is that I like about you?--This: you have made a sort of tabula rasa
-within yourself, and are ready to hear a sermon on morality that you
-will hear nowhere else; for mankind in the mass are even more
-consummate hypocrites than any one individual can be when his
-interests demand a piece of acting. Most of us spend a good part of
-our lives in clearing our minds of the notions that sprang up
-unchecked during our nonage. This is called 'getting our
-experience.' "
-
-Lucien, listening, thought within himself, "Here is some old intriguer
-delighted with a chance of amusing himself on a journey. He is pleased
-with the idea of bringing about a change of opinion in a poor wretch
-on the brink of suicide; and when he is tired of his amusement, he
-will drop me. Still he understands paradox, and seems to be quite a
-match for Blondet or Lousteau."
-
-But in spite of these sage reflections, the diplomate's poison had
-sunk deeply into Lucien's soul; the ground was ready to receive it,
-and the havoc wrought was the greater because such famous examples
-were cited. Lucien fell under the charm of his companion's cynical
-talk, and clung the more willingly to life because he felt that this
-arm which drew him up from the depths was a strong one.
-
-In this respect the ecclesiastic had evidently won the day; and,
-indeed, from time to time a malicious smile bore his cynical anecdotes
-company.
-
-"If your system of morality at all resembles your manner of regarding
-history," said Lucien, "I should dearly like to know the motive of
-your present act of charity, for such it seems to be."
-
-"There, young man, I have come to the last head of my sermon; you will
-permit me to reserve it, for in that case we shall not part company
-to-day," said the canon, with the tact of the priest who sees that his
-guile has succeeded.
-
-"Very well, talk morality," said Lucien. To himself he said, "I will
-draw him out."
-
-"Morality begins with the law," said the priest. "If it were simply a
-question of religion, laws would be superfluous; religious peoples
-have few laws. The laws of statecraft are above civil law. Well, do
-you care to know the inscription which a politician can read, written
-at large over your nineteenth century? In 1793 the French invented the
-idea of the sovereignty of the people--and the sovereignty of the
-people came to an end under the absolute ruler in the Emperor. So much
-for your history as a nation. Now for your private manners. Mme.
-Tallien and Mme. Beauharnais both acted alike. Napoleon married the
-one, and made her your Empress; the other he would never receive at
-court, princess though she was. The sans-culotte of 1793 takes the
-Iron Crown in 1804. The fanatical lovers of Equality or Death conspire
-fourteen years afterwards with a Legitimist aristocracy to bring back
-Louis XVIII. And that same aristocracy, lording it to-day in the
-Faubourg Saint-Germain, has done worse--has been merchant, usurer,
-pastry-cook, farmer, and shepherd. So in France systems political and
-moral have started from one point and reached another diametrically
-opposed; and men have expressed one kind of opinion and acted on
-another. There has been no consistency in national policy, nor in the
-conduct of individuals. You cannot be said to have any morality left.
-Success is the supreme justification of all actions whatsoever. The
-fact in itself is nothing; the impression that it makes upon others is
-everything. Hence, please observe a second precept: Present a fair
-exterior to the world, keep the seamy side of life to yourself, and
-turn a resplendent countenance upon others. Discretion, the motto of
-every ambitious man, is the watchword of our Order; take it for your
-own. Great men are guilty of almost as many base deeds as poor
-outcasts; but they are careful to do these things in shadow and to
-parade their virtues in the light, or they would not be great men.
-Your insignificant man leaves his virtues in the shade; he publicly
-displays his pitiable side, and is despised accordingly. You, for
-instance, have hidden your titles to greatness and made a display of
-your worst failings. You openly took an actress for your mistress,
-lived with her and upon her; you were by no means to blame for this;
-everybody admitted that both of you were perfectly free to do as you
-liked; but you ran full tilt against the ideas of the world, and the
-world has not shown you the consideration that is shown to those who
-obey the rules of the game. If you had left Coralie to this M.
-Camusot, if you had hidden your relations with her, you might have
-married Mme. de Bargeton; you would now be prefect of Angouleme and
-Marquis de Rubempre.
-
-"Change your tactics, bring your good looks, your charm, your wit,
-your poetry to the front. If you indulge in small discreditable
-courses, let it be within four walls, and you will never again be
-guilty of a blot on the decorations of this great theatrical scene
-called society. Napoleon called this 'washing dirty linen at home.'
-The corollary follows naturally on this second precept--Form is
-everything. Be careful to grasp the meaning of that word 'form.' There
-are people who, for want of knowing better, will help themselves to
-money under pressure of want, and take it by force. These people are
-called criminals; and, perforce, they square accounts with Justice. A
-poor man of genius discovers some secret, some invention as good as a
-treasure; you lend him three thousand francs (for that, practically,
-the Cointets have done; they hold your bills, and they are about to
-rob your brother-in-law); you torment him until he reveals or partly
-reveals his secret; you settle your accounts with your own conscience,
-and your conscience does not drag you into the assize court.
-
-"The enemies of social order, beholding this contrast, take occasion
-to yap at justice, and wax wroth in the name of the people, because,
-forsooth, burglars and fowl-stealers are sent to the hulks, while a
-man who brings whole families to ruin by a fraudulent bankruptcy is
-let off with a few months' imprisonment. But these hypocrites know
-quite well that the judge who passes sentence on the thief is
-maintaining the barrier set between the poor and the rich, and that if
-that barrier were overturned, social chaos would ensue; while, in the
-case of the bankrupt, the man who steals an inheritance cleverly, and
-the banker who slaughters a business for his own benefit, money merely
-changes hands, that is all.
-
-"Society, my son, is bound to draw those distinctions which I have
-pointed out for your benefit. The one great point is this--you must be
-a match for society. Napoleon, Richelieu, and the Medicis were a match
-for their generations. And as for you, you value yourself at twelve
-thousand francs! You of this generation in France worship the golden
-calf; what else is the religion of your Charter that will not
-recognize a man politically unless he owns property? What is this but
-the command, 'Strive to be rich?' Some day, when you shall have made a
-fortune without breaking the law, you will be rich; you will be the
-Marquis de Rubempre, and you can indulge in the luxury of honor. You
-will be so extremely sensitive on the point of honor that no one will
-dare to accuse you of past shortcomings if in the process of making
-your way you should happen to smirch it now and again, which I myself
-should never advise," he added, patting Lucien's hand.
-
-"So what must you put in that comely head of yours? Simply this and
-nothing more--propose to yourself a brilliant and conspicuous goal,
-and go towards it secretly; let no one see your methods or your
-progress. You have behaved like a child; be a man, be a hunter, lie in
-wait for your quarry in the world of Paris, wait for your chance and
-your game; you need not be particular nor mindful of your dignity, as
-it is called; we are all of us slaves to something, to some failing of
-our own or to necessity; but keep that law of laws--secrecy."
-
-"Father, you frighten me," said Lucien; "this seems to me to be a
-highwayman's theory."
-
-"And you are right," said the canon, "but it is no invention of mine.
-All parvenus reason in this way--the house of Austria and the house of
-France alike. You have nothing, you say? The Medicis, Richelieu, and
-Napoleon started from precisely your standpoint; but THEY, my child,
-considered that their prospects were worth ingratitude, treachery, and
-the most glaring inconsistencies. You must dare all things to gain all
-things. Let us discuss it. Suppose that you sit down to a game of
-bouillotte, do you begin to argue over the rules of the game? There
-they are, you accept them."
-
-"Come, now," thought Lucien, "he can play bouillotte."
-
-"And what do you do?" continued the priest; "do you practise openness,
-that fairest of virtues? Not merely do you hide your tactics, but you
-do your best to make others believe that you are on the brink of ruin
-as soon as you are sure of winning the game. In short, you dissemble,
-do you not? You lie to win four or five louis d'or. What would you
-think of a player so generous as to proclaim that he held a hand full
-of trumps? Very well; the ambitious man who carries virtue's precepts
-into the arena when his antagonists have left them behind is behaving
-like a child. Old men of the world might say to him, as card-players
-would say to the man who declines to take advantage of his trumps,
-'Monsieur, you ought not to play at bouillotte.'
-
-"Did you make the rules of the game of ambition? Why did I tell you to
-be a match for society?--Because, in these days, society by degrees
-has usurped so many rights over the individual, that the individual is
-compelled to act in self-defence. There is no question of laws now,
-their place has been taken by custom, which is to say grimacings, and
-forms must always be observed."
-
-Lucien started with surprise.
-
-"Ah, my child!" said the priest, afraid that he had shocked Lucien's
-innocence; "did you expect to find the Angel Gabriel in an Abbe loaded
-with all the iniquities of the diplomacy and counter-diplomacy of two
-kings? I am an agent between Ferdinand VII. and Louis XVIII., two--
-kings who owe their crowns to profound--er--combinations, let us say.
-I believe in God, but I have a still greater belief in our Order, and
-our Order has no belief save in temporal power. In order to strengthen
-and consolidate the temporal power, our Order upholds the Catholic
-Apostolic and Roman Church, which is to say, the doctrines which
-dispose the world at large to obedience. We are the Templars of modern
-times; we have a doctrine of our own. Like the Templars, we have been
-dispersed, and for the same reasons; we are almost a match for the
-world. If you will enlist as a soldier, I will be your captain. Obey
-me as a wife obeys her husband, as a child obeys his mother, and I
-will guarantee that you shall be Marquis de Rubempre in less than six
-months; you shall marry into one of the proudest houses in the
-Faubourg Saint-Germain, and some day you shall sit on a bench with
-peers of France. What would you have been at this moment if I had not
-amused you by my conversation?--An undiscovered corpse in a deep bed
-of mud. Well and good, now for an effort of imagination----"
-
-Lucien looked curiously at his protector.
-
-"Here, in this caleche beside the Abbe Carlos Herrera, canon of
-Toledo, secret envoy from His Majesty Ferdinand VII. to his Majesty
-the King of France, bearer of a despatch thus worded it may be--'When
-you have delivered me, hang all those whom I favor at this moment,
-more especially the bearer of this despatch, for then he can tell no
-tales'--well, beside this envoy sits a young man who has nothing in
-common with that poet recently deceased. I have fished you out of the
-water, I have brought you to life again, you belong to me as the
-creature belongs to the creator, as the efrits of fairytales belong to
-the genii, as the janissary to the Sultan, as the soul to the body. I
-will sustain you in the way to power with a strong hand; and at the
-same time I promise that your life shall be a continual course of
-pleasure, honors, and enjoyment. You shall never want for money. You
-shall shine, you shall go bravely in the eyes of the world; while I,
-crouching in the mud, will lay a firm foundation for the brilliant
-edifice of your fortunes. For I love power for its own sake. I shall
-always rejoice in your enjoyment, forbidden to me. In short, my self
-shall become your self! Well, if a day should come when this pact
-between man and the tempter, this agreement between the child and the
-diplomatist should no longer suit your ideas, you can still look about
-for some quiet spot, like that pool of which you were speaking, and
-drown yourself; you will only be as you are now, or a little more or a
-little less wretched and dishonored."
-
-"This is not like the Archbishop of Granada's homily," said Lucien as
-they stopped to change horses.
-
-"Call this concentrated education by what name you will, my son, for
-you are my son, I adopt you henceforth, and shall make you my heir; it
-is the Code of ambition. God's elect are few and far between. There is
-no choice, you must bury yourself in the cloister (and there you very
-often find the world again in miniature) or accept the Code."
-
-"Perhaps it would be better not to be so wise," said Lucien, trying to
-fathom this terrible priest.
-
-"What!" rejoined the canon. "You begin to play before you know the
-rules of the game, and now you throw it up just as your chances are
-best, and you have a substantial godfather to back you! And you do not
-even care to play a return match? You do not mean to say that you have
-no mind to be even with those who drove you from Paris?"
-
-Lucien quivered; the sounds that rang through every nerve seemed to
-come from some bronze instrument, some Chinese gong.
-
-"I am only a poor priest," returned his mentor, and a grim expression,
-dreadful to behold, appeared for a moment on a face burned to a
-copper-red by the sun of Spain, "I am only a poor priest; but if I had
-been humiliated, vexed, tormented, betrayed, and sold as you have been
-by the scoundrels of whom you have told me, I should do like an Arab
-of the desert--I would devote myself body and soul to vengeance. I
-might end by dangling from a gibbet, garroted, impaled, guillotined in
-your French fashion, I should not care a rap; but they should not have
-my head until I had crushed my enemies under my heel."
-
-Lucien was silent; he had no wish to draw the priest out any further.
-
-"Some are descended from Cain and some from Abel," the canon
-concluded; "I myself am of mixed blood--Cain for my enemies, Abel for
-my friends. Woe to him that shall awaken Cain! After all, you are a
-Frenchman; I am a Spaniard, and, what is more, a canon."
-
-"What a Tartar!" thought Lucien, scanning the protector thus sent to
-him by Heaven.
-
-There was no sign of the Jesuit, nor even of the ecclesiastic, about
-the Abbe Carlos Herrera. His hands were large, he was thick-set and
-broad-chested, evidently he possessed the strength of a Hercules; his
-terrific expression was softened by benignity assumed at will; but a
-complexion of impenetrable bronze inspired feelings of repulsion
-rather than attachment for the man.
-
-The strange diplomatist looked somewhat like a bishop, for he wore
-powder on his long, thick hair, after the fashion of the Prince de
-Talleyrand; a gold cross, hanging from a strip of blue ribbon with a
-white border, indicated an ecclesiastical dignitary. The outlines
-beneath the black silk stockings would not have disgraced an athlete.
-The exquisite neatness of his clothes and person revealed an amount of
-care which a simple priest, and, above all, a Spanish priest, does not
-always take with his appearance. A three-cornered hat lay on the front
-seat of the carriage, which bore the arms of Spain.
-
-In spite of the sense of repulsion, the effect made by the man's
-appearance was weakened by his manner, fierce and yet winning as it
-was; he evidently laid himself out to please Lucien, and the winning
-manner became almost coaxing. Yet Lucien noticed the smallest trifles
-uneasily. He felt that the moment of decision had come; they had
-reached the second stage beyond Ruffec, and the decision meant life or
-death.
-
-The Spaniard's last words vibrated through many chords in his heart,
-and, to the shame of both, it must be said that all that was worst in
-Lucien responded to an appeal deliberately made to his evil impulses,
-and the eyes that studied the poet's beautiful face had read him very
-clearly. Lucien beheld Paris once more; in imagination he caught again
-at the reins of power let fall from his unskilled hands, and he
-avenged himself! The comparisons which he himself had drawn so lately
-between the life of Paris and life in the provinces faded from his
-mind with the more painful motives for suicide; he was about to return
-to his natural sphere, and this time with a protector, a political
-intriguer unscrupulous as Cromwell.
-
-"I was alone, now there will be two of us," he told himself. And then
-this priest had been more and more interested as he told of his sins
-one after another. The man's charity had grown with the extent of his
-misdoings; nothing had astonished this confessor. And yet, what could
-be the motive of a mover in the intrigues of kings? Lucien at first
-was fain to be content with the banal answer--the Spanish are a
-generous race. The Spaniard is generous! even so the Italian is
-jealous and a poisoner, the Frenchman fickle, the German frank, the
-Jew ignoble, and the Englishman noble. Reverse these verdicts and you
-shall arrive within a reasonable distance of the truth! The Jews have
-monopolized the gold of the world; they compose Robert the Devil, act
-Phedre, sing William Tell, give commissions for pictures and build
-palaces, write Reisebilder and wonderful verse; they are more powerful
-than ever, their religion is accepted, they have lent money to the
-Holy Father himself! As for Germany, a foreigner is often asked
-whether he has a contract in writing, and this is in the smallest
-matters, so tricky are they in their dealings. In France the spectacle
-of national blunders has never lacked national applause for the past
-fifty years; we continue to wear hats which no mortal can explain, and
-every change of government is made on the express condition that
-things shall remain exactly as they were before. England flaunts her
-perfidy in the face of the world, and her abominable treachery is only
-equaled by her greed. All the gold of two Indies passed through the
-hands of Spain, and now she has nothing left. There is no country in
-the world where poison is so little in request as in Italy, no country
-where manners are easier or more gentle. As for the Spaniard, he has
-traded largely on the reputation of the Moor.
-
-As the Canon of Toledo returned to the caleche, he had spoken a word
-to the post-boy. "Drive post-haste," he said, "and there will be three
-francs for drink-money for you." Then, seeing that Lucien hesitated,
-"Come! come!" he exclaimed, and Lucien took his place again, telling
-himself that he meant to try the effect of the argumentum ad hominem.
-
-"Father," he began, "after pouring out, with all the coolness in the
-world, a series of maxims which the vulgar would consider profoundly
-immoral----"
-
-"And so they are," said the priest; "that is why Jesus Christ said
-that it must needs be that offences come, my son; and that is why the
-world displays such horror of offences."
-
-"A man of your stamp will not be surprised by the question which I am
-about to ask?"
-
-"Indeed, my son, you do not know me," said Carlos Herrera. "Do you
-suppose that I should engage a secretary unless I knew that I could
-depend upon his principles sufficiently to be sure that he would not
-rob me? I like you. You are as innocent in every way as a twenty-year-
-old suicide. Your question?"
-
-"Why do you take an interest in me? What price do you set on my
-obedience? Why should you give me everything? What is your share?"
-
-The Spaniard looked at Lucien, and a smile came over his face.
-
-"Let us wait till we come to the next hill; we can walk up and talk
-out in the open. The back seat of a traveling carriage is not the
-place for confidences."
-
-They traveled in silence for sometime; the rapidity of the movement
-seemed to increase Lucien's moral intoxication.
-
-"Here is a hill, father," he said at last awakening from a kind of
-dream.
-
-"Very well, we will walk." The Abbe called to the postilion to stop,
-and the two sprang out upon the road.
-
-"You child," said the Spaniard, taking Lucien by the arm, "have you
-ever thought over Otway's Venice Preserved? Did you understand the
-profound friendship between man and man which binds Pierre and Jaffier
-each to each so closely that a woman is as nothing in comparison, and
-all social conditions are changed?--Well, so much for the poet."
-
-"So the canon knows something of the drama," thought Lucien. "Have you
-read Voltaire?" he asked.
-
-"I have done better," said the other; "I put his doctrine in
-practice."
-
-"You do not believe in God?"
-
-"Come! it is I who am the atheist, is it?" the Abbe said, smiling.
-"Let us come to practical matters, my child," he added, putting an arm
-round Lucien's waist. "I am forty-six years old, I am the natural son
-of a great lord; consequently, I have no family, and I have a heart.
-But, learn this, carve it on that still so soft brain of yours--man
-dreads to be alone. And of all kinds of isolation, inward isolation is
-the most appalling. The early anchorite lived with God; he dwelt in
-the spirit world, the most populous world of all. The miser lives in a
-world of imagination and fruition; his whole life and all that he is,
-even his sex, lies in his brain. A man's first thought, be he leper or
-convict, hopelessly sick or degraded, is to find another with a like
-fate to share it with him. He will exert the utmost that is in him,
-every power, all his vital energy, to satisfy that craving; it is his
-very life. But for that tyrannous longing, would Satan have found
-companions? There is a whole poem yet to be written, a first part of
-Paradise Lost; Milton's poem is only the apology for the revolt."
-
-"It would be the Iliad of Corruption," said Lucien.
-
-"Well, I am alone, I live alone. If I wear the priest's habit, I have
-not a priest's heart. I like to devote myself to some one; that is my
-weakness. That is my life, that is how I came to be a priest. I am not
-afraid of ingratitude, and I am grateful. The Church is nothing to me;
-it is an idea. I am devoted to the King of Spain, but you cannot give
-affection to a King of Spain; he is my protector, he towers above me.
-I want to love my creature, to mould him, fashion him to my use, and
-love him as a father loves his child. I shall drive in your tilbury,
-my boy, enjoy your success with women, and say to myself, 'This fine
-young fellow, this Marquis de Rubempre, my creation whom I have
-brought into this great world, is my very Self; his greatness is my
-doing, he speaks or is silent with my voice, he consults me in
-everything.' The Abbe de Vermont felt thus for Marie-Antoinette."
-
-"He led her to the scaffold."
-
-"He did not love the Queen," said the priest. "HE only loved the Abbe
-de Vermont."
-
-"Must I leave desolation behind me?"
-
-"I have money, you shall draw on me."
-
-"I would do a great deal just now to rescue David Sechard," said
-Lucien, in the tone of one who has given up all idea of suicide.
-
-"Say but one word, my son, and by to-morrow morning he shall have
-money enough to set him free."
-
-"What! Would you give me twelve thousand francs?"
-
-"Ah! child, do you not see that we are traveling on at the rate of
-four leagues an hour? We shall dine at Poitiers before long, and
-there, if you decide to sign the pact, to give me a single proof of
-obedience, a great proof that I shall require, then the Bordeaux coach
-shall carry fifteen thousand francs to your sister----"
-
-"Where is the money?"
-
-The Spaniard made no answer, and Lucien said within himself, "There I
-had him; he was laughing at me."
-
-In another moment they took their places. Neither of them said a word.
-Silently the Abbe groped in the pocket of the coach, and drew out a
-traveler's leather pouch with three divisions in it; thence he took a
-hundred Portuguese moidores, bringing out his large hand filled with
-gold three times.
-
-"Father, I am yours," said Lucien, dazzled by the stream of gold.
-
-"Child!" said the priest, and set a tender kiss on Lucien's forehead.
-"There is twice as much still left in the bag, besides the money for
-traveling expenses."
-
-"And you are traveling alone!" cried Lucien.
-
-"What is that?" asked the Spaniard. "I have more than a hundred
-thousand crowns in drafts on Paris. A diplomatist without money is in
-your position of this morning--a poet without a will of his own!"
-
-
-
-As Lucien took his place in the caleche beside the so-called Spanish
-diplomatist, Eve rose to give her child a draught of milk, found the
-fatal letter in the cradle, and read it. A sudden cold chilled the
-damps of morning slumber, dizziness came over her, she could not see.
-She called aloud to Marion and Kolb.
-
-"Has my brother gone out?" she asked, and Kolb answered at once with,
-"Yes, Montame, pefore tay."
-
-"Keep this that I am going to tell you a profound secret," said Eve.
-"My brother has gone no doubt to make away with himself. Hurry, both
-of you, make inquiries cautiously, and look along the river."
-
-Eve was left alone in a dull stupor, dreadful to see. Her trouble was
-at its height when Petit-Claud came in at seven o'clock to talk over
-the steps to be taken in David's case. At such a time, any voice in
-the world may speak, and we let them speak.
-
-"Our poor, dear David is in prison, madame," so began Petit-Claud. "I
-foresaw all along that it would end in this. I advised him at the time
-to go into partnership with his competitors the Cointets; for while
-your husband has simply the idea, they have the means of putting it
-into practical shape. So as soon as I heard of his arrest yesterday
-evening, what did I do but hurry away to find the Cointets and try to
-obtain such concessions as might satisfy you. If you try to keep the
-discovery to yourselves, you will continue to live a life of shifts
-and chicanery. You must give in, or else when you are exhausted and at
-the last gasp, you will end by making a bargain with some capitalist
-or other, and perhaps to your own detriment, whereas to-day I hope to
-see you make a good one with MM. Cointet. In this way you will save
-yourselves the hardships and the misery of the inventor's duel with
-the greed of the capitalist and the indifference of the public. Let us
-see! If the MM. Cointet should pay your debts--if, over and above your
-debts, they should pay you a further sum of money down, whether or no
-the invention succeeds; while at the same time it is thoroughly
-understood that if it succeeds a certain proportion of the profits of
-working the patent shall be yours, would you not be doing very well?--
-You yourself, madame, would then be the proprietor of the plant in the
-printing-office. You would sell the business, no doubt; it is quite
-worth twenty thousand francs. I will undertake to find you a buyer at
-that price.
-
-"Now if you draw up a deed of partnership with the MM. Cointet, and
-receive fifteen thousand francs of capital; and if you invest it in
-the funds at the present moment, it will bring you in an income of two
-thousand francs. You can live on two thousand francs in the provinces.
-Bear in mind, too, madame, that, given certain contingencies, there
-will be yet further payments. I say 'contingencies,' because we must
-lay our accounts with failure.
-
-"Very well," continued Petit-Claud, "now these things I am sure that I
-can obtain for you. First of all, David's release from prison;
-secondly, fifteen thousand francs, a premium paid on his discovery,
-whether the experiments fail or succeed; and lastly, a partnership
-between David and the MM. Cointet, to be taken out after private
-experiment made jointly. The deed of partnership for the working of
-the patent should be drawn up on the following basis: The MM. Cointet
-to bear all the expenses, the capital invested by David to be confined
-to the expenses of procuring the patent, and his share of the profits
-to be fixed at twenty-five per cent. You are a clear-headed and very
-sensible woman, qualities which are not often found combined with
-great beauty; think over these proposals, and you will see that they
-are very favorable."
-
-Poor Eve in her despair burst into tears."Ah, sir! why did you not
-come yesterday evening to tell me this? We should have been spared
-disgrace and--and something far worse----"
-
-"I was talking with the Cointets until midnight. They are behind
-Metivier, as you must have suspected. But how has something worse than
-our poor David's arrest happened since yesterday evening?"
-
-"Here is the awful news that I found when I awoke this morning," she
-said, holding out Lucien's letter. "You have just given me proof of
-your interest in us; you are David's friend and Lucien's; I need not
-ask you to keep the secret----"
-
-"You need not feel the least anxiety," said Petit-Claud, as he
-returned the letter. "Lucien will not take his life. Your husband's
-arrest was his doing; he was obliged to find some excuse for leaving
-you, and this exit of his looks to me like a piece of stage business."
-
-The Cointets had gained their ends. They had tormented the inventor
-and his family, until, worn out by the torture, the victims longed for
-a respite, and then seized their opportunity and made the offer. Not
-every inventor has the tenacity of the bull-dog that will perish with
-his teeth fast set in his capture; the Cointets had shrewdly estimated
-David's character. The tall Cointet looked upon David's imprisonment
-as the first scene of the first act of the drama. The second act
-opened with the proposal which Petit-Claud had just made. As arch-
-schemer, the attorney looked upon Lucien's frantic folly as a bit of
-unhoped-for luck, a chance that would finally decide the issues of the
-day.
-
-Eve was completely prostrated by this event; Petit-Claud saw this, and
-meant to profit by her despair to win her confidence, for he saw at
-last how much she influenced her husband. So far from discouraging
-Eve, he tried to reassure her, and very cleverly diverted her thoughts
-to the prison. She should persuade David to take the Cointets into
-partnership.
-
-"David told me, madame, that he only wished for a fortune for your
-sake and your brother's; but it should be clear to you by now that to
-try to make a rich man of Lucien would be madness. The youngster would
-run through three fortunes."
-
-Eve's attitude told plainly enough that she had no more illusions left
-with regard to her brother. The lawyer waited a little so that her
-silence should have the weight of consent.
-
-"Things being so, it is now a question of you and your child," he
-said. "It rests with you to decide whether an income of two thousand
-francs will be enough for your welfare, to say nothing of old
-Sechard's property. Your father-in-law's income has amounted to seven
-or eight thousand francs for a long time past, to say nothing of
-capital lying out at interest. So, after all, you have a good prospect
-before you. Why torment yourself?"
-
-Petit-Claud left Eve Sechard to reflect upon this prospect. The whole
-scheme had been drawn up with no little skill by the tall Cointet the
-evening before.
-
-"Give them the glimpse of a possibility of money in hand," the lynx
-had said, when Petit-Claud brought the news of the arrest; "once let
-them grow accustomed to that idea, and they are ours; we will drive a
-bargain, and little by little we shall bring them down to our price
-for the secret."
-
-The argument of the second act of the commercial drama was in a manner
-summed up in that speech.
-
-Mme. Sechard, heartbroken and full of dread for her brother's fate,
-dressed and came downstairs. An agony of terror seized her when she
-thought that she must cross Angouleme alone on the way to the prison.
-Petit-Claud gave little thought to his fair client's distress. When he
-came back to offer his arm, it was from a tolerably Machiavellian
-motive; but Eve gave him credit for delicate consideration, and he
-allowed her to thank him for it. The little attention, at such a
-moment, from so hard a man, modified Mme. Sechard's previous opinion
-of Petit-Claud.
-
-"I am taking you round by the longest way," he said, "and we shall
-meet nobody."
-
-"For the first time in my life, monsieur, I feel that I have no right
-to hold up my head before other people; I had a sharp lesson given to
-me last night----"
-
-"It will be the first and the last."
-
-"Oh! I certainly shall not stay in the town now----"
-
-"Let me know if your husband consents to the proposals that are all
-but definitely offered by the Cointets," said Petit-Claud at the gate
-of the prison; "I will come at once with an order for David's release
-from Cachan, and in all likelihood he will not go back again to
-prison."
-
-This suggestion, made on the very threshold of the jail, was a piece
-of cunning strategy--a combinazione, as the Italians call an
-indefinable mixture of treachery and truth, a cunningly planned fraud
-which does not break the letter of the law, or a piece of deft
-trickery for which there is no legal remedy. St. Bartholomew's for
-instance, was a political combination.
-
-Imprisonment for debt, for reasons previously explained, is such a
-rare occurrence in the provinces, that there is no house of detention,
-and a debtor is perforce imprisoned with the accused, convicted, and
-condemned--the three graduated subdivisions of the class generically
-styled criminal. David was put for the time being in a cell on the
-ground floor from which some prisoner had probably been recently
-discharged at the end of his time. Once inscribed on the jailer's
-register, with the amount allowed by the law for a prisoner's board
-for one month, David confronted a big, stout man, more powerful than
-the King himself in a prisoner's eyes; this was the jailer.
-
-An instance of a thin jailer is unknown in the provinces. The place,
-to begin with, is almost a sinecure, and a jailer is a kind of
-innkeeper who pays no rent and lives very well, while his prisoners
-fare very ill; for, like an innkeeper, he gives them rooms according
-to their payments. He knew David by name, and what was more, knew
-about David's father, and thought that he might venture to let the
-printer have a good room on credit for one night; for David was
-penniless.
-
-The prison of Angouleme was built in the Middle Ages, and has no more
-changed than the old cathedral. It is built against the old presidial,
-or ancient court of appeal, and people still call it the maison de
-justice. It boasts the conventional prison gateway, the solid-looking,
-nail-studded door, the low, worn archway which the better deserves the
-qualification "cyclopean," because the jailer's peephole or judas
-looks out like a single eye from the front of the building. As you
-enter you find yourself in a corridor which runs across the entire
-width of the building, with a row of doors of cells that give upon the
-prison yard and are lighted by high windows covered with a square iron
-grating. The jailer's house is separated from these cells by an
-archway in the middle, through which you catch a glimpse of the iron
-gate of the prison yard. The jailer installed David in a cell next to
-the archway, thinking that he would like to have a man of David's
-stamp as a near neighbor for the sake of company.
-
-"This is the best room," he said. David was struck dumb with amazement
-at the sight of it.
-
-The stone walls were tolerably damp. The windows, set high in the
-wall, were heavily barred; the stone-paved floor was cold as ice, and
-from the corridor outside came the sound of the measured tramp of the
-warder, monotonous as waves on the beach. "You are a prisoner! you are
-watched and guarded!" said the footsteps at every moment of every
-hour. All these small things together produce a prodigious effect upon
-the minds of honest folk. David saw that the bed was execrable, but
-the first night in a prison is full of violent agitation, and only on
-the second night does the prisoner notice that his couch is hard. The
-jailer was graciously disposed; he naturally suggested that his
-prisoner should walk in the yard until nightfall.
-
-David's hour of anguish only began when he was locked into his cell
-for the night. Lights are not allowed in the cells. A prisoner
-detained on arrest used to be subjected to rules devised for
-malefactors, unless he brought a special exemption signed by the
-public prosecutor. The jailer certainly might allow David to sit by
-his fire, but the prisoner must go back to his cell at locking-up
-time. Poor David learned the horrors of prison life by experience, the
-rough coarseness of the treatment revolted him. Yet a revulsion,
-familiar to those who live by thought, passed over him. He detached
-himself from his loneliness, and found a way of escape in a poet's
-waking dream.
-
-At last the unhappy man's thoughts turned to his own affairs. The
-stimulating influence of a prison upon conscience and self-scrutiny is
-immense. David asked himself whether he had done his duty as the head
-of a family. What despairing grief his wife must feel at this moment!
-Why had he not done as Marion had said, and earned money enough to
-pursue his investigations at leisure?
-
-"How can I stay in Angouleme after such a disgrace? And when I come
-out of prison, what will become of us? Where shall we go?"
-
-Doubts as to his process began to occur to him, and he passed through
-an agony which none save inventors can understand. Going from doubt to
-doubt, David began to see his real position more clearly; and to
-himself he said, as the Cointets had said to old Sechard, as Petit-
-Claud had just said to Eve, "Suppose that all should go well, what
-does it amount to in practice? The first thing to be done is to take
-out a patent, and money is needed for that--and experiments must be
-tried on a large scale in a paper-mill, which means that the discovery
-must pass into other hands. Oh! Petit-Claud was right!"
-
-A very vivid light sometimes dawns in the darkest prison.
-
-"Pshaw!" said David; "I shall see Petit-Claud to-morrow no doubt," and
-he turned and slept on the filthy mattress covered with coarse brown
-sacking.
-
-So when Eve unconsciously played into the hands of the enemy that
-morning, she found her husband more than ready to listen to proposals.
-She put her arms about him and kissed him, and sat down on the edge of
-the bed (for there was but one chair of the poorest and commonest kind
-in the cell). Her eyes fell on the unsightly pail in a corner, and
-over the walls covered with inscriptions left by David's predecessors,
-and tears filled the eyes that were red with weeping. She had sobbed
-long and very bitterly, but the sight of her husband in a felon's cell
-drew fresh tears.
-
-"And the desire of fame may lead one to this!" she cried. "Oh! my
-angel, give up your career. Let us walk together along the beaten
-track; we will not try to make haste to be rich, David. . . . I need
-very little to be very happy, especially now, after all that we have
-been through. . . . And if you only knew--the disgrace of arrest is
-not the worst. . . . Look."
-
-She held out Lucien's letter, and when David had read it, she tried to
-comfort him by repeating Petit-Claud's bitter comment.
-
-"If Lucien has taken his life, the thing is done by now," said David;
-"if he has not made away with himself by this time, he will not kill
-himself. As he himself says, 'his courage cannot last longer than a
-morning----' "
-
-"But the suspense!" cried Eve, forgiving almost everything at the
-thought of death. Then she told her husband of the proposals which
-Petit-Claud professed to have received from the Cointets. David
-accepted them at once with manifest pleasure.
-
-"We shall have enough to live upon in a village near L'Houmeau, where
-the Cointets' paper-mill stands. I want nothing now but a quiet life,"
-said David. "If Lucien has punished himself by death, we can wait so
-long as father lives; and if Lucien is still living, poor fellow, he
-will learn to adapt himself to our narrow ways. The Cointets certainly
-will make money by my discovery; but, after all, what am I compared
-with our country? One man in it, that is all; and if the whole country
-is benefited, I shall be content. There! dear Eve, neither you nor I
-were meant to be successful in business. We do not care enough about
-making a profit; we have not the dogged objection to parting with our
-money, even when it is legally owing, which is a kind of virtue of the
-counting-house, for these two sorts of avarice are called prudence and
-a faculty of business."
-
-Eve felt overjoyed; she and her husband held the same views, and this
-is one of the sweetest flowers of love; for two human beings who love
-each other may not be of the same mind, nor take the same view of
-their interests. She wrote to Petit-Claud telling him that they both
-consented to the general scheme, and asked him to release David. Then
-she begged the jailer to deliver the message.
-
-Ten minutes later Petit-Claud entered the dismal place. "Go home,
-madame," he said, addressing Eve, "we will follow you.--Well, my dear
-friend" (turning to David), "so you allowed them to catch you! Why did
-you come out? How came you to make such a mistake?"
-
-"Eh! how could I do otherwise? Look at this letter that Lucien wrote."
-
-David held out a sheet of paper. It was Cerizet's forged letter.
-
-Petit-Claud read it, looked at it, fingered the paper as he talked,
-and still taking, presently, as if through absence of mind, folded it
-up and put it in his pocket. Then he linked his arm in David's, and
-they went out together, the order for release having come during the
-conversation.
-
-It was like heaven to David to be at home again. He cried like a child
-when he took little Lucien in his arms and looked round his room after
-three weeks of imprisonment, and the disgrace, according to provincial
-notions, of the last few hours. Kolb and Marion had come back. Marion
-had heard in L'Houmeau that Lucien had been seen walking along on the
-Paris road, somewhere beyond Marsac. Some country folk, coming in to
-market, had noticed his fine clothes. Kolb, therefore, had set out on
-horseback along the highroad, and heard at last at Mansle that Lucien
-was traveling post in a caleche--M. Marron had recognized him as he
-passed.
-
-"What did I tell you?" said Petit-Claud. "That fellow is not a poet;
-he is a romance in heaven knows how many chapters."
-
-"Traveling post!" repeated Eve. "Where can he be going this time?"
-
-"Now go to see the Cointets, they are expecting you," said Petit-
-Claud, turning to David.
-
-"Ah, monsieur!" cried the beautiful Eve, "pray do your best for our
-interests; our whole future lies in your hands."
-
-"If you prefer it, madame, the conference can be held here. I will
-leave David with you. The Cointets will come this evening, and you
-shall see if I can defend your interests."
-
-"Ah! monsieur, I should be very glad," said Eve.
-
-"Very well," said Petit-Claud; "this evening, at seven o'clock."
-
-"Thank you," said Eve; and from her tone and glance Petit-Claud knew
-that he had made great progress in his fair client's confidence.
-
-"You have nothing to fear; you see I was right," he added. "Your
-brother is a hundred miles away from suicide, and when all comes to
-all, perhaps you will have a little fortune this evening. A bona-fide
-purchaser for the business has turned up."
-
-"If that is the case," said Eve, "why should we not wait awhile before
-binding ourselves to the Cointets?"
-
-Petit-Claud saw the danger. "You are forgetting, madame," he said,
-"that you cannot sell your business until you have paid M. Metivier;
-for a distress warrant has been issued."
-
-As soon as Petit-Claud reached home he sent for Cerizet, and when the
-printer's foreman appeared, drew him into the embrasure of the window.
-
-"To-morrow evening," he said, "you will be the proprietor of the
-Sechards' printing-office, and then there are those behind you who
-have influence enough to transfer the license;" (then in a lowered
-voice), "but you have no mind to end in the hulks, I suppose?"
-
-"The hulks! What's that? What's that?"
-
-"Your letter to David was a forgery. It is in my possession. What
-would Henriette say in a court of law? I do not want to ruin you," he
-added hastily, seeing how white Cerizet's face grew.
-
-"You want something more of me?" cried Cerizet.
-
-"Well, here it is," said Petit-Claud. "Follow me carefully. You will
-be a master printer in Angouleme in two months' time . . . but you
-will not have paid for your business--you will not pay for it in ten
-years. You will work a long while yet for those that have lent you the
-money, and you will be the cat's-paw of the Liberal party. . . . Now
-_I_ shall draw up your agreement with Gannerac, and I can draw it up
-in such a way that you will have the business in your own hands one of
-these days. But--if the Liberals start a paper, if you bring it out,
-and if I am deputy public prosecutor, then you will come to an
-understanding with the Cointets and publish articles of such a nature
-that they will have the paper suppressed. . . . The Cointets will pay
-you handsomely for that service. . . . I know, of course, that you
-will be a hero, a victim of persecution; you will be a personage among
-the Liberals--a Sergeant Mercier, a Paul-Louis Courier, a Manual on a
-small scale. I will take care that they leave you your license. In
-fact, on the day when the newspaper is suppressed, I will burn this
-letter before your eyes. . . . Your fortune will not cost you much."
-
-A working man has the haziest notions as to the law with regard to
-forgery; and Cerizet, who beheld himself already in the dock, breathed
-again.
-
-"In three years' time," continued Petit-Claud, "I shall be public
-prosecutor in Angouleme. You may have need of me some day; bear that
-in mind."
-
-"It's agreed," said Cerizet, "but you don't know me. Burn that letter
-now and trust to my gratitude."
-
-Petit-Claud looked Cerizet in the face. It was a duel in which one
-man's gaze is a scalpel with which he essays to probe the soul of
-another, and the eyes of that other are a theatre, as it were, to
-which all his virtue is summoned for display.
-
-Petit-Claud did not utter a word. He lighted a taper and burned the
-letter. "He has his way to make," he said to himself.
-
-"Here is one that will go through fire and water for you," said
-Cerizet.
-
-
-
-David awaited the interview with the Cointets with a vague feeling of
-uneasiness; not, however, on account of the proposed partnership, nor
-for his own interests--he felt nervous as to their opinion of his
-work. He was in something the same position as a dramatic author
-before his judges. The inventor's pride in the discovery so nearly
-completed left no room for any other feelings.
-
-At seven o'clock that evening, while Mme. du Chatelet, pleading a sick
-headache, had gone to her room in her unhappiness over the rumors of
-Lucien's departure; while M. de Comte, left to himself, was
-entertaining his guests at dinner--the tall Cointet and his stout
-brother, accompanied by Petit-Claud, opened negotiations with the
-competitor who had delivered himself up, bound hand and foot.
-
-A difficulty awaited them at the outset. How was it possible to draw
-up a deed of partnership unless they knew David's secret? And if David
-divulged his secret, he would be at the mercy of the Cointets. Petit-
-Claud arranged that the deed of partnership should be the first drawn
-up. Thereupon the tall Cointet asked to see some specimens of David's
-work, and David brought out the last sheet that he had made,
-guaranteeing the price of production.
-
-"Well," said Petit-Claud, "there you have the basis of the agreement
-ready made. You can go into partnership on the strength of those
-samples, inserting a clause to protect yourselves in case the
-conditions of the patent are not fulfilled in the manufacturing
-process."
-
-"It is one thing to make samples of paper on a small scale in your own
-room with a small mould, monsieur, and another to turn out a
-quantity," said the tall Cointet, addressing David. "Quite another
-thing, as you may judge from this single fact. We manufacture colored
-papers. We buy parcels of coloring absolutely identical. Every cake of
-indigo used for 'blueing' our post-demy is taken from a batch supplied
-by the same maker. Well, we have never yet been able to obtain two
-batches of precisely the same shade. There are variations in the
-material which we cannot detect. The quantity and the quality of the
-pulp modify every question at once. Suppose that you have in a caldron
-a quantity of ingredients of some kind (I don't ask to know what they
-are), you can do as you like with them, the treatment can be uniformly
-applied, you can manipulate, knead, and pestle the mass at your
-pleasure until you have a homogeneous substance. But who will
-guarantee that it will be the same with a batch of five hundred reams,
-and that your plan will succeed in bulk?"
-
-David, Eve, and Petit-Claud looked at one another; their eyes said
-many things.
-
-"Take a somewhat similar case," continued the tall Cointet after a
-pause. "You cut two or three trusses of meadow hay, and store it in a
-loft before 'the heat is out of the grass,' as the peasants say; the
-hay ferments, but no harm comes of it. You follow up your experiment
-by storing a couple of thousand trusses in a wooden barn--and, of
-course, the hay smoulders, and the barn blazes up like a lighted
-match. You are an educated man," continued Cointet; "you can see the
-application for yourself. So far, you have only cut your two trusses
-of hay; we are afraid of setting fire to our paper-mill by bringing in
-a couple of thousand trusses. In other words, we may spoil more than
-one batch, make heavy losses, and find ourselves none the better for
-laying out a good deal of money."
-
-David was completely floored by this reasoning. Practical wisdom spoke
-in matter-of-fact language to theory, whose word is always for the
-future.
-
-"Devil fetch me, if I'll sign such a deed of partnership!" the stout
-Cointet cried bluntly. "You may throw away your money if you like,
-Boniface; as for me, I shall keep mine. Here is my offer--to pay M.
-Sechard's debts AND six thousand francs, and another three thousand
-francs in bills at twelve and fifteen months," he added. "That will be
-quite enough risk to run.--We have a balance of twelve thousand francs
-against Metivier. That will make fifteen thousand francs.--That is all
-that I would pay for the secret if I were going to exploit it for
-myself. So this is the great discovery that you were talking about,
-Boniface! Many thanks! I thought you had more sense. No, you can't
-call this business."
-
-"The question for you," said Petit-Claud, undismayed by the explosion,
-"resolves itself into this: 'Do you care to risk twenty thousand
-francs to buy a secret that may make rich men of you?' Why, the risk
-usually is in proportion to the profit, gentlemen. You stake twenty
-thousand francs on your luck. A gambler puts down a louis at roulette
-for a chance of winning thirty-six, but he knows that the louis is
-lost. Do the same."
-
-"I must have time to think it over," said the stout Cointet; "I am not
-so clever as my brother. I am a plain, straight-forward sort of chap,
-that only knows one thing--how to print prayer-books at twenty sous
-and sell them for two francs. Where I see an invention that has only
-been tried once, I see ruin. You succeed with the first batch, you
-spoil the next, you go on, and you are drawn in; for once put an arm
-into that machinery, the rest of you follows," and he related an
-anecdote very much to the point--how a Bordeaux merchant had ruined
-himself by following a scientific man's advice, and trying to bring
-the Landes into cultivation; and followed up the tale with half-a-
-dozen similar instances of agricultural and commercial failures nearer
-home in the departments of the Charente and Dordogne. He waxed warm
-over his recitals. He would not listen to another word. Petit-Claud's
-demurs, so far from soothing the stout Cointet, appeared to irritate
-him.
-
-"I would rather give more for a certainty, if I made only a small
-profit on it," he said, looking at his brother. "It is my opinion that
-things have gone far enough for business," he concluded.
-
-"Still you came here for something, didn't you?" asked Petit-Claud.
-"What is your offer?"
-
-"I offer to release M. Sechard, and, if his plan succeeds, to give him
-thirty per cent of the profits," the stout Cointet answered briskly.
-
-"But, monsieur," objected Eve, "how should we live while the
-experiments were being made? My husband has endured the disgrace of
-imprisonment already; he may as well go back to prison, it makes no
-difference now, and we will pay our debts ourselves----"
-
-Petit-Claud laid a finger on his lips in warning.
-
-"You are unreasonable," said he, addressing the brothers. "You have
-seen the paper; M. Sechard's father told you that he had shut his son
-up, and that he had made capital paper in a single night from
-materials that must have cost a mere nothing. You are here to make an
-offer. Are you purchasers, yes or no?"
-
-"Stay," said the tall Cointet, "whether my brother is willing or no, I
-will risk this much myself. I will pay M. Sechard's debts, I will pay
-six thousand francs over and above the debts, and M. Sechard shall
-have thirty per cent of the profits. But mind this--if in the space of
-one year he fails to carry out the undertakings which he himself will
-make in the deed of partnership, he must return the six thousand
-francs, and we shall keep the patent and extricate ourselves as best
-we may."
-
-"Are you sure of yourself?" asked Petit-Claud, taking David aside.
-
-"Yes," said David. He was deceived by the tactics of the brothers, and
-afraid lest the stout Cointet should break off the negotiations on
-which his future depended.
-
-"Very well, I will draft the deed," said Petit-Claud, addressing the
-rest of the party. "Each of you shall have a copy to-night, and you
-will have all to-morrow morning in which to think it over. To-morrow
-afternoon at four o'clock, when the court rises, you will sign the
-agreement. You, gentlemen, will withdraw Metivier's suit, and I, for
-my part, will write to stop proceedings in the Court-Royal; we will
-give notice on either side that the affair has been settled out of
-court."
-
-David Sechard's undertakings were thus worded in the deed:--
-
- "M. David Sechard, printer of Angouleme, affirming that he has
- discovered a method of sizing paper-pulp in the vat, and also a
- method of affecting a reduction of fifty per cent in the price of
- all kinds of manufactured papers, by introducing certain vegetable
- substances into the pulp, either by intermixture of such
- substances with the rags already in use, or by employing them
- solely without the addition of rags: a partnership for working the
- patent to be presently applied for is entered upon by M. David
- Sechard and the firm of Cointet Brothers, subject to the following
- conditional clauses and stipulations."
-
-One of the clauses so drafted that David Sechard forfeited all his
-rights if he failed to fulfil his engagements within the year; the
-tall Cointet was particularly careful to insert that clause, and David
-Sechard allowed it to pass.
-
-When Petit-Claud appeared with a copy of the agreement next morning at
-half-past seven o'clock, he brought news for David and his wife.
-Cerizet offered twenty-two thousand francs for the business. The whole
-affair could be signed and settled in the course of the evening. "But
-if the Cointets knew about it," he added, "they would be quite capable
-of refusing to sign the deed of partnership, of harassing you, and
-selling you up."
-
-"Are you sure of payment?" asked Eve. She had thought it hopeless to
-try to sell the business; and now, to her astonishment, a bargain
-which would have been their salvation three months ago was concluded
-in this summary fashion.
-
-"The money has been deposited with me," he answered succinctly.
-
-"Why, here is magic at work!" said David, and he asked Petit-Claud for
-an explanation of this piece of luck.
-
-"No," said Petit-Claud, "it is very simple. The merchants in L'Houmeau
-want a newspaper."
-
-"But I am bound not to publish a paper," said David.
-
-"Yes, you are bound, but is your successor?--However it is," he
-continued, "do not trouble yourself at all; sell the business, pocket
-the proceeds, and leave Cerizet to find his way through the conditions
-of the sale--he can take care of himself."
-
-"Yes," said Eve.
-
-"And if it turns out that you may not print a newspaper in Angouleme,"
-said Petit-Claud, "those who are finding the capital for Cerizet will
-bring out the paper in L'Houmeau."
-
-The prospect of twenty-two thousand francs, of want now at end,
-dazzled Eve. The partnership and its hopes took a second place. And,
-therefore, M. and Mme. Sechard gave way on a final point of dispute.
-The tall Cointet insisted that the patent should be taken out in the
-name of any one of the partners. What difference could it make? The
-stout Cointet said the last word.
-
-"He is finding the money for the patent; he is bearing the expenses of
-the journey--another two thousand francs over and above the rest of
-the expenses. He must take it out in his own name, or we will not stir
-in the matter."
-
-The lynx gained a victory at all points. The deed of partnership was
-signed that afternoon at half-past four.
-
-The tall Cointet politely gave Mme. Sechard a dozen thread-pattern
-forks and spoons and a beautiful Ternaux shawl, by way of pin-money,
-said he, and to efface any unpleasant impression made in the heat of
-discussion. The copies of the draft had scarcely been made out, Cachan
-had barely had time to send the documents to Petit-Claud, together
-with the three unlucky forged bills, when the Sechards heard a
-deafening rumble in the street, a dray from the Messageries stopped
-before the door, and Kolb's voice made the staircase ring again.
-
-"Montame! montame! vifteen tausend vrancs, vrom Boidiers" (Poitiers).
-"Goot money! vrom Monziere Lucien!"
-
-"Fifteen thousand francs!" cried Eve, throwing up her arms.
-
-"Yes, madame," said the carman in the doorway, "fifteen thousand
-francs, brought by the Bordeaux coach, and they didn't want any more
-neither! I have two men downstairs bringing up the bags. M. Lucien
-Chardon de Rubempre is the sender. I have brought up a little leather
-bag for you, containing five hundred francs in gold, and a letter it's
-likely."
-
- "MY DEAR SISTER,--Here are fifteen thousand francs. Instead of
- taking my life, I have sold it. I am no longer my own; I am only
- the secretary of a Spanish diplomatist; I am his creature. A new
- and dreadful life is beginning for me. Perhaps I should have done
- better to drown myself.
-
- "Good-bye. David will be released, and with the four thousand
- francs he can buy a little paper-mill, no doubt, and make his
- fortune. Forget me, all of you. This is the wish of your unhappy
- brother.
- "LUCIEN."
-
-"It is decreed that my poor boy should be unlucky in everything, and
-even when he does well, as he said himself," said Mme. Chardon, as she
-watched the men piling up the bags.
-
-"We have had a narrow escape!" exclaimed the tall Cointet, when he was
-once more in the Place du Murier. "An hour later the glitter of the
-silver would have thrown a new light on the deed of partnership. Our
-man would have fought shy of it. We have his promise now, and in three
-months' time we shall know what to do."
-
-That very evening, at seven o'clock, Cerizet bought the business, and
-the money was paid over, the purchaser undertaking to pay rent for the
-last quarter. The next day Eve sent forty thousand francs to the
-Receiver-General, and bought two thousand five hundred francs of
-rentes in her husband's name. Then she wrote to her father-in-law and
-asked him to find a small farm, worth about ten thousand francs, for
-her near Marsac. She meant to invest her own fortune in this way.
-
-The tall Cointet's plot was formidably simple. From the very first he
-considered that the plan of sizing the pulp in the vat was
-impracticable. The real secret of fortune lay in the composition of
-the pulp, in the cheap vegetable fibre as a substitute for rags. He
-made up his mind, therefore, to lay immense stress on the secondary
-problem of sizing the pulp, and to pass over the discovery of cheap
-raw material, and for the following reasons:
-
-The Angouleme paper-mills manufacture paper for stationers. Notepaper,
-foolscap, crown, and post-demy are all necessarily sized; and these
-papers have been the pride of the Angouleme mills for a long while
-past, stationery being the specialty of the Charente. This fact gave
-color to the Cointet's urgency upon the point of sizing in the
-pulping-trough; but, as a matter of fact, they cared nothing for this
-part of David's researches. The demand for writing-paper is
-exceedingly small compared with the almost unlimited demand for
-unsized paper for printers. As Boniface Cointet traveled to Paris to
-take out the patent in his own name, he was projecting plans that were
-like to work a revolution in his paper-mill. Arrived in Paris, he took
-up his quarters with Metivier, and gave his instructions to his agent.
-Metivier was to call upon the proprietors of newspapers, and offer to
-deliver paper at prices below those quoted by all other houses; he
-could guarantee in each case that the paper should be a better color,
-and in every way superior to the best kinds hitherto in use.
-Newspapers are always supplied by contract; there would be time before
-the present contracts expired to complete all the subterranean
-operations with buyers, and to obtain a monopoly of the trade. Cointet
-calculated that he could rid himself of Sechard while Metivier was
-taking orders from the principal Paris newspapers, which even then
-consumed two hundred reams daily. Cointet naturally offered Metivier a
-large commission on the contracts, for he wished to secure a clever
-representative on the spot, and to waste no time in traveling to and
-fro. And in this manner the fortunes of the firm of Metivier, one of
-the largest houses in the paper trade, were founded. The tall Cointet
-went back to Angouleme to be present at Petit-Claud's wedding, with a
-mind at rest as to the future.
-
-Petit-Claud had sold his professional connection, and was only waiting
-for M. Milaud's promotion to take the public prosecutor's place, which
-had been promised to him by the Comtesse du Chatelet. The public
-prosecutor's second deputy was appointed first deputy to the Court of
-Limoges, the Keeper of the Seals sent a man of his own to Angouleme,
-and the post of first deputy was kept vacant for a couple of months.
-The interval was Petit-Claud's honeymoon.
-
-While Boniface Cointet was in Paris, David made a first experimental
-batch of unsized paper far superior to that in common use for
-newspapers. He followed it up with a second batch of magnificent
-vellum paper for fine printing, and this the Cointets used for a new
-edition of their diocesan prayer-book. The material had been privately
-prepared by David himself; he would have no helpers but Kolb and
-Marion.
-
-When Boniface came back the whole affair wore a different aspect; he
-looked at the samples, and was fairly satisfied.
-
-"My good friend," he said, "the whole trade of Angouleme is in crown
-paper. We must make the best possible crown paper at half the present
-price; that is the first and foremost question for us."
-
-Then David tried to size the pulp for the desired paper, and the
-result was a harsh surface with grains of size distributed all over
-it. On the day when the experiment was concluded and David held the
-sheets in his hand, he went away to find a spot where he could be
-alone and swallow his bitter disappointment. But Boniface Cointet went
-in search of him and comforted him. Boniface was delightfully amiable.
-
-"Do not lose heart," he said; "go on! I am a good fellow, I understand
-you; I will stand by you to the end."
-
-"Really," David said to his wife at dinner, "we are with good people;
-I should not have expected that the tall Cointet would be so
-generous." And he repeated his conversation with his wily partner.
-
-Three months were spent in experiments. David slept at the mill; he
-noted the effects of various preparations upon the pulp. At one time
-he attributed his non-success to an admixture of rag-pulp with his own
-ingredients, and made a batch entirely composed of the new material;
-at another, he endeavored to size pulp made exclusively from rags;
-persevering in his experiments under the eyes of the tall Cointet,
-whom he had ceased to mistrust, until he had tried every possible
-combination of pulp and size. David lived in the paper-mill for the
-first six months of 1823--if it can be called living, to leave food
-untasted, and go in neglect of person and dress. He wrestled so
-desperately with the difficulties, that anybody but the Cointets would
-have seen the sublimity of the struggle, for the brave fellow was not
-thinking of his own interests. The moment had come when he cared for
-nothing but the victory. With marvelous sagacity he watched the
-unaccountable freaks of the semi-artificial substances called into
-existence by man for ends of his own; substances in which nature had
-been tamed, as it were, and her tacit resistance overcome; and from
-these observations drew great conclusions; finding, as he did, that
-such creations can only be obtained by following the laws of the more
-remote affinities of things, of "a second nature," as he called it, in
-substances.
-
-Towards the end of August he succeeded to some extent in sizing the
-paper pulp in the vat; the result being a kind of paper identical with
-a make in use for printers' proofs at the present day--a kind of paper
-that cannot be depended upon, for the sizing itself is not always
-certain. This was a great result, considering the condition of the
-paper trade in 1823, and David hoped to solve the final difficulties
-of the problem, but--it had cost ten thousand francs.
-
-Singular rumors were current at this time in Angouleme and L'Houmeau.
-It was said that David Sechard was ruining the firm of Cointet
-Brothers. Experiments had eaten up twenty thousand francs; and the
-result, said gossip, was wretchedly bad paper. Other manufacturers
-took fright at this, hugged themselves on their old-fashioned methods,
-and, being jealous of the Cointets, spread rumors of the approaching
-fall of that ambitious house. As for the tall Cointet, he set up the
-new machinery for making lengths of paper in a ribbon, and allowed
-people to believe that he was buying plant for David's experiments.
-Then the cunning Cointet used David's formula for pulp, while urging
-his partner to give his whole attention to the sizing process; and
-thousands of reams of the new paper were despatched to Metivier in
-Paris.
-
-When September arrived, the tall Cointet took David aside, and,
-learning that the latter meditated a crowning experiment, dissuaded
-him from further attempts.
-
-"Go to Marsac, my dear David, see your wife, and take a rest after
-your labors; we don't want to ruin ourselves," said Cointet in the
-friendliest way. "This great triumph of yours, after all, is only a
-starting-point. We shall wait now for awhile before trying any new
-experiments. To be fair! see what has come of them. We are not merely
-paper-makers, we are printers besides and bankers, and people say that
-you are ruining us."
-
-David Sechard's gesture of protest on behalf of his good faith was
-sublime in its simplicity.
-
-"Not that fifty thousand francs thrown into the Charente would ruin
-us," said Cointet, in reply to mute protest, "but we do not wish to be
-obliged to pay cash for everything in consequence of slanders that
-shake our credit; THAT would bring us to a standstill. We have reached
-the term fixed by our agreement, and we are bound on either side to
-think over our position."
-
-"He is right," thought David. He had forgotten the routine work of the
-business, thoroughly absorbed as he had been in experiments on a large
-scale.
-
-David went to Marsac. For the past six months he had gone over on
-Saturday evening, returning again to L'Houmeau on Tuesday morning.
-Eve, after much counsel from her father-in-law, had bought a house
-called the Verberie, with three acres of land and a croft planted with
-vines, which lay like a wedge in the old man's vineyard. Here, with
-her mother and Marion, she lived a very frugal life, for five thousand
-francs of the purchase money still remained unpaid. It was a charming
-little domain, the prettiest bit of property in Marsac. The house,
-with a garden before it and a yard at the back, was built of white
-tufa ornamented with carvings, cut without great expense in that
-easily wrought stone, and roofed with slate. The pretty furniture from
-the house in Angouleme looked prettier still at Marsac, for there was
-not the slightest attempt at comfort or luxury in the country in those
-days. A row of orange-trees, pomegranates, and rare plants stood
-before the house on the side of the garden, set there by the last
-owner, an old general who died under M. Marron's hands.
-
-David was enjoying his holiday sitting under an orange-tree with his
-wife, and father, and little Lucien, when the bailiff from Mansle
-appeared. Cointet Brothers gave their partner formal notice to appoint
-an arbitrator to settle disputes, in accordance with a clause in the
-agreement. The Cointets demanded that the six thousand francs should
-be refunded, and the patent surrendered in consideration of the
-enormous outlay made to no purpose.
-
-"People say that you are ruining them," said old Sechard. "Well, well,
-of all that you have done, that is the one thing that I am glad to
-know."
-
-At nine o'clock the next morning Eve and David stood in Petit-Claud's
-waiting-room. The little lawyer was the guardian of the widow and
-orphan by virtue of his office, and it seemed to them that they could
-take no other advice. Petit-Claud was delighted to see his clients,
-and insisted that M. and Mme. Sechard should do him the pleasure of
-breakfasting with him.
-
-"Do the Cointets want six thousand francs of you?" he asked, smiling.
-"How much is still owing of the purchase-money of the Verberie?"
-
-"Five thousand francs, monsieur," said Eve, "but I have two
-thousand----"
-
-"Keep your money," Petit-Claud broke in. "Let us see: five
-thousand--why, you want quite another ten thousand francs to settle
-yourselves comfortably down yonder. Very good, in two hours' time the
-Cointets shall bring you fifteen thousand francs----"
-
-Eve started with surprise.
-
-"If you will renounce all claims to the profits under the deed of
-partnership, and come to an amicable settlement," said Petit-Claud.
-"Does that suit you?"
-
-"Will it really be lawfully ours?" asked Eve.
-
-"Very much so," said the lawyer, smiling. "The Cointets have worked
-you trouble enough; I should like to make an end of their pretensions.
-Listen to me; I am a magistrate now, and it is my duty to tell you the
-truth. Very good. The Cointets are playing you false at this moment,
-but you are in their hands. If you accept battle, you might possibly
-gain the lawsuit which they will bring. Do you wish to be where you
-are now after ten years of litigation? Experts' fees and expenses of
-arbitration will be multiplied, the most contradictory opinions will
-be given, and you must take your chance. And," he added, smiling
-again, "there is no attorney here that can defend you, so far as I
-see. My successor has not much ability. There, a bad compromise is
-better than a successful lawsuit."
-
-"Any arrangement that will give us a quiet life will do for me," said
-David.
-
-Petit-Claud called to his servant.
-
-"Paul! go and ask M. Segaud, my successor, to come here.--He shall go
-to see the Cointets while we breakfast" said Petit-Claud, addressing
-his former clients, "and in a few hours' time you will be on your way
-home to Marsac, ruined, but with minds at rest. Ten thousand francs
-will bring you in another five hundred francs of income, and you will
-live comfortably on your bit of property."
-
-Two hours later, as Petit-Claud had prophesied, Maitre Segaud came
-back with an agreement duly drawn up and signed by the Cointets, and
-fifteen notes each for a thousand francs.
-
-"We are much indebted to you," said Sechard, turning to Petit-Claud.
-
-"Why, I have just this moment ruined you," said Petit-Claud, looking
-at his astonished former clients. "I tell you again, I have ruined
-you, as you will see as time goes on; but I know you, you would rather
-be ruined than wait for a fortune which perhaps might come too late."
-
-"We are not mercenary, monsieur," said Madame Eve. "We thank you for
-giving us the means of happiness; we shall always feel grateful to
-you."
-
-"Great heavens! don't call down blessings on ME!" cried Petit-Claud.
-"It fills me with remorse; but to-day, I think, I have made full
-reparation. If I am a magistrate, it is entirely owing to you; and if
-anybody is to feel grateful, it is I. Good-bye."
-
-
-
-As time went on, Kolb changed his opinion of Sechard senior; and as
-for the old man, he took a liking to Kolb when he found that, like
-himself, the Alsacien could neither write nor read a word, and that it
-was easy to make him tipsy. The old "bear" imparted his ideas on vine
-culture and the sale of a vintage to the ex-cuirassier, and trained
-him with a view to leaving a man with a head on his shoulders to look
-after his children when he should be gone; for he grew childish at the
-last, and great were his fears as to the fate of his property. He had
-chosen Courtois the miller as his confidant. "You will see how things
-will go with my children when I am under ground. Lord! it makes me
-shudder to think of it."
-
-Old Sechard died in the month of March, 1929, leaving about two
-hundred thousand francs in land. His acres added to the Verberie made
-a fine property, which Kolb had managed to admiration for some two
-years.
-
-David and his wife found nearly a hundred thousand crowns in gold in
-the house. The department of the Charente had valued old Sechard's
-money at a million; rumor, as usual, exaggerating the amount of a
-hoard. Eve and David had barely thirty thousand francs of income when
-they added their little fortune to the inheritance; they waited
-awhile, and so it fell out that they invested their capital in
-Government securities at the time of the Revolution of July.
-
-Then, and not until then, could the department of the Charente and
-David Sechard form some idea of the wealth of the tall Cointet. Rich
-to the extent of several millions of francs, the elder Cointet became
-a deputy, and is at this day a peer of France. It is said that he will
-be Minister of Commerce in the next Government; for in 1842 he married
-Mlle. Popinot, daughter of M. Anselme Popinot, one of the most
-influential statesmen of the dynasty, deputy and mayor of an
-arrondissement in Paris.
-
-David Sechard's discovery has been assimilated by the French
-manufacturing world, as food is assimilated by a living body. Thanks
-to the introduction of materials other than rags, France can produce
-paper more cheaply than any other European country. Dutch paper, as
-David foresaw, no longer exists. Sooner or later it will be necessary,
-no doubt, to establish a Royal Paper Manufactory; like the Gobelins,
-the Sevres porcelain works, the Savonnerie, and the Imprimerie royale,
-which so far have escaped the destruction threatened by bourgeois
-vandalism.
-
-David Sechard, beloved by his wife, father of two boys and a girl, has
-the good taste to make no allusion to his past efforts. Eve had the
-sense to dissuade him from following his terrible vocation; for the
-inventor like Moses on Mount Horeb, is consumed by the burning bush.
-He cultivates literature by way of recreation, and leads a comfortable
-life of leisure, befitting the landowner who lives on his own estate.
-He has bidden farewell for ever to glory, and bravely taken his place
-in the class of dreamers and collectors; for he dabbles in entomology,
-and is at present investigating the transformations of insects which
-science only knows in the final stage.
-
-Everybody has heard of Petit-Claud's success as attorney-general; he
-is the rival of the great Vinet of Provins, and it is his ambition to
-be President of the Court-Royal of Poitiers.
-
-Cerizet has been in trouble so frequently for political offences that
-he has been a good deal talked about; and as one of the boldest
-enfants perdus of the Liberal party he was nicknamed the "Brave
-Cerizet." When Petit-Claud's successor compelled him to sell his
-business in Angouleme, he found a fresh career on the provincial
-stage, where his talents as an actor were like to be turned to
-brilliant account. The chief stage heroine, however, obliged him to go
-to Paris to find a cure for love among the resources of science, and
-there he tried to curry favor with the Liberal party.
-
-As for Lucien, the story of his return to Paris belongs to the Scenes
-of Parisian life.
-
-
-
- ADDENDUM
-
-Note: Eve and David is the third part of a trilogy. Part one is
-entitled Two Poets and part two is A Distinguished Provincial at
-Paris. In other references parts one and three are usually combined
-under the title Lost Illusions.
-
-The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.
-
-Cerizet
- Two Poets
- A Man of Business
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
- The Middle Classes
-
-Chardon, Madame (nee Rubempre)
- Two Poets
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
-
-Chatelet, Sixte, Baron du
- Two Poets
- A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
- The Thirteen
-
-Chatelet, Marie-Louise-Anais de Negrepelisse, Baronne du
- Two Poets
- A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
- The Government Clerks
-
-Cointet, Boniface
- Two Poets
- The Firm of Nucingen
- The Member for Arcis
-
-Cointet, Jean
- Two Poets
-
-Collin, Jacques
- Father Goriot
- A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
- The Member for Arcis
-
-Conti, Gennaro
- Beatrix
-
-Courtois
- Two Poets
-
-Courtois, Madame
- Two Poets
-
-Hautoy, Francis du
- Two Poets
-
-Herrera, Carlos
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
-
-Marron
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
-
-Marsay, Henri de
- The Thirteen
- The Unconscious Humorists
- Another Study of Woman
- The Lily of the Valley
- Father Goriot
- Jealousies of a Country Town
- Ursule Mirouet
- A Marriage Settlement
- A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
- Letters of Two Brides
- The Ball at Sceaux
- Modeste Mignon
- The Secrets of a Princess
- The Gondreville Mystery
- A Daughter of Eve
-
-Metivier
- The Government Clerks
- The Middle Classes
-
-Milaud
- The Muse of the Department
-
-Nucingen, Baron Frederic de
- The Firm of Nucingen
- Father Goriot
- Pierrette
- Cesar Birotteau
- A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
- Another Study of Woman
- The Secrets of a Princess
- A Man of Business
- Cousin Betty
- The Muse of the Department
- The Unconscious Humorists
-
-Nucingen, Baronne Delphine de
- Father Goriot
- The Thirteen
- Eugenie Grandet
- Cesar Birotteau
- Melmoth Reconciled
- A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
- The Commission in Lunacy
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
- Modeste Mignon
- The Firm of Nucingen
- Another Study of Woman
- A Daughter of Eve
- The Member for Arcis
-
-Petit-Claud
- Two Poets
-
-Pimentel, Marquis and Marquise de
- Two Poets
-
-Postel
- Two Poets
-
-Prieur, Madame
- Two Poets
-
-Rastignac, Baron and Baronne de (Eugene's parents)
- Father Goriot
- Two Poets
-
-Rastignac, Eugene de
- Father Goriot
- A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
- The Ball at Sceaux
- The Commission in Lunacy
- A Study of Woman
- Another Study of Woman
- The Magic Skin
- The Secrets of a Princess
- A Daughter of Eve
- The Gondreville Mystery
- The Firm of Nucingen
- Cousin Betty
- The Member for Arcis
- The Unconscious Humorists
-
-Rubempre, Lucien-Chardon de
- Two Poets
- A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
- The Government Clerks
- Ursule Mirouet
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
-
-Sechard, Jerome-Nicholas
- Two Poets
-
-Sechard, David
- Two Poets
- A Distinguished Provincial At Paris
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
-
-Sechard, Madame David
- Two Poets
- A Distinguished Provincial At Paris
- Scenes from a Courtesan's Life
-
-Senonches, Jacques de
- Two Poets
-
-Senonches, Madame Jacques de
- Two Poets
-
-Touches, Mademoiselle Felicite des
- Beatrix
- A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
- A Bachelor's Establishment
- Another Study of Woman
- A Daughter of Eve
- Honorine
- Beatrix
- The Muse of the Department
-
-Victorine
- Massimilla Doni
- Letters of Two Brides
- Gaudissart II
-
-
-
-
-
-End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Eve and David by Honore de Balzac
-