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+Project Gutenberg Etext At the Sign of the Cat & Racket by Balzac
+#58 in our series by Honore de Balzac
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+At the Sign of the Cat and Racket
+
+by Honore de Balzac
+
+Translated by Clara Bell
+
+March, 1998 [Etext #1680]
+
+
+Project Gutenberg Etext At the Sign of the Cat & Racket by Balzac
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+Etext prepared by Dagny, dagnyj@hotmail.com
+and John Bickers, jbickers@templar.actrix.gen.nz
+
+
+
+
+
+At the Sign of the Cat and Racket
+
+by Honore de Balzac
+
+
+
+
+Translated by Clara Bell
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+To Mademoiselle Marie de Montheau
+
+
+
+
+AT THE SIGN OF THE CAT AND RACKET
+
+
+
+Half-way down the Rue Saint-Denis, almost at the corner of the Rue du
+Petit-Lion, there stood formerly one of those delightful houses which
+enable historians to reconstruct old Paris by analogy. The threatening
+walls of this tumbledown abode seemed to have been decorated with
+hieroglyphics. For what other name could the passer-by give to the Xs
+and Vs which the horizontal or diagonal timbers traced on the front,
+outlined by little parallel cracks in the plaster? It was evident that
+every beam quivered in its mortices at the passing of the lightest
+vehicle. This venerable structure was crowned by a triangular roof of
+which no example will, ere long, be seen in Paris. This covering,
+warped by the extremes of the Paris climate, projected three feet over
+the roadway, as much to protect the threshold from the rainfall as to
+shelter the wall of a loft and its sill-less dormer-window. This upper
+story was built of planks, overlapping each other like slates, in
+order, no doubt, not to overweight the frail house.
+
+One rainy morning in the month of March, a young man, carefully
+wrapped in his cloak, stood under the awning of a shop opposite this
+old house, which he was studying with the enthusiasm of an antiquary.
+In point of fact, this relic of the civic life of the sixteenth
+century offered more than one problem to the consideration of an
+observer. Each story presented some singularity; on the first floor
+four tall, narrow windows, close together, were filled as to the lower
+panes with boards, so as to produce the doubtful light by which a
+clever salesman can ascribe to his goods the color his customers
+inquire for. The young man seemed very scornful of this part of the
+house; his eyes had not yet rested on it. The windows of the second
+floor, where the Venetian blinds were drawn up, revealing little dingy
+muslin curtains behind the large Bohemian glass panes, did not
+interest him either. His attention was attracted to the third floor,
+to the modest sash-frames of wood, so clumsily wrought that they might
+have found a place in the Museum of Arts and Crafts to illustrate the
+early efforts of French carpentry. These windows were glazed with
+small squares of glass so green that, but for his good eyes, the young
+man could not have seen the blue-checked cotton curtains which
+screened the mysteries of the room from profane eyes. Now and then the
+watcher, weary of his fruitless contemplation, or of the silence in
+which the house was buried, like the whole neighborhood, dropped his
+eyes towards the lower regions. An involuntary smile parted his lips
+each time he looked at the shop, where, in fact, there were some
+laughable details.
+
+A formidable wooden beam, resting on four pillars, which appeared to
+have bent under the weight of the decrepit house, had been encrusted
+with as many coats of different paint as there are of rouge on an old
+duchess' cheek. In the middle of this broad and fantastically carved
+joist there was an old painting representing a cat playing rackets.
+This picture was what moved the young man to mirth. But it must be
+said that the wittiest of modern painters could not invent so comical
+a caricature. The animal held in one of its forepaws a racket as big
+as itself, and stood on its hind legs to aim at hitting an enormous
+ball, returned by a man in a fine embroidered coat. Drawing, color,
+and accessories, all were treated in such a way as to suggest that the
+artist had meant to make game of the shop-owner and of the passing
+observer. Time, while impairing this artless painting, had made it yet
+more grotesque by introducing some uncertain features which must have
+puzzled the conscientious idler. For instance, the cat's tail had been
+eaten into in such a way that it might now have been taken for the
+figure of a spectator--so long, and thick, and furry were the tails of
+our forefathers' cats. To the right of the picture, on an azure field
+which ill-disguised the decay of the wood, might be read the name
+"Guillaume," and to the left, "Successor to Master Chevrel." Sun and
+rain had worn away most of the gilding parsimoniously applied to the
+letters of this superscription, in which the Us and Vs had changed
+places in obedience to the laws of old-world orthography.
+
+To quench the pride of those who believe that the world is growing
+cleverer day by day, and that modern humbug surpasses everything, it
+may be observed that these signs, of which the origin seems so
+whimsical to many Paris merchants, are the dead pictures of once
+living pictures by which our roguish ancestors contrived to tempt
+customers into their houses. Thus the Spinning Sow, the Green Monkey,
+and others, were animals in cages whose skills astonished the passer-
+by, and whose accomplishments prove the patience of the fifteenth-
+century artisan. Such curiosities did more to enrich their fortunate
+owners than the signs of "Providence," "Good-faith," Grace of God,"
+and "Decapitation of John the Baptist," which may still be seen in the
+Rue Saint-Denis.
+
+However, our stranger was certainly not standing there to admire the
+cat, which a minute's attention sufficed to stamp on his memory. The
+young man himself had his peculiarities. His cloak, folded after the
+manner of an antique drapery, showed a smart pair of shoes, all the
+more remarkable in the midst of the Paris mud, because he wore white
+silk stockings, on which the splashes betrayed his impatience. He had
+just come, no doubt, from a wedding or a ball; for at this early hour
+he had in his hand a pair of white gloves, and his black hair, now out
+of curl, and flowing over his shoulders, showed that it had been
+dressed /a la Caracalla/, a fashion introduced as much by David's
+school of painting as by the mania for Greek and Roman styles which
+characterized the early years of this century.
+
+In spite of the noise made by a few market gardeners, who, being late,
+rattled past towards the great market-place at a gallop, the busy
+street lay in a stillness of which the magic charm is known only to
+those who have wandered through deserted Paris at the hours when its
+roar, hushed for a moment, rises and spreads in the distance like the
+great voice of the sea. This strange young man must have seemed as
+curious to the shopkeeping folk of the "Cat and Racket" as the "Cat
+and Racket" was to him. A dazzlingly white cravat made his anxious
+face look even paler than it really was. The fire that flashed in his
+black eyes, gloomy and sparkling by turns, was in harmony with the
+singular outline of his features, with his wide, flexible mouth,
+hardened into a smile. His forehead, knit with violent annoyance, had
+a stamp of doom. Is not the forehead the most prophetic feature of a
+man? When the stranger's brow expressed passion the furrows formed in
+it were terrible in their strength and energy; but when he recovered
+his calmness, so easily upset, it beamed with a luminous grace which
+gave great attractiveness to a countenance in which joy, grief, love,
+anger, or scorn blazed out so contagiously that the coldest man could
+not fail to be impressed.
+
+He was so thoroughly vexed by the time when the dormer-window of the
+loft was suddenly flung open, that he did not observe the apparition
+of three laughing faces, pink and white and chubby, but as vulgar as
+the face of Commerce as it is seen in sculpture on certain monuments.
+These three faces, framed by the window, recalled the puffy cherubs
+floating among the clouds that surround God the Father. The
+apprentices snuffed up the exhalations of the street with an eagerness
+that showed how hot and poisonous the atmosphere of their garret must
+be. After pointing to the singular sentinel, the most jovial, as he
+seemed, of the apprentices retired and came back holding an instrument
+whose hard metal pipe is now superseded by a leather tube; and they
+all grinned with mischief as they looked down on the loiterer, and
+sprinkled him with a fine white shower of which the scent proved that
+three chins had just been shaved. Standing on tiptoe, in the farthest
+corner of their loft, to enjoy their victim's rage, the lads ceased
+laughing on seeing the haughty indifference with which the young man
+shook his cloak, and the intense contempt expressed by his face as he
+glanced up at the empty window-frame.
+
+At this moment a slender white hand threw up the lower half of one of
+the clumsy windows on the third floor by the aid of the sash runners,
+of which the pulley so often suddenly gives way and releases the heavy
+panes it ought to hold up. The watcher was then rewarded for his long
+waiting. The face of a young girl appeared, as fresh as one of the
+white cups that bloom on the bosom of the waters, crowned by a frill
+of tumbled muslin, which gave her head a look of exquisite innocence.
+Though wrapped in brown stuff, her neck and shoulders gleamed here and
+there through little openings left by her movements in sleep. No
+expression of embarrassment detracted from the candor of her face, or
+the calm look of eyes immortalized long since in the sublime works of
+Raphael; here were the same grace, the same repose as in those
+Virgins, and now proverbial. There was a delightful contrast between
+the cheeks of that face on which sleep had, as it were, given high
+relief to a superabundance of life, and the antiquity of the heavy
+window with its clumsy shape and black sill. Like those day-blowing
+flowers, which in the early morning have not yet unfurled their cups,
+twisted by the chills of night, the girl, as yet hardly awake, let her
+blue eyes wander beyond the neighboring roofs to look at the sky;
+then, from habit, she cast them down on the gloomy depths of the
+street, where they immediately met those of her adorer. Vanity, no
+doubt, distressed her at being seen in undress; she started back, the
+worn pulley gave way, and the sash fell with the rapid run, which in
+our day has earned for this artless invention of our forefathers an
+odious name, /Fenetre a la Guillotine/. The vision had disappeared. To
+the young man the most radiant star of morning seemed to be hidden by
+a cloud.
+
+During these little incidents the heavy inside shutters that protected
+the slight windows of the shop of the "Cat and Racket" had been
+removed as if by magic. The old door with its knocker was opened back
+against the wall of the entry by a man-servant, apparently coeval with
+the sign, who, with a shaking hand, hung upon it a square of cloth, on
+which were embroidered in yellow silk the words: "Guillaume, successor
+to Chevrel." Many a passer-by would have found it difficult to guess
+the class of trade carried on by Monsieur Guillaume. Between the
+strong iron bars which protected his shop windows on the outside,
+certain packages, wrapped in brown linen, were hardly visible, though
+as numerous as herrings swimming in a shoal. Notwithstanding the
+primitive aspect of the Gothic front, Monsieur Guillaume, of all the
+merchant clothiers in Paris, was the one whose stores were always the
+best provided, whose connections were the most extensive, and whose
+commercial honesty never lay under the slightest suspicion. If some of
+his brethren in business made a contract with the Government, and had
+not the required quantity of cloth, he was always ready to deliver it,
+however large the number of pieces tendered for. The wily dealer knew
+a thousand ways of extracting the largest profits without being
+obliged, like them, to court patrons, cringing to them, or making them
+costly presents. When his fellow-tradesmen could only pay in good
+bills of long date, he would mention his notary as an accommodating
+man, and managed to get a second profit out of the bargain, thanks to
+this arrangement, which had made it a proverb among the traders of the
+Rue Saint-Denis: "Heaven preserve you from Monsieur Guillaume's
+notary!" to signify a heavy discount.
+
+The old merchant was to be seen standing on the threshold of his shop,
+as if by a miracle, the instant the servant withdrew. Monsieur
+Guillaume looked at the Rue Saint-Denis, at the neighboring shops, and
+at the weather, like a man disembarking at Havre, and seeing France
+once more after a long voyage. Having convinced himself that nothing
+had changed while he was asleep, he presently perceived the stranger
+on guard, and he, on his part, gazed at the patriarchal draper as
+Humboldt may have scrutinized the first electric eel he saw in
+America. Monsieur Guillaume wore loose black velvet breeches, pepper-
+and-salt stockings, and square toed shoes with silver buckles. His
+coat, with square-cut fronts, square-cut tails, and square-cut collar
+clothed his slightly bent figure in greenish cloth, finished with
+white metal buttons, tawny from wear. His gray hair was so accurately
+combed and flattened over his yellow pate that it made it look like a
+furrowed field. His little green eyes, that might have been pierced
+with a gimlet, flashed beneath arches faintly tinged with red in the
+place of eyebrows. Anxieties had wrinkled his forehead with as many
+horizontal lines as there were creases in his coat. This colorless
+face expressed patience, commercial shrewdness, and the sort of wily
+cupidity which is needful in business. At that time these old families
+were less rare than they are now, in which the characteristic habits
+and costume of their calling, surviving in the midst of more recent
+civilization, were preserved as cherished traditions, like the
+antediluvian remains found by Cuvier in the quarries.
+
+The head of the Guillaume family was a notable upholder of ancient
+practices; he might be heard to regret the Provost of Merchants, and
+never did he mention a decision of the Tribunal of Commerce without
+calling it the /Sentence of the Consuls/. Up and dressed the first of
+the household, in obedience, no doubt, to these old customs, he stood
+sternly awaiting the appearance of his three assistants, ready to
+scold them in case they were late. These young disciples of Mercury
+knew nothing more terrible than the wordless assiduity with which the
+master scrutinized their faces and their movements on Monday in search
+of evidence or traces of their pranks. But at this moment the old
+clothier paid no heed to his apprentices; he was absorbed in trying to
+divine the motive of the anxious looks which the young man in silk
+stockings and a cloak cast alternately at his signboard and into the
+depths of his shop. The daylight was now brighter, and enabled the
+stranger to discern the cashier's corner enclosed by a railing and
+screened by old green silk curtains, where were kept the immense
+ledgers, the silent oracles of the house. The too inquisitive gazer
+seemed to covet this little nook, and to be taking the plan of a
+dining-room at one side, lighted by a skylight, whence the family at
+meals could easily see the smallest incident that might occur at the
+shop-door. So much affection for his dwelling seemed suspicious to a
+trader who had lived long enough to remember the law of maximum
+prices; Monsieur Guillaume naturally thought that this sinister
+personage had an eye to the till of the Cat and Racket. After quietly
+observing the mute duel which was going on between his master and the
+stranger, the eldest of the apprentices, having seen that the young
+man was stealthily watching the windows of the third floor, ventured
+to place himself on the stone flag where Monsieur Guillaume was
+standing. He took two steps out into the street, raised his head, and
+fancied that he caught sight of Mademoiselle Augustine Guillaume in
+hasty retreat. The draper, annoyed by his assistant's perspicacity,
+shot a side glance at him; but the draper and his amorous apprentice
+were suddenly relieved from the fears which the young man's presence
+had excited in their minds. He hailed a hackney cab on its way to a
+neighboring stand, and jumped into it with an air of affected
+indifference. This departure was a balm to the hearts of the other two
+lads, who had been somewhat uneasy as to meeting the victim of their
+practical joke.
+
+"Well, gentlemen, what ails you that you are standing there with your
+arms folded?" said Monsieur Guillaume to his three neophytes. "In
+former days, bless you, when I was in Master Chevrel's service, I
+should have overhauled more than two pieces of cloth by this time."
+
+"Then it was daylight earlier," said the second assistant, whose duty
+this was.
+
+The old shopkeeper could not help smiling. Though two of these young
+fellows, who were confided to his care by their fathers, rich
+manufacturers at Louviers and at Sedan, had only to ask and to have a
+hundred thousand francs the day when they were old enough to settle in
+life, Guillaume regarded it as his duty to keep them under the rod of
+an old-world despotism, unknown nowadays in the showy modern shops,
+where the apprentices expect to be rich men at thirty. He made them
+work like Negroes. These three assistants were equal to a business
+which would harry ten such clerks as those whose sybaritical tastes
+now swell the columns of the budget. Not a sound disturbed the peace
+of this solemn house, where the hinges were always oiled, and where
+the meanest article of furniture showed the respectable cleanliness
+which reveals strict order and economy. The most waggish of the three
+youths often amused himself by writing the date of its first
+appearance on the Gruyere cheese which was left to their tender
+mercies at breakfast, and which it was their pleasure to leave
+untouched. This bit of mischief, and a few others of the same stamp,
+would sometimes bring a smile on the face of the younger of
+Guillaume's daughters, the pretty maiden who has just now appeared to
+the bewitched man in the street.
+
+Though each of these apprentices, even the eldest, paid a round sum
+for his board, not one of them would have been bold enough to remain
+at the master's table when dessert was served. When Madame Guillaume
+talked of dressing the salad, the hapless youths trembled as they
+thought of the thrift with which her prudent hand dispensed the oil.
+They could never think of spending a night away from the house without
+having given, long before, a plausible reason for such an
+irregularity. Every Sunday, each in his turn, two of them accompanied
+the Guillaume family to Mass at Saint-Leu, and to vespers.
+Mesdemoiselles Virginie and Augustine, simply attired in cotton print,
+each took the arm of an apprentice and walked in front, under the
+piercing eye of their mother, who closed the little family procession
+with her husband, accustomed by her to carry two large prayer-books,
+bound in black morocco. The second apprentice received no salary. As
+for the eldest, whose twelve years of perseverance and discretion had
+initiated him into the secrets of the house, he was paid eight hundred
+francs a year as the reward of his labors. On certain family festivals
+he received as a gratuity some little gift, to which Madame
+Guillaume's dry and wrinkled hand alone gave value--netted purses,
+which she took care to stuff with cotton wool, to show off the fancy
+stitches, braces of the strongest make, or heavy silk stockings.
+Sometimes, but rarely, this prime minister was admitted to share the
+pleasures of the family when they went into the country, or when,
+after waiting for months, they made up their mind to exert the right
+acquired by taking a box at the theatre to command a piece which Paris
+had already forgotten.
+
+As to the other assistants, the barrier of respect which formerly
+divided a master draper from his apprentices was that they would have
+been more likely to steal a piece of cloth than to infringe this
+time-honored etiquette. Such reserve may now appear ridiculous; but
+these old houses were a school of honesty and sound morals. The
+masters adopted their apprentices. The young man's linen was cared
+for, mended, and often replaced by the mistress of the house. If an
+apprentice fell ill, he was the object of truly maternal attention. In
+a case of danger the master lavished his money in calling in the most
+celebrated physicians, for he was not answerable to their parents
+merely for the good conduct and training of the lads. If one of them,
+whose character was unimpeachable, suffered misfortune, these old
+tradesmen knew how to value the intelligence he had displayed, and
+they did not hesitate to entrust the happiness of their daughters to
+men whom they had long trusted with their fortunes. Guillaume was one
+of these men of the old school, and if he had their ridiculous side,
+he had all their good qualities; and Joseph Lebas, the chief
+assistant, an orphan without any fortune, was in his mind destined to
+be the husband of Virginie, his elder daughter. But Joseph did not
+share the symmetrical ideas of his master, who would not for an empire
+have given his second daughter in marriage before the elder. The
+unhappy assistant felt that his heart was wholly given to Mademoiselle
+Augustine, the younger. In order to justify this passion, which had
+grown up in secret, it is necessary to inquire a little further into
+the springs of the absolute government which ruled the old cloth-
+merchant's household.
+
+Guillaume had two daughters. The elder, Mademoiselle Virginie, was the
+very image of her mother. Madame Guillaume, daughter of the Sieur
+Chevrel, sat so upright in the stool behind her desk, that more than
+once she had heard some wag bet that she was a stuffed figure. Her
+long, thin face betrayed exaggerated piety. Devoid of attractions or
+of amiable manners, Madame Guillaume commonly decorated her head--that
+of a woman near on sixty--with a cap of a particular and unvarying
+shape, with long lappets, like that of a widow. In all the
+neighborhood she was known as the "portress nun." Her speech was curt,
+and her movements had the stiff precision of a semaphore. Her eye,
+with a gleam in it like a cat's, seemed to spite the world because she
+was so ugly. Mademoiselle Virginie, brought up, like her younger
+sister, under the domestic rule of her mother, had reached the age of
+eight-and-twenty. Youth mitigated the graceless effect which her
+likeness to her mother sometimes gave to her features, but maternal
+austerity had endowed her with two great qualities which made up for
+everything. She was patient and gentle. Mademoiselle Augustine, who
+was but just eighteen, was not like either her father or her mother.
+She was one of those daughters whose total absence of any physical
+affinity with their parents makes one believe in the adage: "God gives
+children." Augustine was little, or, to describe her more truly,
+delicately made. Full of gracious candor, a man of the world could
+have found no fault in the charming girl beyond a certain meanness of
+gesture or vulgarity of attitude, and sometimes a want of ease. Her
+silent and placid face was full of the transient melancholy which
+comes over all young girls who are too weak to dare to resist their
+mother's will.
+
+The two sisters, always plainly dressed, could not gratify the innate
+vanity of womanhood but by a luxury of cleanliness which became them
+wonderfully, and made them harmonize with the polished counters and
+the shining shelves, on which the old man-servant never left a speck
+of dust, and with the old-world simplicity of all they saw about them.
+As their style of living compelled them to find the elements of
+happiness in persistent work, Augustine and Virginie had hitherto
+always satisfied their mother, who secretly prided herself on the
+perfect characters of her two daughters. It is easy to imagine the
+results of the training they had received. Brought up to a commercial
+life, accustomed to hear nothing but dreary arguments and calculations
+about trade, having studied nothing but grammar, book-keeping, a
+little Bible-history, and the history of France in Le Ragois, and
+never reading any book but what their mother would sanction, their
+ideas had not acquired much scope. They knew perfectly how to keep
+house; they were familiar with the prices of things; they understood
+the difficulty of amassing money; they were economical, and had a
+great respect for the qualities that make a man of business. Although
+their father was rich, they were as skilled in darning as in
+embroidery; their mother often talked of having them taught to cook,
+so that they might know how to order a dinner and scold a cook with
+due knowledge. They knew nothing of the pleasures of the world; and,
+seeing how their parents spent their exemplary lives, they very rarely
+suffered their eyes to wander beyond the walls of their hereditary
+home, which to their mother was the whole universe. The meetings to
+which family anniversaries gave rise filled in the future of earthly
+joy to them.
+
+When the great drawing-room on the second floor was to be prepared to
+receive company--Madame Roguin, a Demoiselle Chevrel, fifteen months
+younger than her cousin, and bedecked with diamonds; young Rabourdin,
+employed in the Finance Office; Monsieur Cesar Birotteau, the rich
+perfumer, and his wife, known as Madame Cesar; Monsieur Camusot, the
+richest silk mercer in the Rue des Bourdonnais, with his father-in-
+law, Monsieur Cardot, two or three old bankers, and some immaculate
+ladies--the arrangements, made necessary by the way in which
+everything was packed away--the plate, the Dresden china, the
+candlesticks, and the glass--made a variety in the monotonous lives of
+the three women, who came and went and exerted themselves as nuns
+would to receive their bishop. Then, in the evening, when all three
+were tired out with having wiped, rubbed, unpacked, and arranged all
+the gauds of the festival, as the girls helped their mother to
+undress, Madame Guillaume would say to them, "Children, we have done
+nothing today."
+
+When, on very great occasions, "the portress nun" allowed dancing,
+restricting the games of boston, whist, and backgammon within the
+limits of her bedroom, such a concession was accounted as the most
+unhoped felicity, and made them happier than going to the great balls,
+to two or three of which Guillaume would take the girls at the time of
+the Carnival.
+
+And once a year the worthy draper gave an entertainment, when he
+spared no expense. However rich and fashionable the persons invited
+might be, they were careful not to be absent; for the most important
+houses on the exchange had recourse to the immense credit, the
+fortune, or the time-honored experience of Monsieur Guillaume. Still,
+the excellent merchant's daughters did not benefit as much as might be
+supposed by the lessons the world has to offer to young spirits. At
+these parties, which were indeed set down in the ledger to the credit
+of the house, they wore dresses the shabbiness of which made them
+blush. Their style of dancing was not in any way remarkable, and their
+mother's surveillance did not allow of their holding any conversation
+with their partners beyond Yes and No. Also, the law of the old sign
+of the Cat and Racket commanded that they should be home by eleven
+o'clock, the hour when balls and fetes begin to be lively. Thus their
+pleasures, which seemed to conform very fairly to their father's
+position, were often made insipid by circumstances which were part of
+the family habits and principles.
+
+As to their usual life, one remark will sufficiently paint it. Madame
+Guillaume required her daughters to be dressed very early in the
+morning, to come down every day at the same hour, and she ordered
+their employments with monastic regularity. Augustine, however, had
+been gifted by chance with a spirit lofty enough to feel the emptiness
+of such a life. Her blue eyes would sometimes be raised as if to
+pierce the depths of that gloomy staircase and those damp store-rooms.
+After sounding the profound cloistral silence, she seemed to be
+listening to remote, inarticulate revelations of the life of passion,
+which accounts feelings as of higher value than things. And at such
+moments her cheek would flush, her idle hands would lay the muslin
+sewing on the polished oak counter, and presently her mother would say
+in a voice, of which even the softest tones were sour, "Augustine, my
+treasure, what are you thinking about?" It is possible that two
+romances discovered by Augustine in the cupboard of a cook Madame
+Guillaume had lately discharged--/Hippolyte Comte de Douglas/ and /Le
+Comte de Comminges/--may have contributed to develop the ideas of the
+young girl, who had devoured them in secret, during the long nights of
+the past winter.
+
+And so Augustine's expression of vague longing, her gentle voice, her
+jasmine skin, and her blue eyes had lighted in poor Lebas' soul a
+flame as ardent as it was reverent. From an easily understood caprice,
+Augustine felt no affection for the orphan; perhaps she did not know
+that he loved her. On the other hand, the senior apprentice, with his
+long legs, his chestnut hair, his big hands and powerful frame, had
+found a secret admirer in Mademoiselle Virginie, who, in spite of her
+dower of fifty thousand crowns, had as yet no suitor. Nothing could be
+more natural than these two passions at cross-purposes, born in the
+silence of the dingy shop, as violets bloom in the depths of a wood.
+The mute and constant looks which made the young people's eyes meet by
+sheer need of change in the midst of persistent work and cloistered
+peace, was sure, sooner or later, to give rise to feelings of love.
+The habit of seeing always the same face leads insensibly to our
+reading there the qualities of the soul, and at last effaces all its
+defects.
+
+"At the pace at which that man goes, our girls will soon have to go on
+their knees to a suitor!" said Monsieur Guillaume to himself, as he
+read the first decree by which Napoleon drew in advance on the
+conscript classes.
+
+From that day the old merchant, grieved at seeing his eldest daughter
+fade, remembered how he had married Mademoiselle Chevrel under much
+the same circumstances as those of Joseph Lebas and Virginie. A good
+bit of business, to marry off his daughter, and discharge a sacred
+debt by repaying to an orphan the benefit he had formerly received
+from his predecessor under similar conditions! Joseph Lebas, who was
+now three-and-thirty, was aware of the obstacle which a difference of
+fifteen years placed between Augustine and himself. Being also too
+clear-sighted not to understand Monsieur Guillaume's purpose, he knew
+his inexorable principles well enough to feel sure that the second
+would never marry before the elder. So the hapless assistant, whose
+heart was as warm as his legs were long and his chest deep, suffered
+in silence.
+
+This was the state of the affairs in the tiny republic which, in the
+heart of the Rue Saint-Denis, was not unlike a dependency of La
+Trappe. But to give a full account of events as well as of feelings,
+it is needful to go back to some months before the scene with which
+this story opens. At dusk one evening, a young man passing the
+darkened shop of the Cat and Racket, had paused for a moment to gaze
+at a picture which might have arrested every painter in the world. The
+shop was not yet lighted, and was as a dark cave beyond which the
+dining-room was visible. A hanging lamp shed the yellow light which
+lends such charm to pictures of the Dutch school. The white linen, the
+silver, the cut glass, were brilliant accessories, and made more
+picturesque by strong contrasts of light and shade. The figures of the
+head of the family and his wife, the faces of the apprentices, and the
+pure form of Augustine, near whom a fat chubby-cheeked maid was
+standing, composed so strange a group; the heads were so singular, and
+every face had so candid an expression; it was so easy to read the
+peace, the silence, the modest way of life in this family, that to an
+artist accustomed to render nature, there was something hopeless in
+any attempt to depict this scene, come upon by chance. The stranger
+was a young painter, who, seven years before, had gained the first
+prize for painting. He had now just come back from Rome. His soul,
+full-fed with poetry; his eyes, satiated with Raphael and Michael
+Angelo, thirsted for real nature after long dwelling in the pompous
+land where art has everywhere left something grandiose. Right or
+wrong, this was his personal feeling. His heart, which had long been a
+prey to the fire of Italian passion, craved one of those modest and
+meditative maidens whom in Rome he had unfortunately seen only in
+painting. From the enthusiasm produced in his excited fancy by the
+living picture before him, he naturally passed to a profound
+admiration for the principal figure; Augustine seemed to be pensive,
+and did not eat; by the arrangement of the lamp the light fell full on
+her face, and her bust seemed to move in a circle of fire, which threw
+up the shape of her head and illuminated it with almost supernatural
+effect. The artist involuntarily compared her to an exiled angel
+dreaming of heaven. An almost unknown emotion, a limpid, seething love
+flooded his heart. After remaining a minute, overwhelmed by the weight
+of his ideas, he tore himself from his bliss, went home, ate nothing,
+and could not sleep.
+
+The next day he went to his studio, and did not come out of it till he
+had placed on canvas the magic of the scene of which the memory had,
+in a sense, made him a devotee; his happiness was incomplete till he
+should possess a faithful portrait of his idol. He went many times
+past the house of the Cat and Racket; he even ventured in once or
+twice, under a disguise, to get a closer view of the bewitching
+creature that Madame Guillaume covered with her wing. For eight whole
+months, devoted to his love and to his brush, he was lost to the sight
+of his most intimate friends forgetting the world, the theatre,
+poetry, music, and all his dearest habits. One morning Girodet broke
+through all the barriers with which artists are familiar, and which
+they know how to evade, went into his room, and woke him by asking,
+"What are you going to send to the Salon?" The artist grasped his
+friend's hand, dragged him off to the studio, uncovered a small easel
+picture and a portrait. After a long and eager study of the two
+masterpieces, Girodet threw himself on his comrade's neck and hugged
+him, without speaking a word. His feelings could only be expressed as
+he felt them--soul to soul.
+
+"You are in love?" said Girodet.
+
+They both knew that the finest portraits by Titian, Raphael, and
+Leonardo da Vinci, were the outcome of the enthusiastic sentiments by
+which, indeed, under various conditions, every masterpiece is
+engendered. The artist only bent his head in reply.
+
+"How happy are you to be able to be in love, here, after coming back
+from Italy! But I do not advise you to send such works as these to the
+Salon," the great painter went on. "You see, these two works will not
+be appreciated. Such true coloring, such prodigious work, cannot yet
+be understood; the public is not accustomed to such depths. The
+pictures we paint, my dear fellow, are mere screens. We should do
+better to turn rhymes, and translate the antique poets! There is more
+glory to be looked for there than from our luckless canvases!"
+
+Notwithstanding this charitable advice, the two pictures were
+exhibited. The /Interior/ made a revolution in painting. It gave birth
+to the pictures of genre which pour into all our exhibitions in such
+prodigious quantity that they might be supposed to be produced by
+machinery. As to the portrait, few artists have forgotten that
+lifelike work; and the public, which as a body is sometimes
+discerning, awarded it the crown which Girodet himself had hung over
+it. The two pictures were surrounded by a vast throng. They fought for
+places, as women say. Speculators and moneyed men would have covered
+the canvas with double napoleons, but the artist obstinately refused
+to sell or to make replicas. An enormous sum was offered him for the
+right of engraving them, and the print-sellers were not more favored
+than the amateurs.
+
+Though these incidents occupied the world, they were not of a nature
+to penetrate the recesses of the monastic solitude in the Rue Saint-
+Denis. However, when paying a visit to Madame Guillaume, the notary's
+wife spoke of the exhibition before Augustine, of whom she was very
+fond, and explained its purpose. Madame Roguin's gossip naturally
+inspired Augustine with a wish to see the pictures, and with courage
+enough to ask her cousin secretly to take her to the Louvre. Her
+cousin succeeded in the negotiations she opened with Madame Guillaume
+for permission to release the young girl for two hours from her dull
+labors. Augustine was thus able to make her way through the crowd to
+see the crowned work. A fit of trembling shook her like an aspen leaf
+as she recognized herself. She was terrified, and looked about her to
+find Madame Roguin, from whom she had been separated by a tide of
+people. At that moment her frightened eyes fell on the impassioned
+face of the young painter. She at once recalled the figure of a
+loiterer whom, being curious, she had frequently observed, believing
+him to be a new neighbor.
+
+"You see how love has inspired me," said the artist in the timid
+creature's ear, and she stood in dismay at the words.
+
+She found supernatural courage to enable her to push through the crowd
+and join her cousin, who was still struggling with the mass of people
+that hindered her from getting to the picture.
+
+"You will be stifled!" cried Augustine. "Let us go."
+
+But there are moments, at the Salon, when two women are not always
+free to direct their steps through the galleries. By the irregular
+course to which they were compelled by the press, Mademoiselle
+Guillaume and her cousin were pushed to within a few steps of the
+second picture. Chance thus brought them, both together, to where they
+could easily see the canvas made famous by fashion, for once in
+agreement with talent. Madame Roguin's exclamation of surprise was
+lost in the hubbub and buzz of the crowd; Augustine involuntarily shed
+tears at the sight of this wonderful study. Then, by an almost
+unaccountable impulse, she laid her finger on her lips, as she
+perceived quite near her the ecstatic face of the young painter. The
+stranger replied by a nod, and pointed to Madame Roguin, as a spoil-
+sport, to show Augustine that he had understood. This pantomime struck
+the young girl like hot coals on her flesh; she felt quite guilty as
+she perceived that there was a compact between herself and the artist.
+The suffocating heat, the dazzling sight of beautiful dresses, the
+bewilderment produced in Augustine's brain by the truth of coloring,
+the multitude of living or painted figures, the profusion of gilt
+frames, gave her a sense of intoxication which doubled her alarms. She
+would perhaps have fainted if an unknown rapture had not surged up in
+her heart to vivify her whole being, in spite of this chaos of
+sensations. She nevertheless believed herself to be under the power of
+the Devil, of whose awful snares she had been warned of by the
+thundering words of preachers. This moment was to her like a moment of
+madness. She found herself accompanied to her cousin's carriage by the
+young man, radiant with joy and love. Augustine, a prey to an
+agitation new to her experience, an intoxication which seemed to
+abandon her to nature, listened to the eloquent voice of her heart,
+and looked again and again at the young painter, betraying the emotion
+that came over her. Never had the bright rose of her cheeks shown in
+stronger contrast with the whiteness of her skin. The artist saw her
+beauty in all its bloom, her maiden modesty in all its glory. She
+herself felt a sort of rapture mingled with terror at thinking that
+her presence had brought happiness to him whose name was on every lip,
+and whose talent lent immortality to transient scenes. She was loved!
+It was impossible to doubt it. When she no longer saw the artist,
+these simple words still echoed in her ear, "You see how love has
+inspired me!" And the throbs of her heart, as they grew deeper, seemed
+a pain, her heated blood revealed so many unknown forces in her being.
+She affected a severe headache to avoid replying to her cousin's
+questions concerning the pictures; but on their return Madame Roguin
+could not forbear from speaking to Madame Guillaume of the fame that
+had fallen on the house of the Cat and Racket, and Augustine quaked in
+every limb as she heard her mother say that she should go to the Salon
+to see her house there. The young girl again declared herself
+suffering, and obtained leave to go to bed.
+
+"That is what comes of sight-seeing," exclaimed Monsieur Guillaume--"a
+headache. And is it so very amusing to see in a picture what you can
+see any day in your own street? Don't talk to me of your artists! Like
+writers, they are a starveling crew. Why the devil need they choose my
+house to flout it in their pictures?"
+
+"It may help to sell a few ells more of cloth," said Joseph Lebas.
+
+This remark did not protect art and thought from being condemned once
+again before the judgment-seat of trade. As may be supposed, these
+speeches did not infuse much hope into Augustine, who, during the
+night, gave herself up to the first meditations of love. The events of
+the day were like a dream, which it was a joy to recall to her mind.
+She was initiated into the fears, the hopes, the remorse, all the ebb
+and flow of feeling which could not fail to toss a heart so simple and
+timid as hers. What a void she perceived in this gloomy house! What a
+treasure she found in her soul! To be the wife of a genius, to share
+his glory! What ravages must such a vision make in the heart of a girl
+brought up among such a family! What hopes must it raise in a young
+creature who, in the midst of sordid elements, had pined for a life of
+elegance! A sunbeam had fallen into the prison. Augustine was suddenly
+in love. So many of her feelings were soothed that she succumbed
+without reflection. At eighteen does not love hold a prism between the
+world and the eyes of a young girl? She was incapable of suspecting
+the hard facts which result from the union of a loving woman with a
+man of imagination, and she believed herself called to make him happy,
+not seeing any disparity between herself and him. To her the future
+would be as the present. When, next day, her father and mother
+returned from the Salon, their dejected faces proclaimed some
+disappointment. In the first place, the painter had removed the two
+pictures; and then Madame Guillaume had lost her cashmere shawl. But
+the news that the pictures had disappeared from the walls since her
+visit revealed to Augustine a delicacy of sentiment which a woman can
+always appreciate, even by instinct.
+
+On the morning when, on his way home from a ball, Theodore de
+Sommervieux--for this was the name which fame had stamped on
+Augustine's heart--had been squirted on by the apprentices while
+awaiting the appearance of his artless little friend, who certainly
+did not know that he was there, the lovers had seen each other for the
+fourth time only since their meeting at the Salon. The difficulties
+which the rule of the house placed in the way of the painter's ardent
+nature gave added violence to his passion for Augustine.
+
+How could he get near to a young girl seated in a counting-house
+between two such women as Mademoiselle Virginie and Madame Guillaume?
+How could he correspond with her when her mother never left her side?
+Ingenious, as lovers are, to imagine woes, Theodore saw a rival in one
+of the assistants, to whose interests he supposed the others to be
+devoted. If he should evade these sons of Argus, he would yet be
+wrecked under the stern eye of the old draper or of Madame Guillaume.
+The very vehemence of his passion hindered the young painter from
+hitting on the ingenious expedients which, in prisoners and in lovers,
+seem to be the last effort of intelligence spurred by a wild craving
+for liberty, or by the fire of love. Theodore wandered about the
+neighborhood with the restlessness of a madman, as though movement
+might inspire him with some device. After racking his imagination, it
+occurred to him to bribe the blowsy waiting-maid with gold. Thus a few
+notes were exchanged at long intervals during the fortnight following
+the ill-starred morning when Monsieur Guillaume and Theodore had so
+scrutinized one another. At the present moment the young couple had
+agreed to see each other at a certain hour of the day, and on Sunday,
+at Saint-Leu, during Mass and vespers. Augustine had sent her dear
+Theodore a list of the relations and friends of the family, to whom
+the young painter tried to get access, in the hope of interesting, if
+it were possible, in his love affairs, one of these souls absorbed in
+money and trade, to whom a genuine passion must appear a quite
+monstrous speculation, a thing unheard-of. Nothing meanwhile, was
+altered at the sign of the Cat and Racket. If Augustine was absent-
+minded, if, against all obedience to the domestic code, she stole up
+to her room to make signals by means of a jar of flowers, if she
+sighed, if she were lost in thought, no one observed it, not even her
+mother. This will cause some surprise to those who have entered into
+the spirit of the household, where an idea tainted with poetry would
+be in startling contrast to persons and things, where no one could
+venture on a gesture or a look which would not be seen and analyzed.
+Nothing, however, could be more natural: the quiet barque that
+navigated the stormy waters of the Paris Exchange, under the flag of
+the Cat and Racket, was just now in the toils of one of these tempests
+which, returning periodically, might be termed equinoctial. For the
+last fortnight the five men forming the crew, with Madame Guillaume
+and Mademoiselle Virginie, had been devoting themselves to the hard
+labor, known as stock-taking.
+
+Every bale was turned over, and the length verified to ascertain the
+exact value of the remnant. The ticket attached to each parcel was
+carefully examined to see at what time the piece had been bought. The
+retail price was fixed. Monsieur Guillaume, always on his feet, his
+pen behind his ear, was like a captain commanding the working of the
+ship. His sharp tones, spoken through a trap-door, to inquire into the
+depths of the hold in the cellar-store, gave utterance to the
+barbarous formulas of trade-jargon, which find expression only in
+cipher. "How much H. N. Z.?"--"All sold."--"What is left of Q. X.?"--
+Two ells."--"At what price?"--"Fifty-five three."--"Set down A. at
+three, with all of J. J., all of M. P., and what is left of V. D. O."
+--A hundred other injunctions equally intelligible were spouted over
+the counters like verses of modern poetry, quoted by romantic spirits,
+to excite each other's enthusiasm for one of their poets. In the
+evening Guillaume, shut up with his assistant and his wife, balanced
+his accounts, carried on the balance, wrote to debtors in arrears, and
+made out bills. All three were busy over this enormous labor, of which
+the result could be stated on a sheet of foolscap, proving to the head
+of the house that there was so much to the good in hard cash, so much
+in goods, so much in bills and notes; that he did not owe a sou; that
+a hundred or two hundred thousand francs were owing to him; that the
+capital had been increased; that the farmlands, the houses, or the
+investments were extended, or repaired, or doubled. Whence it became
+necessary to begin again with increased ardor, to accumulate more
+crown-pieces, without its ever entering the brain of these laborious
+ants to ask--"To what end?"
+
+Favored by this annual turmoil, the happy Augustine escaped the
+investigations of her Argus-eyed relations. At last, one Saturday
+evening, the stock-taking was finished. The figures of the sum-total
+showed a row of 0's long enough to allow Guillaume for once to relax
+the stern rule as to dessert which reigned throughout the year. The
+shrewd old draper rubbed his hands, and allowed his assistants to
+remain at table. The members of the crew had hardly swallowed their
+thimbleful of some home-made liqueur, when the rumble of a carriage
+was heard. The family party were going to see /Cendrillon/ at the
+Varietes, while the two younger apprentices each received a crown of
+six francs, with permission to go wherever they chose, provided they
+were in by midnight.
+
+Notwithstanding this debauch, the old cloth-merchant was shaving
+himself at six next morning, put on his maroon-colored coat, of which
+the glowing lights afforded him perennial enjoyment, fastened a pair
+of gold buckles on the knee-straps of his ample satin breeches; and
+then, at about seven o'clock, while all were still sleeping in the
+house, he made his way to the little office adjoining the shop on the
+first floor. Daylight came in through a window, fortified by iron
+bars, and looking out on a small yard surrounded by such black walls
+that it was very like a well. The old merchant opened the iron-lined
+shutters, which were so familiar to him, and threw up the lower half
+of the sash window. The icy air of the courtyard came in to cool the
+hot atmosphere of the little room, full of the odor peculiar to
+offices.
+
+The merchant remained standing, his hand resting on the greasy arm of
+a large cane chair lined with morocco, of which the original hue had
+disappeared; he seemed to hesitate as to seating himself. He looked
+with affection at the double desk, where his wife's seat, opposite his
+own, was fitted into a little niche in the wall. He contemplated the
+numbered boxes, the files, the implements, the cash box--objects all
+of immemorial origin, and fancied himself in the room with the shade
+of Master Chevrel. He even pulled out the high stool on which he had
+once sat in the presence of his departed master. This stool, covered
+with black leather, the horse-hair showing at every corner--as it had
+long done, without, however, coming out--he placed with a shaking hand
+on the very spot where his predecessor had put it, and then, with an
+emotion difficult to describe, he pulled a bell, which rang at the
+head of Joseph Lebas' bed. When this decisive blow had been struck,
+the old man, for whom, no doubt, these reminiscences were too much,
+took up three or four bills of exchange, and looked at them without
+seeing them.
+
+Suddenly Joseph Lebas stood before him.
+
+"Sit down there," said Guillaume, pointing to the stool.
+
+As the old master draper had never yet bid his assistant be seated in
+his presence, Joseph Lebas was startled.
+
+"What do you think of these notes?" asked Guillaume.
+
+"They will never be paid."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well, I heard the day before yesterday Etienne and Co. had made their
+payments in gold."
+
+"Oh, oh!" said the draper. "Well, one must be very ill to show one's
+bile. Let us speak of something else.--Joseph, the stock-taking is
+done."
+
+"Yes, monsieur, and the dividend is one of the best you have ever
+made."
+
+"Do not use new-fangled words. Say the profits, Joseph. Do you know,
+my boy, that this result is partly owing to you? And I do not intend
+to pay you a salary any longer. Madame Guillaume has suggested to me
+to take you into partnership.--'Guillaume and Lebas;' will not that
+make a good business name? We might add, 'and Co.' to round off the
+firm's signature."
+
+Tears rose to the eyes of Joseph Lebas, who tried to hide them.
+
+"Oh, Monsieur Guillaume, how have I deserved such kindness? I only do
+my duty. It was so much already that you should take an interest in a
+poor orph----"
+
+He was brushing the cuff of his left sleeve with his right hand, and
+dared not look at the old man, who smiled as he thought that this
+modest young fellow no doubt needed, as he had needed once on a time,
+some encouragement to complete his explanation.
+
+"To be sure," said Virginie's father, "you do not altogether deserve
+this favor, Joseph. You have not so much confidence in me as I have in
+you." (The young man looked up quickly.) "You know all the secrets of
+the cash-box. For the last two years I have told you almost all my
+concerns. I have sent you to travel in our goods. In short, I have
+nothing on my conscience as regards you. But you--you have a soft
+place, and you have never breathed a word of it." Joseph Lebas
+blushed. "Ah, ha!" cried Guillaume, "so you thought you could deceive
+an old fox like me? When you knew that I had scented the Lecocq
+bankruptcy?"
+
+"What, monsieur?" replied Joseph Lebas, looking at his master as
+keenly as his master looked at him, "you knew that I was in love?"
+
+"I know everything, you rascal," said the worthy and cunning old
+merchant, pulling the assistant's ear. "And I forgive you--I did the
+same myself."
+
+"And you will give her to me?"
+
+"Yes--with fifty thousand crowns; and I will leave you as much by
+will, and we will start on our new career under the name of a new
+firm. We will do good business yet, my boy!" added the old man,
+getting up and flourishing his arms. "I tell you, son-in-law, there is
+nothing like trade. Those who ask what pleasure is to be found in it
+are simpletons. To be on the scent of a good bargain, to hold your own
+on 'Change, to watch as anxiously as at the gaming-table whether
+Etienne and Co. will fail or no, to see a regiment of Guards march
+past all dressed in your cloth, to trip your neighbor up--honestly of
+course!--to make the goods cheaper than others can; then to carry out
+an undertaking which you have planned, which begins, grows, totters,
+and succeeds! to know the workings of every house of business as well
+as a minister of police, so as never to make a mistake; to hold up
+your head in the midst of wrecks, to have friends by correspondence in
+every manufacturing town; is not that a perpetual game, Joseph? That
+is life, that is! I shall die in that harness, like old Chevrel, but
+taking it easy now, all the same."
+
+In the heat of his eager rhetoric, old Guillaume had scarcely looked
+at his assistant, who was weeping copiously. "Why, Joseph, my poor
+boy, what is the matter?"
+
+"Oh, I love her so! Monsieur Guillaume, that my heart fails me; I
+believe----"
+
+"Well, well, boy," said the old man, touched, "you are happier than
+you know, by God! For she loves you. I know it."
+
+And he blinked his little green eyes as he looked at the young man.
+
+"Mademoiselle Augustine! Mademoiselle Augustine!" exclaimed Joseph
+Lebas in his rapture.
+
+He was about to rush out of the room when he felt himself clutched by
+a hand of iron, and his astonished master spun him round in front of
+him once more.
+
+"What has Augustine to do with this matter?" he asked, in a voice
+which instantly froze the luckless Joseph.
+
+"Is it not she that--that--I love?" stammered the assistant.
+
+Much put out by his own want of perspicacity, Guillaume sat down
+again, and rested his long head in his hands to consider the
+perplexing situation in which he found himself. Joseph Lebas,
+shamefaced and in despair, remained standing.
+
+"Joseph," the draper said with frigid dignity, "I was speaking of
+Virginie. Love cannot be made to order, I know. I know, too, that you
+can be trusted. We will forget all this. I will not let Augustine
+marry before Virginie.--Your interest will be ten per cent."
+
+The young man, to whom love gave I know not what power of courage and
+eloquence, clasped his hand, and spoke in his turn--spoke for a
+quarter of an hour, with so much warmth and feeling, that he altered
+the situation. If the question had been a matter of business the old
+tradesman would have had fixed principles to guide his decision; but,
+tossed a thousand miles from commerce, on the ocean of sentiment,
+without a compass, he floated, as he told himself, undecided in the
+face of such an unexpected event. Carried away by his fatherly
+kindness, he began to beat about the bush.
+
+"Deuce take it, Joseph, you must know that there are ten years between
+my two children. Mademoiselle Chevrel was no beauty, still she has had
+nothing to complain of in me. Do as I did. Come, come, don't cry. Can
+you be so silly? What is to be done? It can be managed perhaps. There
+is always some way out of a scrape. And we men are not always devoted
+Celadons to our wives--you understand? Madame Guillaume is very pious.
+. . . Come. By Gad, boy, give your arm to Augustine this morning as we
+go to Mass."
+
+These were the phrases spoken at random by the old draper, and their
+conclusion made the lover happy. He was already thinking of a friend
+of his as a match for Mademoiselle Virginie, as he went out of the
+smoky office, pressing his future father-in-law's hand, after saying
+with a knowing look that all would turn out for the best.
+
+"What will Madame Guillaume say to it?" was the idea that greatly
+troubled the worthy merchant when he found himself alone.
+
+At breakfast Madame Guillaume and Virginie, to whom the draper had not
+yet confided his disappointment, cast meaning glances at Joseph Lebas,
+who was extremely embarrassed. The young assistant's bashfulness
+commended him to his mother-in-law's good graces. The matron became so
+cheerful that she smiled as she looked at her husband, and allowed
+herself some little pleasantries of time-honored acceptance in such
+simple families. She wondered whether Joseph or Virginie were the
+taller, to ask them to compare their height. This preliminary fooling
+brought a cloud to the master's brow, and he even made such a point of
+decorum that he desired Augustine to take the assistant's arm on their
+way to Saint-Leu. Madame Guillaume, surprised at this manly delicacy,
+honored her husband with a nod of approval. So the procession left the
+house in such order as to suggest no suspicious meaning to the
+neighbors.
+
+"Does it not seem to you, Mademoiselle Augustine," said the assistant,
+and he trembled, "that the wife of a merchant whose credit is as good
+as Monsieur Guillaume's, for instance, might enjoy herself a little
+more than Madame your mother does? Might wear diamonds--or keep a
+carriage? For my part, if I were to marry, I should be glad to take
+all the work, and see my wife happy. I would not put her into the
+counting-house. In the drapery business, you see, a woman is not so
+necessary now as formerly. Monsieur Guillaume was quite right to act
+as he did--and besides, his wife liked it. But so long as a woman
+knows how to turn her hand to the book-keeping, the correspondence,
+the retail business, the orders, and her housekeeping, so as not to
+sit idle, that is enough. At seven o'clock, when the shop is shut, I
+shall take my pleasures, go to the play, and into company.--But you
+are not listening to me."
+
+"Yes, indeed, Monsieur Joseph. What do you think of painting? That is
+a fine calling."
+
+"Yes. I know a master house-painter, Monsieur Lourdois. He is well-to-
+do."
+
+Thus conversing, the family reached the Church of Saint-Leu. There
+Madame Guillaume reasserted her rights, and, for the first time,
+placed Augustine next herself, Virginie taking her place on the fourth
+chair, next to Lebas. During the sermon all went well between
+Augustine and Theodore, who, standing behind a pillar, worshiped his
+Madonna with fervent devotion; but at the elevation of the Host,
+Madame Guillaume discovered, rather late, that her daughter Augustine
+was holding her prayer-book upside down. She was about to speak to her
+strongly, when, lowering her veil, she interrupted her own devotions
+to look in the direction where her daughter's eyes found attraction.
+By the help of her spectacles she saw the young artist, whose
+fashionable elegance seemed to proclaim him a cavalry officer on leave
+rather than a tradesman of the neighborhood. It is difficult to
+conceive of the state of violent agitation in which Madame Guillaume
+found herself--she, who flattered herself on having brought up her
+daughters to perfection--on discovering in Augustine a clandestine
+passion of which her prudery and ignorance exaggerated the perils. She
+believed her daughter to be cankered to the core.
+
+"Hold your book right way up, miss," she muttered in a low voice,
+tremulous with wrath. She snatched away the tell-tale prayer-book and
+returned it with the letter-press right way up. "Do not allow your
+eyes to look anywhere but at your prayers," she added, "or I shall
+have something to say to you. Your father and I will talk to you after
+church."
+
+These words came like a thunderbolt on poor Augustine. She felt faint;
+but, torn between the distress she felt and the dread of causing a
+commotion in church she bravely concealed her anguish. It was,
+however, easy to discern the stormy state of her soul from the
+trembling of her prayer-book, and the tears which dropped on every
+page she turned. From the furious glare shot at him by Madame
+Guillaume the artist saw the peril into which his love affair had
+fallen; he went out, with a raging soul, determined to venture all.
+
+"Go to your room, miss!" said Madame Guillaume, on their return home;
+"we will send for you, but take care not to quit it."
+
+The conference between the husband and wife was conducted so secretly
+that at first nothing was heard of it. Virginie, however, who had
+tried to give her sister courage by a variety of gentle remonstrances,
+carried her good nature so far as to listen at the door of her
+mother's bedroom where the discussion was held, to catch a word or
+two. The first time she went down to the lower floor she heard her
+father exclaim, "Then, madame, do you wish to kill your daughter?"
+
+"My poor dear!" said Virginie, in tears, "papa takes your part."
+
+"And what do they want to do to Theodore?" asked the innocent girl.
+
+Virginie, inquisitive, went down again; but this time she stayed
+longer; she learned that Joseph Lebas loved Augustine. It was written
+that on this memorable day, this house, generally so peaceful, should
+be a hell. Monsieur Guillaume brought Joseph Lebas to despair by
+telling him of Augustine's love for a stranger. Lebas, who had advised
+his friend to become a suitor for Mademoiselle Virginie, saw all his
+hopes wrecked. Mademoiselle Virginie, overcome by hearing that Joseph
+had, in a way, refused her, had a sick headache. The dispute that had
+arisen from the discussion between Monsieur and Madame Guillaume,
+when, for the third time in their lives, they had been of antagonistic
+opinions, had shown itself in a terrible form. Finally, at half-past
+four in the afternoon, Augustine, pale, trembling, and with red eyes,
+was haled before her father and mother. The poor child artlessly
+related the too brief tale of her love. Reassured by a speech from her
+father, who promised to listen to her in silence, she gathered courage
+as she pronounced to her parents the name of Theodore de Sommervieux,
+with a mischievous little emphasis on the aristocratic /de/. And
+yielding to the unknown charm of talking of her feelings, she was
+brave enough to declare with innocent decision that she loved Monsieur
+de Sommervieux, that she had written to him, and she added, with tears
+in her eyes: "To sacrifice me to another man would make me wretched."
+
+"But, Augustine, you cannot surely know what a painter is?" cried her
+mother with horror.
+
+"Madame Guillaume!" said the old man, compelling her to silence.--
+"Augustine," he went on, "artists are generally little better than
+beggars. They are too extravagant not to be always a bad sort. I
+served the late Monsieur Joseph Vernet, the late Monsieur Lekain, and
+the late Monsieur Noverre. Oh, if you could only know the tricks
+played on poor Father Chevrel by that Monsieur Noverre, by the
+Chevalier de Saint-Georges, and especially by Monsieur Philidor! They
+are a set of rascals; I know them well! They all have a gab and nice
+manners. Ah, your Monsieur Sumer--, Somm----"
+
+"De Sommervieux, papa."
+
+"Well, well, de Sommervieux, well and good. He can never have been
+half so sweet to you as Monsieur le Chevalier de Saint-Georges was to
+me the day I got a verdict of the consuls against him. And in those
+days they were gentlemen of quality."
+
+"But, father, Monsieur Theodore is of good family, and he wrote me
+that he is rich; his father was called Chevalier de Sommervieux before
+the Revolution."
+
+At these words Monsieur Guillaume looked at his terrible better half,
+who, like an angry woman, sat tapping the floor with her foot while
+keeping sullen silence; she avoided even casting wrathful looks at
+Augustine, appearing to leave to Monsieur Guillaume the whole
+responsibility in so grave a matter, since her opinion was not
+listened to. Nevertheless, in spite of her apparent self-control, when
+she saw her husband giving way so mildly under a catastrophe which had
+no concern with business, she exclaimed:
+
+"Really, monsieur, you are so weak with your daughters! However----"
+
+The sound of a carriage, which stopped at the door, interrupted the
+rating which the old draper already quaked at. In a minute Madame
+Roguin was standing in the middle of the room, and looking at the
+actors in this domestic scene: "I know all, my dear cousin," said she,
+with a patronizing air.
+
+Madame Roguin made the great mistake of supposing that a Paris
+notary's wife could play the part of a favorite of fashion.
+
+"I know all," she repeated, "and I have come into Noah's Ark, like the
+dove, with the olive-branch. I read that allegory in the /Genie du
+Christianisme/," she added, turning to Madame Guillaume; "the allusion
+ought to please you, cousin. Do you know," she went on, smiling at
+Augustine, "that Monsieur de Sommervieux is a charming man? He gave me
+my portrait this morning, painted by a master's hand. It is worth at
+least six thousand francs." And at these words she patted Monsieur
+Guillaume on the arm. The old draper could not help making a grimace
+with his lips, which was peculiar to him.
+
+"I know Monsieur de Sommervieux very well," the Dove ran on. "He has
+come to my evenings this fortnight past, and made them delightful. He
+has told me all his woes, and commissioned me to plead for him. I know
+since this morning that he adores Augustine, and he shall have her.
+Ah, cousin, do not shake your head in refusal. He will be created
+Baron, I can tell you, and has just been made Chevalier of the Legion
+of Honor, by the Emperor himself, at the Salon. Roguin is now his
+lawyer, and knows all his affairs. Well! Monsieur de Sommervieux has
+twelve thousand francs a year in good landed estate. Do you know that
+the father-in-law of such a man may get a rise in life--be mayor of
+his /arrondissement/, for instance. Have we not seen Monsieur Dupont
+become a Count of the Empire, and a senator, all because he went as
+mayor to congratulate the Emperor on his entry into Vienna? Oh, this
+marriage must take place! For my part, I adore the dear young man. His
+behavior to Augustine is only met with in romances. Be easy, little
+one, you shall be happy, and every girl will wish she were in your
+place. Madame la Duchesse de Carigliano, who comes to my 'At Homes,'
+raves about Monsieur de Sommervieux. Some spiteful people say she only
+comes to me to meet him; as if a duchesse of yesterday was doing too
+much honor to a Chevrel, whose family have been respected citizens
+these hundred years!
+
+"Augustine," Madame Roguin went on, after a short pause, "I have seen
+the portrait. Heavens! How lovely it is! Do you know that the Emperor
+wanted to have it? He laughed, and said to the Deputy High Constable
+that if there were many women like that in his court while all the
+kings visited it, he should have no difficulty about preserving the
+peace of Europe. Is not that a compliment?"
+
+The tempests with which the day had begun were to resemble those of
+nature, by ending in clear and serene weather. Madame Roguin displayed
+so much address in her harangue, she was able to touch so many strings
+in the dry hearts of Monsieur and Madame Guillaume, that at last she
+hit on one which she could work upon. At this strange period commerce
+and finance were more than ever possessed by the crazy mania for
+seeking alliance with rank; and the generals of the Empire took full
+advantage of this desire. Monsieur Guillaume, as a singular exception,
+opposed this deplorable craving. His favorite axioms were that, to
+secure happiness, a woman must marry a man of her own class; that
+every one was punished sooner or later for having climbed too high;
+that love could so little endure under the worries of a household,
+that both husband and wife needed sound good qualities to be happy,
+that it would not do for one to be far in advance of the other,
+because, above everything, they must understand each other; if a man
+spoke Greek and his wife Latin, they might come to die of hunger. He
+had himself invented this sort of adage. And he compared such
+marriages to old-fashioned materials of mixed silk and wool. Still,
+there is so much vanity at the bottom of man's heart that the prudence
+of the pilot who steered the Cat and Racket so wisely gave way before
+Madame Roguin's aggressive volubility. Austere Madame Guillaume was
+the first to see in her daughter's affection a reason for abdicating
+her principles and for consenting to receive Monsieur de Sommervieux,
+whom she promised herself she would put under severe inquisition.
+
+The old draper went to look for Joseph Lebas, and inform him of the
+state of affairs. At half-past six, the dining-room immortalized by
+the artist saw, united under its skylight, Monsieur and Madame Roguin,
+the young painter and his charming Augustine, Joseph Lebas, who found
+his happiness in patience, and Mademoiselle Virginie, convalescent
+from her headache. Monsieur and Madame Guillaume saw in perspective
+both their children married, and the fortunes of the Cat and Racket
+once more in skilful hands. Their satisfaction was at its height when,
+at dessert, Theodore made them a present of the wonderful picture
+which they had failed to see, representing the interior of the old
+shop, and to which they all owed so much happiness.
+
+"Isn't it pretty!" cried Guillaume. "And to think that any one would
+pay thirty thousand francs for that!"
+
+"Because you can see my lappets in it," said Madame Guillaume.
+
+"And the cloth unrolled!" added Lebas; "you might take it up in your
+hand."
+
+"Drapery always comes out well," replied the painter. "We should be
+only too happy, we modern artists, if we could touch the perfection of
+antique drapery."
+
+"So you like drapery!" cried old Guillaume. "Well, then, by Gad! shake
+hands on that, my young friend. Since you can respect trade, we shall
+understand each other. And why should it be despised? The world began
+with trade, since Adam sold Paradise for an apple. He did not strike a
+good bargain though!" And the old man roared with honest laughter,
+encouraged by the champagne, which he sent round with a liberal hand.
+The band that covered the young artist's eyes was so thick that he
+thought his future parents amiable. He was not above enlivening them
+by a few jests in the best taste. So he too pleased every one. In the
+evening, when the drawing-room, furnished with what Madame Guillaume
+called "everything handsome," was deserted, and while she flitted from
+the table to the chimney-piece, from the candelabra to the tall
+candlesticks, hastily blowing out the wax-lights, the worthy draper,
+who was always clear-sighted when money was in question, called
+Augustine to him, and seating her on his knee, spoke as follows:--
+
+"My dear child, you shall marry your Sommervieux since you insist; you
+may, if you like, risk your capital in happiness. But I am not going
+to be hoodwinked by the thirty thousand francs to be made by spoiling
+good canvas. Money that is lightly earned is lightly spent. Did I not
+hear that hare-brained youngster declare this evening that money was
+made round that it might roll. If it is round for spendthrifts, it is
+flat for saving folks who pile it up. Now, my child, that fine
+gentleman talks of giving you carriages and diamonds! He has money,
+let him spend it on you; so be it. It is no concern of mine. But as to
+what I can give you, I will not have the crown-pieces I have picked up
+with so much toil wasted in carriages and frippery. Those who spend
+too fast never grow rich. A hundred thousand crowns, which is your
+fortune, will not buy up Paris. It is all very well to look forward to
+a few hundred thousand francs to be yours some day; I shall keep you
+waiting for them as long as possible, by Gad! So I took your lover
+aside, and a man who managed the Lecocq bankruptcy had not much
+difficulty in persuading the artist to marry under a settlement of his
+wife's money on herself. I will keep an eye on the marriage contract
+to see that what he is to settle on you is safely tied up. So now, my
+child, I hope to be a grandfather, by Gad! I will begin at once to lay
+up for my grandchildren; but swear to me, here and now, never to sign
+any papers relating to money without my advice; and if I go soon to
+join old Father Chevrel, promise to consult young Lebas, your brother-
+in-law."
+
+"Yes, father, I swear it."
+
+At these words, spoken in a gentle voice, the old man kissed his
+daughter on both cheeks. That night the lovers slept as soundly as
+Monsieur and Madame Guillaume.
+
+
+
+Some few months after this memorable Sunday the high altar of Saint-
+Leu was the scene of two very different weddings. Augustine and
+Theodore appeared in all the radiance of happiness, their eyes beaming
+with love, dressed with elegance, while a fine carriage waited for
+them. Virginie, who had come in a good hired fly with the rest of the
+family, humbly followed her younger sister, dressed in the simplest
+fashion like a shadow necessary to the harmony of the picture.
+Monsieur Guillaume had exerted himself to the utmost in the church to
+get Virginie married before Augustine, but the priests, high and low,
+persisted in addressing the more elegant of the two brides. He heard
+some of his neighbors highly approving the good sense of Mademoiselle
+Virginie, who was making, as they said, the more substantial match,
+and remaining faithful to the neighborhood; while they fired a few
+taunts, prompted by envy of Augustine, who was marrying an artist and
+a man of rank; adding, with a sort of dismay, that if the Guillaumes
+were ambitious, there was an end to the business. An old fan-maker
+having remarked that such a prodigal would soon bring his wife to
+beggary, father Guillaume prided himself /in petto/ for his prudence
+in the matter of marriage settlements. In the evening, after a
+splendid ball, followed by one of those substantial suppers of which
+the memory is dying out in the present generation, Monsieur and Madame
+Guillaume remained in a fine house belonging to them in the Rue du
+Colombier, where the wedding had been held; Monsieur and Madame Lebas
+returned in their fly to the old home in the Rue Saint-Denis, to steer
+the good ship Cat and Racket. The artist, intoxicated with happiness,
+carried off his beloved Augustine, and eagerly lifting her out of
+their carriage when it reached the Rue des Trois-Freres, led her to an
+apartment embellished by all the arts.
+
+The fever of passion which possessed Theodore made a year fly over the
+young couple without a single cloud to dim the blue sky under which
+they lived. Life did not hang heavy on the lovers' hands. Theodore
+lavished on every day inexhaustible /fioriture/ of enjoyment, and he
+delighted to vary the transports of passion by the soft languor of
+those hours of repose when souls soar so high that they seem to have
+forgotten all bodily union. Augustine was too happy for reflection;
+she floated on an undulating tide of rapture; she thought she could
+not do enough by abandoning herself to sanctioned and sacred married
+love; simple and artless, she had no coquetry, no reserves, none of
+the dominion which a worldly-minded girl acquires over her husband by
+ingenious caprice; she loved too well to calculate for the future, and
+never imagined that so exquisite a life could come to an end. Happy in
+being her husband's sole delight, she believed that her
+inextinguishable love would always be her greatest grace in his eyes,
+as her devotion and obedience would be a perennial charm. And, indeed,
+the ecstasy of love had made her so brilliantly lovely that her beauty
+filled her with pride, and gave her confidence that she could always
+reign over a man so easy to kindle as Monsieur de Sommervieux. Thus
+her position as a wife brought her no knowledge but the lessons of
+love.
+
+In the midst of her happiness, she was still the simple child who had
+lived in obscurity in the Rue Saint-Denis, and who never thought of
+acquiring the manners, the information, the tone of the world she had
+to live in. Her words being the words of love, she revealed in them,
+no doubt, a certain pliancy of mind and a certain refinement of
+speech; but she used the language common to all women when they find
+themselves plunged in passion, which seems to be their element. When,
+by chance, Augustine expressed an idea that did not harmonize with
+Theodore's, the young artist laughed, as we laugh at the first
+mistakes of a foreigner, though they end by annoying us if they are
+not corrected.
+
+In spite of all this love-making, by the end of this year, as
+delightful as it was swift, Sommervieux felt one morning the need for
+resuming his work and his old habits. His wife was expecting their
+first child. He saw some friends again. During the tedious discomforts
+of the year when a young wife is nursing an infant for the first time,
+he worked, no doubt, with zeal, but he occasionally sought diversion
+in the fashionable world. The house which he was best pleased to
+frequent was that of the Duchesse de Carigliano, who had at last
+attracted the celebrated artist to her parties. When Augustine was
+quite well again, and her boy no longer required the assiduous care
+which debars a mother from social pleasures, Theodore had come to the
+stage of wishing to know the joys of satisfied vanity to be found in
+society by a man who shows himself with a handsome woman, the object
+of envy and admiration.
+
+To figure in drawing-rooms with the reflected lustre of her husband's
+fame, and to find other women envious of her, was to Augustine a new
+harvest of pleasures; but it was the last gleam of conjugal happiness.
+She first wounded her husband's vanity when, in spite of vain efforts,
+she betrayed her ignorance, the inelegance of her language, and the
+narrowness of her ideas. Sommervieux's nature, subjugated for nearly
+two years and a half by the first transports of love, now, in the calm
+of less new possession, recovered its bent and habits, for a while
+diverted from their channel. Poetry, painting, and the subtle joys of
+imagination have inalienable rights over a lofty spirit. These
+cravings of a powerful soul had not been starved in Theodore during
+these two years; they had only found fresh pasture. As soon as the
+meadows of love had been ransacked, and the artist had gathered roses
+and cornflowers as the children do, so greedily that he did not see
+that his hands could hold no more, the scene changed. When the painter
+showed his wife the sketches for his finest compositions he heard her
+exclaim, as her father had done, "How pretty!" This tepid admiration
+was not the outcome of conscientious feeling, but of her faith on the
+strength of love.
+
+Augustine cared more for a look than for the finest picture. The only
+sublime she knew was that of the heart. At last Theodore could not
+resist the evidence of the cruel fact--his wife was insensible to
+poetry, she did not dwell in his sphere, she could not follow him in
+all his vagaries, his inventions, his joys and his sorrows; she walked
+groveling in the world of reality, while his head was in the skies.
+Common minds cannot appreciate the perennial sufferings of a being
+who, while bound to another by the most intimate affections, is
+obliged constantly to suppress the dearest flights of his soul, and to
+thrust down into the void those images which a magic power compels him
+to create. To him the torture is all the more intolerable because his
+feeling towards his companion enjoins, as its first law, that they
+should have no concealments, but mingle the aspirations of their
+thought as perfectly as the effusions of their soul. The demands of
+nature are not to be cheated. She is as inexorable as necessity, which
+is, indeed, a sort of social nature. Sommervieux took refuge in the
+peace and silence of his studio, hoping that the habit of living with
+artists might mould his wife and develop in her the dormant germs of
+lofty intelligence which some superior minds suppose must exist in
+every being. But Augustine was too sincerely religious not to take
+fright at the tone of artists. At the first dinner Theodore gave, she
+heard a young painter say, with the childlike lightness, which to her
+was unintelligible, and which redeems a jest from the taint of
+profanity, "But, madame, your Paradise cannot be more beautiful than
+Raphael's Transfiguration!--Well, and I got tired of looking at that."
+
+Thus Augustine came among this sparkling set in a spirit of distrust
+which no one could fail to see. She was a restraint on their freedom.
+Now an artist who feels restraint is pitiless; he stays away, or
+laughs it to scorn. Madame Guillaume, among other absurdities, had an
+excessive notion of the dignity she considered the prerogative of a
+married woman; and Augustine, though she had often made fun of it,
+could not help a slight imitation of her mother's primness. This
+extreme propriety, which virtuous wives do not always avoid, suggested
+a few epigrams in the form of sketches, in which the harmless jest was
+in such good taste that Sommervieux could not take offence; and even
+if they had been more severe, these pleasantries were after all only
+reprisals from his friends. Still, nothing could seem a trifle to a
+spirit so open as Theodore's to impressions from without. A coldness
+insensibly crept over him, and inevitably spread. To attain conjugal
+happiness we must climb a hill whose summit is a narrow ridge, close
+to a steep and slippery descent: the painter's love was falling down
+it. He regarded his wife as incapable of appreciating the moral
+considerations which justified him in his own eyes for his singular
+behavior to her, and believed himself quite innocent in hiding from
+her thoughts she could not enter into, and peccadilloes outside the
+jurisdiction of a /bourgeois/ conscience. Augustine wrapped herself in
+sullen and silent grief. These unconfessed feelings placed a shroud
+between the husband and wife which could not fail to grow thicker day
+by day. Though her husband never failed in consideration for her,
+Augustine could not help trembling as she saw that he kept for the
+outer world those treasures of wit and grace that he formerly would
+lay at her feet. She soon began to find sinister meaning in the
+jocular speeches that are current in the world as to the inconstancy
+of men. She made no complaints, but her demeanor conveyed reproach.
+
+Three years after her marriage this pretty young woman, who dashed
+past in her handsome carriage, and lived in a sphere of glory and
+riches to the envy of heedless folk incapable of taking a just view of
+the situations of life, was a prey to intense grief. She lost her
+color; she reflected; she made comparisons; then sorrow unfolded to
+her the first lessons of experience. She determined to restrict
+herself bravely within the round of duty, hoping that by this generous
+conduct she might sooner or later win back her husband's love. But it
+was not so. When Sommervieux, fired with work, came in from his
+studio, Augustine did not put away her work so quickly but that the
+painter might find his wife mending the household linen, and his own,
+with all the care of a good housewife. She supplied generously and
+without a murmur the money needed for his lavishness; but in her
+anxiety to husband her dear Theodore's fortune, she was strictly
+economical for herself and in certain details of domestic management.
+Such conduct is incompatible with the easy-going habits of artists,
+who, at the end of their life, have enjoyed it so keenly that they
+never inquire into the causes of their ruin.
+
+It is useless to note every tint of shadow by which the brilliant hues
+of their honeymoon were overcast till they were lost in utter
+blackness. One evening poor Augustine, who had for some time heard her
+husband speak with enthusiasm of the Duchesse de Carigliano, received
+from a friend certain malignantly charitable warnings as to the nature
+of the attachment which Sommervieux had formed for this celebrated
+flirt of the Imperial Court. At one-and-twenty, in all the splendor of
+youth and beauty, Augustine saw herself deserted for a woman of
+six-and-thirty. Feeling herself so wretched in the midst of a world of
+festivity which to her was a blank, the poor little thing could no
+longer understand the admiration she excited, or the envy of which she
+was the object. Her face assumed a different expression. Melancholy,
+tinged her features with the sweetness of resignation and the pallor
+of scorned love. Ere long she too was courted by the most fascinating
+men; but she remained lonely and virtuous. Some contemptuous words
+which escaped her husband filled her with incredible despair. A
+sinister flash showed her the breaches which, as a result of her
+sordid education, hindered the perfect union of her soul with
+Theodore's; she loved him well enough to absolve him and condemn
+herself. She shed tears of blood, and perceived, too late, that there
+are /mesalliances/ of the spirit as well as of rank and habits. As she
+recalled the early raptures of their union, she understood the full
+extent of that lost happiness, and accepted the conclusion that so
+rich a harvest of love was in itself a whole life, which only sorrow
+could pay for. At the same time, she loved too truly to lose all hope.
+At one-and-twenty she dared undertake to educate herself, and make her
+imagination, at least, worthy of that she admired. "If I am not a
+poet," thought she, "at any rate, I will understand poetry."
+
+Then, with all the strength of will, all the energy which every woman
+can display when she loves, Madame de Sommervieux tried to alter her
+character, her manners, and her habits; but by dint of devouring books
+and learning undauntedly, she only succeeded in becoming less
+ignorant. Lightness of wit and the graces of conversation are a gift
+of nature, or the fruit of education begun in the cradle. She could
+appreciate music and enjoy it, but she could not sing with taste. She
+understood literature and the beauties of poetry, but it was too late
+to cultivate her refractory memory. She listened with pleasure to
+social conversation, but she could contribute nothing brilliant. Her
+religious notions and home-grown prejudices were antagonistic to the
+complete emancipation of her intelligence. Finally, a foregone
+conclusion against her had stolen into Theodore's mind, and this she
+could not conquer. The artist would laugh, at those who flattered him
+about his wife, and his irony had some foundation; he so overawed the
+pathetic young creature that, in his presence, or alone with him, she
+trembled. Hampered by her too eager desire to please, her wits and her
+knowledge vanished in one absorbing feeling. Even her fidelity vexed
+the unfaithful husband, who seemed to bid her do wrong by stigmatizing
+her virtue as insensibility. Augustine tried in vain to abdicate her
+reason, to yield to her husband's caprices and whims, to devote
+herself to the selfishness of his vanity. Her sacrifices bore no
+fruit. Perhaps they had both let the moment slip when souls may meet
+in comprehension. One day the young wife's too sensitive heart
+received one of those blows which so strain the bonds of feeling that
+they seem to be broken. She withdrew into solitude. But before long a
+fatal idea suggested to her to seek counsel and comfort in the bosom
+of her family.
+
+So one morning she made her way towards the grotesque facade of the
+humble, silent home where she had spent her childhood. She sighed as
+she looked up at the sash-window, whence one day she had sent her
+first kiss to him who now shed as much sorrow as glory on her life.
+Nothing was changed in the cavern, where the drapery business had,
+however, started on a new life. Augustine's sister filled her mother's
+old place at the desk. The unhappy young woman met her brother-in-law
+with his pen behind his ear; he hardly listened to her, he was so full
+of business. The formidable symptoms of stock-taking were visible all
+round him; he begged her to excuse him. She was received coldly enough
+by her sister, who owed her a grudge. In fact, Augustine, in her
+finery, and stepping out of a handsome carriage, had never been to see
+her but when passing by. The wife of the prudent Lebas, imagining that
+want of money was the prime cause of this early call, tried to keep up
+a tone of reserve which more than once made Augustine smile. The
+painter's wife perceived that, apart from the cap and lappets, her
+mother had found in Virginie a successor who could uphold the ancient
+honor of the Cat and Racket. At breakfast she observed certain changes
+in the management of the house which did honor to Lebas' good sense;
+the assistants did not rise before dessert; they were allowed to talk,
+and the abundant meal spoke of ease without luxury. The fashionable
+woman found some tickets for a box at the Francais, where she
+remembered having seen her sister from time to time. Madame Lebas had
+a cashmere shawl over her shoulders, of which the value bore witness
+to her husband's generosity to her. In short, the couple were keeping
+pace with the times. During the two-thirds of the day she spent there,
+Augustine was touched to the heart by the equable happiness, devoid,
+to be sure, of all emotion, but equally free from storms, enjoyed by
+this well-matched couple. They had accepted life as a commercial
+enterprise, in which, above all, they must do credit to the business.
+Not finding any great love in her husband, Virginie had set to work to
+create it. Having by degrees learned to esteem and care for his wife,
+the time that his happiness had taken to germinate was to Joseph Lebas
+a guarantee of its durability. Hence, when Augustine plaintively set
+forth her painful position, she had to face the deluge of commonplace
+morality which the traditions of the Rue Saint-Denis furnished to her
+sister.
+
+"The mischief is done, wife," said Joseph Lebas; "we must try to give
+our sister good advice." Then the clever tradesman ponderously
+analyzed the resources which law and custom might offer Augustine as a
+means of escape at this crisis; he ticketed every argument, so to
+speak, and arranged them in their degrees of weight under various
+categories, as though they were articles of merchandise of different
+qualities; then he put them in the scale, weighed them, and ended by
+showing the necessity for his sister-in-law's taking violent steps
+which could not satisfy the love she still had for her husband; and,
+indeed, the feeling had revived in all its strength when she heard
+Joseph Lebas speak of legal proceedings. Augustine thanked them, and
+returned home even more undecided than she had been before consulting
+them. She now ventured to go to the house in the Rue du Colombier,
+intending to confide her troubles to her father and mother; for she
+was like a sick man who, in his desperate plight, tries every
+prescription, and even puts faith in old wives' remedies.
+
+The old people received their daughter with an effusiveness that
+touched her deeply. Her visit brought them some little change, and
+that to them was worth a fortune. For the last four years they had
+gone their way like navigators without a goal or a compass. Sitting by
+the chimney corner, they would talk over their disasters under the old
+law of /maximum/, of their great investments in cloth, of the way they
+had weathered bankruptcies, and, above all, the famous failure of
+Lecocq, Monsieur Guillaume's battle of Marengo. Then, when they had
+exhausted the tale of lawsuits, they recapitulated the sum total of
+their most profitable stock-takings, and told each other old stories
+of the Saint-Denis quarter. At two o'clock old Guillaume went to cast
+an eye on the business at the Cat and Racket; on his way back he
+called at all the shops, formerly the rivals of his own, where the
+young proprietors hoped to inveigle the old draper into some risky
+discount, which, as was his wont, he never refused point-blank. Two
+good Normandy horses were dying of their own fat in the stables of the
+big house; Madame Guillaume never used them but to drag her on Sundays
+to high Mass at the parish church. Three times a week the worthy
+couple kept open house. By the influence of his son-in-law
+Sommervieux, Monsieur Guillaume had been named a member of the
+consulting board for the clothing of the Army. Since her husband had
+stood so high in office, Madame Guillaume had decided that she must
+receive; her rooms were so crammed with gold and silver ornaments, and
+furniture, tasteless but of undoubted value, that the simplest room in
+the house looked like a chapel. Economy and expense seemed to be
+struggling for the upper hand in every accessory. It was as though
+Monsieur Guillaume had looked to a good investment, even in the
+purchase of a candlestick. In the midst of this bazaar, where splendor
+revealed the owner's want of occupation, Sommervieux's famous picture
+filled the place of honor, and in it Monsieur and Madame Guillaume
+found their chief consolation, turning their eyes, harnessed with eye-
+glasses, twenty times a day on this presentment of their past life, to
+them so active and amusing. The appearance of this mansion and these
+rooms, where everything had an aroma of staleness and mediocrity, the
+spectacle offered by these two beings, cast away, as it were, on a
+rock far from the world and the ideas which are life, startled
+Augustine; she could here contemplate the sequel of the scene of which
+the first part had struck her at the house of Lebas--a life of stir
+without movement, a mechanical and instinctive existence like that of
+the beaver; and then she felt an indefinable pride in her troubles, as
+she reflected that they had their source in eighteen months of such
+happiness as, in her eyes, was worth a thousand lives like this; its
+vacuity seemed to her horrible. However, she concealed this not very
+charitable feeling, and displayed for her parents her newly-acquired
+accomplishments of mind, and the ingratiating tenderness that love had
+revealed to her, disposing them to listen to her matrimonial
+grievances. Old people have a weakness for this kind of confidence.
+Madame Guillaume wanted to know the most trivial details of that alien
+life, which to her seemed almost fabulous. The travels of Baron da la
+Houtan, which she began again and again and never finished, told her
+nothing more unheard-of concerning the Canadian savages.
+
+"What, child, your husband shuts himself into a room with naked women!
+And you are so simple as to believe that he draws them?"
+
+As she uttered this exclamation, the grandmother laid her spectacles
+on a little work-table, shook her skirts, and clasped her hands on her
+knees, raised by a foot-warmer, her favorite pedestal.
+
+"But, mother, all artists are obliged to have models."
+
+"He took good care not to tell us that when he asked leave to marry
+you. If I had known it, I would never had given my daughter to a man
+who followed such a trade. Religion forbids such horrors; they are
+immoral. And at what time of night do you say he comes home?"
+
+"At one o'clock--two----"
+
+The old folks looked at each other in utter amazement.
+
+"Then he gambles?" said Monsieur Guillaume. "In my day only gamblers
+stayed out so late."
+
+Augustine made a face that scorned the accusation.
+
+"He must keep you up through dreadful nights waiting for him," said
+Madame Guillaume. "But you go to bed, don't you? And when he has lost,
+the wretch wakes you."
+
+"No, mamma, on the contrary, he is sometimes in very good spirits. Not
+unfrequently, indeed, when it is fine, he suggests that I should get
+up and go into the woods."
+
+"The woods! At that hour? Then have you such a small set of rooms that
+his bedroom and his sitting-room are not enough, and that he must run
+about? But it is just to give you cold that the wretch proposes such
+expeditions. He wants to get rid of you. Did one ever hear of a man
+settled in life, a well-behaved, quiet man galloping about like a
+warlock?"
+
+"But, my dear mother, you do not understand that he must have
+excitement to fire his genius. He is fond of scenes which----"
+
+"I would make scenes for him, fine scenes!" cried Madame Guillaume,
+interrupting her daughter. "How can you show any consideration to such
+a man? In the first place, I don't like his drinking water only; it is
+not wholesome. Why does he object to see a woman eating? What queer
+notion is that! But he is mad. All you tell us about him is
+impossible. A man cannot leave his home without a word, and never come
+back for ten days. And then he tells you he has been to Dieppe to
+paint the sea. As if any one painted the sea! He crams you with a pack
+of tales that are too absurd."
+
+Augustine opened her lips to defend her husband; but Madame Guillaume
+enjoined silence with a wave of her hand, which she obeyed by a
+survival of habit, and her mother went on in harsh tones: "Don't talk
+to me about the man! He never set foot in church excepting to see you
+and to be married. People without religion are capable of anything.
+Did Guillaume ever dream of hiding anything from me, of spending three
+days without saying a word to me, and of chattering afterwards like a
+blind magpie?"
+
+"My dear mother, you judge superior people too severely. If their
+ideas were the same as other folks', they would not be men of genius."
+
+"Very well, then let men of genius stop at home and not get married.
+What! A man of genius is to make his wife miserable? And because he is
+a genius it is all right! Genius, genius! It is not so very clever to
+say black one minute and white the next, as he does, to interrupt
+other people, to dance such rigs at home, never to let you know which
+foot you are to stand on, to compel his wife never to be amused unless
+my lord is in gay spirits, and to be dull when he is dull."
+
+"But, mother, the very nature of such imaginations----"
+
+"What are such 'imaginations'?" Madame Guillaume went on, interrupting
+her daughter again. "Fine ones his are, my word! What possesses a man
+that all on a sudden, without consulting a doctor, he takes it into
+his head to eat nothing but vegetables? If indeed it were from
+religious motives, it might do him some good--but he has no more
+religion than a Huguenot. Was there ever a man known who, like him,
+loved horses better than his fellow-creatures, had his hair curled
+like a heathen, laid statues under muslin coverlets, shut his shutters
+in broad day to work by lamp-light? There, get along; if he were not
+so grossly immoral, he would be fit to shut up in a lunatic asylum.
+Consult Monsieur Loraux, the priest at Saint Sulpice, ask his opinion
+about it all, and he will tell you that your husband, does not behave
+like a Christian."
+
+"Oh, mother, can you believe----?"
+
+"Yes, I do believe. You loved him, and you can see none of these
+things. But I can remember in the early days after your marriage. I
+met him in the Champs-Elysees. He was on horseback. Well, at one
+minute he was galloping as hard as he could tear, and then pulled up
+to a walk. I said to myself at that moment, 'There is a man devoid of
+judgement.' "
+
+"Ah, ha!" cried Monsieur Guillaume, "how wise I was to have your money
+settled on yourself with such a queer fellow for a husband!"
+
+When Augustine was so imprudent as to set forth her serious grievances
+against her husband, the two old people were speechless with
+indignation. But the word "divorce" was ere long spoken by Madame
+Guillaume. At the sound of the word divorce the apathetic old draper
+seemed to wake up. Prompted by his love for his daughter, and also by
+the excitement which the proceedings would bring into his uneventful
+life, father Guillaume took up the matter. He made himself the leader
+of the application for a divorce, laid down the lines of it, almost
+argued the case; he offered to be at all the charges, to see the
+lawyers, the pleaders, the judges, to move heaven and earth. Madame de
+Sommervieux was frightened, she refused her father's services, said
+she would not be separated from her husband even if she were ten times
+as unhappy, and talked no more about her sorrows. After being
+overwhelmed by her parents with all the little wordless and consoling
+kindnesses by which the old couple tried in vain to make up to her for
+her distress of heart, Augustine went away, feeling the impossibility
+of making a superior mind intelligible to weak intellects. She had
+learned that a wife must hide from every one, even from her parents,
+woes for which it is so difficult to find sympathy. The storms and
+sufferings of the upper spheres are appreciated only by the lofty
+spirits who inhabit there. In any circumstance we can only be judged
+by our equals.
+
+Thus poor Augustine found herself thrown back on the horror of her
+meditations, in the cold atmosphere of her home. Study was indifferent
+to her, since study had not brought her back her husband's heart.
+Initiated into the secret of these souls of fire, but bereft of their
+resources, she was compelled to share their sorrows without sharing
+their pleasures. She was disgusted with the world, which to her seemed
+mean and small as compared with the incidents of passion. In short,
+her life was a failure.
+
+One evening an idea flashed upon her that lighted up her dark grief
+like a beam from heaven. Such an idea could never have smiled on a
+heart less pure, less virtuous than hers. She determined to go to the
+Duchesse de Carigliano, not to ask her to give her back her husband's
+heart, but to learn the arts by which it had been captured; to engage
+the interest of this haughty fine lady for the mother of her lover's
+children; to appeal to her and make her the instrument of her future
+happiness, since she was the cause of her present wretchedness.
+
+So one day Augustine, timid as she was, but armed with supernatural
+courage, got into her carriage at two in the afternoon to try for
+admittance to the boudoir of the famous coquette, who was never
+visible till that hour. Madame de Sommervieux had not yet seen any of
+the ancient and magnificent mansions of the Faubourg Saint-Germain. As
+she made her way through the stately corridors, the handsome
+staircases, the vast drawing-rooms--full of flowers, though it was in
+the depth of winter, and decorated with the taste peculiar to women
+born to opulence or to the elegant habits of the aristocracy,
+Augustine felt a terrible clutch at her heart; she coveted the secrets
+of an elegance of which she had never had an idea; she breathed in an
+air of grandeur which explained the attraction of the house for her
+husband. When she reached the private rooms of the Duchess she was
+filled with jealousy and a sort of despair, as she admired the
+luxurious arrangement of the furniture, the draperies and the
+hangings. Here disorder was a grace, here luxury affected a certain
+contempt of splendor. The fragrance that floated in the warm air
+flattered the sense of smell without offending it. The accessories of
+the rooms were in harmony with a view, through plate-glass windows, of
+the lawns in a garden planted with evergreen trees. It was all
+bewitching, and the art of it was not perceptible. The whole spirit of
+the mistress of these rooms pervaded the drawing-room where Augustine
+awaited her. She tried to divine her rival's character from the aspect
+of the scattered objects; but there was here something as impenetrable
+in the disorder as in the symmetry, and to the simple-minded young
+wife all was a sealed letter. All that she could discern was that, as
+a woman, the Duchess was a superior person. Then a painful thought
+came over her.
+
+"Alas! And is it true," she wondered, "that a simple and loving heart
+is not all-sufficient to an artist; that to balance the weight of
+these powerful souls they need a union with feminine souls of a
+strength equal to their own? If I had been brought up like this siren,
+our weapons at least might have been equal in the hour of struggle."
+
+"But I am not at home!" The sharp, harsh words, though spoken in an
+undertone in the adjoining boudoir, were heard by Augustine, and her
+heart beat violently.
+
+"The lady is in there," replied the maid.
+
+"You are an idiot! Show her in," replied the Duchess, whose voice was
+sweeter, and had assumed the dulcet tones of politeness. She evidently
+now meant to be heard.
+
+Augustine shyly entered the room. At the end of the dainty boudoir she
+saw the Duchess lounging luxuriously on an ottoman covered with brown
+velvet and placed in the centre of a sort of apse outlined by soft
+folds of white muslin over a yellow lining. Ornaments of gilt bronze,
+arranged with exquisite taste, enhanced this sort of dais, under which
+the Duchess reclined like a Greek statue. The dark hue of the velvet
+gave relief to every fascinating charm. A subdued light, friendly to
+her beauty, fell like a reflection rather than a direct illumination.
+A few rare flowers raised their perfumed heads from costly Sevres
+vases. At the moment when this picture was presented to Augustine's
+astonished eyes, she was approaching so noiselessly that she caught a
+glance from those of the enchantress. This look seemed to say to some
+one whom Augustine did not at first perceive, "Stay; you will see a
+pretty woman, and make her visit seem less of a bore."
+
+On seeing Augustine, the Duchess rose and made her sit down by her.
+
+"And to what do I owe the pleasure of this visit, madame?" she said
+with a most gracious smile.
+
+"Why all the falseness?" thought Augustine, replying only with a bow.
+
+Her silence was compulsory. The young woman saw before her a
+superfluous witness of the scene. This personage was, of all the
+Colonels in the army, the youngest, the most fashionable, and the
+finest man. His face, full of life and youth, but already expressive,
+was further enhanced by a small moustache twirled up into points, and
+as black as jet, by a full imperial, by whiskers carefully combed, and
+a forest of black hair in some disorder. He was whisking a riding whip
+with an air of ease and freedom which suited his self-satisfied
+expression and the elegance of his dress; the ribbons attached to his
+button-hole were carelessly tied, and he seemed to pride himself much
+more on his smart appearance than on his courage. Augustine looked at
+the Duchesse de Carigliano, and indicated the Colonel by a sidelong
+glance. All its mute appeal was understood.
+
+"Good-bye, then, Monsieur d'Aiglemont, we shall meet in the Bois de
+Boulogne."
+
+These words were spoken by the siren as though they were the result of
+an agreement made before Augustine's arrival, and she winged them with
+a threatening look that the officer deserved perhaps for the
+admiration he showed in gazing at the modest flower, which contrasted
+so well with the haughty Duchess. The young fop bowed in silence,
+turned on the heels of his boots, and gracefully quitted the boudoir.
+At this instant, Augustine, watching her rival, whose eyes seemed to
+follow the brilliant officer, detected in that glance a sentiment of
+which the transient expression is known to every woman. She perceived
+with the deepest anguish that her visit would be useless; this lady,
+full of artifice, was too greedy of homage not to have a ruthless
+heart.
+
+"Madame," said Augustine in a broken voice, "the step I am about to
+take will seem to you very strange; but there is a madness of despair
+which ought to excuse anything. I understand only too well why
+Theodore prefers your house to any other, and why your mind has so
+much power over his. Alas! I have only to look into myself to find
+more than ample reasons. But I am devoted to my husband, madame. Two
+years of tears have not effaced his image from my heart, though I have
+lost his. In my folly I dared to dream of a contest with you; and I
+have come to you to ask you by what means I may triumph over yourself.
+Oh, madame," cried the young wife, ardently seizing the hand which her
+rival allowed her to hold, "I will never pray to God for my own
+happiness with so much fervor as I will beseech Him for yours, if you
+will help me to win back Sommervieux's regard--I will not say his
+love. I have no hope but in you. Ah! tell me how you could please him,
+and make him forget the first days----" At these words Augustine broke
+down, suffocated with sobs she could not suppress. Ashamed of her
+weakness, she hid her face in her handkerchief, which she bathed with
+tears.
+
+"What a child you are, my dear little beauty!" said the Duchess,
+carried away by the novelty of such a scene, and touched, in spite of
+herself, at receiving such homage from the most perfect virtue perhaps
+in Paris. She took the young wife's handkerchief, and herself wiped
+the tears from her eyes, soothing her by a few monosyllables murmured
+with gracious compassion. After a moment's silence the Duchess,
+grasping poor Augustine's hands in both her own--hands that had a rare
+character of dignity and powerful beauty--said in a gentle and
+friendly voice: "My first warning is to advise you not to weep so
+bitterly; tears are disfiguring. We must learn to deal firmly with the
+sorrows that make us ill, for love does not linger long by a sick-bed.
+Melancholy, at first, no doubt, lends a certain attractive grace, but
+it ends by dragging the features and blighting the loveliest face. And
+besides, our tyrants are so vain as to insist that their slaves should
+be always cheerful."
+
+"But, madame, it is not in my power not to feel. How is it possible,
+without suffering a thousand deaths, to see the face which once beamed
+with love and gladness turn chill, colorless, and indifferent? I
+cannot control my heart!"
+
+"So much the worse, sweet child. But I fancy I know all your story. In
+the first place, if your husband is unfaithful to you, understand
+clearly that I am not his accomplice. If I was anxious to have him in
+my drawing-room, it was, I own, out of vanity; he was famous, and he
+went nowhere. I like you too much already to tell you all the mad
+things he has done for my sake. I will only reveal one, because it may
+perhaps help us to bring him back to you, and to punish him for the
+audacity of his behavior to me. He will end by compromising me. I know
+the world too well, my dear, to abandon myself to the discretion of a
+too superior man. You should know that one may allow them to court
+one, but marry them--that is a mistake! We women ought to admire men
+of genius, and delight in them as a spectacle, but as to living with
+them? Never.--No, no. It is like wanting to find pleasure in
+inspecting the machinery of the opera instead of sitting in a box to
+enjoy its brilliant illusions. But this misfortune has fallen on you,
+my poor child, has it not? Well, then, you must try to arm yourself
+against tyranny."
+
+"Ah, madame, before coming in here, only seeing you as I came in, I
+already detected some arts of which I had no suspicion."
+
+"Well, come and see me sometimes, and it will not be long before you
+have mastered the knowledge of these trifles, important, too, in their
+way. Outward things are, to fools, half of life; and in that matter
+more than one clever man is a fool, in spite of all his talent. But I
+dare wager you never could refuse your Theodore anything!"
+
+"How refuse anything, madame, if one loves a man?"
+
+"Poor innocent, I could adore you for your simplicity. You should know
+that the more we love the less we should allow a man, above all, a
+husband, to see the whole extent of our passion. The one who loves
+most is tyrannized over, and, which is worse, is sooner or later
+neglected. The one who wishes to rule should----"
+
+"What, madame, must I then dissimulate, calculate, become false, form
+an artificial character, and live in it? How is it possible to live in
+such a way? Can you----" she hesitated; the Duchess smiled.
+
+"My dear child," the great lady went on in a serious tone, "conjugal
+happiness has in all times been a speculation, a business demanding
+particular attention. If you persist in talking passion while I am
+talking marriage, we shall soon cease to understand each other. Listen
+to me," she went on, assuming a confidential tone. "I have been in the
+way of seeing some of the superior men of our day. Those who have
+married have for the most part chosen quite insignificant wives. Well,
+those wives governed them, as the Emperor governs us; and if they were
+not loved, they were at least respected. I like secrets--especially
+those which concern women--well enough to have amused myself by
+seeking the clue to the riddle. Well, my sweet child, those worthy
+women had the gift of analyzing their husbands' nature; instead of
+taking fright, like you, at their superiority, they very acutely noted
+the qualities they lacked, and either by possessing those qualities,
+or by feigning to possess them, they found means of making such a
+handsome display of them in their husbands' eyes that in the end they
+impressed them. Also, I must tell you, all these souls which appear so
+lofty have just a speck of madness in them, which we ought to know how
+to take advantage of. By firmly resolving to have the upper hand and
+never deviating from that aim, by bringing all our actions to bear on
+it, all our ideas, our cajolery, we subjugate these eminently
+capricious natures, which, by the very mutability of their thoughts,
+lend us the means of influencing them."
+
+"Good heavens!" cried the young wife in dismay. "And this is life. It
+is a warfare----"
+
+"In which we must always threaten," said the Duchess, laughing. "Our
+power is wholly factitious. And we must never allow a man to despise
+us; it is impossible to recover from such a descent but by odious
+manoeuvring. Come," she added, "I will give you a means of bringing
+your husband to his senses."
+
+She rose with a smile to guide the young and guileless apprentice to
+conjugal arts through the labyrinth of her palace. They came to a
+back-staircase, which led up to the reception rooms. As Madame de
+Carigliano pressed the secret springlock of the door she stopped,
+looking at Augustine with an inimitable gleam of shrewdness and grace.
+"The Duc de Carigliano adores me," said she. "Well, he dare not enter
+by this door without my leave. And he is a man in the habit of
+commanding thousands of soldiers. He knows how to face a battery, but
+before me,--he is afraid!"
+
+Augustine sighed. They entered a sumptuous gallery, where the
+painter's wife was led by the Duchess up to the portrait painted by
+Theodore of Mademoiselle Guillaume. On seeing it, Augustine uttered a
+cry.
+
+"I knew it was no longer in my house," she said, "but--here!----"
+
+"My dear child, I asked for it merely to see what pitch of idiocy a
+man of genius may attain to. Sooner or later I should have returned it
+to you, for I never expected the pleasure of seeing the original here
+face to face with the copy. While we finish our conversation I will
+have it carried down to your carriage. And if, armed with such a
+talisman, you are not your husband's mistress for a hundred years, you
+are not a woman, and you deserve your fate."
+
+Augustine kissed the Duchess' hand, and the lady clasped her to her
+heart, with all the more tenderness because she would forget her by
+the morrow. This scene might perhaps have destroyed for ever the
+candor and purity of a less virtuous woman than Augustine, for the
+astute politics of the higher social spheres were no more consonant to
+Augustine than the narrow reasoning of Joseph Lebas, or Madame
+Guillaume's vapid morality. Strange are the results of the false
+positions into which we may be brought by the slightest mistake in the
+conduct of life! Augustine was like an Alpine cowherd surprised by an
+avalanche; if he hesitates, if he listens to the shouts of his
+comrades, he is almost certainly lost. In such a crisis the heart
+steels itself or breaks.
+
+Madame de Sommervieux returned home a prey to such agitation as it is
+difficult to describe. Her conversation with the Duchesse de
+Carigliano had roused in her mind a crowd of contradictory thoughts.
+Like the sheep in the fable, full of courage in the wolf's absence,
+she preached to herself, and laid down admirable plans of conduct; she
+devised a thousand coquettish stratagems; she even talked to her
+husband, finding, away from him, all the springs of true eloquence
+which never desert a woman; then, as she pictured to herself
+Theodore's clear and steadfast gaze, she began to quake. When she
+asked whether monsieur were at home her voice shook. On learning that
+he would not be in to dinner, she felt an unaccountable thrill of joy.
+Like a criminal who has appealed against sentence of death, a respite,
+however short, seemed to her a lifetime. She placed the portrait in
+her room, and waited for her husband in all the agonies of hope. That
+this venture must decide her future life, she felt too keenly not to
+shiver at every sound, even the low ticking of the clock, which seemed
+to aggravate her terrors by doling them out to her. She tried to cheat
+time by various devices. The idea struck her of dressing in a way
+which would make her exactly like the portrait. Then, knowing her
+husband's restless temper, she had her room lighted up with unusual
+brightness, feeling sure that when he came in curiosity would bring
+him there at once. Midnight had struck when, at the call of the groom,
+the street gate was opened, and the artist's carriage rumbled in over
+the stones of the silent courtyard.
+
+"What is the meaning of this illumination?" asked Theodore in glad
+tones, as he came into her room.
+
+Augustine skilfully seized the auspicious moment; she threw herself
+into her husband's arms, and pointed to the portrait. The artist stood
+rigid as a rock, and his eyes turned alternately on Augustine, on the
+accusing dress. The frightened wife, half-dead, as she watched her
+husband's changeful brow--that terrible brow--saw the expressive
+furrows gathering like clouds; then she felt her blood curdling in her
+veins when, with a glaring look, and in a deep hollow voice, he began
+to question her:
+
+"Where did you find that picture?"
+
+"The Duchess de Carigliano returned it to me."
+
+"You asked her for it?"
+
+"I did not know that she had it."
+
+The gentleness, or rather the exquisite sweetness of this angel's
+voice, might have touched a cannibal, but not an artist in the
+clutches of wounded vanity.
+
+"It is worthy of her!" exclaimed the painter in a voice of thunder. "I
+will be avenged!" he cried, striding up and down the room. "She shall
+die of shame; I will paint her! Yes, I will paint her as Messalina
+stealing out at night from the palace of Claudius."
+
+"Theodore!" said a faint voice.
+
+"I will kill her!"
+
+"My dear----"
+
+"She is in love with that little cavalry colonel, because he rides
+well----"
+
+"Theodore!"
+
+"Let me be!" said the painter in a tone almost like a roar.
+
+It would be odious to describe the whole scene. In the end the frenzy
+of passion prompted the artist to acts and words which any woman not
+so young as Augustine would have ascribed to madness.
+
+At eight o'clock next morning Madame Guillaume, surprising her
+daughter, found her pale, with red eyes, her hair in disorder, holding
+a handkerchief soaked with tears, while she gazed at the floor strewn
+with the torn fragments of a dress and the broken fragments of a large
+gilt picture-frame. Augustine, almost senseless with grief, pointed to
+the wreck with a gesture of deep despair.
+
+"I don't know that the loss is very great!" cried the old mistress of
+the Cat and Racket. "It was like you, no doubt; but I am told that
+there is a man on the boulevard who paints lovely portraits for fifty
+crowns."
+
+"Oh, mother!"
+
+"Poor child, you are quite right," replied Madame Guillaume, who
+misinterpreted the expression of her daughter's glance at her. "True,
+my child, no one ever can love you as fondly as a mother. My darling,
+I guess it all; but confide your sorrows to me, and I will comfort
+you. Did I not tell you long ago that the man was mad! Your maid has
+told me pretty stories. Why, he must be a perfect monster!"
+
+Augustine laid a finger on her white lips, as if to implore a moment's
+silence. During this dreadful night misery had led her to that patient
+resignation which in mothers and loving wives transcends in its
+effects all human energy, and perhaps reveals in the heart of women
+the existence of certain chords which God has withheld from men.
+
+
+
+An inscription engraved on a broken column in the cemetery at
+Montmartre states that Madame de Sommervieux died at the age of
+twenty-seven. In the simple words of this epitaph one of the timid
+creature's friends can read the last scene of a tragedy. Every year,
+on the second of November, the solemn day of the dead, he never passes
+this youthful monument without wondering whether it does not need a
+stronger woman than Augustine to endure the violent embrace of genius?
+
+"The humble and modest flowers that bloom in the valley," he reflects,
+"perish perhaps when they are transplanted too near the skies, to the
+region where storms gather and the sun is scorching."
+
+
+
+
+ADDENDUM
+
+The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.
+
+Aiglemont, General, Marquis Victor d'
+ The Firm of Nucingen
+ A Woman of Thirty
+
+Birotteau, Cesar
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+
+Camusot
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ Cousin Pons
+ The Muse of the Department
+ Cesar Birotteau
+
+Cardot, Jean-Jerome-Severin
+ A Start in Life
+ Lost Illusions
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ A Bachelor's Establishment
+ Cesar Birotteau
+
+Carigliano, Marechal, Duc de
+ Father Goriot
+ Sarrasine
+
+Carigliano, Duchesse de
+ A Distinguished Provincial at Paris
+ The Peasantry
+ The Member for Arcis
+
+Guillaume
+ Cesar Birotteau
+
+Lebas, Joseph
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Cousin Betty
+
+Lebas, Madame Joseph (Virginie)
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Cousin Betty
+
+Lourdois
+ Cesar Birotteau
+
+Rabourdin, Xavier
+ The Government Clerks
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ The Middle Classes
+
+Roguin, Madame
+ Cesar Birotteau
+ Pierrette
+ A Second Home
+ A Daughter of Eve
+
+Sommervieux, Theodore de
+ The Government Clerks
+ Modeste Mignon
+
+Sommervieux, Madame Theodore de (Augustine)
+ At the Sign of the Cat and Racket
+ Cesar Birotteau
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext At the Sign of the Cat & Racket by Balzac
+