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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Chateau of Prince Polignac, by Anthony
+Trollope
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Chateau of Prince Polignac
+
+
+Author: Anthony Trollope
+
+
+
+Release Date: January 16, 2015 [eBook #3712]
+[This file was first posted on July 31, 2001]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHATEAU OF PRINCE POLIGNAC***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1864 Chapman and Hall “Tales of All Countries”
+edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE CHÂTEAU OF PRINCE POLIGNAC.
+
+
+FEW Englishmen or Englishwomen are intimately acquainted with the little
+town of Le Puy. It is the capital of the old province of Le Velay, which
+also is now but little known, even to French ears, for it is in these
+days called by the imperial name of the Department of the Haute Loire.
+It is to the south-east of Auvergne, and is nearly in the centre of the
+southern half of France.
+
+But few towns, merely as towns, can be better worth visiting. In the
+first place, the volcanic formation of the ground on which it stands is
+not only singular in the extreme, so as to be interesting to the
+geologist, but it is so picturesque as to be equally gratifying to the
+general tourist. Within a narrow valley there stand several rocks,
+rising up from the ground with absolute abruptness. Round two of these
+the town clusters, and a third stands but a mile distant, forming the
+centre of a faubourg, or suburb. These rocks appear to be, and I believe
+are, the harder particles of volcanic matter, which have not been carried
+away through successive ages by the joint agency of water and air.
+
+When the tide of lava ran down between the hills the surface left was no
+doubt on a level with the heads of these rocks; but here and there the
+deposit became harder than elsewhere, and these harder points have
+remained, lifting up their steep heads in a line through the valley.
+
+The highest of these is called the Rocher de Corneille. Round this and
+up its steep sides the town stands. On its highest summit there was an
+old castle; and there now is, or will be before these pages are printed,
+a colossal figure in bronze of the Virgin Mary, made from the cannon
+taken at Sebastopol. Half-way down the hill the cathedral is built, a
+singularly gloomy edifice,—Romanesque, as it is called, in its style, but
+extremely similar in its mode of architecture to what we know of
+Byzantine structures. But there has been no surface on the rock side
+large enough to form a resting-place for the church, which has therefore
+been built out on huge supporting piles, which form a porch below the
+west front; so that the approach is by numerous steps laid along the side
+of the wall below the church, forming a wondrous flight of stairs. Let
+all men who may find themselves stopping at Le Puy visit the top of these
+stairs at the time of the setting sun, and look down from thence through
+the framework of the porch on the town beneath, and at the hill-side
+beyond.
+
+Behind the church is the seminary of the priests, with its beautiful
+walks stretching round the Rocher de Corneille, and overlooking the town
+and valley below.
+
+Next to this rock, and within a quarter of a mile of it, is the second
+peak, called the Rock of the Needle. It rises narrow, sharp, and abrupt
+from the valley, allowing of no buildings on its sides. But on its very
+point has been erected a church sacred to St. Michael, that lover of rock
+summits, accessible by stairs cut from the stone. This, perhaps—this
+rock, I mean—is the most wonderful of the wonders which Nature has formed
+at La Puy.
+
+Above this, at a mile’s distance, is the rock of Espailly, formed in the
+same way, and almost equally precipitous. On its summit is a castle,
+having its own legend, and professing to have been the residence of
+Charles VII., when little of France belonged to its kings but the
+provinces of Berry, Auvergne, and Le Velay. Some three miles farther up
+there is another volcanic rock, larger, indeed, but equally sudden in its
+spring,—equally remarkable as rising abruptly from the valley,—on which
+stands the castle and old family residence of the house of Polignac. It
+was lost by them at the Revolution, but was repurchased by the minister
+of Charles X., and is still the property of the head of the race.
+
+Le Puy itself is a small, moderate, pleasant French town, in which the
+language of the people has not the pure Parisian aroma, nor is the glory
+of the boulevards of the capital emulated in its streets. These are
+crooked, narrow, steep, and intricate, forming here and there excellent
+sketches for a lover of street picturesque beauty; but hurtful to the
+feet with their small, round-topped paving stones, and not always as
+clean as pedestrian ladies might desire.
+
+And now I would ask my readers to join me at the morning table d’hôte at
+the Hotel des Ambassadeurs. It will of course be understood that this
+does not mean a breakfast in the ordinary fashion of England, consisting
+of tea or coffee, bread and butter, and perhaps a boiled egg. It
+comprises all the requisites for a composite dinner, excepting soup; and
+as one gets farther south in France, this meal is called dinner. It is,
+however, eaten without any prejudice to another similar and somewhat
+longer meal at six or seven o’clock, which, when the above name is taken
+up by the earlier enterprise, is styled supper.
+
+The déjeûner, or dinner, at the Hôtel des Ambassadeurs, on the morning in
+question, though very elaborate, was not a very gay affair. There were
+some fourteen persons present, of whom half were residents in the town,
+men employed in some official capacity, who found this to be the
+cheapest, the most luxurious, and to them the most comfortable mode of
+living. They clustered together at the head of the table, and as they
+were customary guests at the house, they talked their little talk
+together—it was very little—and made the most of the good things before
+them. Then there were two or three commis-voyageurs, a chance traveller
+or two, and an English lady with a young daughter. The English lady sat
+next to one of the accustomed guests; but he, unlike the others, held
+converse with her rather than with them. Our story at present has
+reference only to that lady and to that gentleman.
+
+Place aux dames. We will speak first of the lady, whose name was Mrs.
+Thompson. She was, shall I say, a young woman of about thirty-six. In
+so saying, I am perhaps creating a prejudice against her in the minds of
+some readers, as they will, not unnaturally, suppose her, after such an
+announcement, to be in truth over forty. Any such prejudice will be
+unjust. I would have it believed that thirty-six was the outside, not
+the inside of her age. She was good-looking, lady-like, and considering
+that she was an Englishwoman, fairly well dressed. She was inclined to
+be rather full in her person, but perhaps not more so than is becoming to
+ladies at her time of life. She had rings on her fingers and a brooch on
+her bosom which were of some value, and on the back of her head she wore
+a jaunty small lace cap, which seemed to tell, in conjunction with her
+other appointments, that her circumstances were comfortable.
+
+The little girl who sat next to her was the youngest of her two
+daughters, and might be about thirteen years of age. Her name was
+Matilda, but infantine circumstances had invested her with the nickname
+of Mimmy, by which her mother always called her. A nice, pretty, playful
+little girl was Mimmy Thompson, wearing two long tails of plaited hair
+hanging, behind her head, and inclined occasionally to be rather loud in
+her sport.
+
+Mrs. Thompson had another and an elder daughter, now some fifteen years
+old, who was at school in Le Puy; and it was with reference to her
+tuition that Mrs. Thompson had taken up a temporary residence at the
+Hôtel des Ambassadeurs in that town. Lilian Thompson was occasionally
+invited down to dine or breakfast at the inn, and was visited daily at
+her school by her mother.
+
+“When I’m sure that she’ll do, I shall leave her there, and go back to
+England,” Mrs. Thompson had said, not in the purest French, to the
+neighbour who always sat next to her at the table d’hôte, the gentleman,
+namely, to whom we have above alluded. But still she had remained at Le
+Puy a month, and did not go; a circumstance which was considered
+singular, but by no means unpleasant, both by the innkeeper and by the
+gentleman in question.
+
+The facts, as regarded Mrs. Thompson, were as follows:—She was the widow
+of a gentleman who had served for many years in the civil service of the
+East Indies, and who, on dying, had left her a comfortable income of—it
+matters not how many pounds, but constituting quite a sufficiency to
+enable her to live at her ease and educate her daughters.
+
+Her children had been sent home to England before her husband’s death,
+and after that event she had followed them; but there, though she was
+possessed of moderate wealth, she had no friends and few acquaintances,
+and after a little while she had found life to be rather dull. Her
+customs were not those of England, nor were her propensities English;
+therefore she had gone abroad, and having received some recommendation of
+this school at Le Puy, had made her way thither. As it appeared to her
+that she really enjoyed more consideration at Le Puy than had been
+accorded to her either at Torquay or Leamington, there she remained from
+day to day. The total payment required at the Hôtel des Ambassadeurs was
+but six francs daily for herself and three and a half for her little
+girl; and where else could she live with a better junction of economy and
+comfort? And then the gentleman who always sat next to her was so
+exceedingly civil!
+
+The gentleman’s name was M. Lacordaire. So much she knew, and had
+learned to call him by his name very frequently. Mimmy, too, was quite
+intimate with M. Lacordaire; but nothing more than his name was known of
+him. But M. Lacordaire carried a general letter of recommendation in his
+face, manner, gait, dress, and tone of voice. In all these respects
+there was nothing left to be desired; and, in addition to this, he was
+decorated, and wore the little red ribbon of the Legion of Honour,
+ingeniously twisted into the shape of a small flower.
+
+M. Lacordaire might be senior in age to Mrs. Thompson by about ten years,
+nor had he about him any of the airs or graces of a would-be young man.
+His hair, which he wore very short, was grizzled, as was also the small
+pretence of a whisker which came down about as far as the middle of his
+ear; but the tuft on his chin was still brown, without a gray hair. His
+eyes were bright and tender, his voice was low and soft, his hands were
+very white, his clothes were always new and well fitting, and a
+better-brushed hat could not be seen out of Paris, nor perhaps in it.
+
+Now, during the weeks which Mrs. Thompson had passed at La Puy, the
+acquaintance which she had formed with M. Lacordaire had progressed
+beyond the prolonged meals in the salle à manger. He had occasionally
+sat beside her evening table as she took her English cup of tea in her
+own room, her bed being duly screened off in its distant niche by
+becoming curtains; and then he had occasionally walked beside her, as he
+civilly escorted her to the lions of the place; and he had once
+accompanied her, sitting on the back seat of a French voiture, when she
+had gone forth to see something of the surrounding country.
+
+On all such occasions she had been accompanied by one of her daughters,
+and the world of Le Puy had had nothing material to say against her. But
+still the world of Le Puy had whispered a little, suggesting that M.
+Lacordaire knew very well what he was about. But might not Mrs. Thompson
+also know as well what she was about? At any rate, everything had gone
+on very pleasantly since the acquaintance had been made. And now, so
+much having been explained, we will go back to the elaborate breakfast at
+the Hôtel des Ambassadeurs.
+
+Mrs. Thompson, holding Mimmy by the hand, walked into the room some few
+minutes after the last bell had been rung, and took the place which was
+now hers by custom. The gentlemen who constantly frequented the house
+all bowed to her, but M. Lacordaire rose from his seat and offered her
+his hand.
+
+“And how is Mees Meemy this morning?” said he; for ’twas thus he always
+pronounced her name.
+
+Miss Mimmy, answering for herself, declared that she was very well, and
+suggested that M. Lacordaire should give her a fig from off a dish that
+was placed immediately before him on the table. This M. Lacordaire did,
+presenting it very elegantly between his two fingers, and making a little
+bow to the little lady as he did so.
+
+“Fie, Mimmy!” said her mother; “why do you ask for the things before the
+waiter brings them round?”
+
+“But, mamma,” said Mimmy, speaking English, “M. Lacordaire always gives
+me a fig every morning.”
+
+“M. Lacordaire always spoils you, I think,” answered Mrs. Thompson, in
+French. And then they went thoroughly to work at their breakfast.
+During the whole meal M. Lacordaire attended assiduously to his
+neighbour; and did so without any evil result, except that one Frenchman
+with a black moustache, at the head of the table, trod on the toe of
+another Frenchman with another black moustache—winking as he made the
+sign—just as M. Lacordaire, having selected a bunch of grapes, put it on
+Mrs. Thompson’s plate with infinite grace. But who among us all is free
+from such impertinences as these?
+
+“But madame really must see the château of Prince Polignac before she
+leaves Le Puy,” said M. Lacordaire.
+
+“The château of who?” asked Mimmy, to whose young ears the French words
+were already becoming familiar.
+
+“Prince Polignac, my dear. Well, I really don’t know, M. Lacordaire;—I
+have seen a great deal of the place already, and I shall be going now
+very soon; probably in a day or two,” said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+“But madame must positively see the château,” said M. Lacordaire, very
+impressively; and then after a pause he added, “If madame will have the
+complaisance to commission me to procure a carriage for this afternoon,
+and will allow me the honour to be her guide, I shall consider myself one
+of the most fortunate of men.”
+
+“Oh, yes, mamma, do go,” said Mimmy, clapping her hands. “And it is
+Thursday, and Lilian can go with us.”
+
+“Be quiet, Mimmy, do. Thank you, no, M. Lacordaire. I could not go
+to-day; but I am extremely obliged by your politeness.”
+
+M. Lacordaire still pressed the matter, and Mrs. Thompson still declined
+till it was time to rise from the table. She then declared that she did
+not think it possible that she should visit the château before she left
+Le Puy; but that she would give him an answer at dinner.
+
+The most tedious time in the day to Mrs. Thompson were the two hours
+after breakfast. At one o’clock she daily went to the school, taking
+Mimmy, who for an hour or two shared her sister’s lessons. This and her
+little excursions about the place, and her shopping, managed to make away
+with her afternoon. Then in the evening, she generally saw something of
+M. Lacordaire. But those two hours after breakfast were hard of killing.
+
+On this occasion, when she gained her own room, she as usual placed Mimmy
+on the sofa with a needle. Her custom then was to take up a novel; but
+on this morning she sat herself down in her arm-chair, and resting her
+head upon her hand and elbow, began to turn over certain circumstances in
+her mind.
+
+“Mamma,” said Mimmy, “why won’t you go with M. Lacordaire to that place
+belonging to the prince? Prince—Polly something, wasn’t it?”
+
+“Mind your work, my dear,” said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+“But I do so wish you’d go, mamma. What was the prince’s name?”
+
+“Polignac.”
+
+“Mamma, ain’t princes very great people?”
+
+“Yes, my dear; sometimes.”
+
+“Is Prince Polly-nac like our Prince Alfred?”
+
+“No, my dear; not at all. At least, I suppose not.”
+
+“Is his mother a queen?”
+
+“No, my dear.”
+
+“Then his father must be a king?”
+
+“No, my dear. It is quite a different thing here. Here in France they
+have a great many princes.”
+
+“Well, at any rate I should like to see a prince’s château; so I do hope
+you’ll go.” And then there was a pause. “Mamma, could it come to pass,
+here in France, that M. Lacordaire should ever be a prince?”
+
+“M. Lacordaire a prince! No; don’t talk such nonsense, but mind your
+work.”
+
+“Isn’t M. Lacordaire a very nice man? Ain’t you very fond of him?”
+
+To this question Mrs. Thompson made no answer.
+
+“Mamma,” continued Mimmy, after a moment’s pause, “won’t you tell me
+whether you are fond of M. Lacordaire? I’m quite sure of this,—that he’s
+very fond of you.”
+
+“What makes you think that?” asked Mrs. Thompson, who could not bring
+herself to refrain from the question.
+
+“Because he looks at you in that way, mamma, and squeezes your hand.”
+
+“Nonsense, child,” said Mrs. Thompson; “hold your tongue. I don’t know
+what can have put such stuff into your head.”
+
+“But he does, mamma,” said Mimmy, who rarely allowed her mother to put
+her down.
+
+Mrs. Thompson made no further answer, but again sat with her head resting
+on her hand. She also, if the truth must be told, was thinking of M.
+Lacordaire and his fondness for herself. He had squeezed her hand and he
+had looked into her face. However much it may have been nonsense on
+Mimmy’s part to talk of such things, they had not the less absolutely
+occurred. Was it really the fact that M. Lacordaire was in love with
+her?
+
+And if so, what return should she, or could she make to such a passion?
+He had looked at her yesterday, and squeezed her hand to-day. Might it
+not be probable that he would advance a step further to-morrow? If so,
+what answer would she be prepared to make to him?
+
+She did not think—so she said to herself—that she had any particular
+objection to marrying again. Thompson had been dead now for four years,
+and neither his friends, nor her friends, nor the world could say she was
+wrong on that score. And as to marrying a Frenchman, she could not say
+she felt within herself any absolute repugnance to doing that. Of her
+own country, speaking of England as such, she, in truth, knew but
+little—and perhaps cared less. She had gone to India almost as a child,
+and England had not been specially kind to her on her return. She had
+found it dull and cold, stiff, and almost ill-natured. People there had
+not smiled on her and been civil as M. Lacordaire had done. As far as
+England and Englishmen were considered she saw no reason why she should
+not marry M. Lacordaire.
+
+And then, as regarded the man; could she in her heart say that she was
+prepared to love, honour, and obey M. Lacordaire? She certainly knew no
+reason why she should not do so. She did not know much of him, she said
+to herself at first; but she knew as much, she said afterwards, as she
+had known personally of Mr. Thompson before their marriage. She had
+known, to be sure, what was Mr. Thompson’s profession and what his
+income; or, if not, some one else had known for her. As to both these
+points she was quite in the dark as regarded M. Lacordaire.
+
+Personally, she certainly did like him, as she said to herself more than
+once. There was a courtesy and softness about him which were very
+gratifying to her; and then, his appearance was so much in his favour.
+He was not very young, she acknowledged; but neither was she young
+herself. It was quite evident that he was fond of her children, and that
+he would be a kind and affectionate father to them. Indeed, there was
+kindness in all that he did.
+
+Should she marry again,—and she put it to herself quite
+hypothetically,—she would look for no romance in such a second marriage.
+She would be content to sit down in a quiet home, to the tame dull
+realities of life, satisfied with the companionship of a man who would be
+kind and gentle to her, and whom she could respect and esteem. Where
+could she find a companion with whom this could be more safely
+anticipated than with M. Lacordaire?
+
+And so she argued the question within her own breast in a manner not
+unfriendly to that gentleman. That there was as yet one great hindrance
+she at once saw; but then that might be remedied by a word. She did not
+know what was his income or his profession. The chambermaid, whom she
+had interrogated, had told her that he was a “marchand.” To merchants,
+generally, she felt that she had no objection. The Barings and the
+Rothschilds were merchants, as was also that wonderful man at Bombay, Sir
+Hommajee Bommajee, who was worth she did no know how many thousand lacs
+of rupees.
+
+That it would behove her, on her own account and that of her daughters,
+to take care of her own little fortune in contracting any such
+connection, that she felt strongly. She would never so commit herself as
+to put security in that respect out of her power. But then she did not
+think that M. Lacordaire would ever ask her to do so; at any rate, she
+was determined on this, that there should never be any doubt on that
+matter; and as she firmly resolved on this, she again took up her book,
+and for a minute or two made an attempt to read.
+
+“Mamma,” said Mummy, “will M. Lacordaire go up to the school to see
+Lilian when you go away from this?”
+
+“Indeed, I cannot say, my dear. If Lilian is a good girl, perhaps he may
+do so now and then.”
+
+“And will he write to you and tell you how she is?”
+
+“Lilian can write for herself; can she not?”
+
+“Oh yes; I suppose she can; but I hope M. Lacordaire will write too. We
+shall come back here some day; shan’t we, mamma?”
+
+“I cannot say, my dear.”
+
+“I do so hope we shall see M. Lacordaire again. Do you know what I was
+thinking, mamma?”
+
+“Little girls like you ought not to think,” said Mrs. Thompson, walking
+slowly out of the room to the top of the stairs and back again; for she
+had felt the necessity of preventing Mimmy from disclosing any more of
+her thoughts. “And now, my dear, get yourself ready, and we will go up
+to the school.”
+
+Mrs. Thompson always dressed herself with care, though not in especially
+fine clothes, before she went down to dinner at the table d’hôte; but on
+this occasion she was more than usually particular. She hardly explained
+to herself why she did this; but, nevertheless, as she stood before the
+glass, she did in a certain manner feel that the circumstances of her
+future life might perhaps depend on what might be said and done that
+evening. She had not absolutely decided whether or no she would go to
+the Prince’s château; but if she did go—. Well, if she did; what then?
+She had sense enough, as she assured herself more than once, to regulate
+her own conduct with propriety in any such emergency.
+
+During the dinner, M. Lacordaire conversed in his usual manner, but said
+nothing whatever about the visit to Polignac. He was very kind to Mimmy,
+and very courteous to her mother, but did not appear to be at all more
+particular than usual. Indeed, it might be a question whether he was not
+less so. As she had entered the room Mrs. Thompson had said to herself
+that, perhaps, after all, it would be better that there should be nothing
+more thought about it; but before the four of five courses were over, she
+was beginning to feel a little disappointed.
+
+And now the fruit was on the table, after the consumption of which it was
+her practice to retire. It was certainly open to her to ask M.
+Lacordaire to take tea with her that evening, as she had done on former
+occasions; but she felt that she must not do this now, considering the
+immediate circumstances of the case. If any further steps were to be
+taken, they must be taken by him, and not by her;—or else by Mimmy, who,
+just as her mother was slowly consuming her last grapes, ran round to the
+back of M. Lacordaire’s chair, and whispered something into his ear. It
+may be presumed that Mrs. Thompson did not see the intention of the
+movement in time to arrest it, for she did nothing till the whispering
+had been whispered; and then she rebuked the child, bade her not to be
+troublesome, and with more than usual austerity in her voice, desired her
+to get herself ready to go up stairs to their chamber.
+
+As she spoke she herself rose from her chair, and made her final little
+bow to the table, and her other final little bow and smile to M.
+Lacordaire; but this was certain to all who saw it, that the smile was
+not as gracious as usual.
+
+As she walked forth, M. Lacordaire rose from his chair—such being his
+constant practice when she left the table; but on this occasion he
+accompanied her to the door.
+
+“And has madame decided,” he asked, “whether she will permit me to
+accompany her to the château?”
+
+“Well, I really don’t know,” said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+“Mees Meemy,” continued M. Lacordaire, “is very anxious to see the rock,
+and I may perhaps hope that Mees Lilian would be pleased with such a
+little excursion. As for myself—” and then M. Lacordaire put his hand
+upon his heart in a manner that seemed to speak more plainly than he had
+ever spoken.
+
+“Well, if the children would really like it, and—as you are so very
+kind,” said Mrs. Thompson; and so the matter was conceded.
+
+“To-morrow afternoon?” suggested M. Lacordaire. But Mrs. Thompson fixed
+on Saturday, thereby showing that she herself was in no hurry for the
+expedition.
+
+“Oh, I am so glad!” said Mimmy, when they had re-entered their own room.
+“Mamma, do let me tell Lilian myself when I go up to the school
+to-morrow!”
+
+But mamma was in no humour to say much to her child on this subject at
+the present moment. She threw herself back on her sofa in perfect
+silence, and began to reflect whether she would like to sign her name in
+future as Fanny Lacordaire, instead of Fanny Thompson. It certainly
+seemed as though things were verging towards such a necessity. A
+marchand! But a marchand of what? She had an instinctive feeling that
+the people in the hotel were talking about her and M. Lacordaire, and was
+therefore more than ever averse to asking any one a question.
+
+As she went up to the school the next afternoon, she walked through more
+of the streets of Le Puy than was necessary, and in every street she
+looked at the names which she saw over the doors of the more respectable
+houses of business. But she looked in vain. It might be that M.
+Lacordaire was a marchand of so specially high a quality as to be under
+no necessity to put up his name at all. Sir Hommajee Bommajee’s name did
+not appear over any door in Bombay;—at least, she thought not.
+
+And then came the Saturday morning. “We shall be ready at two,” she
+said, as she left the breakfast-table; “and perhaps you would not mind
+calling for Lilian on the way.”
+
+M. Lacordaire would be delighted to call anywhere for anybody on behalf
+of Mrs. Thompson; and then, as he got to the door of the salon, he
+offered her his hand. He did so with so much French courtesy that she
+could not refuse it, and then she felt that his purpose was more tender
+than ever it had been. And why not, if this was the destiny which Fate
+had prepared for her?
+
+Mrs. Thompson would rather have got into the carriage at any other spot
+in Le Puy than at that at which she was forced to do so—the chief
+entrance, namely, of the Hôtel des Ambassadeurs. And what made it worse
+was this, that an appearance of a special fate was given to the occasion.
+M. Lacordaire was dressed in more than his Sunday best. He had on new
+yellow kid gloves. His coat, if not new, was newer than any Mrs.
+Thompson had yet observed, and was lined with silk up to the very collar.
+He had on patent leather boots, which glittered, as Mrs. Thompson
+thought, much too conspicuously. And as for his hat, it was quite
+evident that it was fresh that morning from the maker’s block.
+
+In this costume, with his hat in his hand, he stood under the great
+gateway of the hotel, ready to hand Mrs. Thompson into the carriage.
+This would have been nothing if the landlord and landlady had not been
+there also, as well as the man-cook, and the four waiters, and the fille
+de chambre. Two or three other pair of eyes Mrs. Thompson also saw, as
+she glanced round, and then Mimmy walked across the yard in her best
+clothes with a fête-day air about her for which her mother would have
+liked to have whipped her.
+
+But what did it matter? If it was written in the book that she should
+become Madame Lacordaire, of course the world would know that there must
+have been some preparatory love-making. Let them have their laugh; a
+good husband would not be dearly purchased at so trifling an expense.
+And so they sallied forth with already half the ceremony of a wedding.
+
+Mimmy seated herself opposite to her mother, and M. Lacordaire also sat
+with his back to the horses, leaving the second place of honour for
+Lilian. “Pray make yourself comfortable, M. Lacordaire, and don’t mind
+her,” said Mrs. Thompson. But he was firm in his purpose of civility,
+perhaps making up his mind that when he should in truth stand in the
+place of papa to the young lady, then would be his time for having the
+back seat in the carnage.
+
+Lilian, also in her best frock, came down the school-steps, and three of
+the school teachers came with her. It would have added to Mrs.
+Thompson’s happiness at that moment if M. Lacordaire would have kept his
+polished boots out of sight, and put his yellow gloves into his pocket.
+
+And then they started. The road from Le Puy to Polignac is nearly all up
+hill; and a very steep hill it is, so that there was plenty of time for
+conversation. But the girls had it nearly all to themselves. Mimmy
+thought that she had never found M. Lacordaire so stupid; and Lilian told
+her sister on the first safe opportunity that occurred, that it seemed
+very much as though they were all going to church.
+
+“And do any of the Polignac people ever live at this place?” asked Mrs.
+Thompson, by way of making conversation; in answer to which M. Lacordaire
+informed madame that the place was at present only a ruin; and then there
+was again silence till they found themselves under the rock, and were
+informed by the driver that the rest of the ascent must be made on foot.
+
+The rock now stood abrupt and precipitous above their heads. It was
+larger in its circumference and with much larger space on its summit than
+those other volcanic rocks in and close to the town; but then at the same
+time it was higher from the ground, and quite as inaccessible, except by
+the single path which led up to the château.
+
+M. Lacordaire, with conspicuous gallantry, first assisted Mrs. Thompson
+from the carriage, and then handed down the two young ladies. No lady
+could have been so difficult to please as to complain of him, and yet
+Mrs. Thompson thought that he was not as agreeable as usual. Those
+horrid boots and those horrid gloves gave him such an air of holiday
+finery that neither could he be at his ease wearing them, nor could she,
+in seeing them worn.
+
+They were soon taken in hand by the poor woman whose privilege it was to
+show the ruins. For a little distance they walked up the path in single
+file; not that it was too narrow to accommodate two, but M. Lacordaire’s
+courage had not yet been screwed to a point which admitted of his
+offering his arm to the widow. For in France, it must be remembered,
+that this means more than it does in some other countries.
+
+Mrs. Thompson felt that all this was silly and useless. If they were not
+to be dear friends this coming out fêting together, those boots and
+gloves and new hat were all very foolish; and if they were, the sooner
+they understood each other the better. So Mrs. Thompson, finding that
+the path was steep and the weather warm, stood still for a while leaning
+against the wall, with a look of considerable fatigue in her face.
+
+“Will madame permit me the honour of offering her my arm?” said M.
+Lacordaire. “The road is so extraordinarily steep for madame to climb.”
+
+Mrs. Thompson did permit him the honour, and so they went on till they
+reached the top.
+
+The view from the summit was both extensive and grand, but neither Lilian
+nor Mimmy were much pleased with the place. The elder sister, who had
+talked over the matter with her school companions, expected a fine castle
+with turrets, battlements, and romance; and the other expected a pretty
+smiling house, such as princes, in her mind, ought to inhabit.
+
+Instead of this they found an old turret, with steps so broken that M.
+Lacordaire did not care to ascend them, and the ruined walls of a
+mansion, in which nothing was to be seen but the remains of an enormous
+kitchen chimney.
+
+“It was the kitchen of the family,” said the guide.
+
+“Oh,” said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+“And this,” said the woman, taking them into the next ruined compartment,
+“was the kitchen of monsieur et madame.”
+
+“What! two kitchens?” exclaimed Lilian, upon which M. Lacordaire
+explained that the ancestors of the Prince de Polignac had been very
+great people, and had therefore required culinary performances on a great
+scale.
+
+And then the woman began to chatter something about an oracle of Apollo.
+There was, she said, a hole in the rock, from which in past times,
+perhaps more than a hundred years ago, the oracle used to speak forth
+mysterious words.
+
+“There,” she said, pointing to a part of the rock at some distance, “was
+the hole. And if the ladies would follow her to a little outhouse which
+was just beyond, she would show them the huge stone mouth out of which
+the oracle used to speak.”
+
+Lilian and Mimmy both declared at once for seeing the oracle, but Mrs.
+Thompson expressed her determination to remain sitting where she was upon
+the turf. So the guide started off with the young ladies; and will it be
+thought surprising that M. Lacordaire should have remained alone by the
+side of Mrs. Thompson?
+
+It must be now or never, Mrs. Thompson felt; and as regarded M.
+Lacordaire, he probably entertained some idea of the same kind. Mrs.
+Thompson’s inclinations, though they had never been very strong in the
+matter, were certainly in favour of the “now.” M. Lacordaire’s
+inclinations were stronger. He had fully and firmly made up his mind in
+favour of matrimony; but then he was not so absolutely in favour of the
+“now.” Mrs. Thompson’s mind, if one could have read it, would have shown
+a great objection to shilly-shallying, as she was accustomed to call it.
+But M. Lacordaire, were it not for the danger which might thence arise,
+would have seen no objection to some slight further procrastination. His
+courage was beginning, perhaps, to ooze out from his fingers’ ends.
+
+“I declare that those girls have scampered away ever so far,” said Mrs.
+Thompson.
+
+“Would madame wish that I should call them back?” said M. Lacordaire,
+innocently.
+
+“Oh, no, dear children! let them enjoy themselves; it will be a pleasure
+to them to run about the rock, and I suppose they will be safe with that
+woman?”
+
+“Oh, yes, quite safe,” said M. Lacordaire; and then there was another
+little pause.
+
+Mrs. Thompson was sitting on a broken fragment of a stone just outside
+the entrance to the old family kitchen, and M. Lacordaire was standing
+immediately before her. He had in his hand a little cane with which he
+sometimes slapped his boots and sometimes poked about among the rubbish.
+His hat was not quite straight on his head, having a little jaunty twist
+to one side, with reference to which, by-the-bye, Mrs. Thompson then
+resolved that she would make a change, should ever the gentleman become
+her own property. He still wore his gloves, and was very smart; but it
+was clear to see that he was not at his ease.
+
+“I hope the heat does not incommode you,” he said after a few moments’
+silence. Mrs. Thompson declared that it did not, that she liked a good
+deal of heat, and that, on the whole, she was very well where she was.
+She was afraid, however, that she was detaining M. Lacordaire, who might
+probably wish to be moving about upon the rock. In answer to which M.
+Lacordaire declared that he never could be so happy anywhere as in her
+close vicinity.
+
+“You are too good to me,” said Mrs. Thompson, almost sighing. “I don’t
+know what my stay here would have been without your great kindness.”
+
+“It is madame that has been kind to me,” said M. Lacordaire, pressing the
+handle of his cane against his heart.
+
+There was then another pause, after which Mrs. Thompson said that that
+was all his French politeness; that she knew that she had been very
+troublesome to him, but that she would now soon be gone; and that then,
+in her own country, she would never forget his great goodness.
+
+“Ah, madame!” said M. Lacordaire; and, as he said it, much more was
+expressed in his face than in his words. But, then, you can neither
+accept nor reject a gentleman by what he says in his face. He blushed,
+too, up to his grizzled hair, and, turning round, walked a step or two
+away from the widow’s seat, and back again.
+
+Mrs. Thompson the while sat quite still. The displaced fragment, lying,
+as it did, near a corner of the building, made not an uncomfortable
+chair. She had only to be careful that she did not injure her hat or
+crush her clothes, and throw in a word here and there to assist the
+gentleman, should occasion permit it.
+
+“Madame!” said M. Lacordaire, on his return from a second little walk.
+
+“Monsieur!” replied Mrs. Thompson, perceiving that M. Lacordaire paused
+in his speech.
+
+“Madame,” he began again, and then, as he again paused, Mrs. Thompson
+looked up to him very sweetly; “madame, what I am going to say will, I am
+afraid, seem to evince by far too great audacity on my part.”
+
+Mrs. Thompson may, perhaps, have thought that, at the present moment,
+audacity was not his fault. She replied, however, that she was quite
+sure that monsieur would say nothing that was in any way unbecoming
+either for him to speak or for her to hear.
+
+“Madame, may I have ground to hope that such may be your sentiments after
+I have spoken! Madame”—and now he went down, absolutely on his knees, on
+the hard stones; and Mrs. Thompson, looking about into the distance,
+almost thought that she saw the top of the guide’s cap—“Madame, I have
+looked forward to this opportunity as one in which I may declare for you
+the greatest passion that I have ever yet felt. Madame, with all my heart
+and soul I love you. Madame, I offer to you the homage of my heart, my
+hand, the happiness of my life, and all that I possess in this world;”
+and then, taking her hand gracefully between his gloves, he pressed his
+lips against the tips of her fingers.
+
+If the thing was to be done, this way of doing it was, perhaps, as good
+as any other. It was one, at any rate, which left no doubt whatever as
+to the gentleman’s intentions. Mrs. Thompson, could she have had her own
+way, would not have allowed her lover of fifty to go down upon his knees,
+and would have spared him much of the romance of his declaration. So
+also would she have spared him his yellow gloves and his polished boots.
+But these were a part of the necessity of the situation, and therefore
+she wisely took them as matters to be passed over with indifference.
+Seeing, however, that M. Lacordaire still remained on his knees, it was
+necessary that she should take some step toward raising him, especially
+as her two children and the guide would infallibly be upon them before
+long.
+
+“M. Lacordaire,” she said, “you surprise me greatly; but pray get up.”
+
+“But will madame vouchsafe to give me some small ground for hope?”
+
+“The girls will be here directly, M. Lacordaire; pray get up. I can talk
+to you much better if you will stand up, or sit down on one of these
+stones.”
+
+M. Lacordaire did as he was bid; he got up, wiped the knees of his
+pantaloons with his handkerchief, sat down beside her, and then pressed
+the handle of his cane to his heart.
+
+“You really have so surprised me that I hardly know how to answer you,”
+said Mrs. Thompson. “Indeed, I cannot bring myself to imagine that you
+are in earnest.”
+
+“Ah, madame, do not be so cruel! How can I have lived with you so long,
+sat beside you for so many days, without having received your image into
+my heart? I am in earnest! Alas! I fear too much in earnest!” And
+then he looked at her with all his eyes, and sighed with all his
+strength.
+
+Mrs. Thompson’s prudence told her that it would be well to settle the
+matter, in one way or the other, as soon as possible. Long periods of
+love-making were fit for younger people than herself and her future
+possible husband. Her object would be to make him comfortable if she
+could, and that he should do the same for her, if that also were
+possible. As for lookings and sighings and pressings of the hand, she
+had gone through all that some twenty years since in India, when Thompson
+had been young, and she was still in her teens.
+
+“But, M. Lacordaire, there are so many things to be considered. There!
+I hear the children coming! Let us walk this way for a minute.” And
+they turned behind a wall which placed them out of sight, and walked on a
+few paces till they reached a parapet, which stood on the uttermost edge
+of the high rock. Leaning upon this they continued their conversation.
+
+“There are so many things to be considered,” said Mrs. Thompson again.
+
+“Yes, of course,” said M. Lacordaire. “But my one great consideration is
+this;—that I love madame to distraction.”
+
+“I am very much flattered; of course, any lady would so feel. But, M.
+Lacordaire—”
+
+“Madame, I am all attention. But, if you would deign to make me happy,
+say that one word, ‘I love you!’” M. Lacordaire, as he uttered these
+words, did not look, as the saying is, at his best. But Mrs. Thompson
+forgave him. She knew that elderly gentlemen under such circumstances do
+not look at their best.
+
+“But if I consented to—to—to such an arrangement, I could only do so on
+seeing that it would be beneficial—or, at any rate, not injurious—to my
+children; and that it would offer to ourselves a fair promise of future
+happiness.”
+
+“Ah, madame; it would be the dearest wish of my heart to be a second
+father to those two young ladies; except, indeed—” and then M. Lacordaire
+stopped the flow of his speech.
+
+“In such matters it is so much the best to be explicit at once,” said
+Mrs. Thompson.
+
+“Oh, yes; certainly! Nothing can be more wise than madame.”
+
+“And the happiness of a household depends so much on money.”
+
+“Madame!”
+
+“Let me say a word or two, Monsieur Lacordaire. I have enough for myself
+and my children; and, should I every marry again, I should not, I hope,
+be felt as a burden by my husband; but it would, of course, be my duty to
+know what were his circumstances before I accepted him. Of yourself,
+personally, I have seen nothing that I do not like.”
+
+“Oh, madame!”
+
+“But as yet I know nothing of your circumstances.”
+
+M. Lacordaire, perhaps, did feel that Mrs. Thompson’s prudence was of a
+strong, masculine description; but he hardly liked her the less on this
+account. To give him his due he was not desirous of marrying her solely
+for her money’s sake. He also wished for a comfortable home, and
+proposed to give as much as he got; only he had been anxious to wrap up
+the solid cake of this business in a casing of sugar of romance. Mrs.
+Thompson would not have the sugar but the cake might not be the worse on
+that account.
+
+“No, madame, not as yet; but they shall all be made open and at your
+disposal,” said M. Lacordaire; and Mrs. Thompson bowed approvingly.
+
+“I am in business,” continued M. Lacordaire; “and my business gives me
+eight thousand francs a year.”
+
+“Four times eight are thirty-two,” said Mrs. Thompson to herself; putting
+the francs into pounds sterling, in the manner that she had always found
+to be the readiest. Well, so far the statement was satisfactory. An
+income of three hundred and twenty pounds a year from business, joined to
+her own, might do very well. She did not in the least suspect M.
+Lacordaire of being false, and so far the matter sounded well.
+
+“And what is the business?” she asked, in a tone of voice intended to be
+indifferent, but which nevertheless showed that she listened anxiously
+for an answer to her question.
+
+They were both standing with their arms upon the wall, looking down upon
+the town of Le Puy; but they had so stood that each could see the other’s
+countenance as they talked. Mrs. Thompson could now perceive that M.
+Lacordaire became red in the face, as he paused before answering her.
+She was near to him, and seeing his emotion gently touched his arm with
+her hand. This she did to reassure him, for she saw that he was ashamed
+of having to declare that he was a tradesman. As for herself, she had
+made up her mind to bear with this, if she found, as she felt sure she
+would find, that the trade was one which would not degrade either him or
+her. Hitherto, indeed,—in her early days,—she had looked down on trade;
+but of what benefit had her grand ideas been to her when she had returned
+to England? She had tried her hand at English genteel society, and no
+one had seemed to care for her. Therefore, she touched his arm lightly
+with her fingers that she might encourage him.
+
+He paused for a moment, as I have said, and became red; and then feeling
+that he had shown some symptoms of shame—and feeling also, probably, that
+it was unmanly in him to do so, he shook himself slightly, raised his
+head up somewhat more proudly than was his wont, looked her full in the
+face with more strength of character than she had yet seen him assume;
+and then, declared his business.
+
+“Madame,” he said, in a very audible, but not in a loud voice, “madame—je
+suis tailleur.” And having so spoken, he turned slightly from her and
+looked down over the valley towards Le Puy.
+
+There was nothing more said upon the subject as they drove down from the
+rock of Polignac back to the town. Immediately on receiving the
+announcement, Mrs. Thompson found that she had no answer to make. She
+withdrew her hand—and felt at once that she had received a blow. It was
+not that she was angry with M. Lacordaire for being a tailor; nor was she
+angry with him in that, being a tailor, he had so addressed her. But she
+was surprised, disappointed, and altogether put beyond her ease. She
+had, at any rate, not expected this. She had dreamed of his being a
+banker; thought that, perhaps, he might have been a wine merchant; but
+her idea had never gone below a jeweller or watchmaker. When those words
+broke upon her ear, “Madame, je suis tailleur,” she had felt herself to
+be speechless.
+
+But the words had not been a minute spoken when Lilian and Mimmy ran up
+to their mother. “Oh, mamma,” said Lilian, “we thought you were lost; we
+have searched for you all over the château.”
+
+“We have been sitting very quietly here, my dear, looking at the view,”
+said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+“But, mamma, I do wish you’d see the mouth of the oracle. It is so
+large, and so round, and so ugly. I put my arm into it all the way,”
+said Mimmy.
+
+But at the present moment her mamma felt no interest in the mouth of the
+oracle; and so they all walked down together to the carriage. And,
+though the way was steep, Mrs. Thompson managed to pick her steps without
+the assistance of an arm; nor did M. Lacordaire presume to offer it.
+
+The drive back to town was very silent. Mrs. Thompson did make one or
+two attempts at conversation, but they were not effectual. M. Lacordaire
+could not speak at his ease till this matter was settled, and he already
+had begun to perceive that his business was against him. Why is it that
+the trade of a tailor should be less honourable than that of a
+haberdasher, or even a grocer?
+
+They sat next each other at dinner, as usual; and here, as all eyes were
+upon them, they both made a great struggle to behave in their accustomed
+way. But even in this they failed. All the world of the Hôtel des
+Ambassadeurs knew that M. Lacordaire had gone forth to make an offer to
+Mrs. Thompson, and all that world, therefore, was full of speculation.
+But all the world could make nothing of it. M. Lacordaire did look like
+a rejected man, but Mrs. Thompson did not look like the woman who had
+rejected him. That the offer had been made—in that everybody agreed,
+from the senior habitué of the house who always sat at the head of the
+table, down to the junior assistant garçon. But as to reading the
+riddle, there was no accord among them.
+
+When the dessert was done, Mrs. Thompson, as usual, withdrew, and M.
+Lacordaire, as usual, bowed as he stood behind his own chair. He did
+not, however, attempt to follow her.
+
+But when she reached the door she called him. He was at her side in a
+moment, and then she whispered in his ear—
+
+“And I, also—I will be of the same business.”
+
+When M. Lacordaire regained the table the senior habitué, the junior
+garçon, and all the intermediate ranks of men at the Hôtel des
+Ambassadeurs knew that they might congratulate him.
+
+Mrs. Thompson had made a great struggle; but, speaking for myself, I am
+inclined to think that she arrived at last at a wise decision.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHATEAU OF PRINCE POLIGNAC***
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+<title>The Chateau of Prince Polignac, by Anthony Trollope</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Chateau of Prince Polignac, by Anthony
+Trollope
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Chateau of Prince Polignac
+
+
+Author: Anthony Trollope
+
+
+
+Release Date: January 16, 2015 [eBook #3712]
+[This file was first posted on July 31, 2001]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHATEAU OF PRINCE POLIGNAC***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1864 Chapman and Hall &ldquo;Tales of All
+Countries&rdquo; edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1>THE CH&Acirc;TEAU OF PRINCE POLIGNAC.</h1>
+<p><span class="smcap">Few</span> Englishmen or Englishwomen are
+intimately acquainted with the little town of Le Puy.&nbsp; It is
+the capital of the old province of Le Velay, which also is now
+but little known, even to French ears, for it is in these days
+called by the imperial name of the Department of the Haute
+Loire.&nbsp; It is to the south-east of Auvergne, and is nearly
+in the centre of the southern half of France.</p>
+<p>But few towns, merely as towns, can be better worth
+visiting.&nbsp; In the first place, the volcanic formation of the
+ground on which it stands is not only singular in the extreme, so
+as to be interesting to the geologist, but it is so picturesque
+as to be equally gratifying to the general tourist.&nbsp; Within
+a narrow valley there stand several rocks, rising up from the
+ground with absolute abruptness.&nbsp; Round two of these the
+town clusters, and a third stands but a mile distant, forming the
+centre of a faubourg, or suburb.&nbsp; These rocks appear to be,
+and I believe are, the harder particles of volcanic matter, which
+have not been carried away through successive ages by the joint
+agency of water and air.</p>
+<p>When the tide of lava ran down between the hills the surface
+left was no doubt on a level with the heads of these rocks; but
+here and there the deposit became harder than elsewhere, and
+these harder points have remained, lifting up their steep heads
+in a line through the valley.</p>
+<p>The highest of these is called the Rocher de Corneille.&nbsp;
+Round this and up its steep sides the town stands.&nbsp; On its
+highest summit there was an old castle; and there now is, or will
+be before these pages are printed, a colossal figure in bronze of
+the Virgin Mary, made from the cannon taken at Sebastopol.&nbsp;
+Half-way down the hill the cathedral is built, a singularly
+gloomy edifice,&mdash;Romanesque, as it is called, in its style,
+but extremely similar in its mode of architecture to what we know
+of Byzantine structures.&nbsp; But there has been no surface on
+the rock side large enough to form a resting-place for the
+church, which has therefore been built out on huge supporting
+piles, which form a porch below the west front; so that the
+approach is by numerous steps laid along the side of the wall
+below the church, forming a wondrous flight of stairs.&nbsp; Let
+all men who may find themselves stopping at Le Puy visit the top
+of these stairs at the time of the setting sun, and look down
+from thence through the framework of the porch on the town
+beneath, and at the hill-side beyond.</p>
+<p>Behind the church is the seminary of the priests, with its
+beautiful walks stretching round the Rocher de Corneille, and
+overlooking the town and valley below.</p>
+<p>Next to this rock, and within a quarter of a mile of it, is
+the second peak, called the Rock of the Needle.&nbsp; It rises
+narrow, sharp, and abrupt from the valley, allowing of no
+buildings on its sides.&nbsp; But on its very point has been
+erected a church sacred to St. Michael, that lover of rock
+summits, accessible by stairs cut from the stone.&nbsp; This,
+perhaps&mdash;this rock, I mean&mdash;is the most wonderful of
+the wonders which Nature has formed at La Puy.</p>
+<p>Above this, at a mile&rsquo;s distance, is the rock of
+Espailly, formed in the same way, and almost equally
+precipitous.&nbsp; On its summit is a castle, having its own
+legend, and professing to have been the residence of Charles
+VII., when little of France belonged to its kings but the
+provinces of Berry, Auvergne, and Le Velay.&nbsp; Some three
+miles farther up there is another volcanic rock, larger, indeed,
+but equally sudden in its spring,&mdash;equally remarkable as
+rising abruptly from the valley,&mdash;on which stands the castle
+and old family residence of the house of Polignac.&nbsp; It was
+lost by them at the Revolution, but was repurchased by the
+minister of Charles X., and is still the property of the head of
+the race.</p>
+<p>Le Puy itself is a small, moderate, pleasant French town, in
+which the language of the people has not the pure Parisian aroma,
+nor is the glory of the boulevards of the capital emulated in its
+streets.&nbsp; These are crooked, narrow, steep, and intricate,
+forming here and there excellent sketches for a lover of street
+picturesque beauty; but hurtful to the feet with their small,
+round-topped paving stones, and not always as clean as pedestrian
+ladies might desire.</p>
+<p>And now I would ask my readers to join me at the morning table
+d&rsquo;h&ocirc;te at the Hotel des Ambassadeurs.&nbsp; It will
+of course be understood that this does not mean a breakfast in
+the ordinary fashion of England, consisting of tea or coffee,
+bread and butter, and perhaps a boiled egg.&nbsp; It comprises
+all the requisites for a composite dinner, excepting soup; and as
+one gets farther south in France, this meal is called
+dinner.&nbsp; It is, however, eaten without any prejudice to
+another similar and somewhat longer meal at six or seven
+o&rsquo;clock, which, when the above name is taken up by the
+earlier enterprise, is styled supper.</p>
+<p>The d&eacute;je&ucirc;ner, or dinner, at the H&ocirc;tel des
+Ambassadeurs, on the morning in question, though very elaborate,
+was not a very gay affair.&nbsp; There were some fourteen persons
+present, of whom half were residents in the town, men employed in
+some official capacity, who found this to be the cheapest, the
+most luxurious, and to them the most comfortable mode of
+living.&nbsp; They clustered together at the head of the table,
+and as they were customary guests at the house, they talked their
+little talk together&mdash;it was very little&mdash;and made the
+most of the good things before them.&nbsp; Then there were two or
+three commis-voyageurs, a chance traveller or two, and an English
+lady with a young daughter.&nbsp; The English lady sat next to
+one of the accustomed guests; but he, unlike the others, held
+converse with her rather than with them.&nbsp; Our story at
+present has reference only to that lady and to that
+gentleman.</p>
+<p>Place aux dames.&nbsp; We will speak first of the lady, whose
+name was Mrs. Thompson.&nbsp; She was, shall I say, a young woman
+of about thirty-six.&nbsp; In so saying, I am perhaps creating a
+prejudice against her in the minds of some readers, as they will,
+not unnaturally, suppose her, after such an announcement, to be
+in truth over forty.&nbsp; Any such prejudice will be
+unjust.&nbsp; I would have it believed that thirty-six was the
+outside, not the inside of her age.&nbsp; She was good-looking,
+lady-like, and considering that she was an Englishwoman, fairly
+well dressed.&nbsp; She was inclined to be rather full in her
+person, but perhaps not more so than is becoming to ladies at her
+time of life.&nbsp; She had rings on her fingers and a brooch on
+her bosom which were of some value, and on the back of her head
+she wore a jaunty small lace cap, which seemed to tell, in
+conjunction with her other appointments, that her circumstances
+were comfortable.</p>
+<p>The little girl who sat next to her was the youngest of her
+two daughters, and might be about thirteen years of age.&nbsp;
+Her name was Matilda, but infantine circumstances had invested
+her with the nickname of Mimmy, by which her mother always called
+her.&nbsp; A nice, pretty, playful little girl was Mimmy
+Thompson, wearing two long tails of plaited hair hanging, behind
+her head, and inclined occasionally to be rather loud in her
+sport.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson had another and an elder daughter, now some
+fifteen years old, who was at school in Le Puy; and it was with
+reference to her tuition that Mrs. Thompson had taken up a
+temporary residence at the H&ocirc;tel des Ambassadeurs in that
+town.&nbsp; Lilian Thompson was occasionally invited down to dine
+or breakfast at the inn, and was visited daily at her school by
+her mother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I&rsquo;m sure that she&rsquo;ll do, I shall leave
+her there, and go back to England,&rdquo; Mrs. Thompson had said,
+not in the purest French, to the neighbour who always sat next to
+her at the table d&rsquo;h&ocirc;te, the gentleman, namely, to
+whom we have above alluded.&nbsp; But still she had remained at
+Le Puy a month, and did not go; a circumstance which was
+considered singular, but by no means unpleasant, both by the
+innkeeper and by the gentleman in question.</p>
+<p>The facts, as regarded Mrs. Thompson, were as
+follows:&mdash;She was the widow of a gentleman who had served
+for many years in the civil service of the East Indies, and who,
+on dying, had left her a comfortable income of&mdash;it matters
+not how many pounds, but constituting quite a sufficiency to
+enable her to live at her ease and educate her daughters.</p>
+<p>Her children had been sent home to England before her
+husband&rsquo;s death, and after that event she had followed
+them; but there, though she was possessed of moderate wealth, she
+had no friends and few acquaintances, and after a little while
+she had found life to be rather dull.&nbsp; Her customs were not
+those of England, nor were her propensities English; therefore
+she had gone abroad, and having received some recommendation of
+this school at Le Puy, had made her way thither.&nbsp; As it
+appeared to her that she really enjoyed more consideration at Le
+Puy than had been accorded to her either at Torquay or
+Leamington, there she remained from day to day.&nbsp; The total
+payment required at the H&ocirc;tel des Ambassadeurs was but six
+francs daily for herself and three and a half for her little
+girl; and where else could she live with a better junction of
+economy and comfort?&nbsp; And then the gentleman who always sat
+next to her was so exceedingly civil!</p>
+<p>The gentleman&rsquo;s name was M. Lacordaire.&nbsp; So much
+she knew, and had learned to call him by his name very
+frequently.&nbsp; Mimmy, too, was quite intimate with M.
+Lacordaire; but nothing more than his name was known of
+him.&nbsp; But M. Lacordaire carried a general letter of
+recommendation in his face, manner, gait, dress, and tone of
+voice.&nbsp; In all these respects there was nothing left to be
+desired; and, in addition to this, he was decorated, and wore the
+little red ribbon of the Legion of Honour, ingeniously twisted
+into the shape of a small flower.</p>
+<p>M. Lacordaire might be senior in age to Mrs. Thompson by about
+ten years, nor had he about him any of the airs or graces of a
+would-be young man.&nbsp; His hair, which he wore very short, was
+grizzled, as was also the small pretence of a whisker which came
+down about as far as the middle of his ear; but the tuft on his
+chin was still brown, without a gray hair.&nbsp; His eyes were
+bright and tender, his voice was low and soft, his hands were
+very white, his clothes were always new and well fitting, and a
+better-brushed hat could not be seen out of Paris, nor perhaps in
+it.</p>
+<p>Now, during the weeks which Mrs. Thompson had passed at La
+Puy, the acquaintance which she had formed with M. Lacordaire had
+progressed beyond the prolonged meals in the salle &agrave;
+manger.&nbsp; He had occasionally sat beside her evening table as
+she took her English cup of tea in her own room, her bed being
+duly screened off in its distant niche by becoming curtains; and
+then he had occasionally walked beside her, as he civilly
+escorted her to the lions of the place; and he had once
+accompanied her, sitting on the back seat of a French voiture,
+when she had gone forth to see something of the surrounding
+country.</p>
+<p>On all such occasions she had been accompanied by one of her
+daughters, and the world of Le Puy had had nothing material to
+say against her.&nbsp; But still the world of Le Puy had
+whispered a little, suggesting that M. Lacordaire knew very well
+what he was about.&nbsp; But might not Mrs. Thompson also know as
+well what she was about?&nbsp; At any rate, everything had gone
+on very pleasantly since the acquaintance had been made.&nbsp;
+And now, so much having been explained, we will go back to the
+elaborate breakfast at the H&ocirc;tel des Ambassadeurs.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson, holding Mimmy by the hand, walked into the room
+some few minutes after the last bell had been rung, and took the
+place which was now hers by custom.&nbsp; The gentlemen who
+constantly frequented the house all bowed to her, but M.
+Lacordaire rose from his seat and offered her his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And how is Mees Meemy this morning?&rdquo; said he; for
+&rsquo;twas thus he always pronounced her name.</p>
+<p>Miss Mimmy, answering for herself, declared that she was very
+well, and suggested that M. Lacordaire should give her a fig from
+off a dish that was placed immediately before him on the
+table.&nbsp; This M. Lacordaire did, presenting it very elegantly
+between his two fingers, and making a little bow to the little
+lady as he did so.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fie, Mimmy!&rdquo; said her mother; &ldquo;why do you
+ask for the things before the waiter brings them
+round?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, mamma,&rdquo; said Mimmy, speaking English,
+&ldquo;M. Lacordaire always gives me a fig every
+morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. Lacordaire always spoils you, I think,&rdquo;
+answered Mrs. Thompson, in French.&nbsp; And then they went
+thoroughly to work at their breakfast.&nbsp; During the whole
+meal M. Lacordaire attended assiduously to his neighbour; and did
+so without any evil result, except that one Frenchman with a
+black moustache, at the head of the table, trod on the toe of
+another Frenchman with another black moustache&mdash;winking as
+he made the sign&mdash;just as M. Lacordaire, having selected a
+bunch of grapes, put it on Mrs. Thompson&rsquo;s plate with
+infinite grace.&nbsp; But who among us all is free from such
+impertinences as these?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But madame really must see the ch&acirc;teau of Prince
+Polignac before she leaves Le Puy,&rdquo; said M. Lacordaire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The ch&acirc;teau of who?&rdquo; asked Mimmy, to whose
+young ears the French words were already becoming familiar.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Prince Polignac, my dear.&nbsp; Well, I really
+don&rsquo;t know, M. Lacordaire;&mdash;I have seen a great deal
+of the place already, and I shall be going now very soon;
+probably in a day or two,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But madame must positively see the
+ch&acirc;teau,&rdquo; said M. Lacordaire, very impressively; and
+then after a pause he added, &ldquo;If madame will have the
+complaisance to commission me to procure a carriage for this
+afternoon, and will allow me the honour to be her guide, I shall
+consider myself one of the most fortunate of men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, mamma, do go,&rdquo; said Mimmy, clapping her
+hands.&nbsp; &ldquo;And it is Thursday, and Lilian can go with
+us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be quiet, Mimmy, do.&nbsp; Thank you, no, M.
+Lacordaire.&nbsp; I could not go to-day; but I am extremely
+obliged by your politeness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. Lacordaire still pressed the matter, and Mrs. Thompson
+still declined till it was time to rise from the table.&nbsp; She
+then declared that she did not think it possible that she should
+visit the ch&acirc;teau before she left Le Puy; but that she
+would give him an answer at dinner.</p>
+<p>The most tedious time in the day to Mrs. Thompson were the two
+hours after breakfast.&nbsp; At one o&rsquo;clock she daily went
+to the school, taking Mimmy, who for an hour or two shared her
+sister&rsquo;s lessons.&nbsp; This and her little excursions
+about the place, and her shopping, managed to make away with her
+afternoon.&nbsp; Then in the evening, she generally saw something
+of M. Lacordaire.&nbsp; But those two hours after breakfast were
+hard of killing.</p>
+<p>On this occasion, when she gained her own room, she as usual
+placed Mimmy on the sofa with a needle.&nbsp; Her custom then was
+to take up a novel; but on this morning she sat herself down in
+her arm-chair, and resting her head upon her hand and elbow,
+began to turn over certain circumstances in her mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mamma,&rdquo; said Mimmy, &ldquo;why won&rsquo;t you go
+with M. Lacordaire to that place belonging to the prince?&nbsp;
+Prince&mdash;Polly something, wasn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mind your work, my dear,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I do so wish you&rsquo;d go, mamma.&nbsp; What was
+the prince&rsquo;s name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Polignac.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mamma, ain&rsquo;t princes very great
+people?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, my dear; sometimes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is Prince Polly-nac like our Prince Alfred?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my dear; not at all.&nbsp; At least, I suppose
+not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is his mother a queen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my dear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then his father must be a king?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my dear.&nbsp; It is quite a different thing
+here.&nbsp; Here in France they have a great many
+princes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, at any rate I should like to see a prince&rsquo;s
+ch&acirc;teau; so I do hope you&rsquo;ll go.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+then there was a pause.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mamma, could it come to
+pass, here in France, that M. Lacordaire should ever be a
+prince?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. Lacordaire a prince!&nbsp; No; don&rsquo;t talk such
+nonsense, but mind your work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t M. Lacordaire a very nice man?&nbsp;
+Ain&rsquo;t you very fond of him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To this question Mrs. Thompson made no answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mamma,&rdquo; continued Mimmy, after a moment&rsquo;s
+pause, &ldquo;won&rsquo;t you tell me whether you are fond of M.
+Lacordaire?&nbsp; I&rsquo;m quite sure of this,&mdash;that
+he&rsquo;s very fond of you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What makes you think that?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Thompson,
+who could not bring herself to refrain from the question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because he looks at you in that way, mamma, and
+squeezes your hand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nonsense, child,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson; &ldquo;hold
+your tongue.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know what can have put such
+stuff into your head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he does, mamma,&rdquo; said Mimmy, who rarely
+allowed her mother to put her down.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson made no further answer, but again sat with her
+head resting on her hand.&nbsp; She also, if the truth must be
+told, was thinking of M. Lacordaire and his fondness for
+herself.&nbsp; He had squeezed her hand and he had looked into
+her face.&nbsp; However much it may have been nonsense on
+Mimmy&rsquo;s part to talk of such things, they had not the less
+absolutely occurred.&nbsp; Was it really the fact that M.
+Lacordaire was in love with her?</p>
+<p>And if so, what return should she, or could she make to such a
+passion?&nbsp; He had looked at her yesterday, and squeezed her
+hand to-day. Might it not be probable that he would advance a
+step further to-morrow?&nbsp; If so, what answer would she be
+prepared to make to him?</p>
+<p>She did not think&mdash;so she said to herself&mdash;that she
+had any particular objection to marrying again.&nbsp; Thompson
+had been dead now for four years, and neither his friends, nor
+her friends, nor the world could say she was wrong on that
+score.&nbsp; And as to marrying a Frenchman, she could not say
+she felt within herself any absolute repugnance to doing
+that.&nbsp; Of her own country, speaking of England as such, she,
+in truth, knew but little&mdash;and perhaps cared less.&nbsp; She
+had gone to India almost as a child, and England had not been
+specially kind to her on her return.&nbsp; She had found it dull
+and cold, stiff, and almost ill-natured.&nbsp; People there had
+not smiled on her and been civil as M. Lacordaire had done.&nbsp;
+As far as England and Englishmen were considered she saw no
+reason why she should not marry M. Lacordaire.</p>
+<p>And then, as regarded the man; could she in her heart say that
+she was prepared to love, honour, and obey M. Lacordaire?&nbsp;
+She certainly knew no reason why she should not do so.&nbsp; She
+did not know much of him, she said to herself at first; but she
+knew as much, she said afterwards, as she had known personally of
+Mr. Thompson before their marriage.&nbsp; She had known, to be
+sure, what was Mr. Thompson&rsquo;s profession and what his
+income; or, if not, some one else had known for her.&nbsp; As to
+both these points she was quite in the dark as regarded M.
+Lacordaire.</p>
+<p>Personally, she certainly did like him, as she said to herself
+more than once.&nbsp; There was a courtesy and softness about him
+which were very gratifying to her; and then, his appearance was
+so much in his favour.&nbsp; He was not very young, she
+acknowledged; but neither was she young herself.&nbsp; It was
+quite evident that he was fond of her children, and that he would
+be a kind and affectionate father to them.&nbsp; Indeed, there
+was kindness in all that he did.</p>
+<p>Should she marry again,&mdash;and she put it to herself quite
+hypothetically,&mdash;she would look for no romance in such a
+second marriage.&nbsp; She would be content to sit down in a
+quiet home, to the tame dull realities of life, satisfied with
+the companionship of a man who would be kind and gentle to her,
+and whom she could respect and esteem.&nbsp; Where could she find
+a companion with whom this could be more safely anticipated than
+with M. Lacordaire?</p>
+<p>And so she argued the question within her own breast in a
+manner not unfriendly to that gentleman.&nbsp; That there was as
+yet one great hindrance she at once saw; but then that might be
+remedied by a word.&nbsp; She did not know what was his income or
+his profession.&nbsp; The chambermaid, whom she had interrogated,
+had told her that he was a &ldquo;marchand.&rdquo;&nbsp; To
+merchants, generally, she felt that she had no objection.&nbsp;
+The Barings and the Rothschilds were merchants, as was also that
+wonderful man at Bombay, Sir Hommajee Bommajee, who was worth she
+did no know how many thousand lacs of rupees.</p>
+<p>That it would behove her, on her own account and that of her
+daughters, to take care of her own little fortune in contracting
+any such connection, that she felt strongly.&nbsp; She would
+never so commit herself as to put security in that respect out of
+her power.&nbsp; But then she did not think that M. Lacordaire
+would ever ask her to do so; at any rate, she was determined on
+this, that there should never be any doubt on that matter; and as
+she firmly resolved on this, she again took up her book, and for
+a minute or two made an attempt to read.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mamma,&rdquo; said Mummy, &ldquo;will M. Lacordaire go
+up to the school to see Lilian when you go away from
+this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, I cannot say, my dear.&nbsp; If Lilian is a
+good girl, perhaps he may do so now and then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And will he write to you and tell you how she
+is?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lilian can write for herself; can she not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes; I suppose she can; but I hope M. Lacordaire
+will write too.&nbsp; We shall come back here some day;
+shan&rsquo;t we, mamma?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot say, my dear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do so hope we shall see M. Lacordaire again.&nbsp; Do
+you know what I was thinking, mamma?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Little girls like you ought not to think,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Thompson, walking slowly out of the room to the top of the
+stairs and back again; for she had felt the necessity of
+preventing Mimmy from disclosing any more of her thoughts.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And now, my dear, get yourself ready, and we will go up to
+the school.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson always dressed herself with care, though not in
+especially fine clothes, before she went down to dinner at the
+table d&rsquo;h&ocirc;te; but on this occasion she was more than
+usually particular.&nbsp; She hardly explained to herself why she
+did this; but, nevertheless, as she stood before the glass, she
+did in a certain manner feel that the circumstances of her future
+life might perhaps depend on what might be said and done that
+evening.&nbsp; She had not absolutely decided whether or no she
+would go to the Prince&rsquo;s ch&acirc;teau; but if she did
+go&mdash;.&nbsp; Well, if she did; what then?&nbsp; She had sense
+enough, as she assured herself more than once, to regulate her
+own conduct with propriety in any such emergency.</p>
+<p>During the dinner, M. Lacordaire conversed in his usual
+manner, but said nothing whatever about the visit to
+Polignac.&nbsp; He was very kind to Mimmy, and very courteous to
+her mother, but did not appear to be at all more particular than
+usual.&nbsp; Indeed, it might be a question whether he was not
+less so.&nbsp; As she had entered the room Mrs. Thompson had said
+to herself that, perhaps, after all, it would be better that
+there should be nothing more thought about it; but before the
+four of five courses were over, she was beginning to feel a
+little disappointed.</p>
+<p>And now the fruit was on the table, after the consumption of
+which it was her practice to retire.&nbsp; It was certainly open
+to her to ask M. Lacordaire to take tea with her that evening, as
+she had done on former occasions; but she felt that she must not
+do this now, considering the immediate circumstances of the
+case.&nbsp; If any further steps were to be taken, they must be
+taken by him, and not by her;&mdash;or else by Mimmy, who, just
+as her mother was slowly consuming her last grapes, ran round to
+the back of M. Lacordaire&rsquo;s chair, and whispered something
+into his ear.&nbsp; It may be presumed that Mrs. Thompson did not
+see the intention of the movement in time to arrest it, for she
+did nothing till the whispering had been whispered; and then she
+rebuked the child, bade her not to be troublesome, and with more
+than usual austerity in her voice, desired her to get herself
+ready to go up stairs to their chamber.</p>
+<p>As she spoke she herself rose from her chair, and made her
+final little bow to the table, and her other final little bow and
+smile to M. Lacordaire; but this was certain to all who saw it,
+that the smile was not as gracious as usual.</p>
+<p>As she walked forth, M. Lacordaire rose from his
+chair&mdash;such being his constant practice when she left the
+table; but on this occasion he accompanied her to the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And has madame decided,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;whether
+she will permit me to accompany her to the
+ch&acirc;teau?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I really don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Thompson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mees Meemy,&rdquo; continued M. Lacordaire, &ldquo;is
+very anxious to see the rock, and I may perhaps hope that Mees
+Lilian would be pleased with such a little excursion.&nbsp; As
+for myself&mdash;&rdquo; and then M. Lacordaire put his hand upon
+his heart in a manner that seemed to speak more plainly than he
+had ever spoken.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, if the children would really like it,
+and&mdash;as you are so very kind,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson; and
+so the matter was conceded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-morrow afternoon?&rdquo; suggested M.
+Lacordaire.&nbsp; But Mrs. Thompson fixed on Saturday, thereby
+showing that she herself was in no hurry for the expedition.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I am so glad!&rdquo; said Mimmy, when they had
+re-entered their own room.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mamma, do let me tell
+Lilian myself when I go up to the school to-morrow!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But mamma was in no humour to say much to her child on this
+subject at the present moment.&nbsp; She threw herself back on
+her sofa in perfect silence, and began to reflect whether she
+would like to sign her name in future as Fanny Lacordaire,
+instead of Fanny Thompson.&nbsp; It certainly seemed as though
+things were verging towards such a necessity.&nbsp; A
+marchand!&nbsp; But a marchand of what?&nbsp; She had an
+instinctive feeling that the people in the hotel were talking
+about her and M. Lacordaire, and was therefore more than ever
+averse to asking any one a question.</p>
+<p>As she went up to the school the next afternoon, she walked
+through more of the streets of Le Puy than was necessary, and in
+every street she looked at the names which she saw over the doors
+of the more respectable houses of business.&nbsp; But she looked
+in vain.&nbsp; It might be that M. Lacordaire was a marchand of
+so specially high a quality as to be under no necessity to put up
+his name at all.&nbsp; Sir Hommajee Bommajee&rsquo;s name did not
+appear over any door in Bombay;&mdash;at least, she thought
+not.</p>
+<p>And then came the Saturday morning.&nbsp; &ldquo;We shall be
+ready at two,&rdquo; she said, as she left the breakfast-table;
+&ldquo;and perhaps you would not mind calling for Lilian on the
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. Lacordaire would be delighted to call anywhere for anybody
+on behalf of Mrs. Thompson; and then, as he got to the door of
+the salon, he offered her his hand.&nbsp; He did so with so much
+French courtesy that she could not refuse it, and then she felt
+that his purpose was more tender than ever it had been.&nbsp; And
+why not, if this was the destiny which Fate had prepared for
+her?</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson would rather have got into the carriage at any
+other spot in Le Puy than at that at which she was forced to do
+so&mdash;the chief entrance, namely, of the H&ocirc;tel des
+Ambassadeurs.&nbsp; And what made it worse was this, that an
+appearance of a special fate was given to the occasion.&nbsp; M.
+Lacordaire was dressed in more than his Sunday best.&nbsp; He had
+on new yellow kid gloves.&nbsp; His coat, if not new, was newer
+than any Mrs. Thompson had yet observed, and was lined with silk
+up to the very collar.&nbsp; He had on patent leather boots,
+which glittered, as Mrs. Thompson thought, much too
+conspicuously.&nbsp; And as for his hat, it was quite evident
+that it was fresh that morning from the maker&rsquo;s block.</p>
+<p>In this costume, with his hat in his hand, he stood under the
+great gateway of the hotel, ready to hand Mrs. Thompson into the
+carriage.&nbsp; This would have been nothing if the landlord and
+landlady had not been there also, as well as the man-cook, and
+the four waiters, and the fille de chambre.&nbsp; Two or three
+other pair of eyes Mrs. Thompson also saw, as she glanced round,
+and then Mimmy walked across the yard in her best clothes with a
+f&ecirc;te-day air about her for which her mother would have
+liked to have whipped her.</p>
+<p>But what did it matter?&nbsp; If it was written in the book
+that she should become Madame Lacordaire, of course the world
+would know that there must have been some preparatory
+love-making.&nbsp; Let them have their laugh; a good husband
+would not be dearly purchased at so trifling an expense.&nbsp;
+And so they sallied forth with already half the ceremony of a
+wedding.</p>
+<p>Mimmy seated herself opposite to her mother, and M. Lacordaire
+also sat with his back to the horses, leaving the second place of
+honour for Lilian.&nbsp; &ldquo;Pray make yourself comfortable,
+M. Lacordaire, and don&rsquo;t mind her,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Thompson.&nbsp; But he was firm in his purpose of civility,
+perhaps making up his mind that when he should in truth stand in
+the place of papa to the young lady, then would be his time for
+having the back seat in the carnage.</p>
+<p>Lilian, also in her best frock, came down the school-steps,
+and three of the school teachers came with her.&nbsp; It would
+have added to Mrs. Thompson&rsquo;s happiness at that moment if
+M. Lacordaire would have kept his polished boots out of sight,
+and put his yellow gloves into his pocket.</p>
+<p>And then they started.&nbsp; The road from Le Puy to Polignac
+is nearly all up hill; and a very steep hill it is, so that there
+was plenty of time for conversation.&nbsp; But the girls had it
+nearly all to themselves.&nbsp; Mimmy thought that she had never
+found M. Lacordaire so stupid; and Lilian told her sister on the
+first safe opportunity that occurred, that it seemed very much as
+though they were all going to church.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And do any of the Polignac people ever live at this
+place?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Thompson, by way of making conversation;
+in answer to which M. Lacordaire informed madame that the place
+was at present only a ruin; and then there was again silence till
+they found themselves under the rock, and were informed by the
+driver that the rest of the ascent must be made on foot.</p>
+<p>The rock now stood abrupt and precipitous above their
+heads.&nbsp; It was larger in its circumference and with much
+larger space on its summit than those other volcanic rocks in and
+close to the town; but then at the same time it was higher from
+the ground, and quite as inaccessible, except by the single path
+which led up to the ch&acirc;teau.</p>
+<p>M. Lacordaire, with conspicuous gallantry, first assisted Mrs.
+Thompson from the carriage, and then handed down the two young
+ladies.&nbsp; No lady could have been so difficult to please as
+to complain of him, and yet Mrs. Thompson thought that he was not
+as agreeable as usual.&nbsp; Those horrid boots and those horrid
+gloves gave him such an air of holiday finery that neither could
+he be at his ease wearing them, nor could she, in seeing them
+worn.</p>
+<p>They were soon taken in hand by the poor woman whose privilege
+it was to show the ruins.&nbsp; For a little distance they walked
+up the path in single file; not that it was too narrow to
+accommodate two, but M. Lacordaire&rsquo;s courage had not yet
+been screwed to a point which admitted of his offering his arm to
+the widow.&nbsp; For in France, it must be remembered, that this
+means more than it does in some other countries.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson felt that all this was silly and useless.&nbsp;
+If they were not to be dear friends this coming out f&ecirc;ting
+together, those boots and gloves and new hat were all very
+foolish; and if they were, the sooner they understood each other
+the better.&nbsp; So Mrs. Thompson, finding that the path was
+steep and the weather warm, stood still for a while leaning
+against the wall, with a look of considerable fatigue in her
+face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will madame permit me the honour of offering her my
+arm?&rdquo; said M. Lacordaire.&nbsp; &ldquo;The road is so
+extraordinarily steep for madame to climb.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson did permit him the honour, and so they went on
+till they reached the top.</p>
+<p>The view from the summit was both extensive and grand, but
+neither Lilian nor Mimmy were much pleased with the place.&nbsp;
+The elder sister, who had talked over the matter with her school
+companions, expected a fine castle with turrets, battlements, and
+romance; and the other expected a pretty smiling house, such as
+princes, in her mind, ought to inhabit.</p>
+<p>Instead of this they found an old turret, with steps so broken
+that M. Lacordaire did not care to ascend them, and the ruined
+walls of a mansion, in which nothing was to be seen but the
+remains of an enormous kitchen chimney.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was the kitchen of the family,&rdquo; said the
+guide.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And this,&rdquo; said the woman, taking them into the
+next ruined compartment, &ldquo;was the kitchen of monsieur et
+madame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What! two kitchens?&rdquo; exclaimed Lilian, upon which
+M. Lacordaire explained that the ancestors of the Prince de
+Polignac had been very great people, and had therefore required
+culinary performances on a great scale.</p>
+<p>And then the woman began to chatter something about an oracle
+of Apollo.&nbsp; There was, she said, a hole in the rock, from
+which in past times, perhaps more than a hundred years ago, the
+oracle used to speak forth mysterious words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There,&rdquo; she said, pointing to a part of the rock
+at some distance, &ldquo;was the hole.&nbsp; And if the ladies
+would follow her to a little outhouse which was just beyond, she
+would show them the huge stone mouth out of which the oracle used
+to speak.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lilian and Mimmy both declared at once for seeing the oracle,
+but Mrs. Thompson expressed her determination to remain sitting
+where she was upon the turf.&nbsp; So the guide started off with
+the young ladies; and will it be thought surprising that M.
+Lacordaire should have remained alone by the side of Mrs.
+Thompson?</p>
+<p>It must be now or never, Mrs. Thompson felt; and as regarded
+M. Lacordaire, he probably entertained some idea of the same
+kind.&nbsp; Mrs. Thompson&rsquo;s inclinations, though they had
+never been very strong in the matter, were certainly in favour of
+the &ldquo;now.&rdquo;&nbsp; M. Lacordaire&rsquo;s inclinations
+were stronger.&nbsp; He had fully and firmly made up his mind in
+favour of matrimony; but then he was not so absolutely in favour
+of the &ldquo;now.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mrs. Thompson&rsquo;s mind, if
+one could have read it, would have shown a great objection to
+shilly-shallying, as she was accustomed to call it.&nbsp; But M.
+Lacordaire, were it not for the danger which might thence arise,
+would have seen no objection to some slight further
+procrastination.&nbsp; His courage was beginning, perhaps, to
+ooze out from his fingers&rsquo; ends.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I declare that those girls have scampered away ever so
+far,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would madame wish that I should call them back?&rdquo;
+said M. Lacordaire, innocently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, dear children! let them enjoy themselves; it
+will be a pleasure to them to run about the rock, and I suppose
+they will be safe with that woman?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, quite safe,&rdquo; said M. Lacordaire; and
+then there was another little pause.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson was sitting on a broken fragment of a stone just
+outside the entrance to the old family kitchen, and M. Lacordaire
+was standing immediately before her.&nbsp; He had in his hand a
+little cane with which he sometimes slapped his boots and
+sometimes poked about among the rubbish.&nbsp; His hat was not
+quite straight on his head, having a little jaunty twist to one
+side, with reference to which, by-the-bye, Mrs. Thompson then
+resolved that she would make a change, should ever the gentleman
+become her own property.&nbsp; He still wore his gloves, and was
+very smart; but it was clear to see that he was not at his
+ease.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope the heat does not incommode you,&rdquo; he said
+after a few moments&rsquo; silence.&nbsp; Mrs. Thompson declared
+that it did not, that she liked a good deal of heat, and that, on
+the whole, she was very well where she was.&nbsp; She was afraid,
+however, that she was detaining M. Lacordaire, who might probably
+wish to be moving about upon the rock.&nbsp; In answer to which
+M. Lacordaire declared that he never could be so happy anywhere
+as in her close vicinity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are too good to me,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson,
+almost sighing.&nbsp; &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what my stay here
+would have been without your great kindness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is madame that has been kind to me,&rdquo; said M.
+Lacordaire, pressing the handle of his cane against his
+heart.</p>
+<p>There was then another pause, after which Mrs. Thompson said
+that that was all his French politeness; that she knew that she
+had been very troublesome to him, but that she would now soon be
+gone; and that then, in her own country, she would never forget
+his great goodness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, madame!&rdquo; said M. Lacordaire; and, as he said
+it, much more was expressed in his face than in his words.&nbsp;
+But, then, you can neither accept nor reject a gentleman by what
+he says in his face.&nbsp; He blushed, too, up to his grizzled
+hair, and, turning round, walked a step or two away from the
+widow&rsquo;s seat, and back again.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson the while sat quite still.&nbsp; The displaced
+fragment, lying, as it did, near a corner of the building, made
+not an uncomfortable chair.&nbsp; She had only to be careful that
+she did not injure her hat or crush her clothes, and throw in a
+word here and there to assist the gentleman, should occasion
+permit it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame!&rdquo; said M. Lacordaire, on his return from a
+second little walk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Monsieur!&rdquo; replied Mrs. Thompson, perceiving that
+M. Lacordaire paused in his speech.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he began again, and then, as he again
+paused, Mrs. Thompson looked up to him very sweetly;
+&ldquo;madame, what I am going to say will, I am afraid, seem to
+evince by far too great audacity on my part.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson may, perhaps, have thought that, at the present
+moment, audacity was not his fault.&nbsp; She replied, however,
+that she was quite sure that monsieur would say nothing that was
+in any way unbecoming either for him to speak or for her to
+hear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame, may I have ground to hope that such may be your
+sentiments after I have spoken!&nbsp; Madame&rdquo;&mdash;and now
+he went down, absolutely on his knees, on the hard stones; and
+Mrs. Thompson, looking about into the distance, almost thought
+that she saw the top of the guide&rsquo;s
+cap&mdash;&ldquo;Madame, I have looked forward to this
+opportunity as one in which I may declare for you the greatest
+passion that I have ever yet felt. Madame, with all my heart and
+soul I love you.&nbsp; Madame, I offer to you the homage of my
+heart, my hand, the happiness of my life, and all that I possess
+in this world;&rdquo; and then, taking her hand gracefully
+between his gloves, he pressed his lips against the tips of her
+fingers.</p>
+<p>If the thing was to be done, this way of doing it was,
+perhaps, as good as any other.&nbsp; It was one, at any rate,
+which left no doubt whatever as to the gentleman&rsquo;s
+intentions.&nbsp; Mrs. Thompson, could she have had her own way,
+would not have allowed her lover of fifty to go down upon his
+knees, and would have spared him much of the romance of his
+declaration.&nbsp; So also would she have spared him his yellow
+gloves and his polished boots.&nbsp; But these were a part of the
+necessity of the situation, and therefore she wisely took them as
+matters to be passed over with indifference.&nbsp; Seeing,
+however, that M. Lacordaire still remained on his knees, it was
+necessary that she should take some step toward raising him,
+especially as her two children and the guide would infallibly be
+upon them before long.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. Lacordaire,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you surprise me
+greatly; but pray get up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But will madame vouchsafe to give me some small ground
+for hope?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The girls will be here directly, M. Lacordaire; pray
+get up.&nbsp; I can talk to you much better if you will stand up,
+or sit down on one of these stones.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. Lacordaire did as he was bid; he got up, wiped the knees of
+his pantaloons with his handkerchief, sat down beside her, and
+then pressed the handle of his cane to his heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You really have so surprised me that I hardly know how
+to answer you,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson.&nbsp; &ldquo;Indeed, I
+cannot bring myself to imagine that you are in
+earnest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, madame, do not be so cruel!&nbsp; How can I have
+lived with you so long, sat beside you for so many days, without
+having received your image into my heart?&nbsp; I am in
+earnest!&nbsp; Alas!&nbsp; I fear too much in
+earnest!&rdquo;&nbsp; And then he looked at her with all his
+eyes, and sighed with all his strength.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson&rsquo;s prudence told her that it would be well
+to settle the matter, in one way or the other, as soon as
+possible.&nbsp; Long periods of love-making were fit for younger
+people than herself and her future possible husband.&nbsp; Her
+object would be to make him comfortable if she could, and that he
+should do the same for her, if that also were possible.&nbsp; As
+for lookings and sighings and pressings of the hand, she had gone
+through all that some twenty years since in India, when Thompson
+had been young, and she was still in her teens.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, M. Lacordaire, there are so many things to be
+considered.&nbsp; There!&nbsp; I hear the children coming!&nbsp;
+Let us walk this way for a minute.&rdquo;&nbsp; And they turned
+behind a wall which placed them out of sight, and walked on a few
+paces till they reached a parapet, which stood on the uttermost
+edge of the high rock.&nbsp; Leaning upon this they continued
+their conversation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are so many things to be considered,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Thompson again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, of course,&rdquo; said M. Lacordaire.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But my one great consideration is this;&mdash;that I love
+madame to distraction.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am very much flattered; of course, any lady would so
+feel.&nbsp; But, M. Lacordaire&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame, I am all attention.&nbsp; But, if you would
+deign to make me happy, say that one word, &lsquo;I love
+you!&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; M. Lacordaire, as he uttered these
+words, did not look, as the saying is, at his best.&nbsp; But
+Mrs. Thompson forgave him.&nbsp; She knew that elderly gentlemen
+under such circumstances do not look at their best.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if I consented to&mdash;to&mdash;to such an
+arrangement, I could only do so on seeing that it would be
+beneficial&mdash;or, at any rate, not injurious&mdash;to my
+children; and that it would offer to ourselves a fair promise of
+future happiness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, madame; it would be the dearest wish of my heart to
+be a second father to those two young ladies; except,
+indeed&mdash;&rdquo; and then M. Lacordaire stopped the flow of
+his speech.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In such matters it is so much the best to be explicit
+at once,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes; certainly!&nbsp; Nothing can be more wise than
+madame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the happiness of a household depends so much on
+money.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me say a word or two, Monsieur Lacordaire.&nbsp; I
+have enough for myself and my children; and, should I every marry
+again, I should not, I hope, be felt as a burden by my husband;
+but it would, of course, be my duty to know what were his
+circumstances before I accepted him.&nbsp; Of yourself,
+personally, I have seen nothing that I do not like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, madame!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But as yet I know nothing of your
+circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>M. Lacordaire, perhaps, did feel that Mrs. Thompson&rsquo;s
+prudence was of a strong, masculine description; but he hardly
+liked her the less on this account.&nbsp; To give him his due he
+was not desirous of marrying her solely for her money&rsquo;s
+sake.&nbsp; He also wished for a comfortable home, and proposed
+to give as much as he got; only he had been anxious to wrap up
+the solid cake of this business in a casing of sugar of
+romance.&nbsp; Mrs. Thompson would not have the sugar but the
+cake might not be the worse on that account.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, madame, not as yet; but they shall all be made open
+and at your disposal,&rdquo; said M. Lacordaire; and Mrs.
+Thompson bowed approvingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am in business,&rdquo; continued M. Lacordaire;
+&ldquo;and my business gives me eight thousand francs a
+year.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Four times eight are thirty-two,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Thompson to herself; putting the francs into pounds sterling, in
+the manner that she had always found to be the readiest.&nbsp;
+Well, so far the statement was satisfactory.&nbsp; An income of
+three hundred and twenty pounds a year from business, joined to
+her own, might do very well.&nbsp; She did not in the least
+suspect M. Lacordaire of being false, and so far the matter
+sounded well.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what is the business?&rdquo; she asked, in a tone
+of voice intended to be indifferent, but which nevertheless
+showed that she listened anxiously for an answer to her
+question.</p>
+<p>They were both standing with their arms upon the wall, looking
+down upon the town of Le Puy; but they had so stood that each
+could see the other&rsquo;s countenance as they talked.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Thompson could now perceive that M. Lacordaire became red in
+the face, as he paused before answering her.&nbsp; She was near
+to him, and seeing his emotion gently touched his arm with her
+hand.&nbsp; This she did to reassure him, for she saw that he was
+ashamed of having to declare that he was a tradesman.&nbsp; As
+for herself, she had made up her mind to bear with this, if she
+found, as she felt sure she would find, that the trade was one
+which would not degrade either him or her.&nbsp; Hitherto,
+indeed,&mdash;in her early days,&mdash;she had looked down on
+trade; but of what benefit had her grand ideas been to her when
+she had returned to England?&nbsp; She had tried her hand at
+English genteel society, and no one had seemed to care for
+her.&nbsp; Therefore, she touched his arm lightly with her
+fingers that she might encourage him.</p>
+<p>He paused for a moment, as I have said, and became red; and
+then feeling that he had shown some symptoms of shame&mdash;and
+feeling also, probably, that it was unmanly in him to do so, he
+shook himself slightly, raised his head up somewhat more proudly
+than was his wont, looked her full in the face with more strength
+of character than she had yet seen him assume; and then, declared
+his business.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he said, in a very audible, but not in a
+loud voice, &ldquo;madame&mdash;je suis tailleur.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And having so spoken, he turned slightly from her and looked down
+over the valley towards Le Puy.</p>
+<p>There was nothing more said upon the subject as they drove
+down from the rock of Polignac back to the town.&nbsp;
+Immediately on receiving the announcement, Mrs. Thompson found
+that she had no answer to make.&nbsp; She withdrew her
+hand&mdash;and felt at once that she had received a blow.&nbsp;
+It was not that she was angry with M. Lacordaire for being a
+tailor; nor was she angry with him in that, being a tailor, he
+had so addressed her.&nbsp; But she was surprised, disappointed,
+and altogether put beyond her ease.&nbsp; She had, at any rate,
+not expected this.&nbsp; She had dreamed of his being a banker;
+thought that, perhaps, he might have been a wine merchant; but
+her idea had never gone below a jeweller or watchmaker.&nbsp;
+When those words broke upon her ear, &ldquo;Madame, je suis
+tailleur,&rdquo; she had felt herself to be speechless.</p>
+<p>But the words had not been a minute spoken when Lilian and
+Mimmy ran up to their mother.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, mamma,&rdquo; said
+Lilian, &ldquo;we thought you were lost; we have searched for you
+all over the ch&acirc;teau.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have been sitting very quietly here, my dear,
+looking at the view,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thompson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, mamma, I do wish you&rsquo;d see the mouth of the
+oracle.&nbsp; It is so large, and so round, and so ugly.&nbsp; I
+put my arm into it all the way,&rdquo; said Mimmy.</p>
+<p>But at the present moment her mamma felt no interest in the
+mouth of the oracle; and so they all walked down together to the
+carriage.&nbsp; And, though the way was steep, Mrs. Thompson
+managed to pick her steps without the assistance of an arm; nor
+did M. Lacordaire presume to offer it.</p>
+<p>The drive back to town was very silent.&nbsp; Mrs. Thompson
+did make one or two attempts at conversation, but they were not
+effectual.&nbsp; M. Lacordaire could not speak at his ease till
+this matter was settled, and he already had begun to perceive
+that his business was against him.&nbsp; Why is it that the trade
+of a tailor should be less honourable than that of a haberdasher,
+or even a grocer?</p>
+<p>They sat next each other at dinner, as usual; and here, as all
+eyes were upon them, they both made a great struggle to behave in
+their accustomed way.&nbsp; But even in this they failed.&nbsp;
+All the world of the H&ocirc;tel des Ambassadeurs knew that M.
+Lacordaire had gone forth to make an offer to Mrs. Thompson, and
+all that world, therefore, was full of speculation.&nbsp; But all
+the world could make nothing of it.&nbsp; M. Lacordaire did look
+like a rejected man, but Mrs. Thompson did not look like the
+woman who had rejected him.&nbsp; That the offer had been
+made&mdash;in that everybody agreed, from the senior
+habitu&eacute; of the house who always sat at the head of the
+table, down to the junior assistant gar&ccedil;on.&nbsp; But as
+to reading the riddle, there was no accord among them.</p>
+<p>When the dessert was done, Mrs. Thompson, as usual, withdrew,
+and M. Lacordaire, as usual, bowed as he stood behind his own
+chair.&nbsp; He did not, however, attempt to follow her.</p>
+<p>But when she reached the door she called him.&nbsp; He was at
+her side in a moment, and then she whispered in his
+ear&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I, also&mdash;I will be of the same
+business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When M. Lacordaire regained the table the senior
+habitu&eacute;, the junior gar&ccedil;on, and all the
+intermediate ranks of men at the H&ocirc;tel des Ambassadeurs
+knew that they might congratulate him.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thompson had made a great struggle; but, speaking for
+myself, I am inclined to think that she arrived at last at a wise
+decision.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CHATEAU OF PRINCE POLIGNAC***</p>
+<pre>
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Chateau of Prince Polignac, by Trollope
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+Title: The Chateau of Prince Polignac
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+Author: Anthony Trollope
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+This etext was produced by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk,
+from the 1864 Chapman & Hall "Tales of all Countries" edition.
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+
+
+THE CHATEAU OF PRINCE POLIGNAC
+
+by Anthony Trollope
+
+
+
+
+Few Englishmen or Englishwomen are intimately acquainted with the
+little town of Le Puy. It is the capital of the old province of Le
+Velay, which also is now but little known, even to French ears, for
+it is in these days called by the imperial name of the Department of
+the Haute Loire. It is to the south-east of Auvergne, and is nearly
+in the centre of the southern half of France.
+
+But few towns, merely as towns, can be better worth visiting. In
+the first place, the volcanic formation of the ground on which it
+stands is not only singular in the extreme, so as to be interesting
+to the geologist, but it is so picturesque as to be equally
+gratifying to the general tourist. Within a narrow valley there
+stand several rocks, rising up from the ground with absolute
+abruptness. Round two of these the town clusters, and a third
+stands but a mile distant, forming the centre of a faubourg, or
+suburb. These rocks appear to be, and I believe are, the harder
+particles of volcanic matter, which have not been carried away
+through successive ages by the joint agency of water and air.
+
+When the tide of lava ran down between the hills the surface left
+was no doubt on a level with the heads of these rocks; but here and
+there the deposit became harder than elsewhere, and these harder
+points have remained, lifting up their steep heads in a line through
+the valley.
+
+The highest of these is called the Rocher de Corneille. Round this
+and up its steep sides the town stands. On its highest summit there
+was an old castle; and there now is, or will be before these pages
+are printed, a colossal figure in bronze of the Virgin Mary, made
+from the cannon taken at Sebastopol. Half-way down the hill the
+cathedral is built, a singularly gloomy edifice,--Romanesque, as it
+is called, in its style, but extremely similar in its mode of
+architecture to what we know of Byzantine structures. But there has
+been no surface on the rock side large enough to form a resting-
+place for the church, which has therefore been built out on huge
+supporting piles, which form a porch below the west front; so that
+the approach is by numerous steps laid along the side of the wall
+below the church, forming a wondrous flight of stairs. Let all men
+who may find themselves stopping at Le Puy visit the top of these
+stairs at the time of the setting sun, and look down from thence
+through the framework of the porch on the town beneath, and at the
+hill-side beyond.
+
+Behind the church is the seminary of the priests, with its beautiful
+walks stretching round the Rocher de Corneille, and overlooking the
+town and valley below.
+
+Next to this rock, and within a quarter of a mile of it, is the
+second peak, called the Rock of the Needle. It rises narrow, sharp,
+and abrupt from the valley, allowing of no buildings on its sides.
+But on its very point has been erected a church sacred to St.
+Michael, that lover of rock summits, accessible by stairs cut from
+the stone. This, perhaps--this rock, I mean--is the most wonderful
+of the wonders which Nature has formed at La Puy.
+
+Above this, at a mile's distance, is the rock of Espailly, formed in
+the same way, and almost equally precipitous. On its summit is a
+castle, having its own legend, and professing to have been the
+residence of Charles VII., when little of France belonged to its
+kings but the provinces of Berry, Auvergne, and Le Velay. Some
+three miles farther up there is another volcanic rock, larger,
+indeed, but equally sudden in its spring,--equally remarkable as
+rising abruptly from the valley,--on which stands the castle and old
+family residence of the house of Polignac. It was lost by them at
+the Revolution, but was repurchased by the minister of Charles X.,
+and is still the property of the head of the race.
+
+Le Puy itself is a small, moderate, pleasant French town, in which
+the language of the people has not the pure Parisian aroma, nor is
+the glory of the boulevards of the capital emulated in its streets.
+These are crooked, narrow, steep, and intricate, forming here and
+there excellent sketches for a lover of street picturesque beauty;
+but hurtful to the feet with their small, round-topped paving
+stones, and not always as clean as pedestrian ladies might desire.
+
+And now I would ask my readers to join me at the morning table
+d'hote at the Hotel des Ambassadeurs. It will of course be
+understood that this does not mean a breakfast in the ordinary
+fashion of England, consisting of tea or coffee, bread and butter,
+and perhaps a boiled egg. It comprises all the requisites for a
+composite dinner, excepting soup; and as one gets farther south in
+France, this meal is called dinner. It is, however, eaten without
+any prejudice to another similar and somewhat longer meal at six or
+seven o'clock, which, when the above name is taken up by the earlier
+enterprise, is styled supper.
+
+The dejeuner, or dinner, at the Hotel des Ambassadeurs, on the
+morning in question, though very elaborate, was not a very gay
+affair. There were some fourteen persons present, of whom half were
+residents in the town, men employed in some official capacity, who
+found this to be the cheapest, the most luxurious, and to them the
+most comfortable mode of living. They clustered together at the
+head of the table, and as they were customary guests at the house,
+they talked their little talk together--it was very little--and made
+the most of the good things before them. Then there were two or
+three commis-voyageurs, a chance traveller or two, and an English
+lady with a young daughter. The English lady sat next to one of the
+accustomed guests; but he, unlike the others, held converse with her
+rather than with them. Our story at present has reference only to
+that lady and to that gentleman.
+
+Place aux dames. We will speak first of the lady, whose name was
+Mrs. Thompson. She was, shall I say, a young woman of about thirty-
+six. In so saying, I am perhaps creating a prejudice against her in
+the minds of some readers, as they will, not unnaturally, suppose
+her, after such an announcement, to be in truth over forty. Any
+such prejudice will be unjust. I would have it believed that
+thirty-six was the outside, not the inside of her age. She was
+good-looking, lady-like, and considering that she was an
+Englishwoman, fairly well dressed. She was inclined to be rather
+full in her person, but perhaps not more so than is becoming to
+ladies at her time of life. She had rings on her fingers and a
+brooch on her bosom which were of some value, and on the back of her
+head she wore a jaunty small lace cap, which seemed to tell, in
+conjunction with her other appointments, that her circumstances were
+comfortable.
+
+The little girl who sat next to her was the youngest of her two
+daughters, and might be about thirteen years of age. Her name was
+Matilda, but infantine circumstances had invested her with the
+nickname of Mimmy, by which her mother always called her. A nice,
+pretty, playful little girl was Mimmy Thompson, wearing two long
+tails of plaited hair hanging, behind her head, and inclined
+occasionally to be rather loud in her sport.
+
+Mrs. Thompson had another and an elder daughter, now some fifteen
+years old, who was at school in Le Puy; and it was with reference to
+her tuition that Mrs. Thompson had taken up a temporary residence at
+the Hotel des Ambassadeurs in that town. Lilian Thompson was
+occasionally invited down to dine or breakfast at the inn, and was
+visited daily at her school by her mother.
+
+"When I'm sure that she'll do, I shall leave her there, and go back
+to England," Mrs. Thompson had said, not in the purest French, to
+the neighbour who always sat next to her at the table d'hote, the
+gentleman, namely, to whom we have above alluded. But still she had
+remained at Le Puy a month, and did not go; a circumstance which was
+considered singular, but by no means unpleasant, both by the
+innkeeper and by the gentleman in question.
+
+The facts, as regarded Mrs. Thompson, were as follows:- She was the
+widow of a gentleman who had served for many years in the civil
+service of the East Indies, and who, on dying, had left her a
+comfortable income of--it matters not how many pounds, but
+constituting quite a sufficiency to enable her to live at her ease
+and educate her daughters.
+
+Her children had been sent home to England before her husband's
+death, and after that event she had followed them; but there, though
+she was possessed of moderate wealth, she had no friends and few
+acquaintances, and after a little while she had found life to be
+rather dull. Her customs were not those of England, nor were her
+propensities English; therefore she had gone abroad, and having
+received some recommendation of this school at Le Puy, had made her
+way thither. As it appeared to her that she really enjoyed more
+consideration at Le Puy than had been accorded to her either at
+Torquay or Leamington, there she remained from day to day. The
+total payment required at the Hotel des Ambassadeurs was but six
+francs daily for herself and three and a half for her little girl;
+and where else could she live with a better junction of economy and
+comfort? And then the gentleman who always sat next to her was so
+exceedingly civil!
+
+The gentleman's name was M. Lacordaire. So much she knew, and had
+learned to call him by his name very frequently. Mimmy, too, was
+quite intimate with M. Lacordaire; but nothing more than his name
+was known of him. But M. Lacordaire carried a general letter of
+recommendation in his face, manner, gait, dress, and tone of voice.
+In all these respects there was nothing left to be desired; and, in
+addition to this, he was decorated, and wore the little red ribbon
+of the Legion of Honour, ingeniously twisted into the shape of a
+small flower.
+
+M. Lacordaire might be senior in age to Mrs. Thompson by about ten
+years, nor had he about him any of the airs or graces of a would-be
+young man. His hair, which he wore very short, was grizzled, as was
+also the small pretence of a whisker which came down about as far as
+the middle of his ear; but the tuft on his chin was still brown,
+without a gray hair. His eyes were bright and tender, his voice was
+low and soft, his hands were very white, his clothes were always new
+and well fitting, and a better-brushed hat could not be seen out of
+Paris, nor perhaps in it.
+
+Now, during the weeks which Mrs. Thompson had passed at La Puy, the
+acquaintance which she had formed with M. Lacordaire had progressed
+beyond the prolonged meals in the salle a manger. He had
+occasionally sat beside her evening table as she took her English
+cup of tea in her own room, her bed being duly screened off in its
+distant niche by becoming curtains; and then he had occasionally
+walked beside her, as he civilly escorted her to the lions of the
+place; and he had once accompanied her, sitting on the back seat of
+a French voiture, when she had gone forth to see something of the
+surrounding country.
+
+On all such occasions she had been accompanied by one of her
+daughters, and the world of Le Puy had had nothing material to say
+against her. But still the world of Le Puy had whispered a little,
+suggesting that M. Lacordaire knew very well what he was about. But
+might not Mrs. Thompson also know as well what she was about? At
+any rate, everything had gone on very pleasantly since the
+acquaintance had been made. And now, so much having been explained,
+we will go back to the elaborate breakfast at the Hotel des
+Ambassadeurs.
+
+Mrs. Thompson, holding Mimmy by the hand, walked into the room some
+few minutes after the last bell had been rung, and took the place
+which was now hers by custom. The gentlemen who constantly
+frequented the house all bowed to her, but M. Lacordaire rose from
+his seat and offered her his hand.
+
+"And how is Mees Meemy this morning?" said he; for 'twas thus he
+always pronounced her name.
+
+Miss Mimmy, answering for herself, declared that she was very well,
+and suggested that M. Lacordaire should give her a fig from off a
+dish that was placed immediately before him on the table. This M.
+Lacordaire did, presenting it very elegantly between his two
+fingers, and making a little bow to the little lady as he did so.
+
+"Fie, Mimmy!" said her mother; "why do you ask for the things before
+the waiter brings them round?"
+
+"But, mamma," said Mimmy, speaking English, "M. Lacordaire always
+gives me a fig every morning."
+
+"M. Lacordaire always spoils you, I think," answered Mrs. Thompson,
+in French. And then they went thoroughly to work at their
+breakfast. During the whole meal M. Lacordaire attended assiduously
+to his neighbour; and did so without any evil result, except that
+one Frenchman with a black moustache, at the head of the table, trod
+on the toe of another Frenchman with another black moustache--
+winking as he made the sign--just as M. Lacordaire, having selected
+a bunch of grapes, put it on Mrs. Thompson's plate with infinite
+grace. But who among us all is free from such impertinences as
+these?
+
+"But madame really must see the chateau of Prince Polignac before
+she leaves Le Puy," said M. Lacordaire.
+
+"The chateau of who?" asked Mimmy, to whose young ears the French
+words were already becoming familiar.
+
+"Prince Polignac, my dear. Well, I really don't know, M.
+Lacordaire;--I have seen a great deal of the place already, and I
+shall be going now very soon; probably in a day or two," said Mrs.
+Thompson.
+
+"But madame must positively see the chateau," said M. Lacordaire,
+very impressively; and then after a pause he added, "If madame will
+have the complaisance to commission me to procure a carriage for
+this afternoon, and will allow me the honour to be her guide, I
+shall consider myself one of the most fortunate of men."
+
+"Oh, yes, mamma, do go," said Mimmy, clapping her hands. "And it is
+Thursday, and Lilian can go with us."
+
+"Be quiet, Mimmy, do. Thank you, no, M. Lacordaire. I could not go
+to-day; but I am extremely obliged by your politeness."
+
+M. Lacordaire still pressed the matter, and Mrs. Thompson still
+declined till it was time to rise from the table. She then declared
+that she did not think it possible that she should visit the chateau
+before she left Le Puy; but that she would give him an answer at
+dinner.
+
+The most tedious time in the day to Mrs. Thompson were the two hours
+after breakfast. At one o'clock she daily went to the school,
+taking Mimmy, who for an hour or two shared her sister's lessons.
+This and her little excursions about the place, and her shopping,
+managed to make away with her afternoon. Then in the evening, she
+generally saw something of M. Lacordaire. But those two hours after
+breakfast were hard of killing.
+
+On this occasion, when she gained her own room, she as usual placed
+Mimmy on the sofa with a needle. Her custom then was to take up a
+novel; but on this morning she sat herself down in her arm-chair,
+and resting her head upon her hand and elbow, began to turn over
+certain circumstances in her mind.
+
+"Mamma," said Mimmy, "why won't you go with M. Lacordaire to that
+place belonging to the prince? Prince--Polly something, wasn't it?"
+
+"Mind your work, my dear," said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+"But I do so wish you'd go, mamma. What was the prince's name?"
+
+"Polignac."
+
+"Mamma, ain't princes very great people?"
+
+"Yes, my dear; sometimes."
+
+"Is Prince Polly-nac like our Prince Alfred?"
+
+"No, my dear; not at all. At least, I suppose not."
+
+"Is his mother a queen?"
+
+"No, my dear."
+
+"Then his father must be a king?"
+
+"No, my dear. It is quite a different thing here. Here in France
+they have a great many princes."
+
+"Well, at any rate I should like to see a prince's chateau; so I do
+hope you'll go." And then there was a pause. "Mamma, could it come
+to pass, here in France, that M. Lacordaire should ever be a
+prince?"
+
+"M. Lacordaire a prince! No; don't talk such nonsense, but mind
+your work."
+
+"Isn't M. Lacordaire a very nice man? Ain't you very fond of him?"
+
+To this question Mrs. Thompson made no answer.
+
+"Mamma," continued Mimmy, after a moment's pause, "won't you tell me
+whether you are fond of M. Lacordaire? I'm quite sure of this,--
+that he's very fond of you."
+
+"What makes you think that?" asked Mrs. Thompson, who could not
+bring herself to refrain from the question.
+
+"Because he looks at you in that way, mamma, and squeezes your
+hand."
+
+"Nonsense, child," said Mrs. Thompson; "hold your tongue. I don't
+know what can have put such stuff into your head."
+
+"But he does, mamma," said Mimmy, who rarely allowed her mother to
+put her down.
+
+Mrs. Thompson made no further answer, but again sat with her head
+resting on her hand. She also, if the truth must be told, was
+thinking of M. Lacordaire and his fondness for herself. He had
+squeezed her hand and he had looked into her face. However much it
+may have been nonsense on Mimmy's part to talk of such things, they
+had not the less absolutely occurred. Was it really the fact that
+M. Lacordaire was in love with her?
+
+And if so, what return should she, or could she make to such a
+passion? He had looked at her yesterday, and squeezed her hand to-
+day. Might it not be probable that he would advance a step further
+to-morrow? If so, what answer would she be prepared to make to him?
+
+She did not think--so she said to herself--that she had any
+particular objection to marrying again. Thompson had been dead now
+for four years, and neither his friends, nor her friends, nor the
+world could say she was wrong on that score. And as to marrying a
+Frenchman, she could not say she felt within herself any absolute
+repugnance to doing that. Of her own country, speaking of England
+as such, she, in truth, knew but little--and perhaps cared less.
+She had gone to India almost as a child, and England had not been
+specially kind to her on her return. She had found it dull and
+cold, stiff, and almost ill-natured. People there had not smiled on
+her and been civil as M. Lacordaire had done. As far as England and
+Englishmen were considered she saw no reason why she should not
+marry M. Lacordaire.
+
+And then, as regarded the man; could she in her heart say that she
+was prepared to love, honour, and obey M. Lacordaire? She certainly
+knew no reason why she should not do so. She did not know much of
+him, she said to herself at first; but she knew as much, she said
+afterwards, as she had known personally of Mr. Thompson before their
+marriage. She had known, to be sure, what was Mr. Thompson's
+profession and what his income; or, if not, some one else had known
+for her. As to both these points she was quite in the dark as
+regarded M. Lacordaire.
+
+Personally, she certainly did like him, as she said to herself more
+than once. There was a courtesy and softness about him which were
+very gratifying to her; and then, his appearance was so much in his
+favour. He was not very young, she acknowledged; but neither was
+she young herself. It was quite evident that he was fond of her
+children, and that he would be a kind and affectionate father to
+them. Indeed, there was kindness in all that he did.
+
+Should she marry again,--and she put it to herself quite
+hypothetically,--she would look for no romance in such a second
+marriage. She would be content to sit down in a quiet home, to the
+tame dull realities of life, satisfied with the companionship of a
+man who would be kind and gentle to her, and whom she could respect
+and esteem. Where could she find a companion with whom this could
+be more safely anticipated than with M. Lacordaire?
+
+And so she argued the question within her own breast in a manner not
+unfriendly to that gentleman. That there was as yet one great
+hindrance she at once saw; but then that might be remedied by a
+word. She did not know what was his income or his profession. The
+chambermaid, whom she had interrogated, had told her that he was a
+"marchand." To merchants, generally, she felt that she had no
+objection. The Barings and the Rothschilds were merchants, as was
+also that wonderful man at Bombay, Sir Hommajee Bommajee, who was
+worth she did no know how many thousand lacs of rupees.
+
+That it would behove her, on her own account and that of her
+daughters, to take care of her own little fortune in contracting any
+such connection, that she felt strongly. She would never so commit
+herself as to put security in that respect out of her power. But
+then she did not think that M. Lacordaire would ever ask her to do
+so; at any rate, she was determined on this, that there should never
+be any doubt on that matter; and as she firmly resolved on this, she
+again took up her book, and for a minute or two made an attempt to
+read.
+
+"Mamma," said Mummy, "will M. Lacordaire go up to the school to see
+Lilian when you go away from this?"
+
+"Indeed, I cannot say, my dear. If Lilian is a good girl, perhaps
+he may do so now and then."
+
+"And will he write to you and tell you how she is?"
+
+"Lilian can write for herself; can she not?"
+
+"Oh yes; I suppose she can; but I hope M. Lacordaire will write too.
+We shall come back here some day; shan't we, mamma?"
+
+"I cannot say, my dear."
+
+"I do so hope we shall see M. Lacordaire again. Do you know what I
+was thinking, mamma?"
+
+"Little girls like you ought not to think," said Mrs. Thompson,
+walking slowly out of the room to the top of the stairs and back
+again; for she had felt the necessity of preventing Mimmy from
+disclosing any more of her thoughts. "And now, my dear, get
+yourself ready, and we will go up to the school."
+
+Mrs. Thompson always dressed herself with care, though not in
+especially fine clothes, before she went down to dinner at the table
+d'hote; but on this occasion she was more than usually particular.
+She hardly explained to herself why she did this; but, nevertheless,
+as she stood before the glass, she did in a certain manner feel that
+the circumstances of her future life might perhaps depend on what
+might be said and done that evening. She had not absolutely decided
+whether or no she would go to the Prince's chateau; but if she did
+go -. Well, if she did; what then? She had sense enough, as she
+assured herself more than once, to regulate her own conduct with
+propriety in any such emergency.
+
+During the dinner, M. Lacordaire conversed in his usual manner, but
+said nothing whatever about the visit to Polignac. He was very kind
+to Mimmy, and very courteous to her mother, but did not appear to be
+at all more particular than usual. Indeed, it might be a question
+whether he was not less so. As she had entered the room Mrs.
+Thompson had said to herself that, perhaps, after all, it would be
+better that there should be nothing more thought about it; but
+before the four of five courses were over, she was beginning to feel
+a little disappointed.
+
+And now the fruit was on the table, after the consumption of which
+it was her practice to retire. It was certainly open to her to ask
+M. Lacordaire to take tea with her that evening, as she had done on
+former occasions; but she felt that she must not do this now,
+considering the immediate circumstances of the case. If any further
+steps were to be taken, they must be taken by him, and not by her;--
+or else by Mimmy, who, just as her mother was slowly consuming her
+last grapes, ran round to the back of M. Lacordaire's chair, and
+whispered something into his ear. It may be presumed that Mrs.
+Thompson did not see the intention of the movement in time to arrest
+it, for she did nothing till the whispering had been whispered; and
+then she rebuked the child, bade her not to be troublesome, and with
+more than usual austerity in her voice, desired her to get herself
+ready to go up stairs to their chamber.
+
+As she spoke she herself rose from her chair, and made her final
+little bow to the table, and her other final little bow and smile to
+M. Lacordaire; but this was certain to all who saw it, that the
+smile was not as gracious as usual.
+
+As she walked forth, M. Lacordaire rose from his chair--such being
+his constant practice when she left the table; but on this occasion
+he accompanied her to the door.
+
+"And has madame decided," he asked, "whether she will permit me to
+accompany her to the chateau?"
+
+"Well, I really don't know," said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+"Mees Meemy," continued M. Lacordaire, "is very anxious to see the
+rock, and I may perhaps hope that Mees Lilian would be pleased with
+such a little excursion. As for myself--" and then M. Lacordaire
+put his hand upon his heart in a manner that seemed to speak more
+plainly than he had ever spoken.
+
+"Well, if the children would really like it, and--as you are so very
+kind," said Mrs. Thompson; and so the matter was conceded.
+
+"To-morrow afternoon?" suggested M. Lacordaire. But Mrs. Thompson
+fixed on Saturday, thereby showing that she herself was in no hurry
+for the expedition.
+
+"Oh, I am so glad!" said Mimmy, when they had re-entered their own
+room. "Mamma, do let me tell Lilian myself when I go up to the
+school to-morrow!"
+
+But mamma was in no humour to say much to her child on this subject
+at the present moment. She threw herself back on her sofa in
+perfect silence, and began to reflect whether she would like to sign
+her name in future as Fanny Lacordaire, instead of Fanny Thompson.
+It certainly seemed as though things were verging towards such a
+necessity. A marchand! But a marchand of what? She had an
+instinctive feeling that the people in the hotel were talking about
+her and M. Lacordaire, and was therefore more than ever averse to
+asking any one a question.
+
+As she went up to the school the next afternoon, she walked through
+more of the streets of Le Puy than was necessary, and in every
+street she looked at the names which she saw over the doors of the
+more respectable houses of business. But she looked in vain. It
+might be that M. Lacordaire was a marchand of so specially high a
+quality as to be under no necessity to put up his name at all. Sir
+Hommajee Bommajee's name did not appear over any door in Bombay;--at
+least, she thought not.
+
+And then came the Saturday morning. "We shall be ready at two," she
+said, as she left the breakfast-table; "and perhaps you would not
+mind calling for Lilian on the way."
+
+M. Lacordaire would be delighted to call anywhere for anybody on
+behalf of Mrs. Thompson; and then, as he got to the door of the
+salon, he offered her his hand. He did so with so much French
+courtesy that she could not refuse it, and then she felt that his
+purpose was more tender than ever it had been. And why not, if this
+was the destiny which Fate had prepared for her?
+
+Mrs. Thompson would rather have got into the carriage at any other
+spot in Le Puy than at that at which she was forced to do so--the
+chief entrance, namely, of the Hotel des Ambassadeurs. And what
+made it worse was this, that an appearance of a special fate was
+given to the occasion. M. Lacordaire was dressed in more than his
+Sunday best. He had on new yellow kid gloves. His coat, if not
+new, was newer than any Mrs. Thompson had yet observed, and was
+lined with silk up to the very collar. He had on patent leather
+boots, which glittered, as Mrs. Thompson thought, much too
+conspicuously. And as for his hat, it was quite evident that it was
+fresh that morning from the maker's block.
+
+In this costume, with his hat in his hand, he stood under the great
+gateway of the hotel, ready to hand Mrs. Thompson into the carriage.
+This would have been nothing if the landlord and landlady had not
+been there also, as well as the man-cook, and the four waiters, and
+the fille de chambre. Two or three other pair of eyes Mrs. Thompson
+also saw, as she glanced round, and then Mimmy walked across the
+yard in her best clothes with a fete-day air about her for which her
+mother would have liked to have whipped her.
+
+But what did it matter? If it was written in the book that she
+should become Madame Lacordaire, of course the world would know that
+there must have been some preparatory love-making. Let them have
+their laugh; a good husband would not be dearly purchased at so
+trifling an expense. And so they sallied forth with already half
+the ceremony of a wedding.
+
+Mimmy seated herself opposite to her mother, and M. Lacordaire also
+sat with his back to the horses, leaving the second place of honour
+for Lilian. "Pray make yourself comfortable, M. Lacordaire, and
+don't mind her," said Mrs. Thompson. But he was firm in his purpose
+of civility, perhaps making up his mind that when he should in truth
+stand in the place of papa to the young lady, then would be his time
+for having the back seat in the carnage.
+
+Lilian, also in her best frock, came down the school-steps, and
+three of the school teachers came with her. It would have added to
+Mrs. Thompson's happiness at that moment if M. Lacordaire would have
+kept his polished boots out of sight, and put his yellow gloves into
+his pocket.
+
+And then they started. The road from Le Puy to Polignac is nearly
+all up hill; and a very steep hill it is, so that there was plenty
+of time for conversation. But the girls had it nearly all to
+themselves. Mimmy thought that she had never found M. Lacordaire so
+stupid; and Lilian told her sister on the first safe opportunity
+that occurred, that it seemed very much as though they were all
+going to church.
+
+"And do any of the Polignac people ever live at this place?" asked
+Mrs. Thompson, by way of making conversation; in answer to which M.
+Lacordaire informed madame that the place was at present only a
+ruin; and then there was again silence till they found themselves
+under the rock, and were informed by the driver that the rest of the
+ascent must be made on foot.
+
+The rock now stood abrupt and precipitous above their heads. It was
+larger in its circumference and with much larger space on its summit
+than those other volcanic rocks in and close to the town; but then
+at the same time it was higher from the ground, and quite as
+inaccessible, except by the single path which led up to the chateau.
+
+M. Lacordaire, with conspicuous gallantry, first assisted Mrs.
+Thompson from the carriage, and then handed down the two young
+ladies. No lady could have been so difficult to please as to
+complain of him, and yet Mrs. Thompson thought that he was not as
+agreeable as usual. Those horrid boots and those horrid gloves gave
+him such an air of holiday finery that neither could he be at his
+ease wearing them, nor could she, in seeing them worn.
+
+They were soon taken in hand by the poor woman whose privilege it
+was to show the ruins. For a little distance they walked up the
+path in single file; not that it was too narrow to accommodate two,
+but M. Lacordaire's courage had not yet been screwed to a point
+which admitted of his offering his arm to the widow. For in France,
+it must be remembered, that this means more than it does in some
+other countries.
+
+Mrs. Thompson felt that all this was silly and useless. If they
+were not to be dear friends this coming out feting together, those
+boots and gloves and new hat were all very foolish; and if they
+were, the sooner they understood each other the better. So Mrs.
+Thompson, finding that the path was steep and the weather warm,
+stood still for a while leaning against the wall, with a look of
+considerable fatigue in her face.
+
+"Will madame permit me the honour of offering her my arm?" said M.
+Lacordaire. "The road is so extraordinarily steep for madame to
+climb."
+
+Mrs. Thompson did permit him the honour, and so they went on till
+they reached the top.
+
+The view from the summit was both extensive and grand, but neither
+Lilian nor Mimmy were much pleased with the place. The elder
+sister, who had talked over the matter with her school companions,
+expected a fine castle with turrets, battlements, and romance; and
+the other expected a pretty smiling house, such as princes, in her
+mind, ought to inhabit.
+
+Instead of this they found an old turret, with steps so broken that
+M. Lacordaire did not care to ascend them, and the ruined walls of a
+mansion, in which nothing was to be seen but the remains of an
+enormous kitchen chimney.
+
+"It was the kitchen of the family," said the guide.
+
+"Oh," said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+"And this," said the woman, taking them into the next ruined
+compartment, "was the kitchen of monsieur et madame."
+
+"What! two kitchens?" exclaimed Lilian, upon which M. Lacordaire
+explained that the ancestors of the Prince de Polignac had been very
+great people, and had therefore required culinary performances on a
+great scale.
+
+And then the woman began to chatter something about an oracle of
+Apollo. There was, she said, a hole in the rock, from which in past
+times, perhaps more than a hundred years ago, the oracle used to
+speak forth mysterious words.
+
+"There," she said, pointing to a part of the rock at some distance,
+"was the hole. And if the ladies would follow her to a little
+outhouse which was just beyond, she would show them the huge stone
+mouth out of which the oracle used to speak."
+
+Lilian and Mimmy both declared at once for seeing the oracle, but
+Mrs. Thompson expressed her determination to remain sitting where
+she was upon the turf. So the guide started off with the young
+ladies; and will it be thought surprising that M. Lacordaire should
+have remained alone by the side of Mrs. Thompson?
+
+It must be now or never, Mrs. Thompson felt; and as regarded M.
+Lacordaire, he probably entertained some idea of the same kind.
+Mrs. Thompson's inclinations, though they had never been very strong
+in the matter, were certainly in favour of the "now." M.
+Lacordaire's inclinations were stronger. He had fully and firmly
+made up his mind in favour of matrimony; but then he was not so
+absolutely in favour of the "now." Mrs. Thompson's mind, if one
+could have read it, would have shown a great objection to shilly-
+shallying, as she was accustomed to call it. But M. Lacordaire,
+were it not for the danger which might thence arise, would have seen
+no objection to some slight further procrastination. His courage
+was beginning, perhaps, to ooze out from his fingers' ends.
+
+"I declare that those girls have scampered away ever so far," said
+Mrs. Thompson.
+
+"Would madame wish that I should call them back?" said M.
+Lacordaire, innocently.
+
+"Oh, no, dear children! let them enjoy themselves; it will be a
+pleasure to them to run about the rock, and I suppose they will be
+safe with that woman?"
+
+"Oh, yes, quite safe," said M. Lacordaire; and then there was
+another little pause.
+
+Mrs. Thompson was sitting on a broken fragment of a stone just
+outside the entrance to the old family kitchen, and M. Lacordaire
+was standing immediately before her. He had in his hand a little
+cane with which he sometimes slapped his boots and sometimes poked
+about among the rubbish. His hat was not quite straight on his
+head, having a little jaunty twist to one side, with reference to
+which, by-the-bye, Mrs. Thompson then resolved that she would make a
+change, should ever the gentleman become her own property. He still
+wore his gloves, and was very smart; but it was clear to see that he
+was not at his ease.
+
+"I hope the heat does not incommode you," he said after a few
+moments' silence. Mrs. Thompson declared that it did not, that she
+liked a good deal of heat, and that, on the whole, she was very well
+where she was. She was afraid, however, that she was detaining M.
+Lacordaire, who might probably wish to be moving about upon the
+rock. In answer to which M. Lacordaire declared that he never could
+be so happy anywhere as in her close vicinity.
+
+"You are too good to me," said Mrs. Thompson, almost sighing. "I
+don't know what my stay here would have been without your great
+kindness."
+
+"It is madame that has been kind to me," said M. Lacordaire,
+pressing the handle of his cane against his heart.
+
+There was then another pause, after which Mrs. Thompson said that
+that was all his French politeness; that she knew that she had been
+very troublesome to him, but that she would now soon be gone; and
+that then, in her own country, she would never forget his great
+goodness.
+
+"Ah, madame!" said M. Lacordaire; and, as he said it, much more was
+expressed in his face than in his words. But, then, you can neither
+accept nor reject a gentleman by what he says in his face. He
+blushed, too, up to his grizzled hair, and, turning round, walked a
+step or two away from the widow's seat, and back again.
+
+Mrs. Thompson the while sat quite still. The displaced fragment,
+lying, as it did, near a corner of the building, made not an
+uncomfortable chair. She had only to be careful that she did not
+injure her hat or crush her clothes, and throw in a word here and
+there to assist the gentleman, should occasion permit it.
+
+"Madame!" said M. Lacordaire, on his return from a second little
+walk.
+
+"Monsieur!" replied Mrs. Thompson, perceiving that M. Lacordaire
+paused in his speech.
+
+"Madame," he began again, and then, as he again paused, Mrs.
+Thompson looked up to him very sweetly; "madame, what I am going to
+say will, I am afraid, seem to evince by far too great audacity on
+my part."
+
+Mrs. Thompson may, perhaps, have thought that, at the present
+moment, audacity was not his fault. She replied, however, that she
+was quite sure that monsieur would say nothing that was in any way
+unbecoming either for him to speak or for her to hear.
+
+"Madame, may I have ground to hope that such may be your sentiments
+after I have spoken! Madame"--and now he went down, absolutely on
+his knees, on the hard stones; and Mrs. Thompson, looking about into
+the distance, almost thought that she saw the top of the guide's
+cap--"Madame, I have looked forward to this opportunity as one in
+which I may declare for you the greatest passion that I have ever
+yet felt. Madame, with all my heart and soul I love you. Madame, I
+offer to you the homage of my heart, my hand, the happiness of my
+life, and all that I possess in this world;" and then, taking her
+hand gracefully between his gloves, he pressed his lips against the
+tips of her fingers.
+
+If the thing was to be done, this way of doing it was, perhaps, as
+good as any other. It was one, at any rate, which left no doubt
+whatever as to the gentleman's intentions. Mrs. Thompson, could she
+have had her own way, would not have allowed her lover of fifty to
+go down upon his knees, and would have spared him much of the
+romance of his declaration. So also would she have spared him his
+yellow gloves and his polished boots. But these were a part of the
+necessity of the situation, and therefore she wisely took them as
+matters to be passed over with indifference. Seeing, however, that
+M. Lacordaire still remained on his knees, it was necessary that she
+should take some step toward raising him, especially as her two
+children and the guide would infallibly be upon them before long.
+
+"M. Lacordaire," she said, "you surprise me greatly; but pray get
+up."
+
+"But will madame vouchsafe to give me some small ground for hope?"
+
+"The girls will be here directly, M. Lacordaire; pray get up. I can
+talk to you much better if you will stand up, or sit down on one of
+these stones."
+
+M. Lacordaire did as he was bid; he got up, wiped the knees of his
+pantaloons with his handkerchief, sat down beside her, and then
+pressed the handle of his cane to his heart.
+
+"You really have so surprised me that I hardly know how to answer
+you," said Mrs. Thompson. "Indeed, I cannot bring myself to imagine
+that you are in earnest."
+
+"Ah, madame, do not be so cruel! How can I have lived with you so
+long, sat beside you for so many days, without having received your
+image into my heart? I am in earnest! Alas! I fear too much in
+earnest!" And then he looked at her with all his eyes, and sighed
+with all his strength.
+
+Mrs. Thompson's prudence told her that it would be well to settle
+the matter, in one way or the other, as soon as possible. Long
+periods of love-making were fit for younger people than herself and
+her future possible husband. Her object would be to make him
+comfortable if she could, and that he should do the same for her, if
+that also were possible. As for lookings and sighings and pressings
+of the hand, she had gone through all that some twenty years since
+in India, when Thompson had been young, and she was still in her
+teens.
+
+"But, M. Lacordaire, there are so many things to be considered.
+There! I hear the children coming! Let us walk this way for a
+minute." And they turned behind a wall which placed them out of
+sight, and walked on a few paces till they reached a parapet, which
+stood on the uttermost edge of the high rock. Leaning upon this
+they continued their conversation.
+
+"There are so many things to be considered," said Mrs. Thompson
+again.
+
+"Yes, of course," said M. Lacordaire. "But my one great
+consideration is this;--that I love madame to distraction."
+
+"I am very much flattered; of course, any lady would so feel. But,
+M. Lacordaire--"
+
+"Madame, I am all attention. But, if you would deign to make me
+happy, say that one word, 'I love you!'" M. Lacordaire, as he
+uttered these words, did not look, as the saying is, at his best.
+But Mrs. Thompson forgave him. She knew that elderly gentlemen
+under such circumstances do not look at their best.
+
+"But if I consented to--to--to such an arrangement, I could only do
+so on seeing that it would be beneficial--or, at any rate, not
+injurious--to my children; and that it would offer to ourselves a
+fair promise of future happiness."
+
+"Ah, madame; it would be the dearest wish of my heart to be a second
+father to those two young ladies; except, indeed--" and then M.
+Lacordaire stopped the flow of his speech.
+
+"In such matters it is so much the best to be explicit at once,"
+said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+"Oh, yes; certainly! Nothing can be more wise than madame."
+
+"And the happiness of a household depends so much on money."
+
+"Madame!"
+
+"Let me say a word or two, Monsieur Lacordaire. I have enough for
+myself and my children; and, should I every marry again, I should
+not, I hope, be felt as a burden by my husband; but it would, of
+course, be my duty to know what were his circumstances before I
+accepted him. Of yourself, personally, I have seen nothing that I
+do not like."
+
+"Oh, madame!"
+
+"But as yet I know nothing of your circumstances."
+
+M. Lacordaire, perhaps, did feel that Mrs. Thompson's prudence was
+of a strong, masculine description; but he hardly liked her the less
+on this account. To give him his due he was not desirous of
+marrying her solely for her money's sake. He also wished for a
+comfortable home, and proposed to give as much as he got; only he
+had been anxious to wrap up the solid cake of this business in a
+casing of sugar of romance. Mrs. Thompson would not have the sugar
+but the cake might not be the worse on that account.
+
+"No, madame, not as yet; but they shall all be made open and at your
+disposal," said M. Lacordaire; and Mrs. Thompson bowed approvingly.
+
+"I am in business," continued M. Lacordaire; "and my business gives
+me eight thousand francs a year."
+
+"Four times eight are thirty-two," said Mrs. Thompson to herself;
+putting the francs into pounds sterling, in the manner that she had
+always found to be the readiest. Well, so far the statement was
+satisfactory. An income of three hundred and twenty pounds a year
+from business, joined to her own, might do very well. She did not
+in the least suspect M. Lacordaire of being false, and so far the
+matter sounded well.
+
+ "And what is the business?" she asked, in a tone of voice intended
+to be indifferent, but which nevertheless showed that she listened
+anxiously for an answer to her question.
+
+ They were both standing with their arms upon the wall, looking down
+upon the town of Le Puy; but they had so stood that each could see
+the other's countenance as they talked. Mrs. Thompson could now
+perceive that M. Lacordaire became red in the face, as he paused
+before answering her. She was near to him, and seeing his emotion
+gently touched his arm with her hand. This she did to reassure him,
+for she saw that he was ashamed of having to declare that he was a
+tradesman. As for herself, she had made up her mind to bear with
+this, if she found, as she felt sure she would find, that the trade
+was one which would not degrade either him or her. Hitherto,
+indeed,--in her early days,--she had looked down on trade; but of
+what benefit had her grand ideas been to her when she had returned
+to England? She had tried her hand at English genteel society, and
+no one had seemed to care for her. Therefore, she touched his arm
+lightly with her fingers that she might encourage him.
+
+He paused for a moment, as I have said, and became red; and then
+feeling that he had shown some symptoms of shame--and feeling also,
+probably, that it was unmanly in him to do so, he shook himself
+slightly, raised his head up somewhat more proudly than was his
+wont, looked her full in the face with more strength of character
+than she had yet seen him assume; and then, declared his business.
+
+"Madame," he said, in a very audible, but not in a loud voice,
+"madame--je suis tailleur." And having so spoken, he turned
+slightly from her and looked down over the valley towards Le Puy.
+
+There was nothing more said upon the subject as they drove down from
+the rock of Polignac back to the town. Immediately on receiving the
+announcement, Mrs. Thompson found that she had no answer to make.
+She withdrew her hand--and felt at once that she had received a
+blow. It was not that she was angry with M. Lacordaire for being a
+tailor; nor was she angry with him in that, being a tailor, he had
+so addressed her. But she was surprised, disappointed, and
+altogether put beyond her ease. She had, at any rate, not expected
+this. She had dreamed of his being a banker; thought that, perhaps,
+he might have been a wine merchant; but her idea had never gone
+below a jeweller or watchmaker. When those words broke upon her
+ear, "Madame, je suis tailleur," she had felt herself to be
+speechless.
+
+But the words had not been a minute spoken when Lilian and Mimmy ran
+up to their mother. "Oh, mamma," said Lilian, "we thought you were
+lost; we have searched for you all over the chateau."
+
+"We have been sitting very quietly here, my dear, looking at the
+view," said Mrs. Thompson.
+
+"But, mamma, I do wish you'd see the mouth of the oracle. It is so
+large, and so round, and so ugly. I put my arm into it all the
+way," said Mimmy.
+
+But at the present moment her mamma felt no interest in the mouth of
+the oracle; and so they all walked down together to the carriage.
+And, though the way was steep, Mrs. Thompson managed to pick her
+steps without the assistance of an arm; nor did M. Lacordaire
+presume to offer it.
+
+The drive back to town was very silent. Mrs. Thompson did make one
+or two attempts at conversation, but they were not effectual. M.
+Lacordaire could not speak at his ease till this matter was settled,
+and he already had begun to perceive that his business was against
+him. Why is it that the trade of a tailor should be less honourable
+than that of a haberdasher, or even a grocer?
+
+They sat next each other at dinner, as usual; and here, as all eyes
+were upon them, they both made a great struggle to behave in their
+accustomed way. But even in this they failed. All the world of the
+Hotel des Ambassadeurs knew that M. Lacordaire had gone forth to
+make an offer to Mrs. Thompson, and all that world, therefore, was
+full of speculation. But all the world could make nothing of it.
+M. Lacordaire did look like a rejected man, but Mrs. Thompson did
+not look like the woman who had rejected him. That the offer had
+been made--in that everybody agreed, from the senior habitue of the
+house who always sat at the head of the table, down to the junior
+assistant garcon. But as to reading the riddle, there was no accord
+among them.
+
+When the dessert was done, Mrs. Thompson, as usual, withdrew, and M.
+Lacordaire, as usual, bowed as he stood behind his own chair. He
+did not, however, attempt to follow her.
+
+But when she reached the door she called him. He was at her side in
+a moment, and then she whispered in his ear -
+
+"And I, also--I will be of the same business."
+
+When M. Lacordaire regained the table the senior habitue, the junior
+garcon, and all the intermediate ranks of men at the Hotel des
+Ambassadeurs knew that they might congratulate him.
+
+Mrs. Thompson had made a great struggle; but, speaking for myself, I
+am inclined to think that she arrived at last at a wise decision.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Chateau of Prince Polignac, by Trollope
+
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