“The whole show is dreadful,”
she cried coming out of the menagerie of M. Martin.
She had just been looking at that daring speculator
“working with his hyena,”—to
speak in the style of the programme.
“By what means,” she continued,
“can he have tamed these animals to such a point
as to be certain of their affection for——”
“What seems to you a problem,”
said I, interrupting, “is really quite natural.”
“Oh!” she cried, letting
an incredulous smile wander over her lips.
“You think that beasts are wholly
without passions?” I asked her. “Quite
the reverse; we can communicate to them all the vices
arising in our own state of civilization.”
She looked at me with an air of astonishment.
“But,” I continued, “the
first time I saw M. Martin, I admit, like you, I did
give vent to an exclamation of surprise. I found
myself next to an old soldier with the right leg amputated,
who had come in with me. His face had struck
me. He had one of those heroic heads, stamped
with the seal of warfare, and on which the battles
of Napoleon are written. Besides, he had that
frank, good-humored expression which always impresses
me favorably. He was without doubt one of those
troopers who are surprised at nothing, who find matter
for laughter in the contortions of a dying comrade,
who bury or plunder him quite light-heartedly, who
stand intrepidly in the way of bullets;—in
fact, one of those men who waste no time in deliberation,
and would not hesitate to make friends with the devil
himself. After looking very attentively at the
proprietor of the menagerie getting out of his box,
my companion pursed up his lips with an air of mockery
and contempt, with that peculiar and expressive twist
which superior people assume to show they are not
taken in. Then, when I was expatiating on the
courage of M. Martin, he smiled, shook his head knowingly,
and said, ‘Well known.’
“‘How “well known”?’
I said. ’If you would only explain me the
mystery, I should be vastly obliged.’
“After a few minutes, during
which we made acquaintance, we went to dine at the
first restauranteur’s whose shop caught our eye.
At dessert a bottle of champagne completely refreshed
and brightened up the memories of this odd old soldier.
He told me his story, and I saw that he was right
when he exclaimed, ‘Well known.’”
When she got home, she teased me to
that extent, was so charming, and made so many promises,
that I consented to communicate to her the confidences
of the old soldier. Next day she received the
following episode of an epic which one might call
“The French in Egypt.”
During the expedition in Upper Egypt
under General Desaix, a Provencal soldier fell into
the hands of the Maugrabins, and was taken by these
Arabs into the deserts beyond the falls of the Nile.
In order to place a sufficient distance
between themselves and the French army, the Maugrabins
made forced marches, and only halted when night was
upon them. They camped round a well overshadowed
by palm trees under which they had previously concealed
a store of provisions. Not surmising that the
notion of flight would occur to their prisoner, they
contented themselves with binding his hands, and after
eating a few dates, and giving provender to their
horses, went to sleep.
When the brave Provencal saw that
his enemies were no longer watching him, he made use
of his teeth to steal a scimiter, fixed the blade
between his knees, and cut the cords which prevented
him from using his hands; in a moment he was free.
He at once seized a rifle and a dagger, then taking
the precautions to provide himself with a sack of
dried dates, oats, and powder and shot, and to fasten
a scimiter to his waist, he leaped on to a horse,
and spurred on vigorously in the direction where he
thought to find the French army. So impatient
was he to see a bivouac again that he pressed on the
already tired courser at such speed, that its flanks
were lacerated with his spurs, and at last the poor
animal died, leaving the Frenchman alone in the desert.
After walking some time in the sand with all the courage
of an escaped convict, the soldier was obliged to
stop, as the day had already ended. In spite
of the beauty of an Oriental sky at night, he felt
he had not strength enough to go on. Fortunately
he had been able to find a small hill, on the summit
of which a few palm trees shot up into the air; it
was their verdure seen from afar which had brought
hope and consolation to his heart. His fatigue
was so great that he lay down upon a rock of granite,
capriciously cut out like a camp-bed; there he fell
asleep without taking any precaution to defend himself
while he slept. He had made the sacrifice of
his life. His last thought was one of regret.
He repented having left the Maugrabins, whose nomadic
life seemed to smile upon him now that he was far
from them and without help. He was awakened by
the sun, whose pitiless rays fell with all their force
on the granite and produced an intolerable heat—for
he had had the stupidity to place himself adversely
to the shadow thrown by the verdant majestic heads
of the palm trees. He looked at the solitary
trees and shuddered—they reminded him of
the graceful shafts crowned with foliage which characterize
the Saracen columns in the cathedral of Arles.
But when, after counting the palm
trees, he cast his eyes around him, the most horrible
despair was infused into his soul. Before him
stretched an ocean without limit. The dark sand
of the desert spread further than eye could reach
in every direction, and glittered like steel struck
with bright light. It might have been a sea of
looking-glass, or lakes melted together in a mirror.
A fiery vapor carried up in surging waves made a perpetual
whirlwind over the quivering land. The sky was
lit with an Oriental splendor of insupportable purity,
leaving naught for the imagination to desire.
Heaven and earth were on fire.
The silence was awful in its wild
and terrible majesty. Infinity, immensity, closed
in upon the soul from every side. Not a cloud
in the sky, not a breath in the air, not a flaw on
the bosom of the sand, ever moving in diminutive waves;
the horizon ended as at sea on a clear day, with one
line of light, definite as the cut of a sword.
The Provencal threw his arms round
the trunk of one of the palm trees, as though it were
the body of a friend, and then, in the shelter of
the thin, straight shadow that the palm cast upon the
granite, he wept. Then sitting down he remained
as he was, contemplating with profound sadness the
implacable scene, which was all he had to look upon.
He cried aloud, to measure the solitude. His voice,
lost in the hollows of the hill, sounded faintly,
and aroused no echo—the echo was in his
own heart. The Provencal was twenty-two years
old:—he loaded his carbine.
“There’ll be time enough,”
he said to himself, laying on the ground the weapon
which alone could bring him deliverance.
Viewing alternately the dark expanse
of the desert and the blue expanse of the sky, the
soldier dreamed of France—he smelled with
delight the gutters of Paris—he remembered
the towns through which he had passed, the faces of
his comrades, the most minute details of his life.
His Southern fancy soon showed him the stones of his
beloved Provence, in the play of the heat which undulated
above the wide expanse of the desert. Realizing
the danger of this cruel mirage, he went down the
opposite side of the hill to that by which he had come
up the day before. The remains of a rug showed
that this place of refuge had at one time been inhabited;
at a short distance he saw some palm trees full of
dates. Then the instinct which binds us to life
awoke again in his heart. He hoped to live long
enough to await the passing of some Maugrabins, or
perhaps he might hear the sound of cannon; for at
this time Bonaparte was traversing Egypt.
This thought gave him new life.
The palm tree seemed to bend with the weight of the
ripe fruit. He shook some of it down. When
he tasted this unhoped-for manna, he felt sure that
the palms had been cultivated by a former inhabitant—the
savory, fresh meat of the dates were proof of the
care of his predecessor. He passed suddenly from
dark despair to an almost insane joy. He went
up again to the top of the hill, and spent the rest
of the day in cutting down one of the sterile palm
trees, which the night before had served him for shelter.
A vague memory made him think of the animals of the
desert; and in case they might come to drink at the
spring, visible from the base of the rocks but lost
further down, he resolved to guard himself from their
visits by placing a barrier at the entrance of his
hermitage.
In spite of his diligence, and the
strength which the fear of being devoured asleep gave
him, he was unable to cut the palm in pieces, though
he succeeded in cutting it down. At eventide the
king of the desert fell; the sound of its fall resounded
far and wide, like a sigh in the solitude; the soldier
shuddered as though he had heard some voice predicting
woe.
But like an heir who does not long
bewail a deceased relative, he tore off from this
beautiful tree the tall broad green leaves which are
its poetic adornment, and used them to mend the mat
on which he was to sleep.
Fatigued by the heat and his work,
he fell asleep under the red curtains of his wet cave.
In the middle of the night his sleep
was troubled by an extraordinary noise; he sat up,
and the deep silence around allowed him to distinguish
the alternative accents of a respiration whose savage
energy could not belong to a human creature.
A profound terror, increased still
further by the darkness, the silence, and his waking
images, froze his heart within him. He almost
felt his hair stand on end, when by straining his eyes
to their utmost he perceived through the shadow two
faint yellow lights. At first he attributed these
lights to the reflections of his own pupils, but soon
the vivid brilliance of the night aided him gradually
to distinguish the objects around him in the cave,
and he beheld a huge animal lying but two steps from
him. Was it a lion, a tiger, or a crocodile?
The Provencal was not sufficiently
educated to know under what species his enemy ought
to be classed; but his fright was all the greater,
as his ignorance led him to imagine all terrors at
once; he endured a cruel torture, noting every variation
of the breathing close to him without daring to make
the slightest movement. An odor, pungent like
that of a fox, but more penetrating, more profound,—so
to speak, —filled the cave, and when the
Provencal became sensible of this, his terror reached
its height, for he could no longer doubt the proximity
of a terrible companion, whose royal dwelling served
him for a shelter.
Presently the reflection of the moon
descending on the horizon lit up the den, rendering
gradually visible and resplendent the spotted skin
of a panther.
This lion of Egypt slept, curled up
like a big dog, the peaceful possessor of a sumptuous
niche at the gate of an hotel; its eyes opened for
a moment and closed again; its face was turned towards
the man. A thousand confused thoughts passed
through the Frenchman’s mind; first he thought
of killing it with a bullet from his gun, but he saw
there was not enough distance between them for him
to take proper aim —the shot would miss
the mark. And if it were to wake!—the
thought made his limbs rigid. He listened to
his own heart beating in the midst of the silence,
and cursed the too violent pulsations which the flow
of blood brought on, fearing to disturb that sleep
which allowed him time to think of some means of escape.
Twice he placed his hand on his scimiter,
intending to cut off the head of his enemy; but the
difficulty of cutting the stiff short hair compelled
him to abandon this daring project. To miss would
be to die for certain, he thought; he preferred
the chances of fair fight, and made up his mind to
wait till morning; the morning did not leave him long
to wait.
He could now examine the panther at
ease; its muzzle was smeared with blood.
“She’s had a good dinner,”
he thought, without troubling himself as to whether
her feast might have been on human flesh. “She
won’t be hungry when she gets up.”
It was a female. The fur on her
belly and flanks was glistening white; many small
marks like velvet formed beautiful bracelets round
her feet; her sinuous tail was also white, ending
with black rings; the overpart of her dress, yellow
like burnished gold, very lissome and soft, had the
characteristic blotches in the form of rosettes, which
distinguish the panther from every other feline species.
This tranquil and formidable hostess
snored in an attitude as graceful as that of a cat
lying on a cushion. Her blood-stained paws, nervous
and well armed, were stretched out before her face,
which rested upon them, and from which radiated her
straight slender whiskers, like threads of silver.
If she had been like that in a cage,
the Provencal would doubtless have admired the grace
of the animal, and the vigorous contrasts of vivid
color which gave her robe an imperial splendor; but
just then his sight was troubled by her sinister appearance.
The presence of the panther, even
asleep, could not fail to produce the effect which
the magnetic eyes of the serpent are said to have on
the nightingale.
For a moment the courage of the soldier
began to fail before this danger, though no doubt
it would have risen at the mouth of a cannon charged
with shell. Nevertheless, a bold thought brought
daylight to his soul and sealed up the source of the
cold sweat which sprang forth on his brow. Like
men driven to bay, who defy death and offer their
body to the smiter, so he, seeing in this merely a
tragic episode, resolved to play his part with honor
to the last.
“The day before yesterday the
Arabs would have killed me, perhaps,” he said;
so considering himself as good as dead already, he
waited bravely, with excited curiosity, the awakening
of his enemy.
When the sun appeared, the panther
suddenly opened her eyes; then she put out her paws
with energy, as if to stretch them and get rid of
cramp. At last she yawned, showing the formidable
apparatus of her teeth and pointed tongue, rough as
a file.
“A regular petite maitresse,”
thought the Frenchman, seeing her roll herself about
so softly and coquettishly. She licked off the
blood which stained her paws and muzzle, and scratched
her head with reiterated gestures full of prettiness.
“All right, make a little toilet,” the
Frenchman said to himself, beginning to recover his
gaiety with his courage; “we’ll say good
morning to each other presently;” and he seized
the small, short dagger which he had taken from the
Maugrabins.
At this moment the panther turned
her head toward the man and looked at him fixedly
without moving. The rigidity of her metallic eyes
and their insupportable luster made him shudder, especially
when the animal walked towards him. But he looked
at her caressingly, staring into her eyes in order
to magnetize her, and let her come quite close to
him; then with a movement both gentle and amorous,
as though he were caressing the most beautiful of
women, he passed his hand over her whole body, from
the head to the tail, scratching the flexible vertebrae
which divided the panther’s yellow back.
The animal waved her tail voluptuously, and her eyes
grew gentle; and when for the third time the Frenchman
accomplished this interesting flattery, she gave forth
one of those purrings by which cats express their pleasure;
but this murmur issued from a throat so powerful and
so deep that it resounded through the cave like the
last vibrations of an organ in a church. The
man, understanding the importance of his caresses,
redoubled them in such a way as to surprise and stupefy
his imperious courtesan. When he felt sure of
having extinguished the ferocity of his capricious
companion, whose hunger had so fortunately been satisfied
the day before, he got up to go out of the cave; the
panther let him go out, but when he had reached the
summit of the hill she sprang with the lightness of
a sparrow hopping from twig to twig, and rubbed herself
against his legs, putting up her back after the manner
of all the race of cats. Then regarding her guest
with eyes whose glare had softened a little, she gave
vent to that wild cry which naturalists compare to
the grating of a saw.
“She is exacting,” said the Frenchman,
smilingly.
He was bold enough to play with her
ears; he caressed her belly and scratched her head
as hard as he could. When he saw that he was
successful, he tickled her skull with the point of
his dagger, watching for the right moment to kill
her, but the hardness of her bones made him tremble
for his success.
The sultana of the desert showed herself
gracious to her slave; she lifted her head, stretched
out her neck and manifested her delight by the tranquility
of her attitude. It suddenly occurred to the soldier
that to kill this savage princess with one blow he
must poniard her in the throat.
He raised the blade, when the panther,
satisfied no doubt, laid herself gracefully at his
feet, and cast up at him glances in which, in spite
of their natural fierceness, was mingled confusedly
a kind of good will. The poor Provencal ate his
dates, leaning against one of the palm trees, and
casting his eyes alternately on the desert in quest
of some liberator and on his terrible companion to
watch her uncertain clemency.
The panther looked at the place where
the date stones fell, and every time that he threw
one down her eyes expressed an incredible mistrust.
She examined the man with an almost
commercial prudence. However, this examination
was favorable to him, for when he had finished his
meager meal she licked his boots with her powerful
rough tongue, brushing off with marvelous skill the
dust gathered in the creases.
“Ah, but when she’s really
hungry!” thought the Frenchman. In spite
of the shudder this thought caused him, the soldier
began to measure curiously the proportions of the
panther, certainly one of the most splendid specimens
of its race. She was three feet high and four
feet long without counting her tail; this powerful
weapon, rounded like a cudgel, was nearly three feet
long. The head, large as that of a lioness, was
distinguished by a rare expression of refinement.
The cold cruelty of a tiger was dominant, it was true,
but there was also a vague resemblance to the face
of a sensual woman. Indeed, the face of this
solitary queen had something of the gaiety of a drunken
Nero: she had satiated herself with blood, and
she wanted to play.
The soldier tried if he might walk
up and down, and the panther left him free, contenting
herself with following him with her eyes, less like
a faithful dog than a big Angora cat, observing everything
and every movement of her master.
When he looked around, he saw, by
the spring, the remains of his horse; the panther
had dragged the carcass all that way; about two thirds
of it had been devoured already. The sight reassured
him.
It was easy to explain the panther’s
absence, and the respect she had had for him while
he slept. The first piece of good luck emboldened
him to tempt the future, and he conceived the wild
hope of continuing on good terms with the panther
during the entire day, neglecting no means of taming
her, and remaining in her good graces.
He returned to her, and had the unspeakable
joy of seeing her wag her tail with an almost imperceptible
movement at his approach. He sat down then, without
fear, by her side, and they began to play together;
he took her paws and muzzle, pulled her ears, rolled
her over on her back, stroked her warm, delicate flanks.
She let him do what ever he liked, and when he began
to stroke the hair on her feet she drew her claws
in carefully.
The man, keeping the dagger in one
hand, thought to plunge it into the belly of the too
confiding panther, but he was afraid that he would
be immediately strangled in her last convulsive struggle;
besides, he felt in his heart a sort of remorse which
bid him respect a creature that had done him no harm.
He seemed to have found a friend, in a boundless desert;
half unconsciously he thought of his first sweetheart,
whom he had nicknamed “Mignonne” by way
of contrast, because she was so atrociously jealous
that all the time of their love he was in fear of
the knife with which she had always threatened him.
This memory of his early days suggested
to him the idea of making the young panther answer
to this name, now that he began to admire with less
terror her swiftness, suppleness, and softness.
Toward the end of the day he had familiarized himself
with his perilous position; he now almost liked the
painfulness of it. At last his companion had got
into the habit of looking up at him whenever he cried
in a falsetto voice, “Mignonne.”
At the setting of the sun Mignonne
gave, several times running, a profound melancholy
cry. “She’s been well brought up,”
said the lighthearted soldier; “she says her
prayers.” But this mental joke only occurred
to him when he noticed what a pacific attitude his
companion remained in. “Come, ma petite
blonde, I’ll let you go to bed first,”
he said to her, counting on the activity of his own
legs to run away as quickly as possible, directly
she was asleep, and seek another shelter for the night.
The soldier waited with impatience
the hour of his flight, and when it had arrived he
walked vigorously in the direction of the Nile; but
hardly had he made a quarter of a league in the sand
when he heard the panther bounding after him, crying
with that saw-like cry more dreadful even than the
sound of her leaping.
“Ah!” he said, “then
she’s taken a fancy to me, she has never met
anyone before, and it is really quite flattering to
have her first love.” That instant the
man fell into one of those movable quicksands so terrible
to travelers and from which it is impossible to save
oneself. Feeling himself caught, he gave a shriek
of alarm; the panther seized him with her teeth by
the collar, and, springing vigorously backwards, drew
him as if by magic out of the whirling sand.
“Ah, Mignonne!” cried
the soldier, caressing her enthusiastically; “we’re
bound together for life and death but no jokes, mind!”
and he retraced his steps.
From that time the desert seemed inhabited.
It contained a being to whom the man could talk, and
whose ferocity was rendered gentle by him, though
he could not explain to himself the reason for their
strange friendship. Great as was the soldier’s
desire to stay upon guard, he slept.
On awakening he could not find Mignonne;
he mounted the hill, and in the distance saw her springing
toward him after the habit of these animals, who cannot
run on account of the extreme flexibility of the vertebral
column. Mignonne arrived, her jaws covered with
blood; she received the wonted caress of her companion,
showing with much purring how happy it made her.
Her eyes, full of languor, turned still more gently
than the day before toward the Provencal, who talked
to her as one would to a tame animal.
“Ah! mademoiselle, you are a
nice girl, aren’t you? Just look at that!
So we like to be made much of, don’t we?
Aren’t you ashamed of yourself? So you
have been eating some Arab or other, have you?
That doesn’t matter. They’re animals
just the same as you are; but don’t you take
to eating Frenchmen, or I shan’t like you any
longer.”
She played like a dog with its master,
letting herself be rolled over, knocked about, and
stroked, alternately; sometimes she herself would
provoke the soldier, putting up her paw with a soliciting
gesture.
Some days passed in this manner.
This companionship permitted the Provencal to appreciate
the sublime beauty of the desert; now that he had
a living thing to think about, alternations of fear
and quiet, and plenty to eat, his mind became filled
with contrast and his life began to be diversified.
Solitude revealed to him all her secrets,
and enveloped him in her delights. He discovered
in the rising and setting of the sun sights unknown
to the world. He knew what it was to tremble when
he heard over his head the hiss of a bird’s
wing, so rarely did they pass, or when he saw the
clouds, changing and many colored travelers, melt one
into another. He studied in the night time the
effect of the moon upon the ocean of sand, where the
simoom made waves swift of movement and rapid in their
change. He lived the life of the Eastern day,
marveling at its wonderful pomp; then, after having
reveled in the sight of a hurricane over the plain
where the whirling sands made red, dry mists and death-bearing
clouds, he would welcome the night with joy, for then
fell the healthful freshness of the stars, and he listened
to imaginary music in the skies. Then solitude
taught him to unroll the treasures of dreams.
He passed whole hours in remembering mere nothings,
and comparing his present life with his past.
At last he grew passionately fond
of the panther; for some sort of affection was a necessity.
Whether it was that his will powerfully
projected had modified the character of his companion,
or whether, because she found abundant food in her
predatory excursions in the desert, she respected the
man’s life, he began to fear for it no longer,
seeing her so well tamed.
He devoted the greater part of his
time to sleep, but he was obliged to watch like a
spider in its web that the moment of his deliverance
might not escape him, if anyone should pass the line
marked by the horizon. He had sacrificed his
shirt to make a flag with, which he hung at the top
of a palm tree, whose foliage he had torn off.
Taught by necessity, he found the means of keeping
it spread out, by fastening it with little sticks;
for the wind might not be blowing at the moment when
the passing traveler was looking through the desert.
It was during the long hours, when
he had abandoned hope, that he amused himself with
the panther. He had come to learn the different
inflections of her voice, the expressions of her eyes;
he had studied the capricious patterns of all the
rosettes which marked the gold of her robe. Mignonne
was not even angry when he took hold of the tuft at
the end of her tail to count her rings, those graceful
ornaments which glittered in the sun like jewelry.
It gave him pleasure to contemplate the supple, fine
outlines of her form, the whiteness of her belly, the
graceful pose of her head. But it was especially
when she was playing that he felt most pleasure in
looking at her; the agility and youthful lightness
of her movements were a continual surprise to him;
he wondered at the supple way in which she jumped
and climbed, washed herself and arranged her fur,
crouched down and prepared to spring. However
rapid her spring might be, however slippery the stone
she was on, she would always stop short at the word
“Mignonne.”
One day, in a bright midday sun, an
enormous bird coursed through the air. The man
left his panther to look at his new guest; but after
waiting a moment the deserted sultana growled deeply.
“My goodness! I do believe
she’s jealous,” he cried, seeing her eyes
become hard again; “the soul of Virginie has
passed into her body; that’s certain.”
The eagle disappeared into the air,
while the soldier admired the curved contour of the
panther.
But there was such youth and grace
in her form! she was beautiful as a woman! the blond
fur of her robe mingled well with the delicate tints
of faint white which marked her flanks.
The profuse light cast down by the
sun made this living gold, these russet markings,
to burn in a way to give them an indefinable attraction.
The man and the panther looked at
one another with a look full of meaning; the coquette
quivered when she felt her friend stroke her head;
her eyes flashed like lightning—then she
shut them tightly.
“She has a soul,” he said,
looking at the stillness of this queen of the sands,
golden like them, white like them, solitary and burning
like them.
“Well,” she said, “I
have read your plea in favor of beasts; but how did
two so well adapted to understand each other end?”
“Ah, well! you see, they ended
as all great passions do end—by a misunderstanding.
For some reason one suspects the other of treason;
they don’t come to an explanation through pride,
and quarrel and part from sheer obstinacy.”
“Yet sometimes at the best moments
a single word or a look is enough —but
anyhow go on with your story.”
“It’s horribly difficult,
but you will understand, after what the old villain
told me over his champagne. He said—’I
don’t know if I hurt her, but she turned round,
as if enraged, and with her sharp teeth caught hold
of my leg—gently, I daresay; but I, thinking
she would devour me, plunged my dagger into her throat.
She rolled over, giving a cry that froze my heart;
and I saw her dying, still looking at me without anger.
I would have given all the world—my cross
even, which I had not got then—to have
brought her to life again. It was as though I
had murdered a real person; and the soldiers who had
seen my flag, and were come to my assistance, found
me in tears.’
“‘Well sir,’ he
said, after a moment of silence, ’since then
I have been in war in Germany, in Spain, in Russia,
in France; I’ve certainly carried my carcase
about a good deal, but never have I seen anything
like the desert. Ah! yes, it is very beautiful!’
“‘What did you feel there?’ I asked
him.
“’Oh! that can’t
be described, young man! Besides, I am not always
regretting my palm trees and my panther. I should
have to be very melancholy for that. In the desert,
you see, there is everything and nothing.’
“‘Yes, but explain——’
“‘Well,’ he said,
with an impatient gesture, ’it is God without
mankind.’”