The Wine-shop
A large cask of wine had been dropped
and broken, in the street. The accident had happened
in getting it out of a cart; the cask had tumbled
out with a run, the hoops had burst, and it lay on
the stones just outside the door of the wine-shop,
shattered like a walnut-shell.
All the people within reach had suspended
their business, or their idleness, to run to the spot
and drink the wine. The rough, irregular stones
of the street, pointing every way, and designed, one
might have thought, expressly to lame all living creatures
that approached them, had dammed it into little pools;
these were surrounded, each by its own jostling group
or crowd, according to its size. Some men kneeled
down, made scoops of their two hands joined, and sipped,
or tried to help women, who bent over their shoulders,
to sip, before the wine had all run out between their
fingers. Others, men and women, dipped in the
puddles with little mugs of mutilated earthenware,
or even with handkerchiefs from women’s heads,
which were squeezed dry into infants’ mouths;
others made small mud-embankments, to stem the wine
as it ran; others, directed by lookers-on up at high
windows, darted here and there, to cut off little
streams of wine that started away in new directions;
others devoted themselves to the sodden and lee-dyed
pieces of the cask, licking, and even champing the
moister wine-rotted fragments with eager relish.
There was no drainage to carry off the wine, and not
only did it all get taken up, but so much mud got taken
up along with it, that there might have been a scavenger
in the street, if anybody acquainted with it could
have believed in such a miraculous presence.
A shrill sound of laughter and of
amused voices—voices of men, women, and
children—resounded in the street while this
wine game lasted. There was little roughness
in the sport, and much playfulness. There was
a special companionship in it, an observable inclination
on the part of every one to join some other one, which
led, especially among the luckier or lighter-hearted,
to frolicsome embraces, drinking of healths, shaking
of hands, and even joining of hands and dancing, a
dozen together. When the wine was gone, and the
places where it had been most abundant were raked
into a gridiron-pattern by fingers, these demonstrations
ceased, as suddenly as they had broken out.
The man who had left his saw sticking in the firewood
he was cutting, set it in motion again; the women
who had left on a door-step the little pot of hot
ashes, at which she had been trying to soften the
pain in her own starved fingers and toes, or in those
of her child, returned to it; men with bare arms,
matted locks, and cadaverous faces, who had emerged
into the winter light from cellars, moved away, to
descend again; and a gloom gathered on the scene that
appeared more natural to it than sunshine.
The wine was red wine, and had stained
the ground of the narrow street in the suburb of Saint
Antoine, in Paris, where it was spilled. It
had stained many hands, too, and many faces, and many
naked feet, and many wooden shoes. The hands
of the man who sawed the wood, left red marks on the
billets; and the forehead of the woman who nursed
her baby, was stained with the stain of the old rag
she wound about her head again. Those who had
been greedy with the staves of the cask, had acquired
a tigerish smear about the mouth; and one tall joker
so besmirched, his head more out of a long squalid
bag of a nightcap than in it, scrawled upon a wall
with his finger dipped in muddy wine-lees—blood.
The time was to come, when that wine
too would be spilled on the street-stones, and when
the stain of it would be red upon many there.
And now that the cloud settled on
Saint Antoine, which a momentary gleam had driven
from his sacred countenance, the darkness of it was
heavy—cold, dirt, sickness, ignorance, and
want, were the lords in waiting on the saintly presence—nobles
of great power all of them; but, most especially the
last. Samples of a people that had undergone
a terrible grinding and regrinding in the mill, and
certainly not in the fabulous mill which ground old
people young, shivered at every corner, passed in
and out at every doorway, looked from every window,
fluttered in every vestige of a garment that the wind
shook. The mill which had worked them down, was
the mill that grinds young people old; the children
had ancient faces and grave voices; and upon them,
and upon the grown faces, and ploughed into every
furrow of age and coming up afresh, was the sigh, Hunger.
It was prevalent everywhere. Hunger was pushed
out of the tall houses, in the wretched clothing that
hung upon poles and lines; Hunger was patched into
them with straw and rag and wood and paper; Hunger
was repeated in every fragment of the small modicum
of firewood that the man sawed off; Hunger stared
down from the smokeless chimneys, and started up from
the filthy street that had no offal, among its refuse,
of anything to eat. Hunger was the inscription
on the baker’s shelves, written in every small
loaf of his scanty stock of bad bread; at the sausage-shop,
in every dead-dog preparation that was offered for
sale. Hunger rattled its dry bones among the
roasting chestnuts in the turned cylinder; Hunger
was shred into atomics in every farthing porringer
of husky chips of potato, fried with some reluctant
drops of oil.
Its abiding place was in all things
fitted to it. A narrow winding street, full
of offence and stench, with other narrow winding streets
diverging, all peopled by rags and nightcaps, and all
smelling of rags and nightcaps, and all visible things
with a brooding look upon them that looked ill.
In the hunted air of the people there was yet some
wild-beast thought of the possibility of turning at
bay. Depressed and slinking though they were,
eyes of fire were not wanting among them; nor compressed
lips, white with what they suppressed; nor foreheads
knitted into the likeness of the gallows-rope they
mused about enduring, or inflicting. The trade
signs (and they were almost as many as the shops)
were, all, grim illustrations of Want. The butcher
and the porkman painted up, only the leanest scrags
of meat; the baker, the coarsest of meagre loaves.
The people rudely pictured as drinking in the wine-shops,
croaked over their scanty measures of thin wine and
beer, and were gloweringly confidential together.
Nothing was represented in a flourishing condition,
save tools and weapons; but, the cutler’s knives
and axes were sharp and bright, the smith’s
hammers were heavy, and the gunmaker’s stock
was murderous. The crippling stones of the pavement,
with their many little reservoirs of mud and water,
had no footways, but broke off abruptly at the doors.
The kennel, to make amends, ran down the middle of
the street—when it ran at all: which
was only after heavy rains, and then it ran, by many
eccentric fits, into the houses. Across the
streets, at wide intervals, one clumsy lamp was slung
by a rope and pulley; at night, when the lamplighter
had let these down, and lighted, and hoisted them
again, a feeble grove of dim wicks swung in a sickly
manner overhead, as if they were at sea. Indeed
they were at sea, and the ship and crew were in peril
of tempest.
For, the time was to come, when the
gaunt scarecrows of that region should have watched
the lamplighter, in their idleness and hunger, so
long, as to conceive the idea of improving on his method,
and hauling up men by those ropes and pulleys, to
flare upon the darkness of their condition.
But, the time was not come yet; and every wind that
blew over France shook the rags of the scarecrows
in vain, for the birds, fine of song and feather, took
no warning.
The wine-shop was a corner shop, better
than most others in its appearance and degree, and
the master of the wine-shop had stood outside it,
in a yellow waistcoat and green breeches, looking on
at the struggle for the lost wine. “It’s
not my affair,” said he, with a final shrug
of the shoulders. “The people from the
market did it. Let them bring another.”
There, his eyes happening to catch
the tall joker writing up his joke, he called to him
across the way:
“Say, then, my Gaspard, what do you do there?”
The fellow pointed to his joke with
immense significance, as is often the way with his
tribe. It missed its mark, and completely failed,
as is often the way with his tribe too.
“What now? Are you a subject
for the mad hospital?” said the wine-shop keeper,
crossing the road, and obliterating the jest with
a handful of mud, picked up for the purpose, and smeared
over it. “Why do you write in the public
streets? Is there—tell me thou—is
there no other place to write such words in?”
In his expostulation he dropped his
cleaner hand (perhaps accidentally, perhaps not) upon
the joker’s heart. The joker rapped it
with his own, took a nimble spring upward, and came
down in a fantastic dancing attitude, with one of
his stained shoes jerked off his foot into his hand,
and held out. A joker of an extremely, not to
say wolfishly practical character, he looked, under
those circumstances.
“Put it on, put it on,”
said the other. “Call wine, wine; and finish
there.” With that advice, he wiped his
soiled hand upon the joker’s dress, such as
it was—quite deliberately, as having dirtied
the hand on his account; and then recrossed the road
and entered the wine-shop.
This wine-shop keeper was a bull-necked,
martial-looking man of thirty, and he should have
been of a hot temperament, for, although it was a
bitter day, he wore no coat, but carried one slung
over his shoulder. His shirt-sleeves were rolled
up, too, and his brown arms were bare to the elbows.
Neither did he wear anything more on his head than
his own crisply-curling short dark hair. He was
a dark man altogether, with good eyes and a good bold
breadth between them. Good-humoured looking on
the whole, but implacable-looking, too; evidently
a man of a strong resolution and a set purpose; a man
not desirable to be met, rushing down a narrow pass
with a gulf on either side, for nothing would turn
the man.
Madame Defarge, his wife, sat in the
shop behind the counter as he came in. Madame
Defarge was a stout woman of about his own age, with
a watchful eye that seldom seemed to look at anything,
a large hand heavily ringed, a steady face, strong
features, and great composure of manner. There
was a character about Madame Defarge, from which one
might have predicated that she did not often make mistakes
against herself in any of the reckonings over which
she presided. Madame Defarge being sensitive
to cold, was wrapped in fur, and had a quantity of
bright shawl twined about her head, though not to the
concealment of her large earrings. Her knitting
was before her, but she had laid it down to pick her
teeth with a toothpick. Thus engaged, with her
right elbow supported by her left hand, Madame Defarge
said nothing when her lord came in, but coughed just
one grain of cough. This, in combination with
the lifting of her darkly defined eyebrows over her
toothpick by the breadth of a line, suggested to her
husband that he would do well to look round the shop
among the customers, for any new customer who had
dropped in while he stepped over the way.
The wine-shop keeper accordingly rolled
his eyes about, until they rested upon an elderly
gentleman and a young lady, who were seated in a corner.
Other company were there: two playing cards,
two playing dominoes, three standing by the counter
lengthening out a short supply of wine. As he
passed behind the counter, he took notice that the
elderly gentleman said in a look to the young lady,
“This is our man.”
“What the devil do you
do in that galley there?” said Monsieur Defarge
to himself; “I don’t know you.”
But, he feigned not to notice the
two strangers, and fell into discourse with the triumvirate
of customers who were drinking at the counter.
“How goes it, Jacques?”
said one of these three to Monsieur Defarge.
“Is all the spilt wine swallowed?”
“Every drop, Jacques,” answered Monsieur
Defarge.
When this interchange of Christian
name was effected, Madame Defarge, picking her teeth
with her toothpick, coughed another grain of cough,
and raised her eyebrows by the breadth of another line.
“It is not often,” said
the second of the three, addressing Monsieur Defarge,
“that many of these miserable beasts know the
taste of wine, or of anything but black bread and
death. Is it not so, Jacques?”
“It is so, Jacques,” Monsieur Defarge
returned.
At this second interchange of the
Christian name, Madame Defarge, still using her toothpick
with profound composure, coughed another grain of
cough, and raised her eyebrows by the breadth of another
line.
The last of the three now said his
say, as he put down his empty drinking vessel and
smacked his lips.
“Ah! So much the worse!
A bitter taste it is that such poor cattle always
have in their mouths, and hard lives they live, Jacques.
Am I right, Jacques?”
“You are right, Jacques,”
was the response of Monsieur Defarge.
This third interchange of the Christian
name was completed at the moment when Madame Defarge
put her toothpick by, kept her eyebrows up, and slightly
rustled in her seat.
“Hold then! True!”
muttered her husband. “Gentlemen—my
wife!”
The three customers pulled off their
hats to Madame Defarge, with three flourishes.
She acknowledged their homage by bending her head,
and giving them a quick look. Then she glanced
in a casual manner round the wine-shop, took up her
knitting with great apparent calmness and repose of
spirit, and became absorbed in it.
“Gentlemen,” said her
husband, who had kept his bright eye observantly upon
her, “good day. The chamber, furnished
bachelor-fashion, that you wished to see, and were
inquiring for when I stepped out, is on the fifth
floor. The doorway of the staircase gives on
the little courtyard close to the left here,”
pointing with his hand, “near to the window
of my establishment. But, now that I remember,
one of you has already been there, and can show the
way. Gentlemen, adieu!”
They paid for their wine, and left
the place. The eyes of Monsieur Defarge were
studying his wife at her knitting when the elderly
gentleman advanced from his corner, and begged the
favour of a word.
“Willingly, sir,” said
Monsieur Defarge, and quietly stepped with him to
the door.
Their conference was very short, but
very decided. Almost at the first word, Monsieur
Defarge started and became deeply attentive.
It had not lasted a minute, when he nodded and went
out. The gentleman then beckoned to the young
lady, and they, too, went out. Madame Defarge
knitted with nimble fingers and steady eyebrows, and
saw nothing.
Mr. Jarvis Lorry and Miss Manette,
emerging from the wine-shop thus, joined Monsieur
Defarge in the doorway to which he had directed his
own company just before. It opened from a stinking
little black courtyard, and was the general public
entrance to a great pile of houses, inhabited by a
great number of people. In the gloomy tile-paved
entry to the gloomy tile-paved staircase, Monsieur
Defarge bent down on one knee to the child of his
old master, and put her hand to his lips. It
was a gentle action, but not at all gently done; a
very remarkable transformation had come over him in
a few seconds. He had no good-humour in his
face, nor any openness of aspect left, but had become
a secret, angry, dangerous man.
“It is very high; it is a little
difficult. Better to begin slowly.”
Thus, Monsieur Defarge, in a stern voice, to Mr. Lorry,
as they began ascending the stairs.
“Is he alone?” the latter whispered.
“Alone! God help him,
who should be with him!” said the other, in the
same low voice.
“Is he always alone, then?”
“Yes.”
“Of his own desire?”
“Of his own necessity.
As he was, when I first saw him after they found
me and demanded to know if I would take him, and, at
my peril be discreet—as he was then, so
he is now.”
“He is greatly changed?”
“Changed!”
The keeper of the wine-shop stopped
to strike the wall with his hand, and mutter a tremendous
curse. No direct answer could have been half
so forcible. Mr. Lorry’s spirits grew heavier
and heavier, as he and his two companions ascended
higher and higher.
Such a staircase, with its accessories,
in the older and more crowded parts of Paris, would
be bad enough now; but, at that time, it was vile
indeed to unaccustomed and unhardened senses.
Every little habitation within the great foul nest
of one high building—that is to say, the
room or rooms within every door that opened on the
general staircase—left its own heap of refuse
on its own landing, besides flinging other refuse
from its own windows. The uncontrollable and
hopeless mass of decomposition so engendered, would
have polluted the air, even if poverty and deprivation
had not loaded it with their intangible impurities;
the two bad sources combined made it almost insupportable.
Through such an atmosphere, by a steep dark shaft
of dirt and poison, the way lay. Yielding to
his own disturbance of mind, and to his young companion’s
agitation, which became greater every instant, Mr.
Jarvis Lorry twice stopped to rest. Each of these
stoppages was made at a doleful grating, by which any
languishing good airs that were left uncorrupted,
seemed to escape, and all spoilt and sickly vapours
seemed to crawl in. Through the rusted bars,
tastes, rather than glimpses, were caught of the jumbled
neighbourhood; and nothing within range, nearer or
lower than the summits of the two great towers of
Notre-Dame, had any promise on it of healthy life
or wholesome aspirations.
At last, the top of the staircase
was gained, and they stopped for the third time.
There was yet an upper staircase, of a steeper inclination
and of contracted dimensions, to be ascended, before
the garret story was reached. The keeper of
the wine-shop, always going a little in advance, and
always going on the side which Mr. Lorry took, as
though he dreaded to be asked any question by the young
lady, turned himself about here, and, carefully feeling
in the pockets of the coat he carried over his shoulder,
took out a key.
“The door is locked then, my
friend?” said Mr. Lorry, surprised.
“Ay. Yes,” was the grim reply of
Monsieur Defarge.
“You think it necessary to keep the unfortunate
gentleman so retired?”
“I think it necessary to turn
the key.” Monsieur Defarge whispered it
closer in his ear, and frowned heavily.
“Why?”
“Why! Because he has lived
so long, locked up, that he would be frightened—rave—tear
himself to pieces—die—come to
I know not what harm—if his door was left
open.”
“Is it possible!” exclaimed Mr. Lorry.
“Is it possible!” repeated
Defarge, bitterly. “Yes. And a beautiful
world we live in, when it is possible, and when
many other such things are possible, and not only
possible, but done—done, see you!—under
that sky there, every day. Long live the Devil.
Let us go on.”
This dialogue had been held in so
very low a whisper, that not a word of it had reached
the young lady’s ears. But, by this time
she trembled under such strong emotion, and her face
expressed such deep anxiety, and, above all, such
dread and terror, that Mr. Lorry felt it incumbent
on him to speak a word or two of reassurance.
“Courage, dear miss! Courage!
Business! The worst will be over in a moment;
it is but passing the room-door, and the worst is over.
Then, all the good you bring to him, all the relief,
all the happiness you bring to him, begin. Let
our good friend here, assist you on that side.
That’s well, friend Defarge. Come, now.
Business, business!”
They went up slowly and softly.
The staircase was short, and they were soon at the
top. There, as it had an abrupt turn in it, they
came all at once in sight of three men, whose heads
were bent down close together at the side of a door,
and who were intently looking into the room to which
the door belonged, through some chinks or holes in
the wall. On hearing footsteps close at hand,
these three turned, and rose, and showed themselves
to be the three of one name who had been drinking
in the wine-shop.
“I forgot them in the surprise
of your visit,” explained Monsieur Defarge.
“Leave us, good boys; we have business here.”
The three glided by, and went silently down.
There appearing to be no other door
on that floor, and the keeper of the wine-shop going
straight to this one when they were left alone, Mr.
Lorry asked him in a whisper, with a little anger:
“Do you make a show of Monsieur Manette?”
“I show him, in the way you have seen, to a
chosen few.”
“Is that well?”
“I think it is well.”
“Who are the few? How do you choose them?”
“I choose them as real men,
of my name—Jacques is my name—to
whom the sight is likely to do good. Enough;
you are English; that is another thing. Stay
there, if you please, a little moment.”
With an admonitory gesture to keep
them back, he stooped, and looked in through the crevice
in the wall. Soon raising his head again, he
struck twice or thrice upon the door—evidently
with no other object than to make a noise there.
With the same intention, he drew the key across it,
three or four times, before he put it clumsily into
the lock, and turned it as heavily as he could.
The door slowly opened inward under
his hand, and he looked into the room and said something.
A faint voice answered something. Little more
than a single syllable could have been spoken on either
side.
He looked back over his shoulder,
and beckoned them to enter. Mr. Lorry got his
arm securely round the daughter’s waist, and
held her; for he felt that she was sinking.
“A-a-a-business, business!”
he urged, with a moisture that was not of business
shining on his cheek. “Come in, come in!”
“I am afraid of it,” she answered, shuddering.
“Of it? What?”
“I mean of him. Of my father.”
Rendered in a manner desperate, by
her state and by the beckoning of their conductor,
he drew over his neck the arm that shook upon his
shoulder, lifted her a little, and hurried her into
the room. He sat her down just within the door,
and held her, clinging to him.
Defarge drew out the key, closed the
door, locked it on the inside, took out the key again,
and held it in his hand. All this he did, methodically,
and with as loud and harsh an accompaniment of noise
as he could make. Finally, he walked across
the room with a measured tread to where the window
was. He stopped there, and faced round.
The garret, built to be a depository
for firewood and the like, was dim and dark:
for, the window of dormer shape, was in truth a door
in the roof, with a little crane over it for the hoisting
up of stores from the street: unglazed, and
closing up the middle in two pieces, like any other
door of French construction. To exclude the cold,
one half of this door was fast closed, and the other
was opened but a very little way. Such a scanty
portion of light was admitted through these means,
that it was difficult, on first coming in, to see
anything; and long habit alone could have slowly formed
in any one, the ability to do any work requiring nicety
in such obscurity. Yet, work of that kind was
being done in the garret; for, with his back towards
the door, and his face towards the window where the
keeper of the wine-shop stood looking at him, a white-haired
man sat on a low bench, stooping forward and very
busy, making shoes.