An old
maid’s household
To complete the picture of the internal
habits and ways of this house, it is necessary to
group around Mademoiselle Cormon and the Abbe de Sponde
Jacquelin, Josette, and Mariette, the cook, who employed
themselves in providing for the comfort of uncle and
niece.
Jacquelin, a man of forty, short,
fat, ruddy, and brown, with a face like a Breton sailor,
had been in the service of the house for twenty-two
years. He waited at table, groomed the mare, gardened,
blacked the abbe’s boots, went on errands, chopped
the wood, drove the carriole, and fetched the oats,
straw, and hay from Prebaudet. He sat in the
antechamber during the evening, where he slept like
a dormouse. He was in love with Josette, a girl
of thirty, whom Mademoiselle would have dismissed
had she married him. So the poor fond pair laid
by their wages, and loved each other silently, waiting,
hoping for mademoiselle’s own marriage, as the
Jews are waiting for the Messiah. Josette, born
between Alencon and Mortagne, was short and plump;
her face, which looked like a dirty apricot, was not
wanting in sense and character; it was said that she
ruled her mistress. Josette and Jacquelin, sure
of results, endeavored to hide an inward satisfaction
which allows it to be supposed that, as lovers, they
had discounted the future. Mariette, the cook,
who had been fifteen years in the household, knew
how to make all the dishes held in most honor in Alencon.
Perhaps we ought to count for much
the fat old Norman brown-bay mare, which drew Mademoiselle
Cormon to her country-seat at Prebaudet; for the five
inhabitants of the house bore to this animal a maniacal
affection. She was called Penelope, and had served
the family for eighteen years; but she was kept so
carefully and fed with such regularity that mademoiselle
and Jacquelin both hoped to use her for ten years
longer. This beast was the subject of perpetual
talk and occupation; it seemed as if poor Mademoiselle
Cormon, having no children on whom her repressed motherly
feelings could expend themselves, had turned those
sentiments wholly on this most fortunate animal.
The four faithful servants—for
Penelope’s intelligence raised her to the level
of the other good servants; while they, on the other
hand, had lowered themselves to the mute, submissive
regularity of the beast —went and came
daily in the same occupations with the infallible
accuracy of mechanism. But, as they said in their
idiom, they had eaten their white bread first.
Mademoiselle Cormon, like all persons nervously agitated
by a fixed idea, became hard to please, and nagging,
less by nature than from the need of employing her
activity. Having no husband or children to occupy
her, she fell back on petty details. She talked
for hours about mere nothings, on a dozen napkins
marked “Z,” placed in the closet before
the “O’s.”
“What can Josette be thinking
of?” she exclaimed. “Josette is beginning
to neglect things.”
Mademoiselle inquired for eight days
running whether Penelope had had her oats at two o’clock,
because on one occasion Jacquelin was a trifle late.
Her narrow imagination spent itself on trifles.
A layer of dust forgotten by the feather-duster, a
slice of toast ill-made by Mariette, Josette’s
delay in closing the blinds when the sun came round
to fade the colors of the furniture,—all
these great little things gave rise to serious quarrels
in which mademoiselle grew angry. “Everything
was changing,” she would cry; “she did
not know her own servants; the fact was she spoiled
them!” On one occasion Josette gave her the
“Journee du Chretien” instead of the “Quinzaine
de Paques.” The whole town heard of this
disaster the same evening. Mademoiselle had been
forced to leave the church and return home; and her
sudden departure, upsetting the chairs, made people
suppose a catastrophe had happened. She was therefore
obliged to explain the facts to her friends.
“Josette,” she said gently,
“such a thing must never happen again.”
Mademoiselle Cormon was, without being
aware of it, made happier by such little quarrels,
which served as cathartics to relieve her bitterness.
The soul has its needs, and, like the body, its gymnastics.
These uncertainties of temper were accepted by Josette
and Jacquelin as changes in the weather are accepted
by husbandmen. Those worthy souls remark, “It
is fine to-day,” or “It rains,” without
arraigning the heavens. And so when they met in
the morning the servants would wonder in what humor
mademoiselle would get up, just as a farmer wonders
about the mists at dawn.
Mademoiselle Cormon had ended, as
it was natural she should end, in contemplating herself
only in the infinite pettinesses of her life.
Herself and God, her confessor and the weekly wash,
her preserves and the church services, and her uncle
to care for, absorbed her feeble intellect. To
her the atoms of life were magnified by an optic peculiar
to persons who are selfish by nature or self-absorbed
by some accident. Her perfect health gave alarming
meaning to the least little derangement of her digestive
organs. She lived under the iron rod of the medical
science of our forefathers, and took yearly four precautionary
doses, strong enough to have killed Penelope, though
they seemed to rejuvenate her mistress. If Josette,
when dressing her, chanced to discover a little pimple
on the still satiny shoulders of mademoiselle, it
became the subject of endless inquiries as to the
various alimentary articles of the preceding week.
And what a triumph when Josette reminded her mistress
of a certain hare that was rather “high,”
and had doubtless raised that accursed pimple!
With what joy they said to each other: “No
doubt, no doubt, it was the hare!”
“Mariette over-seasoned it,”
said mademoiselle. “I am always telling
her to do so lightly for my uncle and for me; but Mariette
has no more memory than—”
“The hare,” said Josette.
“Just so,” replied Mademoiselle;
“she has no more memory than a hare, —a
very just remark.”
Four times a year, at the beginning
of each season, Mademoiselle Cormon went to pass a
certain number of days on her estate of Prebaudet.
It was now the middle of May, the period at which she
wished to see how her apple-trees had “snowed,”
a saying of that region which expressed the effect
produced beneath the trees by the falling of their
blossoms. When the circular deposit of these fallen
petals resembled a layer of snow the owner of the trees
might hope for an abundant supply of cider. While
she thus gauged her vats, Mademoiselle Cormon also
attended to the repairs which the winter necessitated;
she ordered the digging of her flower-beds and her
vegetable garden, from which she supplied her table.
Every season had its own business. Mademoiselle
always gave a dinner of farewell to her intimate friends
the day before her departure, although she was certain
to see them again within three weeks. It was always
a piece of news which echoed through Alencon when
Mademoiselle Cormon departed. All her visitors,
especially those who had missed a visit, came to bid
her good-bye; the salon was thronged, and every one
said farewell as though she were starting for Calcutta.
The next day the shopkeepers would stand at their
doors to see the old carriole pass, and they seemed
to be telling one another some news by repeating from
shop to shop:—
“So Mademoiselle Cormon is going to Prebaudet!”
Some said: “Her bread is baked.”
“Hey! my lad,” replied
the next man. “She’s a worthy woman;
if money always came into such hands we shouldn’t
see a beggar in the country.”
Another said: “Dear me,
I shouldn’t be surprised if the vineyards were
in bloom; here’s Mademoiselle Cormon going to
Prebaudet. How happens it she doesn’t marry?”
“I’d marry her myself,”
said a wag; “in fact, the marriage is half-made,
for here’s one consenting party; but the other
side won’t. Pooh! the oven is heating for
Monsieur du Bousquier.”
“Monsieur du Bousquier! Why, she has refused
him.”
That evening at all the gatherings it was told gravely:—
“Mademoiselle Cormon has gone.”
Or:—
“So you have really let Mademoiselle Cormon
go.”
The Wednesday chosen by Suzanne to
make known her scandal happened to be this farewell
Wednesday,—a day on which Mademoiselle Cormon
drove Josette distracted on the subject of packing.
During the morning, therefore, things had been said
and done in the town which lent the utmost interest
to this farewell meeting. Madame Granson had gone
the round of a dozen houses while the old maid was
deliberating on the things she needed for the journey;
and the malicious Chevalier de Valois was playing
piquet with Mademoiselle Armande, sister of a distinguished
old marquis, and the queen of the salon of the aristocrats.
If it was not uninteresting to any one to see what
figure the seducer would cut that evening, it was
all important for the chevalier and Madame Granson
to know how Mademoiselle Cormon would take the news
in her double capacity of marriageable woman and president
of the Maternity Society. As for the innocent
du Bousquier, he was taking a walk on the promenade,
and beginning to suspect that Suzanne had tricked
him; this suspicion confirmed him in his principles
as to women.
On gala days the table was laid at
Mademoiselle Cormon’s about half-past three
o’clock. At that period the fashionable
people of Alencon dined at four. Under the Empire
they still dined as in former times at half-past two;
but then they supped! One of the pleasures which
Mademoiselle Cormon valued most was (without meaning
any malice, although the fact certainly rests on egotism)
the unspeakable satisfaction she derived from seeing
herself dressed as mistress of the house to receive
her guests. When she was thus under arms a ray
of hope would glide into the darkness of her heart;
a voice told her that nature had not so abundantly
provided for her in vain, and that some man, brave
and enterprising, would surely present himself.
Her desire was refreshed like her person; she contemplated
herself in her heavy stuffs with a sort of intoxication,
and this satisfaction continued when she descended
the stairs to cast her redoubtable eye on the salon,
the dinner-table, and the boudoir. She would then
walk about with the naive contentment of the rich,—who
remember at all moments that they are rich and will
never want for anything. She looked at her eternal
furniture, her curiosities, her lacquers, and said
to herself that all these fine things wanted was a
master. After admiring the dining-room, and the
oblong dinner-table, on which was spread a snow-white
cloth adorned with twenty covers placed at equal distances;
after verifying the squadron of bottles she had ordered
to be brought up, and which all bore honorable labels;
after carefully verifying the names written on little
bits of paper in the trembling handwriting of the
abbe (the only duty he assumed in the household, and
one which gave rise to grave discussions on the place
of each guest),—after going through all
these preliminary acts mademoiselle went, in her fine
clothes, to her uncle, who was accustomed at this,
the best hour in the day, to take his walk on the
terrace which overlooked the Brillante, where he could
listen to the warble of birds which were resting in
the coppice, unafraid of either sportsmen or children.
At such times of waiting she never joined the Abbe
de Sponde without asking him some ridiculous question,
in order to draw the old man into a discussion which
might serve to amuse him. And her reason was this,
—which will serve to complete our picture
of this excellent woman’s nature:—
Mademoiselle Cormon regarded it as
one of her duties to talk; not that she was talkative,
for she had unfortunately too few ideas, and did not
know enough phrases to converse readily. But she
believed she was accomplishing one of the social duties
enjoined by religion, which orders us to make ourselves
agreeable to our neighbor. This obligation cost
her so much that she consulted her director, the Abbe
Couturier, upon the subject of this honest but puerile
civility. In spite of the humble remark of his
penitent, confessing the inward labor of her mind
in finding anything to say, the old priest, rigid on
the point of discipline, read her a passage from Saint-Francois
de Sales on the duties of women in society, which
dwelt on the decent gayety of pious Christian women,
who were bound to reserve their sternness for themselves,
and to be amiable and pleasing in their homes, and
see that their neighbors enjoyed themselves.
Thus, filled with a sense of duty, and wishing, at
all costs, to obey her director, who bade her converse
with amenity, the poor soul perspired in her corset
when the talk around her languished, so much did she
suffer from the effort of emitting ideas in order
to revive it. Under such circumstances she would
put forth the silliest statements, such as: “No
one can be in two places at once—unless
it is a little bird,” by which she one day roused,
and not without success, a discussion on the ubiquity
of the apostles, which she was unable to comprehend.
Such efforts at conversation won her the appellation
of “that good Mademoiselle Cormon,” which,
from the lips of the beaux esprits of society, means
that she was as ignorant as a carp, and rather a poor
fool; but many persons of her own calibre took the
remark in its literal sense, and answered:—
“Yes; oh yes! Mademoiselle
Cormon is an excellent woman.”
Sometimes she would put such absurd
questions (always for the purpose of fulfilling her
duties to society, and making herself agreeable to
her guests) that everybody burst out laughing.
She asked, for instance, what the government did with
the taxes they were always receiving; and why the
Bible had not been printed in the days of Jesus Christ,
inasmuch as it was written by Moses. Her mental
powers were those of the English “country gentleman”
who, hearing constant mention of “posterity”
in the House of Commons, rose to make the speech that
has since become celebrated: “Gentlemen,”
he said, “I hear much talk in this place about
Posterity. I should be glad to know what that
power has ever done for England.”
Under these circumstances the heroic
Chevalier de Valois would bring to the succor of the
old maid all the powers of his clever diplomacy, whenever
he saw the pitiless smile of wiser heads. The
old gentleman, who loved to assist women, turned Mademoiselle
Cormon’s sayings into wit by sustaining them
paradoxically, and he often covered the retreat so
well that it seemed as if the good woman had said nothing
silly. She asserted very seriously one evening
that she did not see any difference between an ox
and a bull. The dear chevalier instantly arrested
the peals of laughter by asserting that there was only
the difference between a sheep and a lamb.
But the Chevalier de Valois served
an ungrateful dame, for never did Mademoiselle Cormon
comprehend his chivalrous services. Observing
that the conversation grew lively, she simply thought
that she was not so stupid as she was,—the
result being that she settled down into her ignorance
with some complacency; she lost her timidity, and acquired
a self-possession which gave to her “speeches”
something of the solemnity with which the British
enunciate their patriotic absurdities,—the
self-conceit of stupidity, as it may be called.
As she approached her uncle, on this
occasion, with a majestic step, she was ruminating
over a question that might draw him from a silence,
which always troubled her, for she feared he was dull.
“Uncle,” she said, leaning
on his arm and clinging to his side (this was one
of her fictions; for she said to herself “If
I had a husband I should do just so”),—“uncle,
if everything here below happens according to the
will of God, there must be a reason for everything.”
“Certainly,” replied the
abbe, gravely. The worthy man, who cherished
his niece, always allowed her to tear him from his
meditations with angelic patience.
“Then if I remain unmarried,—supposing
that I do,—God wills it?”
“Yes, my child,” replied the abbe.
“And yet, as nothing prevents
me from marrying to-morrow if I choose, His will can
be destroyed by mine?”
“That would be true if we knew
what was really the will of God,” replied the
former prior of the Sorbonne. “Observe,
my daughter, that you put in an if.”
The poor woman, who expected to draw
her uncle into a matrimonial discussion by an argument
ad omnipotentem, was stupefied; but persons of obtuse
mind have the terrible logic of children, which consists
in turning from answer to question,—a logic
that is frequently embarrassing.
“But, uncle, God did not make
women intending them not to marry; otherwise they
ought all to stay unmarried; if not, they ought all
to marry. There’s great injustice in the
distribution of parts.”
“Daughter,” said the worthy
abbe, “you are blaming the Church, which declares
celibacy to be the better way to God.”
“But if the Church is right,
and all the world were good Catholics, wouldn’t
the human race come to an end, uncle?”
“You have too much mind, Rose;
you don’t need so much to be happy.”
That remark brought a smile of satisfaction
to the lips of the poor woman, and confirmed her in
the good opinion she was beginning to acquire about
herself. That is how the world, our friends, and
our enemies are the accomplices of our defects!
At this moment the conversation was
interrupted by the successive arrival of the guests.
On these ceremonial days, friendly familiarities were
exchanged between the servants of the house and the
company. Mariette remarked to the chief-justice
as he passed the kitchen:—
“Ah, Monsieur du Ronceret, I’ve
cooked the cauliflowers au gratin expressly for you,
for mademoiselle knows how you like them; and she
said to me: ’Now don’t forget, Mariette,
for Monsieur du Ronceret is coming.’”
“That good Mademoiselle Cormon!”
ejaculated the chief legal authority of the town.
“Mariette, did you steep them in gravy instead
of soup-stock? it is much richer.”
The chief-justice was not above entering
the chamber of council where Mariette held court;
he cast the eye of a gastronome around it, and offered
the advice of a past master in cookery.
“Good-day, madame,” said
Josette to Madame Granson, who courted the maid.
“Mademoiselle has thought of you, and there’s
fish for dinner.”
As for the Chevalier de Valois, he
remarked to Mariette, in the easy tone of a great
seigneur who condescends to be familiar:—
“Well, my dear cordon-bleu,
to whom I should give the cross of the Legion of honor,
is there some little dainty for which I had better
reserve myself?”
“Yes, yes, Monsieur de Valois,—a
hare sent from Prebaudet; weighs fourteen pounds.”
Du Bousquier was not invited.
Mademoiselle Cormon, faithful to the system which
we know of, treated that fifty-year-old suitor extremely
ill, although she felt inexplicable sentiments towards
him in the depths of her heart. She had refused
him; yet at times she repented; and a presentiment
that she should yet marry him, together with a terror
at the idea which prevented her from wishing for the
marriage, assailed her. Her mind, stimulated
by these feelings, was much occupied by du Bousquier.
Without being aware of it, she was influenced by the
herculean form of the republican. Madame Granson
and the Chevalier de Valois, although they could not
explain to themselves Mademoiselle Cormon’s
inconsistencies, had detected her naive glances in
that direction, the meaning of which seemed clear enough
to make them both resolve to ruin the hopes of the
already rejected purveyor, —hopes which
it was evident he still indulged.
Two guests, whose functions excused
them, kept the dinner waiting. One was Monsieur
du Coudrai, the recorder of mortgages; the other Monsieur
Choisnel, former bailiff to the house of Esgrignon,
and now the notary of the upper aristocracy, by whom
he was received with a distinction due to his virtues;
he was also a man of considerable wealth. When
the two belated guests arrived, Jacquelin said to
them as he saw them about to enter the salon:—
“They are all in the garden.”
No doubt the assembled stomachs were
impatient; for on the appearance of the register of
mortgages—who had no defect except that
of having married for her money an intolerable old
woman, and of perpetrating endless puns, at which
he was the first to laugh—the gentle murmur
by which such late-comers are welcomed arose.
While awaiting the official announcement of dinner,
the company were sauntering on the terrace above the
river, and gazing at the water-plants, the mosaic of
the currents, and the various pretty details of the
houses clustering across the river, their old wooden
galleries, their mouldering window-frames, their little
gardens where clothes were drying, the cabinet-maker’s
shop,—in short, the many details of a small
community to which the vicinity of a river, a weeping
willow, flowers, rose-bushes, added a certain grace,
making the scene quite worthy of a landscape painter.
The chevalier studied all faces, for
he knew that his firebrand had been very successfully
introduced into the chief houses of the place.
But no one as yet referred openly to the great news
of Suzanne and du Bousquier. Provincials possess
in the highest degree the art of distilling gossip;
the right moment for openly discussing this strange
affair had not arrived; it was first necessary that
all present should put themselves on record.
So the whispers went round from ear to ear:—
“You have heard?”
“Yes.”
“Du Bousquier?”
“And that handsome Suzanne.”
“Does Mademoiselle Cormon know of it?”
“No.”
“Ha!”
This was the piano of the scandal;
the rinforzando would break forth as soon as
the first course had been removed. Suddenly Monsieur
de Valois’s eyes lighted on Madame Granson, arrayed
in her green hat with bunches of auriculas, and beaming
with evident joy. Was it merely the joy of opening
the concert? Though such a piece of news was like
a gold mine to work in the monotonous lives of these
personages, the observant and distrustful chevalier
thought he recognized in the worthy woman a far more
extended sentiment; namely, the joy caused by the
triumph of self-interest. Instantly he turned
to examine Athanase, and detected him in the significant
silence of deep meditation. Presently, a look
cast by the young man on Mademoiselle Cormon carried
to the soul of the chevalier a sudden gleam. That
momentary flash of lightning enabled him to read the
past.
“Ha! the devil!” he said
to himself; “what a checkmate I’m exposed
to!”
Monsieur de Valois now approached
Mademoiselle Cormon, and offered his arm. The
old maid’s feeling to the chevalier was that
of respectful consideration; and certainly his name,
together with the position he occupied among the aristocratic
constellations of the department made him the most
brilliant ornament of her salon. In her inmost
mind Mademoiselle Cormon had wished for the last dozen
years to become Madame de Valois. That name was
like the branch of a tree, to which the ideas which
swarmed in her mind about rank, nobility, and
the external qualities of a husband had fastened.
But, though the Chevalier de Valois was the man chosen
by her heart, and mind, and ambition, that elderly
ruin, combed and curled like a little Saint-John in
a procession, alarmed Mademoiselle Cormon. She
saw the gentleman in him, but she could not see a
husband. The indifference which the chevalier
affected as to marriage, above all, the apparent purity
of his morals in a house which abounded in grisettes,
did singular harm in her mind to Monsieur de Valois
against his expectations. The worthy man, who
showed such judgment in the matter of his annuity,
was at fault here. Without being herself aware
of it, the thoughts of Mademoiselle Cormon on the
too virtuous chevalier might be translated thus:—
“What a pity that he isn’t a trifle dissipated!”
Observers of the human heart have
remarked the leaning of pious women toward scamps;
some have expressed surprise at this taste, considering
it opposed to Christian virtue. But, in the first
place, what nobler destiny can you offer to a virtuous
woman than to purify, like charcoal, the muddy waters
of vice? How is it some observers fail to see
that these noble creatures, obliged by the sternness
of their own principles never to infringe on conjugal
fidelity, must naturally desire a husband of wider
practical experience than their own? The scamps
of social life are great men in love. Thus the
poor woman groaned in spirit at finding her chosen
vessel parted into two pieces. God alone could
solder together a Chevalier de Valois and a du Bousquier.
In order to explain the importance
of the few words which the chevalier and Mademoiselle
Cormon are about to say to each other, it is necessary
to reveal two serious matters which agitated the town,
and about which opinions were divided; besides, du
Bousquier was mysteriously connected with them.
One concerns the rector of Alencon,
who had formerly taken the constitutional oath, and
who was now conquering the repugnance of the Catholics
by a display of the highest virtues. He was Cheverus
on a small scale, and became in time so fully appreciated
that when he died the whole town mourned him.
Mademoiselle Cormon and the Abbe de Sponde belonged
to that “little Church,” sublime in its
orthodoxy, which was to the court of Rome what the
Ultras were to be to Louis XVIII. The abbe, more
especially, refused to recognize a Church which had
compromised with the constitutionals. The rector
was therefore not received in the Cormon household,
whose sympathies were all given to the curate of Saint-Leonard,
the aristocratic parish of Alencon. Du Bousquier,
that fanatic liberal now concealed under the skin of
a royalist, knowing how necessary rallying points
are to all discontents (which are really at the bottom
of all oppositions), had drawn the sympathies of the
middle classes around the rector. So much for
the first case; the second was this:—
Under the secret inspiration of du
Bousquier the idea of building a theatre had dawned
on Alencon. The henchmen of the purveyor did not
know their Mohammed; and they thought they were ardent
in carrying out their own conception. Athanase
Granson was one of the warmest partisans for the theatre;
and of late he had urged at the mayor’s office
a cause which all the other young clerks had eagerly
adopted.
The chevalier, as we have said, offered
his arm to the old maid for a turn on the terrace.
She accepted it, not without thanking him by a happy
look for this attention, to which the chevalier replied
by motioning toward Athanase with a meaning eye.
“Mademoiselle,” he began,
“you have so much sense and judgment in social
proprieties, and also, you are connected with that
young man by certain ties—”
“Distant ones,” she said, interrupting
him.
“Ought you not,” he continued,
“to use the influence you have over his mother
and over himself by saving him from perdition?
He is not very religious, as you know; indeed he approves
of the rector; but that is not all; there is something
far more serious; isn’t he throwing himself
headlong into an opposition without considering what
influence his present conduct may exert upon his future?
He is working for the construction of a theatre.
In this affair he is simply the dupe of that disguised
republican du Bousquier—”
“Good gracious! Monsieur
de Valois,” she replied; “his mother is
always telling me he has so much mind, and yet he can’t
say two words; he stands planted before me as mum
as a post—”
“Which doesn’t think at
all!” cried the recorder of mortgages. “I
caught your words on the fly. I present my compliments
to Monsieur de Valois,” he added, bowing to
that gentleman with much emphasis.
The chevalier returned the salutation
stiffly, and drew Mademoiselle Cormon toward some
flower-pots at a little distance, in order to show
the interrupter that he did not choose to be spied
upon.
“How is it possible,”
he continued, lowering his voice, and leaning towards
Mademoiselle Cormon’s ear, “that a young
man brought up in those detestable lyceums should
have ideas? Only sound morals and noble habits
will ever produce great ideas and a true love.
It is easy to see by a mere look at him that the poor
lad is likely to be imbecile, and come, perhaps, to
some sad end. See how pale and haggard he is!”
“His mother declares he works
too hard,” replied the old maid, innocently.
“He sits up late, and for what? reading books
and writing! What business ought to require a
young man to write at night?”
“It exhausts him,” replied
the chevalier, trying to bring the old maid’s
thoughts back to the ground where he hoped to inspire
her with horror for her youthful lover. “The
morals of those Imperial lyceums are really shocking.”
“Oh, yes!” said the ingenuous
creature. “They march the pupils about
with drums at their head. The masters have no
more religion than pagans. And they put the poor
lads in uniform, as if they were troops. What
ideas!”
“And behold the product!”
said the chevalier, motioning to Athanase. “In
my day, young men were not so shy of looking at a pretty
woman. As for him, he drops his eyes whenever
he sees you. That young man frightens me because
I am really interested in him. Tell him not to
intrigue with the Bonapartists, as he is now doing
about that theatre. When all these petty folks
cease to ask for it insurrectionally, —which
to my mind is the synonym of constitutionally,—the
government will build it. Besides which, tell
his mother to keep an eye on him.”
“Oh, I’m sure she will
prevent him from seeing those half-pay, questionable
people. I’ll talk to her,” said Mademoiselle
Cormon, “for he might lose his place in the
mayor’s office; and then what would he and his
mother have to live on? It makes me shudder.”
As Monsieur de Talleyrand said of
his wife, so the chevalier said to himself, looking
at Mademoiselle Cormon:—
“Find me another as stupid!
Good powers! isn’t virtue which drives out intellect
vice? But what an adorable wife for a man of my
age! What principles! what ignorance!”
Remember that this monologue, addressed
to the Princess Goritza, was mentally uttered while
he took a pinch of snuff.
Madame Granson had divined that the
chevalier was talking about Athanase. Eager to
know the result of the conversation, she followed
Mademoiselle Cormon, who was now approaching the young
man with much dignity. But at this moment Jacquelin
appeared to announce that mademoiselle was served.
The old maid gave a glance of appeal to the chevalier;
but the gallant recorder of mortgages, who was beginning
to see in the manners of that gentleman the barrier
which the provincial nobles were setting up about
this time between themselves and the bourgeoisie,
made the most of his chance to cut out Monsieur de
Valois. He was close to Mademoiselle Cormon, and
promptly offered his arm, which she found herself
compelled to accept. The chevalier then darted,
out of policy, upon Madame Granson.
“Mademoiselle Cormon, my dear
lady,” he said to her, walking slowly after
all the other guests, “feels the liveliest interest
in your dear Athanase; but I fear it will vanish through
his own fault. He is irreligious and liberal;
he is agitating this matter of the theatre; he frequents
the Bonapartists; he takes the side of that rector.
Such conduct may make him lose his place in the mayor’s
office. You know with what care the government
is beginning to weed out such opinions. If your
dear Athanase loses his place, where can he find other
employment? I advise him not to get himself in
bad odor with the administration.”
“Monsieur le Chevalier,”
said the poor frightened mother, “how grateful
I am to you! You are right: my son is the
tool of a bad set of people; I shall enlighten him.”
The chevalier had long since fathomed
the nature of Athanase, and recognized in it that
unyielding element of republican convictions to which
in his youth a young man is willing to sacrifice everything,
carried away by the word “liberty,” so
ill-defined and so little understood, but which to
persons disdained by fate is a banner of revolt; and
to such, revolt is vengeance. Athanase would certainly
persist in that faith, for his opinions were woven
in with his artistic sorrows, with his bitter contemplation
of the social state. He was ignorant of the fact
that at thirty-six years of age,—the period
of life when a man has judged men and social interests
and relations,—the opinions for which he
was ready to sacrifice his future would be modified
in him, as they are in all men of real superiority.
To remain faithful to the Left side of Alencon was
to gain the aversion of Mademoiselle Cormon.
There, indeed, the chevalier saw true.
Thus we see that this society, so
peaceful in appearance, was internally as agitated
as any diplomatic circle, where craft, ability, and
passions group themselves around the grave questions
of an empire. The guests were now seated at the
table laden with the first course, which they ate
as provincials eat, without shame at possessing a good
appetite, and not as in Paris, where it seems as if
jaws gnashed under sumptuary laws, which made it their
business to contradict the laws of anatomy. In
Paris people eat with their teeth, and trifle with
their pleasure; in the provinces things are done naturally,
and interest is perhaps rather too much concentrated
on the grand and universal means of existence to which
God has condemned his creatures.
It was at the end of the first course
that Mademoiselle Cormon made the most celebrated
of her “speeches”; it was talked about
for fully two years, and is still told at the gatherings
of the lesser bourgeoisie whenever the topic of her
marriage comes up.
The conversation, becoming lively
as the penultimate entree was reached, had turned
naturally on the affair of the theatre and the constitutionally
sworn rector. In the first fervor of royalty,
during the year 1816, those who later were called
Jesuits were all for the expulsion of the Abbe Francois
from his parish. Du Bousquier, suspected by Monsieur
de Valois of sustaining the priest and being at the
bottom of the theatre intrigues, and on whose back
the adroit chevalier would in any case have put those
sins with his customary cleverness, was in the dock
with no lawyer to defend him. Athanase, the only
guest loyal enough to stand by du Bousquier, had not
the nerve to emit his ideas in the presence of those
potentates of Alencon, whom in his heart he thought
stupid. None but provincial youths now retain
a respectful demeanor before men of a certain age,
and dare neither to censure nor contradict them.
The talk, diminished under the effect of certain delicious
ducks dressed with olives, was falling flat.
Mademoiselle Cormon, feeling the necessity of maintaining
it against her own ducks, attempted to defend du Bousquier,
who was being represented as a pernicious fomenter
of intrigues, capable of any trickery.
“As for me,” she said,
“I thought that Monsieur du Bousquier cared
chiefly for childish things.”
Under existing circumstances the remark
had enormous success. Mademoiselle Cormon obtained
a great triumph; she brought the nose of the Princess
Goritza flat on the table. The chevalier, who
little expected such an apt remark from his Dulcinea,
was so amazed that he could at first find no words
to express his admiration; he applauded noiselessly,
as they do at the Opera, tapping his fingers together
to imitate applause.
“She is adorably witty,”
he said to Madame Granson. “I always said
that some day she would unmask her batteries.”
“In private she is always charming,” replied
the widow.
“In private, madame, all women have wit,”
returned the chevalier.
The Homeric laugh thus raised having
subsided, Mademoiselle Cormon asked the reason of
her success. Then began the forte of the
gossip. Du Bousquier was depicted as a species
of celibate Pere Gigogne, a monster, who for the last
fifteen years had kept the Foundling Hospital supplied.
His immoral habits were at last revealed! these Parisian
saturnalias were the result of them, etc., etc.
Conducted by the Chevalier de Valois, a most able
leader of an orchestra of this kind, the opening of
the cancan was magnificent.
“I really don’t know,”
he said, “what should hinder a du Bousquier
from marrying a Mademoiselle Suzanne What’s-her-name.
What is her name, do you know? Suzette!
Though I have lodgings at Madame Lardot’s, I
know her girls only by sight. If this Suzette
is a tall, fine, saucy girl, with gray eyes, a slim
waist, and a pretty foot, whom I have occasionally
seen, and whose behavior always seemed to me extremely
insolent, she is far superior in manners to du Bousquier.
Besides, the girl has the nobility of beauty; from
that point of view the marriage would be a poor one
for her; she might do better. You know how the
Emperor Joseph had the curiosity to see the du Barry
at Luciennes. He offered her his arm to walk
about, and the poor thing was so surprised at the
honor that she hesitated to accept it: ’Beauty
is ever a queen,’ said the Emperor. And
he, you know, was an Austrian-German,” added
the chevalier. “But I can tell you that
Germany, which is thought here very rustic, is a land
of noble chivalry and fine manners, especially in
Poland and Hungary, where—”
Here the chevalier stopped, fearing
to slip into some allusion to his personal happiness;
he took out his snuff-box, and confided the rest of
his remarks to the princess, who had smiled upon him
for thirty-six years and more.
“That speech was rather a delicate
one for Louis XV.,” said du Ronceret.
“But it was, I think, the Emperor
Joseph who made it, and not Louis XV.,” remarked
Mademoiselle Cormon, in a correcting tone.
“Mademoiselle,” said the
chevalier, observing the malicious glance exchanged
between the judge, the notary, and the recorder, “Madame
du Barry was the Suzanne of Louis XV.,—a
circumstance well known to scamps like ourselves,
but unsuitable for the knowledge of young ladies.
Your ignorance proves you to be a flawless diamond;
historical corruptions do not enter your mind.”
The Abbe de Sponde looked graciously
at the Chevalier de Valois, and nodded his head in
sign of his laudatory approbation.
“Doesn’t mademoiselle
know history?” asked the recorder of mortgages.
“If you mix up Louis XV. and
this girl Suzanne, how am I to know history?”
replied Mademoiselle Cormon, angelically, glad to see
that the dish of ducks was empty at last, and the
conversation so ready to revive that all present laughed
with their mouths full at her last remark.
“Poor girl!” said the
Abbe de Sponde. “When a great misfortune
happens, charity, which is divine love, and as blind
as pagan love, ought not to look into the causes of
it. Niece, you are president of the Maternity
Society; you must succor that poor girl, who will now
find it difficult to marry.”
“Poor child!” ejaculated Mademoiselle
Cormon.
“Do you suppose du Bousquier would marry her?”
asked the judge.
“If he is an honorable man he
ought to do so,” said Madame Granson; “but
really, to tell the truth, my dog has better morals
than he—”
“Azor is, however, a good purveyor,”
said the recorder of mortgages, with the air of saying
a witty thing.
At dessert du Bousquier was still
the topic of conversation, having given rise to various
little jokes which the wine rendered sparkling.
Following the example of the recorder, each guest capped
his neighbor’s joke with another: Du Bousquier
was a father, but not a confessor; he was father less;
he was father LY; he was not a reverend father; nor
yet a conscript-father—
“Nor can he be a foster-father,”
said the Abbe de Sponde, with a gravity which stopped
the laughter.
“Nor a noble father,” added the chevalier.
The Church and the nobility descended
thus into the arena of puns, without, however, losing
their dignity.
“Hush!” exclaimed the
recorder of mortgages. “I hear the creaking
of du Bousquier’s boots.”
It usually happens that a man is ignorant
of rumors that are afloat about him. A whole
town may be talking of his affairs; may calumniate
and decry him, but if he has no good friends, he will
know nothing about it. Now the innocent du Bousquier
was superb in his ignorance. No one had told
him as yet of Suzanne’s revelations; he therefore
appeared very jaunty and slightly conceited when the
company, leaving the dining-room, returned to the
salon for their coffee; several other guests had meantime
assembled for the evening. Mademoiselle Cormon,
from a sense of shamefacedness, dared not look at the
terrible seducer. She seized upon Athanase, and
began to lecture him with the queerest platitudes
about royalist politics and religious morality.
Not possessing, like the Chevalier de Valois, a snuff-box
adorned with a princess, by the help of which he could
stand this torrent of silliness, the poor poet listened
to the words of her whom he loved with a stupid air,
gazing, meanwhile, at her enormous bust, which held
itself before him in that still repose which is the
attribute of all great masses. His love produced
in him a sort of intoxication which changed the shrill
voice of the old maid into a soft murmur, and her
flat remarks into witty speeches. Love is a maker
of false coin, continually changing copper pennies
into gold-pieces, and sometimes turning its real gold
into copper.
“Well, Athanase, will you promise me?”
This final sentence struck the ear
of the absorbed young man like one of those noises
which wake us with a bound.
“What, mademoiselle?”
Mademoiselle Cormon rose hastily,
and looked at du Bousquier, who at that moment resembled
the stout god of Fable which the Republic stamped
upon her coins. She walked up to Madame Granson,
and said in her ear:—
“My dear friend, you son is
an idiot. That lyceum has ruined him,” she
added, remembering the insistence with which the chevalier
had spoken of the evils of education in such schools.
What a catastrophe! Unknown to
himself, the luckless Athanase had had an occasion
to fling an ember of his own fire upon the pile of
brush gathered in the heart of the old maid.
Had he listened to her, he might have made her, then
and there, perceive his passion; for, in the agitated
state of Mademoiselle Cormon’s mind, a single
word would have sufficed. But that stupid absorption
in his own sentiments, which characterizes young and
true love, had ruined him, as a child full of life
sometimes kills itself out of ignorance.
“What have you been saying to
Mademoiselle Cormon?” demanded his mother.
“Nothing.”
“Nothing; well, I can explain
that,” she thought to herself, putting off till
the next day all further reflection on the matter,
and attaching but little importance to Mademoiselle
Cormon’s words; for she fully believed that
du Bousquier was forever lost in the old maid’s
esteem after the revelation of that evening.
Soon the four tables were filled with
their sixteen players. Four persons were playing
piquet,—an expensive game, at which the
most money was lost. Monsieur Choisnel, the procureur-du-roi,
and two ladies went into the boudoir for a game at
backgammon. The glass lustres were lighted; and
then the flower of Mademoiselle Cormon’s company
gathered before the fireplace, on sofas, and around
the tables, and each couple said to her as they arrived,—
“So you are going to-morrow to Prebaudet?”
“Yes, I really must,” she replied.
On this occasion the mistress of the
house appeared preoccupied. Madame Granson was
the first to perceive the quite unnatural state of
the old maid’s mind,—Mademoiselle
Cormon was thinking!
“What are you thinking of, cousin?”
she said at last, finding her seated in the boudoir.
“I am thinking,” she replied,
“of that poor girl. As the president of
the Maternity Society, I will give you fifty francs
for her.”
“Fifty francs!” cried
Madame Granson. “But you have never given
as much as that.”
“But, my dear cousin, it is
so natural to have children.”
That immoral speech coming from the
heart of the old maid staggered the treasurer of the
Maternity Society. Du Bousquier had evidently
advanced in the estimation of Mademoiselle Cormon.
“Upon my word,” said Madame
Granson, “du Bousquier is not only a monster,
he is a villain. When a man has done a wrong like
that, he ought to pay the indemnity. Isn’t
it his place rather than ours to look after the girl?—who,
to tell you the truth, seems to me rather questionable;
there are plenty of better men in Alencon than that
cynic du Bousquier. A girl must be depraved, indeed,
to go after him.”
“Cynic! Your son teaches
you to talk Latin, my dear, which is wholly incomprehensible.
Certainly I don’t wish to excuse Monsieur du
Bousquier; but pray explain to me why a woman is depraved
because she prefers one man to another.”
“My dear cousin, suppose you
married my son Athanase; nothing could be more natural.
He is young and handsome, full of promise, and he will
be the glory of Alencon; and yet everybody will exclaim
against you: evil tongues will say all sorts
of things; jealous women will accuse you of depravity,—but
what will that matter? you will be loved, and loved
truly. If Athanase seemed to you an idiot, my
dear, it is that he has too many ideas; extremes meet.
He lives the life of a girl of fifteen; he has never
wallowed in the impurities of Paris, not he!
Well, change the terms, as my poor husband used to
say; it is the same thing with du Bousquier in connection
with Suzanne. You would be calumniated; but
in the case of du Bousquier, the charge would be true.
Don’t you understand me?”
“No more than if you were talking
Greek,” replied Mademoiselle Cormon, who opened
her eyes wide, and strained all the forces of her
intellect.
“Well, cousin, if I must dot
all the i’s, it is impossible for Suzanne to
love du Bousquier. And if the heart counts for
nothing in this affair—”
“But, cousin, what do people
love with if not their hearts?”
Here Madame Granson said to herself,
as the chevalier had previously thought: “My
poor cousin is altogether too innocent; such stupidity
passes all bounds!—Dear child,” she
continued aloud, “it seems to me that children
are not conceived by the spirit only.”
“Why, yes, my dear; the Holy Virgin herself—”
“But, my love, du Bousquier isn’t the
Holy Ghost!”
“True,” said the old maid;
“he is a man!—a man whose personal
appearance makes him dangerous enough for his friends
to advise him to marry.”
“You could yourself bring about that result,
cousin.”
“How so?” said the old maid, with the
meekness of Christian charity.
“By not receiving him in your
house until he marries. You owe it to good morals
and to religion to manifest under such circumstances
an exemplary displeasure.”
“On my return from Prebaudet
we will talk further of this, my dear Madame Granson.
I will consult my uncle and the Abbe Couturier,”
said Mademoiselle Cormon, returning to the salon,
where the animation was now at its height.
The lights, the group of women in
their best clothes, the solemn tone, the dignified
air of the assembly, made Mademoiselle Cormon not a
little proud of her company. To many persons nothing
better could be seen in Paris in the highest society.
At this moment du Bousquier, who was
playing whist with the chevalier and two old ladies,—Madame
du Coudrai and Madame du Ronceret,—was
the object of deep but silent curiosity. A few
young women arrived, who, under pretext of watching
the game, gazed fixedly at him in so singular a manner,
though slyly, that the old bachelor began to think
that there must be some deficiency in his toilet.
“Can my false front be crooked?”
he asked himself, seized by one of those anxieties
which beset old bachelors.
He took advantage of a lost trick,
which ended a seventh rubber, to rise and leave the
table.
“I can’t touch a card
without losing,” he said. “I am decidedly
too unlucky.”
“But you are lucky in other
ways,” said the chevalier, giving him a sly
look.
That speech naturally made the rounds
of the salon, where every one exclaimed on the exquisite
taste of the chevalier, the Prince de Talleyrand of
the province.
“There’s no one like Monsieur de Valois
for such wit.”
Du Bousquier went to look at himself
in a little oblong mirror, placed above the “Deserter,”
but he saw nothing strange in his appearance.
After innumerable repetitions of the
same text, varied in all keys, the departure of the
company took place about ten o’clock, through
the long antechamber, Mademoiselle Cormon conducting
certain of her favorite guests to the portico.
There the groups parted; some followed the Bretagne
road towards the chateau; the others went in the direction
of the river Sarthe. Then began the usual conversation,
which for twenty years had echoed at that hour through
this particular street of Alencon. It was invariably:—
“Mademoiselle Cormon looked very well to-night.”
“Mademoiselle Cormon? why, I thought her rather
strange.”
“How that poor abbe fails!
Did you notice that he slept? He does not know
what cards he holds; he is getting very absent-minded.”
“We shall soon have the grief of losing him.”
“What a fine night! It will be a fine day
to-morrow.”
“Good weather for the apple-blossoms.”
“You beat us; but when you play
with Monsieur de Valois you never do otherwise.”
“How much did he win?”
“Well, to-night, three or four francs; he never
loses.”
“True; and don’t you know
there are three hundred and sixty-five days a year?
At that price his gains are the value of a farm.”
“Ah! what hands we had to-night!”
“Here you are at home, monsieur
and madame, how lucky you are, while we have half
the town to cross!”
“I don’t pity you; you
could afford a carriage, and dispense with the fatigue
of going on foot.”
“Ah, monsieur! we have a daughter
to marry, which takes off one wheel, and the support
of our son in Paris carries off another.”
“You persist in making a magistrate of him?”
“What else can be done with
a young man? Besides, there’s no shame in
serving the king.”
Sometimes a discussion on ciders and
flax, always couched in the same terms, and returning
at the same time of year, was continued on the homeward
way. If any observer of human customs had lived
in this street, he would have known the months and
seasons by simply overhearing the conversations.
On this occasion it was exclusively
jocose; for du Bousquier, who chanced to march alone
in front of the groups, was humming the well-known
air,—little thinking of its appropriateness,—“Tender
woman! hear the warble of the birds,” etc.
To some, du Bousquier was a strong man and a misjudged
man. Ever since he had been confirmed in his
present office by a royal decree, Monsieur du Ronceret
had been in favor of du Bousquier. To others
the purveyor seemed dangerous,—a man of
bad habits, capable of anything. In the provinces,
as in Paris, men before the public eye are like that
statue in the fine allegorical tale of Addison, for
which two knights on arriving near it fought; for
one saw it white, the other saw it black. Then,
when they were both off their horses, they saw it
was white one side and black the other. A third
knight coming along declared it red.
When the chevalier went home that
night, he made many reflections, as follows:—
“It is high time now to spread
a rumor of my marriage with Mademoiselle Cormon.
It will leak out from the d’Esgrignon salon,
and go straight to the bishop at Seez, and so get
round through the grand vicars to the curate of Saint-Leonard’s,
who will be certain to tell it to the Abbe Couturier;
and Mademoiselle Cormon will get the shot in her upper
works. The old Marquis d’Esgrignon shall
invite the Abbe de Sponde to dinner, so as to stop
all gossip about Mademoiselle Cormon if I decide against
her, or about me if she refuses me. The abbe shall
be well cajoled; and Mademoiselle Cormon will certainly
not hold out against a visit from Mademoiselle Armande,
who will show her the grandeur and future chances
of such an alliance. The abbe’s property
is undoubtedly as much as three hundred thousand; her
own savings must amount to more than two hundred thousand;
she has her house and Prebaudet and fifteen thousand
francs a year. A word to my friend the Comte
de Fontaine, and I should be mayor of Alencon to-morrow,
and deputy. Then, once seated on the Right benches,
we shall reach the peerage, shouting, ‘Cloture!’
‘Ordre!’”
As soon as she reached home Madame
Granson had a lively argument with her son, who could
not be made to see the connection which existed between
his love and his political opinions. It was the
first quarrel that had ever troubled that poor household.