“Let us get this over,” said Rastignac.
“Sylvie, look out some sheets, and go upstairs
to help the gentlemen.”
“You won’t forget Sylvie,”
said Mme. Vauquer in Eugene’s ear; “she
has been sitting up these two nights.”
As soon as Eugene’s back was
turned, the old woman hurried after her handmaid.
“Take the sheets that have had
the sides turned into the middle, number 7. Lord!
they are plenty good enough for a corpse,” she
said in Sylvie’s ear.
Eugene, by this time, was part of
the way upstairs, and did not overhear the elderly
economist.
“Quick,” said Bianchon,
“let us change his shirt. Hold him upright.”
Eugene went to the head of the bed
and supported the dying man, while Bianchon drew off
his shirt; and then Goriot made a movement as if he
tried to clutch something to his breast, uttering a
low inarticulate moaning the while, like some dumb
animal in mortal pain.
“Ah! yes!” cried Bianchon.
“It is the little locket and the chain made
of hair that he wants; we took it off a while ago when
we put the blisters on him. Poor fellow! he must
have it again. There it lies on the chimney-piece.”
Eugene went to the chimney-piece and
found the little plait of faded golden hair—Mme.
Goriot’s hair, no doubt. He read the name
on the little round locket, ANASTASIE on the one side,
DELPHINE on the other. It was the symbol of his
own heart that the father always wore on his breast.
The curls of hair inside the locket were so fine and
soft that is was plain they had been taken from two
childish heads. When the old man felt the locket
once more, his chest heaved with a long deep sigh
of satisfaction, like a groan. It was something
terrible to see, for it seemed as if the last quiver
of the nerves were laid bare to their eyes, the last
communication of sense to the mysterious point within
whence our sympathies come and whither they go.
A delirious joy lighted up the distorted face.
The terrific and vivid force of the feeling that had
survived the power of thought made such an impression
on the students, that the dying man felt their hot
tears falling on him, and gave a shrill cry of delight.
“Nasie! Fifine!”
“There is life in him yet,” said Bianchon.
“What does he go on living for?” said
Sylvie.
“To suffer,” answered Rastignac.
Bianchon made a sign to his friend
to follow his example, knelt down and pressed his
arms under the sick man, and Rastignac on the other
side did the same, so that Sylvie, standing in readiness,
might draw the sheet from beneath and replace it with
the one that she had brought. Those tears, no
doubt, had misled Goriot; for he gathered up all his
remaining strength in a last effort, stretched out
his hands, groped for the students’ heads, and
as his fingers caught convulsively at their hair,
they heard a faint whisper:
“Ah! my angels!”
Two words, two inarticulate murmurs,
shaped into words by the soul which fled forth with
them as they left his lips.
“Poor dear!” cried Sylvie,
melted by that exclamation; the expression of the
great love raised for the last time to a sublime height
by that most ghastly and involuntary of lies.
The father’s last breath must
have been a sigh of joy, and in that sigh his whole
life was summed up; he was cheated even at the last.
They laid Father Goriot upon his wretched bed with
reverent hands. Thenceforward there was no expression
on his face, only the painful traces of the struggle
between life and death that was going on in the machine;
for that kind of cerebral consciousness that distinguishes
between pleasure and pain in a human being was extinguished;
it was only a question of time—and the
mechanism itself would be destroyed.
“He will lie like this for several
hours, and die so quietly at last, that we shall not
know when he goes; there will be no rattle in the
throat. The brain must be completely suffused.”
As he spoke there was a footstep on
the staircase, and a young woman hastened up, panting
for breath.
“She has come too late,” said Rastignac.
But it was not Delphine; it was Therese,
her waiting-woman, who stood in the doorway.
“Monsieur Eugene,” she
said, “monsieur and madame have had a terrible
scene about some money that Madame (poor thing!) wanted
for her father. She fainted, and the doctor came,
and she had to be bled, calling out all the while,
‘My father is dying; I want to see papa!’
It was heartbreaking to hear her——”
“That will do, Therese.
If she came now, it would be trouble thrown away.
M. Goriot cannot recognize any one now.”
“Poor, dear gentleman, is he
as bad at that?” said Therese.
“You don’t want me now,
I must go and look after my dinner; it is half-past
four,” remarked Sylvie. The next instant
she all but collided with Mme. de Restaud on
the landing outside.
There was something awful and appalling
in the sudden apparition of the Countess. She
saw the bed of death by the dim light of the single
candle, and her tears flowed at the sight of her father’s
passive features, from which the life had almost ebbed.
Bianchon with thoughtful tact left the room.
“I could not escape soon enough,” she
said to Rastignac.
The student bowed sadly in reply.
Mme. de Restaud took her father’s hand
and kissed it.
“Forgive me, father! You
used to say that my voice would call you back from
the grave; ah! come back for one moment to bless your
penitent daughter. Do you hear me? Oh! this
is fearful! No one on earth will ever bless me
henceforth; every one hates me; no one loves me but
you in all the world. My own children will hate
me. Take me with you, father; I will love you,
I will take care of you. He does not hear me
. . . I am mad . . .”
She fell on her knees, and gazed wildly
at the human wreck before her.
“My cup of misery is full,”
she said, turning her eyes upon Eugene. “M.
de Trailles has fled, leaving enormous debts behind
him, and I have found out that he was deceiving me.
My husband will never forgive me, and I have left
my fortune in his hands. I have lost all my illusions.
Alas! I have forsaken the one heart that loved
me (she pointed to her father as she spoke), and for
whom? I have held his kindness cheap, and slighted
his affection; many and many a time I have given him
pain, ungrateful wretch that I am!”
“He knew it,” said Rastignac.
Just then Goriot’s eyelids unclosed;
it was only a muscular contraction, but the Countess’
sudden start of reviving hope was no less dreadful
than the dying eyes.
“Is it possible that he can
hear me?” cried the Countess. “No,”
she answered herself, and sat down beside the bed.
As Mme. de Restaud seemed to wish to sit by her
father, Eugene went down to take a little food.
The boarders were already assembled.
“Well,” remarked the painter,
as he joined them, “it seems that there is to
be a death-orama upstairs.”
“Charles, I think you might
find something less painful to joke about,”
said Eugene.
“So we may not laugh here?”
returned the painter. “What harm does it
do? Bianchon said that the old man was quite insensible.”
“Well, then,” said the
employe from the Museum, “he will die
as he has lived.”
“My father is dead!” shrieked the Countess.
The terrible cry brought Sylvie, Rastignac,
and Bianchon; Mme. de Restaud had fainted away.
When she recovered they carried her downstairs, and
put her into the cab that stood waiting at the door.
Eugene sent Therese with her, and bade the maid take
the Countess to Mme. de Nucingen.
Bianchon came down to them.
“Yes, he is dead,” he said.
“Come, sit down to dinner, gentlemen,”
said Mme. Vauquer, “or the soup will be
cold.”
The two students sat down together.
“What is the next thing to be done?” Eugene
asked of Bianchon.
“I have closed his eyes and
composed his limbs,” said Bianchon. “When
the certificate has been officially registered at the
Mayor’s office, we will sew him in his winding
sheet and bury him somewhere. What do you think
we ought to do?”
“He will not smell at his bread
like this any more,” said the painter, mimicking
the old man’s little trick.
“Oh, hang it all!” cried
the tutor, “let Father Goriot drop, and let
us have something else for a change. He is a standing
dish, and we have had him with every sauce this hour
or more. It is one of the privileges of the good
city of Paris that anybody may be born, or live, or
die there without attracting any attention whatsoever.
Let us profit by the advantages of civilization.
There are fifty or sixty deaths every day; if you
have a mind to do it, you can sit down at any time
and wail over whole hecatombs of dead in Paris.
Father Goriot has gone off the hooks, has he?
So much the better for him. If you venerate his
memory, keep it to yourselves, and let the rest of
us feed in peace.”
“Oh, to be sure,” said
the widow, “it is all the better for him that
he is dead. It looks as though he had had trouble
enough, poor soul, while he was alive.”
And this was all the funeral oration
delivered over him who had been for Eugene the type
and embodiment of Fatherhood.
The fifteen lodgers began to talk
as usual. When Bianchon and Eugene had satisfied
their hunger, the rattle of spoons and forks, the
boisterous conversation, the expressions on the faces
that bespoke various degrees of want of feeling, gluttony,
or indifference, everything about them made them shiver
with loathing. They went out to find a priest
to watch that night with the dead. It was necessary
to measure their last pious cares by the scanty sum
of money that remained. Before nine o’clock
that evening the body was laid out on the bare sacking
of the bedstead in the desolate room; a lighted candle
stood on either side, and the priest watched at the
foot. Rastignac made inquiries of this latter
as to the expenses of the funeral, and wrote to the
Baron de Nucingen and the Comte de Restaud, entreating
both gentlemen to authorize their man of business to
defray the charges of laying their father-in-law in
the grave. He sent Christophe with the letters;
then he went to bed, tired out, and slept.
Next day Bianchon and Rastignac were
obliged to take the certificate to the registrar themselves,
and by twelve o’clock the formalities were completed.
Two hours went by, no word came from the Count nor
from the Baron; nobody appeared to act for them, and
Rastignac had already been obliged to pay the priest.
Sylvie asked ten francs for sewing the old man in
his winding-sheet and making him ready for the grave,
and Eugene and Bianchon calculated that they had scarcely
sufficient to pay for the funeral, if nothing was forthcoming
from the dead man’s family. So it was the
medical student who laid him in a pauper’s coffin,
despatched from Bianchon’s hospital, whence he
obtained it at a cheaper rate.
“Let us play those wretches
a trick,” said he. “Go to the cemetery,
buy a grave for five years at Pere-Lachaise, and arrange
with the Church and the undertaker to have a third-class
funeral. If the daughters and their husbands
decline to repay you, you can carve this on the headstone—’Here
lies M. Goriot, father of the Comtesse de Restaud
and the Baronne de Nucingen, interred at the expense
of two students.’”
Eugene took part of his friend’s
advice, but only after he had gone in person first
to M. and Mme. de Nucingen, and then to M. and
Mme. de Restaud—a fruitless errand.
He went no further than the doorstep in either house.
The servants had received strict orders to admit no
one.
“Monsieur and Madame can see
no visitors. They have just lost their father,
and are in deep grief over their loss.”
Eugene’s Parisian experience
told him that it was idle to press the point.
Something clutched strangely at his heart when he saw
that it was impossible to reach Delphine.
“Sell some of your ornaments,”
he wrote hastily in the porter’s room, “so
that your father may be decently laid in his last resting-place.”
He sealed the note, and begged the
porter to give it to Therese for her mistress; but
the man took it to the Baron de Nucingen, who flung
the note into the fire. Eugene, having finished
his errands, returned to the lodging-house about three
o’clock. In spite of himself, the tears
came into his eyes. The coffin, in its scanty
covering of black cloth, was standing there on the
pavement before the gate, on two chairs. A withered
sprig of hyssop was soaking in the holy water bowl
of silver-plated copper; there was not a soul in the
street, not a passer-by had stopped to sprinkle the
coffin; there was not even an attempt at a black drapery
over the wicket. It was a pauper who lay there;
no one made a pretence of mourning for him; he had
neither friends nor kindred—there was no
one to follow him to the grave.
Bianchon’s duties compelled
him to be at the hospital, but he had left a few lines
for Eugene, telling his friend about the arrangements
he had made for the burial service. The house
student’s note told Rastignac that a mass was
beyond their means, that the ordinary office for the
dead was cheaper, and must suffice, and that he had
sent word to the undertaker by Christophe. Eugene
had scarcely finished reading Bianchon’s scrawl,
when he looked up and saw the little circular gold
locket that contained the hair of Goriot’s two
daughters in Mme. Vauquer’s hands.
“How dared you take it?” he asked.
“Good Lord! is that to be buried
along with him?” retorted Sylvie. “It
is gold.”
“Of course it shall!”
Eugene answered indignantly; “he shall at any
rate take one thing that may represent his daughters
into the grave with him.”
When the hearse came, Eugene had the
coffin carried into the house again, unscrewed the
lid, and reverently laid on the old man’s breast
the token that recalled the days when Delphine and
Anastasie were innocent little maidens, before they
began “to think for themselves,” as he
had moaned out in his agony.
Rastignac and Christophe and the two
undertaker’s men were the only followers of
the funeral. The Church of Saint-Etienne du Mont
was only a little distance from the Rue Nueve-Sainte-Genevieve.
When the coffin had been deposited in a low, dark,
little chapel, the law student looked round in vain
for Goriot’s two daughters or their husbands.
Christophe was his only fellow-mourner; Christophe,
who appeared to think it was his duty to attend the
funeral of the man who had put him in the way of such
handsome tips. As they waited there in the chapel
for the two priests, the chorister, and the beadle,
Rastignac grasped Christophe’s hand. He
could not utter a word just then.
“Yes, Monsieur Eugene,”
said Christophe, “he was a good and worthy man,
who never said one word louder than another; he never
did any one any harm, and gave nobody any trouble.”
The two priests, the chorister, and
the beadle came, and said and did as much as could
be expected for seventy francs in an age when religion
cannot afford to say prayers for nothing.
The ecclesiatics chanted a psalm,
the Libera nos and the De profundis.
The whole service lasted about twenty minutes.
There was but one mourning coach, which the priest
and chorister agreed to share with Eugene and Christophe.
“There is no one else to follow
us,” remarked the priest, “so we may as
well go quickly, and so save time; it is half-past
five.”
But just as the coffin was put in
the hearse, two empty carriages, with the armorial
bearings of the Comte de Restaud and the Baron de
Nucingen, arrived and followed in the procession to
Pere-Lachaise. At six o’clock Goriot’s
coffin was lowered into the grave, his daughters’
servants standing round the while. The ecclesiastic
recited the short prayer that the students could afford
to pay for, and then both priest and lackeys disappeared
at once. The two grave diggers flung in several
spadefuls of earth, and then stopped and asked Rastignac
for their fee. Eugene felt in vain in his pocket,
and was obliged to borrow five francs of Christophe.
This thing, so trifling in itself, gave Rastignac
a terrible pang of distress. It was growing dusk,
the damp twilight fretted his nerves; he gazed down
into the grave and the tears he shed were drawn from
him by the sacred emotion, a single-hearted sorrow.
When such tears fall on earth, their radiance reaches
heaven. And with that tear that fell on Father
Goriot’s grave, Eugene Rastignac’s youth
ended. He folded his arms and gazed at the clouded
sky; and Christophe, after a glance at him, turned
and went —Rastignac was left alone.
He went a few paces further, to the
highest point of the cemetery, and looked out over
Paris and the windings of the Seine; the lamps were
beginning to shine on either side of the river.
His eyes turned almost eagerly to the space between
the column of the Place Vendome and the cupola of
the Invalides; there lay the shining world that he
had wished to reach. He glanced over that humming
hive, seeming to draw a foretaste of its honey, and
said magniloquently:
“Henceforth there is war between us.”
And by way of throwing down the glove
to Society, Rastignac went to dine with Mme.
de Nucingen.