At the time when this story opens,
the Stanhope press and the ink-distributing roller
were not as yet in general use in small provincial
printing establishments. Even at Angouleme, so
closely connected through its paper-mills with the
art of typography in Paris, the only machinery in
use was the primitive wooden invention to which the
language owes a figure of speech—“the
press groans” was no mere rhetorical expression
in those days. Leather ink-balls were still used
in old-fashioned printing houses; the pressman dabbed
the ink by hand on the characters, and the movable
table on which the form of type was placed in readiness
for the sheet of paper, being made of marble, literally
deserved its name of “impression-stone.”
Modern machinery has swept all this old-world mechanism
into oblivion; the wooden press which, with all its
imperfections, turned out such beautiful work for
the Elzevirs, Plantin, Aldus, and Didot is so completely
forgotten, that something must be said as to the obsolete
gear on which Jerome-Nicolas Sechard set an almost
superstitious affection, for it plays a part in this
chronicle of great small things.
Sechard had been in his time a journeyman
pressman, a “bear” in compositors’
slang. The continued pacing to and fro of the
pressman from ink-table to press, from press to ink-table,
no doubt suggested the nickname. The “bears,”
however, make matters even by calling the compositors
monkeys, on account of the nimble industry displayed
by those gentlemen in picking out the type from the
hundred and fifty-two compartments of the cases.
In the disastrous year 1793, Sechard,
being fifty years old and a married man, escaped the
great Requisition which swept the bulk of French workmen
into the army. The old pressman was the only hand
left in the printing-house; and when the master (otherwise
the “gaffer”) died, leaving a widow, but
no children, the business seemed to be on the verge
of extinction; for the solitary “bear”
was quite incapable of the feat of transformation
into a “monkey,” and in his quality of
pressman had never learned to read or write. Just
then, however, a Representative of the People being
in a mighty hurry to publish the Decrees of the Convention,
bestowed a master printer’s license on Sechard,
and requisitioned the establishment. Citizen Sechard
accepted the dangerous patent, bought the business
of his master’s widow with his wife’s
savings, and took over the plant at half its value.
But he was not even at the beginning. He was
bound to print the Decrees of the Republic without
mistakes and without delay.
In this strait Jerome-Nicolas Sechard
had the luck to discover a noble Marseillais who had
no mind to emigrate and lose his lands, nor yet to
show himself openly and lose his head, and consequently
was fain to earn a living by some lawful industry.
A bargain was struck. M. le Comte de Maucombe,
disguised in a provincial printer’s jacket, set
up, read, and corrected the decrees which forbade
citizens to harbor aristocrats under pain of death;
while the “bear,” now a “gaffer,”
printed the copies and duly posted them, and the pair
remained safe and sound.
In 1795, when the squall of the Terror
had passed over, Nicolas Sechard was obliged to look
out for another jack-of-all-trades to be compositor,
reader, and foreman in one; and an Abbe who declined
the oath succeeded the Comte de Maucombe as soon as
the First Consul restored public worship. The
Abbe became a Bishop at the Restoration, and in after
days the Count and the Abbe met and sat together on
the same bench of the House of Peers.
In 1795 Jerome-Nicolas had not known
how to read or write; in 1802 he had made no progress
in either art; but by allowing a handsome margin for
“wear and tear” in his estimates, he managed
to pay a foreman’s wages. The once easy-going
journeyman was a terror to his “bears”
and “monkeys.” Where poverty ceases,
avarice begins. From the day when Sechard first
caught a glimpse of the possibility of making a fortune,
a growing covetousness developed and sharpened in him
a certain practical faculty for business—greedy,
suspicious, and keen-eyed. He carried on his
craft in disdain of theory. In course of time
he had learned to estimate at a glance the cost of
printing per page or per sheet in every kind of type.
He proved to unlettered customers that large type
costs more to move; or, if small type was under discussion,
that it was more difficult to handle. The setting-up
of the type was the one part of his craft of which
he knew nothing; and so great was his terror lest
he should not charge enough, that he always made a
heavy profit. He never took his eyes off his compositors
while they were paid by the hour. If he knew
that a paper manufacturer was in difficulties, he
would buy up his stock at a cheap rate and warehouse
the paper. So from this time forward he was his
own landlord, and owned the old house which had been
a printing office from time immemorial.
He had every sort of luck. He
was left a widower with but one son. The boy
he sent to the grammar school; he must be educated,
not so much for his own sake as to train a successor
to the business; and Sechard treated the lad harshly
so as to prolong the time of parental rule, making
him work at case on holidays, telling him that he must
learn to earn his own living, so as to recompense
his poor old father, who was slaving his life out
to give him an education.
Then the Abbe went, and Sechard promoted
one of his four compositors to be foreman, making
his choice on the future bishop’s recommendation
of the man as an honest and intelligent workman.
In these ways the worthy printer thought to tide over
the time until his son could take a business which
was sure to extend in young and clever hands.
David Sechard’s school career
was a brilliant one. Old Sechard, as a “bear”
who had succeeded in life without any education, entertained
a very considerable contempt for attainments in book
learning; and when he sent his son to Paris to study
the higher branches of typography, he recommended
the lad so earnestly to save a good round sum in the
“working man’s paradise” (as he was
pleased to call the city), and so distinctly gave
the boy to understand that he was not to draw upon
the paternal purse, that it seemed as if old Sechard
saw some way of gaining private ends of his own by
that sojourn in the Land of Sapience. So David
learned his trade, and completed his education at
the same time, and Didot’s foreman became a scholar;
and yet when he left Paris at the end of 1819, summoned
home by his father to take the helm of business, he
had not cost his parent a farthing.
Now Nicolas Sechard’s establishment
hitherto had enjoyed a monopoly of all the official
printing in the department, besides the work of the
prefecture and the diocese—three connections
which should prove mighty profitable to an active
young printer; but precisely at this juncture the
firm of Cointet Brothers, paper manufacturers, applied
to the authorities for the second printer’s
license in Angouleme. Hitherto old Sechard had
contrived to reduce this license to a dead letter,
thanks to the war crisis of the Empire, and consequent
atrophy of commercial enterprise; but he had neglected
to buy up the right himself, and this piece of parsimony
was the ruin of the old business. Sechard thought
joyfully when he heard the news that the coming struggle
with the Cointets would be fought out by his son and
not by himself.
“I should have gone to the wall,”
he thought, “but a young fellow from the Didots
will pull through.”
The septuagenarian sighed for the
time when he could live at ease in his own fashion.
If his knowledge of the higher branches of the craft
of printing was scanty, on the other hand, he was supposed
to be past master of an art which workmen pleasantly
call “tipple-ography,” an art held in
high esteem by the divine author of Pantagruel;
though of late, by reason of the persecution of societies
yclept of Temperance, the cult has fallen, day by
day, into disuse.
Jerome-Nicolas Sechard, bound by the
laws of etymology to be a dry subject, suffered from
an inextinguishable thirst. His wife, during
her lifetime, managed to control within reasonable
bounds the passion for the juice of the grape, a taste
so natural to the bear that M. de Chateaubriand remarked
it among the ursine tribes of the New World.
But philosophers inform us that old age is apt to revert
to the habits of youth, and Sechard senior is a case
in point—the older he grew, the better
he loved to drink. The master-passion had given
a stamp of originality to an ursine physiognomy; his
nose had developed till it reached the proportions
of a double great-canon A; his veined cheeks looked
like vine-leaves, covered, as they were, with bloated
patches of purple, madder red, and often mottled hues;
till altogether, the countenance suggested a huge
truffle clasped about by autumn vine tendrils.
The little gray eyes, peering out from beneath thick
eyebrows like bushes covered with snow, were agleam
with the cunning of avarice that had extinguished
everything else in the man, down to the very instinct
of fatherhood. Those eyes never lost their cunning
even when disguised in drink. Sechard put you
in mind of one of La Fontaine’s Franciscan friars,
with the fringe of grizzled hair still curling about
his bald pate. He was short and corpulent, like
one of the old-fashioned lamps for illumination, that
burn a vast deal of oil to a very small piece of wick;
for excess of any sort confirms the habit of body,
and drunkenness, like much study, makes the fat man
stouter, and the lean man leaner still.
For thirty years Jerome-Nicolas-Sechard
had worn the famous municipal three-cornered hat,
which you may still see here and there on the head
of the towncrier in out-of-the-way places. His
breeches and waistcoat were of greenish velveteen,
and he wore an old-fashioned brown greatcoat, gray
cotton stockings, and shoes with silver buckles to
them. This costume, in which the workman shone
through the burgess, was so thoroughly in keeping
with the man’s character, defects, and way of
life, that he might have come ready dressed into the
world. You could no more imagine him apart from
his clothes than you could think of a bulb without
its husk. If the old printer had not long since
given the measure of his blind greed, the very nature
of the man came out in the manner of his abdication.
Knowing, as he did, that his son must
have learned his business pretty thoroughly in the
great school of the Didots, he had yet been ruminating
for a long while over the bargain that he meant to
drive with David. All that the father made, the
son, of course, was bound to lose, but in business
this worthy knew nothing of father or son. If,
in the first instance, he had looked on David as his
only child, later he came to regard him as the natural
purchaser of the business, whose interests were therefore
his own. Sechard meant to sell dear; David, of
course, to buy cheap; his son, therefore, was an antagonist,
and it was his duty to get the better of him.
The transformation of sentiment into self-seeking,
ordinarily slow, tortuous, and veiled by hypocrisy
in better educated people, was swift and direct in
the old “bear,” who demonstrated the superiority
of shrewd tipple-ography over book-learned typography.
David came home, and the old man received
him with all the cordiality which cunning folk can
assume with an eye to business. He was as full
of thought for him as any lover for his mistress; giving
him his arm, telling him where to put his foot down
so as to avoid the mud, warming the bed for him, lighting
a fire in his room, making his supper ready.
The next day, after he had done his best to fluster
his son’s wits over a sumptuous dinner, Jerome-Nicolas
Sechard, after copious potations, began with a “Now
for business,” a remark so singularly misplaced
between two hiccoughs, that David begged his parent
to postpone serious matters until the morrow.
But the old “bear” was by no means inclined
to put off the long-expected battle; he was too well
prepared to turn his tipsiness to good account.
He had dragged the chain these fifty years, he would
not wear it another hour; to-morrow his son should
be the “gaffer.”
Perhaps a word or two about the business
premises may be said here. The printing-house
had been established since the reign of Louis XIV.
in the angle made by the Rue de Beaulieu and the Place
du Murier; it had been devoted to its present purposes
for a long time past. The ground floor consisted
of a single huge room lighted on the side next the
street by an old-fashioned casement, and by a large
sash window that gave upon the yard at the back.
A passage at the side led to the private office; but
in the provinces the processes of typography excite
such a lively interest, that customers usually preferred
to enter by way of the glass door in the street front,
though they at once descended three steps, for the
floor of the workshop lay below the level of the street.
The gaping newcomer always failed to note the perils
of the passage through the shop; and while staring
at the sheets of paper strung in groves across the
ceiling, ran against the rows of cases, or knocked
his hat against the tie-bars that secured the presses
in position. Or the customer’s eyes would
follow the agile movements of a compositor, picking
out type from the hundred and fifty-two compartments
of his case, reading his copy, verifying the words
in the composing-stick, and leading the lines, till
a ream of damp paper weighted with heavy slabs, and
set down in the middle of the gangway, tripped up
the bemused spectator, or he caught his hip against
the angle of a bench, to the huge delight of boys,
“bears,” and “monkeys.”
No wight had ever been known to reach the further end
without accident. A couple of glass-windowed cages
had been built out into the yard at the back; the
foreman sat in state in the one, the master printer
in the other. Out in the yard the walls were agreeably
decorated by trellised vines, a tempting bit of color,
considering the owner’s reputation. On
the one side of the space stood the kitchen, on the
other the woodshed, and in a ramshackle penthouse against
the hall at the back, the paper was trimmed and damped
down. Here, too, the forms, or, in ordinary language,
the masses of set-up type, were washed. Inky
streams issuing thence blended with the ooze from the
kitchen sink, and found their way into the kennel in
the street outside; till peasants coming into the
town of a market day believed that the Devil was taking
a wash inside the establishment.
As to the house above the printing
office, it consisted of three rooms on the first floor
and a couple of attics in the roof. The first
room did duty as dining-room and lobby; it was exactly
the same length as the passage below, less the space
taken up by the old-fashioned wooden staircase; and
was lighted by a narrow casement on the street and
a bull’s-eye window looking into the yard.
The chief characteristic of the apartment was a cynic
simplicity, due to money-making greed. The bare
walls were covered with plain whitewash, the dirty
brick floor had never been scoured, the furniture
consisted of three rickety chairs, a round table,
and a sideboard stationed between the two doors of
a bedroom and a sitting-room. Windows and doors
alike were dingy with accumulated grime. Reams
of blank paper or printed matter usually encumbered
the floor, and more frequently than not the remains
of Sechard’s dinner, empty bottles and plates,
were lying about on the packages.
The bedroom was lighted on the side
of the yard by a window with leaded panes, and hung
with the old-world tapestry that decorated house fronts
in provincial towns on Corpus Christi Day. For
furniture it boasted a vast four-post bedstead with
canopy, valances and quilt of crimson serge, a couple
of worm-eaten armchairs, two tapestry-covered chairs
in walnut wood, an aged bureau, and a timepiece on
the mantel-shelf. The Seigneur Rouzeau, Jerome-Nicolas’
master and predecessor, had furnished the homely old-world
room; it was just as he had left it.
The sitting-room had been partly modernized
by the late Mme. Sechard; the walls were adorned
with a wainscot, fearful to behold, painted the color
of powder blue. The panels were decorated with
wall-paper —Oriental scenes in sepia tint—and
for all furniture, half-a-dozen chairs with lyre-shaped
backs and blue leather cushions were ranged round
the room. The two clumsy arched windows that gave
upon the Place du Murier were curtainless; there was
neither clock nor candle sconce nor mirror above the
mantel-shelf, for Mme. Sechard had died before
she carried out her scheme of decoration; and the “bear,”
unable to conceive the use of improvements that brought
in no return in money, had left it at this point.
Hither, pede titubante, Jerome-Nicolas
Sechard brought his son, and pointed to a sheet of
paper lying on the table—a valuation of
plant drawn up by the foreman under his direction.
“Read that, my boy,” said
Jerome-Nicolas, rolling a drunken eye from the paper
to his son, and back to the paper. “You
will see what a jewel of a printing-house I am giving
you.”
“’Three wooden presses,
held in position by iron tie-bars, cast-iron plates——’”
“An improvement of my own,” put in Sechard
senior.
“’——Together
with all the implements, ink-tables, balls, benches,
et cetera, sixteen hundred francs!’ Why,
father,” cried David, letting the sheet fall,
“these presses of yours are old sabots not worth
a hundred crowns; they are only fit for firewood.”
“Sabots?” cried old Sechard,
“Sabots? There, take the inventory
and let us go downstairs. You will soon see whether
your paltry iron-work contrivances will work like
these solid old tools, tried and trusty. You
will not have the heart after that to slander honest
old presses that go like mail coaches, and are good
to last you your lifetime without needing repairs
of any sort. Sabots! Yes, sabots that are
like to hold salt enough to cook your eggs with—sabots
that your father has plodded on with these twenty
years; they have helped him to make you what you are.”
The father, without coming to grief
on the way, lurched down the worn, knotty staircase
that shook under his tread. In the passage he
opened the door of the workshop, flew to the nearest
press (artfully oiled and cleaned for the occasion)
and pointed out the strong oaken cheeks, polished
up by the apprentice.
“Isn’t it a love of a press?”
A wedding announcement lay in the
press. The old “bear” folded down
the frisket upon the tympan, and the tympan upon the
form, ran in the carriage, worked the lever, drew
out the carriage, and lifted the frisket and tympan,
all with as much agility as the youngest of the tribe.
The press, handled in this sort, creaked aloud in such
fine style that you might have thought some bird had
dashed itself against the window pane and flown away
again.
“Where is the English press
that could go at that pace?” the parent asked
of his astonished son.
Old Sechard hurried to the second,
and then to the third in order, repeating the manoeuvre
with equal dexterity. The third presenting to
his wine-troubled eye a patch overlooked by the apprentice,
with a notable oath he rubbed it with the skirt of
his overcoat, much as a horse-dealer polishes the
coat of an animal that he is trying to sell.
“With those three presses, David,
you can make your nine thousand francs a year without
a foreman. As your future partner, I am opposed
to your replacing these presses by your cursed cast-iron
machinery, that wears out the type. You in Paris
have been making such a to-do over that damned Englishman’s
invention—a foreigner, an enemy of France
who wants to help the ironfounders to a fortune.
Oh! you wanted Stanhopes, did you? Thanks for
your Stanhopes, that cost two thousand five hundred
francs apiece, about twice as much as my three jewels
put together, and maul your type to pieces, because
there is no give in them. I haven’t book-learning
like you, but you keep this well in mind, the life
of the Stanhope is the death of the type. Those
three presses will serve your turn well enough, the
printing will be properly done, and folk here in Angouleme
won’t ask any more of you. You may print
with presses made of wood or iron or gold or silver,
they will never pay you a farthing more.”
“‘Item,’”
pursued David, “’five thousand pounds weight
of type from M. Vaflard’s foundry——’”
Didot’s apprentice could not help smiling at
the name.
“Laugh away! After twelve
years of wear, that type is as good as new. That
is what I call a typefounder! M. Vaflard is an
honest man, who uses hard metal; and, to my way of
thinking, the best typefounder is the one you go to
most seldom.”
“‘——Taken
at ten thousand francs,’” continued David.
“Ten thousand francs, father! Why, that
is two francs a pound, and the Messrs. Didot only
ask thirty-six sous for their Cicero! These
nail-heads of yours will only fetch the price of old
metal—fivepence a pound.”
“You call M. Gille’s italics,
running-hand and round-hand, ‘nail-heads,’
do you? M. Gille, that used to be printer to the
Emperor! And type that costs six francs a pound!
masterpieces of engraving, bought only five years
ago. Some of them are as bright yet as when they
came from the foundry. Look here!”
Old Sechard pounced upon some packets
of unused sorts, and held them out for David to see.
“I am not book-learned; I don’t
know how to read or write; but, all the same, I know
enough to see that M. Gille’s sloping letters
are the fathers of your Messrs. Didot’s English
running-hand. Here is the round-hand,”
he went on, taking up an unused pica type.
David saw that there was no way of
coming to terms with his father. It was a case
of Yes or No—of taking or leaving it.
The very ropes across the ceiling had gone down into
the old “bear’s” inventory, and
not the smallest item was omitted; jobbing chases,
wetting-boards, paste-pots, rinsing-trough, and lye-brushes
had all been put down and valued separately with miserly
exactitude. The total amounted to thirty thousand
francs, including the license and the goodwill.
David asked himself whether or not this thing was
feasible.
Old Sechard grew uneasy over his son’s
silence; he would rather have had stormy argument
than a wordless acceptance of the situation.
Chaffering in these sorts of bargains means that a
man can look after his interests. “A man
who is ready to pay you anything you ask will pay
nothing,” old Sechard was saying to himself.
While he tried to follow his son’s train of
thought, he went through the list of odds and ends
of plant needed by a country business, drawing David
now to a hot-press, now to a cutting-press, bragging
of its usefulness and sound condition.
“Old tools are always the best
tools,” said he. “In our line of
business they ought to fetch more than the new, like
goldbeaters’ tools.”
Hideous vignettes, representing Hymen
and Cupids, skeletons raising the lids of their tombs
to describe a V or an M, and huge borders of masks
for theatrical posters became in turn objects of tremendous
value through old Jerome-Nicolas’ vinous eloquence.
Old custom, he told his son, was so deeply rooted
in the district that he (David) would only waste his
pains if he gave them the finest things in life.
He himself had tried to sell them a better class of
almanac than the Double Liegeois on grocers’
paper; and what came of it?—the original
Double Liegeois sold better than the most sumptuous
calendars. David would soon see the importance
of these old-fashioned things when he found he could
get more for them than for the most costly new-fangled
articles.
“Aha! my boy, Paris is Paris,
and the provinces are the provinces. If a man
came in from L’Houmeau with an order for wedding
cards, and you were to print them without a Cupid
and garlands, he would not believe that he was properly
married; you would have them all back again if you
sent them out with a plain M on them after the style
of your Messrs. Didot. They may be fine printers,
but their inventions won’t take in the provinces
for another hundred years. So there you are.”
A generous man is a bad bargain-driver.
David’s nature was of the sensitive and affectionate
type that shrinks from a dispute, and gives way at
once if an opponent touches his feelings. His
loftiness of feeling, and the fact that the old toper
had himself well in hand, put him still further at
a disadvantage in a dispute about money matters with
his own father, especially as he credited that father
with the best intentions, and took his covetous greed
for a printer’s attachment to his old familiar
tools. Still, as Jerome-Nicolas Sechard had taken
the whole place over from Rouzeau’s widow for
ten thousand francs, paid in assignats, it stood to
reason that thirty thousand francs in coin at the
present day was an exorbitant demand.
“Father, you are cutting my throat!” exclaimed
David.
“I,” cried the
old toper, raising his hand to the lines of cord across
the ceiling, “I who gave you life? Why,
David, what do you suppose the license is worth?
Do you know that the sheet of advertisements alone,
at fivepence a line, brought in five hundred francs
last month? You turn up the books, lad, and see
what we make by placards and the registers at the
Prefecture, and the work for the mayor’s office,
and the bishop too. You are a do-nothing that
has no mind to get on. You are haggling over
the horse that will carry you to some pretty bit of
property like Marsac.”
Attached to the valuation of plant
there was a deed of partnership between Sechard senior
and his son. The good father was to let his house
and premises to the new firm for twelve hundred francs
per annum, reserving one of the two rooms in the roof
for himself. So long as David’s purchase-money
was not paid in full, the profits were to be divided
equally; as soon as he paid off his father, he was
to be made sole proprietor of the business.
David made a mental calculation of
the value of the license, the goodwill, and the stock
of paper, leaving the plant out of account. It
was just possible, he thought, to clear off the debt.
He accepted the conditions. Old Sechard, accustomed
to peasants’ haggling, knowing nothing of the
wider business views of Paris, was amazed at such a
prompt conclusion.
“Can he have been putting money
by?” he asked himself. “Or is he
scheming out, at this moment, some way of not paying
me?”
With this notion in his head, he tried
to find out whether David had any money with him;
he wanted to be paid something on account. The
old man’s inquisitiveness roused his son’s
distrust; David remained close buttoned up to the
chin.
Next day, old Sechard made the apprentice
move all his own household stuff up into the attic
until such time as an empty market cart could take
it out on the return journey into the country; and
David entered into possession of three bare, unfurnished
rooms on the day that saw him installed in the printing-house,
without one sou wherewith to pay his men’s wages.
When he asked his father, as a partner, to contribute
his share towards the working expenses, the old man
pretended not to understand. He had found the
printing-house, he said, and he was not bound to find
the money too. He had paid his share. Pressed
close by his son’s reasoning, he answered that
when he himself had paid Rouzeau’s widow he
had not had a penny left. If he, a poor, ignorant
working man, had made his way, Didot’s apprentice
should do still better. Besides, had not David
been earning money, thanks to an education paid for
by the sweat of his old father’s brow? Now
surely was the time when the education would come
in useful.
“What have you done with your
‘polls?’” he asked, returning to
the charge. He meant to have light on a problem
which his son left unresolved the day before.
“Why, had I not to live?”
David asked indignantly, “and books to buy besides?”
“Oh! you bought books, did you?
You will make a poor man of business. A man that
buys books is hardly fit to print them,” retorted
the “bear.”
Then David endured the most painful
of humiliations—the sense of shame for
a parent; there was nothing for it but to be passive
while his father poured out a flood of reasons—sordid,
whining, contemptible, money-getting reasons—in
which the niggardly old man wrapped his refusal.
David crushed down his pain into the depths of his
soul; he saw that he was alone; saw that he had no
one to look to but himself; saw, too, that his father
was trying to make money out of him; and in a spirit
of philosophical curiosity, he tried to find out how
far the old man would go. He called old Sechard’s
attention to the fact that he had never as yet made
any inquiry as to his mother’s fortune; if that
fortune would not buy the printing-house, it might
go some ways towards paying the working expenses.
“Your mother’s fortune?”
echoed old Sechard; “why, it was her beauty
and intelligence!”
David understood his father thoroughly
after that answer; he understood that only after an
interminable, expensive, and disgraceful lawsuit could
he obtain any account of the money which by rights
was his. The noble heart accepted the heavy burden
laid upon it, seeing clearly beforehand how difficult
it would be to free himself from the engagements into
which he had entered with his father.
“I will work,” he said
to himself. “After all, if I have a rough
time of it, so had the old man; besides, I shall be
working for myself, shall I not?”
“I am leaving you a treasure,”
said Sechard, uneasy at his son’s silence.
David asked what the treasure might be.
“Marion!” said his father.
Marion, a big country girl, was an
indispensable part of the establishment. It was
Marion who damped the paper and cut it to size; Marion
did the cooking, washing, and marketing; Marion unloaded
the paper carts, collected accounts, and cleaned the
ink-balls; and if Marion had but known how to read,
old Sechard would have put her to set up type into
the bargain.
Old Sechard set out on foot for the
country. Delighted as he was with his sale of
the business, he was not quite easy in his mind as
to the payment. To the throes of the vendor,
the agony of uncertainty as to the completion of the
purchase inevitably succeeds. Passion of every
sort is essentially Jesuitical. Here was a man
who thought that education was useless, forcing himself
to believe in the influence of education. He
was mortgaging thirty thousand francs upon the ideas
of honor and conduct which education should have developed
in his son; David had received a good training, so
David would sweat blood and water to fulfil his engagements;
David’s knowledge would discover new resources;
and David seemed to be full of fine feelings, so—David
would pay! Many a parent does in this way, and
thinks that he has acted a father’s part; old
Sechard was quite of that opinion by the time that
he had reached his vineyard at Marsac, a hamlet some
four leagues out of Angouleme. The previous owner
had built a nice little house on the bit of property,
and from year to year had added other bits of land
to it, until in 1809 the old “bear” bought
the whole, and went thither, exchanging the toil of
the printing press for the labor of the winepress.
As he put it himself, “he had been in that line
so long that he ought to know something about it.”
During the first twelvemonth of rural
retirement, Sechard senior showed a careful countenance
among his vine props; for he was always in his vineyard
now, just as, in the old days, he had lived in his
shop, day in, day out. The prospect of thirty
thousand francs was even more intoxicating than sweet
wine; already in imagination he fingered the coin.
The less the claim to the money, the more eager he
grew to pouch it. Not seldom his anxieties sent
him hurrying from Marsac to Angouleme; he would climb
up the rocky staircases into the old city and walk
into his son’s workshop to see how business went.
There stood the presses in their places; the one apprentice,
in a paper cap, was cleaning the ink-balls; there
was a creaking of a press over the printing of some
trade circular, the old type was still unchanged, and
in the dens at the end of the room he saw his son and
the foreman reading books, which the “bear”
took for proof-sheets. Then he would join David
at dinner and go back to Marsac, chewing the cud of
uneasy reflection.
Avarice, like love, has the gift of
second sight, instinctively guessing at future contingencies,
and hugging its presentiments. Sechard senior
living at a distance, far from the workshop and the
machinery which possessed such a fascination for him,
reminding him, as it did, of days when he was making
his way, could feel that there were disquieting
symptoms of inactivity in his son. The name of
Cointet Brothers haunted him like a dread; he saw Sechard
& Son dropping into the second place. In short,
the old man scented misfortune in the wind.
His presentiments were too well founded;
disaster was hovering over the house of Sechard.
But there is a tutelary deity for misers, and by a
chain of unforeseen circumstances that tutelary deity
was so ordering matters that the purchase-money of
his extortionate bargain was to be tumbled after all
into the old toper’s pouch.
Indifferent to the religious reaction
brought about by the Restoration, indifferent no less
to the Liberal movement, David preserved a most unlucky
neutrality on the burning questions of the day.
In those times provincial men of business were bound
to profess political opinions of some sort if they
meant to secure custom; they were forced to choose
for themselves between the patronage of the Liberals
on the one hand or the Royalists on the other.
And Love, moreover, had come to David’s heart,
and with his scientific preoccupation and finer nature
he had not room for the dogged greed of which our
successful man of business is made; it choked the keen
money-getting instinct which would have led him to
study the differences between the Paris trade and
the business of a provincial printing-house.
The shades of opinion so sharply defined in the country
are blurred and lost in the great currents of Parisian
business life. Cointet Brothers set themselves
deliberately to assimilate all shades of monarchical
opinion. They let every one know that they fasted
of a Friday and kept Lent; they haunted the cathedral;
they cultivated the society of the clergy; and in
consequence, when books of devotion were once more
in demand, Cointet Brothers were the first in this
lucrative field. They slandered David, accusing
him of Liberalism, Atheism, and what not. How,
asked they, could any one employ a man whose father
had been a Septembrist, a Bonapartist, and a drunkard
to boot? The old man was sure to leave plenty
of gold pieces behind him. They themselves were
poor men with families to support, while David was
a bachelor and could do as he pleased; he would have
plenty one of these days; he could afford to take
things easily; whereas . . . and so forth and so forth.
Such tales against David, once put
into circulation, produced their effect. The
monopoly of the prefectorial and diocesan work passed
gradually into the hands of Cointet Brothers; and before
long David’s keen competitors, emboldened by
his inaction, started a second local sheet of advertisements
and announcements. The older establishment was
left at length with the job-printing orders from the
town, and the circulation of the Charente Chronicle
fell off by one-half. Meanwhile the Cointets
grew richer; they had made handsome profits on their
devotional books; and now they offered to buy Sechard’s
paper, to have all the trade and judicial announcements
of the department in their own hands.
The news of this proposal sent by
David to his father brought the old vinegrower from
Marsac into the Place du Murier with the swiftness
of the raven that scents the corpses on a battlefield.
“Leave me to manage the Cointets,”
said he to his son; “don’t you meddle
in this business.”
The old man saw what the Cointets
meant; and they took alarm at his clearsighted sagacity.
His son was making a blunder, he said, and he, Sechard,
had come to put a stop to it.
“What was to become of the connection
if David gave up the paper? It all depended upon
the paper. All the attorneys and solicitors and
men of business in L’Houmeau were Liberals to
a man. The Cointets had tried to ruin the Sechards
by accusing them of Liberalism, and by so doing gave
them a plank to cling to—the Sechards should
keep the Liberal business. Sell the paper indeed!
Why, you might as well sell the stock-in-trade and
the license!”
Old Sechard asked the Cointets sixty
thousand francs for the printing business, so as not
to ruin his son; he was fond of his son; he was taking
his son’s part. The vinegrower brought his
son to the front to gain his point, as a peasant brings
in his wife.
His son was unwilling to do this,
that, or the other; it varied according to the offers
which he wrung one after another from the Cointets,
until, not without an effort, he drew them on to give
twenty-two thousand francs for the Charente Chronicle.
But, at the same time, David must pledge himself thenceforward
to print no newspaper whatsoever, under a penalty
of thirty thousand francs for damages.
That transaction dealt the deathblow
to the Sechard establishment; but the old vinegrower
did not trouble himself much on that head. Murder
usually follows robbery. Our worthy friend intended
to pay himself with the ready money. To have
the cash in his own hands he would have given in David
himself over and above the bargain, and so much the
more willingly since that this nuisance of a son could
claim one-half of the unexpected windfall. Taking
this fact into consideration, therefore, the generous
parent consented to abandon his share of the business
but not the business premises; and the rental was still
maintained at the famous sum of twelve hundred francs
per annum.
The old man came into town very seldom
after the paper was sold to the Cointets. He
pleaded his advanced age, but the truth was that he
took little interest in the establishment now that
it was his no longer. Still, he could not quite
shake off his old kindness for his stock-in-trade;
and when business brought him into Angouleme, it would
have been hard to say which was the stronger attraction
to the old house —his wooden presses or
the son whom (as a matter of form) he asked for rent.
The old foreman, who had gone over to the rival establishment,
knew exactly how much this fatherly generosity was
worth; the old fox meant to reserve a right to interfere
in his son’s affairs, and had taken care to
appear in the bankruptcy as a privileged creditor for
arrears of rent.
The causes of David’s heedlessness
throw a light on the character of that young man.
Only a few days after his establishment in the paternal
printing office, he came across an old school friend
in the direst poverty. Lucien Chardon, a young
fellow of one-and-twenty or thereabouts, was the son
of a surgeon-major who had retired with a wound from
the republican army. Nature had meant M. Chardon
senior for a chemist; chance opened the way for a
retail druggist’s business in Angouleme.
After many years of scientific research, death cut
him off in the midst of his incompleted experiments,
and the great discovery that should have brought wealth
to the family was never made. Chardon had tried
to find a specific for the gout. Gout is a rich
man’s malady; the rich will pay large sums to
recover health when they have lost it, and for this
reason the druggist deliberately selected gout as
his problem. Halfway between the man of science
on the one side and the charlatan on the other, he
saw that the scientific method was the one road to
assured success, and had studied the causes of the
complaint, and based his remedy on a certain general
theory of treatment, with modifications in practice
for varying temperaments. Then, on a visit to
Paris undertaken to solicit the approval of the Academie
des Sciences, he died, and lost all the fruits
of his labors.
It may have been that some presentiment
of the end had led the country druggist to do all
that in him lay to give his boy and girl a good education;
the family had been living up to the income brought
in by the business; and now when they were left almost
destitute, it was an aggravation of their misfortune
that they had been brought up in the expectations
of a brilliant future; for these hopes were extinguished
by their father’s death. The great Desplein,
who attended Chardon in his last illness, saw him
die in convulsions of rage.
The secret of the army surgeon’s
ambition lay in his passionate love for his wife,
the last survivor of the family of Rubempre, saved
as by a miracle from the guillotine in 1793.
He had gained time by declaring that she was pregnant,
a lie told without the girl’s knowledge or consent.
Then, when in a manner he had created a claim to call
her his wife, he had married her in spite of their
common poverty. The children of this marriage,
like all children of love, inherited the mother’s
wonderful beauty, that gift so often fatal when accompanied
by poverty. The life of hope and hard work and
despair, in all of which Mme. Chardon had shared
with such keen sympathy, had left deep traces in her
beautiful face, just as the slow decline of a scanty
income had changed her ways and habits; but both she
and her children confronted evil days bravely enough.
She sold the druggist’s shop in the Grand’
Rue de L’Houmeau, the principal suburb of Angouleme;
but it was impossible for even one woman to exist
on the three hundred francs of income brought in by
the investment of the purchase-money, so the mother
and daughter accepted the position, and worked to earn
a living. The mother went out as a monthly nurse,
and for her gentle manners was preferred to any other
among the wealthy houses, where she lived without
expense to her children, and earned some seven francs
a week. To save her son the embarrassment of
seeing his mother reduced to this humble position,
she assumed the name of Madame Charlotte; and persons
requiring her services were requested to apply to M.
Postel, M. Chardon’s successor in the business.
Lucien’s sister worked for a laundress, a decent
woman much respected in L’Houmeau, and earned
fifteen daily sous. As Mme. Prieur’s
forewoman she had a certain position in the workroom,
which raised her slightly above the class of working-girls.
The two women’s slender earnings,
together with Mme. Chardon’s three hundred
francs of rentes, amounted to about eight hundred
francs a year, and on this sum three persons must
be fed, clothed, and lodged. Yet, with all their
frugal thrift, the pittance was scarcely sufficient;
nearly the whole of it was needed for Lucien.
Mme. Chardon and her daughter Eve believed in
Lucien as Mahomet’s wife believed in her husband;
their devotion for his future knew no bounds.
Their present landlord was the successor to the business,
for M. Postel let them have rooms at the further end
of a yard at the back of the laboratory for a very
low rent, and Lucien slept in the poor garret above.
A father’s passion for natural science had stimulated
the boy, and at first induced him to follow in the
same path. Lucien was one of the most brilliant
pupils at the grammar school of Angouleme, and when
David Sechard left, his future friend was in the third
form.