MATTERS GROWN
COMPLICATED
During these little events other little
events were going on in Havre, which caused Modeste
to forget her present uneasiness. Dumay went down
to Havre early in the morning, and soon discovered
that no architect had been in town the day before.
Furious at Butscha’s lie, which revealed a conspiracy
of which he was resolved to know the meaning, he rushed
from the mayor’s office to his friend Latournelle.
“Where’s your Master Butscha?”
he demanded of the notary, when he saw that the clerk
was not in his place.
“Butscha, my dear fellow, has
gone to Paris. He heard some news of his father
this morning on the quays, from a Swedish sailor.
It seems the father went to the Indies and served
a prince, or something, and he is now in Paris.”
“Lies! it’s all a trick!
infamous! I’ll find that damned cripple
if I’ve got to go express to Paris for him,”
cried Dumay. “Butscha is deceiving us;
he knows something about Modeste, and hasn’t
told us. If he meddles in this thing he shall
never be a notary. I’ll roll him in the
mud from which he came, I’ll—”
“Come, come, my friend; never
hang a man before you try him,” said Latournelle,
frightened at Dumay’s rage.
After stating the facts on which his
suspicions were founded, Dumay begged Madame Latournelle
to go and stay at the Chalet during his absence.
“You will find the colonel in
Paris,” said the notary. “In the
shipping news quoted this morning in the Journal of
Commerce, I found under the head of Marseilles—here,
see for yourself,” he said, offering the paper.
“’The Bettina Mignon, Captain Mignon, arrived
October 6’; it is now the 17th, and the colonel
is sure to be in Paris.”
Dumay requested Gobenheim to do without
him in future, and then went back to the Chalet, which
he reached just as Modeste was sealing her two letters,
to her father and Canalis. Except for the address
the letters were precisely alike both in weight and
appearance. Modeste thought she had laid that
to her father over that to her Melchior, but had,
in fact, done exactly the reverse. This mistake,
so often made in the little things of life, occasioned
the discovery of her secret by Dumay and her mother.
The former was talking vehemently to Madame Mignon
in the salon, and revealing to her his fresh fears
caused by Modeste’s duplicity and Butscha’s
connivance.
“Madame,” he cried, “he
is a serpent whom we have warmed in our bosoms; there’s
no place in his contorted little body for a soul!”
Modeste put the letter for her father
into the pocket of her apron, supposing it to be that
for Canalis, and came downstairs with the letter for
her lover in her hand, to see Dumay before he started
for Paris.
“What has happened to my Black
Dwarf? why are you talking so loud!” she said,
appearing at the door.
“Mademoiselle, Butscha has gone
to Paris, and you, no doubt, know why, —to
carry on that affair of the little architect with the
sulphur waistcoat, who, unluckily for the hunchback’s
lies, has never been here.”
Modeste was struck dumb; feeling sure
that the dwarf had departed on a mission of inquiry
as to her poet’s morals, she turned pale, and
sat down.
“I’m going after him;
I shall find him,” continued Dumay. “Is
that the letter for your father, mademoiselle?”
he added, holding out his hand. “I will
take it to the Mongenods. God grant the colonel
and I may not pass each other on the road.”
Modeste gave him the letter.
Dumay looked mechanically at the address.
“’Monsieur le Baron de
Canalis, rue de Paradis-Poissoniere, No. 29’!”
he cried out; “what does that mean?”
“Ah, my daughter! that is the
man you love,” exclaimed Madame Mignon; “the
stanzas you set to music were his—”
“And that’s his portrait
that you have in a frame upstairs,” added Dumay.
“Give me back that letter, Monsieur
Dumay,” said Modeste, erecting herself like
a lioness defending her cubs.
“There it is, mademoiselle,” he replied.
Modeste put it into the bosom of her
dress, and gave Dumay the one intended for her father.
“I know what you are capable
of, Dumay,” she said; “and if you take
one step against Monsieur de Canalis, I shall take
another out of this house, to which I will never return.”
“You will kill your mother,
mademoiselle,” replied Dumay, who left the room
and called his wife.
The poor mother was indeed half-fainting,—struck
to the heart by Modeste’s words.
“Good-bye, wife,” said
the Breton, kissing the American. “Take
care of the mother; I go to save the daughter.”
He made his preparations for the journey
in a few minutes, and started for Havre. An hour
later he was travelling post to Paris, with the haste
that nothing but passion or speculation can get out
of wheels.
Recovering herself under Modeste’s
tender care, Madame Mignon went up to her bedroom
leaning on the arm of her daughter, to whom she said,
as her sole reproach, when they were alone:—
“My unfortunate child, see what
you have done! Why did you conceal anything from
me? Am I so harsh?”
“Oh! I was just going to
tell it to you comfortably,” sobbed Modeste.
She thereupon related everything to
her mother, read her the letters and their answers,
and shed the rose of her poem petal by petal into
the heart of the kind German woman. When this
confidence, which took half the day, was over, when
she saw something that was almost a smile on the lips
of the too indulgent mother, Modeste fell upon her
breast in tears.
“Oh, mother!” she said
amid her sobs, “you, whose heart, all gold and
poetry, is a chosen vessel, chosen of God to hold a
sacred love, a single and celestial love that endures
for life; you, whom I wish to imitate by loving no
one but my husband,—you will surely understand
what bitter tears I am now shedding. This butterfly,
this Psyche of my thoughts, this dual soul which I
have nurtured with maternal care, my love, my sacred
love, this living mystery of mysteries—it
is about to fall into vulgar hands, and they will
tear its diaphanous wings and rend its veil under
the miserable pretext of enlightening me, of discovering
whether genius is as prudent as a banker, whether my
Melchior has saved his money, or whether he has some
entanglement to shake off; they want to find out if
he is guilty to bourgeois eyes of youthful indiscretions,—which
to the sun of our love are like the clouds of the
dawn. Oh! what will come of it? what will they
do? See! feel my hand, it burns with fever.
Ah! I shall never survive it.”
And Modeste, really taken with a chill,
was forced to go to bed, causing serious uneasiness
to her mother, Madame Latournelle, and Madame Dumay,
who took good care of her during the journey of the
lieutenant to Paris,—to which city the logic
of events compels us to transport our drama for a
moment.
Truly modest minds, like that of Ernest
de La Briere, but especially those who, knowing their
own value, also know that they are neither loved nor
appreciated, can understand the infinite joy to which
the young secretary abandoned himself on reading Modeste’s
letter. Could it be that after thinking him lofty
and witty in soul, his young, his artless, his tricksome
mistress now thought him handsome? This flattery
is the flattery supreme. And why? Beauty
is, undoubtedly, the signature of the master to the
work into which he has put his soul; it is the divine
spirit manifested. And to see it where it is not,
to create it by the power of an inward look,—is
not that the highest reach of love? And so the
poor youth cried aloud with all the rapture of an
applauded author, “At last I am beloved!”
When a woman, be she maid, wife, or widow, lets the
charming words escape her, “Thou art handsome,”
the words may be false, but the man opens his thick
skull to their subtle poison, and thenceforth he is
attached by an everlasting tie to the pretty flatterer,
the true or the deceived judge; she becomes his particular
world, he thirsts for her continual testimony, and
he never wearies of it, even if he is a crowned prince.
Ernest walked proudly up and down his room; he struck
a three-quarter, full-face, and profile attitude before
the glass; he tried to criticise himself; but a voice,
diabolically persuasive, whispered to him, “Modeste
is right.” He took up her letter and re-read
it; he saw his fairest of the fair; he talked with
her; then, in the midst of his ecstacy, a dreadful
thought came to him:—
“She thinks me Canalis, and
she has a million of money!”
Down went his happiness, just as a
somnambulist, having attained the peak of a roof,
hears a voice, awakes, and falls crushed upon the
pavement.
“Without the halo of fame I
shall be hideous in her eyes,” he cried; “what
a maddening situation I have put myself in!”
La Briere was too much the man of
his letters which we have read, his heart was too
noble and pure to allow him to hesitate at the call
of honor. He at once resolved to find Modeste’s
father, if he were in Paris, and confess all to him,
and to let Canalis know the serious results of their
Parisian jest. To a sensitive nature like his,
Modeste’s large fortune was in itself a determining
reason. He could not allow it to be even suspected
that the ardor of the correspondence, so sincere on
his part, had in view the capture of a “dot.”
Tears were in his eyes as he made his way to the rue
Chantereine to find the banker Mongenod, whose fortune
and business connections were partly the work of the
minister to whom Ernest owed his start in life.
At the hour when La Briere was inquiring
about the father of his beloved from the head of the
house of Mongenod, and getting information that might
be useful to him in his strange position, a scene
was taking place in Canalis’s study which the
ex-lieutenant’s hasty departure from Havre may
have led the reader to foresee.
Like a true soldier of the imperial
school, Dumay, whose Breton blood had boiled all the
way to Paris, considered a poet to be a poor stick
of a fellow, of no consequence whatever,—a
buffoon addicted to choruses, living in a garret,
dressed in black clothes that were white at every
seam, wearing boots that were occasionally without
soles, and linen that was unmentionable, and whose
fingers knew more about ink than soap; in short, one
who looked always as if he had tumbled from the moon,
except when scribbling at a desk, like Butscha.
But the seething of the Breton’s heart and brain
received a violent application of cold water when
he entered the courtyard of the pretty house occupied
by the poet and saw a groom washing a carriage, and
also, through the windows of a handsome dining-room,
a valet dressed like a banker, to whom the groom referred
him, and who answered, looking the stranger over from
head to foot, that Monsieur le baron was not visible.
“There is,” added the man, “a meeting
of the council of state to-day, at which Monsieur
le baron is obliged to be present.”
“Is this really the house of
Monsieur Canalis,” said Dumay, “a writer
of poetry?”
“Monsieur le baron de Canalis,”
replied the valet, “is the great poet of whom
you speak; but he is also the president of the court
of Claims attached to the ministry of foreign affairs.”
Dumay, who had come to box the ears
of a scribbling nobody, found himself confronted by
a high functionary of the state. The salon where
he was told to wait offered, as a topic for his meditations,
the insignia of the Legion of honor glittering on
a black coat which the valet had left upon a chair.
Presently his eyes were attracted by the beauty and
brilliancy of a silver-gilt cup bearing the words “Given
by Madame.” Then he beheld before
him, on a pedestal, a Sevres vase on which was engraved,
“The gift of Madame la Dauphine.”
These mute admonitions brought Dumay
to his senses while the valet went to ask his master
if he would receive a person who had come from Havre
expressly to see him,—a stranger named Dumay.
“What sort of a man?” asked Canalis.
“He is well-dressed, and wears the ribbon of
the Legion of honor.”
Canalis made a sign of assent, and
the valet retreated, and then returned and announced,
“Monsieur Dumay.”
When he heard himself announced, when
he was actually in presence of Canalis, in a study
as gorgeous as it was elegant, with his feet on a
carpet far handsomer than any in the house of Mignon,
and when he met the studied glance of the poet who
was playing with the tassels of a sumptuous dressing-gown,
Dumay was so completely taken aback that he allowed
the great poet to have the first word.
“To what do I owe the honor of your visit, monsieur?”
“Monsieur,” began Dumay, who remained
standing.
“If you have a good deal to
say,” interrupted Canalis, “I must ask
you to be seated.”
And Canalis himself plunged into an
armchair a la Voltaire, crossed his legs, raised the
upper one to the level of his eye and looked fixedly
at Dumay, who became, to use his own martial slang,
“bayonetted.”
“I am listening, monsieur,”
said the poet; “my time is precious,—the
ministers are expecting me.”
“Monsieur,” said Dumay,
“I shall be brief. You have seduced—how,
I do not know—a young lady in Havre, young,
beautiful, and rich; the last and only hope of two
noble families; and I have come to ask your intentions.”
Canalis, who had been busy during
the last three months with serious matters of his
own, and was trying to get himself made commander of
the Legion of honor and minister to a German court,
had completely forgotten Modeste’s letter.”
“I!” he exclaimed.
“You!” repeated Dumay.
“Monsieur,” answered Canalis,
smiling; “I know no more of what you are talking
about than if you had said it in Hebrew. I seduce
a young girl! I, who—” and a
superb smile crossed his features. “Come,
come, monsieur, I’m not such a child as to steal
fruit over the hedges when I have orchards and gardens
of my own where the finest peaches ripen. All
Paris knows where my affections are set. Very
likely there may be some young girl in Havre full
of enthusiasm for my verses,—of which they
are not worthy; that would not surprise me at all;
nothing is more common. See! look at that lovely
coffer of ebony inlaid with mother-of-pearl, and edged
with that iron-work as fine as lace. That coffer
belonged to Pope Leo X., and was given to me by the
Duchesse de Chaulieu, who received it from the king
of Spain. I use it to hold the letters I receive
from ladies and young girls living in every quarter
of Europe. Oh! I assure you I feel the utmost
respect for these flowers of the soul, cut and sent
in moments of enthusiasm that are worthy of all reverence.
Yes, to me the impulse of a heart is a noble and sublime
thing! Others—scoffers—light
their cigars with such letters, or give them to their
wives for curl-papers; but I, who am a bachelor, monsieur,
I have too much delicacy not to preserve these artless
offerings—so fresh, so disinterested—in
a tabernacle of their own. In fact, I guard them
with a species of veneration, and at my death they
will be burned before my eyes. People may call
that ridiculous, but I do not care. I am grateful;
these proofs of devotion enable me to bear the criticisms
and annoyances of a literary life. When I receive
a shot in the back from some enemy lurking under cover
of a daily paper, I look at that casket and think,—here
and there in this wide world there are hearts whose
wounds have been healed, or soothed, or dressed by
me!”
This bit of poetry, declaimed with
all the talent of a great actor, petrified the lieutenant,
whose eyes opened to their utmost extent, and whose
astonishment delighted the poet.
“I will permit you,” continued
the peacock, spreading his tail, “out of respect
for your position, which I fully appreciate, to open
that coffer and look for the letter of your young
lady. Though I know I am right, I remember names,
and I assure you you are mistaken in thinking—”
“And this is what a poor child
comes to in this gulf of Paris!” cried Dumay,—“the
darling of her parents, the joy of her friends, the
hope of all, petted by all, the pride of a family,
who has six persons so devoted to her that they would
willingly make a rampart of their lives and fortunes
between her and sorrow. Monsieur,” Dumay
remarked after a pause, “you are a great poet,
and I am only a poor soldier. For fifteen years
I served my country in the ranks; I have had the wind
of many a bullet in my face; I have crossed Siberia
and been a prisoner there; the Russians flung me on
a kibitka, and God knows what I suffered. I have
seen thousands of my comrades die,—but you,
you have given me a chill to the marrow of my bones,
such as I never felt before.”
Dumay fancied that his words moved
the poet, but in fact they only flattered him,—a
thing which at this period of his life had become
almost an impossibility; for his ambitious mind had
long forgotten the first perfumed phial that praise
had broken over his head.
“Ah, my soldier!” he said
solemnly, laying his hand on Dumay’s shoulder,
and thinking to himself how droll it was to make a
soldier of the empire tremble, “this young girl
may be all in all to you, but to society at large
what is she? nothing. At this moment the greatest
mandarin in China may be yielding up the ghost and
putting half the universe in mourning, and what is
that to you? The English are killing thousands
of people in India more worthy than we are; why, at
this very moment while I am speaking to you some ravishing
woman is being burned alive,—did that make
you care less for your cup of coffee this morning
at breakfast? Not a day passes in Paris that some
mother in rags does not cast her infant on the world
to be picked up by whoever finds it; and yet see!
here is this delicious tea in a cup that cost five
louis, and I write verses which Parisian women rush
to buy, exclaiming, ‘Divine! delicious! charming!
food for the soul!’ Social nature, like Nature
herself, is a great forgetter. You will be quite
surprised ten years hence at what you have done to-day.
You are here in a city where people die, where they
marry, where they adore each other at an assignation,
where young girls suffocate themselves, where the
man of genius with his cargo of thoughts teeming with
humane beneficence goes to the bottom,—all
side by side, sometimes under the same roof, and yet
ignorant of each other, ignorant and indifferent.
And here you come among us and ask us to expire with
grief at this commonplace affair.”
“You call yourself a poet!”
cried Dumay, “but don’t you feel what you
write?”
“Good heavens! if we endured
the joys or the woes we sing we should be as worn
out in three months as a pair of old boots,”
said the poet, smiling. “But stay, you
shall not come from Havre to Paris to see Canalis
without carrying something back with you. Warrior!”
(Canalis had the form and action of an Homeric hero)
“learn this from the poet: Every noble
sentiment in man is a poem so exclusively individual
that his nearest friend, his other self, cares nothing
for it. It is a treasure which is his alone,
it is—”
“Forgive me for interrupting
you,” said Dumay, who was gazing at the poet
with horror, “but did you ever come to Havre?”
“I was there for a day and a
night in the spring of 1824 on my way to London.”
“You are a man of honor,”
continued Dumay; “will you give me your word
that you do not know Mademoiselle Modeste Mignon?”
“This is the first time that
name ever struck my ear,” replied Canalis.
“Ah, monsieur!” said Dumay,
“into what dark intrigue am I about to plunge?
Can I count upon you to help me in my inquiries?—for
I am certain that some one has been using your name.
You ought to have had a letter yesterday from Havre.”
“I received none. Be sure,
monsieur, that I will help you,” said Canalis,
“so far as I have the opportunity of doing so.”
Dumay withdrew, his heart torn with
anxiety, believing that the wretched Butscha had worn
the skin of the poet to deceive Modeste; whereas Butscha
himself, keen-witted as a prince seeking revenge, and
far cleverer than any paid spy, was ferretting out
the life and actions of Canalis, escaping notice by
his insignificance, like an insect that bores its
way into the sap of a tree.
The Breton had scarcely left the poet’s
house when La Briere entered his friend’s study.
Naturally, Canalis told him of the visit of the man
from Havre.
“Ha!” said Ernest, “Modeste
Mignon; that is just what I have come to speak of.”
“Ah, bah!” cried Canalis;
“have I had a triumph by proxy?”
“Yes; and here is the key to
it. My friend, I am loved by the sweetest girl
in all the world,—beautiful enough to shine
beside the greatest beauties in Paris, with a heart
and mind worthy of Clarissa. She has seen me;
I have pleased her, and she thinks me the great Canalis.
But that is not all. Modeste Mignon is of high
birth, and Mongenod has just told me that her father,
the Comte de La Bastie, has something like six millions.
The father is here now, and I have asked him through
Mongenod for an interview at two o’clock.
Mongenod is to give him a hint, just a word, that
it concerns the happiness of his daughter. But
you will readily understand that before seeing the
father I feel I ought to make a clean breast of it
to you.”
“Among the plants whose flowers
bloom in the sunshine of fame,” said Canalis,
impressively, “there is one, and the most magnificent,
which bears like the orange-tree a golden fruit amid
the mingled perfumes of beauty and of mind; a lovely
plant, a true tenderness, a perfect bliss, and—it
eludes me.” Canalis looked at the carpet
that Ernest might not read his eyes. “Could
I,” he continued after a pause to regain his
self-possession, “how could I have divined that
flower from a pretty sheet of perfumed paper, that
true heart, that young girl, that woman in whom love
wears the livery of flattery, who loves us for ourselves,
who offers us felicity? It needed but an angel
or a demon to perceive her; and what am I but the
ambitious head of a Court of Claims! Ah, my friend,
fame makes us the target of a thousand arrows.
One of us owes his rich marriage to an hydraulic piece
of poetry, while I, more seductive, more a woman’s
man than he, have missed mine, —for, do
you love her, poor girl?” he said, looking up
at La Briere.
“Oh!” ejaculated the young man.
“Well then,” said the
poet, taking his secretary’s arm and leaning
heavily upon it, “be happy, Ernest. By a
mere accident I have been not ungrateful to you.
You are richly rewarded for your devotion, and I will
generously further your happiness.”
Canalis was furious; but he could
not behave otherwise than with propriety, and he made
the best of his disappointment by mounting it as a
pedestal.
“Ah, Canalis, I have never really
known you till this moment.”
“Did you expect to? It
takes some time to go round the world,” replied
the poet with his pompous irony.
“But think,” said La Briere,
“of this enormous fortune.”
“Ah, my friend, is it not well
invested in you?” cried Canalis, accompanying
the words with a charming gesture.
“Melchior,” said La Briere,
“I am yours for life and death.”
He wrung the poet’s hand and
left him abruptly, for he was in haste to meet Monsieur
Mignon.