A THIRD
SUITOR
“Those two young men,”
said Madame Latournelle, on the Saturday evening,
“have no idea how many spies they have on their
tracks. We are eight in all, on the watch.”
“Don’t say two young men,
wife; say three!” cried little Latournelle,
looking round him. “Gobenheim is not here,
so I can speak out.”
Modeste raised her head, and everybody,
imitating Modeste, raised theirs and looked at the
notary.
“Yes, a third lover—and
he is something like a lover—offers himself
as a candidate.”
“Bah!” exclaimed the colonel.
“I speak of no less a person,”
said Latournelle, pompously, “than Monsieur
le Duc d’Herouville, Marquis de Saint-Sever,
Duc de Nivron, Comte de Bayeux, Vicomte d’Essigny,
grand equerry and peer of France, knight of the Spur
and the Golden Fleece, grandee of Spain, and son of
the last governor of Normandy. He saw Mademoiselle
Modeste at the time when he was staying with the Vilquins,
and he regretted then—as his notary, who
came from Bayeux yesterday, tells me—that
she was not rich enough for him; for his father recovered
nothing but the estate of Herouville on his return
to France, and that is saddled with a sister.
The young duke is thirty-three years old. I am
definitively charged to lay these proposals before
you, Monsieur le comte,” added the notary, turning
respectfully to the colonel.
“Ask Modeste if she wants another
bird in her cage,” replied the count; “as
far as I am concerned, I am willing that my lord the
grand equerry shall pay her attention.”
Notwithstanding the care with which
Charles Mignon avoided seeing people, and though he
stayed in the Chalet and never went out without Modeste,
Gobenheim had reported Dumay’s wealth; for Dumay
had said to him when giving up his position as cashier:
“I am to be bailiff for my colonel, and all
my fortune, except what my wife needs, is to go to
the children of our little Modeste.” Every
one in Havre had therefore propounded the same question
that the notary had already put to himself: “If
Dumay’s share in the profits is six hundred thousand
francs, and he is going to be Monsieur Mignon’s
bailiff, then Monsieur Mignon must certainly have
a colossal fortune. He arrived at Marseilles
on a ship of his own, loaded with indigo; and they
say at the Bourse that the cargo, not counting the
ship, is worth more than he gives out as his whole
fortune.”
The colonel was unwilling to dismiss
the servants he had brought back with him, whom he
had chosen with care during his travels; and he therefore
hired a house for them in the lower part of Ingouville,
where he installed his valet, cook, and coachman, all
Negroes, and three mulattos on whose fidelity he could
rely. The coachman was told to search for saddle-horses
for Mademoiselle and for his master, and for carriage-horses
for the caleche in which the colonel and the lieutenant
had returned to Havre. That carriage, bought in
Paris, was of the latest fashion, and bore the arms
of La Bastie, surmounted by a count’s coronet.
These things, insignificant in the eyes of a man who
for four years had been accustomed to the unbridled
luxury of the Indies and of the English merchants
at Canton, were the subject of much comment among
the business men of Havre and the inhabitants of Ingouville
and Graville. Before five days had elapsed the
rumor of them ran from one end of Normandy to the
other like a train of gunpowder touched by fire.
“Monsieur Mignon has come back
from China with millions,” some one said in
Rouen; “and it seems he was made a count in mid-ocean.”
“But he was the Comte de La
Bastie before the Revolution,” answered another.
“So they call him a liberal
just because he was plain Charles Mignon for twenty-five
years! What are we coming to?” said a third.
Modeste was considered, therefore,
notwithstanding the silence of her parents and friends,
as the richest heiress in Normandy, and all eyes began
once more to see her merits. The aunt and sister
of the Duc d’Herouville confirmed in the aristocratic
salons of Bayeux Monsieur Charles Mignon’s right
to the title and arms of count, derived from Cardinal
Mignon, for whom the Cardinal’s hat and tassels
were added as a crest. They had seen Mademoiselle
de La Bastie when they were staying at the Vilquins,
and their solicitude for the impoverished head of
their house now became active.
“If Mademoiselle de La Bastie
is really as rich as she is beautiful,” said
the aunt of the young duke, “she is the best
match in the province. She at least is noble.”
The last words were aimed at the Vilquins,
with whom they had not been able to come to terms,
after incurring the humiliation of staying in that
bourgeois household.
Such were the little events which,
contrary to the rules of Aristotle and of Horace,
precede the introduction of another person into our
story; but the portrait and the biography of this personage,
this late arrival, shall not be long, taking into
consideration his own diminutiveness. The grand
equerry shall not take more space here than he will
take in history. Monsieur le Duc d’Herouville,
offspring of the matrimonial autumn of the last governor
of Normandy, was born during the emigration in 1799,
at Vienna. The old marechal, father of the present
duke, returned with the king in 1814, and died in 1819,
before he was able to marry his son. He could
only leave him the vast chateau of Herouville, the
park, a few dependencies, and a farm which he had
bought back with some difficulty; all of which returned
a rental of about fifteen thousand francs a year.
Louis XVIII. gave the post of grand equerry to the
son, who, under Charles X., received the usual pension
of twelve thousand francs which was granted to the
pauper peers of France. But what were these twenty-seven
thousand francs a year and the salary of grand equerry
to such a family? In Paris, of course, the young
duke used the king’s coaches, and had a mansion
provided for him in the rue Saint-Thomas-du-Louvre,
near the royal stables; his salary paid for his winters
in the city, and his twenty-seven thousand francs
for the summers in Normandy. If this noble personage
was still a bachelor he was less to blame than his
aunt, who was not versed in La Fontaine’s fables.
Mademoiselle d’Herouville made enormous pretensions
wholly out of keeping with the spirit of the times;
for great names, without the money to keep them up,
can seldom win rich heiresses among the higher French
nobility, who are themselves embarrassed to provide
for their sons under the new law of the equal division
of property. To marry the young Duc d’Herouville,
it was necessary to conciliate the great banking-houses;
but the haughty pride of the daughter of the house
alienated these people by cutting speeches. During
the first years of the Restoration, from 1817 to 1825,
Mademoiselle d’Herouville, though in quest of
millions, refused, among others, the daughter of Mongenod
the banker, with whom Monsieur de Fontaine afterwards
contented himself.
At last, having lost several good
opportunities to establish her nephew, entirely through
her own fault, she was just considering whether the
property of the Nucingens was not too basely acquired,
or whether she should lend herself to the ambition
of Madame de Nucingen, who wished to make her daughter
a duchess. The king, anxious to restore the d’Herouvilles
to their former splendor, had almost brought about
this marriage, and when it failed he openly accused
Mademoiselle d’Herouville of folly. In
this way the aunt made the nephew ridiculous, and
the nephew, in his own way, was not less absurd.
When great things disappear they leave crumbs, “frusteaux,”
Rabelais would say, behind them; and the French nobility
of this century has left us too many such fragments.
Neither the clergy nor the nobility have anything
to complain of in this long history of manners and
customs. Those great and magnificent social necessities
have been well represented; but we ought surely to
renounce the noble title of historian if we are not
impartial, if we do not here depict the present degeneracy
of the race of nobles, although we have already done
so elsewhere,—in the character of the Comte
de Mortsauf (in “The Lily of the Valley”), in
the “Duchesse de Langeais,” and the very
nobleness of the nobility in the “Marquis d’Espard.”
How then could it be that the race of heroes and valiant
men belonging to the proud house of Herouville, who
gave the famous marshal to the nation, cardinals to
the church, great leaders to the Valois, knights to
Louis XIV., was reduced to a little fragile being
smaller than Butscha? That is a question which
we ask ourselves in more than one salon in Paris when
we hear the greatest names of France announced, and
see the entrance of a thin, pinched, undersized young
man, scarcely possessing the breath of life, or a
premature old one, or some whimsical creature in whom
an observer can with great difficulty trace the signs
of a past grandeur. The dissipations of the reign
of Louis XV., the orgies of that fatal and egotistic
period, have produced an effete generation, in which
manners alone survive the nobler vanished qualities,—forms,
which are the sole heritage our nobles have preserved.
The abandonment in which Louis XVI. was allowed to
perish may thus be explained, with some slight reservations,
as a wretched result of the reign of Madame de Pompadour.
The grand equerry, a fair young man
with blue eyes and a pallid face, was not without
a certain dignity of thought; but his thin, undersized
figure, and the follies of his aunt who had taken him
to the Vilquins and elsewhere to pay his court, rendered
him extremely diffident. The house of Herouville
had already been threatened with extinction by the
deed of a deformed being (see the “Enfant Maudit”
in “Philosophical Studies”). The grand
marshal, that being the family term for the member
who was made duke by Louis XIII., married at the age
of eighty. The young duke admired women, but
he placed them too high and respected them too much;
in fact, he adored them, and was only at his ease
with those whom he could not respect. This characteristic
caused him to lead a double life. He found compensation
with women of easy virtue for the worship to which
he surrendered himself in the salons, or, if you like,
the boudoirs, of the faubourg Saint-Germain. Such
habits and his puny figure, his suffering face with
its blue eyes turning upward in ecstasy, increased
the ridicule already bestowed upon him,—very
unjustly bestowed, as it happened, for he was full
of wit and delicacy; but his wit, which never sparkled,
only showed itself when he felt at ease. Fanny
Beaupre, an actress who was supposed to be his nearest
friend (at a price), called him “a sound wine
so carefully corked that you break all your corkscrews.”
The beautiful Duchesse de Maufrigneuse, whom the grand
equerry could only worship, annihilated him with a
speech which, unfortunately, was repeated from mouth
to mouth, like all such pretty and malicious sayings.
“He always seems to me,”
she said, “like one of those jewels of fine
workmanship which we exhibit but never wear, and keep
in cotton-wool.”
Everything about him, even to his
absurdly contrasting title of grand equerry, amused
the good-natured king, Charles X., and made him laugh,
—although the Duc d’Herouville justified
his appointment in the matter of being a fine horseman.
Men are like books, often understood and appreciated
too late. Modeste had seen the duke during his
fruitless visit to the Vilquins, and many of these
reflections passed through her mind as she watched
him come and go. But under the circumstances
in which she now found herself, she saw plainly that
the courtship of the Duc d’Herouville would
save her from being at the mercy of either Canalis.
“I see no reason,” she
said to Latournelle, “why the Duc d’Herouville
should not be received. I have passed, in spite
of our indigence,” she continued, with a mischievous
look at her father, “to the condition of heiress.
Haven’t you observed Gobenheim’s glances?
They have quite changed their character within a week.
He is in despair at not being able to make his games
of whist count for mute adoration of my charms.”
“Hush, my darling!” cried
Madame Latournelle, “here he comes.”
“Old Althor is in despair,”
said Gobenheim to Monsieur Mignon as he entered.
“Why?” asked the count.
“Vilquin is going to fail; and
the Bourse thinks you are worth several millions.
What ill-luck for his son!”
“No one knows,” said Charles
Mignon, coldly, “what my liabilities in India
are; and I do not intend to take the public into my
confidence as to my private affairs. Dumay,”
he whispered to his friend, “if Vilquin is embarrassed
we could get back the villa by paying him what he
gave for it.”
Such was the general state of things,
due chiefly to accident, when on Sunday morning Canalis
and La Briere arrived, with a courier in advance,
at the villa of Madame Amaury. It was known that
the Duc d’Herouville, his sister, and his aunt
were coming the following Tuesday to occupy, also
under pretext of ill-health, a hired house at Graville.
This assemblage of suitors made the wits of the Bourse
remark that, thanks to Mademoiselle Mignon, rents would
rise at Ingouville. “If this goes on, she
will have a hospital here,” said the younger
Mademoiselle Vilquin, vexed at not becoming a duchess.
The everlasting comedy of “The
Heiress,” about to be played at the Chalet,
might very well be called, in view of Modeste’s
frame of mind, “The Designs of a Young Girl”;
for since the overthrow of her illusions she had fully
made up her mind to give her hand to no man whose
qualifications did not fully satisfy her.
The two rivals, still intimate friends,
intended to pay their first visit at the Chalet on
the evening of the day succeeding their arrival.
They had spent Sunday and part of Monday in unpacking
and arranging Madame Amaury’s house for a month’s
stay. The poet, always calculating effects, wished
to make the most of the probable excitement which
his arrival would case in Havre, and which would of
course echo up to the Mignons. Therefore, in his
role of a man needing rest, he did not leave the house.
La Briere went twice to walk past the Chalet, though
always with a sense of despair, for he feared to displease
Modeste, and the future seemed to him dark with clouds.
The two friends came down to dinner on Monday dressed
for the momentous visit. La Briere wore the same
clothes he had so carefully selected for the famous
Sunday; but he now felt like the satellite of planet,
and resigned himself to the uncertainties of his situation.
Canalis, on the other hand, had carefully attended
to his black coat, his orders, and all those little
drawing-room elegancies, which his intimacy with the
Duchesse de Chaulieu and the fashionable world of
the faubourg had brought to perfection. He had
gone into the minutiae of dandyism, while poor La
Briere was about to present himself with the negligence
of a man without hope. Germain, as he waited at
dinner could not help smiling to himself at the contrast.
After the second course, however, the valet came in
with a diplomatic, that is to say, uneasy air.
“Does Monsieur le baron know,”
he said to Canalis in a low voice, “that Monsieur
the grand equerry is coming to Graville to get cured
of the same illness which has brought Monsieur de
La Briere and Monsieur le baron to the sea-shore?”
“What, the little Duc d’Herouville?”
“Yes, monsieur.”
“Is he coming for Mademoiselle
de La Bastie?” asked La Briere, coloring.
“So it appears, monsieur.”
“We are cheated!” cried Canalis looking
at La Briere.
“Ah!” retorted Ernest
quickly, “that is the first time you have said,
‘we’ since we left Paris: it has been
‘I’ all along.”
“You understood me,” cried
Canalis, with a burst of laughter. “But
we are not in a position to struggle against a ducal
coronet, nor the duke’s title, nor against the
waste lands which the Council of State have just granted,
on my report, to the house of Herouville.”
“His grace,” said La Briere,
with a spice of malice that was nevertheless serious,
“will furnish you with compensation in the person
of his sister.”
At this instant, the Comte de La Bastie
was announced; the two young men rose at once, and
La Briere hastened forward to present Canalis.
“I wished to return the visit
that you paid me in Paris,” said the count to
the young lawyer, “and I knew that by coming
here I should have the double pleasure of greeting
one of our great living poets.”
“Great!—Monsieur,”
replied the poet, smiling, “no one can be great
in a century prefaced by the reign of a Napoleon.
We are a tribe of would-be great poets; besides, second-rate
talent imitates genius nowadays, and renders real
distinction impossible.”
“Is that the reason why you
have thrown yourself into politics?” asked the
count.
“It is the same thing in that
sphere,” said the poet; “there are no
statesmen in these days, only men who handle events
more or less. Look at it, monsieur; under the
system of government that we derive from the Charter,
which makes a tax-list of more importance than a coat-of-arms,
there is absolutely nothing solid except that which
you went to seek in China,—wealth.”
Satisfied with himself and with the
impression he was making on the prospective father-in-law,
Canalis turned to Germain.
“Serve the coffee in the salon,”
he said, inviting Monsieur de La Bastie to leave the
dining-room.
“I thank you for this visit,
monsieur le comte,” said La Briere; “it
saves me from the embarrassment of presenting my friend
to you in your own house. You have a heart, and
you have also a quick mind.”
“Bah! the ready wit of Provence,
that is all,” said Charles Mignon.
“Ah, do you come from Provence?” cried
Canalis.
“You must pardon my friend,”
said La Briere; “he has not studied, as I have,
the history of La Bastie.”
At the word friend Canalis
threw a searching glance at Ernest.
“If your health will allow,”
said the count to the poet, “I shall hope to
receive you this evening under my roof; it will be
a day to mark, as the old writer said ‘albo
notanda lapillo.’ Though we cannot duly
receive so great a fame in our little house, yet your
visit will gratify my daughter, whose admiration for
your poems has even led her to set them to music.”
“You have something better than
fame in your house,” said Canalis; “you
have beauty, if I am to believe Ernest.”
“Yes, a good daughter; but you
will find her rather countrified,” said Charles
Mignon.
“A country girl sought by the
Duc d’Herouville,” remarked Canalis, dryly.
“Oh!” replied Monsieur
Mignon, with the perfidious good-humor of a Southerner,
“I leave my daughter free. Dukes, princes,
commoners, —they are all the same to me,
even men of genius. I shall make no pledges,
and whoever my Modeste chooses will be my son-in-law,
or rather my son,” he added, looking at La Briere.
“It could not be otherwise. Madame de La
Bastie is German. She has never adopted our etiquette,
and I let my two women lead me their own way.
I have always preferred to sit in the carriage rather
than on the box. I can make a joke of all this
at present, for we have not yet seen the Duc d’Herouville,
and I do not believe in marriages arranged by proxy,
any more than I believe in choosing my daughter’s
husband.”
“That declaration is equally
encouraging and discouraging to two young men who
are searching for the philosopher’s stone of
happiness in marriage,” said Canalis.
“Don’t you consider it
useful, necessary, and even politic to stipulate for
perfect freedom of action for parents, daughters, and
suitors?” asked Charles Mignon.
Canalis, at a sign from La Briere,
kept silence. The conversation presently became
unimportant, and after a few turns round the garden
the count retired, urging the visit of the two friends.
“That’s our dismissal,”
cried Canalis; “you saw it as plainly as I did.
Well, in his place, I should not hesitate between the
grand equerry and either of us, charming as we are.”
“I don’t think so,”
said La Briere. “I believe that frank soldier
came here to satisfy his desire to see you, and to
warn us of his neutrality while receiving us in his
house. Modeste, in love with your fame, and misled
by my person, stands, as it were, between the real
and the ideal, between poetry and prose. I am,
unfortunately, the prose.”
“Germain,” said Canalis
to the valet, who came to take away the coffee, “order
the carriage in half an hour. We will take a drive
before we go to the Chalet.”