A SPLENDID FIRST
APPEARANCE
The two young men were equally impatient
to see Modeste, but La Briere dreaded the interview,
while Canalis approached it with the confidence of
self-conceit. The eagerness with which La Briere
had met the father, and the flattery of his attention
to the family pride of the ex-merchant, showed Canalis
his own maladroitness, and determined him to select
a special role. The great poet resolved to pretend
indifference, though all the while displaying his seductive
powers; to appear to disdain the young lady, and thus
pique her self-love. Trained by the handsome
Duchesse de Chaulieu, he was bound to be worthy of
his reputation as a man who knew women, when, in fact,
he did not know them at all,—which is often
the case with those who are the happy victims of an
exclusive passion. While poor Ernest, gloomily
ensconced in his corner of the caleche, gave way to
the terrors of genuine love, and foresaw instinctively
the anger, contempt, and disdain of an injured and
offended young girl, Canalis was preparing himself,
not less silently, like an actor making ready for an
important part in a new play; certainly neither of
them presented the appearance of a happy man.
Important interests were involved for Canalis.
The mere suggestion of his desire to marry would bring
about a rupture of the tie which had bound him for
the last ten years to the Duchesse de Chaulieu.
Though he had covered the purpose of his journey with
the vulgar pretext of needing rest,—in which,
by the bye, women never believe, even when it is true,—his
conscience troubled him somewhat; but the word “conscience”
seemed so Jesuitical to La Briere that he shrugged
his shoulders when the poet mentioned his scruples.
“Your conscience, my friend,
strikes me as nothing more nor less than a dread of
losing the pleasures of vanity, and some very real
advantages and habits by sacrificing the affections
of Madame de Chaulieu; for, if you were sure of succeeding
with Modeste, you would renounce without the slightest
compunction the wilted aftermath of a passion that
has been mown and well-raked for the last eight years.
If you simply mean that you are afraid of displeasing
your protectress, should she find out the object of
your stay here, I believe you. To renounce the
duchess and yet not succeed at the Chalet is too heavy
a risk. You take the anxiety of this alternative
for remorse.”
“You have no comprehension of
feelings,” said the poet, irritably, like a
man who hears truth when he expects a compliment.
“That is what a bigamist should
tell the jury,” retorted La Briere, laughing.
This epigram made another disagreeable
impression on Canalis. He began to think La Briere
too witty and too free for a secretary.
The arrival of an elegant caleche,
driven by a coachman in the Canalis livery, made the
more excitement at the Chalet because the two suitors
were expected, and all the personages of this history
were assembled to receive them, except the duke and
Butscha.
“Which is the poet?” asked
Madame Latournelle of Dumay in the embrasure of a
window, where she stationed herself as soon as she
heard the wheels.
“The one who walks like a drum-major,”
answered the lieutenant.
“Ah!” said the notary’s
wife, examining Canalis, who was swinging his body
like a man who knows he is being looked at. The
fault lay with the great lady who flattered him incessantly
and spoiled him,—as all women older than
their adorers invariably spoil and flatter them; Canalis
in his moral being was a sort of Narcissus. When
a woman of a certain age wishes to attach a man forever,
she begins by deifying his defects, so as to cut off
all possibility of rivalry; for a rival is never,
at the first approach, aware of the super-fine flattery
to which the man is accustomed. Coxcombs are
the product of this feminine manoeuvre, when they
are not fops by nature. Canalis, taken young by
the handsome duchess, vindicated his affectations to
his own mind by telling himself that they pleased
that “grande dame,” whose taste was law.
Such shades of character may be excessively faint,
but it is improper for the historian not to point
them out. For instance, Melchior possessed a
talent for reading which was greatly admired, and
much injudicious praise had given him a habit of exaggeration,
which neither poets nor actors are willing to check,
and which made people say of him (always through De
Marsay) that he no longer declaimed, he bellowed his
verses; lengthening the sounds that he might listen
to himself. In the slang of the green-room, Canalis
“dragged the time.” He was fond of
exchanging glances with his hearers, throwing himself
into postures of self-complacency and practising those
tricks of demeanor which actors call “balancoires,”—the
picturesque phrase of an artistic people. Canalis
had his imitators, and was in fact the head of a school
of his kind. This habit of declamatory chanting
slightly affected his conversation, as we have seen
in his interview with Dumay. The moment the mind
becomes finical the manners follow suit, and the great
poet ended by studying his demeanor, inventing attitudes,
looking furtively at himself in mirrors, and suiting
his discourse to the particular pose which he happened
to have taken up. He was so preoccupied with
the effect he wished to produce, that a practical
joke, Blondet, had bet once or twice, and won the wager,
that he could nonplus him at any moment by merely looking
fixedly at his hair, or his boots, or the tails of
his coats.
These airs and graces, which started
in life with a passport of flowery youth, now seemed
all the more stale and old because Melchior himself
was waning. Life in the world of fashion is quite
as exhausting to men as it is to women, and perhaps
the twenty years by which the duchess exceeded her
lover’s age, weighed more heavily upon him than
upon her; for to the eyes of the world she was always
handsome,—without rouge, without wrinkles,
and without heart. Alas! neither men nor women
have friends who are friendly enough to warn them
of the moment when the fragrance of their modesty grows
stale, when the caressing glance is but an echo of
the stage, when the expression of the face changes
from sentiment to sentimentality, and the artifices
of the mind show their rusty edges. Genius alone
renews its skin like a snake; and in the matter of
charm, as in everything else, it is only the heart
that never grows old. People who have hearts
are simple in all their ways. Now Canalis, as
we know, had a shrivelled heart. He misused the
beauty of his glance by giving it, without adequate
reason, the fixity that comes to the eyes in meditation.
In short, applause was to him a business, in which
he was perpetually on the lookout for gain. His
style of paying compliments, charming to superficial
people, seemed insulting to others of more delicacy,
by its triteness and the cool assurance of its cut-and-dried
flattery. As a matter of fact, Melchior lied like
a courtier. He remarked without blushing to the
Duc de Chaulieu, who made no impression whatever when
he was obliged to address the Chamber as minister
of foreign affairs, “Your excellency was truly
sublime!” Many men like Canalis are purged of
their affectations by the administration of non-success
in little doses.
These defects, slight in the gilded
salons of the faubourg Saint-Germain, where every
one contributes his or her quota of absurdity, and
where these particular forms of exaggerated speech
and affected diction—magniloquence, if you
please to call it so —are surrounded by
excessive luxury and sumptuous toilettes, which are
to some extent their excuse, were certain to be far
more noticed in the provinces, whose own absurdities
are of a totally different type. Canalis, by
nature over-strained and artificial, could not change
his form; in fact, he had had time to grow stiff in
the mould into which the duchess had poured him; moreover,
he was thoroughly Parisian, or, if you prefer it,
truly French. The Parisian is amazed that everything
everywhere is not as it in Paris; the Frenchman, as
it is in France. Good taste, on the contrary,
demands that we adapt ourselves to the customs of
foreigners without losing too much of our own character,—as
did Alcibiades, that model of a gentleman. True
grace is elastic; it lends itself to circumstances;
it is in harmony with all social centres; it wears
a robe of simple material in the streets, noticeable
only by its cut, in preference to the feathers and
flounces of middle-class vulgarity. Now Canalis,
instigated by a woman who loved herself much more
than she loved him, wished to lay down the law and
be, everywhere, such as he himself might see fit to
be. He believed he carried his own public with
him wherever he went,—an error shared by
several of the great men of Paris.
While the poet made a studied and
effective entrance into the salon of the Chalet, La
Briere slipped in behind him like a person of no account.
“Ha! do I see my soldier?”
said Canalis, perceiving Dumay, after addressing a
compliment to Madame Mignon, and bowing to the other
women. “Your anxieties are relieved, are
they not?” he said, offering his hand effusively;
“I comprehend them to their fullest extent after
seeing mademoiselle. I spoke to you of terrestrial
creatures, not of angels.”
All present seemed by their attitudes
to ask the meaning of this speech.
“I shall always consider it
a triumph,” resumed the poet, observing that
everybody wished for an explanation, “to have
stirred to mention on of those men of iron whom Napoleon
had the eye to find and make the supporting piles
on which he tried to build an empire, too colossal
to be lasting: for such structures time alone
is the cement. But this triumph—why
should I be proud of it?—I count for nothing.
It was the triumph of ideas over facts. Your
battles, my dear Monsieur Dumay, your heroic charges,
Monsieur le comte, nay, war itself was the form in
which Napoleon’s idea clothed itself. Of
all of these things, what remains? The sod that
covers them knows nothing; harvests come and go without
revealing their resting-place; were it not for the
historian, the writer, futurity would have no knowledge
of those heroic days. Therefore your fifteen
years of war are now ideas and nothing more; that
which preserves the Empire forever is the poem that
the poets make of them. A nation that can win
such battles must know how to sing them.”
Canalis paused, to gather by a glance
that ran round the circle the tribute of amazement
which he expected of provincials.
“You must be aware, monsieur,
of the regret I feel at not seeing you,” said
Madame Mignon, “since you compensate me with
the pleasure of hearing you.”
Modeste, determined to think Canalis
sublime, sat motionless with amazement; the embroidery
slipped from her fingers, which held it only by the
needleful of thread.
“Modeste, this is Monsieur Ernest
de La Briere. Monsieur Ernest, my daughter,”
said the count, thinking the secretary too much in
the background.
The young girl bowed coldly, giving
Ernest a glance that was meant to prove to every one
present that she saw him for the first time.
“Pardon me, monsieur,”
she said without blushing; “the great admiration
I feel for the greatest of our poets is, in the eyes
of my friends, a sufficient excuse for seeing only
him.”
The pure, fresh voice, with accents
like that of Mademoiselle Mars, charmed the poor secretary,
already dazzled by Modeste’s beauty, and in
his sudden surprise he answered by a phrase that would
have been sublime, had it been true.
“He is my friend,” he said.
“Ah, then you do pardon me,” she replied.
“He is more than a friend,”
cried Canalis taking Ernest by the shoulder and leaning
upon it like Alexander on Hephaestion, “we love
each other as though we were brothers—”
Madame Latournelle cut short the poet’s
speech by pointing to Ernest and saying aloud to her
husband, “Surely that is the gentleman we saw
at church.”
“Why not?” said Charles
Mignon, quickly, observing that Ernest reddened.
Modeste coldly took up her embroidery.
“Madame may be right; I have
been twice in Havre lately,” replied La Briere,
sitting down by Dumay.
Canalis, charmed with Modeste’s
beauty, mistook the admiration she expressed, and
flattered himself he had succeeded in producing his
desired effects.
“I should think a man without
heart, if he had no devoted friend near him,”
said Modeste, to pick up the conversation interrupted
by Madame Latournelle’s awkwardness.
“Mademoiselle, Ernest’s
devotion makes me almost think myself worth something,”
said Canalis; “for my dear Pylades is full of
talent; he was the right hand of the greatest minister
we have had since the peace. Though he holds
a fine position, he is good enough to be my tutor
in the science of politics; he teaches me to conduct
affairs and feeds me with his experience, when all
the while he might aspire to a much better situation.
Oh! he is worth far more than I.” At a gesture
from Modeste he continued gracefully: “Yes,
the poetry that I express he carries in his heart;
and if I speak thus openly before him it is because
he has the modesty of a nun.”
“Enough, oh, enough!”
cried La Briere, who hardly knew which way to look.
“My dear Canalis, you remind me of a mother who
is seeking to marry off her daughter.”
“How is it, monsieur,”
said Charles Mignon, addressing Canalis, “that
you can even think of becoming a political character?”
“It is abdication,” said
Modeste, “for a poet; politics are the resource
of matter-of-fact men.”
“Ah, mademoiselle, the rostrum
is to-day the greatest theatre of the world; it has
succeeded the tournaments of chivalry, it is now the
meeting-place for all intellects, just as the army
has been the rallying-point of courage.”
Canalis stuck spurs into his charger
and talked for ten minutes on political life:
“Poetry was but a preface to the statesman.”
“To-day the orator has become a sublime reasoner,
the shepherd of ideas.” “A poet may
point the way to nations or individuals, but can he
ever cease to be himself?” He quoted Chateaubriand
and declared that he would one day be greater on the
political side than on the literary. “The
forum of France was to be the pharos of humanity.”
“Oral battles supplanted fields of battle:
there were sessions of the Chamber finer than any
Austerlitz, and orators were seen to be as lofty as
generals; they spent their lives, their courage, their
strength, as freely as those who went to war.”
“Speech was surely one of the most prodigal
outlets of the vital fluid that man had ever known,”
etc.
This improvisation of modern commonplaces,
clothed in sonorous phrases and newly invented words,
and intended to prove that the Comte de Canalis was
becoming one of the glories of the French government,
made a deep impression upon the notary and Gobenheim,
and upon Madame Latournelle and Madame Mignon.
Modeste looked as though she were at the theatre,
in an attitude of enthusiasm for an actor,—very
much like that of Ernest toward herself; for though
the secretary knew all these high-sounding phrases
by heart, he listened through the eyes, as it were,
of the young girl, and grew more and more madly in
love with her. To this true lover, Modeste was
eclipsing all the Modestes he had created as he read
her letters and answered them.
This visit, the length of which was
predetermined by Canalis, careful not to allow his
admirers a chance to get surfeited, ended by an invitation
to dinner on the following Monday.
“We shall not be at the Chalet,”
said the Comte de La Bastie. “Dumay will
have sole possession of it. I return to the villa,
having bought it back under a deed of redemption within
six months, which I have to-day signed with Monsieur
Vilquin.”
“I hope,” said Dumay,
“that Vilquin will not be able to return to you
the sum you have just lent him, and that the villa
will remain yours.”
“It is an abode in keeping with
your fortune,” said Canalis.
“You mean the fortune that I
am supposed to have,” replied Charles Mignon,
hastily.
“It would be too sad,”
said Canalis, turning to Modeste with a charming little
bow, “if this Madonna were not framed in a manner
worthy of her divine perfections.”
That was the only thing Canalis said
to Modeste. He affected not to look at her, and
behaved like a man to whom all idea of marriage was
interdicted.
“Ah! my dear Madame Mignon,”
cried the notary’s wife, as soon as the gravel
was heard to grit under the feet of the Parisians,
“what an intellect!”
“Is he rich?—that is the question,”
said Gobenheim.
Modeste was at the window, not losing
a single movement of the great poet, and paying no
attention to his companion. When Monsieur Mignon
returned to the salon, and Modeste, having received
a last bow from the two friends as the carriage turned,
went back to her seat, a weighty discussion took place,
such as provincials invariably hold over Parisians
after a first interview. Gobenheim repeated his
phrase, “Is he rich?” as a chorus to the
songs of praise sung by Madame Latournelle, Modeste,
and her mother.
“Rich!” exclaimed Modeste;
“what can that signify! Do you not see that
Monsieur de Canalis is one of those men who are destined
for the highest places in the State. He has more
than fortune; he possesses that which gives fortune.”
“He will be minister or ambassador,”
said Monsieur Mignon.
“That won’t hinder tax-payers
from having to pay the costs of his funeral,”
remarked the notary.
“How so?” asked Charles Mignon.
“He strikes me as a man who
will waste all the fortunes with whose gifts Mademoiselle
Modeste so liberally endows him,” answered Latournelle.
“Modeste can’t avoid being
liberal to a poet who called her a Madonna,”
said Dumay, sneering, and faithful to the repulsion
with which Canalis had originally inspired him.
Gobenheim arranged the whist-table
with all the more persistency because, since the return
of Monsieur Mignon, Latournelle and Dumay had allowed
themselves to play for ten sous points.
“Well, my little darling,”
said the father to the daughter in the embrasure of
a window. “Admit that papa thinks of everything.
If you send your orders this evening to your former
dressmaker in Paris, and all your other furnishing
people, you shall show yourself eight days hence in
all the splendor of an heiress. Meantime we will
install ourselves in the villa. You already have
a pretty horse, now order a habit; you owe that amount
of civility to the grand equerry.”
“All the more because there
will be a number of us to ride,” said Modeste,
who was recovering the colors of health.
“The secretary did not say much,”
remarked Madame Mignon.
“A little fool,” said
Madame Latournelle; “the poet has an attentive
word for everybody. He thanked Monsieur Latournelle
for his help in choosing the house; and said he must
have taken counsel with a woman of good taste.
But the other looked as gloomy as a Spaniard, and kept
his eyes fixed on Modeste as though he would like to
swallow her whole. If he had even looked at me
I should have been afraid of him.”
“He had a pleasant voice,” said Madame
Mignon.
“No doubt he came to Havre to
inquire about the Mignons in the interests of his
friend the poet,” said Modeste, looking furtively
at her father. “It was certainly he whom
we saw in church.”
Madame Dumay and Monsieur and Madame
Latournelle, accepted this as the natural explanation
of Ernest’s journey.