MODESTE PLAYS
HER PART
The game opened with the baron and
the duke, Gobenheim and Latournelle as partners.
Modeste took a seat near the poet, to Ernest’s
deep disappointment; he watched the face of the wayward
girl, and marked the progress of the fascination which
Canalis exerted over her. La Briere had not the
gift of seduction which Melchior possessed. Nature
frequently denies it to true hearts, who are, as a
rule, timid. This gift demands fearlessness,
an alacrity of ways and means that might be called
the trapeze of the mind; a little mimicry goes with
it; in fact there is always, morally speaking, something
of the comedian in a poet. There is a vast difference
between expressing sentiments we do not feel, though
we may imagine all their variations, and feigning to
feel them when bidding for success on the theatre of
private life. And yet, though the necessary hypocrisy
of a man of the world may have gangrened a poet, he
ends by carrying the faculties of his talent into
the expression of any required sentiment, just as a
great man doomed to solitude ends by infusing his
heart into his mind.
“He is after the millions,”
thought La Briere, sadly; “and he can play passion
so well that Modeste will believe him.”
Instead of endeavoring to appear more
amiable and wittier than his rival, Ernest imitated
the Duc d’Herouville, and was gloomy, anxious,
and watchful; but whereas the courier studied the freaks
of the young heiress, Ernest simply fell a prey to
the pains of dark and concentrated jealousy.
He had not yet been able to obtain a glance from his
idol. After a while he left the room with Butscha.
“It is all over!” he said;
“she is caught by him; I am more disagreeable
to her, and moreover, she is right. Canalis is
charming; there’s intellect in his silence,
passion in his eyes, poetry in his rhodomontades.”
“Is he an honest man?” asked Butscha.
“Oh, yes,” replied La
Briere. “He is loyal and chivalrous, and
capable of getting rid, under Modeste’s influence,
of those affectations which Madame de Chaulieu has
taught him.”
“You are a fine fellow,”
said the hunchback; “but is he capable of loving,—will
he love her?”
“I don’t know,”
answered La Briere. “Has she said anything
about me?” he asked after a moment’s silence.
“Yes,” said Butscha, and
he repeated Modeste’s speech about disguises.
Poor Ernest flung himself upon a bench
and held his head in his hands. He could not
keep back his tears, and he did not wish Butscha to
see them; but the dwarf was the very man to guess
his emotion.
“What troubles you?” he asked.
“She is right!” cried Ernest, springing
up; “I am a wretch.”
And he related the deception into
which Canalis had led him when Modeste’s first
letter was received, carefully pointing out to Butscha
that he had wished to undeceive the young girl before
she herself took off the mask, and apostrophizing,
in rather juvenile fashion, his luckless destiny.
Butscha sympathetically understood the love in the
flavor and vigor of his simple language, and in his
deep and genuine anxiety.
“But why don’t you show
yourself to Mademoiselle Modeste for what you are?”
he said; “why do you let your rival do his exercises?”
“Have you never felt your throat
tighten when you wished to speak to her?” cried
La Briere; “is there never a strange feeling
in the roots of your hair and on the surface of your
skin when she looks at you, —even if she
is thinking of something else?”
“But you had sufficient judgment
to show displeasure when she as good as told her excellent
father that he was a dolt.”
“Monsieur, I love her too well
not to have felt a knife in my heart when I heard
her contradicting her own perfections.”
“Canalis supported her.”
“If she had more self-love than
heart there would be nothing for a man to regret in
losing her,” answered La Briere.
At this moment, Modeste, followed
by Canalis, who had lost the rubber, came out with
her father and Madame Dumay to breathe the fresh air
of the starry night. While his daughter walked
about with the poet, Charles Mignon left her and came
up to La Briere.
“Your friend, monsieur, ought
to have been a lawyer,” he said, smiling and
looking attentively at the young man.
“You must not judge a poet as
you would an ordinary man,—as you would
me, for example, Monsieur le comte,” said La
Briere. “A poet has a mission. He
is obliged by his nature to see the poetry of questions,
just as he expresses that of things. When you
think him inconsistent with himself he is really faithful
to his vocation. He is a painter copying with
equal truth a Madonna and a courtesan. Moliere
is as true to nature in his old men as in his young
ones, and Moliere’s judgment was assuredly a
sound and healthy one. These witty paradoxes might
be dangerous for second-rate minds, but they have
no real influence on the character of great men.”
Charles Mignon pressed La Briere’s hand.
“That adaptability, however,
leads a man to excuse himself in his own eyes for
actions that are diametrically opposed to each other;
above all, in politics.”
“Ah, mademoiselle,” Canalis
was at this moment saying, in a caressing voice, replying
to a roguish remark of Modeste, “do not think
that a multiplicity of emotions can in any way lessen
the strength of feelings. Poets, even more than
other men, must needs love with constancy and faith.
You must not be jealous of what is called the Muse.
Happy is the wife of a man whose days are occupied.
If you heard the complaints of women who have to endure
the burden of an idle husband, either a man without
duties, or one so rich as to have nothing to do, you
would know that the highest happiness of a Parisian
wife is freedom,—the right to rule in her
own home. Now we writers and men of functions
and occupations, we leave the sceptre to our wives;
we cannot descend to the tyranny of little minds; we
have something better to do. If I ever marry,—which
I assure you is a catastrophe very remote at the present
moment,—I should wish my wife to enjoy
the same moral freedom that a mistress enjoys, and
which is perhaps the real source of her attraction.”
Canalis talked on, displaying the
warmth of his fancy and all his graces, for Modeste’s
benefit, as he spoke of love, marriage, and the adoration
of women, until Monsieur Mignon, who had rejoined them,
seized the opportunity of a slight pause to take his
daughter’s arm and lead her up to Ernest de
La Briere, whom he had been advising to seek an open
explanation with her.
“Mademoiselle,” said Ernest,
in a voice that was scarcely his own, “it is
impossible for me to remain any longer under the weight
of your displeasure. I do not defend myself;
I do not seek to justify my conduct; I desire only
to make you see that before reading your most
flattering letter, addressed to the individual and
no longer to the poet,—the last which you
sent to me,—I wished, and I told you in
my note written at Havre that I wished, to correct
the error under which you were acting. All the
feelings that I have had the happiness to express
to you are sincere. A hope dawned on me in Paris
when your father told me he was comparatively poor,—but
now that all is lost, now that nothing is left for
me but endless regrets, why should I stay here where
all is torture? Let me carry away with me one
smile to live forever in my heart.”
“Monsieur,” answered Modeste,
who seemed cold and absent-minded, “I am not
the mistress of this house; but I certainly should
deeply regret to retain any one where he finds neither
pleasure nor happiness.”
She left La Briere and took Madame
Dumay’s arm to re-enter the house. A few
moments later all the actors in this domestic scene
reassembled in the salon, and were a good deal surprised
to see Modeste sitting beside the Duc d’Herouville
and coquetting with him like an accomplished Parisian
woman. She watched his play, gave him the advice
he wanted, and found occasion to say flattering things
by ranking the merits of noble birth with those of
genius and beauty. Canalis thought he knew the
reason of this change; he had tried to pique Modeste
by calling marriage a catastrophe, and showing that
he was aloof from it; but like others who play with
fire, he had burned his fingers. Modeste’s
pride and her present disdain frightened him, and he
endeavored to recover his ground, exhibiting a jealousy
which was all the more visible because it was artificial.
Modeste, implacable as an angel, tasted the sweets
of power, and, naturally enough, abused it. The
Duc d’Herouville had never known such a happy
evening; a woman smiled on him! At eleven o’clock,
an unheard-of hour at the Chalet, the three suitors
took their leave,—the duke thinking Modeste
charming, Canalis believing her excessively coquettish,
and La Briere heart-broken by her cruelty.
For eight days the heiress continued
to be to her three lovers very much what she had been
during that evening; so that the poet appeared to
carry the day against his rivals, in spite of certain
freaks and caprices which from time to time gave the
Duc d’Herouville a little hope. The disrespect
she showed to her father, and the great liberties
she took with him; her impatience with her blind mother,
to whom she seemed to grudge the little services which
had once been the delight of her filial piety,—seemed
the result of a capricious nature and a heedless gaiety
indulged from childhood. When Modeste went too
far, she turned round and openly took herself to task,
ascribing her impertinence and levity to a spirit
of independence. She acknowledged to the duke
and Canalis her distaste for obedience, and professed
to regard it as an obstacle to her marriage; thus
investigating the nature of her suitors, after the
manner of those who dig into the earth in search of
metals, coal, tufa, or water.
“I shall never,” she said,
the evening before the day on which the family were
to move into the villa, “find a husband who will
put up with my caprices as my father does; his kindness
never flags. I am sure no one will ever be as
indulgent to me as my precious mother.”
“They know that you love them,
mademoiselle,” said La Briere.
“You may be very sure, mademoiselle,
that your husband will know the full value of his
treasure,” added the duke.
“You have spirit and resolution
enough to discipline a husband,” cried Canalis,
laughing.
Modeste smiled as Henri IV. must have
smiled after drawing out the characters of his three
principal ministers, for the benefit of a foreign
ambassador, by means of three answers to an insidious
question.
On the day of the dinner, Modeste,
led away by the preference she bestowed on Canalis,
walked alone with him up and down the gravelled space
which lay between the house and the lawn with its flower-beds.
From the gestures of the poet, and the air and manner
of the young heiress, it was easy to see that she
was listening favorably to him. The two demoiselles
d’Herouville hastened to interrupt the scandalous
tete-a-tete; and with the natural cleverness of women
under such circumstances, they turned the conversation
on the court, and the distinction of an appointment
under the crown,—pointing out the difference
that existed between appointments in the household
of the king and those of the crown. They tried
to intoxicate Modeste’s mind by appealing to
her pride, and describing one of the highest stations
to which a woman could aspire.
“To have a duke for a son,”
said the elder lady, “is an actual advantage.
The title is a fortune that we secure to our children
without the possibility of loss.”
“How is it, then,” said
Canalis, displeased at his tete-a-tete being thus
broken in upon, “that Monsieur le duc has had
so little success in a matter where his title would
seem to be of special service to him?”
The two ladies cast a look at Canalis
as full of venom as the tooth of a snake, and they
were so disconcerted by Modeste’s amused smile
that they were actually unable to reply.
“Monsieur le duc has never blamed
you,” she said to Canalis, “for the humility
with which you bear your fame; why should you attack
him for his modesty?”
“Besides, we have never yet
met a woman worthy of my nephew’s rank,”
said Mademoiselle d’Herouville. “Some
had only the wealth of the position; others, without
fortune, had the wit and birth. I must admit
that we have done well to wait till God granted us
an opportunity to meet one in whom we find the noble
blood, the mind, and fortune of a Duchesse d’Herouville.”
“My dear Modeste,” said
Helene d’Herouville, leading her new friend
apart, “there are a thousand barons in the kingdom,
just as there are a hundred poets in Paris, who are
worth as much as he; he is so little of a great man
that even I, a poor girl forced to take the veil for
want of a ‘dot,’ I would not take him.
You don’t know what a young man is who has been
for ten years in the hands of a Duchesse de Chaulieu.
None but an old woman of sixty could put up with the
little ailments of which, they say, the great poet
is always complaining,—a habit in Louis
XIV. that became a perfectly insupportable annoyance.
It is true the duchess does not suffer from it as
much as a wife, who would have him always about her.”
Then, practising a well-known manoeuvre
peculiar to her sex, Helene d’Herouville repeated
in a low voice all the calumnies which women jealous
of the Duchesse de Chaulieu were in the habit of spreading
about the poet. This little incident, common as
it is in the intercourse of women, will serve to show
with what fury the hounds were after Modeste’s
wealth.
Ten days saw a great change in the
opinions at the Chalet as to the three suitors for
Mademoiselle de La Bastie’s hand. This change,
which was much to the disadvantage of Canalis, came
about through considerations of a nature which ought
to make the holders of any kind of fame pause, and
reflect. No one can deny, if we remember the
passion with which people seek for autographs, that
public curiosity is greatly excited by celebrity.
Evidently most provincials never form an exact idea
in their own minds of how illustrious Parisians put
on their cravats, walk on the boulevards, stand gaping
at nothing, or eat a cutlet; because, no sooner do
they perceive a man clothed in the sunbeams of fashion
or resplendent with some dignity that is more or less
fugitive (though always envied), than they cry out,
“Look at that!” “How queer!”
and other depreciatory exclamations. In a word,
the mysterious charm that attaches to every kind of
fame, even that which is most justly due, never lasts.
It is, and especially with superficial people who
are envious or sarcastic, a sensation which passes
off with the rapidity of lightning, and never returns.
It would seem as though fame, like the sun, hot and
luminous at a distance, is cold as the summit of an
alp when you approach it. Perhaps man is only
really great to his peers; perhaps the defects inherent
in his constitution disappear sooner to the eyes of
his equals than to those of vulgar admirers.
A poet, if he would please in ordinary life, must
put on the fictitious graces of those who are able
to make their insignificances forgotten by charming
manners and complying speeches. The poet of the
faubourg Saint-Germain, who did not choose to bow
before this social dictum, was made before long to
feel that an insulting provincial indifference had
succeeded to the dazed fascination of the earlier
evenings. The prodigality of his wit and wisdom
had produced upon these worthy souls somewhat the effect
which a shopful of glass-ware produces on the eye;
in other words, the fire and brilliancy of Canalis’s
eloquence soon wearied people who, to use their own
words, “cared more for the solid.”
Forced after a while to behave like
an ordinary man, the poet found an unexpected stumbling-block
on ground where La Briere had already won the suffrage
of the worthy people who at first had thought him sulky.
They felt the need of compensating themselves for Canalis’s
reputation by preferring his friend. The best
of men are influenced by such feelings as these.
The simple and straightforward young fellow jarred
no one’s self-love; coming to know him better
they discovered his heart, his modesty, his silent
and sure discretion, and his excellent bearing.
The Duc d’Herouville considered him, as a political
element, far above Canalis. The poet, ill-balanced,
ambitious, and restless as Tasso, loved luxury, grandeur,
and ran into debt; while the young lawyer, whose character
was equable and well-balanced, lived soberly, was
useful without proclaiming it, awaited rewards without
begging for them, and laid by his money.
Canalis had moreover laid himself
open in a special way to the bourgeois eyes that were
watching him. For two or three days he had shown
signs of impatience; he had given way to depression,
to states of melancholy without apparent reason, to
those capricious changes of temper which are the natural
results of the nervous temperament of poets.
These originalities (we use the provincial word) came
from the uneasiness that his conduct toward the Duchesse
de Chaulieu which grew daily less explainable, caused
him. He knew he ought to write to her, but could
not resolve on doing so. All these fluctuations
were carefully remarked and commented on by the gentle
American, and the excellent Madame Latournelle, and
they formed the topic of many a discussion between
these two ladies and Madame Mignon. Canalis felt
the effects of these discussions without being able
to explain them. The attention paid to him was
not the same, the faces surrounding him no longer
wore the entranced look of the earlier days; while
at the same time Ernest was evidently gaining ground.
For the last two days the poet had
endeavored to fascinate Modeste only, and he took
advantage of every moment when he found himself alone
with her, to weave the web of passionate language around
his love. Modeste’s blush, as she listened
to him on the occasion we have just mentioned, showed
the demoiselles d’Herouville the pleasure with
which she was listening to sweet conceits that were
sweetly said; and they, horribly uneasy at the sight,
had immediate recourse to the “ultima ratio”
of women in such cases, namely, those calumnies which
seldom miss their object. Accordingly, when the
party met at the dinner-table the poet saw a cloud
on the brow of his idol; he knew that Mademoiselle
d’Herouville’s malignity allowed him to
lose no time, and he resolved to offer himself as
a husband at the first moment when he could find himself
alone with Modeste.
Overhearing a few acid though polite
remarks exchanged between the poet and the two noble
ladies, Gobenheim nudged Butscha with his elbow, and
said in an undertone, motioning towards the poet and
the grand equerry,—
“They’ll demolish one another!”
“Canalis has genius enough to
demolish himself all alone,” answered the dwarf.