MODESTE BEHAVES
WITH DIGNITY
On re-entering the salon Ernest de
La Briere found a young officer of the company of
the guard d’Havre, the Vicomte de Serizy, who
had just arrived from Rosny to announce that Madame
was obliged to be present at the opening of the Chambers.
We know the importance then attached to this constitutional
solemnity, at which Charles X. delivered his speech,
surrounded by the royal family,—Madame la
Dauphine and Madame being present in their
gallery. The choice of the emissary charged with
the duty of expressing the princess’s regrets
was an attention to Diane, who was then an object
of adoration to this charming young man, son of a
minister of state, gentleman in ordinary of the chamber,
only son and heir to an immense fortune. The
Duchesse de Maufrigneuse permitted his attentions
solely for the purpose of attracting notice to the
age of his mother, Madame de Serizy, who was said,
in those chronicles that are whispered behind the
fans, to have deprived her of the heart of the handsome
Lucien de Rubempre.
“You will do us the pleasure,
I hope, to remain at Rosembray,” said the severe
duchess to the young officer.
While giving ear to every scandal,
the devout lady shut her eyes to the derelictions
of her guests who had been carefully selected by the
duke; indeed, it is surprising how much these excellent
women will tolerate under pretence of bringing the
lost sheep back to the fold by their indulgence.
“We reckoned without our constitutional
government,” said the grand equerry; “and
Rosembray, Madame la duchesse, will lose a great honor.”
“We shall be more at our ease,”
said a tall thin old man, about seventy-five years
of age, dressed in blue cloth, and wearing his hunting-cap
by permission of the ladies. This personage, who
closely resembled the Duc de Bourbon, was no less
than the Prince de Cadignan, Master of the Hunt, and
one of the last of the great French lords. Just
as La Briere was endeavoring to slip behind the sofa
and obtain a moment’s intercourse with Modeste,
a man of thirty-eight, short, fat, and very common
in appearance, entered the room.
“My son, the Prince de Loudon,”
said the Duchesse de Verneuil to Modeste, who could
not restrain the expression of amazement that overspread
her young face on seeing the man who bore the historical
name that the hero of La Vendee had rendered famous
by his bravery and the martyrdom of his death.
“Gaspard,” said the duchess,
calling her son to her. The young prince came
at once, and his mother continued, motioning to Modeste,
“Mademoiselle de La Bastie, my friend.”
The heir presumptive, whose marriage
with Desplein’s only daughter had lately been
arranged, bowed to the young girl without seeming struck,
as his father had been, with her beauty. Modeste
was thus enabled to compare the youth of to-day with
the old age of a past epoch; for the old Prince de
Cadignan had already said a few words which made her
feel that he rendered as true a homage to womanhood
as to royalty. The Duc de Rhetore, the eldest
son of the Duchesse de Chaulieu, chiefly remarkable
for manners that were equally impertinent and free
and easy, bowed to Modeste rather cavalierly.
The reason of this contrast between the fathers and
the sons is to be found, probably, in the fact that
young men no longer feel themselves great beings, as
their forefathers did, and they dispense with the
duties of greatness, knowing well that they are now
but the shadow of it. The fathers retain the
inherent politeness of their vanished grandeur, like
the mountain-tops still gilded by the sun when all
is twilight in the valley.
Ernest was at last able to slip a
word into Modeste’s ear, and she rose immediately.
“My dear,” said the duchesse,
thinking she was going to dress, and pulling a bell-rope,
“they shall show you your apartment.”
Ernest accompanied Modeste to the
foot of the grand staircase, presenting the request
of the luckless poet, and endeavoring to touch her
feelings by describing Melchior’s agony.
“You see, he loves—he
is a captive who thought he could break his chain.”
“Love in such a rapid seeker
after fortune!” retorted Modeste.
“Mademoiselle, you are at the
entrance of life; you do not know its defiles.
The inconsistencies of a man who falls under the dominion
of a woman much older than himself should be forgiven,
for he is really not accountable. Think how many
sacrifices Canalis has made to her. He has sown
too much seed of that kind to resign the harvest; the
duchess represents to him ten years of devotion and
happiness. You made him forget all that, and
unfortunately, he has more vanity than pride; he did
not reflect on what he was losing until he met Madame
Chaulieu here to-day. If you really understood
him, you would help him. He is a child, always
mismanaging his life. You call him a seeker after
fortune, but he seeks very badly; like all poets, he
is a victim of sensations; he is childish, easily
dazzled like a child by anything that shines, and
pursuing its glitter. He used to love horses and
pictures, and he craved fame,—well, he sold
his pictures to buy armor and old furniture of the
Renaissance and Louis XV.; just now he is seeking
political power. Admit that his hobbies are noble
things.”
“You have said enough,”
replied Modeste; “come,” she added, seeing
her father, whom she called with a motion of her head
to give her his arm; “come with me, and I will
give you that scrap of paper; you shall carry it to
the great man and assure him of my condescension to
his wishes, but on one condition,—you must
thank him in my name for the pleasure I have taken
in seeing one of the finest of the German plays performed
in my honor. I have learned that Goethe’s
masterpiece is neither Faust nor Egmont—”
and then, as Ernest looked at the malicious girl with
a puzzled air, she added: “It is Torquato
Tasso! Tell Monsieur de Canalis to re-read it,”
she added smiling; “I particularly desire that
you will repeat to your friend word for word what
I say; for it is not an epigram, it is the justification
of his conduct,—with this trifling difference,
that he will, I trust, become more and more reasonable,
thanks to the folly of his Eleonore.”
The duchess’s head-woman conducted
Modeste and her father to their apartment, where Francoise
Cochet had already put everything in order, and the
choice elegance of which astounded the colonel, more
especially after he heard from Francoise that there
were thirty other apartments in the chateau decorated
with the same taste.
“This is what I call a proper
country-house,” said Modeste.
“The Comte de La Bastie must
build you one like it,” replied her father.
“Here, monsieur,” said
Modeste, giving the bit of paper to Ernest; “carry
it to our friend and put him out of his misery.”
The word our friend struck
the young man’s heart. He looked at Modeste
to see if there was anything real in the community
of interests which she seemed to admit, and she, understanding
perfectly what his look meant, added, “Come,
go at once, your friend is waiting.”
La Briere colored excessively, and
left the room in a state of doubt and anxiety less
endurable than despair. The path that approaches
happiness is, to the true lover, like the narrow way
which Catholic poetry has called the entrance to Paradise,—expressing
thus a dark and gloomy passage, echoing with the last
cries of earthly anguish.
An hour later this illustrious company
were all assembled in the salon; some were playing
whist, others conversing; the women had their embroideries
in hand, and all were waiting the announcement of dinner.
The Prince de Cadignan was drawing Monsieur Mignon
out upon China, and his campaigns under the empire,
and making him talk about the Portendueres, the L’Estorades,
and the Maucombes, Provencal families; he blamed him
for not seeking service, and assured him that nothing
would be easier than to restore him to his rank as
colonel of the Guard.
“A man of your birth and your
fortune ought not to belong to the present Opposition,”
said the prince, smiling.
This society of distinguished persons
not only pleased Modeste, but it enabled her to acquire,
during her stay, a perfection of manners which without
this revelation she would have lacked all her life.
Show a clock to an embryo mechanic, and you reveal
to him the whole mechanism; he thus develops the germs
of his faculty which lie dormant within him.
In like manner Modeste had the instinct to appropriate
the distinctive qualities of Madame de Maufrigneuse
and Madame de Chaulieu. For her, the sight of
these women was an education; whereas a bourgeois
would merely have ridiculed their ways or made them
absurd by clumsy imitation. A well-born, well-educated,
and right-minded young woman like Modeste fell naturally
into connection with these people, and saw at once
the differences that separate the aristocratic world
from the bourgeois world, the provinces from the faubourg
Saint-Germain; she caught the almost imperceptible
shadings; in short, she perceived the grace of the
“grande dame” without doubting that she
could herself acquire it. She noticed also that
her father and La Briere appeared infinitely better
in this Olympus than Canalis. The great poet,
abdicating his real and incontestable power, that of
the mind, became nothing more than a courtier seeking
a ministry, intriguing for an order, and forced to
please the whole galaxy. Ernest de La Briere,
without ambitions, was able to be himself; while Melchior
became, to use a vulgar expression, a mere toady, and
courted the Prince de Loudon, the Duc de Rhetore,
the Vicomte de Serizy, or the Duc de Maufrigneuse,
like a man not free to assert himself, as did Colonel
Mignon, who was justly proud of his campaigns, and
of the confidence of the Emperor Napoleon. Modeste
took note of the strained efforts of the man of real
talent, seeking some witticism that should raise a
laugh, some clever speech, some compliment with which
to flatter these grand personages, whom it was his
interest to please. In a word, to Modeste’s
eyes the peacock plucked out his tail-feathers.
Toward the middle of the evening the
young girl sat down with the grand equerry in a corner
of the salon. She led him there purposely to
end a suit which she could no longer encourage if she
wished to retain her self-respect.
“Monsieur le duc, if you really
knew me,” she said, “you would understand
how deeply I am touched by your attentions. It
is because of the profound respect I feel for your
character, and the friendship which a soul like yours
inspires in mine, that I cannot endure to wound your
self-love. Before your arrival in Havre I loved
sincerely, deeply, and forever, one who is worthy
of being loved, and my affection for whom is still
a secret; but I wish you to know—and in
saying this I am more sincere than most young girls—that
had I not already formed this voluntary attachment,
you would have been my choice, for I recognize your
noble and beautiful qualities. A few words which
your aunt and sister have said to me as to your intentions
lead me to make this frank avowal. If you think
it desirable, a letter from my mother shall recall
me, on pretence of her illness, to-morrow morning
before the hunt begins. Without your consent I
do not choose to be present at a fete which I owe
to your kindness, and where, if my secret should escape
me, you might feel hurt and defrauded. You will
ask me why I have come here at all. I could not
withstand the invitation. Be generous enough
not to reproach me for what was almost a necessary
curiosity. But this is not the chief, not the
most delicate thing I have to say to you. You
have firm friends in my father and myself,—more
so than perhaps you realize; and as my fortune was
the first cause that brought you to me, I wish to say—but
without intending to use it as a sedative to calm the
grief which gallantry requires you to testify—that
my father has thought over the affair of the marshes,
his friend Dumay thinks your project feasible, and
they have already taken steps to form a company.
Gobenheim, Dumay, and my father have subscribed fifteen
hundred thousand francs, and undertake to get the
rest from capitalists, who will feel it in their interest
to take up the matter. If I have not the honor
of becoming the Duchesse d’Herouville, I have
almost the certainty of enabling you to choose her,
free from all trammels in your choice, and in a higher
sphere than mine. Oh! let me finish,” she
cried, at a gesture from the duke.
“Judging by my nephew’s
emotion,” whispered Mademoiselle d’Herouville
to her niece, “it is easy to see you have a sister.”
“Monsieur le duc, all this was
settled in my mind the day of our first ride, when
I heard you deplore your situation. This is what
I have wished to say to you. That day determined
my future life. Though you did not make the conquest
of a woman, you have at least gained faithful friends
at Ingouville—if you will deign to accord
us that title.”
This little discourse, which Modeste
had carefully thought over, was said with so much
charm of soul that the tears came to the grand equerry’s
eyes; he seized her hand and kissed it.
“Stay during the hunt,”
he said; “my want of merit has accustomed me
to these refusals; but while accepting your friendship
and that of the colonel, you must let me satisfy myself
by the judgment of competent scientific men, that
the draining of those marshes will be no risk to the
company you speak of, before I agree to the generous
offer of your friends. You are a noble girl,
and though my heart aches to think I can only be your
friend, I will glory in that title, and prove it to
you at all times and in all seasons.”
“In that case, Monsieur le duc,
let us keep our secret. My choice will not be
known, at least I think not, until after my mother’s
complete recovery. I should like our first blessing
to come from her eyes.”