III
PATHOLOGY of
retired mercers
When the petty shopkeeper who has
come to Paris from the provinces returns to the provinces
from Paris he brings with him a few ideas; then he
loses them in the habits and ways of provincial life
into which he plunges, and his reforming notions leave
him. From this there do result, however, certain
trifling, slow, successive changes by which Paris
scratches the surface of the provincial towns.
This process marks the transition of the ex-shopkeeper
into the substantial bourgeois, but it acts like an
illness upon him. No retail shopkeeper can pass
with impunity from his perpetual chatter into dead
silence, from his Parisian activity to the stillness
of provincial life. When these worthy persons
have laid by property they spend a portion of it on
some desire over which they have long brooded and into
which they now turn their remaining impulses, no longer
restrained by force of will. Those who have not
been nursing a fixed idea either travel or rush into
the political interests of their municipality.
Others take to hunting or fishing and torment their
farmers or tenants; others again become usurers or
stock-jobbers. As for the scheme of the Rogrons,
brother and sister, we know what that was; they had
to satisfy an imperious desire to handle the trowel
and remodel their old house into a charming new one.
This fixed idea produced upon the
square of Lower Provins the front of the building
which Brigaut had been examining; also the interior
arrangements of the house and its handsome furniture.
The contractor did not drive a nail without consulting
the owners, without requiring them to sign the plans
and specifications, without explaining to them at
full length and in every detail the nature of each
article under discussion, where it was manufactured,
and what were its various prices. As to the choicer
things, each, they were told, had been used by Monsieur
Tiphaine, or Madame Julliard, or Monsieur the mayor,
the notables of the place. The idea of having
things done as the rich bourgeois of Provins did them
carried the day for the contractor.
“Oh, if Monsieur Garceland has
it in his house, put it in,” said Mademoiselle
Rogron. “It must be all right; his taste
is good.”
“Sylvie, see, he wants us to
have ovolos in the cornice of the corridor.”
“Do you call those ovolos?”
“Yes, mademoiselle.”
“What an odd name! I never heard it before.”
“But you have seen the thing?”
“Yes.”
“Do you understand Latin?”
“No.”
“Well, it means eggs—from the Latin
ovum.”
“What queer fellows you are,
you architects!” cried Rogron. “It
is stepping on egg-shells to deal with you.”
“Shall we paint the corridor?” asked the
builder.
“Good heavens, no!” cried
Sylvie. “That would be five hundred francs
more!”
“Oh, but the salon and the staircase
are too pretty not to have the corridor decorated
too,” said the man. “That little Madame
Lesourd had hers painted last year.”
“And now, her husband, as king’s
attorney, is obliged to leave Provins.”
“Ah, he’ll be chief justice
some of these days,” said the builder.
“How about Monsieur Tiphaine?”
“Monsieur Tiphaine? he’s
got a pretty wife and is sure to get on. He’ll
go to Paris. Shall we paint the corridor?”
“Yes, yes,” said Rogron.
“The Lesourds must be made to see that we are
as good as they.”
The first year after the Rogrons returned
to Provins was entirely taken up by such discussions,
by the pleasure of watching the workmen, by the surprise
occasioned to the townspeople and the replies to questions
of all kinds which resulted therefrom, and also by
the attempts made by Sylvie and her brother to be
socially intimate with the principal families of Provins.
The Rogrons had never gone into any
society; they had never left their shop, knowing absolutely
no one in Paris, and now they were athirst for the
pleasures of social life. On their arrival in
Provins they found their former masters in Paris (long
since returned to the provinces), Monsieur and Madame
Julliard, lately of the “Chinese Worm,”
their children and grandchildren; the Guepin family,
or rather the Guepin clan, the youngest scion of which
now kept the “Three Distaffs”; and thirdly,
Madame Guenee from whom they had purchased the “Family
Sister,” and whose three daughters were married
and settled in Provins. These three races, Julliard,
Guepin, and Guenee, had spread through the town like
dog-grass through a lawn. The mayor, Monsieur
Garceland, was the son-in-law of Monsieur Guepin; the
curate, Abbe Peroux, was own brother to Madame Julliard;
the judge, Monsieur Tiphaine junior, was brother to
Madame Guenee, who signed herself “nee
Tiphaine.”
The queen of the town was the beautiful
Madame Tiphaine junior, only daughter of Madame Roguin,
the rich wife of a former notary in Paris, whose name
was never mentioned. Clever, delicate, and pretty,
married in the provinces to please her mother, who
for special reasons did not want her with her, and
took her from a convent only a few days before the
wedding, Melanie Tiphaine considered herself an exile
in Provins, where she behaved to admiration.
Handsomely dowered, she still had hopes. As for
Monsieur Tiphaine, his old father had made to his eldest
daughter Madame Guenee such advances on her inheritance
that an estate worth eight thousand francs a year,
situated within fifteen miles of Provins, was to come
wholly to him. Consequently the Tiphaines would
possess, sooner or later, some forty thousand francs
a year, and were not “badly off,” as they
say. The one overwhelming desire of the beautiful
Madame Tiphaine was to get Monsieur Tiphaine elected
deputy. As deputy he would become a judge in
Paris; and she was firmly resolved to push him up
into the Royal courts. For these reasons she
tickled all vanities and strove to please all parties;
and—what is far more difficult—she
succeeded. Twice a week she received the bourgeoisie
of Provins at her house in the Upper town. This
intelligent young woman of twenty had not as yet made
a single blunder or misstep on the slippery path she
had taken. She gratified everybody’s self-love,
and petted their hobbies; serious with the serious,
a girl with girls, instinctively a mother with mothers,
gay with young wives and disposed to help them, gracious
to all,—in short, a pearl, a treasure,
the pride of Provins. She had never yet said
a word of her intentions and wishes, but all the electors
of Provins were awaiting the time when their dear
Monsieur Tiphaine had reached the required age for
nomination. Every man in the place, certain of
his own talents, regarded the future deputy as his
particular friend, his protector. Of course, Monsieur
Tiphaine would attain to honors; he would be Keeper
of the Seals, and then, what wouldn’t he do
for Provins!
Such were the pleasant means by which
Madame Tiphaine had come to rule over the little town.
Madame Guenee, Monsieur Tiphaine’s sister, after
having married her eldest daughter to Monsieur Lesourd,
prosecuting attorney, her second to Monsieur Martener,
the doctor, and the third to Monsieur Auffray, the
notary, had herself married Monsieur Galardon, the
collector. Mother and daughters all considered
Monsieur Tiphaine as the richest and ablest man in
the family. The prosecuting attorney had the
strongest interest in sending his uncle to Paris,
expecting to step into his shoes as judge of the local
court of Provins. The four ladies formed a sort
of court round Madame Tiphaine, whose ideas and advice
they followed on all occasions. Monsieur Julliard,
the eldest son of the old merchant, who had married
the only daughter of a rich farmer, set up a sudden,
secret, and disinterested passion for Madame Tiphaine,
that angel descended from the Parisian skies.
The clever Melanie, too clever to involve herself with
Julliard, but quite capable of keeping him in the condition
of Amadis and making the most of his folly, advised
him to start a journal, intending herself to play
the part of Egeria. For the last two years, therefore,
Julliard, possessed by his romantic passion, had published
the said newspaper, called the “Bee-hive,”
which contained articles literary, archaeological,
and medical, written in the family. The advertisements
paid expenses. The subscriptions, two hundred
in all, made the profits. Every now and then
melancholy verses, totally incomprehensible in La
Brie, appeared, addressed, “To her!!!”
with three exclamation marks. The clan Julliard
was thus united to the other clans, and the salon
of Madame Tiphaine became, naturally, the first in
the town. The few aristocrats who lived in Provins
were, of course, apart, and formed a single salon
in the Upper town, at the house of the old Comtesse
de Breautey.
During the first six months of their
transplantation, the Rogrons, favored by their former
acquaintance with several of these people, were received,
first by Madame Julliard the elder, and by the former
Madame Guenee, now Madame Galardon (from whom they
had bought their business), and next, after a good
deal of difficulty, by Madame Tiphaine. All parties
wished to study the Rogrons before admitting them.
It was difficult, of course, to keep out merchants
of the rue Saint-Denis, originally from Provins, who
had returned to the town to spend their fortunes.
Still, the object of all society is to amalgamate
persons of equal wealth, education, manners, customs,
accomplishments, and character. Now the Guepins,
Guenees, and Julliards had a better position among
the bourgeoisie than the Rogrons, whose father had
been held in contempt on account of his private life,
and his conduct in the matter of the Auffray property,
—the facts of which were known to the notary
Auffray, Madame Galardon’s son-in-law.
In the social life of these people,
to which Madame Tiphaine had given a certain tone
of elegance, all was homogeneous; the component parts
understood each other, knew each other’s characters,
and behaved and conversed in a manner that was agreeable
to all. The Rogrons flattered themselves that
being received by Monsieur Garceland, the mayor, they
would soon be on good terms with all the best families
in the town. Sylvie applied herself to learn
boston. Rogron, incapable of playing a game,
twirled his thumbs and had nothing to say except to
discourse on his new house. Words seemed to choke
him; he would get up, try to speak, become frightened,
and sit down again, with comical distortion of the
lips. Sylvie naively betrayed her natural self
at cards. Sharp, irritable, whining when she
lost, insolent when she won, nagging and quarrelsome,
she annoyed her partners as much as her adversaries,
and became the scourge of society. And yet, possessed
by a silly, unconcealed ambition, Rogron and his sister
were bent on playing a part in the society of a little
town already in possession of a close corporation
of twelve allied families. Allowing that the restoration
of their house had cost them thirty thousand francs,
the brother and sister possessed between them at least
ten thousand francs a year. This they considered
wealth, and with it they endeavored to impress society,
which immediately took the measure of their vulgarity,
crass ignorance, and foolish envy. On the evening
when they were presented to the beautiful Madame Tiphaine,
who had already eyed them at Madame Garceland’s
and at Madame Julliard the elder’s, the queen
of the town remarked to Julliard junior, who stayed
a few moments after the rest of the company to talk
with her and her husband:—
“You all seem to be taken with those Rogrons.”
“No, no,” said Amadis,
“they bore my mother and annoy my wife.
When Mademoiselle Sylvie was apprenticed, thirty years
ago, to my father, none of them could endure her.”
“I have a great mind,”
said Madame Tiphaine, putting her pretty foot on the
bar of the fender, “to make it understood that
my salon is not an inn.”
Julliard raised his eyes to the ceiling,
as if to say, “Good heavens? what wit, what
intellect!”
“I wish my society to be select;
and it certainly will not be if I admit those Rogrons.”
“They have neither heart, nor
mind, nor manners”; said Monsieur Tiphaine.
“If, after selling thread for twenty years, as
my sister did for example—”
“Your sister, my dear,”
said his wife in a parenthesis, “cannot be out
of place in any salon.”
“—if,” he continued,
“people are stupid enough not to throw off the
shop and polish their manners, if they don’t
know any better than to mistake the Counts of Champagne
for the accounts of a wine-shop, as Rogron
did this evening, they had better, in my opinion, stay
at home.”
“They are simply impudent,”
said Julliard. “To hear them talk you would
suppose there was no other handsome house in Provins
but theirs. They want to crush us; and after
all, they have hardly enough to live on.”
“If it was only the brother,”
said Madame Tiphaine, “one might put up with
him; he is not so aggressive. Give him a Chinese
puzzle and he will stay in a corner quietly enough;
it would take him a whole winter to find it out.
But Mademoiselle Sylvie, with that voice like a hoarse
hyena and those lobster-claws of hands! Don’t
repeat all this, Julliard.”
When Julliard had departed the little
woman said to her husband:—
“I have aborigines enough whom
I am forced to receive; these two will fairly kill
me. With your permission, I shall deprive myself
of their society.”
“You are mistress in your own
house,” replied he; “but that will make
enemies. The Rogrons will fling themselves into
the opposition, which hitherto has had no real strength
in Provins. That Rogron is already intimate with
Baron Gouraud and the lawyer Vinet.”
“Then,” said Melanie,
laughing, “they will do you some service.
Where there are no opponents, there is no triumph.
A liberal conspiracy, an illegal cabal, a struggle
of any kind, will bring you into the foreground.”
The justice looked at his young wife
with a sort of alarmed admiration.
The next day it was whispered about
that the Rogrons had not altogether succeeded in Madame
Tiphaine’s salon. That lady’s speech
about an inn was immensely admired. It was a whole
month before she returned Mademoiselle Sylvie’s
visit. Insolence of this kind is very much noticed
in the provinces.
During the evening which Sylvie had
spent at Madame Tiphaine’s a disagreeable scene
occurred between herself and old Madame Julliard while
playing boston, apropos of a trick which Sylvie declared
the old lady had made her lose on purpose; for the
old maid, who liked to trip others, could never endure
the same game on herself. The next time she was
invited out the mistress took care to make up the card-tables
before she arrived; so that Sylvie was reduced to wandering
from table to table as an onlooker, the players glancing
at her with scornful eyes. At Madame Julliard
senior’s house, they played whist, a game Sylvie
did not know.
The old maid at last understood that
she was under a ban; but she had no conception of
the reason of it. She fancied herself an object
of jealousy to all these persons. After a time
she and her brother received no invitations, but they
still persisted in paying evening visits. Satirical
persons made fun of them,—not spitefully,
but amusingly; inveigling them to talk absurdly about
the eggs in their cornice, and their wonderful cellar
of wine, the like of which was not in Provins.
Before long the Rogron house was completely
finished, and the brother and sister then resolved
to give several sumptuous dinners, as much to return
the civilities they had received as to exhibit their
luxury. The invited guests accepted from curiosity
only. The first dinner was given to the leading
personages of the town; to Monsieur and Madame Tiphaine,
with whom, however the Rogrons had never dined; to
Monsieur and Madame Julliard, senior and junior; to
Monsieur Lesourd, Monsieur le cure, and Monsieur and
Madame Galardon. It was one of those interminable
provincial dinners, where you sit at table from five
to nine o’clock. Madame Tiphaine had introduced
into Provins the Parisian custom of taking leave as
soon as coffee had been served. On this occasion
she had company at home and was anxious to get away.
The Rogrons accompanied her husband and herself to
the street door, and when they returned to the salon,
disconcerted at not being able to keep their chief
guests, the rest of the party were preparing to imitate
Madame Tiphaine’s fashion with cruel provincial
promptness.
“They won’t see our salon
lighted up,” said Sylvie, “and that’s
the show of the house.”
The Rogrons had counted on surprising
their guests. It was the first time any one had
been admitted to the now celebrated house, and the
company assembled at Madame Tiphaine’s was eagerly
awaiting her opinion of the marvels of the “Rogron
palace.”
“Well!” cried little Madame
Martener, “you’ve seen the Louvre; tell
us all about it.”
“All? Well, it would be like the dinner,—not
much.”
“But do describe it.”
“Well, to begin with, that front
door, the gilded grating of which we have all admired,”
said Madame Tiphaine, “opens upon a long corridor
which divides the house unequally; on the right side
there is one window, on the other, two. At the
garden end, the corridor opens with a glass door upon
a portico with steps to the lawn, where there’s
a sun dial and a plaster statue of Spartacus, painted
to imitate bronze. Behind the kitchen, the builder
has put the staircase, and a sort of larder which
we are spared the sight of. The staircase, painted
to imitate black marble with yellow veins, turns upon
itself like those you see in cafes leading from the
ground-floor to the entresol. The balustrade,
of walnut with brass ornaments and dangerously slight,
was pointed out to us as one of the seven wonders
of the world. The cellar stairs run under it.
On the other side of the corridor is the dining-room,
which communicates by folding-doors with a salon of
equal size, the windows of which look on the garden.”
“Dear me, is there no ante-chamber?” asked
Madame Auffray.
“The corridor, full of draughts,
answers for an ante-chamber,” replied Madame
Tiphaine. “Our friends have had, they assured
us, the eminently national, liberal, constitutional,
and patriotic feeling to use none but French woods
in the house; so the floor in the dining-room is chestnut,
the sideboards, tables, and chairs, of the same.
White calico window-curtains, with red borders, are
held back by vulgar red straps; these magnificent
draperies run on wooden curtain rods ending in brass
lion’s-paws. Above one of the sideboards
hangs a dial suspended by a sort of napkin in gilded
bronze,—an idea that seemed to please the
Rogrons hugely. They tried to make me admire the
invention; all I could manage to say was that if it
was ever proper to wrap a napkin round a dial it was
certainly in a dining-room. On the sideboard
were two huge lamps like those on the counter of a
restaurant. Above the other sideboard hung a barometer,
excessively ornate, which seems to play a great part
in their existence; Rogron gazed at it as he might
at his future wife. Between the two windows is
a white porcelain stove in a niche overloaded with
ornament. The walls glow with a magnificent paper,
crimson and gold, such as you see in the same restaurants,
where, no doubt, the Rogrons chose it. Dinner
was served on white and gold china, with a dessert
service of light blue with green flowers, but they
showed us another service in earthenware for everyday
use. Opposite to each sideboard was a large cupboard
containing linen. All was clean, new, and horribly
sharp in tone. However, I admit the dining-room;
it has some character, though disagreeable; it represents
that of the masters of the house. But there is
no enduring the five engravings that hang on the walls;
the Minister of the Interior ought really to frame
a law against them. One was Poniatowski jumping
into the Elster; the others, Napoleon pointing a cannon,
the defence at Clichy, and the two Mazepas, all in
gilt frames of the vulgarest description,—fit
to carry off the prize of disgust. Oh! how much
I prefer Madame Julliard’s pastels of fruit,
those excellent Louis XV. pastels, which are in keeping
with the old dining-room and its gray panels,—defaced
by age, it is true, but they possess the true provincial
characteristics that go well with old family silver,
precious china, and our simple habits. The provinces
are provinces; they are only ridiculous when they mimic
Paris. I prefer this old salon of my husband’s
forefathers, with its heavy curtains of green and
white damask, the Louis XV. mantelpiece, the twisted
pier-glasses, the old mirrors with their beaded mouldings,
and the venerable card tables. Yes, I prefer
my old Sevres vases in royal blue, mounted on copper,
my clock with those impossible flowers, that rococco
chandelier, and the tapestried furniture, to all the
finery of the Rogron salon.”
“What is the salon like?”
said Monsieur Martener, delighted with the praise
the handsome Parisian bestowed so adroitly on the provinces.
“As for the salon, it is all
red,—the red Mademoiselle Sylvie turns
when she loses at cards.”
“Sylvan-red,” said Monsieur
Tiphaine, whose sparkling saying long remained in
the vocabulary of Provins.
“Window-curtains, red; furniture,
red; mantelpiece, red, veined yellow, candelabra and
clock ditto mounted on bronze, common and heavy in
design,—Roman standards with Greek foliage!
Above the clock is that inevitable good-natured lion
which looks at you with a simper, the lion of ornamentation,
with a big ball under his feet, symbol of the decorative
lion, who passes his life holding a black ball, —exactly
like a deputy of the Left. Perhaps it is meant
as a constitutional myth. The face of the clock
is curious. The glass over the chimney is framed
in that new fashion of applied mouldings which is
so trumpery and vulgar. From the ceiling hangs
a chandelier carefully wrapped in green muslin, and
rightly too, for it is in the worst taste, the sharpest
tint of bronze with hideous ornaments. The walls
are covered with a red flock paper to imitate velvet
enclosed in panels, each panel decorated with a chromo-lithograph
in one of those frames festooned with stucco flowers
to represent wood-carving. The furniture, in
cashmere and elm-wood, consists, with classic uniformity,
of two sofas, two easy-chairs, two armchairs, and six
common chairs. A vase in alabaster, called a la
Medicis, kept under glass stands on a table between
the windows; before the windows, which are draped
with magnificent red silk curtains and lace curtains
under them, are card-tables. The carpet is Aubusson,
and you may be sure the Rogrons did not fail to lay
hands on that most vulgar of patterns, large flowers
on a red ground. The room looks as if no one ever
lived there; there are no books, no engravings, none
of those little knick-knacks we all have lying about,”
added Madame Tiphaine, glancing at her own table covered
with fashionable trifles, albums, and little presents
given to her by friends; “and there are no flowers,—it
is all cold and barren, like Mademoiselle Sylvie herself.
Buffon says the style is the man, and certainly salons
have styles of their own.”
From this sketch everybody can see
the sort of house the brother and sister lived in,
though they can never imagine the absurdities into
which a clever builder dragged the ignorant pair,—new
inventions, fantastic ornaments, a system for preventing
smoky chimneys, another for preventing damp walls;
painted marquetry panels on the staircase, colored
glass, superfine locks,—in short, all those
vulgarities which make a house expensive and gratify
the bourgeois taste.
No one chose to visit the Rogrons,
whose social plans thus came to nothing. Their
invitations were refused under various excuses,—the
evenings were already engaged to Madame Garceland and
the other ladies of the Provins world. The Rogrons
had supposed that all that was required to gain a
position in society was to give a few dinners.
But no one any longer accepted them, except a few
young men who went to make fun of their host and hostess,
and certain diners-out who went everywhere.
Frightened at the loss of forty thousand
francs swallowed up without profit in what she called
her “dear house,” Sylvie now set to work
to recover it by economy. She gave no more dinners,
which had cost her forty or fifty francs without the
wines, and did not fulfil her social hopes, hopes
that are as hard to realize in the provinces as in
Paris. She sent away her cook, took a country-girl
to do the menial work, and did her own cooking, as
she said, “for pleasure.”
Fourteen months after their return
to Provins, the brother and sister had fallen into
a solitary and wholly unoccupied condition. Their
banishment from society roused in Sylvie’s heart
a dreadful hatred against the Tiphaines, Julliards
and all the other members of the social world of Provins,
which she called “the clique,” and with
whom her personal relations became extremely cold.
She would gladly have set up a rival clique, but the
lesser bourgeoisie was made up of either small shopkeepers
who were only free on Sundays and fete-days, or smirched
individuals like the lawyer Vinet and Doctor Neraud,
and wholly inadmissible Bonapartists like Baron Gouraud,
with whom, however, Rogron thoughtlessly allied himself,
though the upper bourgeoisie had warned him against
them.
The brother and sister were, therefore,
forced to sit by the fire of the stove in the dining-room,
talking over their former business, trying to recall
the faces of their customers and other matters they
had intended to forget. By the end of the second
winter ennui weighed heavily on them. They did
not know how to get through each day; sometimes as
they went to bed the words escaped them, “There’s
another over!” They dragged out the morning
by staying in bed, and dressing slowly. Rogron
shaved himself every day, examined his face, consulted
his sister on any changes he thought he saw there,
argued with the servant about the temperature of his
hot water, wandered into the garden, looked to see
if the shrubs were budding, sat at the edge of the
water where he had built himself a kiosk, examined
the joinery of his house,—had it sprung?
had the walls settled, the panels cracked? or he would
come in fretting about a sick hen, and complaining
to his sister, who was nagging the servant as she
set the table, of the dampness which was coming out
in spots upon the plaster. The barometer was
Rogron’s most useful bit of property. He
consulted it at all hours, tapped it familiarly like
a friend, saying: “Vile weather!”
to which his sister would reply, “Pooh! it is
only seasonable.” If any one called to
see him the excellence of that instrument was his chief
topic of conversation.
Breakfast took up some little time;
with what deliberation those two human beings masticated
their food! Their digestions were perfect; cancer
of the stomach was not to be dreaded by them.
They managed to get along till twelve o’clock
by reading the “Bee-hive” and the “Constitutionnel.”
The cost of subscribing to the Parisian paper was
shared by Vinet the lawyer, and Baron Gouraud.
Rogron himself carried the paper to Gouraud, who had
been a colonel and lived on the square, and whose
long yarns were Rogron’s delight; the latter
sometimes puzzled over the warnings he had received,
and asked himself how such a lively companion could
be dangerous. He was fool enough to tell the
colonel he had been warned against him, and to repeat
all the “clique” had said. God knows
how the colonel, who feared no one, and was equally
to be dreaded with pistols or a sword, gave tongue
about Madame Tiphaine and her Amadis, and the ministerialists
of the Upper town, persons capable of any villany
to get places, and who counted the votes at elections
to suit themselves, etc.
About two o’clock Rogron started
for a little walk. He was quite happy if some
shopkeeper standing on the threshold of his door would
stop him and say, “Well, pere Rogron, how goes
it with you?” Then he would talk, and
ask for news, and gather all the gossip of the town.
He usually went as far as the Upper town, sometimes
to the ravines, according to the weather. Occasionally
he would meet old men taking their walks abroad like
himself. Such meetings were joyful events to
him. There happened to be in Provins a few men
weary of Parisian life, quiet scholars who lived with
their books. Fancy the bewilderment of the ignorant
Rogron when he heard a deputy-judge named Desfondrilles,
more of an archaeologist than a magistrate, saying
to old Monsieur Martener, a really learned man, as
he pointed to the valley:—
“Explain to me why the idlers
of Europe go to Spa instead of coming to Provins,
when the springs here have a superior curative value
recognized by the French faculty,—a potential
worthy of the medicinal properties of our roses.”
“That is one of the caprices
of caprice,” said the old gentleman. “Bordeaux
wine was unknown a hundred years ago. Marechal
de Richelieu, one of the noted men of the last century,
the French Alcibiades, was appointed governor of Guyenne.
His lungs were diseased, and, heaven knows why! the
wine of the country did him good and he recovered.
Bordeaux instantly made a hundred millions; the marshal
widened its territory to Angouleme, to Cahors,—in
short, to over a hundred miles of circumference! it
is hard to tell where the Bordeaux vineyards end.
And yet they haven’t erected an equestrian statue
to the marshal in Bordeaux!”
“Ah! if anything of that kind
happens to Provins,” said Monsieur Desfondrilles,
“let us hope that somewhere in the Upper or Lower
town they will set up a bas-relief of the head of
Monsieur Opoix, the re-discoverer of the mineral waters
of Provins.”
“My dear friend, the revival
of Provins is impossible,” replied Monsieur
Martener; “the town was made bankrupt long ago.”
“What!” cried Rogron, opening his eyes
very wide.
“It was once a capital, holding
its own against Paris in the twelfth century, when
the Comtes de Champagne held their court here, just
as King Rene held his in Provence,” replied
the man of learning; “for in those days civilization,
gaiety, poesy, elegance, and women, in short all social
splendors, were not found exclusively in Paris.
It is as difficult for towns and cities as it is for
commercial houses to recover from ruin. Nothing
is left to us of the old Provins but the fragrance
of our historical glory and that of our roses,—and
a sub-prefecture!”
“Ah! what mightn’t France
be if she had only preserved her feudal capitals!”
said Desfondrilles. “Can sub-prefects replace
the poetic, gallant, warlike race of the Thibaults
who made Provins what Ferrara was to Italy, Weimar
to Germany,—what Munich is trying to be
to-day.”
“Was Provins ever a capital?” asked Rogron.
“Why! where do you come from?”
exclaimed the archaeologist. “Don’t
you know,” he added, striking the ground of
the Upper town where they stood with his cane, “don’t
you know that the whole of this part of Provins is
built on catacombs?”
“Catacombs?”
“Yes, catacombs, the extent
and height of which are yet undiscovered. They
are like the naves of cathedrals, and there are pillars
in them.”
“Monsieur is writing a great
archaeological work to explain these strange constructions,”
interposed Monsieur Martener, seeing that the deputy-judge
was about to mount his hobby.
Rogron came home much comforted to
know that his house was in the valley. The crypts
of Provins kept him occupied for a week in explorations,
and gave a topic of conversation to the unhappy celibates
for many evenings.
In the course of these ramblings Rogron
picked up various bits of information about Provins,
its inhabitants, their marriages, together with stale
political news; all of which he narrated to his sister.
Scores of times in his walks he would stop and say,—often
to the same person on the same day,—“Well,
what’s the news?” When he reached home
he would fling himself on the sofa like a man exhausted
with labor, whereas he was only worn out with the
burden of his own dulness. Dinner came at last,
after he had gone twenty times to the kitchen and
back, compared the clocks, and opened and shut all
the doors of the house. So long as the brother
and sister could spend their evenings in paying visits
they managed to get along till bedtime; but after they
were compelled to stay at home those evenings became
like a parching desert. Sometimes persons passing
through the quiet little square would hear unearthly
noises as though the brother were throttling the sister;
a moment’s listening would show that they were
only yawning. These two human mechanisms, having
nothing to grind between their rusty wheels, were
creaking and grating at each other. The brother
talked of marrying, but only in despair. He felt
old and weary; the thought of a woman frightened him.
Sylvie, who began to see the necessity of having a
third person in the home, suddenly remembered the
little cousin, about whom no one in Provins had yet
inquired, the friends of Madame Lorrain probably supposing
that mother and child were both dead.
Sylvie Rogron never lost anything;
she was too thoroughly an old maid even to mislay
the smallest article; but she pretended to have suddenly
found the Lorrains’ letter, so as to mention
Pierrette naturally to her brother, who was greatly
pleased at the possibility of having a little girl
in the house. Sylvie replied to Madame Lorrain’s
letter half affectionately, half commercially, as one
may say, explaining the delay by their change of abode
and the settlement of their affairs. She seemed
desirous of receiving her little cousin, and hinted
that Pierrette would perhaps inherit twelve thousand
francs a year if her brother Jerome did not marry.
Perhaps it is necessary to have been,
like Nebuchadnezzar, something of a wild beast, and
shut up in a cage at the Jardin des Plantes without
other prey than the butcher’s meat doled out
by the keeper, or a retired merchant deprived of the
joys of tormenting his clerks, to understand the impatience
with which the brother and sister awaited the arrival
of their cousin Lorrain. Three days after the
letter had gone, the pair were already asking themselves
when she would get there.
Sylvie perceived in her spurious benevolence
towards her poor cousin a means of recovering her
position in the social world of Provins. She
accordingly went to call on Madame Tiphaine, of whose
reprobation she was conscious, in order to impart
the fact of Pierrette’s approaching arrival,—deploring
the girl’s unfortunate position, and posing
herself as being only too happy to succor her and give
her a position as daughter and future heiress.
“You have been rather long in
discovering her,” said Madame Tiphaine, with
a touch of sarcasm.
A few words said in a low voice by
Madame Garceland, while the cards were being dealt,
recalled to the minds of those who heard her the shameful
conduct of old Rogron about the Auffray property; the
notary explained the iniquity.
“Where is the little girl now?”
asked Monsieur Tiphaine, politely.
“In Brittany,” said Rogron.
“Brittany is a large place,” remarked
Monsieur Lesourd.
“Her grandfather and grandmother
Lorrain wrote to us—when was that, my dear?”
said Rogron addressing his sister.
Sylvie, who was just then asking Madame
Garceland where she had bought the stuff for her gown,
answered hastily, without thinking of the effect of
her words:—
“Before we sold the business.”
“And have you only just answered
the letter, mademoiselle?” asked the notary.
Sylvie turned as red as a live coal.
“We wrote to the Institution of Saint-Jacques,”
remarked Rogron.
“That is a sort of hospital
or almshouse for old people,” said Monsieur
Desfondrilles, who knew Nantes. “She can’t
be there; they receive no one under sixty.”
“She is there, with her grandmother Lorrain,”
said Rogron.
“Her mother had a little fortune,
the eight thousand francs which your father—no,
I mean of course your grandfather—left to
her,” said the notary, making the blunder intentionally.
“Ah!” said Rogron, stupidly, not understanding
the notary’s sarcasm.
“Then you know nothing about
your cousin’s position or means?” asked
Monsieur Tiphaine.
“If Monsieur Rogron had known
it,” said the deputy-judge, “he would
never have left her all this time in an establishment
of that kind. I remember now that a house in
Nantes belonging to Monsieur and Madame Lorrain was
sold under an order of the court, and that Mademoiselle
Lorrain’s claim was swallowed up. I know
this, for I was commissioner at the time.”
The notary spoke of Colonel Lorrain,
who, had he lived, would have been much amazed to
know that his daughter was in such an institution.
The Rogrons beat a retreat, saying to each other that
the world was very malicious. Sylvie perceived
that the news of her benevolence had missed its effect,—in
fact, she had lost ground in all minds; and she felt
that henceforth she was forbidden to attempt an intimacy
with the upper class of Provins. After this evening
the Rogrons no longer concealed their hatred of that
class and all its adherents. The brother told
the sister the scandals that Colonel Gouraud and the
lawyer Vinet had put into his head about the Tiphaines,
the Guenees, the Garcelands, the Julliards, and others:—
“I declare, Sylvie, I don’t
see why Madame Tiphaine should turn up her nose at
shopkeeping in the rue Saint-Denis; it is more honest
than what she comes from. Madame Roguin, her
mother, is cousin to those Guillaumes of the ‘Cat-playing-ball’
who gave up the business to Joseph Lebas, their son-in-law.
Her father is that Roguin who failed in 1819, and
ruined the house of Cesar Birotteau. Madame Tiphaine’s
fortune was stolen,—for what else are you
to call it when a notary’s wife who is very
rich lets her husband make a fraudulent bankruptcy?
Fine doings! and she marries her daughter in Provins
to get her out of the way,—all on account
of her own relations with du Tillet. And such
people set up to be proud! Well, well, that’s
the world!”
On the day when Jerome Rogron and
his sister began to declaim against “the clique”
they were, without being aware of it, on the road to
having a society of their own; their house was to become
a rendezvous for other interests seeking a centre,—those
of the hitherto floating elements of the liberal party
in Provins. And this is how it came about:
The launch of the Rogrons in society had been watched
with great curiosity by Colonel Gouraud and the lawyer
Vinet, two men drawn together, first by their ostracism,
next by their opinions. They both professed patriotism
and for the same reason,—they wished to
become of consequence. The Liberals in Provins
were, so far, confined to one old soldier who kept
a cafe, an innkeeper, Monsieur Cournant a notary,
Doctor Neraud, and a few stray persons, mostly farmers
or those who had bought lands of the public domain.
The colonel and the lawyer, delighted
to lay hands on a fool whose money would be useful
to their schemes, and who might himself, in certain
cases, be made to bell the cat, while his house would
serve as a meeting-ground for the scattered elements
of the party, made the most of the Rogrons’
ill-will against the upper classes of the place.
The three had already a slight tie in their united
subscription to the “Constitutionnel”;
it would certainly not be difficult for the colonel
to make a Liberal of the ex-mercer, though Rogron knew
so little of politics that he was capable of regarding
the exploits of Sergeant Mercier as those of a brother
shopkeeper.
The expected arrival of Pierrette
brought to sudden fruition the selfish ideas of the
two men, inspired as they were by the folly and ignorance
of the celibates. Seeing that Sylvie had lost
all chance of establishing herself in the good society
of the place, an afterthought came to the colonel.
Old soldiers have seen so many horrors in all lands,
so many grinning corpses on battle-fields, that no
physiognomies repel them; and Gouraud began to cast
his eyes on the old maid’s fortune. This
imperial colonel, a short, fat man, wore enormous
rings in ears that were bushy with tufts of hair.
His sparse and grizzled whiskers were called in 1799
“fins.” His jolly red face was rather
discolored, like those of all who had lived to tell
of the Beresina. The lower half of his big, pointed
stomach marked the straight line which characterizes
a cavalry officer. Gouraud had commanded the
Second Hussars. His gray moustache hid a huge
blustering mouth,—if we may use a term
which alone describes that gulf. He did not eat
his food, he engulfed it. A sabre cut had slit
his nose, by which his speech was made thick and very
nasal, like that attributed to Capuchins. His
hands, which were short and broad, were of the kind
that make women say: “You have the hands
of a rascal.” His legs seemed slender for
his torso. In that fat and active body an absolutely
lawless spirit disported itself, and a thorough experience
of the things of life, together with a profound contempt
for social convention, lay hidden beneath the apparent
indifference of a soldier. Colonel Gouraud wore
the cross of an officer of the Legion of honor, and
his emoluments from that, together with his salary
as a retired officer, gave him in all about three
thousand francs a year.
The lawyer, tall and thin, had liberal
opinions in place of talent, and his only revenue
was the meagre profits of his office. In Provins
lawyers plead their own cases. The court was unfavorable
to Vinet on account of his opinions; consequently,
even the farmers who were Liberals, when it came to
lawsuits preferred to employ some lawyer who was more
congenial to the judges. Vinet was regarded with
disfavor in other ways. He was said to have seduced
a rich girl in the neighborhood of Coulommiers, and
thus have forced her parents to marry her to him.
Madame Vinet was a Chargeboeuf, an old and noble family
of La Brie, whose name comes from the exploit of a
squire during the expedition of Saint Louis to Egypt.
She incurred the displeasure of her father and mother,
who arranged, unknown to Vinet, to leave their entire
fortune to their son, doubtless charging him privately,
to pay over a portion of it to his sister’s
children.
Thus the first bold effort of the
ambitious man was a failure. Pursued by poverty,
and ashamed not to give his wife the means of making
a suitable appearance, he had made desperate efforts
to enter public life, but the Chargeboeuf family refused
him their influence. These Royalists disapproved,
on moral grounds, of his forced marriage; besides,
he was named Vinet, and how could they be expected
to protect a plebian? Thus he was driven from
branch to branch when he tried to get some good out
of his marriage. Repulsed by every one, filled
with hatred for the family of his wife, for the government
which denied him a place, for the social world of
Provins, which refused to admit him, Vinet submitted
to his fate; but his gall increased. He became
a Liberal in the belief that his fortune might yet
be made by the triumph of the opposition, and he lived
in a miserable little house in the Upper town from
which his wife seldom issued. Madame Vinet had
found no one to defend her since her marriage except
an old Madame de Chargeboeuf, a widow with one daughter,
who lived at Troyes. The unfortunate young woman,
destined for better things, was absolutely alone in
her home with a single child.
There are some kinds of poverty which
may be nobly accepted and gaily borne; but Vinet,
devoured by ambition, and feeling himself guilty towards
his wife, was full of darkling rage; his conscience
grew elastic; and he finally came to think any means
of success permissible. His young face changed.
Persons about the courts were sometimes frightened
as they looked at his viperish, flat head, his slit
mouth, his eyes gleaming through glasses, and heard
his sharp, persistent voice which rasped their nerves.
His muddy skin, with its sickly tones of green and
yellow, expressed the jaundice of his balked ambition,
his perpetual disappointments and his hidden wretchedness.
He could talk and argue; he was well-informed and shrewd,
and was not without smartness and metaphor. Accustomed
to look at everything from the standpoint of his own
success, he was well fitted for a politician.
A man who shrinks from nothing so long as it is legal,
is strong; and Vinet’s strength lay there.
This future athlete of parliamentary
debate, who was destined to share in proclaiming the
dynasty of the house of Orleans had a terrible influence
on Pierrette’s fate. At the present moment
he was bent on making for himself a weapon by founding
a newspaper at Provins. After studying the Rogrons
at a distance (the colonel aiding him) he had come
to the conclusion that the brother might be made useful.
This time he was not mistaken; his days of poverty
were over, after seven wretched years, when even his
daily bread was sometimes lacking. The day when
Gouraud told him in the little square that the Rogrons
had finally quarrelled with the bourgeois aristocracy
of the Upper town, he nudged the colonel in the ribs
significantly, and said, with a knowing look:—
“One woman or another—handsome
or ugly—you don’t care; marry
Mademoiselle Rogron and we can organize something at
once.”
“I have been thinking of it,”
replied Gouraud, “but the fact is they have
sent for the daughter of Colonel Lorrain, and she’s
their next of kin.”
“You can get them to make a
will in your favor. Ha! you would get a very
comfortable house.”
“As for the little girl—well,
well, let’s see her,” said the colonel,
with a leering and thoroughly wicked look, which proved
to a man of Vinet’s quality how little respect
the old trooper could feel for any girl.