X
VERDICTS—LEGAL
AND OTHER
Meantime Rogron’s marriage with
Mademoiselle de Chargeboeuf took place. Sylvie
moved to the second floor of the house, which she shared
with Madame de Chargeboeuf, for the first floor was
entirely taken up by the new wife. The beautiful
Madame Rogron succeeded to the social place of the
beautiful Madame Tiphaine. The influence of the
marriage was immense. No one now came to visit
Sylvie, but Madame Rogron’s salon was always
full.
Sustained by the influence of his
mother-in-law and the bankers du Tillet and Nucingen,
Monsieur Tiphaine was fortunate enough to do some
service to the administration; he became one of its
chief orators, was made judge in the civil courts,
and obtained the appointment of his nephew Lesourd
to his own vacant place as president of the court of
Provins. This appointment greatly annoyed Desfondrilles.
The Keeper of the Seals sent down one of his own proteges
to fill Lesourd’s place. The promotion
of Monsieur Tiphaine and his translation to Paris were
therefore of no benefit at all to the Vinet party;
but Vinet nevertheless made a clever use of the result.
He had always told the Provins people that they were
being used as a stepping-stone to raise the crafty
Madame Tiphaine into grandeur; Tiphaine himself had
tricked them; Madame Tiphaine despised both Provins
and its people in her heart, and would never return
there again. Just at this crisis Monsieur Tiphaine’s
father died; his son inherited a fine estate and sold
his house in Provins to Monsieur Julliard. The
sale proved to the minds of all how little the Tiphaines
thought of Provins. Vinet was right; Vinet had
been a true prophet. These things had great influence
on the question of Pierrette’s guardianship.
Thus the dreadful martyrdom brutally
inflicted on the poor child by two imbecile tyrants
(which led, through its consequences, to the terrible
operation of trepanning, performed by Monsieur Martener
under the advice of Doctor Bianchon),—all
this horrible drama reduced to judicial form was left
to float in the vile mess called in legal parlance
the calendar. The case was made to drag through
the delays and the interminable labyrinths of the
law, by the shufflings of an unprincipled lawyer;
and during all this time the calumniated girl languished
in the agony of the worst pain known to science.
Monsieur Martener, together with the
Auffray family, were soon charmed by the beauty of
Pierrette’s nature and the character of her old
grandmother, whose feelings, ideas, and ways bore the
stamp of Roman antiquity,—this matron of
the Marais was like a woman in Plutarch.
Doctor Martener struggled bravely
with death, which already grasped its prey. From
the first, Bianchon and the hospital surgeon had considered
Pierrette doomed; and there now took place between
the doctor and the disease, the former relying on
Pierrette’s youth, one of those struggles which
physicians alone comprehend,—the reward
of which, in case of success, is never found in the
venal pay nor in the patients themselves, but in the
gentle satisfaction of conscience, in the invisible
ideal palm gathered by true artists from the contentment
which fills their soul after accomplishing a noble
work. The physician strains towards good as an
artist towards beauty, each impelled by that grand
sentiment which we call virtue. This daily contest
wiped out of Doctor Martener’s mind the petty
irritations of that other contest of the Tiphaines
and the Vinets,—as always happens to men
when they find themselves face to face with a great
and real misery to conquer.
Monsieur Martener had begun his career
in Paris; but the cruel activity of the city and its
insensibility to its masses of suffering had shocked
his gentle soul, fitted only for the quiet life of
the provinces. Moreover, he was under the yoke
of his beautiful native land. He returned to
Provins, where he married and settled, and cared almost
lovingly for the people, who were to him like a large
family. During the whole of Pierrette’s
illness he was careful not to speak of her. His
reluctance to answer the questions of those who asked
about her was so evident that persons soon ceased
to put them. Pierrette was to him, what indeed
she truly was, a poem, mysterious, profound, vast
in suffering, such as doctors find at times in their
terrible experience. He felt an admiration for
this delicate young creature which he would not share
with any one.
This feeling of the physician for
his patient was, however, unconsciously communicated
(like all true feelings) to Monsieur and Madame Auffray,
whose house became, so long as Pierrette was in it,
quiet and silent. The children, who had formerly
played so joyously with her, agreed among themselves
with the loving grace of childhood to be neither noisy
nor troublesome. They made it a point of honor
to be good because Pierrette was ill. Monsieur
Auffray’s house was in the Upper town, beneath
the ruins of the Chateau, and it was built upon a
sort of terrace formed by the overthrow of the old
ramparts. The occupants could have a view of
the valley from the little fruit-garden enclosed by
walls which overlooked the town. The roofs of
the other houses came to about the level of the lower
wall of this garden. Along the terrace ran a
path, by which Monsieur Auffray’s study could
be entered through a glass door; at the other end
of the path was an arbor of grape vines and a fig-tree,
beneath which stood a round table, a bench and some
chairs, painted green. Pierrette’s bedroom
was above the study of her new guardian. Madame
Lorrain slept in a cot beside her grandchild.
From her window Pierrette could see the whole of the
glorious valley of Provins, which she hardly knew,
so seldom had she left that dreadful house of the
Rogrons. When the weather was fine she loved
to drag herself, resting on her grandmother’s
arm, to the vine-clad arbor. Brigaut, unable
to work, came three times a day to see his little
friend; he was gnawed by a grief which made him indifferent
to life. He lay in wait like a dog for Monsieur
Martener, and followed him when he left the house.
The old grandmother, drunk with grief, had the courage
to conceal her despair; she showed her darling the
smiling face she formerly wore at Pen-Hoel. In
her desire to produce that illusion in the girl’s
mind, she made her a little Breton cap like the one
Pierrette had worn on her first arrival in Provins;
it made the darling seem more like her childlike self;
in it she was delightful to look upon, her sweet face
circled with a halo of cambric and fluted lace.
Her skin, white with the whiteness of unglazed porcelain,
her forehead, where suffering had printed the semblance
of deep thought, the purity of the lines refined by
illness, the slowness of the glances, and the occasional
fixity of the eyes, made Pierrette an almost perfect
embodiment of melancholy. She was served by all
with a sort of fanaticism; she was felt to be so gentle,
so tender, so loving. Madame Martener sent her
piano to her sister Madame Auffray, thinking to amuse
Pierrette who was passionately fond of music.
It was a poem to watch her listening to a theme of
Weber, or Beethoven, or Herold,—her eyes
raised, her lips silent, regretting no doubt the life
escaping her. The cure Peroux and Monsieur Habert,
her two religious comforters, admired her saintly
resignation. Surely the seraphic perfection of
young girls and young men marked with the hectic of
death, is a wonderful fact worthy of the attention
alike of philosophers and of heedless minds.
He who has ever seen one of these sublime departures
from this life can never remain, or become, an unbeliever.
Such beings exhale, as it were, a celestial fragrance;
their glances speak of God; the voices are eloquent
in the simplest words; often they ring like some seraphic
instrument revealing the secrets of the future.
When Monsieur Martener praised her for having faithfully
followed a harsh prescription the little angel replied,
and with what a glance!—
“I want to live, dear Monsieur
Martener; but less for myself than for my grandmother,
for my Brigaut, for all of you who will grieve at my
death.”
The first time she went into the garden
on a beautiful sunny day in November attended by all
the household, Madame Auffray asked her if she was
tired.
“No, now that I have no sufferings
but those God sends I can bear all,” she said.
“The joy of being loved gives me strength to
suffer.”
That was the only time (and then vaguely)
that she ever alluded to her horrible martyrdom at
the Rogrons, whom she never mentioned, and of whom
no one reminded her, knowing well how painful the memory
must be.
“Dear Madame Auffray,”
she said one day at noon on the terrace, as she gazed
at the valley, warmed by a glorious sun and colored
with the glowing tints of autumn, “my death
in your house gives me more happiness than I have
had since I left Brittany.”
Madame Auffray whispered in her sister Martener’s
ear:—
“How she would have loved!”
In truth, her tones, her looks gave to her words a
priceless value.
Monsieur Martener corresponded with
Doctor Bianchon, and did nothing of importance without
his advice. He hoped in the first place to regular
the functions of nature and to draw away the abscess
in the head through the ear. The more Pierrette
suffered, the more he hoped. He gained some slight
success at times, and that was a great triumph.
For several days Pierrette’s appetite returned
and enabled her to take nourishing food for which
her illness had given her a repugnance; the color
of her skin changed; but the condition of her head
was terrible. Monsieur Martener entreated the
great physician his adviser to come down. Bianchon
came, stayed two days, and resolved to undertake an
operation. To spare the feelings of poor Martener
he went to Paris and brought back with him the celebrated
Desplein. Thus the operation was performed by
the greatest surgeon of ancient or modern times; but
that terrible diviner said to Martener as he departed
with Bianchon, his best-loved pupil:—
“Nothing but a miracle can save
her. As Horace told you, caries of the bone has
begun. At her age the bones are so tender.”
The operation was performed at the
beginning of March, 1828. During all that month,
distressed by Pierrette’s horrible sufferings,
Monsieur Martener made several journeys to Paris; there
he consulted Desplein and Bianchon, and even went
so far as to propose to them an operation of the nature
of lithotrity, which consists in passing into the
head a hollow instrument by the help of which an heroic
remedy can be applied to the diseased bone, to arrest
the progress of the caries. Even the bold Desplein
dared not attempt that high-handed surgical measure,
which despair alone had suggested to Martener.
When he returned home from Paris he seemed to his
friends morose and gloomy. He was forced to announce
on that fatal evening to the Auffrays and Madame Lorrain
and to the two priests and Brigaut that science could
do no more for Pierrette, whose recovery was now in
God’s hands only. The consternation among
them was terrible. The grandmother made a vow,
and requested the priests to say a mass every morning
at daybreak before Pierrette rose,—a mass
at which she and Brigaut might be present.
The trial came on. While the
victim lay dying, Vinet was calumniating her in court.
The judge approved and accepted the report of the Family
Council, and Vinet instantly appealed. The newly
appointed procureur du roi made a requisition
which necessitated fresh evidence. Rogron and
his sister were forced to give bail to avoid going
to prison. The order for fresh evidence included
that of Pierrette herself. When Monsieur Desfondrilles
came to the Auffrays’ to receive it, Pierrette
was dying, her confessor was at her bedside about to
administer extreme unction. At that moment she
entreated all present to forgive her cousins as she
herself forgave them, saying with her simple good
sense that the judgment of these things belonged to
God alone.
“Grandmother,” she said,
“leave all you have to Brigaut” (Brigaut
burst into tears); “and,” continued Pierrette,
“give a thousand francs to that kind Adele who
warmed my bed. If Adele had remained with my
cousins I should not now be dying.”
It was at three o’clock on the
Tuesday of Easter week, on a beautiful, bright day,
that the angel ceased to suffer. Her heroic grandmother
wished to watch all that night with the priests, and
to sew with her stiff old fingers her darling’s
shroud. Towards evening Brigaut left the Auffray’s
house and went to Frappier’s.
“I need not ask you, my poor
boy, for news,” said the cabinet-maker.
“Pere Frappier, yes, it is ended
for her—but not for me.”
He cast a look upon the different
woods piled up around the shop,—a look
of painful meaning.
“I understand you, Brigaut,”
said his worthy master. “Take all you want.”
And he showed him the oaken planks of two-inch thickness.
“Don’t help me, Monsieur
Frappier,” said the Breton, “I wish to
do it alone.”
He passed the night in planing and
fitting Pierrette’s coffin, and more than once
his plane took off at a single pass a ribbon of wood
which was wet with tears. The good man Frappier
smoked his pipe and watched him silently, saying only,
when the four pieces were joined together,—
“Make the cover to slide; her
poor grandmother will not hear the nails.”
At daybreak Brigaut went out to fetch
the lead to line the coffin. By a strange chance,
the sheets of lead cost just the sum he had given
Pierrette for her journey from Nantes to Provins.
The brave Breton, who was able to resist the awful
pain of himself making the coffin of his dear one
and lining with his memories those burial planks, could
not bear up against this strange reminder. His
strength gave way; he was not able to lift the lead,
and the plumber, seeing this, came with him, and offered
to accompany him to the house and solder the last
sheet when the body had been laid in the coffin.
The Breton burned the plane and all
the tools he had used. Then he settled his accounts
with Frappier and bade him farewell. The heroism
with which the poor lad personally performed, like
the grandmother, the last offices for Pierrette made
him a sharer in the awful scene which crowned the
tyranny of the Rogrons.
Brigaut and the plumber reached the
house of Monsieur Auffray just in time to decide by
their own main force an infamous and shocking judicial
question. The room where the dead girl lay was
full of people, and presented to the eyes of the two
men a singular sight. The Rogron emissaries were
standing beside the body of their victim, to torture
her even after death. The corpse of the child,
solemn in its beauty, lay on the cot-bed of her grandmother.
Pierrette’s eyes were closed, the brown hair
smoothed upon her brow, the body swathed in a coarse
cotton sheet.
Before the bed, on her knees, her
hair in disorder, her hands stretched out, her face
on fire, the old Lorrain was crying out, “No,
no, it shall not be done!”
At the foot of the bed stood Monsieur
Auffray and the two priests. The tapers were
still burning.
Opposite to the grandmother was the
surgeon of the hospital, with an assistant, and near
him stood Doctor Neraud and Vinet. The surgeon
wore his dissecting apron; the assistant had opened
a case of instruments and was handing him a knife.
This scene was interrupted by the
noise of the coffin which Brigaut and the plumber
set down upon the floor. Then Brigaut, advancing,
was horrified at the sight of Madame Lorrain, who
was now weeping.
“What is the matter?”
he asked, standing beside her and grasping the chisel
convulsively in his hand.
“This,” said the old woman,
“this, Brigaut: they want to open
the body of my child and cut into her head, and stab
her heart after her death as they did when she was
living.”
“Who?” said Brigaut, in
a voice that might have deafened the men of law.
“The Rogrons.”
“In the sacred name of God!—”
“Stop, Brigaut,” said
Monsieur Auffray, seeing the lad brandish his chisel.
“Monsieur Auffray,” said
Brigaut, as white as his dead companion, “I
hear you because you are Monsieur Auffray, but at this
moment I will not listen to—”
“The law!” said Auffray.
“Is there law? is there justice?”
cried the Breton. “Justice, this is it!”
and he advanced to the lawyer and the doctors, threatening
them with his chisel.
“My friend,” said the
curate, “the law has been invoked by the lawyer
of Monsieur Rogron, who is under the weight of a serious
accusation; and it is impossible for us to refuse
him the means of justification. The lawyer of
Monsieur Rogron claims that if the poor child died
of an abscess in her head her former guardian cannot
be blamed, for it is proved that Pierrette concealed
the effects of the blow which she gave to herself—”
“Enough!” said Brigaut.
“My client—” began Vinet.
“Your client,” cried the
Breton, “shall go to hell and I to the scaffold;
for if one of you dares to touch her whom your client
has killed, I will kill him if my weapon does its
duty.”
“This is interference with the
law,” said Vinet. “I shall instantly
inform the court.”
The five men left the room.
“Oh, my son!” cried the
old woman, rising from her knees and falling on Brigaut’s
neck, “let us bury her quick,—they
will come back.”
“If we solder the lead,”
said the plumber, “they may not dare to open
it.”
Monsieur Auffray hastened to his brother-in-law,
Monsieur Lesourd, to try and settle the matter.
Vinet was not unwilling. Pierrette being dead
the suit about the guardianship fell, of course, to
the ground. All the astute lawyer wanted was
the effect produced by his request.
At midday Monsieur Desfondrilles made
his report on the case, and the court rendered a decision
that there was no ground for further action.
Rogron dared not go to Pierrette’s
funeral, at which the whole town was present.
Vinet wished to force him there, but the miserable
man was afraid of exciting universal horror.
Brigaut left Provins after watching
the filling up of the grave where Pierrette lay, and
went on foot to Paris. He wrote a petition to
the Dauphiness asking, in the name of his father,
that he might enter the Royal guard, to which he was
at once admitted. When the expedition to Algiers
was undertaken he wrote to her again, to obtain employment
in it. He was then a sergeant; Marshal Bourmont
gave him an appointment as sub-lieutenant in a line
regiment. The major’s son behaved like a
man who wished to die. Death has, however, respected
Jacques Brigaut up to the present time; although he
has distinguished himself in all the recent expeditions
he has never yet been wounded. He is now major
in a regiment of infantry. No officer is more
taciturn or more trustworthy. Outside of his
duty he is almost mute; he walks alone and lives mechanically.
Every one divines and respects a hidden sorrow.
He possesses forty-six thousand francs, which old
Madame Lorrain, who died in Paris in 1829, bequeathed
to him.
At the elections of 1830 Vinet was
made a deputy. The services he rendered the new
government have now earned him the position of procureur-general.
His influence is such that he will always remain a
deputy. Rogron is receiver-general in the same
town where Vinet fulfils his legal functions; and
by one of those curious tricks of chance which do
so often occur, Monsieur Tiphaine is president of the
Royal court in the same town,—for the worthy
man gave in his adhesion to the dynasty of July without
the slightest hesitation. The ex-beautiful Madame
Tiphaine lives on excellent terms with the beautiful
Madame Rogron. Vinet is hand in glove with Madame
Tiphaine.
As to the imbecile Rogron, he makes
such remarks as, “Louis-Philippe will never
be really king till he is able to make nobles.”
The speech is evidently not his own.
His health is failing, which allows Madame Rogron
to hope she may soon marry the General Marquis de
Montriveau, peer of France, who commands the department,
and is paying her attentions. Vinet is in his
element, seeking victims; he never believes in the
innocence of an accused person. This thoroughbred
prosecutor is held to be one of the most amiable men
on the circuit; and he is no less liked in Paris and
in the Chamber; at court he is a charming courtier.
According to a certain promise made
by Vinet, General Baron Gouraud, that noble relic
of our glorious armies, married a Mademoiselle Matifat,
twenty-five years old, daughter of a druggist in the
rue des Lombards, whose dowry was a hundred thousand
francs. He commands (as Vinet prophesied) a department
in the neighborhood of Paris. He was named peer
of France for his conduct in the riots which occurred
during the ministry of Casimir Perier. Baron Gouraud
was one of the generals who took the church of Saint-Merry,
delighted to rap those rascally civilians who had
vexed him for years over the knuckles; for which service
he was rewarded with the grand cordon of the Legion
of honor.
None of the personages connected with
Pierrette’s death ever felt the slightest remorse
about it. Monsieur Desfondrilles is still archaeological,
but, in order to compass his own election, the procureur
general Vinet took pains to have him appointed
president of the Provins court. Sylvie has a
little circle, and manages her brother’s property;
she lends her own money at high interest, and does
not spend more than twelve hundred francs a year.
From time to time, when some former
son or daughter of Provins returns from Paris to settle
down, you may hear them ask, as they leave Mademoiselle
Rogron’s house, “Wasn’t there a painful
story against the Rogrons,—something about
a ward?”
“Mere prejudice,” replies
Monsieur Desfondrilles. “Certain persons
tried to make us believe falsehoods. Out of kindness
of heart the Rogrons took in a girl named Pierrette,
quite pretty but with no money. Just as she was
growing up she had an intrigue with a young man, and
stood at her window barefooted talking to him.
The lovers passed notes to each other by a string.
She took cold in this way and died, having no constitution.
The Rogrons behaved admirably. They made no claim
on certain property which was to come to her,—they
gave it all up to the grandmother. The moral
of it was, my good friend, that the devil punishes
those who try to benefit others.”
“Ah! that is quite another story
from the one old Frappier told me.”
“Frappier consults his wine-cellar
more than he does his memory,” remarked another
of Mademoiselle Rogron’s visitors.
“But that old priest, Monsieur Habert says—”
“Oh, he! don’t you know why?”
“No.”
“He wanted to marry his sister
to Monsieur Rogron, the receiver-general.”
* * * *
*
Two men think of Pierrette daily:
Doctor Martener and Major Brigaut; they alone know
the hideous truth.
To give that truth its true proportions
we must transport the scene to the Rome of the middle
ages, where a sublime young girl, Beatrice Cenci,
was brought to the scaffold by motives and intrigues
that were almost identical with those which laid our
Pierrette in her grave. Beatrice Cenci had but
one defender,—an artist, a painter.
In our day history, and living men, on the faith of
Guido Reni’s portrait, condemn the Pope, and
know that Beatrice was a most tender victim of infamous
passions and base feuds.
We must all agree that legality would
be a fine thing for social scoundrelism IF THERE WERE
NO GOD.