VI
After admitting his insolvency and
filing his schedule, a merchant should find some retired
spot in France, or in foreign countries, where he
may live without taking part in life, like the child
that he is; for the law declares him a minor, and
not competent for any legal action as a citizen.
This, however, is never done. Before reappearing
he obtains a safe-conduct, which neither judge nor
creditor ever refuses to give; for if the debtor were
found without this exeat he would be put in
prison, while with it he passes safely, as with a flag
of truce, through the enemy’s camp,—not
by way of curiosity, but for the purpose of defeating
the severe intention of the laws relating to bankruptcy.
The effect of all laws which touch private interests
is to develop, enormously, the knavery of men’s
minds. The object of a bankrupt, like that of
other persons whose interests are thwarted by any
law, is to make void the law in his particular case.
The status of civil death in which
the bankrupt remains a chrysalis lasts for about three
months,—a period required by formalities
which precede a conference at which the creditors
and their debtor sign a treaty of peace, by which
the bankrupt is allowed the ability to make payments,
and receives a bankrupt’s certificate. This
transaction is called the concordat,—a
word implying, perhaps, that peace reigns after the
storm and stress of interests violently in opposition.
As soon as the insolvent’s schedule
is filed, the Court of commerce appoints a judge-commissioner,
whose duty it is to look after the interests of the
still unknown body of creditors, and also to protect
the insolvent against the vexatious measures of angry
creditors,—a double office, which might
be nobly magnified if the judges had time to attend
to it. The commissioner, however, delegates an
agent to take possession of the property, the securities,
and the merchandise, and to verify the schedule; when
this is done, the court appoints a day for a meeting
of the creditors, notice of which is trumpeted forth
in the newspapers. The creditors, real or pretended,
are expected to be present and choose the provisional
assignees, who are to supersede the agent, step into
the insolvent’s shoes, became by a fiction of
law the insolvent himself, and are authorized to liquidate
the business, negotiate all transactions, sell the
property,—in short, recast everything in
the interest of the creditors, provided the bankrupt
makes no opposition. The majority of Parisian
failures stop short at this point, and the reason
is as follows:
The appointment of one or more permanent
assignees is an act which gives opportunity for the
bitterest action on the part of creditors who are
thirsting for vengeance, who have been tricked, baffled,
cozened, trapped, duped, robbed, and cheated.
Although, as a general thing, all creditors are cheated,
robbed, duped, trapped, cozened, tricked, and baffled,
yet there is not in all Paris a commercial passion
able to keep itself alive for ninety days. The
paper of commerce alone maintains its vitality, and
rises, athirst for payment, in three months.
Before ninety days are over, the creditors, worn out
by coming and going, by the marches and countermarches
which a failure entails, are asleep at the side of
their excellent little wives. This may help a
stranger to understand why it is that the provisional
in France is so often the definitive: out of
every thousand provisional assignees, not more than
five ever become permanent. The subsidence of
passions stirred up by failures is thus accounted for.
But here it becomes necessary to explain
to persons who have not had the happiness to be in
business the whole drama of bankruptcy, so as to make
them understand how it constitutes in Paris a monstrous
legal farce; and also how the bankruptcy of Cesar
Birotteau was a signal exception to the general rule.
This fine commercial drama is in three
distinct acts,—the agent’s act, the
assignee’s act, the concordat, or certificate-of-bankruptcy
act. Like all theatrical performances, it is played
with a double-intent: it is put upon the stage
for the public eye, but it also has a hidden purpose;
there is one performance for the pit, and another
for the side-scenes. Posted in the side-scenes
are the bankrupt and his solicitor, the attorney of
the creditors, the assignees, the agent, and the judge-commissioner
himself. No one out of Paris knows, and no one
in Paris does not know, that a judge of the commercial
courts is the most extraordinary magistrate that society
ever allowed itself to create. This judge may
live in dread of his own justice at any moment.
Paris has seen the president of her courts of commerce
file his own schedule. Instead of being an experienced
retired merchant, to whom the magistracy might properly
be made the reward of a pure life, this judge is a
trader, bending under the weight of enormous enterprises,
and at the head of some large commercial house.
The sine qua non condition in the election
of this functionary, whose business it is to pass
judgment on the avalanche of commercial suits incessantly
rolling through the courts, is that he shall have
the greatest difficulty in managing his own affairs.
This commercial tribunal, far from being made a useful
means of transition whereby a merchant might rise,
without ridicule, into the ranks of the nobility, is
in point of fact made up of traders who are trading,
and who are liable to suffer for their judgments when
they next meet with dissatisfied parties,—very
much as Birotteau was now punished by du Tillet.
The commissioner is of necessity a
personage before whom much is said; who listens, recollecting
all the while his own interests, and leaves the cause
to the assignees and the attorneys,—except,
possibly, in a few strange and unusual cases where
dishonesty is accompanied by peculiar circumstances,
when the judge usually observes that the debtor, or
the creditors, as it may happen, are clever people.
This personage, set up in the drama like the royal
bust in a public audience-chamber, may be found early
in the morning at his wood-yard, if he sells wood;
in his shop, if, like Birotteau, he is a perfumer;
or, in the evenings, at his dessert after dinner,—always,
it should be added, in a terrible hurry; as a general
thing he is silent. Let us, however, do justice
to the law: the legislation that governs his
functions, and which was pushed through in haste, has
tied the hands of this commissioner; and it sometimes
happens that he sanctions fraud which he cannot hinder,—as
the reader will shortly see.
The agent to whom the judge delegates
the first proceedings, instead of serving the creditors,
may become if he please a tool of the debtor.
Every one hopes to swell his own gains by getting on
the right side of the debtor, who is always supposed
to keep back a hidden treasure. The agent may
make himself useful to both parties; on the one hand
by not laying the bankrupt’s business in ashes,
on the other by snatching a few morsels for men of
influence,—in short, he runs with the hare
and holds with the hounds. A clever agent has
frequently arrested judgment by buying up the debts
and then releasing the merchant, who then rebounds
like an india-rubber ball. The agent chooses
the best-stocked crib, whether it leads him to cover
the largest creditors and shear the debtor, or to
sacrifice the creditors for the future prosperity
of the restored merchant. The action of the agent
is decisive. This man, together with the bankrupt’s
solicitor, plays the utility role in the drama, where
it may be said neither the one nor the other would
accept a part if not sure of their fees. Taking
the average of a thousand failures, an agent would
be found nine hundred and fifty times on the side
of the bankrupt. At the period of our history,
the solicitors frequently sought the judge with the
request that he would appoint an agent whom they proposed
to him, —a man, as they said, to whom the
affairs of the bankrupt were well-known, who would
know how to reconcile the interests of the whole body
of creditors with those of a man honorably overtaken
by misfortune. For some years past the best judges
have sought the advice of the solicitors in this matter
for the purpose of not taking it, endeavoring to appoint
some other agent quasi virtuous.
During this act of the drama the creditors,
real or pretended, come forward to select the provisional
assignees, who are often, as we have said, the final
ones. In this electoral assembly all creditors
have the right to vote, whether the sum owing to them
is fifty sous, or fifty thousand francs. This
assembly, in which are found pretended creditors introduced
by the bankrupt,—the only electors who never
fail to come to the meeting,—proposes the
whole body of creditors as candidates from among whom
the commissioner, a president without power, is supposed
to select the assignees. Thus it happens that
the judge almost always appoints as assignees those
creditors whom it suits the bankrupt to have,—another
abuse which makes the catastrophe of bankruptcy one
of the most burlesque dramas to which justice ever
lent her name. The honorable bankrupt overtaken
by misfortune is then master of the situation, and
proceeds to legalize the theft he premeditated.
As a rule, the petty trades of Paris are guiltless
in this respect. When a shopkeeper gets as far
as making an assignment, the worthy man has usually
sold his wife’s shawl, pawned his plate, left
no stone unturned, and succumbs at last with empty
hands, ruined, and without enough money to pay his
attorney, who in consequence cares little for him.
The law requires that the concordat,
at which is granted the bankrupt’s certificate
that remits to the merchant a portion of his debt,
and restores to him the right of managing his affairs,
shall be attended by a majority of the creditors,
and also that they shall represent a certain proportion
of the debt. This important action brings out
much clever diplomacy, on the part of the bankrupt,
his assignees, and his solicitor, among the contending
interests which cross and jostle each other.
A usual and very common manoeuvre is to offer to that
section of the creditors who make up in number and
amount the majority required by law certain premiums,
which the debtor consents to pay over and above the
dividend publicly agreed upon. This monstrous
fraud is without remedy. The thirty commercial
courts which up to the present time have followed
one after the other, have each known of it, for all
have practised it. Enlightened by experience,
they have lately tried to render void such fraudulent
agreements; and as the bankrupts have reason to complain
of the extortion, the judges had some hope of reforming
to that extent the system of bankruptcy. The
attempt, however, will end in producing something still
more immoral; for the creditors will devise other
rascally methods, which the judges will condemn as
judges, but by which they will profit as merchants.
Another much-used stratagem, and one
to which we owe the term “serious and legitimate
creditor,” is that of creating creditors,—just
as du Tillet created a banker and a banking-house,—and
introducing a certain quantity of Claparons under
whose skin the bankrupt hides, diminishing by just
so much the dividends of the true creditors, and laying
up for the honest man a store for the future; always,
however, providing a sufficient majority of votes
and debts to secure the passage of his certificate.
The “gay and illegitimate creditors” are
like false electors admitted into the electoral college.
What chance has the “serious and legitimate
creditor” against the “gay and illegitimate
creditor?” Shall he get rid of him by attacking
him? How can he do it? To drive out the
intruder the legitimate creditor must sacrifice his
time, his own business, and pay an attorney to help
him; while the said attorney, making little out of
it, prefers to manage the bankruptcy in another capacity,
and therefore works for the genuine credit without
vigor.
To dislodge the illegitimate creditor
it is necessary to thread the labyrinth of proceedings
in bankruptcy, search among past events, ransack accounts,
obtain by injunction the books of the false creditors,
show the improbability of the fiction of their existence,
prove it to the judges, sue for justice, go and come,
and stir up sympathy; and, finally, to charge like
Don Quixote upon each “gay and illegitimate
creditor,” who if convicted of “gaiety”
withdraws from court, saying with a bow to the judges,
“Excuse me, you are mistaken, I am very ‘serious.’”
All this without prejudice to the rights of the bankrupt,
who may carry Don Quixote and his remonstrance to the
upper courts; during which time Don Quixote’s
own business is suffering, and he is liable to become
a bankrupt himself.
The upshot of all this is, that in
point of fact the debtor appoints his assignees, audits
his own accounts, and draws up the certificate of
bankruptcy himself.
Given these premises, it is easy to
imagine the devices of Frontin, the trickeries of
Sganarelle, the lies of Mascarille, and the empty
bags of Scapin which such a system develops. There
has never been a failure which did not generate enough
matter to fill the fourteen volumes of “Clarissa
Harlowe,” if an author could be found to describe
them. A single example will suffice. The
illustrious Gobseck,—ruler of Palma, Gigonnet,
Werbrust, Keller, Nucingen, and the like,—being
concerned in a failure where he attempted to roughly
handle the insolvent, who had managed to get the better
of him, obtained notes from his debtor for an amount
which together with the declared dividend made up
the sum total of his loss. These notes were to
fall due after the concordat. Gobseck
then brought about a settlement in the concordat
by which sixty-five per cent was remitted to the bankrupt.
Thus the creditors were swindled in the interests of
Gobseck. But the bankrupt had signed the illicit
notes with the name of his insolvent firm, and he
was therefore able to bring them under the reduction
of sixty-five per cent. Gobseck, the great Gobseck,
received scarcely fifty per cent on his loss.
From that day forth he bowed to his debtor with ironical
respect.
As all operations undertaken by an
insolvent within ten days before his failure can be
impeached, prudent men are careful to enter upon certain
affairs with a certain number of creditors whose interest,
like that of the bankrupt, is to arrive at the concordat
as fast as possible. Skilful creditors will approach
dull creditors or very busy ones, give an ugly look
into the failure, and buy up their claims at half
what they are worth at the liquidation; in this way
they get back their money partly by the dividend on
their own claims, partly from the half, or third,
or fourth, gained on these purchased claims.
A failure is the closer, more or less
hermetically tight, of a house where pillage has left
a few remaining bags of silver. Lucky the man
who can get in at a window, slide down a chimney, creep
in through a cellar or through a hole, and seize a
bag to swell his share! In the general rout,
the sauve qui peut of Beresina is passed from
mouth to mouth; all is legal and illegal, false and
true, honest and dishonest. A man is admired
if he “covers” himself. To “cover”
himself means that he seizes securities to the detriment
of the other creditors. France has lately rung
with the discussion of an immense failure that took
place in a town where one of the upper courts holds
its sittings, and where the judges, having current
accounts with the bankrupts, wore such heavy india-rubber
mantles that the mantle of justice was rubbed into
holes. It was absolutely necessary, in order to
avert legitimate suspicion, to send the case for judgment
in another court. There was neither judge nor
agent nor supreme court in the region where the failure
took place that could be trusted.
This alarming commercial tangle is
so well understood in Paris, that unless a merchant
is involved to a large amount he accepts a failure
as total shipwreck without insurance, passes it to
his profit-and-loss account, and does not commit the
folly of wasting time upon it; he contents himself
with brewing his own malt. As to the petty trader,
worried about his monthly payments, busied in pushing
the chariot of his little fortunes, a long and costly
legal process terrifies him. He gives up trying
to see his way, imitates the substantial merchant,
bows his head, and accepts his loss.
The wholesale merchants seldom fail,
nowadays; they make friendly liquidations; the creditors
take what is given to them, and hand in their receipts.
In this way many things are avoided,—dishonor,
judicial delays, fees to lawyers, and the depreciation
of merchandise. All parties think that bankruptcy
will give less in the end than liquidation. There
are now more liquidations than bankruptcies in Paris.
The assignee’s act in the drama
is intended to prove that every assignee is incorruptible,
and that no collusion has ever existed between any
of them and the bankrupt. The pit—which
has all, more or less, been assignee in its day—knows
very well that every assignee is a “covered”
merchant. It listens, and believes as it likes.
After three months employed in auditing the debtor
and creditor accounts, the time comes for the concordat.
The provisional assignees make a little report at
the meeting, of which the following is the usual formula:—
Messieurs,—There is owing to
the whole of us, in bulk, about a million.
We have dismantled our man like a condemned frigate.
The nails, iron, wood, and copper will bring about
three hundred thousand francs. We shall thus
get about thirty per cent of our money. Happy
in obtaining this amount, when our debtor might have
left us only one hundred thousand, we hereby declare
him an Aristides; we vote him a premium and crown
of encouragement, and propose to leave him to manage
his assets, giving him ten or twelve years in which
to pay us the fifty per cent which he has been so
good as to offer us. Here is the certificate of
bankruptcy; have the goodness to walk up to the desk
and sign it.
At this speech, all the fortune creditors
congratulate each other and shake hands. After
the ratification of the certificate, the bankrupt
becomes once more a merchant, precisely such as he
was before; he receives back his securities, he continues
his business, he is not deprived of the power to fail
again, on the promised dividend,—an additional
little failure which often occurs, like the birth of
a child nine months after the mother has married her
daughter.
If the certificate of bankruptcy is
not granted, the creditors then select the permanent
assignees, take extreme measures, and form an association
to get possession of the whole property and the business
of their debtor, seizing everything that he has or
ever will have, —his inheritance from his
father, his mother, his aunt, et caetera.
This stern measure can only be carried through by an
association of creditors.
* * * *
There are therefore two sorts of failures,—the
failure of the merchant who means to repossess himself
of his business, and the failure of the merchant who
has fallen into the water and is willing to sink to
the bottom. Pillerault knew the difference.
It was, to his thinking and to that of Ragon, as hard
to come out pure from the first as to come out safe
from the second. After advising Cesar to abandon
everything to his creditors, he went to the most honorable
solicitor in such matters, that immediate steps might
be taken to liquidate the failure and put everything
at once at the disposition of the creditors.
The law requires that while the drama is being acted,
the creditors shall provide for the support of the
bankrupt and his family. Pillerault notified
the commissioner that he would himself supply the
wants of his niece and nephew.
Du Tillet had worked all things together
to make the failure a prolonged agony for his old
master; and this is how he did it. Time is so
precious in Paris that it is customary, when two assignees
are appointed, for only one to attend to the affair:
the duty of the other is merely formal,—he
approves and signs, like the second notary in notarial
deeds. By this means, the largest failures in
Paris are so vigorously handled that, in spite of
the law’s delays, they are adjusted, settled,
and secured with such rapidity that within a hundred
days the judge can echo the atrocious saying of the
Minister, —“Order reigns in Warsaw.”
Du Tillet meant to compass Cesar’s
commercial death. The names of the assignees
selected through the influence of du Tillet were very
significant to Pillerault. Monsieur Bidault, called
Gigonnet,—the principal creditor,—was
the one to take no active part; and Molineux, the
mischievous old man who lost nothing by the failure,
was to manage everything. Du Tillet flung the
noble commercial carcass to the little jackal, that
he might torment it as he devoured it. After the
meeting at which the creditors appointed the assignees,
little Molineux returned home “honored,”
so he said, “by the suffrages of his fellow-citizens”;
happy in the prospect of hectoring Birotteau, just
as a child delights in having an insect to maltreat.
The landlord, astride of his hobby,—the
law,—begged du Tillet to favor him with
his ideas; and he bought a copy of the commercial
Code. Happily, Joseph Lebas, cautioned by Pillerault,
had already requested the president of the Board of
Commerce to select a sagacious and well-meaning commissioner.
Gobenheim-Keller, whom du Tillet hoped to have, found
himself displaced by Monsieur Camusot, a substitute-judge,—a
rich silk-merchant, Liberal in politics, and the owner
of the house in which Pillerault lived; a man counted
honorable.
* * *
One of the cruellest scenes of Cesar’s
life was his forced conference with little Molineux,—the
being he had once regarded as a nonentity, who now
by a fiction of law had become Cesar Birotteau.
He was compelled to go to the Cour Batave, to mount
the six flights, and re-enter the miserable appartement
of the old man, now his custodian, his quasi
judge,—the representative of his creditors.
Pillerault accompanied him.
“What is the matter?”
said the old man, as Cesar gave vent to an exclamation.
“Ah, uncle! you do not know
the sort of man this Molineux is!”
“I have seen him from time to
time for fifteen years past at the cafe David, where
he plays dominoes. That is why I have come with
you.”
Monsieur Molineux showed the utmost
politeness to Pillerault, and much disdainful condescension
to the bankrupt; he had thought over his part, studied
the shades of his demeanor, and prepared his ideas.
“What information is it that
you need?” asked Pillerault. “There
is no dispute as to the claims.”
“Oh,” said little Molineux,
“the claims are in order,—they have
been examined. The creditors are all serious
and legitimate. But the law, monsieur,—the
law! The expenditures of the bankrupt have been
disproportional to his fortune. It appears that
the ball—”
“At which you were present,” interrupted
Pillerault.
“—cost nearly sixty
thousand francs, and at that time the assets of the
insolvent amounted to not more than one hundred and
a few thousand francs. There is cause to arraign
the bankrupt on a charge of wilful bankruptcy.”
“Is that your intention?”
said Pillerault, noticing the despondency into which
these words had cast Birotteau.
“Monsieur, I make a distinction;
the Sieur Birotteau was a member of the municipality—”
“You have not sent for us, I
presume, to explain that we are to be brought into
a criminal police court?” said Pillerault.
“The cafe David would laugh finely at your conduct
this evening.”
The opinion of the cafe David seemed
to frighten the old man, who looked at Pillerault
with a startled air. He had counted on meeting
Birotteau alone, intending to pose as the sovereign
arbiter of his fate,—a legal Jupiter.
He meant to frighten him with the thunder-bolt of
an accusation, to brandish the axe of a criminal charge
over his head, enjoy his fears and his terrors, and
then allow himself to be touched and softened, and
persuaded at last to restore his victim to a life
of perpetual gratitude. Instead of his insect,
he had got hold of an old commercial sphinx.
“Monsieur,” he replied, “I see nothing
to laugh at.”
“Excuse me,” said Pillerault.
“You have negotiated largely with Monsieur Claparon;
you have neglected the interests of the main body
of the creditors, so as to make sure that certain claims
shall have a preference. Now I can as one of
the creditors interfere. The commissioner is
to be taken into account.”
“Monsieur,” said Molineux, “I am
incorruptible.”
“I am aware of it,” said
Pillerault. “You have only taken your iron
out of the fire, as they say. You are keen; you
are acting just as you do with your tenants—”
“Oh, monsieur!” said the
assignee, suddenly dropping into the landlord,—just
as the cat metamorphosed into a woman ran after a
mouse when she caught sight of it,—“my
affair of the Rue Montorgeuil is not yet settled.
What they call an impediment has arisen. The
tenant is the chief tenant. This conspirator declares
that as he has paid a year in advance, and having
only one more year to”—here Pillerault
gave Cesar a look which advised him to pay strict attention
—“and, the year being paid for, that
he has the right to take away his furniture.
I shall sue him! I must hold on to my securities
to the last; he may owe something for repairs before
the year is out.”
“But,” said Pillerault,
“the law only allows you to take furniture as
security for the rent—”
“And its accessories!”
cried Molineux, assailed in his trenches. “That
article in the Code has been interpreted by various
judgments rendered in the matter: however, there
ought to be legislative rectification to it.
At this very moment I am elaborating a memorial to
his Highness, the Keeper of the Seals, relating to
this flaw in our statutes. It is desirable that
the government should maintain the interests of landlords.
That is the chief question in statecraft. We are
the tap-root of taxation.”
“You are well fitted to enlighten
the government,” said Pillerault; “but
in what way can we enlighten you—about our
affairs?”
“I wish to know,” said
Molineux, with pompous authority, “if Monsieur
Birotteau has received moneys from Monsieur Popinot.”
“No, monsieur,” said Birotteau.
Then followed a discussion on Birotteau’s
interests in the house of Popinot, from which it appeared
that Popinot had the right to have all his advances
paid in full, and that he was not involved in the failure
to the amount of half the costs of his establishment,
due to him by Birotteau. Molineux, judiciously
handled by Pillerault, insensibly got back to gentler
ways, which only showed how he cared for the opinion
of those who frequented the cafe David. He ended
by offering consolation to Birotteau, and by inviting
him, as well as Pillerault, to share his humble dinner.
If the ex-perfumer had gone alone, he would probably
have irritated Molineux, and the matter would have
become envenomed. In this instance, as in others,
old Pillerault was his tutelary angel.
Commercial law imposes a horrible
torture upon the bankrupt; he is compelled to appear
in person at the meeting of his creditors, when they
decide upon his future fate. For a man who can
hold himself above it all, or for a merchant who expects
to recover himself, this ceremony is little feared.
But to a man like Cesar Birotteau it was agony only
to be compared to the last day of a criminal condemned
to death. Pillerault did all in his power to
make that terrible day endurable to his nephew.
The steps taken by Molineux, and agreed
to by the bankrupt, were as follows: The suit
relating to the mortgage on the property in the Faubourg
du Temple having been won in the courts, the assignees
decided to sell that property, and Cesar made no opposition.
Du Tillet, hearing privately that the government intended
to cut a canal which should lead from Saint-Denis
to the upper Seine through the Faubourg du Temple,
bought the property of Birotteau for seventy thousand
francs. All Cesar’s rights in the lands
about the Madeleine were turned over to Monsieur Claparon,
on condition that he on his side would abandon all
claim against Birotteau for half the costs of drawing
up and registering the contracts; also for all payments
on the price of the lands, by receiving himself, under
the failure, the dividend which was to be paid over
to the sellers. The interests of the perfumer
in the house of Popinot and Company were sold to the
said Popinot for the sum of forty-eight thousand francs.
The business of “The Queen of Roses” was
bought by Celestin Crevel at fifty-seven thousand
francs, with the lease, the fixtures, the merchandise,
furniture, and all rights in the Paste of Sultans and
the Carminative Balm, with twelve years’ lease
of the manufactories, whose various appliances were
also sold to him. The assets when liquidated came
to one hundred and ninety-five thousand francs, to
which the assignees added seventy thousand produced
by Birotteau’s claims in the liquidation of
the “unfortunate” Roguin. Thus the
total amount made over to Cesar’s creditors
was two hundred and fifty-five thousand francs.
The debts amounted to four hundred and forty thousand;
consequently, the creditors received more than fifty
per cent on their claims.
Bankruptcy is a species of chemical
transmutation, from which a clever merchant tries
to emerge in fresh shape. Birotteau, distilled
to the last drop in this retort, gave a result which
made du Tillet furious. Du Tillet looked to see
a dishonorable failure; he saw an honorable one.
Caring little for his own gains, though he was about
to get possession of the lands around the Madeleine
without ever drawing his purse-strings, he wanted
to see his old master dishonored, lost, and vilified.
The creditors at the general meeting would undoubtedly
show the poor man that they respected him.
By degrees, as Birotteau’s courage
came back to him, Pillerault, like a wise doctor,
informed him, by gradual doses, of the transactions
resulting from his failure. These harsh tidings
were like so many blows. A merchant cannot learn
without a shock the depreciation of property which
represents to him so much money, so much solicitude,
so much labor. The facts his uncle now told him
petrified the poor man.
“Fifty-seven thousand francs
for ‘The Queen of Roses’! Why, the
shop alone cost ten thousand; the appartement cost
forty thousand; the mere outlay on the manufactories,
the utensils, the frames, the boilers, cost thirty
thousand. Why! at fifty per cent abatement, if
my creditors allow me that, there would still be ten
thousand francs worth of property in the shop.
Why! the Paste and the Balm are solid property,—worth
as much as a farm!”
Poor Cesar’s jeremiads made
no impression upon Pillerault. The old merchant
took them as a horse takes a down-pour; but he was
alarmed by the gloomy silence Birotteau maintained
when it was a question of the meeting. Those
who comprehend the vanities and weaknesses which in
all social spheres beset mankind, will know what a
martyrdom it was for this poor man to enter as a bankrupt
the commercial tribunal of justice where he once sat
as judge; to meet affronts where so often he had been
thanked for services rendered,—he, Birotteau,
whose inflexible opinions about bankruptcy were so
well known; he who had said, “A man may be honest
till he fails, but he comes out of a meeting of his
creditors a swindler.” Pillerault watched
for the right moment to familiarize Cesar’s
mind with the thought of appearing before his creditors
as the law demands. The thought killed him.
His mute grief and resignation made a deep impression
on his uncle, who often heard him at night, through
the partition, crying out to himself, “Never!
never! I will die sooner.”
Pillerault, a strong man,—strong
through the simplicity of his life, —was
able to understand weakness. He resolved to spare
Cesar the anguish of appearing before his creditors,—a
terrible scene which the law renders inevitable, and
to which, indeed, he might succumb. On this point
the law is precise, formal, and not to be evaded.
The merchant who refused to appear would, for that
act alone, be brought before the criminal police courts.
But though the law compels the bankrupt to appear,
it has no power to oblige the creditor to do so.
A meeting of creditors is a ceremony of no real importance
except in special cases,—when, for instance,
a swindler is to be dispossessed and a coalition among
the creditors agreed upon, when there is difference
of opinion between the privileged creditors and the
unsecured creditors, or when the concordat is
specially dishonest, and the bankrupt is in need of
a deceptive majority. But in the case of a failure
when all has been given up, the meeting is a mere
formality. Pillerault went to each creditor, one
after the other, and asked him to give his proxy to
his attorney. Every creditor, except du Tillet,
sincerely pitied Cesar, after striking him down.
Each knew that his conduct was scrupulously honest,
that his books were regular, and his business as clear
as the day. All were pleased to find no “gay
and illegitimate creditor” among them. Molineux,
first the agent and then the provisional assignee,
had found in Cesar’s house everything the poor
man owned, even the engraving of Hero and Leander which
Popinot had given him, his personal trinkets, his breast-pin,
his gold buckles, his two watches,—things
which an honest man might have taken without thinking
himself less than honest. Constance had left her
modest jewel-case. This touching obedience to
the law struck the commercial mind keenly. Birotteau’s
enemies called it foolishness; but men of sense held
it up to its true light as a magnificent supererogation
of integrity. In two months the opinion of the
Bourse had changed; every one, even those who were
most indifferent, admitted this failure to be a rare
commercial wonder, seldom seen in the markets of Paris.
Thus the creditors, knowing that they were secure of
nearly sixty per cent of their claims, were very ready
to do what Pillerault asked of them. The solicitors
of the commercial courts are few in number; it therefore
happened that several creditors employed the same
man, giving him their proxies. Pillerault finally
succeeded in reducing the formidable assemblage to
three solicitors, himself, Ragon, the two assignees,
and the commissioner.
Early in the morning of the solemn
day, Pillerault said to his nephew,—
“Cesar, you can go to your meeting
to-day without fear; nobody will be there.”
Monsieur Ragon wished to accompany
his debtor. When the former master of “The
Queen of Roses” first made known the wish in
his little dry voice, his ex-successor turned pale;
but the good old man opened his arms, and Birotteau
threw himself into them as a child into the arms of
its father, and the two perfumers mingled their tears.
The bankrupt gathered courage as he felt the indulgences
shown to him, and he got into the coach with his uncle
and Ragon. Precisely at half past ten o’clock
the three reached the cloister Saint-Merri, where the
Court of Commerce was then held. At that hour
there was no one in the Hall of Bankruptcy. The
day and the hour had been chosen by agreement with
the judge and the assignees. The three solicitors
were already there on behalf of their clients.
There was nothing, therefore, to distress or intimidate
Cesar Birotteau; yet the poor man could not enter the
office of Monsieur Camusot—which chanced
to be the one he had formerly occupied—without
deep emotion, and he shuddered as he passed through
the Hall of Bankruptcy.
“It is cold,” said Monsieur
Camusot to Birotteau. “I am sure these
gentlemen will not be sorry to stay here, instead of
our going to freeze in the Hall.” He did
not say the word “Bankruptcy.” “Gentlemen,
be seated.”
Each took his seat, and the judge
gave his own armchair to Birotteau, who was bewildered.
The solicitors and the assignees signed the papers.
“In consideration of the surrender
of your entire property,” said Camusot to Birotteau,
“your creditors unanimously agree to relinquish
the rest of their claims. Your certificate is
couched in terms which may well soften your pain;
your solicitor will see that it is promptly recorded;
you are now free. All the judges of this court,
dear Monsieur Birotteau,” said Camusot, taking
him by the hand, “feel for your position, and
are not surprised at your courage; none have failed
to do justice to your integrity. In the midst
of a great misfortune you have been worthy of what
you once were here. I have been in business for
twenty years, and this is only the second time that
I have seen a fallen merchant gaining, instead of
losing, public respect.”
Birotteau took the hands of the judge
and wrung them, with tears in his eyes. Camusot
asked him what he now meant to do. Birotteau replied
that he should work till he had paid his creditors
in full to the last penny.
“If to accomplish that noble
task you should ever want a few thousand francs, you
will always find them with me,” said Camusot.
“I would give them with a great deal of pleasure
to witness a deed so rare in Paris.”
Pillerault, Ragon, and Birotteau retired.
“Well! that wasn’t the
ocean to drink,” said Pillerault, as they left
the court-room.
“I recognize your hand in it,”
said the poor man, much affected.
“Now, here you are, free, and
we are only a few steps from the Rue des Cinq-Diamants;
come and see my nephew,” said Ragon.
A cruel pang shot through Cesar’s
heart when he saw Constance sitting in a little office
in the damp, dark entresol above the shop, whose
single window was one third darkened by a sign which
intercepted the daylight and bore the name,—A.
POPINOT.
“Behold a lieutenant of Alexander,”
said Cesar, with the gaiety of grief, pointing to
the sign.
This forced gaiety, through which
an inextinguishable sense of the superiority which
Birotteau attributed to himself was naively revealed,
made Ragon shudder in spite of his seventy years.
Cesar saw his wife passing down letters and papers
for Popinot to sign; he could neither restrain his
tears nor keep his face from turning pale.
“Good-morning, my friend,” she said to
him, smiling.
“I do not ask if you are comfortable
here,” said Cesar, looking at Popinot.
“As if I were living with my
own son,” she answered, with a tender manner
that struck her husband.
Birotteau took Popinot and kissed him, saying,—
“I have lost the right, forever, of calling
him my son.”
“Let us hope!” said Popinot.
“Your oil succeeds—thanks to
my advertisements in the newspapers, and to Gaudissart,
who has travelled over the whole of France; he has
inundated the country with placards and prospectuses;
he is now at Strasburg getting the prospectuses printed
in the German language, and he is about to descend,
like an invasion, upon Germany itself. We have
received orders for three thousand gross.”
“Three thousand gross!” exclaimed Cesar.
“And I have bought a piece of
land in the Faubourg Saint-Marceau,—not
dear,—where I am building a manufactory.”
“Wife,” whispered Cesar
to Constance, “with a little help we might have
pulled through.”
* * *
*
After that fatal day Cesar, his wife,
and daughter understood each other. The poor
clerk resolved to attain an end which, if not impossible,
was at least gigantic in its enterprise,—namely,
the payment of his debts to their last penny.
These three beings,—father, mother, daughter,—bound
together by the tie of a passionate integrity, became
misers, denying themselves everything; a farthing
was sacred in their eyes. Out of sheer calculation
Cesarine threw herself into her business with the
devotion of a young girl. She sat up at night,
taxing her ingenuity to find ways of increasing the
prosperity of the establishment, and displaying an
innate commercial talent. The masters of the
house were obliged to check her ardor for work; they
rewarded her by presents, but she refused all articles
of dress and the jewels which they offered her.
Money! money! was her cry. Every month she carried
her salary and her little earnings to her uncle Pillerault.
Cesar did the same; so did Madame Birotteau. All
three, feeling themselves incapable, dared not take
upon themselves the responsibility of managing their
money, and they made over to Pillerault the whole
business of investing their savings. Returning
thus to business, the latter made the most of these
funds by negotiations at the Bourse. It was known
afterwards that he had been helped in this work by
Jules Desmarets and Joseph Lebas, both of whom were
eager to point out opportunities which Pillerault might
take without risk.
Cesar, though he lived with his uncle,
never ventured to question him as to what was done
with the money acquired by his labor and that of his
wife and daughter. He walked the streets with
a bowed head, hiding from every eye his stricken,
dull, distraught face. He felt, with self-reproach,
that the cloth he wore was too good for him.
“At least,” he said to
Pillerault, with a look that was angelic, “I
do not eat the bread of my creditors. Your bread
is sweet to me, though it is your pity that gives
it; thanks to your sacred charity, I do not steal
a farthing of my salary!”
The merchants, his old associates,
who met the clerk could see no vestige of the perfumer.
Even careless minds gained an idea of the immensity
of human disaster from the aspect of this man, on whose
face sorrow had cast its black pall, who revealed
the havoc caused by that which had never before appeared
in him,—by thought! N’est pas
detruit qui veut. Light-minded people, devoid
of conscience, to whom all things are indifferent,
can never present such a spectacle of disaster.
Religion alone sets a special seal upon fallen human
beings; they believe in a future, in a divine Providence;
from within them gleams a light that marks them, a
look of saintly resignation mingled with hope, which
lends them a certain tender emotion; they realize all
that they have lost, like the exiled angel weeping
at the gates of heaven. Bankrupts are forbidden
to enter the Bourse. Cesar, driven from the regions
of integrity, was like an angel sighing for pardon.
For fourteen months he lived on, full of religious
thoughts with which his fall inspired him, and denying
himself every pleasure. Though sure of the Ragons’
friendship, nothing could induce him to dine with them,
nor with the Lebas, nor the Matifats, nor the Protez
and Chiffrevilles, not even with Monsieur Vauquelin;
all of whom were eager to do honor to his rare virtue.
Cesar preferred to be alone in his room rather than
meet the eye of a creditor. The warmest greetings
of his friends reminded him the more bitterly of his
position. Constance and Cesarine went nowhere.
On Sundays and fete days, the only days when they
were at liberty, the two women went to fetch Cesar
at the hour for Mass, and they stayed with him at Pillerault’s
after their religious duties were accomplished.
Pillerault often invited the Abbe Loraux, whose words
sustained Cesar in this life of trial. And in
this way their lives were spent. The old ironmonger
had too tough a fibre of integrity not to approve
of Cesar’s sensitive honor. His mind, however,
turned on increasing the number of persons among whom
the poor bankrupt might show himself with an open brow,
and an eye that could meet the eyes of his fellows.