IV
During the first three days of the
year, two hundred visiting cards were sent to Birotteau.
This rush of fictitious friendship, these empty testimonials
of favor, are horrible to those who feel themselves
drawn down into the vortex of misfortune. Birotteau
presented himself three times at the hotel of the
famous banker, the Baron de Nucingen, but in vain.
The opening of the year with all its festivities sufficiently
explained the absences of the financier. On the
last occasion Birotteau got as far as the office of
the banker, where the head-clerk, a German, told him
that Monsieur de Nucingen had returned at five in
the morning from a ball at the Kellers’, and
would not be visible until half-past nine o’clock.
Birotteau had the luck to interest this man in his
affairs, and remained talking with him more than half
an hour. In the course of the afternoon this prime
minister of the house of Nucingen wrote Birotteau
that the baron would receive him the next day, 13th,
at noon. Though every hour brought its drop of
absinthe, the day went by with frightful rapidity.
Cesar took a hackney coach, but stopped it several
paces distant from the hotel, whose courtyard was
crowded with carriages. The poor man’s heart
sank within him when he saw the splendors of that
noted house.
“And yet he has failed twice,”
he said to himself as he went up a superb staircase
banked with flowers, and crossed the sumptuous rooms
which helped to make Madame Delphine de Nucingen famous
in the Chaussee d’Antin. The baronne’s
ambition was to rival the great ladies of the Faubourg
Saint-Germain, to whose houses she was not as yet
admitted. The baron was breakfasting with his
wife. In spite of the crowd which was waiting
for him in the counting-room, he had left word that
any friend of du Tillet was to be admitted. Birotteau
trembled with hope as he noticed the change which
the baron’s order had wrought in the hitherto
insolent manner of the footman.
“Pardon me, my tear,”
said the baron to his wife, in a strong German accent,
as he rose and nodded to Birotteau, “monsieur
is a good royalist, and der intimate frient of tu
Tillet. Bezides, monsieur is debudy-mayor of
der zecond arrondissement, and gifs palls of Aziatigue
magnifissence; so vill you mak his acquentence mit
blaysure.”
“I should be delighted to take
lessons from Madame Birotteau, for Ferdinand—”
“She calls him Ferdinand!” thought Cesar.
“—spoke of the ball
with great admiration, which is all the more valuable
because he usually admires nothing. Ferdinand
is a harsh critic; in his eyes everything ought to
be perfect. Shall you soon give another ball?”
she inquired affably.
“Madame, poor people, such as
we are, seldom have many amusements of that kind,”
said the perfumer, not knowing whether she meant to
ridicule him, or was merely paying an empty compliment.
“Monsieur Grindot suberintented
der resdoration of your abbartement, I zink?”
said the baron.
“Ah, Grindot! that nice little
architect who has just returned from Rome,”
said Delphine de Nucingen. “I dote on him;
he makes delicious drawings in my album.”
No culprit enduring the torments of
hell in Venetian dungeons ever suffered more from
the torture of the boot than Birotteau did, standing
there in his ordinary clothes. He felt a sneer
in every word.
“Vill you gif oder little palls?”
said the banker, with a searching look at the perfumer.
“You see all der vorld ist inderesded.”
“Will Monsieur Birotteau breakfast
with us, without ceremony?” said Delphine, motioning
towards the table which was sumptuously served.
“Madame la baronne, I came on business, and
I am—”
“Yes, matame, vill you bermit us to speak of
business?”
Delphine made a little sign of assent,
saying to her husband, “Are you going to buy
perfumery?” The baron shrugged his shoulders
and turned to Cesar, who trembled with anxiety.
“Tu Tillet takes der graadest inderest in you,”
he said.
“At last,” thought the poor man, “we
are coming to the point.”
“His ledder gif you in my house
a creydit vich is only limided by der limids of my
privade fortune.”
The exhilarating balm infused into
the water offered by the angel to Hagar in the desert,
must have been the same cordial which flowed through
Cesar’s veins as he listened to these words.
The wily banker retained the horrible pronunciation
of the German Jews,—possibly that he might
be able to deny promises actually given, but only
half-understood.
“You shall haf a running aggont.
Ve vill broceed in dis vay—” said
this great and good and venerable financier, with Alsatian
good-humor.
Birotteau doubted no longer; he was
a merchant, and new very well that those who have
no intention of rendering a service never enter into
the details of executing it.
“I neet not tell you dat der
Bank demands of all, graat and small alaike, dree
zignatures. So denn, you traw a cheque to die
order of our frient tu Tillet, and I vill sent it,
same tay, to der Bank mit mein zignature; so shall
you haf, at four o’clock, der amount of die
cheque you trew in der morning; and at der costs of
die Bank. I vill not receif a commission, no!
I vill haf only der blaysure to be agreeaple to you.
But I mak one condeetion,” he added, laying his
left finger lightly on his nose with an inimitably
sly gesture.
“Monsieur le baron, it is granted
on the sport,” said Birotteau, who thought it
concerned some tithe to be levied on his profits.
“A condeetion to vich I attache
der graatest imbortance, because I vish Matame de
Nucingen should receif, as she say, zom lessons from
Matame Pirodot.”
“Monsieur le baron! pray do
not laugh at me, I entreat you.”
“Monsieur Pirodot,” said
the financier, with a serious air, “it is deen
agreet; you vill invite us to your nex pall? My
vife is shalous; she vish to see your abbartement,
of vich she hear so mooch.”
“Monsieur le baron!—”
“Oh! if you reffuse me, no creydit!
Yes, I know der Prayfic of die Seine was at your las
pall.”
“Monsieur le baron!—”
“You had Pillartiere, shentelman
of der betchamber; goot royalist like you, who vas
vounded at Zaint-Roqque—”
“On the 13th Vendemiaire, Monsieur le baron.”
“Denn you hat Monsieur de Lazabed,
Monsieur Fauquelin of der Agatemi—”
“Monsieur le baron!—”
“Hey! der tefle! dont pe zo
humple, Monsieur der debudy-mayor; I haf heard dat
der king say dat your ball—”
“The king?” exclaimed
Birotteau, who was destined to hear no more, for,
at this moment, a young man entered the room familiarly,
whose step, recognized from afar by the beautiful
Delphine de Nucingen, brought the color to her cheek.
“Goot morning, my tear te Marsay;
tak my blace. Dere is a crowd, zey tell me, waiting
in der gounting-room. I know vy. Der mines
of Wortschin bay a graat divitent! I haf receifed
die aggonts. You vill haf one hundert tousant
francs, Matame de Nucingen, so you can buy chewels
and oder tings to make you bretty,—as if
you could be brettier!”
“Good God! the Ragons sold their
shares!” exclaimed Birotteau.
“Who are those persons?”
asked the elegant de Marsay, smiling.
“Egzactly,” said Monsieur
de Nucingen, turning back when he was almost at the
door. “I zink tat dose persons—te
Marsay, dis is Monsieur Pirodot, your berfumer, who
gifs palls of a magnifissence druly Aziatique, and
whom der king has decoraded.”
De Marsay lifted his eyeglass, and
said, “Ah! true, I thought the face was not
unknown to me. So you are going to perfume your
affairs with potent cosmetics, oil them with—”
“Ah! dose Rakkons,” interrupted
the baron, making a grimace expressive of disgust;
“dey had an aggont mit us; I fafored dem, and
dey could haf made der fortune, but dey would not
wait one zingle day longer.”
“Monsieur le baron!” cried Birotteau.
The worthy man thought his own prospects
extremely doubtful, and without bowing to Madame de
Nucingen, or to de Marsay, he hastily followed the
banker. The baron was already on the staircase,
and Birotteau caught him at the bottom just as he
was about to enter the counting-room. As Nucingen
opened the door he saw the despairing gesture of the
poor creature behind him, who felt himself pushed into
a gulf, and said hastily,—
“Vell, it is all agreet.
See tu Tillet, and arranche it mit him.”
Birotteau, thinking that de Marsay
might have some influence with Nucingen, ran back
with the rapidity of a swallow, and slipped into the
dining-room where he had left the baronne and the young
man, and where Delphine was waiting for a cup of cafe
a la creme. He saw that the coffee had been
served, but the baronne and the dandy had disappeared.
The footman smiled at the astonishment of the worthy
man, who slowly re-descended the stairs. Cesar
rushed to du Tillet’s, and was told that he
had gone into the country with Madame Roguin.
He took a cabriolet, and paid the driver well to be
taken rapidly to Nogent-sur-Marne. At Nogent-sur-Marne
the porter told him that monsieur and madame had started
for Paris. Birotteau returned home, shattered
in mind and body. When he related his wild-goose
chase to his wife and daughter he was amazed to find
his Constance, usually perched like a bird of ill
omen on the smallest commercial mishap, now giving
him the tenderest consolation, and assuring him that
everything would turn out well.
The next morning, Birotteau mounted
guard as early as seven o’clock before du Tillet’s
door. He begged the porter, slipping ten francs
into his hand, to put him in communication with du
Tillet’s valet, and obtained from the latter
a promise to show him in to his master the moment
that du Tillet was visible: he slid two pieces
of gold into the valet’s hand. By such
little sacrifices and great humiliations, common to
all courtiers and petitioners, he was able to attain
his end. At half-past eight, just as his former
clerk was putting on a dressing-gown, yawning, stretching,
and shaking off the cobwebs of sleep, Birotteau came
face to face with the tiger, hungry for revenge, whom
he now looked upon as his only friend.
“Go on with your dressing,” said Birotteau.
“What do you want, my good Cesar?”
said du Tillet.
Cesar stated, with painful trepidation,
the answer and requirements of Monsieur de Nucingen
to the inattentive ears of du Tillet, who was looking
for the bellows and scolding his valet for the clumsy
manner in which he had lighted the fire.
The valet listened. At first
Cesar did not notice him; when he did so he stopped
short, confused, but resumed what he was saying as
du Tillet touched him with the spur exclaiming, “Go
on! go on! I am listening to you.”
The poor man’s shirt was wet;
his perspiration turned to ice as du Tillet looked
fixedly at him, and he saw the silver-lined pupils
of those eyes, streaked with threads of gold, which
pierced to his very heart with a diabolical gleam.
“My dear master, the Bank has
refused to take your notes which the house of Claparon
passed over to Gigonnet not guaranteed.
Is that my fault? How is it that you, an old
commercial judge, should commit such blunders?
I am, first and foremost, a banker. I will give
you my money, but I cannot risk having my signature
refused at the Bank. My credit is my life; that
is the case with all of us. Do you want money?”
“Can you give me what I want?”
“That depends on how much you owe. How
much do you want?”
“Thirty thousand francs.”
“Are the chimney-bricks coming
down on my head?” exclaimed du Tillet, bursting
into a laugh.
Cesar, misled by the luxury about
him, fancied it was the laugh of a man to whom the
sum was a mere trifle; he breathed again. Du Tillet
rang the bell.
“Send the cashier to me.”
“He has not come, monsieur,” said the
valet.
“These fellows take advantage
of me! It is half-past eight o’clock, and
he ought to have done a million francs’ worth
of business by this time.”
Five minutes later Monsieur Legras came in.
“How much have we in the desk?”
“Only twenty thousand francs.
Monsieur gave orders to buy into the Funds to the
amount of thirty thousand francs cash, payable on the
15th.”
“That’s true; I am half-asleep still.”
The cashier gave Birotteau a suspicious look as he
left the room.
“If truth were banished from
this earth, she would leave her last word with a cashier,”
said du Tillet. “Haven’t you some
interest in this little Popinot, who has set up for
himself?” he added, after a dreadful pause,
in which the sweat rolled in drops from Cesar’s
brow.
“Yes,” he answered, naively.
“Do you think you could discount his signature
for a large amount?”
“Bring me his acceptances for
fifty thousand francs, and I will get them discounted
for you at a reasonable rate by old Gobseck, who is
very easy to deal with when he has funds to invest;
and he has some now.”
Birotteau went home broken-hearted,
not perceiving that the bankers were tossing him from
one to the other like a shuttle-cock; but Constance
had already guessed that credit was unattainable.
If three bankers refused it, it was very certain that
they had inquired of each other about so prominent
a man as a deputy-mayor; and there was, consequently,
no hope from the Bank of France.
“Try to renew your notes,”
she said; “go and see Monsieur Claparon, your
copartner, and all the others to whom you gave notes
for the 15th, and ask them to renew. It will
be time enough to go to the money-lenders with Popinot’s
paper if that fails.”
“To-morrow is the 13th,”
said Birotteau, completely crushed.
In the language of his own prospectus,
he enjoyed a sanguine temperament, which was subject
to an enormous waste through emotions and the pressure
of thought, and imperatively demanded sleep to repair
it. Cesarine took her father into the salon and
played to him “Rousseau’s Dream,”—a
pretty piece of music by Herold; while Constance sat
sewing beside him. The poor man laid his head
on a cushion, and every time he looked up at his wife
he saw a soft smile upon her lips; and thus he fell
asleep.
“Poor man!” said Constance;
“what misery is in store for him! God grant
he may have strength to bear it!”
“Oh! what troubles you, mamma?”
said Cesarine, seeing that her mother was weeping.
“Dear daughter, I see a failure
coming. If your father is forced to make an assignment,
we must ask no one’s pity. My child, be
prepared to become a simple shop-girl. If I see
you accepting your life courageously, I shall have
strength to begin my life over again. I know
your father,—he will not keep back one farthing;
I shall resign my dower; all that we possess will
be sold. My child, you must take your jewels
and your clothes to-morrow to your uncle Pillerault;
for you are not bound to any sacrifice.”
Cesarine was seized with a terror
beyond control as she listened to these words, spoken
with religious simplicity. The thought came into
her mind to go and see Anselme; but her native delicacy
checked it.
On the morrow, at nine o’clock,
Birotteau, following his wife’s advice, went
to find Claparon in the Rue de Provence, in the grasp
of anxieties quite other than those through which
he had lately passed. To ask for a credit is
an ordinary business matter; it happens every day
that those who undertake an enterprise are obliged
to borrow capital; but to ask for the renewal of notes
is in commercial jurisprudence what the correctional
police is to the court of assizes, —a first
step towards bankruptcy, just as a misdemeanor leads
to crime. The secret of your embarrassment is
in other hands than your own. A merchant delivers
himself over, bound hand and foot, to another merchant;
and mercy is a virtue not practised at the Bourse.
Cesar, who once walked the streets
of Paris with his head high and his eye beaming with
confidence, now, unstrung by perplexity, shrank from
meeting Claparon; he began to realize that a banker’s
heart is mere viscera. Claparon had seemed to
him so brutal in his coarse jollity, and he had felt
the man’s vulgarity so keenly, that he shuddered
at the necessity of accosting him.
“But he is nearer to the people;
perhaps he will therefore have more heart!”
Such was the first reproachful word which the anguish
of his position forced from Cesar’s lips.
Birotteau drew upon the dregs of his
courage, and went up the stairway of a mean little
entresol, at whose windows he had caught a glimpse
of green curtains yellowed by the sun. He read
the word “Offices,” stamped in black letters
on an oval copper-plate; he rapped, nobody answered,
and he went in. The place, worse than humble,
conveyed an idea of penury, or avarice, or neglect.
No employe was to be seen behind the brass lattice
which topped an unpainted white wooden enclosure,
breast-high, within which were tables and desks in
stained black wood. These deserted places were
littered with inkstands, in which the ink was mouldy
and the pens as rumpled as a ragammufin’s head,
and twisted like sunfish; with boxes and papers and
printed matter,—all worthless, no doubt.
The floor was as dirty, defaced, and damp as that
of a boarding-house. The second room, announced
by the word “Counting-Room” on its door,
harmonized with the grim facetiae of its neighbor.
In one corner was a large space screened off by an
oak balustrade, trellised with copper wire and furnished
with a sliding cat-hole, within which was an enormous
iron chest. This space, apparently given over
to the rioting of rats, also contained an odd-looking
desk, with a shabby arm-chair, which was ragged, green,
and torn in the seat,—from which the horse-hair
protruded, like the wig of its master, in half a hundred
libertine curls. The chief adornment of this
room, which had evidently been the salon of the appartement
before it was converted into a banking-office, was
a round table covered with a green cloth, round which
stood a few old chairs of black leather with tarnished
gilt nails. The fireplace, somewhat elegant,
showed none of the sooty marks of a fire; the hearth
was clean; the mirror, covered with fly-specks, had
a paltry air, in keeping with a mahogany clock bought
at the sale of some old notary, which annoyed the
eye, already depressed by two candelabras without
candles and the sticky dust that covered them.
The wall-paper, mouse-gray with a pink border, revealed,
by certain fuliginous stains, the unwholesome presence
of smokers. Nothing ever more faithfully represented
that prosaic precinct called by the newspapers an
“editorial sanctum.” Birotteau, fearing
that he might be indiscreet, knocked sharply three
times on the door opposite to that by which he entered.
“Come in!” cried Claparon,
the reverberation of whose voice revealed the distance
it had to traverse and the emptiness of the room,—in
which Cesar heard the crackling of a good fire, though
the owner was apparently not there.
The room was, in truth, Claparon’s
private office. Between the ostentatious reception-room
of Francois Keller and the untidy abode of the counterfeit
banker, there was all the difference that exists between
Versailles and the wigwam of a Huron chief. Birotteau
had witnessed the splendors of finance; he was now
to see its fooleries. Lying in bed, in a sort
of oblong recess or den opening from the farther end
of the office, and where the habits of a slovenly life
had spoiled, dirtied, greased, torn, defaced, obliterated,
and ruined furniture which had been elegant in its
day, Claparon, at the entrance of Birotteau, wrapped
his filthy dressing-gown around him, laid down his
pipe, and drew together the curtains of the bed with
a haste which made even the innocent perfumer suspect
his morals.
“Sit down, monsieur,” said the make-believe
banker.
Claparon, without his wig, his head
wrapped up in a bandanna handkerchief twisted awry,
seemed all the more hideous to Birotteau because,
when the dressing-gown gaped open, he saw an undershirt
of knitted wool, once white, but now yellowed by wear
indefinitely prolonged.
“Will you breakfast with me?”
said Claparon, recollecting the perfumer’s ball,
and thinking to make him a return and also to put him
off the scent by this invitation.
Cesar now perceived a round table,
hastily cleared of its litter, which bore testimony
to the presence of jovial company by a pate, oysters,
white wine, and vulgar kidneys, sautes au vin de
champagne, sodden in their own sauce. The
light of a charcoal brazier gleamed on an omelette
aux truffes.
Two covers and two napkins, soiled
by the supper of the previous night, might have enlightened
the purest innocence. Claparon, thinking himself
very clever, pressed his invitation in spite of Cesar’s
refusal.
“I was to have had a guest,
but that guest has disappointed me,” said the
crafty traveller, in a voice likely to reach a person
buried under coverlets.
“Monsieur,” said Birotteau,
“I came solely on business, and I shall not
detain you long.”
“I’m used up,” said
Claparon, pointing to the desk and the tables piled
with documents; “they don’t leave me a
poor miserable moment to myself! I don’t
receive people except on Saturdays. But as for
you, my dear friend, I’ll see you at any time.
I haven’t a moment to love or to loaf; I have
lost even the inspiration of business; to catch its
vim one must have the sloth of ease. Nobody ever
sees me now on the boulevard doing nothing. Bah!
I’m sick of business; I don’t want to
talk about business; I’ve got money enough, but
I never can get enough happiness. My gracious!
I want to travel,—to see Italy! Oh,
that dear Italy! beautiful in spite of all her reverses!
adorable land, where I shall no doubt encounter some
angel, complying yet majestic! I have always
loved Italian women. Did you ever have an Italian
woman yourself? No? Then come with me to
Italy. We will see Venice, the abode of doges,—unfortunately
fallen into those intelligent Austrian hands that
know nothing of art! Bah! let us get rid of business,
canals, loans, and peaceful governments. I’m
a good fellow when I’ve got my pockets lined.
Thunder! let’s travel.”
“One word, monsieur, and I will
release you,” said Birotteau. “You
made over my notes to Monsieur Bidault.”
“You mean Gigonnet, that good
little Gigonnet, easy-going—”
“Yes,” said Cesar; “but
I wish,—and here I count upon your honor
and delicacy,—”
Claparon bowed.
“—to renew those notes.”
“Impossible!” snapped
the banker. “I’m not alone in the
matter. We have met in council,—regular
Chamber; but we all agreed like bacon in a frying-pan.
The devil! we deliberated. Those lands about the
Madeleine don’t amount to anything; we are operating
elsewhere. Hey! my dear sir, if we were not involved
in the Champs Elysees and at the Bourse which they
are going to finish, and in the quartier Saint-Lazare
and at Tivoli, we shouldn’t be, as that fat Nucingen
says, in peaseness at all. What’s
the Madeleine to us?—a midge of a thing.
Pr-r-r! We don’t play low, my good fellow,”
he said, tapping Birotteau on the stomach and catching
him round the waist. “Come, let’s
have our breakfast, and talk,” added Claparon,
wishing to soften his refusal.
“Very good,” said Birotteau.
“So much the worse for the other guest,”
he thought, meaning to make Claparon drunk, and to
find out who were his real associates in an affair
which began to look suspicious to him.
“All right! Victoire!” called the
banker.
This call brought a regular Leonarde, tricked out
like a fish-woman.
“Tell the clerks that I can’t
see any one,—not even Nucingen, Keller,
Gigonnet, and all the rest of them.”
“No one has come but Monsieur Lempereur.”
“He can receive the great people,”
said Claparon; “the small fry are not to get
beyond the first room. They are to say I’m
cogitating a great enterprise—in champagne.”
To make an old commercial traveller
drunk is an impossibility. Cesar mistook the
elation of the man’s vulgarity when he attempted
to sound his mind.
“That infamous Roguin is still
connected with you,” he began; “don’t
you think you ought to write and tell him to assist
an old friend whom he has compromised,—a
man with whom he dined every Sunday, and whom he has
known for twenty years?”
“Roguin? A fool! his share
is ours now. Don’t be worried, old fellow,
all will go well. Pay up to the 15th, and after
that we will see—I say, we will see.
Another glass of wine? The capital doesn’t
concern me one atom; pay or don’t pay, I sha’n’t
make faces at you. I’m only in the business
for a commission on the sales, and for a share when
the lands are converted into money; and it’s
for that I manage the owners. Don’t you
understand? You have got solid men behind you,
so I’m not afraid, my good sir. Nowadays,
business is all parcelled out in portions. A
single enterprise requires a combination of capacities.
Go in with us; don’t potter with pomatum and
perfumes,—rubbish! rubbish! Shave
the public; speculate!”
“Speculation!” said Cesar, “is that
commerce?”
“It is abstract commerce,”
said Claparon,—“commerce which won’t
be developed for ten years to come, according to Nucingen,
the Napoleon of finance; commerce by which a man can
grasp the totality of fractions, and skim the profits
before there are any. Gigantic idea! one way
of pouring hope into pint cups,—in short,
a new necromancy! So far, we have only got ten
or a dozen hard heads initiated into the cabalistic
secrets of these magnificent combinations.”
Cesar opened his eyes and ears, endeavoring
to understand this composite phraseology.
“Listen,” said Claparon,
after a pause. “Such master-strokes need
men. There’s the man of genius who hasn’t
a sou—like all men of genius. Those
fellows spend their thoughts and spend their money
just as it comes. Imagine a pig rooting round
a truffle-patch; he is followed by a jolly fellow,
a moneyed man, who listens for the grunt as piggy
finds the succulent. Now, when the man of genius
has found a good thing, the moneyed man taps him on
the shoulder and says, ’What have you got there?
You are rushing into the fiery furnace, my good fellow,
and you haven’t the loins to run out again.
There’s a thousand francs; just let me take
it in hand and manage the affair.’ Very
good! The banker then convokes the traders:
’My friends, let us go to work: write a
prospectus! Down with humbug!’ On that they
get out the hunting-horns and shout and clamor,—’One
hundred thousand francs for five sous! or five sous
for a hundred thousand francs! gold mines! coal mines!’
In short, all the clap-trap of commerce. We buy
up men of arts and sciences; the show begins, the
public enters; it gets its money’s worth, and
we get the profits. The pig is penned up with
his potatoes, and the rest of us wallow in banknotes.
There it all is, my good sir. Come, go into the
business with us. What would you like to be,—pig,
buzzard, clown, or millionaire? Reflect upon it;
I have now laid before you the whole theory of the
modern loan-system. Come and see me often; you’ll
always find me a jovial, jolly fellow. French
joviality—gaiety and gravity, all in one—never
injures business; quite the contrary. Men who
quaff the sparkling cup are born to understand each
other. Come, another glass of champagne! it is
good, I tell you! It was sent to me from Epernay
itself, by a man for whom I once sold quantities at
a good price—I used to be in wines.
He shows his gratitude, and remembers me in my prosperity;
very rare, that.”
Birotteau, overcome by the frivolity
and heedlessness of a man to whom the world attributed
extreme depth and capacity, dared not question him
any further. In the midst of his own haziness
of mind produced by the champagne, he did, however,
recollect a name spoken by du Tillet; and he asked
Claparon who Gobseck the banker was, and where he lived.
“Have you got as far as that?”
said Claparon. “Gobseck is a banker, just
as the headsman is a doctor. The first word is
‘fifty per cent’; he belongs to the race
of Harpagon; he’ll take canary birds at all
seasons, fur tippets in summer, nankeens in winter.
What securities are you going to offer him? If
you want him to take your paper without security you
will have to deposit your wife, your daughter, your
umbrella, everything down to your hat-box, your socks
(don’t you go in for ribbed socks?), your shovel
and tongs, and the very wood you’ve got in the
cellar! Gobseck! Gobseck! in the name of
virtuous folly, who told you to go to that commercial
guillotine?”
“Monsieur du Tillet.”
“Ah! the scoundrel, I recognize
him! We used to be friends. If we have quarrelled
so that we don’t speak to each other, you may
depend upon it my aversion to him is well-founded;
he let me read down to the bottom of his infamous
soul, and he made me uncomfortable at that beautiful
ball you gave us. I can’t stand his impudent
airs—all because he has got a notary’s
wife! I could have countesses if I wanted them;
I sha’n’t respect him any the more for
that. Ah! my respect is a princess who’ll
never give birth to such as he. But, I say, you
are a funny fellow, old man, to flash us a ball like
that, and two months after try to renew your paper!
You seem to have some go in you. Let’s
do business together. You have got a reputation
which would be very useful to me. Oh! du Tillet
was born to understand Gobseck. Du Tillet will
come to a bad end at the Bourse. If he is, as
they say, the tool of old Gobseck, he won’t be
allowed to go far. Gobseck sits in a corner of
his web like an old spider who has travelled round
the world. Sooner or later, ztit! the usurer will
toss him off as I do this glass of wine. So much
the better! Du Tillet has played me a trick—oh!
a damnable trick.”
At the end of an hour and a half spend
in just such senseless chatter, Birotteau attempted
to get away, seeing that the late commercial traveller
was about to relate the adventure of a republican deputy
of Marseilles, in love with a certain actress then
playing the part of la belle Arsene, who, on one occasion,
was hissed by a royalist crowd in the pit.
“He stood up in his box,”
said Claparon, “and shouted: ’Arrest
whoever hissed her! Eugh! If it’s
a woman, I’ll kiss her; if it’s a man,
we’ll see about it; if it’s neither the
one nor the other, may God’s lightning blast
it!’ Guess how it ended.”
“Adieu, monsieur,” said Birotteau.
“You will have to come and see
me,” said Claparon; “that first scrap
of paper you gave Cayron has come back to us protested;
I endorsed it, so I’ve paid it. I shall
send after you; business before everything.”
Birotteau felt stabbed to the heart
by this cold and grinning kindness as much as by the
harshness of Keller or the coarse German banter of
Nucingen. The familiarity of the man, and his
grotesque gabble excited by champagne, seemed to tarnish
the soul of the honest bourgeois as though he came
from a house of financial ill-fame. He went down
the stairway and found himself in the streets without
knowing where he was going. As he walked along
the boulevards and reached the Rue Saint-Denis, he
recollected Molineux, and turned into the Cour Batave.
He went up the dirty, tortuous staircase which he once
trod so proudly. He recalled to mind the mean
and niggardly acrimony of Molineux, and he shrank
from imploring his favor. The landlord was sitting
in the chimney-corner, as on the occasion of Cesar’s
first visit, but his breakfast was now in process
of digestion. Birotteau proffered his request.
“Renew a note for twelve hundred
francs?” said Molineux, with mocking incredulity.
“Have you got to that, monsieur? If you
have not twelve hundred francs to pay me on the 15th,
do you intend to send back my receipt for the rent
unpaid? I shall be sorry; but I have not the
smallest civility in money-matters,—my rents
are my living. Without them how could I pay what
I owe myself? No merchant will deny the soundness
of that principle. Money is no respecter of persons;
money has no ears, it has no heart. The winter
is hard, the price of wood has gone up. If you
don’t pay me on the 15th, a little summons will
be served upon you at twelve o’clock on the
16th. Bah! the worthy Mitral, your bailiff, is
mine as well; he will send you the writ in an envelope,
with all the consideration due to your high position.”
“Monsieur, I have never received
a summons in my life,” said Birotteau.
“There is a beginning to everything,”
said Molineux.
Dismayed by the curt malevolence of
the old man, Cesar was cowed; he heard the knell of
failure ringing in his ears, and every jangle woke
a memory of the stern sayings his pitiless justice
had uttered against bankrupts. His former opinions
now seared, as with fire, the soft substance of his
brain.
“By the by,” said Molineux,
“you neglected to put upon your notes, ‘for
value received in rental,’ which would secure
me preference.”
“My position will prevent me
from doing anything to the detriment of my creditors,”
said Cesar, stunned by the sudden sight of the precipice
yawning before him.
“Very good, monsieur, very good;
I thought I knew everything relating to rentals and
tenants, but I have learned through you never to take
notes in payment. Ah! I shall sue you, for
your answer shows plainly enough that you are not
going to meet your liabilities. Hard cash is a
matter which concerns every landlord in Paris.”
Birotteau went out, weary of life.
It is in the nature of such soft and tender souls
to be disheartened by a first rebuff, just as a first
success encourages them. Cesar no longer had any
hope except in the devotion of little Popinot, to
whom his thoughts naturally turned as he crossed the
Marche des Innocents.
“Poor boy! who could have believed
it when I launched him, only six weeks ago, in the
Tuileries?”
It was just four o’clock, the
hour at which the judges left their court-rooms.
Popinot the elder chanced to go and see his nephew.
This judge, whose mind was singularly acute on all
moral questions, was also gifted with a second-sight
which enabled him to discover secret intentions, to
perceive the meaning of insignificant human actions,
the germs of crime, the roots of wrongdoing; and he
now watched Birotteau, though Birotteau was not aware
of it. The perfumer, who was annoyed at finding
the judge with his nephew, seemed to him harassed,
preoccupied, pensive. Little Popinot, always busy,
with his pen behind his ear, lay down as usual flat
on his stomach before the father of his Cesarine.
The empty phrases which Cesar addressed to his partner
seemed to the judge to mask some important request.
Instead of going away, the crafty old man stayed in
spite of his nephew’s evident desire, for he
guessed that the perfumer would soon try to get rid
of him by going away himself. Accordingly, when
Birotteau went out the judge followed, and saw Birotteau
hanging about that part of the Rue des Cinq-Diamants
which leads into the Rue Aubry-le-Boucher. This
trifling circumstance roused the suspicions of old
Popinot as to Cesar’s intentions; he turned
into the Rue des Lombards, and when he saw the perfumer
re-enter Anselme’s door, he came hastily back
again.
“My dear Popinot,” said
Cesar to his partner, “I have come to ask a
service of you.”
“What can I do?” cried Popinot with generous
ardor.
“Ah! you save my life,”
exclaimed the poor man, comforted by this warmth of
heart which flamed upon the sea of ice he had traversed
for twenty-five days.
“You must give me a note for
fifty thousand francs on my share of the profits;
we will arrange later about the payment.”
Popinot looked fixedly at Cesar.
Cesar dropped his eyes. At this moment the judge
re-entered.
“My son—ah! excuse
me, Monsieur Birotteau—Anselme, I forget
to tell you—” and with an imperious
gesture he led his nephew into the street and forced
him, in his shirt-sleeves and bareheaded, to listen
as they walked towards the Rue des Lombards.
“My nephew, your old master may find himself
so involved that he will be forced to make an assignment.
Before taking that step, honorable men who have forty
years of integrity to boast of, virtuous men seeking
to save their good name, will play the part of reckless
gamblers; they become capable of anything; they will
sell their wives, traffic with their daughters, compromise
their best friends, pawn what does not belong to them;
they will frequent gambling-tables, become dissemblers,
hypocrites, liars; they will even shed tears.
I have witnessed strange things. You yourself
have seen Roguin’s respectability,—a
man to whom they would have given the sacraments without
confession. I do not apply these remarks in their
full force to Monsieur Birotteau,—I believe
him to be an honest man; but if he asks you to do
anything, no matter what, against the rules of business,
such as endorsing notes out of good-nature, or launching
into a system of ‘circulations,’ which,
to my mind, is the first step to swindling,—for
it is uttering counterfeit paper-money,—if
he asks you to do anything of the kind, promise me
that you will sign nothing without consulting me.
Remember that if you love his daughter you must not—in
the very interests of your love you must not—destroy
your future. If Monsieur Birotteau is to fall,
what will it avail if you fall too? You will
deprive yourselves, one as much as the other, of all
the chances of your new business, which may prove
his only refuge.”
“Thank you, my uncle; a word
to the wise is enough,” said Popinot, to whom
Cesar’s heart-rending exclamation was now explained.
The merchant in oils, refined and
otherwise, returned to his gloomy shop with an anxious
brow. Birotteau saw the change.
“Will you do me the honor to
come up into my bedroom? We shall be better there.
The clerks, though very busy, might overhear us.”
Birotteau followed Popinot, a prey
to the anxiety a condemned man goes through from the
moment of his appeal for mercy until its rejection.
“My dear benefactor,”
said Anselme, “you cannot doubt my devotion;
it is absolute. Permit me only to ask you one
thing. Will this sum clear you entirely, or is
it only a means of delaying some catastrophe?
If it is that, what good will it do to drag me down
also? You want notes at ninety days. Well,
it is absolutely impossible that I could meet them
in that time.”
Birotteau rose, pale and solemn, and looked at Popinot.
Popinot, horror-struck, cried out,
“I will do them for you, if you wish it.”
“UNGRATEFUL!” said his
master, who spent his whole remaining strength in
hurling the word at Anselme’s brow, as if it
were a living mark of infamy.
Birotteau walked to the door, and
went out. Popinot, rousing himself from the sensation
which the terrible word produced upon him, rushed
down the staircase and into the street, but Birotteau
was out of sight. Cesarine’s lover heard
that dreadful charge ringing in his ears, and saw
the distorted face of the poor distracted Cesar constantly
before him; Popinot was to live henceforth, like Hamlet,
with a spectre beside him.
Birotteau wandered about the streets
of the neighborhood like a drunken man. At last
he found himself upon the quay, and followed it till
he reached Sevres, where he passed the night at an
inn, maddened with grief, while his terrified wife
dared not send in search of him. She knew that
in such circumstances an alarm, imprudently given,
might be fatal to his credit, and the wise Constance
sacrificed her own anxiety to her husband’s
commercial reputation: she waited silently through
the night, mingling her prayers and terrors. Was
Cesar dead? Had he left Paris on the scent of
some last hope? The next morning she behaved
as though she knew the reasons for his absence; but
at five o’clock in the afternoon when Cesar
had not returned, she sent for her uncle and begged
him to go at once to the Morgue. During the whole
of that day the courageous creature sat behind her
counter, her daughter embroidering beside her.
When Pillerault returned, Cesar was with him; on his
way back the old man had met him in the Palais-Royal,
hesitating before the entrance to a gambling-house.
This was the 14th. At dinner
Cesar could not eat. His stomach, violently contracted,
rejected food. The evening hours were terrible.
The shaken man went through, for the hundredth time,
one of those frightful alternations of hope and despair
which, by forcing the soul to run up the scale of
joyous emotion and then precipitating it to the last
depths of agony, exhaust the vital strength of feeble
beings. Derville, Birotteau’s advocate,
rushed into the handsome salon where Madame Cesar
was using all her persuasion to retain her husband,
who wished to sleep on the fifth floor,—“that
I may not see,” he said, “these monuments
of my folly.”
“The suit is won!” cried Derville.
At these words Cesar’s drawn
face relaxed; but his joy alarmed Derville and Pillerault.
The women left the room to go and weep by themselves
in Cesarine’s chamber.
“Now I can get a loan!” cried Birotteau.
“It would be imprudent,”
said Derville; “they have appealed; the court
might reverse the judgment; but in a month it would
be safe.”
“A month!”
Cesar fell into a sort of slumber,
from which no one tried to rouse him,—a
species of catalepsy, in which the body lived and suffered
while the functions of the mind were in abeyance.
This respite, bestowed by chance, was looked upon
by Constance, Cesarine, Pillerault, and Derville as
a blessing from God. And they judged rightly:
Cesar was thus enabled to bear the harrowing emotions
of that night. He was sitting in a corner of
the sofa near the fire; his wife was in the other
corner watching him attentively, with a soft smile
upon her lips,—the smile which proves that
women are nearer than men to angelic nature, in that
they know how to mingle an infinite tenderness with
an all-embracing compassion; a secret belonging only
to angels seen in dreams providentially strewn at long
intervals through the history of human life.
Cesarine, sitting on a little stool at her mother’s
feet, touched her father’s hand lightly with
her hair from time to time, as she gave him a caress
into which she strove to put the thoughts which, in
such crises, the voice seems to render intrusive.
Seated in his arm-chair, like the
Chancelier de l’Hopital on the peristyle of
the Chamber of Deputies, Pillerault—a philosopher
prepared for all events, and showing upon his countenance
the wisdom of an Egyptian sphinx—was talking
to Derville and his niece in a suppressed voice.
Constance thought it best to consult the lawyer, whose
discretion was beyond a doubt. With the balance-sheet
written in her head, she explained the whole situation
in low tones. After an hour’s conference,
held in presence of the stupefied Cesar, Derville
shook his head and looked at Pillerault.
“Madame,” he said, with
the horrible coolness of his profession, “you
must give in your schedule and make an assignment.
Even supposing that by some contrivance you could
meet the payments for to-morrow, you would have to
pay down at least three hundred thousand francs before
you could borrow on those lands. Your liabilities
are five hundred thousand. To meet them you have
assets that are very promising, very productive, but
not convertible at present; you must fail within a
given time. My opinion is that it is better to
jump out of the window than to roll downstairs.”
“That is my advice, too, dear child,”
said Pillerault.
Derville left, and Madame Cesar and
Pillerault went with him to the door.
“Poor father!” said Cesarine,
who rose softly to lay a kiss on Cesar’s head.
“Then Anselme could do nothing?” she added,
as her mother and Pillerault returned.
“UNGRATEFUL!” cried Cesar,
struck by the name of Anselme in the only living part
of his memory,—as the note of a piano lifts
the hammer which strikes its corresponding string.