By the time the old town lay several
miles away, Victurnien felt not the slightest regret;
he thought no more about the father, who had loved
ten generations in his son, nor of the aunt, and her
almost insane devotion. He was looking forward
to Paris with vehement ill-starred longings; in thought
he had lived in that fairyland, it had been the background
of his brightest dreams. He imagined that he
would be first in Paris, as he had been in the town
and the department where his father’s name was
potent; but it was vanity, not pride, that filled
his soul, and in his dreams his pleasures were to be
magnified by all the greatness of Paris. The
distance was soon crossed. The traveling coach,
like his own thoughts, left the narrow horizon of the
province for the vast world of the great city, without
a break in the journey. He stayed in the Rue
de Richelieu, in a handsome hotel close to the boulevard,
and hastened to take possession of Paris as a famished
horse rushes into a meadow.
He was not long in finding out the
difference between country and town, and was rather
surprised than abashed by the change. His mental
quickness soon discovered how small an entity he was
in the midst of this all-comprehending Babylon; how
insane it would be to attempt to stem the torrent
of new ideas and new ways. A single incident was
enough. He delivered his father’s letter
of introduction to the Duc de Lenoncourt, a noble
who stood high in favor with the King. He saw
the duke in his splendid mansion, among surroundings
befitting his rank. Next day he met him again.
This time the Peer of France was lounging on foot
along the boulevard, just like any ordinary mortal,
with an umbrella in his hand; he did not even wear
the Blue Ribbon, without which no knight of the order
could have appeared in public in other times.
And, duke and peer and first gentleman of the bedchamber
though he was, M. de Lenoncourt, in spite of his high
courtesy, could not repress a smile as he read his
relative’s letter; and that smile told Victurnien
that the Collection of Antiquities and the Tuileries
were separated by more than sixty leagues of road;
the distance of several centuries lay between them.
The names of the families grouped
about the throne are quite different in each successive
reign, and the characters change with the names.
It would seem that, in the sphere of court, the same
thing happens over and over again in each generation;
but each time there is a quite different set of personages.
If history did not prove that this is so, it would
seem incredible. The prominent men at the court
of Louis XVIII., for instance, had scarcely any connection
with the Rivieres, Blacas, d’Avarays, Vitrolles,
d’Autichamps, Pasquiers, Larochejaqueleins,
Decazes, Dambrays, Laines, de Villeles, La Bourdonnayes,
and others who shone at the court of Louis XV.
Compare the courtiers of Henri IV. with those of Louis
XIV.; you will hardly find five great families of
the former time still in existence. The nephew
of the great Richelieu was a very insignificant person
at the court of Louis XIV.; while His Majesty’s
favorite, Villeroi, was the grandson of a secretary
ennobled by Charles IX. And so it befell that
the d’Esgrignons, all but princes under the Valois,
and all-powerful in the time of Henri IV., had no
fortune whatever at the court of Louis XVIII., which
gave them not so much as a thought. At this day
there are names as famous as those of royal houses—the
Foix-Graillys, for instance, or the d’Herouvilles—left
to obscurity tantamount to extinction for want of
money, the one power of the time.
All which things Victurnien beheld
entirely from his own point of view; he felt the equality
that he saw in Paris as a personal wrong. The
monster Equality was swallowing down the last fragments
of social distinction in the Restoration. Having
made up his mind on this head, he immediately proceeded
to try to win back his place with such dangerous,
if blunted weapons, as the age left to the noblesse.
It is an expensive matter to gain the attention of
Paris. To this end, Victurnien adopted some of
the ways then in vogue. He felt that it was a
necessity to have horses and fine carriages, and all
the accessories of modern luxury; he felt, in short,
“that a man must keep abreast of the times,”
as de Marsay said—de Marsay, the first dandy
that he came across in the first drawing-room to which
he was introduced. For his misfortune, he fell
in with a set of roues, with de Marsay, de Ronquerolles,
Maxime de Trailles, des Lupeaulx, Rastignac, Ajuda-Pinto,
Beaudenord, de la Roche-Hugon, de Manerville, and the
Vandenesses, whom he met wherever he went, and a great
many houses were open to a young man with his ancient
name and reputation for wealth. He went to the
Marquise d’Espard’s, to the Duchesses de
Grandlieu, de Carigliano, and de Chaulieu, to the Marquises
d’Aiglemont and de Listomere, to Mme. de
Serizy’s, to the Opera, to the embassies and
elsewhere. The Faubourg Saint-Germain has its
provincial genealogies at its fingers’ ends;
a great name once recognized and adopted therein is
a passport which opens many a door that will scarcely
turn on its hinges for unknown names or the lions
of a lower rank.
Victurnien found his relatives both
amiable and ready to welcome him so long as he did
not appear as a suppliant; he saw at once that the
surest way of obtaining nothing was to ask for something.
At Paris, if the first impulse moves people to protect,
second thoughts (which last a good deal longer) impel
them to despise the protege. Independence, vanity,
and pride, all the young Count’s better and worse
feelings combined, led him, on the contrary, to assume
an aggressive attitude. And therefore the Ducs
de Verneuil, de Lenoncourt, de Chaulieu, de Navarreins,
d’Herouville, de Grandlieu, and de Maufrigneuse,
the Princes de Cadignan and de Blamont-Chauvry, were
delighted to present the charming survivor of the
wreck of an ancient family at court.
Victurnien went to the Tuileries in
a splendid carriage with his armorial bearings on
the panels; but his presentation to His Majesty made
it abundantly clear to him that the people occupied
the royal mind so much that his nobility was like
to be forgotten. The restored dynasty, moreover,
was surrounded by triple ranks of eligible old men
and gray-headed courtiers; the young noblesse was reduced
to a cipher, and this Victurnien guessed at once.
He saw that there was no suitable place for him at
court, nor in the government, nor the army, nor, indeed,
anywhere else. So he launched out into the world
of pleasure. Introduced at the Elyess-Bourbon,
at the Duchesse d’Angouleme’s, at the
Pavillon Marsan, he met on all sides with the surface
civilities due to the heir of an old family, not so
old but it could be called to mind by the sight of
a living member. And, after all, it was not a
small thing to be remembered. In the distinction
with which Victurnien was honored lay the way to the
peerage and a splendid marriage; he had taken the
field with a false appearance of wealth, and his vanity
would not allow him to declare his real position.
Besides, he had been so much complimented on the figure
that he made, he was so pleased with his first success,
that, like many other young men, he felt ashamed to
draw back. He took a suite of rooms in the Rue
du Bac, with stables and a complete equipment for
the fashionable life to which he had committed himself.
These preliminaries cost him fifty thousand francs,
which money, moreover, the young gentleman managed
to draw in spite of all Chesnel’s wise precautions,
thanks to a series of unforeseen events.
Chesnel’s letter certainly reached
his friend’s office, but Maitre Sorbier was
dead; and Mme. Sorbier, a matter-of-fact person,
seeing it was a business letter, handed it on to her
husband’s successor. Maitre Cardot, the
new notary, informed the young Count that a draft on
the Treasury made payable to the deceased would be
useless; and by way of reply to the letter, which
had cost the old provincial notary so much thought,
Cardot despatched four lines intended not to reach
Chesnel’s heart, but to produce the money.
Chesnel made the draft payable to Sorbier’s
young successor; and the latter, feeling but little
inclination to adopt his correspondent’s sentimentality,
was delighted to put himself at the Count’s
orders, and gave Victurnien as much money as he wanted.
Now those who know what life in Paris
means, know that fifty thousand francs will not go
very far in furniture, horses, carriages, and elegance
generally; but it must be borne in mind that Victurnien
immediately contracted some twenty thousand francs’
worth of debts besides, and his tradespeople at first
were not at all anxious to be paid, for our young
gentleman’s fortune had been prodigiously increased,
partly by rumor, partly by Josephin, that Chesnel in
livery.
Victurnien had not been in town a
month before he was obliged to repair to his man of
business for ten thousand francs; he had only been
playing whist with the Ducs de Navarreins, de Chaulieu,
and de Lenoncourt, and now and again at his club.
He had begun by winning some thousands of francs but
pretty soon lost five or six thousand, which brought
home to him the necessity of a purse for play.
Victurnien had the spirit that gains goodwill everywhere,
and puts a young man of a great family on a level
with the very highest. He was not merely admitted
at once into the band of patrician youth, but was
even envied by the rest. It was intoxicating to
him to feel that he was envied, nor was he in this
mood very likely to think of reform. Indeed,
he had completely lost his head. He would not
think of the means; he dipped into his money-bags
as if they could be refilled indefinitely; he deliberately
shut his eyes to the inevitable results of the system.
In that dissipated set, in the continual whirl of
gaiety, people take the actors in their brilliant costumes
as they find them, no one inquires whether a man can
afford to make the figure he does, there is nothing
in worse taste than inquiries as to ways and means.
A man ought to renew his wealth perpetually, and as
Nature does —below the surface and out
of sight. People talk if somebody comes to grief;
they joke about a newcomer’s fortune till their
minds are set at rest, and at this they draw the line.
Victurnien d’Esgrignon, with all the Faubourg
Saint-Germain to back him, with all his protectors
exaggerating the amount of his fortune (were it only
to rid themselves of responsibility), and magnifying
his possessions in the most refined and well-bred
way, with a hint or a word; with all these advantages
—to repeat—Victurnien was, in
fact, an eligible Count. He was handsome, witty,
sound in politics; his father still possessed the
ancestral castle and the lands of the marquisate.
Such a young fellow is sure of an admirable reception
in houses where there are marriageable daughters,
fair but portionless partners at dances, and young
married women who find that time hangs heavy on their
hands. So the world, smiling, beckoned him to
the foremost benches in its booth; the seats reserved
for marquises are still in the same place in Paris;
and if the names are changed, the things are the same
as ever.
In the most exclusive circle of society
in the Faubourg Saint-Germain, Victurnien found the
Chevalier’s double in the person of the Vidame
de Pamiers. The Vidame was a Chevalier de Valois
raised to the tenth power, invested with all the prestige
of wealth, enjoying all the advantages of high position.
The dear Vidame was a repositary for everybody’s
secrets, and the gazette of the Faubourg besides;
nevertheless, he was discreet, and, like other gazettes,
only said things that might safely be published.
Again Victurnien listened to the Chevalier’s
esoteric doctrines. The Vidame told young d’Esgrignon,
without mincing matters, to make conquests among women
of quality, supplementing the advice with anecdotes
from his own experience. The Vicomte de Pamiers,
it seemed, had permitted himself much that it would
serve no purpose to relate here; so remote was it all
from our modern manners, in which soul and passion
play so large a part, that nobody would believe it.
But the excellent Vidame did more than this.
“Dine with me at a tavern to-morrow,”
said he, by way of conclusion. “We will
digest our dinner at the Opera, and afterwards I will
take you to a house where several people have the
greatest wish to meet you.”
The Vidame gave a delightful little
dinner at the Rocher de Cancale; three guests only
were asked to meet Victurnien—de Marsay,
Rastignac, and Blondet. Emile Blondet, the young
Count’s fellow-townsman, was a man of letters
on the outskirts of society to which he had been introduced
by a charming woman from the same province. This
was one of the Vicomte de Troisville’s daughters,
now married to the Comte de Montcornet, one of those
of Napoleon’s generals who went over to the
Bourbons. The Vidame held that a dinner-party
of more than six persons was beneath contempt.
In that case, according to him, there was an end alike
of cookery and conversation, and a man could not sip
his wine in a proper frame of mind.
“I have not yet told you, my
dear boy, where I mean to take you to-night,”
he said, taking Victurnien’s hands and tapping
on them. “You are going to see Mlle.
des Touches; all the pretty women with any pretensions
to wit will be at her house en petit comite. Literature,
art, poetry, any sort of genius, in short, is held
in great esteem there. It is one of our old-world
bureaux d’esprit, with a veneer of monarchical
doctrine, the livery of this present age.”
“It is sometimes as tiresome
and tedious there as a pair of new boots, but there
are women with whom you cannot meet anywhere else,”
said de Marsay.
“If all the poets who went there
to rub up their muse were like our friend here,”
said Rastignac, tapping Blondet familiarly on the
shoulder, “we should have some fun. But
a plague of odes, and ballads, and driveling meditations,
and novels with wide margins, pervades the sofas and
the atmosphere.”
“I don’t dislike them,”
said de Marsay, “so long as they corrupt girls’
minds, and don’t spoil women.”
“Gentlemen,” smiled Blondet,
“you are encroaching on my field of literature.”
“You need not talk. You
have robbed us of the most charming woman in the world,
you lucky rogue; we may be allowed to steal your less
brilliant ideas,” cried Rastignac.
“Yes, he is a lucky rascal,”
said the Vidame, and he twitched Blondet’s ear.
“But perhaps Victurnien here will be luckier
still this evening——”
“Already!” exclaimed
de Marsay. “Why, he only came here a month
ago; he has scarcely had time to shake the dust of
his old manor house off his feet, to wipe off the
brine in which his aunt kept him preserved; he has
only just set up a decent horse, a tilbury in the latest
style, a groom——”
“No, no, not a groom,”
interrupted Rastignac; “he has some sort of an
agricultural laborer that he brought with him ‘from
his place.’ Buisson, who understands a
livery as well as most, declared that the man was
physically incapable of wearing a jacket.”
“I will tell you what, you ought
to have modeled yourself on Beaudenord,” the
Vidame said seriously. “He has this advantage
over all of you, my young friends, he has a genuine
specimen of the English tiger——”
“Just see, gentlemen, what the
noblesse have come to in France!” cried Victurnien.
“For them the one important thing is to have
a tiger, a thoroughbred, and baubles——”
“Bless me!” said Blondet.
“’This gentleman’s good sense at
times appalls me.’—Well, yes, young
moralist, you nobles have come to that. You have
not even left to you that lustre of lavish expenditure
for which the dear Vidame was famous fifty years ago.
We revel on a second floor in the Rue Montorgueil.
There are no more wars with the Cardinal, no Field
of the Cloth of Gold. You, Comte d’Esgrignon,
in short, are supping in the company of one Blondet,
younger son of a miserable provincial magistrate,
with whom you would not shake hands down yonder; and
in ten years’ time you may sit beside him among
peers of the realm. Believe in yourself after
that, if you can.”
“Ah, well,” said Rastignac,
“we have passed from action to thought, from
brute force to force of intellect, we are talking——”
“Let us not talk of our reverses,”
protested the Vidame; “I have made up my mind
to die merrily. If our friend here has not a tiger
as yet, he comes of a race of lions, and can dispense
with one.”
“He cannot do without a tiger,”
said Blondet; “he is too newly come to town.”
“His elegance may be new as
yet,” returned de Marsay, “but we are
adopting it. He is worthy of us, he understands
his age, he has brains, he is nobly born and gently
bred; we are going to like him, and serve him, and
push him——”
“Whither?” inquired Blondet.
“Inquisitive soul!” said Rastignac.
“With whom will he take up to-night?”
de Marsay asked.
“With a whole seraglio,” said the Vidame.
“Plague take it! What can
we have done that the dear Vidame is punishing us
by keeping his word to the infanta? I should be
pitiable indeed if I did not know her——”
“And I was once a coxcomb even
as he,” said the Vidame, indicating de Marsay.
The conversation continued pitched
in the same key, charmingly scandalous, and agreeably
corrupt. The dinner went off very pleasantly.
Rastignac and de Marsay went to the Opera with the
Vidame and Victurnien, with a view to following them
afterwards to Mlle. des Touches’ salon.
And thither, accordingly, this pair of rakes betook
themselves, calculating that by that time the tragedy
would have been read; for of all things to be taken
between eleven and twelve o’clock at night,
a tragedy in their opinion was the most unwholesome.
They went to keep a watch on Victurnien and to embarrass
him, a piece of schoolboys’s mischief embittered
by a jealous dandy’s spite. But Victurnien
was gifted with that page’s effrontery which
is a great help to ease of manner; and Rastignac,
watching him as he made his entrance, was surprised
to see how quickly he caught the tone of the moment.
“That young d’Esgrignon
will go far, will he not?” he said, addressing
his companion.
“That is as may be,” returned
de Marsay, “but he is in a fair way.”