IX
IN THE
CHAMBER
The king had opened the Chamber, but
Sallenauve was not present, and his absence was causing
a certain sensation in the democratic ranks.
The “National” was particularly disturbed.
As a stockholder of the paper, coming frequently to
its office before the election, and even consenting
to write articles for it, how strange that on the eve
of the opening of the session the newly elected deputy
should not come near it!
“Now that he is elected,”
said some of the editorial staff, remarking on the
total disappearance of the man whom they considered
they had done their part to elect, “does monsieur
think he can treat us scurvily? It is getting
too much the habit of these lordly deputies to be
very obsequious as long as they are candidates, and
throw us away, after they have climbed the tree, like
an old coat.”
Less excitable, the editor-in-chief
calmed this first ebullition, but Sallenauve’s
absence from the royal session seemed to him very
strange.
The next day, when the bureaus are
constituted, presidents and secretaries appointed,
and committees named, Sallenauve’s absence was
still more marked. In the bureau for which his
name was drawn, it happened that the election of its
president depended on one vote; through the absence
of the deputy of Arcis, the ministry gained that advantage
and the Opposition lost it. Much discontent was
expressed by the newspapers of the latter party; they
did not, as yet, openly attack the conduct of the
defaulter, but they declared that they could not account
for it.
Maxime de Trailles, on the other hand,
fully prepared and on the watch, was waiting only
until the routine business of the bureaus and the
appointment of the committees was disposed of to send
in the petition of the Romilly peasant-woman, which
had been carefully drawn up by Massol, under whose
clever pen the facts he was employed to make the most
of assumed that degree of probability which barristers
contrive to communicate to their sayings and affirmations.
But when Maxime had the joy of seeing that Sallenauve’s
absence in itself was creating a prejudice against
him, he went again to Rastignac and asked him if he
did not think it better to hasten the moment of attack,
since everything seemed so favorable.
This time Rastignac was much more
explicit: Sallenauve’s absence abroad seemed
to him the conduct of a man who feared exposure and
had lost his head. He therefore advised de Trailles
to have the petition sent in at once, and he made
no difficulty about promising his assistance to a
conspiracy which appeared to be taking color, the
result of which must be, in any case, a very pretty
scandal. The next day the first trace of his
subterranean influence was visible. The order
of the day in the Chamber was the verification of powers,—that
is, the admission of newly elected members. The
deputy appointed to report on the elections in the
department of the Aube was a strong partisan of the
ministry, and, in consequence of a confidential communication
made to him that morning, the following paragraph
appeared in his report:—
The action of the electoral college of
Arcis was regular. Monsieur de Sallenauve produced
in proper time all the necessary papers proving
his eligibility; his admission therefore would seem
to present no difficulty. But rumors of a singular
nature have been current since the election as to
the name and identity of the new deputy; and, in
support of these rumors, a petition to authorize a
criminal prosecution has been laid before the president
of the Chamber. This petition states an extremely
serious fact, namely: that Monsieur de Sallenauve
has usurped the name he bears; and this usurpation,
being made by means of an official document, assumes
the character of forgery committed by substitution
of person. A most regrettable circumstance,
continued the report,
is the absence of Monsieur de Sallenauve,
who instead of instantly contradicting the accusation
made against him, has not appeared since the opening
of the Chamber at any of its sessions, and it is not
even known where he is. Under these circumstances,
his admission, the committee think, cannot be granted;
and they feel it therefore their duty to refer the
matter to the Chamber.
Daniel d’Arthez, a deputy of
the legitimist opposition, who had been favorable
to the election of Sallenauve, hastened, after the
reading of this report, to ask for the floor, and
entreated the Chamber to remark that its adoption
would be wholly unjustifiable.
“The point for the committee
to decide,” he said, “was the regularity
of the election. The report distinctly states
that this is not called in question. The Chamber
can, therefore, do only one thing; namely, admit by
an immediate vote the validity of an election about
which no irregularity is alleged. To bring in
the question of authorizing a criminal investigation
would be an abuse of power; because by not allowing
discussion or defence, and by dispensing with the usual
forms of procedure which guarantee certain rights
to a party implicated, the Chamber would be virtually
rejecting the action of the electors in the exercise
of their sovereign functions. Every one can see,
moreover,” added the orator, “that to
grant the right of criminal investigation in this
connection is to prejudge the merits of the case; the
presumption of innocence, which is the right of every
man, is ignored —whereas in this case the
person concerned is a man whose integrity has never
been doubted, and who has just been openly honored
by the suffrages of his fellow citizens.”
The discussion was prolonged for some
time, the ministerial orators, of course, taking the
other side, until an unfortunate event occurred.
The senior deputy, acting as president (for the Chamber
was not yet constituted), was a worn-out old man,
very absent-minded, and wholly unaccustomed to the
functions which his age devolved upon him. He
had duly received Monsieur de Sallenauve’s letter
requesting leave of absence; and had he recollected
to communicate it, as in duty bound, to the Chamber
at the proper time, the discussion would probably have
been nipped in the bud. But parliamentary matters
are apt to go haphazard; when, reminded of the letter
by the discussion, he produced it, and when the Chamber
learned that the request for leave of absence was
made for an indefinite period and for the vague purpose
of “urgent affairs,” the effect was lamentable.
“It is plain,” said all
the ministerial party, “that he has gone to
England to escape an investigation; he feared the result;
he feels himself unmasked.”
This view, setting aside political
prejudices, was shared by the sterner minds of all
parties, who refused to conceive of a man not hastening
to defend himself from such a blasting accusation.
In short, after a very keen and able argument from
the attorney-general, Vinet, who had taken heart on
finding that the accused was likely to be condemned
by default, the question of adjournment was put to
the vote and passed, but by a very small majority;
eight days being granted to the said deputy to appear
and defend himself.
The day after the vote was passed
Maxime de Trailles wrote to Madame Beauvisage as follows:—
Madame,—The enemy received
a severe check yesterday. In the opinion of
my friend Rastignac, a very intelligent and experienced
judge in parliamentary matters, Dorlange can never
recover from the blow, no matter what may happen
later. If we cannot succeed in producing positive
proof to support the statement of our good peasant-woman,
it is possible that this rascal, supposing always
that he ventures to return to France, may be admitted
to the Chamber. But if he is, he can only drag
on a despised and miserable existence; he will be
driven to resign, and then the election of Monsieur
Beauvisage is beyond all doubt; for the electors,
ashamed to have forsaken him for such a rascal, will
be only too glad to reinstate themselves in public
opinion by the choice of an honorable man—who
was, in fact, their first choice.
It is to your rare sagacity, madame, that
this result is due; for without that species of
second sight which showed you the chances hidden
in the revelation of that woman, we should have missed
our best weapon. I must tell you though you
may think this vanity, that neither Rastignac nor
the attorney-general, in spite of their great political
acumen, perceived the true value of your discovery;
and I myself, if I had not had the good fortune of
your acquaintance, and thus been enabled to judge
of the great value of all ideas emanating from you,
even I might have shared the indifference of the
two statesmen to the admirable weapon which you
have placed in our hands. I have now succeeded
in proving to Rastignac the shrewdness and perspicacity
you have shown in this matter, and he sincerely
admires you for them. Therefore, madame, when
I have the happiness of belonging to you by the tie
we proposed, I shall not have to initiate you into
politics, for you have already found your way there.
Nothing further can take place for a week,
which is the period of delay granted by the Chamber.
If the defaulter does not then appear, I am confident
his election will be annulled. You can easily
believe that between now and then all my efforts will
be given to increase the feeling in the Chamber
against him, both by arguments in the press and
by private conversations. Rastignac has also
given orders among the ministerial adherents to that
effect. We may feel confident, therefore, that
by the end of another week our enemy will find public
opinion solidly against him.
Will you permit me, madame, to recall
myself to the memory of
Mademoiselle Cecile, and accept yourself,
together with Monsieur
Beauvisage, the assurance of my most respectful
sentiments.
A hint from certain quarters given
to the ministerial journals now began to surround
Sallenauve’s name with an atmosphere of disrespect
and ridicule; insulting insinuations colored his absence
with an appearance of escaping the charges. The
effect of these attacks was all the greater because
Sallenauve was very weakly defended by his political
co-religionists, which was scarcely surprising.
Not knowing how to explain his conduct, the Opposition
papers were afraid to commit themselves in favor of
a man whose future was daily becoming more nebulous.
On the evening before the day on which
the time granted for an explanation would expire,
Sallenauve being still absent, a ministerial paper
published, under the heading of “A Lost Deputy,”
a very witty and insolent article, which was read
by every one and created a great sensation. During
that evening Madame de l’Estorade went to see
Madame de Camps, whom she found alone with her husband.
She was greatly agitated, and said, as soon as she
entered the room,—
“Have you read that infamous article?”
“No,” replied Madame Octave,
“but Monsieur de Camps was just telling me about
it. It is really shameful that the ministry should
not only countenance, but instigate such villanies.”
“I am half crazy,” said
Madame de l’Estorade; “the whole blame
rests on us.”
“That is saying too much,” said Madame
Octave.
“No,” said her husband,
“I agree with madame; all the venom of this
affair could have been destroyed by one action of de
l’Estorade’s, and in refusing to make
it he is, if not the author, at least the accomplice
of this slander.”
“Your wife has told you—”
began Madame de l’Estorade in a reproachful
tone.
“Yes,” said Madame de
Camps; “it was necessary to explain to my husband
the sort of madness that seemed to have taken possession
of M. de l’Estorade; but what I said to him
was not unfaithful to any secret that concerned you
personally.”
“Ah! you are such a united pair,”
said Madame de l’Estorade, with a heavy sigh.
“I don’t regret that you have told all
that to your husband; in fact, two heads are better
than one to advise me in the cruel position in which
I am placed.”
“What has happened?” asked Madame de Camps.
“My husband is losing his head,”
replied the countess. “I don’t see
a trace of his old moral sense left in him. Far
from understanding that he is, as Monsieur de Camps
said just now, the accomplice of the shameful attack
which is going on, and that he has not, like those
who started it, the excuse of ignorance, he actually
seems to take delight in this wickedness. Just
now he brought me that vile paper triumphantly, and
I could scarcely prevent his being very angry with
me for not agreeing with his opinion that it was infinitely
witty and amusing.”
“That letter of Monsieur Gaston’s
was a terrible shock to him,” said Madame de
Camps,—“a shock not only to his heart
but to his body.”
“I admit that,” said her
husband; “but, hang it! a man is a man, and
he ought to take the words of a maniac for what they
are worth.”
“It is certainly very singular
that Monsieur de Sallenauve does not return,”
said Madame Octave; “for that Joseph Bricheteau,
to whom you gave his address, must have written to
him.”
“Oh!” cried the countess,
“there’s fatality in the whole thing.
To-morrow the question of confirming the election or
not comes up in the Chamber; and if Monsieur de Sallenauve
is not here by that time, the ministry expects to
annul it.”
“It is infamous,” said
Monsieur de Camps, “and I have a great mind to
go to the president of the Chamber, and tell him how
matters are.”
“I would have asked you to do
so at the risk of my husband suspecting my interference,
but one thing restrained me. Monsieur de Sallenauve
particularly desires that Monsieur Gaston’s mental
condition be not made public.”
“It is evident,” said
Madame de Camps, “that do defend him in any way
would go against his wishes. After all, the decision
against him in the Chamber is very doubtful, whereas
Monsieur Gaston’s madness, if mentioned publicly,
would never be forgotten.”
“But I have not told you the
worst so far as I am concerned,” said Madame
de l’Estorade. “Just before dinner
my husband imparted to me an absolutely Satanic desire
of his—order, I might call it.”
“What was it?” asked Madame de Camps,
anxiously.
“He wishes me to go with him
to the Chamber to-morrow,—to the gallery
reserved for the peers of France,—and listen
to the discussion.”
“He is actually, as you say,
losing his head,” cried Monsieur de Camps; “he
is like Thomas Diafoirus, proposing to take his fiance
to enjoy a dissection—”
Madame de Camps made her husband a
sign which meant, “Don’t pour oil on the
fire.” Then she asked the countess whether
she had tried to show M. de l’Estorade the impropriety
of that step.
“The moment I began to object,”
replied the countess, “he was angry, and said
I must be very anxious to keep up our intimacy with
’that man’ when I rejected such a natural
opportunity to show publicly that the acquaintance
was at an end.”
“Well, my dear, you will have
to go,” said Madame de Camps. “The
peace of your home before everything else! Besides,
considering all things, your presence at the discussion
may be taken as a proof of kindly interest.”
“For sixteen years,” remarked
Monsieur de Camps, “you have ruled and governed
in your home; and here, at last, is a revolution which
cruelly overturns your power.”
“Ah, monsieur, I beg you to
believe that that sovereignty—which I always
sought to conceal—I never used arbitrarily.”
“As if I did not know that!”
replied Monsieur de Camps, taking Madame de l’Estorade’s
hand and pressing it affectionately. “I
am, nevertheless, of my wife’s opinion:
you will have to drink this cup.”
“But I shall die of shame in
listening to the ministerial infamies; I shall feel
that they are cutting the throat of a man whom two
words from me could save.”
“True,” said Monsieur
de Camps, “and a man, too, who has done you a
vast service. But you must choose: do you
prefer to bring hell into your home, and exasperate
the unhealthy condition of your husband’s mind?”
“Listen to me, dearest,”
said Madame de Camps. “Tell Monsieur de
l’Estorade that I want to go to this session,
and ask him for a permit; don’t yield the point
to any objections. I shall then be there to take
care of you, and perhaps protect you from yourself.”
“I did not dare ask it of you,”
replied Madame de l’Estorade. “We
don’t usually invite friends to see us commit
bad actions; but since you are so kind as to offer,
I can truly say I shall be less wretched if you are
with me. Now good-bye; I don’t want my husband
to find me out when he comes home. He is dining
with Monsieur de Rastignac, where, no doubt, they
are plotting for to-morrow.”
“Yes, go; and I will write you
a note in the course of an hour, as if I had not seen
you, asking you to get me a permit for to-morrow’s
session, which I am told will be very interesting.”
“To be reduced to conspiracy!”
cried Madame de l’Estorade, kissing her friend.
“My dear love,” said Madame
de Camps, “they say the life of a Christian
is a struggle, but that of a woman married in a certain
way is a pitched battle. Have patience and courage.”
So saying, the two friends separated.
The next day, about two o’clock,
Madame de l’Estorade, accompanied by her husband
and Madame Octave de Camps, took their places in the
gallery reserved for the members of the peerage.
She seemed ill, and answered languidly the bows and
salutations that were addressed to her from all parts
of the Chamber. Madame de Camps, who was present
for the first time in the parliamentary precincts,
made two observations: first, she objected strongly
to the slovenly costume of a great many of the “honorable
gentlemen”; and she was also amazed at the number
of bald heads she looked down upon from the gallery.
Monsieur de l’Estorade took pains to point out
to her all the notabilities present: first, the
great men whom we need not mention, because their
names are in everybody’s memory; next, the poet
Canalis, whose air she thought Olympian; d’Arthez,
who pleased her by his modesty and absence of assumption;
Vinet, of whom she remarked that he was like a viper
in spectacles; Victorin Hulot, a noted orator of the
Left Centre. It was some time before she could
accustom herself to the hum of the various conversations,
which seemed to her like the buzzing of bees around
their hive; but the thing that most amazed her was
the general aspect of this assemblage of legislators,
where a singular laisser-aller and a total
absence of dignity would never have led her to suppose
she was in the hall of the representatives of a great
people.
It was written that on this day no
pain or unpleasantness should be spared to Madame
de l’Estorade. Just before the sitting began,
the Marquise d’Espard, accompanied by Monsieur
de Ronquerolles, entered the peers’ gallery
and took her seat beside the countess. Though
meeting constantly in society, the two women could
not endure each other. Madame de l’Estorade
despised the spirit of intrigue, the total lack of
principle, and the sour, malevolent nature which the
marquise covered with an elegant exterior; and the
marquise despised, to a still greater degree, what
she called the pot-au-feu virtues of Madame
de l’Estorade. It must also be mentioned
that Madame de l’Estorade was thirty-two years
old and her beauty was still undimmed, whereas Madame
d’Espard was forty-four, and, in spite of the
careful dissimulations of the toilet, her beauty was
fairly at an end.
“You do not often come here,
I think,” said Madame d’Espard, after the
usual conventional phrases about the pleasure
of their meeting had passed.
“I never come,” replied Madame de l’Estorade.
“And I am most assiduous,” said Madame
d’Espard.
Then, pretending to a sudden recollection, she added,—
“Ah! I forgot; you have
a special interest, I think, on this occasion.
A friend of yours is to be judged, is he not?”
“Yes; Monsieur de Sallenauve has been to our
house several times.”
“How sad it is,” said
the marquise, “to see a man who, Monsieur de
Ronquerolles tells me, had the making of a hero in
many ways, come down to the level of the correctional
police.”
“His crime so far,” said
Madame de l’Estorade, dryly, “consists
solely in his absence.”
“At any rate,” continued
the marquise, “he seems to be a man eaten up
by ambition. Before his parliamentary attempt,
he made, as you doubtless know, a matrimonial attempt
upon the Lantys, which ended in the beautiful heiress
of that family, into whose good graces he had insinuated
himself, being sent to a convent.”
Madame de l’Estorade was not
much surprised at finding that this history, which
Sallenauve had told her as very secret, had reached
the knowledge of Madame d’Espard. The marquise
was one of the best informed women in Paris; her salon,
as an old academician had said mythologically, was
the Temple of Fame.
“I think the sitting is about
to begin,” said Madame de l’Estorade;
fearing some blow from the claws of the marquise, she
was eager to put an end to the conversation.
The president had rung his bell, the
deputies were taking their seats, the curtain was
about to rise. As a faithful narrator of the session
we desire our readers to attend, we think it safer
and better in every way to copy verbatim the
report of the debate as given in one of the morning
papers of the following day.
Chamber of Deputies.
In the chair, M. Cointet (vice-president).
(Sitting of May 28.)
At two o’clock the president takes
his seat.
M. the Keeper of the Seals, M. the minister
of the Interior, M.
the minister of Public Works, are on the
ministerial bench.
The minutes of the last session are read,
approved, and accepted.
The order of the day is the verification
of the powers and the
admission of the deputy elected by the
arrondissement of
Arcis-sur-Aube.
The President.—M. the
reporter, from the Committee on the
elections of the department of the Aube,
has the floor.
The Reporter.—Gentlemen,
the singular and regrettable situation in which
Monsieur de Sallenauve has placed himself has not
terminated in the manner that was hoped and expected
last week. The period of delay expired yesterday;
Monsieur de Sallenauve continues to absent himself
from your sittings, and no letter has reached M.
le president asking for further leave of absence.
This indifference to the functions which Monsieur
de Sallenauve appeared to have solicited with so
much eagerness [slight agitation on the Left] would
be, in any case, a grave mistake; but when connected
with an accusation that seriously compromises the
deputy elect, it must be regarded as altogether unfortunate
for his reputation. [Murmurs on the Left. Approbation
from the Centre.] Compelled to search for the solution
of a difficulty which may be said to be without
precedent in parliamentary annals, your committee,
in the adoption of suitable measures, finds itself
divided into two very distinct opinions. The
minority whom I represent—the committee
consisting of but three members—thinks
that it ought to submit to you a resolution which
I shall call radical, and which has for its object
the cutting short of the difficulty by returning
the question to its natural judges. Annul hic
et nunc the election of Monsieur de Sallenauve,
and send him back to the voters by whom he was elected
and of whom he is so unfaithful a representative.
Such is one of the solutions I have the honor to
present to you. [Agitation on the Left.] The majority,
on the contrary, are of opinion that the will of the
electors cannot be too highly respected, and that
the faults of a man honored by their confidence
ought not to be discussed until the utmost limits
of forbearance and indulgence have been passed.
Consequently your committee instruct me to suggest
that you grant to Monsieur de Sallenauve a further
delay of fifteen days [murmurs from the Centre;
“Very good! very good!” from the Left];
being satisfied that if after that delay Monsieur
de Sallenauve does not present himself or give any
other sign of existence, it will be sufficient proof
that he has thrown up his election, and the Chamber
need not be dragged on his account into irritating
and useless debates. [Murmurs of various kinds.]
M. le Colonel Franchessini, who during
the foregoing speech was
sitting on the ministers’ bench
in earnest conversation with the
minister of Public Works, here demanded
the floor.
The President.—M. de
Canalis has already asked for it.
M. de Canalis.—Gentlemen,
M. de Sallenauve is one of those bold men who, like
myself, are convinced that politics are not forbidden
fruit to any form of intellect, and that in the poet,
in the artist, as well as in the magistrate, the
administrator, the lawyer, the physician, and the
property-holder, may be found the stuff that makes
a statesman. In virtue of this community of opinion,
M. de Sallenauve has my entire sympathy, and no one
can be surprised to see me mount this tribune to
support the proposal of the majority of your committee.
I cannot, however, agree to their final conclusion;
and the idea of our colleague being declared, without
discussion, dismissed from this Chamber through the
single fact of his absence, prolonged without leave,
is repugnant to my reason and also to my conscience.
You are told: “The absence of M. de Sallenauve
is all the more reprehensible because he is under
the odium of a serious accusation.” But
suppose this accusation is the very cause of his
absence—[“Ha! ha!” from the Centre,
and laughter.] Allow me to say, gentlemen, that
I am not, perhaps, quite so artless as Messieurs the
laughers imagine. I have one blessing, at any
rate: ignoble interpretations do not come into
my mind; and that M. de Sallenauve, with the eminent
position he has filled in the world of art, should
seek to enter the world of politics by means of
a crime, is a supposition which I cannot admit a
priori. Around a birth like his two hideous
spiders called slander and intrigue have every facility
to spread their toils; and far from admitting that
he has fled before the accusation that now attacks
him, I ask myself whether his absence does not mean
that he is now engaged in collecting the elements
of his defence. [Left: “Very good!”
“That’s right.” Ironical
laughter in the Centre.] Under that supposition—in
my opinion most probable—so far from
arraigning him in consequence of this absence, ought
we not rather to consider it as an act of deference
to the Chamber whose deliberations he did not feel
worthy to share until he found himself in a position
to confound his calumniators?
A Voice.—He wants leave
of absence for ten years, like
Telemachus, to search for his father.
M. de Canalis.—I did
not expect so poetical an interruption; but since
the memory of the Odyssey has been thus evoked, I shall
ask the Chamber to kindly remember that Ulysses,
though disguised as a beggar and loaded with insults,
was yet able to string his bow and easily get the
better of his enemies. [Violent murmurs from the
Centre.] I vote for leave of absence for fifteen days,
and that the Chamber be again consulted at the expiration
of that time.
M. le Colonel Franchessini.—I
do not know if the last speaker intended to intimidate
the Chamber, but, for my part, such arguments have
very little power upon me, and I am always ready to
send them back whence they came. [Left: “Come!
come!”]
The President.—Colonel,
no provocations!
M. le Colonel Franchessini.—I
am, however, of the opinion of the speaker who preceded
me; I do not think that the delinquent has fled
to escape the accusation against him. Neither
that accusation, nor the effect it will produce
upon your minds, nor even the quashing of his election
would be able at this moment to occupy his mind.
Do you wish to know what M. de Sallenauve is doing
in England? Then read the English papers.
For the last week they have rung with the praises
of a new prima donna who has just made her first
appearance at the London opera-house. [Violent murmurs;
interruption.]
A Voice.—Such gossip
is unworthy of this Chamber!
M. le Colonel Franchessini.—Gentlemen,
being more accustomed to the frankness of camps
than to the reticence of these precincts, I may
perhaps have committed the impropriety of thinking
aloud. The preceding speaker said to you that
he believed M. de Sallenauve was employed in collecting
his means of defence; well, I do not say to you
“I believe,” I tell you I know that
a rich stranger succeed in substituting his protection
for what which Phidias, our colleague, was bestowing
on his handsome model, an Italian woman —[Fresh
interruption. “Order! order!” “This
is intolerable!”]
A Voice.—M. le president,
silence the speaker!
Colonel Franchessini crosses his arms
and waits till the tumult
subsides.
The President.—I request
the speaker to keep to the question.
M. le Colonel Franchessini.—The
question! I have not left it. But, inasmuch
as the Chamber refuses to hear me, I declare that I
side with the minority of the committee. It
seems to me very proper to send M. de Sallenauve
back to his electors in order to know whether they
intended to send a deputy or a lover to this Chamber—[“Order!
order!” Loud disturbance on the Left. The
tumult increases.]
M. de Canalis hurries to the tribune.
The President.—M. le
ministre of Public Works has asked for the
floor; as minister of the king he has
the first right to be heard.
M. de Rastignac.—It
has not been without remonstrance on my part, gentlemen,
that this scandal has been brought to your notice.
I endeavored, in the name of the long friendship which
unites me to Colonel Franchessini, to persuade him
not to speak on this delicate subject, lest his
parliamentary inexperience, aggravated in a measure
by his witty facility of speech, should lead him
to some very regrettable indiscretion. Such, gentleman,
was the subject of the little conversation you may
have seen that he held with me on my bench before
he asked for the floor; and I myself have asked
for the same privilege only in order to remove from
your minds all idea of my complicity in the great mistake
he has just, as I think, committed by condescending
to the private details he has thought fit to relate
to this assembly. But as, against my intention,
and I may add against my will, I have entered the
tribune, the Chamber will permit me, perhaps, —although
no ministerial interest is here concerned,—to
say a few words. [Cries from the Centre: “Go
on!” “Speak!”]
M. le ministre then went on to say that
the conduct of the absent deputy showed contempt
for the Chamber; he was treating it lightly and
cavalierly. M. de Sallenauve had asked for leave
of absence; but how or where had he asked for it?
From a foreign country! That is to say, he
began by taking it, and then asked for it! Did
he trouble himself, as is usual in such cases, to
give a reason for the request? No; he merely
says, in his letter to your president, that he is
forced to absent himself on “urgent business,”—a
very convenient excuse, on which the Chamber might
be depopulated of half its members. But, supposing
that M. de Sallenauve’s business was really
urgent, and that he thought it of a nature not to be
explained in a letter that would necessarily be made
public, why had he not written confidentially to
the president, or even requested a friend in some
responsible position, whose simple word would have
sufficed, to assure the Chamber of the necessity of
the deputy’s absence without requiring any
statement of private reasons?
At this point M. de Rastignac’s
remarks were interrupted by a commotion in the corridor
to the right. Several deputies left their seats;
others jumped upon the benches, apparently endeavoring
to see something. The minister, after turning
to the president, from whom he seemed to be asking
an explanation, went back to the ministerial bench,
where he was immediately surrounded by a number
of the deputies of the Centre, among whom, noticeable
for the vehemence of his gestures, was M. le procureur-general
Vinet. Groups formed in the audience chamber;
the sitting was, in fact, informally suspended.
After a few moments’ delay M. le
president rings his bell.
The Ushers.—Take your
seats, gentlemen.
The deputies hasten on all sides to do
so.
The President.—M. de
Sallenauve has the floor.
M. de Sallenauve, who, during the few
moments that the sitting was interrupted by his
entrance, has been talking with M. de Canalis and
M. d’Arthez, goes to the tribune. His manner
is modest, but he shows no sign of embarrassment.
Every one is struck by his resemblance to the portraits
of one of the most fiery of the revolutionary orators.
A Voice.—It is Danton—without
the small-pox!
M. de Sallenauve.—[Profound
silence.] Gentlemen, I do not misjudge my parliamentary
value; I know that the persecution directed apparently
against me personally is, in point of fact, aimed
at the political opinions I have the honor to represent.
But, however that may be, my election seems to have
been viewed by the ministry as a matter of some
importance. In order to oppose it, a special
agent and special journalists were sent to Arcis;
and a humble employe under government, with a salary
of fifteen hundred francs, was dismissed, after
twenty years of faithful and honorable service,
for having aided in my success. [Loud murmurs from
the Centre.] I thank my honorable interrupters, feeling
sure that their loud disapprobation is given to
this strange dismissal, which is not open to the
slightest doubt. [Laughter on the Left.] As for
me, gentlemen, who could not be dismissed, I have been
attacked with another weapon,—sagacious
calumny, combined with my fortunate absence—
The Minister of Public Works.—Of
course the government sent you
out of the country.
M. de Sallenauve.—No,
Monsieur le ministre. I do not attribute my
absence to either your influence or your suggestions;
it was necessitated by imperious duty, and it had
no other instigation or motive. But, as to
the part you have really taken in the denunciation
set on foot against me, I am about to tell the facts,
and the Chamber will consider them. [Close attention.]
The law, in order to protect the independence of
the deputy, directs that no criminal prosecution
can be begun against a member of the national representation
without the preliminary consent of the Chamber; this
fact has been turned with great adroitness against
me. If the complaint had been laid before the
magistrates, it could not have been admitted even
for an instant; it is simply a bare charge, not supported
by evidence of any kind; and I have never heard that
the public authorities are in the habit of prosecuting
citizens on the mere allegation of the first-comer.
We must therefore admire the subtlety of mind which
instantly perceived that, by petitioning you for
leave to prosecute, all the benefits of the accusation,
politically speaking, would be obtained without encountering
the difficulty I have mentioned in the courts. [Excitement.]
Now, to what able parliamentary tactician must we
ascribe the honor of this invention? You know
already, gentleman, that it is due ostensibly to
a woman, a peasant-woman, one who labors for her living;
hence the conclusion is that the peasant-women of
Champagne have an intellectual superiority of which,
up to this time, neither you nor I were at all aware.
[Laughter.] It must be said, however, that before
coming to Paris to lodge her complaint, this woman
had an interview with the mayor of Arcis, my opponent
on the ministerial side in the late election.
From this conference she obtained certain lights.
To which we must add that the mayor, taking apparently
much interest in the charge to be brought against
me, agreed to pay the costs, not only of the peasant-woman’s
trip to Paris, but also those of the village practitioner
by whom she was accompanied. [Left: “Ha!
ha!”] This superior woman having arrived in
Paris, with whom did she immediately communicate?
With the special agent sent down to Arcis by the
government to ensure the success of the ministerial
candidate. And who drew up the petition to this
honorable Chamber for the necessary authority to
proceed to a criminal prosecution? Not precisely
the special ministerial agent himself, but a barrister
under his dictation, and after a breakfast to which
the peasant- woman and her adviser were invited
in order to furnish the necessary information. [Much
excitement. “Hear! hear!”]
The Minister of Public Works from his
seat.—Without discussing the truth
of these statements, as to which I have personally
no knowledge, I affirm upon my honor that the government
is completely ignorant of the proceedings now related,
which it blames and disavows in the most conclusive
manner.
M. de Sallenauve.—After
the formal declaration which I have had the good
fortune to evoke it would ill become me, gentlemen,
to insist on tracing the responsibility for this
intrigue back to the government. But what I
have already said will seem to you natural when
you remember that, as I entered this hall, the minister
of Public Works was in the tribune, taking part,
in a most unusual manner, in a discussion on discipline
wholly outside of his department, and endeavoring
to persuade you that I had conducted myself towards
this honorable body with a total want of reverence.
The minister of Public Works said a few
words which did not reach
us. Great disturbance.
M. Victorin Hulot.—M.
le president, have the goodness to
request the minister of Public Works not
to interrupt the speaker.
He can answer.
M. de Sallenauve.—According
to M. le comte de Rastignac, I showed essential
disrespect to the Chamber by asking, in a foreign
country, for leave of absence, which it was obvious
I had already taken before making my request.
But, in his extreme desire to find me to blame,
the minister lost sight of the fact that at the time
I left France the Chamber had not met, no president
existed, and therefore in making my request at that
time to the president of this assembly I should
simply have addressed a pure abstraction. [Left:
“True!”] As for the insufficiency of the
motives with which I supported my request, I regret
to have to say to the Chamber that I cannot be more
explicit even now; because in revealing the true
cause of my absence I should betray the secret of an
honorable man, and not my own. I did not conceal
from myself that by this reticence I exposed my
proceedings to mistaken interpretations,—though
I certainly did not expect it to give rise to accusations
as burlesque as they are odious. [Much excitement.]
In point of fact, I was so anxious not to neglect any
of the duties of my new position that I did precisely
what the minister of Public Works reproaches me
for not doing. I selected a man in a most honorable
position, who was, like myself, a repository of
the secret I am unable to divulge, and I requested
him to make all necessary explanations to the president
of this Chamber. But, calumny having no doubt
worked upon his mind, that honorable person must
have thought it compromising to his name and dignity
to do me this service. The danger to me being
now over, I shall not betray his prudent incognito.
Though I was far indeed from expecting this calculating
selfishness, which has painfully surprised and wounded
me, I shall be careful to keep this betrayal of
friendship between myself and his own conscience, which
alone shall reproach him for the wrong he has done
me.
At this moment a disturbance occurred
in the peers’ gallery; a
lady had fainted; and several deputies,
among them a physician,
left the hall hastily. The sitting
was momentarily suspended.
The President.—Ushers,
open the ventilators. It is want of air
that has caused this unfortunate accident.
M. de Sallenauve, be
good enough to resume your speech.
M. de Sallenauve.—Two
words, gentleman, and I have finished. I think
the petition to authorize a criminal prosecution has
already lost something of its weight in the minds
of my least cordial colleagues. But I have
here a letter from the Romilly peasant-woman, my
relation, duly signed and authenticated, withdrawing
her charge and confirming all the explanations I have
just had the honor to give you. I might read
this letter aloud to you, but I think it more becoming
to place it in the hands of M. le president. [“Very
good! very good!”] As for my illegal absence,
I returned to Paris early this morning, and I could
have been in my seat at the opening of the Chamber;
but, as M. de Canalis has told you, I had it much
at heart not to appear in this hall until I could
disperse the cloud which has so strangely appeared
around my reputation. It has taken me the whole
morning to obtain these papers. And now, gentlemen,
you have to decide whether a few hours’ delay
in taking his seat in this Chamber justifies you in
sending a colleague back to his electors. But
after all, whatever is done, whether some persist
in thinking me a forger, or a libertine, or merely
a negligent deputy, I feel no anxiety about the
verdict of my electors. I can confidently assert
that after a delay of a few weeks I shall return
to you.
Cries on all sides.—The
vote! the vote!
On leaving the tribune M. de Sallenauve
receives many
congratulations.
The President.—I put
to vote the admission of M. de Sallenauve
as the deputy elected by the arrondissement
of Arcis.
Nearly the whole Chamber rises and votes
the admission; a few
deputies of the Centre alone abstain from
taking part in the
demonstration.
M. de Sallenauve is admitted and takes
the oath.
The President.—The order
of the day calls for the reading of the Address
to the Throne, but the chairman of the committee appointed
to prepare it informs me that the document in question
cannot be communicated to the Chamber before to-morrow.
Nothing else being named in the order of the day,
I declare this sitting adjourned.
The Chamber rose at half-past four o’clock.