V
CHILDREN
On his return from the theatre Monsieur
Octave de Camps declared that it would be long before
they caught him at a fairy piece again.
But Nais, on the contrary, still under the spell of
its marvels gave a lively recital of the scene, which
showed how much her imagination was capable of being
stirred.
As Madame de Camps and her husband
walked away together, the former remarked,—
“That child is really very disquieting.
Madame de l’Estorade develops her too much;
I should not be surprised if she gave her a great deal
of trouble in future years.”
It would be difficult to mark the
precise moment in our contemporary habits and customs
when a new species of religion, which might be called
child-idolatry, appeared. Nor shall we find it
easier to discover by what species of influence this
worship has reached its present enormous development
among us. But, although unexplained, the fact
exists and ought to be recorded by every faithful historian
of the great and the little movements of society.
In the family of to-day children have taken the place
of the household gods of the ancients, and whoever
does not share this worship is not a morose and sour
spirit, nor a captious and annoying reasoner,—he
is simply an atheist.
Try to amuse one of these beloved
adored ones, all puffed up, as they naturally are,
by a sense of their importance, with dolls and toys
and Punch-and-Judys, as in the days of our unsophisticated
innocence! Nonsense! Boys must have ponies
and cigarettes, and the reading of novelettes; and
girls, the delight of playing hostess, giving afternoon
dances, and evening parties at which the real Guignol
of the Champs Elysees and Robert Houdin appear,—the
entertainment being announced on the invitation cards.
Sometimes, as now in the case of Nais de l’Estorade,
these little sovereigns obtain permission to give
a ball in grown-up style,—so much
so, that policemen are stationed about the doors,
and Delisle, Nattier, and Prevost provide the toilets
and the decorations.
With the character we have already
seen in Nais, it may be said that no one was better
fitted than she for the duties that devolved upon
her by the abdication of her mother. This abdication
took place before the evening of the ball itself,
for it was Mademoiselle Nais de l’Estorade who,
in her own name, invited her guests to do her the
honor to pass the evening chez elle; and as
Madame de l’Estorade would not allow the parody
to go as far as printed cards, Nais spent several
days writing her notes of invitation, taking care to
put in the corner, in conspicuous letters, the sacramental
word, “Dancing.”
Nothing could be more curious, or,
as Madame de Camps might have said, more alarming,
than the self-possession of this little girl of fourteen,
behaving precisely as she had seen her mother do on
like occasions; stationed, to receive her company,
at the door of the salon, and marking by her manner
the proper grades of welcome, from eager cordiality
to a coldness that verged on disdain. To her best
friends she gave her hand in truly English style; for
the rest she had smiles, apportioned to the degrees
of intimacy,—simple inclination of the
head for unknown guests or those of less account; with
little speeches now and then, and delicious mamma-like
airs for the tiny children whom it is necessary to
ask to these juvenile routs, however dangerous and
difficult to manage that element may be.
With the fathers and mothers of her
guests, as the ball was not given for them, Nais as
a general thing reversed the nature of the Gospel
invocation, Sinite parvulos venire ad me, and
was careful not to pass the limit of cold though respectful
politeness. But when Lucas, following the instructions
he had received, reversed the natural order of things
and announced, “Mesdemoiselles de la Roche-Hugon,
Madame la Baronne de la Roche-Hugon, and Madame la
Comtesse de Rastignac,” the little strategist
laid aside her reserve, and, running up to the wife
of the minister, she took her hand and pressed it to
her lips with charming grace.
After the dancing began, Nais was
unable to accept all the invitations which the elegant
young lions vied with one another in pressing upon
her; in fact, she grew sadly confused as to the number
and order of her engagements,—a circumstance
which very nearly led, in spite of the entente
cordiale, to an open rupture between France and
perfidious Albion. A quadrille doubly promised,
to a young English peer aged ten and a pupil in the
Naval School of about the same years, came very near
producing unpleasant complications, inasmuch as the
young British scion of nobility had assumed a boxing
attitude. That fray pacified, another annoying
episode occurred. A small boy, seeing a servant
with a tray of refreshments and being unable to reach
up to the objects of his greed, had the deplorable
idea of putting his hand on the edge of the tray and
bending it down to him. Result: a cascade
of mingled orgeat, negus, and syrups; and happy would
it have been had the young author of this mischief
been the only sufferer from the sugary torrent; but,
alas! nearly a dozen innocent victims were splashed
and spattered by the disastrous accident,—among
them four or five bacchantes, who were furious at
seeing their toilets injured, and would fain have
made an Orpheus of the clumsy infant. While he
was being rescued with great difficulty from their
clutches by the German governess, a voice was heard
amid the hubbub,—that of a pretty little
blonde, saying to a small Scottish youth with whom
she had danced the whole evening,—
“How odd of Nais to invite little boys of that
age!”
“That’s easily explained,”
said the Scottish youth; “he’s a boy of
the Treasury department. Nais had to ask him
on account of her parents,—a matter of
policy, you know.”
Then, taking the arm of one of his
friends, the same youth continued:—
“Hey, Ernest,” he said,
“I’d like a cigar; suppose we find a quiet
corner, out of the way of all this racket?”
“I can’t, my dear fellow,”
replied Ernest, in a whisper; “you know Leontine
always makes me a scene when she smells I’ve
been smoking, and she is charming to me to-night.
See, look at what she has given me!”
“A horse-hair ring!” exclaimed
the Scot, disdainfully, “with two locked hearts;
all the boys at school have them.”
“What have you to show that’s
better?” replied Ernest, in a piqued tone.
“Oh!” said the Scot, with
a superior air, “something much better.”
And drawing from the pouch which formed
an integral part of his costume a note on violet paper
highly perfumed,—
“There,” he said, putting
it under Ernest’s nose, “smell that!”
Indelicate friend that he was, Ernest
pounced upon the note and took possession of it.
The Scottish youth, furious, flung himself upon the
treacherous French boy; on which Monsieur de l’Estorade,
a thousand leagues from imagining the subject of the
quarrel, intervened and parted the combatants, which
enabled the ravisher to escape into a corner of the
salon to enjoy his booty. The note contained no
writing. The young scamp had probably taken the
paper out of his mother’s blotting-book.
A moment after, returning to his adversary and giving
him the note, he said in a jeering tone,—
“There’s your note; it is awfully compromising.”
“Keep it, monsieur,” replied
the Scot. “I shall ask for it to-morrow
in the Tuileries, under the horse-chestnuts; meantime,
you will please understand that all intercourse is
at an end between us.”
Ernest was less knightly; he contented
himself with putting the thumb of his right hand to
his nose and spreading the fingers,—an ironical
gesture he had acquired from his mother’s coachman;
after which he ran to find his partner for the next
quadrille.
But what details are these on which
we are wasting time, when we know that interests of
the highest order are moving, subterraneously, beneath
the surface of the children’s ball.
Arriving from Ville d’Avray
late in the afternoon, Sallenauve had brought Madame
de l’Estorade ill news of Marie-Gaston.
Under an appearance of resignation, he was gloomy,
and, singular to say, he had not visited the grave
of his wife,—as if he feared an emotion
he might not have the power to master. It seemed
to Sallenauve that his friend had come to the end
of his strength, and that a mental prostration of
the worst character was succeeding the over-excitement
he had shown at his election. One thing reassured
the new deputy, and enabled him to come to Paris for,
at any rate, a few hours. A friend of Marie-Gaston,
an English nobleman with whom he had been intimate
in Florence, came out to see him, and the sad man
greeted the new-comer with apparent joy.
In order to distract Sallenauve’s
thoughts from this anxiety, Madame de l’Estorade
introduced him to Monsieur Octave de Camps, the latter
having expressed a great desire to know him. The
deputy had not talked ten minutes with the iron-master
before he reached his heart by the magnitude of the
metallurgical knowledge his conversation indicated.
During the year in which he had been
preparing for a parliamentary life, Sallenauve had
busied himself by acquiring the practical knowledge
which enables an orator of the Chamber to take part
in all discussions and have reasons to give for his
general views. He had turned his attention more
especially to matters connected with the great question
of the revenue and taxation; such, for instance, as
the custom-house, laws of exchange, stamp duties,
and taxation, direct and indirect. Approaching
in this manner that problematical science—which
is, nevertheless, so sure of itself!—called
political economy, Sallenauve had also studied the
sources which contribute to form the great current
of national prosperity; and in this connection the
subject of mines, the topic at this moment most interesting
to Monsieur de Camps, had not been neglected by him.
We can imagine the admiration of the iron-master,
who had studied too exclusively the subject of iron
ore to know much about the other branches of metallurgy,
when the young deputy told him, apropos of the wealth
of our soil, a sort of Arabian Nights tale, which,
if science would only take hold of it, might become
a reality.
“But, monsieur, do you really
believe,” cried Monsieur de Camps, “that,
besides our coal and iron mines, we possess mines of
copper, lead, and, possibly, silver?”
“If you will take the trouble
to consult certain specialists,” replied Sallenauve,
“you will find that neither the boasted strata
of Bohemia and Saxony nor even those of Russia and
Hungary can be compared to those hidden in the Pyrenees,
in the Alps from Briancon to the Isere, in the Cevennes
on the Lozere side, in the Puy-de-Dome, Bretagne, and
the Vosges. In the Vosges, more especially about
the town of Saint-Die, I can point out to you a single
vein of the mineral of silver which lies to the depth
of fifty to eighty metres with a length of thirteen
kilometres.”
“But, monsieur, why has such
untold metallurgical wealth never been worked?”
“It has been, in former days,”
replied Sallenauve, “especially during the Roman
occupation of Gaul. After the fall of the Roman
Empire, the work was abandoned; but the lords of the
soil and the clergy renewed it in the middle ages;
after that, during the struggle of feudality against
the royal power and the long civil wars which devastated
France, the work was again suspended, and has never
since been taken up.”
“Are you sure of what you say?”
“Ancient authors, Strabo and
others, all mention these mines, and the tradition
of their existence still lingers in the regions where
they are situated; decrees of emperors and the ordinances
of certain of our kings bear testimony to the value
of their products; in certain places more material
proof may be found in excavations of considerable depth
and length, in galleries and halls cut in the solid
rock,—in short, in the many traces still
existing of those vast works which have immortalized
Roman industry. To this must be added that the
modern study of geological science has confirmed and
developed these irrefutable indications.”
The imagination of Monsieur Octave
de Camps, hitherto limited to the development of a
single iron-mine, took fire, and he was about to ask
his instructor to give him his ideas on the manner
of awakening a practical interest in the matter, when
Lucas, throwing wide open the double doors of the
salon, announced in his loudest and most pompous voice,—
“Monsieur the minister of Public Works.”
The effect produced on the elders of the assembly
was electric.
“I want to see what sort of
figure that little Rastignac cuts as a statesman,”
said Monsieur de Camps, rising from his seat; but in
his heart he was thinking of the government subsidy
he wanted for his iron-mine. The new deputy,
on his side, foresaw an inevitable meeting with the
minister, and wondered what his friends in the Opposition
would say when they read in the “National”
that a representative of the Left was seen to have
an interview with a minister celebrated for his art
in converting political opponents. Anxious also
to return to Marie-Gaston, he resolved to profit by
the general stir created by the minister’s arrival
to slip away; and by a masterly manoeuvre he made
his way slyly to the door of the salon, expecting to
escape without being seen. But he reckoned without
Nais, to whom he was engaged for a quadrille.
That small girl sounded the alarm at the moment when
he laid his hand on the handle of the door; and Monsieur
de l’Estorade, mindful of his promise to Rastignac,
hastened to put a stop to the desertion. Finding
his quiet retreat impossible, Sallenauve was afraid
that an open departure after the arrival of the minister
might be construed as an act of puritanical opposition
in the worst taste; he therefore accepted the situation
promptly, and decided to remain.
Monsieur de l’Estorade knew
that Sallenauve was far too wise to be the dupe of
any artifices he might have used to bring about his
introduction to the minister. He therefore went
straight to the point, and soon after Rastignac’s
arrival he slipped his arm through that of the statesman,
and, approaching the deputy, said to him,—
“Monsieur the minister of Public
Works, who, on the eve of the battle, wishes me to
introduce him to a general of the enemy’s army.”
“Monsieur le ministre does me
too much honor,” replied Sallenauve, ceremoniously.
“Far from being a general, I am a private soldier,
and a very unknown one.”
“Hum!” said the minister;
“it seems to me that the battle at Arcis-sur-Aube
was not an insignificant victory; you routed our ranks,
monsieur, in a singular manner.”
“There was nothing wonderful
in that; you must have heard that a saint fought for
us.”
“Well, at any rate,” said
Rastignac, “I prefer this result to the one
arranged for us by a man I thought cleverer than he
proved to be, whom I sent down there. It seems
that Beauvisage is a perfect nonentity; he’d
have rubbed off upon us; and after all, he was really
as much Left centre as the other man, Giguet.
Now the Left centre is our real enemy, because it
is aiming to get our portfolios.”
“Oh!” said Monsieur de
l’Estorade, “after what we heard of the
man, I think he would have done exactly what was wanted
of him.”
“My dear friend, don’t
believe that,” said the minister. “Fools
are often more tenacious of the flag under which they
enlisted than we think for. Besides, to go over
to the enemy is to make a choice, and that supposes
an operation of the mind; it is much easier to be
obstinate.”
“I agree with the minister,”
said Sallenauve; “extreme innocence and extreme
rascality are equally able to defend themselves against
seduction.”
Here Monsieur de l’Estorade,
seeing, or pretending to see, a signal made to him,
looked over his shoulder and said,—
“I’m coming.”
And the two adversaries being thus
buckled together, he hastened away as if summoned
to some duty as master of the house.
Sallenauve was anxious not to seem
disturbed at finding himself alone with the minister.
The meeting having come about, he decided to endure
it with a good grace, and, taking the first word, he
asked if the ministry had prepared, in view of the
coming sessions, a large number of bills.
“No, very few,” replied
Rastignac. “To tell the truth, we do not
expect to be in power very long; we brought about an
election because in the general confusion into which
the press has thrown public opinion, our constitutional
duty was to force that opinion to reconstitute itself;
but the fact is, we did not expect the result to be
favorable to us, and we are therefore taken somewhat
unawares.”
“You are like the peasant,”
said Sallenauve, laughing, “who, expecting the
end of the world, did not sow his wheat.”
“Well, we don’t look upon
our retirement as the end of the world,” said
Rastignac, modestly; “there are men to come after
us, and many of them well able to govern; only, as
we expected to give but few more representations in
that transitory abode called ‘power,’ we
have not unpacked either our costumes or our scenery.
Besides, the coming session, in any case, can only
be a business session. The question now is, of
course, between the palace, that is, personal influence,
and the doctrine of parliamentary supremacy.
This question will naturally come up when the vote
is taken on the secret-service fund. Whenever,
in one way or the other, that is settled, and the budget
is voted, together with a few bills of secondary interest,
Parliament has really completed its task; it will
have put an end to a distressing struggle, and the
country will know to which of the two parties it can
look for the development of its prosperity.”
“And you think,” said
Sallenauve, “that in a well-balanced system of
government that question is a useful one to raise?”
“Well,” replied Rastignac,
“we have not raised it. It is born perhaps
of circumstances; a great deal, as I think, from the
restlessness of certain ambitions, and also from the
tactics of parties.”
“So that, in your opinion, one
of the combatants is not guilty and has absolutely
nothing to reproach himself with?”
“You are a republican,”
said Rastignac, “and therefore, a priori,
an enemy to the dynasty. I think I should lose
my time in trying to change your ideas on the policy
you complain of.”
“You are mistaken,” said
the theoretical republican deputy; “I have no
preconceived hatred to the reigning dynasty. I
even think that in its past, striped, if I
may say so, with royal affinities and revolutionary
memories, it has all that is needed to respond to the
liberal and monarchical instincts of the nation.
But you will find it difficult to persuade me that
in the present head of the dynasty we shall not find
extreme ideas of personal influence, which in the long
run will undermine and subvert the finest as well as
the strongest institutions.”
“Yes,” said Rastignac,
ironically, “and they are saved by the famous
axiom of the deputy of Sancerre: ’The king
reigns, but does not govern.’”
Whether he was tired of standing to
converse, or whether he wished to prove his ease in
releasing himself from the trap which had evidently
been laid for him, Sallenauve, before replying, drew
up a chair for his interlocutor, and, taking one himself,
said,—
“Will you permit me to cite
the example of another royal behavior? —that
of a prince who was not considered indifferent to his
royal prerogative, and who was not ignorant of constitutional
mechanism—”
“Louis XVIII.,” said Rastignac,
“or, as the newspapers used to call him, ’the
illustrious author of the Charter’?”
“Precisely; and will you kindly tell me where
he died?”
“Parbleu! at the Tuileries.”
“And his successor?”
“In exile—Oh! I see what you
are coming to.”
“My conclusion is certainly
not difficult to guess. But have you fully remarked
the deduction to be drawn from that royal career?—for
which I myself feel the greatest respect. Louis
XVIII. was not a citizen king. He granted this
Charter, but he never consented to it. Born nearer
to the throne than the prince whose regrettable tendencies
I mentioned just now, he might naturally share more
deeply still the ideas, the prejudices, and the infatuations
of the court; in person he was ridiculous (a serious
princely defect in France); he bore the brunt of a
new and untried regime; he succeeded a government which
had intoxicated the people with that splendid gilded
smoke called glory; and if he was not actually brought
back to France by foreigners, at any rate he came
as the result of the armed invasion of Europe.
Now, shall I tell you why, in spite of all these defects
and disadvantages, in spite, too, of the ceaseless
conspiracy kept up against his government, it was
given to him to die tranquilly in his bed at the Tuileries?”
“Because he had made himself
a constitutional king,” said Rastignac, with
a slight shrug of his shoulders. “But do
you mean to say that we are not that?”
“In the letter, yes; in the
spirit, no. When Louis XVIII. gave his confidence
to a minister, he gave it sincerely and wholly.
He did not cheat him; he played honestly into his
hand,—witness the famous ordinance of September
5, and the dissolution of the Chamber, which was more
Royalist than himself,—a thing he had the
wisdom not to desire. Later, a movement of public
opinion shook the minister who had led him along that
path; that minister was his favorite, his son, as
he called him. No matter; yielding to the constitutional
necessity, he bravely sent him to foreign parts, after
loading him with crosses and titles,—in
short, with everything that could soften the pain of
his fall; and he did not watch and manoeuvre surreptitiously
to bring him back to power, which that minister never
regained.”
“For a man who declares he does
not hate us,” said Rastignac, “you treat
us rather roughly. According to you we are almost
faithless to the constitutional compact, and our policy,
to your thinking ambiguous and tortuous, gives us
a certain distant likeness to Monsieur Doublemain
in the ‘Mariage de Figaro.’”
“I do not say that the evil
is as deep as that,” replied Sallenauve; “perhaps,
after all, we are simply a faiseur,—using
the word, be it understood, in the sense of a meddler,
one who wants to have his finger in everything.”
“Ah! monsieur, but suppose we
are the ablest politician in the country.”
“If we are, it does not follow
that our kingdom ought not to have the chance of becoming
as able as ourselves.”
“Parbleu!” cried
Rastignac, in the tone of a man who comes to the climax
of a conversation, “I wish I had power to realize
a wish—”
“And that is?”
“To see you grappling with that ability which
you call meddlesome.”
“Well, you know, Monsieur le
ministre, that we all spend three fourths of life
in wishing for the impossible.”
“Why impossible? Would
you be the first man of the Opposition to be seen
at the Tuileries? An invitation to dinner given
publicly, openly, which would, by bringing you into
contact with one whom you misjudge at a distance—”
“I should have the honor to refuse.”
And he emphasized the words have
the honor in a way to show the meaning he attached
to them.
“You are all alike, you men
of the Opposition!” cried the minister; “you
won’t let yourselves be enlightened when the
opportunity presents itself; or, to put it better,
you—”
“Do you call the rays of those
gigantic red bottles in a chemist’s shop light,
when they flash into your eyes as you pass them after
dark? Don’t they, on the contrary, seem
to blind you?”
“It is not our rays that frighten
you,” said Rastignac; “it is the dark
lantern of your party watchmen on their rounds.”
“There may be some truth in
what you say; a party and the man who undertakes to
represent it are in some degree a married couple, who
in order to live peaceably together must be mutually
courteous, frank, and faithful in heart as well as
in principle.”
“Well, try to be moderate.
Your dream is far more impossible to realize than
mine; the day will come when you will have more to
say about the courtesy of your chaste better half.”
“If there is an evil for which
I ought to be prepared, it is that.”
“Do you think so? With
the lofty and generous sentiments so apparent in your
nature, shall you remain impassive under political
attack, —under calumny, for instance?”
“You yourself, Monsieur le ministre,
have not escaped its venom; but it did not, I think,
deter you from your course.”
“But,” said Rastignac,
lowering his voice, “suppose I were to tell you
that I have already sternly refused to listen to a
proposal to search into your private life on a certain
side which, being more in the shade than the rest,
seems to offer your enemies a chance to entrap you.”
“I do not thank you for the
honor you have done yourself in rejecting with contempt
the proposals of men who can be neither of my party
nor of yours; they belong to the party of base appetites
and selfish passions. But, supposing the impossible,
had they found some acceptance from you, pray believe
that my course, which follows the dictates of my conscience,
could not be affected thereby.”
“But your party,—consider
for a moment its elements: a jumble of foiled
ambitions, brutal greed, plagiarists of ’93,
despots disguising themselves as lovers of liberty.”
“My party has nothing, and seeks
to gain something. Yours calls itself conservative,
and it is right; its chief concern is how to preserve
its power, offices, and wealth,—in short,
all it now monopolizes.”
“But, monsieur, we are not a
closed way; we open our way, on the contrary, to all
ambitions. But the higher you are in character
and intellect, the less we can allow you to pass,
dragging after you your train of democrats; for the
day when that crew gains the upper hand it will not
be a change of policy, but a revolution.”
“But what makes you think I
want an opening of any kind?”
“What! follow a course without
an aim?—a course that leads nowhere?
A certain development of a man’s faculties not
only gives him the right but makes it his duty to
seek to govern.”
“To watch the governing power
is a useful career, and, I may add, a very busy one.”
“You can fancy, monsieur,”
said Rastignac, good-humoredly, “that if Beauvisage
were in your place I should not have taken the trouble
to argue with him; I may say, however, that he would
have made my effort less difficult.”
“This meeting, which chance
has brought about between us,” said Sallenauve,
“will have one beneficial result; we understand
each other henceforth, and our future meetings will
always therefore be courteous —which will
not lessen the strength of our convictions.”
“Then I must say to the king—for
I had his royal commands to—”
Rastignac did not end the sentence
in which he was, so to speak, firing his last gun,
for the orchestra began to play a quadrille, and Nais,
running up, made him a coquettish courtesy, saying,—
“Monsieur le ministre, I am
very sorry, but you have taken my partner, and you
must give him up. He is down for my eleventh quadrille,
and if I miss it my list gets into terrible confusion.”
“You permit me, monsieur?”
said Sallenauve, laughing. “As you see,
I am not a very savage republican.” So
saying, he followed Nais, who led him along by the
hand.
Madame de l’Estorade, comprehending
that this fancy of Nais was rather compromising to
the dignity of the new deputy, had arranged that several
papas and mammas should figure in the same quadrille;
and she herself with the Scottish lad danced vis-a-vis
to her daughter, who beamed with pride and joy.
In the evolutions of the last figure, where Nais had
to take her mother’s hand, she said, pressing
it passionately,—
“Poor mamma! if it hadn’t
been for him, you wouldn’t have me now.”
This sudden reminder so agitated Madame
de l’Estorade, coming as it did unexpectedly,
that she was seized with a return of the nervous trembling
her daughter’s danger had originally caused,
and was forced to sit down. Seeing her change
color, Sallenauve, Nais, and Madame Octave de Camps
ran to her to know if she were ill.
“It is nothing,” she answered,
addressing Sallenauve; “only that my little
girl reminded me suddenly of the utmost obligation
we are under to you, monsieur. ‘Without
him,’ she said, ‘you would not have
me.’ Ah! monsieur, without your generous
courage where would my child be now?”
“Come, come, don’t excite
yourself,” interposed Madame Octave de Camps,
observing the convulsive and almost gasping tone of
her friend’s voice. “It is not reasonable
to put yourself in such a state for a child’s
speech.”
“She is better than the rest
of us,” replied Madame de l’Estorade,
taking Nais in her arms.
“Come, mamma, be reasonable,” said that
young lady.
“She puts nothing in the world,”
continued Madame de l’Estorade, “before
her gratitude to her preserver, whereas her father
and I have scarcely shown him any.”
“But, madame,” said Sallenauve, “you
have courteously—”
“Courteously!” interrupted
Nais, shaking her pretty head with an air of disapproval;
“if any one had saved my daughter, I should be
different to him from that.”
“Nais,” said Madame de
Camps, sternly, “children should be silent when
their opinion is not asked.”
“What is the matter,”
said Monsieur de l’Estorade, joining the group.
“Nothing,” said Madame
de Camps; “only a giddiness Renee had in dancing.”
“Is it over?”
“Yes, I am quite well again,” said Madame
de l’Estorade.
“Then come and say good-night
to Madame de Rastignac, who is preparing to take leave.”
In his eagerness to get to the minister’s
wife, he forgot to give his own wife his arm.
Sallenauve was more thoughtful. As they walked
together in the wake of her husband, Madame de l’Estorade
said,—
“I saw you talking for a long
time with Monsieur de Rastignac; did he practise his
well-known seductions upon you?”
“Do you think he succeeded?” replied Sallenauve.
“No; but such attempts to capture
are always disagreeable, and I beg you to believe
that I was not a party to the plot. I am not so
violently ministerial as my husband.”
“Nor I as violently revolutionary as they think.”
“I trust that these annoying
politics, which have already produced a jar between
you and Monsieur de l’Estorade, may not disgust
you with the idea of being counted among our friends.”
“That is an honor, madame, for
which I can only be grateful.”
“It is not an honor but a pleasure
that I hoped you would find in it,” said Madame
de l’Estorade, quickly. “I say, with
Nais, if I had saved the life of a friend’s
child, I should cease to be ceremonious with her.”
So saying, and without listening to
his answer, she disengaged her arm quickly from that
of Sallenauve, and left him rather astonished at the
tone in which she had spoken.
In seeing Madame de l’Estorade
so completely docile to the advice, more clever than
prudent, perhaps, of Madame de Camps, the reader, we
think, can scarcely be surprised. A certain attraction
has been evident for some time on the part of the
frigid countess not only to the preserver of her daughter,
but to the man who under such romantic and singular
circumstances had come before her mind. Carefully
considered, Madame de l’Estorade is seen to be
far from one of those impassible natures which resist
all affectionate emotions except those of the family.
With a beauty that was partly Spanish, she had eyes
which her friend Louise de Chaulieu declared could
ripen peaches. Her coldness was not what physicians
call congenital; her temperament was an acquired one.
Marrying from reason a man whose mental insufficiency
is very apparent, she made herself love him out of
pity and a sense of protection. Up to the present
time, by means of a certain atrophy of heart, she
had succeeded, without one failure, in making Monsieur
de l’Estorade perfectly happy. With the
same instinct, she had exaggerated the maternal sentiment
to an almost inconceivable degree, until in that way
she had fairly stifled all the other cravings of her
nature. It must be said, however, that the success
she had had in accomplishing this hard task was due
in a great measure to the circumstance of Louise
de Chaulieu. To her that dear mistaken one was
like the drunken slave whom the Spartans made a living
lesson to their children; and between the two friends
a sort of tacit wager was established. Louise
having taken the side of romantic passion, Renee held
firmly to that of superior reason; and in order to
win the game, she had maintained a courage of good
sense and wisdom which might have cost her far more
to practise without this incentive. At the age
she had now reached, and with her long habit of self-control,
we can understand how, seeing, as she believed, the
approach of a love against which she had preached
so vehemently, she should instantly set to work to
rebuff it; but a man who did not feel that love, while
thinking her ideally beautiful, and who possibly loved
elsewhere,—a man who had saved her child
from death and asked no recompense, who was grave,
serious, and preoccupied in an absorbing enterprise,—why
should she still continue to think such a man dangerous?
Why not grant to him, without further hesitation,
the lukewarm sentiment of friendship?