The illustrious Gaudissart returned
to the Soleil d’Or, where he naturally conversed
with the landlord while waiting for dinner. Mitouflet
was an old soldier, guilelessly crafty, like the peasantry
of the Loire; he never laughed at a jest, but took
it with the gravity of a man accustomed to the roar
of cannon and to make his own jokes under arms.
“You have some very strong-minded
people here,” said Gaudissart, leaning against
the door-post and lighting his cigar at Mitouflet’s
pipe.
“How do you mean?” asked Mitouflet.
“I mean people who are rough-shod on political
and financial ideas.”
“Whom have you seen? if I may
ask without indiscretion,” said the landlord
innocently, expectorating after the adroit and periodical
fashion of smokers.
“A fine, energetic fellow named Margaritis.”
Mitouflet cast two glances in succession
at his guest which were expressive of chilling irony.
“May be; the good-man knows
a deal. He knows too much for other folks, who
can’t always understand him.”
“I can believe it, for he thoroughly
comprehends the abstruse principles of finance.”
“Yes,” said the innkeeper,
“and for my part, I am sorry he is a lunatic.”
“A lunatic! What do you mean?”
“Well, crazy,—cracked,
as people are when they are insane,” answered
Mitouflet. “But he is not dangerous; his
wife takes care of him. Have you been arguing
with him?” added the pitiless landlord; “that
must have been funny!”
“Funny!” cried Gaudissart.
“Funny! Then your Monsieur Vernier has been
making fun of me!”
“Did he send you there?”
“Yes.”
“Wife! wife! come here and listen.
If Monsieur Vernier didn’t take it into his
head to send this gentleman to talk to Margaritis!”
“What in the world did you say
to each other, my dear, good Monsieur?” said
the wife. “Why, he’s crazy!”
“He sold me two casks of wine.”
“Did you buy them?”
“Yes.”
“But that is his delusion; he
thinks he sells his wine, and he hasn’t any.”
“Ha!” snorted the traveller,
“then I’ll go straight to Monsieur Vernier
and thank him.”
And Gaudissart departed, boiling over
with rage, to shake the ex-dyer, whom he found in
his salon, laughing with a company of friends to whom
he had already recounted the tale.
“Monsieur,” said the prince
of travellers, darting a savage glance at his enemy,
“you are a scoundrel and a blackguard; and under
pain of being thought a turn-key,—a species
of being far below a galley-slave,—you
will give me satisfaction for the insult you dared
to offer me in sending me to a man whom you knew to
be a lunatic! Do you hear me, Monsieur Vernier,
dyer?”
Such was the harangue which Gaudissart
prepared as he went along, as a tragedian makes ready
for his entrance on the scene.
“What!” cried Vernier,
delighted at the presence of an audience, “do
you think we have no right to make fun of a man who
comes here, bag and baggage, and demands that we hand
over our property because, forsooth, he is pleased
to call us great men, painters, artists, poets,—mixing
us up gratuitously with a set of fools who have neither
house nor home, nor sous nor sense? Why should
we put up with a rascal who comes here and wants us
to feather his nest by subscribing to a newspaper
which preaches a new religion whose first doctrine
is, if you please, that we are not to inherit from
our fathers and mothers? On my sacred word of
honor, Pere Margaritis said things a great deal more
sensible. And now, what are you complaining about?
You and Margaritis seemed to understand each other.
The gentlemen here present can testify that if you
had talked to the whole canton you couldn’t
have been as well understood.”
“That’s all very well
for you to say; but I have been insulted, Monsieur,
and I demand satisfaction!”
“Very good, Monsieur! consider
yourself insulted, if you like. I shall not give
you satisfaction, because there is neither rhyme nor
reason nor satisfaction to be found in the whole business.
What an absurd fool he is, to be sure!”
At these words Gaudissart flew at
the dyer to give him a slap on the face, but the listening
crowd rushed between them, so that the illustrious
traveller only contrived to knock off the wig of his
enemy, which fell on the head of Mademoiselle Clara
Vernier.
“If you are not satisfied, Monsieur,”
he said, “I shall be at the Soleil d’Or
until to-morrow morning, and you will find me ready
to show you what it means to give satisfaction.
I fought in July, Monsieur.”
“And you shall fight in Vouvray,”
answered the dyer; “and what is more, you shall
stay here longer than you imagine.”
Gaudissart marched off, turning over
in his mind this prophetic remark, which seemed to
him full of sinister portent. For the first time
in his life the prince of travellers did not dine jovially.
The whole town of Vouvray was put in a ferment about
the “affair” between Monsieur Vernier
and the apostle of Saint-Simonism. Never before
had the tragic event of a duel been so much as heard
of in that benign and happy valley.
“Monsieur Mitouflet, I am to
fight to-morrow with Monsieur Vernier,” said
Gaudissart to his landlord. “I know no one
here: will you be my second?”
“Willingly,” said the host.
Gaudissart had scarcely finished his
dinner before Madame Fontanieu and the assistant-mayor
of Vouvray came to the Soleil d’Or and took
Mitouflet aside. They told him it would be a painful
and injurious thing to the whole canton if a violent
death were the result of this affair; they represented
the pitiable distress of Madame Vernier, and conjured
him to find some way to arrange matters and save the
credit of the district.
“I take it all upon myself,”
said the sagacious landlord.
In the evening he went up to the traveller’s
room carrying pens, ink, and paper.
“What have you got there?” asked Gaudissart.
“If you are going to fight to-morrow,”
answered Mitouflet, “you had better make some
settlement of your affairs; and perhaps you have letters
to write,—we all have beings who are dear
to us. Writing doesn’t kill, you know.
Are you a good swordsman? Would you like to get
your hand in? I have some foils.”
“Yes, gladly.”
Mitouflet returned with foils and masks.
“Now, then, let us see what you can do.”
The pair put themselves on guard.
Mitouflet, with his former prowess as grenadier of
the guard, made sixty-two passes at Gaudissart, pushed
him about right and left, and finally pinned him up
against the wall.
“The deuce! you are strong,” said Gaudissart,
out of breath.
“Monsieur Vernier is stronger than I am.”
“The devil! Damn it, I shall fight with
pistols.”
“I advise you to do so; because,
if you take large holster pistols and load them up
to their muzzles, you can’t risk anything.
They are sure to fire wide of the mark, and
both parties can retire from the field with honor.
Let me manage all that. Hein! ‘sapristi,’
two brave men would be arrant fools to kill each other
for a joke.”
“Are you sure the pistols will
carry wide enough? I should be sorry to
kill the man, after all,” said Gaudissart.
“Sleep in peace,” answered Mitouflet,
departing.
The next morning the two adversaries,
more or less pale, met beside the bridge of La Cise.
The brave Vernier came near shooting a cow which was
peaceably feeding by the roadside.
“Ah, you fired in the air!” cried Gaudissart.
At these words the enemies embraced.
“Monsieur,” said the traveller,
“your joke was rather rough, but it was a good
one for all that. I am sorry I apostrophized you:
I was excited. I regard you as a man of honor.”
“Monsieur, we take twenty subscriptions
to the ‘Children’s Journal,’”
replied the dyer, still pale.
“That being so,” said
Gaudissart, “why shouldn’t we all breakfast
together? Men who fight are always the ones to
come to a good understanding.”
“Monsieur Mitouflet,”
said Gaudissart on his return to the inn, “of
course you have got a sheriff’s officer here?”
“What for?”
“I want to send a summons to
my good friend Margaritis to deliver the two casks
of wine.”
“But he has not got them,” said Vernier.
“No matter for that; the affair
can be arranged by the payment of an indemnity.
I won’t have it said that Vouvray outwitted the
illustrious Gaudissart.”
Madame Margaritis, alarmed at the
prospect of a suit in which the plaintiff would certainly
win his case, brought thirty francs to the placable
traveller, who thereupon considered himself quits with
the happiest region of sunny France,—a
region which is also, we must add, the most recalcitrant
to new and progressive ideas.
On returning from his trip through
the southern departments, the illustrious Gaudissart
occupied the coupe of a diligence, where he met a
young man to whom, as they journeyed between Angouleme
and Paris, he deigned to explain the enigmas of life,
taking him, apparently, for an infant.
As they passed Vouvray the young man
exclaimed, “What a fine site!”
“Yes, Monsieur,” said
Gaudissart, “but not habitable on account of
the people. You get into duels every day.
Why, it is not three months since I fought one just
there,” pointing to the bridge of La Cise, “with
a damned dyer; but I made an end of him,—he
bit the dust!”