The circle of
monsieur and madame Thuillier
The Collevilles and their children
became, naturally, the nucleus of the circle which
Mademoiselle Thuillier had the ambition to group around
her brother. A former clerk in the Billardiere
division of the ministry, named Phellion, had lived
for the last thirty years in their present quarter.
He was promptly greeted by Colleville and Thuillier
at the first review. Phellion proved to be one
of the most respected men in the arrondissement.
He had one daughter, now married to a school-teacher
in the rue Saint-Hyacinthe, a Monsieur Barniol.
Phellion’s eldest son was a professor of mathematics
in a royal college; he gave lectures and private lessons,
being devoted, so his father was wont to say, to pure
mathematics. A second son was in the government
School of Engineering. Phellion had a pension
of nine hundred francs, and he possessed a little
property of nine thousand and a few odd hundred francs;
the fruit of his economy and that of his wife during
thirty years of toil and privation. He was, moreover,
the owner of a little house and garden where he lived
in the “impasse” des Feuillantines,—in
thirty years he had never used the old-fashioned word
“cul-de-sac”!
Dutocq, the clerk of the justice of
peace, was also a former employee at the ministry
of finance. Sacrificed, in former days, to one
of those necessities which are always met with in
representative government, he had accepted the position
of scapegoat, receiving, privately, a round sum of
money and the opportunity to buy his present post
of clerk in the arrondissement. This man, not
very honorable, and known to be a spy in the government
offices, was never welcomed as he thought he ought
to be by the Thuilliers; but the coldness of his landlords
only made him the more persistent in going to see them.
He was a bachelor and had various vices; he therefore
concealed his life carefully, knowing well how to
maintain his position by flattering his superiors.
The justice of peace was much attached to Dutocq.
This man, base as he was, managed, in the end, to
make himself tolerated by the Thuilliers, chiefly
by coarse and cringing adulation. He knew the
facts of Thuillier’s whole life, his relations
with Colleville, and, above all, with Madame Colleville.
One and all they feared his tongue, and the Thuilliers,
without admitting him to any intimacy, endured his
visits.
The family which became the flower
of the Thuillier salon was that of a former ministerial
clerk, once an object of pity in the government offices,
who, driven by poverty, left the public service, in
1827, to fling himself into a business enterprise,
having, as he thought, an idea. Minard (that
was his name) foresaw a fortune in one of those wicked
conceptions which reflect such discredit on French
commerce, but which, in the year 1827, had not yet
been exposed and blasted by publicity. Minard
bought tea and mixed it with tea-leaves already used;
also he adulterated the elements of chocolate in a
manner which enabled him to sell the chocolate itself
very cheaply. This trade in colonial products,
begun in the quartier Saint-Marcel, made a merchant
of Minard. He started a factory, and through these
early connections he was able to reach the sources
of raw material. He then did honorably, and on
a large scale, a business begun in the first instance
dishonorably. He became a distiller, worked upon
untold quantities of products, and, by the year 1835,
was considered the richest merchant in the region
of the Place Maubert. By that time he had bought
a handsome house in the rue des Macons-Sorbonne; he
had been assistant mayor, and in 1839 became mayor
of his arrondissement and judge in the Court of Commerce.
He kept a carriage, had a country-place near Lagny;
his wife wore diamonds at the court balls, and he
prided himself on the rosette of an officer of the
Legion of honor in his buttonhole.
Minard and his wife were exceedingly
benevolent. Perhaps he wished to return in retail
to the poor the sums he had mulcted from the public
by the wholesale. Phellion, Colleville, and Thuillier
met their old comrade, Minard, at election, and an
intimacy followed; all the closer with the Thuilliers
and Collevilles because Madame Minard seemed enchanted
to make an acquaintance for her daughter in Celeste
Colleville. It was at a grand ball given by the
Minards that Celeste made her first appearance in
society (being at that time sixteen and a half years
old), dressed as her Christian named demanded, which
seemed to be prophetic of her coming life. Delighted
to be friendly with Mademoiselle Minard, her elder
by four years, she persuaded her father and godfather
to cultivate the Minard establishment, with its gilded
salons and great opulence, where many political celebrities
of the “juste milieu” were wont to congregate,
such as Monsieur Popinot, who became, after a time,
minister of commerce; Cochin, since made Baron Cochin,
a former employee at the ministry of finance, who,
having a large interest in the drug business, was
now the oracle of the Lombard and Bourdonnais quarters,
conjointly with Monsieur Anselme Popinot. Minard’s
eldest son, a lawyer, aiming to succeed those barristers
who were turned down from the Palais for political
reasons in 1830, was the genius of the household,
and his mother, even more than his father, aspired
to marry him well. Zelie Minard, formerly a flower-maker,
felt an ardent passion for the upper social spheres,
and desired to enter them through the marriages of
her son and daughter; whereas Minard, wiser than she,
and imbued with the vigor of the middle classes, which
the revolution of July had infiltrated into the fibres
of government, thought only of wealth and fortune.
He frequented the Thuillier salon
to gain information as to Celeste’s probable
inheritance. He knew, like Dutocq and Phellion,
the reports occasioned by Thuillier’s former
intimacy with Flavie, and he saw at a glance the idolatry
of the Thuilliers for their godchild. Dutocq,
to gain admittance to Minard’s house, fawned
upon him grossly. When Minard, the Rothschild
of the arrondissement, appeared at the Thuilliers’,
he compared him cleverly to Napoleon, finding him stout,
fat, and blooming, having left him at the ministry
thin, pale, and puny.
“You looked, in the division
Billardiere,” he said, “like Napoleon
before the 18th Brumaire, and I behold you now the
Napoleon of the Empire.”
Notwithstanding which flattery, Minard
received Dutocq very coldly and did not invite him
to his house; consequently, he made a mortal enemy
of the former clerk.
Monsieur and Madame Phellion, worthy
as they were, could not keep themselves from making
calculations and cherishing hopes; they thought that
Celeste would be the very wife for their son the professor;
therefore, to have, as it were, a watcher in the Thuillier
salon, they introduced their son-in-law, Monsieur
Barniol, a man much respected in the faubourg Saint-Jacques,
and also an old employee at the mayor’s office,
an intimate friend of theirs, named Laudigeois.
Thus the Phellions formed a phalanx of seven persons;
the Collevilles were not less numerous; so that on
Sundays it often appeared that thirty persons were
assembled in the Thuillier salon. Thuillier renewed
acquaintance with the Saillards, Baudoyers, and Falleixs,—all
persons of respectability in the quarter of the Palais-Royal,
whom they often invited to dinner.
Madame Colleville was, as a woman,
the most distinguished member of this society, just
as Minard junior and Professor Phellion were superior
among the men. All the others, without ideas or
education, and issuing from the lower ranks, presented
the types and the absurdities of the lesser bourgeoisie.
Though all success, especially if won from distant
sources, seems to presuppose some genuine merit, Minard
was really an inflated balloon. Expressing himself
in empty phrases, mistaking sycophancy for politeness,
and wordiness for wit, he uttered his commonplaces
with a brisk assurance that passed for eloquence.
Certain words which said nothing but answered all things,
—progress, steam, bitumen, National guard,
order, democratic element, spirit of association,
legality, movement, resistance,—seemed,
as each political phase developed, to have been actually
made for Minard, whose talk was a paraphrase on the
ideas of his newspaper. Julien Minard, the young
lawyer, suffered from his father as much as his father
suffered from his wife. Zelie had grown pretentious
with wealth, without, at the same time, learning to
speak French. She was now very fat, and gave
the idea, in her rich surroundings, of a cook married
to her master.
Phellion, that type and model of the
petty bourgeois, exhibited as many virtues as he did
absurdities. Accustomed to subordination during
his bureaucratic life, he respected all social superiority.
He was therefore silent before Minard. During
the critical period of retirement from office, he
had held his own admirably, for the following reason.
Never until now had that worthy and excellent man
been able to indulge his own tastes. He loved
the city of Paris; he was interested in its embellishment,
in the laying out of its streets; he was capable of
standing for hours to watch the demolition of houses.
He might now have been observed, stolidly planted on
his legs, his nose in the air, watching for the fall
of a stone which some mason was loosening at the top
of a wall, and never moving till the stone fell; when
it had fallen he went away as happy as an academician
at the fall of a romantic drama. Veritable supernumeraries
of the social comedy, Phellion, Laudigeois, and their
kind, fulfilled the functions of the antique chorus.
They wept when weeping was in order, laughed when
they should laugh, and sang in parts the public joys
and sorrows; they triumphed in their corner with the
triumphs of Algiers, of Constantine, of Lisbon, of
Sainte-Jean d’Ulloa; they deplored the death
of Napoleon and the fatal catastrophes of the Saint-Merri
and the rue Transnonnain, grieving over celebrated
men who were utterly unknown to them. Phellion
alone presents a double side: he divides himself
conscientiously between the reasons of the opposition
and those of the government. When fighting went
on in the streets, Phellion had the courage to declare
himself before his neighbors; he went to the Place
Saint-Michel, the place where his battalion assembled;
he felt for the government and did his duty. Before
and during the riot, he supported the dynasty, the
product of July; but, as soon as the political trials
began, he stood by the accused. This innocent
“weather-cockism” prevails in his political
opinions; he produces, in reply to all arguments,
the “colossus of the North.” England
is, to his thinking, as to that of the old “Constitutionnel,”
a crone with two faces,—Machiavellian Albion,
and the model nation: Machiavellian, when the
interests of France and of Napoleon are concerned;
the model nation when the faults of the government
are in question. He admits, with his chosen paper,
the democratic element, but refuses in conversation
all compact with the republican spirit. The republican
spirit to him means 1793, rioting, the Terror, and
agrarian law. The democratic element is the development
of the lesser bourgeoisie, the reign of Phellions.
The worthy old man is always dignified;
dignity serves to explain his life. He has brought
up his children with dignity; he has kept himself
a father in their eyes; he insists on being honored
in his home, just as he himself honors power and his
superiors. He has never made debts. As a
juryman his conscience obliges him to sweat blood and
water in the effort to follow the debates of a trial;
he never laughs, not even if the judge, and audience,
and all the officials laugh. Eminently useful,
he gives his services, his time, everything—except
his money. Felix Phellion, his son, the professor,
is his idol; he thinks him capable of attaining to
the Academy of Sciences. Thuillier, between the
audacious nullity of Minard, and the solid silliness
of Phellion, was a neutral substance, but connected
with both through his dismal experience. He managed
to conceal the emptiness of his brain by commonplace
talk, just as he covered the yellow skin of his bald
pate with thready locks of his gray hair, brought
from the back of his head with infinite art by the
comb of his hairdresser.
“In any other career,”
he was wont to say, speaking of the government employ,
“I should have made a very different fortune.”
He had seen the right, which
is possible in theory and impossible in practice,—results
proving contrary to premises,—and he related
the intrigues and the injustices of the Rabourdin
affair.
“After that, one can believe
all, and believe nothing,” he would say.
“Ah! it is a queer thing, government! I’m
very glad not to have a son, and never to see him
in the career of a place-hunter.”
Colleville, ever gay, rotund, and
good-humored, a sayer of “quodlibets,”
a maker of anagrams, always busy, represented the
capable and bantering bourgeois, with faculty without
success, obstinate toil without result; he was also
the embodiment of jovial resignation, mind without
object, art with usefulness, for, excellent musician
that he was, he never played now except for his daughter.
The Thuillier salon was in some sort
a provincial salon, lighted, however, by continual
flashes from the Parisian conflagration; its mediocrity
and its platitudes followed the current of the times.
The popular saying and thing (for in Paris the thing
and its saying are like the horse and its rider) ricochetted,
so to speak, to this company. Monsieur Minard
was always impatiently expected, for he was certain
to know the truth of important circumstances.
The women of the Thuillier salon held by the Jesuits;
the men defended the University; and, as a general
thing, the women listened. A man of intelligence
(could he have borne the dulness of these evenings)
would have laughed, as he would at a comedy of Moliere,
on hearing, amid endless discussion, such remarks
as the following:—
“How could the Revolution of
1789 have been avoided? The loans of Louis XIV.
prepared the way for it. Louis XV., an egotist,
a man of narrow mind (didn’t he say, ’If
I were lieutenant of police I would suppress cabriolets’?),
that dissolute king—you remember his Parc
aux Cerfs?—did much to open the abyss of
revolution. Monsieur de Necker, an evil-minded
Genovese, set the thing a-going. Foreigners have
always tried to injure France. The maximum did
great harm to the Revolution. Legally Louis XVI.
should never have been condemned; a jury would have
acquitted him. Why did Charles X. fall? Napoleon
was a great man, and the facts that prove his genius
are anecdotal: he took five pinches of snuff
a minute out of a pocket lined with leather made in
his waistcoat. He looked into all his tradesmen’s
accounts; he went to Saint-Denis to judge for himself
the prices of things. Talma was his friend; Talma
taught him his gestures; nevertheless, he always refused
to give Talma the Legion of honor! The emperor
mounted guard for a sentinel who went to sleep, to
save him from being shot. Those were the things
that made his soldiers adore him. Louis XVIII.,
who certainly had some sense, was very unjust in calling
him Monsieur de Buonaparte. The defect of the
present government is in letting itself be led instead
of leading. It holds itself too low. It is
afraid of men of energy. It ought to have torn
up all the treaties of 1815 and demanded the Rhine.
They keep the same men too long in the ministry”;
etc., etc.
“Come, you’ve exerted
your minds long enough,” said Mademoiselle Thuillier,
interrupting one of these luminous talks; “the
altar is dressed; begin your little game.”
If these anterior facts and all these
generalities were not placed here as the frame of
the present Scene, to give an idea of the spirit of
this society, the following drama would certainly have
suffered greatly. Moreover, this sketch is historically
faithful; it shows a social stratum of importance
in any portrayal of manners and morals, especially
when we reflect that the political system of the Younger
branch rests almost wholly upon it.
The winter of the year 1839 was, it
may be said, the period when the Thuillier salon was
in its greatest glory. The Minards came nearly
every Sunday, and began their evening by spending an
hour there, if they had other engagements elsewhere.
Often Minard would leave his wife at the Thuilliers
and take his son and daughter to other houses.
This assiduity on the part of the Minards was brought
about by a somewhat tardy meeting between Messieurs
Metivier, Barbet, and Minard on an evening when the
two former, being tenants of Mademoiselle Thuillier,
remained rather longer than usual in discussing business
with her. From Barbet, Minard learned that the
old maid had money transactions with himself and Metivier
to the amount of sixty thousand francs, besides having
a large deposit in the Bank.
“Has she an account at the Bank?” asked
Minard.
“I believe so,” replied
Barbet. “I give her at least eighty thousand
francs there.”
Being on intimate terms with a governor
of the Bank, Minard ascertained that Mademoiselle
Thuillier had, in point of fact, an account of over
two hundred thousand francs, the result of her quarterly
deposits for many years. Besides this, she owned
the house they lived in, which was not mortgaged,
and was worth at least one hundred thousand francs,
if not more.
“Why should Mademoiselle Thuillier
work in this way?” said Minard to Metivier.
“She’d be a good match for you,”
he added.
“I? oh, no,” replied Metivier.
“I shall do better by marrying a cousin; my
uncle Metivier has given me the succession to his business;
he has a hundred thousand francs a year and only two
daughters.”
However secretive Mademoiselle Thuillier
might be,—and she said nothing of her investments
to any one, not even to her brother, although a large
amount of Madame Thuillier’s fortune went to
swell the amount of her own savings,—it
was difficult to prevent some ray of light from gliding
under the bushel which covered her treasure.
Dutocq, who frequented Barbet, with
whom he had some resemblance in character and countenance,
had appraised, even more correctly than Minard, the
Thuillier finances. He knew that their savings
amounted, in 1838, to one hundred and fifty thousand
francs, and he followed their progress secretly, calculating
profits by the help of that all-wise money-lender,
Barbet.
“Celeste will have from my brother
and myself two hundred thousand francs in ready money,”
the old maid had said to Barbet in confidence, “and
Madame Thuillier wishes to secure to her by the marriage
contract the ultimate possession of her own fortune.
As for me, my will is made. My brother will have
everything during his lifetime, and Celeste will be
my heiress with that reservation. Monsieur Cardot,
the notary, is my executor.”
Mademoiselle Thuillier now instigated
her brother to renew his former relations with the
Saillards, Baudoyers, and others, who held a position
similar to that of the Thuilliers in the quartier
Saint-Antoine, of which Monsieur Saillard was mayor.
Cardot, the notary, had produced his aspirant for
Celeste’s hand in the person of Monsieur Godeschal,
attorney and successor to Derville; an able man, thirty-six
years of age, who had paid one hundred thousand francs
for his practice, which the two hundred thousand of
the “dot” would doubly clear off.
Minard, however, got rid of Godeschal by informing
Mademoiselle Thuillier that Celeste’s sister-in-law
would be the famous Mariette of the Opera.
“She came from the stage,”
said Colleville, alluding to his wife, “and
there’s no need she should return to it.”
“Besides, Monsieur Godeschal
is too old for Celeste,” remarked Brigitte.
“And ought we not,” added
Madame Thuillier, timidly, “to let her marry
according to her own taste, so as to be happy?”
The poor woman had detected in Felix
Phellion a true love for Celeste; the love that a
woman crushed by Brigitte and wounded by her husband’s
indifference (for Thuillier cared less for his wife
than he did for a servant) had dreamed that love might
be,—bold in heart, timid externally, sure
of itself, reserved, hidden from others, but expanding
toward heaven. At twenty-three years of age, Felix
Phellion was a gentle, pure-minded young man, like
all true scholars who cultivate knowledge for knowledge’s
sake. He had been sacredly brought up by his
father, who, viewing all things seriously, had given
him none but good examples accompanied by trivial
maxims. He was a young man of medium height,
with light chestnut hair, gray eyes, and a skin full
of freckles; gifted with a charming voice, a tranquil
manner; making few gestures; thoughtful, saying little,
and that little sensible; contradicting no one, and
quite incapable of a sordid thought or a selfish calculation.
“That,” thought Madame
Thuillier, “is what I should have liked my husband
to be.”
One evening, in the month of February,
1840, the Thuillier salon contained the various personages
whose silhouettes we have just traced out, together
with some others. It was nearly the end of the
month. Barbet and Metivier having business with
mademoiselle Brigitte, were playing whist with Minard
and Phellion. at another table were Julien the advocate
(a nickname given by Colleville to young Minard), Madame
Colleville, Monsieur Barniol, and Madame Phellion.
“Bouillotte,” at five sous a stake, occupied
Madame Minard, who knew no other game, Colleville,
old Monsieur Saillard, and Bandoze, his son-in-law.
The substitutes were Laudigeois and Dutocq. Mesdames
Falleix, Baudoyer, Barniol, and Mademoiselle Minard
were playing boston, and Celeste was sitting beside
Prudence Minard. Young Phellion was listening
to Madame Thuillier and looking at Celeste.
At a corner of the fireplace sat enthroned
on a sofa the Queen Elizabeth of the family, as simply
dressed as she had been for the last thirty years;
for no prosperity could have made her change her habits.
She wore on her chinchilla hair a black gauze cap,
adorned with the geranium called Charles X.; her gown,
of plum-colored stuff, made with a yoke, cost fifteen
francs, her embroidered collarette was worth six,
and it ill disguised the deep wrinkle produced by the
two muscles which fastened the head to the vertebral
column. The actor, Monvel, playing Augustus Caesar
in his old age, did not present a harder and sterner
profile than that of this female autocrat, knitting
socks for her brother. Before the fireplace stood
Thuillier in an attitude, ready to go forward and
meet the arriving guests; near him was a young man
whose entrance had produced a great effect, when the
porter (who on Sundays wore his best clothes and waited
on the company) announced Monsieur Olivier Vinet.
A private communication made by Cardot
to the celebrated “procureur-general,”
father of this young man, was the cause of his visit.
Olivier Vinet had just been promoted from the court
of Arcis-sur-Aube to that of the Seine, where he now
held the post of substitute “procureur-de-roi.”
Cardot had already invited Thuillier and the elder
Vinet, who was likely to become minister of justice,
with his son, to dine with him. The notary estimated
the fortunes which would eventually fall to Celeste
at seven hundred thousand francs. Vinet junior
appeared charmed to obtain the right to visit the
Thuilliers on Sundays. Great dowries make men
commit great and unbecoming follies without reserve
or decency in these days.
Ten minutes later another young man,
who had been talking with Thuillier before the arrival
of Olivier Vinet, raised his voice eagerly, in a political
discussion, and forced the young magistrate to follow
his example in the vivacious argument which now ensued.
The matter related to the vote by which the Chamber
of Deputies had just overthrown the ministry of the
12th of May, refusing the allowance demanded for the
Duc de Nemours.
“Assuredly,” said the
young man, “I am far from belonging to the dynastic
party; I am very far from approving of the rise of
the bourgeoisie to power. The bourgeoisie ought
not, any more than the aristocracy of other days,
to assume to be the whole nation. But the French
bourgeoisie has now taken upon itself to create a new
dynasty, a royalty of its own, and behold how it treats
it! When the people allowed Napoleon to rise
to power, it created with him a splendid and monumental
state of things; it was proud of his grandeur; and
it nobly gave its blood and sweat in building up the
edifice of the Empire. Between the magnificence
of the aristocratic throne and those of the imperial
purple, between the great of the earth and the People,
the bourgeoisie is proving itself petty; it degrades
power to its own level instead of rising up to it.
The saving of candle-ends it has so long practised
behind its counters, it now seeks to impose on its
princes. What may perhaps have been virtue in
its shops is a blunder and a crime higher up.
I myself have wanted many things for the people, but
I never should have begun by lopping off ten millions
of francs from the new civil list. In becoming,
as it were, nearly the whole of France, the bourgeoisie
owed to us the prosperity of the people, splendor
without ostentation, grandeur without privilege.”
The father of Olivier Vinet was just
now sulking with the government. The robe of
Keeper of the Seals, which had been his dream, was
slow in coming to him. The young substitute did
not, therefore, know exactly how to answer this speech;
he thought it wise to enlarge on one of its side issues.
“You are right, monsieur,”
said Olivier Vinet. “But, before manifesting
itself magnificently, the bourgeoisie has other duties
to fulfil towards France. The luxury you speak
of should come after duty. That which seems to
you so blameable is the necessity of the moment.
The Chamber is far from having its full share in public
affairs; the ministers are less for France than they
are for the crown, and parliament has determined that
the administration shall have, as in England, a strength
and power of its own, and not a mere borrowed power.
The day on which the administration can act for itself,
and represent the Chamber as the Chamber represents
the country, parliament will be found very liberal
toward the crown. The whole question is there.
I state it without expressing my own opinion, for
the duties of my post demand, in politics, a certain
fealty to the crown.”
“Setting aside the political
question,” replied the young man, whose voice
and accent were those of a native of Provence, “it
is certainly true that the bourgeoisie has ill understood
its mission. We can see, any day, the great law
officers, attorney-generals, peers of France in omnibuses,
judges who live on their salaries, prefects without
fortunes, ministers in debt! Whereas the bourgeoisie,
who have seized upon those offices, ought to dignify
them, as in the olden time when aristocracy dignified
them, and not occupy such posts solely for the purpose
of making their fortune, as scandalous disclosures
have proved.”
“Who is this young man?”
thought Olivier Vinet. “Is he a relative?
Cardot ought to have come with me on this first visit.”
“Who is that little monsieur?”
asked Minard of Barbet. “I have seen him
here several times.”
“He is a tenant,” replied Metivier, shuffling
the cards.
“A lawyer,” added Barbet,
in a low voice, “who occupies a small apartment
on the third floor front. Oh! He doesn’t
amount to much; he has nothing.”
“What is the name of that young
man?” said Olivier Vinet to Thuillier.
“Theodose de la Peyrade; he
is a barrister,” replied Thuillier, in a whisper.
At that moment the women present,
as well as the men, looked at the two young fellows,
and Madame Minard remarked to Colleville:—
“He is rather good-looking, that stranger.”
“I have made his anagram,”
replied Colleville, “and his name, Charles-Marie-Theodose
de la Peyrade, prophecies: ’Eh! monsieur
payera, de la dot, des oies et le char.’
Therefore, my dear Mamma Minard, be sure you don’t
give him your daughter.”
“They say that young man is
better-looking than my son,” said Madame Phellion
to Madame Colleville. “What do you think
about it?”
“Oh! in the matter of physical
beauty a woman might hesitate before choosing,”
replied Madame Colleville.
At that moment it occurred to young
Vinet as he looked round the salon, so full of the
lesser bourgeoisie, that it might be a shrewd thing
to magnify that particular class; and he thereupon
enlarged upon the meaning of the young Provencal barrister,
declaring that men so honored by the confidence of
the government should imitate royalty and encourage
a magnificence surpassing that of the former court.
It was folly, he said, to lay by the emoluments of
an office. Besides, could it be done, in Paris
especially, where costs of living had trebled, —the
apartment of a magistrate, for instance, costing three
thousand francs a year?
“My father,” he said in
conclusion, “allows me three thousand francs
a year, and that, with my salary, barely allows me
to maintain my rank.”
When the young substitute rode boldly
into this bog-hole, the Provencal, who had slyly enticed
him there, exchanged, without being observed, a wink
with Dutocq, who was just then waiting for the place
of a player at bouillotte.
“There is such a demand for
offices,” remarked the latter, “that they
talk of creating two justices of the peace to each
arrondissement in order to make a dozen new clerkships.
As if they could interfere with our rights and our
salaries, which already require an exhorbitant tax!”
“I have not yet had the pleasure
of hearing you at the Palais,” said Vinet to
Monsieur de la Peyrade.
“I am advocate for the poor,
and I plead only before the justice of peace,”
replied la Peyrade.
Mademoiselle Thuillier, as she listened
to young Vinet’s theory of the necessity of
spending an income, assumed a distant air and manner,
the significance of which was well understood by Dutocq
and the young Provencal. Vinet left the house
in company with Minard and Julien the advocate, so
that the battle-field before the fire-place was abandoned
to la Peyrade and Dutocq.
“The upper bourgeoisie,”
said Dutocq to Thuillier, “will behave, in future,
exactly like the old aristocracy. The nobility
wanted girls with money to manure their lands, and
the parvenus of to-day want the same to feather their
nests.”
“That’s exactly what Monsieur
Thuillier was saying to me this morning,” remarked
la Peyrade, boldly.
“Vinet’s father,”
said Dutocq, “married a Demoiselle de Chargeboeuf
and has caught the opinions of the nobility; he wants
a fortune at any price; his wife spends money regally.”
“Oh!” said Thuillier,
in whom the jealousy between the two classes of the
bourgeoisie was fully roused, “take offices away
from those fellows and they’d fall back where
they came.”
Mademoiselle was knitting with such
precipitous haste that she seemed to be propelled
by a steam-engine.
“Take my place, Monsieur Dutocq,”
said Madame Minard, rising. “My feet are
cold,” she added, going to the fire, where the
golden ornaments of her turban made fireworks in the
light of the Saint-Aurora wax-candles that were struggling
vainly to light the vast salon.
“He is very small fry, that
young substitute,” said Madame Minard, glancing
at Mademoiselle Thuillier.
“Small fry!” cried la Peyrade. “Ah,
madame! how witty!”
“But madame has so long accustomed
us to that sort of thing,” said the handsome
Thuillier.
Madame Colleville was examining la
Peyrade and comparing him with young Phellion, who
was just then talking to Celeste, neither of them
paying any heed to what was going on around them.
This is, certainly, the right moment to depict the
singular personage who was destined to play a signal
part in the Thuillier household, and who fully deserves
the appellation of a great artist.