In 1792 the townspeople of Issoudun
enjoyed the services of a physician named Rouget,
whom they held to be a man of consummate malignity.
Were we to believe certain bold tongues, he made his
wife extremely unhappy, although she was the most
beautiful woman of the neighborhood. Perhaps,
indeed, she was rather silly. But the prying of
friends, the slander of enemies, and the gossip of
acquaintances, had never succeeded in laying bare
the interior of that household. Doctor Rouget
was a man of whom we say in common parlance, “He
is not pleasant to deal with.” Consequently,
during his lifetime, his townsmen kept silence about
him and treated him civilly. His wife, a demoiselle
Descoings, feeble in health during her girlhood (which
was said to be a reason why the doctor married her),
gave birth to a son, and also to a daughter who arrived,
unexpectedly, ten years after her brother, and whose
birth took the husband, doctor though he were, by
surprise. This late-comer was named Agathe.
These little facts are so simple,
so commonplace, that a writer seems scarcely justified
in placing them in the fore-front of his history;
yet if they are not known, a man of Doctor Rouget’s
stamp would be thought a monster, an unnatural father,
when, in point of fact, he was only following out
the evil tendencies which many people shelter under
the terrible axiom that “men should have strength
of character,”—a masculine phrase
that has caused many a woman’s misery.
The Descoings, father-in-law and mother-in-law
of the doctor, were commission merchants in the wool-trade,
and did a double business by selling for the producers
and buying for the manufacturers of the golden fleeces
of Berry; thus pocketing a commission on both sides.
In this way they grew rich and miserly—the
outcome of many such lives. Descoings the son,
younger brother of Madame Rouget, did not like Issoudun.
He went to seek his fortune in Paris, where he set
up as a grocer in the rue Saint-Honore. That
step led to his ruin. But nothing could have
hindered it: a grocer is drawn to his business
by an attracting force quite equal to the repelling
force which drives artists away from it. We do
not sufficiently study the social potentialities which
make up the various vocations of life. It would
be interesting to know what determines one man to be
a stationer rather than a baker; since, in our day,
sons are not compelled to follow the calling of their
fathers, as they were among the Egyptians. In
this instance, love decided the vocation of Descoings.
He said to himself, “I, too, will be a grocer!”
and in the same breath he said (also to himself) some
other things regarding his employer,—a
beautiful creature, with whom he had fallen desperately
in love. Without other help than patience and
the trifling sum of money his father and mother sent
him, he married the widow of his predecessor, Monsieur
Bixiou.
In 1792 Descoings was thought to be
doing an excellent business. At that time, the
old Descoings were still living. They had retired
from the wool-trade, and were employing their capital
in buying up the forfeited estates,—another
golden fleece! Their son-in-law Doctor Rouget,
who, about this time, felt pretty sure that he should
soon have to mourn for the death of his wife, sent
his daughter to Paris to the care of his brother-in-law,
partly to let her see the capital, but still more
to carry out an artful scheme of his own. Descoings
had no children. Madame Descoings, twelve years
older than her husband, was in good health, but as
fat as a thrush after harvest; and the canny Rouget
knew enough professionally to be certain that Monsieur
and Madame Descoings, contrary to the moral of fairy
tales, would live happy ever after without having
any children. The pair might therefore become
attached to Agathe.
That young girl, the handsomest maiden
in Issoudun, did not resemble either father or mother.
Her birth had caused a lasting breach between Doctor
Rouget and his intimate friend Monsieur Lousteau, a
former sub-delegate who had lately removed from the
town. When a family expatriates itself, the natives
of a place as attractive as Issoudun have a right
to inquire into the reasons of so surprising a step.
It was said by certain sharp tongues that Doctor Rouget,
a vindictive man, had been heard to exclaim that Monsieur
Lousteau should die by his hand. Uttered by a
physician, this declaration had the force of a cannon-ball.
When the National Assembly suppressed the sub-delegates,
Lousteau and his family left Issoudun, and never returned
there. After their departure Madame Rouget spent
most of her time with the sister of the late sub-delegate,
Madame Hochon, who was the godmother of her daughter,
and the only person to whom she confided her griefs.
The little that the good town of Issoudun ever really
knew of the beautiful Madame Rouget was told by Madame
Hochon,—though not until after the doctor’s
death.
The first words of Madame Rouget,
when informed by her husband that he meant to send
Agathe to Paris, were: “I shall never see
my daughter again.”
“And she was right,” said the worthy Madame
Hochon.
After this, the poor mother grew as
yellow as a quince, and her appearance did not contradict
the tongues of those who declared that Doctor Rouget
was killing her by inches. The behavior of her
booby of a son must have added to the misery of the
poor woman so unjustly accused. Not restrained,
possibly encouraged by his father, the young fellow,
who was in every way stupid, paid her neither the attentions
nor the respect which a son owes to a mother.
Jean-Jacques Rouget was like his father, especially
on the latter’s worst side; and the doctor at
his best was far from satisfactory, either morally
or physically.
The arrival of the charming Agathe
Rouget did not bring happiness to her uncle Descoings;
for in the same week (or rather, we should say decade,
for the Republic had then been proclaimed) he was imprisoned
on a hint from Robespierre given to Fouquier-Tinville.
Descoings, who was imprudent enough to think the famine
fictitious, had the additional folly, under the impression
that opinions were free, to express that opinion to
several of his male and female customers as he served
them in the grocery. The citoyenne Duplay, wife
of a cabinet-maker with whom Robespierre lodged, and
who looked after the affairs of that eminent citizen,
patronized, unfortunately, the Descoings establishment.
She considered the opinions of the grocer insulting
to Maximilian the First. Already displeased with
the manners of Descoings, this illustrious “tricoteuse”
of the Jacobin club regarded the beauty of his wife
as a kind of aristocracy. She infused a venom
of her own into the grocer’s remarks when she
repeated them to her good and gentle master, and the
poor man was speedily arrested on the well-worn charge
of “accaparation.”
No sooner was he put in prison, than
his wife set to work to obtain his release. But
the steps she took were so ill-judged that any one
hearing her talk to the arbiters of his fate might
have thought that she was in reality seeking to get
rid of him. Madame Descoings knew Bridau, one
of the secretaries of Roland, then minister of the
interior,—the right-hand man of all the
ministers who succeeded each other in that office.
She put Bridau on the war-path to save her grocer.
That incorruptible official—one of the virtuous
dupes who are always admirably disinterested—was
careful not to corrupt the men on whom the fate of
the poor grocer depended; on the contrary, he endeavored
to enlighten them. Enlighten people in those days!
As well might he have begged them to bring back the
Bourbons. The Girondist minister, who was then
contending against Robespierre, said to his secretary,
“Why do you meddle in the matter?” and
all others to whom the worthy Bridau appealed made
the same atrocious reply: “Why do you meddle?”
Bridau then sagely advised Madame Descoings to keep
quiet and await events. But instead of conciliating
Robespierre’s housekeeper, she fretted and fumed
against that informer, and even complained to a member
of the Convention, who, trembling for himself, replied
hastily, “I will speak of it to Robespierre.”
The handsome petitioner put faith in this promise,
which the other carefully forgot. A few loaves
of sugar, or a bottle or two of good liqueur, given
to the citoyenne Duplay would have saved Descoings.
This little mishap proves that in
revolutionary times it is quite as dangerous to employ
honest men as scoundrels; we should rely on ourselves
alone. Descoings perished; but he had the glory
of going to the scaffold with Andre Chenier.
There, no doubt, grocery and poetry embraced for the
first time in the flesh; although they have, and ever
have had, intimate secret relations. The death
of Descoings produced far more sensation than that
of Andre Chenier. It has taken thirty years to
prove to France that she lost more by the death of
Chenier than by that of Descoings.
This act of Robespierre led to one
good result: the terrified grocers let politics
alone until 1830. Descoings’s shop was not
a hundred yards from Robespierre’s lodging.
His successor was scarcely more fortunate than himself.
Cesar Birotteau, the celebrated perfumer of the “Queen
of Roses,” bought the premises; but, as if the
scaffold had left some inexplicable contagion behind
it, the inventor of the “Paste of Sultans”
and the “Carminative Balm” came to his
ruin in that very shop. The solution of the problem
here suggested belongs to the realm of occult science.
During the visits which Roland’s
secretary paid to the unfortunate Madame Descoings,
he was struck with the cold, calm, innocent beauty
of Agathe Rouget. While consoling the widow, who,
however, was too inconsolable to carry on the business
of her second deceased husband, he married the charming
girl, with the consent of her father, who hastened
to give his approval to the match. Doctor Rouget,
delighted to hear that matters were going beyond his
expectations,—for his wife, on the death
of her brother, had become sole heiress of the Descoings,—rushed
to Paris, not so much to be present at the wedding
as to see that the marriage contract was drawn to suit
him. The ardent and disinterested love of citizen
Bridau gave carte blanche to the perfidious doctor,
who made the most of his son-in-law’s blindness,
as the following history will show.
Madame Rouget, or, to speak more correctly,
the doctor, inherited all the property, landed and
personal, of Monsieur and Madame Descoings the elder,
who died within two years of each other; and soon after
that, Rouget got the better, as we may say, of his
wife, for she died at the beginning of the year 1799.
So he had vineyards and he bought farms, he owned
iron-works and he sold fleeces. His well-beloved
son was stupidly incapable of doing anything; but
the father destined him for the state in life of a
land proprietor and allowed him to grow up in wealth
and silliness, certain that the lad would know as much
as the wisest if he simply let himself live and die.
After 1799, the cipherers of Issoudun put, at the
very least, thirty thousand francs’ income to
the doctor’s credit. From the time of his
wife’s death he led a debauched life, though
he regulated it, so to speak, and kept it within the
closed doors of his own house. This man, endowed
with “strength of character,” died in
1805, and God only knows what the townspeople of Issoudun
said about him then, and how many anecdotes they related
of his horrible private life. Jean-Jacques Rouget,
whom his father, recognizing his stupidity, had latterly
treated with severity, remained a bachelor for certain
reasons, the explanation of which will form an important
part of this history. His celibacy was partly
his father’s fault, as we shall see later.
Meantime, it is well to inquire into
the results of the secret vengeance the doctor took
on a daughter whom he did not recognize as his own,
but who, you must understand at once, was legitimately
his. Not a person in Issoudun had noticed one
of those capricious facts that make the whole subject
of generation a vast abyss in which science flounders.
Agathe bore a strong likeness to the mother of Doctor
Rouget. Just as gout is said to skip a generation
and pass from grandfather to grandson, resemblances
not uncommonly follow the same course.
In like manner, the eldest of Agathe’s
children, who physically resembled his mother, had
the moral qualities of his grandfather, Doctor Rouget.
We will leave the solution of this problem to the
twentieth century, with a fine collection of microscopic
animalculae; our descendants may perhaps write as
much nonsense as the scientific schools of the nineteenth
century have uttered on this mysterious and perplexing
question.
Agathe Rouget attracted the admiration
of everyone by a face destined, like that of Mary,
the mother of our Lord, to continue ever virgin, even
after marriage. Her portrait, still to be seen
in the atelier of Bridau, shows a perfect oval and
a clear whiteness of complexion, without the faintest
tinge of color, in spite of her golden hair. More
than one artist, looking at the pure brow, the discreet,
composed mouth, the delicate nose, the small ears,
the long lashes, and the dark-blue eyes filled with
tenderness,—in short, at the whole countenance
expressive of placidity,—has asked the great
artist, “Is that a copy of a Raphael?”
No man ever acted under a truer inspiration than the
minister’s secretary when he married this young
girl. Agathe was an embodiment of the ideal housekeeper
brought up in the provinces and never parted from
her mother. Pious, though far from sanctimonious,
she had no other education than that given to women
by the Church. Judged, by ordinary standards,
she was an accomplished wife, yet her ignorance of
life paved the way for great misfortunes. The
epitaph on the Roman matron, “She did needlework
and kept the house,” gives a faithful picture
of her simple, pure, and tranquil existence.
Under the Consulate, Bridau attached
himself fanatically to Napoleon, who placed him at
the head of a department in the ministry of the interior
in 1804, a year before the death of Doctor Rouget.
With a salary of twelve thousand francs and very handsome
emoluments, Bridau was quite indifferent to the scandalous
settlement of the property at Issoudun, by which Agathe
was deprived of her rightful inheritance. Six
months before Doctor Rouget’s death he had sold
one-half of his property to his son, to whom the other
half was bequeathed as a gift, and also in accordance
with his rights as heir. An advance of fifty
thousand francs on her inheritance, made to Agathe
at the time of her marriage, represented her share
of the property of her father and mother.
Bridau idolized the Emperor, and served
him with the devotion of a Mohammedan for his prophet;
striving to carry out the vast conceptions of the
modern demi-god, who, finding the whole fabric of France
destroyed, went to work to reconstruct everything.
The new official never showed fatigue, never cried
“Enough.” Projects, reports, notes,
studies, he accepted all, even the hardest labors,
happy in the consciousness of aiding his Emperor.
He loved him as a man, he adored him as a sovereign,
and he would never allow the least criticism of his
acts or his purposes.
From 1804 to 1808, the Bridaus lived
in a handsome suite of rooms on the Quai Voltaire,
a few steps from the ministry of the interior and
close to the Tuileries. A cook and footman were
the only servants of the household during this period
of Madame Bridau’s grandeur. Agathe, early
afoot, went to market with her cook. While the
latter did the rooms, she prepared the breakfast.
Bridau never went to the ministry before eleven o’clock.
As long as their union lasted, his wife took the same
unwearying pleasure in preparing for him an exquisite
breakfast, the only meal he really enjoyed. At
all seasons and in all weathers, Agathe watched her
husband from the window as he walked toward his office,
and never drew in her head until she had seen him
turn the corner of the rue du Bac. Then she cleared
the breakfast-table herself, gave an eye to the arrangement
of the rooms, dressed for the day, played with her
children and took them to walk, or received the visits
of friends; all the while waiting in spirit for Bridau’s
return. If her husband brought him important business
that had to be attended to, she would station herself
close to the writing-table in his study, silent as
a statue, knitting while he wrote, sitting up as late
as he did, and going to bed only a few moments before
him. Occasionally, the pair went to some theatre,
occupying one of the ministerial boxes. On those
days, they dined at a restaurant, and the gay scenes
of that establishment never ceased to give Madame
Bridau the same lively pleasure they afford to provincials
who are new to Paris. Agathe, who was obliged
to accept the formal dinners sometimes given to the
head of a department in a ministry, paid due attention
to the luxurious requirements of the then mode of dress,
but she took off the rich apparel with delight when
she returned home, and resumed the simple garb of
a provincial. One day in the week, Thursday,
Bridau received his friends, and he also gave a grand
ball, annually, on Shrove Tuesday.
These few words contain the whole
history of their conjugal life, which had but three
events; the births of two children, born three years
apart, and the death of Bridau, who died in 1808, killed
by overwork at the very moment when the Emperor was
about to appoint him director-general, count, and
councillor of state. At this period of his reign,
Napoleon was particularly absorbed in the affairs of
the interior; he overwhelmed Bridau with work, and
finally wrecked the health of that dauntless bureaucrat.
The Emperor, of whom Bridau had never asked a favor,
made inquiries into his habits and fortune. Finding
that this devoted servant literally had nothing but
his situation, Napoleon recognized him as one of the
incorruptible natures which raised the character of
his government and gave moral weight to it, and he
wished to surprise him by the gift of some distinguished
reward. But the effort to complete a certain work,
involving immense labor, before the departure of the
Emperor for Spain caused the death of the devoted
servant, who was seized with an inflammatory fever.
When the Emperor, who remained in Paris for a few days
after his return to prepare for the campaign of 1809,
was told of Bridau’s death he said: “There
are men who can never be replaced.” Struck
by the spectacle of a devotion which could receive
none of the brilliant recognitions that reward a soldier,
the Emperor resolved to create an order to requite
civil services, just as he had already created the
Legion of honor to reward the military. The impression
he received from the death of Bridau led him to plan
the order of the Reunion. He had not time, however,
to mature this aristocratic scheme, the recollection
of which is now so completely effaced that many of
my readers may ask what were its insignia: the
order was worn with a blue ribbon. The Emperor
called it the Reunion, under the idea of uniting the
order of the Golden Fleece of Spain with the order
of the Golden Fleece of Austria. “Providence,”
said a Prussian diplomatist, “took care to frustrate
the profanation.”
After Bridau’s death the Emperor
inquired into the circumstances of his widow.
Her two sons each received a scholarship in the Imperial
Lyceum, and the Emperor paid the whole costs of their
education from his privy purse. He gave Madame
Bridau a pension of four thousand francs, intending,
no doubt, to advance the fortune of her sons in future
years.
From the time of her marriage to the
death of her husband, Agathe had held no communication
with Issoudun. She lost her mother just as she
was on the point of giving birth to her youngest son,
and when her father, who, as she well knew, loved
her little, died, the coronation of the Emperor was
at hand, and that event gave Bridau so much additional
work that she was unwilling to leave him. Her
brother, Jean-Jacques Rouget, had not written to her
since she left Issoudun. Though grieved by the
tacit repudiation of her family, Agathe had come to
think seldom of those who never thought of her.
Once a year she received a letter from her godmother,
Madame Hochon, to whom she replied with commonplaces,
paying no heed to the advice which that pious and
excellent woman gave to her, disguised in cautious
words.
Some time before the death of Doctor
Rouget, Madame Hochon had written to her goddaughter
warning her that she would get nothing from her father’s
estate unless she gave a power of attorney to Monsieur
Hochon. Agathe was very reluctant to harass her
brother. Whether it were that Bridau thought
the spoliation of his wife in accordance with the
laws and customs of Berry, or that, high-minded as
he was, he shared the magnanimity of his wife, certain
it is that he would not listen to Roguin, his notary,
who advised him to take advantage of his ministerial
position to contest the deeds by which the father had
deprived the daughter of her legitimate inheritance.
Husband and wife thus tacitly sanctioned what was
done at Issoudun. Nevertheless, Roguin had forced
Bridau to reflect upon the future interests of his
wife which were thus compromised. He saw that
if he died before her, Agathe would be left without
property, and this led him to look into his own affairs.
He found that between 1793 and 1805 his wife and he
had been obliged to use nearly thirty thousand of the
fifty thousand francs in cash which old Rouget had
given to his daughter at the time of her marriage.
He at once invested the remaining twenty thousand in
the public funds, then quoted at forty, and from this
source Agathe received about two thousand francs a
year. As a widow, Madame Bridau could live suitably
on an income of six thousand francs. With provincial
good sense, she thought of changing her residence,
dismissing the footman, and keeping no servant except
a cook; but her intimate friend, Madame Descoings,
who insisted on being considered her aunt, sold her
own establishment and came to live with Agathe, turning
the study of the late Bridau into her bedroom.
The two widows clubbed their revenues,
and so were in possession of a joint income of twelve
thousand francs a year. This seems a very simple
and natural proceeding. But nothing in life is
more deserving of attention than the things that are
called natural; we are on our guard against the unnatural
and extraordinary. For this reason, you will
find men of experience—lawyers, judges,
doctors, and priests —attaching immense
importance to simple matters; and they are often thought
over-scrupulous. But the serpent amid flowers
is one of the finest myths that antiquity has bequeathed
for the guidance of our lives. How often we hear
fools, trying to excuse themselves in their own eyes
or in the eyes of others, exclaiming, “It was
all so natural that any one would have been taken
in.”
In 1809, Madame Descoings, who never
told her age, was sixty-five. In her heyday she
had been popularly called a beauty, and was now one
of those rare women whom time respects. She owed
to her excellent constitution the privilege of preserving
her good looks, which, however, would not bear close
examination. She was of medium height, plump,
and fresh, with fine shoulders and a rather rosy complexion.
Her blond hair, bordering on chestnut, showed, in spite
of her husband’s catastrophe, not a tinge of
gray. She loved good cheer, and liked to concoct
nice little made dishes; yet, fond as she was of eating,
she also adored the theatre and cherished a vice which
she wrapped in impenetrable mystery—she
bought into lotteries. Can that be the abyss
of which mythology warns us under the fable of the
Danaides and their cask? Madame Descoings, like
other women who are lucky enough to keep young for
many years, spend rather too much upon her dress;
but aside from these trifling defects she was the
pleasantest of women to live with. Of every one’s
opinion, never opposing anybody, her kindly and communicative
gayety gave pleasure to all. She had, moreover,
a Parisian quality which charmed the retired clerks
and elderly merchants of her circle,—she
could take and give a jest. If she did not marry
a third time it was no doubt the fault of the times.
During the wars of the Empire, marrying men found rich
and handsome girls too easily to trouble themselves
about women of sixty.
Madame Descoings, always anxious to
cheer Madame Bridau, often took the latter to the
theatre, or to drive; prepared excellent little dinners
for her delectation, and even tried to marry her to
her own son by her first husband, Bixiou. Alas!
to do this, she was forced to reveal a terrible secret,
carefully kept by her, by her late husband, and by
her notary. The young and beautiful Madame Descoings,
who passed for thirty-six years old, had a son who
was thirty-five, named Bixiou, already a widower,
a major in the Twenty-Fourth Infantry, who subsequently
perished at Lutzen, leaving behind him an only son.
Madame Descoings, who only saw her grandson secretly,
gave out that he was the son of the first wife of
her first husband. The revelation was partly
a prudential act; for this grandson was being educated
with Madame Bridau’s sons at the Imperial Lyceum,
where he had a half-scholarship. The lad, who
was clever and shrewd at school, soon after made himself
a great reputation as draughtsman and designer, and
also as a wit.
Agathe, who lived only for her children,
declined to re-marry, as much from good sense as from
fidelity to her husband. But it is easier for
a woman to be a good wife than to be a good mother.
A widow has two tasks before her, whose duties clash:
she is a mother, and yet she must exercise parental
authority. Few women are firm enough to understand
and practise this double duty. Thus it happened
that Agathe, notwithstanding her many virtues, was
the innocent cause of great unhappiness. In the
first place, through her lack of intelligence and
the blind confidence to which such noble natures are
prone, Agathe fell a victim to Madame Descoings, who
brought a terrible misfortune on the family.
That worthy soul was nursing up a combination of three
numbers called a “trey” in a lottery, and
lotteries give no credit to their customers. As
manager of the joint household, she was able to pay
up her stakes with the money intended for their current
expenses, and she went deeper and deeper into debt,
with the hope of ultimately enriching her grandson
Bixiou, her dear Agathe, and the little Bridaus.
When the debts amounted to ten thousand francs, she
increased her stakes, trusting that her favorite trey,
which had not turned up in nine years, would come at
last, and fill to overflowing the abysmal deficit.
From that moment the debt rolled up
rapidly. When it reached twenty thousand francs,
Madame Descoings lost her head, still failing to win
the trey. She tried to mortgage her own property
to pay her niece, but Roguin, who was her notary,
showed her the impossibility of carrying out that
honorable intention. The late Doctor Rouget had
laid hold of the property of the brother-in-law after
the grocer’s execution, and had, as it were,
disinherited Madame Descoings by securing to her a
life-interest on the property of his own son, Jean-Jacques
Rouget. No money-lender would think of advancing
twenty thousand francs to a woman sixty-six years
of age, on an annuity of about four thousand, at a
period when ten per cent could easily be got for an
investment. So one morning Madame Descoings fell
at the feet of her niece, and with sobs confessed
the state of things. Madame Bridau did not reproach
her; she sent away the footman and cook, sold all but
the bare necessities of her furniture, sold also three-fourths
of her government funds, paid off the debts, and bade
farewell to her appartement.