One of the worst corners in all Paris
is undoubtedly that part of the rue Mazarin which
lies between the rue Guenegard and its junction with
the rue de Seine, behind the palace of the Institute.
The high gray walls of the college and of the library
which Cardinal Mazarin presented to the city of Paris,
and which the French Academy was in after days to
inhabit, cast chill shadows over this angle of the
street, where the sun seldom shines, and the north
wind blows. The poor ruined widow came to live
on the third floor of a house standing at this damp,
dark, cold corner. Opposite, rose the Institute
buildings, in which were the dens of ferocious animals
known to the bourgeoisie under the name of artists,—under
that of tyro, or rapin, in the studios. Into
these dens they enter rapins, but they may come forth
prix de Rome. The transformation does not take
place without extraordinary uproar and disturbance
at the time of year when the examinations are going
on, and the competitors are shut up in their cells.
To win a prize, they were obliged, within a given time,
to make, if a sculptor, a clay model; if a painter,
a picture such as may be seen at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts;
if a musician, a cantata; if an architect, the plans
for a public building. At the time when we are
penning the words, this menagerie has already been
removed from these cold and cheerless buildings, and
taken to the elegant Palais des Beaux-Arts, which
stands near by.
From the windows of Madame Bridau’s
new abode, a glance could penetrate the depths of
those melancholy barred cages. To the north,
the view was shut in by the dome of the Institute;
looking up the street, the only distraction to the
eye was a file of hackney-coaches, which stood at
the upper end of the rue Mazarin. After a while,
the widow put boxes of earth in front of her windows,
and cultivated those aerial gardens that police regulations
forbid, though their vegetable products purify the
atmosphere. The house, which backed up against
another fronting on the rue de Seine, was necessarily
shallow, and the staircase wound round upon itself.
The third floor was the last. Three windows to
three rooms, namely, a dining-room, a small salon,
and a chamber on one side of the landing; on the other,
a little kitchen, and two single rooms; above, an
immense garret without partitions. Madame Bridau
chose this lodging for three reasons: economy,
for it cost only four hundred francs a year, so that
she took a lease of it for nine years; proximity to
her sons’ school, the Imperial Lyceum being
at a short distance; thirdly, because it was in the
quarter to which she was used.
The inside of the appartement
was in keeping with the general look of the house.
The dining-room, hung with a yellow paper covered with
little green flowers, and floored with tiles that were
not glazed, contained nothing that was not strictly
necessary,—namely, a table, two sideboards,
and six chairs, brought from the other appartement.
The salon was adorned with an Aubusson carpet given
to Bridau when the ministry of the interior was refurnished.
To the furniture of this room the widow added one
of those commonplace mahogany sofas with the Egyptian
heads that Jacob Desmalter manufactured by the gross
in 1806, covering them with a silken green stuff bearing
a design of white geometric circles. Above this
piece of furniture hung a portrait of Bridau, done
in pastel by the hand of an amateur, which at once
attracted the eye. Though art might have something
to say against it, no one could fail to recognize
the firmness of the noble and obscure citizen upon
that brow. The serenity of the eyes, gentle, yet
proud, was well given; the sagacious mind, to which
the prudent lips bore testimony, the frank smile,
the atmosphere of the man of whom the Emperor had
said, “Justum et tenacem,” had all been
caught, if not with talent, at least with fidelity.
Studying that face, an observer could see that the
man had done his duty. His countenance bore signs
of the incorruptibility which we attribute to several
men who served the Republic. On the opposite
wall, over a card-table, flashed a picture of the
Emperor in brilliant colors, done by Vernet; Napoleon
was riding rapidly, attended by his escort.
Agathe had bestowed upon herself two
large birdcages; one filled with canaries, the other
with Java sparrows. She had given herself up to
this juvenile fancy since the loss of her husband,
irreparable to her, as, in fact, it was to many others.
By the end of three months, her widowed chamber had
become what it was destined to remain until the appointed
day when she left it forever,—a litter of
confusion which words are powerless to describe.
Cats were domiciled on the sofa. The canaries,
occasionally let loose, left their commas on the furniture.
The poor dear woman scattered little heaps of millet
and bits of chickweed about the room, and put tidbits
for the cats in broken saucers. Garments lay
everywhere. The room breathed of the provinces
and of constancy. Everything that once belonged
to Bridau was scrupulously preserved. Even the
implements in his desk received the care which the
widow of a paladin might have bestowed upon her husband’s
armor. One slight detail here will serve to bring
the tender devotion of this woman before the reader’s
mind. She had wrapped up a pen and sealed the
package, on which she wrote these words, “Last
pen used by my dear husband.” The cup from
which he drank his last draught was on the fireplace;
caps and false hair were tossed, at a later period,
over the glass globes which covered these precious
relics. After Bridau’s death not a trace
of coquetry, not even a woman’s ordinary care
of her person, was left in the young widow of thirty-five.
Parted from the only man she had ever known, esteemed,
and loved, from one who had never caused her the slightest
unhappiness, she was no longer conscious of her womanhood;
all things were as nothing to her; she no longer even
thought of her dress. Nothing was ever more simply
done or more complete than this laying down of conjugal
happiness and personal charm. Some human beings
obtain through love the power of transferring their
self—their I—to the being of
another; and when death takes that other, no life of
their own is possible for them.
Agathe, who now lived only for her
children, was infinitely sad at the thought of the
privations this financial ruin would bring upon them.
From the time of her removal to the rue Mazarin a shade
of melancholy came upon her face, which made it very
touching. She hoped a little in the Emperor;
but the Emperor at that time could do no more than
he was already doing; he was giving three hundred
francs a year to each child from his privy purse,
besides the scholarships.
As for the brilliant Descoings, she
occupied an appartement on the second floor
similar to that of her niece above her. She had
made Madame Bridau an assignment of three thousand
francs out of her annuity. Roguin, the notary,
attended to this in Madame Bridau’s interest;
but it would take seven years of such slow repayment
to make good the loss. The Descoings, thus reduced
to an income of twelve hundred francs, lived with
her niece in a small way. These excellent but
timid creatures employed a woman-of-all-work for the
morning hours only. Madame Descoings, who liked
to cook, prepared the dinner. In the evenings
a few old friends, persons employed at the ministry
who owed their places to Bridau, came for a game of
cards with the two widows. Madame Descoings still
cherished her trey, which she declared was obstinate
about turning up. She expected, by one grand stroke,
to repay the enforced loan she had made upon her niece.
She was fonder of the little Bridaus than she was
of her grandson Bixiou,—partly from a sense
of the wrong she had done them, partly because she
felt the kindness of her niece, who, under her worst
deprivations, never uttered a word of reproach.
So Philippe and Joseph were cossetted, and the old
gambler in the Imperial Lottery of France (like others
who have a vice or a weakness to atone for) cooked
them nice little dinners with plenty of sweets.
Later on, Philippe and Joseph could extract from her
pocket, with the utmost facility, small sums of money,
which the younger used for pencils, paper, charcoal
and prints, the elder to buy tennis-shoes, marbles,
twine, and pocket-knives. Madame Descoings’s
passion forced her to be content with fifty francs
a month for her domestic expenses, so as to gamble
with the rest.
On the other hand, Madame Bridau,
motherly love, kept her expenses down to the same
sum. By way of penance for her former over-confidence,
she heroically cut off her own little enjoyments.
As with other timid souls of limited intelligence,
one shock to her feelings rousing her distrust led
her to exaggerate a defect in her character until
it assumed the consistency of a virtue. The Emperor,
she said to herself, might forget them; he might die
in battle; her pension, at any rate, ceased with her
life. She shuddered at the risk her children
ran of being left alone in the world without means.
Quite incapable of understanding Roguin when he explained
to her that in seven years Madame Descoings’s
assignment would replace the money she had sold out
of the Funds, she persisted in trusting neither the
notary nor her aunt, nor even the government; she
believed in nothing but herself and the privations
she was practising. By laying aside three thousand
francs every year from her pension, she would have
thirty thousand francs at the end of ten years; which
would give fifteen hundred a year to her children.
At thirty-six, she might expect to live twenty years
longer; and if she kept to the same system of economy
she might leave to each child enough for the bare
necessaries of life.
Thus the two widows passed from hollow
opulence to voluntary poverty, —one under
the pressure of a vice, the other through the promptings
of the purest virtue. None of these petty details
are useless in teaching the lesson which ought to
be learned from this present history, drawn as it
is from the most commonplace interests of life, but
whose bearings are, it may be, only the more widespread.
The view from the windows into the student dens; the
tumult of the rapins below; the necessity of looking
up at the sky to escape the miserable sights of the
damp angle of the street; the presence of that portrait,
full of soul and grandeur despite the workmanship of
an amateur painter; the sight of the rich colors,
now old and harmonious, in that calm and placid home;
the preference of the mother for her eldest child;
her opposition to the tastes of the younger; in short,
the whole body of facts and circumstances which make
the preamble of this history are perhaps the generating
causes to which we owe Joseph Bridau, one of the greatest
painters of the modern French school of art.
Philippe, the elder of the two sons,
was strikingly like his mother. Though a blond
lad, with blue eyes, he had the daring look which is
readily taken for intrepidity and courage. Old
Claparon, who entered the ministry of the interior
at the same time as Bridau, and was one of the faithful
friends who played whist every night with the two
widows, used to say of Philippe two or three times
a month, giving him a tap on the cheek, “Here’s
a young rascal who’ll stand to his guns!”
The boy, thus stimulated, naturally and out of bravado,
assumed a resolute manner. That turn once given
to his character, he became very adroit at all bodily
exercises; his fights at the Lyceum taught him the
endurance and contempt for pain which lays the foundation
of military valor. He also acquired, very naturally,
a distaste for study; public education being unable
to solve the difficult problem of developing “pari
passu” the body and the mind.
Agathe believed that the purely physical
resemblance which Philippe bore to her carried with
it a moral likeness; and she confidently expected
him to show at a future day her own delicacy of feeling,
heightened by the vigor of manhood. Philippe was
fifteen years old when his mother moved into the melancholy
appartement in the rue Mazarin; and the winning
ways of a lad of that age went far to confirm the
maternal beliefs. Joseph, three years younger,
was like his father, but only on the defective side.
In the first place, his thick black hair was always
in disorder, no matter what pains were taken with
it; while Philippe’s, notwithstanding his vivacity,
was invariably neat. Then, by some mysterious
fatality, Joseph could not keep his clothes clean;
dress him in new clothes, and he immediately made
them look like old ones. The elder, on the other
hand, took care of his things out of mere vanity.
Unconsciously, the mother acquired a habit of scolding
Joseph and holding up his brother as an example to
him. Agathe did not treat the two children alike;
when she went to fetch them from school, the thought
in her mind as to Joseph always was, “What sort
of state shall I find him in?” These trifles
drove her heart into the gulf of maternal preference.
No one among the very ordinary persons
who made the society of the two widows—neither
old Du Bruel nor old Claparon, nor Desroches the father,
nor even the Abbe Loraux, Agathe’s confessor—noticed
Joseph’s faculty for observation. Absorbed
in the line of his own tastes, the future colorist
paid no attention to anything that concerned himself.
During his childhood this disposition was so like torpor
that his father grew uneasy about him. The remarkable
size of the head and the width of the brow roused
a fear that the child might be liable to water on
the brain. His distressful face, whose originality
was thought ugliness by those who had no eye for the
moral value of a countenance, wore rather a sullen
expression during his childhood. The features,
which developed later in life, were pinched, and the
close attention the child paid to what went on about
him still further contracted them. Philippe flattered
his mother’s vanity, but Joseph won no compliments.
Philippe sparkled with the clever sayings and lively
answers that lead parents to believe their boys will
turn out remarkable men; Joseph was taciturn, and
a dreamer. The mother hoped great things of Philippe,
and expected nothing of Joseph.
Joseph’s predilection for art
was developed by a very commonplace incident.
During the Easter holidays of 1812, as he was coming
home from a walk in the Tuileries with his brother
and Madame Descoings, he saw a pupil drawing a caricature
of some professor on the wall of the Institute, and
stopped short with admiration at the charcoal sketch,
which was full of satire. The next day the child
stood at the window watching the pupils as they entered
the building by the door on the rue Mazarin; then
he ran downstairs and slipped furtively into the long
courtyard of the Institute, full of statues, busts,
half-finished marbles, plasters, and baked clays;
at all of which he gazed feverishly, for his instinct
was awakened, and his vocation stirred within him.
He entered a room on the ground-floor, the door of
which was half open; and there he saw a dozen young
men drawing from a statue, who at once began to make
fun of him.
“Hi! little one,” cried
the first to see him, taking the crumbs of his bread
and scattering them at the child.
“Whose child is he?”
“Goodness, how ugly!”
For a quarter of an hour Joseph stood
still and bore the brunt of much teasing in the atelier
of the great sculptor, Chaudet. But after laughing
at him for a time, the pupils were struck with his
persistency and with the expression of his face.
They asked him what he wanted. Joseph answered
that he wished to know how to draw; thereupon they
all encouraged him. Won by such friendliness,
the child told them he was Madame Bridau’s son.
“Oh! if you are Madame Bridau’s
son,” they cried, from all parts of the room,
“you will certainly be a great man. Long
live the son of Madame Bridau! Is your mother
pretty? If you are a sample of her, she must
be stylish!”
“Ha! you want to be an artist?”
said the eldest pupil, coming up to Joseph, “but
don’t you know that that requires pluck; you’ll
have to bear all sorts of trials,—yes,
trials,—enough to break your legs and arms
and soul and body. All the fellows you see here
have gone through regular ordeals. That one,
for instance, he went seven days without eating!
Let me see, now, if you can be an artist.”
He took one of the child’s arms
and stretched it straight up in the air; then he placed
the other arm as if Joseph were in the act of delivering
a blow with his fist.
“Now that’s what we call
the telegraph trial,” said the pupil. “If
you can stand like that, without lowering or changing
the position of your arms for a quarter of an hour,
then you’ll have proved yourself a plucky one.”
“Courage, little one, courage!”
cried all the rest. “You must suffer if
you want to be an artist.”
Joseph, with the good faith of his
thirteen years, stood motionless for five minutes,
all the pupils gazing solemnly at him.
“There! you are moving,” cried one.
“Steady, steady, confound you!” cried
another.
“The Emperor Napoleon stood
a whole month as you see him there,” said a
third, pointing to the fine statue by Chaudet, which
was in the room.
That statue, which represents the
Emperor standing with the Imperial sceptre in his
hand, was torn down in 1814 from the column it surmounted
so well.
At the end of ten minutes the sweat
stood in drops on Joseph’s forehead. At
that moment a bald-headed little man, pale and sickly
in appearance, entered the atelier, where respectful
silence reigned at once.
“What you are about, you urchins?”
he exclaimed, as he looked at the youthful martyr.
“That is a good little fellow,
who is posing,” said the tall pupil who had
placed Joseph.
“Are you not ashamed to torture
a poor child in that way?” said Chaudet, lowering
Joseph’s arms. “How long have you
been standing there?” he asked the boy, giving
him a friendly little pat on the cheek.
“A quarter of an hour.”
“What brought you here?”
“I want to be an artist.”
“Where do you belong? where do you come from?”
“From mamma’s house.”
“Oh! mamma!” cried the pupils.
“Silence at the easels!” cried Chaudet.
“Who is your mamma?”
“She is Madame Bridau.
My papa, who is dead, was a friend of the Emperor;
and if you will teach me to draw, the Emperor will
pay all you ask for it.”
“His father was head of a department
at the ministry of the Interior,” exclaimed
Chaudet, struck by a recollection. “So you
want to be an artist, at your age?”
“Yes, monsieur.”
“Well, come here just as much
as you like; we’ll amuse you. Give him a
board, and paper, and chalks, and let him alone.
You are to know, you young scamps, that his father
did me a service. Here, Corde-a-puits, go and
get some cakes and sugar-plums,” he said to the
pupil who had tortured Joseph, giving him some small
change. “We’ll see if you are to
be artist by the way you gobble up the dainties,”
added the sculptor, chucking Joseph under the chin.
Then he went round examining the pupils’
works, followed by the child, who looked and listened,
and tried to understand him. The sweets were
brought, Chaudet, himself, the child, and the whole
studio all had their teeth in them; and Joseph was
petted quite as much as he had been teased. The
whole scene, in which the rough play and real heart
of artists were revealed, and which the boy instinctively
understood, made a great impression on his mind.
The apparition of the sculptor, —for whom
the Emperor’s protection opened a way to future
glory, closed soon after by his premature death,—was
like a vision to little Joseph. The child said
nothing to his mother about this adventure, but he
spent two hours every Sunday and every Thursday in
Chaudet’s atelier. From that time forth,
Madame Descoings, who humored the fancies of the two
cherubim, kept Joseph supplied with pencils and red
chalks, prints and drawing-paper. At school, the
future colorist sketched his masters, drew his comrades,
charcoaled the dormitories, and showed surprising
assiduity in the drawing-class. Lemire, the drawing-master,
struck not only with the lad’s inclination but
also with his actual progress, came to tell Madame
Bridau of her son’s faculty. Agathe, like
a true provincial, who knows as little of art as she
knows much of housekeeping, was terrified. When
Lemire left her, she burst into tears.
“Ah!” she cried, when
Madame Descoings went to ask what was the matter.
“What is to become of me! Joseph, whom I
meant to make a government clerk, whose career was
all marked out for him at the ministry of the interior,
where, protected by his father’s memory, he
might have risen to be chief of a division before he
was twenty-five, he, my boy, he wants to be a painter,—a
vagabond! I always knew that child would give
me nothing but trouble.”
Madame Descoings confessed that for
several months past she had encouraged Joseph’s
passion, aiding and abetting his Sunday and Thursday
visits to the Institute. At the Salon, to which
she had taken him, the little fellow had shown an
interest in the pictures, which was, she declared,
nothing short of miraculous.
“If he understands painting
at thirteen, my dear,” she said, “your
Joseph will be a man of genius.”
“Yes; and see what genius did
for his father,—killed him with overwork
at forty!”
At the close of autumn, just as Joseph
was entering his fourteenth year, Agathe, contrary
to Madame Descoings’s entreaties, went to see
Chaudet, and requested that he would cease to debauch
her son. She found the sculptor in a blue smock,
modelling his last statue; he received the widow of
the man who formerly had served him at a critical
moment, rather roughly; but, already at death’s
door, he was struggling with passionate ardor to do
in a few hours work he could hardly have accomplished
in several months. As Madame Bridau entered,
he had just found an effect long sought for, and was
handling his tools and clay with spasmodic jerks and
movements that seemed to the ignorant Agathe like
those of a maniac. At any other time Chaudet
would have laughed; but now, as he heard the mother
bewailing the destiny he had opened to her child,
abusing art, and insisting that Joseph should no longer
be allowed to enter the atelier, he burst into a holy
wrath.
“I was under obligations to
your deceased husband, I wished to help his son, to
watch his first steps in the noblest of all careers,”
he cried. “Yes, madame, learn, if you do
not know it, that a great artist is a king, and more
than a king; he is happier, he is independent, he
lives as he likes, he reigns in the world of fancy.
Your son has a glorious future before him. Faculties
like his are rare; they are only disclosed at his
age in such beings as the Giottos, Raphaels, Titians,
Rubens, Murillos,—for, in my opinion, he
will make a better painter than sculptor. God
of heaven! if I had such a son, I should be as happy
as the Emperor is to have given himself the King of
Rome. Well, you are mistress of your child’s
fate. Go your own way, madame; make him a fool,
a miserable quill-driver, tie him to a desk, and you’ve
murdered him! But I hope, in spite if all your
efforts, that he will stay an artist. A true
vocation is stronger than all the obstacles that can
be opposed to it. Vocation! why the very word
means a call; ay, the election of God himself!
You will make your child unhappy, that’s all.”
He flung the clay he no longer needed violently into
a tub, and said to his model, “That will do
for to-day.”
Agathe raised her eyes and saw, in
a corner of the atelier where her glance had not before
penetrated, a nude woman sitting on a stool, the sight
of whom drove her away horrified.
“You are not to have the little
Bridau here any more,” said Chaudet to his pupils,
“it annoys his mother.”
“Eugh!” they all cried, as Agathe closed
the door.
No sooner did the students of sculpture
and painting find out that Madame Bridau did not wish
her son to be an artist, than their whole happiness
centred on getting Joseph among them. In spite
of a promise not to go to the Institute which his
mother exacted from him, the child often slipped into
Regnauld the painter’s studio, where he was
encouraged to daub canvas. When the widow complained
that the bargain was not kept, Chaudet’s pupils
assured her that Regnauld was not Chaudet, and they
hadn’t the bringing up of her son, with other
impertinences; and the atrocious young scamps composed
a song with a hundred and thirty-seven couplets on
Madame Bridau.
On the evening of that sad day Agathe
refused to play at cards, and sat on her sofa plunged
in such grief that the tears stood in her handsome
eyes.
“What is the matter, Madame Bridau?” asked
old Claparon.
“She thinks her boy will have
to beg his bread because he has got the bump of painting,”
said Madame Descoings; “but, for my part, I am
not the least uneasy about the future of my step-son,
little Bixiou, who has a passion for drawing.
Men are born to get on.”
“You are right,” said
the hard and severe Desroches, who, in spite of his
talents, had never himself got on in the position of
assistant-head of a department. “Happily
I have only one son; otherwise, with my eighteen hundred
francs a year, and a wife who makes barely twelve
hundred out of her stamped-paper office, I don’t
know what would become of me. I have just placed
my boy as under-clerk to a lawyer; he gets twenty-five
francs a month and his breakfast. I give him as
much more, and he dines and sleeps at home. That’s
all he gets; he must manage for himself, but he’ll
make his way. I keep the fellow harder at work
than if he were at school, and some day he will be
a barrister. When I give him money to go to the
theatre, he is as happy as a king and kisses me.
Oh, I keep a tight hand on him, and he renders me
an account of all he spends. You are too good
to your children, Madame Bridau; if your son wants
to go through hardships and privations, let him; they’ll
make a man of him.”
“As for my boy,” said
Du Bruel, a former chief of a division, who had just
retired on a pension, “he is only sixteen; his
mother dotes on him; but I shouldn’t listen
to his choosing a profession at his age, —a
mere fancy, a notion that may pass off. In my
opinion, boys should be guided and controlled.”
“Ah, monsieur! you are rich,
you are a man, and you have but one son,” said
Agathe.
“Faith!” said Claparon,
“children do tyrannize over us—over
our hearts, I mean. Mine makes me furious; he
has nearly ruined me, and now I won’t have anything
to do with him—it’s a sort of independence.
Well, he is the happier for it, and so am I. That fellow
was partly the cause of his mother’s death.
He chose to be a commercial traveller; and the trade
just suited him, for he was no sooner in the house
than he wanted to be out of it; he couldn’t keep
in one place, and he wouldn’t learn anything.
All I ask of God is that I may die before he dishonors
my name. Those who have no children lose many
pleasures, but they escape great sufferings.”
“And these men are fathers!”
thought Agathe, weeping anew.
“What I am trying to show you,
my dear Madame Bridau, is that you had better let
your boy be a painter; if not, you will only waste
your time.”
“If you were able to coerce
him,” said the sour Desroches, “I should
advise you to oppose his tastes; but weak as I see
you are, you had better let him daub if he likes.”
“Console yourself, Agathe,”
said Madame Descoings, “Joseph will turn out
a great man.”
After this discussion, which was like
all discussions, the widow’s friends united
in giving her one and the same advice; which advice
did not in the least relieve her anxieties. They
advised her to let Joseph follow his bent.
“If he doesn’t turn out
a genius,” said Du Bruel, who always tried to
please Agathe, “you can then get him into some
government office.”
When Madame Descoings accompanied
the old clerks to the door she assured them, at the
head of the stairs, that they were “Grecian
sages.”
“Madame Bridau ought to be glad
her son is willing to do anything,” said Claparon.
“Besides,” said Desroches,
“if God preserves the Emperor, Joseph will always
be looked after. Why should she worry?”
“She is timid about everything
that concerns her children,” answered Madame
Descoings. “Well, my good girl,” she
said, returning to Agathe, “you see they are
unanimous; why are you still crying?”
“If it was Philippe, I should
have no anxiety. But you don’t know what
goes on in that atelier; they have naked women!”
“I hope they keep good fires,” said Madame
Descoings.
A few days after this, the disasters
of the retreat from Moscow became known. Napoleon
returned to Paris to organize fresh troops, and to
ask further sacrifices from the country. The
poor mother was then plunged into very different anxieties.
Philippe, who was tired of school, wanted to serve
under the Emperor; he saw a review at the Tuileries,
—the last Napoleon ever held,—and
he became infatuated with the idea of a soldier’s
life. In those days military splendor, the show
of uniforms, the authority of epaulets, offered irresistible
seductions to a certain style of youth. Philippe
thought he had the same vocation for the army that
his brother Joseph showed for art. Without his
mother’s knowledge, he wrote a petition to the
Emperor, which read as follows:—
Sire,—I am the son of your
Bridau; eighteen years of age, five feet six inches;
I have good legs, a good constitution, and wish to
be one of your soldiers. I ask you to let me enter
the army, etc.
Within twenty-four hours, the Emperor
had sent Philippe to the Imperial Lyceum at Saint-Cyr,
and six months later, in November, 1813, he appointed
him sub-lieutenant in a regiment of cavalry. Philippe
spent the greater part of that winter in cantonments,
but as soon as he knew how to ride a horse he was
dispatched to the front, and went eagerly. During
the campaign in France he was made a lieutenant, after
an affair at the outposts where his bravery had saved
his colonel’s life. The Emperor named him
captain at the battle of La Fere-Champenoise, and
took him on his staff. Inspired by such promotion,
Philippe won the cross at Montereau. He witnessed
Napoleon’s farewell at Fontainebleau, raved
at the sight, and refused to serve the Bourbons.
When he returned to his mother, in July, 1814, he found
her ruined.
Joseph’s scholarship was withdrawn
after the holidays, and Madame Bridau, whose pension
came from the Emperor’s privy purse, vainly
entreated that it might be inscribed on the rolls of
the ministry of the interior. Joseph, more of
a painter than ever, was delighted with the turn of
events, and entreated his mother to let him go to Monsieur
Regnauld, promising to earn his own living. He
declared he was quite sufficiently advanced in the
second class to get on without rhetoric. Philippe,
a captain at nineteen and decorated, who had, moreover,
served the Emperor as an aide-de-camp in two battles,
flattered the mother’s vanity immensely.
Coarse, blustering, and without real merit beyond
the vulgar bravery of a cavalry officer, he was to
her mind a man of genius; whereas Joseph, puny and
sickly, with unkempt hair and absent mind, seeking
peace, loving quiet, and dreaming of an artist’s
glory, would only bring her, she thought, worries and
anxieties.
The winter of 1814-1815 was a lucky
one for Joseph. Secretly encouraged by Madame
Descoings and Bixiou, a pupil of Gros, he went to
work in the celebrated atelier of that painter, whence
a vast variety of talent issued in its day, and there
he formed the closest intimacy with Schinner.
The return from Elba came; Captain Bridau joined the
Emperor at Lyons, accompanied him to the Tuileries,
and was appointed to the command of a squadron in
the dragoons of the Guard. After the battle of
Waterloo—in which he was slightly wounded,
and where he won the cross of an officer of the Legion
of honor—he happened to be near Marshal
Davoust at Saint-Denis, and was not with the army of
the Loire. In consequence of this, and through
Davoust’s intercession, his cross and his rank
were secured to him, but he was placed on half-pay.
Joseph, anxious about his future,
studied all through this period with an ardor which
several times made him ill in the midst of these tumultuous
events.
“It is the smell of the paints,”
Agathe said to Madame Descoings. “He ought
to give up a business so injurious to his health.”
However, all Agathe’s anxieties
were at this time for her son the lieutenant-colonel.
When she saw him again in 1816, reduced from the salary
of nine thousand francs (paid to a commander in the
dragoons of the Imperial Guard) to a half-pay of three
hundred francs a month, she fitted up her attic rooms
for him, and spent her savings in doing so. Philippe
was one of the faithful Bonapartes of the cafe Lemblin,
that constitutional Boeotia; he acquired the habits,
manners, style, and life of a half-pay officer; indeed,
like any other young man of twenty-one, he exaggerated
them, vowed in good earnest a mortal enmity to the
Bourbons, never reported himself at the War department,
and even refused opportunities which were offered
to him for employment in the infantry with his rank
of lieutenant-colonel. In his mother’s
eyes, Philippe seemed in all this to be displaying
a noble character.
“The father himself could have done no more,”
she said.
Philippe’s half-pay sufficed
him; he cost nothing at home, whereas all Joseph’s
expenses were paid by the two widows. From that
moment, Agathe’s preference for Philippe was
openly shown. Up to that time it had been secret;
but the persecution of this faithful servant of the
Emperor, the recollection of the wound received by
her cherished son, his courage in adversity, which,
voluntary though it were, seemed to her a glorious
adversity, drew forth all Agathe’s tenderness.
The one sentence, “He is unfortunate,”
explained and justified everything. Joseph himself,—with
the innate simplicity which superabounds in the artist-soul
in its opening years, and who was, moreover, brought
up to admire his big brother,—so far from
being hurt by the preference of their mother, encouraged
it by sharing her worship of the hero who had carried
Napoleon’s orders on two battlefields, and was
wounded at Waterloo. How could he doubt the superiority
of the grand brother, whom he had beheld in the green
and gold uniform of the dragoons of the Guard, commanding
his squadron on the Champ de Mars?
Agathe, notwithstanding this preference,
was an excellent mother. She loved Joseph, though
not blindly; she simply was unable to understand him.
Joseph adored his mother; Philippe let his mother adore
him. Towards her, the dragoon softened his military
brutality; but he never concealed the contempt he
felt for Joseph,—expressing it, however,
in a friendly way. When he looked at his brother,
weak and sickly as he was at seventeen years of age,
shrunken with determined toil, and over-weighted with
his powerful head, he nicknamed him “Cub.”
Philippe’s patronizing manners would have wounded
any one less carelessly indifferent than the artist,
who had, moreover, a firm belief in the goodness of
heart which soldiers hid, he thought, beneath a brutal
exterior. Joseph did not yet know, poor boy, that
soldiers of genius are as gentle and courteous in manner
as other superior men in any walk of life. All
genius is alike, wherever found.
“Poor boy!” said Philippe
to his mother, “we mustn’t plague him;
let him do as he likes.”
To his mother’s eyes the colonel’s
contempt was a mark of fraternal affection.
“Philippe will always love and
protect his brother,” she thought to herself.