III
Eight days after the date on which
this history began, the new arrangements of the household
and the relations which grew up between the Abbe Birotteau
and Mademoiselle Gamard revealed to the former the
existence of a plot which had been hatching for the
last six months.
As long as the old maid exercised
her vengeance in an underhand way, and the vicar was
able to shut his eyes to it and refuse to believe in
her malevolent intentions, the moral effect upon him
was slight. But since the affair of the candlestick
and the altered clock, Birotteau would doubt no longer
that he was under an eye of hatred turned fully upon
him. From that moment he fell into despair, seeing
everywhere the skinny, clawlike fingers of Mademoiselle
Gamard ready to hook into his heart. The old
maid, happy in a sentiment as fruitful of emotions
as that of vengeance, enjoyed circling and swooping
above the vicar as a bird of prey hovers and swoops
above a field-mouse before pouncing down upon it and
devouring it. She had long since laid a plan which
the poor dumbfounded priest was quite incapable of
imagining, and which she now proceeded to unfold with
that genius for little things often shown by solitary
persons, whose souls, incapable of feeling the grandeur
of true piety, fling themselves into the details of
outward devotion.
The petty nature of his troubles prevented
Birotteau, always effusive and liking to be pitied
and consoled, from enjoying the soothing pleasure
of taking his friends into his confidence,—a
last but cruel aggravation of his misery. The
little amount of tact which he derived from his timidity
made him fear to seem ridiculous in concerning himself
with such pettiness. And yet those petty things
made up the sum of his existence,—that
cherished existence, full of busyness about nothings,
and of nothingness in its business; a colorless barren
life in which strong feelings were misfortunes, and
the absence of emotion happiness. The poor priest’s
paradise was changed, in a moment, into hell.
His sufferings became intolerable. The terror
he felt at the prospect of a discussion with Mademoiselle
Gamard increased day by day; the secret distress which
blighted his life began to injure his health.
One morning, as he put on his mottled blue stockings,
he noticed a marked dimunition in the circumference
of his calves. Horrified by so cruel and undeniable
a symptom, he resolved to make an effort and appeal
to the Abbe Troubert, requesting him to intervene,
officially, between Mademoiselle Gamard and himself.
When he found himself in presence
of the imposing canon, who, in order to receive his
visitor in a bare and cheerless room, had hastily
quitted a study full of papers, where he worked incessantly,
and where no one was ever admitted, the vicar felt
half ashamed at speaking of Mademoiselle Gamard’s
provocations to a man who appeared to be so gravely
occupied. But after going through the agony of
the mental deliberations which all humble, undecided,
and feeble persons endure about things of even no
importance, he decided, not without much swelling
and beating of the heart, to explain his position to
the Abbe Troubert.
The canon listened in a cold, grave
manner, trying, but in vain, to repress an occasional
smile which to more intelligent eyes than those of
the vicar might have betrayed the emotions of a secret
satisfaction. A flame seemed to dart from his
eyelids when Birotteau pictured with the eloquence
of genuine feeling the constant bitterness he was
made to swallow; but Troubert laid his hand above those
lids with a gesture very common to thinkers, maintaining
the dignified demeanor which was usual with him.
When the vicar had ceased to speak he would indeed
have been puzzled had he sought on Troubert’s
face, marbled with yellow blotches even more yellow
than his usually bilious skin, for any trace of the
feelings he must have excited in that mysterious priest.
After a moment’s silence the
canon made one of those answers which required long
study before their meaning could be thoroughly perceived,
though later they proved to reflecting persons the
astonishing depths of his spirit and the power of his
mind. He simply crushed Birotteau by telling
him that “these things amazed him all the more
because he should never have suspected their existence
were it not for his brother’s confession.
He attributed such stupidity on his part to the gravity
of his occupations, his labors, the absorption in
which his mind was held by certain elevated thoughts
which prevented his taking due notice of the petty
details of life.” He made the vicar observe,
but without appearing to censure the conduct of a man
whose age and connections deserved all respect, that
“in former days, recluses thought little about
their food and lodging in the solitude of their retreats,
where they were lost in holy contemplations,”
and that “in our days, priests could make a
retreat for themselves in the solitude of their own
hearts.” Then, reverting to Birotteau’s
affairs, he added that “such disagreements were
a novelty to him. For twelve years nothing of
the kind had occurred between Mademoiselle Gamard and
the venerable Abbe Chapeloud. As for himself,
he might, no doubt, be an arbitrator between the vicar
and their landlady, because his friendship for that
person had never gone beyond the limits imposed by
the Church on her faithful servants; but if so, justice
demanded that he should hear both sides. He certainly
saw no change in Mademoiselle Gamard, who seemed to
him the same as ever; he had always submitted to a
few of her caprices, knowing that the excellent woman
was kindness and gentleness itself; the slight fluctuations
of her temper should be attributed, he thought, to
sufferings caused by a pulmonary affection, of which
she said little, resigning herself to bear them in
a truly Christian spirit.” He ended by
assuring the vicar that “if he stayed a few
years longer in Mademoiselle Gamard’s house he
would learn to understand her better and acknowledge
the real value of her excellent nature.”
Birotteau left the room confounded.
In the direful necessity of consulting no one, he
now judged Mademoiselle Gamard as he would himself,
and the poor man fancied that if he left her house
for a few days he might extinguish, for want of fuel,
the dislike the old maid felt for him. He accordingly
resolved to spend, as he formerly did, a week or so
at a country-house where Madame de Listomere passed
her autumns, a season when the sky is usually pure
and tender in Touraine. Poor man! in so doing
he did the thing that was most desired by his terrible
enemy, whose plans could only have been brought to
nought by the resistant patience of a monk. But
the vicar, unable to divine them, not understanding
even his own affairs, was doomed to fall, like a lamb,
at the butcher’s first blow.
Madame de Listomere’s country-place,
situated on the embankment which lies between Tours
and the heights of Saint-Georges, with a southern
exposure and surrounded by rocks, combined the charms
of the country with the pleasures of the town.
It took but ten minutes from the bridge of Tours to
reach the house, which was called the “Alouette,”
—a great advantage in a region where no
one will put himself out for anything whatsoever,
not even to seek a pleasure.
The Abbe Birotteau had been about
ten days at the Alouette, when, one morning while
he was breakfasting, the porter came to say that Monsieur
Caron desired to speak with him. Monsieur Caron
was Mademoiselle Gamard’s laywer, and had charge
of her affairs. Birotteau, not remembering this,
and unable to think of any matter of litigation between
himself and others, left the table to see the lawyer
in a stage of great agitation. He found him modestly
seated on the balustrade of a terrace.
“Your intention of ceasing to
reside in Mademoiselle Gamard’s house being
made evident—” began the man of business.
“Eh! monsieur,” cried
the Abbe Birotteau, interrupting him, “I have
not the slightest intention of leaving it.”
“Nevertheless, monsieur,”
replied the lawyer, “you must have had some
agreement in the matter with Mademoiselle, for she
has sent me to ask how long you intend to remain in
the country. The event of a long absence was
not foreseen in the agreement, and may lead to a contest.
Now, Mademoiselle Gamard understanding that your board—”
“Monsieur,” said Birotteau,
amazed, and again interrupting the lawyer, “I
did not suppose it necessary to employ, as it were,
legal means to—”
“Mademoiselle Gamard, who is
anxious to avoid all dispute,” said Monsieur
Caron, “has sent me to come to an understanding
with you.”
“Well, if you will have the
goodness to return to-morrow,” said the abbe,
“I shall then have taken advice in the matter.”
The quill-driver withdrew. The
poor vicar, frightened at the persistence with which
Mademoiselle Gamard pursued him, returned to the dining-room
with his face so convulsed that everybody cried out
when they saw him: “What is the matter,
Monsieur Birotteau?”
The abbe, in despair, sat down without
a word, so crushed was he by the vague presence of
approaching disaster. But after breakfast, when
his friends gathered round him before a comfortable
fire, Birotteau naively related the history of his
troubles. His hearers, who were beginning to
weary of the monotony of a country-house, were keenly
interested in a plot so thoroughly in keeping with
the life of the provinces. They all took sides
with the abbe against the old maid.
“Don’t you see, my dear
friend,” said Madame de Listomere, “that
the Abbe Troubert wants your apartment?”
Here the historian ought to sketch
this lady; but it occurs to him that even those who
are ignorant of Sterne’s system of “cognomology,”
cannot pronounce the three words “Madame de Listomere”
without picturing her to themselves as noble and dignified,
softening the sternness of rigid devotion by the gracious
elegance and the courteous manners of the old monarchical
regime; kind, but a little stiff; slightly nasal in
voice; allowing herself the perusal of “La Nouvelle
Heloise”; and still wearing her own hair.
“The Abbe Birotteau must not
yield to that old vixen,” cried Monsieur de
Listomere, a lieutenant in the navy who was spending
a furlough with his aunt. “If the vicar
has pluck and will follow my suggestions he will soon
recover his tranquillity.”
All present began to analyze the conduct
of Mademoiselle Gamard with the keen perceptions which
characterize provincials, to whom no one can deny
the talent of knowing how to lay bare the most secret
motives of human actions.
“You don’t see the whole
thing yet,” said an old landowner who knew the
region well. “There is something serious
behind all this which I can’t yet make out.
The Abbe Troubert is too deep to be fathomed at once.
Our dear Birotteau is at the beginning of his troubles.
Besides, would he be left in peace and comfort even
if he did give up his lodging to Troubert? I
doubt it. If Caron came here to tell you that
you intended to leave Mademoiselle Gamard,” he
added, turning to the bewildered priest, “no
doubt Mademoiselle Gamard’s intention is to
turn you out. Therefore you will have to go, whether
you like it or not. Her sort of people play a
sure game, they risk nothing.”
This old gentleman, Monsieur de Bourbonne,
could sum up and estimate provincial ideas as correctly
as Voltaire summarized the spirit of his times.
He was thin and tall, and chose to exhibit in the matter
of clothes the quiet indifference of a landowner whose
territorial value is quoted in the department.
His face, tanned by the Touraine sun, was less intellectual
than shrewd. Accustomed to weigh his words and
measure his actions, he concealed a profound vigilance
behind a misleading appearance of simplicity.
A very slight observation of him sufficed to show
that, like a Norman peasant, he invariably held the
upper hand in business matters. He was an authority
on wine-making, the leading science of Touraine.
He had managed to extend the meadow lands of his domain
by taking in a part of the alluvial soil of the Loire
without getting into difficulties with the State.
This clever proceeding gave him the reputation of
a man of talent. If Monsieur de Bourbonne’s
conversation pleased you and you were to ask who he
was of a Tourainean, “Ho! a sly old fox!”
would be the answer of those who were envious of him—and
they were many. In Touraine, as in many of the
provinces, jealousy is the root of language.
Monsieur de Bourbonne’s remark
occasioned a momentary silence, during which the persons
who composed the little party seemed to be reflecting.
Meanwhile Mademoiselle Salomon de Villenoix was announced.
She came from Tours in the hope of being useful to
the poor abbe, and the news she brought completely
changed the aspect of the affair. As she entered,
every one except Monsieur de Bourbonne was urging
Birotteau to hold his own against Troubert and Gamard,
under the auspices of the aristocractic society of
the place, which would certainly stand by him.
“The vicar-general, to whom
the appointments to office are entrusted, is very
ill,” said Mademoiselle Salomon, “and the
archbishop has delegated his powers to the Abbe Troubert
provisionally. The canonry will, of course, depend
wholly upon him. Now last evening, at Mademoiselle
de la Blottiere’s the Abbe Poirel talked about
the annoyances which the Abbe Birotteau had inflicted
on Mademoiselle Gamard, as though he were trying to
cast all the blame on our good abbe. ‘The
Abbe Birotteau,’ he said, ’is a man to
whom the Abbe Chapeloud was absolutely necessary,
and since the death of that venerable man, he has
shown’—and then came suggestions,
calumnies! you understand?”
“Troubert will be made vicar-general,”
said Monsieur de Bourbonne, sententiously.
“Come!” cried Madame de
Listomere, turning to Birotteau, “which do you
prefer, to be made a canon, or continue to live with
Mademoiselle Gamard?”
“To be a canon!” cried the whole company.
“Well, then,” resumed
Madame de Listomere, “you must let the Abbe
Troubert and Mademoiselle Gamard have things their
own way. By sending Caron here they mean to let
you know indirectly that if you consent to leave the
house you shall be made canon,—one good
turn deserves another.”
Every one present applauded Madame
de Listomere’s sagacity, except her nephew the
Baron de Listomere, who remarked in a comic tone to
Monsieur de Bourbonne, “I would like to have
seen a fight between the Gamard and the Birotteau.”
But, unhappily for the vicar, forces
were not equal between these persons of the best society
and the old maid supported by the Abbe Troubert.
The time soon came when the struggle developed openly,
went on increasing, and finally assumed immense proportions.
By the advice of Madame de Listomere and most of her
friends, who were now eagerly enlisted in a matter
which threw such excitement into their vapid provincial
lives, a servant was sent to bring back Monsieur Caron.
The lawyer returned with surprising celerity, which
alarmed no one but Monsieur de Bourbonne.
“Let us postpone all decision
until we are better informed,” was the advice
of that Fabius in a dressing-gown, whose prudent reflections
revealed to him the meaning of these moves on the Tourainean
chess-board. He tried to enlighten Birotteau on
the dangers of his position; but the wisdom of the
old “sly-boots” did not serve the passions
of the moment, and he obtained but little attention.
The conference between the lawyer
and Birotteau was short. The vicar came back
quite terrified.
“He wants me to sign a paper
stating my relinquishment of domicile.”
“That’s formidable language!” said
the naval lieutenant.
“What does it mean?” asked Madame de Listomere.
“Merely that the abbe must declare
in writing his intention of leaving Mademoiselle Gamard’s
house,” said Monsieur de Bourbonne, taking a
pinch of snuff.
“Is that all?” said Madame
de Listomere. “Then sign it at once,”
she added, turning to Birotteau. “If you
positively decide to leave her house, there can be
no harm in declaring that such is your will.”
Birotteau’s will!
“That is true,” said Monsieur
de Bourbonne, closing his snuff-box with a gesture
the significance of which it is impossible to render,
for it was a language in itself. “But writing
is always dangerous,” he added, putting his
snuff-box on the mantelpiece with an air and manner
that alarmed the vicar.
Birotteau was so bewildered by the
upsetting of all his ideas, by the rapidity of events
which found him defenceless, by the ease with which
his friends were settling the most cherished matters
of his solitary life, that he remained silent and
motionless as if moonstruck, thinking of nothing,
though listening and striving to understand the meaning
of the rapid sentences the assembled company addressed
to him. He took the paper Monsieur Caron had
given him and read it, as if he were giving his mind
to the lawyer’s document, but the act was merely
mechanical. He signed the paper, by which he declared
that he left Mademoiselle Gamard’s house of
his own wish and will, and that he had been fed and
lodged while there according to the terms originally
agreed upon. When the vicar had signed the document,
Monsieur Caron took it and asked where his client
was to send the things left by the abbe in her house
and belonging to him. Birotteau replied that they
could be sent to Madame de Listomere’s,—that
lady making him a sign that she would receive him,
never doubting that he would soon be a canon.
Monsieur de Bourbonne asked to see the paper, the deed
of relinquishment, which the abbe had just signed.
Monsieur Caron gave it to him.
“How is this?” he said
to the vicar after reading it. “It appears
that written documents already exist between you and
Mademoiselle Gamard. Where are they? and what
do they stipulate?”
“The deed is in my library,” replied Birotteau.
“Do you know the tenor of it?”
said Monsieur de Bourbonne to the lawyer.
“No, monsieur,” said Caron,
stretching out his hand to regain the fatal document.
“Ha!” thought the old
man; “you know, my good friend, what that deed
contains, but you are not paid to tell us,” and
he returned the paper to the lawyer.
“Where can I put my things?”
cried Birotteau; “my books, my beautiful book-shelves,
and pictures, my red furniture, and all my treasures?”
The helpless despair of the poor man
thus torn up as it were by the roots was so artless,
it showed so plainly the purity of his ways and his
ignorance of the things of life, that Madame de Listomere
and Mademoiselle de Salomon talked to him and consoled
him in the tone which mothers take when they promise
a plaything to their children.
“Don’t fret about such
trifles,” they said. “We will find
you some place less cold and dismal than Mademoiselle
Gamard’s gloomy house. If we can’t
find anything you like, one or other of us will take
you to live with us. Come, let’s play a
game of backgammon. To-morrow you can go and
see the Abbe Troubert and ask him to push your claims
to the canonry, and you’ll see how cordially
he will receive you.”
Feeble folk are as easily reassured
as they are frightened. So the poor abbe, dazzled
at the prospect of living with Madame de Listomere,
forgot the destruction, now completed, of the happiness
he had so long desired, and so delightfully enjoyed.
But at night before going to sleep, the distress of
a man to whom the fuss of moving and the breaking
up of all his habits was like the end of the world,
came upon him, and he racked his brains to imagine
how he could ever find such a good place for his book-case
as the gallery in the old maid’s house.
Fancying he saw his books scattered about, his furniture
defaced, his regular life turned topsy-turvy, he asked
himself for the thousandth time why the first year
spent in Mademoiselle Gamard’s house had been
so sweet, the second so cruel. His troubles were
a pit in which his reason floundered. The canonry
seemed to him small compensation for so much misery,
and he compared his life to a stocking in which a single
dropped stitch resulted in destroying the whole fabric.
Mademoiselle Salomon remained to him. But, alas,
in losing his old illusions the poor priest dared
not trust in any later friendship.
In the “citta dolente”
of spinsterhood we often meet, especially in France,
with women whose lives are a sacrifice nobly and daily
offered to noble sentiments. Some remain proudly
faithful to a heart which death tore from them; martyrs
of love, they learn the secrets of womanhood only
though their souls. Others obey some family pride
(which in our days, and to our shame, decreases steadily);
these devote themselves to the welfare of a brother,
or to orphan nephews; they are mothers while remaining
virgins. Such old maids attain to the highest
heroism of their sex by consecrating all feminine feelings
to the help of sorrow. They idealize womanhood
by renouncing the rewards of woman’s destiny,
accepting its pains. They live surrounded by the
splendour of their devotion, and men respectfully bow
the head before their faded features. Mademoiselle
de Sombreuil was neither wife nor maid; she was and
ever will be a living poem. Mademoiselle Salomon
de Villenoix belonged to the race of these heroic
beings. Her devotion was religiously sublime,
inasmuch as it won her no glory after being, for years,
a daily agony. Beautiful and young, she loved
and was beloved; her lover lost his reason. For
five years she gave herself, with love’s devotion,
to the mere mechanical well-being of that unhappy
man, whose madness she so penetrated that she never
believed him mad. She was simple in manner, frank
in speech, and her pallid face was not lacking in
strength and character, though its features were regular.
She never spoke of the events of her life. But
at times a sudden quiver passed over her as she listened
to the story of some sad or dreadful incident, thus
betraying the emotions that great sufferings had developed
within her. She had come to live at Tours after
losing the companion of her life; but she was not appreciated
there at her true value and was thought to be merely
an amiable woman. She did much good, and attached
herself, by preference, to feeble beings. For
that reason the poor vicar had naturally inspired her
with a deep interest.
Mademoiselle de Villenoix, who returned
to Tours the next morning, took Birotteau with her
and set him down on the quay of the cathedral leaving
him to make his own way to the Cloister, where he was
bent on going, to save at least the canonry and to
superintend the removal of his furniture. He
rang, not without violent palpitations of the heart,
at the door of the house whither, for fourteen years,
he had come daily, and where he had lived blissfully,
and from which he was now exiled forever, after dreaming
that he should die there in peace like his friend
Chapeloud. Marianne was surprised at the vicar’s
visit. He told her that he had come to see the
Abbe Troubert, and turned towards the ground-floor
apartment where the canon lived; but Marianne called
to him:—
“Not there, monsieur le vicaire;
the Abbe Troubert is in your old apartment.”
These words gave the vicar a frightful
shock. He was forced to comprehend both Troubert’s
character and the depths of the revenge so slowly
brought about when he found the canon settled in Chapeloud’s
library, seated in Chapeloud’s handsome armchair,
sleeping, no doubt, in Chapeloud’s bed, and
disinheriting at last the friend of Chapeloud, the
man who, for so many years, had confined him to Mademoiselle
Gamard’s house, by preventing his advancement
in the church, and closing the best salons in Tours
against him. By what magic wand had the present
transformation taken place? Surely these things
belonged to Birotteau? And yet, observing the
sardonic air with which Troubert glanced at that bookcase,
the poor abbe knew that the future vicar-general felt
certain of possessing the spoils of those he had so
bitterly hated,—Chapeloud as an enemy, and
Birotteau, in and through whom Chapeloud still thwarted
him. Ideas rose in the heart of the poor man
at the sight, and plunged him into a sort of vision.
He stood motionless, as though fascinated by Troubert’s
eyes which fixed themselves upon him.
“I do not suppose, monsieur,”
said Birotteau at last, “that you intend to
deprive me of the things that belong to me. Mademoiselle
may have been impatient to give you better lodgings,
but she ought to have been sufficiently just to give
me time to pack my books and remove my furniture.”
“Monsieur,” said the Abbe
Troubert, coldly, not permitting any sign of emotion
to appear on his face, “Mademoiselle Gamard told
me yesterday of your departure, the cause of which
is still unknown to me. If she installed me here
at once, it was from necessity. The Abbe Poirel
has taken my apartment. I do not know if the
furniture and things that are in these rooms belong
to you or to Mademoiselle; but if they are yours,
you know her scrupulous honesty; the sanctity of her
life is the guarantee of her rectitude. As for
me, you are well aware of my simple modes of living.
I have slept for fifteen years in a bare room without
complaining of the dampness,—which, eventually
will have caused my death. Nevertheless, if you
wish to return to this apartment I will cede it to
you willingly.”
After hearing these terrible words,
Birotteau forgot the canonry and ran downstairs as
quickly as a young man to find Mademoiselle Gamard.
He met her at the foot of the staircase, on the broad,
tiled landing which united the two wings of the house.
“Mademoiselle,” he said,
bowing to her without paying any attention to the
bitter and derisive smile that was on her lips, nor
to the extraordinary flame in her eyes which made
them lucent as a tiger’s, “I cannot understand
how it is that you have not waited until I removed
my furniture before—”
“What!” she said, interrupting
him, “is it possible that your things have not
been left at Madame de Listomere’s?”
“But my furniture?”
“Haven’t you read your
deed?” said the old maid, in a tone which would
have to be rendered in music before the shades of meaning
that hatred is able to put into the accent of every
word could be fully shown.
Mademoiselle Gamard seemed to rise
in stature, her eyes shone, her face expanded, her
whole person quivered with pleasure. The Abbe
Troubert opened a window to get a better light on the
folio volume he was reading. Birotteau stood
as if a thunderbolt had stricken him. Mademoiselle
Gamard made his ears hum when she enunciated in a voice
as clear as a cornet the following sentence:—
“Was it not agreed that if you
left my house your furniture should belong to me,
to indemnify me for the difference in the price of
board paid by you and that paid by the late venerable
Abbe Chapeloud? Now, as the Abbe Poirel has just
been appointed canon—”
Hearing the last words Birotteau made
a feeble bow as if to take leave of the old maid,
and left the house precipitately. He was afraid
if he stayed longer that he should break down utterly,
and give too great a triumph to his implacable enemies.
Walking like a dunken man he at last reached Madame
de Listomere’s house, where he found in one of
the lower rooms his linen, his clothing, and all his
papers packed in a trunk. When he eyes fell on
these few remnants of his possessions the unhappy
priest sat down and hid his face in his hands to conceal
his tears from the sight of others. The Abbe
Poirel was canon! He, Birotteau, had neither
home, nor means, nor furniture!
Fortunately Mademoiselle Salomon happened
to drive past the house, and the porter, who saw and
comprehended the despair of the poor abbe, made a
sign to the coachman. After exchanging a few words
with Mademoiselle Salomon the porter persuaded the
vicar to let himself be placed, half dead as he was,
in the carriage of his faithful friend, to whom he
was unable to speak connectedly. Mademoiselle
Salomon, alarmed at the momentary derangement of a
head that was always feeble, took him back at once
to the Alouette, believing that this beginning of
mental alienation was an effect produced by the sudden
news of Abbe Poirel’s nomination. She knew
nothing, of course, of the fatal agreement made by
the abbe with Mademoiselle Gamard, for the excellent
reason that he did not know of it himself; and because
it is in the nature of things that the comical is
often mingled with the pathetic, the singular replies
of the poor abbe made her smile.
“Chapeloud was right,” he said; “he
is a monster!”
“Who?” she asked.
“Chapeloud. He has taken all.”
“You mean Poirel?”
“No, Troubert.”
At last they reached the Alouette,
where the priest’s friends gave him such tender
care that towards evening he grew calmer and was able
to give them an account of what had happened during
the morning.
The phlegmatic old fox asked to see
the deed which, on thinking the matter over, seemed
to him to contain the solution of the enigma.
Birotteau drew the fatal stamped paper from his pocket
and gave it to Monsieur de Bourbonne, who read it
rapidly and soon came upon the following clause:—
“Whereas a difference exists
of eight hundred francs yearly between the price of
board paid by the late Abbe Chapeloud and that at which
the said Sophie Gamard agrees to take into her house,
on the above-named stipulated condition, the said
Francois Birotteau; and whereas it is understood that
the undersigned Francois Birotteau is not able for
some years to pay the full price charged to the other
boarders of Mademoiselle Gamard, more especially the
Abbe Troubert; the said Birotteau does hereby engage,
in consideration of certain sums of money advanced
by the undersigned Sophie Gamard, to leave her, as
indemnity, all the household property of which he may
die possessed, or to transfer the same to her should
he, for any reason whatever or at any time, voluntarily
give up the apartment now leased to him, and thus
derive no further profit from the above-named engagements
made by Mademoiselle Gamard for his benefit—”
“Confound her! what an agreement!”
cried the old gentleman. “The said Sophie
Gamard is armed with claws.”
Poor Birotteau never imagined in his
childish brain that anything could ever separate him
from that house where he expected to live and die
with Mademoiselle Gamard. He had no remembrance
whatever of that clause, the terms of which he had
not discussed, for they had seemed quite just to him
at a time when, in his great anxiety to enter the
old maid’s house, he would readily have signed
any and all legal documents she had offered him.
His simplicity was so guileless and Mademoiselle Gamard’s
conduct so atrocious, the fate of the poor old man
seemed so deplorable, and his natural helplessness
made him so touching, that in the first glow of her
indignation Madame de Listomere exclaimed: “I
made you put your signature to that document which
has ruined you; I am bound to give you back the happiness
of which I have deprived you.”
“But,” remarked Monsieur
de Bourbonne, “that deed constitutes a fraud;
there may be ground for a lawsuit.”
“Then Birotteau shall go to
the law. If he loses at Tours he may win at Orleans;
if he loses at Orleans, he’ll win in Paris,”
cried the Baron de Listomere.
“But if he does go to law,”
continued Monsieur de Bourbonne, coldly, “I
should advise him to resign his vicariat.”
“We will consult lawyers,”
said Madame de Listomere, “and go to law if
law is best. But this affair is so disgraceful
for Mademoiselle Gamard, and is likely to be so injurious
to the Abbe Troubert, that I think we can compromise.”
After mature deliberation all present
promised their assistance to the Abbe Birotteau in
the struggle which was now inevitable between the
poor priest and his antagonists and all their adherents.
A true presentiment, an infallible provincial instinct,
led them to couple the names of Gamard and Troubert.
But none of the persons assembled on this occasion
in Madame de Listomere’s salon, except the old
fox, had any real idea of the nature and importance
of such a struggle. Monsieur de Bourbonne took
the poor abbe aside into a corner of the room.
“Of the fourteen persons now
present,” he said, in a low voice, “not
one will stand by you a fortnight hence. If the
time comes when you need some one to support you you
may find that I am the only person in Tours bold enough
to take up your defence; for I know the provinces
and men and things, and, better still, I know self-interests.
But these friends of yours, though full of the best
intentions, are leading you astray into a bad path,
from which you won’t be able to extricate yourself.
Take my advice; if you want to live in peace, resign
the vicariat of Saint-Gatien and leave Tours.
Don’t say where you are going, but find some
distant parish where Troubert cannot get hold of you.”
“Leave Tours!” exclaimed
the vicar, with indescribable terror.
To him it was a kind of death; the
tearing up of all the roots by which he held to life.
Celibates substitute habits for feelings; and when
to that moral system, which makes them pass through
life instead of really living it, is added a feeble
character, external things assume an extraordinary
power over them. Birotteau was like certain vegetables;
transplant them, and you stop their ripening.
Just as a tree needs daily the same sustenance, and
must always send its roots into the same soil, so
Birotteau needed to trot about Saint-Gatien, and amble
along the Mail where he took his daily walk, and saunter
through the streets, and visit the three salons where,
night after night, he played his whist or his backgammon.
“Ah! I did not think of
it!” replied Monsieur de Bourbonne, gazing at
the priest with a sort of pity.
All Tours was soon aware that Madame
la Baronne de Listomere, widow of a lieutenant-general,
had invited the Abbe Birotteau, vicar of Saint-Gatien,
to stay at her house. That act, which many persons
questioned, presented the matter sharply and divided
the town into parties, especially after Mademoiselle
Salomon spoke openly of a fraud and a lawsuit.
With the subtle vanity which is common to old maids,
and the fanatic self-love which characterizes them,
Mademoiselle Gamard was deeply wounded by the course
taken by Madame de Listomere. The baroness was
a woman of high rank, elegant in her habits and ways,
whose good taste, courteous manners, and true piety
could not be gainsaid. By receivng Birotteau
as her guest she gave a formal denial to all Mademoiselle
Gamard’s assertions, and indirectly censured
her conduct by maintaining the vicar’s cause
against his former landlady.
It is necessary for the full understanding
of this history to explain how the natural discernment
and spirit of analysis which old women bring to bear
on the actions of others gave power to Mademoiselle
Gamard, and what were the resources on her side.
Accompanied by the taciturn Abbe Troubert she made
a round of evening visits to five or six houses, at
each of which she met a circle of a dozen or more
persons, united by kindred tastes and the same general
situation in life. Among them were one or two
men who were influenced by the gossip and prejudices
of their servants; five or six old maids who spent
their time in sifting the words and scrutinizing the
actions of their neighbours and others in the class
below them; besides these, there were several old
women who busied themselves in retailing scandal,
keeping an exact account of each person’s fortune,
striving to control or influence the actions of others,
prognosticating marriages, and blaming the conduct
of friends as sharply as that of enemies. These
persons, spread about the town like the capillary fibres
of a plant, sucked in, with the thirst of a leaf for
the dew, the news and the secrets of each household,
and transmitted them mechanically to the Abbe Troubert,
as the leaves convey to the branch the moisture they
absorb.
Accordingly, during every evening
of the week, these good devotees, excited by that
need of emotion which exists in all of us, rendered
an exact account of the current condition of the town
with a sagacity worthy of the Council of Ten, and
were, in fact, a species of police, armed with the
unerring gift of spying bestowed by passions.
When they had divined the secret meaning of some event
their vanity led them to appropriate to themselves
the wisdom of their sanhedrim, and set the tone to
the gossip of their respective spheres. This idle
but ever busy fraternity, invisible, yet seeing all
things, dumb, but perpetually talking, possessed an
influence which its nonentity seemed to render harmless,
though it was in fact terrible in its effects when
it concerned itself with serious interests. For
a long time nothing had entered the sphere of these
existences so serious and so momentous to each one
of them as the struggle of Birotteau, supported by
Madame de Listomere, against Mademoiselle Gamard and
the Abbe Troubert. The three salons of Madame
de Listomere and the Demoiselles Merlin de la Blottiere
and de Villenoix being considered as enemies by all
the salons which Mademoiselle Gamard frequented, there
was at the bottom of the quarrel a class sentiment
with all its jealousies. It was the old Roman
struggle of people and senate in a molehill, a tempest
in a teacup, as Montesquieu remarked when speaking
of the Republic of San Marino, whose public offices
are filled by the day only,—despotic power
being easily seized by any citizen.
But this tempest, petty as it seems,
did develop in the souls of these persons as many
passions as would have been called forth by the highest
social interests. It is a mistake to think that
none but souls concerned in mighty projects, which
stir their lives and set them foaming, find time too
fleeting. The hours of the Abbe Troubert fled
by as eagerly, laden with thoughts as anxious, harassed
by despairs and hopes as deep as the cruellest hours
of the gambler, the lover, or the statesman.
God alone is in the secret of the energy we expend
upon our occult triumphs over man, over things, over
ourselves. Though we know not always whither
we are going we know well what the journey costs us.
If it be permissible for the historian to turn aside
for a moment from the drama he is narrating and ask
his readers to cast a glance upon the lives of these
old maids and abbes, and seek the cause of the evil
which vitiates them at their source, we may find it
demonstrated that man must experience certain passions
before he can develop within him those virtues which
give grandeur to life by widening his sphere and checking
the selfishness which is inherent in every created
being.
Madame de Listomere returned to town
without being aware that for the previous week her
friends had felt obliged to refute a rumour (at which
she would have laughed had she known if it) that her
affection for her nephew had an almost criminal motive.
She took Birotteau to her lawyer, who did not regard
the case as an easy one. The vicar’s friends,
inspired by the belief that justice was certain in
so good a cause, or inclined to procrastinate in a
matter which did not concern them personally, had
put off bringing the suit until they returned to Tours.
Consequently the friends of Mademoiselle Gamard had
taken the initiative, and told the affair wherever
they could to the injury of Birotteau. The lawyer,
whose practice was exclusively among the most devout
church people, amazed Madame de Listomere by advising
her not to embark on such a suit; he ended the consultation
by saying that “he himself would not be able
to undertake it, for, according to the terms of the
deed, Mademoiselle Gamard had the law on her side,
and in equity, that is to say outside of strict legal
justice, the Abbe Birotteau would undoubtedly seem
to the judges as well as to all respectable laymen
to have derogated from the peaceable, conciliatory,
and mild character hitherto attributed to him; that
Mademoiselle Gamard, known to be a kindly woman and
easy to live with, had put Birotteau under obligations
to her by lending him the money he needed to pay the
legacy duties on Chapeloud’s bequest without
taking from him a receipt; that Birotteau was not
of an age or character to sign a deed without knowing
what it contained or understanding the importance
of it; that in leaving Mademoiselle Gamard’s
house at the end of two years, when his friend Chapeloud
had lived there twelve and Troubert fifteen, he must
have had some purpose known to himself only; and that
the lawsuit, if undertaken, would strike the public
as an act of ingratitude;” and so forth.
Letting Birotteau go before them to the staircase,
the lawyer detained Madame de Listomere a moment to
entreat her, if she valued her own peace of mind,
not to involve herself in the matter.
But that evening the poor vicar, suffering
the torments of a man under sentence of death who
awaits in the condemned cell at Bicetre the result
of his appeal for mercy, could not refrain from telling
his assembled friends the result of his visit to the
lawyer.
“I don’t know a single
pettifogger in Tours,” said Monsieur de Bourbonne,
“except that Radical lawyer, who would be willing
to take the case,—unless for the purpose
of losing it; I don’t advise you to undertake
it.”
“Then it is infamous!”
cried the navel lieutenant. “I myself will
take the abbe to the Radical—”
“Go at night,” said Monsieur
de Bourbonne, interrupting him.
“Why?”
“I have just learned that the
Abbe Troubert is appointed vicar-general in place
of the other man, who died yesterday.”
“I don’t care a fig for the Abbe Troubert.”
Unfortunately the Baron de Listomere
(a man thirty-six years of age) did not see the sign
Monsieur de Bourbonne made him to be cautious in what
he said, motioning as he did so to a friend of Troubert,
a councillor of the Prefecture, who was present.
The lieutenant therefore continued:—
“If the Abbe Troubert is a scoundrel—”
“Oh,” said Monsieur de
Bourbonne, cutting him short, “why bring Monsieur
Troubert into a matter which doesn’t concern
him?”
“Not concern him?” cried
the baron; “isn’t he enjoying the use of
the Abbe Birotteau’s household property?
I remember that when I called on the Abbe Chapeloud
I noticed two valuable pictures. Say that they
are worth ten thousand francs; do you suppose that
Monsieur Birotteau meant to give ten thousand francs
for living two years with that Gamard woman,—not
to speak of the library and furniture, which are worth
as much more?”
The Abbe Birotteau opened his eyes
at hearing he had once possessed so enormous a fortune.
The baron, getting warmer than ever,
went on to say: “By Jove! there’s
that Monsieur Salmon, formerly an expert at the Museum
in Paris; he is down here on a visit to his mother-in-law.
I’ll go and see him this very evening with the
Abbe Birotteau and ask him to look at those pictures
and estimate their value. From there I’ll
take the abbe to the lawyer.”
Two days after this conversation the
suit was begun. This employment of the Liberal
laywer did harm to the vicar’s cause. Those
who were opposed to the government, and all who were
known to dislike the priests, or religion (two things
quite distinct which many persons confound), got hold
of the affair and the whole town talked of it.
The Museum expert estimated the Virgin of Valentin
and the Christ of Lebrun, two paintings of great beauty,
at eleven thousand francs. As to the bookshelves
and the gothic furniture, the taste for such things
was increasing so rapidly in Paris that their immediate
value was at least twelve thousand. In short,
the appraisal of the whole property by the expert
reached the sum of over thirty-six thousand francs.
Now it was very evident that Birotteau never intended
to give Mademoiselle Gamard such an enormous sum of
money for the small amount he might owe her under
the terms of the deed; therefore he had, legally speaking,
equitable grounds on which to demand an amendment of
the agreement; if this were denied, Mademoiselle Gamard
was plainly guilty of intentional fraud. The
Radical lawyer accordingly began the affair by serving
a writ on Mademoiselle Gamard. Though very harsh
in language, this document, strengthened by citations
of precedents and supported by certain clauses in
the Code, was a masterpiece of legal argument, and
so evidently just in its condemnation of the old maid
that thirty or forty copies were made and maliciously
distributed through the town.