I
Early in the autumn of 1826 the Abbe
Birotteau, the principal personage of this history,
was overtaken by a shower of rain as he returned home
from a friend’s house, where he had been passing
the evening. He therefore crossed, as quickly
as his corpulence would allow, the deserted little
square called “The Cloister,” which lies
directly behind the chancel of the cathedral of Saint-Gatien
at Tours.
The Abbe Birotteau, a short little
man, apoplectic in constitution and about sixty years
old, had already gone through several attacks of gout.
Now, among the petty miseries of human life the one
for which the worthy priest felt the deepest aversion
was the sudden sprinkling of his shoes, adorned with
silver buckles, and the wetting of their soles.
Notwithstanding the woollen socks in which at all seasons
he enveloped his feet with the extreme care that ecclesiastics
take of themselves, he was apt at such times to get
them a little damp, and the next day gout was sure
to give him certain infallible proofs of constancy.
Nevertheless, as the pavement of the Cloister was likely
to be dry, and as the abbe had won three francs ten
sous in his rubber with Madame de Listomere, he bore
the rain resignedly from the middle of the place de
l’Archeveche, where it began to come down in
earnest. Besides, he was fondling his chimera,—a
desire already twelve years old, the desire of a priest,
a desire formed anew every evening and now, apparently,
very near accomplishment; in short, he had wrapped
himself so completely in the fur cape of a canon that
he did not feel the inclemency of the weather.
During the evening several of the company who habitually
gathered at Madame de Listomere’s had almost
guaranteed to him his nomination to the office of canon
(then vacant in the metropolitan Chapter of Saint-Gatien),
assuring him that no one deserved such promotion as
he, whose rights, long overlooked, were indisputable.
If he had lost the rubber, if he had
heard that his rival, the Abbe Poirel, was named canon,
the worthy man would have thought the rain extremely
chilling; he might even have thought ill of life.
But it so chanced that he was in one of those rare
moments when happy inward sensations make a man oblivious
of discomfort. In hastening his steps he obeyed
a more mechanical impulse, and truth (so essential
in a history of manners and morals) compels us to
say that he was thinking of neither rain nor gout.
In former days there was in the Cloister,
on the side towards the Grand’Rue, a cluster
of houses forming a Close and belonging to the cathedral,
where several of the dignitaries of the Chapter lived.
After the confiscation of ecclesiastical property the
town had turned the passage through this close into
a narrow street, called the Rue de la Psalette, by
which pedestrians passed from the Cloister to the
Grand’Rue. The name of this street, proves
clearly enough that the precentor and his pupils and
those connected with the choir formerly lived there.
The other side, the left side, of the street is occupied
by a single house, the walls of which are overshadowed
by the buttresses of Saint-Gatien, which have their
base in the narrow little garden of the house, leaving
it doubtful whether the cathedral was built before
or after this venerable dwelling. An archaeologist
examining the arabesques, the shape of the windows,
the arch of the door, the whole exterior of the house,
now mellow with age, would see at once that it had
always been a part of the magnificent edifice with
which it is blended.
An antiquary (had there been one at
Tours,—one of the least literary towns
in all France) would even discover, where the narrow
street enters the Cloister, several vestiges of an
old arcade, which formerly made a portico to these
ecclesiastical dwellings, and was, no doubt, harmonious
in style with the general character of the architecture.
The house of which we speak, standing
on the north side of the cathedral, was always in
the shadow thrown by that vast edifice, on which time
had cast its dingy mantle, marked its furrows, and
shed its chill humidity, its lichen, mosses, and rank
herbs. The darkened dwelling was wrapped in silence,
broken only by the bells, by the chanting of the offices
heard through the windows of the church, by the call
of the jackdaws nesting in the belfries. The region
is a desert of stones, a solitude with a character
of its own, an arid spot, which could only be inhabited
by beings who had either attained to absolute nullity,
or were gifted with some abnormal strength of soul.
The house in question had always been occupied by abbes,
and it belonged to an old maid named Mademoiselle
Gamard. Though the property had been bought from
the national domain under the Reign of Terror by the
father of Mademoiselle Gamard, no one objected under
the Restoration to the old maid’s retaining
it, because she took priests to board and was very
devout; it may be that religious persons gave her
credit for the intention of leaving the property to
the Chapter.
The Abbe Birotteau was making his
way to this house, where he had lived for the last
two years. His apartment had been (as was now
the canonry) an object of envy and his “hoc
erat in votis” for a dozen years. To be
Mademoiselle Gamard’s boarder and to become a
canon were the two great desires of his life; in fact
they do present accurately the ambition of a priest,
who, considering himself on the highroad to eternity,
can wish for nothing in this world but good lodging,
good food, clean garments, shoes with silver buckles,
a sufficiency of things for the needs of the animal,
and a canonry to satisfy self-love, that inexpressible
sentiment which follows us, they say, into the presence
of God,—for there are grades among the saints.
But the covetous desire for the apartment which the
Abbe Birotteau was now inhabiting (a very harmless
desire in the eyes of worldly people) had been to
the abbe nothing less than a passion, a passion full
of obstacles, and, like more guilty passions, full
of hopes, pleasures, and remorse.
The interior arrangements of the house
did not allow Mademoiselle Gamard to take more than
two lodgers. Now, for about twelve years before
the day when Birotteau went to live with her she had
undertaken to keep in health and contentment two priests;
namely, Monsieur l’Abbe Troubert and Monsieur
l’Abbe Chapeloud. The Abbe Troubert still
lived. The Abbe Chapeloud was dead; and Birotteau
had stepped into his place.
The late Abbe Chapeloud, in life a
canon of Saint-Gatien, had been an intimate friend
of the Abbe Birotteau. Every time that the latter
paid a visit to the canon he had constantly admired
the apartment, the furniture and the library.
Out of this admiration grew the desire to possess
these beautiful things. It had been impossible
for the Abbe Birotteau to stifle this desire; though
it often made him suffer terribly when he reflected
that the death of his best friend could alone satisfy
his secret covetousness, which increased as time went
on. The Abbe Chapeloud and his friend Birotteau
were not rich. Both were sons of peasants; and
their slender savings had been spent in the mere costs
of living during the disastrous years of the Revolution.
When Napoleon restored the Catholic worship the Abbe
Chapeloud was appointed canon of the cathedral and
Birotteau was made vicar of it. Chapeloud then
went to board with Mademoiselle Gamard. When Birotteau
first came to visit his friend, he thought the arrangement
of the rooms excellent, but he noticed nothing more.
The outset of this concupiscence of chattels was very
like that of a true passion, which often begins, in
a young man, with cold admiration for a woman whom
he ends in loving forever.
The apartment, reached by a stone
staircase, was on the side of the house that faced
south. The Abbe Troubert occupied the ground-floor,
and Mademoiselle Gamard the first floor of the main
building, looking on the street. When Chapeloud
took possession of his rooms they were bare of furniture,
and the ceilings were blackened with smoke. The
stone mantelpieces, which were very badly cut, had
never been painted. At first, the only furniture
the poor canon could put in was a bed, a table, a
few chairs, and the books he possessed. The apartment
was like a beautiful woman in rags. But two or
three years later, an old lady having left the Abbe
Chapeloud two thousand francs, he spent that sum on
the purchase of an oak bookcase, the relic of a chateau
pulled down by the Bande Noire, the carving of which
deserved the admiration of all artists. The abbe
made the purchase less because it was very cheap than
because the dimensions of the bookcase exactly fitted
the space it was to fill in his gallery. His
savings enabled him to renovate the whole gallery,
which up to this time had been neglected and shabby.
The floor was carefully waxed, the ceiling whitened,
the wood-work painted to resemble the grain and knots
of oak. A long table in ebony and two cabinets
by Boulle completed the decoration, and gave to this
gallery a certain air that was full of character.
In the course of two years the liberality of devout
persons, and legacies, though small ones, from pious
penitents, filled the shelves of the bookcase, till
then half empty. Moreover, Chapeloud’s uncle,
an old Oratorian, had left him his collection in folio
of the Fathers of the Church, and several other important
works that were precious to a priest.
Birotteau, more and more surprised
by the successive improvements of the gallery, once
so bare, came by degrees to a condition of involuntary
envy. He wished he could possess that apartment,
so thoroughly in keeping with the gravity of ecclestiastical
life. The passion increased from day to day.
Working, sometimes for days together, in this retreat,
the vicar could appreciate the silence and the peace
that reigned there. During the following year
the Abbe Chapeloud turned a small room into an oratory,
which his pious friends took pleasure in beautifying.
Still later, another lady gave the canon a set of
furniture for his bedroom, the covering of which she
had embroidered under the eyes of the worthy man without
his ever suspecting its destination. The bedroom
then had the same effect upon the vicar that the gallery
had long had; it dazzled him. Lastly, about three
years before the Abbe Chapeloud’s death, he completed
the comfort of his apartment by decorating the salon.
Though the furniture was plainly covered in red Utrecht
velvet, it fascinated Birotteau. From the day
when the canon’s friend first laid eyes on the
red damask curtains, the mahogany furniture, the Aubusson
carpet which adorned the vast room, then lately painted,
his envy of Chapeloud’s apartment became a monomania
hidden within his breast. To live there, to sleep
in that bed with the silk curtains where the canon
slept, to have all Chapeloud’s comforts about
him, would be, Birotteau felt, complete happiness;
he saw nothing beyond it. All the envy, all the
ambition which the things of this world give birth
to in the hearts of other men concentrated themelves
for Birotteau in the deep and secret longing he felt
for an apartment like that which the Abbe Chapeloud
had created for himself. When his friend fell
ill he went to him out of true affection; but all
the same, when he first heard of his illness, and
when he sat by his bed to keep him company, there arose
in the depths of his consciousness, in spite of himself,
a crowd of thoughts the simple formula of which was
always, “If Chapeloud dies I can have this apartment.”
And yet—Birotteau having an excellent heart,
contracted ideas, and a limited mind—he
did not go so far as to think of means by which to
make his friend bequeath to him the library and the
furniture.
The Abbe Chapeloud, an amiable, indulgent
egoist, fathomed his friend’s desires—not
a difficult thing to do—and forgave them;
which may seem less easy to a priest; but it must
be remembered that the vicar, whose friendship was
faithful, did not fail to take a daily walk with his
friend along their usual path in the Mail de Tours,
never once depriving him of an instant of the time
devoted for over twenty years to that exercise.
Birotteau, who regarded his secret wishes as crimes,
would have been capable, out of contrition, of the
utmost devotion to his friend. The latter paid
his debt of gratitude for a friendship so ingenuously
sincere by saying, a few days before his death, as
the vicar sat by him reading the “Quotidienne”
aloud: “This time you will certainly get
the apartment. I feel it is all over with me
now.”
Accordingly, it was found that the
Abbe Chapeloud had left his library and all his furniture
to his friend Birotteau. The possession of these
things, so keenly desired, and the prospect of being
taken to board by Mademoiselle Gamard, certainly did
allay the grief which Birotteau felt at the death
of his friend the canon. He might not have been
willing to resuscitate him; but he mourned him.
For several days he was like Gargantus, who, when
his wife died in giving birth to Pantagruel, did not
know whether to rejoice at the birth of a son or grieve
at having buried his good Babette, and therefore cheated
himself by rejoicing at the death of his wife, and
deploring the advent of Pantagruel.
The Abbe Birotteau spent the first
days of his mourning in verifying the books in his
library, in making use of his furniture, in
examining the whole of his inheritance, saying in a
tone which, unfortunately, was not noted at the time,
“Poor Chapeloud!” His joy and his grief
so completely absorbed him that he felt no pain when
he found that the office of canon, in which the late
Chapeloud had hoped his friend Birotteau might succeed
him, was given to another. Mademoiselle Gamard
having cheerfully agreed to take the vicar to board,
the latter was thenceforth a participator in all those
felicities of material comfort of which the deceased
canon had been wont to boast.
Incalculable they were! According
to the Abbe Chapeloud none of the priests who inhabited
the city of Tours, not even the archbishop, had ever
been the object of such minute and delicate attentions
as those bestowed by Mademoiselle Gamard on her two
lodgers. The first words the canon said to his
friend when they met for their walk on the Mail referred
usually to the succulent dinner he had just eaten;
and it was a very rare thing if during the walks of
each week he did not say at least fourteen times,
“That excellent spinster certainly has a vocation
for serving ecclesiastics.”
“Just think,” the canon
would say to Birotteau, “that for twelve consecutive
years nothing has ever been amiss,—linen
in perfect order, bands, albs, surplices; I find everything
in its place, always in sufficient quantity, and smelling
of orris-root. My furniture is rubbed and kept
so bright that I don’t know when I have seen
any dust —did you ever see a speck of it
in my rooms? Then the firewood is so well selected.
The least little things are excellent. In fact,
Mademoiselle Gamard keeps an incessant watch over my
wants. I can’t remember having rung twice
for anything—no matter what—in
ten years. That’s what I call living!
I never have to look for a single thing, not even
my slippers. Always a good fire, always a good
dinner. Once the bellows annoyed me, the nozzle
was choked up; but I only mentioned it once, and the
next day Mademoiselle gave me a very pretty pair,
also those nice tongs you see me mend the fire with.”
For all answer Birotteau would say,
“Smelling of orris-root!” That “smelling
of orris-root” always affected him. The
canon’s remarks revealed ideal joys to the poor
vicar, whose bands and albs were the plague of his
life, for he was totally devoid of method and often
forgot to order his dinner. Therefore, if he saw
Mademoiselle Gamard at Saint-Gatien while saying mass
or taking round the plate, he never failed to give
her a kindly and benevolent look,—such a
look as Saint Teresa might have cast to heaven.
Though the comforts which all creatures
desire, and for which he had so often longed, thus
fell to his share, the Abbe Birotteau, like the rest
of the world, found it difficult, even for a priest,
to live without something to hanker for. Consequently,
for the last eighteen months he had replaced his two
satisfied passions by an ardent longing for a canonry.
The title of Canon had become to him very much what
a peerage is to a plebeian minister. The prospect
of an appointment, hopes of which had just been held
out to him at Madame de Listomere’s, so completely
turned his head that he did not observe until he reached
his own door that he had left his umbrella behind him.
Perhaps, even then, if the rain were not falling in
torrents he might not have missed it, so absorbed
was he in the pleasure of going over and over in his
mind what had been said to him on the subject of his
promotion by the company at Madame de Listomere’s,—an
old lady with whom he spent every Wednesday evening.
The vicar rang loudly, as if to let
the servant know she was not to keep him waiting.
Then he stood close to the door to avoid, if he could,
getting showered; but the drip from the roof fell precisely
on the toes of his shoes, and the wind blew gusts
of rain into his face that were much like a shower-bath.
Having calculated the time necesary for the woman
to leave the kitchen and pull the string of the outer
door, he rang again, this time in a manner that resulted
in a very significant peal of the bell.
“They can’t be out,”
he said to himself, not hearing any movement on the
premises.
Again he rang, producing a sound that
echoed sharply through the house and was taken up
and repeated by all the echoes of the cathedral, so
that no one could avoid waking up at the remonstrating
racket. Accordingly, in a few moments, he heard,
not without some pleasure in his wrath, the wooden
shoes of the servant-woman clacking along the paved
path which led to the outer door. But even then
the discomforts of the gouty old gentleman were not
so quickly over as he hoped. Instead of pulling
the string, Marianne was obliged to turn the lock
of the door with its heavy key, and pull back all the
bolts.
“Why did you let me ring three
times in such weather?” said the vicar.
“But, monsieur, don’t
you see the door was locked? We have all been
in bed ever so long; it struck a quarter to eleven
some time ago. Mademoiselle must have thought
you were in.”
“You saw me go out, yourself.
Besides, Mademoiselle knows very well I always go
to Madame de Listomere’s on Wednesday evening.”
“I only did as Mademoiselle told me, monsieur.”
These words struck the vicar a blow,
which he felt the more because his late revery had
made him completely happy. He said nothing and
followed Marianne towards the kitchen to get his candlestick,
which he supposed had been left there as usual.
But instead of entering the kitchen Marianne went
on to his own apartments, and there the vicar beheld
his candlestick on a table close to the door of the
red salon, in a sort of antechamber formed by the
landing of the staircase, which the late canon had
inclosed with a glass partition. Mute with amazement,
he entered his bedroom hastily, found no fire, and
called to Marianne, who had not had time to get downstairs.
“You have not lighted the fire!” he said.
“Beg pardon, Monsieur l’abbe,
I did,” she said; “it must have gone out.”
Birotteau looked again at the hearth,
and felt convinced that the fire had been out since
morning.
“I must dry my feet,” he said. “Make
the fire.”
Marianne obeyed with the haste of
a person who wants to get back to her night’s
rest. While looking about him for his slippers,
which were not in the middle of his bedside carpet
as usual, the abbe took mental notes of the state
of Marianne’s dress, which convinced him that
she had not got out of bed to open the door as she
said she had. He then recollected that for the
last two weeks he had been deprived of various little
attentions which for eighteen months had made life
sweet to him. Now, as the nature of narrow minds
induces them to study trifles, Birotteau plunged suddenly
into deep meditation on these four circumstances,
imperceptible in their meaning to others, but to him
indicative of four catastrophes. The total loss
of his happiness was evidently foreshadowed in the
neglect to place his slipppers, in Marianne’s
falsehood about the fire, in the unusual removal of
his candlestick to the table of the antechamber, and
in the evident intention to keep him waiting in the
rain.
When the fire was burning on the hearth,
and the lamp was lighted, and Marianne had departed
without saying, as usual, “Does Monsieur want
anything more?” the Abbe Birotteau let himself
fall gently into the wide and handsome easy-chair
of his late friend; but there was something mournful
in the movement with which he dropped upon it.
The good soul was crushed by a presentiment of coming
calamity. His eyes roved successively to the
handsome tall clock, the bureau, curtains, chairs,
carpets, to the stately bed, the basin of holy-water,
the crucifix, to a Virgin by Valentin, a Christ by
Lebrun,—in short, to all the accessories
of this cherished room, while his face expressed the
anguish of the tenderest farewell that a lover ever
took of his first mistress, or an old man of his lately
planted trees. The vicar had just perceived,
somewhat late it is true, the signs of a dumb persecution
instituted against him for the last three months by
Mademoiselle Gamard, whose evil intentions would doubtless
have been fathomed much sooner by a more intelligent
man. Old maids have a special talent for accentuating
the words and actions which their dislikes suggest
to them. They scratch like cats. They not
only wound but they take pleasure in wounding, and
in making their victim see that he is wounded.
A man of the world would never have allowed himself
to be scratched twice; the good abbe, on the contrary,
had taken several blows from those sharp claws before
he could be brought to believe in any evil intention.
But when he did perceive it, he set
to work, with the inquisitorial sagacity which priests
acquire by directing consciences and burrowing into
the nothings of the confessional, to establish, as
though it were a matter of religious controversy,
the following proposition: “Admitting that
Mademoiselle Gamard did not remember it was Madame
de Listomere’s evening, and that Marianne did
think I was home, and did really forget to make my
fire, it is impossible, inasmuch as I myself took
down my candlestick this morning, that Mademoiselle
Gamard, seeing it in her salon, could have supposed
I had gone to bed. Ergo, Mademoiselle Gamard
intended that I should stand out in the rain, and,
by carrying my candlestick upstairs, she meant to make
me understand it. What does it all mean?”
he said aloud, roused by the gravity of these circumstances,
and rising as he spoke to take off his damp clothes,
get into his dressing-gown, and do up his head for
the night. Then he returned from the bed to the
fireplace, gesticulating, and launching forth in various
tones the following sentences, all of which ended
in a high falsetto key, like notes of interjection:
“What the deuce have I done
to her? Why is she angry with me? Marianne
did not forget my fire! Mademoiselle told
her not to light it! I must be a child if I can’t
see, from the tone and manner she has been taking
to me, that I’ve done something to displease
her. Nothing like it ever happened to Chapeloud!
I can’t live in the midst of such torments as—At
my age—”
He went to bed hoping that the morrow
might enlighten him on the causes of the dislike which
threatened to destroy forever the happiness he had
now enjoyed two years after wishing for it so long.
Alas! the secret reasons for the inimical feelings
Mademoiselle Gamard bore to the luckless abbe were
fated to remain eternally unknown to him,—not
that they were difficult to fathom, but simply because
he lacked the good faith and candor by which great
souls and scoundrels look within and judge themselves.
A man of genius or a trickster says to himself, “I
did wrong.” Self-interest and native talent
are the only infallible and lucid guides. Now
the Abbe Birotteau, whose goodness amounted to stupidity,
whose knowledge was only, as it were, plastered on
him by dint of study, who had no experience whatever
of the world and its ways, who lived between the mass
and the confessional, chiefly occupied in dealing
the most trivial matters of conscience in his capacity
of confessor to all the schools in town and to a few
noble souls who rightly appreciated him,—the
Abbe Birotteau must be regarded as a great child,
to whom most of the practices of social life were
utterly unknown. And yet, the natural selfishness
of all human beings, reinforced by the selfishness
peculiar to the priesthood and that of the narrow
life of the provinces had insensibly, and unknown
to himself, developed within him. If any one
had felt enough interest in the good man to probe his
spirit and prove to him that in the numerous petty
details of his life and in the minute duties of his
daily existence he was essentially lacking in the
self-sacrifice he professed, he would have punished
and mortified himself in good faith. But those
whom we offend by such unconscious selfishness pay
little heed to our real innocence; what they want is
vengeance, and they take it. Thus it happened
that Birotteau, weak brother that he was, was made
to undergo the decrees of that great distributive
Justice which goes about compelling the world to execute
its judgments,—called by ninnies “the
misfortunes of life.”
There was this difference between
the late Chapeloud and the vicar, —one
was a shrewd and clever egoist, the other a simple-minded
and clumsy one. When the canon went to board
with Mademoiselle Gamard he knew exactly how to judge
of his landlady’s character. The confessional
had taught him to understand the bitterness that the
sense of being kept outside the social pale puts into
the heart of an old maid; he therefore calculated
his own treatment of Mademoiselle Gamard very wisely.
She was then about thirty-eight years old, and still
retained a few pretensions, which, in well-behaved
persons of her condition, change, rather later, into
strong personal self-esteem. The canon saw plainly
that to live comfortably with his landlady he must
pay her invariably the same attentions and be more
infallible than the pope himself. To compass
this result, he allowed no points of contact between
himself and her except those that politeness demanded,
and those which necessarily exist between two persons
living under the same roof. Thus, though he and
the Abbe Troubert took their regular three meals a
day, he avoided the family breakfast by inducing Mademoiselle
Gamard to send his coffee to his own room. He
also avoided the annoyance of supper by taking tea
in the houses of friends with whom he spent his evenings.
In this way he seldom saw his landlady except at dinner;
but he always came down to that meal a few minutes
in advance of the hour. During this visit of courtesy,
as it may be called, he talked to her, for the twelve
years he had lived under her roof, on nearly the same
topics, receiving from her the same answers.
How she had slept, her breakfast, the trivial domestic
events, her looks, her health, the weather, the time
the church services had lasted, the incidents of the
mass, the health of such or such a priest,—these
were the subjects of their daily conversation.
During dinner he invariably paid her certain indirect
compliments; the fish had an excellent flavor; the
seasoning of a sauce was delicious; Mademoiselle Gamard’s
capacities and virtues as mistress of a household
were great. He was sure of flattering the old
maid’s vanity by praising the skill with which
she made or prepared her preserves and pickles and
pates and other gastronomical inventions. To cap
all, the wily canon never left his landlady’s
yellow salon after dinner without remarking that there
was no house in Tours where he could get such good
coffee as that he had just imbibed.
Thanks to this thorough understanding
of Mademoiselle Gamard’s character, and to the
science of existence which he had put in practice
for the last twelve years, no matter of discussion
on the internal arrangements of the household had
ever come up between them. The Abbe Chapeloud
had taken note of the spinster’s angles, asperities,
and crabbedness, and had so arranged his avoidance
of her that he obtained without the least difficulty
all the concessions that were necessary to the happiness
and tranquility of his life. The result was that
Mademoiselle Gamard frequently remarked to her friends
and acquaintances that the Abbe Chapeloud was a very
amiable man, extremely easy to live with, and a fine
mind.
As to her other lodger, the Abbe Troubert,
she said absolutely nothing about him. Completely
involved in the round of her life, like a satellite
in the orbit of a planet, Troubert was to her a sort
of intermediary creature between the individuals of
the human species and those of the canine species;
he was classed in her heart next, but directly before,
the place intended for friends but now occupied by
a fat and wheezy pug which she tenderly loved.
She ruled Troubert completely, and the intermingling
of their interests was so obvious that many persons
of her social sphere believed that the Abbe Troubert
had designs on the old maid’s property, and was
binding her to him unawares with infinite patience,
and really directing her while he seemed to be obeying
without ever letting her percieve in him the slightest
wish on his part to govern her.
When the Abbe Chapeloud died, the
old maid, who desired a lodger with quiet ways, naturally
thought of the vicar. Before the canon’s
will was made known she had meditated offering his
rooms to the Abbe Troubert, who was not very comfortable
on the ground-floor. But when the Abbe Birotteau,
on receiving his legacy, came to settle in writing
the terms of his board she saw he was so in love with
the apartment, for which he might now admit his long
cherished desires, that she dared not propose the
exchange, and accordingly sacrificed her sentiments
of friendship to the demands of self-interest.
But in order to console her beloved canon, Mademoiselle
took up the large white Chateau-Renaud bricks that
made the floors of his apartment and replaced them
by wooden floors laid in “point de Hongrie.”
She also rebuilt a smoky chimney.
For twelve years the Abbe Birotteau
had seen his friend Chapeloud in that house without
ever giving a thought to the motive of the canon’s
extreme circumspection in his relations to Mademoiselle
Gamard. When he came himself to live with that
saintly woman he was in the condition of a lover on
the point of being made happy. Even if he had
not been by nature purblind of intellect, his eyes
were too dazzled by his new happiness to allow him
to judge of the landlady, or to reflect on the limits
which he ought to impose on their daily intercourse.
Mademoiselle Gamard, seen from afar and through the
prism of those material felicities which the vicar
dreamed of enjoying in her house, seemed to him a
perfect being, a faultless Christian, essentially
charitable, the woman of the Gospel, the wise virgin,
adorned by all those humble and modest virtues which
shed celestial fragrance upon life.
So, with the enthusiasm of one who
attains an object long desired, with the candor of
a child, and the blundering foolishness of an old
man utterly without worldly experience, he fell into
the life of Mademoiselle Gamard precisely as a fly
is caught in a spider’s web. The first
day that he went to dine and sleep at the house he
was detained in the salon after dinner, partly to
make his landlady’s acquaintance, but chiefly
by that inexplicable embarrassment which often assails
timid people and makes them fear to seem impolite by
breaking off a conversation in order to take leave.
Consequently he remained there the whole evening.
Then a friend of his, a certain Mademoiselle Salomon
de Villenoix, came to see him, and this gave Mademoiselle
Gamard the happiness of forming a card-table; so that
when the vicar went to bed he felt that he had passed
a very agreeable evening. Knowing Mademoiselle
Gamard and the Abbe Troubert but slightly, he saw
only the superficial aspects of their characters; few
persons bare their defects at once, they generally
take on a becoming veneer.
The worthy abbe was thus led to suggest
to himself the charming plan of devoting all his evenings
to Mademoiselle Gamard, instead of spending them,
as Chapeloud had done, elsewhere. The old maid
had for years been possessed by a desire which grew
stronger day by day. This desire, often formed
by old persons and even by pretty women, had become
in Mademoiselle Gamard’s soul as ardent a longing
as that of Birotteau for Chapeloud’s apartment;
and it was strengthened by all those feelings of pride,
egotism, envy, and vanity which pre-exist in the breasts
of worldly people.
This history is of all time; it suffices
to widen slightly the narrow circle in which these
personages are about to act to find the coefficient
reasons of events which take place in the very highest
spheres of social life.
Mademoiselle Gamard spent her evenings
by rotation in six or eight different houses.
Whether it was that she disliked being obliged to go
out to seek society, and considered that at her age
she had a right to expect some return; or that her
pride was wounded at receiving no company in her house;
or that her self-love craved the compliments she saw
her various hostesses receive,—certain it
is that her whole ambition was to make her salon a
centre towards which a given number of persons should
nightly make their way with pleasure. One morning
as she left Saint-Gatien, after Birotteau and his
friend Mademoiselle Salomon had spent a few evenings
with her and with the faithful and patient Troubert,
she said to certain of her good friends whom she met
at the church door, and whose slave she had hitherto
considered herself, that those who wished to see her
could certainly come once a week to her house, where
she had friends enough to make a card-table; she could
not leave the Abbe Birotteau; Mademoiselle Salomon
had not missed a single evening that week; she was
devoted to friends; and—et cetera, et
cetera. Her speech was all the more humbly
haughty and softly persuasive because Mademoiselle
Salomon de Villenoix belonged to the most aristocatic
society in Tours. For though Mademoiselle Salomon
came to Mademoiselle Gamard’s house solely out
of friendship for the vicar, the old maid triumphed
in receiving her, and saw that, thanks to Birotteau,
she was on the point of succeeding in her great desire
to form a circle as numerous and as agreeable as those
of Madame de Listomere, Mademoiselle Merlin de la
Blottiere, and other devout ladies who were in the
habit of receiving the pious and ecclesiastical society
of Tours.
But alas! the abbe Birotteau himself
caused this cherished hope to miscarry. Now if
those persons who in the course of their lives have
attained to the enjoyment of a long desired happiness
and have therefore comprehended the joy of the vicar
when he stepped into Chapeloud’s vacant place,
they will also have gained some faint idea of Mademoiselle
Gamard’s distress at the overthrow of her favorite
plan.
After accepting his happiness in the
old maid’s salon for six months with tolerable
patience, Birotteau deserted the house of an evening,
carrying with him Mademoiselle Salomon. In spite
of her utmost efforts the ambitious Gamard had recruited
barely six visitors, whose faithful attendance was
more than problematical; and boston could not be played
night after night unless at least four persons were
present. The defection of her two principal guests
obliged her therefore to make suitable apologies and
return to her evening visiting among former friends;
for old maids find their own company so distasteful
that they prefer to seek the doubtful pleasures of
society.
The cause of this desertion is plain
enough. Although the vicar was one of those to
whom heaven is hereafter to belong in virtue of the
decree “Blessed are the poor in spirit,”
he could not, like some fools, endure the annoyance
that other fools caused him. Persons without
minds are like weeds that delight in good earth; they
want to be amused by others, all the more because
they are dull within. The incarnation of ennui
to which they are victims, joined to the need they
feel of getting a divorce from themselves, produces
that passion for moving about, for being somewhere
else than where they are, which distinguishes their
species,—and also that of all beings devoid
of sensitiveness, and those who have missed their
destiny, or who suffer by their own fault.
Without really fathoming the vacuity
and emptiness of Mademoiselle Gamard’s mind,
or stating to himself the pettiness of her ideas, the
poor abbe perceived, unfortunately too late, the defects
which she shared with all old maids, and those which
were peculiar to herself. The bad points of others
show out so strongly against the good that they usually
strike our eyes before they wound us. This moral
phenomenon might, at a pinch, be made to excuse the
tendency we all have, more or less, to gossip.
It is so natural, socially speaking, to laugh at the
failings of others that we ought to forgive the ridicule
our own absurdities excite, and be annoyed only by
calumny. But in this instance the eyes of the
good vicar never reached the optical range which enables
men of the world to see and evade their neighbours’
rough points. Before he could be brought to perceive
the faults of his landlady he was forced to undergo
the warning which Nature gives to all her creatures—pain.
Old maids who have never yielded in
their habits of life or in their characters to other
lives and other characters, as the fate of woman exacts,
have, as a general thing, a mania for making others
give way to them. In Mademoiselle Gamard this
sentiment had degenerated into despotism, but a despotism
that could only exercise itself on little things.
For instance (among a hundred other examples), the
basket of counters placed on the card-table for the
Abbe Birotteau was to stand exactly where she placed
it; and the abbe annoyed her terribly by moving it,
which he did nearly every evening. How is this
sensitiveness stupidly spent on nothings to be accounted
for? what is the object of it? No one could have
told in this case; Mademoiselle Gamard herself knew
no reason for it. The vicar, though a sheep by
nature, did not like, any more than other sheep, to
feel the crook too often, especially when it bristled
with spikes. Not seeking to explain to himself
the patience of the Abbe Troubert, Birotteau simply
withdrew from the happiness which Mademoiselle Gamard
believed that she seasoned to his liking,—for
she regarded happiness as a thing to be made, like
her preserves. But the luckless abbe made the
break in a clumsy way, the natural way of his own
naive character, and it was not carried out without
much nagging and sharp-shooting, which the Abbe Birotteau
endeavored to bear as if he did not feel them.
By the end of the first year of his
sojourn under Mademoiselle Gamard’s roof the
vicar had resumed his former habits; spending two
evenings a week with Madame de Listomere, three with
Mademoiselle Salomon, and the other two with Mademoiselle
Merlin de la Blottiere. These ladies belonged
to the aristocratic circles of Tourainean society,
to which Mademoiselle Gamard was not admitted.
Therefore the abbe’s abandonment was the more
insulting, because it made her feel her want of social
value; all choice implies contempt for the thing rejected.
“Monsieur Birotteau does not
find us agreeable enough,” said the Abbe Troubert
to Mademoiselle Gamard’s friends when she was
forced to tell them that her “evenings”
must be given up. “He is a man of the world,
and a good liver! He wants fashion, luxury, witty
conversation, and the scandals of the town.”
These words of course obliged Mademoiselle
Gamard to defend herself at Birotteau’s expense.
“He is not much a man of the
world,” she said. “If it had not been
for the Abbe Chapeloud he would never have been received
at Madame de Listomere’s. Oh, what didn’t
I lose in losing the Abbe Chapeloud! Such an
amiable man, and so easy to live with! In twelve
whole years I never had the slightest difficulty or
disagreement with him.”
Presented thus, the innocent abbe
was considered by this bourgeois society, which secretly
hated the aristocratic society, as a man essentially
exacting and hard to get along with. For a week
Mademoiselle Gamard enjoyed the pleasure of being pitied
by friends who, without really thinking one word of
what they said, kept repeating to her: “How
could he have turned against you?—so
kind and gentle as you are!” or, “Console
yourself, dear Mademoiselle Gamard, you are so well
known that—” et cetera.
Nevertheless, these friends, enchanted
to escape one evening a week in the Cloister, the
darkest, dreariest, and most out of the way corner
in Tours, blessed the poor vicar in their hearts.
Between persons who are perpetually
in each other’s company dislike or love increases
daily; every moment brings reasons to love or hate
each other more and more. The Abbe Birotteau
soon became intolerable to Mademoiselle Gamard.
Eighteen months after she had taken him to board,
and at the moment when the worthy man was mistaking
the silence of hatred for the peacefulness of content,
and applauding himself for having, as he said, “managed
matters so well with the old maid,” he was really
the object of an underhand persecution and a vengeance
deliberately planned. The four marked circumstances
of the locked door, the forgotten slippers, the lack
of fire, and the removal of the candlestick, were
the first signs that revealed to him a terrible enmity,
the final consequences of which were destined not to
strike him until the time came when they were irreparable.
As he went to bed the worthy vicar
worked his brains—quite uselessly, for
he was soon at the end of them—to explain
to himself the extraordinarily discourteous conduct
of Mademoiselle Gamard. The fact was that, having
all along acted logically in obeying the natural laws
of his own egotism, it was impossible that he should
now perceive his own faults towards his landlady.
Though the great things of life are
simple to understand and easy to express, the littlenesses
require a vast number of details to explain them.
The foregoing events, which may be called a sort of
prologue to this bourgeois drama, in which we shall
find passions as violent as those excited by great
interests, required this long introduction; and it
would have been difficult for any faithful historian
to shorten the account of these minute developments.