Unconsciouscomedians
Leon de Lora, our celebrated landscape
painter, belongs to one of the noblest families of
the Roussillon (Spanish originally) which, although
distinguished for the antiquity of its race, has been
doomed for a century to the proverbial poverty of
hidalgos. Coming, light-footed, to Paris from
the department of the Eastern Pyrenees, with the sum
of eleven francs in his pocket for all viaticum, he
had in some degree forgotten the miseries and privations
of his childhood and his family amid the other privations
and miseries which are never lacking to “rapins,”
whose whole fortune consists of intrepid vocation.
Later, the cares of fame and those of success were
other causes of forgetfulness.
If you have followed the capricious
and meandering course of these studies, perhaps you
will remember Mistigris, Schinner’s pupil, one
of the heroes of “A Start in Life” (Scenes
from Private Life), and his brief apparitions in other
Scenes. In 1845, this landscape painter, emulator
of the Hobbemas, Ruysdaels, and Lorraines, resembles
no more the shabby, frisky rapin whom we then knew.
Now an illustrious man, he owns a charming house in
the rue de Berlin, not far from the hotel de Brambourg,
where his friend Brideau lives, and quite close to
the house of Schinner, his early master. He is
a member of the Institute and an officer of the Legion
of honor; he is thirty-six years old, has an income
of twenty thousand francs from the Funds, his pictures
sell for their weight in gold, and (what seems to
him more extraordinary than the invitations he receives
occasionally to court balls) his name and fame, mentioned
so often for the last sixteen years by the press of
Europe, has at last penetrated to the valley of the
Eastern Pyrenees, where vegetate three veritable Loras:
his father, his eldest brother, and an old paternal
aunt, Mademoiselle Urraca y Lora.
In the maternal line the painter has
no relation left except a cousin, the nephew of his
mother, residing in a small manufacturing town in
the department. This cousin was the first to bethink
himself of Leon. But it was not until 1840 that
Leon de Lora received a letter from Monsieur Sylvestre
Palafox-Castal-Gazonal (called simply Gazonal) to
which he replied that he was assuredly himself,—that
is to say, the son of the late Leonie Gazonal, wife
of Comte Fernand Didas y Lora.
During the summer of 1841 cousin Sylvestre
Gazonal went to inform the illustrious unknown family
of Lora that their little Leon had not gone to the
Rio de la Plata, as they supposed, but was now one
of the greatest geniuses of the French school of painting;
a fact the family did not believe. The eldest
son, Don Juan de Lora assured his cousin Gazonal that
he was certainly the dupe of some Parisian wag.
Now the said Gazonal was intending
to go to Paris to prosecute a lawsuit which the prefect
of the Eastern Pyrenees had arbitrarily removed from
the usual jurisdiction, transferring it to that of
the Council of State. The worthy provincial determined
to investigate this act, and to ask his Parisian cousin
the reason of such high-handed measures. It thus
happened that Monsieur Gazonal came to Paris, took
shabby lodgings in the rue Croix-des-Petits-Champs,
and was amazed to see the palace of his cousin in
the rue de Berlin. Being told that the painter
was then travelling in Italy, he renounced, for the
time being, the intention of asking his advice, and
doubted if he should ever find his maternal relationship
acknowledged by so great a man.
During the years 1843 and 1844 Gazonal
attended to his lawsuit. This suit concerned
a question as to the current and level of a stream
of water and the necessity of removing a dam, in which
dispute the administration, instigated by the abutters
on the river banks, had meddled. The removal
of the dam threatened the existence of Gazonal’s
manufactory. In 1845, Gazonal considered his cause
as wholly lost; the secretary of the Master of Petitions,
charged with the duty of drawing up the report, had
confided to him that the said report would assuredly
be against him, and his own lawyer confirmed the statement.
Gazonal, though commander of the National Guard in
his own town and one of the most capable manufacturers
of the department, found himself of so little account
in Paris, and he was, moreover, so frightened by the
costs of living and the dearness of even the most trifling
things, that he kept himself, all this time, secluded
in his shabby lodgings. The Southerner, deprived
of his sun, execrated Paris, which he called a manufactory
of rheumatism. As he added up the costs of his
suit and his living, he vowed within himself to poison
the prefect on his return, or to minotaurize him.
In his moments of deepest sadness he killed the prefect
outright; in gayer mood he contented himself with
minotaurizing him.
One morning as he ate his breakfast
and cursed his fate, he picked up a newspaper savagely.
The following lines, ending an article, struck Gazonal
as if the mysterious voice which speaks to gamblers
before they win had sounded in his ear: “Our
celebrated landscape painter, Leon de Lora, lately
returned from Italy, will exhibit several pictures
at the Salon; thus the exhibition promises, as we see,
to be most brilliant.” With the suddenness
of action that distinguishes the sons of the sunny
South, Gazonal sprang from his lodgings to the street,
from the street to a street-cab, and drove to the rue
de Berlin to find his cousin.
Leon de Lora sent word by a servant
to his cousin Gazonal that he invited him to breakfast
the next day at the Cafe de Paris, but he was now
engaged in a matter which did not allow him to receive
his cousin at the present moment. Gazonal, like
a true Southerner, recounted all his troubles to the
valet.
The next day at ten o’clock,
Gazonal, much too well-dressed for the occasion (he
had put on his bottle-blue coat with brass buttons,
a frilled shirt, a white waistcoat and yellow gloves),
awaited his amphitryon a full hour, stamping his feet
on the boulevard, after hearing from the master of
the cafe that “these gentlemen” breakfasted
habitually between eleven and twelve o’clock.
“Between eleven and half-past,”
he said when he related his adventures to his cronies
in the provinces, “two Parisians dressed in simple
frock-coats, looking like nothing at all, called
out when they saw me on the boulevard, ‘There’s
our Gazonal!’”
The speaker was Bixiou, with whom
Leon de Lora had armed himself to “bring out”
his provincial cousin, in other words, to make him
pose.
“‘Don’t be vexed,
cousin, I’m at your service!’ cried out
that little Leon, taking me in his arms,” related
Gazonal on his return home. “The breakfast
was splendid. I thought I was going blind when
I saw the number of bits of gold it took to pay that
bill. Those fellows must earn their weight in
gold, for I saw my cousin give the waiter thirty
sous—the price of a whole day’s
work!”
During this monstrous breakfast—advisedly
so called in view of six dozen Osten oysters, six
cutlets a la Soubise, a chicken a la Marengo, lobster
mayonnaise, green peas, a mushroom pasty, washed down
with three bottles of Bordeaux, three bottles of Champagne,
plus coffee and liqueurs, to say nothing of relishes—Gazonal
was magnificent in his diatribes against Paris.
The worthy manufacturer complained of the length of
the four-pound bread-loaves, the height of the houses,
the indifference of the passengers in the streets
to one another, the cold, the rain, the cost of hackney-coaches,
all of which and much else he bemoaned in so witty
a manner that the two artists took a mighty fancy
to cousin Gazonal, and made him relate his lawsuit
from beginning to end.
“My lawsuit,” he said
in his Southern accent and rolling his r’s, “is
a very simple thing; they want my manufactory.
I’ve employed here in Paris a dolt of a lawyer,
to whom I give twenty francs every time he opens an
eye, and he is always asleep. He’s a slug,
who drives in his coach, while I go afoot and he splashes
me. I see now I ought to have had a carriage!
On the other hand, that Council of State are a pack
of do-nothings, who leave their duties to little scamps
every one of whom is bought up by our prefect.
That’s my lawsuit! They want my manufactory!
Well, they’ll get it! and they must manage the
best they can with my workmen, a hundred of ’em,
who’ll make them sing another tune before they’ve
done with them.”
“Two years. Ha! that meddling
prefect! he shall pay dear for this; I’ll have
his life if I have to give mine on the scaffold—”
“Which state councillor presides over your section?”
“A former newspaper man,—doesn’t
pay ten sous in taxes,—his name is Massol.”
The two Parisians exchanged glances.
“Who is the commissioner who is making the report?”
“Ha! that’s still more
queer; he’s Master of Petitions, professor of
something or other at the Sorbonne,—a fellow
who writes things in reviews, and for whom I have
the profoundest contempt.”
“Claude Vignon,” said Bixiou.
“Yes, that’s his name,”
replied Gazonal. “Massol and Vignon—there
you have Social Reason, in which there’s no
reason at all.”
“There must be some way out
of it,” said Leon de Lora. “You see,
cousin, all things are possible in Paris for good as
well as for evil, for the just as well as the unjust.
There’s nothing that can’t be done, undone,
and redone.”
“The devil take me if I stay
ten days more in this hole of a place, the dullest
in all France!”
The two cousins and Bixiou were at
this moment walking from one end to the other of that
sheet of asphalt on which, between the hours of one
and three, it is difficult to avoid seeing some of
the personages in honor of whom Fame puts one or the
other of her trumpets to her lips. Formerly that
locality was the Place Royale; next it was the Pont
Neuf; in these days this privilege had been acquired
by the Boulevard des Italiens.
“Paris,” said the painter
to his cousin, “is an instrument on which we
must know how to play; if we stand here ten minutes
I’ll give you your first lesson. There,
look!” he said, raising his cane and pointing
to a couple who were just then coming out from the
Passage de l’Opera.
“Goodness! who’s that?” asked Gazonal.
That was an old woman, in a
bonnet which had spent six months in a show-case,
a very pretentious gown and a faded tartan shawl, whose
face had been buried twenty years of her life in a
damp lodge, and whose swollen hand-bag betokened no
better social position than that of an ex-portress.
With her was a slim little girl, whose eyes, fringed
with black lashes, had lost their innocence and showed
great weariness; her face, of a pretty shape, was
fresh and her hair abundant, her forehead charming
but audacious, her bust thin,—in other
words, an unripe fruit.
“That,” replied Bixiou, “is a rat
tied to its mother.”
“A rat!—what’s that?”
“That particular rat,”
said Leon, with a friendly nod to Mademoiselle Ninette,
“may perhaps win your suit for you.”
Gazonal bounded; but Bixiou had held
him by the arm ever since they left the cafe, thinking
perhaps that the flush on his face was rather vivid.
“That rat, who is just leaving
a rehearsal at the Opera-house, is going home to eat
a miserable dinner, and will return about three o’clock
to dress, if she dances in the ballet this evening—as
she will, to-day being Monday. This rat is already
an old rat for she is thirteen years of age.
Two years from now that creature may be worth sixty
thousand francs; she will be all or nothing, a great
danseuse or a marcheuse, a celebrated person or a
vulgar courtesan. She has worked hard since she
was eight years old. Such as you see her, she
is worn out with fatigue; she exhausted her body this
morning in the dancing-class, she is just leaving
a rehearsal where the evolutions are as complicated
as a Chinese puzzle; and she’ll go through them
again to-night. The rat is one of the primary
elements of the Opera; she is to the leading danseuse
what a junior clerk is to a notary. The rat is
—hope.”
“Who produces the rat?” asked Gazonal.
“Porters, paupers, actors, dancers,”
replied Bixiou. “Only the lowest depths
of poverty could force a child to subject her feet
and joints to positive torture, to keep herself virtuous
out of mere speculation until she is eighteen years
of age, and to live with some horrible old crone like
a beautiful plant in a dressing of manure. You
shall see now a procession defiling before you, one
after the other, of men of talent, little and great,
artists in seed or flower, who are raising to the
glory of France that every-day monument called the
Opera, an assemblage of forces, wills, and forms of
genius, nowhere collected as in Paris.
“I have already seen the Opera,”
said Gazonal, with a self-sufficient air.
“Yes, from a three-francs-sixty-sous
seat among the gods,” replied the landscape
painter; “just as you have seen Paris in the
rue Croix-des-Petits-Champs, without knowing anything
about it. What did they give at the Opera when
you were there?”
“Guillaume Tell.”
“Well,” said Leon, “Matilde’s
grand DUO must have delighted you. What do you
suppose that charming singer did when she left the
stage?”
“She—well, what?”
“She ate two bloody mutton-chops which her servant
had ready for her.”
“Pooh! nonsense!”
“Malibran kept up on brandy—but
it killed her in the end. Another thing!
You have seen the ballet, and you’ll now see
it defiling past you in its every-day clothes, without
knowing that the face of your lawsuit depends on a
pair of those legs.”
“My lawsuit!”
“See, cousin, here comes what is called a marcheuse.”
Leon pointed to one of those handsome
creatures who at twenty-five years of age have lived
sixty, and whose beauty is so real and so sure of
being cultivated that they make no display of it.
She was tall, and walked well, with the arrogant look
of a dandy; her toilet was remarkable for its ruinous
simplicity.
“That is Carabine,” said
Bixiou, who gave her, as did Leon, a slight nod to
which she responded by a smile.
“There’s another who may
possibly get your prefect turned out.”
“A marcheuse!—but what is that?”
“A marcheuse is a rat of great
beauty whom her mother, real or fictitious, has sold
as soon as it was clear she would become neither first,
second, nor third danseuse, but who prefers the occupation
of coryphee to any other, for the main reason that
having spent her youth in that employment she is unfitted
for any other. She has been rejected at the minor
theatres where they want danseuses; she has not succeeded
in the three towns where ballets are given; she has
not had the money, or perhaps the desire to go to
foreign countries—for perhaps you don’t
know that the great school of dancing in Paris supplies
the whole world with male and female dancers.
Thus a rat who becomes a marcheuse,—that
is to say, an ordinary figurante in a ballet,—must
have some solid attachment which keeps her in Paris:
either a rich man she does not love or a poor man she
loves too well. The one you have just seen pass
will probably dress and redress three times this evening,—as
a princess, a peasant-girl, a Tyrolese; by which she
will earn about two hundred francs a month.”
“She is better dressed than my prefect’s
wife.”
“If you should go to her house,”
said Bixiou, “you would find there a chamber-maid,
a cook, and a man-servant. She occupies a fine
apartment in the rue Saint-Georges; in short, she
is, in proportion to French fortunes of the present
day compared with those of former times, a relic of
the eighteenth century ‘opera-girl.’
Carabine is a power; at this moment she governs du
Tillet, a banker who is very influential in the Chamber
of Deputies.”
“And above these two rounds
in the ballet ladder what comes next?” asked
Gazonal.
“Look!” said his cousin,
pointing to an elegant caleche which was turning at
that moment from the boulevard into the rue Grange-Bateliere,
“there’s one of the leading danseuses whose
name on the posters attracts all Paris. That
woman earns sixty thousand francs a year and lives
like a princess; the price of your manufactory all
told wouldn’t suffice to buy you the privilege
of bidding her good-morning a dozen times.”
“Do you see,” said Bixiou,
“that young man who is sitting on the front
seat of her carriage? Well, he’s a viscount
who bears a fine old name; he’s her first gentleman
of the bed-chamber; does all her business with the
newspapers; carries messages of peace or war in the
morning to the director of the Opera; and takes charge
of the applause which salutes her as she enters or
leaves the stage.”
“Well, well, my good friends,
that’s the finishing touch! I see now that
I knew nothing of the ways of Paris.”
“At any rate, you are learning
what you can see in ten minutes in the Passage de
l’Opera,” said Bixiou. “Look
there.”
Two persons, a man and a woman, came
out of the Passage at that moment. The woman
was neither plain nor pretty; but her dress had that
distinction of style and cut and color which reveals
an artist; the man had the air of a singer.
“There,” said Bixiou,
“is a baritone and a second danseuse. The
baritone is a man of immense talent, but a baritone
voice being only an accessory to the other parts he
scarcely earns what the second danseuse earns.
The danseuse, who was celebrated before Taglioni and
Ellsler appeared, has preserved to our day some of
the old traditions of the character dance and pantomime.
If the two others had not revealed in the art of dancing
a poetry hitherto unperceived, she would have been
the leading talent; as it is, she is reduced to the
second line. But for all that, she fingers her
thirty thousand francs a year, and her faithful friend
is a peer of France, very influential in the Chamber.
And see! there’s a danseuse of the third order,
who, as a dancer, exists only through the omnipotence
of a newspaper. If her engagement were not renewed
the ministry would have one more journalistic enemy
on its back. The corps de ballet is a great power;
consequently it is considered better form in the upper
ranks of dandyism and politics to have relations with
dance than with song. In the stalls, where the
habitues of the Opera congregate, the saying ‘Monsieur
is all for singing’ is a form of ridicule.”
A short man with a common face, quite
simply dressed, passed them at this moment.
“There’s the other half
of the Opera receipts—that man who just
went by; the tenor. There is no longer any play,
poem, music, or representation of any kind possible
unless some celebrated tenor can reach a certain note.
The tenor is love, he is the Voice that touches the
heart, that vibrates in the soul, and his value is
reckoned at a much higher salary than that of a minister.
One hundred thousand francs for a throat, one hundred
thousand francs for a couple of ankle-bones,—those
are the two financial scourges of the Opera.”
“I am amazed,” said Gazonal,
“at the hundreds of thousands of francs walking
about here.”
“We’ll amaze you a good
deal more, my dear cousin,” said Leon de Lora.
“We’ll take Paris as an artist takes his
violoncello, and show you how it is played,—in
short, how people amuse themselves in Paris.”
“It is a kaleidoscope with a
circumference of twenty miles,” cried Gazonal.
“Before piloting monsieur about,
I have to see Gaillard,” said Bixiou.
“But we can use Gaillard for
the cousin,” replied Leon.
“What sort of machine is that?” asked
Gazonal.
“He isn’t a machine, he
is a machinist. Gaillard is a friend of ours
who has ended a miscellaneous career by becoming the
editor of a newspaper, and whose character and finances
are governed by movements comparable to those of the
tides. Gaillard can contribute to make you win
your lawsuit—”
“It is lost.”
“That’s the very moment to win it,”
replied Bixiou.
When they reached Theodore Gaillard’s
abode, which was now in the rue de Menars, the valet
ushered the three friends into a boudoir and asked
them to wait, as monsieur was in secret conference.
“With whom?” asked Bixiou.
“With a man who is selling him
the incarceration of an unseizable debtor,”
replied a handsome woman who now appeared in a charming
morning toilet.
“In that case, my dear Suzanne,”
said Bixiou, “I am certain we may go in.”
“Oh! what a beautiful creature!” said
Gazonal.
“That is Madame Gaillard,”
replied Leon de Lora, speaking low into his cousin’s
ear. “She is the most humble-minded woman
in Paris, for she had the public and has contented
herself with a husband.”
“What is your will, messeigneurs?”
said the facetious editor, seeing his two friends
and imitating Frederic Lemaitre.
Theodore Gaillard, formerly a wit,
had ended by becoming a stupid man in consequence
of remaining constantly in one centre,—a
moral phenomenon frequently to be observed in Paris.
His principal method of conversation consisted in
sowing his speeches with sayings taken from plays
then in vogue and pronounced in imitation of well-known
actors.
“We have come to blague,” said Leon.
“‘Again, young men’” (Odry
in the Saltimbauques).
“Well, this time, we’ve
got him, sure,” said Gaillard’s other visitor,
apparently by way of conclusion.
“Are you sure of it,
pere Fromenteau?” asked Gaillard. “This
it the eleventh time you’ve caught him at night
and missed him in the morning.”
“How could I help it? I
never saw such a debtor! he’s a locomotive;
goes to sleep in Paris and wakes up in the Seine-et-Oise.
A safety lock I call him.” Seeing a smile
on Gaillard’s face he added: “That’s
a saying in our business. Pinch a man, means arrest
him, lock him up. The criminal police have another
term. Vidoeq said to his man, ’You are
served’; that’s funnier, for it means the
guillotine.”
A nudge from Bixiou made Gazonal all eyes and ears.
“Does monsieur grease my paws?”
asked Fromenteau of Gaillard, in a threatening but
cool tone.
“‘A question that of fifty
centimes’” (Les Saltimbauques), replied
the editor, taking out five francs and offering them
to Fromenteau.
“And the rapscallions?” said the man.
“What rapscallions?” asked Gaillard.
“Those I employ,” replied Fromenteau calmly.
“Is there a lower depth still?” asked
Bixiou.
“Yes, monsieur,” said
the spy. “Some people give us information
without knowing they do so, and without getting paid
for it. I put fools and ninnies below rapscallions.”
“They are often original, and witty, your rapscallions!”
said Leon.
“Do you belong to the police?”
asked Gazonal, eying with uneasy curiosity the hard,
impassible little man, who was dressed like the third
clerk in a sheriff’s office.
“Which police do you mean?” asked Fromenteau.
“There are several?”
“As many as five,” replied
the man. “Criminal, the head of which was
Vidoeq; secret police, which keeps an eye on the other
police, the head of it being always unknown; political
police,—that’s Fouche’s.
Then there’s the police of Foreign Affairs, and
finally, the palace police (of the Emperor, Louis
XVIII., etc.), always squabbling with that of
the quai Malaquais. It came to an end under Monsieur
Decazes. I belonged to the police of Louis XVIII.;
I’d been in it since 1793, with that poor Contenson.”
The four gentlemen looked at each
other with one thought: “How many heads
he must have brought to the scaffold!”
“Now-a-days, they are trying
to get on without us. Folly!” continued
the little man, who began to seem terrible. “Since
1830 they want honest men at the prefecture!
I resigned, and I’ve made myself a small vocation
by arresting for debt.”
“He is the right arm of the
commercial police,” said Gaillard in Bixiou’s
ear, “but you can never find out who pays him
most, the debtor or the creditor.”
“The more rascally a business
is, the more honor it needs. I’m for him
who pays me best,” continued Fromenteau addressing
Gaillard. “You want to recover fifty thousand
francs and you talk farthings to your means of action.
Give me five hundred francs and your man is pinched
to-night, for we spotted him yesterday!”
“Five hundred francs for you
alone!” cried Theodore Gaillard.
“Lizette wants a shawl,”
said the spy, not a muscle of his face moving.
“I call her Lizette because of Beranger.”
“You have a Lizette, and you
stay in such a business!” cried the virtuous
Gazonal.
“It is amusing! People
may cry up the pleasures of hunting and fishing as
much as they like but to stalk a man in Paris is far
better fun.”
“Certainly,” said Gazonal,
reflectively, speaking to himself, “they must
have great talent.”
“If I were to enumerate the
qualities which make a man remarkable in our vocation,”
said Fromenteau, whose rapid glance had enabled him
to fathom Gazonal completely, “you’d think
I was talking of a man of genius. First, we must
have the eyes of a lynx; next, audacity (to tear into
houses like bombs, accost the servants as if we knew
them, and propose treachery—always agreed
to); next, memory, sagacity, invention (to make schemes,
conceived rapidly, never the same—for spying
must be guided by the characters and habits of the
persons spied upon; it is a gift of heaven); and,
finally, agility, vigor. All these facilities
and qualities, monsieur, are depicted on the door of
the Gymnase-Amoros as Virtue. Well, we must have
them all, under pain of losing the salaries given
us by the State, the rue de Jerusalem, or the minister
of Commerce.”
“You certainly seem to me a
remarkable man,” said Gazonal.
Fromenteau looked at the provincial
without replying, without betraying the smallest sign
of feeling, and departed, bowing to no one,—a
trait of real genius.
“Well, cousin, you have now
seen the police incarnate,” said Leon to Gazonal.
“It has something the effect
of a dinner-pill,” said the worthy provincial,
while Gaillard and Bixiou were talking together in
a low voice.
“I’ll give you an answer
to-night at Carabine’s,” said Gaillard
aloud, re-seating himself at his desk without seeing
or bowing to Gazonal.
“He is a rude fellow!”
cried the Southerner as they left the room.
“His paper has twenty-two thousand
subscribers,” said Leon de Lora. “He
is one of the five great powers of the day, and he
hasn’t, in the morning, the time to be polite.
Now,” continued Leon, speaking to Bixiou, “if
we are going to the Chamber to help him with his lawsuit
let us take the longest way round.”
“Words said by great men are
like silver-gilt spoons with the gilt washed off;
by dint of repetition they lose their brilliancy,”
said Bixiou. “Where shall we go?”
“Here, close by, to our hatter?” replied
Leon.
“Bravo!” cried Bixiou.
“If we keep on in this way, we shall have an
amusing day of it.”
“Gazonal,” said Leon,
“I shall make the man pose for you; but mind
that you keep a serious face, like the king on a five-franc
piece, for you are going to see a choice original,
a man whose importance has turned his head. In
these days, my dear fellow, under our new political
dispensation, every human being tries to cover himself
with glory, and most of them cover themselves with
ridicule; hence a lot of living caricatures quite
new to the world.”
“If everybody gets glory, who
can be famous?” said Gazonal.
“Fame! none but fools want that,”
replied Bixiou. “Your cousin wears the
cross, but I’m the better dressed of the two,
and it is I whom people are looking at.”
After this remark, which may explain
why orators and other great statesmen no longer put
the ribbon in their buttonholes when in Paris, Leon
showed Gazonal a sign, bearing, in golden letters,
the illustrious name of “Vital, successor to
Finot, manufacturer of hats” (no longer “hatter”
as formerly), whose advertisements brought in more
money to the newspapers than those of any half-dozen
vendors of pills or sugarplums,—the author,
moreover, of an essay on hats.
“My dear fellow,” said
Bixiou to Gazonal, pointing to the splendors of the
show-window, “Vital has forty thousand francs
a year from invested property.”
“And he stays a hatter!”
cried the Southerner, with a bound that almost broke
the arm which Bixiou had linked in his.
“You shall see the man,”
said Leon. “You need a hat and you shall
have one gratis.”
“Is Monsieur Vital absent?”
asked Bixiou, seeing no one behind the desk.
“Monsieur is correcting proof
in his study,” replied the head clerk.
“Hein! what style!” said
Leon to his cousin; then he added, addressing the
clerk: “Could we speak to him without injury
to his inspiration?”
“Let those gentlemen enter,” said a voice.
It was a bourgeois voice, the voice
of one eligible to the Chamber, a powerful voice,
a wealthy voice.
Vital deigned to show himself, dressed
entirely in black cloth, with a splendid frilled shirt
adorned with one diamond. The three friends observed
a young and pretty woman sitting near the desk, working
at some embroidery.
Vital is a man between thirty and
forty years of age, with a natural joviality now repressed
by ambitious ideas. He is blessed with that medium
height which is the privilege of sound organizations.
He is rather plump, and takes great pains with his
person. His forehead is getting bald, but he
uses that circumstance to give himself the air of
a man consumed by thought. It is easy to see by
the way his wife looks at him and listens to him that
she believes in the genius and glory of her husband.
Vital loves artists, not that he has any taste for
art, but from fellowship; for he feels himself an
artist, and makes this felt by disclaiming that title
of nobility, and placing himself with constant premeditation
at so great a distance from the arts that persons
may be forced to say to him: “You have raised
the construction of hats to the height of a science.”
“Have you at last discovered
a hat to suit me?” asked Leon de Lora.
“Why, monsieur! in fifteen days?”
replied Vital, “and for you! Two months
would hardly suffice to invent a shape in keeping with
your countenance. See, here is your lithographic
portrait: I have studied it most carefully.
I would not give myself that trouble for a prince;
but you are more; you are an artist, and you understand
me.”
“This is one of our greatest
inventors,” said Bixiou presenting Gazonal.
“He might be as great as Jacquart if he would
only let himself die. Our friend, a manufacturer
of cloth, has discovered a method of replacing the
indigo in old blue coats, and he wants to see you
as another great phenomenon, because he has heard of
your saying, ‘The hat is the man.’
That speech of yours enraptured him. Ah!
Vital, you have faith; you believe in something; you
have enthusiasm for your work.”
Vital scarcely listened; he grew pale with pleasure.
“Rise, my wife! Monsieur is a man of science.”
Madame Vital rose at her husband’s gesture.
Gazonal bowed to her.
“Shall I have the honor to cover
your head?” said Vital, with joyful obsequiousness.
“At the same price as mine,” interposed
Bixiou.
“Of course, of course; I ask
no other fee than to be quoted by you, messieurs—
Monsieur needs a picturesque hat, something in the
style of Monsieur Lousteau’s,” he continued,
looking at Gazonal with the eye of a master.
“I will consider it.”
“You give yourself a great deal of trouble,”
said Gazonal.
“Oh! for a few persons only;
for those who know how to appreciate the value of
the pains I bestow upon them. Now, take the aristocracy
—there is but one man there who has truly
comprehended the Hat; and that is the Prince de Bethune.
How is it that men do not consider, as women do, that
the hat is the first thing that strikes the eye?
And why have they never thought of changing the present
system, which is, let us say it frankly, ignoble?
Yes, ignoble; and yet a Frenchman is, of all nationalities,
the one most persistent in this folly! I know
the difficulties of a change, messieurs. I don’t
speak of my own writings on the matter, which, as
I think, approach it philosophically, but simply as
a hatter. I have myself studied means to accentuate
the infamous head-covering to which France is now
enslaved until I succeed in overthrowing it.”
So saying he pointed to the hideous hat in vogue at
the present day.
“Behold the enemy, messieurs,”
he continued. “How is it that the wittiest
and most satirical people on earth will consent to
wear upon their heads a bit of stove-pipe?—as
one of our great writers has called it. Here
are some of the infections I have been able to give
to those atrocious lines,” he added, pointing
to a number of his creations. “But, although
I am able to conform them to the character of each
wearer—for, as you see, there are the hats
of a doctor, a grocer, a dandy, an artist, a fat man,
a thin man, and so forth—the style itself
remains horrible. Seize, I beg of you, my whole
thought—”
He took up a hat, low-crowned and wide-brimmed.
“This,” he continued,
“is the old hat of Claude Vignon, a great critic,
in the days when he was a free man and a free-liver.
He has lately come round to the ministry; they’ve
made him a professor, a librarian; he writes now for
the Debats only; they’ve appointed him Master
of Petitions with a salary of sixteen thousand francs;
he earns four thousand more out of his paper, and
he is decorated. Well, now see his new hat.”
And Vital showed them a hat of a form
and design which was truly expressive of the juste-milieu.
“You ought to have made him
a Punch and Judy hat!” cried Gazonal.
“You are a man of genius, Monsieur Vital,”
said Leon.
Vital bowed.
“Would you kindly tell me why
the shops of your trade in Paris remain open late
at night,—later than the cafes and the wineshops?
That fact puzzles me very much,” said Gazonal.
“In the first place, our shops
are much finer when lighted up than they are in the
daytime; next, where we sell ten hats in the daytime
we sell fifty at night.”
“Everything is queer in Paris,” said Leon.
“Thanks to my efforts and my
successes,” said Vital, returning to the course
of his self-laudation, “we are coming to hats
with round headpieces. It is to that I tend!”
“What obstacle is there?” asked Gazonal.
“Cheapness, monsieur. In
the first place, very handsome silk hats can be built
for fifteen francs, which kills our business; for in
Paris no one ever has fifteen francs in his pocket
to spend on a hat. If a beaver hat costs thirty,
it is still the same thing— When I say
beaver, I ought to state that there are not ten pounds
of beaver skins left in France. That article
is worth three hundred and fifty francs a pound, and
it takes an ounce for a hat. Besides, a beaver
hat isn’t really worth anything; the skin takes
a wretched dye; gets rusty in ten minutes under the
sun, and heat puts it out of shape as well. What
we call ‘beaver’ in the trade is neither
more nor less than hare’s-skin. The best
qualities are made from the back of the animal, the
second from the sides, the third from the belly.
I confide to you these trade secrets because you are
men of honor. But whether a man has hare’s-skin
or silk on his head, fifteen or thirty francs in short,
the problem is always insoluble. Hats must be
paid for in cash, and that is why the hat remains
what it is. The honor of vestural France will
be saved on the day that gray hats with round crowns
can be made to cost a hundred francs. We could
then, like the tailors, give credit. To reach
that result men must resolve to wear buckles, gold
lace, plumes, and the brims lined with satin, as in
the days of Louis XIII. and Louis XIV. Our business,
which would then enter the domain of fancy, would
increase tenfold. The markets of the world should
belong to France; Paris will forever give the tone
to women’s fashions, and yet the hats which
all Frenchmen wear to-day are made in every country
on earth! There are ten millions of foreign money
to be gained annually for France in that question—”
“A revolution!” cried Bixiou, pretending
enthusiasm.
“Yes, and a radical one; for the form must be
changed.”
“You are happy after the manner
of Luther in dreaming of reform,” said Leon.
“Yes, monsieur. Ah! if
a dozen or fifteen artists, capitalists, or dandies
who set the tone would only have courage for twenty-four
hours France would gain a splendid commercial battle!
To succeed in this reform I would give my whole fortune!
Yes, my sole ambition is to regenerate the hat and
disappear.”
“The man is colossal,”
said Gazonal, as they left the shop; “but I
assure you that all your originals so far have a touch
of the Southerner about them.”
“Let us go this way,”
said Bixiou pointing to the rue Saint-Marc.