Therich uncle
Before proceeding further, persons
of an exact turn of mind may like to read a species
of family inventory, so as to understand the degrees
of relationship which connected the old man thus suddenly
converted to religion with these three heads of families
or their wives. This cross-breeding of families
in the remote provinces might be made the subject
of many instructive reflections.
There are but three or four houses
of the lesser nobility in Nemours; among them, at
the period of which we write, that of the family of
Portenduere was the most important. These exclusives
visited none but nobles who possessed lands or chateaus
in the neighbourhood; of the latter we may mention
the d’Aiglemonts, owners of the beautiful estate
of Saint-Lange, and the Marquis du Rouvre, whose property,
crippled by mortgages, was closely watched by the
bourgeoisie. The nobles of the town had no money.
Madame de Portenduere’s sole possessions were
a farm which brought a rental of forty-seven hundred
francs, and her town house.
In opposition to this very insignificant
Faubourg St. Germain was a group of a dozen rich families,
those of retired millers, or former merchants; in
short a miniature bourgeoisie; below which, again,
lived and moved the retail shopkeepers, the proletaries
and the peasantry. The bourgeoisie presented
(like that of the Swiss cantons and of other small
countries) the curious spectacle of the ramifications
of certain autochthonous families, old-fashioned and
unpolished perhaps, but who rule a whole region and
pervade it, until nearly all its inhabitants are cousins.
Under Louis XI., an epoch at which the commons first
made real names of their surnames (some of which are
united with those of feudalism) the bourgeoisie of
Nemours was made up of Minorets, Massins, Levraults
and Cremieres. Under Louis XIII. these four families
had already produced the Massin-Cremieres, the Levrault-Massins,
the Massin-Minorets, the Minoret-Minorets, the Cremiere-Levraults,
the Levrault-Minoret-Massins, Massin-Levraults, Minoret-Massins,
Massin-Massins, and Cremiere-Massins,—all
these varied with juniors and diversified with the
names of eldest sons, as for instance, Cremiere-Francois,
Levrault-Jacques, Jean-Minoret—enough to
drive a Pere Anselme of the People frantic,—if
the people should ever want a genealogist.
The variations of this family kaleidoscope
of four branches was now so complicated by births
and marriages that the genealogical tree of the bourgeoisie
of Nemours would have puzzled the Benedictines of the
Almanach of Gotha, in spite of the atomic science with
which they arrange those zigzags of German alliances.
For a long time the Minorets occupied the tanneries,
the Cremieres kept the mills, the Massins were in
trade, and the Levraults continued farmers. Fortunately
for the neighbourhood these four stocks threw out suckers
instead of depending only on their tap-roots; they
scattered cuttings by the expatriation of sons who
sought their fortune elsewhere; for instance, there
are Minorets who are cutlers at Melun; Levraults at
Montargis; Massins at Orleans; and Cremieres of some
importance in Paris. Divers are the destinies
of these bees from the parent hive. Rich Massins
employ, of course, the poor working Massins—just
as Austria and Prussia take the German princes into
their service. It may happen that a public office
is managed by a Minoret millionaire and guarded by
a Minoret sentinel. Full of the same blood and
called by the same name (for sole likeness), these
four roots had ceaselessly woven a human network of
which each thread was delicate or strong, fine or
coarse, as the case might be. The same blood was
in the head and in the feet and in the heart, in the
working hands, in the weakly lungs, in the forehead
big with genius.
The chiefs of the clan were faithful
to the little town, where the ties of family were
relaxed or tightened according to the events which
happened under this curious cognomenism. In whatever
part of France you may be, you will find the same
thing under changed names, but without the poetic
charm which feudalism gave to it, and which Walter
Scott’s genius reproduced so faithfully.
Let us look a little higher and examine humanity as
it appears in history. All the noble families
of the eleventh century, most of them (except the royal
race of Capet) extinct to-day, will be found to have
contributed to the birth of the Rohans, Montmorencys,
Beauffremonts, and Mortemarts of our time,—in
fact they will all be found in the blood of the last
gentleman who is indeed a gentleman. In other
words, every bourgeois is cousin to a bourgeois, and
every noble is cousin to a noble. A splendid page
of biblical genealogy shows that in one thousand years
three families, Shem, Ham, and Japhet, peopled the
globe. One family may become a nation; unfortunately,
a nation may become one family. To prove this
we need only search back through our ancestors and
see their accumulation, which time increases into
a retrograde geometric progression, which multiplies
of itself; reminding us of the calculation of the
wise man who, being told to choose a reward from the
king of Persia for inventing chess, asked for one ear
of wheat for the first move on the board, the reward
to be doubled for each succeeding move; when it was
found that the kingdom was not large enough to pay
it. The net-work of the nobility, hemmed in by
the net-work of the bourgeoisie,—the antagonism
of two protected races, one protected by fixed institutions,
the other by the active patience of labor and the
shrewdness of commerce,—produced the revolution
of 1789. The two races almost reunited are to-day
face to face with collaterals without a heritage.
What are they to do? Our political future is
big with the answer.
The family of the man who under Louis
XV. was simply called Minoret was so numerous that
one of the five children (the Minoret whose entrance
into the parish church caused such interest) went to
Paris to seek his fortune, and seldom returned to
his native town, until he came to receive his share
of the inheritance of his grandfather. After
suffering many things, like all young men of firm will
who struggle for a place in the brilliant world of
Paris, this son of the Minorets reached a nobler destiny
than he had, perhaps, dreamed of at the start.
He devoted himself, in the first instance, to medicine,
a profession which demands both talent and a cheerful
nature, but the latter qualification even more than
talent. Backed by Dupont de Nemours, connected
by a lucky chance with the Abbe Morellet (whom Voltaire
nicknamed Mords-les), and protected by the Encyclopedists,
Doctor Minoret attached himself as liegeman to the
famous Doctor Bordeu, the friend of Diderot, D’Alembert,
Helvetius, the Baron d’Holbach and Grimm, in
whose presence he felt himself a mere boy. These
men, influenced by Bordeu’s example, became interested
in Minoret, who, about the year 1777, found himself
with a very good practice among deists, encyclopedists,
sensualists, materialists, or whatever you are pleased
to call the rich philosophers of that period.
Though Minoret was very little of
a humbug, he invented the famous balm of Lelievre,
so much extolled by the “Mercure de France,”
the weekly organ of the Encyclopedists, in whose columns
it was permanently advertised. The apothecary
Lelievre, a clever man, saw a stroke of business where
Minoret had only seen a new preparation for the dispensary,
and he loyally shared his profits with the doctor,
who was a pupil of Rouelle in chemistry as well as
of Bordeu in medicine. Less than that would make
a man a materialist.
The doctor married for love in 1778,
during the reign of the “Nouvelle Heloise,”
when persons did occasionally marry for that reason.
His wife was a daughter of the famous harpsichordist
Valentin Mirouet, a celebrated musician, frail and
delicate, whom the Revolution slew. Minoret knew
Robespierre intimately, for he had once been instrumental
in awarding him a gold medal for a dissertation on
the following subject: “What is the origin
of the opinion that covers a whole family with the
shame attaching to the public punishment of a guilty
member of it? Is that opinion more harmful than
useful? If yes, in what way can the harm be warded
off.” The Royal Academy of Arts and Sciences
at Metz, to which Minoret belonged, must possess this
dissertation in the original. Though, thanks
to this friendship, the Doctor’s wife need have
had no fear, she was so in dread of going to the scaffold
that her terror increased a disposition to heart disease
caused by the over-sensitiveness of her nature.
In spite of all the precautions taken by the man who
idolized her, Ursula unfortunately met the tumbril
of victims among whom was Madame Roland, and the shock
caused her death. Minoret, who in tenderness
to his wife had refused her nothing, and had given
her a life of luxury, found himself after her death
almost a poor man. Robespierre gave him an appointment
as surgeon-in-charge of a hospital.
Though the name of Minoret obtained
during the lively debates to which mesmerism gave
rise a certain celebrity which occasionally recalled
him to the minds of his relatives, still the Revolution
was so great a destroyer of family relations that
in 1813 Nemours knew little of Doctor Minoret, who
was induced to think of returning there to die, like
the hare to its form, by a circumstance that was wholly
accidental.
Who has not felt in traveling through
France, where the eye is often wearied by the monotony
of plains, the charming sensation of coming suddenly,
when the eye is prepared for a barren landscape, upon
a fresh cool valley, watered by a river, with a little
town sheltering beneath a cliff like a swarm of bees
in the hollow of an old willow? Wakened by the
“hu! hu!” of the postilion as he walks
beside his horses, we shake off sleep and admire,
like a dream within a dream, the beautiful scene which
is to the traveler what a noble passage in a book
is to a reader,—a brilliant thought of Nature.
Such is the sensation caused by a first sight of Nemours
as we approach it from Burgundy. We see it encircled
with bare rocks, gray, black, white, fantastic in
shape like those we find in the forest of Fontainebleau;
from them spring scattered trees, clearly defined against
the sky, which give to this particular rock formation
the dilapidated look of a crumbling wall. Here
ends the long wooded hill which creeps from Nemours
to Bouron, skirting the road. At the bottom of
this irregular ampitheater lie meadow-lands through
which flows the Loing, forming sheets of water with
many falls. This delightful landscape, which
continues the whole way to Montargis, is like an opera
scene, for its effects really seem to have been studied.
One morning Doctor Minoret, who had
been summoned into Burgundy by a rich patient, was
returning in all haste to Paris. Not having mentioned
at the last relay the route he intended to take, he
was brought without his knowledge through Nemours,
and beheld once more, on waking from a nap, the scenery
in which his childhood had been passed. He had
lately lost many of his old friends. The votary
of the Encyclopedists had witnessed the conversion
of La Harpe; he had buried Lebrun-Pindare and Marie-Joseph
de Chenier, and Morellet, and Madame Helvetius.
He assisted at the quasi-fall of Voltaire when assailed
by Geoffroy, the continuator of Freton. For some
time past he had thought of retiring, and so, when
his post chaise stopped at the head of the Grand’Rue
of Nemours, his heart prompted him to inquire for his
family. Minoret-Levrault, the post master, came
forward himself to see the doctor, who discovered
him to be the son of his eldest brother. The
nephew presented the doctor to his wife, the only daughter
of the late Levrault-Cremiere, who had died twelve
years earlier, leaving him the post business and the
finest inn in Nemours.
“Well, nephew,” said the
doctor, “have I any other relatives?”
“My aunt Minoret, your sister,
married a Massin-Massin—”
“Yes, I know, the bailiff of Saint-Lange.”
“She died a widow leaving an
only daughter, who has lately married a Cremiere-Cremiere,
a fine young fellow, still without a place.”
“Ah! she is my own niece.
Now, as my brother, the sailor, died a bachelor, and
Captain Minoret was killed at Monte-Legino, and here
I am, that ends the paternal line. Have I any
relations on the maternal side? My mother was
a Jean-Massin-Levrault.”
“Of the Jean-Massin-Levrault’s
there’s only one left,” answered Minoret-Levrault,
“namely, Jean-Massin, who married Monsieur Cremiere-Levrault-Dionis,
a purveyor of forage, who perished on the scaffold.
His wife died of despair and without a penny, leaving
one daughter, married to a Levrault-Minoret, a farmer
at Montereau, who is doing well; their daughter has
just married a Massin-Levrault, notary’s clerk
at Montargis, where his father is a locksmith.”
“So I’ve plenty of heirs,”
said the doctor gayly, immediately proposing to take
a walk through Nemours accompanied by his nephew.
The Loing runs through the town in
a waving line, banked by terraced gardens and neat
houses, the aspect of which makes one fancy that happiness
must abide there sooner than elsewhere. When the
doctor turned into the Rue des Bourgeois, Minoret-Levrault
pointed out the property of Levrault-Levrault, a rich
iron merchant in Paris who, he said, had just died.
“The place is for sale, uncle,
and a very pretty house it is; there’s a charming
garden running down to the river.”
“Let us go in,” said the
doctor, seeing, at the farther end of a small paved
courtyard, a house standing between the walls of the
two neighbouring houses which were masked by clumps
of trees and climbing-plants.
“It is built over a cellar,”
said the doctor, going up the steps of a high portico
adorned with vases of blue and white pottery in which
geraniums were growing.
Cut in two, like the majority of provincial
houses, by a long passage which led from the courtyard
to the garden, the house had only one room to the
right, a salon lighted by four windows, two on the
courtyard and two on the garden; but Levrault-Levrault
had used one of these windows to make an entrance
to a long greenhouse built of brick which extended
from the salon towards the river, ending in a horrible
Chinese pagoda.
“Good! by building a roof to
that greenhouse and laying a floor,” said old
Minoret, “I could put my book there and make
a very comfortable study of that extraordinary bit
of architecture at the end.”
On the other side of the passage,
toward the garden, was the dining-room, decorated
in imitation of black lacquer with green and gold
flowers; this was separated from the kitchen by the
well of the staircase. Communication with the
kitchen was had through a little pantry built behind
the staircase, the kitchen itself looking into the
courtyard through windows with iron railings.
There were two chambers on the next floor, and above
them, attic rooms sheathed in wood, which were fairly
habitable. After examining the house rapidly,
and observing that it was covered with trellises from
top to bottom, on the side of the courtyard as well
as on that to the garden,—which ended in
a terrace overlooking the river and adorned with pottery
vases,—the doctor remarked:—
“Levrault-Levrault must have
spend a good deal of money here.”
“Ho! I should think so,”
answered Minoret-Levrault. “He liked flowers
—nonsense! ‘What do they bring
in?’ says my wife. You saw inside there
how an artist came from Paris to paint flowers in fresco
in the corridor. He put those enormous mirrors
everywhere. The ceilings were all re-made with
cornices which cost six francs a foot. The dining-room
floor is in marquetry—perfect folly!
The house won’t sell for a penny the more.”
“Well, nephew, buy it for me:
let me know what you do about it; here’s my
address. The rest I leave to my notary. Who
lives opposite?” he asked, as they left the
house.
“Emigres,” answered the
post master, “named Portenduere.”
The house once bought, the illustrious
doctor, instead of leaving there, wrote to his nephew
to let it. The Folie-Levraught was therefore
occupied by the notary of Nemours, who about that time
sold his practice to Dionis, his head-clerk, and died
two years later, leaving the house on the doctor’s
hands, just at the time when the fate of Napoleon
was being decided in the neighbourhood. The doctor’s
heirs, at first misled, had by this time decided that
his thought of returning to his native place was merely
a rich man’s fancy, and that probably he had
some tie in Paris which would keep him there and cheat
them of their hoped-for inheritance. However,
Minoret-Levrault’s wife seized the occasion
to write him a letter. The old man replied that
as soon as peace was signed, the roads cleared of
soldiers, and safe communications established, he
meant to go and live at Nemours. He did, in fact,
put in an appearance with two of his clients, the
architect of his hospital and an upholsterer, who took
charge of the repairs, the indoor arrangements, and
the transportation of the furniture. Madame Minoret-Levrault
proposed the cook of the late notary as caretaker,
and the woman was accepted.
When the heirs heard that their uncle
and great-uncle Minoret was really coming to live
in Nemours, they were seized (in spite of the political
events which were just then weighing so heavily on
Brie and on the Gatinais) with a devouring curiosity,
which was not surprising. Was he rich? Economical
or spendthrift? Would he leave a fine fortune
or nothing? Was his property in annuities?
In the end they found out what follows, but only by
taking infinite pains and employing much subterraneous
spying.
After the death of his wife, Ursula
Mirouet, and between the years 1789 and 1813, the
doctor (who had been appointed consulting physician
to the Emperor in 1805) must have made a good deal
of money; but no one knew how much. He lived
simply, without other extravagancies than a carriage
by the year and a sumptuous apartment. He received
no guests, and dined out almost every day. His
housekeeper, furious at not being allowed to go with
him to Nemours, told Zelie Levrault, the post master’s
wife, that she knew the doctor had fourteen thousand
francs a year on the “grand-livre.”
Now, after twenty years’ exercise of a profession
which his position as head of a hospital, physician
to the Emperor, and member of the Institute, rendered
lucrative, these fourteen thousand francs a year showed
only one hundred and sixty thousand francs laid by.
To have saved only eight thousand francs a year the
doctor must have had either many vices or many virtues
to gratify. But neither his housekeeper nor Zelie
nor any one else could discover the reason for such
moderate means. Minoret, who when he left it
was much regretted in the quarter of Paris where he
had lived, was one of the most benevolent of men,
and, like Larrey, kept his kind deeds a profound secret.
The heirs watched the arrival of their
uncle’s fine furniture and large library with
complacency, and looked forward to his own coming,
he being now an officer of the Legion of honor, and
lately appointed by the king a chevalier of the order
of Saint-Michel—perhaps on account of his
retirement, which left a vacancy for some favorite.
But when the architect and painter and upholsterer
had arranged everything in the most comfortable manner,
the doctor did not come. Madame Minoret-Levrault,
who kept an eye on the upholsterer and architect as
if her own property was concerned, found out, through
the indiscretion of a young man sent to arrange the
books, that the doctor was taking care of a little
orphan named Ursula. The news flew like wild-fire
through the town. At last, however, towards the
middle of the month of January, 1815, the old man
actually arrived, installing himself quietly, almost
slyly, with a little girl about ten months old, and
a nurse.
“The child can’t be his
daughter,” said the terrified heirs; “he
is seventy-one years old.”
“Whoever she is,” remarked
Madame Massin, “she’ll give us plenty of
tintouin” (a word peculiar to Nemours, meaning
uneasiness, anxiety, or more literally, tingling in
the ears).
The doctor received his great-niece
on the mother’s side somewhat coldly; her husband
had just bought the place of clerk of the court, and
the pair began at once to tell him of their difficulties.
Neither Massin nor his wife were rich. Massin’s
father, a locksmith at Montargis, had been obliged
to compromise with his creditors, and was now, at
sixty-seven years of age, working like a young man,
and had nothing to leave behind him. Madame Massin’s
father, Levrault-Minoret, had just died at Montereau
after the battle, in despair at seeing his farm burned,
his fields ruined, his cattle slaughtered.
“We’ll get nothing out
of your great-uncle,” said Massin to his wife,
now pregnant with her second child, after the interview.
The doctor, however, gave them privately
ten thousand francs, with which Massin, who was a
great friend of the notary and of the sheriff, began
the business of money-lending, and carried matters
so briskly with the peasantry that by the time of
which we are now writing Goupil knew him to hold at
least eighty thousand francs on their property.
As to his other niece, the doctor
obtained for her husband, through his influence in
Paris, the collectorship of Nemours, and became his
bondsman. Though Minoret-Levrault needed no assistance,
Zelie, his wife, being jealous of the uncle’s
liberality to his two nieces, took her ten-year old
son to see him, and talked of the expense he would
be to them at a school in Paris, where, she said,
education costs so much. The doctor obtained
a half-scholarship for his great-nephew at the school
of Louis-le-Grand, where Desire was put into the fourth
class.
Cremiere, Massin, and Minoret-Levrault,
extremely common persons, were “rated without
appeal” by the doctor within two months of his
arrival in Nemours, during which time they courted,
less their uncle than his property. Persons who
are led by instinct have one great disadvantage against
others with ideas. They are quickly found out;
the suggestions of instinct are too natural, too open
to the eye not to be seen at a glance; whereas, the
conceptions of the mind require an equal amount of
intellect to discover them. After buying the gratitude
of his heirs, and thus, as it were, shutting their
mouths, the wily doctor made a pretext of his occupations,
his habits, and the care of the little Ursula to avoid
receiving his relatives without exactly closing his
doors to them. He liked to dine alone; he went
to bed late and he got up late; he had returned to
his native place for the very purpose of finding rest
in solitude. These whims of an old man seemed
to be natural, and his relatives contented themselves
with paying him weekly visits on Sundays from one
to four o’clock, to which, however, he tried
to put a stop by saying: “Don’t come
and see me unless you want something.”
The doctor, while not refusing to
be called in consultation over serious cases, especially
if the patients were indigent, would not serve as
a physician in the little hospital of Nemours, and
declared that he no longer practiced his profession.
“I’ve killed enough people,”
he said, laughing, to the Abbe Chaperon, who, knowing
his benevolence, would often get him to attend the
poor.
“He’s an original!”
These words, said of Doctor Minoret, were the harmless
revenge of various wounded vanities; for a doctor collects
about him a society of persons who have many of the
characteristics of a set of heirs. Those of the
bourgeoisie who thought themselves entitled to visit
this distinguished physician kept up a ferment of
jealousy against the few privileged friends whom he
did admit to his intimacy, which had in the long run
some unfortunate results.