|
IV
"It had been Godefroid's
privilege to run over Europe," resumed
Bixiou, "nor had he neglected his
opportunities of making a thorough
comparative study of European
dancing. Perhaps but for profound
diligence in the pursuit of what is
usually held to be useless
knowledge, he would never have
fallen in love with this young lady; as
it was, out of the three hundred
guests that crowded the handsome
rooms in the Rue Saint-Lazare, he
alone comprehended the unpublished
romance revealed by a garrulous
quadrille. People certainly noticed
Isaure d'Aldrigger's dancing; but in
this present century the cry is
'Skim lightly over the surface, do
not lean your weight on it;' so one
said (he was a notary's clerk),
'There is a girl that dances
uncommonly well;' another (a lady in
a turban), 'There is a young lady
that dances enchantingly;' and a
third (a woman of thirty), 'That
little thing is not dancing
badly.'But to return to the great
Marcel, let us parody his best known
saying with, 'How much there is
in an avant-deux.' "
"And let us get on a little
faster," said Blondet; "you are
maundering."
"Isaure," continued
Bixiou, looking askance at Blondet, "wore a simple
white crepe dress with green
ribbons; she had a camellia in her hair,
a camellia at her waist, another
camellia at her skirt-hem, and a
camellia"
"Come, now! here comes Sancho's
three hundred goats."
"Therein lies all literature,
dear boy. Clarissa is a masterpiece,
there are fourteen volumes of her,
and the most wooden-headed
playwright would give you the whole
of Clarissa in a single act. So
long as I amuse you, what have you
to complain of? That costume was
positively lovely. Don't you like
camillias? Would you rather have
dahlias? No? Very good, chestnuts
then, here's for you." (And probably
Bixiou flung a chestnut across the
table, for we heard something drop
on a plate.)
"I was wrong, I acknowledge it.
Go on," said Blondet.
"I resume. 'Pretty enough to
marry, isn't she?' said Rastignac, coming
up to Godefroid de Beaudenord, and
indicating the little one with the
spotless white camellias, every
petal intact.
"Rastignac being an intimate friend,
Godefroid answered in a low
voice, 'Well, so I was thinking. I
was saying to myself that instead
of enjoying my happiness with fear
and trembling at every moment;
instead of taking a world of trouble
to whisper a word in an
inattentive ear, of looking over the
house at the Italiens to see if
some one wears a red flower or a
white in her hair, or watching along
the Corso for a gloved hand on a
carriage door, as we used to do at
Milan; instead of snatching a mouthful of baba like a lackey finishing
off a bottle behind a door, or wearing out one's wits with giving and
receiving letters like a
postmanletters that consist not of a mere
couple of tender lines, but expand
to five folio volumes to-day and
contract to a couple of sheets
to-morrow (a tiresome practice);
instead of dragging along over the
ruts and dodging behind hedgesit
would be better to give way to the
adorable passion that Jean-Jacques
Rousseau envied, to fall frankly in
love with a girl like Isaure, with
a view to making her my wife, if upon
exchange of sentiments our
hearts respond to each other; to be
Werther, in short, with a happy
ending.'
" 'Which is a common weakness,'
returned Rastignac without laughing.
'Possibly in your place I might
plunge into the unspeakable delights
of that ascetic course; it possesses
the merits of novelty and
originality, and it is not very
expensive. Your Monna Lisa is sweet,
but inane as music for the ballet; I
give you warning.'
"Rastignac made this last
remark in a way which set Beaudenord
thinking that his friend had his own
motives for disenchanting him;
Beaudenord had not been a
diplomatist for nothing; he fancied that
Rastignac wanted to cut him out. If
a man mistakes his vocation, the
false start none the less influences
him for the rest of his life.
Godefroid was so evidently smitten
with Mlle. Isaure d'Aldrigger, that
Rastignac went off to a tall girl
chatting in the card-room.
'Malvina,' he said, lowering his
voice, 'your sister has just netted a
fish worth eighteen thousand francs
a year. He has a name, a manner,
and a certain position in the world;
keep an eye on them; be careful
to gain Isaure's confidence; and if
they philander, do not let her
send word to him unless you have
seen it first'
"Towards two o'clock
in the morning, Isaure was standing beside a
diminutive Shepherdess of the Alps, a little woman of forty,
coquettish as a Zerlina. A footman announced that 'Mme. la Baronne's
carriage stops the way,' and
Godefroid forthwith saw his beautiful
maiden out of a German song draw her
fantastical mother into the
cloakroom, whither Malvina followed
them; and (boy that he was) he
must needs go to discover into what
pot of preserves the infant Joby
had fallen, and had the pleasure of
watching Isaure and Malvina
coaxing that sparkling person, their
mamma, into her pelisse, with all
the little tender precautions required for a night journey in Paris.
Of course, the girls on their side
watched Beaudenord out of the
corners of their eyes, as
well-taught kittens watch a mouse, without
seeming to see it at all. With a
certain satisfaction Beaudenord noted
the bearing, manner, and appearance,
of the tall well-gloved Alsacien
servant in livery who brought three
pairs of fur-lined overshoes for
his mistresses.
"Never were two sisters more unlike
than Isaure and Malvina. Malvina
the elder was tall and dark-haired,
Isaure was short and fair, and her
features were finely and delicately
cut, while her sister's were
vigorous and striking. Isaure was
one of those women who reign like
queens through their weakness, such
a woman as a schoolboy would feel
it incumbent upon him to protect;
Malvina was the Andalouse of
Musset's poem. As the sisters stood
together, Isaure looked like a
miniature beside a portrait in oils.
" 'She is rich!' exclaimed Godefroid,
going back to Rastignac in the
ballroom.
" 'Who?'
" 'That young lady.'
" 'Oh, Isaure d'Aldrigger? Why,
yes. The mother is a widow; Nucingen
was once a clerk in her husband's bank at Strasbourg.
Do you want to
see them again? Just turn off a compliment for Mme. de Restaud; she is
giving a ball the day after
to-morrow; the Baroness d'Aldrigger and
her two daughters will be there. You
will have an invitation.'
"For three days Godefroid
beheld Isaure in the camera obscura of his
brainHIS Isaure with her white
camellias and the little ways she had
with her headsaw her as you see the
bright thing on which you have
been gazing after your eyes are
shut, a picture grown somewhat
smaller; a radiant, brightly-colored
vision flashing out of a vortex
of darkness."
"Bixiou, you are dropping into
phenomena, block us out our pictures,"
put in Couture.
"Here you are, gentlemen! Here
is the picture you ordered!" (from the
tones of Bixiou's voice, he
evidently was posing as a waiter.) "Finot,
attention, one has to pull at your
mouth as a jarvie pulls at his
jade. In Madame Theodora Marguerite
Wilhelmine Adolphus (of the firm
of Adolphus and Company, Manheim),
relict of the late Baron
d'Aldrigger, you might expect to
find a stout, comfortable German,
compact and prudent, with a fair
complexion mellowed to the tint of
the foam on a pot of beer; and as to
virtues, rich in all the
patriarchal good qualities that Germany
possessesin romances, that
is to say. Well there was not a gray hair in the frisky ringlets that
she wore on either side of her face;
she was still as fresh and as
brightly colored on the cheek-bone as a Nuremberg
doll; her eyes were
lively and bright; a closely-fitting bodice set off the slenderness of
her waist. Her brow and temples were
furrowed by a few involuntary
wrinkles which, like Ninon, she
would fain have banished from her head
to her heel, but they persisted in
tracing their zigzags in the more
conspicuous place. The outlines of
the nose had somewhat fallen away,
and the tip had reddened, and this
was the more awkward because it
matched the color on the
cheek-bones.
"An only daughter and an
heiress, spoilt by her father and mother,
spoilt by her husband and the city of Strasbourg,
spoilt still by two
daughters who worshiped their mother, the Baroness d'Aldrigger
indulged a taste for rose color,
short petticoats, and a knot of
ribbon at the point of the
tightly-fitting corselet bodice. Any
Parisian meeting the Baroness on the
boulevard would smile and condemn
her outright; he does not admit any
plea of extenuating circumstances,
like a modern jury on a case of
fratricide. A scoffer is always
superficial, and in consequence
cruel; the rascal never thinks of
throwing the proper share of
ridicule on society that made the
individual what he is; for Nature
only makes dull animals of us, we
owe the fool to artificial
conditions."
"The thing that I admire about
Bixiou is his completeness," said
Blondet; "whenever he is not
gibing at others, he is laughing at
himself."
"I will be even with you for
that, Blondet," returned Bixiou in a
significant tone. "If the
little Baroness was giddy, careless,
selfish, and incapable in practical
matters, she was not accountable
for her sins; the responsibility is
divided between the firm of
Adolphus and Company of Manheim and
Baron d'Aldrigger with his blind
love for his wife. The Baroness was
a gentle as a lamb; she had a soft
heart that was very readily moved;
unluckily, the emotion never lasted
long, but it was all the more
frequently renewed.
"When the Baron died, for
instance, the Shepherdess all but followed
him to the tomb, so violent and
sincere was her grief, butnext
morning there was green peas at
lunch, she was fond of green peas, the
delicious green peas calmed the
crisis. Her daughters and her servants
loved her so blindly that the whole
household rejoiced over a
circumstance that enabled them to
hide the dolorous spectacle of the
funeral from the sorrowing Baroness.
Isaure and Malvina would not
allow their idolized mother to see
their tears.
"While the Requiem was chanted,
they diverted her thoughts to the
choice of mourning dresses. While
the coffin was placed in the huge,
black and white, wax-besprinkled
catafalque that does duty for some
three thousand dead in the course of
its careerso I was informed by
a philosophically-minded mute whom I
once consulted on a point over a
couple of glasses of petit
blancwhile an indifferent priest mumbling
the office for the dead, do you know
what the friends of the departed
were saying as, all dressed in black
from head to foot, they sat or
stood in the church? (Here is the
picture you ordered.) Stay, do you
see them?
" 'How much do you suppose old
d'Aldrigger will leave?' Desroches
asked of Taillefer.You remember
Taillefer that gave us the finest
orgy ever known not long before he
died?"
"He was in treaty for practice
in 1822," said Couture. "It was a bold
thing to do, for he was the son of a
poor clerk who never made more
than eighteen hundred francs a year,
and his mother sold stamped
paper. But he worked very hard from
1818 to 1822. He was Derville's
fourth clerk when he came; and in
1819 he was second!"
"Desroches?"
"Yes. Desroches, like the rest
of us, once groveled in the poverty of
Job. He grew so tired of wearing
coats too tight and sleeves too short
for him, that he swallowed down the
law in desperation and had just
bought a bare license. He was a
licensed attorney, without a penny, or
a client, or any friends beyond our
set; and he was bound to pay
interest on the purchase-money and
the cautionary deposit besides."
"He used to make me feel as if
I had met a tiger escaped from the
Jardin des Plantes," said Couture. "He was lean and red-haired, his
eyes were the color of Spanish snuff,
and his complexion was harsh. He
looked cold and phlegmatic. He was
hard upon the widow, pitiless to
the orphan, and a terror to his
clerks; they were not allowed to waste
a minute. Learned, crafty,
double-faced, honey-tongued, never flying
into a passion, rancorous in his
judicial way."
"But there is goodness in
him," cried Finot; "he is devoted to his
friends. The first thing he did was
to take Godeschal, Mariette's
brother, as his head-clerk."
"At Paris," said
Blondet, "there are attorneys of two shades. There is
the honest man attorney; he abides within the province of the law,
pushes on his cases, neglects no
one, never runs after business, gives
his clients his honest opinion, and
makes them compromise on doubtful
pointshe is a Derville, in short.
Then there is the starveling
attorney, to whom anything seems
good provided that he is sure of
expenses; he will set, not mountains
fighting, for he sells them, but
planets; he will work to make the
worse appear the better cause, and
take advantage of a technical error
to win the day for a rogue. If one
of these fellows tries one of Maitre
Gonin's tricks once too often,
the guild forces him to sell his
connection. Desroches, our friend
Desroches, understood the full
resources of a trade carried on in a
beggarly way enough by poor devils;
he would buy up causes of men who
feared to lose the day; he plunged
into chicanery with a fixed
determination to make money by it.
He was right; he did his business
very honestly. He found influence among
men in public life by getting
them out of awkward complications;
there was our dear les Lupeaulx,
for instance, whose position was so
deeply compromised. And Desroches
stood in need of influence; for when
he began, he was anything but
well looked on at the court, and he
who took so much trouble to
rectify the errors of his clients
was often in trouble himself. See
now, Bixiou, to go back to the
subjectHow came Desroches to be in
the church?"
" 'D'Aldrigger is leaving seven
or eight hundred thousand francs,'
Taillefer answered, addressing
Desroches.
" 'Oh, pooh, there is only one
man who knows how much THEY are worth,'
put in Werbrust, a friend of the
deceased.
" 'Who?'
" 'That fat rogue Nucingen; he
will go as far as the cemetery;
d'Aldrigger was his master once, and
out of gratitude he put the old
man's capital into his business.'
" 'The widow will soon feel a
great difference.'
" 'What do you mean?'
" 'Well, d'Aldrigger was so
fond of his wife. Now, don't laugh, people
are looking at us.'
" 'Look here comes du Tillet;
he is very late. The epistle is just
beginning.'
" 'He will marry the eldest
girl in all probability.'
" 'Is it possible?' asked
Desroches; 'why, he is tied more than ever
to Mme. Roguin.'
" 'TIEDhe?You do not know him.'
" 'Do you know how Nucingen and
du Tillet stand?' asked Desroches.
" 'Like this,' said Taillefer;
'Nucingen is just the man to swallow
down his old master's capital, and
then to disgorge it.'
" 'Ugh! ugh!' coughed Werbrust,
'these churches are confoundedly damp;
ugh! ugh! What do you mean by
"disgorge it"?'
" 'Well, Nucingen knows that du
Tillet has a lot of money; he wants to
marry him to Malvina; but du Tillet
is shy of Nucingen. To a looker-
on, the game is good fun.'
" 'What!' exclaimed Werbrust,
'is she old enough to marry? How quickly
we grow old!'
" 'Malvina d'Aldrigger is quite
twenty years old, my dear fellow. Old
d'Aldrigger was married in 1800. He
gave some rather fine
entertainments in Strasbourg at the time of his wedding, and
afterwards when Malvina was born. That was in 1801 at the peace of
Amiens, and here are we in the
year 1823, Daddy Werbrust! In those
days everything was Ossianized; he called his daughter Malvina. Six
years afterwards there was a rage
for chivalry, Partant pour la Syrie
a pack of nonsenseand he christened
his second daughter Isaure.
She is seventeen. So there are two
daughters to marry.'
" 'The women will not have a
penny left in ten years' time,' said
Werbrust, speaking to Desroches in a
confidential tone.
" 'There is d'Aldrigger's
man-servant, the old fellow bellowing away
at the back of the church; he has
been with them since the two young
ladies were children, and he is
capable of anything to keep enough
together for them to live upon,'
said Taillefer.
"Dies iroe! (from the minor
cannons). Dies illa! (from the
choristers).
" 'Good-day, Werbrust (from
Taillefer), the Dies iroe puts me too much
in mind of my poor boy.'
" 'I shall go too; it is too
damp in here,' said Werbrust.
"In favilla.
" 'A few halfpence, kind gentlemen!'
(from the beggars at the door).
" 'For the expenses of the
church!' (from the beadle, with a rattling
clatter of the money-box).
" 'AMEN' (from the choristers).
" 'What did he die of?' (from a
friend).
" 'He broke a blood-vessel in the
heel' (from an inquisitive wag).
" 'Who is dead?' (from a
passer-by).
" 'The President de
Montesquieu!' (from a relative).
"The sacristan to the poor,
'Get away, all of you; the money for you
has been given to us; don't ask for
any more.' "
"Done to the life!" cried
Couture. And indeed it seemed to us that we
heard all that went on in the
church. Bixiou imitated everything, even
the shuffling sound of the feet of
the men that carried the coffin
over the stone floor.
"There are poets and romancers
and writers that say many fine things
abut Parisian manners,"
continued Bixiou, "but that is what really
happens at a funeral. Ninety-nine
out of a hundred that come to pay
their respects to some poor devil
departed, get together and talk
business or pleasure in the middle
of the church. To see some poor
little touch of real sorrow, you
need an impossible combination of
circumstances. And, after all, is
there such a thing as grief without
a thought of self in it?"
"Ugh!" said Blondet.
"Nothing is less respected than death; is it that
there is nothing less
respectable?"
"It is so common!" resumed
Bixiou. "When the service was over Nucingen
and du Tillet went to the graveside.
The old man-servant walked;
Nucingen and du Tillet were put at the
head of the procession of
mourning coaches.'Goot, mein goot
friend,' said Nucingen as they
turned into the boulevard. 'It ees a
goot time to marry Malfina; you
vill be der brodector off that boor
family vat ess in tears; you vill
haf ein family, a home off your own;
you vill haf a house ready
vurnished, und Malfina is truly ein
dreashure.' "
"I seem to hear that old Robert
Macaire of a Nucingen himself," said
Finot.
" 'A charming girl,' said
Ferdinand du Tillet in a cool,
unenthusiastic tone," Bixiou continued.
"Just du Tillet himself summed
up in a word!" cried Couture.
" 'Those that do not know her
may think her plain,' pursued du Tillet,
'but she has character, I admit.'
" 'Und ein herz, dot is the
pest of die pizness, mein der poy; she
vould make you an indelligent und
defoted vife. In our beastly
pizness, nopody cares to know who
lifs or dies; it is a crate plessing
gif a mann kann put drust in his
vife's heart. Mein Telvine prouht me
more as a million, as you know, but
I should gladly gif her for
Malfina dot haf not so pig a DOT.'
" 'But how much has she?'
" 'I do not know precisely;
boot she haf somdings.'
" 'Yes, she has a mother with a
great liking for rose-color.' said du
Tillet; and with that epigram he cut
Nucingen's diplomatic efforts
short.
"After dinner the Baron de
Nucingen informed Wilhelmine Adolphus that
she had barely four hundred thousand
francs deposited with him. The
daughter of Adolphus of Manheim,
thus reduced to an income of twenty-
four thousand livres, lost herself
in arithmetical exercises that
muddled her wits.
" 'I have ALWAYS had six
thousand francs for our dress allowance,' she
said to Malvina. 'Why, how did your
father find money? We shall have
nothing now with twenty-four
thousand francs; it is destitution! Oh!
if my father could see me so come
down in the world, it would kill him
if he were not dead already! Poor
Wilhelmine!' and she began to cry.
"Malvina, puzzled to know how
to comfort her mother, represented to
her that she was still young and
pretty, that rose-color still became
her, that she could continue to go
to the Opera and the Bouffons,
where Mme. de Nucingen had a box.
And so with visions of gaieties,
dances, music, pretty dresses, and
social success, the Baroness was
lulled to sleep and pleasant dreams
in the blue, silk-curtained bed in
the charming room next to the
chamber in which Jean Baptiste, Baron
d'Aldrigger, had breathed his last
but two nights ago.
"Here in a few words is the
Baron's history. During his lifetime that
worthy Alsacien accumulated about
three millions of francs. In 1800,
at the age of thirty-six, in the
apogee of a fortune made during the
Revolution, he made a marriage
partly of ambition, partly of
inclination, with the heiress of the
family of Adolphus of Manheim.
Wilhelmine, being the idol of her
whole family, naturally inherited
their wealth after some ten years.
Next, d'Aldrigger's fortune being
doubled, he was transformed into a
Baron by His Majesty, Emperor and
King, and forthwith became a
fanatical admirer of the great man to
whom he owed his title. Wherefore,
between 1814 and 1815 he ruined
himself by a too serious belief in
the sun of Austerlitz. Honest
Alsacien as he was, he did not
suspend payment, nor did he give his
creditors shares in doubtful
concerns by way of settlement. He paid
everything over the counter, and
retired from business, thoroughly
deserving Nucingen's comment on his
behavior'Honest but stoobid.'
"All claims satisfied, there
remained to him five hundred thousand
francs and certain receipts for sums
advanced to that Imperial
Government, which had ceased to
exist. 'See vat komms of too much
pelief in Nappolion,' said he, when
he had realized all his capital.
"When you have been one of the
leading men in a place, how are you to
remain in it when your estate has
dwindled? D'Aldrigger, like all
ruined provincials, removed to
Paris, there intrepidly wore the
tricolor braces embroidered with
Imperial eagles, and lived entirely
in Bonapartist circles. His capital
he handed over to Nucingen, who
gave him eight per cent upon it, and
took over the loans to the
Imperial Government at a mere sixty
per cent of reduction; wherefore
d'Aldrigger squeezed Nucingen's hand
and said, 'I knew dot in you I
should find de heart of ein
Elzacien.'
"(Nucingen was paid in full
through our friend des Lupeaulx.) Well
fleeced as d'Aldrigger had been, he
still possessed an income of
forty-four thousand francs; but his
mortification was further
complicated by the spleen which lies
in wait for the business man so
soon as he retires from business. He
set himself, noble heart, to
sacrifice himself to his wife, now
that her fortune was lost, that
fortune of which she had allowed
herself to be despoiled so easily,
after the manner of a girl entirely
ignorant of money matters. Mme.
d'Aldrigger accordingly missed not a
single pleasure to which she had
been accustomed; any void caused by
the loss of Strasbourg
acquaintances were speedily filled,
and more than filled, with Paris
gaieties.
"Even then as now the Nucingens
lived at the higher end of financial
society, and the Baron de Nucingen
made it a point of honor to treat
the honest banker well. His
disinterested virtue looked well in the
Nucingen salon.
"Every winter dipped into
d'Aldrigger's principal, but he did not
venture to remonstrate with his
pearl of a Wilhelmine. His was the
most ingenious unintelligent
tenderness in the world. A good man, but
a stupid one! 'What will become of
them when I am gone?' he said, as
he lay dying; and when he was left
alone for a moment with Wirth, his
old man-servant, he struggled for
breath to bid him take care of his
mistress and her two daughters, as
if the one reasonable being in the
house was this Alsacien Caleb
Balderstone.
"Three years afterwards, in
1826, Isaure was twenty years old, and
Malvina still unmarried. Malvina had
gone into society, and in course
of time discovered for herself how
superficial their friendships were,
how accurately every one was weighed
and appraised. Like most girls
that have been 'well brought up,' as
we say, Malvina had no idea of
the mechanism of life, of the
importance of money, of the difficulty
of obtaining it, of the prices of
things. And so, for six years, every
lesson that she had learned had been
a painful one for her.
"D'Aldrigger's four hundred
thousand francs were carried to the credit
of the Baroness' account with the
firm of Nucingen (she was her
husband's creditor for twelve
hundred thousand francs under her
marriage settlement), and when in
any difficulty the Shepherdess of
the Alps dipped into her capital as
though it were inexhaustible.
"When our pigeon first advanced
towards his dove, Nucingen, knowing
the Baroness' character, must have
spoken plainly to Malvina on the
financial position. At that time
three hundred thousand francs were
left; the income of twenty-four
thousand francs was reduced to
eighteen thousand. Wirth had kept up
this state of things for three
years! After that confidential
interview, Malvina put down the
carriage, sold the horses, and
dismissed the coachman, without her
mother's knowledge. The furniture,
now ten years old, could not be
renewed, but it all faded together,
and for those that like harmony
the effect was not half bad. The
Baroness herself, that so well-
preserved flower, began to look like
the last solitary frost-touched
rose on a November bush. I myself
watched the slow decline of luxury
by half-tones and semi-tones!
Frightful, upon my honor! It was my last
trouble of the kind; afterwards I
said to myself, 'It is silly to care
so much about other people.' But
while I was in civil service, I was
fool enough to take a personal
interest in the houses where I dined; I
used to stand up for them; I would
say no ill of them myself; Ioh! I
was a child.
"Well, when the ci-devant
pearl's daughter put the state of the case
before her, 'Oh my poor children,'
cried she, 'who will make my
dresses now? I cannot afford new
bonnets; I cannot see visitors here
nor go out.'Now by what token do you
know that a man is in love?"
said Bixiou, interrupting himself.
"The question is, whether
Beaudenord was genuinely in love
with the fair-haired girl."
"He neglects his
interests," said Couture.
"He changes his shirt three
times a day," opined Blondet; "a man of
more than ordinary ability, can he,
and ought he, to fall in love?"
"My friends," resumed
Bixiou, with a sentimental air, "there is a kind
of man who, when he feels that he is
in peril of falling in love, will
snap his fingers or fling away his
cigar (as the case may be) with a
'Pooh! there are other women in the
world.' Beware of that man for a
dangerous reptile. Still, the
Government may employ that citizen
somewhere in the Foreign Office.
Blondet, I call your attention to the
fact that this Godefroid had thrown
up diplomacy."
"Well, he was absorbed,"
said Blondet. "Love gives the fool his one
chance of growing great."
"Blondet, Blondet, how is it
that we are so poor?" cried Bixiou.
"And why is Finot so
rich?" returned Blondet. "I will tell you how it
is; there, my son, we understand
each other. Come, there is Finot
filling up my glass as if I had
carried in his firewood. At the end of
dinner one ought to sip one's wine
slowly,Well?"
"Thou has said. The absorbed
Godefroid became fully acquainted with
the familythe tall Malvina, the
frivolous Baroness, and the little
lady of the dance. He became a
servant after the most conscientious
and restricted fashion. He was not
scared away by the cadaverous
remains of opulence; not he! by
degrees he became accustomed to the
threadbare condition of things. It
never struck the young man that the
green silk damask and white
ornaments in the drawing-room needed
refurnishing. The curtains, the
tea-table, the knick-knacks on the
chimney-piece, the rococo
chandelier, the Eastern carpet with the pile
worn down to the thread, the
pianoforte, the little flowered china
cups, the fringed serviettes so full
of holes that they looked like
open work in the Spanish fashion,
the green sitting-room with the
Baroness' blue bedroom beyond it,it
was all sacred, all dear to him.
It is only your stupid woman with
the brilliant beauty that throws
heart, brain, and soul into the
shade, who can inspire forgetfulness
like this; a clever woman never
abuses her advantages; she must be
small-natured and silly to gain such
a hold upon a man. Beaudenord
actually loved the solemn old
Wirthhe has told me so himself!
"That old rogue regarded his
future master with the awe which a good
Catholic feels for the Eucharist.
Honest Wirth was a kind of Gaspard,
a beer-drinking German sheathing his
cunning in good-nature, much as a
cardinal in the Middle Ages kept his
dagger up his sleeve. Wirth saw a
husband for Isaure, and accordingly
proceeded to surround Godefroid
with the mazy circumlocutions of his
Alsacien's geniality, that most
adhesive of all known varieties of
bird-lime.
|