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V
"Mme. d'Aldrigger was radically
'improper.' She thought love the most
natural thing imaginable. When
Isaure and Malvina went out together to
the Champs Elysees or the Tuileries, where they were sure to meet the
young men of their set, she would simply say, 'A pleasant time to you,
dear girls.' Their friends among
men, the only persons who might have
slandered the sisters, championed
them; for the extraordinary liberty
permitted in the d'Aldriggers' salon made it unique in Paris. Vast
wealth could scarcely have procured such evenings, the talk was good
on any subject; dress was not
insisted upon; you felt so much at home
there that you could ask for supper.
The sisters corresponded as they
pleased, and quietly read their
letters by their mother's side; it
never occurred to the Baroness to
interfere in any way; the adorable
woman gave the girls the full
benefits of her selfishness, and in a
certain sense selfish persons are
the easiest to live with; they hate
trouble, and therefore do not
trouble other people; they never beset
the lives of their fellow-creatures
with thorny advice and captious
fault-finding; nor do they torment
you with the waspish solicitude of
excessive affection that must know
all things and rule all things"
"This comes home," said
Blondet, "but my dear fellow, this is not
telling a story, this is
blague"
"Blondet, if you were not
tipsy, I should really feel hurt! He is the
one serious literary character among
us; for his benefit, I honor you
by treating you like men of taste, I
am distilling my tale for you,
and now he criticises me! There is
no greater proof of intellectual
sterility, my friends, than the piling
up of facts. Le Misanthrope,
that supreme comedy, shows us that
art consists in the power of
building a palace on a needle's
point. The gist of my idea is in the
fairy wand which can turn the Desert into an Interlaken
in ten seconds
(precisely
the time required to empty this glass). Would you rather
that I fired off at you like a
cannon-ball, or a commander-in-chief's
report? We chat and laugh; and this
journalist, a bibliophobe when
sober, expects me, forsooth, when he
is drunk, to teach my tongue to
move at the dull jogtrot of a
printed book." (Here he affected to
weep.) "Woe unto the French
imagination when men fain would blunt the
needle points of her pleasant humor!
Dies iroe! Let us weep for
Candide. Long live the Kritik of
Pure Reason, La Symbolique, and the
systems in five closely packed
volumes, printed by Germans, who little
suspect that the gist of the matter has been known in Paris since
1750, and crystallized in a few
trenchant wordsthe diamonds of our
national thought. Blondet is driving
a hearse to his own suicide;
Blondet, forsooth! who manufactures
newspaper accounts of the last
words of all the great men that die
without saying anything!"
"Come, get on," put in
Finot.
"It was my intention to explain
to you in what the happiness of a man
consists when he is not a
shareholder (out of compliment to Couture).
Well, now, do you not see at what a
price Godefroid secured the
greatest happiness of a young man's
dreams? He was trying to
understand Isaure, by way of making
sure that she should understand
him. Things which comprehend one
another must needs be similar.
Infinity and Nothingness, for
instance, are like; everything that lies
between the two is like neither.
Nothingness is stupidity; genius,
Infinity. The lovers wrote each other
the stupidest letters
imaginable, putting down various
expressions then in fashion upon bits
of scented paper: 'Angel! Aeolian
harp! with thee I shall be complete!
There is a heart in my man's breast!
Weak woman, poor me!' all the
latest heart-frippery. It was
Godefroid's wont to stay in a drawing-
room for a bare ten minutes; he
talked without any pretension to the
women in it, and at these times they
thought him very clever. In
short, judge of his absorption;
Joby, his horses and carriages, became
secondary interests in his life. He
was never happy except in the
depths of a snug settee opposite the
Baroness, by the dark-green
porphyry chimney-piece, watching
Isaure, taking tea, and chatting with
the little circle of friends that
dropped in every evening between
eleven and twelve in the Rue
Joubert. You could play bouillotte there
safely. (I always won.) Isaure sat
with one little foot thrust out in
its black satin shoe; Godefroid
would gaze and gaze, and stay till
every one else was gone, and say,
'Give me your shoe!' and Isaure
would put her little foot on a chair
and take it off and give it to
him, with a glance, one of those
glances thatin short, you
understand.
"At length Godefroid discovered
a great mystery in Malvina. Whenever
du Tillet knocked at the door, the
live red that colored Malvina's
face said 'Ferdinand!' When the poor
girl's eyes fell on that two-
footed tiger, they lighted up like a
brazier fanned by a current of
air. When Ferdinand drew her away to
the window or a side table, she
betrayed her secret infinite joy. It
is a rare and wonderful thing to
see a woman so much in love that she
loses her cunning to be strange,
and you can read her heart; as rare (dear me!) in Paris as the Singing
Flower in the Indies. But in spite of a friendship
dating from the
d'Aldriggers' first appearance at
the Nucingens', Ferdinand did not
marry Malvina. Our ferocious friend
was not apparently jealous of
Desroches, who paid assiduous court
to the young lady; Desroches
wanted to pay off the rest of the
purchase-money due for his
connection; Malvina could not well
have less than fifty thousand
crowns, he thought, and so the
lawyer was fain to play the lover.
Malvina, deeply humiliated as she
was by du Tillet's carelessness,
loved him too well to shut the door
upon him. With her, an
enthusiastic, highly-wrought,
sensitive girl, love sometimes got the
better of pride, and pride again
overcame wounded love. Our friend
Ferdinand, cool and self-possessed,
accepted her tenderness, and
breathed the atmosphere with the
quiet enjoyment of a tiger licking
the blood that dyes his throat. He
would come to make sure of it with
new proofs; he never allowed two
days to pass without a visit to the
Rue Joubert.
"At that time the rascal
possessed something like eighteen hundred
thousand francs; money must have
weighted very little with him in the
question of marriage; and he had not
merely been proof against
Malvina, he had resisted the Barons
de Nucingen and de Rastignac;
though both of them had set him
galloping at the rate of seventy-five
leagues a day, with outriders,
regardless of expense, through mazes of
their cunning devicesand with never
a clue of thread.
"Godefroid could not refrain
from saying a word to his future sister-
in-law as to her ridiculous position
between a banker and an attorney.
" 'You mean to read me a
lecture on the subject of Ferdinand,' she
said frankly, 'to know the secret
between us. Dear Godefroid, never
mention this again. Ferdinand's
birth, antecedents, and fortune count
for nothing in this, so you may
think it is something extraordinary.'
A few days afterwards, however,
Malvina took Godefroid apart to say,
'I do not think that Desroches is
sincere' (such is the instinct of
love); 'he would like to marry me,
and he is paying court to some
tradesman's daughter as well. I
should very much like to know whether
I am a second shift, and whether
marriage is a matter of money with
him.' The fact was that Desroches,
deep as he was, could not make out
du Tillet, and was afraid that he
might marry Malvina. So the fellow
had secured his retreat. His
position was intolerable, he was scarcely
paying his expenses and interest on
the debt. Women understand nothing
of these things; for them, love is
always a millionaire."
"But since neither du Tillet
nor Desroches married her; just explain
Ferdinand's motive," said
Finot.
"Motive?" repeated Bixiou;
"why, this. General Rule: A girl that has
once given away her slipper, even if
she refused it for ten years, is
never married by the man who"
"Bosh!" interrupted
Blondet, "one reason for loving is the fact that
one has loved. His motive? Here it
is. General Rule: Do not marry as a
sergeant when some day you may be
Duke of Dantzig and Marshal of
France. Now, see what a match du Tillet has made since then. He
married one of the Comte de Granville's daughters, into one of the
oldest families in the French
magistracy."
"Desroches' mother had a
friend, a druggist's wife," continued Bixiou.
"Said druggist had retired with
a fat fortune. These druggist folk
have absurdly crude notions; by way
of giving his daughter a good
education, he had sent her to a
boarding-school! Well, Matifat meant
the girl to marry well, on the
strength of two hundred thousand
francs, good hard coin with no scent
of drugs about it."
"Florine's Matifat?" asked
Blondet.
"Well, yes. Lousteau's Matifat;
ours, in fact. The Matifats, even then
lost to us, had gone to live in the
Rue du Cherche-Midi, as far as may
be from the Rue des Lombards, where their money was made. For my own
part, I had cultivated those Matifats. While I served my time in the
galleys of the law, when I was
cooped up for eight hours out of the
twenty-four with nincompoops of the
first water, I saw queer
characters enough to convince myself
that all is not dead-level even
in obscure places, and that in the
flattest inanity you may chance
upon an angle. Yes, dear boy, such
and such a philistine is to such
another as Raphael is to Natoire.
"Mme. Desroches, the widowed
mother, had long ago planned this
marriage for her son, in spite of a
tremendous obstacle which took the
shape of one Cochin, Matifat's partner's son, a young clerk in the
adult department. M. and Mme. Matifat were of the opinion that an
attorney's position 'gave some guarantee
for a wife's happiness,' to
use their own expression; and as for
Desroches, he was prepared to
fall in with his mother's views in
case he could do no better for
himself. Wherefore, he kept up his
acquaintance with the druggists in
the Rue du Cherche-Midi.
"To put another kind of
happiness before you, you should have a
description of these shopkeepers,
male and female. They rejoiced in
the possession of a handsome ground
floor and a strip of garden; for
amusement, they watched a little
squirt of water, no bigger than a
cornstalk, perpetually rising and
falling upon a small round freestone
slab in the middle of a basin some
six feet across; they would rise
early of a morning to see if the
plants in the garden had grown in the
night; they had nothing to do, they
were restless, they dressed for
the sake of dressing, bored
themselves at the theatre, and were for
ever going to and fro between Paris
and Luzarches, where they had a
country house. I have dined there.
"Once they tried to quiz me,
Blondet. I told them a long-winded story
that lasted from nine
o'clock till midnight,
one tale inside another.
I had just brought my twenty-ninth
personage upon the scene (the
newspapers have plagiarized with
their 'continued in our next'), when
old Matifat, who as host still held
out, snored like the rest, after
blinking for five minutes. Next day
they all complimented me upon the
ending of my tale!
"These tradespeople's society
consisted of M. and Mme. Cochin, Mme.
Desroches, and a young Popinot,
still in the drug business, who used
to bring them news of the Rue des Lombards. (You know him, Finot.)
Mme. Matifat loved the arts; she
bought lithographs, chromo-
lithographs, and colored prints,all
the cheapest things she could
lay her hands on. The Sieur Matifat
amused himself by looking into new
business speculations, investing a
little capital now and again for
the sake of the excitement. Florine
had cured him of his taste for the
Regency style of thing. One saying
of his will give you some idea of
the depths in my Matifat. 'Art THOU
going to bed, my nieces?' he used
to say when he wished them
good-night, because (as he explained) he
was afraid of hurting their feelings
with the more formal 'you.'
"The daughter was a girl with
no manner at all. She looked rather like
a superior sort of housemaid. She
could get through a sonata, she
wrote a pretty English hand, knew
French grammar and orthographya
complete commercial education, in
short. She was impatient enough to
be married and leave the paternal
roof, finding it as dull at home as
a lieutenant finds the nightwatch at
sea; at the same time, it should
be said that her watch lasted
through the whole twenty-four hours.
Desroches or Cochin
junior, a notary or a lifeguardsman, or a sham
English lord,any
husband would have suited her. As she so obviously
knew nothing of life, I took pity
upon her, I determined to reveal the
great secret of it. But, pooh! the
Matifats shut their doors on me.
The bourgeois and I shall never
understand each other."
"She married General
Gouraud," said Finot.
"In forty-eight hours,
Godefroid de Beaudenord, late of the diplomatic
corps, saw through the Matifats and
their nefarious designs," resumed
Bixiou. "Rastignac happened to
be chatting with the frivolous Baroness
when Godefroid came in to give his
report to Malvina. A word here and
there reached his ear; he guessed
the matter on foot, more
particularly from Malvina's look of
satisfaction that it was as she
had suspected. Then Rastignac
actually stopped on till two
o'clock in
the morning. And yet there are those that call him selfish! Beaudenord
took his departure when the Baroness
went to bed.
"As soon as Rastignac was left
alone with Malvina, he spoke in a
fatherly, good-humored fashion.
'Dear child, please to bear in mind
that a poor fellow, heavy with
sleep, has been drinking tea to keep
himself awake till two
o'clock in the morning, all for a chance of
saying a solemn word of advice to youMARRY! Do not be too
particular; do not brood over your
feelings; never mind the sordid
schemes of men that have one foot
here and another in the Matifats'
house; do not stop to think at all:
Marry!When a girl marries, it
means that the man whom she marries
undertakes to maintain her in a
more or less good position in life,
and at any rate her comfort is
assured. I know the world. Girls,
mammas, and grandmammas are all of
them hypocrites when they fly off
into sentiment over a question of
marriage. Nobody really thinks of anything
but a good position. If a
mother marries her daughter well,
she says that she has made an
excellent bargain.' Here Rastignac
unfolded his theory of marriage,
which to his way of thinking is a
business arrangement, with a view to
making life tolerable; and ended up
with, 'I do not ask to know your
secret, Malvina; I know it already.
Men talk things over among
themselves, just as you women talk
after you leave the dinner-table.
This is all I have to say: Marry. If
you do not, remember that I
begged you to marry, here, in this
room, this evening!'
"There was a certain ring in
Rastignac's voice which compelled, not
attention, but reflection. There was
something startling in his
insistence; something that went, as
Rastignac meant that it should, to
the quick of Malvina's intelligence.
She thought over the counsel
again next day, and vainly asked
herself why it had been given."
Couture broke in. "In all these
tops that you have set spinning, I see
nothing at all like the beginnings of
Rastignac's fortune," said he.
"You apparently take us for
Matifats multiplied by half-a-dozen
bottles of champagne."
"We are just coming to
it," returned Bixiou. "You have followed the
course of all the rivulets which
make up that forty thousand livres a
year which so many people envy. By
this time Rastignac held the
threads of all these lives in his
hand."
"Desroches, the Matifats,
Beaudenord, the d'Aldriggers, d'Aiglemont?"
"Yes, and a hundred
others," assented Bixiou.
"Oh, come now, how?" cried
Finot. "I know a few things, but I cannot
see a glimpse of an answer to this
riddle."
"Blondet has roughly given you
the account of Nucingen's first two
suspensions of payment; now for the
third, with full details.After
the peace of 1815, Nucingen grasped an
idea which some of us only
fully understood later, to wit, that
capital is a power only when you
are very much richer than other
people. In his own mind, he was
jealous of the Rothschilds. He had
five millions of francs, he wanted
ten. He knew a way to make thirty
millions with ten, while with five
he could only make fifteen. So he
made up his mind to operate a third
suspension of payment. About that
time, the great man hit on the idea
of indemnifying his creditors with
paper of purely fictitious value
and keeping their coin. On the
market, a great idea of this sort is
not expressed in precisely this
cut-and-dried way. Such an arrangement
consists in giving a lot of grown-up
children a small pie in exchange
for a gold piece; and, like children
of a smaller growth, they prefer
the pie to the gold piece, not
suspecting that they might have a
couple of hundred pies for it."
"What is this all about,
Bixiou?" cried Couture. "Nothing more bona
fide. Not a week passes but pies are
offered to the public for a
louis. But who compels the public to
take them? Are they not perfectly
free to make inquiries?"
"You would rather have it made
compulsory to take up shares, would
you?" asked Blondet.
"No," said Finot.
"Where would the talent come in?"
"Very good for Finot."
"Who put him up to it?"
asked Couture.
"The fact was," continued
Bixiou, "that Nucingen had twice had the
luck to present the public (quite
unintentionally) with a pie that
turned out to be worth more than the
money he received for it. That
unlucky good luck gave him qualms of
conscience. A course of such luck
is fatal to a man in the long run.
This time he meant to make no
mistake of this sort; he waited ten
years for an opportunity of
issuing negotiable securities which
should seem on the face of it to
be worth something, while as a
matter of fact"
"But if you look at banking in
that light," broke in Couture, "no sort
of business would be possible. More
than one bona fide banker, backed
up by a bona fide government, has induced
the hardest-headed men on
'Change to take up stock which is
bound to fall within a given time.
You have seen better than that. Have
you not seen stock created with
the concurrence of a government to
pay the interest upon older stock,
so as to keep things going and tide
over the difficulty? These
operations were more or less like
Nucingen's settlements."
"The thing may look queer on a
small scale," said Blondet, "but on a
large we call it finance. There are
high-handed proceedings criminal
between man and man that amount to
nothing when spread out over any
number of men, much as a drop of
prussic acid becomes harmless in a
pail of water. You take a man's
life, you are guillotined. But if, for
any political conviction whatsoever,
you take five hundred lives,
political crimes are respected. You
take five thousand francs out of
my desk; to the hulks you go. But
with a sop cleverly pushed into the
jaws of a thousand speculators, you
can cram the stock of any bankrupt
republic or monarchy down their
throats; even if the loan has been
floated, as Couture says, to pay the
interest on that very same
national debt. Nobody can complain.
These are the real principles of
the present Golden Age."
"When the stage machinery is so
huge," continued Bixiou, "a good many
puppets are required. In the first
place, Nucingen had purposely and
with his eyes open invested his five
millions in an American
investment, foreseeing that the
profits would not come in until it was
too late. The firm of Nucingen
deliberately emptied its coffers. Any
liquidation ought to be brought
about naturally. In deposits belonging
to private individuals and other
investments, the firm possessed about
six millions of capital altogether.
Among those private individuals
was the Baroness d'Aldrigger with
her three hundred thousand francs,
Beaudenord with four hundred
thousand, d'Aiglemont with a million,
Matifat with three hundred thousand,
Charles Grandet (who married
Mlle. d'Aubrion) with half a
million, and so forth, and so forth.
"Now, if Nucingen had himself
brought out a joint-stock company, with
the shares of which he proposed to
indemnify his creditors after more
or less ingenious manoeuvring, he
might perhaps have been suspected.
He set about it more cunningly than
that. He made some one else put up
the machinery that was to play the part of the Mississippi
scheme in
Law's system. Nucingen can make the longest-headed men work out
schemes for him without confiding a
word to them; it is his peculiar
talent. Nucingen just let fall a
hint to du Tillet of the pyramidal,
triumphant notion of bringing out a
joint-stock enterprise with
capital sufficient to pay very high
dividends for a time. Tried for
the first time, in days when noodles
with capital were plentiful, the
plan was pretty sure to end in a run
upon the shares, and consequently
in a profit for the banker that
issued them. You must remember that
this happened in 1826.
"Du Tillet, struck through he
was by an idea both pregnant and
ingenious, naturally bethought himself
that if the enterprise failed,
the blame must fall upon somebody.
For which reason, it occurred to
him to put forward a figurehead
director in charge of his commercial
machinery. At this day you know the
secret of the firm of Claparon and
Company, founded by du Tillet, one
of the finest inventions"
"Yes," said Blondet,
"the responsible editor in business matters, the
instigator, and scapegoat; but we
know better than that nowadays. We
put, 'Apply at the offices of the Company,
such and such a number,
such and such a street,' where the
public find a staff of clerks in
green caps, about as pleasing to
behold as broker's men."
"Nucingen," pursued
Bixiou, "had supported the firm of Charles
Claparon and Company with all his
credit. There were markets in which
you might safely put a million
francs' worth of Claparon's paper. So
du Tillet proposed to bring his firm
of Claparon to the fore. So said,
so done. In 1825 the shareholder was
still an unsophisticated being.
There was no such thing as cash
lying at call. Managing directors did
not pledge themselves not to put
their own shares upon the market;
they kept no deposit with the Bank
of France; they guaranteed nothing.
They did not even condescend to
explain to shareholders the exact
limits of their liabilities when
they informed them that the directors
in their goodness, refrained from
asking any more than a thousand, or
five hundred, or even two hundred
and fifty francs. It was not given
out that the experiment in aere
publico was not meant to last for more
than seven, five, or even three
years, so that shareholders would not
have long to wait for the
catastrophe. It was in the childhood of the
art. Promoters did not even publish
the gigantic prospectuses with
which they stimulate the
imagination, and at the same time make
demands for money of all and
sundry."
"That only comes when nobody
wishes to part with money," said Couture.
"In short, there was no
competition in investments," continued Bixiou.
"Paper-mache manufacturers,
cotton printers, zinc-rollers, theatres,
and newspapers as yet did not hurl
themselves like hunting dogs upon
their quarrythe expiring
shareholder. 'Nice things in shares,' as
Couture says, put thus artlessly
before the public, and backed up by
the opinions of experts ('the
princes of science'), were negotiated
shamefacedly in the silence and
shadow of the Bourse. Lynx-eyed
speculators used to execute
(financially speaking) the air Calumny out
of The Barber of Seville. They went about piano, piano, making known
the merits of the concern through the medium of stock-exchange gossip.
They could only exploit the victim
in his own house, on the Bourse, or
in company; so they reached him by
means of the skilfully created
rumor which grew till it reached a
tutti of a quotation in four
figures"
"And as we can say anything
among ourselves," said Couture, "I will go
back to the last subject."
"Vous etes orfevre, Monsieur Josse!" cried
Finot.
"Finot will always be classic,
constitutional, and pedantic,"
commented Blondet.
"Yes," rejoined Couture,
on whose account Cerizet had just been
condemned on a criminal charge.
"I maintain that the new way is
infinitely less fraudulent, less
ruinous, more straightforward than
the old. Publicity means time for
reflection and inquiry. If here and
there a shareholder is taken in, he
has himself to blame, nobody sells
him a pig in a poke. The
manufacturing industry"
"Ah!" exclaimed Bixiou,
"here comes industry"
" is a gainer by it,"
continued Couture, taking no notice of the
interruption. "Every government
that meddles with commerce and cannot
leave it free, sets about an
expensive piece of folly; State
interference ends in a MAXIMUM or a
monopoly. To my thinking, few
things can be more in conformity with
the principles of free trade
than joint-stock companies. State
interference means that you try to
regulate the relations of principal
and interest, which is absurd. In
business, generally speaking, the
profits are in proportion to the
risks. What does it matter to the
State how money is set circulating,
provided that it is always in
circulation? What does it matter who is
rich or who is poor, provided that
there is a constant quantity of
rich people to be taxed? Joint-stock
companies, limited liability
companies, every sort of enterprise
that pays a dividend, has been
carried on for twenty years in England,
commercially the first country
in the world. Nothing passes unchallenged there; the Houses of
Parliament hatch some twelve hundred
laws every session, yet no member
of Parliament has ever yet raised an
objection to the system"
"A cure for plethora of the
strong box. Purely vegetable remedy," put
in Bixiou, "les carottes"
(gambling speculation).
"Look here!" cried
Couture, firing up at this. "You have ten thousand
francs. You invest it in ten shares
of a thousand francs each in ten
different enterprises. You are
swindled nine times out of the tenas
a matter of fact you are not, the
public is a match for anybody, but
say that you are swindled, and only
one affair turns out well (by
accident!oh, granted!it was not done
on purposethere, chaff
away!). Very well, the punter that
has the sense to divide up his
stakes in this way hits on a
splendid investment, like those who took
shares in the Wortschin mines.
Gentlemen, let us admit among ourselves
that those who call out are
hypocrites, desperately vexed because they
have no good ideas of their own, and
neither power to advertise nor
skill to exploit a business. You
will not have long to wait for proof.
In a very short time you will see
the aristocracy, the court, and
public men descend into speculation
in serried columns; you will see
that their claws are longer, their
morality more crooked than ours,
while they have not our good points.
What a head a man must have if he
has to found a business in times
when the shareholder is as covetous
and keen as the inventor! What a
great magnetizer must he be that can
create a Claparon and hit upon
expedients never tried before! Do you
know the moral of it all? Our age is
no better than we are; we live in
an era of greed; no one troubles
himself about the intrinsic value of
a thing if he can only make a profit
on it by selling it to somebody
else; so he passes it on to his
neighbor. The shareholder that thinks
he sees a chance of making money is
just as covetous as the founder
that offers him the opportunity of
making it."
"Isn't he fine, our Couture?
Isn't he fine?" exclaimed Bixiou, turning
to Blondet. "He will ask us
next to erect statues to him as a
benefactor of the species."
"It would lead people to
conclude that the fool's money is the wise
man's patrimony by divine
right," said Blondet.
"Gentlemen," cried
Couture, "let us have our laugh out here to make up
for all the times when we must
listen gravely to solemn nonsense
justifying laws passed on the spur
of the moment."
"He is right," said
Blondet. "What times we live in, gentlemen! When
the fire of intelligence appears
among us, it is promptly quenched by
haphazard legislation. Almost all our
lawgivers come up from little
parishes where they studied human
nature through the medium of the
newspapers; forthwith they shut down
the safety-valve, and when the
machinery blows up there is weeping
and gnashing of teeth! We do
nothing nowadays but pass penal laws
and levy taxes. Will you have the
sum of it all!There is no religion
left in the State!"
"Oh, bravo, Blondet!"
cried Bixiou, "thou hast set thy finger on the
weak spot. Meddlesome taxation has
lost us more victories here in
France than the vexatious chances of war. I once spent seven years in
the hulks of a government department, chained with bourgeois to my
bench. There was a clerk in the
office, a man with a head on his
shoulders; he had set his mind upon
making a sweeping reform of the
whole fiscal systemah, well, we took
the conceit out of him nicely.
France might have been too prosperous, you know she might have amused
herself by conquering Europe again; we acted in the interests of the
peace of nations. I slew Rabourdin with a caricature."[*]
[*] See Les Employes [The Government
Clerks aka Bureaucracy].
"By RELIGION I do not mean
cant; I use the word in its wide political
sense," rejoined Blondet.
"Explain your meaning,"
said Finot.
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