VII
In the month of May, 1821, this
family, ever grappling with adversity,
received a first reward for its
efforts at a little fete which
Pillerault, the arbiter of its destinies,
prepared for it. The last
Sunday of that month was the
anniversary of the day on which Constance
had consented to marry Cesar.
Pillerault, in concert with the Ragons,
hired a little country-house at
Sceaux, and the worthy old ironmonger
silently prepared a joyous
house-warming.
"Cesar," said Pillerault,
on the Saturday evening, "to-morrow we are
all going into the country, and you
must come."
Cesar, who wrote a superb hand,
spent his evenings in copying for
Derville and other lawyers. On
Sundays, justified by ecclesiastical
permission, he worked like a Negro.
"No," he said,
"Monsieur Derville is waiting for a guardianship
account."
"Your wife and daughter ought
to have some reward. You will meet none
but our particular friends,--the
Abbe Loraux, the Ragons, Popinot, and
his uncle. Besides, I wish it."
Cesar and his wife, carried along by
the whirlwind of business, had
never revisited Sceaux, though from
time to time each longed to see
once more the tree under which the
head-clerk of "The Queen of Roses"
had fainted with joy. During the
trip, which Cesar made in a hackney-
coach with his wife and daughter,
and Popinot who escorted them,
Constance cast many meaning glances
at her husband without bringing to
his lips a single smile. She
whispered a few words in his ear; for all
answer he shook his head. The soft
signs of her tenderness, ever-
present yet at the moment forced,
instead of brightening Cesar's face
made it more sombre, and brought the
long-repressed tears into his
eyes. Poor man! he had gone over
this road twenty years before, young,
prosperous, full of hope, the lover
of a girl as beautiful as their
own Cesarine; he was dreaming then
of happiness. To-day, in the coach
before him, sat his noble child pale
and worn by vigils, and his brave
wife, whose only beauty now was that
of cities through whose streets
have flowed the lava waves of a
volcano. Love alone remained to him!
Cesar's sadness smothered the joy
that welled up in the hearts of
Cesarine and Anselme, who embodied
to his eyes the charming scene of
other days.
"Be happy, my children! you
have earned the right," said the poor
father in heart-rending tones.
"You may love without one bitter
thought."
As he said these words he took his
wife's hands and kissed them with a
sacred and admiring effect which
touched Constance more than the
brightest gaiety. When they reached
the house where Pillerault, the
Ragons, the Abbe Loraux, and Popinot
the judge were waiting for them,
these five choice people assumed an
air and manner and speech which
put Cesar at his ease; for all were
deeply moved to see him still on
the morrow of his great disaster.
"Go and take a walk in the
Aulnay woods," said Pillerault, putting
Cesar's hand into that of Constance;
"go with Anselme and Cesarine!
but come back by four o'clock."
"Poor souls, we should be a
restraint upon them," said Madame Ragon,
touched by the deep grief of her
debtor. "He will be very happy
presently."
"It is repentance without
sin," said the Abbe Loraux.
"He could rise to greatness
only through adversity," said the judge.
To forget is the great secret of
strong, creative natures,--to forget,
in the way of Nature herself, who
knows no past, who begins afresh, at
every hour, the mysteries of her
untiring travail.
Feeble existences, like that of
Birotteau, live sunk in sorrows,
instead of transmuting them into
doctrines of experience: they let
them saturate their being, and are
worn-out, finally, by falling more
and more under the weight of past
misfortunes.
When the two couples reached the path
which leads to the woods of
Aulnay, placed like a crown upon the
prettiest hillside in the
neighborhood of Paris, and from
which the Vallee-aux-Loups is seen in
all its coquetry, the beauty of the
day, the charm of the landscape,
the first spring verdure, the
delicious memory of the happiest day of
all his youth, loosened the tight
chords in Cesar's soul; he pressed
the arm of his wife against his
beating heart; his eye was no longer
glassy, for the light of pleasure
once more brightened in it.
"At last," said Constance
to her husband, "I see you again, my poor
Cesar. I think we have all behaved
well enough to allow ourselves a
little pleasure now and then."
"Ought I?" said the poor
man. "Ah! Constance, thy affection is all
that remains to me. Yes, I have lost
even my old self-confidence; I
have no strength left; my only
desire is that I may live to die
discharged of debt on earth. Thou,
dear wife, thou who art my wisdom
and my prudence, thou whose eyes saw
clear, thou who art
irreproachable, thou canst have
pleasure. I alone--of us three--am
guilty. Eighteen months ago, in the
midst of that fatal ball, I saw my
Constance, the only woman I have
ever loved, more beautiful than the
young girl I followed along this
path twenty years ago--like our
children yonder! In eighteen months
I have blasted that beauty,--my
pride, my legitimate and sanctioned
pride. I love thee better since I
know thee well. Oh, /dear/!" he
said, giving to the word a tone which
reached to the inmost heart of his
wife, "I would rather have thee
scold me, than see thee so tender to
my pain."
"I did not think," she
said, "that after twenty years of married life
the love of a wife for her husband
could deepen."
These words drove from Cesar's mind,
for one brief moment, all his
sorrows; his heart was so true that
they were to him a fortune. He
walked forward almost joyously to
/their/ tree, which by chance had
not been felled. Husband and wife
sat down beneath it, watching
Anselme and Cesarine, who were
sauntering across the grassy slope
without perceiving them, thinking
probably that they were still
following.
"Mademoiselle," Anselme
was saying, "do not think me so base and
grasping as to profit by your
father's share which I have acquired in
the Cephalic Oil. I am keeping his
share for him; I nurse it with
careful love. I invest the profits;
if there is any loss I put it to
my own account. We can only belong
to one another on the day when your
father is restored to his position,
free of debt. I work for that day
with all the strength that love has
given me."
"Will it come soon?" she
said.
"Soon," said Popinot. The
word was uttered in a tone so full of
meaning, that the chaste and pure
young girl inclined her head to her
dear Anselme, who laid an eager and
respectful kiss upon her brow,--so
noble was her gesture and action.
"Papa, all is well," she
said to Cesar with a little air of
confidence. "Be good and sweet;
talk to us, put away that sad look."
When this family, so tenderly bound
together, re-entered the house,
even Cesar, little observing as he
was, saw a change in the manner of
the Ragons which seemed to denote
some remarkable event. The greeting
of Madame Ragon was particularly
impressive; her look and accent
seemed to say to Cesar, "We are
paid."
At the dessert, the notary of Sceaux
appeared. Pillerault made him sit
down, and then looked at Cesar, who
began to suspect a surprise,
though he was far indeed from
imagining the extent of it.
"My nephew, the savings of your
wife, your daughter, and yourself, for
the last eighteen months, amounted
to twenty thousand francs. I have
received thirty thousand by the
dividend on my claim. We have
therefore fifty thousand francs to
divide among your creditors.
Monsieur Ragon has received thirty
thousand francs for his dividend,
and you have now paid him the
balance of his claim in full, interest
included, for which monsieur here,
the notary of Sceaux, has brought
you a receipt. The rest of the money
is with Crottat, ready for
Lourdois, Madame Madou, the mason,
carpenter, and the other most
pressing creditors. Next year, we
may do as well. With time and
patience we can go far."
Birotteau's joy is not to be
described; he threw himself into his
uncle's arms, weeping.
"May he not wear his
cross?" said Ragon to the Abbe Loraux.
The confessor fastened the red
ribbon to Cesar's buttonhole. The poor
clerk looked at himself again and
again during the evening in the
mirrors of the salon, manifesting a
joy at which people thinking
themselves superior might have
laughed, but which these good bourgeois
thought quite natural.
The next day Birotteau went to find
Madame Madou.
"Ah, there you are, good
soul!" she cried. "I didn't recognize you,
you have turned so gray. Yet you
don't really drudge, you people;
you've got good places. As for me, I
work like a turnspit that
deserves baptism."
"But, madame--"
"Never mind, I don't mean it as
a reproach," she said. "You have got
my receipt."
"I came to tell you that I
shall pay you to-morrow, at Monsieur
Crottat's, the rest of your claim in
full, with interest."
"Is that true?"
"Be there at eleven
o'clock."
"Hey! there's honor for you!
good measure and running over!" she cried
with naive admiration. "Look
here, my good monsieur, I am doing a fine
trade with your little red-head.
He's a nice young fellow; he lets me
earn a fair penny without haggling
over it, so that I may get an
equivalent for that loss. Well, I'll
get you a receipt in full,
anyhow; you keep the money, my poor
old man! La Madou may get in a
fury, and she does scold; but she
has got something here--" she cried,
thumping the most voluminous mounds
of flesh ever yet seen in the
markets.
"No," said Birotteau,
"the law is plain. I wish to pay you in full."
"Then I won't deny you the
pleasure," she said; "and to-morrow I'll
trumpet your conduct through the
markets. Ha! it's rare, rare!"
The worthy man had much the same
scene, with variations, at Lourdois
the house painter's, father-in-law
of Crottat. It was raining; Cesar
left his umbrella at the corner of
the door. The prosperous painter,
seeing the water trickling into the
room where he was breakfasting
with his wife, was not tender.
"Come, what do you want, my
poor Pere Birotteau?" he said, in the hard
tone which some people take to
importunate beggars.
"Monsieur, has not your
son-in-law told you--"
"What?" cried Lourdois,
expecting some appeal.
"To be at his office this
morning at half past eleven, and give me a
receipt for the payment of your
claims in full, with interest?"
"Ah, that's another thing! Sit
down, Monsieur Birotteau, and eat a
mouthful with us."
"Do us the pleasure to share
our breakfast," said Madame Lourdois.
"You are doing well,
then?" asked the fat Lourdois.
"No, monsieur, I have lived
from hand to mouth, that I might scrape up
this money; but I hope, in time, to
repair the wrongs I have done to
my neighbor."
"Ah!" said the painter,
swallowing a mouthful of /pate de foie gras/,
"you are truly a man of
honor."
"What is Madame Birotteau
doing?" asked Madame Lourdois.
"She is keeping the books of
Monsieur Anselme Popinot."
"Poor people!" said Madame
Lourdois, in a low voice to her husband.
"If you ever need me, my dear
Monsieur Birotteau, come and see me,"
said Lourdois. "I might
help--"
"I do need you--at eleven
o'clock to-day, monsieur," said Birotteau,
retiring.
*****
This first result gave courage to
the poor bankrupt, but not peace of
mind. On the contrary, the thought
of regaining his honor agitated his
life inordinately; he completely
lost the natural color of his cheeks,
his eyes grew sunken and dim, and
his face hollow. When old
acquaintances met him, in the
morning at eight o'clock or in the
evening at four, as he went to and
from the Rue de l'Oratoire, wearing
the surtout coat he wore at the time
of his fall, and which he
husbanded as a poor sub-lieutenant
husbands his uniform,--his hair
entirely white, his face pale, his
manner timid,--some few would stop
him in spite of himself; for his eye
was alert to avoid those he knew
as he crept along beside the walls,
like a thief.
"Your conduct is known, my
friend," said one; "everybody regrets the
sternness with which you treat
yourself, also your wife and daughter."
"Take a little more time,"
said others; "the wounds of money do not
kill."
"No, but the wounds of the soul
do," the poor worn Cesar answered one
day to his friend Matifat.
*****
At the beginning of the year 1822,
the Canal Saint-Martin was begun.
Land in the Faubourg du Temple
increased enormously in value. The
canal would cut through the property
which du Tillet had bought of
Cesar Birotteau. The company who
obtained the right of building it
agreed to pay the banker an
exorbitant sum, provided they could take
possession within a given time. The
lease Cesar had granted to
Popinot, which went with the sale to
du Tillet, now hindered the
transfer to the canal company. The
banker came to the Rue des Cinq-
Diamants to see the druggist. If du
Tillet was indifferent to Popinot,
it is very certain that the lover of
Cesarine felt an instinctive
hatred for du Tillet. He knew
nothing of the theft and the infamous
scheme of the prosperous banker, but
an inward voice cried to him,
"The man is an unpunished
rascal." Popinot would never have transacted
the smallest business with him; du
Tillet's very presence was odious
to his feelings. Under the present
circumstances it was doubly so, for
the banker was now enriched through
the forced spoliation of his
former master; the lands about the
Madeleine, as well as those in the
Faubourg du Temple, were beginning
to rise in price, and to foreshadow
the enormous value they were to
reach in 1827. So that after du Tillet
had explained the object of his
visit, Popinot looked at him with
concentrated wrath.
"I shall not refuse to give up
my lease; but I demand sixty thousand
francs for it, and I shall not take
one farthing less."
"Sixty thousand francs!"
exclaimed du Tillet, making a movement to
leave the shop.
"I have fifteen years' lease
still to run; it will, moreover, cost me
three thousand francs a year to get
other buildings. Therefore, sixty
thousand francs, or say no more about
it," said Popinot, going to the
back of the shop, where du Tillet
followed him.
The discussion grew warm,
Birotteau's name was mentioned; Madame Cesar
heard it and came down, and saw du
Tillet for the first time since the
famous ball. The banker was unable
to restrain a gesture of surprise
at the change which had come over
the beautiful woman; he lowered his
eyes, shocked at the result of his
own work.
"Monsieur," said Popinot
to Madame Cesar, "is going to make three
hundred thousand francs out of /your/
land, and he refuses /us/ sixty
thousand francs' indemnity for /our/
lease."
"That is three thousand francs
a year," said du Tillet.
"Three--thousand--francs!"
said Madame Cesar, slowly, in a clear,
penetrating voice.
Du Tillet turned pale. Popinot
looked at Madame Birotteau. There was a
moment of profound silence, which
made the scene still more
inexplicable to Anselme.
"Sign your relinquishment of
the lease, which I have made Crottat draw
up," said du Tillet, drawing a
stamped paper from a side-pocket. "I
will give you a cheque on the Bank
of France for sixty thousand
francs."
Popinot looked at Madame Cesar
without concealing his astonishment; he
thought he was dreaming. While du
Tillet was writing his cheque at a
high desk, Madame Cesar disappeared
and went upstairs. The druggist
and the banker exchanged papers. Du
Tillet bowed coldly to Popinot,
and went away.
"At last, in a few
months," thought Popinot, as he watched du Tillet
going towards the Rue des Lombards,
where his cabriolet was waiting,
"thanks to this extraordinary
affair, I shall have my Cesarine. My
poor little wife shall not wear
herself out any longer. A look from
Madame Cesar was enough! What secret
is there between her and that
brigand? The whole thing is
extraordinary."
Popinot sent the cheque at once to
the Bank, and went up to speak to
Madame Birotteau; she was not in the
counting-room, and had doubtless
gone to her chamber. Anselme and
Constance lived like mother-in-law
and son-in-law when people in that
relation suit each other; he
therefore rushed up to Madame
Cesar's appartement with the natural
eagerness of a lover on the
threshold of his happiness. The young man
was prodigiously surprised to find
her, as he sprang like a cat into
the room, reading a letter from du
Tillet, whose handwriting he
recognized at a glance. A lighted
candle, and the black and quivering
phantoms of burned letters lying on
the floor made him shudder, for
his quick eyes caught the following
words in the letter which
Constance held in her hand:--
"I adore you! You know it well,
angel of my life, and--"
"What power have you over du
Tillet that could force him to agree to
such terms?" he said with a
convulsive laugh that came from repressed
suspicion.
"Do not let us speak of
that," she said, showing great distress.
"No," said Popinot,
bewildered; "let us rather talk of the end of all
your troubles." Anselme turned
on his heel towards the window, and
drummed with his fingers on the
panes as he gazed into the court.
"Well," he said to
himself, "even if she did love du Tillet, is that
any reason why I should not behave
like an honorable man?"
"What is the matter, my
child?" said the poor woman.
"The total of the net profits
of Cephalic Oil mount up to two hundred
and forty-two thousand francs; half
of that is one hundred and twenty-
one thousand," said Popinot,
brusquely. "If I withdraw from that
amount the forty-eight thousand
francs which I paid to Monsieur
Birotteau, there remains
seventy-three thousand, which, joined to
these sixty thousand paid for the
relinquishment of the lease, gives
/you/ one hundred and thirty-three
thousand francs."
Madame Cesar listened with
fluctuations of joy which made her tremble
so violently that Popinot could hear
the beating of her heart.
"Well, I have always considered
Monsieur Birotteau as my partner," he
went on; "we can use this sum
to pay his creditors in full. Add the
twenty-eight thousand you have saved
and placed in our uncle
Pillerault's hands, and we have one
hundred and sixty-one thousand
francs. Our uncle will not refuse
his receipt for his own claim of
twenty-five thousand. No human power
can deprive me of the right of
lending to my father-in-law, by
anticipating our profits of next year,
the necessary sum to make up the
total amount due to his creditor, and
--he--will--be--reinstated--restored--"
"Restored!" cried Madame
Cesar, falling on her knees beside a chair.
She joined her hands and said a
prayer; as she did so, the letter slid
from her fingers. "Dear
Anselme," she said, crossing herself, "dear
son!" She took his head in her
hands, kissed him on the forehead,
pressed him to her heart, and seemed
for a moment beside herself.
"Cesarine is thine! My daughter
will be happy at last. She can leave
that shop where she is killing
herself--"
"For love?" said Popinot.
"Yes," answered the
mother, smiling.
"Listen to a little
secret," said Popinot, glancing at the fatal
letter from a corner of his eye.
"I helped Celestin to buy your
business; but I did it on one
condition,--your appartement was to be
kept exactly as you left it. I had
an idea in my head, though I never
thought that chance would favor it
so much. Celestin is bound to sub-
let to you your old appartement,
where he has never set foot, and
where all the furniture will be
yours. I have kept the second story,
where I shall live with Cesarine,
who shall never leave you. After our
marriage I shall come and pass the
days from eight in the morning till
six in the evening here. I will buy
out Monsieur Cesar's share in this
business for a hundred thousand francs,
and that will give you an
income to live on. Shall you not be
happy?"
"Tell me no more, Anselme, or I
shall go out of my mind."
The angelic attitude of Madame
Cesar, the purity of her eyes, the
innocence of her candid brow,
contradicted so gloriously the thoughts
which surged in the lover's brain
that he resolved to make an end of
their monstrosities forever. Sin was
incompatible with the life and
sentiments of such a woman.
"My dear, adored mother,"
said Anselme, "in spite of myself, a
horrible suspicion has entered my
soul. If you wish to see me happy,
you will put an end to it at
once."
Popinot stretched out his hand and
picked up the letter.
"Without intending it," he
resumed, alarmed at the terror painted on
Constance's face, "I read the
first words of this letter of du Tillet.
The words coincide in a singular
manner with the power you have just
shown in forcing that man to accept
my absurd exactions; any man would
explain it as the devil explains it
to me, in spite of myself. Your
look--three words suffice--"
"Stop!" said Madame Cesar,
taking the letter and burning it. "My son,
I am severely punished for a
trifling error. You shall know all,
Anselme. I shall not allow a
suspicion inspired by her mother to
injure my daughter; and besides, I
can speak without blushing. What I
now tell you, I could tell my
husband. Du Tillet wished to seduce me;
I informed my husband of it, and du
Tillet was to have been dismissed.
On the very day my husband was about
to send him away, he robbed us of
three thousand francs."
"I was sure of it!" said
Popinot, expressing his hatred by the tones
of his voice.
"Anselme, your future, your
happiness, demand this confidence; but you
must let it die in your heart, just
as it is dead in mine and in
Cesar's. Do you not remember how my
husband scolded us for an error in
the accounts? Monsieur Birotteau, to
avoid a police-court which might
have destroyed the man for life, no
doubt placed in the desk three
thousand francs,--the price of that
cashmere shawl which I did not
receive till three years later. All
this explains the scene. Alas! my
dear child, I must admit my
foolishness; du Tillet wrote me three
love-letters, which pictured him so
well that I kept them," she said,
lowering her eyes and sighing,
"as a curiosity. I have not re-read
them more than once; still, it was
imprudent to keep them. When I saw
du Tillet just now I was reminded of
them, and I came upstairs to burn
them; I was looking over the last as
you came in. That's the whole
story, my friend."
Anselme knelt for a moment beside
her and kissed her hand with an
unspeakable emotion, which brought
tears into the eyes of both; Madame
Cesar raised him, stretched out her
arms and pressed him to her heart.
*****
This day was destined to be a day of
joy to Cesar. The private
secretary of the king, Monsieur de
Vandenesse, called at the Sinking-
Fund Office to find him. They walked
out together into the little
courtyard.
"Monsieur Birotteau," said
the Vicomte de Vandenesse, "your efforts to
pay your creditors in full have
accidentally become known to the king.
His Majesty, touched by such rare
conduct, and hearing that through
humility you no longer wear the
cross of the Legion of honor, has sent
me to command you to put it on
again. Moreover, wishing to help you in
meeting your obligations, he has
charged me to give you this sum from
his privy purse, regretting that he
is unable to make it larger. Let
this be a profound secret. His
Majesty thinks it derogatory to the
royal dignity to have his good deeds
divulged," said the private
secretary, putting six thousand
francs into the hand of the poor
clerk, who listened to this speech
with unutterable emotion. The words
that came to his lips were
disconnected and stammering. Vandenesse
waved his hand to him, smiling, and
went away.
The principle which actuated poor
Cesar is so rare in Paris that his
conduct by degrees attracted
admiration. Joseph Lebas, Popinot the
judge, Camusot, the Abbe Loraux,
Ragon, the head of the important
house where Cesarine was employed,
Lourdois, Monsieur de la
Billardiere, and others, talked of
it. Public opinion, undergoing a
change, now lauded him to the skies.
"He is indeed a man of
honor!" The phrase even sounded in Cesar's ears
as he passed along the streets, and
caused him the emotion an author
feels when he hears the muttered
words: "That is he!" This noble
recovery of credit enraged du
Tillet. Cesar's first thought on
receiving the bank-notes sent by the
king was to use them in paying
the debt still due to his former
clerk. The worthy man went to the Rue
de la Chaussee d'Antin just as the
banker was returning from the
Bourse; they met upon the stairway.
"Well, my poor Birotteau!"
said du Tillet, with a stealthy glance.
"Poor!" exclaimed the
debtor proudly, "I am very rich. I shall lay my
head this night upon my pillow with
the happiness of knowing that I
have paid you in full."
This speech, ringing with integrity,
sent a sharp pang through du
Tillet. In spite of the esteem he
publicly enjoyed, he did not esteem
himself; an inextinguishable voice
cried aloud within his soul, "The
man is sublime!"
"Pay me?" he said;
"why, what business are you doing?"
Feeling sure that du Tillet would
not repeat what he told him,
Birotteau answered: "I shall
never go back to business, monsieur. No
human power could have foreseen what
has happened to me there. Who
knows that I might not be the victim
of another Roguin? But my conduct
has been placed under the eyes of
the king; his heart has deigned to
sympathize with my efforts; he has
encouraged them by sending me a sum
of money large enough to--"
"Do you want a receipt?"
said du Tillet, interrupting him; "are you
going to pay--"
"In full, with interest. I must
ask you to come with me now to
Monsieur Crottat, only two steps
from here."
"Before a notary?"
"Monsieur; I am not forbidden
to aim at my complete reinstatement; to
obtain it, all deeds and receipts
must be legal and undeniable."
"Come, then," said du
Tillet, going out with Birotteau; "it is only a
step. But where did you take all
that money from?"
"I have not taken it,"
said Cesar; "I have earned it by the sweat of
my brow."
"You owe an enormous sum to
Claparon."
"Alas! yes; that is my largest
debt. I think sometimes I shall die
before I pay it."
"You never can pay it,"
said du Tillet harshly.
"He is right," thought
Birotteau.
As he went home the poor man passed,
inadvertently, along the Rue
Saint-Honore; for he was in the
habit of making a circuit to avoid
seeing his shop and the windows of
his former home. For the first time
since his fall he saw the house
where eighteen years of happiness had
been effaced by the anguish of three
months.
"I hoped to end my days
there," he thought; and he hastened his steps,
for he caught sight of the new
sign,--
CELESTIN CREVEL
Successor to Cesar Birotteau
"Am I dazzled, am I going
blind? Was that Cesarine?" he cried,
recollecting a blond head he had
seen at the window.
He had actually seen his daughter,
his wife, and Popinot. The lovers
knew that Birotteau never passed
before the windows of his old home,
and they had come to the house to
make arrangements for a fete which
they intended to give him. This
amazing apparition so astonished
Birotteau that he stood stock-still,
unable to move.
"There is Monsieur Birotteau
looking at his old house," said Monsieur
Molineux to the owner of a shop
opposite to "The Queen of Roses."
"Poor man!" said the
perfumer's former neighbor; "he gave a fine ball
--two hundred carriages in the
street."
"I was there; and he failed in
three months," said Molineux. "I was
the assignee."
Birotteau fled, trembling in every
limb, and hastened back to
Pillerault.
Pillerault, who had just been
informed of what had happened in the Rue
des Cinq-Diamants, feared that his
nephew was scarcely fit to bear the
shock of joy which the sudden knowledge
of his restoration would cause
him; for Pillerault was a daily
witness of the moral struggles of the
poor man, whose mind stood always
face to face with his inflexible
doctrines against bankruptcy, and
whose vital forces were used and
spent at every hour. Honor was to
Cesar a corpse, for which an Easter
morning might yet dawn. This hope
kept his sorrow incessantly active.
Pillerault took upon himself the
duty of preparing his nephew to
receive the good news; and when
Birotteau came in he was thinking over
the best means of accomplishing his
purpose. Cesar's joy as he related
the proof of interest which the king
had bestowed upon him seemed of
good augury, and the astonishment he
expressed at seeing Cesarine at
"The Queen of Roses"
afforded, Pillerault thought, an excellent
opening.
"Well, Cesar," said the
old man, "do you know what is at the bottom of
it?--the hurry Popinot is in to
marry Cesarine. He cannot wait any
longer; and you ought not, for the
sake of your exaggerated ideas of
honor, to make him pass his youth
eating dry bread with the fumes of a
good dinner under his nose. Popinot
wishes to lend you the amount
necessary to pay your creditors in
full."
"Then he would buy his
wife," said Birotteau.
"Is it not honorable to
reinstate his father-in-law?"
"There would be ground for
contention; besides--"
"Besides," exclaimed
Pillerault, pretending anger, "you may have the
right to immolate yourself if you
choose, but you have no right to
immolate your daughter."
A vehement discussion ensued, which
Pillerault designedly excited.
"Hey! if Popinot lent you
nothing," cried Pillerault, "if he had
called you his partner, if he had
considered the price which he paid
to the creditors for your share in
the Oil as an advance upon the
profits, so as not to strip you of
everything--"
"I should have seemed to rob my
creditors in collusion with him."
Pillerault feigned to be defeated by
this argument. He knew the human
heart well enough to be certain that
during the night Cesar would go
over the question in his own mind,
and the mental discussion would
accustom him to the idea of his
complete vindication.
"But how came my wife and
daughter to be in our old appartement?"
asked Birotteau, while they were
dining.
"Anselme wants to hire it, and
live there with Cesarine. Your wife is
on his side. They have had the banns
published without saying anything
about it, so as to force you to
consent. Popinot says there will be
much less merit in marrying Cesarine
after you are reinstated. You
take six thousand francs from the
king, and you won't accept anything
from your relations! I can well
afford to give you a receipt in full
for all that is owing to me; do you
mean to refuse it?"
"No," said Cesar;
"but that won't keep me from saving up everything to
pay you."
"Irrational folly!" cried
Pillerault. "In matters of honor I ought to
be believed. What nonsense were you
saying just now? How have you
robbed your creditors when you have
paid them all in full?"
Cesar looked earnestly at
Pillerault, and Pillerault was touched to
see, for the first time in three
years, a genuine smile on the face of
his poor nephew.
"It is true," he said,
"they would be paid; but it would be selling my
daughter."
"And I wish to be bought!"
cried Cesarine, entering with Popinot.
The lovers had heard Birotteau's
last words as they came on tiptoe
through the antechamber of their
uncle's little appartement, Madame
Birotteau following. All three had
driven round to the creditors who
were still unpaid, requesting them
to meet at Alexandre Crottat's that
evening to receive their money. The
all-powerful logic of the enamored
Popinot triumphed in the end over
Cesar's scruples, though he
persisted for some time in calling
himself a debtor, and in declaring
that he was circumventing the law by
a substitution. But the
refinements of his conscience gave
way when Popinot cried out: "Do you
want to kill your daughter?"
"Kill my daughter!" said
Cesar, thunderstruck.
"Well, then," said
Popinot, "I have the right to convey to you the sum
which I conscientiously believe to
be your share in my profits. Do you
refuse it?"
"No," said Cesar.
"Very good; then let us go at
once to Crottat and settle the matter,
so that there may be no backing out
of it. We will arrange about our
marriage contract at the same
time."
*****
A petition for reinstatement with
corroborative documents was at once
deposited by Derville at the office
of the /procureur-general/ of the
Cour Royale.
During the month required for the
legal formalities and for the
publication of the banns of marriage
between Cesarine and Anselme,
Birotteau was a prey to feverish
agitation. He was restless. He feared
he should not live till the great
day when the decree for his
vindication would be rendered. His
heart throbbed, he said, without
cause. He complained of dull pains
in that organ, worn out as it was
by emotions of sorrow, and now
wearied with the rush of excessive joy.
Decrees of rehabilitation are so
rare in the bankrupt court of Paris
that seldom more than one is granted
in ten years.
To those persons who take society in
its serious aspects, the
paraphernalia of justice has a grand
and solemn character difficult
perhaps to define. Institutions
depend altogether on the feelings with
which men view them and the degree
of grandeur which men's thoughts
attach to them. When there is no
longer, we will not say religion, but
belief among the people, whenever
early education has loosened all
conservative bonds by accustoming
youth to the practice of pitiless
analysis, a nation will be found in
process of dissolution; for it
will then be held together only by
the base solder of material
interests, and by the formulas of a
creed created by intelligent
egotism.
Bred in religious ideas, Birotteau
held justice to be what it ought to
be in the eyes of men,--a representation
of society itself, an august
utterance of the will of all, apart
from the particular form by which
it is expressed. The older, feebler,
grayer the magistrate, the more
solemn seemed the exercise of his
function,--a function which demands
profound study of men and things,
which subdues the heart and hardens
it against the influence of eager
interests. It is a rare thing
nowadays to find men who mount the
stairway of the old Palais de
Justice in the grasp of keen
emotions. Cesar Birotteau was one of
those men.
Few persons have noticed the
majestic solemnity of that stairway,
admirably placed as it is to produce
a solemn effect. It rises, beyond
the outer peristyle which adorns the
courtyard of the Palais, from the
centre of a gallery leading, at one
end, to the vast hall of the Pas
Perdus, and at the other to the
Sainte-Chapelle,--two architectural
monuments which make all buildings
in their neighborhood seem paltry.
The church of Saint-Louis is among
the most imposing edifices in
Paris, and the approach to it
through this long gallery is at once
sombre and romantic. The great hall
of the Pas Perdus, on the
contrary, presents at the other end
of the gallery a broad space of
light; it is impossible to forget
that the history of France is linked
to those walls. The stairway should
therefore be imposing in
character; and, in point of act, it
is neither dwarfed nor crushed by
the architectural splendors on
either side of it. Possibly the mind is
sobered by a glimpse, caught through
the rich gratings, of the Place
du Palais-de-Justice, where so many
sentences have been executed. The
staircase opens above into an
enormous space, or antechamber, leading
to the hall where the Court holds
its public sittings.
Imagine the emotions with which the
bankrupt, susceptible by nature to
the awe of such accessories, went up
that stairway to the hall of
judgment, surrounded by his nearest
friends,--Lebas, president of the
Court of Commerce, Camusot his
former judge, Ragon, and Monsieur
l'Abbe Loraux his confessor. The pious
priest made the splendors of
human justice stand forth in strong
relief by reflections which gave
them still greater solemnity in
Cesar's eyes. Pillerault, the
practical philosopher, fearing the
danger of unexpected events on the
worn mind of his nephew, had schemed
to prepare him by degrees for the
joys of this festal day. Just as
Cesar finished dressing, a number of
his faithful friends arrived, all
eager for the honor of accompanying
him to the bar of the Court. The
presence of this retinue roused the
honest man to an elation which gave
him strength to meet the imposing
spectacle in the halls of justice.
Birotteau found more friends
awaiting him in the solemn audience
chamber, where about a dozen
members of the council were in
session.
After the cases were called over,
Birotteau's attorney made his demand
for reinstatement in the usual
terms. On a sign from the presiding
judge, the /procureur-general/ rose.
In the name of his office this
public prosecutor, the
representative of public vindictiveness, asked
that honor might be restored to the
merchant who had never really lost
it,--a solitary instance of such an
appeal; for a condemned man can
only be pardoned. Men of honor alone
can imagine the emotions of Cesar
Birotteau as he heard Monsieur de
Grandville pronounce a speech, of
which the following is an
abridgement:--
"Gentlemen," said that
celebrated official, "on the 16th of
January, 1820, Birotteau was
declared a bankrupt by the commercial
tribunal of the Seine. His failure
was not caused by imprudence,
nor by rash speculations, nor by any
act that stained his honor.
We desire to say publicly that this
failure was the result of a
disaster which has again and again
occurred, to the detriment of
justice and the great injury of the
city of Paris. It has been
reserved for our generation, in
which the bitter leaven of
republican principles and manners
will long be felt, to behold the
notariat of Paris abandoning the
glorious traditions of preceding
centuries, and producing in a few
years as many failures as two
centuries of the old monarchy had
produced. The thirst for gold
rapidly acquired has beset even
these officers of trust, these
guardians of the public wealth,
these mediators between the law
and the people!"
On this text followed an allocution,
in which the Comte de Grandville,
obedient to the necessities of his
role, contrived to incriminate the
Liberals, the Bonapartists, and all
other enemies of the throne.
Subsequent events have proved that
he had reason for his apprehension.
"The flight of a notary of
Paris who carried off the funds which
Birotteau had deposited in his
hands, caused the fall of your
petitioner," he resumed.
"The Court rendered in that matter a
decree which showed to what extent
the confidence of Roguin's
clients had been betrayed. A
/concordat/ was held. For the honor
of your petitioner, we call
attention to the fact that his
proceedings were remarkable for a
purity not found in any of the
scandalous failures which daily
degrade the commerce of Paris. The
creditors of Birotteau received the
whole property, down to the
smallest articles that the
unfortunate man possessed. They
received, gentlemen, his clothes,
his jewels, things of purely
personal use,--and not only his, but
those of his wife, who
abandoned all her rights to swell
the total of his assets. Under
these circumstances Birotteau showed
himself worthy of the respect
which his municipal functions had
already acquired for him; for he
was at the time a deputy-mayor of the second arrondissement and
had just received the decoration of the Legion of honor, granted
as much for his devotion to the
royal cause in Vendemiaire, on the
steps of the Saint-Roch, which were
stained with his blood, as for
his conciliating spirit, his
estimable qualities as a magistrate,
and the modesty with which he
declined the honors of the
mayoralty, pointing out one more
worthy of them, the Baron de la
Billardiere, one of those noble
Vendeens whom he had learned to
value in the dark days."
"That phrase is better than
mine," whispered Cesar to Pillerault.
"At that time the creditors,
who received sixty per cent of their
claims through the aforesaid
relinquishment on the part of this
loyal merchant, his wife, and his
daughter of all that they
possessed, recorded their respect
for their debtor in the
certificate of bankruptcy granted at
the /concordat/ which then
took place, giving him at the same
time a release from the
remainder of their claims. This
testimonial is couched in terms
which are worthy of the attention of
the Court."
Here the /procureur-general/ read
the passage from the certificate of
bankruptcy.
"After receiving such
expressions of good-will, gentlemen, most
merchants would have considered
themselves released from
obligation and free to return boldly
into the vortex of business.
Far from so doing, Birotteau,
without allowing himself to be cast
down, resolved within his conscience
to toil for the glorious day
which has at length dawned for him
here. Nothing disheartened him.
Our beloved sovereign granted to the
man who shed his blood on the
steps of Saint-Roch an office where
he might earn his bread. The
salary of that office the bankrupt
laid by for his creditors,
taking nothing for his own wants;
for family devotion has
supported him."
Birotteau pressed his uncle's hand,
weeping.
"His wife and his daughter
poured their earnings into the common
fund, for they too espoused the
noble hope of Birotteau. Each came
down from the position she had held
and took an inferior one.
These sacrifices, gentlemen, should
be held in honor, for they are
harder than all others to bear. I
will now show you what sort of
task it was that Birotteau imposed
upon himself."
Here the /procureur-general/ read a
summing-up of the schedule, giving
the amounts which had remained
unpaid and the names of the creditors.
"Each of these sums, with the
interest thereon, has been paid,
gentlemen; and the payment is not
shown by receipts under private
seal, which might be questioned:
they are payments made before a
notary, properly authenticated; and
according to the inflexible
requirements of this Court they have
been examined and verified by
the proper authority. We now ask you
to restore Birotteau, not to
honor, but to all the rights of
which he was deprived. In doing
this you are doing justice. Such
exhibitions of character are so
rare in this Court that we cannot
refrain from testifying to the
petitioner how heartily we applaud
his conduct, which an august
approval has already privately
encouraged."
The prosecuting officer closed by
reading his charge in the customary
formal terms.
The Court deliberated without
retiring, and the president rose to
pronounce judgement.
"The Court," he said, in
closing, "desires me to express to
Birotteau the satisfaction with
which it renders such a judgment.
Clerk, call the next case."
Birotteau, clothed with the caftan
of honor which the speech of the
illustrious /procureur-general/ had
cast about him, stood dumb with
joy as he listened to the solemn
words of the president, which
betrayed the quiverings of a heart
beneath the impassibility of human
justice. He was unable to stir from
his place before the bar, and
seemed for a moment nailed there,
gazing at the judges with a
wondering air, as though they were
angels opening to him the gates of
social life. His uncle took him by
the arm and led him from the hall.
Cesar had not as yet obeyed the
command of Louis XVIII., but he now
mechanically fastened the ribbon of
the Legion of honor to his button-
hole. In a moment he was surrounded
by his friends and borne in
triumph down the great stairway to
his coach.
"Where are you taking me, my
friends?" he said to Joseph Lebas,
Pillerault, and Ragon.
"To your own home."
"No; it is only three o'clock.
I wish to go to the Bourse, and use my
rights."
"To the Bourse!" said
Pillerault to the coachman, making an expressive
sign to Joseph Lebas, for he saw
symptoms in Cesar which led him to
fear he might lose his mind.
The late perfumer re-entered the
Bourse leaning on the arms of the two
honored merchants, his uncle and
Joseph Lebas. The news of his
rehabilitation had preceded him. The
first person who saw them enter,
followed by Ragon, was du Tillet.
"Ah! my dear master," he
cried, "I am delighted that you have pulled
through. I have perhaps contributed
to this happy ending of your
troubles by letting that little
Popinot drag a feather from my wing. I
am as glad of your happiness as if
it were my own."
"You could not be
otherwise," said Pillerault. "Such a thing can never
happen to you."
"What do you mean by
that?" said du Tillet.
"Oh! all in good part,"
said Lebas, smiling at the malicious meaning
of Pillerault, who, without knowing
the real truth, considered the man
a scoundrel.
Matifat caught sight of Cesar, and
immediately the most noted
merchants surrounded him and gave
him an /ovation boursiere/. He was
overwhelmed with flattering
compliments and grasped by the hand, which
roused some jealousy and caused some
remorse; for out of every hundred
persons walking about that hall
fifty at least had "liquidated" their
affairs. Gigonnet and Gobseck, who
were talking together in a corner,
looked at the man of commercial
honor very much as a naturalist must
have looked at the first
electric-eel that was ever brought to him,--a
fish armed with the power of a
Leyden jar, which is the greatest
curiosity of the animal kingdom.
After inhaling the incense of his
triumph, Cesar got into the coach to
go to his own home, where the
marriage contract of his dear
Cesarine and the devoted Popinot was
ready for signature. His nervous
laugh disturbed the minds of the
three old friends.
It is a fault of youth to think the
whole world vigorous with its own
vigor,--a fault derived from its
virtues. Youth sees neither men nor
things through spectacles; it colors
all with the reflex glory of its
ardent fires, and casts the superabundance
of its own life upon the
aged. Like Cesar and like Constance,
Popinot held in his memory a
glowing recollection of the famous
ball. Constance and Cesar through
their years of trial had often,
though they never spoke of it to each
other, heard the strains of
Collinet's orchestra, often beheld that
festive company, and tasted the joys
so swiftly and so cruelly
chastised,--as Adam and Eve must
have tasted in after times the
forbidden fruit which gave both
death and life to all posterity; for
it appears that the generation of
angels is a mystery of the skies.
Popinot, however, could dream of the
fete without remorse, nay, with
ecstasy. Had not Cesarine in all her
glory then promised herself to
him--to him, poor? During that
evening had he not won the assurance
that he was loved for himself alone?
So when he bought the appartement
restored by Grindot, from Celestin,
when he stipulated that all should
be kept intact, when he religiously
preserved the smallest things that
once belonged to Cesar and to
Constance, he was dreaming of another
ball,--his ball, his wedding-ball!
He made loving preparation for it,
imitating his old master in
necessary expenses, but eschewing all
follies,--follies that were now past
and done with. So the dinner was
to be served by Chevet; the guests
were to be mostly the same: the
Abbe Loraux replaced the chancellor
of the Legion of honor; the
president of the Court of Commerce,
Monsieur Lebas, had promised to be
there; Popinot invited Monsieur
Camusot in acknowledgment of the
kindness he had bestowed upon
Birotteau; Monsieur de Vandenesse and
Monsieur de Fontaine took the place
of Roguin and his wife. Cesarine
and Popinot distributed their
invitations with much discretion. Both
dreaded the publicity of a wedding,
and they escaped the jar such
scenes must cause to pure and tender
hearts by giving the ball on the
evening of the day appointed for
signing the marriage-contract.
Constance found in her room the gown
of cherry velvet in which she had
shone for a single night with fleeting
splendor. Cesarine cherished a
dream of appearing before Popinot in
the identical ball-dress about
which, time and time again, he had
talked to her. The appartement was
made ready to present to Cesar's
eyes the same enchanting scene he had
once enjoyed for a single evening.
Neither Constance, nor Cesarine,
nor Popinot perceived the danger to
Cesar in this sudden and
overwhelming surprise, and they
awaited his arrival at four o'clock
with a delight that was almost
childish.
Following close upon the unspeakable
emotion his re-entrance at the
Bourse had caused him, the hero of
commercial honor was now to meet
the sudden shock of felicity that
awaited him in his old home. He
entered the house, and saw at the
foot of the staircase (still new as
he had left it) his wife in her
velvet robe, Cesarine, the Comte de
Fontaine, the Vicomte de Vandenesse, the Baron de la
Billardiere, the
illustrious Vauquelin. A
light film dimmed his eyes, and his uncle
Pillerault, who held his arm, felt
him shudder inwardly.
"It is too much," said the
philosopher to the happy lover; "he can
never carry all the wine you are
pouring out to him."
Joy was so vivid in their hearts
that each attributed Cesar's emotion
and his stumbling step to the
natural intoxication of his feelings,--
natural, but sometimes mortal. When
he found himself once more in his
own home, when he saw his salon, his
guests, the women in their ball-
dresses, suddenly the heroic measure
in the finale of the great
symphony rang forth in his head and
heart. Beethoven's ideal music
echoed, vibrated, in many tones,
sounding its clarions through the
membranes of the weary brain, of
which it was indeed the grand finale.
Oppressed with this inward harmony,
Cesar took the arm of his wife and
whispered, in a voice suffocated by
a rush of blood that was still
repressed: "I am not
well."
Constance, alarmed, led him to her
bedroom; he reached it with
difficulty, and fell into a chair,
saying: "Monsieur Haudry, Monsieur
Loraux."
The Abbe Loraux came, followed by
the guests and the women in their
ball-dresses, who stopped short, a
frightened group. In presence of
that shining company Cesar pressed
the hand of his confessor and laid
his head upon the bosom of his
kneeling wife. A vessel had broken in
his heart, and the rush of blood
strangled his last sigh.
"Behold the death of the
righteous!" said the Abbe Loraux solemnly,
pointing to Cesar with the divine
gesture which Rembrandt gave to
Christ in his picture of the Raising
of Lazarus.
Jesus commanded the earth to give up
its prey; the priest called
heaven to behold a martyr of
commercial honor worthy to receive the
everlasting palm.
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