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I
Dedication
To Henri de Balzac, his
brother Honore.
The Comte de Fontaine, head of one
of the oldest families in Poitou,
had served the Bourbon cause with
intelligence and bravery during the
war in La Vendee against the
Republic. After having escaped all the
dangers which threatened the
royalist leaders during this stormy
period of modern history, he was
wont to say in jest, "I am one of the
men who gave themselves to be killed
on the steps of the throne." And
the pleasantry had some truth in it,
as spoken by a man left for dead
at the bloody battle of Les Quatre
Chemins. Though ruined by
confiscation, the staunch Vendeen
steadily refused the lucrative posts
offered to him by the Emperor
Napoleon. Immovable in his aristocratic
faith, he had blindly obeyed its
precepts when he thought it fitting
to choose a companion for life. In
spite of the blandishments of a
rich but revolutionary parvenu, who
valued the alliance at a high
figure, he married Mademoiselle de
Kergarouet, without a fortune, but
belonging to one of the oldest
families in Brittany.
When the second revolution burst on
Monsieur de Fontaine he was
encumbered with a large family.
Though it was no part of the noble
gentlemen's views to solicit favors,
he yielded to his wife's wish,
left his country estate, of which
the income barely sufficed to
maintain his children, and came to Paris. Saddened by
seeing the
greediness of his former comrades in
the rush for places and dignities
under the new Constitution, he was about
to return to his property
when he received a ministerial
despatch, in which a well-known magnate
announced to him his nomination as
marechal de camp, or brigadier-
general, under a rule which allowed
the officers of the Catholic
armies to count the twenty submerged
years of Louis XVIII.'s reign as
years of service. Some days later he
further received, without any
solicitation, ex officio, the
crosses of the Legion of Honor and of
Saint-Louis.
Shaken in his determination by these
successive favors, due, as he
supposed, to the monarch's
remembrance, he was no longer satisfied
with taking his family, as he had
piously done every Sunday, to cry
"Vive le Roi" in the hall
of the Tuileries when the royal family
passed through on their way to
chapel; he craved the favor of a
private audience. The audience, at
once granted, was in no sense
private. The royal drawing-room was
full of old adherents, whose
powdered heads, seen from above,
suggested a carpet of snow. There the
Count met some old friends, who
received him somewhat coldly; but the
princes he thought ADORABLE, an
enthusiastic expression which escaped
him when the most gracious of his
masters, to whom the Count had
supposed himself to be known only by
name, came to shake hands with
him, and spoke of him as the most
thorough Vendeen of them all.
Notwithstanding this ovation, none
of these august persons thought of
inquiring as to the sum of his
losses, or of the money he had poured
so generously into the chests of the
Catholic regiments. He
discovered, a little late, that he
had made war at his own cost.
Towards the end of the evening he
thought he might venture on a witty
allusion to the state of his
affairs, similar, as it was, to that of
many other gentlemen. His Majesty laughed
heartily enough; any speech
that bore the hall-mark of wit was
certain to please him; but he
nevertheless replied with one of
those royal pleasantries whose
sweetness is more formidable than
the anger of a rebuke. One of the
King's most intimate advisers took
an opportunity of going up to the
fortune-seeking Vendeen, and made
him understand by a keen and polite
hint that the time had not yet come
for settling accounts with the
sovereign; that there were bills of
much longer standing than his on
the books, and there, no doubt, they
would remain, as part of the
history of the Revolution. The Count
prudently withdrew from the
venerable group, which formed a
respectful semi-circle before the
august family; then, having
extricated his sword, not without some
difficulty, from among the lean legs
which had got mixed up with it,
he crossed the courtyard of the
Tuileries and got into the hackney cab
he had left on the quay. With the
restive spirit, which is peculiar to
the nobility of the old school, in
whom still survives the memory of
the League and the day of the
Barricades (in 1588), he bewailed
himself in his cab, loudly enough to
compromise him, over the change
that had come over the Court.
"Formerly," he said to himself, "every
one could speak freely to the King
of his own little affairs; the
nobles could ask him a favor, or for
money, when it suited them, and
nowadays one cannot recover the
money advanced for his service without
raising a scandal! By Heaven! the
cross of Saint-Louis and the rank of
brigadier-general will not make good
the three hundred thousand livres
I have spent, out and out, on the
royal cause. I must speak to the
King, face to face, in his own
room."
This scene cooled Monsieur de
Fontaine's ardor all the more
effectually because his requests for
an interview were never answered.
And, indeed, he saw the upstarts of
the Empire obtaining some of the
offices reserved, under the old
monarchy, for the highest families.
"All is lost!" he
exclaimed one morning. "The King has certainly never
been other than a revolutionary. But
for Monsieur, who never
derogates, and is some comfort to
his faithful adherents, I do not
know what hands the crown of France
might not fall into if things are
to go on like this. Their cursed constitutional
system is the worst
possible government, and can never
suit France. Louis XVIII. and
Monsieur Beugnot spoiled everything
at Saint Ouen."
The Count, in despair, was preparing
to retire to his estate,
abandoning, with dignity, all claims
to repayment. At this moment the
events of the 20th March (1815) gave
warning of a fresh storm,
threatening to overwhelm the
legitimate monarch and his defenders.
Monsieur de Fontaine, like one of
those generous souls who do not
dismiss a servant in a torrent of
rain; borrowed on his lands to
follow the routed monarchy, without
knowing whether this complicity in
emigration would prove more
propitious to him than his past devotion.
But when he perceived that the
companions of the King's exile were in
higher favor than the brave men who
had protested, sword in hand,
against the establishment of the
republic, he may perhaps have hoped
to derive greater profit from this
journey into a foreign land than
from active and dangerous service in
the heart of his own country. Nor
was his courtier-like calculation
one of these rash speculations which
promise splendid results on paper,
and are ruinous in effect. He was--
to quote the wittiest and most
successful of our diplomates--one of
the faithful five hundred who shared
the exile of the Court at Ghent,
and one of the fifty thousand who
returned with it. During the short
banishment of royalty, Monsieur de
Fontaine was so happy as to be
employed by Louis XVIII., and found
more than one opportunity of
giving him proofs of great political
honesty and sincere attachment.
One evening, when the King had
nothing better to do, he recalled
Monsieur de Fontaine's witticism at
the Tuileries. The old Vendeen did
not let such a happy chance slip; he
told his history with so much
vivacity that a king, who never
forgot anything, might remember it at
a convenient season. The royal
amateur of literature also observed the
elegant style given to some notes
which the discreet gentleman had
been invited to recast. This little
success stamped Monsieur de
Fontaine on the King's memory as one
of the loyal servants of the
Crown.
At the second restoration the Count
was one of those special envoys
who were sent throughout the
departments charged with absolute
jurisdiction over the leaders of
revolt; but he used his terrible
powers with moderation. As soon as
the temporary commission was ended,
the High Provost found a seat in the
Privy Council, became a deputy,
spoke little, listened much, and
changed his opinions very
considerably. Certain circumstances,
unknown to historians, brought
him into such intimate relations
with the Sovereign, that one day, as
he came in, the shrewd monarch
addressed him thus: "My friend
Fontaine, I shall take care never to
appoint you to be director-
general, or minister. Neither you
nor I, as employes, could keep our
place on account of our opinions.
Representative government has this
advantage; it saves Us the trouble
We used to have, of dismissing Our
Secretaries of State. Our Council is
a perfect inn-parlor, whither
public opinion sometimes sends
strange travelers; however, We can
always find a place for Our faithful
adherents."
This ironical speech was
introductory to a rescript giving Monsieur de
Fontaine an appointment as administrator
in the office of Crown lands.
As a consequence of the intelligent
attention with which he listened
to his royal Friend's sarcasms, his
name always rose to His Majesty's
lips when a commission was to be
appointed of which the members were
to receive a handsome salary. He had
the good sense to hold his tongue
about the favor with which he was
honored, and knew how to entertain
the monarch in those familiar chats
in which Louis XVIII. delighted as
much as in a well-written note, by
his brilliant manner of repeating
political anecdotes, and the
political or parliamentary tittle-tattle
--if the expression may pass--which
at that time was rife. It is well
known that he was immensely amused
by every detail of his
Gouvernementabilite--a word adopted
by his facetious Majesty.
Thanks to the Comte de Fontaine's
good sense, wit, and tact, every
member of his numerous family,
however young, ended, as he jestingly
told his Sovereign, in attaching
himself like a silkworm to the leaves
of the Pay-List. Thus, by the King's
intervention, his eldest son
found a high and fixed position as a
lawyer. The second, before the
restoration a mere captain, was
appointed to the command of a legion
on the return from Ghent; then, thanks to
the confusion of 1815, when
the regulations were evaded, he
passed into the bodyguard, returned to
a line regiment, and found himself
after the affair of the Trocadero a
lieutenant-general with a commission
in the Guards. The youngest,
appointed sous-prefet, ere long
became a legal official and director
of a municipal board of the city of Paris, where he was
safe from
changes in Legislature. These
bounties, bestowed without parade, and
as secret as the favor enjoyed by
the Count, fell unperceived. Though
the father and his three sons each had
sinecures enough to enjoy an
income in salaries almost equal to
that of a chief of department,
their political good fortune excited
no envy. In those early days of
the constitutional system, few
persons had very precise ideas of the
peaceful domain of the civil
service, where astute favorites managed
to find an equivalent for the
demolished abbeys. Monsieur le Comte de
Fontaine, who till lately boasted
that he had not read the Charter,
and displayed such indignation at
the greed of courtiers, had, before
long, proved to his august master
that he understood, as well as the
King himself, the spirit and
resources of the representative system.
At the same time, notwithstanding
the established careers open to his
three sons, and the pecuniary
advantages derived from four official
appointments, Monsieur de Fontaine
was the head of too large a family
to be able to re-establish his
fortune easily and rapidly.
His three sons were rich in
prospects, in favor, and in talent; but he
had three daughters, and was afraid
of wearying the monarch's
benevolence. It occurred to him to
mention only one by one, these
virgins eager to light their
torches. The King had too much good taste
to leave his work incomplete. The
marriage of the eldest with a
Receiver-General, Planat de Baudry,
was arranged by one of those royal
speeches which cost nothing and are
worth millions. One evening, when
the Sovereign was out of spirits, he
smiled on hearing of the
existence of another Demoiselle de
Fontaine, for whom he found a
husband in the person of a young
magistrate, of inferior birth, no
doubt, but wealthy, and whom he
created Baron. When, the year after,
the Vendeen spoke of Mademoiselle
Emilie de Fontaine, the King replied
in his thin sharp tones,
"Amicus Plato sed magis amica Natio." Then, a
few days later, he treated his
"friend Fontaine" to a quatrain,
harmless enough, which he styled an
epigram, in which he made fun of
these three daughters so skilfully
introduced, under the form of a
trinity. Nay, if report is to be believed,
the monarch had found the
point of the jest in the Unity of
the three Divine Persons.
"If your Majesty would only
condescend to turn the epigram into an
epithalamium?" said the Count,
trying to turn the sally to good
account.
"Though I see the rhyme of it,
I fail to see the reason," retorted the
King, who did not relish any
pleasantry, however mild, on the subject
of his poetry.
From that day his intercourse with
Monsieur de Fontaine showed less
amenity. Kings enjoy contradicting
more than people think. Like most
youngest children, Emilie de
Fontaine was a Benjamin spoilt by almost
everybody. The King's coolness,
therefore, caused the Count all the
more regret, because no marriage was
ever so difficult to arrange as
that of this darling daughter. To
understand all the obstacles we must
make our way into the fine residence
where the official was housed at
the expense of the nation. Emilie
had spent her childhood on the
family estate, enjoying the
abundance which suffices for the joys of
early youth; her lightest wishes had
been law to her sisters, her
brothers, her mother, and even her
father. All her relations doted on
her. Having come to years of
discretion just when her family was
loaded with the favors of fortune,
the enchantment of life continued.
The luxury of Paris seemed to her
just as natural as a wealth of
flowers or fruit, or as the rural
plenty which had been the joy of her
first years. Just as in her
childhood she had never been thwarted in
the satisfaction of her playful desires,
so now, at fourteen, she was
still obeyed when she rushed into
the whirl of fashion.
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