V
THE VISIRE CABINET
The Ceres household was established with modest decency in a pretty flat
situated in a new building. Ceres loved his wife in a calm and tranquil fashion.
He was often kept late from home by the Commission on the Budget and he worked
more than three nights a week at a report on the postal finances of which he
hoped to make a masterpiece. Eveline thought she could twist him round her
finger, and this did not displease him. The bad side of their situation was that
they had not much money; in truth they had very little. The servants of the
Republic do not grow rich in her service as easily as people think. Since the
sovereign is no longer there to distribute favours, each of them takes what he
can, and his depredations, limited by the depredations of all the others, are
reduced to modest proportions. Hence that austerity of morals that is noticed in
democratic leaders. They can only grow rich during periods of great business
activity and then they find themselves exposed to the envy of their less
favoured colleagues. Hippolyte Ceres had for a long time foreseen such a period.
He was one of those who had made preparations for its arrival. Whilst waiting
for it he endured his poverty with dignity, and Eveline shared that poverty
without suffering as much as one might have thought. She was in close intimacy
with the Reverend Father Douillard and frequented the chapel of St. Orberosia,
where she met with serious society and people in a position to render her useful
services. She knew how to choose among them and gave her confidence to none but
those who deserved it. She had gained experience since her motor excursions with
Viscount Clena, and above all she had now acquired the value of a married woman.
The deputy was at first uneasy about these pious practices, which were
ridiculed by the demagogic newspapers, but he was soon reassured, for he saw all
around him democratic leaders joyfully becoming reconciled to the aristocracy
and the Church.
They found that they had reached one of those periods (which often recur)
when advance had been carried a little too far. Hippolyte Ceres gave a moderate
support to this view. His policy was not a policy of persecution but a policy of
tolerance. He had laid its foundations in his splendid speech on the
preparations for reform. The Prime Minister was looked upon as too advanced. He
proposed schemes which were admitted to be dangerous to capital, and the great
financial companies were opposed to him. Of course it followed that the papers
of all views supported the companies. Seeing the danger increasing, the Cabinet
abandoned its schemes, its programme, and its opinions, but it was too late. A
new administration was already ready. An insidious question by Paul Visire which
was immediately made the subject of a resolution, and a fine speech by Hippolyte
Ceres, overthrew the Cabinet.
The President of the Republic entrusted the formation of a new Cabinet to
this same Paul Visire, who, though still very young, had been a Minister twice.
He was a charming man, spending much of his time in the green-rooms of theatres,
very artistic, a great society man, of amazing ability and industry. Paul Visire
formed a temporary ministry intended to reassure public feeling which had taken
alarm, and Hippolyte Ceres was invited to hold office in it.
The new ministry, belonging to all the groups in the majority, represented
the most diverse and contrary opinions, but they were all moderate and convinced
conservatives. The Minister of Foreign Affairs was retained from the former
cabinet. He was a little dark man called Crombile, who worked fourteen hours a
day with the conviction that he dealt with tremendous questions. He refused to
see even his own diplomatic agents, and was terribly uneasy, though he did not
disturb anybody else, for the want of foresight of peoples is infinite and that
of governments is just as great.
The office of Public Works was given to a Socialist, Fortune Lapersonne. It
was then a political custom and one of the most solemn, most severe, most
rigorous, and if I may dare say so, the most terrible and cruel of all political
customs, to include a member of the Socialist party in each ministry intended to
oppose Socialism, so that the enemies of wealth and property should suffer the
shame of being attacked by one of their own party, and so that they could not
unite against these forces without turning to some one who might possibly attack
themselves in the future. Nothing but a profound ignorance of the human heart
would permit the belief that it was difficult to find a Socialist to occupy
these functions. Citizen Fortune Lapersonne entered the Visire cabinet of his
own free will and without any constraint; and he found those who approved of his
action even among his former friends, so great was the fascination that power
exercised over the Penguins!
General Debonnaire went to the War Office. He was looked upon as one of the
ablest generals in the army, but he was ruled by a woman, the Baroness
Bildermann, who, though she had reached the age of intrigue, was still
beautiful. She was in the pay of a neighbouring and hostile Power.
The new Minister of Marine, the worthy Admiral Vivier des Murenes, was
generally regarded as an excellent seaman. He displayed a piety that would have
seemed excessive in an anti-clerical minister, if the Republic had not
recognised that religion was of great maritime utility. Acting on the
instruction of his spiritual director, the Reverend Father Douillard, the worthy
Admiral had dedicated his fleet to St. Orberosia and directed canticles in
honour of the Alcan Virgin to be composed by Christian bards. These replaced the
national hymn in the music played by the navy.
Prime Minister Visire declared himself to be distinctly anticlerical but
ready to respect all creeds; he asserted that he was a sober-minded reformer.
Paul Visire and his colleagues desired reforms, and it was in order not to
compromise reform that they proposed none; for they were true politicians and
knew that reforms are compromised the moment they are proposed. The government
was well received, respectable people were reassured, and the funds rose.
The administration announced that four new ironclads would be put into
commission, that prosecutions would be undertaken against the Socialists, and it
formally declared its intention to have nothing to do with any inquisitorial
income-tax. The choice of Terrasson as Minister of Finance was warmly approved
by the press. Terrasson, an old minister famous for his financial operations,
gave warrant to all the hopes of the financiers and shadowed forth a period of
great business activity. Soon those three udders of modern nations, monopolies,
bill discounting, and fraudulent speculation, were swollen with the milk of
wealth. Already whispers were heard of distant enterprises, and of planting
colonies, and the boldest put forward in the newspapers the project of a
military and financial protectorate over Nigritia.
Without having yet shown what he was capable of, Hippolyte Ceres was
considered a man of weight. Business people thought highly of him. He was
congratulated on all sides for having broken with the extreme sections, the
dangerous men, and for having realised the responsibilities of government.
Madame Ceres shone alone amid the Ministers' wives. Crombile withered away in
bachelordom. Paul Visire had married money in the person of Mademoiselle
Blampignon, an accomplished, estimable, and simple lady who was always ill, and
whose feeble health compelled her to stay with her mother in the depths of a
remote province. The other Ministers' wives were not born to charm the sight,
and people smiled when they read that Madame Labillette had appeared at the
Presidency Ball wearing a headdress of birds of paradise. Madame Vivier des
Murenes, a woman of good family, was stout rather than tall, had a face like a
beef-steak and the voice of a newspaper-seller. Madame Debonnaire, tall, dry,
and florid, was devoted to young officers. She ruined herself by her escapades
and crimes and only regained consideration by dint of ugliness and insolence.
Madame Ceres was the charm of the Ministry and its tide to consideration.
Young, beautiful, and irreproachable, she charmed alike society and the masses
by her combination of elegant costumes and pleasant smiles.
Her receptions were thronged by the great Jewish financiers. She gave the
most fashionable garden parties in the Republic. The newspapers described her
dresses and the milliners did not ask her to pay for them. She went to Mass; she
protected the chapel of St. Orberosia from the ill-will of the people; and she
aroused in aristocratic hearts the hope of a fresh Concordat.
With her golden hair, grey eyes, and supple and slight though rounded figure,
she was indeed pretty. She enjoyed an excellent reputation and she was so
adroit, and calm, so much mistress of herself, that she would have preserved it
intact even if she had been discovered in the very act of ruining it.
The session ended with a victory for the cabinet which, amid the almost
unanimous applause of the House, defeated a proposal for an inquisitorial tax,
and with a triumph for Madame Ceres who gave parties in honour of three kings
who were at the moment passing through Alca.
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