GERMINAL
PART VI
CHAPTER II
SNOW had been falling for two days; since the
morning it had ceased, and an intense frost had
frozen the immense sheet. This black country,
with its inky roads and walls and trees powdered
with coal dust, was now white, a single whiteness
stretching out without end. The
Deux-Cent-Quarante settlement lay beneath the snow
as though it had disappeared. No smoke came out
of the chimneys; the houses, without fire and as
cold as the stones in the street, did not melt the
thick layer on the tiles. It was nothing more
than a quarry of white slabs in the white plain, a
vision of a dead village wound in its shroud.
Along the roads the passing patrols alone made a
muddy mess with their stamping.
Among the Maheus the last shovelful of cinders had
been burnt the evening before, and it was no use
any longer to think of gleaning on the pit-bank in
this terrible weather, when the sparrows
themselves could not find a blade of grass.
Alzire, from the obstinacy with which her poor
hands had dug in the snow, was dying. Maheude had
to wrap her up in the fragment of a coverlet while
waiting for Dr. Vanderhaghen, for whom she had
twice gone out without being able to find him.
The servant had, however, promised that he would
come to the settlement before night, and the
mother was standing at the window watching, while
the little invalid, who had wished to be
downstairs, was shivering on a chair, having the
illusion that it was better there near the cold
grate. Old Bonnemort opposite, his legs bad once
more, seemed to be sleeping; neither Lénore
nor Henri had come back from scouring the roads,
in company with Jeanlin, to ask for sous. Maheu
alone was walking heavily up and down the bare
room, stumbling against the wall at every turn,
with the stupid air of an animal which can no
longer see its cage. The petroleum also was
finished; but the reflection of the snow from
outside was so bright that it vaguely lit up the
room, in spite of the deepening night.
There was a noise of sabots, and the Levaque woman
pushed open the door like a gale of wind, beside
herself, shouting furiously from the threshold at
Maheude:
"Then it's you who have said that I forced my
lodger to give me twenty sous when he sleeps with
me?"
The other shrugged her shoulders.
"Don't bother me. I said nothing; and who
told you so?"
"They tell me you said so; it doesn't concern
you who it was. You even said you could hear us
at our dirty tricks behind the wall, and that the
filth gets into our house because I'm always on my
back. Just tell me you didn't say so, eh?"
Every day quarrels broke out as a result of the
constant gossiping of the women. Especially
between those households which lived door to door,
squabbles and reconciliations took place every
day. But never before had such bitterness thrown
them one against the other. Since the strike
hunger exasperated their rancour, so that they
felt the need of blows; an altercation between two
gossiping women finished by a murderous onset
between their two men.
Just then Levaque arrived in his turn, dragging
Bouteloup.
"Here's our mate; let him just say if he has
given twenty sous to my wife to sleep with
her."
The lodger, hiding his timid gentleness in his
great beard, protested and stammered:
"Oh, that? No! Never anything!
never!"
At once Levaque became threatening, and thrust his
fist beneath Maheu's nose.
"You know that won't do for me. If a man's
got a wife like that, he ought to knock her ribs
in. If not, then you believe what she says."
"By God!" exclaimed Maheu, furious at
being dragged out of his dejection, "what is
all this clatter again? Haven't we got enough to
do with our misery? Just leave me alone, damn
you! or I'll let you know it! And first, who
says that my wife said so?"
"Who says so? Pierronne said so."
Maheude broke into a sharp laugh, and turning
towards the Levaque woman:
"An! Pierronne, is it? Well! I can tell
you what she told me. Yes, she told me that you
sleep with both your men--the one underneath and
the other on top!"
After that it was no longer possible to come to an
understanding. They all grew angry, and the
Levaques, as a reply to the Maheus, asserted that
Pierronne had said a good many other things on
their account; that they had sold Catherine, that
they were all rotten together, even to the little
ones, with a dirty disease caught by
Étienne at the Volcan.
"She said that! She said that!" yelled
Maheu. "Good! I'll go to her, I will, and
if she says that she said that, she shall feel my
hand on her chops!"
He was carried out of himself, and the Levaques
followed him to see what would happen, while
Bouteloup, having a horror of disputes, furtively
returned home. Excited by the altercation,
Maheude was also going out, when a complaint from
Alzire held her back. She crossed the ends of the
coverlet over the little one's quivering body, and
placed herself before the window, looking out
vaguely. And that doctor, who still delayed!
At the Pierrons' door Maheu and the Levaques met
Lydie, who was stamping in the snow. The house
was closed, and a thread of light came though a
crack in a shutter. The child replied at first to
their questions with constraint: no, her father
was not there, he had gone to the wash-house to
join Mother Brulé and bring back the bundle
of linen. Then she was confused, and would not
say what her mother was doing. At last she let
out everything with a sly, spiteful laugh: her
mother had pushed her out of the door because M.
Dansaert was there, and she prevented them from
talking. Since the morning he had been going
about the settlement with two policemen, trying to
pick up workmen, imposing on the weak, and
announcing everywhere that if the descent did not
take place on Monday at the Voreux, the Company
had decided to hire men from the Borinage. And as
the night came on he sent away the policemen,
finding Pierronne alone; then he had remained with
her to drink a glass of gin before a good fire.
"Hush! hold your tongue! We must see
them," said Levaque, with a lewd laugh.
"We'll explain everything directly. Get off
with you, youngster."
Lydie drew back a few steps while he put his eye
to a crack in the shutter. He stifled a low cry
and his back bent with a quiver. In her turn his
wife looked through, but she said, as though taken
by the colic, that it was disgusting. Maheu, who
had pushed her, wishing also to see, then declared
that he had had enough for his money. And they
began again, in a row, each taking his glance as
at a peep-show. The parlour, glittering with
cleanliness, was inlivened by a large fire; there
were cakes on the table with a bottle and glasses,
in fact quite a feast. What they saw going on in
there at last exasperated the two men, who under
other circumstances would have laughed over it for
six months. That she should let herself be
stuffed up to the neck, with her skirts in the
air, was funny. But, good God! was it not
disgusting to do that in front of a great fire,
and to get up one's strength with biscuits, when
the mates had neither a slice of bread nor a
fragment of coal?
"Here's father!" cried Lydie, running
away.
Pierron was quietly coming back from the
wash-house with the bundle of linen on his
shoulder. Maheu immediately addressed him:
"Here! they tell me that your wife says that
I sold Catherine, and that we are all rotten at
home. And what do they pay you in your house,
your wife and the gentleman who is this minute
wearing out her skin?"
The astonished Pierron could not understand, and
Pierronne, seized with fear on hearing the tumult
of voices, lost her head and set the door ajar to
see what was the matter. They could see her,
looking very red, with her dress open and her
skirt tucked up at her waist; while Dansaert, in
the background, was wildly buttoning himself up.
The head captain rushed away and disappeared
trembling with fear that this story would reach
the manager's ears. Then there would be an awful
scandal, laughter, and hooting and abuse.
"You, who are always saying that other people
are dirty!" shouted the Levaque woman to
Pierronne; "it's not surprising that you're
clean when you get the bosses to scour you."
"Ah! it's fine for her to talk!" said
Levaque again. "Here's a trollop who says
that my wife sleeps with me and the lodger, one
below and the other above! Yes! yes! that's
what they tell me you say."
But Pierronne, grown calm, held her own against
this abuse, very contemptuous in the assurance
that she was the best looking and the richest.
"I've said what I've said; just leave me
alone, will you! What have my affairs got to do
with you, a pack of jealous creatures who want to
get over us because we are able to save up money!
Get along! get along! You can say what you like;
my husband knows well enough why Monsieur Dansaert
was here."
Pierron, in fact, was furiously defending his
wife. The quarrel turned. They accused him of
having sold himself, of being a spy, the Company's
dog; they charged him with shutting himself up, to
gorge himself with the good things with which the
bosses paid him for his treachery. In defence, he
pretended that Maheu had slipped beneath his door
a threatening paper with two cross-bones and a
dagger above. And this necessarily ended in a
struggle between the men, as the quarrels of the
women always did now that famine was enraging the
mildest. Maheu and Levaque rushed on Pierron with
their fists, and had to be pulled off.
Blood was flowing from her son-in-law's nose, when
Mother Brulé, in her turn, arrived from the
wash-house. When informed of what had been going
on, she merely said:
"The damned beast dishonours me!"
The road was becoming deserted, not a shadow
spotted the naked whiteness of the snow, and the
settlement, falling back into its death-like
immobility, went on starving beneath the intense
cold.
"And the doctor?" asked Maheu, as he
shut the door. "Not come," replied
Maheude, still standing before the window.
"Are the little ones back?"
"No, not back."
Maheu again began his heavy walk from one wall to
the other, looking like a stricken ox. Father
Bonnemort, seated stiffly on his chair, had not
even lifted his head. Alzire also had said
nothing, and was trying not to shiver, so as to
avoid giving them pain; but in spite of her
courage in suffering, she sometimes trembled so
much that one could hear against the coverlet the
quivering of the little invalid girl's lean body,
while with her large open eyes she stared at the
ceiling, from which the pale reflection of the
white gardens lit up the room like moonshine.
The emptied house was now in its last agony,
having reached a final stage of nakedness. The
mattress ticks had followed the wool to the
dealers; then the sheets had gone, the linen,
everything that could be sold. One evening they
had sold a handkerchief of the grandfather's for
two sous. Tears fell over each object of the poor
household which had to go, and the mother was
still lamenting that one day she had carried away
in her skirt the pink cardboard box, her man's old
present, as one would carry away a child to get
rid of it on some doorstep. They were bare; they
had only their skins left to sell, so worn-out and
injured that no one would have given a farthing
for them. They no longer even took the trouble to
search, they knew that there was nothing left,
that they had come to the end of everything, that
they must not hope even for a candle, or a
fragment of coal, or a potato, and they were
waiting to die, only grieved about the children,
and revolted by the useless cruelty that gave the
little one a disease before starving it.
"At last! here he is!" said Maheude.
A black figure passed before the window. The door
opened. But it was not Dr. Vanderhaghen; they
recognized the new curé, Abbé
Ranvier, who did not seem surprised at coming on
this dead house, without light, without fire,
without bread. He had already been to three
neighbouring houses, going from family to family,
seeking willing listeners, like Dansaert with his
two policemen; and at once he exclaimed, in his
feverish fanatic's voice:
"Why were you not at mass on Sunday, my
children? You are wrong, the Church alone can
save you. Now promise me to come next
Sunday."
Maheu, after staring at him, went on pacing
heavily, without a word. It was Maheude who
replied:
"To mass, sir? What for? Isn't the good God
making fun of us? Look here! what has my little
girl there done to Him, to be shaking with fever?
Hadn't we enough misery, that He had to make her
ill too, just when I can't even give her a cup of
warm gruel."
Then the priest stood and talked at length. He
spoke of the strike, this terrible wretchedness,
this exasperated rancour of famine, with the
ardour of a missionary who is preaching to savages
for the glory of religion. He said that the
Church was with the poor, that she would one day
cause justice to triumph by calling down the anger
of God on the iniquities of the rich. And that
day would come soon, for the rich had taken the
place of God, and were governing without God, in
their impious theft of power. But if the workers
desired the fair division of the goods of the
earth, they ought at once to put themselves in the
hands of the priests, just as on the death of
Jesus the poor and the humble grouped themselves
around the apostles. What strength the pope would
have, what an army the clergy would have under
them, when they were able to command the
numberless crowd of workers! In one week they
would purge the world of the wicked, they would
chase away the unworthy masters. Then, indeed,
there would be a real kingdom of God, every one
recompensed according to his merits, and the law
of labour as the foundation for universal
happiness.
Maheude, who was listening to him, seemed to hear
Étienne, in those autumn evenings when he
announced to them the end of their evils. Only
she had always distrusted the cloth.
"That's very well, what you say there,
sir," she replied, "but that's because
you no longer agree with the bourgeois. All our
other curés dined at the manager's, and
threatened us with the devil as soon as we asked
for bread."
He began again, and spoke of the deplorable
misunderstanding between the Church and the
people. Now, in veiled phrases, he hit at the
town curés, at the bishops, at the highly
placed clergy, sated with enjoyment, gorged with
domination, making pacts with the liberal middle
class, in the imbecility of their blindness, not
seeing that it was this middle class which had
dispossessed them of the empire of the world.
Deliverance would come from the country priests,
who would all rise to re-establish the kingdom of
Christ, with the help of the poor; and already he
seemed to be at their head; he raised his bony
form like the chief of a band, a revolutionary of
the gospel, his eyes so filled with light that
they illuminated the gloomy room. This
enthusiastic sermon lifted him to mystic heights,
and the poor people had long ceased to understand
him.
"No need for so many words," growled
Maheu suddenly. "You'd best begin by
bringing us a loaf."
"Come on Sunday to mass," cried the
priest. "God will provide for
everything."
And he went off to catechize the Levaques in their
turn, so carried away by his dream of the final
triumph of the Church, and so contemptuous of
facts, that he would thus go through the
settlements without charities, with empty hands
amid this army dying of hunger, being a poor devil
himself who looked upon suffering as the spur to
salvation.
Maheu continued his pacing, and nothing was heard
but his regular tramp which made the floor
tremble. There was the sound of a rust-eaten
pulley; old Bonnemort was spitting into the cold
grate. Then the rhythm of the feet began again.
Alzire, weakened by fever, was rambling in a low
voice, laughing, thinking that it was warm and
that she was playing in the sun.
"Good gracious!" muttered Maheude, after
having touched her cheeks, "how she burns! I
don't expect that damned beast now, the brigands
must have stopped him from coming."
She meant the doctor and the Company. She uttered
a joyous exclamation, however, when the door once
more opened. But her arms fell back and she
remained standing still with gloomy face.
"Good evening," whispered
Étienne, when he had carefully closed the
door.
He often came thus at night-time. The Maheus
learnt his retreat after the second day. But they
kept the secret and no one in the settlement knew
exactly what had become of the young man. A
legend had grown up around him. People still
believed in him and mysterious rumours circulated:
he would reappear with an army and chests full of
gold; and there was always the religious
expectation of a miracle, the realized ideal, a
sudden entry into that city of justice which he
had promised them. Some said they had seen him
lying back in a carriage, with three other
gentlemen, on the Marchiennes road; others
affirmed that he was in England for a few days.
At length, however, suspicions began to arise and
jokers accused him of hiding in a cellar, where
Mouquette kept him warm; for this relationship,
when known, had done him harm. There was a
growing disaffection in the midst of his
popularity, a gradual increase of the despairing
among the faithful, and their number was certain,
little by little, to grow.
"What brutal weather!" he added.
"And you--nothing new, always from bad to
worse? They tell me that little Négrel has
been to Belgium to get Borains. Good God! we are
done for if that is true!"
He shuddered as he entered this dark icy room,
where it was some time before his eyes were able
to see the unfortunate people whose presence he
guessed by the deepening of the shade. He was
experiencing the repugnance and discomfort of the
workman who has risen above his class, refined by
study and stimulated by ambition. What
wretchedness! and odours! and the bodies in a
heap! And a terrible pity caught him by the
throat. The spectacle of this agony so overcame
him that he tried to find words to advise
submission.
But Maheu came violently up to him, shouting:
"Borains! They won't dare, the bloody fools!
Let the Borains go down, then, if they want us to
destroy the pits!"
With an air of constraint, Étienne
explained that it was not possible to move, that
the soldiers who guarded the pits would protect
the descent of the Belgian workmen. And Maheu
clenched his fists, irritated especially, as he
said, by having bayonets in his back. Then the
colliers were no longer masters in their own
place? They were treated, then, like convicts,
forced to work by a loaded musket! He loved his
pit, it was a great grief to him not to have been
down for two months. He was driven wild,
therefore, at the idea of this insult, these
strangers whom they threatened to introduce. Then
the recollection that his certificate had been
given back to him struck him to the heart.
"I don't know why I'm angry," he
muttered. "I don't belong to their shop any
longer. When they have hunted me away from here,
I may as well die on the road."
"As to that," said Étienne,
"if you like, they'll take your certificate
back to-morrow. People don't send away good
workmen."
He interrupted himself, surprised to hear Alzire,
who was laughing softly in the delirium of her
fever. So far he had only made out Father
Bonnemort's stiff shadow, and this gaiety of the
sick child frightened him. It was indeed too much
if the little ones were going to die of it. With
trembling voice he made up his mind.
"Look here! this can't go on, we are done
for. We must give it up."
Maheude, who had been motionless and silent up to
now, suddenly broke out, and treating him
familiarly and swearing like a man, she shouted in
his face:
"What's that you say? It's you who say that,
by God!" He was about to give reasons, but
she would not let him speak.
"Don't repeat that, by God! or, woman as I
am, I'll put my fist into your face. Then we have
been dying for two months, and I have sold my
household, and my little ones have fallen ill of
it, and there is to be nothing done, and the
injustice is to begin again! Ah! do you know!
when I think of that my blood stands still. No,
no, I would burn everything, I would kill
everything, rather than give up."
She pointed at Maheu in the darkness, with a
vague, threatening gesture.
"Listen to this! If any man goes back to the
pit, he'll find me waiting for him on the road to
spit in his face and cry coward!
Étienne could not see her, but he felt a
heat like the breath of a barking animal. He had
drawn back, astonished at this fury which was his
work. She was so changed that he could no longer
recognize the woman who was once so sensible,
reproving his violent schemes, saying that we
ought not to wish any one dead, and who was now
refusing to listen to reason and talking of
killing people. It was not he now, it was she,
who talked politics, who dreamed of sweeping away
the bourgeois at a stroke, who demanded the
republic and the guillotine to free the earth of
these rich robbers who fattened on the labour of
starvelings.
"Yes, I could flay them with my fingers.
We've had enough of them! Our turn is come now;
you used to say so yourself. When I think of the
father, the grandfather, the grandfather's father,
what all of them who went before have suffered,
what we are suffering, and that our sons and our
sons' sons will suffer it over again, it makes me
mad--I could take a knife. The other day we
didn't do enough at Montsou; we ought to have
pulled the bloody place to the ground, down to the
last brick. And do you know I've only one regret,
that we didn't let the old man strangle the
Piolaine girl. Hunger may strangle my little ones
for all they care!"
Her words fell like the blows of an axe in the
night. The closed horizon would not open, and the
impossible ideal was turning to poison in the
depths of this skull which had been crushed by
grief.
"You have misunderstood," Étienne
was able to say at last, beating a retreat.
"We ought to come to an understanding with
the Company. I know that the pits are suffering
much, so that it would probably consent to an
arrangement."
"No, never!" she shouted.
Just then Lénore and Henri came back with
their hands empty. A gentleman had certainly
given them two sous, but the girl kept kicking her
little brother, and the two sous fell into the
snow, and as Jeanlin had joined in the search they
had not been able to find them.
"Where is Jeanlin?"
"He's gone away, mother; he said he had
business."
Étienne was listening with an aching heart.
Once she had threatened to kill them if they ever
held out their hands to beg. Now she sent them
herself on to the roads, and proposed that all of
them--the ten thousand colliers of Montsou--should
take stick and wallet, like beggars of old, and
scour the terrified country.
The anguish continued to increase in the black
room. The little urchins came back hungry, they
wanted to eat; why could they not have something
to eat? And they grumbled, flung themselves
about, and at last trod on the feet of their dying
sister, who groaned. The mother furiously boxed
their ears in the darkness at random. Then, as
they cried still louder, asking for bread, she
burst into tears, and dropped on to the floor,
seizing them in one embrace with the little
invalid; then, for a long time, her tears fell in
a nervous outbreak which left her limp and worn
out, stammering over and over again the same
phrase, calling for death:
"O God! why do You not take us? O God! in
pity take us, to have done with it!"
The grandfather preserved his immobility, like an
old tree twisted by the rain and wind; while the
father continued walking between the fireplace and
the cupboard, without turning his head.
But the door opened, and this time it was Doctor
Vanderhaghen.
"The devil!" he said. "This light
won't spoil your eyes. Look sharp! I'm in a
hurry."
As usual, he scolded, knocked up by work.
Fortunately, he had matches with him, and the
father had to strike six, one by one, and to hold
them while he examined the invalid. Unwound from
her coverlet, she shivered beneath this flickering
light, as lean as a bird dying in the snow, so
small that one only saw her hump. But she smiled
with the wandering smile of the dying, and her
eyes were very large; while her poor hands
contracted over her hollow breast. And as the
half-choked mother asked if it was right to take
away from her the only child who helped in the
household, so intelligent and gentle, the doctor
grew vexed.
"Ah! she is going. Dead of hunger, your
blessed child. And not the only one, either; I've
just seen another one over there. You all send
for me, but I can't do anything; it's meat that
you want to cure you."
Maheu, with burnt fingers, had dropped the match,
and the darkness closed over the little corpse,
which was still warm. The doctor had gone away in
a hurry. Étienne heard nothing more in the
black room but Maheude's sobs, repeating her cry
for death, that melancholy and endless
lamentation:
"O God! it is my turn, take me! O God!
take my man, take the others, out of pity, to have
done with it!"