His Masterpiece by Emile Zola
CHAPTER XI
CLAUDE set to work again on the very next day, and months elapsed, indeed the
whole summer went by, in heavy quietude. He had found a job, some little
paintings of flowers for England, the proceeds of which sufficed for their daily
bread. All his available time was again devoted to his large canvas, and he no
longer went into the same fits of anger over it, but seemed to resign himself to
that eternal task, evincing obstinate, hopeless industry. However, his eyes
retained their crazy expression—one could see the death of light, as it were, in
them, when they gazed upon the failure of his existence.
About this period Sandoz also experienced great grief. His mother died, his
whole life was upset—that life of three together, so homely in its character,
and shared merely by a few friends. He began to hate the pavilion of the Rue
Nollet, and, moreover, success suddenly declared itself with respect to his
books, which hitherto had sold but moderately well. So, prompted by the advent
of comparative wealth, he rented in the Rue de Londres a spacious flat, the
arrangements of which occupied him and his wife for several months. Sandoz's
grief had drawn him closer to Claude again, both being disgusted with
everything. After the terrible blow of the Salon, the novelist had felt very
anxious about his old chum, divining that something had irreparably snapped
within him, that there was some wound by which life ebbed away unseen. Then,
however, finding Claude so cold and quiet, he ended by growing somewhat
reassured.
Sandoz often walked up to the Rue Tourlaque, and whenever he found only
Christine at home, he questioned her, realising that she also lived in
apprehension of a calamity of which she never spoke. Her face bore a look of
worry, and now and again she started nervously, like a mother who watches over
her child and trembles at the slightest sound, with the fear that death may be
entering the chamber.
One July morning Sandoz asked her: 'Well, are you pleased? Claude's quiet, he
works a deal.'
She gave the large picture her usual glance, a side glance full of terror and
hatred.
'Yes, yes, he works,' she said. 'He wants to finish everything else before
taking up the woman again.' And without confessing the fear that harassed her,
she added in a lower tone: 'But his eyes—have you noticed his eyes? They always
have the same wild expression. I know very well that he lies, despite his
pretence of taking things so easily. Pray, come and see him, and take him out
with you, so as to change the current of his thoughts. He only has you left;
help me, do help me!'
After that Sandoz diligently devised motives for various walks, arriving at
Claude's early in the morning, and carrying him away from his work perforce. It
was almost always necessary to drag him from his steps, on which he habitually
sat, even when he was not painting. A feeling of weariness stopped him, a kind
of torpor benumbed him for long minutes, during which he did not give a single
stroke with the brush. In those moments of mute contemplation, his gaze reverted
with pious fervour to the woman's figure which he no longer touched: it was like
a hesitating desire combined with sacred awe, a passion which he refused to
satisfy, as he felt certain that it would cost him his life. When he set to work
again at the other figures and the background of the picture, he well knew that
the woman's figure was still there, and his glance wavered whenever he espied
it; he felt that he would only remain master of himself as long as he did not
touch it again.
One evening, Christine, who now visited at Sandoz's and never missed a single
Thursday there, in the hope of seeing her big sick child of an artist brighten
up in the society of his friends, took the novelist aside and begged him to drop
in at their place on the morrow. And on the next day Sandoz, who, as it
happened, wanted to take some notes for a novel, on the other side of
Montmartre, went in search of Claude, carried him off and kept him idling about
until night-time.
On this occasion they went as far as the gate of Clignancourt, where a
perpetual fair was held, with merry-go-rounds, shooting-galleries, and taverns,
and on reaching the spot they were stupefied to find themselves face to face
with Chaine, who was enthroned in a large and stylish booth. It was a kind of
chapel, highly ornamented. There were four circular revolving stands set in a
row and loaded with articles in china and glass, all sorts of ornaments and
nick-nacks, whose gilding and polish shone amid an harmonica-like tinkling
whenever the hand of a gamester set the stand in motion. It then spun round,
grating against a feather, which, on the rotatory movement ceasing, indicated
what article, if any, had been won. The big prize was a live rabbit, adorned
with pink favours, which waltzed and revolved unceasingly, intoxicated with
fright. And all this display was set in red hangings, scalloped at the top; and
between the curtains one saw three pictures hanging at the rear of the booth, as
in the sanctuary of some tabernacle. They were Chaine's three masterpieces,
which now followed him from fair to fair, from one end of Paris to the other.
The 'Woman taken in Adultery' in the centre, the copy of the Mantegna on the
left, and Mahoudeau's stove on the right. Of an evening, when the petroleum
lamps flamed and the revolving stands glowed and radiated like planets, nothing
seemed finer than those pictures hanging amid the blood-tinged purple of the
hangings, and a gaping crowd often flocked to view them.
The sight was such that it wrung an exclamation from Claude: 'Ah, good
heavens! But those paintings look very well—they were surely intended for this.'
The Mantegna, so naively harsh in treatment, looked like some faded coloured
print nailed there for the delectation of simple-minded folk; whilst the
minutely painted stove, all awry, hanging beside the gingerbread Christ
absolving the adulterous woman, assumed an unexpectedly gay aspect.
However, Chaine, who had just perceived the two friends, held out his hand to
them, as if he had left them merely the day before. He was calm, neither proud
nor ashamed of his booth, and he had not aged, having still a leathery aspect;
though, on the other hand, his nose had completely vanished between his cheeks,
whilst his mouth, clammy with prolonged silence, was buried in his moustache and
beard.
'Hallo! so we meet again!' said Sandoz, gaily. 'Do you know, your paintings
have a lot of effect?'
'The old humbug!' added Claude. 'Why, he has his little Salon all to himself.
That's very cute indeed.'
Chaine's face became radiant, and he dropped the remark: 'Of course!'
Then, as his artistic pride was roused, he, from whom people barely wrung
anything but growls, gave utterance to a whole sentence:
'Ah! it's quite certain that if I had had any money, like you fellows, I
should have made my way, just as you have done, in spite of everything.'
That was his conviction. He had never doubted of his talent, he had simply
forsaken the profession because it did not feed him. When he visited the Louvre,
at sight of the masterpieces hanging there he felt convinced that time alone was
necessary to turn out similar work.
'Ah, me!' said Claude, who had become gloomy again. 'Don't regret what you've
done; you alone have succeeded. Business is brisk, eh?'
But Chaine muttered bitter words. No, no, there was nothing doing, not even
in his line. People wouldn't play for prizes; all the money found its way to the
wine-shops. In spite of buying paltry odds and ends, and striking the table with
the palm of one's hand, so that the feather might not indicate one of the big
prizes, a fellow barely had water to drink nowadays. Then, as some people had
drawn near, he stopped short in his explanation to call out: 'Walk up, walk up,
at every turn you win!' in a gruff voice which the two others had never known
him to possess, and which fairly stupefied them.
A workman who was carrying a sickly little girl with large covetous eyes, let
her play two turns. The revolving stands grated and the nick-nacks danced round
in dazzling fashion, while the live rabbit, with his ears lowered, revolved and
revolved so rapidly that the outline of his body vanished and he became nothing
but a whitish circle. There was a moment of great emotion, for the little girl
had narrowly missed winning him.
Then, after shaking hands with Chaine, who was still trembling with the
fright this had given him, the two friends walked away.
'He's happy,' said Claude, after they had gone some fifty paces in silence.
'He!' cried Sandoz; 'why, he believes he has missed becoming a member of the
Institute, and it's killing him.'
Shortly after this meeting, and towards the middle of August, Sandoz devised
a real excursion which would take up a whole day. He had met Dubuche—Dubuche,
careworn and mournful, who had shown himself plaintive and affectionate, raking
up the past and inviting his two old chums to lunch at La Richaudiere, where he
should be alone with his two children for another fortnight. Why shouldn't they
go and surprise him there, since he seemed so desirous of renewing the old
intimacy? But in vain did Sandoz repeat that he had promised Dubuche on oath to
bring Claude with him; the painter obstinately refused to go, as if he were
frightened at the idea of again beholding Bennecourt, the Seine, the islands,
all the stretch of country where his happy years lay dead and buried. It was
necessary for Christine to interfere, and he finished by giving way, although
full of repugnance to the trip. It precisely happened that on the day prior to
the appointment he had worked at his painting until very late, being taken with
the old fever again. And so the next morning—it was Sunday—being devoured with a
longing to paint, he went off most reluctantly, tearing himself away from his
picture with a pang. What was the use of returning to Bennecourt? All that was
dead, it no longer existed. Paris alone remained, and even in Paris there was
but one view, the point of the Cite, that vision which haunted him always and
everywhere, that one corner where he ever left his heart.
Sandoz, finding him nervous in the railway carriage, and seeing that his eyes
remained fixed on the window as if he had been leaving the city—which had
gradually grown smaller and seemed shrouded in mist—for years, did all he could
to divert his mind, telling him, for instance, what he knew about Dubuche's real
position. At the outset, old Margaillan, glorifying in his bemedalled
son-in-law, had trotted him about and introduced him everywhere as his partner
and successor. There was a fellow who would conduct business briskly, who would
build houses more cheaply and in finer style than ever, for hadn't he grown pale
over books? But Dubuche's first idea proved disastrous; on some land belonging
to his father-in-law in Burgundy he established a brickyard in so unfavourable a
situation, and after so defective a plan, that the venture resulted in the sheer
loss of two hundred thousand francs. Then he turned his attention to erecting
houses, insisting upon bringing personal ideas into execution, a certain general
scheme of his which would revolutionise the building art. These ideas were the
old theories he held from the revolutionary chums of his youth, everything that
he had promised he would realise when he was free; but he had not properly
reduced the theories to method, and he applied them unseasonably, with the
awkwardness of a pupil lacking the sacred fire; he experimented with terra-cotta
and pottery ornamentation, large bay windows, and especially with the employment
of iron—iron girders, iron staircases, and iron roofings; and as the employment
of these materials increased the outlay, he again ended with a catastrophe,
which was all the greater as he was a pitiful manager, and had lost his head
since he had become rich, rendered the more obtuse, it seemed, by money, quite
spoilt and at sea, unable even to revert to his old habits of industry. This
time Margaillan grew angry; he for thirty years had been buying ground, building
and selling again, estimating at a glance the cost and return of house property;
so many yards of building at so much the foot having to yield so many suites of
rooms at so much rent. He wouldn't have anything more to do with a fellow who
blundered about lime, bricks, millstones, and in fact everything, who employed
oak when deal would have suited, and who could not bring himself to cut up a
storey—like a consecrated wafer—into as many little squares as was necessary.
No, no, none of that! He rebelled against art, after having been ambitious to
introduce a little of it into his routine, in order to satisfy a long-standing
worry about his own ignorance. And after that matters had gone from bad to
worse, terrible quarrels had arisen between the son-in-law and the
father-in-law, the former disdainful, intrenching himself behind his science,
and the latter shouting that the commonest labourer knew more than an architect
did. The millions were in danger, and one fine day Margaillan turned Dubuche out
of his offices, forbidding him ever to set foot in them again, since he did not
even know how to direct a building-yard where only four men worked. It was a
disaster, a lamentable failure, the School of Arts collapsing, derided by a
mason!
At this point of Sandoz's story, Claude, who had begun to listen to his
friend, inquired:
'Then what is Dubuche doing now?'
'I don't know—nothing probably,' answered Sandoz. 'He told me that he was
anxious about his children's health, and was taking care of them.'
That pale woman, Madame Margaillan, as slender as the blade of a knife, had
died of tubercular consumption, which was plainly the hereditary disease, the
source of the family's degeneracy, for her daughter, Regine, had been coughing
ever since her marriage. She was now drinking the waters at Mont-Dore, whither
she had not dared to take her children, as they had been very poorly the year
before, after a season spent in that part, where the air was too keen for them.
This explained the scattering of the family: the mother over yonder with her
maid; the grandfather in Paris, where he had resumed his great building
enterprises, battling amid his four hundred workmen, and crushing the idle and
the incapable beneath his contempt; and the father in exile at La Richaudiere,
set to watch over his son and daughter, shut up there, after the very first
struggle, as if it had broken him down for life. In a moment of effusion Dubuche
had even let Sandoz understand that as his wife was so extremely delicate he now
lived with her merely on friendly terms.
'A nice marriage,' said Sandoz, simply, by way of conclusion.
It was ten o'clock when the two friends rang at the iron gate of La
Richaudiere. The estate, with which they were not acquainted, amazed them. There
was a superb park, a garden laid out in the French style, with balustrades and
steps spreading away in regal fashion; three huge conservatories and a colossal
cascade—quite a piece of folly, with its rocks brought from afar, and the
quantity of cement and the number of conduits that had been employed in
arranging it. Indeed, the owner had sunk a fortune in it, out of sheer vanity.
But what struck the friends still more was the melancholy, deserted aspect of
the domain; the gravel of the avenues carefully raked, with never a trace of
footsteps; the distant expanses quite deserted, save that now and then a
solitary gardener passed by; and the house looking lifeless, with all its
windows closed, excepting two, which were barely set ajar.
However, a valet who had decided to show himself began to question them, and
when he learnt that they wished to see 'monsieur,' he became insolent, and
replied that 'monsieur' was behind the house in the gymnasium, and then went
indoors again.
Sandoz and Claude followed a path which led them towards a lawn, and what
they saw there made them pause. Dubuche, who stood in front of a trapeze, was
raising his arms to support his son, Gaston, a poor sickly boy who, at ten years
of age, still had the slight, soft limbs of early childhood; while the girl,
Alice, sat in a perambulator awaiting her turn. She was so imperfectly developed
that, although she was six years old, she could not yet walk. The father,
absorbed in his task, continued exercising the slim limbs of his little boy,
swinging him backwards and forwards, and vainly trying to make him raise himself
up by his wrists. Then, as this slight effort sufficed to bring on perspiration,
he removed the little fellow from the trapeze and rolled him in a rug. And all
this was done amid complete silence, alone under the far expanse of sky, his
face wearing a look of distressful pity as he knelt there in that splendid park.
However, as he rose up he perceived the two friends.
'What! it's you? On a Sunday, and without warning me!'
He had made a gesture of annoyance, and at once explained that the maid, the
only woman to whom he could trust the children, went to Paris on Sundays, and
that it was consequently impossible for him to leave Gaston and Alice for a
minute.
'I'll wager that you came to lunch?' he added.
As Claude gave Sandoz an imploring glance, the novelist made haste to answer:
'No, no. As it happens, we only have time enough to shake hands with you.
Claude had to come down here on a business matter. He lived at Bennecourt, as
you know. And as I accompanied him, we took it into our heads to walk as far as
here. But there are people waiting for us, so don't disturb yourself in the
least.'
Thereupon, Dubuche, who felt relieved, made a show of detaining them. They
certainly had an hour to spare, dash it all! And they all three began to talk.
Claude looked at Dubuche, astonished to find him so aged; his flabby face had
become wrinkled—it was of a yellowish hue, and streaked with red, as if bile had
splashed his skin; whilst his hair and his moustaches were already growing grey.
In addition, his figure appeared to have become more compact; a bitter weariness
made each of his gestures seem an effort. Were defeats in money matters as hard
to bear, then, as defeats in art? Everything about this vanquished man—his
voice, his glance—proclaimed the shameful dependency in which he had to live:
the bankruptcy of his future which was cast in his teeth, with the accusation of
having allowed a talent he did not possess to be set down as an asset in the
marriage contract. Then there was the family money which he nowadays stole, the
money spent on what he ate, the clothes he wore, and the pocket-money he
needed—in fact, the perpetual alms which were bestowed upon him, just as they
might have been bestowed upon some vulgar swindler, whom one unluckily could not
get rid of.
'Wait a bit,' resumed Dubuche; 'I have to stop here five minutes longer with
one of my poor duckies, and afterwards we'll go indoors.'
Gently, and with infinite motherly precautions, he removed little Alice from
the perambulator and lifted her to the trapeze. Then, stammering coaxing words
and smiling, he encouraged her, and left her hanging for a couple of minutes, so
as to develop her muscles; but he remained with open arms, watching each
movement with the fear of seeing her smashed to pieces, should her weak little
wax-like hands relax their hold. She did not say anything, but obeyed him in
spite of the terror that this exercise caused her; and she was so pitifully
light in weight that she did not even fully stretch the ropes, being like one of
those poor scraggy little birds which fall from a young tree without as much as
bending it.
At this moment, Dubuche, having given Gaston a glance, became distracted on
remarking that the rug had slipped and that the child's legs were uncovered.
'Good heavens! good heavens! Why, he'll catch cold on this grass! And I, who
can't move! Gaston, my little dear! It's the same thing every day; you wait till
I'm occupied with your sister. Sandoz, pray cover him over! Ah, thanks! Pull the
rug up more; don't be afraid!'
So this was the outcome of his splendid marriage—those two poor, weak little
beings, whom the least breath from the sky threatened to kill like flies. Of the
fortune he had married, all that remained to him was the constant grief of
beholding those woeful children stricken by the final degeneracy of scrofula and
phthisis. However, this big, egotistical fellow showed himself an admirable
father. The only energy that remained to him consisted in a determination to
make his children live, and he struggled on hour after hour, saving them every
morning, and dreading to lose them every night. They alone existed now amid his
finished existence, amid the bitterness of his father-in-law's insulting
reproaches, the coldness of his sorry, ailing wife. And he kept to his task in
desperation; he finished bringing those children into the world, as it were, by
dint of unremitting tenderness.
'There, my darling, that's enough, isn't it?' he said. 'You'll soon see how
big and pretty you'll become.'
He then placed Alice in the perambulator again, took Gaston, who was still
wrapped up, on one of his arms; and when his friends wished to help him, he
declined their offer, pushing the little girl's vehicle along with his right
hand, which had remained free.
'Thanks,' he said, 'I'm accustomed to it. Ah! the poor darlings are not
heavy; and besides, with servants one can never be sure of anything.'
On entering the house, Sandoz and Claude again saw the valet who had been so
insolent; and they noticed that Dubuche trembled before him. The kitchen and the
hall shared the contempt of the father-in-law, who paid for everything, and
treated 'madame's' husband like a beggar whose presence was merely tolerated out
of charity. Each time that a shirt was got ready for him, each time that he
asked for some more bread, the servants' impolite gestures made him feel that he
was receiving alms.
'Well, good-bye, we must leave you,' said Sandoz, who suffered at the sight
of it all.
'No, no, wait a bit. The children are going to breakfast, and afterwards I'll
accompany you with them. They must go for their outing.'
Each day was regulated hour by hour. Of a morning came the baths and the
gymnastics; then the breakfast, which was quite an affair, as the children
needed special food, which was duly discussed and weighed. And matters were
carried to such a point that even their wine and water was slightly warmed, for
fear that too chilly a drop might give them a cold. On this occasion they each
partook of the yolk of an egg diluted in some broth, and a mutton cutlet, which
the father cut up into tiny morsels. Then, prior to the siesta, came the
promenade.
Sandoz and Claude found themselves once more out-of-doors, walking down the
broad avenues with Dubuche, who again propelled Alice's perambulator, whilst
Gaston walked beside him. They talked about the estate as they went towards the
gate. The master glanced over the park with timid, nervous eyes, as if he did
not feel at home. Besides he did not know anything; he did not occupy himself
about anything. He appeared even to have forgotten the profession which he was
said to be ignorant of, and seemed to have gone astray, to be bowed down by
sheer inaction.
'And your parents, how are they?' asked Sandoz.
A spark was once more kindled in Dubuche's dim eyes.
'Oh! my parents are happy,' he said; 'I bought them a little house, where
they live on the annuity which I had specified in my marriage contract. Well,
you see, mamma had advanced enough money for my education, and I had to return
it to her, as I had promised, eh? Yes, I can at least say that my parents have
nothing to reproach me with.'
Having reached the gate, they tarried there for a few minutes. At last, still
looking crushed, Dubuche shook hands with his old comrades; and retaining
Claude's hand in his, he concluded, as if making a simple statement of fact
quite devoid of anger:
'Good-bye; try to get out of worry! As for me, I've spoilt my life.'
And they watched him walk back towards the house, pushing the perambulator,
and supporting Gaston, who was already stumbling with fatigue—he, Dubuche,
himself having his back bent and the heavy tread of an old man.
One o'clock was striking, and they both hurried down towards Bennecourt,
saddened and ravenous. But mournfulness awaited them there as well; a murderous
blast had swept over the place, both Faucheurs, husband and wife, and old
Porrette, were all dead; and the inn, having fallen into the hands of that goose
Melie, was becoming repugnant with its filth and coarseness. An abominable
repast was served them, an omelette with hairs in it, and cutlets smelling of
grease, in the centre of the common room, to which an open window admitted the
pestilential odour of a dung heap, while the place was so full of flies that
they positively blackened the tables. The heat of the burning afternoon came in
with the stench, and Claude and Sandoz did not even feel the courage to order
any coffee; they fled.
'And you who used to extol old Mother Faucheur's omelettes!' said Sandoz.
'The place is done for. We are going for a turn, eh?'
Claude was inclined to refuse. Ever since the morning he had had but one
idea—that of walking on as fast as possible, as if each step would shorten the
disagreeable task and bring him back to Paris. His heart, his head, his whole
being had remained there. He looked neither to right nor to left, he glided
along without distinguishing aught of the fields or trees, having but one fixed
idea in his brain, a prey to such hallucinations that at certain moments he
fancied the point of the Cite rose up and called to him from amid the vast
expanse of stubble. However, Sandoz's proposal aroused memories in his mind;
and, softening somewhat, he replied:
'Yes, that's it, we'll have a look.'
But as they advanced along the river bank, he became indignant and grieved.
He could scarcely recognise the place. A bridge had been built to connect
Bennecourt with Bonnieres: a bridge, good heavens! in the place of the old
ferry-boat, grating against its chain—the old black boat which, cutting athwart
the current, had been so full of interest to the artistic eye. Moreover, a dam
established down-stream at Port-Villez had raised the level of the river, most
of the islands of yore were now submerged, and the little armlets of the stream
had become broader. There were no more pretty nooks, no more rippling alleys
amid which one could lose oneself; it was a disaster that inclined one to
strangle all the river engineers!
'Why, that clump of pollards still emerging from the water on the left,'
cried Claude, 'was the Barreux Island, where we used to chat together, lying on
the grass! You remember, don't you? Ah! the scoundrels!'
Sandoz, who could never see a tree felled without shaking his fist at the
wood-cutter, turned pale with anger, and felt exasperated that the authorities
had thus dared to mutilate nature.
Then, as Claude approached his old home, he became silent, and his teeth
clenched. The house had been sold to some middle-class folk, and now there was
an iron gate, against which he pressed his face. The rose-bushes were all dead,
the apricot trees were dead also; the garden, which looked very trim, with its
little pathways and its square-cut beds of flowers and vegetables, bordered with
box, was reflected in a large ball of plated glass set upon a stand in the very
centre of it; and the house, newly whitewashed and painted at the corners and
round the doors and windows, in a manner to imitate freestone, suggested some
clownish parvenu awkwardly arrayed in his Sunday toggery. The sight fairly
enraged the painter. No, no, nothing of himself, nothing of Christine, nothing
of the great love of their youth remained there! He wished to look still
further; he turned round behind the house, and sought for the wood of oak trees
where they had left the living quiver of their embraces; but the wood was dead,
dead like all the rest, felled, sold, and burnt! Then he made a gesture of
anathema, in which he cast all his grief to that stretch of country which was
now so changed that he could not find in it one single token of his past life.
And so a few years sufficed to efface the spot where one had laboured, loved,
and suffered! What was the use of man's vain agitation if the wind behind him
swept and carried away all the traces of his footsteps? He had rightly realised
that he ought not to return thither, for the past is simply the cemetery of our
illusions, where our feet for ever stumble against tombstones!
'Let us go!' he cried; 'let us go at once! It's stupid to torture one's heart
like this!'
When they were on the new bridge, Sandoz tried to calm him by showing him the
view which had not formerly existed, the widened bed of the Seine, full to the
brim, as it were, and the water flowing onward, proudly and slowly. But this
water failed to interest Claude, until he reflected that it was the same water
which, as it passed through Paris, had bathed the old quay walls of the Cite;
and then he felt touched, he leant over the parapet of the bridge for a moment,
and thought that he could distinguish glorious reflections in it—the towers of
Notre-Dame, and the needle-like spire of the Sainte-Chapelle, carried along by
the current towards the sea.
The two friends missed the three o'clock train, and it was real torture to
have to spend two long hours more in that region, where everything weighed so
heavily on their shoulders. Fortunately, they had forewarned Christine and
Madame Sandoz that they might return by a night train if they were detained. So
they resolved upon a bachelor dinner at a restaurant on the Place du Havre,
hoping to set themselves all right again by a good chat at dessert as in former
times. Eight o'clock was about to strike when they sat down to table.
Claude, on leaving the terminus, with his feet once more on the Paris
pavement, had lost his nervous agitation, like a man who at last finds himself
once more at home. And with the cold, absent-minded air which he now usually
displayed, he listened to Sandoz trying to enliven him. The novelist treated his
friend like a mistress whose head he wished to turn; they partook of delicate,
highly spiced dishes and heady wines. But mirth was rebellious, and Sandoz
himself ended by becoming gloomy. All his hopes of immortality were shaken by
his excursion to that ungrateful country village, that Bennecourt, so loved and
so forgetful, where he and Claude had not found a single stone retaining any
recollection of them. If things which are eternal forget so soon, can one place
any reliance for one hour on the memory of man?
'Do you know, old fellow,' said the novelist, 'it's that which sometimes
sends me into a cold sweat. Have you ever reflected that posterity may not be
the faultless dispenser of justice that we dream of? One consoles oneself for
being insulted and denied, by relying on the equity of the centuries to come;
just as the faithful endure all the abominations of this earth in the firm
belief of another life, in which each will be rewarded according to his deserts.
But suppose Paradise exists no more for the artist than it does for the
Catholic, suppose that future generations prolong the misunderstanding and
prefer amiable little trifles to vigorous works! Ah! what a sell it would be,
eh? To have led a convict's life—to have screwed oneself down to one's work—all
for a mere delusion! Please notice that it's quite possible, after all. There
are some consecrated reputations which I wouldn't give a rap for. Classical
education has deformed everything, and has imposed upon us as geniuses men of
correct, facile talent, who follow the beaten track. To them one may prefer men
of free tendencies, whose work is at times unequal; but these are only known to
a few people of real culture, so that it looks as if immortality might really go
merely to the middle-class "average" talent, to the men whose names are forced
into our brains at school, when we are not strong enough to defend ourselves.
But no, no, one mustn't say those things; they make me shudder! Should I have
the courage to go on with my task, should I be able to remain erect amid all the
jeering around me if I hadn't the consoling illusion that I shall some day be
appreciated?'
Claude had listened with his dolorous expression, and he now made a gesture
of indifference tinged with bitterness.
'Bah! what does it matter? Well, there's nothing hereafter. We are even
madder than the fools who kill themselves for a woman. When the earth splits to
pieces in space like a dry walnut, our works won't add one atom to its dust.'
'That's quite true,' summed up Sandoz, who was very pale. 'What's the use of
trying to fill up the void of space? And to think that we know it, and that our
pride still battles all the same!'
They left the restaurant, roamed about the streets, and foundered again in
the depths of a cafe, where they philosophised. They had come by degrees to
raking up the memories of their childhood, and this ended by filling their
hearts with sadness. One o'clock in the morning struck when they decided to go
home.
However, Sandoz talked of seeing Claude as far as the Rue Tourlaque. That
August night was a superb one, the air was warm, the sky studded with stars. And
as they went the round by way of the Quartier de l'Europe, they passed before
the old Cafe Baudequin on the Boulevard des Batignolles. It had changed hands
three times. It was no longer arranged inside in the same manner as formerly;
there were now a couple of billiard tables on the right hand; and several strata
of customers had followed each other thither, one covering the other, so that
the old frequenters had disappeared like buried nations. However, curiosity, the
emotion they had derived from all the past things they had been raking up
together, induced them to cross the boulevard and to glance into the cafe
through the open doorway. They wanted to see their table of yore, on the left
hand, right at the back of the room.
'Oh, look!' said Sandoz, stupefied.
'Gagniere!' muttered Claude.
It was indeed Gagniere, seated all alone at that table at the end of the
empty cafe. He must have come from Melun for one of the Sunday concerts to which
he treated himself; and then, in the evening, while astray in Paris, an old
habit of his legs had led him to the Cafe Baudequin. Not one of the comrades
ever set foot there now, and he, who had beheld another age, obstinately
remained there alone. He had not yet touched his glass of beer; he was looking
at it, so absorbed in thought that he did not even stir when the waiters began
piling the chairs on the tables, in order that everything might be ready for the
morrow's sweeping.
The two friends hurried off, upset by the sight of that dim figure, seized as
it were with a childish fear of ghosts. They parted in the Rue Tourlaque.
'Ah! that poor devil Dubuche!' said Sandoz as he pressed Claude's hand, 'he
spoilt our day for us.'
As soon as November had come round, and when all the old friends were back in
Paris again, Sandoz thought of gathering them together at one of those Thursday
dinners which had remained a habit with him. They were always his greatest
delight. The sale of his books was increasing, and he was growing rich; the flat
in the Rue de Londres was becoming quite luxurious compared with the little
house at Batignolles; but he himself remained immutable. On this occasion, he
was anxious, in his good nature, to procure real enjoyment for Claude by
organising one of the dear evenings of their youth. So he saw to the
invitations; Claude and Christine naturally must come; next Jory and his wife,
the latter of whom it had been necessary to receive since her marriage, then
Dubuche, who always came alone, with Fagerolles, Mahoudeau, and finally
Gagniere. There would be ten of them—all the men comrades of the old band,
without a single outsider, in order that the good understanding and jollity
might be complete.
Henriette, who was more mistrustful than her husband, hesitated when this
list of guests was decided upon.
'Oh! Fagerolles? You believe in having Fagerolles with the others? They
hardly like him—nor Claude either; I fancied I noticed a coolness—'
But he interrupted her, bent on not admitting it.
'What! a coolness? It's really funny, but women can't understand that fellows
chaff each other. All that doesn't prevent them from having their hearts in the
right place.'
Henriette took especial care in preparing the menu for that Thursday dinner.
She now had quite a little staff to overlook, a cook, a man-servant, and so on;
and if she no longer prepared any of the dishes herself, she still saw that very
delicate fare was provided, out of affection for her husband, whose sole vice
was gluttony. She went to market with the cook, and called in person on the
tradespeople. She and her husband had a taste for gastronomical curiosities from
the four corners of the world. On this occasion they decided to have some
ox-tail soup, grilled mullet, undercut of beef with mushrooms, raviolis
in the Italian fashion, hazel-hens from Russia, and a salad of truffles, without
counting caviare and kilkis as side-dishes, a glace pralinee, and
a little emerald-coloured Hungarian cheese, with fruit and pastry. As wine, some
old Bordeaux claret in decanters, chambertin with the roast, and sparkling
moselle at dessert, in lieu of champagne, which was voted commonplace.
At seven o'clock Sandoz and Henriette were waiting for their guests, he
simply wearing a jacket, and she looking very elegant in a plain dress of black
satin. People dined at their house in frock-coats, without any fuss. The
drawing-room, the arrangements of which they were now completing, was becoming
crowded with old furniture, old tapestry, nick-nacks of all countries and all
times—a rising and now overflowing stream of things which had taken source at
Batignolles with an old pot of Rouen ware, which Henriette had given her husband
on one of his fete days. They ran about to the curiosity shops together; a
joyful passion for buying possessed them. Sandoz satisfied the longings of his
youth, the romanticist ambitions which the first books he had read had given
birth to. Thus this writer, so fiercely modern, lived amid the worm-eaten middle
ages which he had dreamt of when he was a lad of fifteen. As an excuse, he
laughingly declared that handsome modern furniture cost too much, whilst with
old things, even common ones, you immediately obtained something with effect and
colour. There was nothing of the collector about him, he was entirely concerned
as to decoration and broad effects; and to tell the truth, the drawing-room,
lighted by two lamps of old Delft ware, had quite a soft warm tint with the dull
gold of the dalmaticas used for upholstering the seats, the yellowish
incrustations of the Italian cabinets and Dutch show-cases, the faded hues of
the Oriental door-hangings, the hundred little notes of the ivory, crockery and
enamel work, pale with age, which showed against the dull red hangings of the
room.
Claude and Christine were the first to arrive. The latter had put on her only
silk dress—an old, worn-out garment which she preserved with especial care for
such occasions. Henriette at once took hold of both her hands and drew her to a
sofa. She was very fond of her, and questioned her, seeing her so strange,
touchingly pale, and with anxious eyes. What was the matter? Did she feel
poorly? No, no, she answered that she was very gay and very pleased to come; but
while she spoke, she kept on glancing at Claude, as if to study him, and then
looked away. He seemed excited, evincing a feverishness in his words and
gestures which he had not shown for a month past. At intervals, however, his
agitation subsided, and he remained silent, with his eyes wide open, gazing
vacantly into space at something which he fancied was calling him.
'Ah! old man,' he said to Sandoz, 'I finished reading your book last night.
It's deucedly clever; you have shut up their mouths this time!'
They both talked standing in front of the chimney-piece, where some logs were
blazing. Sandoz had indeed just published a new novel, and although his critics
did not disarm, there was at last that stir of success which establishes a man's
reputation despite the persistent attacks of his adversaries. Besides, he had no
illusions; he knew very well that the battle, even if it were won, would begin
again at each fresh book he wrote. The great work of his life was advancing,
that series of novels which he launched forth in volumes one after another in
stubborn, regular fashion, marching towards the goal he had selected without
letting anything, obstacles, insults, or fatigue, conquer him.
'It's true,' he gaily replied, 'they are weakening this time. There's even
one who has been foolish enough to admit that I'm an honest man! See how
everything degenerates! But they'll make up for it, never fear! I know some of
them whose nuts are too much unlike my own to let them accept my literary
formula, my boldness of language, and my physiological characters acting under
the influence of circumstances; and I refer to brother writers who possess
self-respect; I leave the fools and the scoundrels on one side. For a man to be
able to work on pluckily, it is best for him to expect neither good faith nor
justice. To be in the right he must begin by dying.'
At this Claude's eyes abruptly turned towards a corner of the drawing-room,
as if to pierce the wall and go far away yonder, whither something had summoned
him. Then they became hazy and returned from their journey, whilst he exclaimed:
'Oh! you speak for yourself! I should do wrong to kick the bucket. No matter,
your book sent me into a deuced fever. I wanted to paint to-day, but I couldn't.
Ah! it's lucky that I can't get jealous of you, else you would make me too
unhappy.'
However, the door had opened, and Mathilde came in, followed by Jory. She was
richly attired in a tunic of nasturtium-hued velvet and a skirt of
straw-coloured satin, with diamonds in her ears and a large bouquet of roses on
her bosom. What astonished Claude the most was that he did not recognise her,
for she had become plump, round, and fair skinned, instead of thin and sunburnt
as he had known her. Her disturbing ugliness had departed in a swelling of the
face; her mouth, once noted for its black voids, now displayed teeth which
looked over-white whenever she condescended to smile, with a disdainful curling
of the upper lip. You could guess that she had become immoderately respectable;
her five and forty summers gave her weight beside her husband, who was younger
than herself and seemed to be her nephew. The only thing of yore that clung to
her was a violent perfume; she drenched herself with the strongest essences, as
if she had been anxious to wash from her skin the smell of all the aromatic
simples with which she had been impregnated by her herbalist business; however,
the sharpness of rhubarb, the bitterness of elder-seed, and the warmth of
peppermint clung to her; and as soon as she crossed the drawing-room, it was
filled with an undefinable smell like that of a chemist's shop, relieved by an
acute odour of musk.
Henriette, who had risen, made her sit down beside Christine, saying:
'You know each other, don't you? You have already met here.'
Mathilde gave but a cold glance at the modest attire of that woman who had
lived for a long time with a man, so it was said, before being married to him.
She herself was exceedingly rigid respecting such matters since the tolerance
prevailing in literary and artistic circles had admitted her to a few
drawing-rooms. Henriette hated her, however, and after the customary exchange of
courtesies, not to be dispensed with, resumed her conversation with Christine.
Jory had shaken hands with Claude and Sandoz, and, standing near them, in
front of the fireplace, he apologised for an article slashing the novelist's new
book which had appeared that very morning in his review.
'As you know very well, my dear fellow, one is never the master in one's own
house. I ought to see to everything, but I have so little time! I hadn't even
read that article, I relied on what had been told me about it. So you will
understand how enraged I was when I read it this afternoon. I am dreadfully
grieved, dreadfully grieved—'
'Oh, let it be! It's the natural order of things,' replied Sandoz, quietly.
'Now that my enemies are beginning to praise me, it's only proper that my
friends should attack me.'
The door again opened, and Gagniere glided in softly, like a
will-o'-the-wisp. He had come straight from Melun, and was quite alone, for he
never showed his wife to anybody. When he thus came to dinner he brought the
country dust with him on his boots, and carried it back with him the same night
on taking the last train. On the other hand, he did not alter; or, rather, age
seemed to rejuvenate him; his complexion became fairer as he grew old.
'Hallo! Why, Gagniere's here!' exclaimed Sandoz.
Then, just as Gagniere was making up his mind to bow to the ladies, Mahoudeau
entered. He had already grown grey, with a sunken, fierce-looking face and
childish, blinking eyes. He still wore trousers which were a good deal too short
for him, and a frock-coat which creased in the back, in spite of the money which
he now earned; for the bronze manufacturer for whom he worked had brought out
some charming statuettes of his, which one began to see on middle-class
mantel-shelves and consoles.
Sandoz and Claude had turned round, inquisitive to witness the meeting
between Mahoudeau and Mathilde. However, matters passed off very quietly. The
sculptor bowed to her respectfully, while Jory, the husband, with his air of
serene unconsciousness, thought fit to introduce her to him, for the twentieth
time, perhaps.
'Eh! It's my wife, old fellow. Shake hands together.'
Thereupon, both very grave, like people of society who are forced somewhat
over-promptly into familiarity, Mathilde and Mahoudeau shook hands. Only, as
soon as the latter had got rid of the job and had found Gagniere in a corner of
the drawing-room, they both began sneering and recalling, in terrible language,
all the abominations of yore.
Dubuche was expected that evening, for he had formally promised to come.
'Yes,' explained Henriette, 'there will only be nine of us. Fagerolles wrote
this morning to apologise; he is forced to go to some official dinner, but he
hopes to escape, and will join us at about eleven o'clock.'
At that moment, however, a servant came in with a telegram. It was from
Dubuche, who wired: 'Impossible to stir. Alice has an alarming cough.'
'Well, we shall only be eight, then,' resumed Henriette, with the somewhat
peevish resignation of a hostess disappointed by her guests.
And the servant having opened the dining-room door and announced that dinner
was ready, she added:
'We are all here. Claude, offer me your arm.'
Sandoz took Mathilde's, Jory charged himself with Christine, while Mahoudeau
and Gagniere brought up the rear, still joking coarsely about what they called
the beautiful herbalist's padding.
The dining-room which they now entered was very spacious, and the light was
gaily bright after the subdued illumination of the drawing-room. The walls,
covered with specimens of old earthenware, displayed a gay medley of colours,
reminding one of cheap coloured prints. Two sideboards, one laden with glass and
the other with silver plate, sparkled like jewellers' show-cases. And in the
centre of the room, under the big hanging lamp girt round with tapers, the table
glistened like a catafalque with the whiteness of its cloth, laid in
perfect style, with decorated plates, cut-glass decanters white with water or
ruddy with wine, and symmetrical side-dishes, all set out around the
centre-piece, a silver basket full of purple roses.
They sat down, Henriette between Claude and Mahoudeau, Sandoz with Mathilde
and Christine beside him, Jory and Gagniere at either end; and the servant had
barely finished serving the soup, when Madame Jory made a most unfortunate
remark. Wishing to show herself amiable, and not having heard her husband's
apologies, she said to the master of the house:
'Well, were you pleased with the article in this morning's number? Edouard
personally revised the proofs with the greatest care!'
On hearing this, Jory became very much confused and stammered:
'No, no! you are mistaken! It was a very bad article indeed, and you know
very well that it was "passed" the other evening while I was away.'
By the silent embarrassment which ensued she guessed her blunder. But she
made matters still worse, for, giving her husband a sharp glance, she retorted
in a very loud voice, so as to crush him, as it were, and disengage her own
responsibility:
'Another of your lies! I repeat what you told me. I won't allow you to make
me ridiculous, do you hear?'
This threw a chill over the beginning of the dinner. Henriette recommended
the kilkis, but Christine alone found them very nice. When the grilled
mullet appeared, Sandoz, who was amused by Jory's embarrassment, gaily reminded
him of a lunch they had had together at Marseilles in the old days. Ah!
Marseilles, the only city where people know how to eat!
Claude, who for a little while had been absorbed in thought, now seemed to
awaken from a dream, and without any transition he asked:
'Is it decided? Have they selected the artists for the new decorations of the
Hotel de Ville?'
'No,' said Mahoudeau, 'they are going to do so. I sha'n't get anything, for I
don't know anybody. Fagerolles himself is very anxious. If he isn't here
to-night, it's because matters are not going smoothly. Ah! he has had his bite
at the cherry; all that painting for millions is cracking to bits!'
There was a laugh, expressive of spite finally satisfied, and even Gagniere
at the other end of the table joined in the sneering. Then they eased their
feelings in malicious words, and rejoiced over the sudden fall of prices which
had thrown the world of 'young masters' into consternation. It was inevitable,
the predicted time was coming, the exaggerated rise was about to finish in a
catastrophe. Since the amateurs had been panic-stricken, seized with
consternation like that of speculators when a 'slump' sweeps over a Stock
Exchange, prices were giving way day by day, and nothing more was sold. It was a
sight to see the famous Naudet amid the rout; he had held out at first, he had
invented 'the dodge of the Yankee'—the unique picture hidden deep in some
gallery, in solitude like an idol—the picture of which he would not name the
price, being contemptuously certain that he could never find a man rich enough
to purchase it, but which he finally sold for two or three hundred thousand
francs to some pig-dealer of Chicago, who felt glorious at carrying off the most
expensive canvas of the year. But those fine strokes of business were not to be
renewed at present, and Naudet, whose expenditure had increased with his gains,
drawn on and swallowed up in the mad craze which was his own work, could now
hear his regal mansion crumbling beneath him, and was reduced to defend it
against the assault of creditors.
'Won't you take some more mushrooms, Mahoudeau?' obligingly interrupted
Henriette.
The servant was now handing round the undercut. They ate, and emptied the
decanters; but their bitterness was so great that the best things were offered
without being tasted, which distressed the master and mistress of the house.
'Mushrooms, eh?' the sculptor ended by repeating. 'No, thanks.' And he added:
'The funny part of it all is, that Naudet is suing Fagerolles. Oh, quite so!
he's going to distrain on him. Ah! it makes me laugh! We shall see a pretty
scouring in the Avenue de Villiers among all those petty painters with mansions
of their own. House property will go for nothing next spring! Well, Naudet, who
had compelled Fagerolles to build a house, and who furnished it for him as he
would have furnished a place for a hussy, wanted to get hold of his nick-nacks
and hangings again. But Fagerolles had borrowed money on them, so it seems. You
can imagine the state of affairs; the dealer accuses the artist of having spoilt
his game by exhibiting with the vanity of a giddy fool; while the painter
replies that he doesn't mean to be robbed any longer; and they'll end by
devouring each other—at least, I hope so.'
Gagniere raised his voice, the gentle but inexorable voice of a dreamer just
awakened.
'Fagerolles is done for. Besides, he never had any success.'
The others protested. Well, what about the hundred thousand francs' worth of
pictures he had sold a year, and his medals and his cross of the Legion of
Honour? But Gagniere, still obstinate, smiled with a mysterious air, as if facts
could not prevail against his inner conviction. He wagged his head and, full of
disdain, replied:
'Let me be! He never knew anything about chiaroscuro.'
Jory was about to defend the talent of Fagerolles, whom he considered to be
his own creation, when Henriette solicited a little attention for the
raviolis. There was a short slackening of the quarrel amid the
crystalline clinking of the glasses and the light clatter of the forks. The
table, laid with such fine symmetry, was already in confusion, and seemed to
sparkle still more amid the ardent fire of the quarrel. And Sandoz, growing
anxious, felt astonished. What was the matter with them all that they attacked
Fagerolles so harshly? Hadn't they all begun together, and were they not all to
reach the goal in the same victory? For the first time, a feeling of uneasiness
disturbed his dream of eternity, that delight in his Thursdays, which he had
pictured following one upon another, all alike, all of them happy ones, into the
far distance of the future. But the feeling was as yet only skin deep, and he
laughingly exclaimed:
'Husband your strength, Claude, here are the hazel-hens. Eh! Claude, where
are you?'
Since silence had prevailed, Claude had relapsed into his dream, gazing about
him vacantly, and taking a second help of raviolis without knowing what
he was about; Christine, who said nothing, but sat there looking sad and
charming, did not take her eyes off him. He started when Sandoz spoke, and chose
a leg from amid the bits of hazel-hen now being served, the strong fumes of
which filled the room with a resinous smell.
'Do you smell that?' exclaimed Sandoz, amused; 'one would think one were
swallowing all the forests of Russia.'
But Claude returned to the matter which worried him.
'Then you say that Fagerolles will be entrusted with the paintings for the
Municipal Council's assembly room?'
And this remark sufficed; Mahoudeau and Gagniere, set on the track, at once
started off again. Ah! a nice wishy-washy smearing it would be if that assembly
room were allotted to him; and he was doing plenty of dirty things to get it.
He, who had formerly pretended to spit on orders for work, like a great artist
surrounded by amateurs, was basely cringing to the officials, now that his
pictures no longer sold. Could anything more despicable be imagined than a
painter soliciting a functionary, bowing and scraping, showing all kinds of
cowardice and making all kinds of concessions? It was shameful that art should
be dependent upon a Minister's idiotic good pleasure! Fagerolles, at that
official dinner he had gone to, was no doubt conscientiously licking the boots
of some chief clerk, some idiot who was only fit to be made a guy of.
'Well,' said Jory, 'he effects his purpose, and he's quite right. You
won't pay his debts.'
'Debts? Have I any debts, I who have always starved?' answered Mahoudeau in a
roughly arrogant tone. 'Ought a fellow to build himself a palace and spend money
on creatures like that Irma Becot, who's ruining Fagerolles?'
At this Jory grew angry, while the others jested, and Irma's name went flying
over the table. But Mathilde, who had so far remained reserved and silent by way
of making a show of good breeding, became intensely indignant. 'Oh! gentlemen,
oh! gentlemen,' she exclaimed, 'to talk before us about that creature.
No, not that creature, I implore you!
After that Henriette and Sandoz, who were in consternation, witnessed the
rout of their menu. The truffle salad, the ice, the dessert, everything was
swallowed without being at all appreciated amidst the rising anger of the
quarrel; and the chambertin and sparkling moselle were imbibed as if they had
merely been water. In vain did Henriette smile, while Sandoz good-naturedly
tried to calm them by making allowances for human weakness. Not one of them
retreated from his position; a single word made them spring upon each other.
There was none of the vague boredom, the somniferous satiety which at times had
saddened their old gatherings; at present there was real ferocity in the
struggle, a longing to destroy one another. The tapers of the hanging lamp
flared up, the painted flowers of the earthenware on the walls bloomed, the
table seemed to have caught fire amid the upsetting of its symmetrical
arrangements and the violence of the talk, that demolishing onslaught of chatter
which had filled them with fever for a couple of hours past.
And amid the racket, when Henriette made up her mind to rise so as to silence
them, Claude at length remarked:
'Ah! if I only had the Hotel de Ville work, and if I could! It used to be my
dream to cover all the walls of Paris!'
They returned to the drawing-room, where the little chandelier and the
bracket-candelabra had just been lighted. It seemed almost cold there in
comparison with the kind of hot-house which had just been left; and for a moment
the coffee calmed the guests. Nobody beyond Fagerolles was expected. The house
was not an open one by any means, the Sandozes did not recruit literary
dependents or muzzle the press by dint of invitations. The wife detested
society, and the husband said with a laugh that he needed ten years to take a
liking to anybody, and then he must like him always. But was not that real
happiness, seldom realised? A few sound friendships and a nook full of family
affection. No music was ever played there, and nobody had ever read a page of
his composition aloud.
On that particular Thursday the evening seemed a long one, on account of the
persistent irritation of the men. The ladies had begun to chat before the
smouldering fire; and when the servant, after clearing the table, reopened the
door of the dining-room, they were left alone, the men repairing to the
adjoining apartment to smoke and sip some beer.
Sandoz and Claude, who were not smokers, soon returned, however, and sat
down, side by side, on a sofa near the doorway. The former, who was glad to see
his old friend excited and talkative, recalled the memories of Plassans apropos
of a bit of news he had learnt the previous day. Pouillaud, the old jester of
their dormitory, who had become so grave a lawyer, was now in trouble over some
adventure with a woman. Ah! that brute of a Pouillaud! But Claude did not
answer, for, having heard his name mentioned in the dining-room, he listened
attentively, trying to understand.
Jory, Mahoudeau, and Gagniere, unsatiated and eager for another bite, had
started on the massacre again. Their voices, at first mere whispers, gradually
grew louder, till at last they began to shout.
'Oh! the man, I abandon the man to you,' said Jory, who was speaking of
Fagerolles. 'He isn't worth much. And he out-generalled you, it's true. Ah! how
he did get the better of you fellows, by breaking off from you and carving
success for himself on your backs! You were certainly not at all cute.'
Mahoudeau, waxing furious, replied:
'Of course! It sufficed for us to be with Claude, to be turned away
everywhere.'
'It was Claude who did for us!' so Gagniere squarely asserted.
And thus they went on, relinquishing Fagerolles, whom they reproached for
toadying the newspapers, for allying himself with their enemies and wheedling
sexagenarian baronesses, to fall upon Claude, who now became the great culprit.
Well, after all, the other was only a hussy, one of the many found in the
artistic fraternity, fellows who accost the public at street corners, leave
their comrades in the lurch, and victimise them so as to get the bourgeois into
their studios. But Claude, that abortive great artist, that impotent fellow who
couldn't set a figure on its legs in spite of all his pride, hadn't he utterly
compromised them, hadn't he let them in altogether? Ah! yes, success might have
been won by breaking off. If they had been able to begin over again, they
wouldn't have been idiots enough to cling obstinately to impossible principles!
And they accused Claude of having paralysed them, of having traded on them—yes,
traded on them, but in so clumsy and dull-witted a manner that he himself had
not derived any benefit by it.
'Why, as for me,' resumed Mahoudeau, 'didn't he make me quite idiotic at one
moment? When I think of it, I sound myself, and remain wondering why I ever
joined his band. Am I at all like him? Was there ever any one thing in common
between us, eh? Ah! it's exasperating to find the truth out so late in the day!'
'And as for myself,' said Gagniere, 'he robbed me of my originality. Do you
think it has amused me, each time I have exhibited a painting during the last
fifteen years, to hear people saying behind me, "That's a Claude!" Oh! I've had
enough of it, I prefer not to paint any more. All the same, if I had seen
clearly in former times, I shouldn't have associated with him.'
It was a stampede, the snapping of the last ties, in their stupefaction at
suddenly finding that they were strangers and enemies, after a long youth of
fraternity together. Life had disbanded them on the road, and the great
dissimilarity of their characters stood revealed; all that remained in them was
the bitterness left by the old enthusiastic dream, that erstwhile hope of battle
and victory to be won side by side, which now increased their spite.
'The fact is,' sneered Jory, 'that Fagerolles did not let himself be pillaged
like a simpleton.'
But Mahoudeau, feeling vexed, became angry. 'You do wrong to laugh,' he said,
'for you are a nice backslider yourself. Yes, you always told us that you would
give us a lift up when you had a paper of your own.'
'Ah! allow me, allow me—'
Gagniere, however, united with Mahoudeau: 'That's quite true!' he said. 'You
can't say any more that what you write about us is cut out, for you are the
master now. And yet, never a word! You didn't even name us in your articles on
the last Salon.'
Then Jory, embarrassed and stammering, in his turn flew into a rage.
'Ah! well, it's the fault of that cursed Claude! I don't care to lose my
subscribers simply to please you fellows. It's impossible to do anything for
you! There! do you understand? You, Mahoudeau, may wear yourself out in
producing pretty little things; you, Gagniere, may even never do anything more;
but you each have a label on the back, and you'll need ten years' efforts before
you'll be able to get it off. In fact, there have been some labels that would
never come off! The public is amused by it, you know; there were only you
fellows to believe in the genius of that big ridiculous lunatic, who will be
locked up in a madhouse one of these fine mornings!'
Then the dispute became terrible, they all three spoke at once, coming at
last to abominable reproaches, with such outbursts, and such furious motion of
the jaw, that they seemed to be biting one another.
Sandoz, seated on the sofa, and disturbed in the gay memories he was
recalling, was at last obliged to lend ear to the tumult which reached him
through the open doorway.
'You hear them?' whispered Claude, with a dolorous smile; 'they are giving it
me nicely! No, no, stay here, I won't let you stop them; I deserve it, since I
have failed to succeed.'
And Sandoz, turning pale, remained there, listening to that bitter
quarrelling, the outcome of the struggle for life, that grappling of conflicting
personalities, which bore all his chimera of everlasting friendship away.
Henriette, fortunately, became anxious on hearing the violent shouting. She
rose and went to shame the smokers for thus forsaking the ladies to go and
quarrel together. They then returned to the drawing-room, perspiring, breathing
hard, and still shaken by their anger. And as Henriette, with her eyes on the
clock, remarked that they certainly would not see Fagerolles that evening, they,
began to sneer again, exchanging glances. Ah! he had a fine scent, and no
mistake; he wouldn't be caught associating with old friends, who had become
troublesome, and whom he hated.
In fact, Fagerolles did not come. The evening finished laboriously. They once
more went back to the dining-room, where the tea was served on a Russian
tablecloth embroidered with a stag-hunt in red thread; and under the tapers a
plain cake was displayed, with plates full of sweetstuff and pastry, and a
barbarous collection of liqueurs and spirits, whisky, hollands, Chio raki, and
kummel. The servant also brought some punch, and bestirred himself round the
table, while the mistress of the house filled the teapot from the samovar
boiling in front of her. But all the comfort, all the feast for the eyes and the
fine perfume of the tea did not move their hearts. The conversation again turned
on the success that some men achieved and the ill-luck that befell others. For
instance, was it not shameful that art should be dishonoured by all those
medals, all those crosses, all those rewards, which were so badly distributed to
boot? Were artists always to remain like little boys at school? All the
universal platitude came from the docility and cowardice which were shown, as in
the presence of ushers, so as to obtain good marks.
They had repaired to the drawing-room once more, and Sandoz, who was greatly
distressed, had begun to wish that they would take themselves off, when he
noticed Mathilde and Gagniere seated side by side on a sofa and talking
languishingly of music, while the others remained exhausted, lacking saliva and
power of speech. Gagniere philosophised and poetised in a state of ecstasy,
while Mathilde rolled up her eyes and went into raptures as if titillated by
some invisible wing. They had caught sight of each other on the previous Sunday
at the concert at the Cirque, and they apprised each other of their enjoyment in
alternate, far-soaring sentences.
'Ah! that Meyerbeer, monsieur, the overture of "Struensee," that funereal
strain, and then that peasant dance, so full of dash and colour; and then the
mournful burden which returns, the duo of the violoncellos. Ah! monsieur, the
violoncellos, the violoncellos!'
'And Berlioz, madame, the festival air in "Romeo." Oh! the solo of the
clarionets, the beloved women, with the harp accompaniment! Something
enrapturing, something white as snow which ascends! The festival bursts upon
you, like a picture by Paul Veronese, with the tumultuous magnificence of the
"Marriage of Cana"; and then the love-song begins again, oh, how softly! Oh!
always higher! higher still—'
'Did you notice, monsieur, in Beethoven's Symphony in A, that knell which
ever and ever comes back and beats upon your heart? Yes, I see very well, you
feel as I do, music is a communion—Beethoven, ah, me! how sad and sweet it is to
be two to understand him and give way—'
'And Schumann, madame, and Wagner, madame—Schumann's "Reverie," nothing but
the stringed instruments, a warm shower falling on acacia leaves, a sunray which
dries them, barely a tear in space. Wagner! ah, Wagner! the overture of the
"Flying Dutchman," are you not fond of it?—tell me you are fond of it! As for
myself, it overcomes me. There is nothing left, nothing left, one expires—'
Their voices died away; they did not even look at each other, but sat there
elbow to elbow, with their faces turned upward, quite overcome.
Sandoz, who was surprised, asked himself where Mathilde could have picked up
that jargon. In some article of Jory's, perhaps. Besides, he had remarked that
women talk music very well, even without knowing a note of it. And he, whom the
bitterness of the others had only grieved, became exasperated at sight of
Mathilde's languishing attitude. No, no, that was quite enough; the men tore
each other to bits; still that might pass, after all; but what an end to the
evening it was, that feminine fraud, cooing and titillating herself with
thoughts of Beethoven's and Schumann's music! Fortunately, Gagniere suddenly
rose. He knew what o'clock it was even in the depths of his ecstasy, and he had
only just time left him to catch his last train. So, after exchanging nerveless
and silent handshakes with the others, he went off to sleep at Melun.
'What a failure he is!' muttered Mahoudeau. 'Music has killed painting; he'll
never do anything!'
He himself had to leave, and the door had scarcely closed behind his back
when Jory declared:
'Have you seen his last paperweight? He'll end by sculpturing sleeve-links.
There's a fellow who has missed his mark! To think that he prided himself on
being vigorous!'
But Mathilde was already afoot, taking leave of Christine with a curt little
inclination of the head, affecting social familiarity with Henriette, and
carrying off her husband, who helped her on with her cloak in the ante-room,
humble and terrified at the severe glance she gave him, for she had an account
to settle.
Then, the door having closed behind them, Sandoz, beside himself, cried out:
'That's the end! The journalist was bound to call the others abortions—yes, the
journalist who, after patching up articles, has fallen to trading upon public
credulity! Ah! luckily there's Mathilde the Avengeress!'
Of the guests Christine and Claude alone were left. The latter, since the
drawing-room had been growing empty, had remained ensconced in the depths of an
arm-chair, no longer speaking, but overcome by that species of magnetic slumber
which stiffened him, and fixed his eyes on something far away beyond the walls.
He protruded his face, a convulsive kind of attention seemed to carry it
forward; he certainly beheld something invisible, and heard a summons in the
silence.
Christine having risen in her turn, and apologised for being the last to
leave, Henriette took hold of her hands, repeated how fond she was of her,
begged her to come and see her frequently, and to dispose of her in all things
as she would with a sister. But Claude's sorrowful wife, looking so sadly
charming in her black dress, shook her head with a pale smile.
'Come,' said Sandoz in her ear, after giving a glance at Claude, 'you mustn't
distress yourself like that. He has talked a great deal, he has been gayer this
evening. He's all right.'
But in a terrified voice she answered:
'No, no; look at his eyes—I shall tremble as long as he has his eyes like
that. You have done all you could, thanks. What you haven't done no one will do.
Ah! how I suffer at being unable to hope, at being unable to do anything!'
Then in a loud tone she asked:
'Are you coming, Claude?'
She had to repeat her question twice, for at first he did not hear her; he
ended by starting, however, and rose to his feet, saying, as if he had answered
the summons from the horizon afar off:
'Yes, I'm coming, I'm coming.'
When Sandoz and his wife at last found themselves alone in the drawing-room,
where the atmosphere now was stifling—heated by the lights and heavy, as it
were, with melancholy silence after all the outbursts of the quarrelling—they
looked at one another and let their arms fall, quite heart-rent by the
unfortunate issue of their dinner party. Henrietta tried to laugh it off,
however, murmuring:
'I warned you, I quite understood—'
But he interrupted her with a despairing gesture. What! was that, then, the
end of his long illusion, that dream of eternity which had made him set
happiness in a few friendships, formed in childhood, and shared until extreme
old age? Ah! what a wretched band, what a final rending, what a terrible
balance-sheet to weep over after that bankruptcy of the human heart! And he grew
astonished on thinking of the friends who had fallen off by the roadside, of the
great affections lost on the way, of the others unceasingly changing around
himself, in whom he found no change. His poor Thursdays filled him with pity, so
many memories were in mourning, it was the slow death of all that one loves!
Would his wife and himself have to resign themselves to live as in a desert, to
cloister themselves in utter hatred of the world? Ought they rather to throw
their doors wide open to a throng of strangers and indifferent folk? By degrees
a certainty dawned in the depths of his grief: everything ended and nothing
began again in life. He seemed to yield to evidence, and, heaving a big sigh,
exclaimed:
'You were right. We won't invite them to dinner again—they would devour one
another.'
As soon as Claude and Christine reached the Place de la Trinite on their way
home, the painter let go of his wife's arm; and, stammering that he had to go
somewhere, he begged her to return to the Rue Tourlaque without him. She had
felt him shuddering, and she remained quite scared with surprise and fear.
Somewhere to go at that hour—past midnight! Where had he to go, and what for? He
had turned round and was making off, when she overtook him, and, pretending that
she was frightened, begged that he would not leave her to climb up to Montmartre
alone at that time of night. This consideration alone brought him back. He took
her arm again; they ascended the Rue Blanche and the Rue Lepic, and at last
found themselves in the Rue Tourlaque. And on reaching their door, he rang the
bell, and then again left her.
'Here you are,' he said; 'I'm going.'
He was already hastening away, taking long strides, and gesticulating like a
madman. Without even closing the door which had been opened, she darted off,
bent on following him. In the Rue Lepic she drew near; but for fear of exciting
him still more she contented herself with keeping him in sight, walking some
thirty yards in the rear, without his knowing that she was behind him. On
reaching the end of the Rue Lepic he went down the Rue Blanche again, and then
proceeded by way of the Rue de la Chaussee-d'Antin and the Rue du Dix Decembre
as far as the Rue de Richelieu. When she saw him turn into the last-named
thoroughfare, a mortal chill came over her: he was going towards the Seine; it
was the realisation of the frightful fear which kept her of a night awake, full
of anguish! And what could she do, good Lord? Go with him, hang upon his neck
over yonder? She was now only able to stagger along, and as each step brought
them nearer to the river, she felt life ebbing from her limbs. Yes, he was going
straight there; he crossed the Place du Theatre Francais, then the Carrousel,
and finally reached the Pont des Saints-Peres. After taking a few steps along
the bridge, he approached the railing overlooking the water; and at the thought
that he was about to jump over, a loud cry was stifled in her contracted throat.
But no; he remained motionless. Was it then only the Cite over yonder that
haunted him, that heart of Paris which pursued him everywhere, which he conjured
up with his fixed eyes, even through walls, and which, when he was leagues away,
cried out the constant summons heard by him alone? She did not yet dare to hope
it; she had stopped short, in the rear, watching him with giddy anxiety, ever
fancying that she saw him take the terrible leap, but resisting her longing to
draw nearer, for fear lest she might precipitate the catastrophe by showing
herself. Oh, God! to think that she was there with her devouring passion, her
bleeding motherly heart—that she was there beholding everything, without daring
to risk one movement to hold him back!
He stood erect, looking very tall, quite motionless, and gazing into the
night.
It was a winter's night, with a misty sky of sooty blackness, and was
rendered extremely cold by a sharp wind blowing from the west. Paris, lighted
up, had gone to sleep, showing no signs of life save such as attached to the
gas-jets, those specks which scintillated and grew smaller and smaller in the
distance till they seemed but so much starry dust. The quays stretched away
showing double rows of those luminous beads whose reverberation glimmered on the
nearer frontages. On the left were the houses of the Quai du Louvre, on the
right the two wings of the Institute, confused masses of monuments and
buildings, which became lost to view in the darkening gloom, studded with
sparks. Then between those cordons of burners, extending as far as the eye could
reach, the bridges stretched bars of lights, ever slighter and slighter, each
formed of a train of spangles, grouped together and seemingly hanging in
mid-air. And in the Seine there shone the nocturnal splendour of the animated
water of cities; each gas-jet there cast a reflection of its flame, like the
nucleus of a comet, extending into a tail. The nearer ones, mingling together,
set the current on fire with broad, regular, symmetrical fans of light, glowing
like live embers, while the more distant ones, seen under the bridges, were but
little motionless sparks of fire. But the large burning tails appeared to be
animated, they waggled as they spread out, all black and gold, with a constant
twirling of scales, in which one divined the flow of the water. The whole Seine
was lighted up by them, as if some fete were being given in its depths—some
mysterious, fairy-like entertainment, at which couples were waltzing beneath the
river's red-flashing window-panes. High above those fires, above the starry
quays, the sky, in which not a planet was visible, showed a ruddy mass of
vapour, that warm, phosphorescent exhalation which every night, above the sleep
of the city, seems to set the crater of a volcano.
The wind blew hard, and Christine, shivering, her eyes full of tears, felt
the bridge move under her, as if it were bearing her away amid a smash up of the
whole scene. Had not Claude moved? Was he not climbing over the rail? No;
everything became motionless again, and she saw him still on the same spot,
obstinately stiff, with his eyes turned towards the point of the Cite, which he
could not see.
It had summoned him, and he had come, and yet he could not see it in the
depths of the darkness. He could only distinguish the bridges, with their light
framework standing out blackly against the sparkling water. But farther off
everything became confused, the island had disappeared, he could not even have
told its exact situation if some belated cabs had not passed from time to time
over the Pont-Neuf, with their lamps showing like those shooting sparks which
dart at times through embers. A red lantern, on a level with the dam of the
Mint, cast a streamlet of blood, as it were, into the water. Something huge and
lugubrious, some drifting form, no doubt a lighter which had become unmoored,
slowly descended the stream amid the reflections. Espied for a moment, it was
immediately afterwards lost in the darkness. Where had the triumphal island
sunk? In the depths of that flow of water? Claude still gazed, gradually
fascinated by the great rushing of the river in the night. He leant over its
broad bed, chilly like an abyss, in which the mysterious flames were dancing.
And the loud, sad wail of the current attracted him, and he listened to its
call, despairing, unto death.
By a shooting pain at her heart, Christine this time realised that the
terrible thought had just occurred to him. She held out her quivering hands
which the wind was lashing. But Claude remained there, struggling against the
sweetness of death; indeed he did not move for another hour, he lingered there
unconscious of the lapse of time, with his eyes still turned in the direction of
the Cite, as if by a miracle of power they were about to create light, and
conjure up the island so that he might behold it.
When Claude at last left the bridge, with stumbling steps, Christine had to
pass in front and run in order to be home in the Rue Tourlaque before him.