<h2>X</h2>
<p><ANTIMG class="figleft" style="width: 95px; height: 104px;" alt="Initial O" title="O" src="images/leto.png" />n
Saturday at seven in the morning the <i>citoyen</i>
Blaise, in a black
cocked-hat, scarlet waistcoat, doe-skin breeches, and boots with yellow
tops, rapped with the handle of his riding-whip at the studio door. The
<i>citoyenne</i> Gamelin was in the room in polite
conversation with the
<i>citoyen</i> Brotteaux, while Évariste stood
before a bit of looking-glass
knotting his high white cravat.</p>
<p>"A pleasant journey, Monsieur Blaise!" the <i>citoyenne</i>
greeted him.
"But, as you are going to paint landscapes, why don't you take Monsieur
Brotteaux, who is a painter?"</p>
<p>"Well, well," said Jean Blaise, "will you come with us, <i>citoyen</i>
Brotteaux?"</p>
<p>On being assured he would not be intruding, Brotteaux, a man
of a
sociable temper and fond of all amusements, accepted the invitation.</p>
<p>The <i>citoyenne</i> Élodie had
climbed the four storeys to embrace the widow
Gamelin, whom she called her good mother. She was in white from head to
foot, and smelt of lavender.</p>
<p>An old two-horsed travelling <i>berline</i> stood
waiting in the Place, with
the hood down. Rose Thévenin occupied the back seat with
Julienne
Hasard. Élodie made the actress sit on the right, took the
left-hand
place herself and put the slim Julienne between the two of them.
Brotteaux settled himself, back to the horses, facing the <i>citoyenne</i>
Thévenin; Philippe Dubois, opposite the <i>citoyenne</i>
Hasard; Évariste
opposite Élodie. As for Philippe Desmahis, he planted his
athletic
figure on the box, on the coachman's left, and proceeded to amaze that
worthy with a traveller's tale about a country in America where the
trees bore chitterlings and saveloys by way of fruit.</p>
<p>The <i>citoyen</i> Blaise, who was a capital
rider, took the road on
horseback, going on in front to escape the dust from the <i>berline</i>.</p>
<p>As the wheels rattled merrily over the suburban roads the
travellers
began to forget their cares, and at sight of the green fields and trees
and sky, their minds turned to gay and pleasant thoughts.
Élodie dreamed
she was surely born to rear poultry with Évariste, a country
justice, to
help her, in some village on a river bank beside a wood. The roadside
elms whirled by as they sped along. Outside the villages the peasants'
mastiffs dashed out to intercept the carriage and barked at the horses,
while a fat spaniel, lying in the roadway, struggled reluctantly to its
feet; the fowls scattered and fled; the geese in a close-packed band
waddled slowly out of the way. The children, with their fresh morning
faces, watched the company go by. It was a hot day and a cloudless sky.
The parched earth was thirsting for rain. They alighted just outside
Villejuif. On their way through the little town, Desmahis went into a
fruiterer's to buy cherries for the overheated <i>citoyennes</i>.
The
shop-keeper was a pretty woman, and Desmahis showed no signs of
reappearing. Philippe Dubois shouted to him, using the nickname his
friends constantly gave him:</p>
<p>"Ho there! Barbaroux!... Barbaroux!"</p>
<p>At this hated name the passers-by pricked up their ears and
faces
appeared at every window. Then, when they saw a young and handsome man
emerge from the shop, his jacket thrown open, his neckerchief flying
loose over a muscular chest, and carrying over his shoulder a basket of
cherries and his coat at the end of a stick, taking him for the
proscribed girondist, a posse of <i>sansculottes</i> laid
violent hands on
him. Regardless of his indignant protests, they would have haled him to
the town-hall, had not old Brotteaux, Gamelin, and the three young
women
borne testimony that the <i>citoyen</i> was named Philippe
Desmahis, a
copper-plate engraver and a good Jacobin. Even then the suspect had to
show his <i>carte de civisme</i>, which he had in his
pocket by great good
luck, for he was very heedless in such matters. At this price he
escaped
from the hands of these patriotic villagers without worse loss than one
of his lace ruffles, which had been torn off; but this was a trifle
after all. He even received the apologies of the National Guards who
had
hustled him the most savagely and who now spoke of carrying him in
triumph to the Hôtel de Ville.</p>
<p>A free man again and with the <i>citoyennes</i>
Élodie, Rose, and Julienne
crowding round him, Desmahis looked at Philippe Dubois—he did
not like
the man and suspected him of having played him a practical
joke—with a
wry smile, and towering above him by a whole head:</p>
<p>"Dubois," he told him, "if you call me Barbaroux again, I
shall call you
Brissot; he is a little fat man with a silly face, greasy hair, an oily
skin and damp hands. They'll be perfectly sure you are the infamous
Brissot, the people's enemy; and the good Republicans, filled with
horror and loathing at sight of you, will hang you from the nearest
lamp-post. You hear me?"</p>
<p>The <i>citoyen</i> Blaise, who had been watering
his horse, announced that he
had arranged the affair, though it was quite plain to everybody that it
had been arranged without him.</p>
<p>The company got in again, and as they drove on, Desmahis
informed the
coachman that in this same plain of Longjumeau several inhabitants of
the Moon had once come down, in shape and colour much like frogs, only
very much bigger. Philippe Dubois and Gamelin talked about their art.
Dubois, a pupil of Regnault, had been to Rome, where he had seen
Raphael's tapestries, which he set above all the masterpieces of the
world. He admired Correggio's colouring, Annibale Caracci's invention,
Domenichino's drawing, but thought nothing comparable in point of style
with the pictures of Pompeio Battoni. He had been in touch at Rome with
Monsieur Ménageot and Madame Lebrun, who had both pronounced
against the
Revolution; so the less said of them the better. But he spoke highly of
Angelica Kauffmann, who had a pure taste and a fine knowledge of the
Antique.</p>
<p>Gamelin deplored that the apogee of French painting, belated
as it was,
for it only dated from Lesueur, Claude and Poussin and corresponded
with
the decadence of the Italian and Flemish schools, had been succeeded by
so rapid and profound a decline. This he attributed to the degraded
state of manners and to the Academy, which was the expression of that
state. But the Academy had been happily abolished, and under the
influence of new canons, David and his school were creating an art
worthy of a free people. Among the young painters, Gamelin, without a
trace of envy, gave the first place to Hennequin and Topino-Lebrun.
Philippe Dubois preferred his own master Regnault to David, and founded
his hopes for the future of painting on that rising artist
Gérard.</p>
<p>Meantime Élodie complimented the <i>citoyenne</i>
Thévenin on her red velvet
toque and white gown. The actress repaid the compliment by
congratulating her two companions on their toilets and advising them
how
to do better still; the thing, she said, was to be more sparing in
ornaments and trimmings.</p>
<p>"A woman can never be dressed too simply," was her dictum. "We
see this
on the stage, where the costume should allow every pose to be
appreciated. That is its true beauty and it needs no other."</p>
<p>"You are right, my dear," replied Élodie. "Only
there is nothing more
expensive in dress than simplicity. It is not always out of bad taste
we
add frills and furbelows; sometimes it is to save our pockets."</p>
<p>They discussed eagerly the autumn fashions,—frocks
entirely plain and
short-waisted.</p>
<p>"So many women disfigure themselves through following the
fashion!"
declared Rose Thévenin. "In dressing every woman should
study her own
figure."</p>
<p>"There is nothing beautiful save draperies that follow the
lines of the
figure and fall in folds," put in Gamelin. "Everything that is cut out
and sewn is hideous."</p>
<p>These sentiments, more appropriate in a treatise of
Winckelmann's than
in the mouth of a man talking to Parisiennes, met with the scorn they
deserved, being entirely disregarded.</p>
<p>"For the winter," observed Élodie, "they are making
quilted gowns in
Lapland style of taffeta and muslin, and coats <i>à
la Zulime</i>,
round-waisted and opening over a stomacher <i>à la
Turque</i>."</p>
<p>"Nasty cheap things," declared the actress, "you can buy them
ready
made. Now I have a little seamstress who works like an angel and is not
dear; I'll send her to see you, my dear."</p>
<p>So they prattled on trippingly, eagerly discussing and
appraising
different fine fabrics—striped taffeta, self-coloured china
silk,
muslin, gauze, nankeen.</p>
<p>And old Brotteaux, as he listened to them, thought with a
pensive
pleasure of these veils that hide women's charms and change
incessantly,—how they last for a few years to be renewed
eternally like
the flowers of the field. And his eyes, as they wandered from the three
pretty women to the cornflowers and the poppies in the wheat, were wet
with smiling tears.</p>
<p>They reached Orangis about nine o'clock and stopped before the
inn, the
<i>Auberge de la Cloche</i>, where the Poitrines, husband
and wife, offered
accommodation for man and beast. The <i>citoyen</i>
Blaise, who had repaired
any disorder in his dress, helped the <i>citoyennes</i> to
alight. After
ordering dinner for midday, they all set off, preceded by their
paintboxes, drawing-boards, easels, and parasols, which were carried by
a village lad, for the meadows near the confluence of the Orge and the
Yvette, a charming bit of country giving a view over the verdant plain
of Longjumeau and bounded by the Seine and the woods of
Sainte-Geneviève.</p>
<p>Jean Blaise, the leader of the troop of artists, was bandying
funny
stories with the <i>ci-devant</i> financier, tales that
brought in without
rhyme or reason Verboquet the Open-handed, Catherine Cuissot the
pedlar,
the demoiselles Chaudron, the fortune-teller Galichet, as well as
characters of a later time like Cadet-Rousselle and Madame Angot.</p>
<p>Évariste, inspired with a sudden love of nature, as
he saw a troop of
harvesters binding their sheaves, felt the tears rise to his eyes,
while
visions of concord and affection filled his heart. For his part,
Desmahis was blowing the light down of the seeding dandelions into the
<i>citoyennes'</i> hair. All three loved posies, as
town-bred girls always
do, and were busy in the meadows plucking the mullein, whose blossoms
grow in spikes close round the stem, the campanula, with its little
blue-bells hanging in rows one above another, the slender twigs of the
scented vervain, wallwort, mint, dyer's weed, milfoil—all the
wild
flowers of late summer. Jean-Jacques had made botany the fashion among
townswomen, so all three knew the name and symbolism of every flower.
As
the delicate petals, drooping for want of moisture, wilted in her hands
and fell in a shower about her feet, the <i>citoyenne</i>
Élodie sighed:</p>
<p>"They are dying already, the poor flowers!"</p>
<p>All set to work and strove to express nature as they saw her;
but each
saw her through the eyes of a master. In a short time Philippe Dubois
had knocked off in the style of Hubert Robert a deserted farm, a clump
of storm-riven trees, a dried-up torrent. Évariste Gamelin
found a
landscape by Poussin ready made on the banks of the Yvette. Philippe
Desmahis was at work before a pigeon-cote in the picaresque manner of
Callot and Duplessis. Old Brotteaux who piqued himself on imitating the
Flemings, was drawing a cow with infinite care. Élodie was
sketching a
peasant's hut, while her friend Julienne, who was a colourman's
daughter, set her palette. A swarm of children pressed about her,
watching her paint, whom she would scold out of her light at intervals,
calling them pestering gnats and giving them lollipops. The <i>citoyenne</i>
Thévenin, picking out the pretty ones, would wash their
faces, kiss them
and put flowers in their hair. She fondled them with a gentle air of
melancholy, because she had missed the joy of motherhood,—as
well as to
heighten her fascinations by a show of tender sentiment and to practise
herself in the art of pose and grouping.</p>
<p>She was the only member of the party neither drawing nor
painting. She
devoted her attention to learning a part and still more to charming her
companions, flitting from one to another, book in hand, a bright,
entrancing creature.</p>
<p>"No complexion, no figure, no voice, no nothing," declared the
women,—and she filled the earth with movement, colour and
harmony.
Faded, pretty, tired, indefatigable, she was the joy of the expedition.
A woman of ever-varying moods, but always gay, sensitive,
quick-tempered
and yet easy-going and accommodating, a sharp tongue with the most
polished utterance, vain, modest, true, false, delightful; if Rose
Thévenin enjoyed no triumphant success, if she was not
worshipped as a
goddess, it was because the times were out of joint and Paris had no
more incense, no more altars for the Graces. The <i>citoyenne</i>
Blaise
herself, who made a face when she spoke of her and used to call her "my
step-mother," could not see her and not be subjugated by such an array
of charms.</p>
<p>They were rehearsing <i>Les Visitandines</i> at
the Théâtre Feydeau, and Rose
was full of self-congratulation at having a part full of "naturalness."
It was this quality she strove after, this she sought and this she
found.</p>
<p>"Then we shall not see 'Paméla'?" asked Desmahis.</p>
<p>The Théâtre de la Nation was closed and
the actors packed off to the
Madelonnettes and to Pélagie.</p>
<p>"Do you call that liberty?" cried Rose Thévenin,
raising her beautiful
eyes to heaven in indignant protest.</p>
<p>"The players of the Théâtre de la Nation
are aristocrats, and the
<i>citoyen</i> François' piece tends to make men
regret the privileges of the
noblesse."</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," said Rose Thévenin, "have you patience
to listen only to
those who flatter you?"</p>
<p>As midday approached everybody began to feel pangs of hunger
and the
little band marched back to the inn.</p>
<p>Évariste walked beside Élodie, smilingly
recalling memories of their
first meetings:</p>
<p>"Two young birds had fallen out of their nests on the roof on
to the
sill of your window. You brought the little creatures up by hand; one
of
them lived and in due time flew away. The other died in the nest of
cotton-wool you had made him. 'It was the one I loved best,' I remember
you said. That day, Élodie, you were wearing a red bow in
your hair."</p>
<p>Philippe Dubois and Brotteaux, a little behind the rest, were
talking of
Rome, where they had both been, the latter in '72, the other towards
the
last days of the Academy. Brotteaux indeed had never forgotten the
Princess Mondragone, to whom he would most certainly have poured out
his plaints but for the Count Altieri, who always followed her like her
shadow. Nor did Philippe Dubois fail to mention that he had been
invited
to dine with Cardinal de Bernis and that he was the most obliging host
in the world.</p>
<p>"I knew him," said Brotteaux, "and I may add without boasting
that I was
for some while one of his most intimate friends; he had a taste for low
society. He was an amiable man, and for all his affectation of telling
fairy tales, there was more sound philosophy in his little finger than
in the heads of all you Jacobins, who are for making us virtuous and
God-fearing by Act of Parliament. Upon my word I prefer our
simple-minded theophagists who know not what they say nor yet what they
do, to these mad law-menders, who make it their business to guillotine
us in order to render us wise and virtuous and adorers of the Supreme
Being who has created them in His likeness. In former days I used to
have Mass said in the Chapel at Les Ilettes by a poor devil of a
Curé
who used to say in his cups: 'Don't let's speak ill of sinners; we live
by 'em, we priests, unworthy as we are!' You must agree, sir, this
prayer-monger held sound maxims of government. We should adopt his
principles, and govern men as being what they are and not what we
should
like them to be."</p>
<p>Rose Thévenin had meantime drawn closer to the old
man. She knew he had
lived on a grand scale, and the thought of this gilded the <i>ci-devant</i>
financier's present poverty, which she deemed less humiliating as being
due to general causes, the result of the public bankruptcy. She saw in
him, with curiosity not unmixed with respect, the survival of one of
those open-handed millionaires of whom her elder comrades of the stage
spoke with sighs of unfeigned regret. Besides, the old fellow in his
plum-coloured coat, so threadbare and so well brushed, pleased her by
his agreeable address.</p>
<p>"Monsieur Brotteaux," she said to him, "we know how once upon
a time, in
a noble park, on moonlight nights, you would slip into the shade of
myrtle groves with actresses and dancing-girls to the far-off shrilling
of flutes and fiddles.... Alas! they were more lovely, were they not,
your goddesses of the Opera and the
Comédie-Française, than we of
to-day, we poor little National actresses?"</p>
<p>"Never think it, Mademoiselle," returned Brotteaux, "but
believe me, if
one like you had been known in those days, she would have moved alone,
as sovereign queen without a rival (little as she would have desired
such solitude), in the park you are obliging enough to form so
flattering a picture of...."</p>
<p>It was quite a rustic inn, this Hôtel de la Cloche.
A branch of holly
hung over the great waggon doors that opened on a courtyard where fowls
were always pecking about in the damp soil. On the far side of this
stood the house itself, consisting of a ground floor and one storey
above, crowned by a high-pitched tiled roof and with walls almost
hidden
under old climbing rose-trees covered with blossom. To the right,
trimmed fruit-trees showed their tops above the low garden wall. To the
left was the stable, with an outside manger and a barn supported by
wooden pillars. A ladder leaned against the wall. Here again, under a
shed crowded with agricultural implements and stumps of trees, a white
cock was keeping an eye on his hens from the top of a broken-down
cabriolet. The courtyard was enclosed on this side by cow-sheds, in
front of which rose in mountainous grandeur a dunghill which at this
moment a girl as broad as she was long, with straw-coloured hair, was
turning over with a pitchfork. The liquid manure filled her sabots and
bathed her bare feet, and you could see the heels rise out of her shoes
every now and then as yellow as saffron. Her petticoats were kilted and
revealed the filth on her enormous calves and thick ankles. While
Philippe Desmahis was staring at her, surprised and tickled by the
whimsicalities of nature in framing this odd example of breadth without
length, the landlord shouted:</p>
<p>"Ho, there! Tronche, my girl! go fetch some water!"</p>
<p>She turned her head, showing a scarlet face and a vast mouth
in which
one huge front tooth was missing. It had needed nothing less than a
bull's horn to effect a breach in that powerful jaw. She stood there
grinning, pitchfork on shoulder. Her sleeves were rolled up and her
arms, as thick as another woman's thighs, gleamed in the sun.</p>
<p>The table was laid in the farm kitchen, where a brace of fowls
was
roasting,—they were almost done to a turn,—under
the hood of the open
fireplace, above which hung two or three old fowling-pieces by way of
ornament. The bare whitewashed room, twenty feet long, was lighted only
through the panes of greenish glass let into the door and by a single
window, framed in roses, near which the grandmother sat turning her
spinning-wheel. She wore a coif and a lace frilling in the fashion of
the Regency. Her gnarled, earth-stained fingers held the distaff. Flies
clustered about her lids without her trying to drive them away. As a
child in her mother's arms, she had seen Louis XIV go by in his coach.</p>
<p>Sixty years ago she had made the journey to Paris. In a weak
sing-song
voice she told the tale to the three young women, standing in front of
her, how she had seen the Hôtel de Ville, the Tuileries and
the
Samaritaine, and how, when she was crossing the Pont-Royal, a barge
loaded with apples for the Marché du Mail had broken up, the
apples had
floated down the current and the river was all red with the
rosy-cheeked
fruit.</p>
<p>She had been told of the changes that had occurred of late in
the
kingdom, and in particular of the coil there was betwixt the
curés who
had taken the oath and the nonjuring curés. She knew
likewise there had
been wars and famines and portents in the sky. She did not believe the
King was dead. They had contrived his escape, she <i>would</i>
have it, by a
subterranean passage, and had handed over to the headsman in his stead
a
man of the common people.</p>
<p>At the old woman's feet, in his wicker cradle, Jeannot, the
last born of
the Poitrines, was cutting his teeth. The <i>citoyenne</i>
Thévenin lifted
the cradle and smiled at the child, which moaned feebly, worn out with
feverishness and convulsions. It must have been very ill, for they had
sent for the doctor, the <i>citoyen</i> Pelleport, who, it
is true, being a
deputy-substitute to the Convention, asked no payment for his visits.</p>
<p>The <i>citoyenne</i> Thévenin, an
innkeeper's daughter herself, was in her
element; not satisfied with the way the farm-girl had washed the plates
and dishes, she gave an extra wipe to the crockery and glass, an extra
polish to the knives and forks. While the <i>citoyenne</i>
Poitrine was
attending to the soup, which she tasted from time to time as a good
cook
should, Élodie was cutting up into slices a four-pound loaf
hot from the
oven. Gamelin, when he saw what she was doing, addressed her:</p>
<p>"A few days ago I read a book written by a young German whose
name I
have forgotten, and which has been very well translated into French. In
it you have a beautiful young girl named Charlotte, who, like you,
Élodie, was cutting bread and butter, and like you, cutting
it
gracefully, and so prettily that at the sight the young Werther fell in
love with her."</p>
<p>"And it ended in their marrying?" asked Élodie.</p>
<p>"No," replied Évariste; "it ended in Werther's
death by violence."</p>
<p>They dined well, they were all very hungry; but the fare was
indifferent. Jean Blaise complained bitterly; he was a great
trencherman
and made it a rule of conduct to feed well; and no doubt what urged him
to elaborate his gluttony into a system was the general scarcity. In
every household the Revolution had overturned the cooking pot. The
common run of citizens had nothing to chew upon. Clever folks like Jean
Blaise, who made big profits amid the general wretchedness, went to the
cookshop where they showed their astuteness by stuffing themselves to
repletion. As for Brotteaux who, in this year II of liberty, was living
on chestnuts and bread-crusts, he could remember having supped at
Grimod
de la Reynière's at the near end of the Champs
Élysées. Eager to win the
repute of an accomplished gourmand he reeled off, sitting there before
Dame Poitrine's bacon and cabbages, a string of artful kitchen recipes
and wise gastronomic maxims. Presently, when Gamelin protested that a
Republican scorns the pleasures of the table, the old financier, always
a lover of antiquity, gave the young Spartan the true recipe for the
famous black broth.</p>
<p>After dinner, Jean Blaise, who never forgot business, set his
itinerant
academy to make studies and sketches of the inn, which struck him as
quite romantic in its dilapidation. While Philippe Desmahis and
Philippe
Dubois were drawing the cow-houses the girl Tronche came out to feed
the
pigs. The <i>citoyen</i> Pelleport, officer of health, who
at the same moment
appeared at the door of the farm kitchen where he had been bestowing
his
professional services on the Poitrine baby, stepped up to the artists
and after complimenting them on their talents, which were an honour to
the whole nation, pointed to the Tronche girl in the middle of her
porkers:</p>
<p>"You see that creature," he said, "it is not one girl, it is
two girls.
I speak by the letter, understand that. I was amazed at the
extraordinary massiveness of her bony framework and I examined her, to
discover she had most of the bones in duplicate—in each thigh
two
femurs welded together, in each shoulder a double humerus. Some of her
muscles are likewise in duplicate. It is a case, in my view, of a pair
of twins associated or rather confounded together. It is an interesting
phenomenon. I notified Monsieur Saint-Hilaire of the facts, and he
thanked me. It is a monster you see before you, <i>citoyens</i>.
The people
here call her 'the girl Tronche'; they should say 'the girls Tronches,'
for there are two of them. Nature has these freaks.... Good evening,
<i>citoyens</i>; we shall have a storm to-night...."</p>
<p>After supper by candle-light, the Academy Blaise adjourned to
the
courtyard where they were joined by a son and daughter of the house in
a game of blindman's-buff, in which the young folks, both men and
women,
displayed a feverish energy sufficiently accounted for by the high
spirits proper to their age without seeking an explanation in the wild
and precarious times in which they lived. When it was quite dark, Jean
Blaise proposed children's games in the farm kitchen. Élodie
suggested
the game of "hunt my heart," and this was agreed to unanimously. Under
the girl's direction Philippe Desmahis traced in chalk, on different
pieces of furniture, on doors and walls, seven hearts, that is to say
one less than there were players, for old Brotteaux had obligingly
joined the rest. They danced round in a ring singing "La Tour, prends
garde!" and at a signal from Élodie, each ran to put a hand
on a heart.
Gamelin in his absent-minded clumsiness was too late to find one
vacant,
and had to pay a forfeit, the little knife he had bought for six sous
at
the fair of Saint-Germain and with which he had cut the loaf for his
mother in her poverty. The game went on, and one after the other
Blaise,
Élodie, Brotteaux and Rose Thévenin failed to
touch a heart; each paid a
forfeit in turn—a ring, a reticule, a little morocco-bound
book, a
bracelet. Then the forfeits were raffled on Élodie's lap,
and each
player had to redeem his property by showing his society
accomplishments—singing a song or reciting a poem. Brotteaux
chose the
speech of the patron saint of France in the first canto of the
<i>Pucelle</i>:</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza"><span class="i0">"Je suis
Denis et saint de mon métier,
</span><span class="i0">J'aime la Gaule,..."<SPAN name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</SPAN>
</span></div>
</div>
<p>The <i>citoyen</i> Blaise, though a far less
well-read man, replied without
hesitation with Richemond's ripost:</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza"><span class="i0">"Monsieur
le Saint, ce n'était pas la peine
</span><span class="i0">D'abandonner le
céleste domaine...."<SPAN name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</SPAN>
</span></div>
</div>
<p>At that time everybody was reading and re-reading with delight
the
masterpiece of the French Ariosto; the most serious of men smiled over
the loves of Jeanne and Dunois, the adventures of Agnès and
Monrose and
the exploits of the winged ass. Every man of cultivation knew by heart
the choice passages of this diverting and philosophical poem.
Évariste
Gamelin himself, stern-tempered as he was, when he recovered his
twopenny knife from Élodie's lap, recited the going down of
Grisbourdon
into hell, with a good deal of spirit. The <i>citoyenne</i>
Thévenin sang
without accompaniment Nina's ballad:</p>
<p>"<i>Quand le bien-aimé reviendra.</i>"</p>
<p>Desmahis sang to the tune of <i>La Faridondaine</i>:</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza"><span class="i0">"Quelques-uns
prirent le cochon
</span><span class="i2">De ce bon saint Antoine,
</span><span class="i0">Et lui mettant un capuchon,
</span><span class="i2">Ils en firent un moine.
</span><span class="i0">Il n'en coûtait
que la façon...."<SPAN name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</SPAN>
</span></div>
</div>
<p>All the same Desmahis was in a pensive mood. For the moment he
was
ardently in love with all the three women with whom he was playing
forfeits, and was casting burning looks of soft appeal at each in turn.
He loved Rose Thévenin for her grace, her supple figure, her
clever
acting, her roving glances, and her voice that went straight to a man's
heart; he loved Élodie, because he recognized instinctively
her rich
endowment of temperament and her kind, complaisant humour; he loved
Julienne Hasard, despite her colourless hair, her pale eyelashes, her
freckles and her thin bust, because, like Dunois in Voltaire's
<i>Pucelle</i>, he was always ready, in his generosity, to
give the least
engaging a token of love—and the more so in this instance
because she
appeared to be for the moment the most neglected, and therefore the
most
amenable to his attentions. Without a trace of vanity, he was never
sure
of these being agreeable; nor yet was he ever sure of their not being.
So he never omitted to offer them on the chance. Taking advantage of
the
opportunities offered by the game of forfeits, he made some tender
speeches to Rose Thévenin, who showed no displeasure, but
could hardly
say much in return under the jealous eyes of the <i>citoyen</i>
Jean Blaise.
He spoke more warmly still to the <i>citoyenne</i>
Élodie, whom he knew to be
pledged to Gamelin, but he was not so exacting as to want a heart all
to
himself. Élodie could never care for him; but she thought
him a handsome
fellow and did not altogether succeed in hiding the fact from him.
Finally, he whispered his most ardent vows in the ear of the <i>citoyenne</i>
Hasard, which she received with an air of bewildered stupefaction that
might equally express abject submission or chill indifference. And
Desmahis did not believe she was indifferent to him.</p>
<p>The inn contained only two bedrooms, both on the first floor
and opening
on the same landing. That to the left, the better of the two, boasted a
flowered paper and a looking-glass the size of a man's hand, the gilt
frame of which had been blackened by generations of flies since the
days
when Louis XIV was a child. In it, under sprigged muslin curtains,
stood
two beds with down pillows, coverlets and counterpanes. This room was
reserved for the three <i>citoyennes</i>.</p>
<p>When the time came to retire, Desmahis and the <i>citoyenne</i>
Hasard, each
holding a bedroom candlestick, wished each other good-night on the
landing. The amorous engraver quickly passed a note to the colourman's
daughter, beseeching her to come to him, when everybody was asleep, in
the garret, which was over the <i>citoyennes'</i> chamber.</p>
<p>With judicious foresight, he had taken care in the course of
the day to
study the lie of the land and explore the garret in question, which was
full of strings of onions, apples and pears left there to ripen with a
swarm of wasps crawling over them, chests and old trunks. He had even
noticed an old bed of sacking, decrepit and now disused, as far as he
could see, and a palliasse, all ripped up and jumping with fleas.</p>
<p>Facing the <i>citoyennes'</i> room was another of
very modest dimensions
containing three beds, where the men of the party were to sleep, in
such
comfort as they might. But Brotteaux, who was a Sybarite, betook
himself
to the barn to sleep among the hay. As for Jean Blaise, <i>he</i>
had
disappeared. Dubois and Gamelin were soon asleep. Desmahis went to bed;
but no sooner had the silence of night, like a stagnant pool, enveloped
the house, than the engraver got up and climbed the wooden staircase,
which creaked under his bare feet. The door of the garret stood ajar.
From within came a breath of stifling hot air, mingled with the acrid
smell of rotting fruit. On the broken-down bed of sacking lay the girl
Tronche, fast asleep with her mouth open.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG style="width: 671px; height: 248px;" alt="Asterisks marking a removed paragraph" title="Removed paragraph" src="images/supppara.png" /></div>
<p>Desmahis returned to his room, where he slept soundly and
peacefully
till daybreak.</p>
<p>On the morrow, after a last day's work, the itinerant Academy
took the
road back to Paris. When Jean Blaise paid mine host in assignats, the
<i>citoyen</i> Poitrine complained bitterly that he never
saw what he called
"square money" nowadays, and promised a fine candle to the beggar who'd
bring back the "yellow boys" again.</p>
<p>He offered the <i>citoyennes</i> their pick of
flowers. At his orders, the
girl Tronche mounted on a ladder in her sabots and kilted skirts,
giving
a full view of her noble, much-bespattered calves, and was
indefatigable
in cutting blossoms from the climbing roses that covered the wall. From
her huge hands the flowers fell in showers, in torrents, in avalanches,
into the laps of Élodie, Julienne, and Rose
Thévenin, who held out their
skirts to catch them. The carriage was full of them. The whole party,
when they got back at nightfall, carried armfuls home, and their
sleeping and waking were perfumed with their fragrance.</p>
<div class="footnotes">
<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></SPAN></p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza"><span class="i0">"I am
Denis, and sainthood is my trade,
</span><span class="i0">I love the land of Gaul,...
etc."
</span></div>
</div></div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></SPAN></p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza"><span class="i0">"Well,
well, sir Saint, 'twas hardly worth your pains
</span><span class="i0">Thus to forsake the heavenly
domains...."
</span></div>
</div></div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></SPAN></p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza"><span class="i0">"Some
ribalds took the pig,
</span><span class="i2">Of the good St. Anthony,
</span><span class="i0">And clapping a cowl on's
head,
</span><span class="i2">They made the brute a monk.
</span><span class="i0">'Twas all a matter of
dress...."
</span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
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