Often the world can enter fully into the nature of their loss: their
son, admired, appreciated, young, perhaps handsome, with a noble path
before him, leading to fortune, possibly to fame, excites universal
regret; society joins in the grief, and alleviates while it magnifies
it. But there is another sorrow of mothers who alone know what their
child was really; who alone have received his smiles and observed the
treasures of a life too soon cut short. That sorrow hides its woe, the
blackness of which surpasses all other
mourning; it cannot be
described; happily there are but few women whose heart-strings are
thus severed.
Before Madame du Bousquier returned to town, Madame du Ronceret, one
of her good friends, had
driven out to Prebaudet to fling this corpse
upon the roses of her joy, to show her the love she had ignored, and
sweetly shed a thousand drops of wormwood into the honey of her bridal
month. As Madame du Bousquier drove back to Alencon, she chanced to
meet Madame Granson at the corner of the rue Val-Noble. The glance of
the mother, dying of her grief, struck to the heart of the poor woman.
A thousand maledictions, a thousand
flaming reproaches, were in that
look: Madame du Bousquier was
horror-struck; that glance predicted and
called down evil upon her head.
The evening after the
catastrophe, Madame Granson, one of the persons
most opposed to the
rector of the town, and who had
hitherto supported
the
minister of Saint-Leonard, began to tremble as she thought of the
inflexible Catholic doctrines professed by her own party. After
placing her son's body in its
shroud with her own hands, thinking of
the mother of the Saviour, she went, with a soul convulsed by anguish,
to the house of the hated
rector. There she found the
modestpriest in
an outer room, engaged in putting away the flax and yarns with which
he supplied poor women, in order that they might never be
wholly out
of work,--a form of
charity which saved many who were
incapable of
begging from
actual penury. The
rector left his yarns and hastened to
take Madame Granson into his dining-room, where the
wretched mother
noticed, as she looked at his supper, the
frugal method of his own
living.
"Monsieur l'abbe," she said, "I have come to
implore you--" She burst
into tears,
unable to continue.
"I know what brings you," replied the saintly man. "I must trust to
you, madame, and to your relation, Madame du Bousquier, to pacify
Monseigneur the Bishop at Seez. Yes, I will pray for your unhappy
child; yes, I will say the masses. But we must avoid all
scandal, and
give no opportunity for evil-judging persons to
assemble in the
church. I alone, without other
clergy, at night--"
"Yes, yes, as you think best; if only he may lie in consecrated
ground," said the poor mother,
taking the
priest's hand and kissing
it.
Toward
midnight a
coffin was clandestinely borne to the
parish church
by four young men, comrades whom Athanase had liked the best. A few
friends of Madame Granson, women dressed in black, and veiled, were
present; and half a dozen other young men who had been somewhat
intimate with this lost
genius. Four torches flickered on the
coffin,
which was covered with crape. The
rector, assisted by one discreet
choirboy, said the mortuary mass. Then the body of the
suicide was
noiselessly carried to a corner of the
cemetery, where a black wooden
cross, without
inscription, was all that indicated its place hereafter
to the mother. Athanase lived and died in shadow. No voice was raised
to blame the
rector; the
bishop kept silence. The piety of the mother
redeemed the impiety of the son's last act.
Some months later, the poor woman, half beside herself with grief, and
moved by one of those
inexplicable thirsts which
misery feels to steep
its lips in the bitter chalice, determined to see the spot where her
son was drowned. Her
instinct may have told her that thoughts of his
could be recovered beneath that
poplar; perhaps, too, she desired to
see what his eyes had seen for the last time. Some mothers would die
of the sight; others give themselves up to it in saintly adoration.
Patient anatomists of human nature cannot too often enunciate the
truths before which all educations, laws, and
philosophical systems
must give way. Let us repeat
continually: it is
absurd to force
sentiments into one
formula: appearing as they do, in each individual
man, they
combine with the elements that form his nature and take his
own physiognomy.
Madame Granson, as she stood on that fatal spot, saw a woman approach
it, who exclaimed,--
"Was it here?"
That woman wept as the mother wept. It was Suzanne. Arriving that
morning at the hotel du More, she had been told of the
catastrophe. If
poor Athanase had been living, she meant to do as many noble souls,
who are moneyless, dream of doing, and as the rich never think of
doing,--she meant to have sent him several thousand francs,
writing up
the
envelope the words: "Money due to your father from a comrade who
makes restitution to you." This tender
scheme had been arranged by
Suzanne during her journey.
The courtesan caught sight of Madame Granson and moved rapidly away,
whispering as she passed her, "I loved him!"
Suzanne,
faithful to her nature, did not leave Alencon on this
occasion without changing the orange-blossoms of the bride to rue. She
was the first to declare that Madame du Bousquier would never be
anything but Mademoiselle Cormon. With one stab of her tongue she
revenged poor Athanase and her dear chevalier.
Alencon now witnessed a
suicide that was slower and quite differently
pitiful from that of poor Athanase, who was quickly forgotten by
society, which always makes haste to forget its dead. The poor
Chevalier de Valois died in life; his
suicide was a daily occurrence
for fourteen years. Three months after the du Bousquier marriage
society remarked, not without
astonishment, that the linen of the
chevalier was frayed and rusty, that his hair was irregularly combed
and brushed. With a frowsy head the Chevalier de Valois could no
longer be said to exist! A few of his ivory teeth deserted, though the
keenest observers of human life were
unable to discover to what body
they had
hitherto belonged, whether to a foreign
legion or whether
they were indigenous,
vegetable or animal; whether age had pulled them
from the chevalier's mouth, or whether they were left forgotten in the
drawer of his dressing-table. The
cravat was
crooked,
indifferent to
elegance. The negroes' heads grew pale with dust and
grease. The
wrinkles of the face were blackened and puckered; the skin became
parchment. The nails,
neglected, were often seen, alas! with a black
velvet edging. The
waistcoat was tracked and stained with droppings
which spread upon its surface like autumn leaves. The cotton in the
ears was seldom changed. Sadness reigned upon that brow, and slipped
its yellowing tints into the depths of each
furrow. In short, the
ruins,
hitherto so cleverly
hidden, now showed through the cracks and
crevices of that fine
edifice, and proved the power of the soul over
the body; for the fair and
dainty man, the
cavalier, the young blood,
died when hope deserted him. Until then the nose of the chevalier was
ever
delicate and nice; never had a damp black blotch, nor an amber
drop fall from it; but now that nose, smeared with
tobacco around the
nostrils, degraded by the driblets which took
advantage of the natural
gutter placed between itself and the upper lip,--that nose, which no
longer cared to seem
agreeable, revealed the
infinite pains which the
chevalier had
formerly taken with his person, and made observers
comprehend, by the
extent of its
degradation, the
greatness and
persistence of the man's designs upon Mademoiselle Cormon.
Alas, too, the anecdotes went the way of the teeth; the clever
sayings
grew rare. The
appetite, however, remained; the old
nobleman saved
nothing but his
stomach from the wreck of his hopes; though he
languidly prepared his pinches of snuff, he ate alarming dinners.
Perhaps you will more fully understand the
disaster that this marriage
was to the mind and heart of the chevalier when you learn that his
intercourse with the Princess Goritza became less frequent.
One day he appeared in Mademoiselle Armande's salon with the calf of
his leg on the shin-bone. This
bankruptcy of the graces was, I do
assure you, terrible, and struck all Alencon with
horror. The late
young man had become an old one; this human being, who, by the
breaking-down of his spirit, had passed at once from fifty to ninety
years of age, frightened society. Besides, his secret was betrayed; he
had waited and watched for Mademoiselle Cormon; he had, like a patient
hunter, adjusted his aim for ten whole years, and finally had missed
the game! In short, the impotent Republic had won the day from Valiant
Chivalry, and that, too, under the Restoration! Form triumphed; mind
was vanquished by matter,
diplomacy by
insurrection. And, O final