space which lay between the house and the lawn with its flower-beds.
From the gestures of the poet, and the air and manner of the young
heiress, it was easy to see that she was listening favorably to him.
The two demoiselles d'Herouville hastened to
interrupt the scandalous
tete-a-tete; and with the natural cleverness of women under such
circumstances, they turned the conversation on the court, and the
distinction of an appointment under the crown,--pointing out the
difference that existed between appointments in the household of the
king and those of the crown. They tried to
intoxicate Modeste's mind
by appealing to her pride, and describing one of the highest stations
to which a woman could aspire.
"To have a duke for a son," said the elder lady, "is an actual
advantage. The title is a fortune that we secure to our children
without the
possibility of loss."
"How is it, then," said Canalis, displeased at his tete-a-tete being
thus broken in upon, "that Monsieur le duc has had so little success
in a matter where his title would seem to be of special service to
him?"
The two ladies cast a look at Canalis as full of venom as the tooth of
a snake, and they were so disconcerted by Modeste's amused smile that
they were
actuallyunable to reply.
"Monsieur le duc has never blamed you," she said to Canalis, "for the
humility with which you bear your fame; why should you attack him for
his
modesty?"
"Besides, we have never yet met a woman
worthy of my nephew's rank,"
said Mademoiselle d'Herouville. "Some had only the
wealth of the
position; others, without fortune, had the wit and birth. I must admit
that we have done well to wait till God granted us an opportunity to
meet one in whom we find the noble blood, the mind, and fortune of a
Duchesse d'Herouville."
"My dear Modeste," said Helene d'Herouville, leading her new friend
apart, "there are a thousand barons in the kingdom, just as there are
a hundred poets in Paris, who are worth as much as he; he is so little
of a great man that even I, a poor girl forced to take the veil for
want of a 'dot,' I would not take him. You don't know what a young man
is who has been for ten years in the hands of a Duchesse de Chaulieu.
None but an old woman of sixty could put up with the little ailments
of which, they say, the great poet is always complaining,--a habit in
Louis XIV. that became a
perfectly insupportable
annoyance. It is true
the
duchess does not suffer from it as much as a wife, who would have
him always about her."
Then, practising a
well-knownmanoeuvrepeculiar to her sex, Helene
d'Herouville
repeated in a low voice all the calumnies which women
jealous of the Duchesse de Chaulieu were in the habit of spreading
about the poet. This little
incident, common as it is in the
intercourse of women, will serve to show with what fury the hounds
were after Modeste's
wealth.
Ten days saw a great change in the opinions at the Chalet as to the
three suitors for Mademoiselle de La Bastie's hand. This change, which
was much to the
advantage" target="_blank" title="n.不利(条件);损失">
disadvantage of Canalis, came about through
considerations of a nature which ought to make the holders of any kind
of fame pause, and
reflect. No one can deny, if we remember the
passion with which people seek for autographs, that public
curiosityis greatly excited by
celebrity. Evidently most
provincials never form
an exact idea in their own minds of how
illustrious Parisians put on
their cravats, walk on the boulevards, stand gaping at nothing, or eat
a cutlet; because, no sooner do they
perceive a man clothed in the
sunbeams of fashion or
resplendent with some
dignity that is more or
less
fugitive (though always envied), than they cry out, "Look at
that!" "How queer!" and other depreciatory exclamations. In a word,
the
mysterious charm that attaches to every kind of fame, even that
which is most
justly due, never lasts. It is, and especially with
superficial people who are
envious or sarcastic, a
sensation which
passes off with the
rapidity of
lightning, and never returns. It would
seem as though fame, like the sun, hot and
luminous at a distance, is
cold as the
summit of an alp when you approach it. Perhaps man is only
really great to his peers; perhaps the defects
inherent in his
constitution disappear sooner to the eyes of his equals than to those
of
vulgar admirers. A poet, if he would please in ordinary life, must
put on the fictitious graces of those who are able to make their
insignificances forgotten by
charming manners and complying speeches.
The poet of the faubourg Saint-Germain, who did not choose to bow
before this social dictum, was made before long to feel that an
insulting
provincialindifference had succeeded to the dazed
fascination of the earlier evenings. The prodigality of his wit and
wisdom had produced upon these
worthy souls somewhat the effect which
a shopful of glass-ware produces on the eye; in other words, the fire
and brilliancy of Canalis's
eloquence soon wearied people who, to use
their own words, "cared more for the solid."
Forced after a while to
behave like an ordinary man, the poet found an
unexpected stumbling-block on ground where La Briere had already won
the
suffrage of the
worthy people who at first had thought him sulky.
They felt the need of compensating themselves for Canalis's reputation
by preferring his friend. The best of men are influenced by such
feelings as these. The simple and straightforward young fellow jarred
no one's self-love; coming to know him better they discovered his
heart, his
modesty, his silent and sure
discretion, and his excellent
bearing. The Duc d'Herouville considered him, as a political element,
far above Canalis. The poet, ill-balanced,
ambitious, and
restless as
Tasso, loved
luxury,
grandeur, and ran into debt; while the young
lawyer, whose
character was equable and well-balanced, lived soberly,
was useful without proclaiming it, awaited rewards without begging for
them, and laid by his money.
Canalis had
moreover laid himself open in a special way to the
bourgeois eyes that were watching him. For two or three days he had
shown signs of
impatience; he had given way to
depression, to states
of
melancholy without
apparent reason, to those capricious changes of
temper which are the natural results of the
nervoustemperament of
poets. These originalities (we use the
provincial word) came from the
uneasiness that his conduct toward the Duchesse de Chaulieu which grew
daily less explainable, caused him. He knew he ought to write to her,
but could not
resolve on doing so. All these fluctuations were
carefully remarked and commented on by the gentle American, and the
excellent Madame Latournelle, and they formed the topic of many a
discussion between these two ladies and Madame Mignon. Canalis felt
the effects of these discussions without being able to explain them.
The attention paid to him was not the same, the faces
surrounding him
no longer wore the entranced look of the earlier days; while at the
same time Ernest was
evidently gaining ground.
For the last two days the poet had endeavored to
fascinate Modeste
only, and he took
advantage of every moment when he found himself
alone with her, to weave the web of
passionate language around his
love. Modeste's blush, as she listened to him on the occasion we have
just mentioned, showed the demoiselles d'Herouville the pleasure with
which she was listening to sweet conceits that were
sweetly said; and
they,
horriblyuneasy at the sight, had immediate
recourse to the
"ultima ratio" of women in such cases,
namely, those calumnies which
seldom miss their object. Accordingly, when the party met at the
dinner-table the poet saw a cloud on the brow of his idol; he knew
that Mademoiselle d'Herouville's malignity allowed him to lose no
time, and he
resolved to offer himself as a husband at the first
moment when he could find himself alone with Modeste.
Overhearing a few acid though
polite remarks exchanged between the
poet and the two noble ladies, Gobenheim nudged Butscha with his
elbow, and said in an undertone, motioning towards the poet and the
grand equerry,--
"They'll
demolish one another!"
"Canalis has
genius enough to
demolish himself all alone," answered
the dwarf.
CHAPTER XXII
A RIDDLE GUESSED
During the dinner, which was
magnificent and
admirably well served,
the duke
obtained a signal
advantage over Canalis. Modeste, who had
received her habit and other equestrian equipments the night before,
spoke of
taking rides about the country. A turn of the conversation
led her to express the wish to see a hunt with hounds, a pleasure she
had never yet enjoyed. The duke at once proposed to arrange a hunt in
one of the crown forests, which lay a few leagues from Havre. Thanks
to his
intimacy with the Prince de Cadignan, Master of the Hunt, he