No one has understood this opium of
poverty. The
lottery, all-powerful
fairy of the poor, bestowed the gift of magic hopes. The turn of the
wheel which opens to the
gambler a vista of gold and happiness, lasts
no longer than a flash of
lightning, but the
lottery gave five days'
existence to that
magnificent flash. What social power can to-day, for
the sum of five sous, give us five days' happiness and
launch us
ideally into all the joys of
civilization? Tobacco, a
craving far more
immoral than play, destroys the body, attacks the mind, and stupefies
a nation; while the
lottery did nothing of the kind. This passion,
moreover, was forced to keep within limits by the long periods that
occurred between the
drawings, and by the choice of wheels which each
investor
individually clung to. Madame Descoings never staked on any
but the "wheel of Paris." Full of
confidence that the trey cherished
for twenty-one years was about to
triumph, she now imposed upon
herself
enormous privations, that she might stake a large
amount of
savings upon the last
drawing of the year. When she dreamed her
cabalistic
visions (for all dreams did not
correspond with the numbers
of the
lottery), she went and told them to Joseph, who was the sole
being who would listen, and not only not scold her, but give her the
kindly words with which an artist knows how to
soothe the follies of
the mind. All great talents respect and understand a real passion;
they explain it to themselves by
finding the roots of it in their own
hearts or minds. Joseph's ideas was, that his brother loved
tobaccoand liquors, Maman Descoings loved her trey, his mother loved God,
Desroches the younger loved lawsuits, Desroches the elder loved
angling,--in short, all the world, he said, loved something. He
himself loved the "beau ideal" in all things; he loved the
poetry of
Lord Byron, the
painting of Gericault, the music of Rossini, the
novels of Walter Scott. "Every one to his taste, maman," he would say;
"but your trey does hang fire terribly."
"It will turn up, and you will be rich, and my little Bixiou as well."
"Give it all to your
grandson," cried Joseph; "at any rate, do what
you like best with it."
"Hey! when it turns up I shall have enough for everybody. In the first
place, you shall have a fine atelier; you sha'n't
deprive yourself of
going to the opera so as to pay for your models and your colors. Do
you know, my dear boy, you make me play a pretty
shabby part in that
picture of yours?"
By way of
economy, Joseph had made the Descoings pose for his
magnificentpainting of a young courtesan taken by an old woman to a
Doge of Venice. This picture, one of the
masterpieces of modern
painting, was
mistaken by Gros himself for a Titian, and it paved the
way for the
recognition which the younger artists gave to Joseph's
talent in the Salon of 1823.
"Those who know you know very well what you are," he answered gayly.
"Why need you trouble yourself about those who don't know you?"
For the last ten years Madame Descoings had taken on the ripe tints of
a russet apple at Easter. Wrinkles had formed in her superabundant
flesh, now grown pallid and flabby. Her eyes, full of life, were
bright with thoughts that were still young and vivacious, and might be
considered grasping; for there is always something of that spirit in a
gambler. Her fat face bore traces of dissimulation and of the mental
reservations
hidden in the depths of her heart. Her vice necessitated
secrecy. There were also indications of gluttony in the
motion of her
lips. And thus, although she was, as we have seen, an excellent and
upright woman, the eye might be misled by her appearance. She was an
admirable model for the old woman Joseph wished to paint. Coralie, a
young
actress of
exquisite beauty who died in the flower of her youth,
the
mistress of Lucien de Rubempre, one of Joseph's friends, had given
him the idea of the picture. This noble
painting has been called a
plagiarism of other pictures, while in fact it was a splendid
arrangement of three portraits. Michel Chrestien, one of his
companions at the Cenacle, lent his
republican head for the senator,
to which Joseph added a few
mature tints, just as he exaggerated the
expression of Madame Descoings's features. This fine picture, which
was destined to make a great noise and bring the artist much hatred,
jealousy, and
admiration, was just sketched out; but, compelled as he
was to work for a living, he laid it aside to make copies of the old
masters for the dealers; thus he penetrated the secrets of their
processes, and his brush is
therefore one of the best trained of the
modern school. The
shrewd sense of an artist led him to
conceal the
profits he was
beginning to lay by from his mother and Madame
Descoings, aware that each had her road to ruin,--the one in Philippe,
the other in the
lottery. This astuteness is seldom
wanting among
painters; busy for days together in the
solitude of their
studios,
engaged in work which, up to a certain point, leaves the mind free,
they are in some respects like women,--their thoughts turn about the
little events of life, and they
contrive to get at their
hiddenmeaning.
Joseph had bought one of those
magnificent chests or
coffers of a past
age, then ignored by fashion, with which he decorated a corner of his
studio, where the light danced upon the bas-reliefs and gave full
lustre to a
masterpiece of the sixteenth century artisans. He saw the
necessity for a hiding-place, and in this
coffer he had begun to
accumulate a little store of money. With an artist's
carelessness, he
was in the habit of putting the sum he allowed for his monthly
expenses in a skull, which stood on one of the compartments of the
coffer. Since his brother had returned to live at home, he found a
constant discrepancy between the
amount he spent and the sum in this
receptacle. The hundred francs a month disappeared with incredible
celerity. Finding nothing one day, when he had only spent forty or
fifty francs, he remarked for the first time: "My money must have got
wings." The next month he paid more attention to his
accounts; but add
as he might, like Robert Macaire, sixteen and five are twenty-three,
he could make nothing of them. When, for the third time, he found a
still more important discrepancy, he communicated the
painful fact to
Madame Descoings, who loved him, he knew, with that
maternal, tender,
confiding,
credulous,
enthusiastic love that he had never had from his
own mother, good as she was,--a love as necessary to the early life of
an artist as the care of the hen is to her unfledged chickens. To her
alone could he
confide his
horrible suspicions. He was as sure of his
friends as he was of himself; and the Descoings, he knew, would take
nothing to put in her
lottery. At the idea which then suggested itself
the poor woman wrung her hands. Philippe alone could have committed
this
domestic theft.
"Why didn't he ask me, if he wanted it?" cried Joseph,
taking a dab of
color on his palette and
stirring it into the other colors without
seeing what he did. "Is it likely I should refuse him?"
"It is robbing a child!" cried the Descoings, her face expressing the
deepest disgust.
"No," replied Joseph, "he is my brother; my purse is his: but he ought
to have asked me."
"Put in a special sum, in silver, this morning, and don't take
anything out," said Madame Descoings. "I shall know who goes into the
studio; and if he is the only one, you will be certain it is he."
The next day Joseph had proof of his brother's forced loans upon him.
Philippe came to the
studio when his brother was out and took the
little sum he wanted. The artist trembled for his savings.
"I'll catch him at it, the scamp!" he said, laughing, to Madame
Descoings.
"And you'll do right: we ought to break him of it. I, too, I have
missed little sums out of my purse. Poor boy! he wants
tobacco; he's
accustomed to it."
"Poor boy! poor boy!" cried the artist. "I'm rather of Fulgence and
Bixiou's opinion: Philippe is a dead-weight on us. He runs his head
into riots and has to be shipped to America, and that costs the mother
twelve thousand francs; he can't find anything to do in the forests of
the New World, and so he comes back again, and that costs twelve
thousand more. Under
pretence of having carried two words of Napoleon
to a general, he thinks himself a great soldier and makes faces at the
Bourbons;
meantime, what does he do? amuse himself, travel about, see
foreign countries! As for me, I'm not duped by his misfortunes; he
doesn't look like a man who fails to get the best of things! Somebody