natural
character, which prompted him to avoid a quarrel.
Torn by this
inwardmisery, Birotteau fell to examining attentively
the broad green lines painted on the oilcloth which, from custom
immemorial, Mademoiselle Gamard left on the table at breakfast-time,
without regard to the
ragged edges or the various scars displayed on
its surface. The priests sat opposite to each other in cane-seated
arm-chairs on either side of the square table, the head of which was
taken by the
landlady, who seemed to
dominate the whole from a high
chair raised on casters, filled with cushions, and
standing very near
to the dining-room stove. This room and the salon were on the ground-
floor beneath the salon and bedroom of the Abbe Birotteau.
When the vicar had received his cup of coffee, duly sugared, from
Mademoiselle Gamard, he felt chilled to the bone at the grim silence
in which he was forced to proceed with the usually gay
function of
breakfast. He dared not look at Troubert's dried-up features, nor at
the threatening
visage of the old maid; and he
therefore turned, to
keep himself in
countenance, to the plethoric pug which was lying on a
cushion near the stove,--a position that
victim of obesity seldom
quitted, having a little plate of dainties always at his left side,
and a bowl of fresh water at his right.
"Well, my pretty," said the vicar, "are you
waiting for your coffee?"
The
personage thus addressed, one of the most important in the
household, though the least troublesome
inasmuch as he had ceased to
bark and left the talking to his
mistress, turned his little eyes,
sunk in rolls of fat, upon Birotteau. Then he closed them peevishly.
To explain the
misery of the poor vicar it should be said that being
endowed by nature with an empty and sonorous loquacity, like the
resounding of a football, he was in the habit of
asserting, without
any
medical reason to back him, that speech favored
digestion.
Mademoiselle Gamard, who believed in this hygienic
doctrine, had not
as yet
refrained, in spite of their
coolness, from talking at meals;
though, for the last few mornings, the vicar had been forced to strain
his mind to find beguiling topics on which to
loosen her tongue. If
the narrow limits of this history permitted us to report even one of
the conversations which often brought a bitter and sarcastic smile to
the lips of the Abbe Troubert, it would offer a finished picture of
the Boeotian life of the provinces. The
singular revelations of the
Abbe Birotteau and Mademoiselle Gamard relating to their personal
opinions on
politics, religion, and
literature would delight observing
minds. It would be highly entertaining to transcribe the reasons on
which they mutually doubted the death of Napoleon in 1820, or the
conjectures by which they mutually believed that the Dauphin was
living,--rescued from the Temple in the hollow of a huge log of wood.
Who could have helped laughing to hear them
assert and prove, by
reasons
evidently their own, that the King of France alone imposed the
taxes, that the Chambers were convoked to destroy the
clergy, that
thirteen hundred thousand persons had perished on the scaffold during
the Revolution? They frequently discussed the press, without either of
them having the faintest idea of what that modern engine really was.
Monsieur Birotteau listened with
acceptance to Mademoiselle Gamard
when she told him that a man who ate an egg every morning would die in
a year, and that facts proved it; that a roll of light bread eaten
without drinking for several days together would cure sciatica; that
all the
workmen who assisted in pulling down the Abbey Saint-Martin
had died in six months; that a certain prefect, under orders from
Bonaparte, had done his best to damage the towers of Saint-Gatien,--
with a hundred other
absurd tales.
But on this occasion poor Birotteau felt he was tongue-tied, and he
resigned himself to eat a meal without engaging in conversation. After
a while, however, the thought crossed his mind that silence was
dangerous for his
digestion, and he
boldly remarked, "This coffee is
excellent."
That act of courage was completely wasted. Then, after looking at the
scrap of sky
visible above the garden between the two buttresses of
Saint-Gatien, the vicar again summoned nerve to say, "It will be finer
weather to-day than it was yesterday."
At that remark Mademoiselle Gamard cast her most
gracious look on the
Abbe Troubert, and immediately turned her eyes with terrible severity
on Birotteau, who
fortunately" target="_blank" title="ad.幸运地">
fortunately by that time was looking on his plate.
No creature of the
feminine gender was ever more
capable of presenting
to the mind the elegaic nature of an old maid than Mademoiselle Sophie
Gamard. In order to describe a being whose
character gives a momentous
interest to the petty events of the present drama and to the anterior
lives of the actors in it, it may be useful to give a
summary of the
ideas which find expression in the being of an Old Maid,--remembering
always that the habits of life form the soul, and the soul forms the
physical presence.
Though all things in society as well as in the
universe are said to
have a purpose, there do exist here below certain beings whose purpose
and
utility seem
inexplicable. Moral
philosophy and political economy
both
condemn the individual who consumes without producing; who fills
a place on the earth but does not shed upon it either good or evil,--
for evil is sometimes good the meaning of which is not at once made
manifest. It is seldom that old maids of their own
motion enter the
ranks of these unproductive beings. Now, if the
consciousness of work
done gives to the workers a sense of
satisfaction which helps them to
support life, the
certainty of being a
useless burden must, one would
think, produce a
contrary effect, and fill the minds of such fruitless
beings with the same
contempt for themselves which they
inspire in
others. This harsh social reprobation is one of the causes which
contribute to fill the souls of old maids with the
distress that
appears in their faces. Prejudice, in which there is truth, does cast,
throughout the world but especially in France, a great
stigma on the
woman with whom no man has been
willing to share the blessings or
endure the ills of life. Now, there comes to all
unmarried women a
period when the world, be it right or wrong,
condemns them on the fact
of this
contempt, this rejection. If they are ugly, the
goodness of
their
characters ought to have compensated for their natural
imperfections; if, on the
contrary, they are handsome, that fact
argues that their
misfortune has some serious cause. It is impossible
to say which of the two classes is most deserving of rejection. If, on
the other hand, their celibacy is
deliberate, if it proceeds from a
desire for
independence, neither men nor mothers will
forgive their
disloyalty to womanly
devotion, evidenced in their
refusal to feed
those
passions which render their sex so affecting. To
renounce the
pangs of womanhood is to abjure its
poetry and cease to merit the
consolations to which mothers have inalienable rights.
Moreover, the
generoussentiments, the
exquisite qualities of a woman
will not develop unless by
constant exercise. By remaining
unmarried,
a creature of the
female sex becomes void of meaning;
selfish and
cold, she creates repulsion. This implacable judgment of the world is
un
fortunately" target="_blank" title="ad.幸运地">
fortunately too just to leave old maids in
ignorance of its causes.
Such ideas shoot up in their hearts as naturally as the effects of
their saddened lives appear upon their features. Consequently they
wither, because the
constant expression of happiness which blooms on
the faces of other women and gives so soft a grace to their movements
has never existed for them. They grow sharp and peevish because all
human beings who miss their
vocation are
unhappy; they suffer, and
suffering gives birth to the
bitterness of ill-will. In fact, before
an old maid blames herself for her
isolation she blames others, and
there is but one step between
reproach and the desire for revenge.
But more than this, the ill grace and want of charm
noticeable in
these women are the necessary result of their lives. Never having felt
a desire to please,
elegance and the refinements of good taste are
foreign to them. They see only themselves in themselves. This instinct
brings them,
unconsciously, to choose the things that are most
convenient to themselves, at the sacrifice of those which might be
more
agreeable to others. Without rendering
account to their own minds
of the difference between themselves and other women, they end by
feeling that difference and
suffering under it. Jealousy is an
indelible
sentiment in the
female breast. An old maid's soul is
jealous and yet void; for she knows but one side--the
miserable side--
of the only
passion men will allow (because it flatters them) to
women. Thus thwarted in all their hopes, forced to deny themselves the
natural development of their natures, old maids
endure an
inwardtorment to which they never grow accustomed. It is hard at any age,
above all for a woman, to see a feeling of repulsion on the faces of
others, when her true
destiny is to move all hearts about her to
e
motions of grace and love. One result of this
inward trouble is that
an old maid's glance is always
oblique, less from
modesty than from
fear and shame. Such beings never
forgive society for their false
position because they never
forgive themselves for it.
Now it is impossible for a woman who is perpetually at war with