lease, of
ending his days there, he lived rather
plainly, served by an
old cook and the former maid of the late Madame Cardot,--both of whom
expected to reap an annuity of some six hundred francs
apiece on the
old man's death. These two women took the
utmost care of him, and were
all the more interested in doing so because no one was ever less fussy
or less fault-finding than he. The
apartment, furnished by the late
Madame Cardot, had remained in the same condition for the last six
years,--the old man being
perfectlycontented with it. He spent in all
not more than three thousand francs a year there; for he dined in
Paris five days in the week, and returned home at
midnight in a
hackney-coach, which belonged to an
establishment at Courtille. The
cook had only her master's breakfast to provide on those days. This
was served at eleven o'clock; after that he dressed and perfumed
himself, and
departed for Paris. Usually, a bourgeois gives notice in
the household if he dines out; old Cardot, on the
contrary, gave
notice when he dined at home.
This little old man--fat, rosy, squat, and strong--always looked, in
popular speech, as if he had stepped from a bandbox. He appeared in
black silk stockings,
breeches of "pou-de-soie" (paduasoy), a white
pique
waistcoat, dazzling shirt-front, a blue-bottle coat,
violet silk
gloves, gold buckles to his shoes and his
breeches, and,
lastly, a
touch of powder and a little queue tied with black
ribbon. His face
was
remarkable for a pair of eyebrows as thick as bushes, beneath
which sparkled his gray eyes; and for a square nose, thick and long,
which gave him somewhat the air of the abbes of former times. His
countenance did not belie him. Pere Cardot belonged to that race of
lively Gerontes which is now disappearing rapidly, though it once
served as Turcarets to the comedies and tales of the eighteenth
century. Uncle Cardot always said "Fair lady," and he placed in their
carriages, and
otherwise paid attention to those women whom he saw
without protectors; he "placed himself at their disposition," as he
said, in his
chivalrous way.
But beneath his calm air and his snowy poll he concealed an old age
almost
wholly given up to mere pleasure. Among men he
openly professed
epicureanism, and gave himself the license of free talk. He had seen
no harm in the
devotion of his son-in-law, Camusot, to Mademoiselle
Coralie, for he himself was
secretly the Mecaenas of Mademoiselle
Florentine, the first danseuse at the Gaiete. But this life and these
opinions never appeared in his own home, nor in his
external conduct
before the world. Uncle Cardot, grave and
polite, was thought to be
somewhat cold, so much did he
affect decorum; a "devote" would have
called him a hypocrite.
The
worthy old gentleman hated priests; he belonged to that great
flock of ninnies who subscribed to the "Constitutionnel," and was much
concerned about "refusals to bury." He adored Voltaire, though his
preferences were really for Piron, Vade, and Colle. Naturally, he
admired Beranger, whom he
wittily called the "grandfather of the
religion of Lisette." His daughters, Madame Camusot and Madame Protez,
and his two sons would, to use a popular expression, have been
flabbergasted if any one had explained to them what their father meant
by "singing la Mere Godichon."
This long-headed parent had never mentioned his
income to his
children, who,
seeing that he lived in a cheap way, reflected that he
had deprived himself of his property for their sakes, and,
therefore,
redoubled their attentions and
tenderness. In fact, he would sometimes
say to his sons:--
"Don't lose your property; remember, I have none to leave you."
Camusot, in whom he recognized a certain
likeness to his own nature,
and whom he liked enough to make a sharer in his secret pleasures,
alone knew of the thirty thousand a year annuity. But Camusot approved
of the old man's
ethics, and thought that, having made the happiness
of his children and nobly fulfilled his duty by them, he now had a
right to end his life jovially.
"Don't you see, my friend," said the former master of the Cocon d'Or,
"I might re-marry. A young woman would give me more children. Well,
Florentine doesn't cost me what a wife would; neither does she bore
me; and she won't give me children to
lessen your property."
Camusot considered that Pere Cardot gave expression to a high sense of
family duty in these words; he regarded him as an
admirable father-in-
law.
"He knows," thought he, "how to unite the interests of his children
with the pleasures which old age naturally desires after the worries
of business life."
Neither the Cardots, nor the Camusots, nor the Protez knew anything of
the ways of life of their aunt Clapart. The family
intercourse was
restricted to the s
ending of notes of "faire part" on the occasion of
deaths and marriages, and cards at the New Year. The proud Madame
Clapart would never have brought herself to seek them were it not for
Oscar's interests, and because of her friendship for Moreau, the only
person who had been
faithful to her in
misfortune. She had never
annoyed old Cardot by her visits, or her importunities, but she held
to him as to a hope, and always went to see him once every three
months and talked to him of Oscar, the
nephew of the late respectable
Madame Cardot; and she took the boy to call upon him three times
during each
vacation. At each of these visits the old gentleman had
given Oscar a dinner at the Cadran-Bleu,
taking him, afterwards, to
the Gaiete, and returning him
safely to the rue de la Cerisaie. On one
occasion, having given the boy an entirely new suit of clothes, he
added the silver cup and fork and spoon required for his school
outfit.
Oscar's mother endeavored to
impress the old gentleman with the idea
that his
nephew cherished him, and she
constantly referred to the cup
and the fork and spoon and to the beautiful suit of clothes, though
nothing was then left of the latter but the
waistcoat. But such little
arts did Oscar more harm than good when practised on so sly an old fox
as uncle Cardot. The latter had never much liked his
departed wife, a
tall, spare, red-haired woman; he was also aware of the circumstances
of the late Husson's marriage with Oscar's mother, and without in the
least condemning her, he knew very well that Oscar was a posthumous
child. His
nephew,
therefore, seemed to him to have no claims on the
Cardot family. But Madame Clapart, like all women who concentrate
their whole being into the
sentiment of motherhood, did not put
herself in Cardot's place and see the matter from his point of view;
she thought he must certainly be interested in so sweet a child, who
bore the
maiden name of his late wife.
"Monsieur," said old Cardot's maid-servant, coming out to him as he
walked about the garden while awaiting his breakfast, after his
hairdresser had duly shaved him and powdered his queue, "the mother of
your
nephew, Oscar, is here."
"Good-day, fair lady," said the old man, bowing to Madame Clapart, and
wrapping his white pique dressing-gown about him. "Hey, hey! how this
little fellow grows," he added,
taking Oscar by the ear.
"He has finished school, and he regretted so much that his dear uncle
was not present at the
distribution of the Henri IV. prizes, at which
he was named. The name of Husson, which, let us hope, he will bear
worthily, was proclaimed--"
"The deuce it was!" exclaimed the little old man, stopping short.
Madame Clapart, Oscar, and he were walking along a
terrace flanked by
oranges, myrtles, and pomegranates. "And what did he get?"
"The fourth rank in
philosophy," replied the mother
proudly.
"Oh! oh!" cried uncle Cardot, "the
rascal has a good deal to do to
make up for lost time; for the fourth rank in
philosophy, well, IT
ISN'T PERU, you know! You will stay and breakfast with me?" he added.
"We are at your orders," replied Madame Clapart. "Ah! my dear Monsieur
Cardot, what happiness it is for fathers and mothers when their
children make a good start in life! In this respect--indeed, in all
others," she added, catching herself up, "you are one of the most
fortunate fathers I have ever known. Under your
virtuous son-in-law
and your
amiable daughter, the Cocon d'Or continues to be the greatest