Byrons who, having crumpled up their lives like a serviette after
dinner, have nothing left to do but to set their country ablaze, blow
their own brains out, plot for a
republic or clamor for a war----"
"Emile," Raphael's neighbor called
eagerly to the
speaker, "on my
honor, but for the revolution of July I would have taken orders, and
gone off down into the country somewhere to lead the life of an
animal, and----"
"And you would have read your breviary through every day."
"Yes."
"You are a coxcomb!"
"Why, we read the newspapers as it is!"
"Not bad that, for a journalist! But hold your tongue, we are going
through a crowd of subscribers. Journalism, look you, is the religion
of modern society, and has even gone a little further."
"What do you mean?"
"Its pontiffs are not obliged to believe in it any more than the
people are."
Chatting thus, like good fellows who have known their De Viris
illustribus for years past, they reached a
mansion in the Rue Joubert.
Emile was a journalist who had acquired more
reputation by dint of
doing nothing than others had derived from their
achievements. A bold,
caustic, and powerful
critic, he possessed all the qualities that his
defects permitted. An out
spoken giber, he made
numberless epigrams on
a friend to his face; but would defend him, if
absent, with courage
and
loyalty. He laughed at everything, even at his own
career. Always
impecunious, he yet lived, like all men of his calibre, plunged in
unspeakable indolence. He would fling some word containing
volumes in
the teeth of folk who could not put a
syllable of sense into their
books. He lavished promises that he never fulfilled; he made a pillow
of his luck and
reputation, on which he slept, and ran the risk of
waking up to old age in a workhouse. A
steadfast friend to the gallows
foot, a
cynical swaggerer with a child's
simplicity, a
worker only
from necessity or caprice.
"In the language of Maitre Alcofribas, we are about to make a famous
troncon de chiere lie," he remarked to Raphael as he
pointed out the
flower-stands that made a perfumed forest of the staircase.
"I like a vestibule to be well warmed and
richly carpeted," Raphael
said. "Luxury in the peristyle is not common in France. I feel as if
life had begun anew here."
"And up above we are going to drink and make merry once more, my dear
Raphael. Ah! yes," he went on, "and I hope we are going to come off
conquerors, too, and walk over everybody else's head."
As he spoke, he jestingly
pointed to the guests. They were entering a
large room which shone with gilding and lights, and there all the
younger men of note in Paris welcomed them. Here was one who had just
revealed fresh powers, his first picture vied with the glories of
Imperial art. There, another, who but
yesterday had launched forth a
volume, an acrid book filled with a sort of
literaryarrogance, which
opened up new ways to the modern school. A
sculptor, not far away,
with
vigorous power
visible in his rough features, was chatting with
one of those unenthusiastic scoffers who can either see excellence
anywhere or
nowhere, as it happens. Here, the cleverest of our
caricaturists, with
mischievous eyes and bitter tongue, lay in wait
for epigrams to
translate into pencil strokes; there, stood the young
and audacious
writer, who distilled the quintessence of political
ideas better than any other man, or
compressed the work of some
prolific
writer as he held him up to
ridicule; he was talking with the
poet whose works would have eclipsed all the writings of the time if
his
ability had been as
strenuous as his hatreds. Both were
trying not
to say the truth while they kept clear of lies, as they exchanged
flattering speeches. A famous
musician administered soothing
consolation in a rallying fashion, to a young
politician who had just
fallen quite unhurt, from his rostrum. Young
writers who lacked style
stood beside other young
writers who lacked ideas, and authors of
poetical prose by prosaic poets.
At the sight of all these
incomplete beings, a simple Saint Simonian,
ingenuous enough to believe in his own
doctrine, charitably paired
them off, designing, no doubt, to
convert them into monks of his
order. A few men of science mingled in the conversation, like nitrogen
in the
atmosphere, and several vaudevillistes shed rays like the
sparking diamonds that give neither light nor heat. A few paradox-
mongers, laughing up their sleeves at any folk who embraced their
likes or dislikes in men or affairs, had already begun a two-edged
policy, conspiring against all systems, without committing themselves
to any side. Then there was the self-ap
pointedcritic who admires
nothing, and will blow his nose in the middle of a cavatina at the
Bouffons, who applauds before any one else begins, and contradicts
every one who says what he himself was about to say; he was there
giving out the sayings of wittier men for his own. Of all the
assembled guests, a future lay before some five; ten or so should
acquire a
fleetingrenown; as for the rest, like all mediocrities,
they might apply to themselves the famous
falsehood of Louis XVIII.,
Union and oblivion.
The
anxious jocularity of a man who is expending two thousand crowns
sat on their host. His eyes turned
impatiently towards the door from
time to time, seeking one of his guests who kept him
waiting. Very
soon a stout little person appeared, who was greeted by a
complimentary murmur; it was the notary who had invented the newspaper
that very morning. A valet-de-chambre in black opened the doors of a
vast dining-room, whither every one went without
ceremony, and took
his place at an
enormous table.
Raphael took a last look round the room before he left it. His wish
had been realized to the full. The rooms were adorned with silk and
gold. Countless wax tapers set in handsome candelabra lit up the
slightest details of gilded friezes, the
delicatebronze sculpture,
and the splendid colors of the furniture. The sweet scent of rare
flowers, set in stands tastefully made of
bamboo, filled the air.
Everything, even the curtains, was pervaded by
elegance without
pretension, and there was a certain
imaginative charm about it all
which acted like a spell on the mind of a needy man.
"An
income of a hundred thousand livres a year is a very nice
beginning of the catechism, and a wonderful
assistance to putting
morality into our actions," he said, sighing. "Truly my sort of virtue
can scarcely go afoot, and vice means, to my thinking, a
garret, a
threadbare coat, a gray hat in winter time, and sums owing to the
porter. . . . I should like to live in the lap of
luxury a year, or
six months, no matter! And then afterwards, die. I should have known,
exhausted, and consumed a thousand lives, at any rate."
"Why, you are
taking the tone of a stockbroker in good luck," said
Emile, who overheard him. "Pooh! your
riches would be a burden to you
as soon as you found that they would spoil your chances of coming out
above the rest of us. Hasn't the artist always kept the balance true
between the
poverty of
riches and the
riches of
poverty? And isn't
struggle a necessity to some of us? Look out for your
digestion, and
only look," he added, with a mock-heroic
gesture, "at the majestic,
thrice holy, and edifying appearance of this
amiablecapitalist's
dining-room. That man has in
reality only made his money for our
benefit. Isn't he a kind of
sponge of the polyp order, overlooked by
naturalists, which should be carefully squeezed before he is left for
his heirs to feed upon? There is style, isn't there, about those bas-
reliefs that adorn the walls? And the lustres, and the pictures, what
luxury well carried out! If one may believe those who envy him, or who
know, or think they know, the origins of his life, then this man got
rid of a German and some others--his best friend for one, and the
mother of that friend, during the Revolution. Could you house crimes
under the
venerable Taillefer's silvering locks? He looks to me a very
worthy man. Only see how the silver sparkles, and is every glittering
ray like a stab of a
dagger to him? . . . Let us go in, one might as
well believe in Mahomet. If common report speak truth, here are thirty
men of
talent, and good fellows too, prepared to dine off the flesh
and blood of a whole family; . . . and here are we ourselves, a pair
of youngsters full of open-hearted
enthusiasm, and we shall be
partakers in his guilt. I have a mind to ask our
capitalist whether he
is a
respectablecharacter. . . ."
"No, not now," cried Raphael, "but when he is dead drunk, we shall
have had our dinner then."
The two friends sat down laughing. First of all, by a glance more
rapid than a word, each paid his
tribute of
admiration to the splendid
general effect of the long table, white as a bank of freshly-fallen
snow, with its symmetrical line of covers, crowned with their pale
golden rolls of bread. Rainbow colors gleamed in the
starry rays of
light reflected by the glass; the lights of the tapers crossed and
recrossed each other
indefinitely; the dishes covered with their