spirits rose. It was as if I had laid a wager with myself, for I was
at once the
player and the cards.
"This was my plan. The eleven hundred francs must keep life in me for
three years--the time I allowed myself in which to bring to light a
work which should draw attention to me, and make me either a name or a
fortune. I exulted at the thought of living on bread and milk, like a
hermit in the Thebaid, while I plunged into the world of books and
ideas, and so reached a lofty
sphere beyond the
tumult of Paris, a
sphere of silent labor where I would entomb myself like a chrysalis to
await a
brilliant and splendid new birth. I imperiled my life in order
to live. By reducing my requirements to real needs and the barest
necessaries, I found that three hundred and sixty-five francs sufficed
for a year of penury; and, in fact, I managed to exist on that slender
sum, so long as I submitted to my own claustral discipline."
"Impossible!" cried Emile.
"I lived for nearly three years in that way," Raphael answered, with a
kind of pride. "Let us
reckon it out. Three sous for bread, two for
milk, and three for cold meat, kept me from dying of
hunger, and my
mind in a state of
peculiar lucidity. I have observed, as you know,
the wonderful effects produced by diet upon the
imagination. My
lodgings cost me three sous daily; I burnt three sous more in oil at
night; I did my own
housework, and wore
flannel shirts so as to reduce
the laundress' bill to two sous per day. The money I spent
yearly in
coal, if divided up, never cost more than two sous for each day. I had
three years' supply of clothing, and I only dressed when going out to
some library or public lecture. These expenses, all told, only
amounted to eighteen sous, so two were left over for emergencies. I
cannot
recollect, during that long period of toil, either crossing the
Pont des Arts, or paying for water; I went out to fetch it every
morning from the
fountain in the Place Saint Michel, at the corner of
the Rue de Gres. Oh, I wore my
povertyproudly. A man urged on towards
a fair future walks through life like an
innocent person to his death;
he feels no shame about it.
"I would not think of
illness. Like Aquilina, I faced the hospital
without
terror. I had not a moment's doubt of my health, and besides,
the poor can only take to their beds to die. I cut my own hair till
the day when an angel of love and kindness . . . But I do not want to
anticipate the state of things that I shall reach later. You must
simply know that I lived with one grand thought for a
mistress, a
dream, an
illusion which deceives us all more or less at first. To-day
I laugh at myself, at that self, holy perhaps and
heroic, which is now
no more. I have since had a closer view of society and the world, of
our manners and customs, and seen the dangers of my
innocent credulity
and the
superfluous nature of my
fervent toil. Stores of that sort are
quite
useless to aspirants for fame. Light should be the
baggage of
seekers after fortune!
"Ambitious men spend their youth in rendering themselves
worthy of
patronage; it is their great mistake. While the foolish creatures are
laying in stores of knowledge and
energy, so that they shall not sink
under the weight of
responsible posts that
recede from them, schemers
come and go who are
wealthy" target="_blank" title="a.富有的;丰富的">
wealthy in words and
destitute in ideas, astonish
the
ignorant, and creep into the confidence of those who have a little
knowledge. While the first kind study, the second march ahead; the one
sort is
modest, and the other impudent; the man of
genius is silent
about his own merits, but these schemers make a
flourish of theirs,
and they are bound to get on. It is so
strongly to the interest of men
in office to believe in ready-made
capacity, and in brazen-faced
merit, that it is
downrightchildish of the
learned to expect material
rewards. I do not seek to paraphrase the
commonplace moral, the song
of songs that obscure
genius is for ever singing; I want to come, in a
logical manner, by the reason of the
frequent successes of mediocrity.
Alas! study shows us such a mother's kindness that it would be a sin
perhaps to ask any other
reward of her than the pure and delightful
pleasures with which she sustains her children.
"Often I remember soaking my bread in milk, as I sat by the window to
take the fresh air; while my eyes wandered over a view of roofs--
brown, gray, or red, slated or tiled, and covered with yellow or green
mosses. At first the
prospect may have seemed
monotonous, but I very
soon found
peculiar beauties in it. Sometimes at night, streams of
light through half-closed shutters would light up and color the dark
abysses of this strange
landscape. Sometimes the
feeble lights of the
street lamps sent up yellow gleams through the fog, and in each street
dimly outlined the undulations of a crowd of roofs, like billows in a
motionless sea. Very
occasionally, too, a face appeared in this gloomy
waste; above the flowers in some skyey garden I caught a
glimpse of an
old woman's
crooked angular
profile as she watered her nasturtiums;
or, in a crazy attic window, a young girl, fancying herself quite
alone as she dressed herself--a view of nothing more than a fair
forehead and long tresses held above her by a pretty white arm.
"I liked to see the short-lived plant-life in the gutters--poor weeds
that a storm soon washed away. I
studied the mosses, with their colors
revived by showers, or transformed by the sun into a brown
velvet that
fitfully caught the light. Such things as these formed my recreations
--the passing
poetic moods of
daylight, the
melancholy mists, sudden
gleams of
sunlight, the silence and the magic of night, the mysteries
of dawn, the smoke wreaths from each chimney; every chance event, in
fact, in my curious world became familiar to me. I came to love this
prison of my own choosing. This level Parisian
prairie of roofs,
beneath which lay
populous abysses, suited my humor, and harmonized
with my thoughts.
"Sudden descents into the world from the
divineheight of scientific
meditation are very exhausting; and, besides, I had apprehended
perfectly the bare life of the
cloister. When I made up my mind to
carry out this new plan of life, I looked for quarters in the most
out-of-the-way parts of Paris. One evening, as I returned home to the
Rue des Cordiers from the Place de l'Estrapade, I saw a girl of
fourteen playing with a battledore at the corner of the Rue de Cluny,
her winsome ways and
laughter amused the neighbors. September was not
yet over; it was warm and fine, so that women sat chatting before
their doors as if it were a fete-day in some country town. At first I
watched the
charming expression of the girl's face and her graceful
attitudes, her pose fit for a
painter. It was a pretty sight. I looked
about me, seeking to understand this
blithesimplicity in the midst of
Paris, and saw that the street was a blind alley and but little
frequented. I remembered that Jean Jacques had once lived here, and
looked up the Hotel Saint-Quentin. Its dilapidated condition awakened
hopes of a cheap
lodging, and I determined to enter.
"I found myself in a room with a low ceiling; the candles, in classic-
looking
copper candle-sticks, were set in a row under each key. The
predominating
cleanliness of the room made a
strikingcontrast to the
usual state of such places. This one was as neat as a bit of genre;
there was a
charming trimness about the blue
coverlet, the cooking
pots and furniture. The
mistress of the house rose and came to me. She
seemed to be about forty years of age; sorrows had left their traces
on her features, and
weeping had dimmed her eyes. I deferentially
mentioned the
amount I could pay; it seemed to cause her no surprise;
she sought out a key from the row, went up to the attics with me, and
showed me a room that looked out on the
neighboring roofs and courts;
long poles with linen drying on them hung out of the window.
"Nothing could be uglier than this
garret, awaiting its
scholar, with
its dingy yellow walls and odor of
poverty. The roofing fell in a
steep slope, and the sky was
visible through chinks in the tiles.
There was room for a bed, a table, and a few chairs, and beneath the
highest point of the roof my piano could stand. Not being rich enough
to furnish this cage (that might have been one of the Piombi of
Venice), the poor woman had never been able to let it; and as I had
saved from the recent sale the furniture that was in a fashion
peculiarly mine, I very soon came to terms with my
landlady, and moved
in on the following day.
"For three years I lived in this airy sepulchre, and worked
unflaggingly day and night; and so great was the pleasure that study
seemed to me the fairest theme and the happiest
solution of life. The
tranquillity and peace that a
scholar needs is something as sweet and
exhilarating as love. Unspeakable joys are showered on us by the
exertion of our
mental faculties; the quest of ideas, and the tranquil
contemplation of knowledge; delights
indescribable, because purely
intellectual and impalpable to our senses. So we are obliged to use
material terms to express the mysteries of the soul. The pleasure of
striking out in some
lonely lake of clear water, with forests, rocks,
and flowers around, and the soft
stirring of the warm breeze,--all
this would give, to those who knew them not, a very faint idea of the
exultation with which my soul bathed itself in the beams of an unknown