social academician. It's pitiable! The old
bachelor whose property the
heirs are
waiting for, who fights to his last
breath with his nurse
for a spoonful of drink, is blest in
comparison with a married man.
I'm not
speaking of all that will happen to annoy, bore, irritate,
coerce, oppose, tyrannize, narcotize,
paralyze, and idiotize a man in
marriage, in that struggle of two beings always in one another's
presence, bound forever, who have coupled each other under the strange
impression that they were suited. No, to tell you those things would
be merely a
repetition of Boileau, and we know him by heart. Still,
I'll
forgive your
absurd idea if you will promise me to marry "en
grand seigneur"; to
entail your property; to have two legitimate
children, to give your wife a house and household
absolutely distinct
from yours; to meet her only in society, and never to return from a
journey without sending her a
courier to announce it. Two hundred
thousand francs a year will
suffice for such a life and your
antecedents will
enable you to marry some rich English woman hungry
for a title. That's an
aristocratic life which seems to me thoroughly
French; the only life in which we can
retain the respect and
friendship of a woman; the only life which distinguishes a man from
the present crowd,--in short, the only life for which a young man
should even think of
resigning his
bachelor blessings. Thus
established, the Comte de Manerville may
advise his epoch, place
himself above the world, and be nothing less than a
minister or an
ambassador. Ridicule can never touch him; he has gained the social
advantages of marriage while keeping all the privileges of a
bachelor."
"But, my good friend, I am not de Marsay; I am
plainly, as you
yourself do me the honor to say, Paul de Manerville,
worthy father and
husband,
deputy of the Centre, possibly peer of France,--a destiny
extremely
commonplace; but I am
modest and I
resign myself."
"Yes, but your wife," said the
pitiless de Marsay, "will she
resignherself?"
"My wife, my dear fellow, will do as I wish."
"Ah! my poor friend, is that where you are? Adieu, Paul. Henceforth, I
refuse to respect you. One word more, however, for I cannot agree
coldly to your abdication. Look and see in what the strength of our
position lies. A
bachelor with only six thousand francs a year
remaining to him has at least his
reputation for
elegance and the
memory of success. Well, even that
fantastic shadow has
enormous value
in it. Life still offers many chances to the
unmarried man. Yes, he
can aim at anything. But marriage, Paul, is the social 'Thus far shalt
thou go and no farther.' Once married you can never be anything but
what you then are--unless your wife should deign to care for you."
"But," said Paul, "you are crushing me down with
exceptional theories.
I am tired of living for others; of having horses merely to exhibit
them; of doing all things for the sake of what may be said of them; of
wasting my substance to keep fools from crying out: 'Dear, dear! Paul
is still driving the same
carriage. What has he done with his fortune?
Does he squander it? Does he
gamble at the Bourse? No, he's a
millionaire. Madame such a one is mad about him. He sent to England
for a
harness which is certainly the handsomest in all Paris. The
four-horse equipages of Messieurs de Marsay and de Manerville were
much noticed at Longchamps; the
harness was perfect'--in short, the
thousand silly things with which a crowd of idiots lead us by the
nose. Believe me, my dear Henri, I admire your power, but I don't envy
it. You know how to judge of life; you think and act as a statesman;
you are able to place yourself above all ordinary laws, received
ideas, adopted conventions, and acknowledged prejudices; in short, you
can grasp the profits of a situation in which I should find nothing
but ill-luck. Your cool,
systematic, possibly true deductions are, to
the eyes of the masses, shockingly immoral. I belong to the masses. I
must play my game of life according to the rules of the society in
which I am forced to live. While putting yourself above all human
things on peaks of ice, you still have feelings; but as for me, I
should
freeze to death. The life of that great majority, to which I
belong in my
commonplace way, is made up of emotions of which I now
have need. Often a man coquets with a dozen women and obtains none.
Then,
whatever be his strength, his cleverness, his knowledge of the
world, he undergoes convulsions, in which he is crushed as between two
gates. For my part, I like the
peaceful chances and changes of life; I
want that
wholesomeexistence in which we find a woman always at our
side."
"A
trifle indecorous, your marriage!" exclaimed de Marsay.
Paul was not to be put out of
countenance, and continued: "Laugh if
you like; I shall feel myself a happy man when my valet enters my room
in the morning and says: 'Madame is a
waitingmonsieur for breakfast';
happier still at night, when I return to find a heart--"
"Altogether indecorous, my dear Paul. You are not yet moral enough to
marry."
"--a heart in which to
confide my interests and my secrets. I wish to
live in such close union with a woman that our
affection shall not
depend upon a yes or a no, or be open to the disillusions of love. In
short, I have the necessary courage to become, as you say, a
worthyhusband and father. I feel myself fitted for family joys; I wish to
put myself under the conditions prescribed by society; I desire to
have a wife and children."
"You
remind me of a hive of honey-bees! But go your way, you'll be a
dupe all your life. Ha, ha! you wish to marry to have a wife! In other
words, you wish to solve
satisfactorily to your own profit the most
difficult problem invented by those bourgeois morals which were
created by the French Revolution; and, what is more, you mean to begin
your attempt by a life of
retirement. Do you think your wife won't
crave the life you say you
despise? Will SHE be disgusted with it, as
you are? If you won't accept the noble conjugality just formulated for
your benefit by your friend de Marsay, listen, at any rate, to his
final advice. Remain a
bachelor for the next thirteen years; amuse
yourself like a lost soul; then, at forty, on your first attack of
gout, marry a widow of thirty-six. Then you may possibly be happy. If
you now take a young girl to wife, you'll die a madman."
"Ah ca! tell me why!" cried Paul, somewhat piqued.
"My dear fellow," replied de Marsay, "Boileau's
satire against women
is a
tissue of
poeticalcommonplaces. Why shouldn't women have
defects? Why
condemn them for having the most
obvious thing in human
nature? To my mind, the problem of marriage is not at all at the point
where Boileau puts it. Do you suppose that marriage is the same thing
as love, and that being a man
suffices to make a wife love you? Have
you gathered nothing in your boudoir experience but pleasant memories?
I tell you that everything in our
bachelor life leads to fatal errors
in the married man unless he is a
profoundobserver of the human
heart. In the happy days of his youth a man, by the caprice of our
customs, is always lucky; he triumphs over women who are all ready to
be triumphed over and who obey their own desires. One thing after
another--the
obstacles created by the laws, the sentiments and natural
defences of women--all engender a mutuality of sensations which
deceives
superficial persons as to their future relations in marriage,
where
obstacles no longer exist, where the wife submits to love
instead of permitting it, and frequently repulses pleasure instead of
desiring it. Then, the whole
aspect of a man's life changes. The
bachelor, who is free and without a care, need never fear repulsion;
in marriage, repulsion is almost certain and irreparable. It may be
possible for a lover to make a woman
reverse an unfavorable decision,
but such a change, my dear Paul, is the Waterloo of husbands. Like
Napoleon, the husband is t
henceforthcondemned to victories which, in
spite of their number, do not prevent the first defeat from crushing
him. The woman, so flattered by the
perseverance, so
delighted with
the ardor of a lover, calls the same things brutality in a husband.
You, who talk of marrying, and who will marry, have you ever meditated
on the Civil Code? I myself have never muddied my feet in that hovel
of commentators, that
garret of
gossip, called the Law-school. I have
never so much as opened the Code; but I see its
application on the
vitals of society. The Code, my dear Paul, makes woman a ward; it
considers her a child, a minor. Now how must we
govern children? By
fear. In that one word, Paul, is the curb of the beast. Now, feel your
own pulse! Have you the strength to play the tyrant,--you, so gentle,