up,
inevitably, a store of evil thoughts, Max became utterly
demoralized. He listened to the opinions of those who longed for
fortune at any price, and did not
shrink from the results of criminal
actions, provided they were done without discovery. When peace was
proclaimed, in April, 1814, he left the island, depraved though still
innocent. On his return to Issoudun he found his father and mother
dead. Like others who give way to their passions and make life, as
they call it, short and sweet, the Gilets had died in the almshouse in
the
utmostpoverty. Immediately after his return, the news of
Napoleon's
landing at Cannes spread through France; Max could do no
better than go to Paris and ask for his rank as major and for his
cross. The
marshal who was at that time
minister of war remembered the
brave conduct of Captain Gilet in Portugal. He put him in the Guard as
captain, which gave him the grade of major in the
infantry; but he
could not get him the cross. "The Emperor says that you will know how
to win it at the first chance," said the
marshal. In fact, the Emperor
did put the brave captain on his list for
decoration the evening after
the fight at Fleurus, where Gilet
distinguished himself.
After the battle of Waterloo Max retreated to the Loire. At the time
of the disbandment, Marshal Feltre refused to recognize Max's grade as
major, or his claim to the cross. The soldier of Napoleon returned to
Issoudun in a state of exasperation that may well be conceived; he
declared that he would not serve without either rank or cross. The
war-office considered these conditions presumptuous in a young man of
twenty-five without a name, who might, if they were granted, become a
colonel at thirty. Max
accordingly" target="_blank" title="ad.因此;从而;依照">
accordingly sent in his
resignation. The major
--for among themselves Bonapartists recognized the grades obtained in
1815--thus lost the pittance called half-pay which was allowed to the
officers of the army of the Loire. But all Issoudun was roused at the
sight of the brave young fellow left with only twenty
napoleons in his
possession; and the mayor gave him a place in his office with a salary
of six hundred francs. Max kept it a few months, then gave it up of
his own
accord, and was replaced by a captain named Carpentier, who,
like himself, had remained
faithful to Napoleon.
By this time Gilet had become grand master of the Knights of Idleness,
and was leading a life which lost him the good-will of the chief
people of the town; who, however, did not
openly make the fact known
to him, for he was
violent and much feared by all, even by the
officers of the old army who, like himself, had refused to serve under
the Bourbons, and had come home to plant their cabbages in Berry. The
little
affection felt for the Bourbons among the natives of Issoudun
is not
surprising when we recall the history which we have just given.
In fact,
considering its size and lack of importance, the little place
contained more Bonapartists than any other town in France. These men
became, as is well known, nearly all Liberals.
In Issoudun and its
neighborhood there were a dozen officers in Max's
position. These men admired him and made him their leader,--with the
exception, however, of Carpentier, his
successor, and a certain
Monsieur Mignonnet, ex-captain in the
artillery of the Guard.
Carpentier, a
cavalry officer risen from the ranks, had married into
one of the best families in the town,--the Borniche-Herau. Mignonnet,
brought up at the Ecole Polytechnique, had served in a corps which
held itself superior to all others. In the Imperial armies there were
two shades of
distinction among the soldiers themselves. A majority of
them felt a
contempt for the bourgeois, the "civilian," fully equal to
the
contempt of nobles for their serfs, or conquerors for the
conquered. Such men did not always observe the laws of honor in their
dealings with civilians; nor did they much blame those who rode rough-
shod over the bourgeoisie. The others, and particularly the
artillery,
perhaps because of its republicanism, never adopted the
doctrine of a
military France and a civil France, the
tendency of which was nothing
less than to make two nations. So, although Major Potel and Captain
Renard, two officers living in the Rome
suburb, were friends to
Maxence Gilet "through thick and thin," Major Mignonnet and Captain
Carpentier took sides with the bourgeoisie, and thought his conduct
unworthy of a man of honor.
Major Mignonnet, a lean little man, full of
dignity, busied himself
with the problems which the
steam-engine requires us to solve, and
lived in a
modest way,
taking his social
intercourse with Monsieur and
Madame Carpentier. His gentle manners and ways, and his scientific
occupations won him the respect of the whole town; and it was
frequently said of him and of Captain Carpentier that they were "quite
another thing" from Major Potel and Captain Renard, Maxence, and other
frequenters of the cafe Militaire, who retained the soldierly manners
and the
defective morals of the Empire.
At the time when Madame Bridau returned to Issoudun, Max was excluded
from the society of the place. He showed,
moreover, proper
self-respect in never presenting himself at the club, and in never
complaining of the
severe reprobation that was shown him; although he
was the handsomest, the most
elegant, and the best dressed man in the
place, spent a great deal of money, and kept a horse,--a thing as
amazing at Issoudun as the horse of Lord Byron at Venice. We are now
to see how it was that Maxence, poor and without
apparent means, was
able to become the dandy of the town. The
shameful conduct which
earned him the
contempt of all scrupulous or religious persons was
connected with the interests which brought Agathe and Joseph to
Issoudun.
Judging by the
audacity of his
bearing, and the expression of his
face, Max cared little for public opinion; he expected, no doubt, to
take his
revenge some day, and to lord it over those who now condemned
him. Moreover, if the bourgeoisie of Issoudun thought ill of him, the
admiration he excited among the common people counterbalanced their
opinion; his courage, his
dashing appearance, his decision of
character, could not fail to please the masses, to whom his
degradations were, for the most part, unknown, and indeed the
bourgeoisie themselves scarcely suspected its
extent. Max played a
role at Issoudun which was something like that of the
blacksmith in
the "Fair Maid of Perth"; he was the
champion of Bonapartism and the
Opposition; they counted upon him as the burghers of Perth counted
upon Smith on great occasions. A single
incident will put this hero
and
victim of the Hundred-Days into clear relief.
In 1819, a
battalion commanded by
royalist officers, young men just
out of the Maison Rouge, passed through Issoudun on its way to go into
garrison at Bourges. Not
knowing what to do with themselves in so
constitutional a place as Issoudun, these young gentlemen went to
while away the time at the cafe Militaire. In every
provincial town
there is a military cafe. That of Issoudun, built on the place d'Armes
at an angle of the
rampart, and kept by the widow of an officer, was
naturally the rendezvous of the Bonapartists,
chiefly officers on
half-pay, and others who shared Max's opinions, to whom the
politicsof the town allowed free expression of their
idolatry for the Emperor.
Every year, dating from 1816, a
banquet was given in Issoudun to
commemorate the
anniversary of his
coronation. The three
royalists who
first entered asked for the newspapers, among others, for the
"Quotidienne" and the "Drapeau Blanc." The
politics of Issoudun,
especially those of the cafe Militaire, did not allow of such
royalistjournals. The
establishment had none but the "Commerce,"--a name which
the "Constitutionel" was compelled to adopt for several years after it
was suppressed by the government. But as, in its first issue under the
new name, the leading article began with these words, "Commerce is
essentially constitutional," people continued to call it the
"Constitutionel," the subscribers all understanding the sly play of
words which begged them to pay no attention to the label, as the wine
would be the same.
The fat
landlady replied from her seat at the desk that she did not
take those papers. "What papers do you take then?" asked one of the
officers, a captain. The
waiter, a little fellow in a blue cloth
jacket, with an apron of
coarse linen tied over it, brought the
"Commerce."
"Is that your paper? Have you no other?"
"No," said the
waiter, "that's the only one."
The captain tore it up, flung the pieces on the floor, and spat upon
them,
calling out,--
"Bring dominos!"