An Old Maid
by Honore de Balzac
Translated by Katharine Prescott Wormeley
DEDICATION
To Monsieur Eugene-Auguste-Georges-Louis Midy de la Greneraye
Surville, Royal Engineer of the Ponts at Chausses.
As a
testimony to the
affection of his brother-in-law,
De Balzac
AN OLD MAID
CHAPTER I
ONE OF MANY CHEVALIERS DE VALOIS
Most persons have encountered, in certain
provinces in France, a
number of Chevaliers de Valois. One lived in Normandy, another at
Bourges, a third (with whom we have here to do) flourished in Alencon,
and
doubtless the South possesses others. The number of the Valesian
tribe is, however, of no
consequence to the present tale. All these
chevaliers, among whom were
doubtless some who were Valois as Louis
XIV. was Bourbon, knew so little of one another that it was not
advisable to speak to one about the others. They were all
willing to
leave the Bourbons in
tranquil possession of the
throne of France; for
it was too
plainly established that Henri IV. became king for want of
a male heir in the first Orleans branch called the Valois. If there
are any Valois, they
descend from Charles de Valois, Duc d'Angouleme,
son of Charles IX. and Marie Touchet, the male line from whom ended,
until proof to the
contrary be produced, in the person of the Abbe de
Rothelin. The Valois-Saint-Remy, who
descended from Henri II., also
came to an end in the famous Lamothe-Valois implicated in the affair
of the Diamond Necklace.
Each of these many chevaliers, if we may believe reports, was, like
the Chevalier of Alencon, an old gentleman, tall, thin, withered, and
moneyless. He of Bourges had emigrated; he of Touraine hid himself; he
of Alencon fought in La Vendee and "chouanized" somewhat. The youth of
the latter was spend in Paris, where the Revolution
overtook him when
thirty years of age in the midst of his conquests and gallantries.
The Chevalier de Valois of Alencon was accepted by the highest
aristocracy of the
province as a
genuine Valois; and he
distinguishedhimself, like the rest of his homonyms, by excellent manners, which
proved him a man of society. He dined out every day, and played cards
every evening. He was thought witty, thanks to his foible for relating
a quantity of anecdotes on the reign of Louis XV. and the beginnings
of the Revolution. When these tales were heard for the first time,
they were held to be well narrated. He had,
moreover, the great merit
of not repeating his personal bons mots and of never
speaking of his
love-affairs, though his smiles and his airs and graces were
delightfully indiscreet. The
worthy gentleman used his
privilege as a
Voltairean noble to stay away from mass; and great
indulgence was
shown to his irreligion because of his
devotion to the royal cause.
One of his particular graces was the air and manner (imitated, no
doubt, from Mole) with which he took snuff from a gold box adorned
with the
portrait of the Princess Goritza,--a
charming Hungarian,
celebrated for her beauty in the last years of the reign of Louis XV.
Having been attached during his youth to that
illustrious stranger, he
still mentioned her with
emotion. For her sake he had fought a duel
with Monsieur de Lauzun.
The chevalier, now fifty-eight years of age, owned to only fifty; and
he might well allow himself that
innocentdeception, for, among the
other advantages granted to fair thin persons, he managed to preserve
the still
youthful figure which saves men as well as women from an
appearance of old age. Yes, remember this: all of life, or rather all
the
elegance that expresses life, is in the figure. Among the
chevalier's other possessions must be counted an
enormous nose with
which nature had endowed him. This nose
vigorously divided a pale face
into two sections which seemed to have no knowledge of each other, for
one side would
redden under the process of
digestion, while the other
continued white. This fact is
worthy of remark at a period when
physiology is so busy with the human heart. The incandescence, so to
call it, was on the left side. Though his long slim legs, supporting a
lank body, and his pallid skin, were not
indicative of health,
Monsieur de Valois ate like an ogre and declared he had a malady
called in the
provinces "hot liver," perhaps to excuse his monstrous
appetite. The circumstance of his
singular flush confirmed this
declaration; but in a region where repasts are developed on the line
of thirty or forty dishes and last four hours, the chevalier's stomach
would seem to have been a
blessing bestowed by Providence on the good
town of Alencon. According to certain doctors, heat on the left side
denotes a
prodigal heart. The chevalier's gallantries confirmed this
scientific
assertion, the
responsibility for which does not rest,
fortunately, on the historian.
In spite of these symptoms, Monsieur de Valois'
constitution was
vigorous,
consequently long-lived. If his liver "heated," to use an
old-fashioned word, his heart was not less inflammable. His face was
wrinkled and his hair silvered; but an
intelligentobserver would have
recognized at once the stigmata of
passion and the furrows of pleasure
which appeared in the crow's-feet and the marches-du-palais, so prized
at the court of Cythera. Everything about this
dainty chevalier
bespoke the "ladies' man." He was so minute in his ablutions that his
cheeks were a pleasure to look upon; they seemed to have been laved in
some
miraculous water. The part of his skull which his hair refused to
cover shone like ivory. His eyebrows, like his hair,
affected youth by
the care and regularity with which they were combed. His skin, already
white, seemed to have been extra-whitened by some secret compound.
Without using perfumes, the chevalier exhaled a certain
fragrance of
youth, that refreshed the
atmosphere. His hands, which were those of a
gentleman, and were cared for like the hands of a pretty woman,
attracted the eye to their rosy, well-shaped nails. In short, had it
not been for his magisterial and
stupendous nose, the chevalier might
have been thought a
trifle too
dainty.
We must here compel ourselves to spoil this
portrait by the avowal of
a littleness. The chevalier put cotton in his ears, and wore, appended
to them, two little ear-rings representing negroes' heads in diamonds,
of
admirableworkmanship. He clung to these
singular appendages,
explaining that since his ears had been bored he had ceased to have
headaches (he had had headaches). We do not present the chevalier as
an
accomplished man; but surely we can
pardon, in an old celibate
whose heart sends so much blood to his left cheek, these adorable
qualities, founded, perhaps, on some
sublime secret history.
Besides, the Chevalier de Valois redeemed those negroes' heads by so
many other graces that society felt itself
sufficiently compensated.
He really took such
immense trouble to
conceal his age and give
pleasure to his friends. In the first place, we must call attention to
the
extreme care he gave to his linen, the only
distinction that well-
bred men can nowadays
exhibit in their clothes. The linen of the
chevalier was
invariably of a
fineness and whiteness that were truly
aristocratic. As for his coat, though
remarkable for its cleanliness,
it was always half worn-out, but without spots or creases. The
preservation of that
garment was something marvellous to those who
noticed the chevalier's high-bred
indifference to its shabbiness. He
did not go so far as to
scrape the seams with glass,--a refinement
invented by the Prince of Wales; but he did practice the rudiments of
English
elegance with a personal
satisfaction little understood by the
people of Alencon. The world owes a great deal to persons who take
such pains to please it. In this there is certainly some
accomplishment of that most difficult
precept of the Gospel about
rendering good for evil. This
freshness of ablution and all the other
little cares harmonized
charmingly with the blue eyes, the ivory
teeth, and the blond person of the old chevalier.
The only
blemish was that this
retired Adonis had nothing manly about
him; he seemed to be employing this
toiletvarnish to hide the ruins
occasioned by the military service of gallantry only. But we must
hasten to add that his voice produced what might be called an
antithesis to his blond
delicacy. Unless you adopted the opinion of
certain
observers of the human heart, and thought that the chevalier
had the voice of his nose, his organ of speech would have amazed you
by its full and redundant sound. Without possessing the
volume of
classical bass voices, the tone of it was
pleasing from a slightly
muffled quality like that of an English bugle, which is firm and
sweet, strong but velvety.
The chevalier had repudiated the
ridiculouscostume still preserved by
certain monarchical old men; he had
frankly modernized himself. He was
always seen in a maroon-colored coat with gilt buttons, half-tight
breeches of poult-de-soie with gold buckles, a white
waistcoat without