Gaudissart II
by Honore de Balzac
Translated by Clara Bell and others
DEDICATION
To Madame la Princesse Cristina de Belgiojoso, nee Trivulzio.
GAUDISSART II.
To know how to sell, to be able to sell, and to sell. People generally
do not
suspect how much of the stateliness of Paris is due to these
three aspects of the same problem. The
brilliant display of shops as
rich as the salons of the noblesse before 1789; the splendors of cafes
which
eclipse, and easily
eclipse, the Versailles of our day; the
shop-window illusions, new every morning,
nightly destroyed; the grace
and
elegance of the young men that come in
contact with fair
customers; the piquant faces and costumes of young damsels, who cannot
fail to attract the
masculinecustomer; and (and this especially of
late) the length, the vast spaces, the Babylonish
luxury of galleries
where shopkeepers
acquire a
monopoly of the trade in various articles
by bringing them all together,--all this is as nothing. Everything, so
far, has been done to
appeal to a single sense, and that the most
exacting and jaded human
faculty, a
faculty developed ever since the
days of the Roman Empire, until, in our own times, thanks to the
efforts of the most fastidious
civilization the world has yet seen,
its demands are grown limitless. That
faculty resides in the "eyes of
Paris."
Those eyes require illuminations costing a hundred thousand francs,
and many-colored glass palaces a couple of miles long and sixty feet
high; they must have a
fairyland at some fourteen theatres every
night, and a
succession of panoramas and exhibitions of the triumphs
of art; for them a whole world of
suffering and pain, and a universe
of joy, must
resolve through the boulevards or stray through the
streets of Paris; for them encyclopaedias of carnival frippery and a
score of
illustrated books are brought out every year, to say nothing
of caricatures by the hundred, and vignettes, lithographs, and prints
by the thousand. To please those eyes, fifteen thousand francs' worth
of gas must blaze every night; and, to conclude, for their delectation
the great city
yearly spends several millions of francs in
opening up
views and planting trees. And even yet this is as nothing--it is only
the material side of the question; in truth, a mere
trifle compared
with the
expenditure of brain power on the shifts,
worthy of Moliere,
invented by some sixty thousand
assistants and forty thousand damsels
of the
counter, who
fasten upon the
customer's purse, much as myriads
of Seine whitebait fall upon a chance crust floating down the river.
Gaudissart in the mart is at least the equal of his illustrious
namesake, now become the
typicalcommercial traveler. Take him away
from his shop and his line of business, he is like a collapsed
balloon; only among his bales of
merchandise do his faculties return,
much as an actor is
sublime only upon the boards. A French shopman is
better educated than his fellows in other European countries; he can
at need talk
asphalt, Bal Mabille, polkas,
literature,
illustrated
books, railways,
politics,
parliament, and revolution;
transplant him,
take away his stage, his yardstick, his
artificial graces; he is
foolish beyond
belief; but on his own boards, on the tight-rope of the
counter, as he displays a shawl with a speech at his tongue's end, and
his eye on his
customer, he puts the great Talleyrand into the shade;
he is a match for a Monrose and a Moliere to boot. Talleyrand in his
own house would have outwitted Gaudissart, but in the shop the parts
would have been reversed.
An
incident will
illustrate the paradox.
Two
charmingduchesses were chatting with the above-mentioned great
diplomatist. The ladies wished for a
bracelet; they were
waiting for
the
arrival of a man from a great Parisian
jeweler. A Gaudissart
accordingly appeared with three
bracelets of
marvelous workmanship.
The great ladies hesitated. Choice is a
mentallightning flash;
hesitate--there is no more to be said, you are at fault. Inspiration
in matters of taste will not come twice. At last, after about ten
minutes the Prince was called in. He saw the two
duchesses confronting
doubt with its thousand facets,
unable to decide between the
transcendent merits of two of the trinkets, for the third had been set
aside at once. Without leaving his book, without a glance at the
bracelets, the Prince looked at the
jeweler's
assistant.
"Which would you choose for your
sweetheart?" asked he.
The young man indicated one of the pair.
"In that case, take the other, you will make two women happy," said
the subtlest of modern diplomatists, "and make your
sweetheart happy
too, in my name."
The two fair ladies smiled, and the young shopman took his departure,
delighted with the Prince's present and the implied
compliment to his
taste.
A woman alights from her splendid
carriage before one of the expensive
shops where shawls are sold in the Rue Vivienne. She is not alone;
women almost always go in pairs on these expeditions; always make the
round of half a score of shops before they make up their minds, and
laugh together in the intervals over the little comedies played for
their benefit. Let us see which of the two acts most in
character--the
fair
customer or the
seller, and which has the best of it in such
miniature vaudevilles?
If you attempt to describe a sale, the central fact of Parisian trade,
you are in duty bound, if you attempt to give the gist of the matter,
to produce a type, and for this purpose a shawl or a chatelaine
costing some three thousand francs is a more
exacting purchase than a
length of lawn or dress that costs three hundred. But know, oh foreign
visitors from the Old World and the New (if ever this study of the
physiology of the Invoice should be by you perused), that this
selfsame
comedy is played in haberdashers' shops over a barege at two
francs or a printed
muslin at four francs the yard.
And you,
princess, or simple citizen's wife,
whichever you may be, how
should you
distrust that
good-looking, very young man, with those
frank,
innocent eyes, and a cheek like a peach covered with down? He
is dressed almost as well as your--cousin, let us say. His tones are
soft as the
woolen stuffs which he spreads before you. There are three
or four more of his like. One has dark eyes, a
decided expression, and
an
imperial manner of
saying, "This is what you wish"; another, that
blue-eyed youth, diffident of manner and meek of speech, prompts the
remark, "Poor boy! he was not born for business"; a third, with light
auburn hair, and laughing tawny eyes, has all the
lively humor, and
activity, and
gaiety of the South; while the fourth, he of the tawny
red hair and fan-shaped beard, is rough as a
communist, with his
portentous
cravat, his sternness, his
dignity, and curt speech.
These varieties of shopmen,
corresponding to the
principal types of
femininecustomers, are arms, as it were, directed by the head, a
stout
personage with a full-blown
countenance, a
partially bald
forehead, and a chest
measure befitting a Ministerialist deputy.
Occasionally this person wears the
ribbon of the Legion of Honor in
recognition of the manner in which he supports the
dignity of the
French drapers' wand. From the comfortable curves of his figure you
can see that he has a wife and family, a country house, and an account
with the Bank of France. He descends like a deux ex machina, whenever
a tangled problem demands a swift
solution. The
feminine purchasers
are surrounded on all sides with urbanity, youth, pleasant manners,
smiles, and jests; the most seeming-simple human products of
civilization are here, all sorted in shades to suit all tastes.
Just one word as to the natural effects of
architecture, optical
science, and house
decoration; one short,
decisive, terrible word, of
history made on the spot. The work which contains this instructive
page is sold at number 76 Rue de Richelieu, where above an elegant
shop, all white and gold and
crimsonvelvet, there is an entresol into
which the light pours straight from the Rue de Menars, as into a
painter's studio--clean, clear, even
daylight. What idler in the
streets has not
beheld the Persian, that Asiatic
potentate, ruffling
it above the door at the corner of the Rue de la Bourse and the Rue de
Richelieu, with a message to deliver urbi et orbi, "Here I reign more
tranquilly than at Lahore"? Perhaps but for this
immortal analytical
study, archaeologists might begin to
puzzle their heads about him five
hundred years hence, and set about
writing quartos with plates (like
M. Quatremere's work on Olympian Jove) to prove that Napoleon was
something of a Sofi in the East before he became "Emperor of the
French." Well, the
wealthy shop laid siege to the poor little
entresol; and after a bombardment with banknotes, entered and took
possession. The Human Comedy gave way before the
comedy of cashmeres.
The Persian sacrificed a diamond or two from his crown to buy that so
necessary
daylight; for a ray of
sunlight shows the play of the
colors, brings out the charms of a shawl, and doubles its value; 'tis
an
irresistible light;
literally, a golden ray. From this fact you may
judge how far Paris shops are arranged with a view to effect.
But to return to the young
assistants, to the be
ribboned man of forty