Maitre Cornelius
by Honore de Balzac
Translated by Katharine Prescott Wormeley
DEDICATION
To Monsieur le Comte Georges Mniszech:
Some
envious being may think on
seeing this page illustrated by
one of the most
illustrious of Sarmatian names, that I am
striving, as the goldsmiths do, to
enhance a modern work with an
ancient jewel,--a fancy of the fashions of the day,--but you and a
few others, dear count, will know that I am only seeking to pay my
debt to Talent, Memory, and Friendship.
MAITRE CORNELIUS
CHAPTER I
A CHURCH SCENE OF THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY
In 1479, on All Saints' day, the moment at which this history begins,
vespers were
ending in the
cathedral of Tours. The
archbishop Helie de
Bourdeilles was rising from his seat to give the benediction himself
to the
faithful. The
sermon had been long; darkness had fallen during
the service, and in certain parts of the noble church (the towers of
which were not yet finished) the deepest
obscurity prevailed.
Nevertheless a
goodly number of tapers were burning in honor of the
saints on the
triangular candle-trays destined to receive such pious
offerings, the merit and signification of which have never been
sufficiently explained. The lights on each altar and all the
candelabra in the choir were burning. Irregularly shed among a forest
of
columns and arcades which supported the three naves of the
cathedral, the gleam of these masses of candles
barely lighted the
immense building, because the strong shadows of the
columns, projected
among the galleries, produced
fantastic forms which increased the
darkness that already wrapped in gloom the arches, the vaulted
ceilings, and the
lateralchapels, always sombre, even at mid-day.
The crowd presented effects that were no less
picturesque. Certain
figures were so
vaguely defined in the "chiaroscuro" that they seemed
like phantoms;
whereas others,
standing in a full gleam of the
scattered light, attracted attention like the
principal heads in a
picture. Some statues seemed
animated, some men seemed petrified. Here
and there eyes shone in the flutings of the
columns, the floor
reflected looks, the marbles spoke, the vaults re-echoed sighs, the
edifice itself seemed endowed with life.
The
existence of Peoples has no more
solemn scenes, no moments more
majestic. To mankind in the mass,
movement is needed to make it
poetical; but in these hours of religious thought, when human riches
unite themselves with
celestialgrandeur,
incredible sublimities are
felt in the silence; there is fear in the bended knee, hope in the
clasping hands. The concert of feelings in which all souls are rising
heavenward produces an
inexplicablephenomenon of spirituality. The
mystical exaltation of the
faithful reacts upon each of them; the
feebler are no doubt borne
upward by the waves of this ocean of faith
and love. Prayer, a power
electrical, draws our nature above itself.
This
involuntary union of all wills,
equallyprostrate on the earth,
equally risen into heaven, contains, no doubt, the secret of the magic
influences wielded by the chants of the priests, the harmonies of the
organ, the perfumes and the pomps of the altar, the voices of the
crowd and its silent contemplations. Consequently, we need not be
surprised to see in the middle-ages so many tender
passions begun in
churches after long ecstasies,--
passions
ending often in little
sanctity, and for which women, as usual, were the ones to do penance.
Religious
sentiment certainly had, in those days, an
affinity with
love; it was either the
motive or the end of it. Love was still a
religion, with its fine fanaticism, its naive superstitions, its
sublime devotions, which sympathized with those of Christianity.
The manners of that period will also serve to explain this alliance
between religion and love. In the first place society had no meeting-
place except before the altar. Lords and vassals, men and women were
equals
nowhere else. There alone could lovers see each other and
communicate. The festivals of the Church were the theatre of former
times; the soul of woman was more
keenly stirred in a
cathedral than
it is at a ball or the opera in our day; and do not strong emotions
invariably bring women back to love? By dint of mingling with life and
grasping it in all its acts and interests, religion had made itself a
sharer of all virtues, the accomplice of all vices. Religion had
passed into science, into
politics, into
eloquence, into crimes, into
the flesh of the sick man and the poor man; it mounted thrones; it was
everywhere. These semi-learned observations will serve, perhaps, to
vindicate the truth of this study, certain details of which may
frighten the perfected morals of our age, which are, as everybody
knows, a
trifle straitlaced.
At the moment when the chanting ceased and the last notes of the
organ, mingling with the vibrations of the loud "A-men" as it issued
from the strong chests of the intoning
clergy, sent a murmuring echo
through the distant arches, and the hushed
assembly were awaiting the
beneficent words of the
archbishop, a
burgher,
impatient to get home,
or fearing for his purse in the
tumult of the crowd when the
worshippers dispersed, slipped quietly away, at the risk of being
called a bad Catholic. On which, a
nobleman, leaning against one of
the
enormouscolumns that surround the choir, hastened to take
possession of the seat
abandoned by the
worthy Tourainean. Having done
so, he quickly hid his face among the plumes of his tall gray cap,
kneeling upon the chair with an air of contrition that even an
inquisitor would have trusted.
Observing the new-comer attentively, his immediate neighbors seemed to
recognize him; after which they returned to their prayers with a
certain
gesture by which they all expressed the same thought,--a
caustic, jeering thought, a silent
slander. Two old women shook their
heads, and gave each other a glance that seemed to dive into futurity.
The chair into which the young man had slipped was close to a
chapelplaced between two
columns and closed by an iron
railing. It was
customary for the chapter to lease at a handsome price to seignorial
families, and even to rich
burghers, the right to be present at the
services, themselves and their servants
exclusively, in the various
lateralchapels of the long side-aisles of the
cathedral. This simony
is in practice to the present day. A woman had her
chapel as she now
has her opera-box. The families who hired these
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privileged places were
required to
decorate the altar of the
chapel thus conceded to them,
and each made it their pride to adorn their own sumptuously,--a vanity
which the Church did not
rebuke. In this particular
chapel a lady was
kneeling close to the
railing on a handsome rug of red
velvet with
gold tassels,
precisely opposite to the seat vacated of the
burgher. A
silver-gilt lamp,
hanging from the vaulted ceiling of the
chapelbefore an altar magnificently
decorated, cast its pale light upon a
prayer-book held by the lady. The book trembled
violently in her hand
when the young man approached her.
"A-men!"
To that
response, sung in a sweet low voice which was painfully
agitated, though happily lost in the general clamor, she added rapidly
in a whisper:--
"You will ruin me."
The words were said in a tone of
innocence which a man of any delicacy
ought to have obeyed; they went to the heart and pierced it. But the
stranger, carried away, no doubt, by one of those paroxysms of
passionwhich
stifleconscience, remained in his chair and raised his head
slightly that he might look into the
chapel.
"He sleeps!" he replied, in so low a voice that the words could be
heard by the young woman only, as sound is heard in its echo.
The lady turned pale; her furtive glance left for a moment the vellum
page of the prayer-book and turned to the old man whom the young man
had designated. What terrible complicity was in that glance? When the
young woman had
cautiously examined the old seigneur, she drew a long
breath and raised her
forehead, adorned with a precious jewel, toward
a picture of the Virgin; that simple
movement, that attitude, the
moistened glance, revealed her life with imprudent naivete; had she
been
wicked, she would certainly have dissimulated. The
personage who
thus alarmed the lovers was a little old man, hunchbacked, nearly
bald,
savage in expression, and wearing a long and discolored white
beard cut in a fan-tail. The cross of Saint-Michel glittered on his
breast; his
coarse, strong hands, covered with gray hairs, which had
been clasped, had now dropped
slightly apart in the
slumber to which
he had imprudently yielded. The right hand seemed about to fall upon
his
dagger, the hilt of which was in the form of an iron shell. By the
manner in which he had placed the
weapon, this hilt was directly under