and had
learned a good deal of life during his four years in a
minister's
cabinet. Kindly,
amiable, and over-modest, with a heart
full of pure and sound feelings, he was
averse to putting himself in
the foreground. He loved his country, and wished to serve her, but
notoriety abashed him. To him the place of secretary to a Napoleon was
far more
desirable than that of the
minister himself. As soon as he
became the friend and secretary of Canalis he did a great
amount of
labor for him, but by the end of eighteen months he had
learned to
understand the barrenness of a nature that was
poetic through
literaryexpression only. The truth of the old
proverb, "The cowl doesn't make
the monk," is eminently shown in
literature. It is
extremely rare to
find among
literary men a nature and a
talent that are in perfect
accord. The faculties are not the man himself. This disconnection,
whose
phenomena are
amazing, proceeds from an unexplored, possibly an
unexplorable
mystery. The brain and its products of all kinds (for in
art the hand of man is a
continuation of his brain) are a world apart,
which flourishes beneath the cranium in
absoluteindependence of
sentiments, feelings, and all that is called
virtue, the
virtue of
citizens, fathers, and private life. This, however true, is not
absolutely so; nothing is
absolutely true of man. It is certain that a
debauched man will dissipate his
talent, that a
drunkard will waste it
in libations; while, on the other hand, no man can give himself
talentby
wholesome living:
nevertheless, it is all but proved that Virgil,
the
painter of love, never loved a Dido, and that Rousseau, the model
citizen, had enough pride to had furnished forth an
aristocracy. On
the other hand Raphael and Michael Angelo do present the glorious
conjunction of
genius with the lines of
character. Talent in men is
therefore, in all moral points, very much what beauty is in women,--
simply a promise. Let us,
therefore,
doubly admire the man in whom
both heart and
character equal the
perfection of his
genius.
When Ernest discovered within his poet an
ambitious egoist, the worst
species of egoist (for there are some
amiable forms of the vice), he
felt a
delicacy in leaving him. Honest natures cannot easily break the
ties that bind them, especially if they have tied them voluntarily.
The secretary was
therefore still living in
domestic relations with
the poet when Modeste's letter arrived,--in such relations, be it
said, as involved a
perpetual sacrifice of his feelings. La Briere
admitted the
frankness with which Canalis had laid himself bare before
him. Moreover, the defects of the man, who will always be considered a
great poet during his
lifetime and flattered as Martmontel was
flattered, were only the wrong side of his
brilliant qualities.
Without his
vanity and his magniloquence it is possible that he might
never have acquired the sonorous elocution which is so useful and even
necessary an
instrument in political life. His cold-bloodedness
touched at certain points on rectitude and
loyalty; his ostentation
had a
lining of
generosity. Results, we must remember, are to the
profit of society; motives concern God.
But after the
arrival of Modeste's letter Ernest deceived himself no
longer as to Canalis. The pair had just finished breakfast and were
talking together in the poet's study, which was on the ground-floor of
a house
standing back in a court-yard, and looked into a garden.
"There!" exclaimed Canalis, "I was telling Madame de Chaulieu the
other day that I ought to bring out another poem; I knew
admirationwas
running short, for I have had no
anonymous letters for a long
time."
"Is it from an unknown woman?"
"Unknown? yes!--a D'Este, in Havre;
evidently a feigned name."
Canalis passed the letter to La Briere. The little poem, with all its
hidden enthusiasms, in short, poor Modeste's heart, was disdainfully
handed over, with the
gesture of a spoiled dandy.
"It is a fine thing," said the
lawyer, "to have the power to attract
such feelings; to force a poor woman to step out of the habits which
nature, education, and the world
dictate to her, to break through
conventions. What privileges
genius wins! A letter such as this,
written by a young girl--a
genuine young girl--without
hiddenmeanings, with real enthusiasm--"
"Well, what?" said Canalis.
"Why, a man might suffer as much as Tasso and yet feel recompensed,"
cried La Briere.
"So he might, my dear fellow, by a first letter of that kind, and even
a second; but how about the thirtieth? And suppose you find out that
these young enthusiasts are little jades? Or imagine a poet rushing
along the
brilliant path in search of her, and
finding at the end of
it an old Englishwoman sitting on a mile-stone and
offering you her
hand! Or suppose this
post-office angel should really be a rather ugly
girl in quest of a husband? Ah, my boy! the effervescence then goes
down."
"I begin to perceive," said La Briere, smiling, "that there is
something
poisonous in glory, as there is in certain dazzling
flowers."
"And then," resumed Canalis, "all these women, even when they are
simple-minded, have ideals, and you can't satisfy them. They never say
to themselves that a poet is a vain man, as I am accused of being;
they can't
conceive what it is for an author to be at the mercy of a
feverish
excitement, which makes him
disagreeable and capricious; they
want him always grand, noble; it never occurs to them that
genius is a
disease, or that Nathan lives with Florine; that D'Arthez is too fat,
and Joseph Bridau is too thin; that Beranger limps, and that their own
particular deity may have the snuffles! A Lucien de Rubempre, poet and
cupid, is a phoenix. And why should I go in search of compliments only
to pull the string of a shower-bath of
horrid looks from some
disillusioned female?"
"Then the true poet," said La Briere, "ought to remain
hidden, like
God, in the centre of his worlds, and be only seen in his own
creations."
"Glory would cost too dear in that case," answered Canalis. "There is
some good in life. As for that letter," he added,
taking a cup of tea,
"I assure you that when a noble and beautiful woman loves a poet she
does not hide in the corner boxes, like a
duchess in love with an
actor; she feels that her beauty, her fortune, her name are protection
enough, and she dares to say
openly, like an epic poem: 'I am the
nymph Calypso, enamored of Telemachus.' Mystery and feigned names are
the resources of little minds. For my part I no longer answer masks--"
"I should love a woman who came to seek me," cried La Briere. "To all
you say I reply, my dear Canalis, that it cannot be an ordinary girl
who aspires to a
distinguished man; such a girl has too little trust,
too much
vanity; she is too faint-hearted. Only a star, a--"
"--
princess!" cried Canalis, bursting into a shout of
laughter; "only
a
princess can
descend to him. My dear fellow, that doesn't happen
once in a hundred years. Such a love is like that flower that blossoms
every century. Princesses, let me tell you, if they are young, rich,
and beautiful, have something else to think of; they are surrounded
like rare plants by a hedge of fools, well-bred idiots as hollow as
elder-bushes! My dream, alas! the
crystal of my dream, garlanded from
hence to the Correze with roses--ah! I cannot speak of it--it is in
fragments at my feet, and has long been so. No, no, all
anonymousletters are begging letters; and what sort of begging? Write yourself
to that young woman, if you suppose her young and pretty, and you'll
find out. There is nothing like experience. As for me, I can't
reasonably be expected to love every woman; Apollo, at any rate he of
Belvedere, is a
delicate consumptive who must take care of his
health."
"But when a woman writes to you in this way her excuse must certainly
be in her
consciousness that she is able to
eclipse in
tenderness and
beauty every other woman," said Ernest, "and I should think you might
feel some curiosity--"
"Ah," said Canalis, "permit me, my
juvenile friend, to abide by the
beautiful
duchess who is all my joy."
"You are right, you are right!" cried Ernest. However, the young
secretary read and re-read Modeste's letter, striving to guess the
mind of its
hidden writer.
"There is not the least fine-
writing here," he said, "she does not
even talk of your
genius; she speaks to your heart. In your place I
should feel tempted by this
fragrance of modesty,--this proposed
agreement--"
"Then, sign it!" cried Canalis, laughing; "answer the letter and go to
the end of the adventure yourself. You shall tell me the results three
months hence--if the affair lasts so long."
Four days later Modeste received the following letter, written on
extremely fine paper, protected by two envelopes, and sealed with the
arms of Canalis.