him a sign to sit down, and said, "Let us
converse, Monsieur."
The two women went into Madame Margaritis' bedroom, leaving the door
open so as to hear the conversation, and
interpose if it became
necessary. They were hardly installed before Monsieur Vernier crept
softly up through the field and,
opening a window, got into the
bedroom without noise.
"Monsieur has
doubtless been in business--?" began Gaudissart.
"Public business," answered Margaritis, interrupting him. "I
pacificated Calabria under the reign of King Murat."
"Bless me! if he hasn't gone to Calabria!" whispered Monsieur Vernier.
"In that case," said Gaudissart, "we shall quickly understand each
other."
"I am listening," said Margaritis,
striking the attitude taken by a
man when he poses to a portrait-
painter.
"Monsieur," said Gaudissart, who chanced to be turning his watch-key
with a rotatory and
periodical click which caught the attention of the
lunatic and contributed no doubt to keep him quiet. "Monsieur, if you
were not a man of superior intelligence" (the fool bowed), "I should
content myself with merely laying before you the material advantages
of this
enterprise, whose
psychological aspects it would be a waste of
time to explain to you. Listen! Of all kinds of social
wealth, is not
time the most precious? To economize time is,
consequently, to become
wealthy. Now, is there anything that consumes so much time as those
anxieties which I call 'pot-boiling'?--a
vulgar expression, but it
puts the whole question in a nutshell. For
instance, what can eat up
more time than the
ability" target="_blank" title="n.无能,无力">
inability to give proper
security to persons from
whom you seek to borrow money when, poor at the moment, you are
nevertheless rich in hope?"
"Money,--yes, that's right," said Margaritis.
"Well, Monsieur, I am sent into the departments by a company of
bankers and
capitalists, who have apprehended the
enormous waste which
rising men of
talent are thus making of time, and,
consequently, of
intelligence and
productiveability. We have seized the idea of
capitalizing for such men their future prospects, and cashing their
talents by discounting--what? TIME; securing the value of it to their
survivors. I may say that it is no longer a question of economizing
time, but of giving it a price, a
quotation; of representing in a
pecuniary sense those products developed by time which
presumably you
possess in the region of your
intellect; of representing also the
moral qualities with which you are endowed, and which are, Monsieur,
living forces,--as living as a
cataract, as a
steam-engine of three,
ten, twenty, fifty horse-power. Ha! this is progress! the
movementonward to a better state of things; a
movement born of the spirit of
our epoch; a
movementessentiallyprogressive, as I shall prove to you
when we come to consider the principles involved in the logical
co-ordination of the social
fabric. I will now explain my meaning by
literal examples, leaving aside all
purelyabstractreasoning, which I
call the
mathematics of thought. Instead of being, as you are, a
proprietor living upon your
income, let us suppose that you are
painter, a
musician, an artist, or a poet--"
"I am a
painter," said the
lunatic.
"Well, so be it. I see you take my metaphor. You are a
painter; you
have a
glorious future, a rich future before you. But I go still
farther--"
At these words the
madman looked
anxiously at Gaudissart, thinking he
meant to go away; but was reassured when he saw that he kept his seat.
"You may even be nothing at all," said Gaudissart, going on with his
phrases, "but you are
conscious of yourself; you feel yourself--"
"I feel myself," said the
lunatic.
"--you feel yourself a great man; you say to yourself, 'I will be a
minister of state.' Well, then, you--
painter, artist, man of letters,
statesman of the future--you
reckon upon your
talents, you estimate
their value, you rate them, let us say, at a hundred thousand
crowns--"
"Do you give me a hundred thousand crowns?"
"Yes, Monsieur, as you will see. Either your heirs and assigns will
receive them if you die, for the company contemplates that event, or
you will receive them in the long run through your works of art, your
writings, or your
fortunate speculations during your
lifetime. But, as
I have already had the honor to tell you, when you have once fixed
upon the value of your
intellectual capital,--for it is
intellectual
capital,--seize that idea firmly,--
intellectual--"
"I understand," said the fool.
"You sign a
policy of insurance with a company which recognizes in you
a value of a hundred thousand crowns; in you, poet--"
"I am a
painter," said the
lunatic.
"Yes," resumed Gaudissart,--"
painter, poet,
musician, statesman--and
binds itself to pay them over to your family, your heirs, if, by
reason of your death, the hopes foundered on your
intellectual capital
should be
overthrown for you
personally. The
payment of the
premium is
all that is required to protect--"
"The money-box," said the
lunatic,
sharply interrupting him.
"Ah! naturally; yes. I see that Monsieur understands business."
"Yes," said the
madman. "I established the Territorial Bank in the Rue
des Fosses-Montmartre at Paris in 1798."
"For," resumed Gaudissart, going back to his
premium, "in order to
meet the
payments on the
intellectual capital which each man
recognizes and esteems in himself, it is of course necessary that each
should pay a certain
premium, three per cent; an
annual due of three
per cent. Thus, by the
payment of this
trifling sum, a mere nothing,
you protect your family from
disastrous results at your death--"
"But I live," said the fool.
"Ah! yes; you mean if you should live long? That is the usual
objection,--a
vulgarprejudice. I fully agree that if we had not
foreseen and demolished it we might feel we were
unworthy of being--
what? What are we, after all? Book-keepers in the great Bureau of
Intellect. Monsieur, I don't apply these remarks to you, but I meet on
all sides men who make it a business to teach new ideas and disclose
chains of
reasoning to people who turn pale at the first word. On my
word of honor, it is pitiable! But that's the way of the world, and I
don't
pretend to
reform it. Your
objection, Monsieur, is really sheer
nonsense."
"Why?" asked the
lunatic.
"Why?--this is why: because, if you live and possess the qualities
which are estimated in your
policy against the chances of death,--now,
attend to this--"
"I am attending."
"Well, then, you have succeeded in life; and you have succeeded
because of the said insurance. You doubled your chances of success by
getting rid of the anxieties you were dragging about with you in the
shape of wife and children who might
otherwise be left
destitute at
your death. If you
attain this
certainty, you have touched the value
of your
intellectual capital, on which the cost of insurance is but a
trifle,--a mere
trifle, a bagatelle."
"That's a fine idea!"
"Ah! is it not, Monsieur?" cried Gaudissart. "I call this
enterprisethe
exchequer of beneficence; a
mutual insurance against
poverty; or,
if you like it better, the discounting, the cashing, of
talent. For
talent, Monsieur, is a bill of exchange which Nature gives to the man
of
genius, and which often has a long time to run before it falls
due."
"That is usury!" cried Margaritis.
"The devil! he's keen, the old fellow! I've made a mistake," thought
Gaudissart, "I must catch him with other chaff. I'll try humbug No. 1.
Not at all," he said aloud, "for you who--"
"Will you take a glass of wine?" asked Margaritis.
"With pleasure," replied Gaudissart.
"Wife, give us a bottle of the wine that is in the puncheons. You are
here at the very head of Vouvray," he continued, with a
gesture of the
hand, "the
vineyard of Margaritis."
The maid-servant brought glasses and a bottle of wine of the vintage
of 1819. The good-man filled a glass with circumspection and offered
it to Gaudissart, who drank it up.