himself persecuted; and the effect of that idea is to make persons who
are unintelligent persecutors and bigots themselves. To Philippe's
conception of life, the
universe began at his head and ended at his
feet, and the sun shone for him alone. The things he had seen in New
York, interpreted by his practical nature, carried away his last
scruples on the score of
morality. For such beings, there are but two
ways of
existence. Either they believe, or they do not believe; they
have the virtues of honest men, or they give themselves up to the
demands of necessity; in which case they proceed to turn their
slightest interests and each passing
impulse of their passions into
necessities.
Such a
system of life carries a man a long way. It was only in
appearance that Colonel Philippe retained the
frankness, plain-
dealing, and easy-going freedom of a soldier. This made him, in
reality, very dangerous; he seemed as guileless as a child, but,
thinking only of himself, he never did anything without reflecting
what he had better do,--like a wily
lawyer planning some trick "a la
Maitre Gonin"; words cost him nothing, and he said as many as he could
to get people to believe. If,
unfortunately, some one refused to
accept the explanations with which he justified the contradictions
between his conduct and his professions, the
colonel, who was a good
shot and could defy the most adroit fencing-master, and possessed the
coolness of one to whom life is
indifferent, was quite ready to demand
satisfaction for the first sharp word; and when a man shows himself
prepared for
violence there is little more to be said. His imposing
stature had taken on a certain rotundity, his face was bronzed from
exposure in Texas, he was still succinct in speech, and had acquired
the
decisive tone of a man obliged to make himself feared among the
populations of a new world. Thus developed,
plainly dressed, his body
trained to
endurance by his recent hardships, Philippe in the eyes of
his mother was a hero; in point of fact, he had simply become what
people (not to mince matters) call a blackguard.
Shocked at the destitution of her cherished son, Madame Bridau bought
him a complete
outfit of clothes at Havre. After listening to the tale
of his woes, she had not the heart to stop his drinking and eating and
amusing himself as a man just returned from the Champ d'Asile was
likely to eat and drink and
divert himself. It was certainly a fine
conception,--that of conquering Texas with the remains of the imperial
army. The
failure was less in the idea than in the men who conceived
it; for Texas is to-day a
republic, with a future full of promise.
This
scheme of Liberalism under the Restoration
distinctly proves that
the interests of the party were
purelyselfish and not national,
seeking power and nothing else. Neither men, nor occasion, nor cause,
nor
devotion were
lacking; only the money and the support of the
hypocritical party at home who dispensed
enormous sums, but gave
nothing when it came to recovering empire. Household managers like
Agathe have a plain common-sense which
enables them to
perceive such
political chicane: the poor woman saw the truth through the lines of
her son's tale; for she had read, in the exile's interests, all the
pompous editorials of the
constitutional journals, and watched the
management of the famous
subscription, which produced
barely one
hundred and fifty thousand francs when it ought to have yielded five
or six millions. The Liberal leaders soon found out that they were
playing into the hands of Louis XVIII. by exporting the glorious
remnants of our grand army, and they
promptlyabandoned to their fate
the most
devoted, the most
ardent, the most
enthusiastic of its
heroes,--those, in short, who had gone in the advance. Agathe was
never able, however, to make her son see that he was more duped than
persecuted. With blind
belief in her idol, she
supposed herself
ignorant, and deplored, as Philippe did, the evil times which had done
him such wrong. Up to this time he was, to her mind, throughout his
misfortunes, less
faulty than victimized by his noble nature, his
energy, the fall of the Emperor, the duplicity of the Liberals, and
the rancor of the Bourbons against the Bonapartists. During the week
at Havre, a week which was
horriblycostly, she dared not ask him to
make terms with the royal government and apply to the
minister of war.
She had hard work to get him away from Havre, where living is very
expensive, and to bring him back to Paris before her money gave out.
Madame Descoings and Joseph, who were awaiting their
arrival in the
courtyard of the coach-office of the Messageries Royales, were struck
with the change in Agathe's face.
"Your mother has aged ten years in two months," whispered the
Descoings to Joseph, as they all embraced, and the two trunks were
being handed down.
"How do you do, mere Descoings?" was the cool greeting the
colonelbestowed on the old woman whom Joseph was in the habit of calling
"maman Descoings."
"I have no money to pay for a hackney-coach," said Agathe, in a sad
voice.
"I have," replied the young
painter. "What a splendid color Philippe
has turned!" he cried, looking at his brother.
"Yes, I've browned like a pipe," said Philippe. "But as for you,
you're not a bit changed, little man."
Joseph, who was now twenty-one, and much thought of by the friends who
had stood by him in his days of trial, felt his own strength and was
aware of his
talent; he represented the art of
painting in a
circle of
young men whose lives were
devoted to science, letters,
politics, and
philosophy. Consequently, he was wounded by his brother's contempt,
which Philippe still further emphasized with a
gesture, pulling his
ears as if he were still a child. Agathe noticed the
coolness which
succeeded the first glow of
tenderness on the part of Joseph and
Madame Descoings; but she hastened to tell them of Philippe's
sufferings in exile, and so lessened it. Madame Descoings, wishing to
make a
festival of the return of the
prodigal, as she called him under
her
breath, had prepared one of her good dinners, to which old
Claparon and the elder Desroches were invited. All the family friends
were to come, and did come, in the evening. Joseph had invited Leon
Giraud, d'Arthez, Michel Chrestien, Fulgence Ridal, and Horace
Bianchon, his friends of the
fraternity. Madame Descoings had promised
Bixiou, her
so-called step-son, that the young people should play at
ecarte. Desroches the younger, who had now taken, under his father's
stern rule, his degree at law, was also of the party. Du Bruel,
Claparon, Desroches, and the Abbe Loraux carefully observed the
returned exile, whose manners and
coarse features, and voice roughened
by the abuse of liquors, together with his
vulgar glance and
phraseology, alarmed them not a little. While Joseph was placing the
card-tables, the more
intimate of the family friends surrounded Agathe
and asked,--
"What do you intend to make of Philippe?"
"I don't know," she answered, "but he is determined not to serve the
Bourbons."
"Then it will be very difficult for you to find him a place in France.
If he won't re-enter the army, he can't be
readily got into government
employ," said old Du Bruel. "And you have only to listen to him to see
he could never, like my son, make his fortune by
writing plays."
The
motion of Agathe's eyes, with which alone she replied to this
speech, showed how
anxious Philippe's future made her; they all kept
silence. The exile himself, Bixiou, and the younger Desroches were
playing at ecarte, a game which was then the rage.
"Maman Descoings, my brother has no money to play with," whispered
Joseph in the good woman's ear.
The devotee of the Royal Lottery fetched twenty francs and gave them
to the artist, who slipped them
secretly into his brother's hand. All
the company were now assembled. There were two tables of boston; and
the party grew
lively. Philippe proved a bad
player: after
winning for
awhile, he began to lose; and by eleven o'clock he owed fifty francs
to young Desroches and to Bixiou. The
racket and the
disputes at the
ecarte table resounded more than once in the ears of the more peaceful
boston
players, who were watching Philippe surreptitiously. The exile
showed such signs of bad
temper that in his final
dispute with the
younger Desroches, who was none too
amiable himself, the elder
Desroches joined in, and though his son was
decidedly in the right, he
declared he was in the wrong, and
forbade him to play any more. Madame
Descoings did the same with her
grandson, who was
beginning to let fly
certain witticisms; and although Philippe, so far, had not understood
him, there was always a chance that one of the barbed arrows might