<h3><SPAN name="linkC2HCH0051" id="linkC2HCH0051"></SPAN> Chapter 51. Pyramus and Thisbe</h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>bout two-thirds of the
way along the Faubourg Saint-Honoré, and in the rear of one of the most
imposing mansions in this rich neighborhood, where the various houses vie with
each other for elegance of design and magnificence of construction, extended a
large garden, where the wide-spreading chestnut-trees raised their heads high
above the walls in a solid rampart, and with the coming of every spring
scattered a shower of delicate pink and white blossoms into the large stone
vases that stood upon the two square pilasters of a curiously wrought iron
gate, that dated from the time of Louis XIII.</p>
<p>This noble entrance, however, in spite of its striking appearance and the
graceful effect of the geraniums planted in the two vases, as they waved their
variegated leaves in the wind and charmed the eye with their scarlet bloom, had
fallen into utter disuse. The proprietors of the mansion had many years before
thought it best to confine themselves to the possession of the house itself,
with its thickly planted courtyard, opening into the Faubourg Saint-Honoré, and
to the garden shut in by this gate, which formerly communicated with a fine
kitchen-garden of about an acre. For the demon of speculation drew a line, or
in other words projected a street, at the farther side of the kitchen-garden.
The street was laid out, a name was chosen and posted up on an iron plate, but
before construction was begun, it occurred to the possessor of the property
that a handsome sum might be obtained for the ground then devoted to fruits and
vegetables, by building along the line of the proposed street, and so making it
a branch of communication with the Faubourg Saint-Honoré itself, one of the
most important thoroughfares in the city of Paris.</p>
<p>In matters of speculation, however, though “man proposes,” yet
“money disposes.” From some such difficulty the newly named street
died almost in birth, and the purchaser of the kitchen-garden, having paid a
high price for it, and being quite unable to find anyone willing to take his
bargain off his hands without a considerable loss, yet still clinging to the
belief that at some future day he should obtain a sum for it that would repay
him, not only for his past outlay, but also the interest upon the capital
locked up in his new acquisition, contented himself with letting the ground
temporarily to some market-gardeners, at a yearly rental of 500 francs.</p>
<p>And so, as we have said, the iron gate leading into the kitchen-garden had been
closed up and left to the rust, which bade fair before long to eat off its
hinges, while to prevent the ignoble glances of the diggers and delvers of the
ground from presuming to sully the aristocratic enclosure belonging to the
mansion, the gate had been boarded up to a height of six feet. True, the planks
were not so closely adjusted but that a hasty peep might be obtained through
their interstices; but the strict decorum and rigid propriety of the
inhabitants of the house left no grounds for apprehending that advantage would
be taken of that circumstance.</p>
<p>Horticulture seemed, however, to have been abandoned in the deserted
kitchen-garden; and where cabbages, carrots, radishes, peas, and melons had
once flourished, a scanty crop of lucern alone bore evidence of its being
deemed worthy of cultivation. A small, low door gave egress from the walled
space we have been describing into the projected street, the ground having been
abandoned as unproductive by its various renters, and had now fallen so
completely in general estimation as to return not even the one-half per cent it
had originally paid. Towards the house the chestnut-trees we have before
mentioned rose high above the wall, without in any way affecting the growth of
other luxuriant shrubs and flowers that eagerly dressed forward to fill up the
vacant spaces, as though asserting their right to enjoy the boon of light and
air. At one corner, where the foliage became so thick as almost to shut out
day, a large stone bench and sundry rustic seats indicated that this sheltered
spot was either in general favor or particular use by some inhabitant of the
house, which was faintly discernible through the dense mass of verdure that
partially concealed it, though situated but a hundred paces off.</p>
<p>Whoever had selected this retired portion of the grounds as the boundary of a
walk, or as a place for meditation, was abundantly justified in the choice by
the absence of all glare, the cool, refreshing shade, the screen it afforded
from the scorching rays of the sun, that found no entrance there even during
the burning days of hottest summer, the incessant and melodious warbling of
birds, and the entire removal from either the noise of the street or the bustle
of the mansion. On the evening of one of the warmest days spring had yet
bestowed on the inhabitants of Paris, might be seen negligently thrown upon the
stone bench, a book, a parasol, and a work-basket, from which hung a partly
embroidered cambric handkerchief, while at a little distance from these
articles was a young woman, standing close to the iron gate, endeavoring to
discern something on the other side by means of the openings in the
planks,—the earnestness of her attitude and the fixed gaze with which she
seemed to seek the object of her wishes, proving how much her feelings were
interested in the matter.</p>
<p>At that instant the little side-gate leading from the waste ground to the
street was noiselessly opened, and a tall, powerful young man appeared. He was
dressed in a common gray blouse and velvet cap, but his carefully arranged
hair, beard and moustache, all of the richest and glossiest black, ill accorded
with his plebeian attire. After casting a rapid glance around him, in order to
assure himself that he was unobserved, he entered by the small gate, and,
carefully closing and securing it after him, proceeded with a hurried step
towards the barrier.</p>
<p>At the sight of him she expected, though probably not in such a costume, the
young woman started in terror, and was about to make a hasty retreat. But the
eye of love had already seen, even through the narrow chinks of the wooden
palisades, the movement of the white robe, and observed the fluttering of the
blue sash. Pressing his lips close to the planks, he exclaimed:</p>
<p>“Don’t be alarmed, Valentine—it is I!”</p>
<p>Again the timid girl found courage to return to the gate, saying, as she did
so:</p>
<p>“And why do you come so late today? It is almost dinner-time, and I had
to use no little diplomacy to get rid of my watchful stepmother, my too-devoted
maid, and my troublesome brother, who is always teasing me about coming to work
at my embroidery, which I am in a fair way never to get done. So pray excuse
yourself as well as you can for having made me wait, and, after that, tell me
why I see you in a dress so singular that at first I did not recognize
you.”</p>
<p>“Dearest Valentine,” said the young man, “the difference
between our respective stations makes me fear to offend you by speaking of my
love, but yet I cannot find myself in your presence without longing to pour
forth my soul, and tell you how fondly I adore you. If it be but to carry away
with me the recollection of such sweet moments, I could even thank you for
chiding me, for it leaves me a gleam of hope, that if you did not expect me
(and that indeed would be worse than vanity to suppose), at least I was in your
thoughts. You asked me the cause of my being late, and why I come disguised. I
will candidly explain the reason of both, and I trust to your goodness to
pardon me. I have chosen a trade.”</p>
<p>“A trade? Oh, Maximilian, how can you jest at a time when we have such
deep cause for uneasiness?”</p>
<p>“Heaven keep me from jesting with that which is far dearer to me than
life itself! But listen to me, Valentine, and I will tell you all about it. I
became weary of ranging fields and scaling walls, and seriously alarmed at the
idea suggested by you, that if caught hovering about here your father would
very likely have me sent to prison as a thief. That would compromise the honor
of the French army, to say nothing of the fact that the continual presence of a
captain of Spahis in a place where no warlike projects could be supposed to
account for it might well create surprise; so I have become a gardener, and,
consequently, adopted the costume of my calling.”</p>
<p>“What excessive nonsense you talk, Maximilian!”</p>
<p>“Nonsense? Pray do not call what I consider the wisest action of my life
by such a name. Consider, by becoming a gardener I effectually screen our
meetings from all suspicion or danger.”</p>
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<p>“I beseech of you, Maximilian, to cease trifling, and tell me what you
really mean.”</p>
<p>“Simply, that having ascertained that the piece of ground on which I
stand was to let, I made application for it, was readily accepted by the
proprietor, and am now master of this fine crop of lucern. Think of that,
Valentine! There is nothing now to prevent my building myself a little hut on
my plantation, and residing not twenty yards from you. Only imagine what
happiness that would afford me. I can scarcely contain myself at the bare idea.
Such felicity seems above all price—as a thing impossible and
unattainable. But would you believe that I purchase all this delight, joy, and
happiness, for which I would cheerfully have surrendered ten years of my life,
at the small cost of 500 francs per annum, paid quarterly? Henceforth we have
nothing to fear. I am on my own ground, and have an undoubted right to place a
ladder against the wall, and to look over when I please, without having any
apprehensions of being taken off by the police as a suspicious character. I may
also enjoy the precious privilege of assuring you of my fond, faithful, and
unalterable affection, whenever you visit your favorite bower, unless, indeed,
it offends your pride to listen to professions of love from the lips of a poor
workingman, clad in a blouse and cap.”</p>
<p>A faint cry of mingled pleasure and surprise escaped from the lips of
Valentine, who almost instantly said, in a saddened tone, as though some
envious cloud darkened the joy which illumined her heart:</p>
<p>“Alas, no, Maximilian, this must not be, for many reasons. We should
presume too much on our own strength, and, like others, perhaps, be led astray
by our blind confidence in each other’s prudence.”</p>
<p>“How can you for an instant entertain so unworthy a thought, dear
Valentine? Have I not, from the first blessed hour of our acquaintance,
schooled all my words and actions to your sentiments and ideas? And you have, I
am sure, the fullest confidence in my honor. When you spoke to me of
experiencing a vague and indefinite sense of coming danger, I placed myself
blindly and devotedly at your service, asking no other reward than the pleasure
of being useful to you; and have I ever since, by word or look, given you cause
of regret for having selected me from the numbers that would willingly have
sacrificed their lives for you? You told me, my dear Valentine, that you were
engaged to M. d’Épinay, and that your father was resolved upon completing
the match, and that from his will there was no appeal, as M. de Villefort was
never known to change a determination once formed. I kept in the background, as
you wished, and waited, not for the decision of your heart or my own, but
hoping that Providence would graciously interpose in our behalf, and order
events in our favor. But what cared I for delays or difficulties, Valentine, as
long as you confessed that you loved me, and took pity on me? If you will only
repeat that avowal now and then, I can endure anything.”</p>
<p>“Ah, Maximilian, that is the very thing that makes you so bold, and which
renders me at once so happy and unhappy, that I frequently ask myself whether
it is better for me to endure the harshness of my stepmother, and her blind
preference for her own child, or to be, as I now am, insensible to any pleasure
save such as I find in these meetings, so fraught with danger to both.”</p>
<p>“I will not admit that word,” returned the young man; “it is
at once cruel and unjust. Is it possible to find a more submissive slave than
myself? You have permitted me to converse with you from time to time,
Valentine, but forbidden my ever following you in your walks or
elsewhere—have I not obeyed? And since I found means to enter this
enclosure to exchange a few words with you through this gate—to be close
to you without really seeing you—have I ever asked so much as to touch
the hem of your gown or tried to pass this barrier which is but a trifle to one
of my youth and strength? Never has a complaint or a murmur escaped me. I have
been bound by my promises as rigidly as any knight of olden times. Come, come,
dearest Valentine, confess that what I say is true, lest I be tempted to call
you unjust.”</p>
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<p>“It is true,” said Valentine, as she passed the end of her slender
fingers through a small opening in the planks, and permitted Maximilian to
press his lips to them, “and you are a true and faithful friend; but
still you acted from motives of self-interest, my dear Maximilian, for you well
knew that from the moment in which you had manifested an opposite spirit all
would have been ended between us. You promised to bestow on me the friendly
affection of a brother. For I have no friend but yourself upon earth, who am
neglected and forgotten by my father, harassed and persecuted by my stepmother,
and left to the sole companionship of a paralyzed and speechless old man, whose
withered hand can no longer press mine, and who can speak to me with the eye
alone, although there still lingers in his heart the warmest tenderness for his
poor grandchild. Oh, how bitter a fate is mine, to serve either as a victim or
an enemy to all who are stronger than myself, while my only friend and
supporter is a living corpse! Indeed, indeed, Maximilian, I am very miserable,
and if you love me it must be out of pity.”</p>
<p>“Valentine,” replied the young man, deeply affected, “I will
not say you are all I love in the world, for I dearly prize my sister and
brother-in-law; but my affection for them is calm and tranquil, in no manner
resembling what I feel for you. When I think of you my heart beats fast, the
blood burns in my veins, and I can hardly breathe; but I solemnly promise you
to restrain all this ardor, this fervor and intensity of feeling, until you
yourself shall require me to render them available in serving or assisting you.
M. Franz is not expected to return home for a year to come, I am told; in that
time many favorable and unforeseen chances may befriend us. Let us, then, hope
for the best; hope is so sweet a comforter. Meanwhile, Valentine, while
reproaching me with selfishness, think a little what you have been to
me—the beautiful but cold resemblance of a marble Venus. What promise of
future reward have you made me for all the submission and obedience I have
evinced?—none whatever. What granted me?—scarcely more. You tell me
of M. Franz d’Épinay, your betrothed lover, and you shrink from the idea
of being his wife; but tell me, Valentine, is there no other sorrow in your
heart? You see me devoted to you, body and soul, my life and each warm drop
that circles round my heart are consecrated to your service; you know full well
that my existence is bound up in yours—that were I to lose you I would
not outlive the hour of such crushing misery; yet you speak with calmness of
the prospect of your being the wife of another! Oh, Valentine, were I in your
place, and did I feel conscious, as you do, of being worshipped, adored, with
such a love as mine, a hundred times at least should I have passed my hand
between these iron bars, and said, ‘Take this hand, dearest Maximilian,
and believe that, living or dead, I am yours—yours only, and
forever!’”</p>
<p>The poor girl made no reply, but her lover could plainly hear her sobs and
tears. A rapid change took place in the young man’s feelings.</p>
<p>“Dearest, dearest Valentine,” exclaimed he, “forgive me if I
have offended you, and forget the words I spoke if they have unwittingly caused
you pain.”</p>
<p>“No, Maximilian, I am not offended,” answered she, “but do
you not see what a poor, helpless being I am, almost a stranger and an outcast
in my father’s house, where even he is seldom seen; whose will has been
thwarted, and spirits broken, from the age of ten years, beneath the iron rod
so sternly held over me; oppressed, mortified, and persecuted, day by day, hour
by hour, minute by minute, no person has cared for, even observed my
sufferings, nor have I ever breathed one word on the subject save to yourself.
Outwardly and in the eyes of the world, I am surrounded by kindness and
affection; but the reverse is the case. The general remark is, ‘Oh, it
cannot be expected that one of so stern a character as M. Villefort could
lavish the tenderness some fathers do on their daughters. What though she has
lost her own mother at a tender age, she has had the happiness to find a second
mother in Madame de Villefort.’ The world, however, is mistaken; my
father abandons me from utter indifference, while my stepmother detests me with
a hatred so much the more terrible because it is veiled beneath a continual
smile.”</p>
<p>“Hate you, sweet Valentine,” exclaimed the young man; “how is
it possible for anyone to do that?”</p>
<p>“Alas,” replied the weeping girl, “I am obliged to own that
my stepmother’s aversion to me arises from a very natural
source—her overweening love for her own child, my brother Edward.”</p>
<p>“But why should it?”</p>
<p>“I do not know; but, though unwilling to introduce money matters into our
present conversation, I will just say this much—that her extreme dislike
to me has its origin there; and I much fear she envies me the fortune I enjoy
in right of my mother, and which will be more than doubled at the death of M.
and Mme. de Saint-Méran, whose sole heiress I am. Madame de Villefort has
nothing of her own, and hates me for being so richly endowed. Alas, how gladly
would I exchange the half of this wealth for the happiness of at least sharing
my father’s love. God knows, I would prefer sacrificing the whole, so
that it would obtain me a happy and affectionate home.”</p>
<p>“Poor Valentine!”</p>
<p>“I seem to myself as though living a life of bondage, yet at the same
time am so conscious of my own weakness that I fear to break the restraint in
which I am held, lest I fall utterly helpless. Then, too, my father is not a
person whose orders may be infringed with impunity; protected as he is by his
high position and firmly established reputation for talent and unswerving
integrity, no one could oppose him; he is all-powerful even with the king; he
would crush you at a word. Dear Maximilian, believe me when I assure you that
if I do not attempt to resist my father’s commands it is more on your
account than my own.”</p>
<p>“But why, Valentine, do you persist in anticipating the worst,—why
picture so gloomy a future?”</p>
<p>“Because I judge it from the past.”</p>
<p>“Still, consider that although I may not be, strictly speaking, what is
termed an illustrious match for you, I am, for many reasons, not altogether so
much beneath your alliance. The days when such distinctions were so nicely
weighed and considered no longer exist in France, and the first families of the
monarchy have intermarried with those of the empire. The aristocracy of the
lance has allied itself with the nobility of the cannon. Now I belong to this
last-named class; and certainly my prospects of military preferment are most
encouraging as well as certain. My fortune, though small, is free and
unfettered, and the memory of my late father is respected in our country,
Valentine, as that of the most upright and honorable merchant of the city; I
say our country, because you were born not far from Marseilles.”</p>
<p>“Don’t speak of Marseilles, I beg of you, Maximilian; that one word
brings back my mother to my recollection—my angel mother, who died too
soon for myself and all who knew her; but who, after watching over her child
during the brief period allotted to her in this world, now, I fondly hope,
watches from her home in heaven. Oh, if my mother were still living, there
would be nothing to fear, Maximilian, for I would tell her that I loved you,
and she would protect us.”</p>
<p>“I fear, Valentine,” replied the lover, “that were she living
I should never have had the happiness of knowing you; you would then have been
too happy to have stooped from your grandeur to bestow a thought on me.”</p>
<p>“Now it is you who are unjust, Maximilian,” cried Valentine;
“but there is one thing I wish to know.”</p>
<p>“And what is that?” inquired the young man, perceiving that
Valentine hesitated.</p>
<p>“Tell me truly, Maximilian, whether in former days, when our fathers
dwelt at Marseilles, there was ever any misunderstanding between them?”</p>
<p>“Not that I am aware of,” replied the young man, “unless,
indeed, any ill-feeling might have arisen from their being of opposite
parties—your father was, as you know, a zealous partisan of the Bourbons,
while mine was wholly devoted to the emperor; there could not possibly be any
other difference between them. But why do you ask?”</p>
<p>“I will tell you,” replied the young girl, “for it is but
right you should know. Well, on the day when your appointment as an officer of
the Legion of Honor was announced in the papers, we were all sitting with my
grandfather, M. Noirtier; M. Danglars was there also—you recollect M.
Danglars, do you not, Maximilian, the banker, whose horses ran away with my
stepmother and little brother, and very nearly killed them? While the rest of
the company were discussing the approaching marriage of Mademoiselle Danglars,
I was reading the paper to my grandfather; but when I came to the paragraph
about you, although I had done nothing else but read it over to myself all the
morning (you know you had told me all about it the previous evening), I felt so
happy, and yet so nervous, at the idea of speaking your name aloud, and before
so many people, that I really think I should have passed it over, but for the
fear that my doing so might create suspicions as to the cause of my silence; so
I summoned up all my courage, and read it as firmly and as steadily as I
could.”</p>
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<p>“Dear Valentine!”</p>
<p>“Well, would you believe it? directly my father caught the sound of your
name he turned round quite hastily, and, like a poor silly thing, I was so
persuaded that everyone must be as much affected as myself by the utterance of
your name, that I was not surprised to see my father start, and almost tremble;
but I even thought (though that surely must have been a mistake) that M.
Danglars trembled too.”</p>
<p>“‘Morrel, Morrel,’ cried my father, ‘stop a bit;’
then knitting his brows into a deep frown, he added, ‘surely this cannot
be one of the Morrel family who lived at Marseilles, and gave us so much
trouble from their violent Bonapartism—I mean about the year 1815.’</p>
<p>“‘Yes,’ replied M. Danglars, ‘I believe he is the son
of the old shipowner.’”</p>
<p>“Indeed,” answered Maximilian; “and what did your father say
then, Valentine?”</p>
<p>“Oh, such a dreadful thing, that I don’t dare to tell you.”</p>
<p>“Always tell me everything,” said Maximilian with a smile.</p>
<p>“‘Ah,’ continued my father, still frowning, ‘their
idolized emperor treated these madmen as they deserved; he called them
‘food for cannon,’ which was precisely all they were good for; and
I am delighted to see that the present government have adopted this salutary
principle with all its pristine vigor; if Algiers were good for nothing but to
furnish the means of carrying so admirable an idea into practice, it would be
an acquisition well worthy of struggling to obtain. Though it certainly does
cost France somewhat dear to assert her rights in that uncivilized
country.’”</p>
<p>“Brutal politics, I must confess.” said Maximilian; “but
don’t attach any serious importance, dear, to what your father said. My
father was not a bit behind yours in that sort of talk. ‘Why,’ said
he, ‘does not the emperor, who has devised so many clever and efficient
modes of improving the art of war, organize a regiment of lawyers, judges and
legal practitioners, sending them in the hottest fire the enemy could maintain,
and using them to save better men?’ You see, my dear, that for
picturesque expression and generosity of spirit there is not much to choose
between the language of either party. But what did M. Danglars say to this
outburst on the part of the procureur?”</p>
<p>“Oh, he laughed, and in that singular manner so peculiar to
himself—half-malicious, half-ferocious; he almost immediately got up and
took his leave; then, for the first time, I observed the agitation of my
grandfather, and I must tell you, Maximilian, that I am the only person capable
of discerning emotion in his paralyzed frame. And I suspected that the
conversation that had been carried on in his presence (for they always say and
do what they like before the dear old man, without the smallest regard for his
feelings) had made a strong impression on his mind; for, naturally enough, it
must have pained him to hear the emperor he so devotedly loved and served
spoken of in that depreciating manner.”</p>
<p>“The name of M. Noirtier,” interposed Maximilian, “is
celebrated throughout Europe; he was a statesman of high standing, and you may
or may not know, Valentine, that he took a leading part in every Bonapartist
conspiracy set on foot during the restoration of the Bourbons.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I have often heard whispers of things that seem to me most
strange—the father a Bonapartist, the son a Royalist; what can have been
the reason of so singular a difference in parties and politics? But to resume
my story; I turned towards my grandfather, as though to question him as to the
cause of his emotion; he looked expressively at the newspaper I had been
reading. ‘What is the matter, dear grandfather?’ said I, ‘are
you pleased?’ He gave me a sign in the affirmative. ‘With what my
father said just now?’ He returned a sign in the negative. ‘Perhaps
you liked what M. Danglars said?’ Another sign in the negative.
‘Oh, then, you were glad to hear that M. Morrel (I didn’t dare to
say Maximilian) had been made an officer of the Legion of Honor?’ He
signified assent; only think of the poor old man’s being so pleased to
think that you, who were a perfect stranger to him, had been made an officer of
the Legion of Honor! Perhaps it was a mere whim on his part, for he is falling,
they say, into second childhood, but I love him for showing so much interest in
you.”</p>
<p>“How singular,” murmured Maximilian; “your father hates me,
while your grandfather, on the contrary—What strange feelings are aroused
by politics.”</p>
<p>“Hush,” cried Valentine, suddenly; “someone is coming!”
Maximilian leaped at one bound into his crop of lucern, which he began to pull
up in the most ruthless way, under the pretext of being occupied in weeding it.</p>
<p>“Mademoiselle, mademoiselle!” exclaimed a voice from behind the
trees. “Madame is searching for you everywhere; there is a visitor in the
drawing-room.”</p>
<p>“A visitor?” inquired Valentine, much agitated; “who is
it?”</p>
<p>“Some grand personage—a prince I believe they said—the Count
of Monte Cristo.”</p>
<p>“I will come directly,” cried Valentine aloud.</p>
<p>The name of Monte Cristo sent an electric shock through the young man on the
other side of the iron gate, to whom Valentine’s <i>“I am
coming”</i> was the customary signal of farewell.</p>
<p>“Now, then,” said Maximilian, leaning on the handle of his spade,
“I would give a good deal to know how it comes about that the Count of
Monte Cristo is acquainted with M. de Villefort.”</p>
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