<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN> CHAPTER VII.<br/>Monseigneur in Town </h2>
<p class="pfirst"><span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>onseigneur, one of the great lords in power at the Court, held his
fortnightly reception in his grand hotel in Paris. Monseigneur was in his
inner room, his sanctuary of sanctuaries, the Holiest of Holiests to the
crowd of worshippers in the suite of rooms without. Monseigneur was about
to take his chocolate. Monseigneur could swallow a great many things with
ease, and was by some few sullen minds supposed to be rather rapidly
swallowing France; but, his morning’s chocolate could not so much as get
into the throat of Monseigneur, without the aid of four strong men besides
the Cook.</p>
<p>Yes. It took four men, all four ablaze with gorgeous decoration, and the
Chief of them unable to exist with fewer than two gold watches in his
pocket, emulative of the noble and chaste fashion set by Monseigneur, to
conduct the happy chocolate to Monseigneur’s lips. One lacquey carried the
chocolate-pot into the sacred presence; a second, milled and frothed the
chocolate with the little instrument he bore for that function; a third,
presented the favoured napkin; a fourth (he of the two gold watches),
poured the chocolate out. It was impossible for Monseigneur to dispense
with one of these attendants on the chocolate and hold his high place
under the admiring Heavens. Deep would have been the blot upon his
escutcheon if his chocolate had been ignobly waited on by only three men;
he must have died of two.</p>
<p>Monseigneur had been out at a little supper last night, where the Comedy
and the Grand Opera were charmingly represented. Monseigneur was out at a
little supper most nights, with fascinating company. So polite and so
impressible was Monseigneur, that the Comedy and the Grand Opera had far
more influence with him in the tiresome articles of state affairs and
state secrets, than the needs of all France. A happy circumstance for
France, as the like always is for all countries similarly favoured!—always
was for England (by way of example), in the regretted days of the merry
Stuart who sold it.</p>
<p>Monseigneur had one truly noble idea of general public business, which
was, to let everything go on in its own way; of particular public
business, Monseigneur had the other truly noble idea that it must all go
his way—tend to his own power and pocket. Of his pleasures, general
and particular, Monseigneur had the other truly noble idea, that the world
was made for them. The text of his order (altered from the original by
only a pronoun, which is not much) ran: “The earth and the fulness thereof
are mine, saith Monseigneur.”</p>
<p>Yet, Monseigneur had slowly found that vulgar embarrassments crept into
his affairs, both private and public; and he had, as to both classes of
affairs, allied himself perforce with a Farmer-General. As to finances
public, because Monseigneur could not make anything at all of them, and
must consequently let them out to somebody who could; as to finances
private, because Farmer-Generals were rich, and Monseigneur, after
generations of great luxury and expense, was growing poor. Hence
Monseigneur had taken his sister from a convent, while there was yet time
to ward off the impending veil, the cheapest garment she could wear, and
had bestowed her as a prize upon a very rich Farmer-General, poor in
family. Which Farmer-General, carrying an appropriate cane with a golden
apple on the top of it, was now among the company in the outer rooms, much
prostrated before by mankind—always excepting superior mankind of
the blood of Monseigneur, who, his own wife included, looked down upon him
with the loftiest contempt.</p>
<p>A sumptuous man was the Farmer-General. Thirty horses stood in his
stables, twenty-four male domestics sat in his halls, six body-women
waited on his wife. As one who pretended to do nothing but plunder and
forage where he could, the Farmer-General—howsoever his matrimonial
relations conduced to social morality—was at least the greatest
reality among the personages who attended at the hotel of Monseigneur that
day.</p>
<p>For, the rooms, though a beautiful scene to look at, and adorned with
every device of decoration that the taste and skill of the time could
achieve, were, in truth, not a sound business; considered with any
reference to the scarecrows in the rags and nightcaps elsewhere (and not
so far off, either, but that the watching towers of Notre Dame, almost
equidistant from the two extremes, could see them both), they would have
been an exceedingly uncomfortable business—if that could have been
anybody’s business, at the house of Monseigneur. Military officers
destitute of military knowledge; naval officers with no idea of a ship;
civil officers without a notion of affairs; brazen ecclesiastics, of the
worst world worldly, with sensual eyes, loose tongues, and looser lives;
all totally unfit for their several callings, all lying horribly in
pretending to belong to them, but all nearly or remotely of the order of
Monseigneur, and therefore foisted on all public employments from which
anything was to be got; these were to be told off by the score and the
score. People not immediately connected with Monseigneur or the State, yet
equally unconnected with anything that was real, or with lives passed in
travelling by any straight road to any true earthly end, were no less
abundant. Doctors who made great fortunes out of dainty remedies for
imaginary disorders that never existed, smiled upon their courtly patients
in the ante-chambers of Monseigneur. Projectors who had discovered every
kind of remedy for the little evils with which the State was touched,
except the remedy of setting to work in earnest to root out a single sin,
poured their distracting babble into any ears they could lay hold of, at
the reception of Monseigneur. Unbelieving Philosophers who were
remodelling the world with words, and making card-towers of Babel to scale
the skies with, talked with Unbelieving Chemists who had an eye on the
transmutation of metals, at this wonderful gathering accumulated by
Monseigneur. Exquisite gentlemen of the finest breeding, which was at that
remarkable time—and has been since—to be known by its fruits
of indifference to every natural subject of human interest, were in the
most exemplary state of exhaustion, at the hotel of Monseigneur. Such
homes had these various notabilities left behind them in the fine world of
Paris, that the spies among the assembled devotees of Monseigneur—forming
a goodly half of the polite company—would have found it hard to
discover among the angels of that sphere one solitary wife, who, in her
manners and appearance, owned to being a Mother. Indeed, except for the
mere act of bringing a troublesome creature into this world—which
does not go far towards the realisation of the name of mother—there
was no such thing known to the fashion. Peasant women kept the
unfashionable babies close, and brought them up, and charming grandmammas
of sixty dressed and supped as at twenty.</p>
<p>The leprosy of unreality disfigured every human creature in attendance
upon Monseigneur. In the outermost room were half a dozen exceptional
people who had had, for a few years, some vague misgiving in them that
things in general were going rather wrong. As a promising way of setting
them right, half of the half-dozen had become members of a fantastic sect
of Convulsionists, and were even then considering within themselves
whether they should foam, rage, roar, and turn cataleptic on the spot—thereby
setting up a highly intelligible finger-post to the Future, for
Monseigneur’s guidance. Besides these Dervishes, were other three who had
rushed into another sect, which mended matters with a jargon about “the
Centre of Truth:” holding that Man had got out of the Centre of Truth—which
did not need much demonstration—but had not got out of the
Circumference, and that he was to be kept from flying out of the
Circumference, and was even to be shoved back into the Centre, by fasting
and seeing of spirits. Among these, accordingly, much discoursing with
spirits went on—and it did a world of good which never became
manifest.</p>
<p>But, the comfort was, that all the company at the grand hotel of
Monseigneur were perfectly dressed. If the Day of Judgment had only been
ascertained to be a dress day, everybody there would have been eternally
correct. Such frizzling and powdering and sticking up of hair, such
delicate complexions artificially preserved and mended, such gallant
swords to look at, and such delicate honour to the sense of smell, would
surely keep anything going, for ever and ever. The exquisite gentlemen of
the finest breeding wore little pendent trinkets that chinked as they
languidly moved; these golden fetters rang like precious little bells; and
what with that ringing, and with the rustle of silk and brocade and fine
linen, there was a flutter in the air that fanned Saint Antoine and his
devouring hunger far away.</p>
<p>Dress was the one unfailing talisman and charm used for keeping all things
in their places. Everybody was dressed for a Fancy Ball that was never to
leave off. From the Palace of the Tuileries, through Monseigneur and the
whole Court, through the Chambers, the Tribunals of Justice, and all
society (except the scarecrows), the Fancy Ball descended to the Common
Executioner: who, in pursuance of the charm, was required to officiate
“frizzled, powdered, in a gold-laced coat, pumps, and white silk
stockings.” At the gallows and the wheel—the axe was a rarity—Monsieur
Paris, as it was the episcopal mode among his brother Professors of the
provinces, Monsieur Orleans, and the rest, to call him, presided in this
dainty dress. And who among the company at Monseigneur’s reception in that
seventeen hundred and eightieth year of our Lord, could possibly doubt,
that a system rooted in a frizzled hangman, powdered, gold-laced, pumped,
and white-silk stockinged, would see the very stars out!</p>
<p>Monseigneur having eased his four men of their burdens and taken his
chocolate, caused the doors of the Holiest of Holiests to be thrown open,
and issued forth. Then, what submission, what cringing and fawning, what
servility, what abject humiliation! As to bowing down in body and spirit,
nothing in that way was left for Heaven—which may have been one
among other reasons why the worshippers of Monseigneur never troubled it.</p>
<p>Bestowing a word of promise here and a smile there, a whisper on one happy
slave and a wave of the hand on another, Monseigneur affably passed
through his rooms to the remote region of the Circumference of Truth.
There, Monseigneur turned, and came back again, and so in due course of
time got himself shut up in his sanctuary by the chocolate sprites, and
was seen no more.</p>
<p>The show being over, the flutter in the air became quite a little storm,
and the precious little bells went ringing downstairs. There was soon but
one person left of all the crowd, and he, with his hat under his arm and
his snuff-box in his hand, slowly passed among the mirrors on his way out.</p>
<p>“I devote you,” said this person, stopping at the last door on his way,
and turning in the direction of the sanctuary, “to the Devil!”</p>
<p>With that, he shook the snuff from his fingers as if he had shaken the
dust from his feet, and quietly walked downstairs.</p>
<p>He was a man of about sixty, handsomely dressed, haughty in manner, and
with a face like a fine mask. A face of a transparent paleness; every
feature in it clearly defined; one set expression on it. The nose,
beautifully formed otherwise, was very slightly pinched at the top of each
nostril. In those two compressions, or dints, the only little change that
the face ever showed, resided. They persisted in changing colour
sometimes, and they would be occasionally dilated and contracted by
something like a faint pulsation; then, they gave a look of treachery, and
cruelty, to the whole countenance. Examined with attention, its capacity
of helping such a look was to be found in the line of the mouth, and the
lines of the orbits of the eyes, being much too horizontal and thin;
still, in the effect of the face made, it was a handsome face, and a
remarkable one.</p>
<p>Its owner went downstairs into the courtyard, got into his carriage, and
drove away. Not many people had talked with him at the reception; he had
stood in a little space apart, and Monseigneur might have been warmer in
his manner. It appeared, under the circumstances, rather agreeable to him
to see the common people dispersed before his horses, and often barely
escaping from being run down. His man drove as if he were charging an
enemy, and the furious recklessness of the man brought no check into the
face, or to the lips, of the master. The complaint had sometimes made
itself audible, even in that deaf city and dumb age, that, in the narrow
streets without footways, the fierce patrician custom of hard driving
endangered and maimed the mere vulgar in a barbarous manner. But, few
cared enough for that to think of it a second time, and, in this matter,
as in all others, the common wretches were left to get out of their
difficulties as they could.</p>
<p>With a wild rattle and clatter, and an inhuman abandonment of
consideration not easy to be understood in these days, the carriage dashed
through streets and swept round corners, with women screaming before it,
and men clutching each other and clutching children out of its way. At
last, swooping at a street corner by a fountain, one of its wheels came to
a sickening little jolt, and there was a loud cry from a number of voices,
and the horses reared and plunged.</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0496m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0496m " /><br/>
</div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0496.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></SPAN>
</h5>
<p>But for the latter inconvenience, the carriage probably would not have
stopped; carriages were often known to drive on, and leave their wounded
behind, and why not? But the frightened valet had got down in a hurry, and
there were twenty hands at the horses’ bridles.</p>
<p>“What has gone wrong?” said Monsieur, calmly looking out.</p>
<p>A tall man in a nightcap had caught up a bundle from among the feet of the
horses, and had laid it on the basement of the fountain, and was down in
the mud and wet, howling over it like a wild animal.</p>
<p>“Pardon, Monsieur the Marquis!” said a ragged and submissive man, “it is a
child.”</p>
<p>“Why does he make that abominable noise? Is it his child?”</p>
<p>“Excuse me, Monsieur the Marquis—it is a pity—yes.”</p>
<p>The fountain was a little removed; for the street opened, where it was,
into a space some ten or twelve yards square. As the tall man suddenly got
up from the ground, and came running at the carriage, Monsieur the Marquis
clapped his hand for an instant on his sword-hilt.</p>
<p>“Killed!” shrieked the man, in wild desperation, extending both arms at
their length above his head, and staring at him. “Dead!”</p>
<p>The people closed round, and looked at Monsieur the Marquis. There was
nothing revealed by the many eyes that looked at him but watchfulness and
eagerness; there was no visible menacing or anger. Neither did the people
say anything; after the first cry, they had been silent, and they remained
so. The voice of the submissive man who had spoken, was flat and tame in
its extreme submission. Monsieur the Marquis ran his eyes over them all,
as if they had been mere rats come out of their holes.</p>
<p>He took out his purse.</p>
<p>“It is extraordinary to me,” said he, “that you people cannot take care of
yourselves and your children. One or the other of you is for ever in the
way. How do I know what injury you have done my horses. See! Give him
that.”</p>
<p>He threw out a gold coin for the valet to pick up, and all the heads
craned forward that all the eyes might look down at it as it fell. The
tall man called out again with a most unearthly cry, “Dead!”</p>
<p>He was arrested by the quick arrival of another man, for whom the rest
made way. On seeing him, the miserable creature fell upon his shoulder,
sobbing and crying, and pointing to the fountain, where some women were
stooping over the motionless bundle, and moving gently about it. They were
as silent, however, as the men.</p>
<p>“I know all, I know all,” said the last comer. “Be a brave man, my
Gaspard! It is better for the poor little plaything to die so, than to
live. It has died in a moment without pain. Could it have lived an hour as
happily?”</p>
<p>“You are a philosopher, you there,” said the Marquis, smiling. “How do
they call you?”</p>
<p>“They call me Defarge.”</p>
<p>“Of what trade?”</p>
<p>“Monsieur the Marquis, vendor of wine.”</p>
<p>“Pick up that, philosopher and vendor of wine,” said the Marquis, throwing
him another gold coin, “and spend it as you will. The horses there; are
they right?”</p>
<p>Without deigning to look at the assemblage a second time, Monsieur the
Marquis leaned back in his seat, and was just being driven away with the
air of a gentleman who had accidentally broke some common thing, and had
paid for it, and could afford to pay for it; when his ease was suddenly
disturbed by a coin flying into his carriage, and ringing on its floor.</p>
<p>“Hold!” said Monsieur the Marquis. “Hold the horses! Who threw that?”</p>
<p>He looked to the spot where Defarge the vendor of wine had stood, a moment
before; but the wretched father was grovelling on his face on the pavement
in that spot, and the figure that stood beside him was the figure of a
dark stout woman, knitting.</p>
<p>“You dogs!” said the Marquis, but smoothly, and with an unchanged front,
except as to the spots on his nose: “I would ride over any of you very
willingly, and exterminate you from the earth. If I knew which rascal
threw at the carriage, and if that brigand were sufficiently near it, he
should be crushed under the wheels.”</p>
<p>So cowed was their condition, and so long and hard their experience of
what such a man could do to them, within the law and beyond it, that not a
voice, or a hand, or even an eye was raised. Among the men, not one. But
the woman who stood knitting looked up steadily, and looked the Marquis in
the face. It was not for his dignity to notice it; his contemptuous eyes
passed over her, and over all the other rats; and he leaned back in his
seat again, and gave the word “Go on!”</p>
<p>He was driven on, and other carriages came whirling by in quick
succession; the Minister, the State-Projector, the Farmer-General, the
Doctor, the Lawyer, the Ecclesiastic, the Grand Opera, the Comedy, the
whole Fancy Ball in a bright continuous flow, came whirling by. The rats
had crept out of their holes to look on, and they remained looking on for
hours; soldiers and police often passing between them and the spectacle,
and making a barrier behind which they slunk, and through which they
peeped. The father had long ago taken up his bundle and bidden himself
away with it, when the women who had tended the bundle while it lay on the
base of the fountain, sat there watching the running of the water and the
rolling of the Fancy Ball—when the one woman who had stood
conspicuous, knitting, still knitted on with the steadfastness of Fate.
The water of the fountain ran, the swift river ran, the day ran into
evening, so much life in the city ran into death according to rule, time
and tide waited for no man, the rats were sleeping close together in their
dark holes again, the Fancy Ball was lighted up at supper, all things ran
their course.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"></SPAN> CHAPTER VIII.<br/>Monseigneur in the Country </h2>
<p class="pfirst"><span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> beautiful landscape, with the corn bright in it, but not abundant.
Patches of poor rye where corn should have been, patches of poor peas and
beans, patches of most coarse vegetable substitutes for wheat. On
inanimate nature, as on the men and women who cultivated it, a prevalent
tendency towards an appearance of vegetating unwillingly—a dejected
disposition to give up, and wither away.</p>
<p>Monsieur the Marquis in his travelling carriage (which might have been
lighter), conducted by four post-horses and two postilions, fagged up a
steep hill. A blush on the countenance of Monsieur the Marquis was no
impeachment of his high breeding; it was not from within; it was
occasioned by an external circumstance beyond his control—the
setting sun.</p>
<p>The sunset struck so brilliantly into the travelling carriage when it
gained the hill-top, that its occupant was steeped in crimson. “It will
die out,” said Monsieur the Marquis, glancing at his hands, “directly.”</p>
<p>In effect, the sun was so low that it dipped at the moment. When the heavy
drag had been adjusted to the wheel, and the carriage slid down hill, with
a cinderous smell, in a cloud of dust, the red glow departed quickly; the
sun and the Marquis going down together, there was no glow left when the
drag was taken off.</p>
<p>But, there remained a broken country, bold and open, a little village at
the bottom of the hill, a broad sweep and rise beyond it, a church-tower,
a windmill, a forest for the chase, and a crag with a fortress on it used
as a prison. Round upon all these darkening objects as the night drew on,
the Marquis looked, with the air of one who was coming near home.</p>
<p>The village had its one poor street, with its poor brewery, poor tannery,
poor tavern, poor stable-yard for relays of post-horses, poor fountain,
all usual poor appointments. It had its poor people too. All its people
were poor, and many of them were sitting at their doors, shredding spare
onions and the like for supper, while many were at the fountain, washing
leaves, and grasses, and any such small yieldings of the earth that could
be eaten. Expressive signs of what made them poor, were not wanting; the
tax for the state, the tax for the church, the tax for the lord, tax local
and tax general, were to be paid here and to be paid there, according to
solemn inscription in the little village, until the wonder was, that there
was any village left unswallowed.</p>
<p>Few children were to be seen, and no dogs. As to the men and women, their
choice on earth was stated in the prospect—Life on the lowest terms
that could sustain it, down in the little village under the mill; or
captivity and Death in the dominant prison on the crag.</p>
<p>Heralded by a courier in advance, and by the cracking of his postilions’
whips, which twined snake-like about their heads in the evening air, as if
he came attended by the Furies, Monsieur the Marquis drew up in his
travelling carriage at the posting-house gate. It was hard by the
fountain, and the peasants suspended their operations to look at him. He
looked at them, and saw in them, without knowing it, the slow sure filing
down of misery-worn face and figure, that was to make the meagreness of
Frenchmen an English superstition which should survive the truth through
the best part of a hundred years.</p>
<p>Monsieur the Marquis cast his eyes over the submissive faces that drooped
before him, as the like of himself had drooped before Monseigneur of the
Court—only the difference was, that these faces drooped merely to
suffer and not to propitiate—when a grizzled mender of the roads
joined the group.</p>
<p>“Bring me hither that fellow!” said the Marquis to the courier.</p>
<p>The fellow was brought, cap in hand, and the other fellows closed round to
look and listen, in the manner of the people at the Paris fountain.</p>
<p>“I passed you on the road?”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, it is true. I had the honour of being passed on the road.”</p>
<p>“Coming up the hill, and at the top of the hill, both?”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, it is true.”</p>
<p>“What did you look at, so fixedly?”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, I looked at the man.”</p>
<p>He stooped a little, and with his tattered blue cap pointed under the
carriage. All his fellows stooped to look under the carriage.</p>
<p>“What man, pig? And why look there?”</p>
<p>“Pardon, Monseigneur; he swung by the chain of the shoe—the drag.”</p>
<p>“Who?” demanded the traveller.</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, the man.”</p>
<p>“May the Devil carry away these idiots! How do you call the man? You know
all the men of this part of the country. Who was he?”</p>
<p>“Your clemency, Monseigneur! He was not of this part of the country. Of
all the days of my life, I never saw him.”</p>
<p>“Swinging by the chain? To be suffocated?”</p>
<p>“With your gracious permission, that was the wonder of it, Monseigneur.
His head hanging over—like this!”</p>
<p>He turned himself sideways to the carriage, and leaned back, with his face
thrown up to the sky, and his head hanging down; then recovered himself,
fumbled with his cap, and made a bow.</p>
<p>“What was he like?”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, he was whiter than the miller. All covered with dust, white
as a spectre, tall as a spectre!”</p>
<p>The picture produced an immense sensation in the little crowd; but all
eyes, without comparing notes with other eyes, looked at Monsieur the
Marquis. Perhaps, to observe whether he had any spectre on his conscience.</p>
<p>“Truly, you did well,” said the Marquis, felicitously sensible that such
vermin were not to ruffle him, “to see a thief accompanying my carriage,
and not open that great mouth of yours. Bah! Put him aside, Monsieur
Gabelle!”</p>
<p>Monsieur Gabelle was the Postmaster, and some other taxing functionary
united; he had come out with great obsequiousness to assist at this
examination, and had held the examined by the drapery of his arm in an
official manner.</p>
<p>“Bah! Go aside!” said Monsieur Gabelle.</p>
<p>“Lay hands on this stranger if he seeks to lodge in your village to-night,
and be sure that his business is honest, Gabelle.”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, I am flattered to devote myself to your orders.”</p>
<p>“Did he run away, fellow?—where is that Accursed?”</p>
<p>The accursed was already under the carriage with some half-dozen
particular friends, pointing out the chain with his blue cap. Some
half-dozen other particular friends promptly hauled him out, and presented
him breathless to Monsieur the Marquis.</p>
<p>“Did the man run away, Dolt, when we stopped for the drag?”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, he precipitated himself over the hill-side, head first, as a
person plunges into the river.”</p>
<p>“See to it, Gabelle. Go on!”</p>
<p>The half-dozen who were peering at the chain were still among the wheels,
like sheep; the wheels turned so suddenly that they were lucky to save
their skins and bones; they had very little else to save, or they might
not have been so fortunate.</p>
<p>The burst with which the carriage started out of the village and up the
rise beyond, was soon checked by the steepness of the hill. Gradually, it
subsided to a foot pace, swinging and lumbering upward among the many
sweet scents of a summer night. The postilions, with a thousand gossamer
gnats circling about them in lieu of the Furies, quietly mended the points
to the lashes of their whips; the valet walked by the horses; the courier
was audible, trotting on ahead into the dull distance.</p>
<p>At the steepest point of the hill there was a little burial-ground, with a
Cross and a new large figure of Our Saviour on it; it was a poor figure in
wood, done by some inexperienced rustic carver, but he had studied the
figure from the life—his own life, maybe—for it was dreadfully
spare and thin.</p>
<p>To this distressful emblem of a great distress that had long been growing
worse, and was not at its worst, a woman was kneeling. She turned her head
as the carriage came up to her, rose quickly, and presented herself at the
carriage-door.</p>
<p>“It is you, Monseigneur! Monseigneur, a petition.”</p>
<p>With an exclamation of impatience, but with his unchangeable face,
Monseigneur looked out.</p>
<p>“How, then! What is it? Always petitions!”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur. For the love of the great God! My husband, the forester.”</p>
<p>“What of your husband, the forester? Always the same with you people. He
cannot pay something?”</p>
<p>“He has paid all, Monseigneur. He is dead.”</p>
<p>“Well! He is quiet. Can I restore him to you?”</p>
<p>“Alas, no, Monseigneur! But he lies yonder, under a little heap of poor
grass.”</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, there are so many little heaps of poor grass?”</p>
<p>“Again, well?”</p>
<p>She looked an old woman, but was young. Her manner was one of passionate
grief; by turns she clasped her veinous and knotted hands together with
wild energy, and laid one of them on the carriage-door—tenderly,
caressingly, as if it had been a human breast, and could be expected to
feel the appealing touch.</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, hear me! Monseigneur, hear my petition! My husband died of
want; so many die of want; so many more will die of want.”</p>
<p>“Again, well? Can I feed them?”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, the good God knows; but I don’t ask it. My petition is, that
a morsel of stone or wood, with my husband’s name, may be placed over him
to show where he lies. Otherwise, the place will be quickly forgotten, it
will never be found when I am dead of the same malady, I shall be laid
under some other heap of poor grass. Monseigneur, they are so many, they
increase so fast, there is so much want. Monseigneur! Monseigneur!”</p>
<p>The valet had put her away from the door, the carriage had broken into a
brisk trot, the postilions had quickened the pace, she was left far
behind, and Monseigneur, again escorted by the Furies, was rapidly
diminishing the league or two of distance that remained between him and
his chateau.</p>
<p>The sweet scents of the summer night rose all around him, and rose, as the
rain falls, impartially, on the dusty, ragged, and toil-worn group at the
fountain not far away; to whom the mender of roads, with the aid of the
blue cap without which he was nothing, still enlarged upon his man like a
spectre, as long as they could bear it. By degrees, as they could bear no
more, they dropped off one by one, and lights twinkled in little
casements; which lights, as the casements darkened, and more stars came
out, seemed to have shot up into the sky instead of having been
extinguished.</p>
<p>The shadow of a large high-roofed house, and of many over-hanging trees,
was upon Monsieur the Marquis by that time; and the shadow was exchanged
for the light of a flambeau, as his carriage stopped, and the great door
of his chateau was opened to him.</p>
<p>“Monsieur Charles, whom I expect; is he arrived from England?”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, not yet.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN> CHAPTER IX.<br/>The Gorgon’s Head </h2>
<p class="pfirst"><span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was a heavy mass of building, that chateau of Monsieur the Marquis,
with a large stone courtyard before it, and two stone sweeps of staircase
meeting in a stone terrace before the principal door. A stony business
altogether, with heavy stone balustrades, and stone urns, and stone
flowers, and stone faces of men, and stone heads of lions, in all
directions. As if the Gorgon’s head had surveyed it, when it was finished,
two centuries ago.</p>
<p>Up the broad flight of shallow steps, Monsieur the Marquis, flambeau
preceded, went from his carriage, sufficiently disturbing the darkness to
elicit loud remonstrance from an owl in the roof of the great pile of
stable building away among the trees. All else was so quiet, that the
flambeau carried up the steps, and the other flambeau held at the great
door, burnt as if they were in a close room of state, instead of being in
the open night-air. Other sound than the owl’s voice there was none, save
the falling of a fountain into its stone basin; for, it was one of those
dark nights that hold their breath by the hour together, and then heave a
long low sigh, and hold their breath again.</p>
<p>The great door clanged behind him, and Monsieur the Marquis crossed a hall
grim with certain old boar-spears, swords, and knives of the chase;
grimmer with certain heavy riding-rods and riding-whips, of which many a
peasant, gone to his benefactor Death, had felt the weight when his lord
was angry.</p>
<p>Avoiding the larger rooms, which were dark and made fast for the night,
Monsieur the Marquis, with his flambeau-bearer going on before, went up
the staircase to a door in a corridor. This thrown open, admitted him to
his own private apartment of three rooms: his bed-chamber and two others.
High vaulted rooms with cool uncarpeted floors, great dogs upon the
hearths for the burning of wood in winter time, and all luxuries befitting
the state of a marquis in a luxurious age and country. The fashion of the
last Louis but one, of the line that was never to break—the
fourteenth Louis—was conspicuous in their rich furniture; but, it
was diversified by many objects that were illustrations of old pages in
the history of France.</p>
<p>A supper-table was laid for two, in the third of the rooms; a round room,
in one of the chateau’s four extinguisher-topped towers. A small lofty
room, with its window wide open, and the wooden jalousie-blinds closed, so
that the dark night only showed in slight horizontal lines of black,
alternating with their broad lines of stone colour.</p>
<p>“My nephew,” said the Marquis, glancing at the supper preparation; “they
said he was not arrived.”</p>
<p>Nor was he; but, he had been expected with Monseigneur.</p>
<p>“Ah! It is not probable he will arrive to-night; nevertheless, leave the
table as it is. I shall be ready in a quarter of an hour.”</p>
<p>In a quarter of an hour Monseigneur was ready, and sat down alone to his
sumptuous and choice supper. His chair was opposite to the window, and he
had taken his soup, and was raising his glass of Bordeaux to his lips,
when he put it down.</p>
<p>“What is that?” he calmly asked, looking with attention at the horizontal
lines of black and stone colour.</p>
<p>“Monseigneur? That?”</p>
<p>“Outside the blinds. Open the blinds.”</p>
<p>It was done.</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur, it is nothing. The trees and the night are all that are
here.”</p>
<p>The servant who spoke, had thrown the blinds wide, had looked out into the
vacant darkness, and stood with that blank behind him, looking round for
instructions.</p>
<p>“Good,” said the imperturbable master. “Close them again.”</p>
<p>That was done too, and the Marquis went on with his supper. He was half
way through it, when he again stopped with his glass in his hand, hearing
the sound of wheels. It came on briskly, and came up to the front of the
chateau.</p>
<p>“Ask who is arrived.”</p>
<p>It was the nephew of Monseigneur. He had been some few leagues behind
Monseigneur, early in the afternoon. He had diminished the distance
rapidly, but not so rapidly as to come up with Monseigneur on the road. He
had heard of Monseigneur, at the posting-houses, as being before him.</p>
<p>He was to be told (said Monseigneur) that supper awaited him then and
there, and that he was prayed to come to it. In a little while he came. He
had been known in England as Charles Darnay.</p>
<p>Monseigneur received him in a courtly manner, but they did not shake
hands.</p>
<p>“You left Paris yesterday, sir?” he said to Monseigneur, as he took his
seat at table.</p>
<p>“Yesterday. And you?”</p>
<p>“I come direct.”</p>
<p>“From London?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“You have been a long time coming,” said the Marquis, with a smile.</p>
<p>“On the contrary; I come direct.”</p>
<p>“Pardon me! I mean, not a long time on the journey; a long time intending
the journey.”</p>
<p>“I have been detained by”—the nephew stopped a moment in his answer—“various
business.”</p>
<p>“Without doubt,” said the polished uncle.</p>
<p>So long as a servant was present, no other words passed between them. When
coffee had been served and they were alone together, the nephew, looking
at the uncle and meeting the eyes of the face that was like a fine mask,
opened a conversation.</p>
<p>“I have come back, sir, as you anticipate, pursuing the object that took
me away. It carried me into great and unexpected peril; but it is a sacred
object, and if it had carried me to death I hope it would have sustained
me.”</p>
<p>“Not to death,” said the uncle; “it is not necessary to say, to death.”</p>
<p>“I doubt, sir,” returned the nephew, “whether, if it had carried me to the
utmost brink of death, you would have cared to stop me there.”</p>
<p>The deepened marks in the nose, and the lengthening of the fine straight
lines in the cruel face, looked ominous as to that; the uncle made a
graceful gesture of protest, which was so clearly a slight form of good
breeding that it was not reassuring.</p>
<p>“Indeed, sir,” pursued the nephew, “for anything I know, you may have
expressly worked to give a more suspicious appearance to the suspicious
circumstances that surrounded me.”</p>
<p>“No, no, no,” said the uncle, pleasantly.</p>
<p>“But, however that may be,” resumed the nephew, glancing at him with deep
distrust, “I know that your diplomacy would stop me by any means, and
would know no scruple as to means.”</p>
<p>“My friend, I told you so,” said the uncle, with a fine pulsation in the
two marks. “Do me the favour to recall that I told you so, long ago.”</p>
<p>“I recall it.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said the Marquis—very sweetly indeed.</p>
<p>His tone lingered in the air, almost like the tone of a musical
instrument.</p>
<p>“In effect, sir,” pursued the nephew, “I believe it to be at once your bad
fortune, and my good fortune, that has kept me out of a prison in France
here.”</p>
<p>“I do not quite understand,” returned the uncle, sipping his coffee. “Dare
I ask you to explain?”</p>
<p>“I believe that if you were not in disgrace with the Court, and had not
been overshadowed by that cloud for years past, a letter de cachet would
have sent me to some fortress indefinitely.”</p>
<p>“It is possible,” said the uncle, with great calmness. “For the honour of
the family, I could even resolve to incommode you to that extent. Pray
excuse me!”</p>
<p>“I perceive that, happily for me, the Reception of the day before
yesterday was, as usual, a cold one,” observed the nephew.</p>
<p>“I would not say happily, my friend,” returned the uncle, with refined
politeness; “I would not be sure of that. A good opportunity for
consideration, surrounded by the advantages of solitude, might influence
your destiny to far greater advantage than you influence it for yourself.
But it is useless to discuss the question. I am, as you say, at a
disadvantage. These little instruments of correction, these gentle aids to
the power and honour of families, these slight favours that might so
incommode you, are only to be obtained now by interest and importunity.
They are sought by so many, and they are granted (comparatively) to so
few! It used not to be so, but France in all such things is changed for
the worse. Our not remote ancestors held the right of life and death over
the surrounding vulgar. From this room, many such dogs have been taken out
to be hanged; in the next room (my bedroom), one fellow, to our knowledge,
was poniarded on the spot for professing some insolent delicacy respecting
his daughter—<i>his</i> daughter? We have lost many privileges; a
new philosophy has become the mode; and the assertion of our station, in
these days, might (I do not go so far as to say would, but might) cause us
real inconvenience. All very bad, very bad!”</p>
<p>The Marquis took a gentle little pinch of snuff, and shook his head; as
elegantly despondent as he could becomingly be of a country still
containing himself, that great means of regeneration.</p>
<p>“We have so asserted our station, both in the old time and in the modern
time also,” said the nephew, gloomily, “that I believe our name to be more
detested than any name in France.”</p>
<p>“Let us hope so,” said the uncle. “Detestation of the high is the
involuntary homage of the low.”</p>
<p>“There is not,” pursued the nephew, in his former tone, “a face I can look
at, in all this country round about us, which looks at me with any
deference on it but the dark deference of fear and slavery.”</p>
<p>“A compliment,” said the Marquis, “to the grandeur of the family, merited
by the manner in which the family has sustained its grandeur. Hah!” And he
took another gentle little pinch of snuff, and lightly crossed his legs.</p>
<p>But, when his nephew, leaning an elbow on the table, covered his eyes
thoughtfully and dejectedly with his hand, the fine mask looked at him
sideways with a stronger concentration of keenness, closeness, and
dislike, than was comportable with its wearer’s assumption of
indifference.</p>
<p>“Repression is the only lasting philosophy. The dark deference of fear and
slavery, my friend,” observed the Marquis, “will keep the dogs obedient to
the whip, as long as this roof,” looking up to it, “shuts out the sky.”</p>
<p>That might not be so long as the Marquis supposed. If a picture of the
chateau as it was to be a very few years hence, and of fifty like it as
they too were to be a very few years hence, could have been shown to him
that night, he might have been at a loss to claim his own from the
ghastly, fire-charred, plunder-wrecked rains. As for the roof he vaunted,
he might have found <i>that</i> shutting out the sky in a new way—to
wit, for ever, from the eyes of the bodies into which its lead was fired,
out of the barrels of a hundred thousand muskets.</p>
<p>“Meanwhile,” said the Marquis, “I will preserve the honour and repose of
the family, if you will not. But you must be fatigued. Shall we terminate
our conference for the night?”</p>
<p>“A moment more.”</p>
<p>“An hour, if you please.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” said the nephew, “we have done wrong, and are reaping the fruits of
wrong.”</p>
<p>“<i>We</i> have done wrong?” repeated the Marquis, with an inquiring
smile, and delicately pointing, first to his nephew, then to himself.</p>
<p>“Our family; our honourable family, whose honour is of so much account to
both of us, in such different ways. Even in my father’s time, we did a
world of wrong, injuring every human creature who came between us and our
pleasure, whatever it was. Why need I speak of my father’s time, when it
is equally yours? Can I separate my father’s twin-brother, joint
inheritor, and next successor, from himself?”</p>
<p>“Death has done that!” said the Marquis.</p>
<p>“And has left me,” answered the nephew, “bound to a system that is
frightful to me, responsible for it, but powerless in it; seeking to
execute the last request of my dear mother’s lips, and obey the last look
of my dear mother’s eyes, which implored me to have mercy and to redress;
and tortured by seeking assistance and power in vain.”</p>
<p>“Seeking them from me, my nephew,” said the Marquis, touching him on the
breast with his forefinger—they were now standing by the hearth—“you
will for ever seek them in vain, be assured.”</p>
<p>Every fine straight line in the clear whiteness of his face, was cruelly,
craftily, and closely compressed, while he stood looking quietly at his
nephew, with his snuff-box in his hand. Once again he touched him on the
breast, as though his finger were the fine point of a small sword, with
which, in delicate finesse, he ran him through the body, and said,</p>
<p>“My friend, I will die, perpetuating the system under which I have lived.”</p>
<p>When he had said it, he took a culminating pinch of snuff, and put his box
in his pocket.</p>
<p>“Better to be a rational creature,” he added then, after ringing a small
bell on the table, “and accept your natural destiny. But you are lost,
Monsieur Charles, I see.”</p>
<p>“This property and France are lost to me,” said the nephew, sadly; “I
renounce them.”</p>
<p>“Are they both yours to renounce? France may be, but is the property? It
is scarcely worth mentioning; but, is it yet?”</p>
<p>“I had no intention, in the words I used, to claim it yet. If it passed to
me from you, to-morrow—”</p>
<p>“Which I have the vanity to hope is not probable.”</p>
<p>“—or twenty years hence—”</p>
<p>“You do me too much honour,” said the Marquis; “still, I prefer that
supposition.”</p>
<p>“—I would abandon it, and live otherwise and elsewhere. It is little
to relinquish. What is it but a wilderness of misery and ruin!”</p>
<p>“Hah!” said the Marquis, glancing round the luxurious room.</p>
<p>“To the eye it is fair enough, here; but seen in its integrity, under the
sky, and by the daylight, it is a crumbling tower of waste, mismanagement,
extortion, debt, mortgage, oppression, hunger, nakedness, and suffering.”</p>
<p>“Hah!” said the Marquis again, in a well-satisfied manner.</p>
<p>“If it ever becomes mine, it shall be put into some hands better qualified
to free it slowly (if such a thing is possible) from the weight that drags
it down, so that the miserable people who cannot leave it and who have
been long wrung to the last point of endurance, may, in another
generation, suffer less; but it is not for me. There is a curse on it, and
on all this land.”</p>
<p>“And you?” said the uncle. “Forgive my curiosity; do you, under your new
philosophy, graciously intend to live?”</p>
<p>“I must do, to live, what others of my countrymen, even with nobility at
their backs, may have to do some day—work.”</p>
<p>“In England, for example?”</p>
<p>“Yes. The family honour, sir, is safe from me in this country. The family
name can suffer from me in no other, for I bear it in no other.”</p>
<p>The ringing of the bell had caused the adjoining bed-chamber to be
lighted. It now shone brightly, through the door of communication. The
Marquis looked that way, and listened for the retreating step of his
valet.</p>
<p>“England is very attractive to you, seeing how indifferently you have
prospered there,” he observed then, turning his calm face to his nephew
with a smile.</p>
<p>“I have already said, that for my prospering there, I am sensible I may be
indebted to you, sir. For the rest, it is my Refuge.”</p>
<p>“They say, those boastful English, that it is the Refuge of many. You know
a compatriot who has found a Refuge there? A Doctor?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“With a daughter?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the Marquis. “You are fatigued. Good night!”</p>
<p>As he bent his head in his most courtly manner, there was a secrecy in his
smiling face, and he conveyed an air of mystery to those words, which
struck the eyes and ears of his nephew forcibly. At the same time, the
thin straight lines of the setting of the eyes, and the thin straight
lips, and the markings in the nose, curved with a sarcasm that looked
handsomely diabolic.</p>
<p>“Yes,” repeated the Marquis. “A Doctor with a daughter. Yes. So commences
the new philosophy! You are fatigued. Good night!”</p>
<p>It would have been of as much avail to interrogate any stone face outside
the chateau as to interrogate that face of his. The nephew looked at him,
in vain, in passing on to the door.</p>
<p>“Good night!” said the uncle. “I look to the pleasure of seeing you again
in the morning. Good repose! Light Monsieur my nephew to his chamber
there!—And burn Monsieur my nephew in his bed, if you will,” he
added to himself, before he rang his little bell again, and summoned his
valet to his own bedroom.</p>
<p>The valet come and gone, Monsieur the Marquis walked to and fro in his
loose chamber-robe, to prepare himself gently for sleep, that hot still
night. Rustling about the room, his softly-slippered feet making no noise
on the floor, he moved like a refined tiger:—looked like some
enchanted marquis of the impenitently wicked sort, in story, whose
periodical change into tiger form was either just going off, or just
coming on.</p>
<p>He moved from end to end of his voluptuous bedroom, looking again at the
scraps of the day’s journey that came unbidden into his mind; the slow
toil up the hill at sunset, the setting sun, the descent, the mill, the
prison on the crag, the little village in the hollow, the peasants at the
fountain, and the mender of roads with his blue cap pointing out the chain
under the carriage. That fountain suggested the Paris fountain, the little
bundle lying on the step, the women bending over it, and the tall man with
his arms up, crying, “Dead!”</p>
<p>“I am cool now,” said Monsieur the Marquis, “and may go to bed.”</p>
<p>So, leaving only one light burning on the large hearth, he let his thin
gauze curtains fall around him, and heard the night break its silence with
a long sigh as he composed himself to sleep.</p>
<p>The stone faces on the outer walls stared blindly at the black night for
three heavy hours; for three heavy hours, the horses in the stables
rattled at their racks, the dogs barked, and the owl made a noise with
very little resemblance in it to the noise conventionally assigned to the
owl by men-poets. But it is the obstinate custom of such creatures hardly
ever to say what is set down for them.</p>
<p>For three heavy hours, the stone faces of the chateau, lion and human,
stared blindly at the night. Dead darkness lay on all the landscape, dead
darkness added its own hush to the hushing dust on all the roads. The
burial-place had got to the pass that its little heaps of poor grass were
undistinguishable from one another; the figure on the Cross might have
come down, for anything that could be seen of it. In the village, taxers
and taxed were fast asleep. Dreaming, perhaps, of banquets, as the starved
usually do, and of ease and rest, as the driven slave and the yoked ox
may, its lean inhabitants slept soundly, and were fed and freed.</p>
<p>The fountain in the village flowed unseen and unheard, and the fountain at
the chateau dropped unseen and unheard—both melting away, like the
minutes that were falling from the spring of Time—through three dark
hours. Then, the grey water of both began to be ghostly in the light, and
the eyes of the stone faces of the chateau were opened.</p>
<p>Lighter and lighter, until at last the sun touched the tops of the still
trees, and poured its radiance over the hill. In the glow, the water of
the chateau fountain seemed to turn to blood, and the stone faces
crimsoned. The carol of the birds was loud and high, and, on the
weather-beaten sill of the great window of the bed-chamber of Monsieur the
Marquis, one little bird sang its sweetest song with all its might. At
this, the nearest stone face seemed to stare amazed, and, with open mouth
and dropped under-jaw, looked awe-stricken.</p>
<p>Now, the sun was full up, and movement began in the village. Casement
windows opened, crazy doors were unbarred, and people came forth shivering—chilled,
as yet, by the new sweet air. Then began the rarely lightened toil of the
day among the village population. Some, to the fountain; some, to the
fields; men and women here, to dig and delve; men and women there, to see
to the poor live stock, and lead the bony cows out, to such pasture as
could be found by the roadside. In the church and at the Cross, a kneeling
figure or two; attendant on the latter prayers, the led cow, trying for a
breakfast among the weeds at its foot.</p>
<p>The chateau awoke later, as became its quality, but awoke gradually and
surely. First, the lonely boar-spears and knives of the chase had been
reddened as of old; then, had gleamed trenchant in the morning sunshine;
now, doors and windows were thrown open, horses in their stables looked
round over their shoulders at the light and freshness pouring in at
doorways, leaves sparkled and rustled at iron-grated windows, dogs pulled
hard at their chains, and reared impatient to be loosed.</p>
<p>All these trivial incidents belonged to the routine of life, and the
return of morning. Surely, not so the ringing of the great bell of the
chateau, nor the running up and down the stairs; nor the hurried figures
on the terrace; nor the booting and tramping here and there and
everywhere, nor the quick saddling of horses and riding away?</p>
<p>What winds conveyed this hurry to the grizzled mender of roads, already at
work on the hill-top beyond the village, with his day’s dinner (not much
to carry) lying in a bundle that it was worth no crow’s while to peck at,
on a heap of stones? Had the birds, carrying some grains of it to a
distance, dropped one over him as they sow chance seeds? Whether or no,
the mender of roads ran, on the sultry morning, as if for his life, down
the hill, knee-high in dust, and never stopped till he got to the
fountain.</p>
<p>All the people of the village were at the fountain, standing about in
their depressed manner, and whispering low, but showing no other emotions
than grim curiosity and surprise. The led cows, hastily brought in and
tethered to anything that would hold them, were looking stupidly on, or
lying down chewing the cud of nothing particularly repaying their trouble,
which they had picked up in their interrupted saunter. Some of the people
of the chateau, and some of those of the posting-house, and all the taxing
authorities, were armed more or less, and were crowded on the other side
of the little street in a purposeless way, that was highly fraught with
nothing. Already, the mender of roads had penetrated into the midst of a
group of fifty particular friends, and was smiting himself in the breast
with his blue cap. What did all this portend, and what portended the swift
hoisting-up of Monsieur Gabelle behind a servant on horseback, and the
conveying away of the said Gabelle (double-laden though the horse was), at
a gallop, like a new version of the German ballad of Leonora?</p>
<p>It portended that there was one stone face too many, up at the chateau.</p>
<p>The Gorgon had surveyed the building again in the night, and had added the
one stone face wanting; the stone face for which it had waited through
about two hundred years.</p>
<p>It lay back on the pillow of Monsieur the Marquis. It was like a fine
mask, suddenly startled, made angry, and petrified. Driven home into the
heart of the stone figure attached to it, was a knife. Round its hilt was
a frill of paper, on which was scrawled:</p>
<p>“Drive him fast to his tomb. This, from Jacques.”</p>
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