Collected Works of Eugène Sue

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by Eugène Sue


  “Besides, I believe that his Royal Highness makes a decided convenience of the ingenuousness of his son—”

  “The devil! No indiscretion, dear sir!”

  “Let me finish, please. I say that monseigneur makes a convenience of the unconquerable ingenuousness of his godson.”

  “Well and good. And I think with you that the prince does not see this handsome boy exposed to the temptations of wicked Paris, without some anxiety. But what are you smiling at, my dear sir?”

  “Nothing.”

  “Do you think that Count Frantz has had some love affair, in spite of his apparent innocence?”

  “You can see after a little, gentlemen, all the fine things a smile may mean, for I call you to witness I am satisfied with smiling.”

  “Seriously, my dear sir, what do you think of Count Frantz?”

  “I think nothing, I say nothing, I shall be as mute as a diplomatist whose interest it is to keep silent, or as a young officer of the noble guards when he passes, for the first time, under the inspection of monseigneur.”

  “The truth is, the prince has a glance which intimidates the boldest. But to return to Count Frantz.”

  This conversation was interrupted by a number of persons who entered the official chamber.

  The newcomers banished the thought of Count Frantz, and two or three voices asked at once:

  “Well, what about your sightseeing? Is this famous manufactory in the Faubourg St. Marceau worth the trouble of a visit?”

  “For my part, gentlemen, I am always very curious about the construction of machinery,” replied one who had just entered. “The whole morning has been interesting, and I declare M. Charles Dutertre, the proprietor of this factory, one of the most accomplished and intelligent machinists that I know, besides being a most agreeable man; I intend to persuade monseigneur to visit his workshops.”

  “Well and good, my dear sir; we will not accuse you of wasting your time in frivolities, but I have not such high pretensions, and my pretension is only in a state of hope.”

  “And what hope?”

  “To be invited to dine with the celebrated Doctor Gasterini.”

  “The most illustrious, the most profound gourmand of Europe.”

  “They say, really, that his table is an ideal of the paradise of gourmands.”

  “I do not know, alas! if this paradise will be as open to me as the other, but I hope so.”

  “I confess my weakness. Of all that I have seen in Paris, what has most charmed me, fascinated me, dazzled me, I will even say instructed—”

  “Well, is what?”

  “It is — our proud and modest Germany will blush at the blasphemy — it is—”

  “Do finish!”

  “It is the Mabille ball!”

  The laughter and the exclamations provoked by this frank avowal lasted until one of the secretaries of the archduke entered, holding two letters in his hand, and saying, gaily:

  “Gentlemen, fresh news from Bologna and Venice!”

  “Bravo, my dear Ulrik, what news?”

  “The most curious, the most extraordinary in the world!”

  “Really?”

  “Quick, tell us, dear Ulrik.”

  “In the first place, Bologna, and Venice afterward, have been for several days in a state of incredible agitation, for reason of a series of events not less incredible.”

  “A revolution?”

  “A movement of young Italy?”

  “Perhaps a new mandate from the papal defender?”

  “No, gentleman, it concerns a woman.”

  “A woman?”

  “Yes, if it is not the devil, which I am inclined to believe.”

  “Ulrik, you are putting us to entreaty, do explain.”

  “Do you remember, gentlemen, last year, having heard in Germany that young Mexican widow, the Marquise de Miranda, spoken of?”

  “Zounds! the one whom our poet, Moser-Hartmann, wrote of in such magnificent and passionate verse, under the name of the modern Aphrodite.”

  “Ah, ah, ah, what a charming mistake!” said one of the inquirers, roaring with laughter. “Moser-Hartmann, the religious and soulful poet, the chaste poet, pure and cold as the immaculate snow, sings Aphrodite, in burning verses. I have heard those admirable verses repeated, but, evidently, they are the production of another Hartmann.”

  “And I assure you, my dear sir, and Ulrik will confirm it, that this poem, which they say rightfully ranks with the most beautiful odes of Sappho, is truly the work of Moser-Hartmann.”

  “Nothing more true,” replied Ulrik. “I heard Moser-Hartmann recite the verses himself, — they are worthy of antiquity.”

  “Then I believe you, but how do you explain this sudden incomprehensible transformation?”

  “Ah, my God! This transformation which has changed a cold, correct man, but a man of estimable talent, indeed, a man of genius, full of fire and power, whose name is renowned through Europe — this transformation has been wrought by the woman whom the poet has praised, by the Marquise de Miranda.”

  “Moser-Hartmann so changed? I would have thought the thing impossible!”

  “Bah!” replied Ulrik, “the marquise has done several things, and here is one of her best tricks, written to me from Bologna. There was there a cardinal legate of the Pope, the terror and aversion of the country.”

  “His name is Orsini, a man as detestable as he is detested.”

  “And his exterior reveals his nature. I saw him in Lombardy. What a cadaverous, sinister face! He always seemed to me the very type of an inquisitor.”

  “Well, the marquise took him to a ball at the Casino in Bologna, disguised as a Hungarian hussar!”

  “The cardinal legate as a Hungarian hussar!” cried the company, in one voice.

  “Come, Ulrik, you are telling an idle tale.”

  “You can read this letter, and when you see who signs it you will doubt no longer, skeptical as you are,” replied Ulrik. “Yes, the marquise made Orsini accompany her so disguised; then, in the midst of the dance, she tore his mask from his face and said, in a loud voice: ‘Good evening, Cardinal Orsini,’ and, laughing like a crazy woman, she disappeared, leaving the legate exposed to the hoots and hisses of the exasperated crowd. He would have run some danger if his escort had not protected him. The next day Bologna was in a stir, demanding the dismissal of Orsini, who, after two days of excitement, was forced to leave the city by night. In the evening every house was illuminated for joy, and my correspondent says the monogram of the marquise was seen on many transparencies.”

  “And what became of her?”

  “She was not seen again, she left for Venice,” replied Ulrik, showing a second letter, “and there, they write me, another thing has happened.”

  “What a woman! What a woman!”

  “What sort of a woman is she?”

  “Have you seen her?”

  “No.”

  “Nor I.”

  “Nor I.”

  “They say she is very tall and very slender.”

  “They told me she was above the ordinary height.”

  “One thing is sure, she is a brunette, because Moser-Hartmann praises her black eyes and black eyebrows.”

  “All I can say is,” replied Ulrik, “that in this letter from Venice, which place the marquise has recently left for France, as I am informed, she is poetically called the ‘blonde star,’ so I think she must be a blonde.”

  “But what has she done in Venice? What has happened there?”

  “My faith!” exclaimed Ulrik, “it is an adventure which smacks of the manners of pagan antiquity and the middle ages of Italy at the same time.”

  Unfortunately for the curiosity of Ulrik’s auditors, the sudden beating of a drum outside announced the return of the Archduke Leopold, and each person in the house of the prince at once went to his post, ready to receive the Royal Highness.

  In fact, the sentinel of the Élysée, descrying the approach of several carriages in t
he livery of the King of the French, had called “To arms!” The soldiers on guard with their commanding officer were immediately in line, and at the moment the carriages entered successively the immense court of the Élysée, the drums beat and the troops presented arms.

  The first of the carriages stopped before the palace; the footmen in bright red livery opened the door, and his Royal Highness, the Archduke Maximilian Leopold, slowly ascended the steps, conversing with a colonel, officer of ordinance, whose office it was to accompany him; a few steps behind the prince came his aids-de-camp, dressed in brilliant foreign uniforms, and took their places in order at the foot of the steps by the royal carriages. The archduke, thirty-nine years old, was robust, yet slenderly proportioned. He wore with military severity the full-dress uniform of the field-marshal, white coat, with epaulettes of gold; scarlet casimir breeches over which reached the shining black of his high riding-boots, a little dusty, as he had assisted in the review appointed in his honour. The great cordon red, the collar of the fleece of gold, and five or six medallions of different orders ornamented his breast; his hair was pale blond, as was his long moustache turned up in military style, which gave a still more severe expression to his features, and strongly augmented the breadth of his chin and the prominent angle of his nose; his eye, cold and penetrating, half-covered by the eyelid, was set under a very heavy eyebrow, which gave him the air of always looking very high. This severe and disdainful glance, united to an imperious manner and an inflexible carriage of the head, gave to the whole personal bearing of the archduke a remarkable character of arrogant, icy authority.

  About a quarter of an hour after the prince had returned to the Élysée, the carriage of a French minister, and that of an ambassador from a great power in the North, stopped successively before the entrance, and the statesman and the diplomatist entered the palace.

  Almost at the same moment, one of the principal persons of this story arrived on foot in the court of the Élysée-Bourbon.

  M. Pascal, for such was our hero’s name, appeared to be about thirty-six years old. He was of middle stature, very dark, and wore quite a long beard, as rough and black as his eyebrows, beneath which glittered two little very piercing gray eyes. As he had the habit of holding his head down, and his two hands in the pockets of his trousers, the attitude served to increase the roundness of his broad shoulders. His features were especially remarkable for their expression of sarcastic sternness, to which was joined that air of inexorable assurance peculiar to people who are convinced of their power and are vain of it. A narrow black cravat, tied, as they say, à la Colin, a long waistcoat of Scotch cloth, a light greatcoat, whitish in colour, a gray hat well worn, and wide nankin trousers, in the pockets of which M. Pascal kept his hands, made up his costume of doubtful cleanliness, and perfectly in harmony with the extreme heat of the season and the habitual carelessness of the wearer.

  When M. Pascal passed before the porter’s lodge, he was challenged by that functionary, who from the depth of his armchair called:

  “Eh! — speak, sir, where are you going?”

  Either M. Pascal did not hear the porter, or he did not wish to give himself the trouble to reply, as he continued to walk toward the entrance of the palace without saying a word.

  The porter, forced to rise from his armchair, ran after the mute visitor, and said, impatiently:

  “I ask again, sir, where are you going? You can reply, can you not?”

  M. Pascal stopped, took a disdainful survey of his interlocutor, shrugged his shoulders, and said, as he turned again toward the entrance: “I am going — to see the archduke.”

  The porter knew the class with which he was accustomed to deal. He could not imagine that this visitor, in a summer greatcoat and loose cravat, really had an audience with the prince, or would dare to present himself before his Highness in a costume so impertinently outside of the regulation, for all persons who had the honour of being received at the palace were usually attired in black; so taking M. Pascal for some half-witted or badly informed tradesman, he followed him, calling in a loud voice:

  “But sir, tradespeople who come to see his Highness do not pass by the grand staircase. Down there at the right you will see the door for tradesmen and servants by which you ought to enter.”

  M. Pascal did not care to talk; he shrugged his shoulders again, and continued his march toward the staircase without a word.

  The porter, exasperated by this silence and this obstinacy, seized M. Pascal by the arm, and, speaking louder still, said:

  “Must I tell you again, sir, that you cannot pass that way?”

  “What do you mean, scoundrel?” cried M. Pascal, in a tone of contempt and anger, as if this outrage on the part of the porter was as insolent as inconceivable, “do you know to whom you are talking?”

  There was in these words an expression of authority so threatening, that the poor porter, frightened for a moment, stammered:

  “Monsieur, — I — do — not — know.”

  The great door of the vestibule was suddenly opened. One of the aids-de-camp of the prince, having seen from the parlour window the altercation between the visitor and the porter, hastily descended the staircase, and, eagerly approaching M. Pascal, said to him in excellent French, with a sympathetic tone:

  “Ah, monsieur, his Royal Highness will, I am sure, be much grieved by this misunderstanding. Do me the honour to follow me; I will introduce you at once. I have just received orders from monseigneur concerning you, sir.”

  M. Pascal bowed his head in assent, and followed the aid-de-camp, leaving the porter amazed and afflicted by his own want of address.

  When M. Pascal and his guide arrived in the chamber of waiting, where other officials were congregated, the young officer said:

  “The audience of his Royal Highness is crowded this morning, because the review detained monseigneur much longer than he expected, so, desiring to make you wait as short a time as possible, he has ordered me to conduct you, upon your arrival, into a chamber adjoining his private office, where his Royal Highness will meet you as soon as his conference with the minister of foreign affairs is ended.”

  M. Pascal again made sign of assent, and, following the aid-de-camp, crossed a dark passage, and entered a chamber overlooking the magnificent garden of the Élysée-Bourbon.

  Before withdrawing, the aid-de-camp, not a little annoyed by the unfortunate altercation between the porter and M. Pascal, remarked the negligent attire of the latter. Habituated to the severe formalities of etiquette, the young courtier was shocked at the unconventional dress of the person he was about to introduce, and hesitated between the fear of antagonising a man like Pascal and the desire to protest against the unsuitability of his bearing as an insult to the dignity of a prince, who was known to be inexorable in all that pertained to the respect due his rank; but the first fear prevailed, and as it was too late to insist upon a change of dress consistent with the requirements of court etiquette, the young courtier said:

  “As soon as the foreign minister withdraws from the presence of his Royal Highness, I will inform him, sir, that you are at his orders.”

  These last words, “that you are at his orders,” did not appear to sound very well in the ears of M. Pascal. A sardonic smile played upon his lips, but making himself at home, so to speak, and finding the temperature of the room too warm, he opened one of the windows, placed his elbows on the balustrade, and, keeping his hat on his head, occupied himself with a survey of the garden.

  CHAPTER II.

  EVERYBODY KNOWS THE garden of the Élysée, that charming little park, planted with the most beautiful trees in the world, whose fresh green turf is watered by a clear winding river; a terraced walk, shaded by elms a century old, borders this park on the side of the avenue called Marigny; a similar walk, parallel to it, bounds it on the opposite side, and a very low wall separates it from the neighbouring gardens. This last mentioned walk ended a short distance from the window where M. Pascal was so comfortably seate
d, and soon his attention was keenly awakened by several incidents.

  The young man who had passed through the parlour, occupied by secretaries and gentlemen, and who had, for reason of his timidity, been the subject of several remarks, was slowly promenading the shaded walk. He was of slender and graceful stature. Every few moments he stopped, stooped down, and remained immovable a second, then continued his promenade. When he reached the extremity of the walk, he approached, almost by stealth, the wall bordering upon the adjacent garden, and, as at this point the wall was hardly more than four feet high, he leaned upon it, apparently absorbed in reflection or the expectation of meeting another person.

  So long as the promenader kept his back turned to M. Pascal, who now began to feel very curious concerning him, his features of course could not be distinguished; but when he turned, after having made some desired discovery, and retraced his steps, he was face to face with his observer at the window.

  Count Frantz de Neuberg, as we have said, passed for the godson of the archduke, by whom he was tenderly loved. According to the rumours of the court, his Royal Highness, having had no children since his marriage with the Princess of Saxe-Teschen, had abundant reason for exercising paternal interest in Frantz de Neuberg, the secret fruit of a first love.

  Frantz, scarcely twenty years old at the time of this history, presented the perfect type of the melancholy beauty of the North. His long blond hair, parted in the middle of a brow as white and ingenuous as that of a young girl, framed a face whose regularity was without a flaw. His large blue eyes, soft and dreaming, seemed to reflect the purity of his soul, and an incipient beard, shading his chin and upper lip with a silken, golden down, accentuated the virility of his charming face.

  As he came up the walk, Frantz more and more attracted the attention of M. Pascal, who looked at him with a sort of admiring surprise, for it would have been difficult not to observe the rare perfection of the young man’s features; but when at a short distance from the window he encountered the fixed and persistent gaze of M. Pascal, he appeared not less provoked than embarrassed, blushed, looked downward, and, turning on his heel, abruptly, quickened his pace until he reached the middle of the walk, where he began again his slow promenade, evidently constrained by the thought that a stranger was watching his movements. He hardly dared approach the boundary of the neighbouring garden, but suddenly, forgetting all preoccupation, he ran toward the wall at the sight of a little straw hat which appeared on the other side, and encased in its frame lined with rose-coloured silk was the freshest, most entrancing countenance of fifteen years that ever entered into a young man’s dream.

 

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