Part 212 (2/2)
”Let us make an end of this. You have come to ask something of me, you say? Well, what? What is it? Speak!”
”Sir,” said Marius, with the look of a man who feels that he is falling over a precipice, ”I have come to ask your permission to marry.”
M. Gillenormand rang the bell. Basque opened the door half-way.
”Call my daughter.”
A second later, the door was opened once more, Mademoiselle Gillenormand did not enter, but showed herself; Marius was standing, mute, with pendant arms and the face of a criminal; M. Gillenormand was pacing back and forth in the room. He turned to his daughter and said to her:--
”Nothing. It is Monsieur Marius. Say good day to him. Monsieur wishes to marry. That's all. Go away.”
The curt, hoa.r.s.e sound of the old man's voice announced a strange degree of excitement. The aunt gazed at Marius with a frightened air, hardly appeared to recognize him, did not allow a gesture or a syllable to escape her, and disappeared at her father's breath more swiftly than a straw before the hurricane.
In the meantime, Father Gillenormand had returned and placed his back against the chimney-piece once more.
”You marry! At one and twenty! You have arranged that! You have only a permission to ask! a formality. Sit down, sir. Well, you have had a revolution since I had the honor to see you last. The Jacobins got the upper hand. You must have been delighted. Are you not a Republican since you are a Baron? You can make that agree. The Republic makes a good sauce for the barony. Are you one of those decorated by July? Have you taken the Louvre at all, sir? Quite near here, in the Rue Saint-Antoine, opposite the Rue des Nonamdieres, there is a cannon-ball incrusted in the wall of the third story of a house with this inscription: 'July 28th, 1830.' Go take a look at that. It produces a good effect. Ah!
those friends of yours do pretty things. By the way, aren't they erecting a fountain in the place of the monument of M. le Duc de Berry?
So you want to marry? Whom? Can one inquire without indiscretion?”
He paused, and, before Marius had time to answer, he added violently:--
”Come now, you have a profession? A fortune made? How much do you earn at your trade of lawyer?”
”Nothing,” said Marius, with a sort of firmness and resolution that was almost fierce.
”Nothing? Then all that you have to live upon is the twelve hundred livres that I allow you?”
Marius did not reply. M. Gillenormand continued:--
”Then I understand the girl is rich?”
”As rich as I am.”
”What! No dowry?”
”No.”
”Expectations?”
”I think not.”
”Utterly naked! What's the father?”
”I don't know.”
”And what's her name?”
”Mademoiselle Fauchelevent.”
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