Part 19 (1/2)
”Your anxieties are relieved, are they not?” he said, offering his hand effusively; ”I comprehend them to their fullest extent after seeing mademoiselle. I spoke to you of terrestrial creatures, not of angels.”
All present seemed by their att.i.tudes to ask the meaning of this speech.
”I shall always consider it a triumph,” resumed the poet, observing that everybody wished for an explanation, ”to have stirred to mention on of those men of iron whom Napoleon had the eye to find and make the supporting piles on which he tried to build an empire, too colossal to be lasting: for such structures time alone is the cement. But this triumph--why should I be proud of it?--I count for nothing. It was the triumph of ideas over facts. Your battles, my dear Monsieur Dumay, your heroic charges, Monsieur le comte, nay, war itself was the form in which Napoleon's idea clothed itself. Of all of these things, what remains?
The sod that covers them knows nothing; harvests come and go without revealing their resting-place; were it not for the historian, the writer, futurity would have no knowledge of those heroic days. Therefore your fifteen years of war are now ideas and nothing more; that which preserves the Empire forever is the poem that the poets make of them. A nation that can win such battles must know how to sing them.”
Ca.n.a.lis paused, to gather by a glance that ran round the circle the tribute of amazement which he expected of provincials.
”You must be aware, monsieur, of the regret I feel at not seeing you,”
said Madame Mignon, ”since you compensate me with the pleasure of hearing you.”
Modeste, determined to think Ca.n.a.lis sublime, sat motionless with amazement; the embroidery slipped from her fingers, which held it only by the needleful of thread.
”Modeste, this is Monsieur Ernest de La Briere. Monsieur Ernest, my daughter,” said the count, thinking the secretary too much in the background.
The young girl bowed coldly, giving Ernest a glance that was meant to prove to every one present that she saw him for the first time.
”Pardon me, monsieur,” she said without blus.h.i.+ng; ”the great admiration I feel for the greatest of our poets is, in the eyes of my friends, a sufficient excuse for seeing only him.”
The pure, fresh voice, with accents like that of Mademoiselle Mars, charmed the poor secretary, already dazzled by Modeste's beauty, and in his sudden surprise he answered by a phrase that would have been sublime, had it been true.
”He is my friend,” he said.
”Ah, then you do pardon me,” she replied.
”He is more than a friend,” cried Ca.n.a.lis taking Ernest by the shoulder and leaning upon it like Alexander on Hephaestion, ”we love each other as though we were brothers--”
Madame Latournelle cut short the poet's speech by pointing to Ernest and saying aloud to her husband, ”Surely that is the gentleman we saw at church.”
”Why not?” said Charles Mignon, quickly, observing that Ernest reddened.
Modeste coldly took up her embroidery.
”Madame may be right; I have been twice in Havre lately,” replied La Briere, sitting down by Dumay.
Ca.n.a.lis, charmed with Modeste's beauty, mistook the admiration she expressed, and flattered himself he had succeeded in producing his desired effects.
”I should think a man without heart, if he had no devoted friend near him,” said Modeste, to pick up the conversation interrupted by Madame Latournelle's awkwardness.
”Mademoiselle, Ernest's devotion makes me almost think myself worth something,” said Ca.n.a.lis; ”for my dear Pylades is full of talent; he was the right hand of the greatest minister we have had since the peace.
Though he holds a fine position, he is good enough to be my tutor in the science of politics; he teaches me to conduct affairs and feeds me with his experience, when all the while he might aspire to a much better situation. Oh! he is worth far more than I.” At a gesture from Modeste he continued gracefully: ”Yes, the poetry that I express he carries in his heart; and if I speak thus openly before him it is because he has the modesty of a nun.”
”Enough, oh, enough!” cried La Briere, who hardly knew which way to look. ”My dear Ca.n.a.lis, you remind me of a mother who is seeking to marry off her daughter.”
”How is it, monsieur,” said Charles Mignon, addressing Ca.n.a.lis, ”that you can even think of becoming a political character?”
”It is abdication,” said Modeste, ”for a poet; politics are the resource of matter-of-fact men.”
”Ah, mademoiselle, the rostrum is to-day the greatest theatre of the world; it has succeeded the tournaments of chivalry, it is now the meeting-place for all intellects, just as the army has been the rallying-point of courage.”