Part 7 (2/2)

”What a donkey this philosopher is!” murmured Schaunard, whose face was buried in his gla.s.s, ”here is he obliging me to put water in my wine.”

After dinner they went to take coffee at the Cafe Momus, where they had already spent the preceding evening. It was from that day that the establishment in question became uninhabitable by its other frequenters.

After coffee and nips of liqueurs the Bohemian clan, definitely founded, returned to Marcel's lodging, which took the name of Schaunard's Elysium. Whilst Colline went to order the supper he had promised, the others bought squibs, crackers and other pyrotechnic materials, and before sitting down to table they let off from the windows a magnificent display of fireworks which turned the whole house topsy-turvey, and during which the four friends shouted at the top of their voices--

”Let us celebrate this happy day.”

The next morning they again found themselves all four together but without seeming astonished this time. Before each going about his business they went together and breakfasted frugally at the Cafe Momus, where they made an appointment for the evening and where for a long time they were seen to return daily.

Such are the chief personages who will reappear in the episodes of which this volume is made up, a volume which is not a romance and has no other pretension than that set forth on its t.i.tle-page, for the ”Bohemians of the Latin Quarter” is only a series of social studies, the heroes of which belong to a cla.s.s badly judged till now, whose greatest crime is lack of order, and who can even plead in excuse that this very lack of order is a necessity of the life they lead.

CHAPTER II

A GOOD ANGEL

Schaunard and Marcel, who had been grinding away valiantly a whole morning, suddenly struck work.

”Thunder and lightning! I'm hungry!” cried Schaunard. And he added carelessly, ”Do we breakfast today?”

Marcel appeared much astonished at this very inopportune question.

”How long has it been the fas.h.i.+on to breakfast two days running?” he asked. ”And yesterday was Thursday.” He finished his reply by tracing with his mahl-stick the ecclesiastic ordinance:

”On Friday eat no meat, Nor aught resembling it.”

Schaunard, finding no answer, returned to his picture, which represented a plain inhabited by a red tree and a blue tree shaking branches; an evident allusion to the sweets of friends.h.i.+p, which had a very philosophical effect.

At this moment the porter knocked; he had brought a letter for Marcel.

”Three sous,” said he.

”You are sure?” replied the artist. ”Very well, you can owe it to us.”

He shut the door in the man's face, and opened the letter. At the first line, he began to vault around the room like a rope-dancer and thundered out, at the top of his voice, this romantic ditty, which indicated with him the highest pitch of ecstasy:

”There were four juveniles in our street; They fell so sick they could not eat; They carried them to the hospital!-- Tal! Tal! Tal! Tal!”

”Oh yes!” said Schaunard, taking him up:

”They put all four into one big bed, Two at the feet and two at the head.”

”Think I don't know it?” Marcel continued:

”There came a sister of Charity-- Ty! Ty! tee! tee!”

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