I said, at the end of the last chapter,
that my friends bade adieu on the quay of Brest to
an “emancipated slaver;” for slaver
I was determined to continue, notwithstanding the
capture of my vessel, and the tedious incarceration
of my body. Had the seizure and sentence been
justly inflicted for a violation of local or international
law, I might, perhaps, have become penitent for early
sins, during the long hours of reflection afforded
me in the chateau. But, with all the fervor
of an ardent and thwarted nature, I was much more disposed
to rebel and revenge myself when opportunity occurred,
than to confess my sins with a lowly and obedient
heart. Indeed, most of my time in prison had
been spent in cursing the court and king, or in reflecting
how I should get back to Africa in the speediest manner,
if I was ever lucky enough to elude the grasp of the
model monarch.
The vessel that bore me into perpetual
banishment from France, was bound to Lisbon; but,
delaying in Portugal only long enough to procure a
new passport, under an assumed name, I spat upon Louis
Philippe’s “eternal exile,” and
took shipping for his loyal port of Marseilles!
Here I found two vessels fitting for the coast of Africa;
but, in consequence of the frightful prevalence of
cholera, all mercantile adventures were temporarily
suspended. In fact, such was the panic, that
no one dreamed of despatching the vessel in which I
was promised a passage, until the pestilence subsided.
Till this occurred, as my means were of the scantiest
character, I took lodgings in an humble hotel.
The dreadful malady was then apparently
at its height, and nearly all the hotels were deserted,
for most of the regular inhabitants had fled; while
the city was unfrequented by strangers except under
pressing duty. It is altogether probable that
the lodging-houses and hotels would have been closed
entirely, so slight was their patronage, had not the
prefect issued an order, depriving of their licenses,
for the space of two years, all who shut their doors
on strangers. Accordingly, even when the scourge
swept many hundred victims daily to their graves,
every hotel, cafe, grocery, butcher shop, and bakery,
was regularly opened in Marseilles; so that a dread
of famine was not added to the fear of cholera.
Of course, the lowly establishment
where I dwelt was not thronged at this epoch; most
of its inmates or frequenters had departed for the
country before my arrival, and I found the house tenanted
alone by three boarders and a surly landlord, who
cursed the authorities for their compulsory edict.
My reception, therefore, was by no means cordial.
I was told that the proclamation had not prevented
the cook from departing; and that I must be
content with whatever the master of the house could
toss up for my fare.
A sailor especially one
fresh from the chateau of Brest, is
not apt to be over nice in the article of cookery,
and I readily accompanied my knight of the rueful
countenance to his table d’hote, which
I found to be a long oval board, three fourths bare
of cloth and guests, while five human visages
clustered around its end.
I took my seat opposite a trim dashing
brunette, with the brightest eyes and rosiest cheeks
imaginable. Her face was so healthily refreshing
in the midst of malady and death, that I altogether
forgot the cholera under the charm of her ardent gaze.
Next me sat a comical sort of fellow, who did not
delay in scraping an acquaintance, and jocularly insisted
on introducing all the company.
“It’s a case of emergency,”
said the droll, “we have no time to lose or
to stand on the ceremony of fashionable etiquette.
Here to-day, gone to-morrow is the motto
of Marseilles! Holà! Messieurs, shall
we not make the most of new acquaintances when they
may be so brief?”
I thanked him for his hospitality.
I had so little to lose in this world, either of property
or friends, that I feared the cholera quite as slightly
as any of the company. “A thousand thanks,”
said I, “Monsieur, for your politeness; I’ll
bury you to-morrow, if it is the cholera’s pleasure,
with ten times more pleasure now that I have had the
honor of an introduction. A fashionable man hardly
cares to be civil to a stranger even if
he happens to be a corpse!”
There was so hearty a cheer at this
sally, that, in spite of the shallow soundings of
my purse, I called for a fresh bottle, and pledged
the party in a bumper all round.
“And now,” continued my
neighbor, “as it may be necessary for some one
of us to write your epitaph in a day or two, or, at
least, to send a message of condolence and sympathy
to your friends; pray let us know a bit of your history,
and what the devil brings you to Marseilles when the
cholera thermometer is up to 1000 degrees per diem?”
Very few words were necessary to impart
such a name and tale as I chose to invent for the
company’s edification. “Santiago Ximenes,”
and my tawny skin betokened my nationality and profession,
while my threadbare garments spoke louder than words
that I was at suit with Fortune.
Presently, after a lull in the chat,
a dapper little prig of a dandy, who sat on my left,
volunteered to inform me that he was no less a personage
than le Docteur Du Jean, a medical practitioner
fresh from Metropolitan hospitals, who, in a spirit
of the loftiest philanthropy, visited this provincial
town at his own expense to succor the poor.
“C’est une belle dame,
nôtre vis a vis, n’est elle pas mon cher?”
said he pointing to our patron saint opposite.
I admitted without argument that she
was the most charming woman I ever saw out of Cuba.
“C’est ma chère amie,”
whispered he confidentially in my ear, strongly emphasizing
the word “friend” and nodding very knowingly
towards the lady herself. “At the present
moment the dear little creature is exclusively under
my charge and protection, for she is en route
to join her husband, a captain in the army at Algiers;
but, alas! grace a Dieu, there’s no chance
of a transport so long as this cursed pestilence blockades
Marseilles! Do you know the man on your right? No!
Bien! that’s the celebrated S ,
the oratorical advocate about whom the papers rang
when Louis Philippe began his assault on the press.
He’s on his way to Algiers too, and will be more
successful in liberalizing the Arabs than the French.
That old chap over yonder with the snuffy nose, the
snuffy wig, and snuffy coat, is a grand speculator
in horses, on his way to the richest cavalry corps
of the army; and, as for our maitre d’hotel
at the head of this segment, pauvre diable,
you see what he is without a revelation. The
pestilence has nearly used him up. He sits half
the day in his bureau on the stairs looking for guests
who never come, reading the record which adds no name,
cursing the cholera, counting a penitential ave
and pater on his rosary, and flying from the
despair of silence and desertion to his pans to stew
our wretched fare. Voila mon cher, la carte de
la table! le Cholera et ses Convives!”
If there is a creature I detest in
the world it is a flippant, intrusive, voluntary youth
who thrusts his conversation and affairs upon strangers,
and makes bold to monopolize their time with his unasked
confidence. Such persons are always silly and
vulgar pretenders; and before Doctor Du Jean got through
his description of the lady, I had already classified
him among my particular aversions.
When the doctor nodded so patronizingly
to the dame, and spoke of his friendly protectorate,
I thought I saw that the quick-witted woman not only
comprehended his intimation, but denied it by the sudden
glance she gave me from beneath her thin and arching
eyebrows. So, when dinner was over, without saying
a word to the doctor, I made a slight inclination
of the head to Madame Duprez, and rising before the
other guests, passed to her side and tendered my arm
for a promenade on the balcony.
“Mon docteur,”
said I as we left the room, “life, you know,
is too short and precarious to suffer a monopoly of
such blessings,” looking intently
into the lady’s eyes, “besides
which, we sailors, in defiance of you landsmen, go
in for the most ’perfect freedom of the seas.’”
Madame Duprez declared I was entirely
right; that I was no pirate. Mais,
mon capitaine,” said the fair one,
as she leaned with a fond pressure on my arm, “I’d
have no objection if you were, so that you’d
capture me from that frightful gallipot! Besides,
you sailors are always so gallant towards the ladies,
and tell us such delightful stories, and bring us
such charming presents when you come home, and love
us so much while you’re in port, because you
see so few when you are away! Now isn’t
that a delightful catalogue raisonne of arguments
why women should love les matelots?”
“Pity then, madame,”
said I, “that you married a soldier.”
“Ah!” returned the ready
dame, “I didn’t; that
was my mother’s match. In France, you know,
the old folks marry us; but we take the liberty to
love whomsoever we please!”
“But, what of Monsieur le
capitaine, in the present instance?” interrupted
I inquiringly.
“Ah! fi donc!”
said Madame, “what bad taste to speak of an absent,
husband when you have the liberty to talk with a present
wife!”
In fact, the lovely Helen of this
tavern-Troy was the dearest of coquettes, whose fence
of tongue was as beautiful a game of thrust and parry
as I ever saw played with Parisian foils. Du Jean
had been horribly mortified by the contemptuous manner
in which the threadbare Spaniard bore off his imaginary
prize; and would probably have assailed me on the
spot, before he knew my temper or quality, had not
the lawyer drawn him aside on a plea of medical advice
and given his inflamed honor time to cool.
But the wit of Madame Duprez was not
so satisfied by a single specimen of our mutual folly,
as to allow the surgeon to resume the undisputed post
of cavalière serviente which he occupied before
my arrival. It was her delight to see us at loggerheads
for her favor, and though we were both aware of her
arrant coquetry, neither had moral courage enough,
in that dismal time, to desist from offering the most
servile courtesies. We mined and counter-mined,
marched and counter-marched, deceived and re-deceived,
for several days, without material advantage to either,
till, at last, the affair ended in a battle.
The prefecture’s bulletin announced
at dinner-time twelve hundred deaths! but, in spite
of the horror, or perhaps to drown its memory, our
undiminished party called for several more bottles,
and became uproariously gay.
The conversation took a physiological
turn; and gradually the modern science of phrenology,
which was just then becoming fashionable, came on
the carpet. Doctor Du Jean professed familiarity
with its mysteries. Spurzheim, he said, had been
his professor in Paris. He could read our characters
on our skulls as if they were written in a book.
Powers, passions, propensities, and even thoughts,
could not be hidden from him; and, “who
dared try his skill?”
“C’est moi!”
said Madame Duprez, as she drew her chair to the centre
of the room, and accepting the challenge, cast loose
her beautiful hair, which fell in a raven torrent
over snowy neck and shoulders, heightening tenfold
every charm of face and figure.
Du Jean was nothing loth to commence
his tender manipulation of the charming head, whose
wicked mouth and teasing eyes shot glances of defiance
at me. Several organs were disclosed and explained
to the company; but then came others which he ventured
to whisper in her ears alone, and, as he did so, I
noticed that his mouth was pressed rather deeper than
I thought needful among the folds of her heavy locks.
I took the liberty to hint rather jestingly that the
doctor “cut quite too deep with his lips;”
but the coquette at once saw my annoyance, and persisted
with malicious delight in making Du Jean whisper heaven
knows what in her ear. In fact, she
insisted that some of the organs should be repeated
to her three or four times over, while, at each rehearsal,
the doctor grew bolder in his dives among the curls,
and the lady louder and redder in her merriment.
At last, propriety required that the
scene should be closed, and no one knew better than
this arch coquette the precise limit of decency’s
bounds. Next came the lawyer’s cranium;
then followed the horse-jockey and tavern-keeper;
and finally, it was my turn to take the stool.
I made every objection I could think
of against submitting to inspection, for I was sure
the surgeon had wit enough not to lose so good a chance
of quizzing or ridiculing me; but a whispered word
from Madame forced an assent, with the stipulation
that Du Jean should allow me to examine his
skull afterwards, pretending that if he had studied
with Spurzheim, I had learned the science from Gall.
The doctor accepted the terms and
began his lecture. First of all my Jealousy was
enormous, and only equalled by my Conceit and Envy.
I was altogether destitute of Love, Friendship, or
the Moral sentiments. I was an immoderate wine-bibber;
extremely avaricious; passionate, revengeful, and
blood-thirsty; in fine, I was a monstrous conglomerate
of every thing devilish and dreadful. The first
two or three essays of the doctor amused the company
and brought down a round of laughter; but as he grew
coarser and coarser, I saw the increasing disgust of
our comrades by their silence, though I preserved my
temper most admirably till he was done. Then
I rose slowly from the seat, and pointing the doctor
silently to the vacant chair, for I could
not speak with rage, I took my stand immediately
in front of him, gazing intently into his eyes.
The company gathered eagerly round, expecting I would
retaliate wittily, or pay him back in his coin of abuse.
After a minute’s pause I regained
my power of speech, and inquired whether the phrenologist
was ready. He replied affirmatively; whereupon
my right hand discovered the bump of impudence with
a tremendous slap on his left cheek, while my left
hand detected the organ of blackguardism with equal
prominence on his right!
It was natural that this new mode
of scientific investigation was as novel and surprising
as it was disagreeable to poor Du Jean; for, in an
instant, we were exchanging blows with intense zeal,
and would probably have borrowed a couple of graves
from the cholera, had not the boarders interfered.
All hands, however, were unanimous in my favor, asserting
that Du Jean had provoked me beyond endurance; and,
as la belle Duprez joined heartily in the verdict,
the doctor gave up the contest, and, ever after, “cut”
the lady.