Far from gaining assurance in meeting
Bonaparte oftener, he intimidated me daily more
and more. I confusedly felt that no emotion
of the heart could possibly take effect upon him.
He looks upon a human being as a fact or as a
thing, but not as a fellow-creature. He does
not hate any more than he loves; there is nothing
for him but himself; all other things are so many
ciphers. The force of his will lies in the
imperturbable calculation of his selfishness.
Reflections
Fate was very kind to Madame De Stael.
She ran the gamut of life from highest
love to direst pain from rosy dawn to blackest
night. Name if you can another woman who touched
life at so many points! Home, health, wealth,
strength, honors, affection, applause, motherhood,
loss, danger, death, defeat, sacrifice, humiliation,
illness, banishment, imprisonment, escape. Again
comes hope returning strength, wealth,
recognition, fame tempered by opposition, home, a few
friends, and kindly death cool, all-enfolding
death.
If Harriet Martineau showed poor judgment
in choosing her parents, we can lay no such charge
to the account of Madame De Stael.
They called her “The Daughter
of Necker,” and all through life she delighted
in the title. The courtier who addressed her thus
received a sunny smile and a gentle love-tap on his
cheek for pay. A splendid woman is usually the
daughter of her father, just as strong men have noble
mothers.
Jacques Necker was born in Geneva,
and went up to the city, like many another country
boy, to make his fortune. He carried with him
to Paris innocence, health, high hope, and twenty
francs in silver. He found a place as porter
or “trotter” in a bank. Soon they
made him clerk.
A letter came one day from a correspondent
asking for a large loan, and setting forth a complex
financial scheme in which the bank was invited to
join. M. Vernet, the head of the establishment,
was away, and young Necker took the matter in hand.
He made a detailed statement of the scheme, computed
probable losses, weighed the pros and cons, and when
the employer returned, the plan, all worked out, was
on his desk, with young Necker’s advice that
the loan be made.
“You seem to know all about
banking!” was the sarcastic remark of M. Vernet.
“I do,” was the proud answer.
“You know too much; I’ll just put you
back as porter.”
The Genevese accepted the reduction
and went back as porter without repining. A man
of small sense would have resigned his situation at
once, just as men are ever forsaking Fortune when
she is about to smile; witness Cato committing suicide
on the very eve of success.
There is always a demand for efficient
men; the market is never glutted; the cities are hungry
for them but the trouble is, few men are
efficient.
“It was none of his business!”
said M. Vernet to his partner, trying to ease conscience
with reasons.
“Yes; but see how he accepted the inevitable!”
“Ah! true, he has two qualities
that are the property only of strong men: confidence
and resignation. I think I think I
was hasty!”
So young Necker was reinstated, and
in six months was cashier, in three years a partner.
Not long after, he married Susanna
Curchod, a poor governess.
But Mademoiselle Curchod was rich
in mental endowment: refined, gentle, spiritual,
she was a true mate to the high-minded Necker.
She was a Swiss, too, and if you know how a young
man and a young woman, countryborn, in a strange city
are attracted to each other, you will better understand
this particular situation.
Some years before, Gibbon had loved
and courted the beautiful Mademoiselle Curchod in
her quiet home in the Jura Mountains. They became
engaged. Gibbon wrote home, breaking the happy
news to his parents.
“Has the beautiful Curchod of
whom you sing, a large dowry?” inquired the
mother.
“She has no dowry! I can
not tell a lie,” was the meek answer. The
mother came on and extinguished the match in short
order.
Gibbon never married. But he
frankly tells us all about his love for Susanna Curchod,
and relates how he visited her, in her splendid Paris
home. “She greeted me without embarrassment,”
says Gibbon, resentfully; “and in the evening
Necker left us together in the parlor, bade me good-night,
and lighting a candle went off to bed!”
Gibbon, historian and philosopher,
was made of common clay (for authors are made of clay,
like plain mortals), and he could not quite forgive
Madame Necker for not being embarrassed on meeting
her former lover, neither could he forgive Necker
for not being jealous.
But that only daughter of the Neckers,
Germaine, pleased Gibbon pleased him better
than the mother, and Gibbon extended his stay in Paris
and called often.
“She was a splendid creature,”
Gibbon relates; “only seventeen, but a woman
grown, physically and mentally; not handsome, but dazzling,
brilliant, emotional, sensitive, daring!”
Gibbon was a bit of a romanticist,
as all historians are, and he no doubt thought it
would be a fine denouement to life’s play to
capture the daughter of his old sweetheart, and avenge
himself on Fate and the unembarrassed Madame Necker
and the unpiqued husband, all at one fell stroke and
she would not be dowerless either. Ha, ha!
But Gibbon forgot that he was past
forty, short in stature, and short of breath, and
“miles around,” as Talleyrand put it.
“I quite like you,” said
the daring daughter, as the eloquent Gibbon sat by
her side at a dinner.
“Why shouldn’t you like me I
came near being your papa!”
“I know, and would I have looked like you?”
“Perhaps.”
“What a calamity!”
Even then she possessed that same
bubbling wit that was hers years later when she sat
at table with D’Alembert. On one side of
the great author was Madame Recamier, famous for beauty
(and later for a certain “Beauty-Cream"), on
the other the daughter of Necker.
“How fortunate!” exclaimed
D’Alembert with rapture; “how fortunate
I sit between Wit and Beauty!”
“Yes, and without possessing either,”
said Wit.
No mistake, the girl’s intellect
was too speedy even for Gibbon. She fenced all
’round him and over him, and he soon discovered
that she was icily gracious to every one, save her
father alone. For him she seemed to outpour all
the lavish love of her splendid womanhood. It
was unlike the usual calm affection of father and
daughter. It was a great and absorbing love,
of which even the mother was jealous.
“I can’t just exactly
make ’em out,” said Gibbon, and withdrew
in good order.
Before Necker was forty he had accumulated
a fortune, and retired from business to devote himself
to literature and the polite arts.
“I have earned a rest,”
he said; “besides, I must have leisure to educate
my daughter.”
Men are constantly “retiring”
from business, but someway the expected Elysium of
leisure forever eludes us. Necker had written
several good pamphlets and showed the world that he
had ability outside of money-making. He was appointed
Resident Minister of Geneva at the Court of France.
Soon after he became President of the French East India
Company, because there was no one else with mind broad
enough to fill the place. His house was the gathering-place
of many eminent scholars and statesmen. Necker
was quiet and reserved; his wife coldly brilliant,
cultured, dignified, religious. The daughter made
good every deficiency in both.
She was tall, finely formed, but her
features were rather heavy, and in repose there was
a languor in her manner and a blankness in her face.
This seeming dulness marks all great actors, but the
heaviness is only on the surface; it often covers
a sleeping volcano. On recognizing an acquaintance,
Germaine Necker’s face would be illumined, and
her smile would light a room. She could pronounce
a man’s name so he would be ready to throw himself
at her feet, or over a precipice for her. And
she could listen in a way that complimented; and by
a sigh, a nod, an exclamation, bring out the best such
thoughts as a man never knew he had. She made
people surprise themselves with their own genius; thus
proving that to make a good impression means to make
the man pleased with himself. “Any man
can be brilliant with her,” said a nettled competitor;
“but if she wishes, she can sink all women in
a room into creeping things.”
She knew how to compliment without
flattering; her cordiality warmed like wine, and her
ready wit, repartee, and ability to thaw all social
ice and lead conversation along any line, were accomplishments
which perhaps have never been equaled. The women
who “entertain” often only depress; they
are so glowing that everybody else feels himself punk.
And these people who are too clever are very numerous;
they seem inwardly to fear rivals, and are intent
on working while it is called the day.
Over against these are the celebrities
who sit in a corner and smile knowingly when they
are expected to scintillate. And the individual
who talks too much at one time is often painfully
silent at another as if he had made New-Year
resolves. But the daughter of Necker entered into
conversation with candor and abandon; she gave herself
to others, and knew whether they wished to talk or
to listen. On occasion, she could monopolize
conversation until she seemed the only person in the
room; but all talent was brighter for the added luster
of her own. This simplicity, this utter frankness,
this complete absence of self-consciousness, was like
the flight of a bird that never doubts its power, simply
because it never thinks of it. Yet continual
power produces arrogance, and the soul unchecked finally
believes in its own omniscience.
Of course such a matrimonial prize
as the daughter of Necker was sought for, even fought
for. But the women who can see clear through a
man, like a Roentgen ray, do not invite soft demonstration.
They give passion a chill. Love demands a little
illusion; it must be clothed in mystery. And
although we find evidences that many youths stood in
the hallways and sighed, the daughter of Necker never
saw fit by a nod to bring them to her feet. She
was after bigger game she desired the admiration
and approbation of archbishops, cardinals, generals,
statesmen, great authors.
Germaine Necker had no conception of what love is.
Many women never have. Had this
fine young woman met a man with intellect as clear,
mind as vivid, and heart as warm as her own, and had
he pierced her through with a wit as strong and keen
as she herself wielded, her pride would have been
broken and she might have paused. Then they might
have looked into each other’s eyes and lost self
there. And had she thus known love it would have
been a complete passion, for the woman seemed capable
of it.
A better pen than mine has written,
“A woman’s love is a dog’s love.”
The dog that craves naught else but the presence of
his master, who is faithful to the one and whines
out his life on that master’s grave, waiting
for the caress that never comes and the cheery voice
that is never heard that’s the way
a woman loves! A woman may admire, respect, revere
and obey, but she does not love until a passion seizes
upon her that has in it the abandon of Niagara.
Do you remember how Nancy Sikes crawls inch by inch
to reach the hand of Bill, and reaching it, tenderly
caresses the coarse fingers that a moment before clutched
her throat, and dies content? That’s the
love of woman! The prophet spoke of something
“passing the love of woman,” but the prophet
was wrong there’s nothing does.
So Germaine Necker, the gracious,
the kindly, the charming, did not love. However,
she married married Baron De Stael, the
Swedish Ambassador. He was thirty-seven, she
was twenty. De Stael was good-looking, polite,
educated. He always smiled at the right time,
said bright things in the right way, kept silence
when he should, and made no enemies because he agreed
with everybody about everything. Stipulations
were made; a long agreement was drawn up; it was signed
by the party of the first and duly executed by the
party of the second part; sealed, witnessed, sworn
to, and the priest was summoned.
It was a happy marriage. The
first three years of married life were the happiest
Madame De Stael ever knew, she said long afterward.
Possibly there are hasty people who
imagine they detect tincture of iron somewhere in
these pages: these good people will say, “Gracious
me! why not?”
And so I will at once admit that these
respectable, well-arranged, and carefully planned
marriages are often happy and peaceful.
The couple may “raise”
a large family and slide through life and out of it
without a splash. I will also admit that love
does not necessarily imply happiness more
often ’t is a pain, a wild yearning, and a vague
unrest; a haunting sense of heart-hunger that drives
a man into exile repeating abstractedly the name “Beatrice!
Beatrice!” And so all the moral I will make
now is simply this: the individual who has not
known an all-absorbing love has not the spiritual
vision that is a passport to Paradise. He forever
yammers between the worlds, fit for neither Heaven
nor Hell.
Necker retired from business that
he might enjoy peace; his daughter married for the
same reason. It was stipulated that she should
never be separated from her father. She who stipulates
is lost, so far as love goes but no matter!
Married women in France are greater lions in society
than maidens can possibly hope to be. The marriage-certificate
serves at once as a license for brilliancy, daring,
splendor, and it is also a badge of respectability.
The marriage-certificate is a document that in all
countries is ever taken care of by the woman and never
by the man.
And this document is especially useful
in France, as French dames know. Frenchmen
are afraid of an unmarried woman she means
danger, damages, a midnight marriage and other awful
things. An unmarried woman in France can not
hope to be a social leader; and to be a social leader
was the one ambition of Madame De Stael.
It was called the salon of Madame
De Stael now. Baron De Stael was known as the
husband of Madame De Stael. The salon of Madame
Necker was only a matter of reminiscence. The
daughter of Necker was greater than her father, and
as for Madame Necker, she was a mere figure in towering
headdress, point lace and diamonds. Talleyrand
summed up the case when he said, “She is one
of those dear old things that have to be tolerated.”
Madame De Stael had a taste for literature
from early womanhood. She wrote beautiful little
essays and read them aloud to her company, and her
manuscripts had a circulation like unto her father’s
bank-notes. She had the faculty of absorbing
beautiful thoughts and sentiments, and no woman ever
expressed them in a more graceful way. People
said she was the greatest woman author of her day.
“You mean of all time,” corrected Diderot.
They called her “the High Priestess of Letters,”
“the Minerva of Poetry,” “Sappho
Returned,” and all that. Her commendation
meant success and her indifference failure. She
knew politics, too, and her hands were on all wires.
Did she wish to placate a minister, she invited him
to call, and once there he was as putty in her hands.
She skimmed the surface of all languages, all arts,
all history, but best of all she knew the human heart.
Of course there was a realm of knowledge
she wist not of the initiates of which
never ventured within her scope. She had nothing
for them they kept away. But the proud,
the vain, the ambitious, the ennui-ridden, the people-who-wish-to-be,
and who are ever looking for the strong man to give
them help these thronged her parlors.
And when you have named these you
have named all those who are foremost in commerce,
politics, art, education, philanthropy and religion.
The world is run by second-rate people. The best
are speedily crucified, or else never heard of until
long after they are dead.
Madame De Stael, in Seventeen Hundred
Eighty-eight, was queen of the people who ran the
world –at least the French part of
it.
But intellectual power, like physical
strength, endures but for a day. Giants who have
a giant’s strength and use it like a giant must
be put down. If you have intellectual power,
hide it!
Do thy daily work in thine own little
way and be content. The personal touch repels
as well as attracts. Thy presence is a menace thy
existence an affront beware! They
are weaving a net for thy feet, and hear you not the
echo of hammering, as of men building a scaffold?
Go read history! Thinkest thou
that all men are mortal save thee alone, and that
what has befallen others can not happen to thee?
The Devil has no title to this property
he now promises. Fool! thou hast no more claim
on Fate than they who have gone before, and what has
come to others in like conditions must come to thee.
God himself can not stay it; it is so written in the
stars. Power to lead men! Pray that thy prayer
shall ne’er be granted ’t is
to be carried to the topmost pinnacle of Fame’s
temple tower, and there cast headlong upon the stones
beneath. Beware! beware!!
Madame De Stael was of an intensely
religious nature throughout her entire life; such
characters swing between license and asceticism.
But the charge of atheism told largely against her
even among the so-called liberals, for liberals are
often very illiberal. Marie Antoinette gathered
her skirts close about her and looked at the “Minerva
of Letters” with suspicion in her big, open
eyes; cabinet officers forgot her requests to call,
and when a famous wit once coolly asked, “Who
was that Madame De Stael we used to read about?”
people roared with laughter.
Necker, as Minister of Finance, had
saved the State from financial ruin; then had been
deposed and banished; then recalled. In September,
Seventeen Hundred Ninety, he was again compelled to
flee. He escaped to Switzerland, disguised as
a pedler. The daughter wished to accompany him,
but this was impossible, for only a week before she
had given birth to her first child.
But favor came back, and in the mad
tumult of the times the freedom of wit and sparkle
of her salon became a need to the poets and philosophers,
if city wits can be so called.
Society shone as never before.
In it was the good nature of the mob. It was
no time to sit quietly at home and enjoy a book men
and women must “go somewhere,” they must
“do something.” The women adopted
the Greek costume and appeared in simple white robes
caught at the shoulders with miniature stilettos.
Many men wore crape on their arms in pretended memory
of friends who had been kissed by Madame Guillotine.
There was fever in the air, fever in the blood, and
the passions held high carnival. In solitude,
danger depresses all save the very strongest, but the
mob (ever the symbol of weakness) is made up of women it
is an effeminate thing. It laughs hysterically
at death and cries, “On with the dance!”
Women represent the opposite poles of virtue.
The fever continues: a “poverty
party” is given by Madame De Stael, where men
dress in rags and women wear tattered gowns that ill
conceal their charms. “We must get used
to it,” she said, and everybody laughed.
Soon, men in the streets wear red nightcaps, women
appear in nightgowns, rich men wear wooden shoes,
and young men in gangs of twelve parade the avenues
at night carrying heavy clubs, hurrahing for this or
that.
Yes, society in Paris was never so gay.
The salons were crowded, and politics
was the theme. When the discussion waxed too
warm, some one would start a hymn and all would chime
in until the contestants were drowned out and in token
of submission joined in the chorus.
But Madame De Stael was very busy
all these days. Her house was filled with refugees,
and she ran here and there for passports and pardons,
and beseeched ministers and archbishops for interference
or assistance or amnesty or succor and all those things
that great men can give or bestow or effect or filch.
And when her smiles failed to win the wished-for signature,
she still had tears that would move a heart of brass.
About this time Baron De Stael fades
from our vision, leaving with Madame three children.
“It was never anything but a
‘mariage de convenance’
anyway, what of it ?” and Madame bursts into
tears and throws herself into Farquar’s arms.
“Compose yourself, my dear you
are spoiling my gown,” says the Duchesse.
“I stood him as long as I could,” continued
Madame.
“You mean he stood you as long as he could.”
“You naughty thing! why don’t
you sympathize with me?”
Then both women fall into a laughing
fit that is interrupted by the servant, who announces
Benjamin Constant.
Constant came as near winning the
love of Madame De Stael as any man ever did.
He was politician, scholar, writer, orator, courtier.
But with it all he was a boor, for when he had won
the favor of Madame De Stael he wrote a long letter
to Madame Charriere, with whom he had lived for several
years in the greatest intimacy, giving reasons why
he had forsaken her, and ending with an ecstacy in
praise of the Stael.
If a man can do a thing more brutal
than to humiliate one woman at the expense of another,
I do not know it. And without entering any defense
for the men who love several women at one time, I
wish to make a clear distinction between the men who
bully and brutalize women for their own gratification
and the men who find their highest pleasure in pleasing
women. The latter may not be a paragon, yet as
his desire is to give pleasure, not to corral it,
he is a totally different being from the man who deceives,
badgers, humiliates, and quarrels with one who can
not defend herself, in order that he may find an excuse
for leaving her.
A good many of Constant’s speeches
were written by Madame De Stael, and when they traveled
together through Germany he no doubt was a great help
to her in preparing the “De l’Allemagne.”
But there was a little man approaching
from out the mist of obscurity who was to play an
important part in the life of Madame De Stael.
He had heard of her wide-reaching influence, and such
an influence he could not afford to forego it
must be used to further his ends.
Yet the First Consul did not call
on her, and she did not call on the First Consul.
They played a waiting game, “If he wishes to
see me, he knows that I am home Thursdays!”
she said with a shrug.
“Yes, but a man in his position
reverses the usual order: he does not make the
first call!”
“Evidently!” said Madame,
and the subject dropped with a dull thud.
Word came from somewhere that Baron
De Stael was seriously ill. The wife was thrown
into a tumult of emotion. She must go to him at
once a wife’s duty was to her husband
first of all. She left everything, and hastening
to his bedside, there ministered to him tenderly.
But death claimed him. The widow returned to
Paris clothed in deep mourning. Crape was tied
on the door-knocker and the salon was closed.
The First Consul sent condolences.
“The First Consul is a joker,” said Dannion
solemnly, and took snuff.
In six weeks the salon was again opened.
Not long after, at a dinner, Napoleon and Madame De
Stael sat side by side. “Your father was
a great man,” said Napoleon.
He had gotten in the first compliment
when she had planned otherwise. She intended
to march her charms in a phalanx upon him, but he would
not have it so. Her wit fell flat and her prettiest
smile brought only the remark, “If the wind
veers north it may rain.”
They were rivals that was
the trouble. France was not big enough for both.
Madame De Stael’s book about
Germany had been duly announced, puffed, printed.
Ten thousand copies were issued and seized
upon by Napoleon’s agents and burned.
“The edition is exhausted,”
cried Madame, as she smiled through her tears and
searched for her pocket-handkerchief.
The trouble with the book was that
nowhere in it was Napoleon mentioned. Had Napoleon
never noticed the book, the author would have been
woefully sorry. As it was she was pleased, and
when the last guest had gone she and Benjamin Constant
laughed, shook hands, and ordered lunch.
But it was not so funny when Fouche
called, apologized, coughed, and said the air in Paris
was bad.
So Madame De Stael had to go it
was “Ten Years of Exile.” In that
book you can read all about it. She retired to
Coppet, and all the griefs, persécutions,
disappointments and heartaches were doubtless softened
by the inward thought of the distinction that was
hers in being the first woman banished by Napoleon
and of being the only woman he thoroughly feared.
When it came Napoleon’s turn
to go and the departure for Elba was at hand, it will
be remembered he bade good-by personally to those who
had served him so faithfully. It was an affecting
scene when he kissed his generals and saluted the
swarthy grenadiers in the same way. When told
of it Madame picked a petal or two from her bouquet
and said, “You see, my dears, the difference
is this: while Judas kissed but one, the Little
Man kissed forty.”
Napoleon was scarcely out of France
before Madame was back in Paris with all her books
and wit and beauty. An ovation was given the daughter
of Necker such as Paris alone can give.
But Napoleon did not stay at Elba,
at least not according to any accounts I have read.
When word came that he was marching
on Paris, Madame hastily packed up her manuscripts
and started in hot haste for Coppet.
But when the eighty days had passed
and the bugaboo was safely on board the “Bellerophon,”
she came back to the scenes she loved so well and to
what for her was the only heaven Paris.
She has been called a philosopher
and a literary light. But she was only socio-literary.
Her written philosophy does not represent the things
she felt were true simply those things
she thought it would be nice to say. She cultivated
literature, only that she might shine. Love, wealth,
health, husband, children all were sacrificed
that she might lead society and win applause.
No one ever feared solitude more: she must have
those about her who would minister to her vanity and
upon whom she could shower her wit. As a type
her life is valuable, and in these pages that traverse
the entire circle of feminine virtues and foibles she
surely must have a place.
In her last illness she was attended
daily by those faithful subjects who had all along
recognized her sovereignty in Society she
was Queen. She surely won her heart’s desire,
for to that bed from which she was no more to rise,
courtiers came and kneeling kissed her hand, and women
by the score whom she had befriended paid her the
tribute of their tears.
She died in Paris aged fifty-one.
When you are in Switzerland and take
the little steamer that plies on Lake Leman from Lausanne
to Geneva, you will see on the western shore a tiny
village that clings close around a chateau, like little
oysters around the parent shell. This is the
village of Coppet that you behold, and the central
building that seems to be a part of the very landscape
is the Chateau De Necker. This was the home of
Madame De Stael and the place where so many refugees
sought safety.
“Coppet is Hell in motion,”
said Napoleon. “The woman who lives there
has a petticoat full of arrows that could hit a man
were he seated on a rainbow. She combines in
her active head and strong heart Rousseau and Mirabeau;
and then shields herself behind a shift and screams
if you approach. To attract attention to herself
she calls, ‘Help, help!’”
The man who voiced these words was
surely fit rival to the chatelaine of this vine-covered
place of peace that lies smiling an ironical smile
in the sunshine on yonder hillside.
Coppet bristles with history.
Could Coppet speak it must tell of
Voltaire and Rousseau, who had knocked at its gates;
of John Calvin; of Montmorency; of Hautville (for whom
Victor Hugo named a chateau); of Fanny Burney and Madame
Recamier and Girardin (pupil of Rousseau); and Lafayette
and hosts of others who are to us but names, but who
in their day were greatest among all the sons of men.
Chief of all was the great Necker,
who himself planned and built the main edifice that
his daughter “might ever call it home.”
Little did he know that it would serve as her prison,
and that from here she would have to steal away in
disguise. But yet it was the place she called
home for full two decades. Here she wrote and
wept and laughed and sang: hating the place when
here, loving it when away. Here she came when
De Stael had died, and here she brought her children.
Here she received the caresses of Benjamin Constant,
and here she won the love of pale, handsome Rocco,
and here, “when past age,” gave birth
to his child. Here and in Paris, in quick turn,
the tragedy and comedy of her life were played; and
here she sleeps.
In the tourist season there are many
visitors at the chateau. A grave old soldier,
wearing on his breast the Cross of the Legion of Honor,
meets you at the lodge and conducts you through the
halls, the salon and the library. There are many
family portraits, and mementos without number, to
bring back the past that is gone forever. Inscribed
copies of books from Goethe and Schiller and Schlegel
and Byron are in the cases, and on the walls are to
be seen pictures of Necker, Rocco, De Stael and Albert,
the firstborn son, decapitated in a duel by a swinging
stroke from a German saber, on account of a king and
two aces held in his sleeve.
Beneath the old chateau dances a mountain
brook, cold from the Jura; in the great courtway is
a fountain and fish-pond, and all around are flowering
plants and stately palms. All is quiet and orderly.
No children play, no merry voices call, no glad laughter
echoes through these courts. Even the birds have
ceased to sing.
The quaint chairs in the parlors are
pushed back with precision against the wall, and the
funereal silence that reigns supreme seems to say that
death yesterday came, and an hour ago all the inmates
of the gloomy mansion, save the old soldier, followed
the hearse afar and have not yet returned.
We are conducted out through the garden,
along gravel walks, across the well-trimmed lawn;
and before a high iron gate, walled in on both sides
with massive masonry, the old soldier stops, and removes
his cap. Standing with heads uncovered, we are
told that within rests the dust of Madame De Stael,
her parents, her children, and her children’s
children four generations in all.
The steamer whistles at the wharf
as if to bring us back from dream and mold and death,
and we hasten away, walking needlessly fast, looking
back furtively to see if grim spectral shapes are
following after. None is seen, but we do not
breathe freely until aboard the steamer and two short
whistles are heard, and the order is given to cast
off. We push off slowly from the stone pier,
and all is safe.