One afternoon in the autumn Gervaise,
who had been taking some washing home to a customer
in the Rue des Portes-Blanches, found
herself at the bottom of the Rue des Poissonniers
just as the day was declining. It had rained
in the morning, the weather was very mild and an odor
rose from the greasy pavement; and the laundress,
burdened with her big basket, was rather out of breath,
slow of step, and inclined to take her ease as she
ascended the street with the vague preoccupation of
a longing increased by her weariness. She would
have liked to have had something to eat. Then,
on raising her eyes she beheld the name of the Rue
Marcadet, and she suddenly had the idea of going to
see Goujet at his forge. He had no end of times
told her to look in any day she was curious to see
how iron was wrought. Besides in the presence
of other workmen she would ask for Etienne, and make
believe that she had merely called for the youngster.
The factory was somewhere on this
end of the Rue Marcadet, but she didn’t know
exactly where and street numbers were often lacking
on those ramshackle buildings separated by vacant
lots. She wouldn’t have lived on this street
for all the gold in the world. It was a wide street,
but dirty, black with soot from factories, with holes
in the pavement and deep ruts filled with stagnant
water. On both sides were rows of sheds, workshops
with beams and brickwork exposed so that they seemed
unfinished, a messy collection of masonry. Beside
them were dubious lodging houses and even more dubious
taverns. All she could recall was that the bolt
factory was next to a yard full of scrap iron and rags,
a sort of open sewer spread over the ground, storing
merchandise worth hundreds of thousands of francs,
according to Goujet.
The street was filled with a noisy
racket. Exhaust pipes on roofs puffed out violent
jets of steam; an automatic sawmill added a rhythmic
screeching; a button factory shook the ground with
the rumbling of its machines. She was looking
up toward the Montmartre height, hesitant, uncertain
whether to continue, when a gust of wind blew down
a mass of sooty smoke that covered the entire street.
She closed her eyes and held her breath. At that
moment she heard the sound of hammers in cadence.
Without realizing it, she had arrived directly in front
of the bolt factory which she now recognized by the
vacant lot beside it full of piles of scrap iron and
old rags.
She still hesitated, not knowing where
to enter. A broken fence opened a passage which
seemed to lead through the heaps of rubbish from some
buildings recently pulled down. Two planks had
been thrown across a large puddle of muddy water that
barred the way. She ended by venturing along
them, turned to the left and found herself lost in
the depths of a strange forest of old carts, standing
on end with their shafts in the air, and of hovels
in ruins, the wood-work of which was still standing.
Toward the back, stabbing through the half-light of
sundown, a flame gleamed red. The clamor of the
hammers had ceased. She was advancing carefully
when a workman, his face blackened with coal-dust and
wearing a goatee passed near her, casting a side-glance
with his pale eyes.
“Sir,” asked she, “it’s
here is it not that a boy named Etienne works?
He’s my son.”
“Etienne, Etienne,” repeated
the workman in a hoarse voice as he twisted himself
about. “Etienne; no I don’t know him.”
An alcoholic reek like that from old
brandy casks issued from his mouth. Meeting a
woman in this dark corner seemed to be giving the fellow
ideas, and so Gervaise drew back saying:
“But yet it’s here that Monsieur Goujet
works, isn’t it?”
“Ah! Goujet, yes!”
said the workman; “I know Goujet! If you
come for Goujet, go right to the end.”
And turning round he called out at
the top of his voice, which had a sound of cracked
brass:
“I say Golden-Mug, here’s a lady wants
you!”
But a clanging of iron drowned the
cry! Gervaise went to the end. She reached
a door and stretching out her neck looked in.
At first she could distinguish nothing. The forge
had died down, but there was still a little glow which
held back the advancing shadows from its corner.
Great shadows seemed to float in the air. At
times black shapes passed before the fire, shutting
off this last bit of brightness, silhouettes of men
so strangely magnified that their arms and legs were
indistinct. Gervaise, not daring to venture in,
called from the doorway in a faint voice:
“Monsieur Goujet! Monsieur Goujet!”
Suddenly all became lighted up.
Beneath the puff of the bellows a jet of white flame
had ascended and the whole interior of the shed could
be seen, walled in by wooden planks, with openings
roughly plastered over, and brick walls reinforcing
the corners. Coal-ash had painted the whole expanse
a sooty grey. Spider webs hung from the beams
like rags hung up to dry, heavy with the accumulated
dust of years. On shelves along the walls, or
hanging from nails, or tossed into corners, she saw
rusty iron, battered implements and huge tools.
The white flame flared higher, like an explosion of
dazzling sunlight revealing the trampled dirt underfoot,
where the polished steel of four anvils fixed on blocks
took on a reflection of silver sprinkled with gold.
Then Gervaise recognized Goujet in
front of the forge by his beautiful yellow beard.
Etienne was blowing the bellows. Two other workmen
were there, but she only beheld Goujet and walked
forward and stood before him.
“Why it’s Madame Gervaise!”
he exclaimed with a bright look on his face.
“What a pleasant surprise.”
But as his comrades appeared to be
rather amused, he pushed Etienne towards his mother
and resumed:
“You’ve come to see the
youngster. He behaves himself well, he’s
beginning to get some strength in his wrists.”
“Well!” she said, “it
isn’t easy to find your way here. I thought
I was going to the end of the world.”
After telling about her journey, she
asked why no one in the shop knew Etienne’s
name. Goujet laughed and explained to her that
everybody called him “Little Zouzou” because
he had his hair cut short like that of a Zouave.
While they were talking together Etienne stopped working
the bellows and the flame of the forge dwindled to
a rosy glow amid the gathering darkness. Touched
by the presence of this smiling young woman, the blacksmith
stood gazing at her.
Then, as neither continued speaking,
he seemed to recollect and broke the silence:
“Excuse me, Madame Gervaise,
I’ve something that has to be finished.
You’ll stay, won’t you? You’re
not in anybody’s way.”
She remained. Etienne returned
to the bellows. The forge was soon ablaze again
with a cloud of sparks; the more so as the youngster,
wanting to show his mother what he could do, was making
the bellows blow a regular hurricane. Goujet,
standing up watching a bar of iron heating, was waiting
with the tongs in his hand. The bright glare illuminated
him without a shadow sleeves rolled back,
shirt neck open, bare arms and chest. When the
bar was at white heat he seized it with the tongs and
cut it with a hammer on the anvil, in pieces of equal
length, as though he had been gently breaking pieces
of glass. Then he put the pieces back into the
fire, from which he took them one by one to work them
into shape. He was forging hexagonal rivets.
He placed each piece in a tool-hole of the anvil,
bent down the iron that was to form the head, flattened
the six sides and threw the finished rivet still red-hot
on to the black earth, where its bright light gradually
died out; and this with a continuous hammering, wielding
in his right hand a hammer weighing five pounds, completing
a detail at every blow, turning and working the iron
with such dexterity that he was able to talk to and
look at those about him. The anvil had a silvery
ring. Without a drop of perspiration, quite at
his ease, he struck in a good-natured sort of a way,
not appearing to exert himself more than on the evenings
when he cut out pictures at home.
“Oh! these are little rivets
of twenty millimetres,” said he in reply to
Gervaise’s questions. “A fellow can
do his three hundred a day. But it requires practice,
for one’s arm soon grows weary.”
And when she asked him if his wrist
did not feel stiff at the end of the day he laughed
aloud. Did she think him a young lady? His
wrist had had plenty of drudgery for fifteen years
past; it was now as strong as the iron implements
it had been so long in contact with. She was right
though; a gentleman who had never forged a rivet or
a bolt, and who would try to show off with his five
pound hammer, would find himself precious stiff in
the course of a couple of hours. It did not seem
much, but a few years of it often did for some very
strong fellows. During this conversation the
other workmen were also hammering away all together.
Their tall shadows danced about in the light, the red
flashes of the iron that the fire traversed, the gloomy
recesses, clouds of sparks darted out from beneath
the hammers and shone like suns on a level with the
anvils. And Gervaise, feeling happy and interested
in the movement round the forge, did not think of
leaving. She was going a long way round to get
nearer to Etienne without having her hands burnt, when
she saw the dirty and bearded workman, whom she had
spoken to outside, enter.
“So you’ve found him,
madame?” asked he in his drunken bantering
way. “You know, Golden-Mug, it’s
I who told madame where to find you.”
He was called Salted-Mouth, otherwise
Drink-without-Thirst, the brick of bricks, a dab hand
at bolt forging, who wetted his iron every day with
a pint and a half of brandy. He had gone out to
have a drop, because he felt he wanted greasing to
make him last till six o’clock. When he
learnt that Little Zouzou’s real name was Etienne,
he thought it very funny; and he showed his black
teeth as he laughed. Then he recognized Gervaise.
Only the day before he had had a glass of wine with
Coupeau. You could speak to Coupeau about Salted-Mouth,
otherwise Drink-without-Thirst; he would at once say:
“He’s a jolly dog!” Ah! that joker
Coupeau! He was one of the right sort; he stood
treat oftener than his turn.
“I’m awfully glad to know you’re
his missus,” added he.
“He deserves to have a pretty
wife. Eh, Golden-Mug, madame is a fine woman,
isn’t she?”
He was becoming quite gallant, sidling
up towards the laundress, who took hold of her basket
and held it in front of her so as to keep him at a
distance. Goujet, annoyed and seeing that his
comrade was joking because of his friendship for Gervaise,
called out to him:
“I say, lazybones, what about
the forty millimetre bolts? Do you think you’re
equal to them now that you’ve got your gullet
full, you confounded guzzler?”
The blacksmith was alluding to an
order for big bolts which necessitated two beaters
at the anvil.
“I’m ready to start at
this moment, big baby!” replied Salted-Mouth,
otherwise Drink-without-Thirst. “It sucks
it’s thumb and thinks itself a man. In
spite of your size I’m equal to you!”
“Yes, that’s it, at once. Look sharp
and off we go!”
“Right you are, my boy!”
They taunted each other, stimulated
by Gervaise’s presence. Goujet placed the
pieces of iron that had been cut beforehand in the
fire, then he fixed a tool-hole of large bore on an
anvil. His comrade had taken from against the
wall two sledge-hammers weighing twenty pounds each,
the two big sisters of the factory whom the workers
called Fifine and Dedele. And he continued to
brag, talking of a half-gross of rivets which he had
forged for the Dunkirk lighthouse, regular jewels,
things to be put in a museum, they were so daintily
finished off. Hang it all, no! he did not fear
competition; before meeting with another chap like
him, you might search every factory in the capital.
They were going to have a laugh; they would see what
they would see.
“Madame will be judge,” said he, turning
towards the young woman.
“Enough chattering,” cried
Goujet. “Now then, Zouzou, show your muscle!
It’s not hot enough, my lad.”
But Salted-Mouth, otherwise Drink-without-Thirst,
asked: “So we strike together?”
“Not a bit of it! each his own bolt, my friend!”
This statement operated as a damper,
and Goujet’s comrade, on hearing it, remained
speechless, in spite of his boasting. Bolts of
forty millimetres fashioned by one man had never before
been seen; the more so as the bolts were to be round-headed,
a work of great difficulty, a real masterpiece to
achieve.
The three other workmen came over,
leaving their jobs, to watch. A tall, lean one
wagered a bottle of wine that Goujet would be beaten.
Meanwhile the two blacksmiths had chosen their sledge
hammers with eyes closed, because Fifine weighed a
half pound more than Dedele. Salted-Mouth, otherwise
Drink-without-Thirst, had the good luck to put his
hand on Dedele; Fifine fell to Golden-Mug.
While waiting for the iron to get
hot enough, Salted-Mouth, otherwise Drink-without-Thirst,
again showing off, struck a pose before the anvil
while casting side glances toward Gervaise. He
planted himself solidly, tapping his feet impatiently
like a man ready for a fight, throwing all his strength
into practice swings with Dedele. Mon Dieu!
He was good at this; he could have flattened the Vendome
column like a pancake.
“Now then, off you go!”
said Goujet, placing one of the pieces of iron, as
thick as a girl’s wrist, in the tool-hole.
Salted-Mouth, otherwise Drink-without-Thirst,
leant back, and swung Dedele round with both hands.
Short and lean, with his goatee bristling, and with
his wolf-like eyes glaring beneath his unkempt hair,
he seemed to snap at each swing of the hammer, springing
up from the ground as though carried away by the force
he put into the blow. He was a fierce one, who
fought with the iron, annoyed at finding it so hard,
and he even gave a grunt whenever he thought he had
planted a fierce stroke. Perhaps brandy did weaken
other people’s arms, but he needed brandy in
his veins, instead of blood. The drop he had taken
a little while before had made his carcass as warm
as a boiler; he felt he had the power of a steam-engine
within him. And the iron seemed to be afraid of
him this time; he flattened it more easily than if
it had been a quid of tobacco. And it was a sight
to see how Dedele waltzed! She cut such capers,
with her tootsies in the air, just like a little dancer
at the Elysee Montmartre, who exhibits her fine underclothes;
for it would never do to dawdle, iron is so deceitful,
it cools at once, just to spite the hammer. With
thirty blows, Salted-Mouth, otherwise Drink-without-Thirst,
had fashioned the head of his bolt. But he panted,
his eyes were half out of his head, and got into a
great rage as he felt his arms growing tired.
Then, carried away by wrath, jumping about and yelling,
he gave two more blows, just out of revenge for his
trouble. When he took the bolt from the hole,
it was deformed, its head being askew like a hunchback’s.
“Come now! Isn’t
that quickly beaten into shape?” said he all
the same, with his self-confidence, as he presented
his work to Gervaise.
“I’m no judge, sir,” replied the
laundress, reservedly.
But she saw plainly enough the marks
of Dedele’s last two kicks on the bolt, and
she was very pleased. She bit her lips so as not
to laugh, for now Goujet had every chance of winning.
It was now Golden-Mug’s turn.
Before commencing, he gave the laundress a look full
of confident tenderness. Then he did not hurry
himself. He measured his distance, and swung
the hammer from on high with all his might and at
regular intervals. He had the classic style, accurate,
evenly balanced, and supple. Fifine, in his hands,
did not cut capers, like at a dance-hall, but made
steady, certain progress; she rose and fell in cadence,
like a lady of quality solemnly leading some ancient
minuet.
There was no brandy in Golden-Mug’s
veins, only blood, throbbing powerfully even into
Fifine and controlling the job. That stalwart
fellow! What a magnificent man he was at work.
The high flame of the forge shone full on his face.
His whole face seemed golden indeed with his short
hair curling over his forehead and his splendid yellow
beard. His neck was as straight as a column and
his immense chest was wide enough for a woman to sleep
across it. His shoulders and sculptured arms
seemed to have been copied from a giant’s statue
in some museum. You could see his muscles swelling,
mountains of flesh rippling and hardening under the
skin; his shoulders, his chest, his neck expanded;
he seemed to shed light about him, becoming beautiful
and all-powerful like a kindly god.
He had now swung Fifine twenty times,
his eyes always fixed on the iron, drawing a deep
breath with each blow, yet showing only two great drops
of sweat trickling down from his temples. He counted:
“Twenty-one, twenty-two, twenty-three ”
Calmly Fifine continued, like a noble lady dancing.
“What a show-off!” jeeringly
murmured Salted-Mouth, otherwise Drink-without-Thirst.
Gervaise, standing opposite Goujet,
looked at him with an affectionate smile. Mon Dieu!
What fools men are! Here these two men were, pounding
on their bolts to pay court to her. She understood
it. They were battling with hammer blows, like
two big red roosters vying for the favors of a little
white hen. Sometimes the human heart has fantastic
ways of expressing itself. This thundering of
Dedele and Fifine upon the anvil was for her, this
forge roaring and overflowing was for her. They
were forging their love before her, battling over her.
To be honest, she rather enjoyed it.
All women are happy to receive compliments. The
mighty blows of Golden-Mug found echoes in her heart;
they rang within her, a crystal-clear music in time
with the throbbing of her pulse. She had the
feeling that this hammering was driving something
deep inside of her, something solid, something hard
as the iron of the bolt.
She had no doubt Goujet would win.
Salted-Mouth, otherwise Drink-without-Thirst, was
much too ugly in his dirty tunic, jumping around like
a monkey that had escaped from a zoo. She waited,
blushing red, happy that the heat could explain the
blush.
Goujet was still counting.
“And twenty-eight!” cried
he at length, laying the hammer on the ground.
“It’s finished; you can look.”
The head of the bolt was clean, polished,
and without a flaw, regular goldsmith’s work,
with the roundness of a marble cast in a mold.
The other men looked at it and nodded their heads;
there was no denying it was lovely enough to be worshipped.
Salted-Mouth, otherwise Drink-without-Thirst, tried
indeed to chuff; but it was no use, and ended by returning
to his anvil, with his nose put out of joint.
Gervaise had squeezed up against Goujet, as though
to get a better view. Etienne having let go the
bellows, the forge was once more becoming enveloped
in shadow, like a brilliant red sunset suddenly giving
way to black night. And the blacksmith and the
laundress experienced a sweet pleasure in feeling
this gloom surround them in that shed black with soot
and filings, and where an odor of old iron prevailed.
They could not have thought themselves more alone
in the Bois de Vincennes had they met there in the
depths of some copse. He took her hand as though
he had conquered her.
Outside, they scarcely exchanged a
word. All he could find to say was that she might
have taken Etienne away with her, had it not been that
there was still another half-hour’s work to get
through. When she started away he called her
back, wanting a few more minutes with her.
“Come along. You haven’t
seen all the place. It’s quite interesting.”
He led her to another shed where the
owner was installing a new machine. She hesitated
in the doorway, oppressed by an instinctive dread.
The great hall was vibrating from the machines and
black shadows filled the air. He reassured her
with a smile, swearing that there was nothing to fear,
only she should be careful not to let her skirts get
caught in any of the gears. He went first and
she followed into the deafening hubbub of whistling,
amid clouds of steam peopled by human shadows moving
busily.
The passages were very narrow and
there were obstacles to step over, holes to avoid,
passing carts to move back from. She couldn’t
distinguish anything clearly or hear what Goujet was
saying.
Gervaise looked up and stopped to
stare at the leather belts hanging from the roof in
a gigantic spider web, each strip ceaselessly revolving.
The steam engine that drove them was hidden behind
a low brick wall so that the belts seemed to be moving
by themselves. She stumbled and almost fell while
looking up.
Goujet raised his voice with explanations.
There were the tapping machines operated by women,
which put threads on bolts and nuts. Their steel
gears were shining with oil. She could follow
the entire process. She nodded her head and smiled.
She was still a little tense, however,
feeling uneasy at being so small among these rough
metalworkers. She jumped back more than once,
her blood suddenly chilled by the dull thud of a machine.
Goujet had stopped before one of the
rivet machines. He stood there brooding, his
head lowered, his gaze fixed. This machine forged
forty millimetre rivets with the calm ease of a giant.
Nothing could be simpler. The stoker took the
iron shank from the furnace; the striker put it into
the socket, where a continuous stream of water cooled
it to prevent softening of the steel. The press
descended and the bolt flew out onto the ground, its
head as round as though cast in a mold. Every
twelve hours this machine made hundreds of kilograms
of bolts!
Goujet was not a mean person, but
there were moments when he wanted to take Fifine and
smash this machine to bits because he was angry to
see that its arms were stronger than his own.
He reasoned with himself, telling himself that human
flesh cannot compete with steel. But he was still
deeply hurt. The day would come when machinery
would destroy the skilled worker. Their day’s
pay had already fallen from twelve francs to nine
francs. There was talk of cutting it again.
He stared at it, frowning, for three minutes without
saying a word. His yellow beard seemed to bristle
defiantly. Then, gradually an expression of resignation
came over his face and he turned toward Gervaise who
was clinging tightly to him and said with a sad smile:
“Well! That machine would
certainly win a contest. But perhaps it will
be for the good of mankind in the long run.”
Gervaise didn’t care a bit about
the welfare of mankind. Smiling, she said to
Goujet:
“I like yours better, because
they show the hand of an artist.”
Hearing this gave him great happiness
because he had been afraid that she might be scornful
of him after seeing the machines. Mon Dieu!
He might be stronger than Salted-Mouth, otherwise
Drink-without-Thirst, but the machines were stronger
yet. When Gervaise finally took her leave, Goujet
was so happy that he almost crushed her with a hug.
The laundress went every Saturday
to the Goujets to deliver their washing. They
still lived in the little house in the Rue Neuve
de la Goutte-d’Or. During
the first year she had regularly repaid them twenty
francs a month; so as not to jumble up the accounts,
the washing-book was only made up at the end of each
month, and then she added to the amount whatever sum
was necessary to make the twenty francs, for the Goujets’
washing rarely came to more than seven or eight francs
during that time. She had therefore paid off
nearly half the sum owing, when one quarter day, not
knowing what to do, some of her customers not having
kept their promises, she had been obliged to go to
the Goujets and borrow from them sufficient for her
rent. On two other occasions she had also applied
to them for the money to pay her workwomen, so that
the debt had increased again to four hundred and twenty-five
francs. Now, she no longer gave a halfpenny;
she worked off the amount solely by the washing.
It was not that she worked less, or that her business
was not so prosperous. But something was going
wrong in her home; the money seemed to melt away,
and she was glad when she was able to make both ends
meet. Mon Dieu! What’s the use of complaining
as long as one gets by. She was putting on weight
and this caused her to become a bit lazy. She
no longer had the energy that she had in the past.
Oh well, there was always something coming in.
Madame Goujet felt a motherly concern
for Gervaise and sometimes reprimanded her. This
wasn’t due to the money owed but because she
liked her and didn’t want to see her get into
difficulties. She never mentioned the debt.
In short, she behaved with the utmost delicacy.
The morrow of Gervaise’s visit
to the forge happened to be the last Saturday of the
month. When she reached the Goujets, where she
made a point of going herself, her basket had so weighed
on her arms that she was quite two minutes before
she could get her breath. One would hardly believe
how heavy clothes are, especially when there are sheets
among them.
“Are you sure you’ve brought
everything?” asked Madame Goujet.
She was very strict on that point.
She insisted on having her washing brought home without
a single article being kept back for the sake of order,
as she said. She also required the laundress always
to come on the day arranged and at the same hour;
in that way there was no time wasted.
“Oh! yes, everything is here,”
replied Gervaise smiling. “You know I never
leave anything behind.”
“That’s true,” admitted
Madame Goujet; “you’ve got into many bad
habits but you’re still free of that one.”
And while the laundress emptied her
basket, laying the linen on the bed, the old woman
praised her; she never burnt the things nor tore them
like so many others did, neither did she pull the
buttons off with the iron; only she used too much
blue and made the shirt-fronts too stiff with starch.
“Just look, it’s like
cardboard,” continued she, making one crackle
between her fingers. “My son does not complain,
but it cuts his neck. To-morrow his neck will
be all scratched when we return from Vincennes.”
“No, don’t say that!”
exclaimed Gervaise, quite grieved. “To look
nice, shirts must be rather stiff, otherwise it’s
as though one had a rag on one’s body.
You should just see what the gentlemen wear. I
do all your things myself. The workwomen never
touch them and I assure you I take great pains.
I would, if necessary, do everything over a dozen times,
because it’s for you, you know.”
She slightly blushed as she stammered
out the last words. She was afraid of showing
the great pleasure she took in ironing Goujet’s
shirts. She certainly had no wicked thoughts,
but she was none the less a little bit ashamed.
“Oh! I’m not complaining
of your work; I know it’s perfection,”
said Madame Goujet. “For instance, you’ve
done this cap splendidly, only you could bring out
the embroidery like that. And the flutings are
all so even. Oh! I recognize your hand at
once. When you give even a dish-cloth to one
of your workwomen I detect it at once. In future,
use a little less starch, that’s all! Goujet
does not care to look like a stylish gentleman.”
She had taken out her notebook and
was crossing off the various items. Everything
was in order. She noticed that Gervaise was charging
six sous for each bonnet. She protested,
but had to agree that it was in line with present
prices. Men’s shirts were five sous,
women’s underdrawers four sous, pillow-cases
a sou and a half, and aprons one sou. No, the
prices weren’t high. Some laundresses charged
a sou more for each item.
Gervaise was now calling out the soiled
clothes, as she packed them in her basket, for Madame
Goujet to list. Then she lingered on, embarrassed
by a request which she wished to make.
“Madame Goujet,” she said
at length, “if it does not inconvenience you,
I would like to take the money for the month’s
washing.”
It so happened that that month was
a very heavy one, the account they had made up together
amounting to ten francs, seven sous. Madame
Goujet looked at her a moment in a serious manner,
then she replied:
“My child, it shall be as you
wish. I will not refuse you the money as you
are in need of it. Only it’s scarcely the
way to pay off your debt; I say that for your sake,
you know. Really now, you should be careful.”
Gervaise received the lecture with
bowed head and stammering excuses. The ten francs
were to make up the amount of a bill she had given
her coke merchant. But on hearing the word “bill,”
Madame Goujet became severer still. She gave
herself as an example; she had reduced her expenditure
ever since Goujet’s wages had been lowered from
twelve to nine francs a day. When one was wanting
in wisdom whilst young, one dies of hunger in one’s
old age. But she held back and didn’t tell
Gervaise that she gave her their laundry only in order
to help her pay off the debt. Before that she
had done all her own washing, and she would have to
do it herself again if the laundry continued taking
so much cash out of her pocket. Gervaise spoke
her thanks and left quickly as soon as she had received
the ten francs seven sous. Outside on the
landing she was so relieved she wanted to dance.
She was becoming used to the annoying, unpleasant
difficulties caused by a shortage of money and preferred
to remember not the embarrassment but the joy in escaping
from them.
It was also on that Saturday that
Gervaise met with a rather strange adventure as she
descended the Goujets’ staircase. She was
obliged to stand up close against the stair-rail with
her basket to make way for a tall bare-headed woman
who was coming up, carrying in her hand a very fresh
mackerel, with bloody gills, in a piece of paper.
She recognized Virginie, the girl whose face she had
slapped at the wash-house. They looked each other
full in the face. Gervaise shut her eyes.
She thought for a moment that she was going to be
hit in the face with the fish. But no, Virginie
even smiled slightly. Then, as her basket was
blocking the staircase, the laundress wished to show
how polite she, too, could be.
“I beg your pardon,” she said.
“You are completely excused,” replied
the tall brunette.
And they remained conversing together
on the stairs, reconciled at once without having ventured
on a single allusion to the past. Virginie, then
twenty-nine years old, had become a superb woman of
strapping proportions, her face, however, looking
rather long between her two plaits of jet black hair.
She at once began to relate her history just to show
off. She had a husband now; she had married in
the spring an ex-journeyman cabinetmaker, who recently
left the army, and who had applied to be admitted
into the police, because a post of that kind is more
to be depended upon and more respectable. She
had been out to buy the mackerel for him.
“He adores mackerel,”
said she. “We must spoil them, those naughty
men, mustn’t we? But come up. You
shall see our home. We are standing in a draught
here.”
After Gervaise had told of her own
marriage and that she had formerly occupied the very
apartment Virginie now had, Virginie urged her even
more strongly to come up since it is always nice to
visit a spot where one had been happy.
Virginie had lived for five years
on the Left Bank at Gros-Caillou. That was
where she had met her husband while he was still in
the army. But she got tired of it, and wanted
to come back to the Goutte-d’Or neighborhood
where she knew everyone. She had only been living
in the rooms opposite the Goujets for two weeks.
Oh! everything was still a mess, but they were slowly
getting it in order.
Then, still on the staircase, they
finally told each other their names.
“Madame Coupeau.”
“Madame Poisson.”
And from that time forth, they called
each other on every possible occasion Madame Poisson
and Madame Coupeau, solely for the pleasure of being
madame, they who in former days had been acquainted
when occupying rather questionable positions.
However, Gervaise felt rather mistrustful at heart.
Perhaps the tall brunette had made it up the better
to avenge herself for the beating at the wash-house
by concocting some plan worthy of a spiteful hypocritical
creature. Gervaise determined to be upon her
guard. For the time being, as Virginie behaved
so nicely, she would be nice also.
In the room upstairs, Poisson, the
husband, a man of thirty-five, with a cadaverous-looking
countenance and carroty moustaches and beard, was
seated working at a table near the window. He
was making little boxes. His only tools were
a knife, a tiny saw the size of a nail file and a
pot of glue. He was using wood from old cigar
boxes, thin boards of unfinished mahogany upon which
he executed fretwork and embellishments of extraordinary
delicacy. All year long he worked at making the
same size boxes, only varying them occasionally by
inlay work, new designs for the cover, or putting
compartments inside. He did not sell his work,
he distributed it in presents to persons of his acquaintance.
It was for his own amusement, a way of occupying his
time while waiting for his appointment to the police
force. It was all that remained with him from
his former occupation of cabinetmaking.
Poisson rose from his seat and politely
bowed to Gervaise, when his wife introduced her as
an old friend. But he was no talker; he at once
returned to his little saw. From time to time
he merely glanced in the direction of the mackerel
placed on the corner of the chest of drawers.
Gervaise was very pleased to see her old lodging once
more. She told them whereabouts her own furniture
stood, and pointed out the place on the floor where
Nana had been born. How strange it was to meet
like this again, after so many years! They never
dreamed of running into each other like this and even
living in the same rooms.
Virginie added some further details.
Her husband had inherited a little money from an aunt
and he would probably set her up in a shop before
long. Meanwhile she was still sewing. At
length, at the end of a full half hour, the laundress
took her leave. Poisson scarcely seemed to notice
her departure. While seeing her to the door, Virginie
promised to return the visit. And she would have
Gervaise do her laundry. While Virginie was keeping
her in further conversation on the landing, Gervaise
had the feeling that she wanted to say something about
Lantier and her sister Adele, and this notion upset
her a bit. But not a word was uttered respecting
those unpleasant things; they parted, wishing each
other good-bye in a very amiable manner.
“Good-bye, Madame Coupeau.”
“Good-bye, Madame Poisson.”
That was the starting point of a great
friendship. A week later, Virginie never passed
Gervaise’s shop without going in; and she remained
there gossiping for hours together, to such an extent
indeed that Poisson, filled with anxiety, fearing
she had been run over, would come and seek her with
his expressionless and death-like countenance.
Now that she was seeing the dressmaker every day Gervaise
became aware of a strange obsession. Every time
Virginie began to talk Gervaise had the feeling Lantier
was going to be mentioned. So she had Lantier
on her mind throughout all of Virginie’s visits.
This was silly because, in fact, she didn’t
care a bit about Lantier or Adele at this time.
She was quite certain that she had no curiosity as
to what had happened to either of them. But this
obsession got hold of her in spite of herself.
Anyway, she didn’t hold it against Virginie,
it wasn’t her fault, surely. She enjoyed
being with her and looked forward to her visits.
Meanwhile winter had come, the Coupeaus’
fourth winter in the Rue de la Goutte-d’Or.
December and January were particularly cold. It
froze hard as it well could. After New Year’s
day the snow remained three weeks without melting.
It did not interfere with work, but the contrary, for
winter is the best season for the ironers. It
was very pleasant inside the shop! There was
never any ice on the window-panes like there was at
the grocer’s and the hosier’s opposite.
The stove was always stuffed with coke and kept things
as hot as a Turkish bath. With the laundry steaming
overhead you could almost imagine it was summer.
You were quite comfortable with the doors closed and
so much warmth everywhere that you were tempted to
doze off with your eyes open. Gervaise laughed
and said it reminded her of summer in the country.
The street traffic made no noise in the snow and you
could hardly hear the pedestrians who passed by.
Only children’s voices were heard in the silence,
especially the noisy band of urchins who had made
a long slide in the gutter near the blacksmith’s
shop.
Gervaise would sometimes go over to
the door, wipe the moisture from one of the panes
with her hand, and look out to see what was happening
to her neighborhood due to this extraordinary cold
spell. Not one nose was being poked out of the
adjacent shops. The entire neighborhood was muffled
in snow. The only person she was able to exchange
nods with was the coal-dealer next door, who still
walked out bare-headed despite the severe freeze.
What was especially enjoyable in this
awful weather was to have some nice hot coffee in
the middle of the day. The workwomen had no cause
for complaint. The mistress made it very strong
and without a grain of chicory. It was quite
different to Madame Fauconnier’s coffee, which
was like ditch-water. Only whenever mother Coupeau
undertook to make it, it was always an interminable
time before it was ready, because she would fall asleep
over the kettle. On these occasions, when the
workwomen had finished their lunch, they would do
a little ironing whilst waiting for the coffee.
It so happened that on the morrow
of Twelfth-day half-past twelve struck and still the
coffee was not ready. It seemed to persist in
declining to pass through the strainer. Mother
Coupeau tapped against the pot with a tea-spoon; and
one could hear the drops falling slowly, one by one,
and without hurrying themselves any the more.
“Leave it alone,” said
tall Clemence; “you’ll make it thick.
To-day there’ll be as much to eat as to drink.”
Tall Clemence was working on a man’s
shirt, the plaits of which she separated with her
finger-nail. She had caught a cold, her eyes were
frightfully swollen and her chest was shaken with fits
of coughing, which doubled her up beside the work-table.
With all that she had not even a handkerchief round
her neck and she was dressed in some cheap flimsy
woolen stuff in which she shivered. Close by,
Madame Putois, wrapped up in flannel muffled up to
her ears, was ironing a petticoat which she turned
round the skirt-board, the narrow end of which rested
on the back of a chair; whilst a sheet laid on the
floor prevented the petticoat from getting dirty as
it trailed along the tiles. Gervaise alone occupied
half the work-table with some embroidered muslin curtains,
over which she passed her iron in a straight line with
her arms stretched out to avoid making any creases.
All on a sudden the coffee running through noisily
caused her to raise her head. It was that squint-eyed
Augustine who had just given it an outlet by thrusting
a spoon through the strainer.
“Leave it alone!” cried
Gervaise. “Whatever is the matter with you?
It’ll be like drinking mud now.”
Mother Coupeau had placed five glasses
on a corner of the work-table that was free.
The women now left their work. The mistress always
poured out the coffee herself after putting two lumps
of sugar into each glass. It was the moment that
they all looked forward to. On this occasion,
as each one took her glass and squatted down on a
little stool in front of the stove, the shop-door
opened. Virginie entered, shivering all over.
“Ah, my children,” said
she, “it cuts you in two! I can no longer
feel my ears. The cold is something awful!”
“Why, it’s Madame Poisson!”
exclaimed Gervaise. “Ah, well! You’ve
come at the right time. You must have some coffee
with us.”
“On my word, I can’t say
no. One feels the frost in one’s bones merely
by crossing the street.”
There was still some coffee left,
luckily. Mother Coupeau went and fetched a sixth
glass, and Gervaise let Virginie help herself to sugar
out of politeness. The workwomen moved to give
Virginie a small space close to the stove. Her
nose was very red, she shivered a bit, pressing her
hands which were stiff with cold around the glass to
warm them. She had just come from the grocery
story where you froze to death waiting for a quarter-pound
of cheese and so she raved about the warmth of the
shop. It felt so good on one’s skin.
After warming up, she stretched out her long legs
and the six of them relaxed together, supping their
coffee slowly, surround by all the work still to be
done. Mother Coupeau and Virginie were the only
ones on chairs, the others, on low benches, seemed
to be sitting on the floor. Squint-eyed Augustine
had pulled over a corner of the cloth below the skirt,
stretching herself out on it.
No one spoke at first; all kept their
noses in their glasses, enjoying their coffee.
“It’s not bad, all the same,” declared
Clemence.
But she was seized with a fit of coughing,
and almost choked. She leant her head against
the wall to cough with more force.
“That’s a bad cough you’ve
got,” said Virginie. “Wherever did
you catch it?”
“One never knows!” replied
Clemence, wiping her face with her sleeve. “It
must have been the other night. There were two
girls who were flaying each other outside the ‘Grand-Balcony.’
I wanted to see, so I stood there whilst the snow
was falling. Ah, what a drubbing! It was
enough to make one die with laughing. One had
her nose almost pulled off; the blood streamed on
the ground. When the other, a great long stick
like me, saw the blood, she slipped away as quick as
she could. And I coughed nearly all night.
Besides that too, men are so stupid in bed, they don’t
let you have any covers over you half the time.”
“Pretty conduct that,”
murmured Madame Putois. “You’re killing
yourself, my girl.”
“And if it pleases me to kill
myself! Life isn’t so very amusing.
Slaving all the blessed day long to earn fifty-five
sous, cooking one’s blood from morning
to night in front of the stove; no, you know, I’ve
had enough of it! All the same though, this cough
won’t do me the service of making me croak.
It’ll go off the same way it came.”
A short silence ensued. The good-for-nothing
Clemence, who led riots in low dancing establishments,
and shrieked like a screech-owl at work, always saddened
everyone with her thoughts of death. Gervaise
knew her well, and so merely said:
“You’re never very gay
the morning after a night of high living.”
The truth was that Gervaise did not
like this talk about women fighting. Because
of the flogging at the wash-house it annoyed her whenever
anyone spoke before her and Virginie of kicks with
wooden shoes and of slaps in the face. It so
happened, too, that Virginie was looking at her and
smiling.
“By the way,” she said
quietly, “yesterday I saw some hair-pulling.
They almost tore each other to pieces.”
“Who were they?” Madame Putois inquired.
“The midwife and her maid, you
know, a little blonde. What a pest the girl is!
She was yelling at her employer that she had got rid
of a child for the fruit woman and that she was going
to tell the police if she wasn’t paid to keep
quiet. So the midwife slapped her right in the
face and then the little blonde jumped on her and
started scratching her and pulling her hair, really by
the roots. The sausage-man had to grab her to
put a stop to it.”
The workwomen laughed. Then they
all took a sip of coffee.
“Do you believe that she really
got rid of a child?” Clemence asked.
“Oh, yes! The rumor was
all round the neighborhood,” Virginie answered.
“I didn’t see it myself, you understand,
but it’s part of the job. All midwives
do it.”
“Well!” exclaimed Madame
Putois. “You have to be pretty stupid to
put yourself in their hands. No thanks, you could
be maimed for life. But there’s a sure
way to do it. Drink a glass of holy water every
evening and make the sign of the cross three times
over your stomach with your thumb. Then your
troubles will be over.”
Everyone thought mother Coupeau was
asleep, but she shook her head in protest. She
knew another way and it was infallible. You had
to eat a hard-cooked egg every two hours, and put
spinach leaves on your loins. Squint-eyed Augustine
set up a hen-cackling when she heard this. They
had forgotten about her. Gervaise lifted up the
petticoat that was being ironed and found her rolling
on the floor with laughter. She jerked her upright.
What was she laughing about? Was it right for
her to be eavesdropping when older people were talking,
the little goose? Anyway it was time for her
to deliver the laundry to a friend of Madame Lerat
at Les Batignolles. So Gervaise hung a basket
on her arm and pushed her toward the door. Augustine
went off, sobbing and sniveling, dragging her feet
in the snow.
Meanwhile mother Coupeau, Madame Putois
and Clemence were discussing the effectiveness of
hard-cooked eggs and spinach leaves. Then Virginie
said softly:
“Mon Dieu! you have a
fight, and then you make it up, if you have a generous
heart.” She leaned toward Gervaise with
a smile and added, “Really, I don’t hold
any grudge against you for that business at the wash-house.
You remember it, don’t you?”
This was what Gervaise had been dreading.
She guessed that the subject of Lantier and Adele
would now come up.
Virginie had moved close to Gervaise
so as not to be overheard by the others. Gervaise,
lulled by the excessive heat, felt so limp that she
couldn’t even summon the willpower to change
the subject. She foresaw what the tall brunette
would say and her heart was stirred with an emotion
which she didn’t want to admit to herself.
“I hope I’m not hurting
your feelings,” Virginie continued. “Often
I’ve had it on the tip of my tongue. But
since we are now on the subject, word of honor, I
don’t have any grudge against you.”
She stirred her remaining coffee and
then took a small sip. Gervaise, with her heart
in her throat, wondered if Virginie had really forgiven
her as completely as she said, for she seemed to observe
sparks in her dark eyes.
“You see,” Virginie went
on, “you had an excuse. They played a really
rotten, dirty trick on you. To be fair about it,
if it had been me, I’d have taken a knife to
her.”
She drank another small sip, then
added rapidly without a pause:
“Anyway, it didn’t bring
them happiness, mon Dieu! Not a bit of
it. They went to live over at La Glacière,
in a filthy street that was always muddy. I went
two days later to have lunch with them. I can
tell you, it was quite a trip by bus. Well, I
found them already fighting. Really, as I came
in they were boxing each other’s ears. Fine
pair of love birds! Adele isn’t worth the
rope to hang her. I say that even if she is my
own sister. It would take too long to relate all
the nasty tricks she played on me, and anyhow, it’s
between the two of us. As for Lantier well,
he’s no good either. He’d beat the
hide off you for anything, and with his fist closed
too. They fought all the time. The police
even came once.”
Virginie went on about other fights.
Oh, she knew of things that would make your hair stand
up. Gervaise listened in silence, her face pale.
It was nearly seven years since she had heard a word
about Lantier. She hadn’t realized what
a strong curiosity she had as to what had become of
the poor man, even though he had treated her badly.
And she never would have believed that just the mention
of his name could put such a glowing warmth in the
pit of her stomach. She certainly had no reason
to be jealous of Adele any more but she rejoiced to
think of her body all bruised from the beatings.
She could have listened to Virginie all night, but
she didn’t ask any questions, not wanting to
appear much interested.
Virginie stopped to sip at her coffee.
Gervaise, realizing that she was expected to say something,
asked, with a pretence of indifference:
“Are they still living at La Glacière?”
“No!” the other replied.
“Didn’t I tell you? They separated
last week. One morning, Adele moved out and Lantier
didn’t chase after her.”
“So they’re separated!” Gervaise
exclaimed.
“Who are you talking about?”
Clemence asked, interrupting her conversation with
mother Coupeau and Madame Putois.
“Nobody you know,” said Virginie.
She was looking at Gervaise carefully
and could see that she was upset. She moved still
closer, maliciously finding pleasure in bringing up
these old stories. Of a sudden she asked Gervaise
what she would do if Lantier came round here.
Men were really such strange creatures, he might decide
to return to his first love. This caused Gervaise
to sit up very straight and dignified. She was
a married woman; she would send Lantier off immediately.
There was no possibility of anything further between
them, not even a handshake. She would not even
want to look that man in the face.
“I know that Etienne is his
son, and that’s a relationship that remains,”
she said. “If Lantier wants to see his son,
I’ll send the boy to him because you can’t
stop a father from seeing his child. But as for
myself, I don’t want him to touch me even with
the tip of his finger. That is all finished.”
Desiring to break off this conversation,
she seemed to awake with a start and called out to
the women:
“You ladies! Do you think
all these clothes are going to iron themselves?
Get to work!”
The workwomen, slow from the heat
and general laziness, didn’t hurry themselves,
but went right on talking, gossiping about other people
they had known.
Gervaise shook herself and got to
her feet. Couldn’t earn money by sitting
all day. She was the first to return to the ironing,
but found that her curtains had been spotted by the
coffee and she had to rub out the stains with a damp
cloth. The other women were now stretching and
getting ready to begin ironing.
Clemence had a terrible attack of
coughing as soon as she moved. Finally she was
able to return to the shirt she had been doing.
Madame Putois began to work on the petticoat again.
“Well, good-bye,” said
Virginie. “I only came out for a quarter-pound
of Swiss cheese. Poisson must think I’ve
frozen to death on the way.”
She had only just stepped outside
when she turned back to say that Augustine was at
the end of the street, sliding on the ice with some
urchins. The squint-eyed imp rushed in all red-faced
and out of breath with snow all in her hair.
She didn’t mind the scolding she received, merely
saying that she hadn’t been able to walk fast
because of the ice and then some brats threw snow
at her.
The afternoons were all the same these
winter days. The laundry was the refuge for anyone
in the neighborhood who was cold. There was an
endless procession of gossiping women. Gervaise
took pride in the comforting warmth of her shop and
welcomed those who came in, “holding a salon,”
as the Lorilleuxs and the Boches remarked meanly.
Gervaise was always thoughtful and
generous. Sometimes she even invited poor people
in if she saw them shivering outside. A friendship
sprang up with an elderly house-painter who was seventy.
He lived in an attic room and was slowly dying of
cold and hunger. His three sons had been killed
in the war. He survived the best he could, but
it had been two years since he had been able to hold
a paint-brush in his hand. Whenever Gervaise
saw Pere Bru walking outside, she would call
him in and arrange a place for him close to the stove.
Often she gave him some bread and cheese. Pere
Bru’s face was as wrinkled as a withered apple.
He would sit there, with his stooping shoulders and
his white beard, without saying a word, just listening
to the coke sputtering in the stove. Maybe he
was thinking of his fifty years of hard work on high
ladders, his fifty years spent painting doors and
whitewashing ceilings in every corner of Paris.
“Well, Pere Bru,”
Gervaise would say, “what are you thinking of
now?”
“Nothing much. All sorts
of things,” he would answer quietly.
The workwomen tried to joke with him
to cheer him up, saying he was worrying over his love
affairs, but he scarcely listened to them before he
fell back into his habitual attitude of meditative
melancholy.
Virginie now frequently spoke to Gervaise
of Lantier. She seemed to find amusement in filling
her mind with ideas of her old lover just for the
pleasure of embarrassing her by making suggestions.
One day she related that she had met him; then, as
the laundress took no notice, she said nothing further,
and it was only on the morrow that she added he had
spoken about her for a long time, and with a great
show of affection. Gervaise was much upset by
these reports whispered in her ear in a corner of
the shop. The mention of Lantier’s name
always caused a worried sensation in the pit of her
stomach. She certainly thought herself strong;
she wished to lead the life of an industrious woman,
because labor is the half of happiness. So she
never considered Coupeau in this matter, having nothing
to reproach herself with as regarded her husband,
not even in her thoughts. But with a hesitating
and suffering heart, she would think of the blacksmith.
It seemed to her that the memory of Lantier that
slow possession which she was resuming rendered
her unfaithful to Goujet, to their unavowed love, sweet
as friendship. She passed sad days whenever she
felt herself guilty towards her good friend.
She would have liked to have had no affection for anyone
but him outside of her family. It was a feeling
far above all carnal thoughts, for the signs of which
upon her burning face Virginie was ever on the watch.
As soon as spring came Gervaise often
went and sought refuge with Goujet. She could
no longer sit musing on a chair without immediately
thinking of her first lover; she pictured him leaving
Adele, packing his clothes in the bottom of their
old trunk, and returning to her in a cab. The
days when she went out, she was seized with the most
foolish fears in the street; she was ever thinking
she heard Lantier’s footsteps behind her.
She did not dare turn round, but tremblingly fancied
she felt his hands seizing her round the waist.
He was, no doubt, spying upon her; he would appear
before her some afternoon; and the bare idea threw
her into a cold perspiration, because he would to a
certainty kiss her on the ear, as he used to do in
former days solely to tease her. It was this
kiss which frightened her; it rendered her deaf beforehand;
it filled her with a buzzing amidst which she could
only distinguish the sound of her heart beating violently.
So, as soon as these fears seized upon her, the forge
was her only shelter; there, under Goujet’s
protection, she once more became easy and smiling,
as his sonorous hammer drove away her disagreeable
reflections.
What a happy time! The laundress
took particular pains with the washing of her customer
in the Rue des Portes-Blanches; she
always took it home herself because that errand, every
Friday, was a ready excuse for passing through the
Rue Marcadet and looking in at the forge. The
moment she turned the corner of the street she felt
light and gay, as though in the midst of those plots
of waste land surrounded by grey factories, she were
out in the country; the roadway black with coal-dust,
the plumage of steam over the roofs, amused her as
much as a moss-covered path leading through masses
of green foliage in a wood in the environs; and she
loved the dull horizon, streaked by the tall factory-chimneys,
the Montmartre heights, which hid the heavens from
view, the chalky white houses pierced with the uniform
openings of their windows. She would slacken
her steps as she drew near, jumping over the pools
of water, and finding a pleasure in traversing the
deserted ins and outs of the yard full of old building
materials. Right at the further end the forge
shone with a brilliant light, even at mid-day.
Her heart leapt with the dance of the hammers.
When she entered, her face turned quite red, the little
fair hairs at the nape of her neck flew about like
those of a woman arriving at some lovers’ meeting.
Goujet was expecting her, his arms and chest bare,
whilst he hammered harder on the anvil on those days
so as to make himself heard at a distance. He
divined her presence, and greeted her with a good
silent laugh in his yellow beard. But she would
not let him leave off his work; she begged him to take
up his hammer again, because she loved him the more
when he wielded it with his big arms swollen with
muscles. She would go and give Etienne a gentle
tap on the cheek, as he hung on to the bellows, and
then remain for an hour watching the rivets.
The two did not exchange a dozen words.
They could not have more completely satisfied their
love if alone in a room with the door double-locked.
The snickering of Salted-Mouth, otherwise Drink-without-Thirst,
did not bother them in the least, for they no longer
even heard him. At the end of a quarter of an
hour she would begin to feel slightly oppressed; the
heat, the powerful smell, the ascending smoke, made
her dizzy, whilst the dull thuds of the hammers shook
her from the crown of her head to the soles of her
feet. Then she desired nothing more; it was her
pleasure. Had Goujet pressed her in his arms
it would not have procured her so sweet an emotion.
She drew close to him that she might feel the wind
raised by his hammer beat upon her cheek, and become,
as it were, a part of the blow he struck. When
the sparks made her soft hands smart, she did not
withdraw them; on the contrary, she enjoyed the rain
of fire which stung her skin. He for certain,
divined the happiness which she tasted there; he always
kept the most difficult work for the Fridays, so as
to pay his court to her with all his strength and
all his skill; he no longer spared himself at the
risk of splitting the anvils in two, as he panted and
his loins vibrated with the joy he was procuring her.
All one spring-time their love thus filled Goujet
with the rumbling of a storm. It was an idyll
amongst giant-like labor in the midst of the glare
of the coal fire, and of the shaking of the shed,
the cracking carcass of which was black with soot.
All that beaten iron, kneaded like red wax, preserved
the rough marks of their love. When on the Fridays
the laundress parted from Golden-Mug, she slowly reascended
the Rue des Poissonniers, contented and
tired, her mind and her body alike tranquil.
Little by little, her fear of Lantier
diminished; her good sense got the better of her.
At that time she would still have led a happy life,
had it not been for Coupeau, who was decidedly going
to the bad. One day she just happened to be returning
from the forge, when she fancied she recognized Coupeau
inside Pere Colombe’s l’Assommoir, in the
act of treating himself to a round of vitriol in the
company of My-Boots, Bibi-the-Smoker, and Salted-Mouth,
otherwise Drink-without-Thirst. She passed quickly
by, so as not to seem to be spying on them. But
she glanced back; it was indeed Coupeau who was tossing
his little glass of bad brandy down his throat with
a gesture already familiar. He lied then; so
he went in for brandy now! She returned home in
despair; all her old dread of brandy took possession
of her. She forgave the wine, because wine nourishes
the workman; all kinds of spirit, on the contrary,
were filth, poisons which destroyed in the workman
the taste for bread. Ah! the government ought
to prevent the manufacture of such horrid stuff!
On arriving at the Rue de
la Goutte-d’Or, she found the whole
house upset. Her workwomen had left the shop,
and were in the courtyard looking up above. She
questioned Clemence.
“It’s old Bijard who’s
giving his wife a hiding,” replied the ironer.
“He was in the doorway, as drunk as a trooper,
watching for her return from the wash-house.
He whacked her up the stairs, and now he’s finishing
her off up there in their room. Listen, can’t
you hear her shrieks?”
Gervaise hastened to the spot.
She felt some friendship for her washer-woman, Madame
Bijard, who was a very courageous woman. She had
hoped to put a stop to what was going on. Upstairs,
on the sixth floor the door of the room was wide open,
some lodgers were shouting on the landing, whilst
Madame Boche, standing in front of the door, was calling
out:
“Will you leave off? I
shall send for the police; do you hear?”
No one dared to venture inside the
room, because it was known that Bijard was like a
brute beast when he was drunk. As a matter of
fact, he was scarcely ever sober. The rare days
on which he worked, he placed a bottle of brandy beside
his blacksmith’s vise, gulping some of it down
every half hour. He could not keep himself going
any other way. He would have blazed away like
a torch if anyone had placed a lighted match close
to his mouth.
“But we mustn’t let her
be murdered!” said Gervaise, all in a tremble.
And she entered. The room, an
attic, and very clean, was bare and cold, almost emptied
by the drunken habits of the man, who took the very
sheets from the bed to turn them into liquor.
During the struggle the table had rolled away to the
window, the two chairs, knocked over, had fallen with
their legs in the air. In the middle of the room,
on the tile floor, lay Madame Bijard, all bloody,
her skirts, still soaked with the water of the wash-house,
clinging to her thighs, her hair straggling in disorder.
She was breathing heavily, with a rattle in her throat,
as she muttered prolonged ohs! each time she received
a blow from the heel of Bijard’s boot.
He had knocked her down with his fists, and now he
stamped upon her.
“Ah, strumpet! Ah, strumpet!
Ah strumpet!” grunted he in a choking voice,
accompanying each blow with the word, taking a delight
in repeating it, and striking all the harder the more
he found his voice failing him.
Then when he could no longer speak,
he madly continued to kick with a dull sound, rigid
in his ragged blue blouse and overalls, his face turned
purple beneath his dirty beard, and his bald forehead
streaked with big red blotches. The neighbors
on the landing related that he was beating her because
she had refused him twenty sous that morning.
Boche’s voice was heard at the foot of the staircase.
He was calling Madame Boche, saying:
“Come down; let them kill each
other, it’ll be so much scum the less.”
Meanwhile, Pere Bru had
followed Gervaise into the room. Between them
they were trying to get him towards the door.
But he turned round, speechless and foaming at the
lips, and in his pale eyes the alcohol was blazing
with a murderous glare. The laundress had her
wrist injured; the old workman was knocked against
the table. On the floor, Madame Bijard was breathing
with greater difficulty, her mouth wide open, her eyes
closed. Now Bijard kept missing her. He had
madly returned to the attack, but blinded by rage,
his blows fell on either side, and at times he almost
fell when his kicks went into space. And during
all this onslaught, Gervaise beheld in a corner of
the room little Lalie, then four years old, watching
her father murdering her mother. The child held
in her arms, as though to protect her, her sister Henriette,
only recently weaned. She was standing up, her
head covered with a cotton cap, her face very pale
and grave. Her large black eyes gazed with a
fixedness full of thought and were without a tear.
When at length Bijard, running against
a chair, stumbled onto the tiled floor, where they
left him snoring, Pere Bru helped Gervaise
to raise Madame Bijard. The latter was now sobbing
bitterly; and Lalie, drawing near, watched her crying,
being used to such sights and already resigned to
them. As the laundress descended the stairs, in
the silence of the now quieted house, she kept seeing
before her that look of this child of four, as grave
and courageous as that of a woman.
“Monsieur Coupeau is on the
other side of the street,” called out Clemence
as soon as she caught sight of her. “He
looks awfully drunk.”
Coupeau was just then crossing the
street. He almost smashed a pane of glass with
his shoulder as he missed the door. He was in
a state of complete drunkenness, with his teeth clinched
and his nose inflamed. And Gervaise at once recognized
the vitriol of l’Assommoir in the poisoned blood
which paled his skin. She tried to joke and get
him to bed, the same as on the days when the wine
had made him merry; but he pushed her aside without
opening his lips, and raised his fist in passing as
he went to bed of his own accord. He made Gervaise
think of the other the drunkard who was
snoring upstairs, tired out by the blows he had struck.
A cold shiver passed over her. She thought of
the men she knew of her husband, of Goujet,
of Lantier her heart breaking, despairing
of ever being happy.