CHAPTER I
“There oft are heard the notes
of infant woe,
The short thick sob, loud scream,
and shriller squall
How can you, mothers, vex your infants
so?” Pope
“D’abord, madame,
c’est impossible! Madame
ne descendra pas ici?” said Francois,
the footman of Madame de Fleury, with a half expostulatory,
half indignant look, as he let down the step of her
carriage at the entrance of a dirty passage, that
led to one of the most miserable-looking houses in
Paris.
“But what can be the cause of
the cries which I hear in this house?” said
Madame de Fleury.
“’Tis only some child
who is crying,” replied Francois; and he would
have put up the step, but his lady was not satisfied.
“’Tis nothing in the world,”
continued he, with a look of appeal to the coachman,
“it can be nothing, but some children
who are locked up there above. The mother, the
workwoman my lady wants, is not at home: that’s
certain.”
“I must know the cause of these
cries; I must see these children” said Madame
de Fleury, getting out of her carriage.
Francois held his arm for his lady as she got out.
“Bon!” cried he, with
an air of vexation. “Si madame
la vent absolument, a la bonne
heure! Mais madame sera abîmée.
Madame verrà que j’ai raison.
Madame ne monterà jamais ce vilain
escalier. D’ailleurs c’est
au cinquième. Mais, madame,
c’est impossible.”
Notwithstanding the impossibility,
Madame de Fleury proceeded; and bidding her talkative
footman wait in the entry, made her way up the dark,
dirty, broken staircase, the sound of the cries increasing
every instant, till, as she reached the fifth storey,
she heard the shrieks of one in violent pain.
She hastened to the door of the room from which the
cries proceeded; the door was fastened, and the noise
was so great that, though she knocked as loud as she
was able, she could not immediately make herself heard.
At last the voice of a child from within answered,
“The door is locked mamma has the
key in her pocket, and won’t be home till night;
and here’s Victoire has tumbled from the top
of the big press, and it is she that is shrieking
so.”
Madame de Fleury ran down the stairs
which she had ascended with so much difficulty, called
to her footman, who was waiting in the entry, despatched
him for a surgeon, and then she returned to obtain
from some people who lodged in the house assistance
to force open the door of the room in which the children
were confined.
On the next floor there was a smith
at work, filing so earnestly that he did not hear
the screams of the children. When his door was
pushed open, and the bright vision of Madame de Fleury
appeared to him, his astonishment was so great that
he seemed incapable of comprehending what she said.
In a strong provincial accent he repeated, “Plait-il?”
and stood aghast till she had explained herself three
times; then suddenly exclaiming, “Ah! c’est
ca;” he collected his tools precipitately,
and followed to obey her orders. The door of
the room was at last forced half open, for a press
that had been overturned prevented its opening entirely.
The horrible smells that issued did not overcome Madame
de Fleury’s humanity: she squeezed her
way into the room, and behind the fallen press saw
three little children: the youngest, almost an
infant, ceased roaring, and ran to a corner; the eldest,
a boy of about eight years old, whose face and clothes
were covered with blood, held on his knee a girl younger
than himself, whom he was trying to pacify, but who
struggled most violently and screamed incessantly,
regardless of Madame de Fleury, to whose questions
she made no answer.
“Where are you hurt, my dear?”
repeated Madame de Fleury in a soothing voice.
“Only tell me where you feel pain?”
The boy, showing his sister’s
arm, said, in a surly tone “It is
this that is hurt but it was not I did
it.”
“It was, it was!”
cried the girl as loud as she could vociferate:
“it was Maurice threw me down from the top of
the press.”
“No it was you that
were pushing me, Victoire, and you fell backwards. Have
done screeching, and show your arm to the lady.”
“I can’t,” said the girl.
“She won’t,” said the boy.
“She cannot,” said Madame
de Fleury, kneeling down to examine it. “She
cannot move it; I am afraid that it is broken.”
“Don’t touch it! don’t
touch it!” cried the girl, screaming more violently.
“Ma’am, she screams that
way for nothing often,” said the boy. “Her
arm is no more broke than mine, I’m sure; she’ll
move it well enough when she’s not cross.”
“I am afraid,” said Madame
de Fleury, “that her arm is broken.”
“Is it indeed?” said the boy, with a look
of terror.
“Oh! don’t touch it you’ll
kill me; you are killing me,” screamed the poor
girl, whilst Madame de Fleury with the greatest care
endeavoured to join the bones in their proper place,
and resolved to hold the arm till the arrival of the
surgeon.
From the feminine appearance of this
lady, no stranger would have expected such resolution;
but with all the natural sensibility and graceful
delicacy of her sex, she had none of that weakness
or affection which incapacitates from being useful
in real distress. In most sudden accidents,
and in all domestic misfortunes, female resolution
and presence of mind are indispensably requisite:
safety, health, and life often depend upon the fortitude
of women. Happy they who, like Madame de Fleury,
possess strength of mind united with the utmost gentleness
of manner and tenderness of disposition!
Soothed by this lady’s sweet
voice, the child’s rage subsided; and no longer
struggling, the poor little girl sat quietly on her
lap, sometimes writhing and moaning with pain.
The surgeon at length arrived:
her arm was set: and he said “that she had
probably been saved much future pain by Madame de Fleury’s
presence of mind.”
“Sir, will it soon be well?”
said Maurice to the surgeon.
“Oh yes, very soon, I dare say,”
said the little girl. “To-morrow, perhaps;
for now that it is tied up it does not hurt me to signify and
after all, I do believe, Maurice, it was not you threw
me down.”
As she spoke, she held up her face
to kiss her brother. “That is right,”
said Madame de Fleury; “there is a good sister.”
The little girl put out her lips,
offering a second kiss, but the boy turned hastily
away to rub the tears from his eyes with the back of
his hand.
“I am not cross now: am I, Maurice?”
“No, Victoire; I was cross myself when I said
that.”
As Victoire was going to speak again,
the surgeon imposed silence, observing that she must
be put to bed, and should be kept quiet. Madame
de Fleury laid her upon the bed, as soon as Maurice
had cleared it of the things with which it was covered;
and as they were spreading the ragged blanket over
the little girl, she whispered a request to Madame
de Fleury that she would “stay till her mamma
came home, to beg Maurice off from being whipped,
if mamma should be angry.”
Touched by this instance of goodness,
and compassionating the desolate condition of these
children, Madame de Fleury complied with Victoire’s
request; resolving to remonstrate with their mother
for leaving them locked up in this manner. They
did not know to what part of the town their mother
was gone; they could tell only “that she was
to go to a great many different places to carry back
work, and to bring home more, and that she expected
to be in by five.” It was now half after
four.
Whilst Madame de Fleury waited, she
asked the boy to give her a full account of the manner
in which the accident had happened.
“Why, ma’am,” said
Maurice, twisting and untwisting a ragged handkerchief
as he spoke, “the first beginning of all the
mischief was, we had nothing to do, so we went to
the ashes to make dirt pies; but Babet would go so
close that she burnt her petticoat, and threw about
all our ashes, and plagued us, and we whipped her.
But all would not do, she would not be quiet; so
to get out of her reach, we climbed up by this chair
on the table to the top of the press, and there we
were well enough for a little while, till somehow
we began to quarrel about the old scissors, and we
struggled hard for them till I got this cut.”
Here he unwound the handkerchief,
and for the first time showed the wound, which he
had never mentioned before.
“Then,” continued he,
“when I got the cut, I shoved Victoire, and she
pushed at me again, and I was keeping her off, and
her foot slipped, and down she fell, and caught by
the press-door, and pulled it and me after her, and
that’s all I know.”
“It is well that you were not
both killed,” said Madame de Fleury. “Are
you often left locked up in this manner by yourselves,
and without anything to do?”
“Yes, always, when mamma is
abroad, except sometimes we are let out upon the stairs
or in the street; but mamma says we get into mischief
there.”
This dialogue was interrupted by the
return of the mother. She came upstairs slowly,
much fatigued, and with a heavy bundle under her arm.
“How now! Maurice, how
comes my door open? What’s all this?”
cried she, in an angry voice; but seeing a lady sitting
upon her child’s bed, she stopped short in great
astonishment. Madame de Fleury related what had
happened, and averted her anger from Maurice by gently
expostulating upon the hardship and hazard of leaving
her young children in this manner during so many hours
of the day.
“Why, my lady,” replied
the poor woman, wiping her forehead, “every hard-working
woman in Paris does the same with her children; and
what can I do else? I must earn bread for these
helpless ones, and to do that I must be out backwards
and forwards, and to the furthest parts of the town,
often from morning till night, with those that employ
me; and I cannot afford to send the children to school,
or to keep any kind of a servant to look after them;
and when I’m away, if I let them run about these
stairs and entries, or go into the sheets, they do
get a little exercise and air, to be sure, such as
it is on which account I do let them out sometimes;
but then a deal of mischief comes of that, too:
they learn all kinds of wickedness, and would grow
up to be no better than pickpockets, if they
were let often to consort with the little vagabonds
they find in the streets. So what to do better
for them I don’t know.”
The poor mother sat down upon the
fallen press, looked at Victoire, and wept bitterly.
Madame de Fleury was struck with compassion; but she
did not satisfy her feelings merely by words or comfort
or by the easy donation of some money she
resolved to do something more, and something better.
CHAPTER II
“Come often, then; for haply
in my bower
Amusement, knowledge, wisdom, thou
may’st gain:
If I one soul improve, I have not
lived in vain.” BEATTIE.
It is not so easy to do good as those
who have never attempted it may imagine; and they
who without consideration follow the mere instinct
of pity, often by their imprudent generosity create
evils more pernicious to society than any which they
partially remedy. “Warm Charity, the general
friend,” may become the general enemy, unless
she consults her head as well as her heart.
Whilst she pleases herself with the idea that she
daily feeds hundreds of the poor, she is perhaps preparing
want and famine for thousands. Whilst she delights
herself with the anticipation of gratitude for her
bounties, she is often exciting only unreasonable
expectations, inducing habits of dependence and submission
to slavery.
Those who wish to do good should attend
to experience, from whom they may receive lessons
upon the largest scale that time and numbers can afford.
Madame de Fleury was aware that neither
a benevolent disposition nor a large fortune were
sufficient to enable her to be of real service, without
the constant exercise of her judgment. She had,
therefore, listened with deference to the conversation
of well-informed men upon those subjects on which
ladies have not always the means or the wish to acquire
extensive and accurate knowledge. Though a Parisian
belle, she had read with attention some of those books
which are generally thought too dry or too deep for
her sex. Consequently, her benevolence was neither
wild in theory nor precipitate nor ostentatious in
practice.
Touched with compassion for a little
girl whose arm had been accidentally broken, and shocked
by the discovery of the confinement and the dangers
to which numbers of children in Paris were doomed,
she did not make a parade of her sensibility.
She did not talk of her feelings in fine sentences
to a circle of opulent admirers, nor did she project
for the relief of the little sufferers some magnificent
establishment which she could not execute or superintend.
She was contented with attempting only what she had
reasonable hopes of accomplishing.
The gift of education she believed
to be more advantageous than the gift of money to
the poor, as it ensures the means both of future subsistence
and happiness. But the application even of this
incontrovertible principle requires caution and judgment.
To crowd numbers of children into a place called
a school, to abandon them to the management of any
person called a schoolmaster or a schoolmistress, is
not sufficient to secure the blessings of a good education.
Madame de Fleury was sensible that the greatest care
is necessary in the choice of the person to whom young
children are to be entrusted; she knew that only a
certain number can be properly directed by one superintendent,
and that, by attempting to do too much, she might
do nothing, or worse than nothing. Her school
was formed, therefore, on a small scale, which she
could enlarge to any extent, if it should be found
to succeed. From some of the families of poor
people, who, in earning their bread, are obliged to
spend most of the day from home, she selected twelve
little girls, of whom Victoire was the eldest, and
she was between six and seven.
The person under whose care Madame
de Fleury wished to place these children was a nun
of the Soeurs de la Charité, with whose simplicity
of character, benevolence, and mild, steady temper
she was thoroughly acquainted. Sister Frances
was delighted with the plan. Any scheme that
promised to be of service to her follow-creatures was
sure of meeting with her approbation; but this suited
her taste peculiarly, because she was extremely fond
of children. No young person had ever boarded
six months at her convent without becoming attached
to good Sister Frances.
The period of which we are writing
was some years before convents were abolished; but
the strictness of their rules had in many instances
been considerably relaxed. Without much difficulty,
permission was obtained from the abbess for our nun
to devote her time during the day to the care of these
poor children, upon condition that she should regularly
return to her convent every night before evening prayers.
The house which Madame de Fleury chose for her little
school was in an airy part of the town; it did not
face the street, but was separated from other buildings
at the back of a court, retired from noise and bustle.
The two rooms intended for the occupation of the
children were neat and clean, but perfectly simple,
with whitewashed walls, furnished only with wooden
stools and benches, and plain deal tables. The
kitchen was well lighted (for light is essential to
cleanliness), and it was provided with utensils; and
for these appropriate places were allotted, to give
the habit and the taste of order. The schoolroom
opened into a garden larger than is usually seen in
towns. The nun, who had been accustomed to purchase
provisions for her convent, undertook to prepare daily
for the children breakfast and dinner; they were to
sup and sleep at their respective homes. Their
parents were to take them to Sister Frances every
morning when they went out to work, and to call for
them upon their return home every evening. By
this arrangement, the natural ties of affection and
intimacy between the children and their parents would
not be loosened; they would be separate only at the
time when their absence must be inevitable.
Madame de Fleury thought that any education which
estranges children entirely from their parents must
be fundamentally erroneous; that such a separation
must tend to destroy that sense of filial affection
and duty, and those principles of domestic subordination,
on which so many of the interests and much of the virtue
and happiness of society depend. The parents
of these poor children were eager to trust them to
her care, and they strenuously endeavoured to promote
what they perceived to be entirely to their advantage.
They promised to take their daughters to school punctually
every morning a promise which was likely
to be kept, as a good breakfast was to be ready at
a certain hour, and not to wait for anybody.
The parents looked forward with pleasure, also, to
the idea of calling for their little girls at the
end of their day’s labour, and of taking them
home to their family supper. During the intermediate
hours the children were constantly to be employed,
or in exercise. It was difficult to provide
suitable employments for their early age; but even
the youngest of those admitted could be taught to
wind balls of cotton, thread, and silk for haberdashers;
or they could shell peas and beans, &c., for a neighbouring
traiteur; or they could weed in a garden.
The next in age could learn knitting and plain work,
reading, writing, and arithmetic. As the girls
should grow up, they were to be made useful in the
care of the house. Sister Frances said she could
teach them to wash and iron, and that she would make
them as skilful in cookery as she was herself.
This last was doubtless a rash promise; for in most
of the mysteries of the culinary art, especially in
the medical branches of it, in making savoury messes
palatable to the sick, few could hope to equal the
neat-handed Sister Frances. She had a variety
of other accomplishments; but her humility and good
sense forbade her upon the present occasion to mention
these. She said nothing of embroidery, or of
painting, or of cutting out paper, or of carving in
ivory, though in all these she excelled: her cuttings-out
in paper were exquisite as the finest lace; her embroidered
housewives, and her painted boxes, and her fan-mounts,
and her curiously-wrought ivory toys, had obtained
for her the highest reputation in the convent amongst
the best judges in the world. Those only who
have philosophically studied and thoroughly understand
the nature of fame and vanity can justly appreciate
the self-denial or magnanimity of Sister Frances,
in forbearing to enumerate or boast of these things.
She alluded to them but once, and in the slightest
and most humble manner.
“These little creatures are
too young for us to think of teaching them anything
but plain work at present; but if hereafter any of
them should show a superior genius we can cultivate
it properly. Heaven has been pleased to endow
me with the means at least, our convent
says so.”
The actions of Sister Frances showed
as much moderation as her words; for though she was
strongly tempted to adorn her new dwelling with those
specimens of her skill which had long been the glory
of her apartment in the convent, yet she resisted
the impulse, and contented herself with hanging over
the chimney-piece of her schoolroom a Madonna of her
own painting.
The day arrived when she was to receive
her pupils in their new habitation. When the
children entered the room for the first time, they
paid the Madonna the homage of their unfeigned admiration.
Involuntarily the little crowd stopped short at the
sight of the picture. Some dormant emotions
of human vanity were now awakened played
for a moment about the heart of Sister Frances and
may be forgiven. Her vanity was innocent and
transient, her benevolence permanent and useful.
Repressing the vain-glory of an artist, as she fixed
her eyes upon the Madonna, her thoughts rose to higher
objects, and she seized this happy moment to impress
upon the minds of her young pupils their first religious
ideas and feelings. There was such unaffected
piety in her manner, such goodness in her countenance,
such persuasion in her voice, and simplicity in her
words, that the impression she made was at once serious,
pleasing, and not to be effaced. Much depends
upon the moment and the manner in which the first
notions of religion are communicated to children; if
these ideas be connected with terror, and produced
when the mind is sullen or in a state of dejection,
the future religious feelings are sometimes of a gloomy,
dispiriting sort; but if the first impression be made
when the heart is expanded by hope or touched by affection,
these emotions are happily and permanently associated
with religion. This should be particularly attended
to by those who undertake the instruction of the children
of the poor, who must lead a life of labour, and can
seldom have leisure or inclination, when arrived at
years of discretion, to re-examine the principles
early infused into their minds. They cannot in
their riper age conquer by reason those superstitions
terrors, or bigoted prejudices, which render their
victims miserable, or perhaps criminal. To attempt
to rectify any errors in the foundation after an edifice
has been constructed is dangerous: the foundation,
therefore, should be laid with care. The religious
opinions of Sister Frances were strictly united with
just rules of morality, strongly enforcing, as the
essential means of obtaining present and future happiness,
the practice of the social virtues, so that no good
or wise persons, however they might differ from her
in modes of faith, could doubt the beneficial influence
of her general principles, or disapprove of the manner
in which they were inculcated.
Detached from every other worldly
interest, this benevolent nun devoted all her earthly
thoughts to the children of whom she had undertaken
the charge. She watched over them with unceasing
vigilance, whilst diffidence of her own abilities
was happily supported by her high opinion of Madame
de Fleury’s judgment. This lady constantly
visited her pupils every week; not in the hasty, negligent
manner in which fine ladies sometimes visit charitable
institutions, imagining that the honour of their presence
is to work miracles, and that everything will go on
rightly when they have said, “Let it be so,”
or, “I must have it so.” Madame
de Fleury’s visits were not of this dictatorial
or cursory nature. Not minutes, but hours, she
devoted to these children she who could
charm by the grace of her manners, and delight by the
elegance of her conversation, the most polished circles
and the best-informed societies of Paris, preferred
to the glory of being admired the pleasure of being
useful:
“Her life, as lovely as her
face,
Each duty mark’d with every
grace;
Her native sense improved by reading,
Her native sweetness by good breeding.”
CHAPTER III
“Ah me! how much I fear lest
pride it be;
But if that pride it be which thus
inspires,
Beware, ye dames! with nice
discernment see
Ye quench not too the sparks of
nobler fires.”
SHENSTONE.
By repeated observation, and by attending
to the minute reports of Sister Frances, Madame de
Fleury soon became acquainted with the habits and
temper of each individual in this little society.
The most intelligent and the most amiable of these
children was Victoire. Whence her superiority
arose, whether her abilities were naturally more vivacious
than those of her companions, or whether they had been
more early developed by accidental excitation, we
cannot pretend to determine, lest we should involve
ourselves in the intricate question respecting natural
genius a metaphysical point, which we shall
not in this place stop to discuss. Till the
world has an accurate philosophical dictionary (a work
not to be expected in less than half a dozen centuries),
this question will never be decided to general satisfaction.
In the meantime we may proceed with our story.
Deep was the impression made on Victoire’s
heart by the kindness that Madame de Fleury showed
her at the time her arm was broken; and her gratitude
was expressed with all the enthusiastic fondness of
childhood. Whenever she spoke or heard of Madame
de Fleury her countenance became interested and animated
in a degree that would have astonished a cool English
spectator. Every morning her first question to
Sister Frances was: “Will she come
to-day?” If Madame de Fleury was expected, the
hours and the minutes were counted, and the sand in
the hour-glass that stood on the schoolroom table
was frequently shaken. The moment she appeared
Victoire ran to her, and was silent; satisfied with
standing close beside her, holding her gown when unperceived,
and watching, as she spoke and moved, every turn of
her countenance. Delighted by these marks of
sensibility, Sister Frances would have praised the
child, but was warned by Madame de Fleury to refrain
from injudicious eulogiums, lest she should teach
her affectation.
“If I must not praise, you will
permit me at least to love her,” said Sister
Frances.
Her affection for Victoire was increased
by compassion: during two months the poor child’s
arm hung in a sling, so that she could not venture
to play with her companions. At their hours
of recreation she used to sit on the schoolroom steps,
looking down into the garden at the scene of merriment
in which she could not partake.
For those who know how to find it,
there is good in everything. Sister Frances
used to take her seat on the steps, sometimes with
her work and sometimes with a book; and Victoire,
tired of being quite idle, listened with eagerness
to the stories which Sister Frances read, or watched
with interest the progress of her work; soon she longed
to imitate what she saw done with so much pleasure,
and begged to be taught to work and read. By
degrees she learned her alphabet, and could soon, to
the amazement of her schoolfellows, read the names
of all the animals in Sister Frances’ picture-book.
No matter how trifling the thing done, or the knowledge
acquired, a great point is gained by giving the desire
for employment. Children frequently become industrious
from impatience of the pains and penalties of idleness.
Count Rumford showed that he understood childish
nature perfectly well when, in his House of Industry
at Munich, he compelled the young children to sit
for some time idle in a gallery round the hall, where
others a little older than themselves were busied at
work. During Victoire’s state of idle convalescence
she acquired the desire to be employed, and she consequently
soon became more industrious than her neighbours.
Succeeding in her first efforts, she was praised was
pleased, and persevered till she became an example
of activity to her companions. But Victoire,
though now nearly seven years old, was not quite perfect.
Naturally, or accidentally, she was very passionate,
and not a little self-willed.
One day being mounted, horsemanlike,
with whip in hand, upon the banister of the flight
of stairs leading from the schoolroom to the garden,
she called in a tone of triumph to her playfellows,
desiring them to stand out of the way, and see her
slide from top to bottom. At this moment Sister
Frances came to the schoolroom door and forbade the
feat; but Victoire, regardless of all prohibition,
slid down instantly, and moreover was going to repeat
the glorious operation, when Sister Frances, catching
hold of her arm, pointed to a heap of sharp stones
that lay on the ground upon the other side of the
banisters.
“I am not afraid,” said Victoire.
“But if you fall there, you may break your arm
again.”
“And if I do, I can bear it,”
said Victoire. “Let me go, pray let me
go: I must do it.”
“No; I forbid you, Victoire,
to slide down again. Babet and all the little
ones would follow your example, and perhaps break their
necks.”
The nun, as she spoke, attempted to
compel Victoire to dismount; but she was so much of
a heroine, that she would do nothing upon compulsion.
Clinging fast to the banisters, she resisted with all
her might; she kicked and screamed, and screamed and
kicked, but at last her feet were taken prisoners;
then grasping the railway with one hand, with the other
she brandished high the little whip.
“What!” said the mild
nun, “would you strike me with that arm?”
The arm dropped instantly Victoire
recollected Madame de Fleury’s kindness the
day when the arm was broken; dismounting immediately,
she threw herself upon her knees in the midst of the
crowd of young spectators, and begged pardon of Sister
Frances. For the rest of the day she was as
gentle as a lamb; nay, some assert that the effects
of her contrition were visible during the remainder
of the week.
Having thus found the secret of reducing
the little rebel to obedience by touching her on the
tender point of gratitude, the nun had recourse to
this expedient in all perilous cases; but one day,
when she was boasting of the infallible operation
of her charm, Madame de Fleury advised her to forbear
recurring to it frequently, lest she should wear out
the sensibility she so much loved. In consequence
of this counsel, Victoire’s violence of temper
was sometimes reduced by force and sometimes corrected
by reason; but the principle and the feeling of gratitude
were not exhausted or weakened in the struggle.
The hope of reward operated upon her generous mind
more powerfully than the fear of punishment; and Madame
de Fleury devised rewards with as much ability as
some legislators invent punishments.
Victoire’s brother Maurice,
who was now of an age to earn his own bread, had a
strong desire to be bound apprentice to the smith who
worked in the house where his mother lodged.
This most ardent wish of his soul he had imparted
to his sister; and she consulted her benefactress,
whom she considered as all-powerful in this, as in
every other affair.
“Your brother’s wish shall
be gratified,” replied Madame de Fleury, “if
you can keep your temper one month. If you are
never in a passion for a whole month, I will undertake
that your brother shall be bound apprentice to his
friend the smith. To your companions, to Sister
Frances, and above all to yourself, I trust, to make
me a just report this day month.”
CHAPTER IV
“You she preferred to all
the gay resorts,
Where female vanity might wish to
shine,
The pomp of cities, and the pride
of courts.”
LYTTELTON.
At the end of the time prescribed,
the judges, including Victoire herself, who was the
most severe of them all, agreed she had justly deserved
her reward. Maurice obtained his wish; and Victoire’s
temper never relapsed into its former bad habits so
powerful is the effect of a well-chosen motive!
Perhaps the historian may be blamed for dwelling on
such trivial anecdotes; yet a lady, who was accustomed
to the conversation of deep philosophers and polished
courtiers, listened without disdain to these simple
annals. Nothing appeared to her a trifle that
could tend to form the habits of temper, truth, honesty,
order, and industry: habits which are to be early
induced, not by solemn precepts, but by practical
lessons. A few more examples of these shall be
recorded, notwithstanding the fear of being tiresome.
One day little Babet, who was now
five years old, saw, as she was coming to school,
an old woman sitting at a corner of the street beside
a large black brazier full of roasted chestnuts.
Babet thought that the chestnuts looked and smelled
very good; the old woman was talking earnestly to
some people, who were on her other side; Babet filled
her work-bag with chestnuts, and then ran after her
mother and sister, who, having turned the corner of
the street, had not seen what passed. When Babet
came to the schoolroom, she opened her bag with triumph,
displayed her treasure, and offered to divide it with
her companions. “Here, Victoire,”
said she, “here is the largest chestnut for you.”
But Victoire would not take it; for
she staid that Babet had no money, and that she could
not have come honestly by these chestnuts. She
spoke so forcibly upon this point that even those
who had the tempting morsel actually at their lips
forbore to bite; those who had bitten laid down their
half-eaten prize; and those who had their hands full
of chestnuts rolled them back again towards the bag.
Babet cried with vexation.
“I burned my fingers in getting
them for you, and now you won’t eat them! And
I must not eat them!” said she: then curbing
her passion, she added, “But at any rate, I
won’t be a thief. I am sure I did not think
it was being a thief just to take a few chestnuts from
an old woman who had such heaps and heaps; but Victoire
says it is wrong, and I would not be a thief for all
the chestnuts in the world I’ll throw
them all into the fire this minute!”
“No; give them back again to
the old woman,” said Victoire.
“But, may be, she would scold
me for having taken them,” said Babet; “or
who knows but she might whip me?”
“And if she did, could you not
bear it?” said Victoire. “I am sure
I would rather bear twenty whippings than be a thief.”
“Twenty, whippings! that’s
a great many,” said Babet; “and I am so
little, consider and that woman has such
a monstrous arm! Now, if it was Sister
Frances, it would be another thing. But come!
if you will go with me, Victoire, you shall see how
I will behave.”
“We will all go with you,” said Victoire.
“Yes, all!” said the children;
“And Sister Frances, I dare say, would go, if
you asked her.”
Babet ran and told her, and she readily
consented to accompany the little penitent to make
restitution. The chestnut woman did not whip
Babet, nor even scold her, but said she was sure that
since the child was so honest as to return what she
had taken, she would never steal again. This
was the most glorious day of Babet’s life, and
the happiest. When the circumstance was told
to Madame de Fleury, she gave the little girl a bag
of the best chestnuts the old women could select, and
Babet with great delight shared her reward with her
companions.
“But, alas! these chestnuts
are not roasted. Oh, if we could but roast them!”
said the children.
Sister Frances placed in the middle
of the table on which the chestnuts were spread a
small earthenware furnace a delightful toy,
commonly used by children in Paris to cook their little
feasts.
“This can be bought for sixpence,”
said she: “and if each of you twelve earn
one halfpenny apiece to-day, you can purchase it to-night,
and I will put a little fire into it, and you will
then be able to roast your chestnuts.”
The children ran eagerly to their
work some to wind worsted for a woman who
paid them a liard for each ball, others to shell
peas for a neighbouring traiteur all
rejoicing that they were able to earn something.
The older girls, under the directions and with the
assistance of Sister Frances, completed making, washing,
and ironing, half a dozen little caps, to supply a
baby-linen warehouse. At the end of the day,
when the sum of the produce of their labours was added
together, they were surprised to find that, instead
of one, they could purchase two furnaces. They
received and enjoyed the reward of their united industry.
The success of their first efforts was fixed in their
memory: for they were very happy roasting the
chestnuts, and they were all (Sister Frances inclusive)
unanimous in opinion that no chestnuts ever were so
good, or so well roasted. Sister Frances always
partook in their little innocent amusements; and it
was her great delight to be the dispenser of rewards
which at once conferred present pleasure and cherished
future virtue.
CHAPTER V
“To virtue wake the pulses
of the heart,
And bid the tear of emulation start.”
ROGERS.
Victoire, who gave constant exercise
to the benevolent feelings of the amiable nun, became
every day more dear to her. Far from having the
selfishness of a favourite, Victoire loved to bring
into public notice the good actions of her companions.
“Stoop down your ear to me, Sister Frances,”
said she, “and I will tell you a secret I
will tell you why my friend Annette is growing so
thin I found it out this morning she
does not eat above half her soup every day.
Look, there’s her porringer covered up in the
corner she carries it home to her mother,
who is sick, and who has not bread to eat.”
Madame de Fleury came in whilst Sister
Frances was yet bending down to hear this secret;
it was repeated to her, and she immediately ordered
that a certain allowance of bread should be given to
Annette every day to carry to her mother during her
illness.
“I give it in charge to you,
Victoire, to remember this, and I am sure it will
never be forgotten. Here is an order for you
upon my baker: run and show it to Annette.
This is a pleasure you deserve; I am glad that you
have chosen for your friend a girl who is so good a
daughter. Good daughters make good friends.”
By similar instances of goodness Victoire
obtained the love and confidence of her companions,
notwithstanding her manifest superiority. In
their turn, they were eager to proclaim her merits;
and, as Sister Frances and Madame de Fleury administered
justice with invariable impartiality, the hateful
passions of envy and jealousy were never excited in
this little society. No servile sycophant, no
malicious detractor, could rob or defraud their little
virtues of their due reward.
“Whom shall I trust to take
this to Madame de Fleury?” said Sister Frances,
carrying into the garden where the children were playing
a pot of fine jonquils, which she had brought from
her convent. “These are the first
jonquils I have seen this year, and finer I never beheld!
Whom shall I trust to take them to Madame de Fleury
this evening? It must be some one who will
not stop to stare about on the way, but who will be
very, very careful some one in whom I can
place perfect dependence.”
“It must be Victoire, then,” cried every
voice.
“Yes, she deserves it to-day
particularly,” said Annette eagerly; “because
she was not angry with Babet when she did what was
enough to put anybody in a passion. Sister Frances,
you know this cherry-tree which you grafted for Victoire
last year, and that was yesterday so full of blossoms now
you see, there is not a blossom left! Babet
plucked them all this morning to make a nosegay.”
“But she did not know,”
said Victoire, “that pulling off the blossoms
would prevent my having any cherries.”
“Oh, I am very sorry I was so
foolish,” said Babet; “Victoire did not
even say a cross word to me.”
“Though she was excessively
anxious about the cherries,” pursued Annette,
“because she intended to have given the first
she had to Madame de Fleury.”
“Victoire, take the jonquils it
is but just,” said Sister Frances. “How
I do love to hear them all praise her! I
knew what she would be from the first.”
With a joyful heart Victoire took
the jonquils, promised to carry them with the utmost
care, and not to stop to stare on the way. She
set out to Madame de Fleury’s hotel, which was
in La Place de Louis Quinze. It was late
in the evening, the lamps were lighting, and as Victoire
crossed the Pont de Louis Seize, she stopped to look
at the reflection of the lamps in the water, which
appeared in succession, as they were lighted, spreading
as if by magic along the river. While Victoire
leaned over the battlements of the bridge, watching
the rising of these stars of fire, a sudden push from
the elbow of some rude passenger precipitated her pot
of jonquils into the Seine. The sound it made
in the water was thunder to the ear of Victoire; she
stood for an instant vainly hoping it would rise again,
but the waters had closed over it for ever.
“Dans cet état
affreux, que faire?
. . . Mon devoir.”
Victoire courageously proceeded to
Madame de Fleury’s, and desired to see her.
“D’abord c’est
impossible madame is dressing
to go to a concert,” said Francois. “Cannot
you leave your message?”
“Oh no,” said Victoire;
“it is of great consequence I must
see her myself; and she is so good, and you too, Monsieur
Francois, that I am sure you will not refuse.”
“Well, I remember one day you
found the seal of my watch, which I dropped at your
schoolroom door one good turn deserves another.
If it is possible it shall be done I will
inquire of madame’s woman.” “Follow
me upstairs,” said he, returning in a few minutes;
“madame will see you.”
She followed him up the large staircase,
and through a suite of apartments sufficiently grand
to intimidate her young imagination.
“Madame est dans son
cabinet. Entrez maïs entrez
donc, entrez toujours.”
Madame de Fleury was more richly dressed
than usual; and her image was reflected in the large
looking-glass, so that at the first moment Victoire
thought she saw many fine ladies, but not one of them
the lady she wanted.
“Well, Victoire, my child, what is the matter?”
“Oh, it is her voice! I
know you now, madame, and I am not afraid not
afraid even to tell you how foolish I have been.
Sister Frances trusted me to carry for you, madame,
a beautiful pot of jonquils, and she desired me not
to stop on the way to stare; but I did stop to look
at the lamps on the bridge, and I forgot the jonquils,
and somebody brushed by me and threw them into the
river and I am very sorry I was so foolish.”
“And I am very glad that you
are so wise as to tell the truth, without attempting
to make any paltry excuses. Go home to Sister
Frances, and assure her that I am more obliged to
her for making you such an honest girl than I could
be for a whole bed of jonquils.”
Victoire’s heart was so full
that she could not speak she kissed Madame
de Fleury’s hand in silence, and then seemed
to be lost in contemplation of her bracelet.
“Are you thinking, Victoire,
that you should be much happier if you had such bracelets
as these? Believe me, you are mistaken if you
think so; many people are unhappy who wear fine bracelets;
so, my child, content yourself.”
“Myself! Oh, madame,
I was not thinking of myself I was not wishing
for bracelets; I was only thinking that ”
“That what?”
“That it is a pity you are so
very rich; you have everything in this world that
you want, and I can never be of the least use to you all
my life I shall never be able to do you any
good and what,” said Victoire, turning
away to hide her tears, “what signifies the gratitude
of such a poor little creature as I am?”
“Did you never hear the fable
of the lion and the mouse, Victoire?”
“No, madame never!”
“Then I will tell it to you.”
Victoire looked up with eyes of eager
expectation Francois opened the door to
announce that the Marquis de M – and
the Comte de S – were in the saloon;
but Madame de Fleury stayed to tell Victoire her fable she
would not lose the opportunity of making an impression
upon this child’s heart.
It is whilst the mind is warm that
the deepest impressions can be made. Seizing
the happy moment sometimes decides the character and
the fate of a child. In this respect, what advantages
have the rich and great in educating the children
of the poor! they have the power which their rank
and all its decorations obtain over the imagination.
Their smiles are favours; their words are listened
to as oracular; they are looked up to as beings of
a superior order. Their powers of working good
are almost as great, though not quite so wonderful,
as those formerly attributed to beneficent, fairies.
CHAPTER VI
“Knowledge for them unlocks
her useful page,
And virtue blossoms for a better
age.” BARBAULD.
A few days after Madame de Fleury
had told Victoire the fable of the lion and the mouse,
she was informed by Sister Frances that Victoire had
put the fable into verse. It was wonderfully
well done for a child of nine years old, and Madame
de Fleury was tempted to praise the lines; but, checking
the enthusiasm of the moment, she considered whether
it would be advantageous to cultivate her pupil’s
talent for poetry. Excellence in the poetic
art cannot be obtained without a degree of application
for which a girl in her situation could not have leisure.
To encourage her to become a mere rhyming scribbler,
without any chance of obtaining celebrity or securing
subsistence, would be folly and cruelty. Early
prodigies in the lower ranks of life are seldom permanently
successful; they are cried up one day, and cried down
the next. Their productions rarely have that
superiority which secures a fair preference in the
great literary market. Their performances are,
perhaps, said to be wonderful, all things considered,
&c. Charitable allowances are made; the books
are purchased by associations of complaisant friends
or opulent patrons; a kind of forced demand is raised,
but this can be only temporary and delusive.
In spite of bounties and of all the arts of protection,
nothing but what is intrinsically good will long be
preferred, when it must be purchased. But granting
that positive excellence is attained, there is always
danger that for works of fancy the taste of the public
may suddenly vary: there is a fashion in these
things; and when the mode changes, the mere literary
manufacturer is thrown out of employment; he is unable
to turn his hand to another trade, or to any but his
own peculiar branch of the business. The powers
of the mind are often partially cultivated in these
self-taught geniuses. We often see that one
part of their understanding is nourished to the prejudice
of the rest the imagination, for instance,
at the expense of the judgment: so that whilst
they have acquired talents for show they have none
for use. In the affairs of common life they are
utterly ignorant and imbecile or worse
than imbecile. Early called into public notice,
probably before their moral habits are formed, they
are extolled for some play of fancy or of wit, as
Bacon calls it, some juggler’s trick of the intellect;
they immediately take an aversion to plodding labour,
they feel raised above their situation; possessed
by the notion that genius exempts them not only from
labour, but from vulgar rules of prudence, they soon
disgrace themselves by their conduct, are deserted
by their patrons, and sink into despair or plunge
into profligacy.
Convinced of these melancholy truths,
Madame de Fleury was determined not to add to the
number of those imprudent or ostentatious patrons,
who sacrifice to their own amusement and vanity the
future happiness of their favourites. Victoire’s
verses were not handed about in fashionable circles,
nor was she called upon to recite them before a brilliant
audience, nor was she produced in public as a prodigy;
she was educated in private, and by slow and sure
degrees, to be a good, useful, and happy member of
society. Upon the same principles which decided
Madame de Fleury against encouraging Victoire to be
a poetess, she refrained from giving any of her little
pupils accomplishments unsuited to their situation.
Some had a fine ear for music, others showed powers
of dancing; but they were taught neither dancing nor
music talents which in their station were
more likely to be dangerous than serviceable.
They were not intended for actresses or opera-girls,
but for shop-girls, mantua-makers, work-women, and
servants of different sorts; consequently they were
instructed in things which would be most necessary
and useful to young women in their rank of life.
Before they were ten years old they could do all
kinds of plain needlework, they could read and write
well, and they were mistresses of the common rules
of arithmetic. After this age they were practised
by a writing-master in drawing out bills neatly, keeping
accounts, and applying to every-day use their knowledge
of arithmetic. Some were taught by a laundress
to wash and get up fine linen and lace; others were
instructed by a neighbouring traiteur in those
culinary mysteries with which Sister Frances was unacquainted.
In sweetmeats and confectioneries she yielded to
no one; and she made her pupils as expert as herself.
Those who were intended for ladies’ maids were
taught mantua-making, and had lessons from Madame de
Fleury’s own woman in hairdressing.
Amongst her numerous friends and acquaintances,
and amongst the shopkeepers whom she was in the habit
of employing, Madame de Fleury had means of placing
and establishing her pupils suitably and advantageously:
of this, both they and their parents were aware, so
that there was a constant and great motive operating
continually to induce them to exert themselves, and
to behave well. This reasonable hope of reaping
the fruits of their education, and of being immediately
rewarded for their good conduct; this perception of
the connection between what they are taught and what
they are to become, is necessary to make young people
assiduous; for want of attending to these principles
many splendid establishments have failed to produce
pupils answerable to the expectations which had been
formed of them.
During seven years that Madame de
Fleury persevered uniformly on the same plan, only
one girl forfeited her protection a girl
of the name of Manon; she was Victoire’s cousin,
but totally unlike her in character.
When very young, her beautiful eyes
and hair caught the fancy of a rich lady, who took
her into her family as a sort of humble playfellow
for her children. She was taught to dance and
to sing: she soon excelled in these accomplishments,
and was admired, and produced as a prodigy of talent.
The lady of the house gave herself great credit for
having discerned, and having brought forward, such
talents. Manon’s moral character was in
the meantime neglected. In this house, where
there was a constant scene of hurry and dissipation,
the child had frequent opportunities and temptations
to be dishonest. For some time she was not detected;
her caressing manners pleased her patroness, and servile
compliance with the humours of the children of the
family secured their goodwill. Encouraged by
daily petty successes in the art of deceit, she became
a complete hypocrite. With culpable negligence,
her mistress trusted implicitly to appearances; and
without examining whether she were really honest,
she suffered her to have free access to unlocked drawers
and valuable cabinets. Several articles of dress
were missed from time to time; but Manon managed so
artfully, that she averted from herself all suspicion.
Emboldened by this fatal impunity, she at last attempted
depredations of more importance. She purloined
a valuable snuff-box was detected in disposing
of the broken parts of it at a pawnbroker’s,
and was immediately discarded in disgrace; but by
her tears and vehement expressions of remorse she
so far worked upon the weakness of the lady of the
house as to prevail upon her to conceal the circumstance
that occasioned her dismissal. Some months afterwards,
Manon, pleading that she was thoroughly reformed,
obtained from this lady a recommendation to Madame
de Fleury’s school. It is wonderful that,
people, who in other respects profess and practise
integrity, can be so culpably weak as to give good
characters to those who do not deserve them: this
is really one of the worst species of forgery.
Imposed upon by this treacherous recommendation,
Madame de Fleury received into the midst of her innocent
young pupils one who might have corrupted their minds
secretly and irrecoverably. Fortunately a discovery
was made in time of Manon’s real disposition.
A mere trifle led to the detection of her habits of
falsehood. As she could not do any kind of needlework,
she was employed in winding cotton; she was negligent,
and did not in the course of the week wind the same
number of balls as her companions; and to conceal
this, she pretended that she had delivered the proper
number to the woman, who regularly called at the end
of the week for the cotton. The woman persisted
in her account, and the children in theirs; and Manon
would not retract her assertion. The poor woman
gave up the point; but she declared that she would
the next time send her brother to make up the account,
because he was sharper than herself, and would not
be imposed upon so easily. The ensuing week
the brother came, and he proved to be the very pawnbroker
to whom Manon formerly offered the stolen box:
he knew her immediately; it was in vain that she attempted
to puzzle him, and to persuade him that she was not
the same person. The man was clear and firm.
Sister Frances could scarcely believe what she heard.
Struck with horror, the children shrank back from
Manon, and stood in silence. Madame de Fleury
immediately wrote to the lady who had recommended this
girl, and inquired into the truth of the pawnbroker’s
assertions. The lady, who had given Manon a
false character, could not deny the facts, and could
apologise for herself only by saying that “she
believed the girl to be partly reformed, and that
she hoped, under Madame de Fleury’s judicious
care, she would become an amiable and respectable woman.”
Madame de Fleury, however, wisely
judged that the hazard of corrupting all her pupils
should not be incurred for the slight chance of correcting
one, whose bad habits wore of such long standing.
Manon was expelled from this happy little community even
Sister Frances, the most mild of human beings, could
never think of the danger to which they had been exposed
without expressing indignation against the lady who
recommended such a girl as a fit companion for her
blameless and beloved pupils.
CHAPTER VII
“Alas! regardless of their
doom,
The little victims play:
No sense have they of ills to come,
No care beyond to-day.” GRAY.
Good legislators always attend to
the habits, and what is called the genius, of the
people they have to govern. From youth to age,
the taste for whatever is called une fête pervades
the whole French nation. Madame de Fleury availed
herself judiciously of this powerful motive, and connected
it with the feelings of affection more than with the
passion for show. For instance, when any of
her little people had done anything particularly worthy
of reward, she gave them leave to invite their parents
to a fête prepared for them by their children,
assisted by the kindness of Sister Frances.
One day it was a holiday
obtained by Victoire’s good conduct all
the children prepared in their garden a little feast
for their parents. Sister Frances spread the
table with a bountiful hand, the happy fathers and
mothers were waited upon by their children, and each
in their turn heard with delight from the benevolent
nun some instance of their daughter’s improvement.
Full of hope for the future and of gratitude for
the past, these honest people ate and talked, whilst
in imagination they saw their children all prosperously
and usefully settled in the world. They blessed
Madame de Fleury in her absence, and they wished ardently
for her presence.
“The sun is setting, and Madame
de Fleury is not yet come,” cried Victoire;
“she said she would be here this evening What
can be the matter?”
“Nothing is the matter, you
may be sure,” said Babet; “but that she
has forgotten us she has so many things
to think of.”
“Yes; but I know she never forgets
us,” said Victoire; “and she loves so
much to see us all happy together, that I am sure it
must be something very extraordinary that detains
her.”
Babet laughed at Victoire’s
fears; but presently even she began to grow impatient;
for they waited long after sunset, expecting every
moment that Madame de Fleury would arrive. At
last she appeared, but with a dejected countenance,
which seemed to justify Victoire’s foreboding.
When she saw this festive company, each child sitting
between her parents, and all at her entrance looking
up with affectionate pleasure, a faint smile enlivened
her countenance for a moment; but she did not speak
to them with her usual ease. Her mind seemed
preoccupied by some disagreeable business of importance.
It appeared that it had some connection with them;
for as she walked round the table with Sister Frances,
she said, with a voice and look of great tenderness,
“Poor children! how happy they are at this moment! Heaven
only knows how soon they may be rendered, or may render
themselves, miserable!”
None of the children could imagine
what this meant; but their parents guessed that it
had some allusion to the state of public affairs.
About this time some of those discontents had broken
out which preceded the terrible days of the Revolution.
As yet, most of the common people, who were honestly
employed in earning their own living, neither understood
what was going on nor foresaw what was to happen.
Many of their superiors were not in such happy ignorance they
had information of the intrigues that were forming;
and the more penetration they possessed, the more
they feared the consequences of events which they could
not control. At the house of a great man, with
whom she had dined this day, Madame de Fleury had
heard alarming news. Dreadful public disturbances,
she saw, were inevitable; and whilst she trembled
for the fate of all who were dear to her, these poor
children had a share in her anxiety. She foresaw
the temptations, the dangers, to which they must be
exposed, whether they abandoned, or whether they abided
by the principles their education had instilled.
She feared that the labour of years would perhaps
be lost in an instant, or that her innocent pupils
would fall victims even to their virtues.
Many of these young people were now
of an age to understand and to govern themselves by
reason; and with these she determined to use those
preventive measures which reason affords. Without
meddling with politics, in which no amiable or sensible
woman can wish to interfere, the influence of ladies
in the higher ranks of life may always be exerted
with perfect propriety, and with essential advantage
to the public, in conciliating the inferior classes
of society, explaining to them their duties and their
interests, and impressing upon the minds of the children
of the poor sentiments of just subordination and honest
independence. How happy would it have been for
France if women of fortune and abilities had always
exerted their talents and activity in this manner,
instead of wasting their powers in futile declamations,
or in the intrigues of party!
CHAPTER VIII
“E’en now the devastation
is begun,
And half the business of destruction
done.”
GOLDSMITH.
Madame de Fleury was not disappointed
in her pupils. When the public disturbances
began, these children were shocked by the horrible
actions they saw. Instead of being seduced by
bad example, they only showed anxiety to avoid companions
of their own age who were dishonest, idle, or profligate.
Victoire’s cousin Manon ridiculed these absurd
principles, as she called them, and endeavoured to
persuade Victoire that she would be much happier if
she followed the fashion.
“What! Victoire, still
with your work-bag on your arm, and still going to
school with your little sister, though you are but
a year younger than I am, I believe! thirteen
last birthday, were not you? Mon Dieu!
Why, how long do you intend to be a child? and why
don’t you leave that old nun, who keeps you
in leading-strings? I assure you, nuns,
and school-mistresses, and schools, and all that
sort of thing, are out of fashion now we
have abolished all that we are to live a
life of reason now and all soon to be equal,
I can tell you; let your Madame de Fleury look to
that, and look to it yourself; for with all your wisdom,
you might find yourself in the wrong box by sticking
to her, and that side of the question. Disengage
yourself from her, I advise you, as soon as you can. My
dear Victoire! believe me, you may spell very well but
you know nothing of the rights of man, or the rights
of woman.”
“I do not pretend to know anything
of the rights of men, or the rights of women,”
cried Victoire; “but this I know: that I
never can or will be ungrateful to Madame de Fleury.
Disengage myself from her! I am bound to her
for ever, and I will abide by her till the last hour
I breathe.”
“Well, well! there is no occasion
to be in a passion I only speak as a friend,
and I have no more time to reason with you; for I must
go home, and get ready my dress for the ball to-night.”
“Manon, how can you afford to buy a dress for
a ball?”
“As you might, if you had common
sense, Victoire only by being a good citizen.
I and a party of us denounced a milliner and a confectioner
in our neighbourhood, who were horrible aristocrats;
and of their goods forfeited to the nation we had,
as was our just share, such delicious marangues
and charming ribands! Oh, Victoire, believe
me, you will never get such things by going to school,
or saying your prayers either. You may look with
as much scorn and indignation as you please, but I
advise you to let it alone, for all that is out of
fashion, and may, moreover, bring you into difficulties.
Believe me, my dear Victoire, your head is not deep
enough to understand these things you know
nothing of politics.”
“But I know the difference between
right and wrong, Manon: politics can never alter
that, you know.”
“Never alter that! there you
are quite mistaken,” said Manon. “I
cannot stay to convince you now but this
I can tell you: that I know secrets that you
don’t suspect.”
“I do not wish to know any of
your secrets, Manon,” said Victoire, proudly.
“Your pride may be humbled,
Citoyenne Victoire, sooner than you expect,”
exclaimed Manon, who was now so provoked by her cousin’s
contempt that she could not refrain from boasting
of her political knowledge. “I can tell
you that your fine friends will in a few days not be
able to protect you. The Abbe Tracassier is
in love with a dear friend of mine, and I know all
the secrets of state from her and I know
what I know. Be as incredulous as you please,
but you will see that, before this week is at end,
Monsieur de Fleury will be guillotined, and then what
will become of you? Good morning, my proud cousin.”
Shocked by what she had just heard,
Victoire could scarcely believe that Manon was in
earnest; she resolved, however, to go immediately and
communicate this intelligence, whether true or false,
to Madame de Fleury. It agreed but too well
with other circumstances, which alarmed this lady
for the safety of her husband. A man of his abilities,
integrity, and fortune, could not in such times hope
to escape persecution. He was inclined to brave
the danger; but his lady represented that it would
not be courage, but rashness and folly, to sacrifice
his life to the villainy of others, without probability
or possibility of serving his country by his fall.
Monsieur de Fleury, in consequence
of these representations, and of Victoire’s
intelligence, made his escape from Paris; and the very
next day placards were put up in every street, offering
a price for the head of Citoyen Fleury, suspected
of incivisme.
Struck with terror and astonishment
at the sight of these placards, the children read
them as they returned in the evening from school; and
little Babet in the vehemence of her indignation mounted
a lamplighter’s ladder, and tore down one of
the papers. This imprudent action did not pass
unobserved: it was seen by one of the spies of
Citoyen Tracassier, a man who, under the pretence
of zeal pour la chose publique, gratified without
scruple his private resentments and his malevolent
passions. In his former character of an abbe,
and a man of wit, he had gained admittance into Madame
de Fleury’s society. There he attempted
to dictate both as a literary and religious despot.
Accidentally discovering that Madame de Fleury had
a little school for poor children, he thought proper
to be offended, because he had not been consulted
respecting the regulations, and because he was not
permitted, as he said, to take the charge of this
little flock. He made many objections to Sister
Frances, as being an improper person to have the spiritual
guidance of these young people; but as he was unable
to give any just reason for his dislike, Madame de
Fleury persisted in her choice, and was at last obliged
to assert, in opposition to the domineering abbe, her
right to judge and decide in her own affairs.
With seeming politeness, he begged ten thousand pardons
for his conscientious interference. No more
was said upon the subject; and as he did not totally
withdraw from her society till the revolution broke
out, she did not suspect that she had anything to
fear from his resentment. His manners and opinions
changed suddenly with the times; the mask of religion
was thrown off; and now, instead of objecting to Sister
Frances as not being sufficiently strict and orthodox
in her tenets, he boldly declared that a nun was not
a fit person to be intrusted with the education of
any of the young citizens they should all
be des élèves de la patrie. The abbe,
become a member of the Committee of Public Safety,
denounced Madame de Fleury, in the strange jargon
of the day, as “the fosterer of a swarm of
bad citizens, who were nourished in the anticivic
prejudices de l’ancien regime, and
fostered in the most detestable superstitions, in defiance
of the law.” He further observed, that
he had good reason to believe that some of these little
enemies to the constitution had contrived and abetted
Monsieur de Fleury’s escape. Of their having
rejoiced at it in a most indecent manner, he said
he could produce irrefragable proof. The boy
who saw Babet tear down the placard was produced and
solemnly examined; and the thoughtless action of this
poor little girl was construed into a state crime
of the most horrible nature. In a declamatory
tone, Tracassier reminded his fellow-citizens, that
in the ancient Grecian times of virtuous republicanism
(times of which France ought to show herself emulous),
an Athenian child was condemned to death for having
made a plaything of a fragment of the gilding that
had fallen from a public statue. The orator,
for the reward of his eloquence, obtained an order
to seize everything in Madame de Fleury’s school-house,
and to throw the nun into prison.
CHAPTER IX
“Who now will guard bewildered
youth
Safe from the fierce assault of
hostile rage?
Such war can Virtue wage?”
At the very moment when this order
was going to be put in execution, Madame de Fleury
was sitting in the midst of the children, listening
to Babet, who was reading AEsop’s fable of The
old man and his sons. Whilst her sister was
reading, Victoire collected a number of twigs from
the garden: she had just tied them together; and
was going, by Sister Frances’ desire, to let
her companions try if they could break the bundle,
when the attention to the moral of the fable was interrupted
by the entrance of an old woman, whose countenance
expressed the utmost terror and haste, to tell what
she had not breath to utter. To Madame de Fleury
she was a stranger; but the children immediately recollected
her to be the chestnut woman to whom Babet had some
years ago restored certain purloined chestnuts.
“Fly!” said she, the moment
she had breath to speak: “Fly! they
are coming to seize everything here carry
off what you can make haste make
haste! I came through a by-street.
A man was eating chestnuts at my stall, and I saw
him show one that was with him the order from Citoyen
Tracassier. They’ll be here in five minutes quick! quick! You,
in particular,” continued she, turning to the
nun, “else you’ll be in prison.”
At these words, the children, who
had clung round Sister Frances, loosed their hold,
exclaiming, “Go! go quick: but where? where? we
will go with her.”
“No, no!” said Madame
de Fleury, “she shall come home with me my
carriage is at the door.”
“Ma belle dame!” cried
the chestnut woman, “your house is the worst
place she can go to let her come to my
cellar the poorest cellar in these days
is safer than the grandest palace.”
So saying, she seized the nun with
honest roughness, and hurried her away. As soon
as she was gone, the children ran different ways, each
to collect some favourite thing, which they thought
they could not leave behind. Victoire alone
stood motionless beside Madame de Fleury; her whole
thoughts absorbed by the fear that her benefactress
would be imprisoned. “Oh, madame!
dear, dear Madame de Fleury, don’t stay! don’t
stay!”
“Oh, children, never mind these things.”
“Don’t stay, madame,
don’t stay! I will stay with them I
will stay do you go.”
The children hearing these words,
and recollecting Madame de Fleury’s danger,
abandoned all their little property, and instantly
obeyed her orders to go home to their parents.
Victoire at last saw Madame de Fleury safe in her
carriage. The coachman drove off at a great rate;
and a few minutes afterwards Tracassier’s myrmidons
arrived at the school-house. Great was their
surprise when they found only the poor children’s
little books, unfinished samplers, and half-hemmed
handkerchiefs. They ran into the garden to search
for the nun. They were men of brutal habits,
yet as they looked at everything round them, which
bespoke peace, innocence, and childish happiness,
they could not help thinking it was a pity to destroy
what could do the nation no great harm after all.
They were even glad that the nun had made her escape,
since they were not answerable for it; and they returned
to their employer satisfied for once without doing
any mischief; but Citizen Tracassier was of too vindictive
a temper to suffer the objects of his hatred thus to
elude his vengeance. The next day Madame de Fleury
was summoned before his tribunal and ordered to give
up the nun, against whom, as a suspected person, a
decree of the law had been obtained.
Madame de Fleury refused to betray
the innocent woman; the gentle firmness of this lady’s
answers to a brutal interrogatory was termed insolence she
was pronounced a refractory aristocrat, dangerous to
the state; and an order was made out to seal up her
goods, and to keep her a prisoner in her own house.
CHAPTER X
“Alas! full oft on Guilt’s
victorious car
The spoils of Virtue are in triumph
borne,
While the fair captive, marked with
many a scar,
In lone obscurity, oppressed, forlorn,
Resigns to tears her angel form.” BEATTIE.
A close prisoner in her own house,
Madame de Fleury was now guarded by men suddenly become
soldiers, and sprung from the dregs of the people;
men of brutal manners, ferocious countenances, and
more ferocious minds. They seemed to delight
in the insolent display of their newly-acquired power.
One of those men had formerly been convicted of some
horrible crime, and had been sent to the galleys by
M. de Fleury. Revenge actuated this wretch under
the mask of patriotism, and he rejoiced in seeing
the wife of the man he hated a prisoner in his custody.
Ignorant of the facts, his associates were ready
to believe him in the right, and to join in the senseless
cry against all who were their superiors in fortune,
birth, and education. This unfortunate lady was
forbidden all intercourse with her friends, and it
was in vain she attempted to obtain from her gaolers
intelligence of what was passing in Paris.
“Tu verras Tout
va bien Ca ira,”
were the only answers they deigned to make; frequently
they continued smoking their pipes in obdurate silence.
She occupied the back rooms of her house, because her
guards apprehended that she might from the front windows
receive intelligence from her friends. One morning
she was awakened by an unusual noise in the streets;
and, upon her inquiring the occasion of it, her guards
told her she was welcome to go to the front windows
and satisfy her curiosity. She went, and saw
an immense crowd of people surrounding a guillotine
that had been erected the preceding night. Madame
de Fleury started back with horror her
guards burst into an inhuman laugh, and asked whether
her curiosity was satisfied. She would have
left the room; but it was now their pleasure to detain
her, and to force her to continue the whole day in
this apartment. When the guillotine began its
work, they had even the barbarity to drag her to the
window, repeating, “It is there you ought to
be! It is there your husband ought to be! You
are too happy, that your husband is not there this
moment. But he will be there the law
will overtake him he will be there in time and
you too!”
The mild fortitude of this innocent,
benevolent woman made no impression upon these cruel
men. When at night they saw her kneeling at her
prayers, they taunted her with gross and impious mockery;
and when she sank to sleep, they would waken her by
their loud and drunken orgies if she remonstrated,
they answered, “The enemies of the constitution
should have no rest.”
Madame de Fleury was not an enemy
to any human being; she had never interfered in politics;
her life had been passed in domestic pleasures, or
employed for the good of her fellow-creatures.
Even in this hour of personal danger she thought
of others more than of herself: she thought of
her husband, an exile in a foreign country, who might
be reduced to the utmost distress now that she was
deprived of all means of remitting him money.
She thought of her friends, who, she knew, would exert
themselves to obtain her liberty, and whose zeal in
her cause might involve them and their families in
distress. She thought of the good Sister Frances,
who had been exposed by her means to the unrelenting
persecution of the malignant and powerful Tracassier.
She thought of her poor little pupils, now thrown
upon the world without a protector. Whilst these
ideas were revolving in her mind one night as she lay
awake, she heard the door of her chamber open softly,
and a soldier, one of her guards, with a light in
his hand, entered; he came to the foot of her bed,
and, as she started up, laid his finger upon his lips.
“Don’t make the least
noise,” said he in a whisper; “those without
are drunk, and asleep. Don’t you know
me? don’t you remember my face?”
“Not in the least; yet I have
some recollection of your voice.”
The man took off the bonnet-rouge still
she could not guess who he was. “You never
saw me in a uniform before nor without a black face.”
She looked again, and recollected
the smith to whom Maurice was bound apprentice, and
remembered his patois accent.
“I remember you,” said
he, “at any rate; and your goodness to that poor
girl the day her arm was broken, and all your goodness
to Maurice. But I’ve no time for talking
of that now get up, wrap this great coat
round you don’t be in a hurry, but
make no noise and follow me.”
She followed him; and he led her past
the sleeping sentinels, opened a back door into the
garden, hurried her (almost carried her) across the
garden to a door at the furthest end of it, which opened
into Les Champs Elysees “La voila!”
cried he, pushing her through the half-opened door.
“God be praised!” answered a voice, which
Madame de Fleury knew to be Victoire’s, whose
arms were thrown round her with a transport of joy.
“Softly; she is not safe yet wait
till we get her home, Victoire,” said another
voice, which she knew to be that of Maurice.
He produced a dark lantern, and guided Madame de Fleury
across the Champs Elysees, and across the bridge,
and then through various by-streets, in perfect silence,
till they arrived safely at the house where Victoire’s
mother lodged, and went up those very stairs which
she had ascended in such different circumstances several
years before. The mother, who was sitting up
waiting most anxiously for the return of her children,
clasped her hands in an ecstasy when she saw them
return with Madame de Fleury.
“Welcome, madame!
Welcome, dear madame! but who would have thought
of seeing you here in such a way? Let her rest
herself let her rest; she is quite overcome.
Here, madame, can you sleep on this poor
bed?”
“The very same bed you laid
me upon the day my arm was broken,” said Victoire.
“Ay, Lord bless her!”
said the mother; “and though it’s seven
good years ago, it seemed but yesterday that I saw
her sitting on that bed beside my poor child looking
like an angel. But let her rest, let her rest we’ll
not say a word more, only God bless her; thank Heaven,
she’s safe with us at last!”
Madame de Fleury expressed unwillingness
to stay with these good people, lest she should expose
them to danger; but they begged most earnestly that
she would remain with them without scruple.
“Surely, madame,”
said the mother, “you must think that we have
some remembrance of all you have done for us, and
some touch of gratitude.”
“And surely, madame, you
can trust us, I hope,” said Maurice.
“And surely you are not too
proud to let us do something for you. The lion
was not too proud to be served by the poor little mouse,”
said Victoire. “As to danger for us,”
continued she, “there can be none; for Maurice
and I have contrived a hiding-place for you, madame,
that can never be found out let them come
spying here as often as they please, they will never
find her out, will they, Maurice? Look,
madame, into this lumber-room; you see it seems
to be quite full of wood for firing; well, if you
creep in behind, you can hide yourself quite sung in
the loft above, and here’s a trap-door into
the loft that nobody ever would think of, for we have
hung these old things from the top of it, and who
could guess it was a trap-door? So you see, dear
madame, you may sleep in peace here, and never
fear for us.”
Though but a girl of fourteen, Victoire
showed at this time all the sense and prudence of
a woman of thirty. Gratitude seemed at once to
develop all the powers of her mind. It was she
and Maurice who had prevailed upon the smith to effect
Madame de Fleury’s escape from her own house.
She had invented, she had foreseen, she had arranged
everything; she had scarcely rested night or day since
the imprisonment of her benefactress, and now that
her exertions had fully succeeded, her joy seemed to
raise her above all feeling of fatigue; she looked
as fresh and moved as briskly, her mother said, as
if she were preparing to go to a ball.
“Ah! my child,” said she,
“your cousin Manon, who goes to those balls
every night, was never so happy as you are this minute.”
But Victoire’s happiness was
not of long continuance; for the next day they were
alarmed by intelligence that Tracassier was enraged
beyond measure at Madame de Fleury’s escape,
that all his emissaries were at work to discover her
present hiding-place, that the houses of all the parents
and relations of her pupils were to be searched, and
that the most severe denunciations were issued against
all by whom she should be harboured. Manon was
the person who gave this intelligence, but not with
any benevolent design; she first came to Victoire,
to display her own consequence; and to terrify her,
she related all she knew from a soldier’s wife,
who was M. Tracassier’s mistress. Victoire
had sufficient command over herself to conceal from
the inquisitive eyes of Manon the agitation of her
heart; she had also the prudence not to let any one
of her companions into her secret, though, when she
saw their anxiety, she was much tempted to relieve
them, by the assurance that Madame de Fleury was in
safety. All the day was passed in apprehension.
Madame de Fleury never stirred from her place of concealment:
as the evening and the hour of the domiciliary visits
approached, Victoire and Maurice were alarmed by an
unforeseen difficulty. Their mother, whose health
had been broken by hard work, in vain endeavoured to
suppress her terror at the thoughts of this domiciliary
visit; she repeated incessantly that she knew they
should all be discovered, and that her children would
be dragged to the guillotine before her face.
She was in such a distracted state, that they dreaded
she would, the moment she saw the soldiers, reveal
all she knew.
“If they question me, I shall
not know what to answer,” cried the terrified
woman. “What can I say? What
can I do?”
Reasoning, entreaties, all were vain;
she was not in a condition to understand, or even
to listen to, anything that was said. In this
situation they were when the domiciliary visitors arrived they
heard the noise of the soldiers’ feet on the
stairs the poor woman sprang from the arms
of her children; but at the moment the door was opened,
and she saw the glittering of the bayonets, she fell
at full length in a swoon on the floor fortunately
before she had power to utter a syllable. The
people of the house knew, and said, that she was subject
to fits on any sudden alarm; so that her being affected
in this manner did not appear surprising. They
threw her on a bed, whilst they proceeded to search
the house: her children stayed with her; and,
wholly occupied in attending to her, they were not
exposed to the danger of betraying their anxiety about
Madame de Fleury. They trembled, however, from
head to foot when they heard one of the soldiers swear
that all the wood in the lumber-room must be pulled
out, and that he would not leave the house till every
stick was moved; the sound of each log, as it was
thrown out, was heard by Victoire; her brother was
now summoned to assist. How great was his terror
when one of the searchers looked up to the roof, as
if expecting to find a trap door; fortunately, however,
he did not discover it. Maurice, who had seized
the light, contrived to throw the shadows so as to
deceive the eye. The soldiers at length retreated;
and with inexpressible satisfaction Maurice lighted
them down stairs, and saw them fairly out of the house.
For some minutes after they were in safety, the terrified
mother, who had recovered her senses, could scarcely
believe that the danger was over. She embraced
her children by turns with wild transport; and with
tears begged Madame de Fleury to forgive her cowardice,
and not to attribute it to ingratitude, or to suspect
that she had a bad heart. She protested that
she was now become so courageous, since she found
that she had gone through this trial successfully,
and since she was sure that the hiding-place was really
so secure, that she should never be alarmed at any
domiciliary visit in future. Madame de Fleury,
however, did not think it either just or expedient
to put her resolution to the trial. She determined
to leave Paris; and, if possible, to make her escape
from France. The master of one of the Paris
diligences was brother to Francois, her footman:
he was ready to assist her at all hazards, and to
convey her safely to Bourdeaux, if she could disguise
herself properly; and if she could obtain a pass from
any friend under a feigned name.
Victoire the indefatigable
Victoire recollected that her friend Annette
had an aunt, who was nearly of Madame de Fleury’s
size, and who had just obtained a pass to go to Bourdeaux,
to visit some of her relations. The pass was
willingly given up to Madame de Fleury; and upon reading
it over it was found to answer tolerably well the
colour of the eyes and hair at least would do; though
the words un nez gros were not precisely descriptive
of this lady’s. Annette’s mother,
who had always worn the provincial dress of Auvergne,
furnished the high cornette, stiff stays, bodice,
&c.; and equipped in these, Madame de Fleury was so
admirably well disguised, that even Victoire declared
she should scarcely have known her. Money, that
most necessary passport in all countries, was still
wanting: as seals had been put upon all Madame
de Fleury’s effects the day she had been first
imprisoned in her own house, she could not save even
her jewels. She had, however, one ring on her
finger of some value. How to dispose of it without
exciting suspicion was the difficulty. Babet,
who was resolved to have her share in assisting her
benefactress, proposed to carry the ring to a colporteur a
pedlar, or sort of travelling jeweller who
had come to lay in a stock of hardware at Paris:
he was related to one of Madame de Fleury’s little
pupils, and readily disposed of the ring for her:
she obtained at least two-thirds of its value a
great deal in those times.
The proofs of integrity, attachment,
and gratitude which she received in these days of
peril, from those whom she had obliged in her prosperity,
touched her generous heart so much, that she has often
since declared she could not regret having been reduced
to distress. Before she quitted Paris she wrote
letters to her friends, recommending her pupils to
their protection; she left these letters in the care
of Victoire, who to the last moment followed her with
anxious affection. She would have followed her
benefactress into exile, but that she was prevented
by duty and affection from leaving her mother, who
was in declining health.
Madame de Fleury successfully made
her escape from Paris. Some of the municipal
officers in the towns through which she passed on her
road were as severe as their ignorance would permit
in scrutinising her passport. It seldom happened
that more than one of these petty committees of public
safety could read. One usually spelled out the
passport as well as he could, whilst the others smoked
their pipes, and from time to time held a light up
to the lady’s face to examine whether it agreed
with the description.
“Mais toi! tu
n’as pas lé nez gros!”
said one of her judges to her. “Son
nez est assez gros, et c’est
moi qui lé dit,” said another.
The question was put to the vote; and the man who
had asserted what was contrary to the evidence of
his senses was so vehement in supporting his opinion,
that it was carried in spite of all that could be said
against it. Madame de Fleury was suffered to
proceed on her journey. She reached Bordeaux
in safety. Her husband’s friends the
good have always friends in adversity her
husband’s friends exerted themselves for her
with the most prudent zeal. She was soon provided
with a sum of money sufficient for her support for
some time in England; and she safely reached that free
and happy country, which has been the refuge of so
many illustrious exiles.
CHAPTER XI
“Così rozzo diamante
appena splendè
Dalla rupe natia quand’
esce fuora,
E a poco a poco lucido
se rende
Sotto l’attenta che lo
lavora.”
Madame de Fleury joined her husband,
who was in London, and they both lived in the most
retired and frugal manner. They had too much
of the pride of independence to become burthensome
to their generous English friends. Notwithstanding
the variety of difficulties they had to encounter,
and the number of daily privations to which they were
forced to submit, yet they were happy in
a tranquil conscience, in their mutual affection,
and the attachment of many poor but grateful friends.
A few months after she came to England, Madame de
Fleury received, by a private hand, a packet of letters
from her little pupils. Each of them, even the
youngest, who had but just begun to learn joining-hand,
would write a few lines in this packet.
In various hands, of various sizes,
the changes were rung upon these simple words:
“MY DEAR MADAME DE FLEURY,
“I love you I wish you
were here again I will be very very
good whilst you are away. If you stay away
ever so long, I shall never forget you, nor your
goodness; but I hope you will soon be able to come
back, and this is what I pray for every night.
Sister Frances says I may tell you that I am very
good, and Victoire thinks so too.”
This was the substance of several
of their little letters. Victoire’s contained
rather more information:
“You will be glad to learn that
dear Sister Frances is safe, and that the good
chestnut-woman, in whose cellar she took refuge, did
not get into any difficulty. After you were
gone, M. T – said that he did not
think it worth while to pursue her, as it was only
you he wanted to humble. Manon, who has,
I do not know how, means of knowing, told me this.
Sister Frances is now with her abbess, who, as well
as everybody else that knows her, is very fond
of her. What was a convent is no longer a
convent the nuns are turned out of it.
Sister Frances’ health is not so good as
it used to be, though she never complains.
I am sure she suffers much; she has never been the
same person since that day when we were driven
from our happy schoolroom. It is all destroyed the
garden and everything. It is now a dismal sight.
Your absence also afflicts Sister Frances much, and
she is in great anxiety about all of us.
She has the six little ones with her every day
in her own apartment, and goes on teaching them as
she used to do. We six eldest go to see her
as often as we can. I should have begun,
my dear Madame de Fleury, by telling you, that, the
day after you left Paris, I went to deliver all
the letters you were so very kind to write for
us in the midst of your hurry. Your friends have
been exceedingly good to us, and have got places
for us all. Rose is with Madame la Grace,
your mantua-maker, who says she is more handy and
more expert at cutting out than girls she has had these
three years. Marianne is in the service of
Madame de V –, who has lost a great
part of her large fortune, and cannot afford to keep
her former waiting-maid. Madame de V –
is well pleased with Marianne, and bids me tell
you that she thanks you for her. Indeed, Marianne,
though she is only fourteen, can do everything
her lady wants. Susanne is with a confectioner.
She gave Sister Frances a box of bonbons of
her own making this morning; and Sister Frances,
who is a judge, says they are excellent she
only wishes you could taste them. Annette and
I (thanks to your kindness!) are in the same service
with Madame Feuillot, the brodeuse, to whom
you recommended us. She is not discontented
with our work, and, indeed, sent a very civil message
yesterday to Sister Frances on this subject; but
believe it is too flattering for me to repeat in
this letter. We shall do our best to give
her satisfaction. She is glad to find that we
can write tolerably, and that we can make out bills
and keep accounts, this being particularly convenient
to her at present, as the young man she had in
the shop is become an orator, and good for nothing
but la chose publique; her son, who could
have supplied his place, is ill; and Madame Feuillot
herself, not having had, as she says, the advantage
of such a good education as we have been blessed with,
writes but badly, and knows nothing of arithmetic.
Dear Madame de Fleury, how much, how very much
we are obliged to you! We feel it every day
more and more; in these times what would have become
of us if we could do nothing useful? Who
would, who could be burdened with us? Dear
madame, we owe everything to you and
we can do nothing, not the least thing for you!
My mother is still in bad health, and I fear will
never recover; Babet is with her always, and Sister
Frances is very good to her. My brother Maurice
is now so good a workman that he earns a louis
a week. He is very steady to his business, and
never goes to the revolutionary meetings, though
once he had a great mind to be an orator of the
people, but never since the day that you explained
to him that he knew nothing about equality and the
rights of men, &c. How could I forget to tell
you, that his master the smith, who was one of
your guards, and who assisted you to escape, has returned
without suspicion to his former trade? and he declares
that he will never more meddle with public affairs.
I gave him the money you left with me for him.
He is very kind to my brother. Yesterday Maurice
mended for Annette’s mistress the lock of
an English writing-desk, and he mended it so astonishingly
well, that an English gentleman, who saw it, could
not believe the work was done by a Frenchman; so
my brother was sent for, to prove it, and they
were forced to believe it. To-day he has more
work than he can finish this twelve-month all
this we owe to you. I shall never forget
the day when you promised that you would grant
my brother’s wish to be apprenticed to the smith,
if I was not in a passion for a month; that cured
me of being so passionate.
“Dear Madame de Fleury, I have
written you too long a letter, and not so well
as I can write when I am not in a hurry; but I wanted
to tell you everything at once, because, may be,
I shall not for a long time have so safe an opportunity
of sending a letter to you.
“VICTOIRE.”
Several months elapsed before Madame
do Fleury received another letter from Victoire; it
was short and evidently written in great distress of
mind. It contained an account of her mother’s
death. She was now left at the early age of
sixteen an orphan. Madame Feuillot, the brodeuse,
with whom she lived, added few lines to her letter,
penned with difficulty and strangely spelled, but,
expressive of her being highly pleased with both the
girls recommended to her by Madame de Fleury, especially
Victoire, who she said was such a treasure to her,
that she would not part with her on any account, and
should consider her as a daughter. “I
tell her not to grieve so much; for though she has
lost one mother she has gained another for herself,
who will always love her; and besides she is so useful,
and in so many ways, with her pen and her needle,
in accounts, and everything that is wanted in a family
or a shop; she can never want employment or friends
in the worst times, and none can be worse than these,
especially for such pretty girls as she is, who have
all their heads turned, and are taught to consider
nothing a sin that used to be sins. Many gentlemen,
who come to our shop, have found out that Victoire
is very handsome, and tell her so; but she is so modest
and prudent that I am not afraid for her. I
could tell you, madame, a good anecdote on this
subject, but my paper will not allow, and, besides,
my writing is so difficult.”
Above a year elapsed before Madame
de Fleury received another letter from Victoire:
this was in a parcel, of which an emigrant took charge;
it contained a variety of little offerings from her
pupils, instances of their ingenuity, their industry,
and their affection; the last thing in the packet
was a small purse labelled in this manner
“Savings from our wages and
earnings for her who taught us all we know.”
CHAPTER XII
“Dans sa pompe
élégante, admirez Chantilly,
De heros en heros, d’age en
age, embelli.” DE LILLE.
The health of the good Sister Frances,
which had suffered much from the shock her mind received
at the commencement of the revolution, declined so
rapidly in the course of the two succeeding years,
that she was obliged to leave Paris, and she retired
to a little village in the neighbourhood of Chantilly.
She chose this situation because here she was within
a morning’s walk of Madame de Fleury’s
country-seat. The Chateau de Fleury had not
yet been seized as national property, nor had it suffered
from the attacks of the mob, though it was in a perilous
situation, within view of the high road to Paris.
The Parisian populace had not yet extended their
outrages to this distance from the city, and the poor
people who lived on the estate of Fleury, attached
from habit, principle, and gratitude, to their lord,
were not disposed to take advantage of the disorder
of the times, to injure the property of those from
whom they had all their lives received favours and
protection. A faithful old steward had the care
of the castle and the grounds. Sister Frances
was impatient to talk to him and to visit the chateau,
which she had never seen; but for some days after
her arrival in the village she was so much fatigued
and so weak that she could not attempt so long a walk.
Victoire had obtained permission from her mistress
to accompany the nun for a few days to the country,
as Annette undertook to do all the business of the
shop during the absence of her companion. Victoire
was fully as eager as Sister Frances to see the faithful
steward and the Chateau de Fleury, and the morning
was now fixed for their walk; but in the middle of
the night they were awakened by the shouts of a mob,
who had just entered the village fresh from the destruction
of a neighbouring castle. The nun and Victoire
listened; but in the midst of the horrid yells of
joy no human voice, no intelligible word could be distinguished;
they looked through a chink in the window-shutter and
they saw the street below filled with a crowd of men,
whose countenances were by turns illuminated by the
glare of the torches which they brandished.
“Good Heavens!” whispered
the nun to Victoire: “I should know the
face of that man who is loading his musket the
very man whom I nursed ten years ago when he was ill
with a gaol fever!”
This man, who stood in the midst of
the crowd, taller by the head than the others, seemed
to be the leader of the party; they were disputing
whether they should proceed further, spend the remainder
of the night in the village ale-house, or return to
Paris. Their leader ordered spirits to be distributed
to his associates, and exhorted them in a loud voice
to proceed in their glorious work. Tossing his
firebrand over his head he declared that he would
never return to Paris till he had razed to the ground
the Chateau de Fleury. At these words, Victoire,
forgetful of all personal danger, ran out into the
midst of the mob, pressed her way up to the leader
of these ruffians, caught him by the arm, exclaiming,
“You will not touch a stone in the Chateau de
Fleury I have my reasons I say
you will not suffer a stone in the Chateau de Fleury
to be touched.”
“And why not?” cried the
man, turning astonished; “and who are you that
I should listen to you?”
“No matter who I am,”
said Victoire; “follow me and I will show you
one to whom you will not refuse to listen. Here! here
she is,” continued Victoire, pointing to the
nun, who had followed her in amazement; “here
is one to whom you will listen yes, look
at her well: hold the light to her face.”
The nun, in a supplicating attitude,
stood in speechless expectation.
“Ay, I see you have gratitude,
I know you will have mercy,” cried Victoire,
watching the workings in the countenance of the man;
“you will save the Chateau de Fleury for her
sake who saved your life.”
“I will,” cried this astonished
chief of a mob, fired with sudden generosity.
“By my faith you are a brave girl, and a fine
girl, and know how to speak to the heart, and in the
right moment. Friends, citizens, this nun, though
she is a nun, is good for something. When I lay
ill with a fever, and not a soul else to help me,
she came and gave me medicines and food in
short, I owe my life to her. ’Tis ten years
ago, but I remember it well, and now it is our turn
to rule, and she shall be paid as she deserves.
Not a stone of the Chateau de Fleury shall be touched!”
With loud acclamations the mob
joined in the generous enthusiasm of the moment and
followed their leader peaceably out of the village.
All this passed with such rapidity as scarcely to
leave the impression of reality upon the mind.
As soon as the sun rose in the morning Victoire looked
out for the turrets of the Chateau de Fleury, and she
saw that they were safe safe in the midst
of the surrounding devastation. Nothing remained
of the superb palace of Chantilly but the white arches
of its foundation.
CHAPTER XIII
“When thy last breath, ere
Nature sank to rest
Thy meek submission to thy God expressed;
When thy last look, ere thought
and feeling fled,
A mingled gleam of hope and triumph
shed;
What to thy soul its glad assurance
gave
Its hope in death, its triumph o’er
the grave?
The sweet remembrance of unblemished
youth,
Th’ inspiring voice of innocence
and truth!” ROGERS.
The good Sister Frances, though she
had scarcely recovered from the shock of the preceding
night, accompanied Victoire to the Chateau de Fleury.
The gates were opened for them by the old steward and
his son Basile, who welcomed them with all the eagerness
with which people welcome friends in time of adversity.
The old man showed them the place; and through every
apartment of the castle went on talking of former times,
and with narrative fondness told anecdotes of his
dear master and mistress. Here his lady used
to sit and read here was the table at which
she wrote this was the sofa on which she
and the ladies sat the very last day she was at the
castle, at the open windows of the hall, whilst all
the tenants and people of the village were dancing
on the green.
“Ay, those were happy times,”
said the old man; “but they will never return.”
“Never! Oh do not say so,” cried
Victoire.
“Never during my life, at least,”
said the nun in a low voice, and with a look of resignation.
Basile, as he wiped the tears from
his eyes, happened to strike his arm against the chord
of Madame de Fleury’s harp, and the sound echoed
through the room.
“Before this year is at an end,”
cried Victoire, “perhaps that harp will be struck
again in this Chateau by Madame de Fleury herself.
Last night we could hardly have hoped to see these
walls standing this morning, and yet it is safe not
a stone touched! Oh, we shall all live, I hope,
to see better times!”
Sister Frances smiled, for she would
not depress Victoire’s enthusiastic hope:
to please her, the good nun added, that she felt better
this morning than she had felt for months, and Victoire
was happier than she had been since Madame de Fleury
left France. But, alas! it was only a transient
gleam. Sister Frances relapsed and declined so
rapidly, that even Victoire, whose mind was almost
always disposed to hope, despaired of her recovery.
With placid resignation, or rather with mild confidence,
this innocent and benevolent creature met the approach
of death. She seemed attached to earth only
by affection for those whom she was to leave in this
world. Two of the youngest of the children who
had formerly been placed under her care, and who were
not yet able to earn their own subsistence, she kept
with her, and in the last days of her life she continued
her instructions to them with the fond solicitude of
a parent. Her father confessor, an excellent
man, who never even in these dangerous times shrank
from his duty, came to Sister Frances in her last
moments, and relieved her mind from all anxiety, by
promising to place the two little children with the
lady who had been abbess of her convent, who would
to the utmost of her power protect and provide for
them suitably. Satisfied by this promise, the
good Sister Frances smiled upon Victoire, who stood
beside her bed, and with that smile upon her countenance
expired. It was some time before the little
children seemed to comprehend, or to believe, that
Sister Frances was dead: they had never before
seen any one die; they had no idea what it was to die,
and their first feeling was astonishment; they did
not seem to understand why Victoire wept. But
the next day when no Sister Frances spoke to them,
when every hour they missed some accustomed kindness
from her, when presently they saw the preparations
for her funeral, when they heard that she
was to be buried in the earth, and that they should
never see her more, they could neither
play nor eat, but sat in a corner holding each other’s
hands, and watching everything that was done for the
dead by Victoire.
In those times, the funeral of a nun,
with a priest attending, would not have been permitted
by the populace. It was therefore performed as
secretly as possible: in the middle of the night
the coffin was carried to the burial-place of the
Fleury family; the old steward, his son Basile, Victoire,
and the good father confessor, were the only persons
present. It is necessary to mention this, because
the facts were afterwards misrepresented.
CHAPTER XIV
“The character is lost!
Her head adorned with lappets, pinned
aloft,
And ribands streaming gay, superbly
raised,
Indebted to some smart wig-weaver’s
hand
For more than half the tresses it
sustains.” COWPER.
Upon her return to Paris, Victoire
felt melancholy; but she exerted herself as much as
possible in her usual occupation; finding that employment
and the consciousness of doing her duty were the best
remedies for sorrow.
One day as she was busy settling Madame
Feuillot’s accounts a servant came into the
shop and inquired for Mademoiselle Victoire: he
presented her a note, which she found rather difficult
to decipher. It was signed by her cousin Manon,
who desired to see Victoire at her hotel. “Her
hotel!” repeated Victoire with astonishment.
The servant assured her that one of the finest hotels
in Paris belonged to his lady, and that he was commissioned
to show her the way to it. Victoire found her
cousin in a magnificent house, which had formerly
belonged to the Prince de Salms. Manon, dressed
in the disgusting, indecent extreme of the mode, was
seated under a richly-fringed canopy. She burst
into a loud laugh as Victoire entered.
“You look just as much astonished
as I expected,” cried she. “Great
changes have happened since I saw you last I
always told you, Victoire, I knew the world better
than you did. What has come of all your schooling,
and your mighty goodness, and your gratitude truly?
Your patroness is banished and a beggar, and you
a drudge in the shop of a brodeuse, who makes
you work your fingers to the bone, no doubt.
Now you shall see the difference. Let me show
you my house; you know it was formerly the hotel of
the Prince de Salms, he that was guillotined the other
day; but you know nothing, for you have been out of
Paris this month, I understand. Then I must
tell you that my friend Villeneuf has acquired an
immense fortune! by assignats made in the course
of a fortnight. I say an immense fortune! and
has bought this fine house. Now do you begin
to understand?”
“I do not clearly know whom
you mean by ‘your friend Villeneuf,’”
said Victoire.
“The hairdresser who lived in
our street,” said Manon; “he became a great
patriot, you know, and orator; and, what with his eloquence
and his luck in dealing in assignats, he has
made his fortune and mine.”
“And yours! then he is your husband?”
“That does not follow that
is not necessary but do not look so shocked everybody
goes on the sane way now; besides, I had no other
resource I must have starved I
could not earn my bread as you do. Besides, I
was too delicate for hard work of any sort and
besides but come, let me show you my house you
have no idea how fine it is.”
With anxious ostentation Manon displayed
all her riches to excite Victoire’s envy.
“Confess, Victoire,” said
she at last, “that you think me the happiest
person you have ever known. You do not answer;
whom did you ever know that was happier?”
“Sister Frances, who died last
week, appeared to be much happier,” said Victoire.
“The poor nun!” said Manon,
disdainfully. “Well, and whom do you think
the next happiest?”
“Madame de Fleury.”
“An exile and a beggar! Oh,
you are jesting now, Victoire or envious.
With that sanctified face, citoyenne perhaps
I should say Mademoiselle Victoire you
would be delighted to change places with me this instant.
Come, you shall stay with me a week to try how you
like it.”
“Excuse me,” said Victoire,
firmly; “I cannot stay with you, Manon; you
have chosen one way of life and I another quite
another. I do not repent my choice may
you never repent yours! Farewell!”
“Bless me! what airs! and with
what dignity she looks! Repent of my choice! a
likely thing, truly. Am not I at the top of the
wheel?”
“And may not the wheel turn?” said Victoire.
“Perhaps it may,” said
Manon; “but till it does I will enjoy myself.
Since you are of a different humour, return to Madame
Feuillot, and figure upon cambric and muslin, and
make out bills, and nurse old nuns all the days of
your life. You will never persuade me, however,
that you would not change places with me if you could.
Stay till you are tried, Mademoiselle Victoire.
Who was ever in love with you or your virtues? Stay
till you are tried.”
CHAPTER XV
“But beauty, like the fair
Hesperian tree,
Laden with blooming gold, had need
the guard
Of dragon watch with unenchanted
eye
To save her blossoms, or defend
her fruit.” MILTON.
The trial was nearer than either Manon
or Victoire expected. Manon had scarcely pronounced
the last words when the ci-devant hairdresser
burst into the room, accompanied by several of his
political associates, who met to consult measures
for the good of the nation. Among these patriots
was the Abbe Tracassier.
“Who is that pretty girl who
is with you, Manon?” whispered he; “a friend
of yours, I hope?”
Victoire left the room immediately,
but not before the profligate abbe had seen enough
to make him wish to see more. The next day he
went to Madame Feuillot’s under pretence of
buying some embroidered handkerchiefs; he paid Victoire
a profusion of extravagant compliments, which made
no impression upon her innocent heart, and which appeared
ridiculous to her plain good sense. She did not
know who he was, nor did Madame Feuillot; for though
she had often heard of the abbe, yet she had never
seen him. Several succeeding days he returned,
and addressed himself to Victoire, each time with
increasing freedom. Madame Feuillot, who had
the greatest confidence in her, left her entirely to
her own discretion. Victoire begged her friend
Annette to do the business of the shop, and stayed
at work in the back parlour. Tracassier was much
disappointed by her absence; but as he thought no great
ceremony necessary in his proceedings, he made his
name known in a haughty manner to Madame de Feuillot,
and desired that he might be admitted into the back
parlour, as he had something of consequence to say
to Mademoiselle Victoire in private. Our readers
will not require to have a detailed account of this
tete-a-tete; it is sufficient to say that the
disappointed and exasperated abbe left the house muttering
imprecations. The next morning a note came to
Victoire apparently from Manon: it was directed
by her, but the inside was written by an unknown hand,
and continued these words:
“You are a charming, but incomprehensible
girl since you do not like compliments,
you shall not be addressed with empty flattery.
It is in the power of the person who dictates this,
not only to make you as rich and great as your cousin
Manon, but also to restore to fortune and to their
country the friends for whom, you are most interested.
Their fate as well as your own is in your power:
if you send a favourable answer to this note, the
persons alluded to will, to-morrow, be struck from
the list of emigrants, and reinstated in their former
possessions. If your answer is decidedly unfavourable,
the return of your friends to France will be thenceforward
impracticable, and their chateau, as well as their
house in Paris, will be declared national property,
and sold without delay to the highest bidder.
To you, who have as much understanding as beauty,
it is unnecessary to say more. Consult your heart,
charming Victoire! be happy, and make others happy.
This moment is decisive of your fate and of theirs,
for you have to answer a man of a most decided character.”
Victoire’s answer was as follows:
“My friends would not, I am
sure, accept of their fortune, or consent to return
to their country, upon the conditions proposed; therefore
I have no merit in rejecting them.”
Victoire had early acquired good principles,
and that plain steady good sense, which goes straight
to its object, without being dazzled or imposed upon
by sophistry. She was unacquainted with the refinements
of sentiment, but she distinctly knew right from wrong,
and had sufficient resolution to abide by the right.
Perhaps many romantic heroines might have thought
it a generous self-devotion to have become in similar
circumstances the mistress of Tracassier; and those
who are skilled “to make the worst appear the
better cause” might have made such an act of
heroism the foundation of an interesting, or at least
a fashionable novel. Poor Victoire had not received
an education sufficiently refined to enable her to
understand these mysteries of sentiment. She
was even simple enough to flatter herself that this
libertine patriot would not fulfil his threats, and
that these had been made only with a view to terrify
her into compliance. In this opinion, however,
she found herself mistaken. M. Tracassier was
indeed a man of the most decided character, if this
form may properly be applied to those who act uniformly
in consequence of their ruling passion. The
Chateau de Fleury was seized as national property.
Victoire heard this bad news from the old steward,
who was turned out of the castle, along with his son,
the very day after her rejection of the proposed conditions.
“I could not have believed that
any human creature could be so wicked!” exclaimed
Victoire, glowing with indignation: but indignation
gave way to sorrow.
“And the Chateau de Fleury is
really seized? and you, good old man, are
turned out of the place where you were born? and
you too, Basile? and Madame de Fleury will
never come back again! and perhaps she may
be put into prison in a foreign country, and may die
for want and I might have prevented all
this!”
Unable to shed a tear, Victoire stood
in silent consternation, whilst Annette explained
to the good steward and his son the whole transaction.
Basile, who was naturally of an impetuous temper, was
so transported with indignation, that he would have
gone instantly with the note from Tracassier to denounce
him before the whole National Convention, if he had
not been restrained by his more prudent father.
The old steward represented to him, that as the note
was neither signed nor written by the hand of Tracassier,
no proof could be brought home to him, and the attempt
to convict one of so powerful a party would only bring
certain destruction upon the accusers. Besides,
such was at this time the general depravity of manners,
that numbers would keep the guilty in countenance.
There was no crime which the mask of patriotism could
not cover. “There is one comfort we have
in our misfortunes, which these men can never have,”
said the old man; “when their downfall comes,
and come it will most certainly, they will not feel
as we do, INNOCENT. Victoire, look up! and do
not give way to despair all will yet be
well.”
“At all events, you have done
what is right so do not reproach yourself,”
said Basile. “Everybody I mean
everybody who is good for anything must
respect, admire, and love you, Victoire.”
CHAPTER XVI
“Ne mal cio
che v’annoja,
Quello e vero gioire
Che nasce da virtude
dopo il soffrire.”
Basile had not seen without emotion
the various instances of goodness which Victoire showed
during the illness of Sister Frances. Her conduct
towards M. Tracassier increased his esteem and attachment;
but he forbore to declare his affection, because he
could not, consistently with prudence, or with gratitude
to his father, think of marrying, now that he was
not able to maintain a wife and family. The honest
earnings of many years of service had been wrested
from the old steward at the time the Chateau de Fleury
was seized, and he now depended on the industry of
his son for the daily support of his age. His
dependence was just, and not likely to be disappointed;
for he had given his son an education suitable to
his condition in life. Basile was an exact arithmetician,
could write an excellent hand, and was a ready draughtsman
and surveyor. To bring these useful talents
into action, and to find employment for them with
men by whom they would be honestly rewarded, was the
only difficulty a difficulty which Victoire’s
brother Maurice soon removed. His reputation
as a smith had introduced him, among his many customers,
to a gentleman of worth and scientific knowledge,
who was at this time employed to make models and plans
of all the fortified places in Europe; he was in want
of a good clerk and draughtsman, of whose integrity
he could be secure. Maurice mentioned his friend
Basile; and upon inquiry into his character, and upon
trial of his abilities, he was found suited to the
place, and was accepted. By his well-earned
salary he supported himself and his father; and began,
with the sanguine hopes of a young man, to flatter
himself that he should soon be rich enough to marry,
and that then he might declare his attachment to Victoire.
Notwithstanding all his boasted prudence, he had
betrayed sufficient symptoms of his passion to have
rendered a declaration unnecessary to any clear-sighted
observer: but Victoire was not thinking of conquests;
she was wholly occupied with a scheme of earning a
certain sum of money for her benefactress, who was
now, as she feared, in want. All Madame de Fleury’s
former pupils contributed their share to the common
stock; and the mantua-maker, the confectioner, the
servants of different sorts, who had been educated
at her school, had laid by, during the years of her
banishment, an annual portion of their wages and savings:
with the sum which Victoire now added to the fund,
it amounted to ten thousand livres. The person
who undertook to carry this money to Madame de Fleury,
was Francois, her former footman, who had procured
a pass to go to England as a hairdresser. The
night before he set out was a happy night for Victoire,
as all her companions met, by Madame Feuillot’s
invitation, at her house; and after tea they had the
pleasure of packing up the little box, in which each,
besides the money, sent some token their gratitude,
and some proof of their ingenuity. They would
with all their hearts have sent twice as many souvenirs
as Francois could carry.
“D’abord c’est
impossible!” cried he, when he saw the box
that was prepared for him to carry to England:
but his good nature was unable to resist the entreaties
of each to have her offering carried, “which
would take up no room.”
He departed arrived safe
in England found out Madame de Fleury, who
was in real distress, in obscure lodgings at Richmond.
He delivered the money, and all the presents of which
he had taken charge: but the person to whom she
entrusted a letter, in answer to Victoire, was not
so punctual, or was more unlucky: for the letter
never reached her, and she and her companions were
long uncertain whether their little treasure had been
received. They still continued, however, with
indefatigable gratitude, to lay by a portion of their
earnings for their benefactress; and the pleasure
they had in this perseverance made them more than amends
for the loss of some little amusements, and for privations
to which they submitted in consequence of their resolution.
In the meantime, Basile, going on
steadily with his employments, advanced every day
in the favour of his master, and his salary was increased
in proportion to his abilities and industry; so that
he thought he could now, without any imprudence, marry.
He consulted his father, who approved of his choice;
he consulted Maurice as to the probability of his
being accepted by Victoire; and encouraged by both
his father and his friend, he was upon the eve of
addressing himself to Victoire, when he was prevented
by a new and unforeseen misfortune. His father
was taken up, by an emissary of Tracassier’s,
and brought before one of their revolutionary committees,
where he was accused of various acts of incivisme.
Among other things equally criminal, it was proved
that one Sunday, when he went to see Le Petit Trianon,
then a public-house, he exclaimed, “C’est
ici que lé canaille danse,
et que les honnêtes gens
pleurent!”
Basile was present at this mock examination
of his father he saw him on the point of
being dragged to prison when a hint was
given that he might save his father by enlisting immediately,
and going with the army out of France. Victoire
was full in Basile’s recollection; but there
was no other means of saving his father. He
enlisted, and in twenty-four hours left Paris.
What appear to be the most unfortunate
circumstances of life often prove ultimately the most
advantageous indeed, those who have knowledge,
activity, and integrity, can convert the apparent blanks
in the lottery of fortune into prizes. Basile
was recommended to his commanding officer by the gentleman
who had lately employed him as a clerk; his skill in
drawing plans, and in taking rapid surveys of the country
through which they passed, was extremely useful to
his general, and his integrity made it safe to trust
him as a secretary. His commanding officer, though
a brave man, was illiterate, and a secretary was to
him a necessary of life. Basile was not only
useful, but agreeable; without any mean arts, or servile
adulation, he pleased by simply showing the desire
to oblige and the ability to serve.
“Diable!” exclaimed the
general one day, as he looked at Basile’s plan
of a town which the army was besieging. “How
comes it that you are able to do all these things?
But you have a genius for this sort of work, apparently.”
“No, sir,” said Basile,
“these things were taught to me when I was a
child by a good friend.”
“A good friend he was, indeed!
he did more for you than if he had given you a fortune;
for, in these times, that might have been soon taken
from you; but now you have the means of making a fortune
for yourself.”
This observation of the general’s,
obvious as it may seem, is deserving of the serious
consideration of those who have children of their own
to educate, or who have the disposal of money for
public charities. In these times no sensible
person will venture to pronounce that a change of
fortune and station may not await the highest and the
lowest; whether we rise or fall in the scale of society,
personal qualities and knowledge will be valuable.
Those who fall cannot be destitute, and those who
rise cannot be ridiculous or contemptible, if they
have been prepared for their fortune by proper education.
In shipwreck those who carry their all in their minds
are the most secure.
But to return to Basile. He
had sense enough not to make his general jealous of
him by any unseasonable display of his talents, or
any officious intrusion of advice, even upon subjects
which he best understood.
The talents of the warrior and the
secretary were in such different lines, that there
was no danger of competition; and the general, finding
in his secretary the soul of all the arts, good sense,
gradually acquired the habit of asking his opinion
on every subject that came within his department.
It happened that the general received orders from
the Directory at Paris to take a certain town, let
it cost what it would, within a given time: in
his perplexity he exclaimed before Basile against
the unreasonableness of these orders, and declared
his belief that it was impossible he should succeed,
and that this was only a scheme of his enemies to
prepare his ruin. Basile had attended to the
operations of the engineer who acted under the general,
and perfectly recollected the model of the mines of
this town, which he had seen when he was employed
as draughtsman by his Parisian friend. He remembered
that there was formerly an old mine that had been
stopped up somewhere near the place where the engineer
was at work; he mentioned in private his suspicions
to the general, who gave orders in consequence.
The old mine was discovered, cleared out, and by
these means the town was taken the day before the
time appointed. Basile did not arrogate to himself
any of the glory of this success; he kept his general’s
secret and his confidence. Upon their return
to Paris, after a fortunate campaign, the general was
more grateful than some others have been, perhaps because
more room was given by Basile’s prudence for
the exercise of this virtue.
“My friend,” said he to
Basile, “you have done me a great service by
your counsel, and a greater still by holding your
tongue. Speak now, and tell me freely if there
is anything I can do for you. You see, as a
victorious general, I have the upper hand amongst these
fellows Tracassier’s scheme to ruin
me missed whatever I ask will at this moment
be granted; speak freely, therefore.”
Basile asked what he knew Victoire
most desired that Monsieur and Madame de
Fleury should be struck from the list of emigrants,
and that their property now in the hands of the nation
should be restored to them. The general promised
that this should be done. A warm contest ensued
upon the subject between him and Tracassier, but the
general stood firm; and Tracassier, enraged, forgot
his usual cunning, and quarrelling irrevocably with
a party now more powerful than his own, he and his
adherents were driven from that station in which they
had so long tyrannised. From being the rulers
of France, they in a few hours became banished men,
or, in the phrase of the times, des deportes.
We must not omit to mention the wretched
end of Manon. The man with whom she lived perished
by the guillotine. From his splendid house she
went upon the stage, did not succeed, sank from one
degree of profligacy to another, and at last died
in an hospital.
In the meantime, the order for the
restoration of the Fleury property, and for permission
for the Fleury family to return to France, was made
out in due form, and Maurice begged to be the messenger
of these good tidings he set out for England
with the order.
Victoire immediately went down to
the Chateau de Fleury, to get everything in readiness
for the reception of the family.
Exiles are expeditious in their return
to their native country. Victoire had but just
time to complete her preparations, when Monsieur and
Madame de Fleury arrived at Calais. Victoire
had assembled all her companions, all Madame de Fleury’s
former pupils; and the hour when she was expected
home, they, with the peasants of the neighbourhood,
were all in their holiday clothes, and, according
to the custom of the country, singing and dancing.
Without music and dancing there is no perfect joy
in France. Never was fête du village or
fête du Seigneur more joyful than this.
The old steward opened the gate, the
carriage drove in. Madame de Fleury saw that
home which she had little expected evermore to behold,
but all other thoughts were lost in the pleasure of
meeting her beloved pupils.
“My children!” cried she,
as they crowded round her the moment she got out of
her carriage “my dear, good
children!”
It was all she could say. She
leaned on Victoire’s arm as she went into the
house, and by degrees recovering from the almost painful
excess of pleasure, began to enjoy what she yet only
confusedly felt.
Several of her pupils were so much
grown and altered in their external appearance, that
she could scarcely recollect them till they spoke,
and then their voices and the expression of their
countenances brought their childhood fully to her
memory. Victoire, she thought, was changed the
least, and at this she rejoiced.
The feeling and intelligent reader
will imagine all the pleasure that Madame de Fleury
enjoyed this day; nor was it merely the pleasure of
a day. She heard from all her friends, with
prolonged satisfaction, repeated accounts of the good
conduct of these young people during her absence.
She learned with delight how her restoration to her
country and her fortune had been effected; and is
it necessary to add, that Victoire consented to marry
Basile, and that she was suitably portioned, and, what
is better still, that she was perfectly happy?
Monsieur de Fleury rewarded the attachment and good
conduct of Maurice by taking him into his service,
and making him his manager under the old steward at
the Chateau de Fleury.
On Victoire’s wedding-day Madame
de Fleury produced all the little offerings of gratitude
which she had received from her and her companions
during her exile. It was now her turn to confer
favours, and she knew how to confer them both with
grace and judgment.
“No gratitude in human nature!
No gratitude in the lower classes of the people!”
cried she; “how much those are mistaken who think
so! I wish they could know my history, and the
history of these my children, and they would acknowledge
their error.”