September 15th, eight o’clock. This
morning, while I was arranging my books, Mother Genevieve
came in, and brought me the basket of fruit I buy
of her every Sunday. For nearly twenty years
that I have lived in this quarter, I have dealt in
her little fruit-shop. Perhaps I should be better
served elsewhere, but Mother Genevieve has but little
custom; to leave her would do her harm, and cause
her unnecessary pain. It seems to me that the
length of our acquaintance has made me incur a sort
of tacit obligation to her; my patronage has become
her property.
She has put the basket upon my table,
and as I wanted her husband, who is a joiner, to add
some shelves to my bookcase, she has gone down stairs
again immediately to send him to me.
At first I did not notice either her
looks or the sound of her voice; but now, that I recall
them, it seems to me that she was not as jovial as
usual. Can Mother Genevieve be in trouble about
anything?
Poor woman! All her best years
were subject to such bitter trials, that she might
think she had received her full share already.
Were I to live a hundred years, I should never forget
the circumstances which first made her known to me,
and which obtained her my respect.
It was at the time of my first settling
in the faubourg. I had noticed her empty
fruit-shop, which nobody came into, and being attracted
by its forsaken appearance, made my little purchases
in it. I have always instinctively preferred
the poor shops; there is less choice in them, but
it seems to me that my purchase is a sign of sympathy
with a brother in poverty. These little dealings
are almost always an anchor of hope to those whose
very existence is in peril the only means
by which some orphan gains a livelihood. There
the aim of the tradesman is not to enrich himself,
but to live! The purchase you make of him is
more than exchange it is a good action.
Mother Genevieve at that time was
still young, but had already lost that fresh bloom
of youth, which suffering causes to wither so soon
among the poor. Her husband, a clever joiner,
gradually left off working to become, according to
the picturesque expression of the workshops, a
worshipper of Saint Monday. The wages of the
week, which was always reduced to two or three working
days, were completely dedicated by him to the worship
of this god of the Barriers,
The cheap wine-shops are outside the
Barriers, to avoid the octroi, or municipal
excise.
and Genevieve was obliged herself
to provide for all the wants of the household.
One evening, when I went to make some
trifling purchases of her, I heard a sound of quarrelling
in the back shop. There were the voices of several
women, among which I distinguished that of Genevieve,
broken by sobs. On looking further in, I perceived
the fruit-woman, with a child in her arms, and kissing
it, while a country nurse seemed to be claiming her
wages from her. The poor woman, who without doubt
had exhausted every explanation and every excuse, was
crying in silence, and one of her neighbours was trying
in vain to appease the countrywoman. Excited
by that love of money which the evils of a hard peasant
life but too well excuse, and disappointed by the
refusal of her expected wages, the nurse was launching
forth in recriminations, threats, and abuse.
In spite of myself, I listened to the quarrel, not
daring to interfere, and not thinking of going away,
when Michael Arout appeared at the shop-door.
The joiner had just come from the
Barrier, where he had passed part of the day at the
public-house. His blouse, without a belt, and
untied at the throat, showed none of the noble stains
of work: in his hand he held his cap, which he
had just picked out of the mud; his hair was in disorder,
his eye fixed, and the pallor of drunkenness in his
face. He came reeling in, looked wildly around
him, and called for Genevieve.
She heard his voice, gave a start,
and rushed into the shop; but at the sight of the
miserable man, who was trying in vain to steady himself,
she pressed the child in her arms, and bent over it
with tears.
The countrywoman and the neighbour had followed her.
“Come! come! Do you intend
to pay me, after all?” cried the former, in
a rage.
“Ask the master for the money,”
ironically answered the woman from next door, pointing
to the joiner, who had just fallen against the counter.
The countrywoman looked at him.
“Ah! he is the father,”
resumed she; “well, what idle beggars! not to
have a penny to pay honest people, and get tipsy with
wine in that way.”
The drunkard raised his head.
“What! what!” stammered
he; “who is it that talks of wine? I’ve
had nothing but brandy. But I am going back again
to get some wine. Wife, give me your money; there
are some friends waiting for me at the Pere la
Tuille.”
Genevieve did not answer: he
went round the counter, opened the till, and began
to rummage in it.
“You see where the money of
the house goes!” observed the neighbour to the
countrywoman; “how can the poor unhappy woman
pay you when he takes all?”
“Is that my fault, then?”
replied the nurse angrily; “they owe it me,
and somehow or other they must pay me.”
And letting loose her tongue, as those
women out of the country do, she began relating at
length all the care she had taken of the child, and
all the expense it had been to her. In proportion
as she recalled all she had done, her words seemed
to convince her more than ever of her rights, and
to increase her anger. The poor mother, who no
doubt feared that her violence would frighten the child,
returned into the back shop, and put it into its cradle.
Whether it was that the countrywoman
saw in this act a determination to escape her claims,
or that she was blinded by passion, I cannot say;
but she rushed into the next room, where I heard the
sounds of quarrelling, with which the cries of the
child were soon mingled. The joiner, who was
still rummaging in the till, was startled, and raised
his head.
At the same moment Genevieve appeared
at the door, holding in her arms the baby that the
countrywoman was trying to tear from her. She
ran towards the counter, and, throwing herself behind
her husband, cried,
“Michael, defend your son!”
The drunken man quickly stood up erect,
like one who awakes with a start.
“My son!” stammered he; “what son?”
His looks fell upon the child; a vague
ray of intelligence passed over his features.
“Robert,” resumed he; “is it Robert?”
He tried to steady himself on his
feet, that he might take the baby, but he tottered.
The nurse approached him in a rage.
“My money, or I shall take the
child away!” cried she; “it is I who have
fed and brought it up; if you don’t pay for what
has made it live, it ought to be the same to you as
if it were dead. I shall not go till I have my
due or the baby.”
“And what would you do with
him?” murmured Genevieve, pressing Robert against
her bosom.
“Take it to the Foundling!”
replied the countrywoman, harshly; “the hospital
is a better mother than you are, for it pays for the
food of its little ones.”
At the word “Foundling,”
Genevieve had exclaimed aloud in horror. With
her arms wound round her son, whose head she hid in
her bosom, and her two hands spread over him, she
had retreated to the wall, and remained with her back
against it, like a lioness defending her young ones.
The neighbour and I contemplated this
scene, without knowing how we could interfere.
As for Michael, he looked at us by turns, making a
visible effort to comprehend it all. When his
eye rested upon Genevieve and the child, it lit up
with a gleam of pleasure; but when he turned towards
us, he again became stupid and hesitating.
At last, apparently making a prodigious
effort, he cried out “Wait!”
And going to a tub full of water,
he plunged his face into it several times.
Every eye was turned upon him; the
countrywoman herself seemed astonished. At length
he raised his dripping head. This ablution had
partly dispelled his drunkenness; he looked at us for
a moment, then he turned to Genevieve, and his face
brightened up.
“Robert!” cried he, going
up to the child, and taking him in his arms.
“Ah! give him me, wife; I must look at him.”
The mother seemed to give up his son
to him with reluctance, and stayed before him with
her arms extended, as if she feared the child would
have a fall. The nurse began again in her turn
to speak, and renewed her claims, this time threatening
to appeal to law.
At first Michael listened to her attentively,
and when he comprehended her meaning, he gave the
child back to its mother.
“How much do we owe you?” asked he.
The countrywoman began to reckon up
the different expenses, which amounted to nearly thirty
francs. The joiner felt to the bottom of his
pockets, but could find nothing. His forehead
became contracted by frowns; low curses began to escape
him; all of a sudden he rummaged in his breast, drew
forth a large watch, and holding it up above his head
“Here it is here’s
your money!” cried he, with a joyful laugh; “a
watch, number one! I always said it would keep
for a drink on a dry day; but it is not I who will
drink it, but the young one. Ah! ah! ah! go and
sell it for me, neighbour; and if that is not enough,
have my ear-rings. Eh! Genevieve, take them
off for me, the ear-rings will square all. They
shall not say you have been disgraced on account of
the child. No, not even if I must pledge a bit
of my flesh! My watch, my ear-rings, and my ring,
get rid of all of them for me at the goldsmith’s;
pay the woman, and let the little fool go to sleep.
Give him me, Genevieve, I will put him to bed.”
And, taking the baby from the arms
of his mother, he carried him with a firm step to
his cradle.
It was easy to perceive the change
which took place in Michael from this day. He
cut all his old drinking acquaintances. He went
early every morning to his work, and returned regularly
in the evening to finish the day with Genevieve and
Robert. Very soon he would not leave them at
all, and he hired a place near the fruitshop, and
worked in it on his own account.
They would soon have been able to
live in comfort, had it not been for the expenses
which the child required. Everything was given
up to his education. He had gone through the
regular school training, had studied mathematics,
drawing, and the carpenter’s trade, and had
only begun to work a few months ago. Till now,
they had been exhausting every resource which their
laborious industry could provide to push him forward
in his business; but, happily, all these exertions
had not proved useless; the seed had brought forth
its fruits, and the days of harvest were close by.
While I was thus recalling these remembrances
to my mind, Michael had come in, and was occupied
in fixing shelves where they were wanted.
During the time I was writing the
notes of my journal, I was also scrutinizing the joiner.
The excesses of his youth and the
labour of his manhood have deeply marked his face;
his hair is thin and gray, his shoulders stooping,
his legs shrunken and slightly bent. There seems
a sort of weight in his whole being. His very
features have an expression of sorrow and despondency.
He answered my questions by monosyllables, and like
a man who wishes to avoid conversation. From
whence is this dejection, when one would think he
had all he could wish for? I should like to know!
Ten o’clock. Michael
is just gone down stairs to look for a tool he has
forgotten. I have at last succeeded in drawing
from him the secret of his and Genevieve’s sorrow.
Their son Robert is the cause of it.
Not that he has turned out ill after
all their care not that he is idle or dissipated;
but both were in hopes he would never leave them any
more. The presence of the young man was to have
renewed and made glad their lives once more; his mother
counted the days, his father prepared everything to
receive their dear associate in their toils, and at
the moment when they were thus about to be repaid for
all their sacrifices, Robert had suddenly informed
them that he had just engaged himself to a contractor
at Versailles.
Every remonstrance and every prayer
were useless; he brought forward the necessity of
initiating himself into all the details of an important
contract, the facilities he should have, in his new
position, of improving himself in his trade, and the
hopes he had of turning his knowledge to advantage.
At last, when his mother, having come to the end of
her arguments, began to cry, he hastily kissed her,
and went away, that he might avoid any further remonstrances.
He had been absent a year, and there
was nothing to give them hopes of his return.
His parents hardly saw him once a month, and then he
only stayed a few moments with them.
“I have been punished where
I had hoped to be rewarded,” Michael said to
me just now; “I had wished for a saving and industrious
son, and God has given me an ambitious and avaricious
one. I had always said to myself, that, when
once he was grown up, we should have him always with
us, to recall our youth and to enliven our hearts;
his mother was always thinking of getting him married,
and having children again to care for. You know
women always will busy themselves about others.
As for me, I thought of him working near my bench,
and singing his new songs for he has learnt
music, and is one of the best singers at the Orphéon.
A dream, sir, truly! Directly the bird was fledged,
he took to flight, and remembers neither father nor
mother. Yesterday, for instance, was the day we
expected him; he should have come to supper with us.
No Robert to-day, either! He has had some plan
to finish, or some bargain to arrange, and his old
parents are put down last in the accounts, after the
customers and the joiner’s work. Ah! if
I could have guessed how it would have turned out!
Fool! to have sacrificed my likings and my money,
for nearly twenty years, to the education of a thankless
son! Was it for this I took the trouble to cure
myself of drinking, to break with my friends, to become
an example to the neighbourhood? The jovial good
fellow has made a goose of himself. Oh! if I
had to begin again! No, no! you see women and
children are our bane. They soften our hearts;
they lead us a life of hope and affection; we pass
a quarter of our lives in fostering the growth of
a grain of corn which is to be everything to us in
our old age, and when the harvest-time comes good-night,
the ear is empty!”
Whilt he was speaking, Michael’s
voice became hoarse, his eye fierce, and his lips
quivered. I wished to answer him, but I could
only think of commonplace consolations, and I remained
silent. The joiner pretended he wanted a tool,
and left me.
Poor father! Ah! I know
those moments of temptation when virtue has failed
to reward us, and we regret having obeyed her!
Who has not felt this weakness in hours of trial,
and who has not uttered, at least once, the mournful
exclamation of “Brutus?”
But if virtue is only a word,
what is there then in life which is true and real?
No, I will not believe that goodness is in vain!
It does not always give the happiness we had hoped
for, but it brings some other. In the world everything
is ruled by order, and has its proper and necessary
consequences, and virtue cannot be the sole exception
to the general law. If it had been prejudicial
to those who practise it, experience would have avenged
them; but experience has, on the contrary, (sic) mader
it more universal and more holy. We only accuse
it of being a faithless debtor, because we demand an
immediate payment, and one apparent to our senses.
We always consider life as a fairy tale, in which
every good action must be rewarded by a visible wonder.
We do not accept as payment a peaceful conscience,
self-content, or a good name among men, treasures that
are more precious than any other, but the value of
which we do not feel till after we have lost them!
Michael is come back, and returned
to his work. His son had not yet arrived.
By telling me of his hopes and his
grievous disappointments, he became excited; he unceasingly
went over again the same subject, always adding something
to his griefs. He has just wound up his confidential
discourse by speaking to me of a joiner’s business,
which he had hoped to buy, and work to good account
with Robert’s help. The present owner had
made a fortune by it, and after thirty years of business,
he was thinking of retiring to one of the ornamental
cottages in the outskirts of the city, a usual retreat
for the frugal and successful working man. Michael
had not indeed the two thousand francs which must
be paid down; but perhaps he could have persuaded
Master Benoit to wait. Robert’s presence
would have been a security for him; for the young
man could not fail to insure the prosperity of a workshop;
besides science and skill, he had the power of invention
and bringing to perfection. His father had discovered
among his drawings a new plan for a staircase, which
had occupied his thoughts for a long time; and he even
suspected him of having engaged himself to the Versailles
contractor for the very purpose of executing it.
The youth was tormented by this spirit of invention,
which took possession of all his thoughts, and, while
devoting his mind to study, he had no time to listen
to his feelings.
Michael told me all this with a mixed
feeling of pride and vexation. I saw he was proud
of the son he was abusing, and that his very pride
made him more sensible of that son’s neglect.
Six o’clock, P. M. I
have just finished a happy day. How many events
have happened within a few hours, and what a change
for Genevieve and Michael!
He had just finished fixing the shelves,
and telling me of his son, whilst I laid the cloth
for my breakfast.
Suddenly we heard hurried steps in
the passage, the door opened, and Genevieve entered
with Robert.
The joiner gave a start of joyful
surprise, but he repressed it immediately, as if he
wished to keep up the appearance of displeasure.
The young man did not appear to notice
it, but threw himself into his arms in an open-hearted
manner, which surprised me. Genevieve, whose
face shone with happiness, seemed to wish to speak,
and to restrain herself with difficulty.
I told Robert I was glad to see him,
and he answered me with ease and civility.
“I expected you yesterday,”
said Michael Arout, rather dryly.
“Forgive me, father,”
replied the young workman, “but I had business
at St. Germains. I was not able to come back till
it was very late, and then the master kept me.”
The joiner looked at his son sideways,
and then took up his hammer again.
“It is right,” muttered
he, in a grumbling tone; “when we are with other
people we must do as they wish; but there are some
who would like better to eat brown bread with their
own knife, than partridges with the silver fork of
a master.”
“And I am one of those, father,”
replied Robert, merrily; “but, as the proverb
says, you must shell the peas before you can eat
them. It was necessary that I should first work
in a great workshop”
“To go on with your plan of
the staircase,” interrupted Michael, ironically.
“You must now say M. Raymond’s
plan, father,” replied Robert, smiling.
“Why?”
“Because I have sold it to him.”
The joiner, who was planing a board, turned round
quickly.
“Sold it!” cried he, with sparkling eyes.
“For the reason that I was not rich enough to
give it him.”
Michael threw down the board and tool.
“There he is again!” resumed
he, angrily; “his good genius puts an idea into
his head which would have made him known, and he goes
and sells it to a rich man, who will take the honour
of it himself.”
“Well, what harm is there done?” asked
Genevieve.
“What harm!” cried the
joiner, in a passion; “you understand nothing
about it you are a woman; but he he
knows well that a true workman never gives up his
own inventions for money, no more than a soldier would
give up his cross. That is his glory; he is bound
to keep it for the honour it does him! Ah! thunder!
if I had ever made a discovery, rather than put it
up at auction I would have sold one of my eyes!
Don’t you see, that a new invention is like a
child to a workman! he takes care of it, he brings
it up, he makes a way for it in the world, and it
is only poor creatures who sell it.”
Robert coloured a little.
“You will think differently,
father,” said he, “when you know why I
sold my plan.”
“Yes, and you will thank him
for it,” added Genevieve, who could no longer
keep silence.
“Never!” replied Michael.
“But, wretched man!” cried she, “he
only sold it for our sakes!”
The joiner looked at his wife and
son with astonishment. It was necessary to come
to an explanation. The latter related how he had
entered into a negotiation with Master Benoit, who
had positively refused to sell his business unless
one-half of the two thousand francs was first paid
down. It was in the hopes of obtaining this sum
that he had gone to work with the contractor at Versailles;
he had an opportunity of trying his invention, and
of finding a purchaser. Thanks to the money he
received for it, he had just concluded the bargain
with Benoit, and had brought his father the key of
the new work-yard.
This explanation was given by the
young workman with so much modesty and simplicity,
that I was quite affected by it. Genevieve cried;
Michael pressed his son to his heart, and in a long
embrace he seemed to ask his pardon for having unjustly
accused him.
All was now explained with honour
to Robert. The conduct which his parents had
ascribed to indifference, really sprang from affection;
he had neither obeyed the voice of ambition nor of
avarice, nor even the nobler inspiration of inventive
genius; his whole motive and single aim had been the
happiness of Genevieve and Michael. The day for
proving his gratitude had come, and he had returned
them sacrifice for sacrifice!
After the explanations and exclamations
of joy, were over, all three were about to leave me;
but the cloth being laid, I added three more places,
and kept them to breakfast.
The meal was prolonged; the fare was
only tolerable; but the overflowings of affection
made it delicious.
Never had I better understood the
unspeakable charm of family love. What calm enjoyment
in that happiness which is always shared with others;
in that community of interests which unites such various
feelings; in that association of existences which forms
one single being of so many! What is man without
those home affections, which, like so many roots,
fix him firmly in the earth, and permit him to imbibe
all the juices of life? Energy, happiness, does
it not all come from them? Without family life,
where would man learn to love, to associate, to deny
himself? A community in little, is not it which
teaches us how to live in the great one? Such
is the holiness of home, that to express our relation
with God, we have been obliged to borrow the words
invented for our family life. Men have named
themselves the sons of a heavenly Father.
Ah! let us carefully preserve these
chains of domestic union; do not let us unbind the
human sheaf, and scatter its ears to all the caprices
of chance, and of the winds; but let us rather enlarge
this holy law; let us carry the principles and the
habits of home beyond its bounds; and, if it may be,
let us realize the prayer of the Apostle of the Gentiles
when he exclaimed to the newborn children of Christ: “Be
ye like-minded, having the same love, being of one
accord, of one mind.”