<h2><SPAN name="chap30"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX.<br/> M. PAUL.</h2>
<p>Yet the reader is advised not to be in any hurry with his kindly conclusions,
or to suppose, with an over-hasty charity, that from that day M. Paul became a
changed character—easy to live with, and no longer apt to flash danger
and discomfort round him.</p>
<p>No; he was naturally a little man of unreasonable moods. When over-wrought,
which he often was, he became acutely irritable; and, besides, his veins were
dark with a livid belladonna tincture, the essence of jealousy. I do not mean
merely the tender jealousy of the heart, but that sterner, narrower sentiment
whose seat is in the head.</p>
<p>I used to think, as I sat looking at M. Paul, while he was knitting his brow or
protruding his lip over some exercise of mine, which had not as many faults as
he wished (for he liked me to commit faults: a knot of blunders was sweet to
him as a cluster of nuts), that he had points of resemblance to Napoleon
Bonaparte. I think so still.</p>
<p>In a shameless disregard of magnanimity, he resembled the great Emperor. M.
Paul would have quarrelled with twenty learned women, would have unblushingly
carried on a system of petty bickering and recrimination with a whole capital
of coteries, never troubling himself about loss or lack of dignity. He would
have exiled fifty Madame de Staëls, if, they had annoyed, offended,
outrivalled, or opposed him.</p>
<p>I well remember a hot episode of his with a certain Madame Panache—a lady
temporarily employed by Madame Beck to give lessons in history. She was
clever—that is, she knew a good deal; and, besides, thoroughly possessed
the art of making the most of what she knew; of words and confidence she held
unlimited command. Her personal appearance was far from destitute of
advantages; I believe many people would have pronounced her “a fine
woman;” and yet there were points in her robust and ample attractions, as
well as in her bustling and demonstrative presence, which, it appeared, the
nice and capricious tastes of M. Paul could not away with. The sound of her
voice, echoing through the carré, would put him into a strange taking; her long
free step—almost stride—along the corridor, would often make him
snatch up his papers and decamp on the instant.</p>
<p>With malicious intent he bethought himself, one day, to intrude on her class;
as quick as lightning he gathered her method of instruction; it differed from a
pet plan of his own. With little ceremony, and less courtesy, he pointed out
what he termed her errors. Whether he expected submission and attention, I know
not; he met an acrid opposition, accompanied by a round reprimand for his
certainly unjustifiable interference.</p>
<p>Instead of withdrawing with dignity, as he might still have done, he threw down
the gauntlet of defiance. Madame Panache, bellicose as a Penthesilea, picked it
up in a minute. She snapped her fingers in the intermeddler’s face; she
rushed upon him with a storm of words. M. Emanuel was eloquent; but Madame
Panache was voluble. A system of fierce antagonism ensued. Instead of laughing
in his sleeve at his fair foe, with all her sore amour-propre and loud
self-assertion, M. Paul detested her with intense seriousness; he honoured her
with his earnest fury; he pursued her vindictively and implacably, refusing to
rest peaceably in his bed, to derive due benefit from his meals, or even
serenely to relish his cigar, till she was fairly rooted out of the
establishment. The Professor conquered, but I cannot say that the laurels of
this victory shadowed gracefully his temples. Once I ventured to hint as much.
To my great surprise he allowed that I might be right, but averred that when
brought into contact with either men or women of the coarse, self-complacent
quality, whereof Madame Panache was a specimen, he had no control over his own
passions; an unspeakable and active aversion impelled him to a war of
extermination.</p>
<p>Three months afterwards, hearing that his vanquished foe had met with reverses,
and was likely to be really distressed for want of employment, he forgot his
hatred, and alike active in good and evil, he moved heaven and earth till he
found her a place. Upon her coming to make up former differences, and thank him
for his recent kindness, the old voice—a little loud—the old
manner—a little forward—so acted upon him that in ten minutes he
started up and bowed her, or rather himself, out of the room, in a transport of
nervous irritation.</p>
<p>To pursue a somewhat audacious parallel, in a love of power, in an eager grasp
after supremacy, M. Emanuel was like Bonaparte. He was a man not always to be
submitted to. Sometimes it was needful to resist; it was right to stand still,
to look up into his eyes and tell him that his requirements went beyond
reason—that his absolutism verged on tyranny.</p>
<p>The dawnings, the first developments of peculiar talent appearing within his
range, and under his rule, curiously excited, even disturbed him. He watched
its struggle into life with a scowl; he held back his hand—perhaps said,
“Come on if you have strength,” but would not aid the birth.</p>
<p>When the pang and peril of the first conflict were over, when the breath of
life was drawn, when he saw the lungs expand and contract, when he felt the
heart beat and discovered life in the eye, he did not yet offer to foster.</p>
<p>“Prove yourself true ere I cherish you,” was his ordinance; and how
difficult he made that proof! What thorns and briers, what flints, he strewed
in the path of feet not inured to rough travel! He watched
tearlessly—ordeals that he exacted should be passed
through—fearlessly. He followed footprints that, as they approached the
bourne, were sometimes marked in blood—followed them grimly, holding the
austerest police-watch over the pain-pressed pilgrim. And when at last he
allowed a rest, before slumber might close the eyelids, he opened those same
lids wide, with pitiless finger and thumb, and gazed deep through the pupil and
the irids into the brain, into the heart, to search if Vanity, or Pride, or
Falsehood, in any of its subtlest forms, was discoverable in the furthest
recess of existence. If, at last, he let the neophyte sleep, it was but a
moment; he woke him suddenly up to apply new tests: he sent him on irksome
errands when he was staggering with weariness; he tried the temper, the sense,
and the health; and it was only when every severest test had been applied and
endured, when the most corrosive aquafortis had been used, and failed to
tarnish the ore, that he admitted it genuine, and, still in clouded silence,
stamped it with his deep brand of approval.</p>
<p>I speak not ignorant of these evils.</p>
<p>Till the date at which the last chapter closes, M. Paul had not been my
professor—he had not given me lessons, but about that time, accidentally
hearing me one day acknowledge an ignorance of some branch of education (I
think it was arithmetic), which would have disgraced a charity-school boy, as
he very truly remarked, he took me in hand, examined me first, found me, I need
not say, abundantly deficient, gave me some books and appointed me some tasks.</p>
<p>He did this at first with pleasure, indeed with unconcealed exultation,
condescending to say that he believed I was “bonne et pas trop
faible” (i.e. well enough disposed, and not wholly destitute of parts),
but, owing he supposed to adverse circumstances, “as yet in a state of
wretchedly imperfect mental development.”</p>
<p>The beginning of all effort has indeed with me been marked by a preternatural
imbecility. I never could, even in forming a common acquaintance, assert or
prove a claim to average quickness. A depressing and difficult passage has
prefaced every new page I have turned in life.</p>
<p>So long as this passage lasted, M. Paul was very kind, very good, very
forbearing; he saw the sharp pain inflicted, and felt the weighty humiliation
imposed by my own sense of incapacity; and words can hardly do justice to his
tenderness and helpfulness. His own eyes would moisten, when tears of shame and
effort clouded mine; burdened as he was with work, he would steal half his
brief space of recreation to give to me.</p>
<p>But, strange grief! when that heavy and overcast dawn began at last to yield to
day; when my faculties began to struggle themselves, free, and my time of
energy and fulfilment came; when I voluntarily doubled, trebled, quadrupled the
tasks he set, to please him as I thought, his kindness became sternness; the
light changed in his eyes from a beam to a spark; he fretted, he opposed, he
curbed me imperiously; the more I did, the harder I worked, the less he seemed
content. Sarcasms of which the severity amazed and puzzled me, harassed my
ears; then flowed out the bitterest inuendoes against the “pride of
intellect.” I was vaguely threatened with I know not what doom, if I ever
trespassed the limits proper to my sex, and conceived a contraband appetite for
unfeminine knowledge. Alas! I had no such appetite. What I loved, it joyed me
by any effort to content; but the noble hunger for science in the
abstract—the godlike thirst after discovery—these feelings were
known to me but by briefest flashes.</p>
<p>Yet, when M. Paul sneered at me, I wanted to possess them more fully; his
injustice stirred in me ambitious wishes—it imparted a strong
stimulus—it gave wings to aspiration.</p>
<p>In the beginning, before I had penetrated to motives, that uncomprehended sneer
of his made my heart ache, but by-and-by it only warmed the blood in my veins,
and sent added action to my pulses. Whatever my powers—feminine or the
contrary—God had given them, and I felt resolute to be ashamed of no
faculty of his bestowal.</p>
<p>The combat was very sharp for a time. I seemed to have lost M. Paul’s
affection; he treated me strangely. In his most unjust moments he would
insinuate that I had deceived him when I appeared, what he called
“faible”—that is incompetent; he said I had feigned a false
incapacity. Again, he would turn suddenly round and accuse me of the most
far-fetched imitations and impossible plagiarisms, asserting that I had
extracted the pith out of books I had not so much as heard of—and over
the perusal of which I should infallibly have fallen down in a sleep as deep as
that of Eutychus.</p>
<p>Once, upon his preferring such an accusation, I turned upon him—I rose
against him. Gathering an armful of his books out of my desk, I filled my apron
and poured them in a heap upon his estrade, at his feet.</p>
<p>“Take them away, M. Paul,” I said, “and teach me no more. I
never asked to be made learned, and you compel me to feel very profoundly that
learning is not happiness.”</p>
<p>And returning to my desk, I laid my head on my arms, nor would I speak to him
for two days afterwards. He pained and chagrined me. His affection had been
very sweet and dear—a pleasure new and incomparable: now that this seemed
withdrawn, I cared not for his lessons.</p>
<p>The books, however, were not taken away; they were all restored with careful
hand to their places, and he came as usual to teach me. He made his peace
somehow—too readily, perhaps: I ought to have stood out longer, but when
he looked kind and good, and held out his hand with amity, memory refused to
reproduce with due force his oppressive moments. And then, reconcilement is
always sweet!</p>
<p>On a certain morning a message came from my godmother, inviting me to attend
some notable lecture to be delivered in the same public rooms before described.
Dr. John had brought the message himself, and delivered it verbally to Rosine,
who had not scrupled to follow the steps of M. Emanuel, then passing to the
first classe, and, in his presence, stand “carrément” before my
desk, hand in apron-pocket, and rehearse the same, saucily and aloud,
concluding with the words, “Qu’il est vraiment beau, Mademoiselle,
ce jeune docteur! Quels yeux—quel regard! Tenez! J’en ai le coeur
tout ému!”</p>
<p>When she was gone, my professor demanded of me why I suffered “cette
fille effrontée, cette créature sans pudeur,” to address me in such
terms.</p>
<p>I had no pacifying answer to give. The terms were precisely such as
Rosine—a young lady in whose skull the organs of reverence and reserve
were not largely developed—was in the constant habit of using. Besides,
what she said about the young doctor was true enough. Graham <i>was</i>
handsome; he had fine eyes and a thrilling glance. An observation to that
effect actually formed itself into sound on my lips.</p>
<p>“Elle ne dit que la vérité,” I said.</p>
<p>“Ah! vous trouvez?”</p>
<p>“Mais, sans doute.”</p>
<p>The lesson to which we had that day to submit was such as to make us very glad
when it terminated. At its close, the released, pupils rushed out,
half-trembling, half-exultant. I, too, was going. A mandate to remain arrested
me. I muttered that I wanted some fresh air sadly—the stove was in a
glow, the classe over-heated. An inexorable voice merely recommended silence;
and this salamander—for whom no room ever seemed too hot—sitting
down between my desk and the stove—a situation in which he ought to have
felt broiled, but did not—proceeded to confront me with—a Greek
quotation!</p>
<p>In M. Emanuel’s soul rankled a chronic suspicion that I knew both Greek
and Latin. As monkeys are said to have the power of speech if they would but
use it, and are reported to conceal this faculty in fear of its being turned to
their detriment, so to me was ascribed a fund of knowledge which I was supposed
criminally and craftily to conceal. The privileges of a “classical
education,” it was insinuated, had been mine; on flowers of Hymettus I
had revelled; a golden store, hived in memory, now silently sustained my
efforts, and privily nurtured my wits.</p>
<p>A hundred expedients did M. Paul employ to surprise my secret—to wheedle,
to threaten, to startle it out of me. Sometimes he placed Greek and Latin books
in my way, and then watched me, as Joan of Arc’s jailors tempted her with
the warrior’s accoutrements, and lay in wait for the issue. Again he
quoted I know not what authors and passages, and while rolling out their sweet
and sounding lines (the classic tones fell musically from his lips—for he
had a good voice—remarkable for compass, modulation, and matchless
expression), he would fix on me a vigilant, piercing, and often malicious eye.
It was evident he sometimes expected great demonstrations; they never occurred,
however; not comprehending, of course I could neither be charmed nor annoyed.</p>
<p>Baffled—almost angry—he still clung to his fixed idea; my
susceptibilities were pronounced marble—my face a mask. It appeared as if
he could not be brought to accept the homely truth, and take me for what I was:
men, and women too, must have delusion of some sort; if not made ready to their
hand, they will invent exaggeration for themselves.</p>
<p>At moments I <i>did</i> wish that his suspicions had been better founded. There
were times when I would have given my right hand to possess the treasures he
ascribed to me. He deserved condign punishment for his testy crotchets. I could
have gloried in bringing home to him his worst apprehensions astoundingly
realized. I could have exulted to burst on his vision, confront and confound
his “lunettes,” one blaze of acquirements. Oh! why did nobody
undertake to make me clever while I was young enough to learn, that I might, by
one grand, sudden, inhuman revelation—one cold, cruel, overwhelming
triumph—have for ever crushed the mocking spirit out of Paul Carl David
Emanuel!</p>
<p>Alas! no such feat was in my power. To-day, as usual, his quotations fell
ineffectual: he soon shifted his ground.</p>
<p>“Women of intellect” was his next theme: here he was at home. A
“woman of intellect,” it appeared, was a sort of “lusus
naturae,” a luckless accident, a thing for which there was neither place
nor use in creation, wanted neither as wife nor worker. Beauty anticipated her
in the first office. He believed in his soul that lovely, placid, and passive
feminine mediocrity was the only pillow on which manly thought and sense could
find rest for its aching temples; and as to work, male mind alone could work to
any good practical result—hein?</p>
<p>This “hein?” was a note of interrogation intended to draw from me
contradiction or objection. However, I only said—“Cela ne me
regarde pas: je ne m’en soucie pas;” and presently
added—“May I go, Monsieur? They have rung the bell for the second
déjeuner” (<i>i.e.</i> luncheon).</p>
<p>“What of that? You are not hungry?”</p>
<p>“Indeed I was,” I said; “I had had nothing since breakfast,
at seven, and should have nothing till dinner, at five, if I missed this
bell.”</p>
<p>“Well, he was in the same plight, but I might share with him.”</p>
<p>And he broke in two the “brioche” intended for his own refreshment,
and gave me half. Truly his bark was worse than his bite; but the really
formidable attack was yet to come. While eating his cake, I could not forbear
expressing my secret wish that I really knew all of which he accused me.</p>
<p>“Did I sincerely feel myself to be an ignoramus?” he asked, in a
softened tone.</p>
<p>If I had replied meekly by an unqualified affirmative, I believe he would have
stretched out his hand, and we should have been friends on the spot, but I
answered—</p>
<p>“Not exactly. I am ignorant, Monsieur, in the knowledge you ascribe to
me, but I <i>sometimes</i>, not <i>always</i>, feel a knowledge of my
own.”</p>
<p>“What did I mean?” he inquired, sharply.</p>
<p>Unable to answer this question in a breath, I evaded it by change of subject.
He had now finished his half of the brioche feeling sure that on so trifling a
fragment he could not have satisfied his appetite, as indeed I had not appeased
mine, and inhaling the fragrance of baked apples afar from the refectory, I
ventured to inquire whether he did not also perceive that agreeable odour. He
confessed that he did. I said if he would let me out by the garden-door, and
permit me just to run across the court, I would fetch him a plateful; and added
that I believed they were excellent, as Goton had a very good method of baking,
or rather stewing fruit, putting in a little spice, sugar, and a glass or two
of vin blanc—might I go?</p>
<p>“Petite gourmande!” said he, smiling, “I have not forgotten
how pleased you were with the pâté â la crême I once gave you, and you know
very well, at this moment, that to fetch the apples for me will be the same as
getting them for yourself. Go, then, but come back quickly.”</p>
<p>And at last he liberated me on parole. My own plan was to go and return with
speed and good faith, to put the plate in at the door, and then to vanish
incontinent, leaving all consequences for future settlement.</p>
<p>That intolerably keen instinct of his seemed to have anticipated my scheme: he
met me at the threshold, hurried me into the room, and fixed me in a minute in
my former seat. Taking the plate of fruit from my hand, he divided the portion
intended only for himself, and ordered me to eat my share. I complied with no
good grace, and vexed, I suppose, by my reluctance, he opened a masked and
dangerous battery. All he had yet said, I could count as mere sound and fury,
signifying nothing: not so of the present attack.</p>
<p>It consisted in an unreasonable proposition with which he had before afflicted
me: namely, that on the next public examination-day I should
engage—foreigner as I was—to take my place on the first form of
first-class pupils, and with them improvise a composition in French, on any
subject any spectator might dictate, without benefit of grammar or lexicon.</p>
<p>I knew what the result of such an experiment would be. I, to whom nature had
denied the impromptu faculty; who, in public, was by nature a cypher; whose
time of mental activity, even when alone, was not under the meridian sun; who
needed the fresh silence of morning, or the recluse peace of evening, to win
from the Creative Impulse one evidence of his presence, one proof of his force;
I, with whom that Impulse was the most intractable, the most capricious, the
most maddening of masters (him before me always excepted)—a deity which
sometimes, under circumstances—apparently propitious, would not speak
when questioned, would not hear when appealed to, would not, when sought, be
found; but would stand, all cold, all indurated, all granite, a dark Baal with
carven lips and blank eye-balls, and breast like the stone face of a tomb; and
again, suddenly, at some turn, some sound, some long-trembling sob of the wind,
at some rushing past of an unseen stream of electricity, the irrational demon
would wake unsolicited, would stir strangely alive, would rush from its
pedestal like a perturbed Dagon, calling to its votary for a sacrifice,
whatever the hour—to its victim for some blood, or some breath, whatever
the circumstance or scene—rousing its priest, treacherously promising
vaticination, perhaps filling its temple with a strange hum of oracles, but
sure to give half the significance to fateful winds, and grudging to the
desperate listener even a miserable remnant—yielding it sordidly, as
though each word had been a drop of the deathless ichor of its own dark veins.
And this tyrant I was to compel into bondage, and make it improvise a theme, on
a school estrade, between a Mathilde and a Coralie, under the eye of a Madame
Beck, for the pleasure, and to the inspiration of a bourgeois of Labassecour!</p>
<p>Upon this argument M. Paul and I did battle more than once—strong battle,
with confused noise of demand and rejection, exaction and repulse.</p>
<p>On this particular day I was soundly rated. “The obstinacy of my whole
sex,” it seems, was concentrated in me; I had an “orgueil de
diable.” I feared to fail, forsooth! What did it matter whether I failed
or not? Who was I that I should not fail, like my betters? It would do me good
to fail. He wanted to see me worsted (I knew he did), and one minute he paused
to take breath.</p>
<p>“Would I speak now, and be tractable?”</p>
<p>“Never would I be tractable in this matter. Law itself should not compel
me. I would pay a fine, or undergo an imprisonment, rather than write for a
show and to order, perched up on a platform.”</p>
<p>“Could softer motives influence me? Would I yield for friendship’s
sake?”</p>
<p>“Not a whit, not a hair-breadth. No form of friendship under the sun had
a right to exact such a concession. No true friendship would harass me
thus.”</p>
<p>He supposed then (with a sneer—M. Paul could sneer supremely, curling his
lip, opening his nostrils, contracting his eyelids)—he supposed there was
but one form of appeal to which I would listen, and of that form it was not for
him to make use.</p>
<p>“Under certain persuasions, from certain quarters, je vous vois
d’ici,” said he, “eagerly subscribing to the sacrifice,
passionately arming for the effort.”</p>
<p>“Making a simpleton, a warning, and an example of myself, before a
hundred and fifty of the ‘papas’ and ‘mammas’ of
Villette.”</p>
<p>And here, losing patience, I broke out afresh with a cry that I wanted to be
liberated—to get out into the air—I was almost in a fever.</p>
<p>“Chut!” said the inexorable, “this was a mere pretext to run
away; <i>he</i> was not hot, with the stove close at his back; how could I
suffer, thoroughly screened by his person?”</p>
<p>“I did not understand his constitution. I knew nothing of the natural
history of salamanders. For my own part, I was a phlegmatic islander, and
sitting in an oven did not agree with me; at least, might I step to the well,
and get a glass of water—the sweet apples had made me thirsty?”</p>
<p>“If that was all, he would do my errand.”</p>
<p>He went to fetch the water. Of course, with a door only on the latch behind me,
I lost not my opportunity. Ere his return, his half-worried prey had escaped.</p>
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