登陆注册
19868100000009

第9章

Graslin employed a charwoman by the day, an old peasant from Auvergne, who did his cooking. The brown earthenware off which he ate, and the stout coarse linen which he used, were in keeping with the character of his food. The old woman had strict orders never to spend more than three francs daily for the total expenses of the household. The office-boy was also man-of-all-work. The clerks took care of their own rooms. The tables of blackened wood, the straw chairs half unseated, the wretched beds, the counters and desks, in short, the whole furniture of house and office was not worth more than a thousand francs, including a colossal iron safe, built into the wall, before which slept the man-of-all-work with two dogs at his feet.

Graslin did not often go into society, which, however, discussed him constantly. Two or three times a year he dined with the receiver- general, with whom his business brought him into occasional intercourse. He also occasionally took a meal at the prefecture; for he had been appointed, much to his regret, a member of the Council- general of the department--"a waste of time," he remarked. Sometimes his brother bankers with whom he had dealings kept him to breakfast or dinner; and he was forced also to visit his former partners, who spent their winters in Limoges. He cared so little to keep up his relations to society that in twenty-five years Graslin had not offered so much as a glass of water to any one. When he passed along the street persons would nudge each other and say: "That's Monsieur Graslin"; meaning, "There's a man who came to Limoges without a penny and has now acquired an enormous fortune." The Auvergnat banker was a model which more than one father pointed out to his son, and wives had been known to fling him in the faces of their husbands.

We can now understand the reasons that led a man who had become the pivot of the financial machine of Limoges to repulse the various propositions of marriage which parents never ceased to make to him.

The daughters of his partners, Messrs. Perret and Grossetete, were married before Graslin was in a position to take a wife; but as each of these ladies had young daughters, the wiseheads of the community finally concluded that old Perret or old Grossetete had made an arrangement with Graslin to wait for one of his granddaughters, and thenceforth they left him alone.

Sauviat had watched the ascending career of his compatriot more attentively and seriously than any one else. He had known him from the time he first came to Limoges; but their respective positions had changed so much, at least apparently, that their friendship, now become merely superficial, was seldom freshened. Still, in his relation as compatriot, Graslin never disdained to talk with Sauviat when they chanced to meet. Both continued to keep up their early /tutoiement/, but only in their native dialect. When the receiver- general of Bourges, the youngest of the brothers Grossetete, married his daughter in 1823 to the youngest son of Comte Fontaine, Sauviat felt sure that the Grossetetes would never allow Graslin to enter their family.

After his conference with the banker, Pere Sauviat returned home joyously. He dined that night in his daughter's room, and after dinner he said to his womenkind:--"Veronique will be Madame Graslin."

"Madame Graslin!" exclaimed Mere Sauviat, astounded.

"Is it possible?" said Veronique, to whom Graslin was personally unknown, and whose imagination regarded him very much as a Parisian grisette would regard a Rothschild.

"Yes, it is settled," said old Sauviat solemnly. "Graslin will furnish his house magnificently; he is to give our daughter a fine Parisian carriage and the best horses to be found in the Limousin; he will buy an estate worth five hundred thousand francs, and settle that and his town-house upon her. Veronique will be the first lady in Limoges, the richest in the department, and she can do what she pleases with Graslin."

Veronique's education, her religious ideas, and her boundless affection for her parents, prevented her from making a single objection; it did not even cross her mind to think that she had been disposed of without reference to her own will. On the morrow Sauviat went to Paris, and was absent for nearly a week.

Pierre Graslin was, as can readily be imagined, not much of a talker; he went straight and rapidly to deeds. A thing decided on was a thing done. In February, 1822, a strange piece of news burst like a thunderbolt on the town of Limoges. The hotel Graslin was being handsomely furnished; carriers' carts came day after day from Paris, and their contents were unpacked in the courtyard. Rumors flew about the town as to the beauty and good taste of the modern or the antique furniture as it was seen to arrive. The great firm of Odiot and Company sent down a magnificent service of plate by the mail-coach.

Three carriages, a caleche, a coupe, and a cabriolet arrived, wrapped in straw with as much care as if they were jewels.

"Monsieur Graslin is going to be married!"

These words were said by every pair of lips in Limoges in the course of a single evening,--in the salons of the upper classes, in the kitchens, in the shops, in the streets, in the suburbs, and before long throughout the whole surrounding country. But to whom? No one could answer. Limoges had a mystery.

同类推荐
  • 刘铭传抚台前后档案

    刘铭传抚台前后档案

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 六十种曲双烈记

    六十种曲双烈记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 孙子遗说

    孙子遗说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Shakespearian Sonnets

    The Shakespearian Sonnets

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Absentee

    The Absentee

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 至天神帝

    至天神帝

    一滴水可显化法相天地,一粒尘可容纳诸天万界!秦易携无名天经重生异世,得天地大造化,一路轰杀各派天才,灭神魔,一拳打穿禁锢之门,镇压万古,成就至天神帝之尊!
  • 阴魂缠绵:鬼夫一撩上瘾

    阴魂缠绵:鬼夫一撩上瘾

    那日,我进入墓园,打扫神龛,意外揭下了盖在神龛上的黄布,从此踏上了一条不归路……
  • 神禁之异界归来

    神禁之异界归来

    这是一只穿越者回到现代后的故事。本故事纯属虚构,如有雷同算我抄你。。。
  • A Room With A View

    A Room With A View

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 异界杀手在都市

    异界杀手在都市

    【新书】【我的老婆是阴阳道士】喜欢的搜索过来看,作者是【怀学生】过去。他是异界的杀手,用眼神就可以杀人。如今。他穿越到都市。英俊却带有一丝邪气的他,低调做人,高调做事。御姐、警花、萝莉、校花,高傲清冷的女神……
  • 上古世纪之水晶头盖骨

    上古世纪之水晶头盖骨

    上古世纪,世界异力尚存,科技与魔法齐头并进,繁荣璀璨。上古公元前2000年,神与英雄掀起战乱,源大陆被毁灭,在那场灾难之中,幻术师一脉只有伊索卡一人存活下来。孤身一人的他,在诺伊亚大陆漂泊无依,一次偶然的机会,他在一场遗迹中寻找到一卷秘书卷轴,卷轴上记载了一种秘法,可以将一个人的意识传送到过去,代价就是施术者本身会肉体崩溃,等到法术消失之后,就连自己的意识也可能灰飞烟灭。伊索卡最终不惜牺牲自己,施展出卷轴记载的秘法,为改变历史,拯救源大陆埋下了伏笔。
  • 尘归尘 土归土

    尘归尘 土归土

    荆自以为还算得上一个清心寡欲的女子,她没料到自己会对一件身外之物这么念念不忘。那是一只天然水晶手镯,玲珑剔透的,却不是一味的冰清玉洁。无论戴在腕上,还是置于白缎精制的匣子里,总泛着微黄的银光,浸透了几千年的月色一般,有一种旷古而寂寥的景象。荆却总疑心这个光洁透亮的圈子,是用了眼泪凝固的冰制成的,那幽幽渺渺、隐隐约约的黄,正是泪水才有的颜色。而她即便不用手,哪怕只用了目光去触摸,也能感觉出它从里到外的沁凉。
  • 艾森豪威尔传

    艾森豪威尔传

    本书共分十章,包括:德国人的后裔、壮志难酬、战争中的新星、向意大利进军、诺曼底登陆、解放巴黎、向德国本士进军等。艾森豪威尔毕业于将星云集的西点军校。作为战功卓著的军人,他创立了美国陆军第一所战车训练营,指挥过北非登陆战、西西里登陆战、代号“霸王”行动的诺曼底登陆战,以及解放巴黎、攻占德国等战争;作为政治家,他签署了《朝鲜停战协定》;提出“艾森豪威尔主义”,即在中东实行“军事援助和合作计划”,达到一面以武力威胁为手段,一面以经济援助为诱饵,用反共作幌子,排挤英、法等国势力,以实现独占中东的图谋。但随着国务卿杜勒斯的逝世,艾森豪威尔主义最终失效。
  • 九宫天启

    九宫天启

    凡间一世,淡淡无常,回首一望,却无熟人。这路,是走是停,他,该如何选择。唯一的选择只有不断变强,只有站在最高的位置,那一切,才能重回……
  • 大道纵横

    大道纵横

    千道万道,唯周同无极混圆道。周同者,周而复始,万物皆同。亲爱的读者,小说已整理更名为《周同传》,网内可搜寻,也可加扣扣群(01):228016389。周同传扣扣群(02):230152714。