登陆注册
19915300000003

第3章

Now, Monsieur de Soulas' father had left him only four thousand francs a year, the income from some cottage farms which lent painful uncertainty to the rents. The lion had hardly three francs a day left for food, amusements, and gambling. He very often dined out, and breakfasted with remarkable frugality. When he was positively obliged to dine at his own cost, he sent his tiger to fetch a couple of dishes from a cookshop, never spending more than twenty-five sous.

Young Monsieur de Soulas was supposed to be a spendthrift, recklessly extravagant, whereas the poor man made the two ends meet in the year with a keenness and skill which would have done honor to a thrifty housewife. At Besancon in those days no one knew how great a tax on a man's capital were six francs spent in polish to spread on his boots or shoes, yellow gloves at fifty sous a pair, cleaned in the deepest secrecy to make them three times renewed, cravats costing ten francs, and lasting three months, four waistcoats at twenty-five francs, and trousers fitting close to the boots. How could he do otherwise, since we see women in Paris bestowing their special attention on simpletons who visit them, and cut out the most remarkable men by means of these frivolous advantages, which a man can buy for fifteen louis, and get his hair curled and a fine linen shirt into the bargain?

If this unhappy youth should seem to you to have become a /lion/ on very cheap terms, you must know that Amedee de Soulas had been three times to Switzerland, by coach and in short stages, twice to Paris, and once from Paris to England. He passed as a well-informed traveler, and could say, "In England, where I went . . ." The dowagers of the town would say to him, "You, who have been in England . . ." He had been as far as Lombardy, and seen the shores of the Italian lakes. He read new books. Finally, when he was cleaning his gloves, the tiger Babylas replied to callers, "Monsieur is very busy." An attempt had been made to withdraw Monsieur Amedee de Soulas from circulation by pronouncing him "A man of advanced ideas." Amedee had the gift of uttering with the gravity of a native the commonplaces that were in fashion, which gave him the credit of being one of the most enlightened of the nobility. His person was garnished with fashionable trinkets, and his head furnished with ideas hall-marked by the press.

In 1834 Amedee was a young man of five-and-twenty, of medium height, dark, with a very prominent thorax, well-made shoulders, rather plump legs, feet already fat, white dimpled hands, a beard under his chin, moustaches worthy of the garrison, a good-natured, fat, rubicund face, a flat nose, and brown expressionless eyes; nothing Spanish about him.

He was progressing rapidly in the direction of obesity, which would be fatal to his pretensions. His nails were well kept, his beard trimmed, the smallest details of his dress attended to with English precision.

Hence Amedee de Soulas was looked upon as the finest man in Besancon.

A hairdresser who waited upon him at a fixed hour--another luxury, costing sixty francs a year--held him up as the sovereign authority in matters of fashion and elegance.

Amedee slept late, dressed and went out towards noon, to go to one of his farms and practise pistol-shooting. He attached as much importance to this exercise as Lord Byron did in his later days. Then, at three o'clock he came home, admired on horseback by the grisettes and the ladies who happened to be at their windows. After an affectation of study or business, which seemed to engage him till four, he dressed to dine out, spent the evening in the drawing-rooms of the aristocracy of Besancon playing whist, and went home to bed at eleven. No life could be more above board, more prudent, or more irreproachable, for he punctually attended the services at church on Sundays and holy days.

To enable you to understand how exceptional is such a life, it is necessary to devote a few words to an account of Besancon. No town ever offered more deaf and dumb resistance to progress. At Besancon the officials, the employes, the military, in short, every one engaged in governing it, sent thither from Paris to fill a post of any kind, are all spoken of by the expressive general name of /the Colony/. The colony is neutral ground, the only ground where, as in church, the upper rank and the townsfolk of the place can meet. Here, fired by a word, a look, or gesture, are started those feuds between house and house, between a woman of rank and a citizen's wife, which endure till death, and widen the impassable gulf which parts the two classes of society. With the exception of the Clermont-Mont-Saint-Jean, the Beauffremont, the de Scey, and the Gramont families, with a few others who come only to stay on their estates in the Comte, the aristocracy of Besancon dates no further back than a couple of centuries, the time of the conquest by Louis XIV. This little world is essentially of the /parlement/, and arrogant, stiff, solemn, uncompromising, haughty beyond all comparison, even with the Court of Vienna, for in this the nobility of Besancon would put the Viennese drawing-rooms to shame. As to Victor Hugo, Nodier, Fourier, the glories of the town, they are never mentioned, no one thinks about them. The marriages in these families are arranged in the cradle, so rigidly are the greatest things settled as well as the smallest. No stranger, no intruder, ever finds his way into one of these houses, and to obtain an introduction for the colonels or officers of title belonging to the first families in France when quartered there, requires efforts of diplomacy which Prince Talleyrand would gladly have mastered to use at a congress.

In 1834 Amedee was the only man in Besancon who wore trouser-straps;this will account for the young man's being regarded as a lion. And a little anecdote will enable you to understand the city of Besancon.

同类推荐
  • 革命军

    革命军

    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。
  • 仁王护国般若波罗蜜多经道场念诵仪轨

    仁王护国般若波罗蜜多经道场念诵仪轨

    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。
  • 续名医类案

    续名医类案

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 剡录

    剡录

    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。
  • 吴下谚联

    吴下谚联

    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
  • 重生之庶女为妻

    重生之庶女为妻

    赵晴岚,万安侯府的庶小姐。意外重生,回到定亲那一年。既然老天怜惜,那她将不会重蹈覆辙。毓亲王府世子?奴家高攀不起!后娘压迫?恶奴欺负?那就让他们哪来滚哪!我的生活我做主!“岚儿,我来下聘了。”等等,墨大哥,你这是神马意思!本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 妖能相师

    妖能相师

    身边美女如云,可林子安却只能看、不能碰!这算哪门子事儿啊!身陷桃花万劫,和美女越亲密,他就越倒霉。无奈装出一副土鳖样,可他精通卜卦算命和绝世医术,想低调都不行!白领丽人来了,美女老师来了,警花校花都来了!别人羡慕不已,可林子安心中憋屈啊:“美女来了,快跑哇!”
  • 绯色璃瞳:美女请你别乱跑

    绯色璃瞳:美女请你别乱跑

    喜欢这本书就加入收藏吧!也可以加我QQ2629779840~
  • 王朝守护者

    王朝守护者

    进攻赢得胜利,防守赢得总冠军。科比和托尼这两个孩子可以做到一切。——禅师菲尔·杰克逊我们会夺得总冠军,我们会开创王朝,并且守护这个王朝!
  • 西孤无所归

    西孤无所归

    一神一魔,一正一邪,而正是这永远无法融合的两股力量,诞下了她,被六界所不容的神魔之子,她是生来就被族人遗弃的神,是无法拥有黑翼的魔……小小的少女独自踏上荒芜的西孤大陆,看她如何凭借自己的力量,创造属于这片中擎大陆的传奇!
  • 世界之最全知道(图文本·珍藏版)

    世界之最全知道(图文本·珍藏版)

    《世界之最全知道(图文本·珍藏版)》从天文地理、动物、植物、军事、科学技术、文化艺术、人类社会 、体育等多个领域,分门别类地向读者介绍了各个领域之“最”,是一部融 知识性、趣味性于一体的科普读物。本书篇幅精练,文字优美,在写作风格上力求通俗易懂,并配有大量精 美的绘画图片,使知识的介绍更加形象化,使读者在获得知识的同时也获得 了艺术上的熏陶。图文并茂的编排方式,使知识的传达更加流畅、准确,不仅给读者带来了强烈的视觉冲击,还为读者营造了一个轻松的阅读氛围,将读者引入了一个新奇、神秘的世界。
  • 只因多看了你一眼(全本)

    只因多看了你一眼(全本)

    【锦书轩】让你爱上文字的香气【流光飞舞】编辑旗下出品兰苗苗:她失婚失爱失去一切,生命是否还有反转的机会?年轻痞气的职场学弟,阴魂不散的懦弱前夫,沉稳内敛的公司高层,无怨无悔的痴情警官,谁与谁才能生死与共?谁才是谁的一生至爱?谁会甘心为她毁容失性命?一朵花几枝叶,只有那一人才是深藏她内心深处的根!婚姻不是坟墓。如是坟墓那倒好了,便可长久相守。最怕的是相互支撑的另一人,突然撤手,只留另一个人掉入万劫不复的深渊。小米新浪微博地址:http://weibo.com/u/2530577364书友群:228733383敲门砖:书中任意人名**********************************************************************************
  • 风流云散

    风流云散

    小说以主人公王英俊六十寿庆个人演唱会为轴线,通过十八首歌曲,串联起他六十年的风雨人生和心路历程。特别是通过他与几个女人的爱情纠葛和恩怨情谊,表现出他在不同历史时期的情感经历和人生际遇。
  • 外道圣人

    外道圣人

    神是什么?来到这个破碎的世界就成了神的他才知道神远不像传说中那么强大!不得善终的倒是不少......在这个被玩坏的世界,活得艰难啊!还好自己还有个兼职的劳务外派身份,虽然得替人家打工......
  • BOSS凶猛:乖妻领证吧

    BOSS凶猛:乖妻领证吧

    少走上了一条宠妻如命的不归之路……豪。“我的妻子……只能是你,林星沫。”