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The Fat and the Thin (Le Ventre de Paris), a novel by Emile Zola

CHAPTER IV

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_ Marjolin had been found in a heap of cabbages at the Market of the
Innocents. He was sleeping under the shelter of a large white-hearted
one, a broad leaf of which concealed his rosy childish face It was
never known what poverty-stricken mother had laid him there. When he
was found he was already a fine little fellow of two or three years of
age, very plump and merry, but so backward and dense that he could
scarcely stammer a few words, and only seemed able to smile. When one
of the vegetable saleswomen found him lying under the big white
cabbage she raised such a loud cry of surprise that her neighbours
rushed up to see what was the matter, while the youngster, still in
petticoats, and wrapped in a scrap of old blanket, held out his arms
towards her. He could not tell who his mother was, but opened his eyes
in wide astonishment as he squeezed against the shoulder of a stout
tripe dealer who eventually took him up. The whole market busied
itself about him throughout the day. He soon recovered confidence, ate
slices of bread and butter, and smiled at all the women. The stout
tripe dealer kept him for a time, then a neighbour took him; and a
month later a third woman gave him shelter. When they asked him where
his mother was, he waved his little hand with a pretty gesture which
embraced all the women present. He became the adopted child of the
place, always clinging to the skirts of one or another of the women,
and always finding a corner of a bed and a share of a meal somewhere.
Somehow, too, he managed to find clothes, and he even had a copper or
two at the bottom of his ragged pockets. It was a buxom, ruddy girl
dealing in medicinal herbs who gave him the name of Marjolin,[*]
though no one knew why.

[*] Literally "Marjoram."

When Marjolin was nearly four years of age, old Mother Chantemesse
also happened to find a child, a little girl, lying on the footway of
the Rue Saint Denis, near the corner of the market. Judging by the
little one's size, she seemed to be a couple of years old, but she
could already chatter like a magpie, murdering her words in an
incessant childish babble. Old Mother Chantemesse after a time
gathered that her name was Cadine, and that on the previous evening
her mother had left her sitting on a doorstep, with instructions to
wait till she returned. The child had fallen asleep there, and did not
cry. She related that she was beaten at home; and she gladly followed
Mother Chantemesse, seemingly quite enchanted with that huge square,
where there were so many people and such piles of vegetables. Mother
Chantemesse, a retail dealer by trade, was a crusty but very worthy
woman, approaching her sixtieth year. She was extremely fond of
children, and had lost three boys of her own when they were mere
babies. She came to the opinion that the chit she had found "was far
too wide awake to kick the bucket," and so she adopted her.

One evening, however, as she was going off home with her right hand
clasping Cadine's, Marjolin came up and unceremoniously caught hold of
her left hand.

"Nay, my lad," said the old woman, stopping, "the place is filled.
Have you left your big Therese, then? What a fickle little gadabout
you are!"

The boy gazed at her with his smiling eyes, without letting go of her
hand. He looked so pretty with his curly hair that she could not
resist him. "Well, come along, then, you little scamp," said she;
"I'll put you to bed as well."

Thus she made her appearance in the Rue au Lard, where she lived, with
a child clinging to either hand. Marjolin made himself quite at home
there. When the two children proved too noisy the old woman cuffed
them, delighted to shout and worry herself, and wash the youngsters,
and pack them away beneath the blankets. She had fixed them up a
little bed in an old costermonger's barrow, the wheels and shafts of
which had disappeared. It was like a big cradle, a trifle hard, but
retaining a strong scent of the vegetables which it had long kept
fresh and cool beneath a covering of damp cloths. And there, when four
years old, Cadine and Marjolin slept locked in each other's arms.

They grew up together, and were always to be seen with their arms
about one another's waist. At night time old Mother Chantemesse heard
them prattling softly. Cadine's clear treble went chattering on for
hours together, while Marjolin listened with occasional expressions of
astonishment vented in a deeper tone. The girl was a mischievous young
creature, and concocted all sorts of stories to frighten her
companion; telling him, for instance, that she had one night seen a
man, dressed all in white, looking at them and putting out a great red
tongue, at the foot of the bed. Marjolin quite perspired with terror,
and anxiously asked for further particulars; but the girl would then
begin to jeer at him, and end by calling him a big donkey. At other
times they were not so peaceably disposed, but kicked each other
beneath the blankets. Cadine would pull up her legs, and try to
restrain her laughter as Marjolin missed his aim, and sent his feet
banging against the wall. When this happened, old Madame Chantemesse
was obliged to get up to put the bed-clothes straight again; and, by
way of sending the children to sleep, she would administer a box on
the ear to both of them. For a long time their bed was a sort of
playground. They carried their toys into it, and munched stolen
carrots and turnips as they lay side by side. Every morning their
adopted mother was amazed at the strange things she found in the bed--
pebbles, leaves, apple cores, and dolls made out of scraps of rags.
When the very cold weather came, she went off to her work, leaving
them sleeping there, Cadine's black mop mingling with Marjolin's sunny
curls, and their mouths so near together that they looked as though
they were keeping each other warm with their breath.

The room in the Rue au Lard was a big, dilapidated garret, with a
single window, the panes of which were dimmed by the rain. The
children would play at hide-and-seek in the tall walnut wardrobe and
underneath Mother Chantemesse's colossal bed. There were also two or
three tables in the room, and they crawled under these on all fours.
They found the place a very charming playground, on account of the dim
light and the vegetables scattered about in the dark corners. The
street itself, too, narrow and very quiet, with a broad arcade opening
into the Rue de la Lingerie, provided them with plenty of
entertainment. The door of the house was by the side of the arcade; it
was a low door and could only be opened half way owing to the near
proximity of the greasy corkscrew staircase. The house, which had a
projecting pent roof and a bulging front, dark with damp, and
displaying greenish drain-sinks near the windows of each floor, also
served as a big toy for the young couple. They spent their mornings
below in throwing stones up into the drain-sinks, and the stones
thereupon fell down the pipes with a very merry clatter. In thus
amusing themselves, however, they managed to break a couple of
windows, and filled the drains with stones, so that Mother
Chantemesse, who had lived in the house for three and forty years,
narrowly escaped being turned out of it.

Cadine and Marjolin then directed their attention to the vans and
drays and tumbrels which were drawn up in the quiet street. They
clambered on to the wheels, swung from the dangling chains, and larked
about amongst the piles of boxes and hampers. Here also were the back
premises of the commission agents of the Rue de la Poterie--huge,
gloomy warehouses, each day filled and emptied afresh, and affording a
constant succession of delightful hiding-places, where the youngsters
buried themselves amidst the scent of dried fruits, oranges, and fresh
apples. When they got tired of playing in his way, they went off to
join old Madame Chantemesse at the Market of the Innocents. They
arrived there arm-in-arm, laughing gaily as they crossed the streets
with never the slightest fear of being run over by the endless
vehicles. They knew the pavement well, and plunged their little legs
knee-deep in the vegetable refuse without ever slipping. They jeered
merrily at any porter in heavy boots who, in stepping over an
artichoke stem, fell sprawling full-length upon the ground. They were
the rosy-cheeked familiar spirits of those greasy streets. They were
to be seen everywhere.

On rainy days they walked gravely beneath the shelter of a ragged old
umbrella, with which Mother Chantemesse had protected her stock-in-
trade for twenty years, and sticking it up in a corner of the market
they called it their house. On sunny days they romped to such a degree
that when evening came they were almost too tired to move. They bathed
their feet in the fountains, dammed up the gutters, or hid themselves
beneath piles of vegetables, and remained there prattling to each
other just as they did in bed at night. People passing some huge
mountain of cos or cabbage lettuces often heard a muffled sound of
chatter coming from it. And when the green-stuff was removed, the two
children would be discovered lying side by side on their couch of
verdure, their eyes glistening uneasily like those of birds discovered
in the depth of a thicket. As time went on, Cadine could not get along
without Marjolin, and Marjolin began to cry when he lost sight of
Cadine. If they happened to get separated, they sought one another
behind the petticoats of every stallkeeper in the markets, amongst the
boxes and under the cabbages. If was, indeed, chiefly under the
cabbages that they grew up and learned to love each other.

Marjolin was nearly eight years old, and Cadine six, when old Madame
Chantemesse began to reproach them for their idleness. She told them
that she would interest them in her business, and pay them a sou a day
to assist her in paring her vegetables. During the first few days the
children displayed eager zeal; they squatted down on either side of
the big flat basket with little knives in their hands, and worked away
energetically. Mother Chantemesse made a specialty of pared
vegetables; on her stall, covered with a strip of damp black lining,
were little lots of potatoes, turnips, carrots, and white onions,
arranged in pyramids of four--three at the base and one at the apex,
all quite ready to be popped into the pans of dilatory housewives. She
also had bundles duly stringed in readiness for the soup-pot--four
leeks, three carrots, a parsnip, two turnips, and a couple of springs
of celery. Then there were finely cut vegetables for julienne soup
laid out on squares of paper, cabbages cut into quarters, and little
heaps of tomatoes and slices of pumpkin which gleamed like red stars
and golden crescents amidst the pale hues of the other vegetables.
Cadine evinced much more dexterity than Marjolin, although she was
younger. The peelings of the potatoes she pared were so thin that you
could see through them; she tied up the bundles for the soup-pot so
artistically that they looked like bouquets; and she had a way of
making the little heaps she set up, though they contained but three
carrots or turnips, look like very big ones. The passers-by would stop
and smile when she called out in her shrill childish voice: "Madame!
madame! come and try me! Each little pile for two sous."

She had her regular customers, and her little piles and bundles were
widely known. Old Mother Chantemesse, seated between the two children,
would indulge in a silent laugh which made her bosom rise almost to
her chin, at seeing them working away so seriously. She paid them
their daily sous most faithfully. But they soon began to weary of the
little heaps and bundles; they were growing up, and began to dream of
some more lucrative business. Marjolin remained very childish for his
years, and this irritated Cadine. He had no more brains than a
cabbage, she often said. And it was, indeed, quite useless for her to
devise any plan for him to make money; he never earned any. He could
not even do an errand satisfactorily. The girl, on the other hand, was
very shrewd. When but eight years old she obtained employment from one
of those women who sit on a bench in the neighbourhood of the markets
provided with a basket of lemons, and employ a troop of children to go
about selling them. Carrying the lemons in her hands and offering them
at two for three sous, Cadine thrust them under every woman's nose,
and ran after every passer-by. Her hands empty, she hastened back for
a fresh supply. She was paid two sous for every dozen lemons that she
sold, and on good days she could earn some five or six sous. During
the following year she hawked caps at nine sous apiece, which proved a
more profitable business; only she had to keep a sharp look-out, as
street trading of this kind is forbidden unless one be licensed.
However, she scented a policeman at a distance of a hundred yards; and
the caps forthwith disappeared under her skirts, whilst she began to
munch an apple with an air of guileless innocence. Then she took to
selling pastry, cakes, cherry-tarts, gingerbread, and thick yellow
maize biscuits on wicker trays. Marjolin, however, ate up nearly the
whole of her stock-in-trade. At last, when she was eleven years old,
she succeeded in realising a grand idea which had long been worrying
her. In a couple of months she put by four francs, bought a small
/hotte/,[*] and then set up as a dealer in birds' food.

[*] A basket carried on the back.--Translator.

It was a big affair. She got up early in the morning and purchased her
stock of groundsel, millet, and bird-cake from the wholesale dealers.
Then she set out on her day's work, crossing the river, and
perambulating the Latin Quarter from the Rue Saint Jacques to the Rue
Dauphine, and even to the Luxembourg. Marjolin used to accompany her,
but she would not let him carry the basket. He was only fit to call
out, she said; and so, in his thick, drawling voice, he would raise
the cry, "Chickweed for the little birds!"

Then Cadine herself, with her flute-like voice, would start on a
strange scale of notes ending in a clear, protracted alto, "Chickweed
for the little birds!"

They each took one side of the road, and looked up in the air as they
walked along. In those days Marjolin wore a big scarlet waistcoat
which hung down to his knees; it had belonged to the defunct Monsieur
Chantemesse, who had been a cab-driver. Cadine for her part wore a
white and blue check gown, made out of an old tartan of Madame
Chantemesse's. All the canaries in the garrets of the Latin Quarter
knew them; and, as they passed along, repeating their cry, each
echoing the other's voice, every cage poured out a song.

Cadine sold water-cress, too. "Two sous a bunch! Two sous a bunch!"
And Marjolin went into the shops to offer it for sale. "Fine water-
cress! Health for the body! Fine fresh water-cress!"

However, the new central markets had just been erected, and the girl
would stand gazing in ecstacy at the avenue of flower stalls which
runs through the fruit pavilion. Here on either hand, from end to end,
big clumps of flowers bloom as in the borders of a garden walk. It is
a perfect harvest, sweet with perfume, a double hedge of blossoms,
between which the girls of the neighbourhood love to walk, smiling the
while, though almost stifled by the heavy perfume. And on the top
tiers of the stalls are artificial flowers, with paper leaves, in
which dewdrops are simulated by drops of gum; and memorial wreaths of
black and white beads rippling with bluish reflections. Cadine's rosy
nostrils would dilate with feline sensuality; she would linger as long
as possible in that sweet freshness, and carry as much of the perfume
away with her as she could. When her hair bobbed under Marjolin's nose
he would remark that it smelt of pinks. She said that she had given
over using pomatum; that is was quite sufficient for her to stroll
through the flower walk in order to scent her hair. Next she began to
intrigue and scheme with such success that she was engaged by one of
the stallkeepers. And then Marjolin declared that she smelt sweet from
head to foot. She lived in the midst of roses, lilacs, wall-flowers,
and lilies of the valley; and Marjolin would playfully smell at her
skirts, feign a momentary hesitation, and then exclaim, "Ah, that's
lily of the valley!" Next he would sniff at her waist and bodice: "Ah,
that's wall-flowers!" And at her sleeves and wrists: "Ah, that's
lilac!" And at her neck, and her cheeks and lips: "Ah, but that's
roses!" he would cry. Cadine used to laugh at him, and call him a
"silly stupid," and tell him to get away, because he was tickling her
with the tip of his nose. As she spoke her breath smelt of jasmine.
She was verily a bouquet, full of warmth and life.

She now got up at four o'clock every morning to assist her mistress in
her purchases. Each day they bought armfuls of flowers from the
suburban florists, with bundles of moss, and bundles of fern fronds,
and periwinkle leaves to garnish the bouquets. Cadine would gaze with
amazement at the diamonds and Valenciennes worn by the daughters of
the great gardeners of Montreuil, who came to the markets amidst their
roses.

On the saints' days of popular observance, such as Saint Mary's, Saint
Peter's, and Saint Joseph's days, the sale of flowers began at two
o'clock. More than a hundred thousand francs' worth of cut flowers
would be sold on the footways, and some of the retail dealers would
make as much as two hundred francs in a few hours. On days like those
only Cadine's curly locks peered over the mounds of pansies,
mignonette, and marguerites. She was quite drowned and lost in the
flood of flowers. Then she would spend all her time in mounting
bouquets on bits of rush. In a few weeks she acquired considerable
skillfulness in her business, and manifested no little originality.
Her bouquets did not always please everybody, however. Sometimes they
made one smile, sometimes they alarmed the eyes. Red predominated in
them, mottled with violent tints of blue, yellow, and violet of a
barbaric charm. On the mornings when she pinched Marjolin, and teased
him till she made him cry, she made up fierce-looking bouquets,
suggestive of her own bad temper, bouquets with strong rough scents
and glaring irritating colours. On other days, however, when she was
softened by some thrill of joy or sorrow, her bouquets would assume a
tone of silvery grey, very soft and subdued, and delicately perfumed.

Then, too, she would set roses, as sanguineous as open hearts, in
lakes of snow-white pinks; arrange bunches of tawny iris that shot up
in tufts of flame from foliage that seemed scared by the brilliance of
the flowers; work elaborate designs, as complicated as those of Smyrna
rugs, adding flower to flower, as on a canvas; and prepare rippling
fanlike bouquets spreading out with all the delicacy of lace. Here was
a cluster of flowers of delicious purity, there a fat nosegay,
whatever one might dream of for the hand of a marchioness or a fish-
wife; all the charming quaint fancies, in short, which the brain of a
sharp-witted child of twelve, budding into womanhood, could devise.

There were only two flowers for which Cadine retained respect; white
lilac, which by the bundle of eight or ten sprays cost from fifteen to
twenty francs in the winter time; and camellias, which were still more
costly, and arrived in boxes of a dozen, lying on beds of moss, and
covered with cotton wool. She handled these as delicately as though
they were jewels, holding her breath for fear of dimming their lustre,
and fastening their short stems to springs of cane with the tenderest
care. She spoke of them with serious reverence. She told Marjolin one
day that a speckless white camellia was a very rare and exceptionally
lovely thing, and, as she was making him admire one, he exclaimed:
"Yes; it's pretty; but I prefer your neck, you know. It's much more
soft and transparent than the camellia, and there are some little blue
and pink veins just like the pencillings on a flower." Then, drawing
near and sniffing, he murmured: "Ah! you smell of orange blossom
to-day."

Cadine was self-willed, and did not get on well in the position of a
servant, so she ended by setting up in business on her own account. As
she was only thirteen at the time, and could not hope for a big trade
and a stall in the flower avenue, she took to selling one-sou bunches
of violets pricked into a bed of moss in an osier tray which she
carried hanging from her neck. All day long she wandered about the
markets and their precincts with her little bit of hanging garden. She
loved this continual stroll, which relieved the numbness of her limbs
after long hours spent, with bent knees, on a low chair, making
bouquets. She fastened her violets together with marvellous deftness
as she walked along. She counted out six or eight flowers, according
to the season, doubled a sprig of cane in half, added a leaf, twisted
some damp thread round the whole, and broke off the thread with her
strong young teeth. The little bunches seemed to spring spontaneously
from the layer of moss, so rapidly did she stick them into it.

Along the footways, amidst the jostling of the street traffic, her
nimble fingers were ever flowering though she gave them not a glance,
but boldly scanned the shops and passers-by. Sometimes she would rest
in a doorway for a moment; and alongside the gutters, greasy with
kitchen slops, she sat, as it were a patch of springtime, a
suggestion of green woods, and purple blossoms. Her flowers still
betokened her frame of mind, her fits of bad temper and her thrills of
tenderness. Sometimes they bristled and glowered with anger amidst
their crumpled leaves; at other times they spoke only of love and
peacefulness as they smiled in their prim collars. As Cadine passed
along, she left a sweet perfume behind her; Marjolin followed her
devoutly. From head to foot she now exhaled but one scent, and the lad
repeated that she was herself a violet, a great big violet.

"Do you remember the day when we went to Romainville together?" he
would say; "Romainville, where there are so many violets. The scent
was just the same. Oh! don't change again--you smell too sweetly."

And she did not change again. This was her last trade. Still, she
often neglected her osier tray to go rambling about the neighbourhood.
The building of the central markets--as yet incomplete--provided both
children with endless opportunities for amusement. They made their way
into the midst of the work-yards through some gap or other between the
planks; they descended into the foundations, and climbed up to the
cast-iron pillars. Every nook, every piece of the framework witnessed
their games and quarrels; the pavilions grew up under the touch of
their little hands. From all this arose the affection which they felt
for the great markets, and which the latter seemed to return. They
were on familiar terms with that gigantic pile, old friends as they
were, who had seen each pin and bolt put into place. They felt no fear
of the huge monster; but slapped it with their childish hands, treated
it like a good friend, a chum whose presence brought no constraint.
And the markets seemed to smile at these two light-hearted children,
whose love was the song, the idyll of their immensity.

Cadine alone now slept at Mother Chantemesse's. The old woman had
packed Marjolin off to a neighbour's. This made the two children very
unhappy. Still, they contrived to spend much of their time together.
In the daytime they would hide themselves away in the warehouses of
the Rue au Lard, behind piles of apples and cases of oranges; and in
the evening they would dive into the cellars beneath the poultry
market, and secret themselves among the huge hampers of feathers which
stood near the blocks where the poultry was killed. They were quite
alone there, amidst the strong smell of the poultry, and with never a
sound but the sudden crowing of some rooster to break upon their
babble and their laughter. The feathers amidst which they found
themselves were of all sorts--turkey's feathers, long and black; goose
quills, white and flexible; the downy plumage of ducks, soft like
cotton wool; and the ruddy and mottled feathers of fowls, which at the
faintest breath flew up in a cloud like a swarm of flies buzzing in
the sun. And then in wintertime there was the purple plumage of the
pheasants, the ashen grey of the larks, the splotched silk of the
partridges, quails, and thrushes. And all these feathers freshly
plucked were still warm and odoriferous, seemingly endowed with life.
The spot was as cosy as a nest; at times a quiver as of flapping wings
sped by, and Marjolin and Cadine, nestling amidst all the plumage,
often imagined that they were being carried aloft by one of those huge
birds with outspread pinions that one hears of in the fairy tales.

As time went on their childish affection took the inevitable turn.
Veritable offsprings of Nature, knowing naught of social conventions
and restraints, they loved one another in all innocence and
guilelessness. They mated even as the birds of the air mate, even as
youth and maid mated in primeval times, because such is Nature's law.
At sixteen Cadine was a dusky town gipsy, greedy and sensual, whilst
Marjolin, now eighteen, was a tall, strapping fellow, as handsome a
youth as could be met, but still with his mental faculties quite
undeveloped. He had lived, indeed, a mere animal life, which had
strengthened his frame, but left his intellect in a rudimentary state.

When old Madame Chantemesse realised the turn that things were taking
she wrathfully upbraided Cadine and struck out vigorously at her with
her broom. But the hussy only laughed and dodged the blows, and then
hied off to her lover. And gradually the markets became their home,
their manger, their aviary, where they lived and loved amidst the
meat, the butter, the vegetables, and the feathers.

They discovered another little paradise in the pavilion where butter,
eggs, and cheese were sold wholesale. Enormous walls of empty baskets
were here piled up every morning, and amidst these Cadine and Marjolin
burrowed and hollowed out a dark lair for themselves. A mere partition
of osier-work separated them from the market crowd, whose loud voices
rang out all around them. They often shook with laughter when people,
without the least suspicion of their presence, stopped to talk
together a few yards away from them. On these occasions they would
contrive peepholes, and spy through them, and when cherries were in
season Cadine tossed the stones in the faces of all the old women who
passed along--a pastime which amused them the more as the startled old
crones could never make out whence the hail of cherry-stones had come.
They also prowled about the depths of the cellars, knowing every
gloomy corner of them, and contriving to get through the most
carefully locked gates. One of their favourite amusements was to visit
the track of the subterranean railway, which had been laid under the
markets, and which those who planned the latter had intended to
connect with the different goods' stations of Paris. Sections of this
railway were laid beneath each of the covered ways, between the
cellars of each pavilion; the work, indeed, was in such an advanced
state that turn-tables had been put into position at all the points of
intersection, and were in readiness for use. After much examination,
Cadine and Marjolin had at last succeeded in discovering a loose plank
in the hoarding which enclosed the track, and they had managed to
convert it into a door, by which they could easily gain access to the
line. There they were quite shut off from the world, though they could
hear the continuous rumbling of the street traffic over their heads.

The line stretched through deserted vaults, here and there illumined
by a glimmer of light filtering through iron gratings, while in
certain dark corners gas jets were burning. And Cadine and Marjolin
rambled about as in the secret recesses of some castle of their own,
secure from all interruption, and rejoicing in the buzzy silence, the
murky glimmer, and subterranean secrecy, which imparted a touch of
melodrama to their experiences. All sorts of smells were wafted
through the hoarding from the neighbouring cellars; the musty smell of
vegetables, the pungency of fish, the overpowering stench of cheese,
and the warm reek of poultry.

At other times, on clear nights and fine dawns, they would climb on to
the roofs, ascending thither by the steep staircases of the turrets at
the angles of the pavilions. Up above they found fields of leads,
endless promenades and squares, a stretch of undulating country which
belonged to them. They rambled round the square roofs of the
pavilions, followed the course of the long roofs of the covered ways,
climbed and descended the slopes, and lost themselves in endless
perambulations of discovery. And when they grew tired of the lower
levels they ascended still higher, venturing up the iron ladders, on
which Cadine's skirts flapped like flags. Then they ran along the
second tier of roofs beneath the open heavens. There was nothing save
the stars above them. All sorts of sounds rose up from the echoing
markets, a clattering and rumbling, a vague roar as of a distant
tempest heard at nighttime. At that height the morning breeze swept
away the evil smells, the foul breath of the awaking markets. They
would kiss one another on the edge of the gutterings like sparrows
frisking on the house-tops. The rising fires of the sun illumined
their faces with a ruddy glow. Cadine laughed with pleasure at being
so high up in the air, and her neck shone with iridescent tints like a
dove's; while Marjolin bent down to look at the street still wrapped
in gloom, with his hands clutching hold of the leads like the feet of
a wood-pigeon. When they descended to earth again, joyful from their
excursion in the fresh air, they would remark to one another that they
were coming back from the country.

It was in the tripe market that they had made the acquaintance of
Claude Lantier. They went there every day, impelled thereto by an
animal taste for blood, the cruel instinct of urchins who find
amusement in the sight of severed heads. A ruddy stream flowed along
the gutters round the pavilion; they dipped the tips of their shoes in
it, and dammed it up with leaves, so as to form large pools of blood.
They took a strong interest in the arrival of the loads of offal in
carts which always smelt offensively, despite all the drenchings of
water they got; they watched the unloading of the bundles of sheep's
trotters, which were piled up on the ground like filthy paving-stones,
of the huge stiffened tongues, bleeding at their torn roots, and of
the massive bell-shaped bullocks' hearts. But the spectacle which,
above all others, made them quiver with delight was that of the big
dripping hampers, full of sheep's heads, with greasy horns and black
muzzles, and strips of woolly skin dangling from bleeding flesh. The
sight of these conjured up in their minds the idea of some guillotine
casting into the baskets the heads of countless victims.

They followed the baskets into the depths of the cellar, watching them
glide down the rails laid over the steps, and listening to the rasping
noise which the casters of these osier waggons made in their descent.
Down below there was a scene of exquisite horror. They entered into a
charnel-house atmosphere, and walked along through murky puddles,
amidst which every now and then purple eyes seem to be glistening. At
times the soles of their boots stuck to the ground, at others they
splashed through the horrible mire, anxious and yet delighted. The
gas jets burned low, like blinking, bloodshot eyes. Near the water-
taps, in the pale light falling through the gratings, they came upon
the blocks; and there they remained in rapture watching the tripe men,
who, in aprons stiffened by gory splashings, broke the sheep's heads
one after another with a blow of their mallets. They lingered there
for hours, waiting till all the baskets were empty, fascinated by the
crackling of the bones, unable to tear themselves away till all was
over. Sometimes an attendant passed behind them, cleansing the cellar
with a hose; floods of water rushed out with a sluice-like roar, but
although the violence of the discharge actually ate away the surface
of the flagstones, it was powerless to remove the ruddy stains and
stench of blood.

Cadine and Marjolin were sure of meeting Claude between four and five
in the afternoon at the wholesale auction of the bullocks' lights. He
was always there amidst the tripe dealers' carts backed up against the
kerb-stones and the blue-bloused, white-aproned men who jostled him
and deafened his ears by their loud bids. But he never felt their
elbows; he stood in a sort of ecstatic trance before the huge hanging
lights, and often told Cadine and Marjolin that there was no finer
sight to be seen. The lights were of a soft rosy hue, gradually
deepening and turning at the lower edges to a rich carmine; and Claude
compared them to watered satin, finding no other term to describe the
soft silkiness of those flowing lengths of flesh which drooped in
broad folds like ballet dancers' skirts. He thought, too, of gauze and
lace allowing a glimpse of pinky skin; and when a ray of sunshine fell
upon the lights and girdled them with gold an expression of languorous
rapture came into his eyes, and he felt happier than if he had been
privileged to contemplate the Greek goddesses in their sovereign
nudity, or the chatelaines of romance in their brocaded robes.

The artist became a great friend of the two young scapegraces. He
loved beautiful animals, and such undoubtedly they were. For a long
time he dreamt of a colossal picture which should represent the loves
of Cadine and Marjolin in the central markets, amidst the vegetables,
the fish, and the meat. He would have depicted them seated on some
couch of food, their arms circling each other's waists, and their lips
exchanging an idyllic kiss. In this conception he saw a manifesto
proclaiming the positivism of art--modern art, experimental and
materialistic. And it seemed to him also that it would be a smart
satire on the school which wishes every painting to embody an "idea,"
a slap for the old traditions and all they represented. But during a
couple of years he began study after study without succeeding in
giving the particular "note" he desired. In this way he spoilt fifteen
canvases. His failure filled him with rancour; however, he continued
to associate with his two models from a sort of hopeless love for his
abortive picture. When he met them prowling about in the afternoon, he
often scoured the neighbourhood with them, strolling around with his
hands in his pockets, and deeply interested in the life of the
streets.

They all three trudged along together, dragging their heels over the
footways and monopolising their whole breadth so as to force others to
step down into the road. With their noses in the air they sniffed in
the odours of Paris, and could have recognised every corner blindfold
by the spirituous emanations of the wine shops, the hot puffs that
came from the bakehouses and confectioners', and the musty odours
wafted from the fruiterers'. They would make the circuit of the whole
district. They delighted in passing through the rotunda of the corn
market, that huge massive stone cage where sacks of flour were piled
up on every side, and where their footsteps echoed in the silence of
the resonant roof. They were fond, too, of the little narrow streets
in the neighbourhood, which had become as deserted, as black, and as
mournful as though they formed part of an abandoned city. These were
the Rue Babille, the Rue Sauval, the Rue des Deux Ecus, and the Rue de
Viarmes, this last pallid from its proximity to the millers' stores,
and at four o'clock lively by reason of the corn exchange held there.
It was generally at this point that they started on their round. They
made their way slowly along the Rue Vauvilliers, glancing as they went
at the windows of the low eating-houses, and thus reaching the
miserably narrow Rue des Prouvaires, where Claude blinked his eyes as
he saw one of the covered ways of the market, at the far end of which,
framed round by this huge iron nave, appeared a side entrance of St.
Eustache with its rose and its tiers of arched windows. And then, with
an air of defiance, he would remark that all the middle ages and the
Renaissance put together were less mighty than the central markets.
Afterwards, as they paced the broad new streets, the Rue du Pont Neuf
and the Rue des Halles, he explained modern life with its wide
footways, its lofty houses, and its luxurious shops, to the two
urchins. He predicted, too, the advent of new and truly original art,
whose approach he could divine, and despair filled him that its
revelation should seemingly be beyond his own powers.

Cadine and Marjolin, however, preferred the provincial quietness of
the Rue des Bourdonnais, where one can play at marbles without fear of
being run over. The girl perked her head affectedly as she passed the
wholesale glove and hosiery stores, at each door of which bareheaded
assistants, with their pens stuck in their ears, stood watching her
with a weary gaze. And she and her lover had yet a stronger preference
for such bits of olden Paris as still existed: the Rue de la Poterie
and the Rue de la Lingerie, with their butter and egg and cheese
dealers; the Rue de la Ferronerie and the Rue de l'Aiguillerie (the
beautiful streets of far-away times), with their dark narrow shops;
and especially the Rue Courtalon, a dank, dirty by-way running from
the Place Sainte Opportune to the Rue Saint Denis, and intersected by
foul-smelling alleys where they had romped in their younger days. In
the Rue Saint Denis they entered into the land of dainties; and they
smiled upon the dried apples, the "Spanishwood," the prunes, and the
sugar-candy in the windows of the grocers and druggists. Their
ramblings always set them dreaming of a feast of good things, and
inspired them with a desire to glut themselves on the contents of the
windows. To them the district seemed like some huge table, always laid
with an everlasting dessert into which they longed to plunge their
fingers.

They devoted but a moment to visiting the other blocks of tumble-down
old houses, the Rue Pirouette, the Rue de Mondetour, the Rue de la
Petite Truanderie, and the Rue de la Grande Truanderie, for they took
little interest in the shops of the dealers in edible snails, cooked
vegetables, tripe, and drink. In the Rue de la Grand Truanderie,
however, there was a soap factory, an oasis of sweetness in the midst
of all the foul odours, and Marjolin was fond of standing outside it
till some one happened to enter or come out, so that the perfume which
swept through the doorway might blow full in his face. Then with all
speed they returned to the Rue Pierre Lescot and the Rue Rambuteau.
Cadine was extremely fond of salted provisions; she stood in
admiration before the bundles of red-herrings, the barrels of
anchovies and capers, and the little casks of gherkins and olives,
standing on end with wooden spoons inside them. The smell of the
vinegar titillated her throat; the pungent odour of the rolled cod,
smoked salmon, bacon and ham, and the sharp acidity of the baskets of
lemons, made her mouth water longingly. She was also fond of feasting
her eyes on the boxes of sardines piled up in metallic columns amidst
the cases and sacks. In the Rue Montorgueil and the Rue Montmartre
were other tempting-looking groceries and restaurants, from whose
basements appetising odours were wafted, with glorious shows of game
and poultry, and preserved-provision shops, which last displayed
beside their doors open kegs overflowing with yellow sour-krout
suggestive of old lacework. Then they lingered in the Rue Coquilliere,
inhaling the odour of truffles from the premises of a notable dealer
in comestibles, which threw so strong a perfume into the street that
Cadine and Marjolin closed their eyes and imagined they were
swallowing all kinds of delicious things. These perfumes, however,
distressed Claude. They made him realise the emptiness of his stomach,
he said; and, leaving the "two animals" to feast on the odour of the
truffles--the most penetrating odour to be found in all the
neighbourhood--he went off again to the corn market by way of the Rue
Oblin, studying on his road the old women who sold green-stuff in the
doorways and the displays of cheap pottery spread out on the foot-
pavements.

Such were their rambles in common; but when Cadine set out alone with
her bunches of violets she often went farther afield, making it a
point to visit certain shops for which she had a particular
partiality. She had an especial weakness for the Taboureau bakery
establishment, one of the windows of which was exclusively devoted to
pastry. She would follow the Rue Turbigo and retrace her steps a dozen
times in order to pass again and again before the almond cakes, the
/savarins/, the St. Honore tarts, the fruit tarts, and the various
dishes containing bunlike /babas/ redolent of rum, eclairs combining
the finger biscuit with chocolate, and /choux a la crème/, little
rounds of pastry overflowing with whipped white of egg. The glass jars
full of dry biscuits, macaroons, and /madeleines/ also made her mouth
water; and the bright shop with its big mirrors, its marble slabs, its
gilding, its bread-bins of ornamental ironwork, and its second window
in which long glistening loaves were displayed slantwise, with one end
resting on a crystal shelf whilst above they were upheld by a brass
rod, was so warm and odoriferous of baked dough that her features
expanded with pleasure when, yielding to temptation, she went in to
buy a /brioche/ for two sous.

Another shop, one in front of the Square des Innocents, also filled
her with gluttonous inquisitiveness, a fever of longing desire. This
shop made a specialty of forcemeat pasties. In addition to the
ordinary ones there were pasties of pike and pasties of truffled /foie
gras/; and the girl would gaze yearningly at them, saying to herself
that she would really have to eat one some day.

Cadine also had her moments of vanity and coquetry. When these fits
were on her, she bought herself in imagination some of the magnificent
dresses displayed in the windows of the "Fabriques de France" which
made the Pointe Saint Eustache gaudy with their pieces of bright stuff
hanging from the first floor to the footway and flapping in the
breeze. Somewhat incommoded by the flat basket hanging before her,
amidst the crowd of market women in dirty aprons gazing at future
Sunday dresses, the girl would feel the woollens, flannels, and
cottons to test the texture and suppleness of the material; and she
would promise herself a gown of bright-coloured flannelling, flowered
print, or scarlet poplin. Sometimes even from amongst the pieces
draped and set off to advantage by the window-dressers she would
choose some soft sky-blue or apple-green silk, and dream of wearing it
with pink ribbons. In the evenings she would dazzle herself with the
displays in the windows of the big jewellers in the Rue Montmartre.
That terrible street deafened her with its ceaseless flow of vehicles,
and the streaming crowd never ceased to jostle her; still she did not
stir, but remained feasting her eyes on the blazing splendour set out
in the light of the reflecting lamps which hung outside the windows.
On one side all was white with the bright glitter of silver: watches
in rows, chains hanging, spoons and forks laid crossways, cups, snuff-
boxes, napkin-rings, and combs arranged on shelves. The silver
thimbles, dotting a porcelain stand covered with a glass shade, had an
especial attraction for her. Then on the other side the windows
glistened with the tawny glow of gold. A cascade of long pendant
chains descended from above, rippling with ruddy gleams; small ladies'
watches, with the backs of their cases displayed, sparkled like fallen
stars; wedding rings clustered round slender rods; bracelets,
broaches, and other costly ornaments glittered on the black velvet
linings of their cases; jewelled rings set their stands aglow with
blue, green, yellow, and violet flamelets; while on every tier of the
shelves superposed rows of earrings and crosses and lockets hung
against the crystal like the rich fringes of altar-cloths. The glow of
this gold illumined the street half way across with a sun-like
radiance. And Cadine, as she gazed at it, almost fancied that she was
in presence of something holy, or on the threshold of the Emperor's
treasure chamber. She would for a long time scrutinise all this show
of gaudy jewellery, adapted to the taste of the fish-wives, and
carefully read the large figures on the tickets affixed to each
article; and eventually she would select for herself a pair of earrings
--pear-shaped drops of imitation coral hanging from golden roses.

One morning Claude caught her standing in ecstasy before a hair-
dresser's window in the Rue Saint Honore. She was gazing at the
display of hair with an expression of intense envy. High up in the
window was a streaming cascade of long manes, soft wisps, loose
tresses, frizzy falls, undulating comb-curls, a perfect cataract of
silky and bristling hair, real and artificial, now in coils of a
flaming red, now in thick black crops, now in pale golden locks, and
even in snowy white ones for the coquette of sixty. In cardboard boxes
down below were cleverly arranged fringes, curling side-ringlets, and
carefully combed chignons glossy with pomade. And amidst this
framework, in a sort of shrine beneath the ravelled ends of the
hanging locks, there revolved the bust of a woman, arrayed in a
wrapper of cherry-coloured satin fastened between the breasts with a
brass brooch. The figure wore a lofty bridal coiffure picked out with
sprigs of orange blossom, and smiled with a dollish smile. Its eyes
were pale blue; its eyebrows were very stiff and of exaggerated
length; and its waxen cheeks and shoulders bore evident traces of the
heat and smoke of the gas. Cadine waited till the revolving figure
again displayed its smiling face, and as its profile showed more
distinctly and it slowly went round from left to right she felt
perfectly happy. Claude, however, was indignant, and, shaking Cadine,
he asked her what she was doing in front of "that abomination, that
corpse-like hussy picked up at the Morgue!" He flew into a temper with
the "dummy's" cadaverous face and shoulders, that disfigurement of the
beautiful, and remarked that artists painted nothing but that unreal
type of woman nowadays. Cadine, however, remained unconvinced by his
oratory, and considered the lady extremely beautiful. Then, resisting
the attempts of the artist to drag her away by the arm, and scratching
her black mop in vexation, she pointed to an enormous ruddy tail,
severed from the quarters of some vigorous mare, and told him she
would have liked to have a crop of hair like that.

During the long rambles when Claude, Cadine, and Marjolin prowled
about the neighbourhood of the markets, they saw the iron ribs of the
giant building at the end of every street. Wherever they turned they
caught sudden glimpses of it; the horizon was always bounded by it;
merely the aspect under which it was seen varied. Claude was
perpetually turning round, and particularly in the Rue Montmartre,
after passing the church. From that point the markets, seen obliquely
in the distance, filled him with enthusiasm. A huge arcade, a giant,
gaping gateway, was open before him; then came the crowding pavilions
with their lower and upper roofs, their countless Venetian shutters
and endless blinds, a vision, as it were, of superposed houses and
palaces; a Babylon of metal of Hindoo delicacy of workmanship,
intersected by hanging terraces, aerial galleries, and flying bridges
poised over space. The trio always returned to this city round which
they strolled, unable to stray more than a hundred yards away. They
came back to it during the hot afternoons when the Venetian shutters
were closed and the blinds lowered. In the covered ways all seemed to
be asleep, the ashy greyness was streaked by yellow bars of sunlight
falling through the high windows. Only a subdued murmur broke the
silence; the steps of a few hurrying passers-by resounded on the
footways; whilst the badge-wearing porters sat in rows on the stone
ledges at the corners of the pavilions, taking off their boots and
nursing their aching feet. The quietude was that of a colossus at
rest, interrupted at times by some cock-crow rising from the cellars
below.

Claude, Cadine, and Marjolin then often went to see the empty hampers
piled upon the drays, which came to fetch them every afternoon so that
they might be sent back to the consignors. There were mountains of
them, labelled with black letters and figures, in front of the
salesmen's warehouses in the Rue Berger. The porters arranged them
symmetrically, tier by tier, on the vehicles. When the pile rose,
however, to the height of a first floor, the porter who stood below
balancing the next batch of hampers had to make a spring in order to
toss them up to his mate, who was perched aloft with arms extended.
Claude, who delighted in feats of strength and dexterity, would stand
for hours watching the flight of these masses of osier, and would
burst into a hearty laugh whenever too vigorous a toss sent them
flying over the pile into the roadway beyond. He was fond, too, of the
footways of the Rue Rambuteau and the Rue du Pont Neuf, near the fruit
market, where the retail dealers congregated. The sight of the
vegetables displayed in the open air, on trestle-tables covered with
damp black rags, was full of charm for him. At four in the afternoon
the whole of this nook of greenery was aglow with sunshine; and Claude
wandered between the stalls, inspecting the bright-coloured heads of
the saleswomen with keen artistic relish. The younger ones, with their
hair in nets, had already lost all freshness of complexion through the
rough life they led; while the older ones were bent and shrivelled,
with wrinkled, flaring faces showing under the yellow kerchiefs bound
round their heads. Cadine and Marjolin refused to accompany him
hither, as they could perceive old Mother Chantemesse shaking her fist
at them, in her anger at seeing them prowling about together. He
joined them again, however, on the opposite footway, where he found a
splendid subject for a picture in the stallkeepers squatting under
their huge umbrellas of faded red, blue, and violet, which, mounted
upon poles, filled the whole market-side with bumps, and showed
conspicuously against the fiery glow of the sinking sun, whose rays
faded amidst the carrots and the turnips. One tattered harridan, a
century old, was sheltering three spare-looking lettuces beneath an
umbrella of pink silk, shockingly split and stained.

Cadine and Marjolin had struck up an acquaintance with Leon, Quenu's
apprentice, one day when he was taking a pie to a house in the
neighbourhood. They saw him cautiously raise the lid of his pan in a
secluded corner of the Rue de Mondetour, and delicately take out a
ball of forcemeat. They smiled at the sight, which gave them a very
high opinion of Leon. And the idea came to Cadine that she might at
last satisfy one of her most ardent longings. Indeed, the very next
time that she met the lad with his basket she made herself very
agreeable, and induced him to offer her a forcemeat ball. But,
although she laughed and licked her fingers, she experienced some
disappointment. The forcemeat did not prove nearly so nice as she had
anticipated. On the other hand, the lad, with his sly, greedy phiz and
his white garments, which made him look like a girl going to her first
communion, somewhat took her fancy.

She invited him to a monster lunch which she gave amongst the hampers
in the auction room at the butter market. The three of them--herself,
Marjolin, and Leon--completely secluded themselves from the world
within four walls of osier. The feast was laid out on a large flat
basket. There were pears, nuts, cream-cheese, shrimps, fried potatoes,
and radishes. The cheese came from a fruiterer's in the Rue de la
Cossonnerie, and was a present; and a "frier" of the Rue de la Grande
Truanderie had given Cadine credit for two sous' worth of potatoes.
The rest of the feast, the pears, the nuts, the shrimps, and the
radishes, had been pilfered from different parts of the market. It was
a delicious treat; and Leon, desirous of returning the hospitality,
gave a supper in his bedroom at one o'clock in the morning. The bill
of fare included cold black-pudding, slices of polony, a piece of salt
pork, some gherkins, and some goose-fat. The Quenu-Gradelles' shop had
provided everything. And matters did not stop there. Dainty suppers
alternated with delicate luncheons, and invitation upon invitation.
Three times a week there were banquets, either amidst the hampers or
in Leon's garret, where Florent, on the nights when he lay awake,
could hear a stifled sound of munching and rippling laughter until day
began to break.

The loves of Cadine and Marjolin now took another turn. The youth
played the gallant, and just as another might entertain his
/innamorata/ at a champagne supper /en tete a tete/ in a private room,
he led Cadine into some quiet corner of the market cellars to munch
apples or sprigs of celery. One day he stole a red-herring, which they
devoured with immense enjoyment on the roof of the fish market beside
the guttering. There was not a single shady nook in the whole place
where they did not indulge in secret feasts. The district, with its
rows of open shops full of fruit and cakes and preserves, was no
longer a closed paradise, in front of which they prowled with greedy,
covetous appetites. As they passed the shops they now extended their
hands and pilfered a prune, a few cherries, or a bit of cod. They also
provisioned themselves at the markets, keeping a sharp look-out as
they made their way between the stalls, picking up everything that
fell, and often assisting the fall by a push of their shoulders.

In spite, however, of all the marauding, some terrible scores had to
be run up with the "frier" of the Rue de la Grand Truanderie. This
"frier," whose shanty leaned against a tumble-down house, and was
propped up by heavy joists, green with moss, made a display of boiled
mussels lying in large earthenware bowls filled to the brim with clear
water; of dishes of little yellow dabs stiffened by too thick a
coating of paste; of squares of tripe simmering in a pan; and of
grilled herrings, black and charred, and so hard that if you tapped
them they sounded like wood. On certain weeks Cadine owed the frier as
much as twenty sous, a crushing debt, which required the sale of an
incalculable number of bunches of violets, for she could count upon no
assistance from Marjolin. Moreover, she was bound to return Leon's
hospitalities; and she even felt some little shame at never being able
to offer him a scrap of meat. He himself had now taken to purloining
entire hams. As a rule, he stowed everything away under his shirt; and
at night when he reached his bedroom he drew from his bosom hunks of
polony, slices of /pate de foie gras/, and bundles of pork rind. They
had to do without bread, and there was nothing to drink; but no
matter. One night Marjolin saw Leon kiss Cadine between two mouthfuls;
however, he only laughed. He could have smashed the little fellow with
a blow from his fist, but he felt no jealousy in respect of Cadine. He
treated her simply as a comrade with whom he had chummed for years.

Claude never participated in these feasts. Having caught Cadine one
day stealing a beet-root from a little hamper lined with hay, he had
pulled her ears and given her a sound rating. These thieving
propensities made her perfect as a ne'er-do-well. However, in spite of
himself, he could not help feeling a sort of admiration for these
sensual, pilfering, greedy creatures, who preyed upon everything that
lay about, feasting off the crumbs that fell from the giant's table.

At last Marjolin nominally took service under Gavard, happy in having
nothing to do except to listen to his master's flow of talk, while
Cadine still continued to sell violets, quite accustomed by this time
to old Mother Chantemesse's scoldings. They were still the same
children as ever, giving way to their instincts and appetites without
the slightest shame--they were the growth of the slimy pavements of
the market district, where, even in fine weather, the mud remains
black and sticky. However, as Cadine walked along the footways,
mechanically twisting her bunches of violets, she was sometimes
disturbed by disquieting reveries; and Marjolin, too, suffered from an
uneasiness which he could not explain. He would occasionally leave the
girl and miss some ramble or feast in order to go and gaze at Madame
Quenu through the windows of her pork shop. She was so handsome and
plump and round that it did him good to look at her. As he stood
gazing at her, he felt full and satisfied, as though he had just eaten
or drunk something extremely nice. And when he went off, a sort of
hunger and thirst to see her again suddenly came upon him. This had
been going on for a couple of months. At first he had looked at her
with the respectful glance which he bestowed upon the shop-fronts of
the grocers and provision dealers; but subsequently, when he and
Cadine had taken to general pilfering, he began to regard her smooth
cheeks much as he regarded the barrels of olives and boxes of dried
apples.

For some time past Marjolin had seen handsome Lisa every day, in the
morning. She would pass Gavard's stall, and stop for a moment or two
to chat with the poultry dealer. She now did her marketing herself, so
that she might be cheated as little as possible, she said. The truth,
however, was that she wished to make Gavard speak out. In the pork
shop he was always distrustful, but at his stall he chatted and talked
with the utmost freedom. Now, Lisa had made up her mind to ascertain
from him exactly what took place in the little room at Monsieur
Lebigre's; for she had no great confidence in her secret police
office, Mademoiselle Saget. In a short time she learnt from the
incorrigible chatterbox a lot of vague details which very much alarmed
her. Two days after her explanation with Quenu she returned home from
the market looking very pale. She beckoned to her husband to follow
her into the dining-room, and having carefully closed the door she
said to him: "Is your brother determined to send us to the scaffold,
then? Why did you conceal from me what you knew?"

Quenu declared that he knew nothing. He even swore a great oath that
he had not returned to Monsieur Lebigre's, and would never go there
again.

"You will do well not to do so," replied Lisa, shrugging her
shoulders, "unless you want to get yourself into a serious scrape.
Florent is up to some evil trick, I'm certain of it! I have just
learned quite sufficient to show me where he is going. He's going back
to Cayenne, do you hear?"

Then, after a pause, she continued in calmer ones: "Oh, the unhappy
man! He had everything here that he could wish for. He might have
redeemed his character; he had nothing but good examples before him.
But no, it is in his blood! He will come to a violent end with his
politics! I insist upon there being an end to all this! You hear me,
Quenu? I gave you due warning long ago!"

She spoke the last words very incisively. Quenu bent his head, as if
awaiting sentence.

"To begin with," continued Lisa, "he shall cease to take his meals
here. It will be quite sufficient if we give him a bed. He is earning
money; let him feed himself."

Quenu seemed on the point of protesting, but his wife silenced him by
adding energetically:

"Make your choice between him and me. If he remains here, I swear to
you that I will go away, and take my daughter with me. Do you want me
to tell you the whole truth about him? He is a man capable of
anything; he has come here to bring discord into our household. But I
will set things right, you may depend on it. You have your choice
between him and me; you hear me?"

Then, leaving her husband in silent consternation, she returned to the
shop, where she served a customer with her usual affable smile. The
fact was that, having artfully inveigled Gavard into a political
discussion, the poultry dealer had told her that she would soon see
how the land lay, that they were going to make a clean sweep of
everything, and that two determined men like her brother-in-law and
himself would suffice to set the fire blazing. This was the evil trick
of which she had spoken to Quenu, some conspiracy to which Gavard was
always making mysterious allusions with a sniggering grin from which
he seemingly desired a great deal to be inferred. And in imagination
Lisa already saw the gendarmes invading the pork shop, gagging
herself, her husband, and Pauline, and casting them into some
underground dungeon.

In the evening, at dinner, she evinced an icy frigidity. She made no
offers to serve Florent, but several times remarked: "It's very
strange what an amount of bread we've got through lately."

Florent at last understood. He felt that he was being treated like a
poor relation who is gradually turned out of doors. For the last two
months Lisa had dressed him in Quenu's old trousers and coats; and, as
he was as thin as his brother was fat, these ragged garments had a
most extraordinary appearance upon him. She also turned her oldest
linen over to him: pocket-handkerchiefs which had been darned a score
of times, ragged towels, sheets which were only fit to be cut up into
dusters and dish-cloths, and worn-out shirts, distended by Quenu's
corpulent figure, and so short that they would have served Florent as
under-vests. Moreover, he no longer found around him the same good-
natured kindliness as in the earlier days. The whole household seemed
to shrug its shoulders after the example set by handsome Lisa. Auguste
and Augustine turned their backs upon him, and little Pauline, with
the cruel frankness of childhood, let fall some bitter remarks about
the stains on his coat and the holes in his shirt. However, during the
last days he suffered most at table. He scarcely dared to eat, as he
saw the mother and daughter fix their gaze upon him whenever he cut
himself a piece of bread. Quenu meantime peered into his plate, to
avoid having to take any part in what went on.

That which most tortured Florent was his inability to invent a reason
for leaving the house. During a week he kept on revolving in his mind
a sentence expressing his resolve to take his meals elsewhere, but
could not bring himself to utter it. Indeed, this man of tender nature
lived in such a world of illusions that he feared he might hurt his
brother and sister-in-law by ceasing to lunch and dine with them. It
had taken him over two months to detect Lisa's latent hostility; and
even now he was sometimes inclined to think that he must be mistaken,
and that she was in reality kindly disposed towards him. Unselfishness
with him extended to forgetfulness of his requirements; it was no
longer a virtue, but utter indifference to self, an absolute
obliteration of personality. Even when he recognised that he was being
gradually turned out of the house, his mind never for a moment dwelt
upon his share in old Gradelle's fortune, or upon the accounts which
Lisa had offered him. He had already planned out his expenditure for
the future; reckoning that with what Madame Verlaque still allowed him
to retain of his salary, and the thirty francs a month which a pupil,
obtained through La Normande, paid him he would be able to spend
eighteen sous on his breakfast and twenty-six sous on his dinner.
This, he thought, would be ample. And so, at last, taking as his
excuse the lessons which he was giving his new pupil, he emboldened
himself one morning to pretend that it would be impossible for him in
future to come to the house at mealtimes. He blushed as he gave
utterance to this laboriously constructed lie, which had given him so
much trouble, and continued apologetically:

"You mustn't be offended; the boy only has those hours free. I can
easily get something to eat, you know; and I will come and have a chat
with you in the evenings."

Beautiful Lisa maintained her icy reserve, and this increased
Florent's feeling of trouble. In order to have no cause for self-
reproach she had been unwilling to send him about his business,
preferring to wait till he should weary of the situation and go of his
own accord. Now he was going, and it was a good riddance; and she
studiously refrained from all show of kindliness for fear it might
induce him to remain. Quenu, however, showed some signs of emotion,
and exclaimed: "Don't think of putting yourself about; take your meals
elsewhere by all means, if it is more convenient. It isn't we who are
turning you way; you'll at all events dine with us sometimes on
Sundays, eh?"

Florent hurried off. His heart was very heavy. When he had gone, the
beautiful Lisa did not venture to reproach her husband for his
weakness in giving that invitation for Sundays. She had conquered, and
again breathed freely amongst the light oak of her dining-room, where
she would have liked to burn some sugar to drive away the odour of
perverse leanness which seemed to linger about. Moreover, she
continued to remain on the defensive; and at the end of another week
she felt more alarmed than ever. She only occasionally saw Florent in
the evenings, and began to have all sorts of dreadful thoughts,
imagining that her brother-in-law was constructing some infernal
machine upstairs in Augustine's bedroom, or else making signals which
would result in barricades covering the whole neighbourhood. Gavard,
who had become gloomy, merely nodded or shook his head when she spoke
to him, and left his stall for days together in Marjolin's charge. The
beautiful Lisa, however, determined that she would get to the bottom
of affairs. She knew that Florent had obtained a day's leave, and
intended to spend it with Claude Lantier, at Madame Francois's, at
Nanterre. As he would start in the morning, and remain away till
night, she conceived the idea of inviting Gavard to dinner. He would
be sure to talk freely, at table, she thought. But throughout the
morning she was unable to meet the poultry dealer, and so in the
afternoon she went back again to the markets.

Marjolin was in the stall alone. He used to drowse there for hours,
recouping himself from the fatigue of his long rambles. He generally
sat upon one chair with his legs resting upon another, and his head
leaning against a little dresser. In the wintertime he took a keen
delight in lolling there and contemplating the display of game; the
bucks hanging head downwards, with their fore-legs broken and twisted
round their necks; the larks festooning the stall like garlands; the
big ruddy hares, the mottled partridges, the water-fowl of a bronze-
grey hue, the Russian black cocks and hazel hens, which arrived in a
packing of oat straw and charcoal;[*] and the pheasants, the
magnificent pheasants, with their scarlet hoods, their stomachers of
green satin, their mantles of embossed gold, and their flaming tails,
that trailed like trains of court robes. All this show of plumage
reminded Marjolin of his rambles in the cellars with Cadine amongst
the hampers of feathers.

[*] The baskets in which these are sent to Paris are identical with
those which in many provinces of Russia serve the /moujiks/ as
cradles for their infants.--Translator.

That afternoon the beautiful Lisa found Marjolin in the midst of the
poultry. It was warm, and whiffs of hot air passed along the narrow
alleys of the pavilion. She was obliged to stoop before she could see
him stretched out inside the stall, below the bare flesh of the birds.
From the hooked bar up above hung fat geese, the hooks sticking in the
bleeding wounds of their long stiffened necks, while their huge bodies
bulged out, glowing ruddily beneath their fine down, and, with their
snowy tails and wings, suggesting nudity encompassed by fine linen.
And also hanging from the bar, with ears thrown back and feet parted
as though they were bent on some vigorous leap, were grey rabbits
whose turned-up tails gleamed whitely, whilst their heads, with sharp
teeth and dim eyes, laughed with the grin of death. On the counter of
the stall plucked fowls showed their strained fleshy breasts; pigeons,
crowded on osier trays, displayed the soft bare skin of innocents;
ducks, with skin of rougher texture, exhibited their webbed feet; and
three magnificent turkeys, speckled with blue dots, like freshly-
shaven chins, slumbered on their backs amidst the black fans of their
expanded tails. On plates near by were giblets, livers, gizzards,
necks, feet, and wings; while an oval dish contained a skinned and
gutted rabbit, with its four legs wide apart, its head bleeding, and
is kidneys showing through its gashed belly. A streamlet of dark
blood, after trickling along its back to its tail, had fallen drop by
drop, staining the whiteness of the dish. Marjolin had not even taken
the trouble to wipe the block, near which the rabbit's feet were still
lying. He reclined there with his eyes half closed, encompassed by
other piles of dead poultry which crowded the shelves of the stall,
poultry in paper wrappers like bouquets, rows upon rows of protuberant
breasts and bent legs showing confusedly. And amidst all this mass of
food, the young fellow's big, fair figure, the flesh of his cheeks,
hands, and powerful neck covered with ruddy down seemed as soft as
that of the magnificent turkeys, and as plump as the breasts of the
fat geese.

When he caught sight of Lisa, he at once sprang up, blushing at having
been caught sprawling in this way. He always seemed very nervous and
ill at ease in Madame Quenu's presence; and when she asked him if
Monsieur Gavard was there, he stammered out: "No, I don't think so. He
was here a little while ago, but he want away again."

Lisa looked at him, smiling; she had a great liking for him. But
feeling something warm brush against her hand, which was hanging by
her side, she raised a little shriek. Some live rabbits were thrusting
their noses out of a box under the counter of the stall, and sniffing
at her skirts.

"Oh," she exclaimed with a laugh, "it's your rabbits that are tickling
me."

Then she stooped and attempted to stroke a white rabbit, which darted
in alarm into a corner of the box.

"Will Monsieur Gavard be back soon, do you think?" she asked, as she
again rose erect.

Marjolin once more replied that he did not know; then in a hesitating
way he continued: "He's very likely gone down into the cellars. He
told me, I think, that he was going there."

"Well, I think I'll wait for him, then," replied Lisa. "Could you let
him know that I am here? or I might go down to him, perhaps. Yes,
that's a good idea; I've been intending to go and have a look at the
cellars for these last five years. You'll take me down, won't you, and
explain things to me?"

Marjolin blushed crimson, and, hurrying out of the stall, walked on in
front of her, leaving the poultry to look after itself. "Of course I
will," said he. "I'll do anything you wish, Madame Lisa."

When they got down below, the beautiful Lisa felt quite suffocated by
the dank atmosphere of the cellar. She stood at the bottom step, and
raised her eyes to look at the vaulted roofing of red and white bricks
arching slightly between the iron ribs upheld by small columns. What
made her hesitate more than the gloominess of the place was a warm,
penetrating odour, the exhalations of large numbers of living
creatures, which irritated her nostrils and throat.

"What a nasty smell!" she exclaimed. "It must be very unhealthy down
here."

"It never does me any harm," replied Marjolin in astonishment.
"There's nothing unpleasant about the smell when you've got accustomed
to it; and it's very warm and cosy down here in the wintertime."

As Lisa followed him, however, she declared that the strong scent of
the poultry quite turned her stomach, and that she would certainly not
be able to eat a fowl for the next two months. All around her, the
storerooms, the small cabins where the stallkeepers keep their live
stock, formed regular streets, intersecting each other at right
angles. There were only a few scattered gas lights, and the little
alleys seemed wrapped in sleep like the lanes of a village where the
inhabitants have all gone to bed. Marjolin made Lisa feel the close-
meshed wiring, stretched on a framework of cast iron; and as she made
her way along one of the streets she amused herself by reading the
names of the different tenants, which were inscribed on blue labels.

"Monsieur Gavard's place is quite at the far end," said the young man,
still walking on.

They turned to the left, and found themselves in a sort of blind
alley, a dark, gloomy spot where not a ray of light penetrated. Gavard
was not there.

"Oh, it makes no difference," said Marjolin. "I can show you our birds
just the same. I have a key of the storeroom."

Lisa followed him into the darkness.

"You don't suppose that I can see your birds in this black oven, do
you?" she asked, laughing.

Marjolin did not reply at once; but presently he stammered out that
there was always a candle in the storeroom. He was fumbling about the
lock, and seemed quite unable to find the keyhole. As Lisa came up to
help him, she felt a hot breath on her neck; and when the young man
had at last succeeded in opening the door and lighted the candle, she
saw that he was trembling.

"You silly fellow!" she exclaimed, "to get yourself into such a state
just because a door won't open! Why, you're no better than a girl, in
spite of your big fists!"

She stepped inside the storeroom. Gavard had rented two compartments,
which he had thrown into one by removing the partition between them.
In the dirt on the floor wallowed the larger birds--the geese,
turkeys, and ducks--while up above, on tiers of shelves, were boxes
with barred fronts containing fowls and rabbits. The grating of the
storeroom was so coated with dust and cobwebs that it looked as though
covered with grey blinds. The woodwork down below was rotting, and
covered with filth. Lisa, however, not wishing to vex Marjolin,
refrained from any further expression of disgust. She pushed her
fingers between the bars of the boxes, and began to lament the fate of
the unhappy fowls, which were so closely huddled together and could
not even stand upright. Then she stroked a duck with a broken leg
which was squatting in a corner, and the young man told her that it
would be killed that very evening, for fear lest it should die during
the night.

"But what do they do for food?" asked Lisa.

Thereupon he explained to her that poultry would not eat in the dark,
and that it was necessary to light a candle and wait there till they
had finished their meal.

"It amuses me to watch them," he continued; "I often stay here with a
light for hours altogether. You should see how they peck away; and
when I hide the flame of the candle with my hand they all stand stock-
still with their necks in the air, just as though the sun had set. It
is against the rules to leave a lighted candle here and go away. One
of the dealers, old Mother Palette--you know her, don't you?--nearly
burned the whole place down the other day. A fowl must have knocked
the candle over into the straw while she was away."

"A pretty thing, isn't it," said Lisa, "for fowls to insist upon
having the chandeliers lighted up every time they take a meal?"

This idea made her laugh. Then she came out of the storeroom, wiping
her feet, and holding up her skirts to keep them from the filth.
Marjolin blew out the candle and locked the door. Lisa felt rather
nervous at finding herself in the dark again with this big young
fellow, and so she hastened on in front.

"I'm glad I came, all the same," she presently said, as he joined her.
"There is a great deal more under these markets than I ever imagined.
But I must make haste now and get home again. They'll wonder what has
become of me at the shop. If Monsieur Gavard comes back, tell him that
I want to speak to him immediately."

"I expect he's in the killing-room," said Marjolin. "We'll go and see,
if you like."

Lisa made no reply. She felt oppressed by the close atmosphere which
warmed her face. She was quite flushed, and her bodice, generally so
still and lifeless, began to heave. Moreover, the sound of Marjolin's
hurrying steps behind her filled her with an uneasy feeling. At last
she stepped aside, and let him go on in front. The lanes of this
underground village were still fast asleep. Lisa noticed that her
companion was taking the longest way. When they came out in front of
the railway track he told her that he had wished to show it to her;
and they stood for a moment or two looking through the chinks in the
hoarding of heavy beams. Then Marjolin proposed to take her on to the
line; but she refused, saying that it was not worth while, as she
could see things well enough where she was.

As they returned to the poultry cellars they found old Madame Palette
in front of her storeroom, removing the cords of a large square
hamper, in which a furious fluttering of wings and scraping of feet
could be heard. As she unfastened the last knot the lid suddenly flew
open, as though shot up by a spring, and some big geese thrust out
their heads and necks. Then, in wild alarm, they sprang from their
prison and rushed away, craning their necks, and filling the dark
cellars with a frightful noise of hissing and clattering of beaks.
Lisa could not help laughing, in spite of the lamentations of the old
woman, who swore like a carter as she caught hold of two of the
absconding birds and dragged them back by the neck. Marjolin,
meantime, set off in pursuit of a third. They could hear him running
along the narrow alleys, hunting for the runaway, and delighting in
the chase. Then, far off in the distance, they heard the sounds of a
struggle, and presently Marjolin came back again, bringing the goose
with him. Mother Palette, a sallow-faced old woman, took it in her
arms and clasped it for a moment to her bosom, in the classic attitude
of Leda.

"Well, well, I'm sure I don't know what I should have done if you
hadn't been here," said she. "The other day I had a regular fight with
one of the brutes; but I had my knife with me, and I cut its throat."

Marjolin was quite out of breath. When they reached the stone blocks
where the poultry were killed, and where the gas burnt more brightly,
Lisa could see that he was perspiring, and had bold, glistening eyes.
She thought he looked very handsome like that, with his broad
shoulders, big flushed face, and fair curly hair, and she looked at
him so complacently, with that air of admiration which women feel they
may safely express for quite young lads, that he relapsed into timid
bashfulness again.

"Well, Monsieur Gavard isn't here, you see," she said. "You've only
made me waste my time."

Marjolin, however, began rapidly explaining the killing of the poultry
to her. Five huge stone slabs stretched out in the direction of the
Rue Rambuteau under the yellow light of the gas jets. A woman was
killing fowls at one end; and this led him to tell Lisa that the birds
were plucked almost before they were dead, the operation thus being
much easier. Then he wanted her to feel the feathers which were lying
in heaps on the stone slabs; and told her that they were sorted and
sold for as much as nine sous the pound, according to their quality.
To satisfy him, she was also obliged to plunge her hand into the big
hampers full of down. Then he turned the water-taps, of which there
was one by every pillar. There was no end to the particulars he gave.
The blood, he said, streamed along the stone blocks, and collected
into pools on the paved floor, which attendants sluiced with water
every two hours, removing the more recent stains with coarse brushes.

When Lisa stooped over the drain which carries away the swillings,
Marjolin found a fresh text for talk. On rainy days, said he, the
water sometimes rose through this orifice and flooded the place. It
had once risen a foot high; and they had been obliged to transport all
the poultry to the other end of the cellar, which is on a higher
level. He laughed as he recalled the wild flutter of the terrified
creatures. However, he had now finished, and it seemed as though there
remained nothing else for him to show, when all at once he bethought
himself of the ventilator. Thereupon he took Lisa off to the far end
of the cellar, and told her to look up; and inside one of the turrets
at the corner angles of the pavilion she observed a sort of escape-
pipe, by which the foul atmosphere of the storerooms ascended into
space.

Here, in this corner, reeking with abominable odours, Marjolin's
nostrils quivered, and his breath came and went violently. His long
stroll with Lisa in these cellars, full of warm animal perfumes, had
gradually intoxicated him.

She had again turned towards him. "Well," said she, "it was very kind
of you to show me all this, and when you come to the shop I will give
you something."

Whilst speaking she took hold of his soft chin, as she often did,
without recognising that he was no longer a child; and perhaps she
allowed her hand to linger there a little longer than was her wont. At
all events, Marjolin, usually so bashful, was thrilled by the caress,
and all at once he impetuously sprang forward, clasped Lisa by the
shoulders, and pressed his lips to her soft cheeks. She raised no cry,
but turned very pale at this sudden attack, which showed her how
imprudent she had been. And then, freeing herself from the embrace,
she raised her arm, as she had seen men do in slaughter houses,
clenched her comely fist, and knocked Marjolin down with a single
blow, planted straight between his eyes; and as he fell his head came
into collision with one of the stone slabs, and was split open. Just
at that moment the hoarse and prolonged crowing of a cock sounded
through the gloom.

Handsome Lisa, however, remained perfectly cool. Her lips were tightly
compressed, and her bosom had recovered its wonted immobility. Up
above she could hear the heavy rumbling of the markets, and through
the vent-holes alongside the Rue Rambuteau the noise of the street
traffic made its way into the oppressive silence of the cellar. Lisa
reflected that her own strong arm had saved her; and then, fearing
lest some one should come and find her there, she hastened off,
without giving a glance at Marjolin. As she climbed the steps, after
passing through the grated entrance of the cellars, the daylight
brought her great relief.

She returned to the shop, quite calm, and only looking a little pale.

"You've been a long time," Quenu said to her.

"I can't find Gavard. I have looked for him everywhere," she quietly
replied. "We shall have to eat our leg of mutton without him."

Then she filled the lard pot, which she noticed was empty; and cut
some pork chops for her friend Madame Taboureau, who had sent her
little servant for them. The blows which she dealt with her cleaver
reminded her of Marjolin. She felt that she had nothing to reproach
herself with. She had acted like an honest woman. She was not going to
disturb her peace of mind; she was too happy to do anything to
compromise herself. However, she glanced at Quenu, whose neck was
coarse and ruddy, and whose shaven chin looked as rough as knotted
wood; whereas Marjolin's chin and neck resembled rosy satin. But then
she must not think of him any more, for he was no longer a child. She
regretted it, and could not help thinking that children grew up much
too quickly.

A slight flush came back to her cheeks, and Quenu considered that she
looked wonderfully blooming. He came and sat down beside her at the
counter for a moment or two. "You ought to go out oftener," said he;
"it does you good. We'll go to the theatre together one of these
nights, if you like; to the Gaite, eh? Madame Taboureau has been to
see the piece they are playing there, and she declares it's splendid."

Lisa smiled, and said they would see about it, and then once more she
took herself off. Quenu thought that it was too good of her to take so
much trouble in running about after that brute Gavard. In point of
fact, however, she had simply gone upstairs to Florent's bedroom, the
key of which was hanging from a nail in the kitchen. She hoped to find
out something or other by an inspection of this room, since the
poultry dealer had failed her. She went slowly round it, examining the
bed, the mantelpiece, and every corner. The window with the little
balcony was open, and the budding pomegranate was steeped in the
golden beams of the setting sun. The room looked to her as though
Augustine had never left it--had slept there only the night before.
There seemed to be nothing masculine about the place. She was quite
surprised, for she had expected to find some suspicious-looking
chests, and coffers with strong locks. She went to feel Augustine's
summer gown, which was still hanging against the wall. Then she sat
down at the table, and began to read an unfinished page of manuscript,
in which the word "revolution" occurred twice. This alarmed her, and
she opened the drawer, which she saw was full of papers. But her sense
of honour awoke within her in presence of the secret which the rickety
deal table so badly guarded. She remained bending over the papers,
trying to understand them without touching them, in a state of great
emotion, when the shrill song of the chaffinch, on whose cage streamed
a ray of sunshine, made her start. She closed the drawer. It was a
base thing that she had contemplated, she thought.

Then, as she lingered by the window, reflecting that she ought to go
and ask counsel of Abbe Roustan, who was a very sensible man, she saw
a crowd of people round a stretcher in the market square below. The
night was falling, still she distinctly recognised Cadine weeping in
the midst of the crowd; while Florent and Claude, whose boots were
white with dust, stood together talking earnestly at the edge of the
footway. She hurried downstairs again, surprised to see them back so
soon, and scarcely had she reached her counter when Mademoiselle Saget
entered the shop.

"They have found that scamp of a Marjolin in the cellar, with his head
split open," exclaimed the old maid. "Won't you come to see him,
Madame Quenu?"

Lisa crossed the road to look at him. The young fellow was lying on
his back on the stretcher, looking very pale. His eyes were closed,
and a stiff wisp of his fair hair was clotted with blood. The
bystanders, however, declared that there was no serious harm done,
and, besides, the scamp had only himself to blame, for he was always
playing all sorts of wild pranks in the cellars. It was generally
supposed that he had been trying to jump over one of the stone blocks
--one of his favourite amusements--and had fallen with his head
against the slab.

"I dare say that hussy there gave him a shove," remarked Mademoiselle
Saget, pointing to Cadine, who was weeping. "They are always larking
together."

Meantime the fresh air had restored Marjolin to consciousness, and he
opened his eyes in wide astonishment. He looked round at everybody,
and then, observing Lisa bending over him, he gently smiled at her
with an expression of mingled humility and affection. He seemed to
have forgotten all that had happened. Lisa, feeling relieved, said
that he ought to be taken to the hospital at once, and promised to go
and see him there, and take him some oranges and biscuits. However,
Marjolin's head had fallen back, and when the stretcher was carried
away Cadine followed it, with her flat basket slung round her neck,
and her hot tears rolling down upon the bunches of violets in their
mossy bed. She certainly had no thoughts for the flowers that she was
thus scalding with her bitter grief.

As Lisa went back to her shop, she heard Claude say, as he shook hands
with Florent and parted from him: "Ah! the confounded young scamp!
He's quite spoiled my day for me! Still, we had a very enjoyable time,
didn't we?"

Claude and Florent had returned both worried and happy, bringing with
them the pleasant freshness of the country air. Madame Francois had
disposed of all her vegetables that morning before daylight; and they
had all three gone to the Golden Compasses, in the Rue Montorgueil, to
get the cart. Here, in the middle of Paris, they found a foretaste of
the country. Behind the Restaurant Philippe, with its frontage of gilt
woodwork rising to the first floor, there was a yard like that of a
farm, dirty, teeming with life, reeking with the odour of manure and
straw. Bands of fowls were pecking at the soft ground. Sheds and
staircases and galleries of greeny wood clung to the old houses
around, and at the far end, in a shanty of big beams, was Balthazar,
harnessed to the cart, and eating the oats in his nosebag. He went
down the Rue Montorgueil at a slow trot, seemingly well pleased to
return to Nanterre so soon. However, he was not going home without a
load. Madame Francois had a contract with the company which undertook
the scavenging of the markets, and twice a week she carried off with
her a load of leaves, forked up from the mass of refuse which littered
the square. It made excellent manure. In a few minutes the cart was
filled to overflowing. Claude and Florent stretched themselves out on
the deep bed of greenery; Madame Francois grasped her reins, and
Balthazar went off at his slow, steady pace, his head somewhat bent by
reason of there being so many passengers to pull along.

This excursion had been talked of for a long time past. Madame
Francois laughed cheerily. She was partial to the two men, and
promised them an /omelette au lard/ as had never been eaten, said she,
in "that villainous Paris." Florent and Claude revelled in the thought
of this day of lounging idleness which as yet had scarcely begun to
dawn. Nanterre seemed to be some distant paradise into which they
would presently enter.

"Are you quite comfortable?" Madame Francois asked as the cart turned
into the Rue du Pont Neuf.

Claude declared that their couch was as soft as a bridal bed. Lying on
their backs, with their hands crossed under their heads, both men were
looking up at the pale sky from which the stars were vanishing. All
along the Rue de Rivoli they kept unbroken silence, waiting till they
should have got clear of the houses, and listening to the worthy woman
as she chattered to Balthazar: "Take your time, old man," she said to
him in kindly tones. "We're in no hurry; we shall be sure to get there
at last."

On reaching the Champs Elysees, when the artist saw nothing but tree-
tops on either side of him, and the great green mass of the Tuileries
gardens in the distance, he woke up, as it were, and began to talk.
When the cart had passed the end of the Rue du Roule he had caught a
glimpse of the side entrance of Saint Eustache under the giant roofing
of one of the market covered-ways. He was constantly referring to this
view of the church, and tried to give it a symbolical meaning.

"It's an odd mixture," he said, "that bit of church framed round by an
avenue of cast iron. The one will kill the other; the iron will slay
the stone, and the time is not very far off. Do you believe in chance,
Florent? For my part, I don't think that it was any mere chance of
position that set a rose-window of Saint Eustache right in the middle
of the central markets. No; there's a whole manifesto in it. It is
modern art, realism, naturalism--whatever you like to call it--that
has grown up and dominates ancient art. Don't you agree with me?"

Then, as Florent still kept silence, Claude continued: "Besides, that
church is a piece of bastard architecture, made up of the dying gasp
of the middle ages, and the first stammering of the Renaissance. Have
you noticed what sort of churches are built nowadays? They resemble
all kinds of things--libraries, observatories, pigeon-cotes, barracks;
and surely no one can imagine that the Deity dwells in such places.
The pious old builders are all dead and gone; and it would be better
to cease erecting those hideous carcasses of stone, in which we have
no belief to enshrine. Since the beginning of the century there has
only been one large original pile of buildings erected in Paris--a
pile in accordance with modern developments--and that's the central
markets. You hear me, Florent? Ah! they are a fine bit of building,
though they but faintly indicate what we shall see in the twentieth
century! And so, you see, Saint Eustache is done for! It stands there
with its rose-windows, deserted by worshippers, while the markets
spread out by its side and teem with noisy life. Yes! that's how I
understand it all, my friend."

"Ah! Monsieur Claude," said Madame Francois, laughing, "the woman who
cut your tongue-string certainly earned her money. Look at Balthazar
laying his ears back to listen to you. Come, come, get along,
Balthazar!"

The cart was slowly making its way up the incline. At this early hour
of the morning the avenue, with its double lines of iron chairs on
either pathway, and its lawns, dotted with flowerbeds and clumps of
shrubbery, stretching away under the blue shadows of the trees, was
quite deserted; however, at the Rond-Point a lady and gentleman on
horseback passed the cart at a gentle trot. Florent, who had made
himself a pillow with a bundle of cabbage-leaves, was still gazing at
the sky, in which a far-stretching rosy glow was appearing. Every now
and then he would close his eyes, the better to enjoy the fresh breeze
of the morning as it fanned his face. He was so happy to escape from
the markets, and travel on through the pure air, that he remained
speechless, and did not even listen to what was being said around him.

"And then, too, what fine jokers are those fellows who imprison art in
a toy-box!" resumed Claude, after a pause. "They are always repeating
the same idiotic words: 'You can't create art out of science,' says
one; 'Mechanical appliances kill poetry,' says another; and a pack of
fools wail over the fate of the flowers, as though anybody wished the
flowers any harm! I'm sick of all such twaddle; I should like to
answer all that snivelling with some work of open defiance. I should
take a pleasure in shocking those good people. Shall I tell you what
was the finest thing I ever produced since I first began to work, and
the one which I recall with the greatest pleasure? It's quite a story.
When I was at my Aunt Lisa's on Christmas Eve last year that idiot of
an Auguste, the assistant, was setting out the shop-window. Well, he
quite irritated me by the weak, spiritless way in which he arranged
the display; and at last I requested him to take himself off, saying
that I would group the things myself in a proper manner. You see, I
had plenty of bright colours to work with--the red of the tongues, the
yellow of the hams, the blue of the paper shavings, the rosy pink of
the things that had been cut into, the green of the sprigs of heath,
and the black of the black-puddings--ah! a magnificent black, which I
have never managed to produce on my palette. And naturally, the
/crepine/, the small sausages, the chitterlings, and the crumbed
trotters provided me with delicate greys and browns. I produced a
perfect work of art. I took the dishes, the plates, the pans, and the
jars, and arranged the different colours; and I devised a wonderful
picture of still life, with subtle scales of tints leading up to
brilliant flashes of colour. The red tongues seemed to thrust
themselves out like greedy flames, and the black-puddings, surrounded
by pale sausages, suggested a dark night fraught with terrible
indigestion. I had produced, you see, a picture symbolical of the
gluttony of Christmas Eve, when people meet and sup--the midnight
feasting, the ravenous gorging of stomachs void and faint after all
the singing of hymns.[*] At the top of everything a huge turkey
exhibited its white breast, marbled blackly by the truffles showing
through its skin. It was something barbaric and superb, suggesting a
paunch amidst a halo of glory; but there was such a cutting, sarcastic
touch about it all that people crowded to the window, alarmed by the
fierce flare of the shop-front. When my aunt Lisa came back from the
kitchen she was quite frightened, and thought I'd set the fat in the
shop on fire; and she considered the appearance of the turkey so
indelicate that she turned me out of the place while Auguste
re-arranged the window after his own idiotic fashion. Such brutes will
never understand the language of a red splotch by the side of a grey
one. Ah, well! that was my masterpiece. I have never done anything
better."

[*] An allusion to the "midnight mass" usually celebrated in Roman
Catholic churches on Christmas Eve.--Translator.

He relapsed into silence, smiling and dwelling with gratification on
this reminiscence. The cart had now reached the Arc de Triomphe, and
strong currents of air swept from the avenues across the expanse of
open ground. Florent sat up, and inhaled with zest the first odours of
grass wafted from the fortifications. He turned his back on Paris,
anxious to behold the country in the distance. At the corner of the
Rue de Longchamp, Madame Francois pointed out to him the spot where
she had picked him up. This rendered him thoughtful, and he gazed at
her as she sat there, so healthy-looking and serene, with her arms
slightly extended so as to grasp the reins. She looked even handsomer
than Lisa, with her neckerchief tied over her head, her robust glow of
health, and her brusque, kindly air. When she gave a slight cluck with
her tongue, Balthazar pricked up his ears and rattled down the road at
a quicker pace.

On arriving at Nanterre, the cart turned to the left into a narrow
lane, skirted some blank walls, and finally came to a standstill at
the end of a sort of blind alley. It was the end of the world, Madame
Francois used to say. The load of vegetable leaves now had to be
discharged. Claude and Florent would not hear of the journeyman
gardener, who was planting lettuces, leaving his work, but armed
themselves with pitchforks and proceeded to toss the leaves into the
manure pit. This occupation afforded them much amusement. Claude had
quite a liking for manure, since it symbolises the world and its life.
The strippings and parings of the vegetables, the scourings of the
markets, the refuse that fell from that colossal table, remained full
of life, and returned to the spot where the vegetables had previously
sprouted, to warm and nourish fresh generations of cabbages, turnips,
and carrots. They rose again in fertile crops, and once more went to
spread themselves out upon the market square. Paris rotted everything,
and returned everything to the soil, which never wearied of repairing
the ravages of death.

"Ah!" exclaimed Claude, as he plied his fork for the last time,
"here's a cabbage-stalk that I'm sure I recognise. It has grown up at
least half a score of times in that corner yonder by the apricot
tree."

This remark made Florent laugh. But he soon became grave again, and
strolled slowly through the kitchen garden, while Claude made a sketch
of the stable, and Madame Francois got breakfast ready. The kitchen
garden was a long strip of ground, divided in the middle by a narrow
path; it rose slightly, and at the top end, on raising the head, you
could perceive the low barracks of Mont Valerien. Green hedges
separated it from other plots of land, and these lofty walls of
hawthorn fringed the horizon with a curtain of greenery in such wise
that of all the surrounding country Mont Valerien alone seemed to rise
inquisitively on tip-toe in order to peer into Madame Francois's
close. Great peacefulness came from the countryside which could not
be seen. Along the kitchen garden, between the four hedges, the May
sun shone with a languid heat, a silence disturbed only by the buzzing
of insects, a somnolence suggestive of painless parturition. Every now
and then a faint cracking sound, a soft sigh, made one fancy that one
could hear the vegetables sprout into being. The patches of spinach
and sorrel, the borders of radishes, carrots, and turnips, the beds of
potatoes and cabbages, spread out in even regularity, displaying their
dark leaf-mould between their tufts of greenery. Farther away, the
trenched lettuces, onions, leeks, and celery, planted by line in long
straight rows, looked like soldiers on parade; while the peas and
beans were beginning to twine their slender tendrils round a forest of
sticks, which, when June came, they would transform into a thick and
verdant wood. There was not a weed to be seen. The garden resembled
two parallel strips of carpet of a geometrical pattern of green on a
reddish ground, which were carefully swept every morning. Borders of
thyme grew like greyish fringe along each side of the pathway.

Florent paced backwards and forwards amidst the perfume of the thyme,
which the sun was warming. He felt profoundly happy in the
peacefulness and cleanliness of the garden. For nearly a year past he
had only seen vegetables bruised and crushed by the jolting of the
market-carts; vegetables torn up on the previous evening, and still
bleeding. He rejoiced to find them at home, in peace in the dark
mould, and sound in every part. The cabbages had a bulky, prosperous
appearance; the carrots looked bright and gay; and the lettuces
lounged in line with an air of careless indolence. And as he looked at
them all, the markets which he had left behind him that morning seemed
to him like a vast mortuary, an abode of death, where only corpses
could be found, a charnel-house reeking with foul smells and
putrefaction. He slackened his steps, and rested in that kitchen
garden, as after a long perambulation amidst deafening noises and
repulsive odours. The uproar and the sickening humidity of the fish
market had departed from him; and he felt as though he were being born
anew in the pure fresh air. Claude was right, he thought. The markets
were a sphere of death. The soil was the life, the eternal cradle, the
health of the world.

"The omelet's ready!" suddenly cried Madame Francois.

When they were all three seated round the table in the kitchen, with
the door thrown open to the sunshine, they ate their breakfast with
such light-hearted gaiety that Madame Francois looked at Florent in
amazement, repeating between each mouthful: "You're quite altered.
You're ten years younger. It is that villainous Paris which makes you
seem so gloomy. You've got a little sunshine in your eyes now. Ah!
those big towns do one's health no good, you ought to come and live
here."

Claude laughed, and retorted that Paris was a glorious place. He stuck
up for it and all that belonged to it, even to its gutters; though at
the same time retaining a keen affection for the country.

In the afternoon Madame Francois and Florent found themselves alone at
the end of the garden, in a corner planted with a few fruit trees.
Seated on the ground, they talked somewhat seriously together. The
good woman advised Florent with an affectionate and quite maternal
kindness. She asked him endless questions about his life, and his
intentions for the future, and begged him to remember that he might
always count upon her, if ever he thought that she could in the
slightest degree contribute to his happiness. Florent was deeply
touched. No woman had ever spoken to him in that way before. Madame
Francois seemed to him like some healthy, robust plant that had grown
up with the vegetables in the leaf-mould of the garden; while the
Lisas, the Normans, and other pretty women of the markets appeared to
him like flesh of doubtful freshness decked out for exhibition. He
here enjoyed several hours of perfect well-being, delivered from all
that reek of food which sickened him in the markets, and reviving to
new life amidst the fertile atmosphere of the country, like that
cabbage stalk which Claude declared he had seen sprout up more than
half a score of times.

The two men took leave of Madame Francois at about five o'clock. They
had decided to walk back to Paris; and the market gardener accompanied
them into the lane. As she bade good-bye to Florent, she kept his hand
in her own for a moment, and said gently: "If ever anything happens to
trouble you, remember to come to me."

For a quarter of an hour Florent walked on without speaking, already
getting gloomy again, and reflecting that he was leaving health behind
him. The road to Courbevoie was white with dust. However, both men
were fond of long walks and the ringing of stout boots on the hard
ground. Little clouds of dust rose up behind their heels at every
step, while the rays of the sinking sun darted obliquely over the
avenue, lengthening their shadows in such wise that their heads
reached the other side of the road, and journeyed along the opposite
footway.

Claude, swinging his arms, and taking long, regular strides,
complacently watched these two shadows, whilst enjoying the rhythmical
cadence of his steps, which he accentuated by a motion of his
shoulders. Presently, however, as though just awaking from a dream, he
exclaimed: "Do you know the 'Battle of the Fat and the Thin'?"

Florent, surprised by the question, replied in the negative; and
thereupon Claude waxed enthusiastic, talking of that series of prints
in very eulogical fashion. He mentioned certain incidents: the Fat, so
swollen that they almost burst, preparing their evening debauch, while
the Thin, bent double by fasting, looked in from the street with the
appearance of envious laths; and then, again, the Fat, with hanging
cheeks, driving off one of the Thin, who had been audacious enough to
introduce himself into their midst in lowly humility, and who looked
like a ninepin amongst a population of balls.

In these designs Claude detected the entire drama of human life, and
he ended by classifying men into Fat and Thin, two hostile groups, one
of which devours the other, and grows fat and sleek and enjoys itself.

"Cain," said he, "was certainly one of the Fat, and Abel one of the
Thin. Ever since that first murder, there have been rampant appetites
which have drained the life-blood of small eaters. It's a continual
preying of the stronger upon the weaker; each swallowing his
neighbour, and then getting swallowed in his turn. Beware of the Fat,
my friend."

He relapsed into silence for a moment, still watching their two
shadows, which the setting sun elongated more than ever. Then he
murmured: "You see, we belong to the Thin--you and I. Those who are no
more corpulent than we are don't take up much room in the sunlight,
eh?"

Florent glanced at the two shadows, and smiled. But Claude waxed
angry, and exclaimed: "You make a mistake if you think it is a
laughing matter. For my own part, I greatly suffer from being one of
the Thin. If I were one of the Fat, I could paint at my ease; I should
have a fine studio, and sell my pictures for their weight in gold.
But, instead of that, I'm one of the Thin; and I have to grind my life
out in producing things which simply make the Fat ones shrug their
shoulders. I shall die of it all in the end, I'm sure of it, with my
skin clinging to my bones, and so flattened that they will be able to
bury me between two leaves of a book. And you, too, you are one of the
Thin, a wonderful one; the very king of Thin, in fact! Do you remember
your quarrel with the fish-wives? It was magnificent; all those
colossal bosoms flying at your scraggy breast! Oh! they were simply
acting from natural instinct; they were pursuing one of the Thin just
as cats pursue a mouse. The Fat, you know, have an instinctive hatred
of the Thin, to such an extent that they must needs drive the latter
from their sight, either by means of their teeth or their feet. And
that is why, if I were in your place, I should take my precautions.
The Quenus belong to the Fat, and so do the Mehudins; indeed, you have
none but Fat ones around you. I should feel uneasy under such
circumstances."

"And what about Gavard, and Mademoiselle Saget, and your friend
Marjolin?" asked Florent, still smiling.

"Oh, if you like, I will classify all our acquaintances for you,"
replied Claude. "I've had their heads in a portfolio in my studio for
a long time past, with memoranda of the order to which they belong.
Gavard is one of the Fat, but of the kind which pretends to belong to
the Thin. The variety is by no means uncommon. Mademoiselle Saget and
Madame Lecoeur belong to the Thin, but to a variety which is much to
be feared--the Thin ones whom envy drives to despair, and who are
capable of anything in their craving to fatten themselves. My friend
Marjolin, little Cadine, and La Sarriette are three Fat ones, still
innocent, however, and having nothing but the guileless hunger of
youth. I may remark that the Fat, so long as they've not grown old,
are charming creatures. Monsieur Lebigre is one of the Fat--don't you
think so? As for your political friends, Charvet, Clemence, Logre, and
Lacaille, they mostly belong to the Thin. I only except that big
animal Alexandre, and that prodigy Robine, who has caused me a vast
amount of annoyance."

The artist continued to talk in this strain from the Pont de Neuilly
to the Arc de Triomphe. He returned to some of those whom he had
already mentioned, and completed their portraits with a few
characteristic touches. Logre, he said, was one of the Thin whose
belly had been placed between his shoulders. Beautiful Lisa was all
stomach, and the beautiful Norman all bosom. Mademoiselle Saget, in
her earlier life, must have certainly lost some opportunity to fatten
herself, for she detested the Fat, while, at the same time, she
despised the Thin. As for Gavard, he was compromising his position as
one of the Fat, and would end by becoming as flat as a bug.

"And what about Madame Francois?" Florent asked.

Claude seemed much embarrassed by this question. He cast about for an
answer, and at last stammered:

"Madame Francois, Madame Francois--well, no, I really don't know; I
never thought about classifying her. But she's a dear good soul, and
that's quite sufficient. She's neither one of the Fat nor one of the
Thin!"

They both laughed. They were now in front of the Arc de Triomphe. The
sun, over by the hills of Suresnes, was so low on the horizon that
their colossal shadows streaked the whiteness of the great structure
even above the huge groups of statuary, like strokes made with a piece
of charcoal. This increased Claude's merriment, he waved his arms and
bent his body; and then, as he started on his way again, he said; "Did
you notice--just as the sun set our two heads shot up to the sky!"

But Florent no longer smiled. Paris was grasping him again, that Paris
which now frightened him so much, after having cost him so many tears
at Cayenne. When he reached the markets night was falling, and there
was a suffocating smell. He bent his head as he once more returned to
the nightmare of endless food, whilst preserving the sweet yet sad
recollection of that day of bright health odorous with the perfume of
thyme. _

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