第 4 节
作者:摄氏0度      更新:2021-02-20 15:48      字数:9322
  remembered; was actually the third; Manon stopped; turned a key in an
  ancient lock; and opened a door painted in a coarse imitation of
  mahogany。
  〃This is it;〃 she said; entering first。
  Was it a miser; was it an artist dying in penury; was it a cynic to
  whom the world was naught; or some religious soul detached from life;
  who had occupied this apartment? That triple question might well be
  asked by one who breathed the odor of that poverty; who saw the greasy
  spots upon the papers yellow with smoke; the blackened ceilings; the
  dusty windows with their casement panes; the discolored floor…bricks;
  the wainscots layered with a sort of sticky glaze。 A damp chill came
  from the chimneys with their mantels of painted stone; surmounted by
  mirrors in panels of the style of the seventeenth century。 The
  apartment was square; like the house; and looked out upon the inner
  court; which could not now be seen because of the darkness。
  〃Who has lived here?〃 asked Godefroid of the priest。
  〃A former councillor of the parliament; a great…uncle of madame;
  Monsieur de Boisfrelon。 After the Revolution he fell into dotage; but
  he did not die until 1832; at the age of ninety…six。 Madame could not
  at first make up her mind to let his rooms to a stranger; but she
  finds she cannot afford to lose the rent。〃
  〃Madame will have the apartment cleaned and furnished in a manner to
  satisfy monsieur;〃 said Manon。
  〃That will depend on the arrangement you make with her;〃 said the
  priest。 〃You have here a fine parlor; a large sleeping…room and
  closet; and those little rooms in the angle will make an excellent
  study。 It is the same arrangement as in my apartment below; also in
  the one overhead。〃
  〃Yes;〃 said Manon; 〃Monsieur Alain's apartment is just like this; only
  his has a view of the tower。〃
  〃I think I had better see the rooms by daylight;〃 said Godefroid;
  timidly。
  〃Perhaps so;〃 said Manon。
  The priest and Godefroid went downstairs; leaving the woman to lock
  the doors。 When they re…entered the salon; Godefroid; who was getting
  inured to the surroundings; looked about him while discoursing with
  Madame de la Chanterie; and examined the persons and things there
  present。
  The salon had curtains at its windows of old red damask; with
  lambrequins; tied back at the sides with silken cords。 The red…tiled
  floor showed at the edges of an old tapestry carpet too small to cover
  the whole room。 The woodwork was painted gray。 The plastered ceiling;
  divided in two parts by a heavy beam which started from the fireplace;
  seemed a concession tardily made to luxury。 Armchairs; with their
  woodwork painted white; were covered with tapestry。 A paltry clock;
  between two copper…gilt candlesticks; decorated the mantel…shelf。
  Beside Madame de la Chanterie was an ancient table with spindle legs;
  on which lay her balls of worsted in a wicker basket。 A hydrostatic
  lamp lighted the scene。 The four men; who were seated there; silent;
  immovable; like bronze statues; had evidently stopped their
  conversation with Madame de la Chanterie when they heard the stranger
  returning。 They all had cold; discreet faces; in keeping with the
  room; the house; the quarter of the town。
  Madame de la Chanterie admitted the justice of Godefroid's
  observations; but told him that she did not wish to make any change
  until she knew the intentions of her lodger; or rather her boarder。 If
  he would conform to the customs of the house he could become her
  boarder; but these customs were widely different from those of Paris。
  Life in the rue Chanoinesse was like provincial life: the lodger must
  always be in by ten o'clock at night; they disliked noise; and could
  have no women or children to break up their customary habits。 An
  ecclesiastic might conform to these ways。 Madame de la Chanterie
  desired; above all; some one of simple life; who would not be
  exacting; she could afford to put only the strictest necessaries into
  the apartment。 Monsieur Alain (here she designated one of the four men
  present) was satisfied; and she would do for a new tenant just as she
  did for the others。
  〃I do not think;〃 said the priest; 〃that monsieur is inclined to enter
  our convent。〃
  〃Eh! why not?〃 said Monsieur Alain; 〃we are all well off here; we have
  nothing to complain of。〃
  〃Madame;〃 said Godefroid; rising; 〃I shall have the honor of calling
  again to…morrow。〃
  Though he was a young man; the four old men and Madame de la Chanterie
  rose; and the vicar accompanied him to the portico。 A whistle sounded。
  At that signal the porter came with a lantern; guided Godefroid to the
  street; and closed behind him the enormous yellow door;ponderous as
  that of a prison; and decorated with arabesque ironwork of a remote
  period that was difficult to determine。
  Though Godefroid got into a cabriolet; and was soon rolling into the
  living; lighted; glowing regions of Paris; what he had seen still
  appeared to him a dream; and his impressions; as he made his way along
  the boulevard des Italiens; had already the remoteness of a memory。 He
  asked himself; 〃Shall I to…morrow find those people there?〃
  III
  THE HOUSE OF MONGENOD
  The next day; as Godefroid rose amid the appointments of modern luxury
  and the choice appliances of English 〃comfort;〃 he remembered the
  details of his visit to that cloister of Notre…Dame; and the meaning
  of the things he had seen there came into his mind。 The three unknown
  and silent men; whose dress; attitude; and stillness acted powerfully
  upon him; were no doubt boarders like the priest。 The solemnity of
  Madame de la Chanterie now seemed to him a secret dignity with which
  she bore some great misfortune。 But still; in spite of the
  explanations which Godefroid gave himself; he could not help fancying
  there was an air of mystery about those sober figures。
  He looked around him and selected the pieces of furniture that he
  would keep; those that were indispensable to him; but when he
  transported them in thought to the miserable lodging in the rue
  Chanoinesse; he began to laugh at the contrast they would make there;
  resolving to sell all and let Madame de la Chanterie furnish the rooms
  for him。 He wanted a new life; and the very sight of these objects
  would remind him of that which he wished to forget。 In his desire for
  transformation (for he belonged to those characters who spring at a
  bound into the middle of a situation; instead of advancing; as others
  do; step by step); he was seized while he breakfasted with an idea;
  he would turn his whole property into money; pay his debts; and place
  the remainder of his capital in the banking…house with which his
  father had done business。
  This house was the firm of Mongenod and Company; established in 1816
  or 1817; whose reputation for honesty and uprightness had never been
  questioned in the midst of the commercial depravity which smirched;
  more or less; all the banking…houses of Paris。 In spite of their
  immense wealth; the houses of Nucingen; du Tillet; the Keller
  Brothers; Palma and Company; were each regarded; more or less; with
  secret disrespect; although it is true this disrespect was only
  whispered。 Evil means had produced such fine results; such political
  successes; dynastic principles covered so completely base workings;
  that no one in 1834 thought of the mud in which the roots of these
  fine trees; the mainstay of the State; were plunged。 Nevertheless
  there was not a single one of those great bankers to whom the
  confidence expressed in the house of Mongenod was not a wound。 Like
  English houses; the Mongenods made no external display of luxury。 They
  lived in dignified stillness; satisfied to do their business
  prudently; wisely; and with a stern uprightness which enabled them to
  carry it from one end of the globe to the other。
  The actual head of the house; Frederic Mongenod; is the brother…in…law
  of the Vicomte de Fontaine; therefore; this numerous family is allied
  through the Baron de Fontaine to Monsieur Grossetete; the receiver…
  general; brother of the Grossetete and Company of Limoges; to the
  Vandenesses; and to Planat de Baudry; another receiver…general。 These
  connections; having procured for the late Mongenod; father of the
  present head of the house; many favors in the financial operations
  under the Restoration; obtained for him also the confidence of the old
  /noblesse/; whose property and whose savings; which were immense; were
  deposited in this bank。 Far from coveting a peerage; like the Kellers;
  Nucingen; and du Tillet; the Mongenods kept away from politics; and
  only knew as much about them as their banking interests demanded。
  The house of Mongenod is established in a fine old mansion in the rue
  de la Victoire; where Madame Mongenod; the mother; lived with her two
  sons; all three being partners in the house;the share of the
  Vicomtesse de Fontaine having been bought out by them on the death of
  the elder Mongenod in 1827。
  Frederic Mongenod; a handsome young man about thirty…five years of
  age; cold; silent; and reserved in manner like a Swiss; and neat as an
  Englishman; had acquired by intercourse with his father all the
  qualities necessary for his difficult profession。 Better educated than
  the generality of bankers; his s