When a poor wretch has convicted Society of
falsehood, he throws himself more eagerly on the mercy of God.
"What do you think of that for a cracked pot?" said Simonnin, without
waiting till the old man had shut the door.
"He looks as if he had been buried and dug up again," said a clerk.
"He is some colonel who wants his arrears of pay," said the head clerk.
"No, he is a retired concierge," said Godeschal.
"I bet you he is a nobleman," cried Boucard.
"I bet you he has been a porter," retorted Godeschal. "Only porters are
gifted by nature with shabby box-coats, as worn and greasy and frayed
as that old body's. And did you see his trodden-down boots that let the
water in, and his stock which serves for a shirt? He has slept in a dry
arch."
"He may be of noble birth, and yet have pulled the doorlatch," cried
Desroches. "It has been known!"
"No," Boucard insisted, in the midst of laughter, "I maintain that he
was a brewer in 1789, and a colonel in the time of the Republic."
"I bet theatre tickets round that he never was a soldier," said Godeschal.
"Done with you," answered Boucard.
"Monsieur! Monsieur!" shouted the little messenger, opening the
window.
"What are you at now, Simonnin?" asked Boucard.
"I am calling him that you may ask him whether he is a colonel or a
porter; he must know."
All the clerks laughed. As to the old man, he was already coming
upstairs again.
"What can we say to him?" cried Godeschal.
"Leave it to me," replied Boucard.
The poor man came in nervously, his eyes cast down, perhaps not to
betray how hungry he was by looking too greedily at the eatables.
"Monsieur," said Boucard, "will you have the kindness to leave your
name, so that M. Derville may know----"
"Chabert."
"The Colonel who was killed at Eylau?" asked Hure, who, having so
far said nothing, was jealous of adding a jest to all the others.
"The same, monsieur," replied the good man, with antique simplicity.
And he went away.
"Whew!"
"Done brown!"
"Poof!"
"Oh!"
"Ah!"
"Boum!"
"The old rogue!"
"Ting-a-ring-ting!"
"Sold again!"
"Monsieur Desroches, you are going to the play without paying," said
Hure to the fourth clerk, giving him a slap on the shoulder that might
have killed a rhinoceros.
There was a storm of cat-calls, cries, and exclamations, which all the
onomatopeia of the language would fail to represent.
"Which theatre shall we go to?"
"To the opera," cried the head clerk.
"In the first place," said Godeschal, "I never mentioned which theatre. I
might, if I chose, take you to see Madame Saqui."
"Madame Saqui is not the play."
"What is a play?" replied Godeschal. "First, we must define the point of
fact. What did I bet, gentlemen? A play. What is a play? A spectacle.
What is a spectacle? Something to be seen--"
"But on that principle you would pay your bet by taking us to see the
water run under the Pont Neuf!" cried Simonnin, interrupting him.
"To be seen for money," Godeschal added.
"But a great many things are to be seen for money that are not plays.
The definition is defective," said Desroches.
"But do listen to me!"
"You are talking nonsense, my dear boy," said Boucard.
"Is Curtius' a play?" said Godeschal.
"No," said the head clerk, "it is a collection of figures--but it is a
spectacle."
"I bet you a hundred francs to a sou," Godeschal resumed, "that Curtius'
Waxworks forms such a show as might be called a play or theatre. It
contains a thing to be seen at various prices, according to the place you
choose to occupy."
"And so on, and so forth!" said Simonnin.
"You mind I don't box your ears!" said Godeschal.
The clerk shrugged their shoulders.
"Besides, it is not proved that that old ape was not making game of us,"
he said, dropping his argument, which was drowned in the laughter of
the other clerks. "On my honor, Colonel Chabert is really and truly
dead. His wife is married again to Comte Ferraud, Councillor of State.
Madame Ferraud is one of our clients."
"Come, the case is remanded till to-morrow," said Boucard. "To work,
gentlemen. The deuce is in it; we get nothing done here. Finish copying
that appeal; it must be handed in before the sitting of the Fourth
Chamber, judgment is to be given to-day. Come, on you go!"
"If he really were Colonel Chabert, would not that impudent rascal
Simonnin have felt the leather of his boot in the right place when he
pretended to be deaf?" said Desroches, regarding this remark as more
conclusive than Godeschal's.
"Since nothing is settled," said Boucard, "let us all agree to
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