LITTLE FRENCH MASTERPIECES

[Illustration: PROSPER MÉRIMÉE

From an etching]




  Prosper Mérimée’s
  Short Stories

  Carmen
  The Taking of the Redoubt
  The Venus of Ille, etc.

  Translated by
  George Burnham Ives

  With an Introduction by
  Grace King

  G. P. Putnam’s Sons
  New York and London
  The Knickerbocker Press
  1909




  COPYRIGHT, 1903
  BY
  G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS


The Knickerbocker Press, New York




Contents


                                      PAGE

  PROSPER MÉRIMÉE                       ix

    CARMEN                               3

    THE TAKING OF THE REDOUBT          137

    MATEO FALCONE                      151

    THE VENUS OF ILLE                  181




Introduction

Prosper Mérimée

(1803-1870)


The stories here presented are a selection from that brilliant
series which shine like a constellation in French literature of the
last century, blazoning Mérimée’s name across it. Each one has been
tested and judged by successive generations of readers and critics.
The authoritative appraisers of literary values, French and English,
have been pronouncing upon them from the time of their publication
until now, when they are still pronouncing upon them, as upon new
productions. Their interest, nevertheless, is still fresh, their
charm as attractive as ever, and inexplicable, as charm must be. The
prediction that was made in their day having been fulfilled so far,
it does not seem hazardous to renew it, at our own risk, that they may
be placed alongside of those classics of fiction that meet so natural
a soil in the human mind that we can no more foresee their ceasing to
give pleasure to readers in course of time than we can foresee the
flowers in the gardens ceasing to give pleasure to lovers of flowers.

_Carmen_, with which the book begins, was the last one written of the
series. It might, however, be said to antedate them all, for the first
impulsive, perhaps instinctive, love of Mérimée’s imagination was for
the passionate drama of Spain, and his first production, _The Plays of
Clara Gazul_, was so vivid an imitation of it that it mystified the
critics of the time, who had yet to learn the extreme susceptibility of
Mérimée’s mind to exotic influences; a susceptibility that the author
indulged, if he did not foster, throughout life.

It was not until 1830 (after the publication of _Mateo Falcone_ and
_The Taking of the Redoubt_) that Mérimée saw Spain with the eyes
of his body, and became naturalised in that part of it, that, as he
describes it, “was bounded on the north by a _gitana_ and on the south
by a carbine,” whose patois he spoke fluently, in whose _ventas_ he
was at home, where he confesses to have committed a thousand follies.
In his letters addressed from Madrid and Valencia, during this first
voyage to Spain, those who are curious about such questions can read
the account of Mérimée’s introduction to Carmen,--that is, to José
Maria, the contrabandist and bandit, and to the toreador. As for
Carmen herself, “that servant of the devil,” as José Maria describes
her only too well, although she does not figure in the letters, we may
infer that she did in some of the “thousand follies.” The story was
not, however, written until fifteen years later than this, after many
subsequent visits to its birthplace. A postscriptum, dated 1842, is
attached to the letters, giving an account of the death of the toreador
and of José Maria.

Mérimée had so long before this story proved himself the most
exquisite master, in his day, of the art of simplicity and naturalness
in writing, that he would seem to have left no farther room to himself
for advance in perfection, no margin for additional praise for this his
last story; and yet it has a quality of its own that distinguishes it
from every preceding one.

“Señor,” said José Maria, “one becomes a rascal without thinking of it;
a pretty girl steals your wits, you fight for her, an accident happens,
you have to live in the mountains, and from a smuggler you become a
robber before you know it.”

This is the simplicity and naturalness, not of Mérimée, but of José
Maria himself; and the story that follows shows absolutely no other
author than the condemned bandit. There is no consciousness in reading
it of the perfection that mars the very perfection of _Colomba_, nor
suspicion of premeditated pathos as in the supremely pathetic _Arsène
Guillot_. Form and pathos are no more thought of by the author than by
José Maria himself. And, therefore, as Taine says, “dissertations on
primitive and savage instinct, learned essays like Schopenhauer’s on
love and death, are not worth its hundred pages.”

As if he himself recognised the finality of his art in this identity of
it with nature, Mérimée laid aside his pen after writing it, and wrote
no more stories for twenty years; in truth, wrote no more, for as his
biographer Filon expresses it, when he took up his pen again, he found
it irremediably rusted.

_The Taking of the Redoubt_ resembles _Carmen_ in this, that the author
so completely effaces his personality from the teller of the story,
that one finds it easier to suppose than not that the incident was
related to him, as he says in the prefatory note, by the officer to
whom it happened, and that he merely wrote it down from memory. The
concession, however, concedes nothing, as long as the word “memory”
is retained in the explanation. For what it stands for here is an
imagination that could make the carelessly dropped incident its own,
and turn upon it a marvellous sight (lens-eye and light, all in one),
until what we read was as clear to Mérimée as it is to us now. Then he
wrote it down in the pages that are without a match in the thousands
of descriptions of battles that have been written. As one does not go
to another for words to describe what one sees oneself, so we need no
interpreter of our sensations when we read _The Taking of the Redoubt_.
It is for us alone, as Mérimée seems to tell us, to read it or not to
read it, to see what took place or not see it.

In the list of Mérimée’s stories _Mateo Falcone_ stands immediately
before _The Taking of the Redoubt_. Both were published in the same
year, in 1829, which was the twenty-sixth of the author’s age. It is
so seldom mentioned now in English without Walter Pater’s judgment
upon it, “perhaps the cruellest story in the world,” that that might
well be added to the name as a sub-title. It would be so, perhaps, if
Mérimée had not related it. He himself, despite the cold impassivity
that he had schooled himself into maintaining as an author,--he himself
shows here and there a trace of the emotion that he arouses in us.
The temptation, fall, and punishment of the little child touch indeed
the most sensitive nerve in the human heart; the one that can give
the keenest pain; that cuts through the heart like a knife. The story
would be well-nigh unbearable in another hand than Mérimée’s, or had he
told it in a clean, clear thrust of reality, as in _The Taking of the
Redoubt_. But he retards the action in the beginning with details and
diverts the attention with local colour; not, however, be it remarked,
such local colour as he saw with his own eyes, in Spain, but the kind
that he learned how to make so easily in the days of _Clara Gazul_ and
_La Guzla_, that he lost, as he confesses, all respect for it. Mateo,
Gianetto, Gamba, and Giuseppa belong also to the domain of the not
seen, not known. But the child, the unfortunate Fortunato, stands out
against the artificial background of place, time, and circumstance,
with a vividness of reality that, as in _The Taking of the Redoubt_,
would make the reality seem vague and indistinct beside it. A few pages
of this story might be cited as the highest point that Mérimée attained
as an artist.

He himself considered _The Venus of Ille_ the best story he ever wrote.
The preference is characteristic of him. It contains all the elements
of the mysterious and horrible for which he had an inherent passion;
and he relates it as he loved to relate the extraordinary, in the tone
of skeptical raillery that is the surest as well as the subtlest way of
sowing in a reader distrust in the integrity of his common sense. This
tone, also, was an inherent quality of Mérimée’s; it represented the
attitude of his mind towards the illusions of his imagination, which
he explains in one of his _Lettres Inédites_: “You cannot imagine,
madame, the difference there is between the things which it pleases
me to suppose and those which I admit to be true. I please myself in
imagining goblins and fairies. I make my own hair stand on end by
relating ghost stories to myself. But, notwithstanding the physical
effect I experience, I am not prevented from not believing in ghosts;
on this point my incredulity is so great that even if I were to see a
ghost, I would not believe in it any the more.”

The old mediæval legend was exhumed by Mérimée, as he unearthed the
bronze statue of the maleficent Venus, in the little village under
the shadow of the Canigou,--in all its beauty and terror, in all its
ferocity, one might say, of pagan Christian. He altered nothing of
it, and added only what as a visiting archæologist, his rôle in the
story, he could not omit: the details of his rather curious experience;
the impression made upon him by the statue, as a woman of seductive
wickedness and cruel, imperious passions, a type of woman that, as his
biographer comments, “none in the Paris of his day (the home of such
divinities) understood so well as he.”

The ascent to the dramatic catastrophe of the story is so natural,
easy, and pleasant (the preparations for a wedding and its celebration
are of all pleasant things in the world what a reader loves most to
dally with); the means employed by the writer are so natural--for
there is not the faintest suggestion of or appeal to the morbid--that
we arrive at the crisis well prepared to lose none of its weird and
terrible intensity, and the thrill and the shudder that arise in us
then are as real as Mérimée’s own physical tribute to the power of his
imagination.

Such stories have an intrinsic value that renders them independent of
an author’s name and reputation, even of his time and country. They are
as easily detached from him, and with as little loss to themselves,
as precious stones are from the name and place of the mine that once
held them. This supreme distinction of a story is, nevertheless, what
commends it to the assiduous seekers after the secret of literary
perfection; the philosopher’s stone of the world of letters. Mérimée,
on the whole, has stood the biographical and critical tests applied to
him well, both as man and artist, and, although the secret of his art
in truth went to the grave with him, this much at least has been found
out, that he was worthy to be the author of his stories.

[Illustration: (Signature) Grace King]




Carmen

    Πᾶσα γυνὴ χόλος ἐστίν· ἔχει δ' ἀγαθάς δύο ὥρας
    Τήν μίαν ἐν θαλάμω, τήν μίαν ἐν θανάτω.

    PALLADAS.


I

I had always suspected the geographers of not knowing what they were
talking about when they placed the battle-field of Munda in the country
of the Bastuli-Pœni, near the modern Monda, some two leagues north of
Marbella. According to my own conjectures concerning the text of the
anonymous author of the _Bellum Hispaniense_, and in view of certain
information collected in the Duke of Ossuna’s excellent library, I
believed that we should seek in the vicinity of Montilla the memorable
spot where for the last time Cæsar played double or quits against
the champions of the republic. Happening to be in Andalusia in the
early autumn of 1830, I made quite a long excursion for the purpose of
setting at rest such doubts as I still entertained. A memoir which I
propose to publish ere long will, I trust, leave no further uncertainty
in the minds of all honest archæologists. Pending the time when my
deliverance shall solve at last the geographical problem which is now
holding all the learning of Europe in suspense, I propose to tell you a
little story; it has no bearing on the question of the actual location
of Munda.

I had hired a guide and two horses at Cordova, and had taken the
field with no other impedimenta than Cæsar’s _Commentaries_ and a
shirt or two. On a certain day, as I wandered over the more elevated
portion of the plain of Cachena, worn out with fatigue, dying with
thirst, and scorched by a sun of molten lead, I was wishing with all
my heart that Cæsar and Pompey’s sons were in the devil’s grip, when
I spied, at a considerable distance from the path I was following,
a tiny greensward, studded with reeds and rushes, which indicated
the proximity of a spring. In fact, as I drew nearer, I found that
what had seemed to be a greensward was a marshy tract through which a
stream meandered, issuing apparently from a narrow ravine between two
high buttresses of the Sierra de Cabra. I concluded that by ascending
the stream I should find cooler water, fewer leeches and frogs, and
perhaps a bit of shade among the cliffs. As we rode into the gorge my
horse whinnied, and another horse, which I could not see, instantly
answered. I had ridden barely a hundred yards when the gorge, widening
abruptly, disclosed a sort of natural amphitheatre, entirely shaded by
the high cliffs which surrounded it. It was impossible to find a spot
which promised the traveller a more attractive sojourn. At the foot
of perpendicular cliffs, the spring came bubbling forth and fell into
a tiny basin carpeted with sand as white as snow. Five or six fine
live-oaks, always sheltered from the wind and watered by the spring,
grew upon its brink and covered it with their dense shade; and all
about the basin, a fine, sheeny grass promised a softer bed than one
could find at any inn within a radius of ten leagues.

The honour of discovering so attractive a spot did not belong to me.
A man was already reposing there, and was asleep in all probability
when I rode in. Roused by the neighing of the horses, he had risen,
and had walked towards his horse, which had taken advantage of his
master’s slumber to make a hearty meal on the grass in the immediate
neighbourhood. He was a young fellow, of medium height, but of robust
aspect, and with a proud and distrustful expression. His complexion,
which might once have been fine, had become darker than his hair
through the action of the sun. He held his horse’s halter in one hand
and in the other a blunderbuss with a copper barrel. I will admit
that at first blush the blunderbuss and the forbidding air of its
bearer took me a little by surprise; but I had ceased to believe in
robbers, because I had heard so much said about them and had never
met one. Moreover, I had seen so many honest farmers going to market
armed to the teeth that the sight of a firearm did not justify me in
suspecting the stranger’s moral character.--“And then, too,” I said to
myself, “what would he do with my shirts and my Elzevir Cæsar?” So I
saluted the man with the blunderbuss with a familiar nod, and asked him
smilingly if I had disturbed his sleep.

He eyed me from head to foot without replying; then, as if satisfied
by his examination, he scrutinised no less closely my guide, who rode
up at that moment. I saw that the latter turned pale and stopped in
evident alarm. “An unfortunate meeting!” I said to myself. But prudence
instantly counselled me to betray no uneasiness. I dismounted, told the
guide to remove the horses’ bridles, and, kneeling by the spring, I
plunged my face and hands in the water; then I took a long draught and
lay flat on my stomach, like the wicked soldiers of Gideon.

But I kept my eyes on my guide and the stranger. The former drew near,
sorely against his will; the other seemed to have no evil designs upon
us, for he had set his horse at liberty once more, and his blunderbuss,
which he had held at first in a horizontal position, was now pointed
towards the ground.

As it seemed to me inexpedient to take umbrage at the small amount of
respect shown to my person, I stretched myself out on the grass, and
asked the man with the blunderbuss, in a careless tone, if he happened
to have a flint and steel about him. At the same time I produced my
cigar-case. The stranger, still without a word, felt in his pocket,
took out his flint and steel and courteously struck a light for me.
Evidently he was becoming tamer, for he sat down opposite me, but did
not lay aside his weapon. When my cigar was lighted, I selected the
best of those that remained and asked him if he smoked.

“Yes, señor,” he replied.

Those were the first words that he had uttered, and I noticed that
he did not pronounce the s after the Andalusian fashion,[1] whence I
concluded that he was a traveller like myself, minus the archæologist.

“You will find this rather good,” I said, offering him a genuine Havana
regalia.

He bent his head slightly, lighted his cigar by mine, thanked me with
another nod, then began to smoke with every appearance of very great
enjoyment.

“Ah!” he exclaimed, as he discharged the first puff slowly through his
mouth and his nostrils, “how long it is since I have had a smoke!”

In Spain, a cigar offered and accepted establishes hospitable
relations, just as the sharing of bread and salt does in the East.
My man became more talkative than I had hoped. But, although he
claimed to live in the _partido_ of Montilla, he seemed to be but
ill-acquainted with the country. He did not know the name of the
lovely valley where we were; he could not mention any village in the
neighbourhood; and, lastly, when I asked him whether he had seen any
ruined walls thereabouts, or any tiles with raised edges, or any carved
stones, he admitted that he had never paid any attention to such
things. By way of compensation he exhibited much expert knowledge of
horses. He criticised mine, which was not very difficult; then he gave
me the genealogy of his, which came from the famous stud of Cordova;
a noble animal in very truth, and so proof against fatigue, according
to his master, that he had once travelled thirty leagues in a day, at
a gallop or a fast trot. In the middle of his harangue the stranger
paused abruptly, as if he were surprised and angry with himself for
having said too much.

“You see, I was in a hurry to get to Cordova,” he added, with some
embarrassment. “I had to present a petition to the judges in the matter
of a lawsuit.”

As he spoke, he glanced at my guide, Antonio, who lowered his eyes.

The cool shade and the spring were so delightful to me that I
remembered some slices of excellent ham which my friends at Montilla
had put in my guide’s wallet. I bade him produce them, and I invited
the stranger to join me in my impromptu collation. If he had not smoked
for a long while, it seemed probable to me that he had not eaten for
at least forty-eight hours. He devoured the food like a starved wolf.
It occurred to me that our meeting was a providential affair for the
poor fellow. My guide meanwhile ate little, drank still less, and did
not talk at all, although from the very beginning of our journey he had
revealed himself to me in the guise of an unparalleled chatterbox. Our
guest’s presence seemed to embarrass him, and a certain distrust kept
them at arm’s length from each other, but I was unable to divine its
cause.

The last crumbs of the bread and ham had vanished; each of us had
smoked a second cigar; I ordered the guide to put the bridles on our
horses, and I was about to take leave of my new friend, when he asked
me where I intended to pass the night.

I replied, before I had noticed a signal from my guide, that I was
going on to the Venta del Cuervo.

“A wretched place for a man like you, señor. I am going there, and if
you will allow me to accompany you, we will ride together.”

“With great pleasure,” I replied, mounting my horse.

My guide, who was holding my stirrup, made another signal with his
eyes. I answered it with a shrug of my shoulders, as if to assure him
that I was perfectly unconcerned, and we set forth.

Antonio’s mysterious signs, his evident uneasiness, a few words that
had escaped from the stranger, and, above all, his gallop of thirty
leagues, and the far from plausible explanation of it which he had
offered, had already formed my opinion concerning our travelling
companion. I had no doubt that I had fallen in with a smuggler,
perhaps a highwayman; but what did it matter to me? I was sufficiently
acquainted with the Spanish character to be very sure that I had
nothing to fear from a man who had broken bread and smoked with me. His
very presence was a certain protection against any unpleasant meetings.
Furthermore, I was very glad to know what manner of man a brigand
is. One does not see them every day, and there is a certain charm in
finding oneself in the company of a dangerous individual, especially
when one finds him to be gentle and tame.

I hoped to lead the stranger by degrees to the point of making me
his confidant, and despite my guide’s meaning winks, I turned the
conversation to the subject of highway robbers. Be it understood that I
spoke of them with great respect. There was in Andalusia at that time
a celebrated brigand named José Maria, whose exploits were on every
tongue.

“Suppose I were riding beside José Maria!” I said to myself.

I told such stories as I knew concerning that hero--all to his credit,
by the way,--and I expressed in warm terms my admiration for his
gallantry and his generosity.

“José Maria is a villain pure and simple,” observed the stranger,
coldly.

“Is he doing himself justice?” I thought; “or is this merely an excess
of modesty on his part?” For, by dint of observing my companion
closely, I had succeeded in applying to him the description of José
Maria which I had seen placarded on the gates of many a town in
Andalusia. “Yes, it is certainly he: fair hair, blue eyes, large mouth,
fine teeth, small hands; a shirt of fine linen, velvet jacket with
silver buttons, white leather gaiters, a bay horse. There is no doubt
of it! But I will respect his incognito.”

We arrived at the _venta_. It was the sort of place that he had
described, that is to say, one of the vilest taverns that I had seen as
yet. A large room served as kitchen, dining-room, and bedroom. The fire
was kindled on a flat stone in the middle of the room, and the smoke
emerged through a hole in the roof, or rather hung about it, forming a
dense cloud a few feet from the floor. Stretched on the ground along
the walls could be seen some five or six worn mule-blankets; they were
the beds of the guests. Some twenty yards from the house, or rather
from the single room which I have described, was a sort of shed, which
did duty as a stable. In this attractive abode there were no other
human beings, for the moment at least, than an old woman and a little
girl of eight or ten years, both as black as soot and clad in shocking
rags.

“Behold,” I said to myself, “all that remains of the population of the
ancient Munda Bœtica! O Cæsar! O Sextus Pompey! how surprised you would
be, should you return to earth!”

At sight of my companion, the old woman uttered an exclamation of
surprise.

“Ah! Señor Don José!” she cried.

Don José frowned and raised his hand with an authoritative gesture
which instantly silenced the old woman. I turned to my guide, and with
an imperceptible sign gave him to understand that there was nothing
that he could tell me concerning the man with whom I was about to pass
the night.

The supper was better than I anticipated. On a small table about a
foot high we were served with an aged rooster, fricasseed with rice
and an abundance of peppers; then with peppers in oil; and lastly with
_gaspacho_, a sort of pepper salad. Three dishes thus highly seasoned
compelled us to have frequent recourse to a skin of Montilla wine,
which was delicious. After we had eaten, happening to spy a mandolin
hanging on the wall,--there are mandolins everywhere in Spain,--I asked
the little girl who waited on us if she knew how to play it.

“No,” she replied, “but Don José plays it so well!”

“Be good enough,” I said to him, “to sing me something; I am
passionately fond of your national music.”

“I can refuse no request of such a gallant gentleman, who gives me such
excellent cigars,” said Don José, good-naturedly.

And, having asked for the mandolin, he sang to his own accompaniment.
His voice was rough, but very agreeable, the tune melancholy and weird;
as for the words, I did not understand a syllable.

“If I am not mistaken,” I said, “that is not a Spanish air. It
resembles the _zorzicos_ which I have heard in the Provinces,[2] and
the words must be Basque.”

“Yes,” replied Don José, with a gloomy air.

He placed the mandolin on the floor, and sat with folded arms, gazing
at the dying fire with a strange expression of melancholy. His face at
once noble and fierce, lighted by a lamp that stood on the low table,
reminded me of Milton’s Satan. Perhaps, like him, my companion was
thinking of the sojourn that he had left, of the banishment that he
had incurred by a sin. I tried to revive the conversation, but he did
not answer, absorbed as he was in his sad thoughts. The old woman had
already retired in one corner of the room, behind an old torn blanket
suspended by a cord. The little girl had followed her to that retreat,
reserved for the fair sex. Thereupon my guide rose and invited me to
accompany him to the stable; but at that suggestion Don José, as if
suddenly awakened, asked him roughly where he was going.

“To the stable,” was the guide’s reply.

“What for? The horses have their feed. Sleep here; the señor will not
object.”

“I am afraid the señor’s horse is sick; I would like the señor to see
him; perhaps he will know what to do for him.”

It was evident that Antonio wished to speak to me in private; but I had
no desire to arouse Don José’s suspicions, and, in view of the footing
on which we then stood, it seemed to me that the wisest course was to
show the most entire confidence. So I told Antonio that I understood
nothing about horses, and that I wished to sleep. Don José went with
him to the stable, whence he soon returned alone. He told me that
nothing was the matter with the horse, but that my guide considered him
such a valuable beast that he was rubbing him with his jacket to make
him sweat, and that he proposed to pass the night in that delectable
occupation. Meanwhile I had stretched myself out on the mule-blankets,
carefully wrapped in my cloak, in order not to come in contact with
them. After apologising for the liberty he took in taking his place
beside me, Don José lay down before the door, not without renewing
the priming of his blunderbuss, which he took care to place under the
wallet which served him for a pillow. Five minutes after we had bade
each other good-night we were both sound asleep.

I had believed that I was tired enough to be able to sleep even on such
a couch; but after about an hour, a very unpleasant itching roused me
from my first nap. As soon as I realised the nature of it, I rose,
convinced that it would be better to pass the night in the open air
than beneath that inhospitable roof. I walked to the door on tiptoe,
stepped over Don José, who was sleeping the sleep of the just, and
exerted such care that I left the house without waking him. Near the
door was a broad wooden bench; I lay down upon it, and bestowed myself
as comfortably as possible to finish the night. I was just closing my
eyes for the second time, when it seemed to me that I saw the shadows
of a man and a horse pass me, both moving without the slightest sound.
I sat up, and fancied that I recognised Antonio. Surprised to find him
outside of the stable at that time of night, I rose and walked toward
him. He had halted, having seen me first.

“Where is he?” he asked in a whisper.

“In the _venta_; he is asleep; he has no fear of fleas. Why are you
taking that horse away?”

I noticed then that to avoid making any noise on leaving the shed,
Antonio had carefully wrapped the animal’s feet in the remnants of an
old blanket.

“Speak lower, in God’s name!” said Antonio. “Don’t you know who that
man is? He’s José Navarro, the most celebrated bandit in Andalusia. I
have been making signs to you all day, but you wouldn’t understand.”

“Bandit or not, what do I care?” said I; “he has not robbed us, and
I’ll wager that he has no inclination to do so.”

“Very good! but there’s a reward of two hundred ducats for whoever
causes his capture. I know that there’s a detachment of lancers
stationed a league and a half from here, and before daybreak I will
bring up some stout fellows to take him. I would have taken his horse,
but the beast is so vicious that no one but Navarro can go near him.”

“The devil take you!” said I. “What harm has the poor fellow done to
you that you should denounce him? Besides, are you quite sure that he
is the brigand you say he is?”

“Perfectly sure; he followed me to the stable just now and said to me:
‘You act as if you knew me; if you tell that honest gentleman who I
am, I’ll blow your brains out!’--Stay, señor, stay with him; you have
nothing to fear. So long as he knows you are here he won’t suspect
anything.”

As we talked we had walked so far from the _venta_ that the noise of
the horse’s shoes could not be heard there. Antonio, in a twinkling,
removed the rags in which he had wrapped them, and prepared to mount. I
tried to detain him by entreaties and threats.

“I am a poor devil, señor,” he said; “two hundred ducats aren’t to be
thrown away, especially when it’s a question of ridding the province
of such vermin. But beware! if Navarro wakes, he’ll jump for his
blunderbuss, and then look out for yourself! I have gone too far to go
back; take care of yourself as best you can.”

The rascal was already in the saddle; he dug both spurs into the horse,
and I soon lost sight of him in the darkness.

I was very angry with my guide, and decidedly uneasy. After a moment’s
reflection, I decided what to do, and returned to the _venta_. Don José
was still asleep, repairing doubtless the effects of the fatigue and
vigils of several days of peril. I was obliged to shake him violently
in order to rouse him. I shall never forget his fierce glance and
the movement that he made to grasp his blunderbuss, which, as a
precautionary measure, I had placed at some distance from his couch.

“Señor,” I said, “I ask your pardon for waking you; but I have a
foolish question to ask you: would you be greatly pleased to see half a
dozen lancers ride up to this door?”

He sprang to his feet and demanded in a terrible voice:

“Who told you?”

“It matters little whence the warning comes, provided that it be well
founded.”

“Your guide has betrayed me, but he shall pay me for it! Where is he?”

“I don’t know; in the stable, I think.--But some one told me----”

“Who told you? It couldn’t have been the old woman.”

“Some one whom I do not know.--But without more words, have you any
reason for not awaiting the soldiers, yes or no? If you have, waste no
time; if not, good-night, and I ask your pardon for disturbing your
sleep.”

“Ah! your guide! your guide! I suspected him from the first; but--his
account is made up! Farewell, señor! God will repay you for the
service you have rendered me. I am not altogether so bad as you think;
no, there is still something in me which deserves a gallant man’s
compassion.--Farewell, señor! I have but one regret, and that is that I
cannot pay my debt to you.”

“In payment of the service I have rendered you, promise, Don José, to
suspect no one, and not to think of revenge. Here, take these cigars,
and a pleasant journey to you!”

And I offered him my hand.

He pressed it without replying, took his blunderbuss and his wallet,
and after exchanging a few words with the old woman, in an argot which
I could not understand, he ran to the shed. A few moments later I heard
him galloping across country.

I lay down again on my bench, but I slept no more. I wondered whether
I had done right to save a highwayman, perhaps a murderer, from the
gibbet, simply because I had eaten ham and rice _à la Valenciennes_
with him. Had I not betrayed my guide, who was upholding the cause of
the law? Had I not exposed him to the vengeance of a miscreant? But
the duties of hospitality!--“The prejudice of a savage!” I said to
myself; “I shall be responsible for all the crimes that bandit may
commit.”--But after all, is it really a prejudice, that instinct of
the conscience which is impervious to all argument? Perhaps, in the
delicate situation in which I found myself, I could not have taken
either course without remorse. I was still in a maze of uncertainty
concerning the moral aspect of my action, when I saw half a dozen
horsemen approaching, with Antonio, who remained prudently with the
rear-guard. I went to meet them and informed them that the brigand had
taken flight more than two hours before. The old woman, when questioned
by the officer in command, admitted that she knew Navarro, but said
that, living alone as she did, she should never have dared to risk her
life by denouncing him. She added that it was his custom, whenever he
visited her house, to leave in the middle of the night. For my part, I
was obliged to go to a place a few leagues away, to show my passport
and sign a declaration before an alcalde, after which I was allowed
to resume my archæological investigations. Antonio bore me a grudge,
suspecting that it was I who had prevented him from earning the two
hundred ducats. However, we parted on friendly terms at Cordova, where
I gave him a gratuity as large as the state of my finances would permit.


II

I passed several days at Cordova. I had been told of a certain
manuscript in the library of the Dominican convent, in which I was
likely to find valuable information concerning the Munda of the
ancients. Being very amiably received by the good fathers, I passed
the days in their convent, and walked about the city in the evenings.
There is always a throng of idlers, about sunset, on the quay that
borders the right bank of the Guadalquivir at Cordova. There one
inhales the emanations from a tannery which still maintains the ancient
celebrity of the district for the manufacture of leather; but, on the
other hand, one enjoys a spectacle that has its merits. A few minutes
before the Angelus, a great number of women assemble on the river
bank, below the quay, which is quite high. No man would dare to join
that group. As soon as the Angelus rings, it is supposed to be dark.
At the last stroke of the bell, all those women undress and go into
the water. Thereupon there is tremendous shouting and laughter and an
infernal uproar. From the quay above, the men stare at the bathers,
squinting their eyes, but they see very little. However, those vague
white shapes outlined against the dark blue of the stream set poetic
minds at work; and with a little imagination it is not difficult to
conjure up a vision of Diana and her nymphs in the bath, without
having to fear the fate of Actæon. I had been told that on a certain
day a number of profane scapegraces clubbed together to grease the palm
of the bell-ringer at the cathedral and hire him to ring the Angelus
twenty minutes before the legal hour. Although it was still broad
daylight, the nymphs of the Guadalquivir did not hesitate, but trusting
the Angelus rather than the sun, they fearlessly made their bathing
toilet, which is always of the simplest. I was not there. In my day the
bell-ringer was incorruptible, the twilight far from brilliant, and
only a cat could have distinguished the oldest orange-woman from the
prettiest grisette in Cordova.

One evening, when it was too dark to see anything, I was leaning
against the parapet of the quay, smoking, when a woman ascended the
steps leading to the river and seated herself by my side. She had in
her hair a large bouquet of jasmine, the flowers of which exhale an
intoxicating odour at night. She was simply, perhaps poorly clad, all
in black, like most grisettes in the evening. Women of fashion wear
black only in the morning; in the evening they dress _à la francesca_.
When she reached my side, my bather allowed the mantilla which covered
her head to fall over her shoulders, and I saw, “by the dim light
that falleth from the stars,” that she was young, small, well built,
and that she had very large eyes. I threw my cigar away at once. She
appreciated that distinctively French attention, and made haste to
say that she was very fond of the smell of tobacco; in fact, that she
sometimes smoked herself, when she could obtain a very mild _papelito_.
Luckily, I happened to have some of that description in my case, and
I lost no time in offering them to her. She deigned to take one and
lighted it at a piece of burning string which a child brought us in
consideration of a small coin. Mingling our smoke, we talked so long,
the fair bather and myself, that we were finally left almost alone on
the quay. I thought that I might safely venture to invite her to take
an ice at the _neveria_.[3] After hesitating modestly, she accepted;
but before concluding to do so, she wished to know what time it was. I
caused my repeater to strike, and that striking seemed to surprise her
greatly.

“What wonderful things you foreigners invent! From what country are
you, señor? An Englishman, no doubt?”[4]

“A Frenchman, and your humble servant. And you, señorita, or señora,
are of Cordova, I presume?”

“No.”

“You are an Andalusian, at all events. It seems to me that I can tell
that by your soft speech.”

“If you observe everybody’s speech so closely, you should be able to
guess what I am.”

“I believe that you are from the land of Jesus, within two steps of
paradise.”

(I had learned this metaphor, which designates Andalusia, from my
friend Francisco Sevilla, a well-known picador.)

“Bah! paradise--the people about here say that it wasn’t made for us.”

“In that case you must be a Moor, or----”

I checked myself, not daring to say “Jewess.”

“Nonsense! you see well enough that I am a gypsy; would you like me to
tell your _baji_?[5] Have you ever heard of La Carmencita? I am she.”

I was such a ne’er-do-well in those days--fifteen years ago--that I did
not recoil in horror when I found myself seated beside a sorceress.

“Pshaw!” I said to myself, “last week I supped with a highway robber,
to-day I will eat ices with a handmaid of the devil. When one is
travelling, one must see everything.”

I had still another motive for cultivating her acquaintance. When I
left school, I confess to my shame, I had wasted some time studying the
occult sciences, and several times indeed I had been tempted to conjure
up the spirits of darkness. Long since cured of my fondness for such
investigations, I still retained, nevertheless, a certain amount of
curiosity concerning all kinds of superstition, and I rejoiced at the
prospect of learning how far the art of magic had been carried among
the gypsies.

While talking together we had entered the _neveria_ and had taken
our seats at a small table lighted by a candle confined in a glass
globe. I had abundant opportunity to examine my _gitana_, while
divers respectable folk who were eating ices there lost themselves in
amazement at seeing me in such goodly company.

I seriously doubt whether Señorita Carmen was of the pure breed; at
all events, she was infinitely prettier than any of the women of her
nation whom I had ever met. No woman is beautiful, say the Spaniards,
unless she combines thirty _so’s_; or, if you prefer, unless she may
be described by ten adjectives, each of which is applicable to three
parts of her person. For instance, she must have three black things:
eyes, lashes, and eyebrows, etc. (See Brantôme for the rest.) My gypsy
could make no pretension to so many perfections. Her skin, albeit
perfectly smooth, closely resembled the hue of copper. Her eyes were
oblique, but of a beautiful shape; her lips a little heavy but well
formed, and disclosed two rows of teeth whiter than almonds without
their skins. Her hair, which was possibly a bit coarse, was black with
a blue reflection, like a crow’s wing, and long and glossy. To avoid
fatiguing you with a too verbose description, I will say that for each
defect she had some good point, which stood out the more boldly perhaps
by the very contrast. It was a strange, wild type of beauty, a face
which took one by surprise at first, but which one could not forget.
Her eyes, especially, had an expression at once voluptuous and fierce,
which I have never seen since in any mortal eye. “A gypsy’s eye is a
wolf’s eye” is a Spanish saying which denotes keen observation. If you
have not the time to go to the Jardin des Plantes to study the glance
of a wolf, observe your cat when it is watching a sparrow.

Of course it would have been absurd to have my fortune told in a café.
So I requested the pretty sorceress to allow me to accompany her to her
home. She readily consented, but she desired once more to know how the
time was passing and asked me to make my watch strike again.

“Is it real gold?” she inquired, scrutinising it with extraordinary
attention.

When we left the café, it was quite dark; most of the shops were
closed, and the streets almost deserted. We crossed the Guadalquivir
by the bridge, and at the very extremity of the suburb, we stopped
in front of a house which bore no resemblance to a palace. A child
admitted us. The gypsy said some words to him in a language entirely
unknown to me, which I afterwards found was the _rommani_ or _chipe
calli_, the language of the _gitanos_. The child at once disappeared,
leaving us in a room of considerable size, furnished with a small
table, two stools, and a chest. I must not forget to mention a jar of
water, a pile of oranges, and a bunch of onions.

As soon as we were alone, the gypsy took from her chest a pack of cards
which seemed to have seen much service, a magnet, a dried chameleon,
and a number of other articles essential to her art. Then she bade me
make a cross in my left hand with a coin, and the magic ceremonies
began. It is unnecessary to repeat her predictions; and, as for her
method of operation, it was evident that she was not a sorceress by
halves.

Unfortunately we were soon disturbed. The door was suddenly thrown
open with violence, and a man wrapped to the eyes in a brown cloak
entered the room, addressing the gypsy in a far from amiable fashion.
I did not understand what he said, but his tone indicated that he was
in a very bad temper. At sight of him the _gitana_ exhibited neither
surprise nor anger, but she ran to meet him, and, with extraordinary
volubility, said several sentences in the mysterious tongue which she
had already used in my presence. The word _payllo_, repeated several
times, was the only word that I understood. I knew that the gypsies
designated thus every man of another race than their own. Assuming
that I was the subject of discussion, I looked forward to a delicate
explanation; I already had my hand on one of the stools and was
deliberating as to the precise moment when it would be well for me to
hurl it at the intruder’s head. But he roughly pushed the gypsy aside
and strode toward me; then recoiled a step, exclaiming:

“What! is it you, señor?”

I looked closely at him and recognised my friend Don José. At that
moment I was inclined to regret that I had not let him be hanged.

“Ah! is it you, my fine fellow?” I cried, laughing as heartily as I
could manage to do; “you interrupted the señorita just as she was
telling me some very interesting things.”

“Always the same! This must come to an end,” he said between his teeth,
glaring savagely at the girl.

She meanwhile continued to talk to him in her own language. She became
excited by degrees. Her eye became bloodshot and terrible to look at,
her features contracted, and she stamped upon the floor. It seemed to
me that she was earnestly urging him to do something which he evidently
hesitated to do. What that something was, I fancied that I understood
only too well, when I saw her draw her little hand swiftly back and
forth under her chin. I was tempted to believe that it was a matter of
cutting a throat, and I had some suspicion that the throat in question
was my own.

To all this torrent of eloquence Don José replied only by two or three
words uttered in a sharp tone. Thereupon the gypsy bestowed on him a
glance of supreme contempt; then seated herself Turkish fashion in a
corner of the room, selected an orange, peeled it, and began to eat it.

Don José seized my arm, opened the door and led me into the street.
We walked about two hundred yards in absolute silence. Then he said,
extending his hand:

“Go straight ahead and you will come to the bridge.”

With that he turned his back on me and walked rapidly away. I returned
to my inn rather sheepishly and in a very bad temper. The worst feature
of the affair was that when I undressed I found that my watch was
missing.

Various considerations deterred me from going the next day to demand
it back, or from applying to the corregidor to recover it for me.
I completed my work on the manuscript at the Dominican convent and
departed for Seville. After wandering about Andalusia for several
months, I determined to return to Madrid, and it was necessary for me
to pass through Cordova once more. I did not propose to make a long
stay there, for I had taken a violent dislike to that fair city and
the bathers in the Guadalquivir. However, a few errands to do and some
friends to call upon would detain me three or four days at least in the
ancient capital of the Mussulman princes.

When I appeared at the Dominican convent, one of the fathers, who had
taken a lively interest in my investigations concerning the location of
Munda, welcomed me with open arms.

“Blessed be the name of God!” he cried. “Welcome, my dear friend! We
all believed you to be dead, and I who speak to you, I have recited
many _paters_ and _aves_, which I do not regret, for the welfare of
your soul. So you were not murdered?--for robbed we know that you
were.”

“How so?” I asked, not a little astonished.

“Why, yes--you know, that beautiful repeating watch that you used to
make strike in the library when we told you that it was time to go to
the choir. Well! it has been recovered; it will be restored to you.”

“That is to say,” I interrupted, somewhat disconcerted, “I lost it----”

“The villain is behind the bars, and as he was known to be a man who
would fire a gun at a Christian to obtain a penny, we were terribly
afraid that he had killed you. I will go to the corregidor’s with you,
and we will obtain your fine watch. And then, do not let me hear you
whisper that justice does not know its business in Spain!”

“I confess,” said I, “that I would rather lose my watch than give
testimony in court which might send a poor devil to the gallows,
especially because--because----”

“Oh! do not be alarmed on that score; he is well recommended, and he
cannot be hanged twice. When I say hanged, I am wrong. He is a hidalgo,
is your robber; so that he will be garroted[6] day after to-morrow,
without fail. So, you see, one theft more or less will have no effect
on his fate. Would to God that he had done nothing but steal! but he
has committed several murders, each more shocking than the last.”

“What is his name?”

“He is known throughout the province by the name of José Navarro,
but he has another Basque name, which neither you nor I could ever
pronounce. But he is a man worth looking at, and you, interested as you
are in seeing all the curiosities of the province, should not neglect
the opportunity to learn how villains leave this world in Spain. It
will be in the chapel, and Father Martinez will take you thither.”

My Dominican insisted so earnestly that I should view the preparations
for the “pretty little hanging” that I could not refuse. I went to see
the prisoner, having first supplied myself with a bunch of cigars,
which, I hoped, would induce him to pardon my indiscretion.

I was ushered into the presence of Don José while he was eating. He
nodded coldly to me, and thanked me courteously for the present I
brought him. Having counted the cigars in the bunch which I placed in
his hands, he took out a certain number and returned the rest to me,
remarking that he should not need any more.

I asked him if I could make his lot any easier by the expenditure of a
little money or by the influence of my friends. At first he shrugged
his shoulders and smiled sadly; but in a moment, on further reflection,
he requested me to have a mass said for the salvation of his soul.

“Would you,” he added timidly,--“would you be willing to have one said
also for a person who injured you?”

“Certainly, my dear fellow,” I said; “but there is no one in this part
of the country who has injured me, so far as I know.”

He took my hand and pressed it, with a solemn expression. After a
moment’s silence, he continued:

“May I venture to ask another favour at your hands? When you return to
your own country, perhaps you will pass through Navarre; at all events,
you will go by way of Vittoria, which is not very far away.”

“Yes,” I said, “I certainly shall go by way of Vittoria, but it is not
impossible that I may turn aside to go to Pampelune, and, to oblige
you, I think that I would willingly make that détour.”

“Very well! if you go to Pampelune, you will see more than one thing
that will interest you. It is a fine city. I will give you this
locket (he showed me a little silver locket which he wore about his
neck); you will wrap it in paper”--he paused a moment to control his
emotion--“and deliver it, or have it delivered, to a good woman whose
address I will give you. You will tell her that I am dead, but that you
do not know how I died.”

I promised to perform his commission. I saw him again the next day, and
passed a large part of the day with him. It was from his own lips that
I learned the melancholy adventures which follow.


III

“I was born,” he said, “at Elizondo, in the valley of Baztan. My name
is Don José Lizzarrabengoa, and you are familiar enough with Spain,
señor, to know at once from my name that I am a Basque and a Christian
of the ancient type. I use the title _Don_ because I am entitled to
it; and if I were at Elizondo, I would show you my genealogy on a
sheet of parchment. My family wished me to be a churchman, and they
forced me to study, but I profited little by it. I was too fond of
playing tennis--that was my ruin. When we Navarrese play tennis, we
forget everything. One day, when I had won, a young man from Alava
picked a quarrel with me; we took our _maquilas_,[7] and again I had
the advantage; but that incident compelled me to leave the country.
I fell in with some dragoons, and I enlisted in the cavalry regiment
of Almanza. The men from our mountains learn the military profession
quickly. I soon became a corporal, with the promise of being promoted
to quartermaster, when, to my undoing, I was placed on duty at the
tobacco factory in Seville. If you have ever been to Seville, you
must have seen that great building, outside of the fortifications,
close to the Guadalquivir. It seems to me that I can see the doorway
and the guard-house beside it at this moment. When on duty Spanish
troops either gamble or sleep; I, like an honest Navarrese, always
tried to find something to do. I was making a chain of brass wire, to
hold my primer. Suddenly my comrades said: ‘There goes the bell; the
girls will be going back to work.’ You must know, señor, that there
are four or five hundred girls employed in the factory. They roll the
cigars in a large room which no man can enter without a permit from
the Twenty-four,[8] because they are in the habit of making themselves
comfortable, the young ones especially, when it is warm. At the hour
when the women return to work, after their dinner, many young men
assemble to see them pass, and they make remarks of all colours to
them. There are very few of those damsels who will refuse a silk
mantilla, and the experts in that fishery have only to stoop to pick
up their fish. While the others stared, I remained on my bench, near
the door. I was young then; I was always thinking of the old province,
and I did not believe that there were any pretty girls without blue
petticoats and long plaited tresses falling over their shoulders.[9]
Moreover, the Andalusian girls frightened me; I was not accustomed as
yet to their manners: always jesting, never a serious word. So I had my
nose over my chain, when I heard some civilians say: ‘Here comes the
_gitanella_!’ I raised my eyes and I saw her. It was a Friday, and I
shall never forget it. I saw that Carmen whom you know, at whose house
I met you several months ago.

“She wore a very short red skirt, which revealed white silk stockings
with more than one hole, and tiny shoes of red morocco, tied with
flame-coloured ribbons. She put her mantilla aside, to show her
shoulders and a huge bunch of cassia, which protruded from her chemise.
She had a cassia flower in the corner of her mouth, too, and as she
walked she swung her hips like a filly in the stud at Cordova. In
my province a woman in that costume would have compelled everybody
to cross themselves. At Seville every one paid her some equivocal
compliment on her appearance, and she had a reply for every one,
casting sly glances here and there, with her hand on her hip, as
impudent as the genuine gypsy that she was. At first sight she did not
attract me, and I returned to my work; but she, according to the habit
of women and cats, who do not come when you call them, but come when
you refrain from calling them,--she halted in front of me and spoke to
me.

“‘_Compadre_,’ she said in Andalusian fashion, ‘will you give me your
chain to hold the keys of my strong-box?’

“‘It is to hold my primer’ [_épinglette_], I replied.

“‘Your _épinglette_!’ she exclaimed, with a laugh. ‘Ah! the señor makes
lace, since he needs pins!’ [_épingles_]

“Everybody present began to laugh, and I felt the blood rise to my
cheeks, nor could I think of any answer to make.

“‘Well, my heart,’ she continued, ‘make me seven ells of black lace
for a mantilla, pincushion [_épinglier_] of my soul!’

“And, taking the flower from her mouth she threw it at me with a jerk
of her thumb, and struck me between the eyes. Señor, that produced
on me the effect of a bullet. I did not know which way to turn, so I
sat as still as a post. When she had gone into the factory, I saw the
cassia blossom lying on the ground between my feet; I do not know what
made me do it, but I picked it up, unseen by my comrades, and stowed it
carefully away in my pocket--the first folly!

“Two or three hours later, I was still thinking of her, when a porter
rushed into the guard-house, gasping for breath and with a horrified
countenance. He told us that a woman had been murdered in the large
room where the cigars were made, and that we must send the guard there.
The quartermaster told me to take two men and investigate. I took my
two men and I went upstairs. Imagine, señor, that on entering the room
I found, first of all, three hundred women in their chemises, or
practically that, all shouting and yelling and gesticulating, making
such an infernal uproar that you could not have heard God’s thunder.
On one side a woman lay on the floor, covered with blood, with an X
carved on her face by two blows of a knife. On the opposite side from
the wounded woman, whom the best of her comrades were assisting, I saw
Carmen in the grasp of five or six women.

“‘Confession! Confession! I am killed!’ shrieked the wounded woman.

“Carmen said nothing; she clenched her teeth and rolled her eyes about
like a chameleon.

“‘What is all this?’ I demanded. I had great difficulty in learning
what had taken place, for all the work-girls talked at once. It seemed
that the wounded one had boasted of having money enough in her pocket
to buy an ass at the fair at Triana.

“‘I say,’ said Carmen, who had a tongue of her own, ‘isn’t a
broomstick good enough for you?’ The other, offended by the insult,
perhaps because she was conscious that she was vulnerable on that
point, replied that she was not a connoisseur in broomsticks, as she
had not the honour to be a gypsy or a godchild of Satan, but that the
Señorita Carmencita would soon make the acquaintance of her ass, when
the corregidor took her out to ride, with two servants behind to keep
the flies away. ‘Well!’ said Carmen, ‘I’ll make watering-troughs for
flies on your cheek, and I’ll paint a checker-board on it.’ And with
that, vli, vlan! she began to draw St. Andrew’s crosses on the other’s
face with the knife with which she cut off the ends of the cigars.

“The case was clear enough; I took Carmen by the arm. ‘You must come
with me, my sister,’ I said to her courteously. She darted a glance at
me, as if she recognised me; but she said, with a resigned air:

“‘Let us go. Where’s my mantilla?’

“She put it over her head in such wise as to show only one of her great
eyes, and followed my two men, as mild as a sheep. When we reached the
guard-house, the quartermaster said that it was a serious matter, and
that she must be taken to prison. It fell to my lot again to escort
her there. I placed her between two dragoons, and marched behind, as a
corporal should do under such circumstances. We started for the town.
At first the gypsy kept silent; but on Rue de Serpent--you know that
street; it well deserves its name because of the détours it makes--she
began operations by letting her mantilla fall over her shoulders, in
order to show me her bewitching face, and turning toward me as far as
she could, she said:

“‘Where are you taking me, my officer?’

“‘To prison, my poor child,’ I replied, as gently as possible, as a
good soldier should speak to a prisoner, especially to a woman.

“‘Alas! what will become of me? Señor officer, take pity on me. You are
so young, so good looking!’ Then she added, in a lower tone: ‘Let me
escape, and I’ll give you a piece of the _bar lachi_, which will make
all women love you.’

“The _bar lachi_, señor, is the lodestone, with which the gypsies claim
that all sorts of spells may be cast when one knows how to use it. Give
a woman a pinch of ground lodestone in a glass of white wine, and she
ceases to resist.--I replied with as much gravity as I could command:

“‘We are not here to talk nonsense; you must go to prison--that is the
order, and there is no way to avoid it.’

“We natives of the Basque country have an accent which makes it easy
for the Spaniards to identify us; on the other hand, there is not one
of them who can learn to say even _baï, jaona_.[10] So that Carmen
had no difficulty in guessing that I came from the provinces. You
must know, señor, that the gypsies, being of no country, are always
travelling, and speak all languages, and that most of them are
perfectly at home in Portugal, in France, in the Basque provinces, in
Catalonia, everywhere; they even make themselves understood by the
Moors and the English. Carmen knew Basque very well.

“‘_Laguna ene bihotsarena_, comrade of my heart,’ she said to me
abruptly, ‘are you from the provinces?’

“Our language, señor, is so beautiful, that, when we hear it in a
foreign land, it makes us tremble.--I would like to have a confessor
from the provinces,” added the bandit in a lower tone.

He continued after a pause:

“‘I am from Elizondo,’ I replied in Basque, deeply moved to hear my
native tongue spoken.

“‘And I am from Etchalar,’ said she. That is a place about four hours’
journey from us. ‘I was brought to Seville by gypsies. I have been
working in the factory to earn money enough to return to Navarre, to
my poor mother, who has no one but me to support her, and a little
_barratcea_[11] with twenty cider-apple trees! Ah! if I was at home,
by the white mountain! They insulted me because I don’t belong in
this land of thieves and dealers in rotten oranges; and those hussies
all leagued against me, because I told them that all their Seville
_jacques_[12] with their knives, wouldn’t frighten one of our boys
with his blue cap and his _maquila_. Comrade, my friend, won’t you do
anything for a countrywoman?’

“She lied, señor, she always lied. I doubt whether that girl ever said
a true word in her life; but when she spoke, I believed her; it was too
much for me. She murdered the Basque language, yet I believed that she
was a Navarrese. Her eyes alone, to say nothing of her mouth and her
colour, proclaimed her a gypsy. I was mad, I paid no heed to anything.
I thought that if Spaniards had dared to speak slightingly to me of
the provinces, I would have slashed their faces as she had slashed her
comrade’s. In short, I was like a drunken man; I began to say foolish
things, I was on the verge of doing them.

“‘If I should push you and you should fall, my countryman,’ she
continued, in Basque, ‘it would take more than these two Castilian
recruits to hold me.’

“Faith, I forgot orders and everything, and said to her:

“‘Well, my dear, my countrywoman, try it, and may Our Lady of the
Mountain be with you!’

“At that moment we were passing one of the narrow lanes of which there
are so many in Seville. All of a sudden Carmen turned and struck me
with her fist in the breast. I purposely fell backward. With one spring
she leaped over me and began to run, showing us a fleet pair of legs!
Basque legs are famous; hers were quite equal to them--as swift and as
well moulded. I sprang up instantly; but I held my lance horizontally
so as to block the street, so that my men were delayed for a moment
when they attempted to pursue her. Then I began to run myself, and they
at my heels. But overtake her! there was no danger of that, with our
spurs, and sabres, and lances![13] In less time than it takes to tell
it, the prisoner had disappeared. Indeed, all the women in the quarter
favoured her flight, laughed at us, and sent us in the wrong direction.
After much marching and countermarching, we were obliged to return to
the guard-house without a receipt from the governor of the prison.

“My men, to avoid being punished, said that Carmen had talked Basque
with me; and to tell the truth, it did not seem any too natural that
a blow with the fist of so diminutive a girl should upset a fellow of
my build so easily. It all seemed decidedly suspicious, or rather it
seemed only too clear. When I went off duty I was reduced to the ranks
and sent to prison for a month. That was my first punishment since I
had been in the service. Farewell to the uniform of a quartermaster,
which I fancied that I had already won!

“My first days in prison passed dismally enough. When I enlisted I had
imagined that I should at least become an officer. Longa and Mina,
countrymen of mine, are captains-general; Chapalangarra, who, like
Mina, is a negro and is a refugee in your country--Chapalangarra was
a colonel, and I have played tennis twenty times with his brother,
who was a poor devil like myself. Now I said to myself: ‘All the time
that you have served without punishment is time thrown away. Here you
are blacklisted, and to regain the good graces of your superiors, you
will have to work ten times harder than when you first enlisted! And
why did you receive punishment? For a gypsy hussy, who made a fool of
you, and who is doubtless stealing at this moment in some corner of the
city.’--But I could not help thinking of her. Would you believe it,
señor? I had always before my eyes her silk stockings, full of holes,
which she had shown me from top to bottom when she ran away. I looked
through the bars into the street, and among all the women who passed
I did not see a single one who could be compared with that devil of a
girl! And then, too, in spite of myself, I smelt of the cassia flower
she had thrown at me, which, although it had withered, still retained
its sweet odour. If there are such things as witches, that girl was one!

“One day the jailer came in and gave me an Alcala[14] loaf.

“‘Here,’ said he, ‘your cousin sends you this.’

“I took the loaf, greatly surprised, for I had no cousin in Seville.
‘It may be a mistake,’ I thought as I glanced at the loaf; but it was
so appetising, it smelt so good, that, without disturbing myself as
to whence it came or for whom it was intended, I determined to eat it.
On attempting to cut it my knife came in contact with something hard.
I investigated and found a small English file, which had been slipped
into the dough before baking. There was also in the loaf a gold piece
of two piastres. There was no more doubt in my mind; it was a gift from
Carmen. To people of her race freedom is everything, and they would set
fire to a city to save themselves from a day in prison. However, she
was a shrewd minx, and with that loaf one could snap one’s fingers at
jailers. In an hour’s time the stoutest bar could be sawed through with
the little file; and with the two piastres I could exchange my uniform
for a civilian’s coat at the first old clo’-man’s. You may imagine that
a man who had many a time taken young eaglets from their nests on our
cliffs would not have been at a loss to climb down into the street from
a window less than thirty feet high. But I did not wish to escape. I
still possessed my honour as a soldier, and to desert seemed to me a
heinous crime. However, I was touched by that token of remembrance.
When you are in prison you like to think that you have a friend outside
who is interested in you. The gold piece disturbed me a little, and I
would have liked to return it; but where was I to find my creditor?
That did not seem to me a simple matter.

“After the ceremony of reduction to the ranks, I thought that I could
not suffer any more; but I had still another humiliation to undergo:
when, on my release from prison, I was restored to duty and made to
take my turn at sentry-go like any private. You cannot conceive what
a man of spirit feels at such a time. I believe that I would as lief
have been shot. Then, at all events, you walk alone, in front of the
platoon; you feel that you are somebody; people look at you.

“I was stationed at the colonel’s door. He was a wealthy young man,
a good fellow, who liked to enjoy himself. All the young officers
were at his house, and many civilians--women, too, actresses, so it
was said. For my own part, it seemed to me as if the whole city had
arranged to meet at his door, in order to stare at me. Finally, the
colonel’s carriage drives up, with his valet on the box. Whom do I see
alight from it?--the _gitanella_! She was arrayed like a shrine this
time, bedizened and bedecked, all gold and ribbons. A spangled dress,
blue slippers, also with spangles, and flowers and lace everywhere. She
had a tambourine in her hand. There were two other gypsy women with
her, one young and one old. There always is an old woman to go about
with them. Then, there was an old man, also a gypsy, with a guitar, to
play for them to dance. You know that it is the fashion to hire gypsies
to go about to parties, to dance the _romalis_--that is their national
dance--and oftentimes for something else.

“Carmen recognised me and we exchanged a glance. I do not know why, but
at that moment I would have liked to be a hundred feet underground.

“‘_Agur laguna_,’[15] she said; ‘you seem to be mounting guard, like a
raw recruit, my officer!’

“And before I had thought of a word to say in reply, she was inside the
house.

“The whole company was in the _patio_, and in spite of the crowd, I
could see through the gate almost everything that took place.[16]
I heard the castanets, the tambourine, the laughter and applause;
sometimes I could see her head when she leaped into the air with her
tambourine. And then I heard some of the officers say to her many
things that brought the blood to my cheeks. I did not know what she
replied. It was that day, I believe, that I began to love her in good
earnest; for I was tempted three or four times to go into the _patio_
and run my sabre into the belly of those popinjays who were making love
to her. My torture lasted a good hour; then the gypsies came out and
the carriage took them away. Carmen, as she passed, glanced at me again
with the eyes that you know, and said, very low:

“‘My countryman, when one likes nice fried things, one goes to Lillas
Pastia’s at Triana for them.’

“Nimble as a kid, she jumped into the carriage, the coachman whipped
his mules, and the whole merry band drove away, I know not where.

“You will readily guess that when I was relieved from duty I went to
Triana; but I was shaved first, and brushed my clothes as for a dress
parade. She was at Lillas Pastia’s, an old gypsy, black as a Moor,
who kept an eating-house, to which many civilians came to eat fried
fish--especially, I rather think, since Carmen had taken up her
quarters there.

“‘Lillas,’ she said, as soon as she saw me, ‘I shall do nothing more
to-day. It will be light to-morrow.[17] Come, my countryman, let’s go
for a walk.’

“She put her mantilla over her face, and behold, we were in the street,
I with no idea where we were going.

“‘Señorita,’ I said, ‘I believe that I have to thank you for a present
which you sent me when I was in prison. I ate the bread; I shall use
the file to sharpen my lance, and I shall keep it in memory of you; but
here is the money.’

“‘My word! he has kept the money!’ she exclaimed, laughing heartily.
‘However, it’s all the better, for I am not in funds. But what does it
matter? The dog that keeps going always finds a bone.[18] Come on, we
will eat it all up. You shall treat me.’

“We were walking in the direction of Seville. As we entered Rue
de Serpent, she bought a dozen oranges and bade me put them in my
handkerchief. A little farther on she bought bread and sausages, and a
bottle of Manzanilla; and finally she entered a confectioner’s shop.
There she tossed on the counter the gold piece I had given back to
her with another that she had in her pocket and some small silver;
then she asked me for all that I had. I had only a _piecette_ and a
few _cuartos_, which I gave her, sorely vexed because I had no more.
I thought that she intended to carry off the whole shop. She selected
all the best and most expensive sweetmeats: _yemas_,[19] _turon_,[20]
preserved fruits, so long as the money held out. All those things too
I must needs carry in paper bags. Perhaps you know Rue de Candilejo,
where there’s a head of King Don Pedro the Justiciary?[21] That head
should have suggested some salutary reflections to my mind. We stopped
in front of an old house on that street. She entered the passage and
knocked at a door on the ground floor. A gypsy woman, a veritable
handmaid of Satan, opened the door. Carmen said a few words to her in
_rommani_. The old woman grumbled at first, and Carmen, to pacify her,
gave her two oranges and a handful of bonbons, and allowed her to taste
the wine. Then she put her cloak over her shoulders and escorted her
to the door, which she secured behind her with an iron bar. As soon as
we were alone, she began to dance and laugh like a mad woman, saying:

“‘You are my _rom_, and I am your _romi_!’[22]

“I stood in the middle of the room, laden with all her purchases, not
knowing where to put them. She threw them all on the floor and jumped
on my neck, saying:

“‘I pay my debts, I pay my debts! That is the law of the _cales_.’[23]

“Ah! that day, señor! that day! When I think of it, I forget to-morrow!”

The bandit was silent for a moment; then, having relighted his cigar,
he continued:

“We passed the whole day together, eating, drinking, and the rest.
When she had eaten her fill of bonbons, like a child of six, she
stuffed handfuls of them into the old woman’s water-jar.--‘That’s to
make sherbet for her,’ she said. She crushed _yemas_ by throwing them
against the wall. ‘That’s to induce the flies to let us alone,’ she
said. There is no conceivable trick and no folly that she did not
commit. I told her that I would like to see her dance; but where was
she to obtain castanets? She instantly took the old woman’s only plate,
broke it in pieces, and in a moment she was dancing the _romalis_,
clapping the pieces of crockery in as perfect time as if they had been
castanets of ebony or ivory. One was never bored with that girl, I
assure you.

“Night came on and I heard the drums beating the retreat.

“‘I must go to quarters for the roll-call,’ I said.

“‘To quarters?’ she repeated, contemptuously; ‘are you a negro, pray,
that you allow yourself to be led by a stick? You are a regular canary,
in dress and in temper![24] Go! you are a chicken-hearted fellow!’

“I remained, with my mind made up beforehand to the guard-room. The
next morning, she was the first to mention parting.

“‘Look you, Joseito,’ she said, ‘have I paid you? According to our law,
I owed you nothing, as you are a _payllo_; but you are a comely youth,
and you took my fancy. We are quits. Good-day.’

“I asked her when I should see her again.

“‘When you are less stupid,’ she replied with a laugh. Then, in a more
serious tone: ‘Do you know, my son, that I believe that I love you a
little bit? But it can’t last. Dog and wolf don’t live happily together
for long. Perhaps, if you should swear allegiance to Egypt, I should
like to be your _romi_. But this is foolish talk; it can never be.
Believe me, my boy, you have come off cheap. You have met the devil,
yes, the devil; he isn’t always black, and he didn’t wring your neck. I
am dressed in wool, but I am no sheep.[25] Go and put a wax candle in
front of your _majari_.[26] She has well earned it. Well, good-bye once
more. Think no more of Carmencita, or she might be the cause of your
marrying a widow with wooden legs.’[27]

“As she spoke she removed the bar that secured the door, and once in
the street, she wrapped herself in her mantilla and turned her back on
me.

“She spoke truly. I should have been wise to think no more of her; but
after that day on Rue de Candilejo, I could think of nothing else. I
walked about all day long, hoping to meet her. I asked the old woman
and the eating-house keeper for news of her. Both replied that she
had gone to Laloro,[28] which was their way of designating Portugal.
Probably they said that in accordance with Carmen’s instructions, but I
very soon found out that they lied. Several weeks after my day on Rue
de Candilejo, I was on duty at one of the gates of the city. A short
distance from the gate there was a breach in the wall; men were at work
repairing it during the day, and at night a sentinel was posted there
to prevent smuggling. During the day I saw Lillas Pastia going to and
fro around the guard-house, and talking with some of my comrades; all
of them knew him, and they knew his fish and his fritters even better.
He came to me and asked me if I had heard from Carmen.

“‘No,’ said I.

“‘Well, you will, _compadre_.’

“He was not mistaken. At night I was stationed at the breach. As soon
as the corporal had retired, I saw a woman coming towards me. My heart
told me that it was Carmen. However, I shouted:

“‘Go back! You cannot pass!’

“‘Don’t be disagreeable,’ she said, showing me her face.

“‘What! is it you, Carmen?’

“‘Yes, my countryman. Let us talk a little and talk quick. Do you want
to earn a _douro_? There are some men coming with bundles; let them
alone.’

“‘No,’ I replied. ‘I must prevent them from passing; those are my
orders.’

“‘Orders! orders! So you’ve forgotten the Rue de Candilejo?’

“‘Ah!’ I exclaimed, completely overwhelmed by the bare memory of that
day, ‘that would be well worth the penalty of forgetting orders; but I
want no smugglers’ money.’

“‘Well, if you don’t want money, would you like to go again to old
Dorothy’s and dine?’

“‘No,’ I said, half suffocated by the effort it cost me, ‘I cannot.’

“‘Very good. If you are so stiff-backed, I know whom to apply to. I
will go to your officer and offer to go to Dorothy’s with him. He looks
like a good fellow, and he will put some man on duty here who will see
no more than he ought to see. Farewell, Canary. I shall laugh with all
my heart on the day when the orders are to hang you.’

“I was weak enough to call her back, and I promised to allow all
gypsydom to pass, if necessary, provided that I obtained the only
reward that I desired. She instantly swore to keep her word on the
next day, and hastened away to notify her friends, who were close by.
There were five of them,--Pastia was one--all well laden with English
goods. Carmen kept watch. She was to give warning with her castanets
the instant that she saw the patrol; but she did not need to do it. The
smugglers did their work in an instant.

“The next day I went to Rue de Candilejo. Carmen kept me waiting, and
when she came she was in a villainous temper.

“‘I don’t like people who make you ask them so many times,’ she said.
‘You did me a very great service the first time, without knowing
whether you would gain anything by it. Yesterday, you bargained with
me. I don’t know why I came, for I don’t love you any more. Here, take
this _douro_ for your trouble.’

“I was within an ace of throwing the money at her head, and I was
obliged to make a violent effort over myself to keep from striking
her. After we had quarrelled for an hour, I left the house in a rage.
I wandered about the city a long while, tramping hither and thither
like a madman; at last I entered a church, and, seeking out the darkest
corner, wept scalding tears. Suddenly I heard a voice:

“‘A dragoon’s tears! I must make a love-philtre of them!’

“I raised my eyes; Carmen stood in front of me.

“‘Well, my countryman, are you still angry with me?’ she said. ‘It must
be that I love you, in spite of what I know of you, for since you left
me, I don’t know what is the matter with me. See, I am the one now who
asks you to come to Rue de Candilejo.’

“So we made our peace; but Carmen’s moods were like the weather in our
country. Among our mountains a storm is never so near as when the sun
shines brightest. She promised to meet me again at Dorothy’s, and she
did not come. And Dorothy told me coolly that she had gone to Laloro on
business of Egypt.

“As I knew already from experience what to think on that subject, I
sought Carmen wherever I thought that she could possibly be, and I
passed through Rue de Candilejo twenty times a day. One evening I was
at Dorothy’s, having almost tamed her by treating her now and then to a
glass of anisette, when Carmen came in, followed by a young officer, a
lieutenant in our regiment.

“‘Off with you, quick,’ she said to me in Basque.

“I sat as if stupefied, with rage in my heart.

“‘What are you doing here?’ the lieutenant asked me; ‘decamp, leave
this house!’

“I could not take a step; I was like a man who has lost the use of his
limbs. The officer, seeing that I did not withdraw, and that I had not
even removed my forage cap, lost his temper, seized me by the collar,
and shook me roughly. I do not know what I said to him. He drew his
sword, and I my sabre. The old woman grasped my arm, and the lieutenant
struck me a blow on the forehead, the mark of which I still bear. I
stepped back and knocked Dorothy down with a blow of my elbow; then,
as the lieutenant followed me, I held the point of my sabre to his
breast, and he spitted himself on it. Thereupon Carmen put out the
lamp and told Dorothy in her language to fly. I myself rushed out into
the street and started to run, I knew not whither. It seemed to me
that some one was following me. When I came to my senses, I found that
Carmen had not left me.

“‘You great idiot of a canary!’ she exclaimed; ‘you can’t do anything
but make a fool of yourself! I told you, you know, that I should bring
you bad luck. Well! there’s a cure for everything when one has for
one’s friend a Roman Fleming.[29] First of all, put this handkerchief
on your head, and toss me that belt. Wait for me in this passage. I
will return in two minutes.’

“She disappeared, and soon brought me a striped cloak, which she had
obtained heaven knows where. She bade me take off my uniform and put
on the cloak over my shirt. Thus attired, with the handkerchief with
which she had bound up the wound on my head, I looked not unlike a
peasant from Valencia, so many of whom came to Seville to sell their
_chufas_[30] orgeat. Then she took me into a house much like Dorothy’s,
at the end of a narrow lane. She and another gypsy washed me and
dressed my wound better than any surgeon could have done, and gave me
something, I don’t know what, to drink; finally, they laid me on a
mattress, and I went to sleep.

“Probably those women had mingled with my drink one of those soporific
drugs of which they know the secret, for I did not wake until very late
the next day. I had a terrible headache and a little fever. It was
some time before I remembered the terrible scene in which I had taken
part the night before. After dressing my wound, Carmen and her friend,
both squatting beside my mattress, exchanged a few words of _chipe
calli_, which seemed to be a medical consultation. Then they united in
assuring me that I should soon be cured, but that I must leave Seville
at the earliest possible moment; for, if I should be caught, I would
inevitably be shot.

“‘My boy,’ said Carmen, ‘you must do something. Now that the king gives
you neither rice nor dried fish,[31] you must think about earning
your living. You are too stupid to steal _à pastesas_[32]; but you
are strong and active; if you have any pluck, go to the coast and be
a smuggler. Haven’t I promised to be the cause of your being hung?
That’s better than being shot? However, if you go about it the right
way you will live like a prince as long as the _miñons_[33] and the
coast-guards don’t get their hands on your collar.’

“In this engaging way did that diabolical girl point out to me the new
career for which she destined me, the only one, to tell the truth,
which remained open to me, now that I had incurred the death penalty.
Need I tell you, señor? she prevailed upon me without much difficulty.
It seemed to me that I should become more closely united to her by that
life of perils and of rebellion. Thenceforth I felt that I was sure
of her love. I had often heard of a band of smugglers who infested
Andalusia, mounted on good horses, blunderbuss in hand, and their
mistresses _en croupe_. I imagined myself trotting over mountain and
valley with the pretty gypsy behind me. When I spoke to her about
it she laughed until she held her sides, and told me that there was
nothing so fine as a night in camp, when every _rom_ retires with
his _romi_ under the little tent formed of three hoops with canvas
stretched over them.

“‘If I ever have you in the mountains,’ I said to her, ‘I shall be sure
of you! There, there are no lieutenants to share with me.’

“‘Oh! you are jealous,’ she replied. ‘So much the worse for you! Are
you really stupid enough for that? Don’t you see that I love you, as I
have never asked you for money?’

“When she talked like that I felt like strangling her.

“To cut it short, señor, Carmen procured a civilian’s costume for me
in which I left Seville without being recognised. I went to Jerez
with a letter from Pastia to a dealer in anisette, whose house was
a rendezvous for smugglers. There I was presented to those gentry,
whose leader, one Dancaïre, took me into his troop. We started for
Gaucin, where I found Carmen, who had agreed to meet me there. In our
expeditions she served us as a spy, and a better spy there never was.
She was returning from Gibraltar and she had already arranged with the
master of a vessel to bring a cargo of English goods which we were to
receive on the coast. We went to Estepona to wait for it, and concealed
a portion in the mountains. Then, laden with the rest, we journeyed to
Ronda. Carmen had preceded us thither, and it was she who let us know
the opportune moment to enter the town. That first trip and several
succeeding ones were fortunate. The smuggler’s life pleased me better
than that of a soldier. I made presents to Carmen; I had money and a
mistress. I suffered little from remorse, for, as the gypsies say:
‘The scab does not itch when one is enjoying one’s self.’ We were well
received everywhere; my companions treated me well, and even showed me
much consideration. The reason was that I had killed a man, and there
were some among them who had not such an exploit on their consciences.
But what appealed to me most strongly in my new life was that I saw
Carmen often. She was more affectionate with me than ever; but before
our comrades she would not admit that she was my mistress; and she
had even made me swear all sorts of oaths never to say anything about
her. I was so weak before that creature that I obeyed all her whims.
Moreover, it was the first time that she had exhibited herself to
me with the reserve of a virtuous woman, and I was simple enough to
believe that she had really corrected herself of her former manners.

“Our troop, which consisted of eight or ten men, seldom met except
at critical moments; ordinarily we were scattered about by twos and
threes, in different towns and villages. Each of us claimed to have
a trade; one was a tinker, another a horse-dealer; I was a silk
merchant, but I seldom showed my face in the large places because of my
unfortunate affair at Seville.

“One day, or rather one night, our rendezvous was at the foot of Veger.
Dancaïre and I arrived there before the rest. He seemed in very high
spirits.

“‘We are going to have another comrade,’ he said. ‘Carmen has just
played one of her best tricks. She has managed the escape of her _rom_,
who was at the presidio at Tarifa.’

“I was already beginning to understand the gypsy tongue, which almost
all my comrades spoke, and that word _rom_ gave me a shock.

“‘What’s that? her husband! is she married?’ I asked the captain.

“‘Yes,’ he replied, ‘to Garcia the One-Eyed, a gypsy, as sharp as
herself. The poor fellow was at the galleys. Carmen bamboozled the
surgeon at the presidio so successfully that she has obtained her
_rom’s_ liberty. Ah! that girl is worth her weight in gold. For two
years she has been trying to manage his escape. Every scheme failed
until they took it into their heads to change surgeons. With the new
one she seems to have found a way to come to an understanding very
soon.’

“You can imagine the pleasure that that news afforded me. I soon saw
Garcia the One-Eyed; he was surely the most loathsome monster that
ever gypsydom reared; black of skin, and blacker of heart, he was the
most unblushing villain that I have ever met in my life. Carmen came
with him; and when she called him her _rom_ in my presence, you should
have seen the eyes she made at me and her grimaces when Garcia turned
his head. I was angry, and I did not speak to her that night. In the
morning we had made up our bales and were already on the march, when
we discovered that a dozen horsemen were at our heels. The braggart
Andalusians, who talked of nothing but massacring everybody, made a
most pitiful show. It was a general save himself who could. Dancaïre,
Garcia, a handsome fellow from Ecija whom we called the Remendado, and
Carmen, did not lose their heads. The rest had abandoned the mules, and
had plunged into the ravines, where horses could not follow them. We
could not keep our animals, and we hastily unpacked the best of our
booty and loaded it on our shoulders, then tried to escape down the
steep slopes of the cliffs. We threw our bundles before us and slid
down on our heels after them as best we could. Meanwhile the enemy were
peppering us; it was the first time that I had ever heard the whistle
of bullets, and it didn’t affect me very much. When one is under the
eye of a woman, there is no merit in laughing at death. We escaped, all
except the poor Remendado, who received a shot in the loins. I dropped
my bundle and tried to carry him.

“‘Fool!’ shouted Garcia, ‘what have we to do with carrion? Finish him
and don’t lose the stockings!’

“‘Drop him!’ Carmen called to me.

“Fatigue forced me to place him on the ground a moment, behind a rock.
Garcia stepped up and discharged his blunderbuss at his head.

“‘It will be a clever man who will recognise him now,’ he said,
glancing at his face, which was torn to shreds by a dozen bullets.

“Such, señor, was the noble life I led. That night we found ourselves
in a copse, utterly worn out and ruined by the loss of our mules.
What does that infernal Garcia do but pull a pack of cards from his
pocket and begin to play with Dancaïre by the light of a fire which
they kindled. Meanwhile I had lain down and was gazing at the stars,
thinking of the Remendado and saying to myself that I would rather be
in his place. Carmen was sitting near me, and from time to time she
played with the castanets and sang under her breath. Then, drawing
nearer as if to speak to me, she kissed me, almost against my will, two
or three times.

“‘You are the devil!’ I said to her.

“‘Yes,’ she replied.

“After a few hours’ rest she started for Gaucin, and the next day a
young goatherd brought us food. We remained there the whole day, and
at night went in the direction of Gaucin. We expected to hear from
Carmen. No one appeared. At daybreak we saw a muleteer conducting a
well-dressed woman with a parasol, and a small girl who seemed to be
her servant. Garcia said:

“‘Here’s two mules and two women sent to us by Saint Nicholas; I should
rather have four mules; but no matter, I’ll make the best of it.’

“He took his blunderbuss and crept down toward the path, keeping out
of sight in the underbrush. We followed him, Dancaïre and I, at a
short distance. When we were within arm’s length we showed ourselves
and called to the muleteer to stop. The woman when she saw us, instead
of being frightened--and our costumes were quite enough to frighten
her--shouted with laughter.

“‘Ha! ha! the _lillipendi_, to take me for an _erani_!’[34]

“It was Carmen, but so perfectly disguised that I should not have
recognised her if she had spoken a different tongue. She jumped down
from her mule and talked for some time in a low tone with Dancaïre and
Garcia, then said to me:

“‘We shall meet again, Canary, before you’re hung. I am going to
Gibraltar on business of Egypt. You will hear of me soon.’

“We parted, after she had told us of a place where we could obtain
shelter for a few days. That girl was the Providence of our party. We
soon received some money which she sent us, and some information which
was worth much more to us; it was to the effect that on such a day two
English noblemen would leave Gibraltar for Grenoble by such a road.
A word to the wise is sufficient. They had a store of good guineas.
Garcia wanted to kill them, but Dancaïre and I objected. We took only
their money and watches, in addition to their shirts, of which we were
in sore need.

“Señor, a man becomes a rascal without thinking of it. A pretty girl
steals your wits, you fight for her, an accident happens, you have to
live in the mountains, and from a smuggler you become a robber before
you know it. We considered that it was not healthy for us in the
neighbourhood of Gibraltar, after the affair of the noblemen, and we
buried ourselves in the Sierra de Ronda. You once mentioned José Maria
to me; well, it was there that I made his acquaintance. He took his
mistress on his expeditions. She was a pretty girl, clean and modest
and well-mannered; never an indecent word, and such devotion. As a
reward, he made her very unhappy. He was always running after women, he
maltreated her, and sometimes he took it into his head to pretend to be
jealous. Once he struck her with a knife. Well, she loved him all the
better for it. Women are made like that, especially the Andalusians.
She was proud of the scar she had on her arm, and showed it as the
most beautiful thing in the world. And then José Maria was the worst
kind of a comrade, to boot. In an expedition that we made together, he
managed matters so well that he had all the profit, we all the blows
and trouble. But I resume my story. We heard nothing at all from Carmen.

“‘One of us must go to Gibraltar to find out something about her,’ said
Dancaïre; ‘she should have arranged some affair for us. I would go, but
I am too well known at Gibraltar.’

“The One-Eyed said:

“‘So am I too; everybody knows me there, and I’ve played so many games
on the lobsters[35]! and as I have only one eye, I am hard to disguise.’

“‘Shall I go then?’ said I in my turn, overjoyed at the bare thought of
seeing Carmen again; ‘tell me, what must I do?’

“The others said to me:

“‘Arrange it so as to go by sea or by San Roque, as you choose; and
when you get to Gibraltar, ask at the harbour where a chocolate seller
called Rollona lives; when you have found her, you can learn from her
what’s going on yonder.’

“It was agreed that we three should go together to the Sierra de
Gaucin, where I was to leave my companions and go on to Gibraltar in
the guise of a dealer in fruit. At Ronda, a man who was in our pay
had procured me a passport; at Gaucin they gave me a donkey; I loaded
him with oranges and melons, and started. When I reached Gibraltar, I
found that Rollona was well known there, but that she was dead or had
gone _to the ends of the earth_,[36] and her disappearance explained,
in my opinion, the loss of our means of correspondence with Carmen. I
put my donkey in a stable, and, taking my oranges, I walked about the
city as if to sell them, but in reality to see if I could not meet
some familiar face. There are quantities of riff-raff there from all
the countries on earth, and it is like the Tower of Babel, for you
cannot take ten steps on any street without hearing as many different
languages. I saw many gypsies, but I hardly dared to trust them; I
sounded them and they sounded me. We divined that we were villains;
the important point was to know whether we belonged to the same band.
After two days of fruitless going to and fro, I had learned nothing
concerning Rollona or Carmen, and was thinking of returning to my
comrades after making a few purchases, when, as I passed through a
street at sunset, I heard a woman’s voice calling to me from a window:
‘Orange-man!’ I looked up and saw Carmen on a balcony, leaning on the
rail with an officer in red, gold epaulets, curly hair--the whole
outfit of a great noble. She too was dressed magnificently: a shawl
over her shoulders, a gold comb, and her dress all silk; and the saucy
minx--always the same!--was laughing so that she held her sides. The
Englishman called to me in broken Spanish to come up, that the señora
wanted some oranges; and Carmen said in Basque:

“‘Come up, and don’t be surprised at anything.’

“In truth nothing was likely to surprise me on her part. I do not know
whether I felt more joy or grief at seeing her again. There was a tall
English servant with powdered hair, at the door, who ushered me into a
gorgeous salon. Carmen instantly said to me in Basque:

“‘You don’t know a word of Spanish; you don’t know me.’ Then, turning
to the Englishman: ‘I told you I recognised him at once as a Basque;
you will hear what a strange tongue it is. What a stupid look he has,
hasn’t he? One would take him for a cat caught in a pantry.’

“‘And you,’ I said to her in my language, ‘have the look of a
brazen-faced slut, and I am tempted to slash your face before your
lover.’

“‘My lover!’ she said; ‘did you really guess that all by yourself? And
you are jealous of this simpleton? You are more of a fool than you
were before our evenings in Rue de Candilejo. Don’t you see, blockhead
that you are, that I am doing the business of Egypt at this moment, and
in the most brilliant fashion too? This house is mine, the lobster’s
guineas will be mine; I lead him by the end of the nose, and I will
lead him to a place he will never come out of.’

“‘And I,’ I said, ‘if you go on doing the business of Egypt in this
way, I will see to it that you won’t do it again.’

“‘Ah! indeed! Are you my _rom_, to give me orders? The One-Eyed thinks
it’s all right, what business is it of yours? Oughtn’t you to be
content to be the only man who can say that he’s my _minchorrò?_’[37]

“‘What does he say?’ asked the Englishman.

“‘He says that he is thirsty and would like to drink a glass,’ Carmen
replied.

“And she threw herself on a couch, roaring with laughter at her
translation.

“When that girl laughed, señor, it was impossible to talk sense.
Everybody laughed with her. The tall Englishman began to laugh too,
like the fool that he was, and ordered something to be brought for me
to drink.

“While I was drinking:

“‘Do you see that ring he has on his finger?’ she asked me; ‘I will
give it to you if you want.’

“I replied:

“‘I would give a finger to have your lord on the mountains, each of us
with a _maquila_ in his hand.’

“‘_Maquila_--what does that mean?’ asked the Englishman.

“‘_Maquila_,’ said Carmen, still laughing, ‘is an orange. Isn’t that a
curious word for orange? He says that he would like to give you some
_maquila_ to eat.’

“‘Yes?’ said the Englishman. ‘Well! bring some _maquila_ to-morrow.’

“While we were talking, the servant entered and said that dinner was
ready. Thereupon the Englishman rose, gave me a piastre and offered
Carmen his arm, as if she could not walk alone. Carmen, still laughing,
said to me:

“‘I can’t invite you to dinner, my boy; but to-morrow, as soon as you
hear the drums beating for the parade, come here with some oranges. You
will find a room better furnished than the one on Rue de Candilejo, and
you will see whether I am still your Carmencita. And then we will talk
about the business of Egypt.’

“I made no reply, and after I was in the street I heard the Englishman
calling after me:

“‘Bring some _maquila_ to-morrow!’ and I heard Carmen’s shouts of
laughter.

“I went out, having no idea what I should do. I slept little, and in
the morning I found myself so enraged with that traitress that I had
resolved to leave Gibraltar without seeing her; but at the first beat
of the drum all my courage deserted me; I took my bag of oranges and
hurried to Carmen. Her blinds were partly open, and I saw her great
black eye watching me. The powdered servant ushered me in at once;
Carmen gave him an errand to do, and as soon as we were alone she burst
out with one of her shouts of crocodile laughter and threw herself
on my neck. I had never seen her so lovely. Arrayed like a Madonna,
perfumed--silk-covered furniture, embroidered hangings--ah!--and I,
dressed like the highwayman that I was!

“‘_Minchorrò!_’ said Carmen, ‘I have a mind to smash everything here,
to set fire to the house, and fly to the mountains!’

“And such caresses! and such laughter! and she danced, and she tore her
falbalas; never did monkey go through more antics, more deviltry, more
grimacing. When she had resumed her gravity:

“‘Listen,’ she said, ‘let us talk of Egypt. I want him to take me to
Ronda, where I have a sister who’s a nun (a fresh outburst of laughter
here). We shall go by a place that I will let you know. Do you fall
upon him; strip him clean! The best way would be to finish him; but,’
she added, with a diabolical smile which she assumed at certain times,
and no one had any desire to imitate that smile at such times,--‘do you
know what you must do? Let the One-Eyed appear first. Do you stay back
a little; the lobster is brave and a good shot; he has good pistols. Do
you understand?’

“She interrupted herself with a fresh burst of laughter that made me
shudder.

“‘No,’ I said, ‘I hate Garcia, but he is my comrade. Some day, perhaps,
I will rid you of him, but we will settle our accounts after the
fashion of my country. I am a gypsy only by chance; and in certain
things I shall always be a downright Navarrese, as the proverb says.’

“She retorted:

“‘You are a blockhead, a fool, a genuine _payllo_! You are like the
dwarf who thinks he’s tall when he can spit a long way. You don’t love
me--be off!’

“When she said ‘be off!’ I could not go. I promised to leave Gibraltar,
to return to my comrades and wait for the Englishman; she, on her side,
promised to be ill until it was time to leave Gibraltar for Ronda. I
stayed at Gibraltar two more days. She had the audacity to come to
see me at my inn, in disguise. I left the city; I, too, had my plan.
I returned to our rendezvous, knowing the place and hour when the
Englishman and Carmen were to pass. I found Dancaïre and Garcia waiting
for me. We passed the night in a wood beside a fire of pine cones,
which blazed finely. I proposed a game of cards to Garcia. He accepted.
In the second game I told him he was cheating; he began to laugh. I
threw the cards in his face. He tried to take his gun, but I put my
foot on it and said to him: ‘They say you can handle a knife like the
best _jaque_ in Malaga--will you try it with me?’ Dancaïre tried to
separate us. I had struck Garcia two or three times with my fist. Anger
made him brave; he drew his knife and I mine. We both told Dancaïre to
give us room and a fair field. He saw that there was no way of stopping
us, and he walked away. Garcia was bent double, like a cat on the point
of springing at a mouse. He held his hat in his left hand to parry, his
knife forward. That is the Andalusian guard. I took my stand Navarrese
fashion, straight in front of him, with the left arm raised, the left
leg forward, and the knife along the right thigh. I felt stronger than
a giant. He rushed on me like a flash; I turned on my left foot, and
he found nothing in front of him; but I caught him in the throat, and
my knife went in so far that my hand was under his chin. I twisted the
blade so sharply that it broke. That was the end. The knife came out of
the wound, forced by a stream of blood as big as your arm. He fell to
the ground as stiff as a stake.

“‘What have you done?’ Dancaïre asked me.

“‘Look you,’ said I; ‘we couldn’t live together. I love Carmen, and
I wish to be her only lover. Besides, Garcia was a villain, and I
remember what he did to poor Remendado. There are only two of us left,
but we are stout fellows. Tell me, do you want me for your friend, in
life or death?’

“Dancaïre gave me his hand. He was a man of fifty.

“‘To the devil with love affairs!’ he cried. ‘If you had asked him for
Carmen, he’d have sold her to you for a piastre. There’s only two of us
now; how shall we manage to-morrow?’

“‘Let me do it all alone,’ I replied. ‘I snap my fingers at the whole
world now.’

“We buried Garcia and pitched our camp again two hundred yards away.
The next day Carmen and her Englishman passed, with two muleteers and a
servant.

“I said to Dancaïre:

“‘I will take care of the Englishman. Frighten the others--they are not
armed.’

“The Englishman had pluck. If Carmen had not struck his arm, he would
have killed me. To make my story short, I won Carmen back that day, and
my first words to her were to tell her that she was a widow. When she
learned how it had happened:

“‘You will always be a _lillipendi_!’ she said. ‘Garcia ought to have
killed you. Your Navarrese guard is all folly, and he has put out the
light of better men than you. It means that his time had come. Yours
will come too.’

“‘And yours,’ I retorted, ‘unless you’re a true _romi_ to me.’

“‘All right,’ said she, ‘I’ve read more than once in coffee grounds
that we were to go together. Bah! let what is planted come up!’

“And she rattled her castanets, as she always did when she wished to
banish some unpleasant thought.

“We forget ourselves when we are talking about ourselves. All these
details tire you, no doubt, but I shall soon be done. The life we were
then leading lasted quite a long time. Dancaïre and I associated with
ourselves several comrades who were more reliable than the former
ones, and we devoted ourselves to smuggling, and sometimes, I must
confess, we stopped people on the highroad, but only in the last
extremity and when we could not do otherwise. However, we did not
maltreat travellers, and we confined ourselves to taking their money.
For several months I had no fault to find with Carmen; she continued
to make herself useful in our operations, informing us of profitable
strokes of business we could do. She stayed sometimes at Malaga,
sometimes at Cordova, sometimes at Granada; but at a word from me, she
would leave everything and join me at some isolated tavern, or even in
our camp. Once only--it was at Malaga--she caused me some anxiety. I
knew that she had cast her spell upon a very rich merchant, with whom
she probably proposed to repeat the Gibraltar pleasantry. In spite of
all that Dancaïre could say, I left him and went to Malaga in broad
daylight; I sought Carmen and took her away at once. We had a sharp
explanation.

“‘Do you know,’ she said, ‘that since you have been my _rom_ for good
and all I love you less than when you were my _minchorrò_? I don’t
choose to be tormented or, above all, to be ordered about! What I want
is to be free and to do what I please. Look out that you don’t drive me
too far. If you tire me out I will find some good fellow who will serve
you as you served the One-Eyed.’

“Dancaïre made peace between us; but we had said things to each
other that remained on our minds and we were no longer the same as
before. Soon after an accident happened to us. The troops surprised
us, Dancaïre was killed, and two more of my comrades; two others were
captured. I was seriously wounded and but for my good horse I should
have fallen into the soldiers’ hands. Worn out with fatigue, and with
a bullet in my body, I hid in some woods with the only comrade I had
left. I fainted when I dismounted, and I thought that I was going to
die in the underbrush like a wounded rabbit. My comrade carried me
to a cave that we knew, then he went in search of Carmen. She was at
Granada, and she instantly came to me. For a fortnight she did not
leave me a moment. She did not close an eye; she nursed me with a skill
and attention which no woman ever showed for the man she loved best. As
soon as I could stand she took me to Granada with the utmost secrecy.
Gypsies find sure places of refuge everywhere, and I passed more than
six weeks in a house within two doors of the corregidor who was looking
for me. More than once as I looked out from behind a shutter I saw him
pass. At last I was cured; but I had reflected deeply on my bed of pain
and I proposed to change my mode of life. I spoke to Carmen of leaving
Spain and of seeking an honest livelihood in the New World. She laughed
at me.

“‘We were not made to plant cabbages,’ said she; ‘our destiny is
to live at the expense of the _payllos_. Look you, I have arranged
an affair with Nathan Ben-Joseph of Gibraltar. He has some cotton
stuffs that are only waiting for you, to pass the frontier. He knows
that you are alive. He is counting on you. What would our Gibraltar
correspondents say if you should go back on your word?’

“I allowed her to persuade me and I resumed my wretched trade.

“While I was in hiding in Granada there were some bull-fights which
Carmen attended. When she returned she had much to say of a very
skilful picador named Lucas. She knew the name of his horse and how
much his embroidered jacket cost. I paid no attention to it. Juanito,
my last remaining comrade, told me some days later that he had seen
Carmen with Lucas in a shop on the Zacatin. That began to disturb me.
I asked Carmen how and why she had made the picador’s acquaintance.

“‘He’s a fellow with whom one can do business,’ she said. ‘A river that
makes a noise has either water or stones. He won twelve hundred reals
in the bull-fights. One of two things must happen: either we must have
that money, or else, as he’s a good rider and a fellow of good pluck,
we must take him into our band. Such a one and such a one are dead and
you need some one in their places. Take him.’

“‘I don’t want either his money or his person,’ I said, ‘and I forbid
you to speak to him.’

“‘Beware!’ said she, ‘when any one defies me to do a thing it’s soon
done!’

“Luckily the picador left for Malaga, and I turned my attention to
bringing in the Jew’s bales of cotton. I had a great deal to do in that
affair, and so did Carmen; and I forgot Lucas; perhaps she forgot him,
too, for the moment at least. It was about that time, señor, that I met
you, first near Montilla, then at Cordova. I will say nothing about
our last interview. Perhaps you remember it better than I do. Carmen
stole your watch; she wanted your money, too, and above all, that ring
that I see on your finger, which, she said, was a magnificent ring,
which it was most important for her to own. We had a violent quarrel,
and I struck her. She turned pale and shed tears, and that produced
a terrible effect on me. I asked her to forgive me, but she sulked a
whole day, and, when I started to return to Montilla, she refused to
kiss me. My heart was very heavy, when, three days later, she came
to see me with a laughing face and gay as a lark. Everything was
forgotten, and we were like lovers of two days’ standing. At the moment
of parting, she said to me:

“‘There’s to be a fête at Cordova; I am going to it, and I shall find
out what people are going away with money and let you know.’

“I let her go. When I was alone, I mused upon that fête and upon
Carmen’s change of humour. ‘She must have had her revenge already,’ I
thought, ‘as she was the first to make advances.’ A peasant told me
that there were bulls at Cordova. My blood began to boil, and like a
madman, I started for the city and went to the public square. Lucas was
pointed out to me, and on the bench next to the barrier, I recognised
Carmen. A single glance at her was enough to satisfy me. Lucas, when
the first bull appeared, played the gallant, as I had foreseen. He tore
the cockade[38] from the bull and carried it to Carmen, who instantly
put it in her hair. The bull took it upon himself to avenge me. Lucas
was thrown down, with his horse across his chest and the bull on top
of them both. I looked for Carmen; she was no longer in her seat.
It was impossible for me to leave the place where I was, and I was
compelled to wait until the end of the sports. Then I went to the house
that you know, and I lay in wait there all the evening and part of the
night. About two o’clock Carmen returned, and was rather surprised to
see me.

“‘Come with me,’ I said to her.

“‘All right!’ said she; ‘let us go.’

“I went for my horse and took her behind me, and we rode all the rest
of the night without exchanging a word. At daybreak we stopped at a
lonely _venta_, near a little hermitage. There I said to Carmen:

“‘Listen; I will forget everything; I will never say a word to you
about anything that has happened; but promise me one thing--that you
will go to America with me and remain quietly there.’

“‘No,’ she said, sullenly, ‘I don’t want to go to America. I am very
well off here.’

“‘That is because you are near Lucas; but understand this, if he
recovers, he won’t live to have old bones. But, after all, why should I
be angry with him? I am tired of killing all your lovers; you are the
one I will kill.’

“She looked earnestly at me with that savage look of hers, and said:

“‘I have always thought that you would kill me. The first time I saw
you, I had just met a priest at the door of my house. And that night
when we left Cordova, didn’t you see anything? A hare crossed the road
between your horse’s feet. It is written.’

“‘Carmen, don’t you love me any more?’ I asked her.

“She made no reply. She was seated with her legs crossed, on a mat, and
making figures on the ground with her finger.

“‘Let us change our mode of life, Carmen,’ I said to her in suppliant
tone. ‘Let us go somewhere to live where we shall never be parted. You
know, we have a hundred and twenty ounces buried under an oak, not far
from here. Then, too, we have funds in the Jew Ben-Joseph’s hands.’

“She smiled and said:

“‘Me first, then you. I know that it is bound to happen so.’

“‘Reflect,’ I continued; ‘I am at the end of my patience and my
courage; make up your mind, or I shall make up mine.’

“I left her and walked in the direction of the hermitage. I found the
hermit praying. I waited until his prayer was at an end; I would have
liked to pray, but I could not. When he rose I went to him.

“‘Father,’ I said, ‘will you say a prayer for some one who is in great
danger?’

“‘I pray for all who are afflicted,’ he said.

“‘Can you say a mass for a soul which perhaps is soon to appear before
its Creator?’

“‘Yes,’ he replied, gazing fixedly at me.

“And, as there was something strange in my manner, he tried to make me
talk.

“‘It seems to me that I have seen you before,’ he said.

“I placed a piastre on his bench.

“‘When will you say the mass?’ I asked.

“‘In half an hour. The son of the innkeeper yonder will come soon to
serve it. Tell me, young man, have you not something on your conscience
which torments you? Will you listen to the advice of a Christian?’

“I felt that I was on the point of weeping. I told him that I would
come again, and I hurried away. I lay down on the grass until I heard
the bell ring. Then I returned, but I remained outside the chapel. When
the mass was said, I returned to the _venta_. I hoped that Carmen would
have fled--she might have taken my horse and made her escape--but I
found her there. She did not propose that any one should say that I had
frightened her. During my absence she had ripped the hem of her dress,
to take out the lead. Now she was standing by a table, watching the
lead, which she had melted and had just thrown into a bowl filled with
water. She was so engrossed by her magic that she did not notice my
return at first. At one moment she would take up a piece of lead and
turn it in every direction with a melancholy air; then she would sing
one of those ballads of magic in which they invoke Maria Padilla, Don
Pedro’s mistress, who, they say, was the _Bari Crallisa_, or the great
queen of the gypsies.[39]

“‘Carmen,’ I said, ‘will you come with me?’

“She rose, pushed her bowl away, and put her mantilla over her head, as
if ready to start. My horse was brought, she mounted behind me, and we
rode away.

“‘So, my Carmen,’ I said, after we had ridden a little way, ‘you will
go with me, won’t you?’

“‘I will go with you to death, yes, but I won’t live with you any more.’

“We were in a deserted ravine; I stopped my horse.

“‘Is this the place?’ she said.

“And with one spring she was on the ground. She took off her mantilla,
dropped it at her feet, and stood perfectly still, with one hand on her
hip, looking me in the eye.

“‘You mean to kill me, I can see that,’ she said; ‘it is written, but
you will not make me yield.’

“‘Be reasonable, I beg,’ I said to her. ‘Listen to me. All of the past
is forgotten. However, as you know, it was you who ruined me; it was
for your sake that I became a robber and a murderer. Carmen! my Carmen!
let me save you and myself with you.’

“‘José,’ she replied, ‘you ask something that is impossible. I no
longer love you; you do still love me, and that is the reason you
intend to kill me. I could easily tell you some lie; but I don’t choose
to take the trouble. All is over between us. As my _rom_, you have a
right to kill your _romi_; but Carmen will always be free. _Calli_ she
was born, _calli_ she will die.’

“‘Then you love Lucas?’ I demanded.

“‘Yes, I did love him, as I loved you, for a moment--but less than I
loved you, I think. Now, I love nobody, and I hate myself for having
loved you.’

“I threw myself at her feet, I took her hands, I drenched them with
my tears. I reminded her of all the blissful moments we had passed
together. I offered to remain a brigand to please her. Everything,
señor, everything; I offered her everything, if only she would love me
again.

“She said to me:

“‘To love you again is impossible. I will not live with you.’

“Frenzy took possession of me. I drew my knife. I would have liked her
to show some fear and to beg for mercy, but that woman was a demon.

“‘For the last time,’ I cried, ‘will you stay with me?’

“‘No! no! no!’ she replied, stamping the ground with her foot.

“And she took from her finger a ring I had given her and threw it into
the underbrush.

“I struck her twice. It was the One-Eyed’s knife, which I had taken,
having broken my own. She fell at the second stroke, without a sound.
I fancy that I still see her great black eye gazing at me; then it
grew dim and closed. I remained utterly crushed beside that corpse for
a long hour. Then I remembered that Carmen had often told me that she
would like to be buried in a wood. I dug a grave with my knife and laid
her in it. I hunted a long while for her ring and found it at last. I
placed it in the grave with her, also a small crucifix. Perhaps I did
wrong. Then I mounted my horse, galloped to Cordova, and gave myself
up at the first guard-house. I said that I had killed Carmen, but I
have refused to tell where her body is. The hermit was a holy man. He
prayed for her! He said a mass for her soul. Poor child! The _Cales_
are guilty, for bringing her up so.”


IV

Spain is one of those countries where we find to-day in the greatest
numbers those nomads who are scattered over all Europe, and are
known by the names of _Bohemians_, _Gitanos_, _Gypsies_, _Zigeuner_,
etc. Most of them live, or rather lead a wandering existence, in the
provinces of the south and east, in Andalusia, Estremadura, and the
kingdom of Murcia; there are many in Catalonia. These latter often
cross the frontier into France. They are to be seen at all the fairs
in the Midi. Ordinarily the men carry on the trades of horse-dealer,
veterinary, and clipper of mules; they combine therewith the industry
of mending kettles and copper implements, to say nothing of smuggling
and other illicit traffic. The women tell fortunes, beg, and sell all
sorts of drugs, innocent or not.

The physical characteristics of the gypsy are easier to distinguish
than to describe, and when you have seen a single one, you can readily
pick out a person of that race from a thousand others. Features and
expression--these above all else separate them from the natives of
the countries where they are found. Their complexion is very dark,
always darker than that of the peoples among whom they live. Hence the
name _Cale_--black--by which they often refer to themselves. Their
eyes, which are perceptibly oblique, well-shaped, and very black, are
shaded by long, thick lashes. One can compare their look to nothing
save that of a wild beast. Audacity and timidity are depicted therein
at once, and in that respect their eyes express accurately enough
the character of the race--crafty, insolent, but _naturally afraid
of blows_, like Panurge. As a general rule, the men are well-knit,
slender, and active; I believe that I have never seen a single one
overburdened with flesh. In Germany, the gypsy women are often very
pretty; beauty is very rare among the _gitanas_ of Spain. When they are
very young, they may pass for rather attractive ugly women; but when
they have once become mothers, they are repulsive. The uncleanliness
of both sexes is beyond belief, and one who has never seen the hair
of a gypsy matron would find it hard to form an idea of it, even by
imagining it as like the coarsest, greasiest, dustiest horsehair. In
some large cities of Andalusia, some of the girls who are a little
more attractive than the rest take more care of their persons. They go
about dancing for money--dances very like those which are forbidden at
our (Parisian) public balls during the Carnival. M. Borrow, an English
missionary, the author of two very interesting works on the gypsies of
Spain, whom he had undertaken to convert at the expense of the Bible
Society, asserts that there is no known instance of a _gitana_ having
a weakness for a man not of her race. It seems to me that there is
much exaggeration in the eulogium which he bestows on their chastity.
In the first place, the great majority of them are in the plight of
Ovid’s ugly woman: _Casta quam nemo rogavit_. As for the pretty ones,
they are, like all Spanish women, exacting in the choice of their
lovers. A man must please them and deserve them. M. Borrow cites as a
proof of their virtue an instance which does honour to his own virtue,
and above all to his innocence. An immoral man of his acquaintance,
he says, offered several ounces of gold to a pretty _gitana_, to no
purpose. An Andalusian to whom I told this anecdote declared that
that same immoral man would have had better luck if he had shown only
two or three piastres, and that to offer ounces of gold to a gypsy
was as poor a way to persuade her as to promise a million or two to a
servant girl at an inn. However that may be, it is certain that the
_gitanas_ display a most extraordinary devotion to their husbands.
There is no peril or privation which they will not defy, in order to
assist them in their need. One of the names by which the gypsies call
themselves--_romi_ or _spouses_--seems to me to bear witness to the
respect of the race for the marriage state. In general, we may say that
their principal virtue is patriotism, if we may call by that name the
fidelity which they observe in their relations with persons of the same
origin as themselves, the zeal with which they help one another, and
the inviolable secrecy which they maintain in respect to compromising
affairs. Indeed, we may remark something similar in all associations
that are shrouded in mystery and are outside of the law.

A few months ago, I visited a tribe of gypsies settled in the Vosges.
In the cabin of an old woman, the patriarch of the tribe, there was a
gypsy unknown to her family, suffering from a fatal disease. That man
had left a hospital, where he was well cared for, to die among his
compatriots. For thirteen weeks he had been in bed in the cabin of
his hosts, and much better treated than the sons and sons-in-law who
lived in the same house. He had a comfortable bed of straw and moss,
with reasonably white sheets, whereas the rest of the family, to the
number of eleven, slept on boards three feet long. So much for their
hospitality. The same woman who was so humane to her guest said in his
presence: “_Singo, singo, homte hi mulo.”_ “Before long, before long,
he must die.” After all, the life of those people is so wretched that
the certainty of death has no terrors for them.

A remarkable feature of the gypsy character is their indifference in
the matter of religion. Not that they are atheists or skeptics. They
have never made profession of atheism. Far from that, they adopt the
religion of the country in which they live; but they change when they
change countries. The superstitions which among ignorant peoples
replace religious sentiments are equally foreign to them. Indeed, how
could superstition exist among people who, in most cases, live on the
credulity of others! I have observed, however, among Spanish gypsies, a
strange horror at the thought of touching a dead body. There are few of
them whom money could hire to carry a corpse to the cemetery.

I have said that most gypsy women dabble in fortune-telling. They are
very skillful at it. But another thing that is a source of very great
profit to them is the sale of charms and love-philtres. Not only do
they keep frogs’ feet to fix fickle hearts, or powdered lodestone to
force the unfeeling to love; but at need they make potent conjurations
which compel the devil to lend them his aid. Last year a Spanish
woman told me the following story: She was passing one day along Rue
d’Alcala, sad and distraught, when a gypsy sitting on the sidewalk
called after her: “Your lover has been false to you, fair lady.”--It
was the truth.--“Do you want me to bring him back?”--You will imagine
how joyfully the offer was accepted, and what unbounded confidence
was naturally inspired by a person who could thus divine at a glance
the inmost secrets of the heart. As it would have been impossible to
proceed to magic rites in the most frequented street in Madrid, they
made an appointment for the morrow.--“Nothing easier than to bring
the unfaithful one back to your feet,” said the _gitana_. “Have you a
handkerchief, a scarf, or a mantilla that he has given you?”--The lady
gave her a silk handkerchief.--“Now sew a piastre into a corner of it,
with crimson silk; half a piastre into another; a _piecette_ here; a
two real piece here. Then you must sew a gold piece in the centre; a
doubloon would be best.”--The doubloon and the rest were duly sewn
into the handkerchief.--“Now, give it to me; I will take it to the
Campo-Santo when the clock strikes twelve. Come with me, if you want
to see some fine deviltry. I promise you that you will see the man you
love to-morrow.”--The gypsy started alone for the Campo-Santo, for the
lady was too much afraid of the devils to accompany her. I leave you to
guess whether the poor love-lorn creature saw her handkerchief or her
faithless lover again.

Despite their poverty and the sort of aversion which they inspire, the
gypsies enjoy a certain consideration none the less among unenlightened
peoples, and they are very proud of it. They feel a haughty contempt
for intelligence, and cordially despise the people who give them
hospitality. “The Gentiles are such fools,” said a gypsy of the Vosges
to me one day, “that there’s no merit in tricking them. The other day
a peasant woman called to me on the street, and I went into her house.
Her stove was smoking, and she asked me for a spell, to make it burn.
I told her to give me first of all a big piece of pork. Then I mumbled
a few words in _rommani_. ‘You are a fool,’ I said, ‘you were born a
fool, a fool you will die.’--When I was at the door, I said to her in
good German: ‘The infallible way to keep your stove from smoking is not
to make any fire in it.’--And I ran off at full speed.”

The history of the gypsies is still a problem. To be sure, we know that
the first bands of them, very small in numbers, showed themselves in
the east of Europe early in the fifteenth century; but no one can say
whence they came to Europe, or why; and, which is more extraordinary,
we have no idea how they multiplied so prodigiously, in a short time,
in several countries at a great distance from one another. The gypsies
themselves have preserved no tradition concerning their origin, and,
although most of them speak of Egypt as their original fatherland, it
is because they have adopted a fable that was spread abroad concerning
them many, many years ago.

Most Orientalists who have studied the gypsy language believe that they
came originally from India. In fact, it seems that a great number of
the roots of the _rommani_ tongue and many of its grammatical forms
are found in phrases derived from the Sanskrit. We can understand
that, in their long wanderings, the gypsies may have adopted many
foreign words. In all the dialects of the _rommani_, we find many
Greek words. For example: _cocal_, bone, from κόκκαλον; _petalli_,
horseshoe, from πέταλον; _cafi_, nail, from καρφί, etc. To-day, the
gypsies have almost as many different dialects as there are bands of
their race living apart from one another. Everywhere they speak the
language of the country in which they live more readily than their
own, which they seldom use except as a means of speaking freely before
strangers. If we compare the dialect of the gypsies of Germany with
that of the Spaniards, who have had no communication with the former
for centuries, we discover a very great number of words common to the
two; but the original tongue has been noticeably modified everywhere,
although in different degrees, by the contact with the more cultivated
tongues, which these nomads have been constrained to employ. German
on the one side, Spanish on the other, have so modified the substance
of the _rommani_ that it would be impossible for a gypsy of the Black
Forest to converse with one of his Andalusian brethren, although they
need only exchange a few sentences to realise that each of them is
speaking a dialect derived from the same parent tongue. A few words in
very frequent use are common, I believe, to all dialects; for instance,
in all the vocabularies which I have had an opportunity to see, _pani_
means water, _manro_, bread, _mas_, meat, and _lon_, salt.

The names of the numbers are almost the same everywhere. The German
dialect seems to me much purer than the Spanish; for it has retained
a number of the primitive grammatical forms, while the _gitanos_
have adopted those of the Castilian tongue. A few words, however,
are exceptions to this rule and attest the former community of the
dialects. The preterit tenses in the German dialect are formed by
adding _ium_ to the imperative, which is always the root of the verb.
The verbs in the Spanish _rommani_ are all conjugated like Castilian
verbs of the first conjugation. From the infinitive _jamar_, to eat,
they regularly make _jamé_, I have eaten; from _lillar_, to take,
_lillé_, I have taken. But some old gypsies say, on the other hand,
_jayon_, _lillon_. I know no other verbs which have retained this
ancient form.

While I am thus parading my slight acquaintance with the _rommani_
tongue, I must note a few words of French argot, which our thieves
have borrowed from the gypsies. The _Mystères de Paris_ has taught
good society that _chourin_ means knife. The word is pure _rommani_;
_tchouri_ is one of the words common to all the dialects. M. Vidocq
calls a horse _grès_--that is another _rommani_ word--_gras_, _gre_,
_graste_, _gris_. Add the word _romanichel_, which in Parisian
slang means gypsies. It is a corruption of _rommane tchave_, gypsy
youths. But an etymology of which I am proud is that of _frimousse_,
expression, face--a word which all schoolboys use, or did use in my
day. Observe first that Oudin, in his curious dictionary, wrote in 1640
_firlimouse_. Now, _firla_, _fila_, in _rommani_ means face; _mui_
has the same meaning, it exactly corresponds to the Latin _os_. The
combination _firlamui_ was instantly understood by a gypsy purist, and
I believe it to be in conformity with the genius of his language.

This is quite enough to give the readers of _Carmen_ a favourable idea
of my studies in _rommani_. I will close with this proverb, which is
quite apropos: _En retudi panda nasti abela macha_--“a fly cannot enter
a closed mouth.”

 1845.


FOOTNOTES:

[1] The Andalusians aspirate the _s_, and in pronunciation confound it
with _c_ soft and _z_, which the Spaniards pronounce like the English
_th_. It is possible to recognise an Andalusian by the one word _señor_.

[2] That is, the _privileged provinces_, which enjoy special _fueros_,
namely, Alava, Biscay, Guipuzcoa, and a part of Navarre. Basque is the
language spoken in those provinces.

[3] A café provided with an ice-house, or rather with a store of snow.
There is hardly a village in Spain which has not its _neveria_.

[4] In Spain every traveller who does not carry about with him
specimens of calico or silk is taken for an Englishman, _Inglesito_. It
is the same in the East; at Chalcis I had the honour of being announced
as a Μιλὸρδος Φραντσέοος.

[5] Fortune.

[6] In 1830 the nobility alone enjoyed that privilege. To-day (1847)
under the constitutional _régime_, the plebeians have obtained the
privilege of the _garrote_.

[7] Ironshod staves carried by the Basques.

[8] The magistrate at the head of the police and municipal
administration.

[9] The ordinary costume of the peasant women of Navarre and the Basque
provinces.

[10] Yes, sir.

[11] Enclosure, garden.

[12] Bravoes, bullies.

[13] All the Spanish cavalry are armed with lances.

[14] Alcala de los Panaderos, a hamlet two leagues from Seville, where
they make delicious small loaves. It is claimed that their excellence
is due to the water of Alcala, and great quantities of them are taken
to Seville daily.

[15] Good-day, comrade.

[16] Most of the houses in Seville have an interior courtyard
surrounded by porticos. The inhabitants live there in summer. The
courtyard is covered with canvas, which is kept wet during the day and
removed at night. The gate into the street is almost always open, and
the passage leading into the courtyard is closed by an iron gate of
elaborate workmanship.

[17] _Mañana sera otro dia._--A Spanish proverb.

[18] A gypsy proverb.

[19] Sugared yolks of eggs.

[20] A kind of nougat.

[21] King Don Pedro, whom we call the _Cruel_, but whom Isabella
the Catholic always called the _Justiciary_, loved to walk the
streets of Seville at night in search of adventures, like the
Caliph Haroun-al-Raschid. On a certain night he had a quarrel in an
out-of-the-way street with a man who was giving a serenade. They fought
and the king slew the love-lorn knight. Hearing the clash of swords,
an old woman put her head out of a window and lighted up the scene
with a small lamp (_candilejo_) which she held in her hand. You must
know that King Don Pedro, who was very active and powerful, had one
physical peculiarity: his knees cracked loudly when he walked. The old
woman had no difficulty in recognising him by means of that cracking.
The next day the Twenty-four who was on duty came to the king to make
his report. “Sire, there was a duel last night on such a street. One
of the combatants was killed.” “Have you discovered the murderer?”
“Yes, sire.” “Why is he not punished before now?” “I await your orders,
sire.” “Carry out the law.” Now the king had recently issued a decree
providing that every duellist should be beheaded, and that his head
should be exposed on the battle-field. The Twenty-four extricated
himself from the dilemma like a man of wit. He caused the head of a
statue of the king to be sawed off, and exposed it in a recess in the
middle of the street where the murder had taken place. The king and all
the good people of Seville thought it an excellent joke. The street
took its name from the lamp of the old woman, who was the sole witness
of the adventure. Such is the popular tradition. Zuñiga tells the story
a little differently. (See _Anales de Sevilla_, vol. ii., p. 136.)
However, there is still a Rue de Candilejo in Seville, and in that
street a stone bust said to be a portrait of Don Pedro. Unfortunately
the bust is a modern affair. The old one was sadly defaced in the
seventeenth century, and the municipal government caused it to be
replaced by the one we see to-day.

[22] _Rom_, husband; _romi_, wife.

[23] _Calo_; feminine _calli_; plural _cales_. Literally _black_--the
name by which the gypsies call themselves in their own tongue.

[24] The Spanish dragoons wear a yellow uniform.

[25] A gypsy proverb.

[26] Saint--the Blessed Virgin.

[27] The gallows, supposed to be the widow of the last man hanged.

[28] The red (land).

[29] _Flamenço de Roma_--a slang term to designate a gypsy. _Roma_ does
not mean here the Eternal City, but the race of _Romi_, or married
folk, a name which the gypsies assume. The first that were seen in
Spain probably came from the Low Countries, whence the designation
_Flemings_.

[30] A bulbous root of which a very pleasant drink is made.

[31] The ordinary rations of the Spanish soldier.

[32] That is, with address, and without violence.

[33] A sort of unattached body of troops.

[34] The idiots, to take me for a swell!

[35] A name which the common people in Spain give to the English, on
account of the colour of their uniform.

[36] That is to say, to the galleys, or to all the devils.

[37] My lover, or rather, my fancy.

[38] _La divisa_, a bow of ribbon, the colour of which indicates the
place from which the bull comes. This bow is fastened in the bull’s
hide by a hook, and it is the very climax of gallantry to tear it from
the living animal and present it to a woman.

[39] Maria Padilla has been accused of having bewitched King Don Pedro.
A popular tradition says that she presented to Queen Blanche de Bourbon
a golden girdle, which seemed to the fascinated eyes of the king a
living serpent. Hence the repugnance which he always displayed for the
unfortunate princess.




The Taking of the Redoubt


A military friend of mine, who died of a fever in Greece a few years
ago, told me one day about the first action in which he took part. His
story made such an impression on me that I wrote it down from memory as
soon as I had time. Here it is:

I joined the regiment on the fourth of September, in the evening. I
found the colonel in camp. He received me rather roughly; but when he
had read General B----’s recommendation, his manner changed and he said
a few courteous words to me.

I was presented by him to my captain, who had just returned from a
reconnaissance. This captain, with whom I hardly had time to become
acquainted, was a tall, dark man, with a harsh, repellent face. He
had been a private and had won his epaulets and his cross on the
battle-field. His voice, which was hoarse and weak, contrasted
strangely with his almost gigantic stature. I was told that he owed
that peculiar voice to a bullet which had passed through his lungs at
the battle of Jena.

When he learned that I was fresh from the school at Fontainebleau, he
made a wry face and said:

“My lieutenant died yesterday.”

I understood that he meant to imply: “You ought to take his place, and
you are not capable of it.”

A sharp retort came to my lips, but I restrained myself.

The moon rose behind the redoubt of Cheverino, about two gunshots from
our bivouac. It was large and red, as it usually is when it rises. But
on that evening it seemed to me of extraordinary size. For an instant
the redoubt stood sharply out in black against the brilliant disk of
the moon. It resembled the crater of a volcano at the instant of an
eruption.

An old soldier beside whom I happened to be, remarked upon the colour
of the moon.

“It is very red,” said he; “that’s a sign that it will cost us dear to
take that famous redoubt!”

I have always been superstitious, and that prophecy, at that particular
moment especially, affected me. I lay down, but I could not sleep. I
rose and walked about for some time, watching the tremendously long
line of camp-fires that covered the heights above the village of
Cheverino.

When I thought that the fresh, sharp night air had cooled my blood
sufficiently, I returned to the fire; I wrapped myself carefully in
my cloak and closed my eyes, hoping not to open them before dawn. But
sleep refused to come. Insensibly my thoughts took a gloomy turn. I
said to myself that I had not a friend among the hundred thousand
men who covered that plain. If I were wounded, I should be taken to
a hospital and treated roughly by ignorant surgeons. All that I had
heard of surgical operations came to my mind. My heart beat violently,
and I instinctively arranged my handkerchief, and the wallet that I had
in my breast pocket, as a sort of cuirass. I was worn out with fatigue,
I nodded every moment, and every moment some sinister thought returned
with renewed force and roused me with a start.

But weariness carried the day, and when they beat the reveille, I was
sound asleep. We were drawn up in battle array, the roll was called,
then we stacked arms, and everything indicated that we were to have a
quiet day.

About three o’clock an aide-de-camp appeared, bringing an order. We
were ordered under arms again; our skirmishers spread out over the
plain; we followed them slowly, and after about twenty minutes, we saw
all the advanced posts of the Russians fall back and return inside the
redoubt.

A battery of artillery came into position at our right, another at our
left, but both well in advance of us. They began a very hot fire at
the enemy, who replied vigorously, and the redoubt of Cheverino soon
disappeared beneath dense clouds of smoke.

Our regiment was almost protected from the Russian fire by a rise in
the ground. Their balls, which, indeed, were rarely aimed at us, for
they preferred to fire at our gunners, passed over our heads, or, at
the worst, spattered us with dirt and small stones.

As soon as we received the order to advance, my captain looked at me
with a close scrutiny which compelled me to run my hand over my budding
moustache twice or thrice, as unconcernedly as I could. Indeed, I was
not frightened, and the only fear I had was that he should believe that
I was frightened. Those harmless cannon-balls helped to maintain me in
my heroically calm frame of mind. My self-esteem told me that I was
really in danger, as I was at last under the fire of a battery. I was
overjoyed to be so entirely at my ease, and I thought of the pleasure I
should take in telling of the capture of the redoubt of Cheverino in
Madame de B----’s salon on Rue de Provence.

The colonel passed our company; he spoke to me:

“Well, you are going to see some sharp work for your début.”

I smiled with an altogether martial air as I brushed my coat sleeve, on
which a shot that struck the ground thirty yards away had spattered a
little dust.

It seems that the Russians observed the ill success of their
cannon-balls; for they replaced them with shells, which could more
easily be made to reach us in the hollow where we were posted. A large
piece of one took off my shako and killed a man near me.

“I congratulate you,” said my captain, as I picked up my shako; “you’re
safe now for to-day.”

I was acquainted with the military superstition which believes that
the axiom, _Non bis in idem_, has the same application on a field of
battle as in a court of justice. I proudly replaced my shako on my head.

“That is making a fellow salute rather unceremoniously,” I said as
gaily as I could. That wretched joke was considered first-rate, in view
of the circumstances.

“I congratulate you,” continued the captain; “you will get nothing
worse, and you will command a company this evening; for I feel that the
oven is being heated for me. Every time that I have been wounded the
officer nearest me has been hit by a spent ball; and,” he added in a
low tone and almost as if he were ashamed, “their names always began
with a P.”

I feigned incredulity; many men would have done the same; many men too
would have been, as I was, profoundly impressed by those prophetic
words. Conscript as I was, I realised that I could not confide my
sensations to any one, and that I must always appear cool and fearless.

After about half an hour the Russian fire sensibly diminished;
thereupon we left our sheltered position to march upon the redoubt.

Our regiment consisted of three battalions. The second was ordered to
turn the redoubt on the side of the entrance; the other two were to
make the assault. I was in the third battalion.

As we came out from behind the species of ridge which had protected
us, we were received by several volleys of musketry, which did little
damage in our ranks. The whistling of the bullets surprised me; I
kept turning my head, and thus induced divers jests on the part of my
comrades, who were more familiar with that sound.

“Take it all in all,” I said to myself, “a battle isn’t such a terrible
thing.”

We advanced at the double-quick, preceded by skirmishers; suddenly the
Russians gave three hurrahs, three distinct hurrahs, then remained
silent and ceased firing.

“I don’t like this silence,” said my captain; “it bodes us no good.”

I considered that our men were a little too noisy, and I could not
forbear making a mental comparison between their tumultuous shouting
and the enemy’s impressive silence.

We speedily reached the foot of the redoubt; the palisades had been
shattered and the earth torn up by our balls. The soldiers rushed at
these newly made ruins with shouts of “_Vive l’Empereur!_” louder than
one would have expected to hear from men who had already shouted so
much.

I raised my eyes, and I shall never forget the spectacle that I saw.
The greater part of the smoke had risen, and hung like a canopy about
twenty feet above the redoubt. Through a bluish haze one could see
the Russian grenadiers behind their half-destroyed parapet, with arms
raised, motionless as statues. It seems to me that I can see now each
soldier, with his left eye fastened upon us, the right hidden by the
levelled musket. In an embrasure, a few yards away, a man stood beside
a cannon, holding a fusee.

I shuddered, and I thought that my last hour had come.

“The dance is going to begin,” cried my captain. “Bonsoir!”

Those were the last words I heard him utter.

The drums rolled inside the redoubt. I saw all the muskets drop. I
closed my eyes, and I heard a most appalling crash, followed by shrieks
and groans. I opened my eyes, surprised to find myself still among the
living. The redoubt was filled with smoke once more. I was surrounded
by dead and wounded. My captain lay at my feet; his head had been
shattered by a cannon-ball, and I was covered with his brains and his
blood. Of all my company only six men and myself were left on our feet.

This carnage was succeeded by a moment of stupefaction. The colonel,
placing his hat on the point of his sword, was the first to scale the
parapet, shouting: “_Vive l’Empereur!_” He was followed instantly by
all the survivors. I have a very dim remembrance of what followed.
We entered the redoubt; how, I have no idea. We fought hand to hand,
amid smoke so dense that we could not see one another. I believe that
I struck, for my sabre was all bloody. At last I heard shouts of
“Victory!” and as the smoke grew less dense, I saw blood and corpses
completely covering the surface of the redoubt. The guns especially
were buried beneath piles of bodies. About two hundred men, in the
French uniform, were standing about in groups, with no pretence of
order, some loading their muskets, others wiping their bayonets. Eleven
hundred Russian prisoners were with them.

The colonel, covered with blood, was lying on a shattered caisson near
the ravine. A number of soldiers were bustling about him. I approached.

“Where is the senior captain?” he asked a sergeant.

The sergeant shrugged his shoulders most expressively.

“And the senior lieutenant?”

“Monsieur here, who arrived last night,” said the sergeant, in a
perfectly matter-of-fact tone.

The colonel smiled bitterly.

“Well, monsieur,” he said, “you command in chief; order the entrance to
the redoubt to be strengthened with these waggons, for the enemy is in
force; but General C---- will see that you are supported.”

“Colonel,” I said, “are you severely wounded?”

“Finished, my boy, but the redoubt is taken!”

 1829.




Mateo Falcone


As you leave Porto Vecchio and journey north-west, towards the interior
of the island, you find that the ground rises rather rapidly; and
after a three hours’ jaunt along winding paths, obstructed by huge
boulders, and sometimes interrupted by ravines, you find yourself on
the edge of a very extensive _maquis_. The _maquis_ is the home of the
Corsican shepherd and of all those who are at odds with the law. You
must know that the Corsican farmer, to save himself the trouble of
fertilising his land, sets fire to a certain amount of woodland. If
the fire spreads farther than is necessary, so much the worse; come
what come may, he is quite sure of obtaining a good harvest by planting
the ground fertilised by the ashes of the trees it formerly bore. When
the ripe grain is gathered,--for they leave the straw, which it would
require some labour to collect,--the roots which are left unburned in
the ground put forth in the following spring very vigorous shoots,
which reach a height of seven or eight feet in a few years. It is this
species of dense underbrush which is called _maquis_. It consists of
trees and bushes of different kinds, mingled together as God pleases.
Only with hatchet in hand can man open a path through it; and there are
some _maquis_ so dense and thick that even the wild sheep cannot break
through.

If you have killed a man, betake yourself to the _maquis_ of Porto
Vecchio, and you can live there in safety with a good rifle, powder,
and shot. Do not forget a brown cloak provided with a hood, to serve as
a covering and as a mattress. The shepherds will give you milk, cheese,
and chestnuts, and you will have no reason to fear the law, or the dead
man’s kindred, except when you are forced to go down into the town to
replenish your stock of ammunition.

Mateo Falcone, when I was in Corsica, in 18--, had his home about half
a league from this _maquis_. He was a rather wealthy man for that
country; living nobly--that is to say, without working--on the produce
of his flocks, which were driven to pasture here and there upon the
mountains by shepherds, a sort of nomadic people. When I saw him,
two years subsequent to the episode I am about to relate, he seemed
to me to be not more than fifty years old at most. Imagine a small,
but sturdily built man, with curly hair as black as jet, aquiline
nose, thin lips, large bright eyes, and a complexion of the hue of a
boot-flap. His skill in marksmanship was considered extraordinary, even
in his country, where there are so many good shots. For example, Mateo
would never fire at a wild sheep with buckshot; but he would bring
one down at a hundred and twenty yards with a bullet in the head or
the shoulder, as he pleased. He used his weapons as readily at night
as by day, and I was told of this instance of his skill, which will
seem incredible perhaps to those who have not travelled in Corsica. A
candle was placed at a distance of twenty-four yards, behind a piece of
transparent paper as large as a plate. He took aim, then the candle was
extinguished, and, a minute later, in absolute darkness, he fired and
hit the paper three times out of four.

With such transcendent talent, Mateo Falcone had won a great
reputation. He was said to be as true a friend as he was a dangerous
enemy; always ready to oblige, and generous to the poor, he lived at
peace with all the world in the district of Porto Vecchio. But the
story was told of him, that at Corte, where he married his wife, he had
disposed very summarily of a rival who was reputed to be as redoubtable
in war as in love; at all events, Mateo was given credit for a certain
rifle shot which surprised the aforesaid rival as he was shaving in
front of a little mirror that hung at his window. When the affair was
forgotten, Mateo married. His wife, Giuseppa, gave him at first three
daughters (which caused him to fret and fume), and finally a son, whom
he named Fortunato; he was the hope of the family, the heir to the
name. The daughters were well married; their father could at need rely
upon the daggers and carbines of his sons-in-law. The son was only ten
years old, but he already gave rich promise for the future.

On a certain day in autumn, Mateo left the house early, with his wife,
to inspect one of his flocks at a clearing in the _maquis_. Fortunato
would have liked to go with them, but the clearing was too far;
moreover, some one must stay behind to watch the house; so the father
refused; we shall see whether he had reason to repent.

He had been absent several hours, and little Fortunato was lying
placidly in the sun, watching the blue mountains, and thinking that, on
the following Sunday, he was going to the town to dine with his uncle
the _caporal_,[40] when he was suddenly interrupted in his meditations
by the report of a firearm. He rose and turned towards the plain from
which the sound came. Other reports followed, at unequal intervals,
coming constantly nearer. At last, on a path leading from the plain
to Mateo’s house, appeared a man wearing a pointed cap such as the
mountaineers wear, with a long beard, clad in rags, and hardly able to
drag himself along, using his rifle as a cane. He had received a bullet
in the thigh.

That man was a bandit,[41] who, having started under cover of the
darkness to go to the town for powder, had fallen into an ambush
of Corsican voltigeurs.[42] After a stout defence he had succeeding
in beating a retreat, hotly pursued, and firing from one rock after
another. But he was only a little in advance of the soldiers, and his
wound made it impossible to reach the _maquis_ before he was overtaken.

He went up to Fortunato and said:

“You are Mateo Falcone’s son?”

“Yes.”

“I am Gianetto Sanpiero. I am pursued by the yellow collars.[43] Hide
me, for I can’t go any farther.”

“What will my father say if I hide you without his leave?”

“He will say that you did well.”

“Who knows?”

“Hide me quick; they’re coming.”

“Wait till my father comes home.”

“Wait? damnation! They will be here in five minutes. Come, hide me, or
I’ll kill you.”

Fortunato replied with the utmost coolness:

“Your gun’s empty, and there ain’t any cartridges left in your
_carchera_.”[44]

“I have my stiletto.”

“But can you run as fast I can?”

He gave a leap and placed himself out of danger.

“You are not Mateo Falcone’s son! Will you let me be arrested in front
of your house?”

The child seemed to be moved.

“What will you give me if I hide you?” he said, drawing nearer.

The bandit felt in a leather pocket that hung from his belt and took
out a five-franc piece, which he had kept in reserve, no doubt, to buy
powder. Fortunato smiled at sight of the silver; he seized it and said
to Gianetto:

“Don’t be afraid.”

He instantly dug a great hole in a haystack that stood near the house.
Gianetto crept into it, and the child covered him so as to let him
have a little air to breathe, but so that it was impossible to suspect
that the hay concealed a man. He conceived also an ingeniously crafty
idea, worthy of a savage. He took a cat and her kittens and placed
them on the haystack, to make it appear that it had not been disturbed
recently. Then, noticing marks of blood on the path near the house, he
carefully covered them with dirt, and, when that was done, lay down
again in the sun with the most perfect tranquillity.

A few minutes later, six men in brown uniform with yellow facings
commanded by an adjutant halted in front of Mateo’s door. This
adjutant was distantly related to the Falcones. (It is well known
that in Corsica degrees of kinship are followed out much farther than
elsewhere.) His name was Tiodoro Gamba; he was an active officer,
greatly feared by the bandits, several of whom he had already run to
earth.

“Good-day, my young cousin,” he said to Fortunato, walking to where he
lay; “how you’ve grown! Did you see a man pass by just now?”

“Oh! I ain’t as tall as you yet, cousin,” replied the child, with a
stupid expression.

“That will come. But tell me, didn’t you see a man pass?”

“Didn’t I see a man pass?”

“Yes, a man with a black velvet pointed cap and a red and yellow
embroidered jacket?”

“A man in a pointed cap and a red and yellow embroidered jacket?”

“Yes; answer at once, and don’t repeat my questions.”

“Monsieur le curé passed our door this morning, on his horse Piero. He
asked me how papa was and I told him----”

“Ah! you little scamp, you are playing sly! Tell me quick which way
Gianetto went; for he’s the man we’re looking for, and I am certain he
took this path.”

“Who knows?”

“Who knows? I know that you saw him.”

“Does a fellow see people pass when he’s asleep?”

“You weren’t asleep, good-for-nothing; the shots woke you.”

“Do you think, cousin, that your guns make such a great noise? My
father’s carbine makes a lot more.”

“May the devil take you, you infernal rascal! I am perfectly sure you
saw Gianetto. Perhaps you have hidden him even. Come, boys; go into the
house, and see if our man isn’t there. He was only going on one foot,
and he knows too much, the villain, to try to get to the _maquis_ at
that gait. Besides, the marks of blood stopped here.”

“What will papa say?” queried Fortunato, with a mocking laugh. “What
will he say when he knows that you went into his house when he was
away?”

“You good-for-nothing!” said Adjutant Gamba, taking him by the ear, “do
you know that it rests with me to make you change your tune? Perhaps,
if I give you twenty blows or so with the flat of my sabre, you will
conclude to speak.”

But Fortunato continued to laugh sneeringly.

“My father is Mateo Falcone!” he said with emphasis.

“Do you know, you little scamp, that I can take you to Corte or to
Bastia? I’ll make you sleep in a dungeon, on straw, with irons on
your feet, and I’ll have you guillotined, if you don’t tell me where
Gianetto Sanpiero is.”

The child laughed heartily at this absurd threat.

“My father’s Mateo Falcone,” he repeated.

“Adjutant,” said one of the voltigeurs in an undertone, “let us not get
into a row with Mateo.”

Gamba was evidently perplexed. He talked in a low tone with his
soldiers, who had already searched the whole house. It was not a very
long operation, for a Corsican’s cabin consists of a single square
room. The furniture consists of a table, benches, chests, and household
and hunting implements. Meanwhile little Fortunato patted his cat,
and seemed to derive a wicked enjoyment from the embarrassment of the
voltigeurs and his cousin.

A soldier approached the haystack. He saw the cat and thrust his
bayonet carelessly into the hay, shrugging his shoulders, as if he
realised that it was an absurd precaution. Nothing stirred; and the
child’s face did not betray the slightest excitement.

The adjutant and his squad were at their wit’s end; they were already
glancing meaningly toward the plain, as if proposing to return whence
they came, when their leader, convinced that threats would have no
effect on Falcone’s son, determined to make one last effort, and to try
the power of caresses and gifts.

“You seem to be a very wide-awake youngster, cousin,” said he. “You
will go far. But you are playing a low game with me; and if I wasn’t
afraid of distressing my cousin Mateo, deuce take me if I wouldn’t
carry you off with me!”

“Bah!”

“But, when my cousin returns, I’ll tell him the story, and he’ll give
you the lash till the blood comes, to punish you for lying.”

“And then?”

“You will see. But, I say, be a good boy, and I’ll give you something.”

“And I’ll give you a piece of advice, cousin: if you stay here any
longer, Gianetto will be in the _maquis_, and then it will take more
than one fox like you to catch him.”

The adjutant took a silver watch from his pocket, worth perhaps thirty
francs; and observing that little Fortunato’s eyes sparkled as he
looked at it, he said, holding it up at the end of its steel chain:

“Rascal! you’d like to have a watch like this hanging round your neck,
and you’d stroll through the streets of Porto Vecchio, as proud as a
peacock; and people would ask you: ‘What time is it?’ and you’d say:
‘Look at my watch!’”

“When I’m big, my uncle the _caporal_ will give me a watch.”

“Yes; but your uncle’s son has got one now--not such a fine one as
this, to be sure. Still, he’s younger than you.”

The child sighed.

“Well! would you like this watch, my little cousin?”

Fortunato, with his eye fixed on the watch, resembled a cat to which a
whole chicken is presented. As the beast feels sure that he is being
made a fool of, he dares not touch it with his claws, and he turns
his eyes away from time to time to avoid the risk of yielding to
temptation; but he licks his chops every instant, and seems to say to
his master: “What a cruel joke this is!”

But Adjutant Gamba seemed to be in earnest in his offer of the watch.
Fortunato did not put out his hand; but he said with a bitter smile:

“Why do you make sport of me?”

“By God! I am not joking. Just tell me where Gianetto is, and this
watch is yours.”

Fortunato smiled an incredulous smile; and, fastening his black eyes on
the adjutant’s, he strove to read therein how far he should put faith
in his words.

“May I lose my epaulets,” cried the adjutant, “if I don’t give you the
watch on that condition! My comrades are witnesses; and I can’t go back
on my word.”

As he spoke, he held the watch nearer and nearer, so that it almost
touched the child’s pale cheek. His face betrayed the battle that was
taking place in his mind between covetousness and respect for the
duties of hospitality. His bare breast rose and fell violently, and he
seemed on the point of suffocation. Meanwhile the watch swung to and
fro, turned, and sometimes touched the end of his nose. At last, by
slow degrees, his right hand rose toward the watch; the ends of his
fingers touched it; and he felt the full weight of it on his hand, but
still the adjutant did not let go the end of the chain. The face was
sky-blue, the case newly polished--in the sun it shone like fire. The
temptation was too great.

Fortunato raised his left hand, too, and pointed with his thumb, over
his left shoulder, to the haystack against which he was leaning. The
adjutant understood him instantly. He let go the end of the chain;
Fortunato realised that he was the sole possessor of the watch. He
sprang up with the agility of a stag, and ran some yards away from the
haystack, which the voltigeurs began at once to demolish.

They soon saw the hay begin to move; and a man covered with blood
came forth, dagger in hand; but when he tried to raise himself, his
stiffened wound prevented him from standing erect. He fell. The
adjutant threw himself upon him and tore his stiletto from his hand.
In a trice he was securely bound, despite his resistance.

Gianetto, lying on the ground and corded like a bundle of sticks,
turned his head toward Fortunato, who had drawn near.

“Son of----!” he said, with more scorn than anger.

The child tossed him the piece of silver which he had received from
him, feeling that he no longer deserved it; but the outlaw seemed to
pay no heed to that movement. He said to the adjutant, as coolly as
possible:

“I can’t walk, my dear Gamba; you will have to carry me to the town.”

“You ran faster than a kid just now,” retorted the cruel victor; “but
never fear; I am so pleased to have caught you, that I would carry you
on my back a whole league without getting tired. However, my boy, we’ll
make a litter for you with some branches and your cloak; and we shall
find horses at Crespoli’s farm.”

“Good,” said the prisoner; “just put a little straw on your litter,
too, so that I can be more comfortable.”

While the voltigeurs busied themselves, some in making a sort of litter
with chestnut branches, others in dressing Gianetto’s wound, Mateo
Falcone and his wife suddenly appeared at a bend in the path leading to
the _maquis_. The woman was stooping painfully beneath the weight of an
enormous bag of chestnuts, while her husband sauntered along, carrying
nothing save one rifle in his hand and another slung over his shoulder;
for it is unworthy of a man to carry any other burden than his weapons.

At sight of the soldiers, Mateo’s first thought was that they had come
to arrest him. But why that thought? Had Mateo any difficulties to
adjust with the authorities? No. He enjoyed an excellent reputation. He
was, as they say, a person of good fame; but he was a Corsican and a
mountaineer; and there are few Corsican mountaineers who, by carefully
searching their memory, cannot find some trifling peccadillo--such as
a rifle shot, a dagger thrust, or other bagatelle. Mateo’s conscience
was clearer than most, for he had not aimed his rifle at a man for more
than ten years; but he was prudent none the less, and he placed himself
in a position to make a stout defence, if need be.

“Wife,” he said to Giuseppa, “put down your bag and be ready.”

She instantly obeyed. He gave her the gun that he carried slung over
his shoulder, which might be in his way. He cocked the one he had in
his hand, and walked slowly toward his house, skirting the trees that
lined the path, and ready, at the slightest hostile demonstration, to
jump behind the largest trunk, where he could fire without exposing
himself. His wife followed at his heels, holding his spare gun and his
cartridge-box. A good housewife’s work, in case of a fight, is to load
her husband’s weapons.

The adjutant, on the other hand, was greatly disturbed to see Mateo
advance thus with measured steps, with rifle raised and finger on
trigger.

“If by any chance,” he thought, “Mateo proves to be related to
Gianetto, or if he is his friend and should take it into his head to
defend him, the charges of his two rifles would reach two of us, as
sure as a letter reaches its address; and suppose he should draw a bead
on me, notwithstanding our relationship!”

In his perplexity he adopted an extremely courageous course--he went
forward alone toward Mateo, to tell him what had happened, accosting
him as an old acquaintance; but the short distance that separated them
seemed to him terribly long.

“Hallo! my old comrade,” he cried; “how goes it, old fellow? It’s me,
Gamba, your cousin.”

Mateo, without a word in reply, halted, and as the other spoke he
raised the barrel of his gun slowly, so that it was pointed at the sky
when the adjutant met him.

“Good-day, brother,” said the adjutant, “it’s a long while since I saw
you.”

“Good-day, brother.”

“I looked in to say good-day to you and Cousin Pepa as I passed. We
have had a long jaunt to-day; but we ought not to complain of fatigue,
as we have made a famous capture. We have caught Gianetto Sanpiero.”

“God be praised!” cried Giuseppa. “He stole a milch goat from us last
week.”

Those words made Gamba’s heart glad.

“Poor devil!” said Mateo, “he was hungry.”

“The rascal defended himself like a lion,” continued the adjutant,
slightly mortified; “he killed one of my men, and, not content with
that, he broke Corporal Chardon’s arm; but there’s no great harm done;
he was only a Frenchman. After that, he hid himself so completely that
the devil himself couldn’t have found him. If it hadn’t been for my
little cousin, Fortunato, I could never have unearthed him.”

“Fortunato!” cried Mateo.

“Fortunato!” echoed Giuseppa.

“Yes, Gianetto was hidden under the haystack yonder; but my little
cousin showed me the trick. And I’ll tell his uncle the _caporal_, so
that he’ll send him a handsome present for his trouble. And his name
and yours will be in the report I shall send the advocate-general.”

“Malediction!” muttered Mateo.

They had joined the squad. Gianetto was already lying on the litter,
ready to start. When he saw Mateo with Gamba, he smiled a strange
smile; then, turning towards the door of the house, he spat on the
threshold, saying:

“House of a traitor!”

Only a man who had made up his mind to die would have dared to utter
the word traitor as applying to Falcone. A quick thrust of the
stiletto, which would not have needed to be repeated, would have paid
for the insult instantly. But Mateo made no other movement than to put
his hand to his forehead, like a man utterly crushed.

Fortunato had gone into the house when he saw his father coming. He
soon reappeared with a mug of milk, which he handed to Gianetto with
downcast eyes.

“Away from me!” shouted the outlaw in a voice of thunder. Then, turning
to one of the voltigeurs, “Comrade,” he said, “give me a drink.”

The soldier placed his gourd in his hands, and the outlaw drank the
water given him by a man with whom he had recently exchanged rifle
shots. Then he asked that his hands might be bound so that they would
be folded on his breast, instead of behind his back.

“I like to lie comfortably,” he said.

They readily gratified him; then the adjutant gave the signal for
departure, bade adieu to Mateo, who made no reply, and marched down at
a rapid pace towards the plain.

Nearly ten minutes passed before Mateo opened his mouth. The child
glanced uneasily, now at his mother and now at his father, who,
leaning upon his gun, gazed at him with an expression of intense wrath.

“You begin well!” said Mateo at last, in a voice which, although calm,
was terrifying to one who knew the man.

“Father!” cried the child stepping forward, with tears in his eyes, as
if to throw himself at his feet.

But Mateo cried:

“Away from me!”

And the child stopped and stood still, sobbing, a few steps from his
father.

Giuseppa approached. She had spied the watch chain, one end of which
protruded from Fortunato’s shirt.

“Who gave you that watch?” she asked in a harsh tone.

“My cousin the adjutant.”

Falcone seized the watch, and hurled it against a stone, breaking it
into a thousand pieces.

“Woman,” he said, “is this child mine?”

Giuseppa’s brown cheeks turned a brick red.

“What do you say, Mateo? Do you know who you’re talking to?”

“Well, this child is the first of his race that ever did an act of
treachery.”

Fortunato’s sobs and hiccoughs redoubled in force, and Falcone still
kept his lynx-eyes fastened on him. At last he struck the butt of his
gun on the ground, then threw it over his shoulder again and started
back toward the _maquis_, calling to Fortunato to follow him. The child
obeyed.

Giuseppa ran after Mateo and grasped his arm.

“He is your son,” she said in a trembling voice, fixing her black eyes
on her husband’s, as if to read what was taking place in his mind.

“Let me alone,” replied Mateo, “I am his father.”

Giuseppa embraced her son and entered her cabin, weeping. She fell
on her knees before an image of the Virgin and prayed fervently.
Meanwhile Falcone walked some two hundred yards along the path, and did
not stop until they reached a narrow ravine into which he descended.
He sounded the earth with the butt of his rifle, and found it soft and
easy to dig. It seemed to him a suitable spot for his design.

“Fortunato, go and stand by that big stone.”

The child did what he ordered, then knelt.

“Say your prayers.”

“Father, father, don’t kill me!”

“Say your prayers!” Mateo repeated, in a terrible voice.

The child, stammering and sobbing, repeated the _Pater_ and the
_Credo_. The father, in a loud voice, said _Amen!_ at the end of each
prayer.

“Are those all the prayers you know?”

“I know the _Ave Maria_, too, father, and the litany my aunt taught me.”

“That’s very long, but no matter.”

The child finished the litany in a feeble voice.

“Have you finished?”

“Oh, father! mercy! forgive me! I won’t do it again! I will pray so
hard to my uncle the _caporal_ that he’ll forgive Gianetto!”

He continued to speak; Mateo had cocked his gun, and he took aim at
him, saying:

“May God forgive you!”

The child made a desperate effort to rise and grasp his father’s knees;
but he had not time. Mateo fired, and Fortunato fell stark dead.

Without glancing at the body, Mateo returned to his house to fetch a
spade, in order to bury his son. He had taken only a few steps, when he
met Giuseppa, who was running after them, terrified by the report.

“What have you done?” she cried.

“Justice.”

“Where is he?”

“In the ravine. I am going to bury him. He died the death of a
Christian; I will have a mass sung for him. Send word to my son-in-law
Tiodoro Bianchi to come and live with us.”

 1829.


FOOTNOTES:

[40] In olden times the _caporals_ were the leaders chosen by the
Corsican communes when they rebelled against the feudal lords. To-day
the name is sometimes given to a man who, by reason of his property,
his alliances, and his clientage, exerts a certain influence and acts
as a sort of magistrate in a _pieve_ or a canton. The Corsicans, by an
ancient custom, divide themselves into _gentlemen_ (some of whom are
_magnificoes_, others _signori_), _caporali_, _citizens_, _plebeians_,
and _foreigners_.

[41] The word is in this instance synonymous with outlaw.

[42] A corps levied within a few years by the government and employed
on police duty, concurrently with the gendarmerie.

[43] The uniform of the voltigeurs consisted of a brown coat with a
yellow collar.

[44] A leather girdle used as cartridge-box and as wallet.




The Venus of Ille

    Ἰλεὼς ἣν δ' ἐγὼ, ἔστω ὁ ἀνδρίας
    Καὶ ἤπιος, οὔτως ἀνδρεῖος ὢν.

    ΛΟΥΚΙΑΝΟΥ ΦΙΛΟΨΕΥΔΗΣ.


I was descending the last slope of Canigou, and, although the sun had
already set, I could distinguish in the plain below the houses of the
little town of Ille, for which I was bound.

“You know,” I said to the Catalan who had been acting as my guide since
the preceding day, “you know, doubtless, where Monsieur de Peyrehorade
lives?”

“Do I know!” he cried; “why, I know his house as well as I do my own;
and if it wasn’t so dark, I’d show it to you. It’s the finest house in
Ille. He has money, you know, has Monsieur de Peyrehorade; and his son
is going to marry a girl that’s richer than himself.”

“Is the marriage to take place soon?” I asked.

“Soon! It may be that the fiddles are already ordered for the wedding.
To-night, perhaps, or to-morrow, or the day after, for all I know! It’s
to be at Puygarrig; for it’s Mademoiselle de Puygarrig that the young
gentleman is going to marry.”

I had a letter of introduction to M. de Peyrehorade from my friend M.
de P. He was, so my friend had told me, a very learned antiquarian, and
good-natured and obliging to the last degree. He would take pleasure in
showing me all the ruins within a radius of ten leagues. Now, I relied
upon him to accompany me about the country near Ille, which I knew to
be rich in monuments of ancient times and of the Middle Ages. This
marriage, of which I now heard for the first time, might upset all my
plans.

“I shall be an interloper,” I said to myself.

But I was expected; as my arrival had been announced by M. de P., I
must needs present myself.

“I’ll bet you, monsieur,” said my guide, as we reached the foot of the
mountain, “I’ll bet you a cigar that I can guess what you are going to
do at Monsieur de Peyrehorade’s.”

“Why, that is not very hard to guess,” I replied, offering him a cigar.
“At this time of day, when one has walked six leagues over Canigou, the
most urgent business is supper.”

“Yes, but to-morrow? Look you, I’ll bet that you have come to Ille to
see the idol! I guessed that when I saw you drawing pictures of the
saints at Serrabona.”

“The idol! what idol?” The word had aroused my curiosity.

“What! didn’t any one at Perpignan tell you how Monsieur de Peyrehorade
had found an idol in the ground?”

“You mean a terra-cotta, or clay statue, don’t you?”

“No, indeed! I mean a copper one, and it’s big enough to make a lot of
big sous. It weighs as much as a church bell. It was way down in the
ground, at the foot of an olive tree, that we found it.”

“So you were present at the discovery, were you?”

“Yes, monsieur. Monsieur de Peyrehorade told us a fortnight ago, Jean
Coll and me, to dig up an old olive tree that got frozen last year--for
it was a very hard winter, you know. So, while we were at work, Jean
Coll, who was going at it with all his might, dug his pick into the
dirt, and I heard a _bimm_--just as if he’d struck a bell.--‘What’s
that?’ says I. We kept on digging and digging, and first a black hand
showed; it looked like a dead man’s hand sticking out of the ground.
For my part, I was scared. I goes to monsieur, and I says to him: ‘Dead
men under the olive tree, master. You’d better call the curé.’

“‘What dead men?’ he says.

“He went with me, and he’d no sooner seen the hand than he sings out:
‘An antique! an antique!’ You’d have thought he had found a treasure.
And to work he went with the pick and with his hands, and did as much
as both of us together, you might say.”

“Well, what did you find?”

“A tall black woman more than half naked, saving your presence,
monsieur, of solid copper; and Monsieur de Peyrehorade told us that it
was an idol of heathen times--of the time of Charlemagne!”

“I see what it is: a bronze Blessed Virgin from some dismantled
convent.”

“A Blessed Virgin! oh, yes! I should have recognised it if it had been
a Blessed Virgin. It’s an idol, I tell you; you can see that from its
expression. It fastens its great white eyes on you; you’d think it was
trying to stare you out of countenance. Why, you actually lower your
eyes when you look at it.”

“White eyes? They are incrusted on the bronze, no doubt. It may be some
Roman statue.”

“Roman! that’s it. Monsieur de Peyrehorade says she’s a Roman.--Ah! I
see that you’re a scholar like him.”

“Is it whole, well preserved?”

“Oh! it’s all there, monsieur. It’s even handsomer and finished better
than the plaster-of-Paris bust of Louis Philippe at the mayor’s office.
But for all that, I can’t get over the idol’s face. It has a wicked
look--and she is wicked, too.”

“Wicked! what harm has she done you?”

“None to me exactly; but I’ll tell you. We had got down on all fours to
stand her up, and Monsieur de Peyrehorade, he was pulling on the rope,
too, although he hasn’t any more strength than a chicken, the excellent
man! With a good deal of trouble we got her on her feet. I was picking
up a piece of stone to wedge her, when, _patatras!_ down she went
again, all in a heap. ‘Stand from under!’ says I. But I was too late,
for Jean Coll didn’t have time to pull out his leg.”

“And he was hurt?”

“His poor leg broken off short like a stick! _Pécaïre!_ when I saw
that, I was furious. I wanted to smash the idol with my pickaxe, but
Monsieur de Peyrehorade held me back. He gave Jean Coll some money,
but he’s been in bed all the same ever since it happened, a fortnight
ago, and the doctor says he’ll never walk with that leg like the
other. It’s a pity, for he was our best runner, and next to monsieur’s
son, the best tennis player. I tell you, it made Monsieur Alphonse de
Peyrehorade feel bad, for Coll always played with him. It was fine to
see how they’d send the balls back at each other. Paf! paf! They never
touched the ground.”

Chatting thus we entered Ille, and I soon found myself in M. de
Peyrehorade’s presence. He was a little old man, still hale and
active, with powdered hair, a red nose, and a jovial, bantering air.
Before opening M. de P.’s letter, he installed himself in front of a
bountifully spread table, and introduced me to his wife and son as an
illustrious archæologist, who was destined to rescue Roussillon from
the oblivion in which the indifference of scholars had thus far left it.

While eating with a hearty appetite--for nothing is more conducive
thereto than the keen mountain air--I examined my hosts. I have
already said a word or two of M. de Peyrehorade; I must add that he
was vivacity personified. He talked, ate, rose from his chair, ran to
his library, brought books to me, showed me prints, filled my glass;
he was never at rest for two minutes in succession. His wife, who was
a trifle too stout, like all the Catalan women after they have passed
forty, impressed me as a typical provincial, who had no interests
outside of her household. Although the supper was ample for at least
six persons, she ran to the kitchen, ordered pigeons killed, all sorts
of things fried, and opened Heaven knows how many jars of preserves. In
an instant the table was laden with dishes and bottles, and I should
certainly have died of indigestion if I had even tasted everything
that was offered me. And yet, with every new dish that I declined,
there were renewed apologies. She was afraid that I would find myself
very badly off at Ille. One had so few resources in the provinces, and
Parisians were so hard to please!

Amid all the goings and comings of his parents, M. Alphonse de
Peyrehorade sat as motionless as the god Terminus. He was a tall young
man of twenty-six, with a handsome and regular face, which however
lacked expression. His figure and his athletic proportions fully
justified the reputation of an indefatigable tennis player which he
enjoyed throughout the province. On this evening he was dressed in the
height of fashion, exactly in accordance with the engraving in the last
number of the _Journal des Modes_. But he seemed ill at ease in his
clothes; he was as stiff as a picket in his velvet stock, and moved his
whole body when he turned. His rough, sunburned hands and short nails
formed a striking contrast to his costume. They were the hands of a
ploughman emerging from the sleeves of a dandy. Furthermore, although
he scrutinised me with interest from head to foot, I being a Parisian,
he spoke to me but once during the evening, and that was to ask me
where I bought my watch chain.

“Look you, my dear guest,” said M. de Peyrehorade, as the supper drew
to a close, “you belong to me, you are in my house; I shall not let
you go until you have seen everything of interest that we have in our
mountains. You must learn to know our Roussillon, and you must do her
justice. You have no suspicion of all that we are going to show you:
Phœnician, Celtic, Roman, Arabian, Byzantine monuments--you shall see
them all, from the cedar to the hyssop. I will take you everywhere, and
I will not let you off from a single brick.”

A paroxysm of coughing compelled him to pause. I seized the opportunity
to say that I should be distressed to incommode him at a season so
fraught with interest to his family. If he would simply give me the
benefit of his excellent advice as to the excursions it would be well
for me to make, I could easily, without putting him to the trouble of
accompanying me----

“Ah! you refer to this boy’s marriage,” he exclaimed, interrupting
me. “That’s a mere trifle--it will take place day after to-morrow.
You must attend the wedding with us, _en famille_, as the bride is in
mourning for an aunt whose property she inherits. So there are to be
no festivities, no ball. It is too bad, for you might have seen our
Catalan girls dance. They are very pretty, and perhaps you would have
felt inclined to follow my Alphonse’s example. One marriage, they say,
leads to others.--Saturday, when the young people are married, I shall
be free, and we will take the field. I ask your pardon for subjecting
you to the ennui of a provincial wedding. For a Parisian, sated with
parties of all sorts--and a wedding without a ball, at that! However,
you will see a bride--a bride--you must tell me what you think of her.
But you are a serious man, and you don’t look at women any more. I have
something better than that to show you. I will show you something worth
seeing! I have a famous surprise in store for you to-morrow.”

“Mon Dieu!” said I, “it is difficult to keep a treasure in one’s house
without the public knowing all about it. I fancy that I can divine
the surprise that you have in store for me. But if you refer to your
statue, the description of it that my guide gave me has served simply
to arouse my curiosity and to predispose me to admiration.”

“Ah! so he spoke to you about the idol--for that is what they call
my beautiful Venus Tur--but I will tell you nothing now. You shall
see her to-morrow, by daylight, and tell me whether I am justified in
considering her a _chef-d’œuvre_. Parbleu! you could not have arrived
more opportunely! There are some inscriptions which I, poor ignoramus
that I am, interpret after my manner. But a scholar from Paris!
It may be that you will make fun of my interpretation--for I have
written a memoir--I, who speak to you, an old provincial antiquary,
have made a start; I propose to make the printing-presses groan. If
you would kindly read and correct me, I might hope. For example, I am
very curious to know how you will translate this inscription on the
pedestal: CAVE--but I won’t ask you anything yet. Until to-morrow!
until to-morrow! Not a word about the Venus to-day!”

“You are quite right, Peyrehorade,” said his wife, “to let your old
idol rest. You must see that you are keeping monsieur from eating. Bah!
monsieur has seen much finer statues than yours in Paris. There are
dozens of them at the Tuileries, and bronze ones, too.”

“There you have the ignorance, the blessed ignorance of the provinces!”
interrupted M. de Peyrehorade. “Think of comparing an admirable antique
to Coustou’s insipid figures!

    “‘With what irreverence
    Doth my good wife speak of the gods!’

Would you believe that my wife wanted me to melt my statue and make it
into a bell for our church! She would have been the donor, you see. A
_chef-d’œuvre_ of Myron, monsieur!”

“_Chef-d’œuvre! chef-d’œuvre!_ a pretty _chef-d’œuvre_ she made! to
break a man’s leg!”

“Look you, my wife,” said M. de Peyrehorade in a determined tone,
extending his right leg encased in a stocking of Chinese silk, in her
direction, “if my Venus had broken this leg, I should not regret it.”

“Gracious Heaven! how can you say that, Peyrehorade? Luckily the man is
getting better. Still, I can’t make up my mind to look at the statue
that causes such accidents as that. Poor Jean Coll!”

“Wounded by Venus, monsieur,” said M. de Peyrehorade, with a chuckle,
“wounded by Venus, the clown complains:

    “‘Veneris nec præmia noris.’

“Who has not been wounded by Venus?”

M. Alphonse, who understood French better than Latin, winked with a
knowing look, and glanced at me as if to ask:

“And you, Monsieur le Parisien, do you understand?”

The supper came to an end. I had eaten nothing for the last hour. I was
tired and I could not succeed in dissembling the frequent yawns which
escaped me. Madame de Peyrehorade was the first to notice my plight and
observed that it was time to go to bed. Thereupon began a new series
of apologies for the wretched accommodations I was to have. I should
not be as comfortable as I was in Paris. One is so badly off in the
provinces! I must be indulgent for the Roussillonnais. In vain did I
protest that after a journey in the mountains a sheaf of straw would be
a luxurious bed for me--she continued to beg me to excuse unfortunate
country folk if they did not treat me as well as they would have liked
to do. I went upstairs at last to the room allotted to me, escorted by
M. de Peyrehorade. The staircase, the upper stairs of which were of
wood, ended in the centre of a corridor upon which several rooms opened.

“At the right,” said my host, “is the apartment which I intend to
give to Madame Alphonse that is to be. Your room is at the end of the
opposite corridor. You know,” he added, with an expression meant to be
sly, “you know we must put a newly married couple all by themselves.
You are at one end of the house and they at the other.”

We entered a handsomely furnished room, in which the first object
that caught my eye was a bed seven feet long, six feet wide, and so
high that one had to use a stool to climb to the top. My host, having
pointed out the location of the bell, having assured himself that the
sugarbowl was full, and that the bottles of cologne had been duly
placed on the dressing-table, and having asked me several times if I
had everything that I wanted, wished me a good-night and left me alone.

The windows were closed. Before undressing I opened one of them to
breathe the fresh night air, always delicious after a long supper. In
front of me was Canigou, beautiful to look at always, but that evening,
it seemed to me the most beautiful mountain in the world, lighted as
it was by a brilliant moon. I stood for some minutes gazing at its
wonderful silhouette, and was on the point of closing my window when,
as I lowered my eyes, I saw the statue on a pedestal some forty yards
from the house. It was placed at the corner of a quickset hedge which
separated a small garden from a large square of perfectly smooth turf,
which, as I learned later, was the tennis-court of the town. This
tract, which belonged to M. de Peyrehorade, had been ceded by him to
the commune, at his son’s urgent solicitation.

I was so far from the statue that I could not distinguish its attitude
and could only guess at its height, which seemed to be about six
feet. At that moment two young scamps from the town walked across the
tennis-court, quite near the hedge, whistling the pretty Roussillon
air, _Montagnes Régalades_. They stopped to look at the statue, and one
of them apostrophised it in a loud voice. He spoke Catalan; but I had
been long enough in Roussillon to understand pretty nearly what he said.

“So there you are, hussy! (The Catalan term was much more forcible.) So
there you are!” he said. “So it was you who broke Jean Coll’s leg! If
you belonged to me, I’d break your neck!”

“Bah! with what?” said the other. “She’s made of copper, and it’s so
hard that Étienne broke his file, trying to file it. It’s copper of the
heathen times, and it’s harder than I don’t know what.”

“If I had my cold-chisel”--it seemed that he was a locksmith’s
apprentice--“I’d soon dig out her big white eyes, as easy as I’d take
an almond out of its shell. They’d make more than a hundred sous in
silver.”

They walked away a few steps.

“I must bid the idol good-night,” said the taller of the two, suddenly
stopping again.

He stooped, and, I suppose, picked up a stone. I saw him raise his arm
and throw something, and instantly there was a ringing blow on the
bronze. At the same moment the apprentice put his hand to his head,
with a sharp cry of pain.

“She threw it back at me!” he exclaimed.

And my two rascals fled at the top of their speed. It was evident that
the stone had rebounded from the metal, and had punished the fellow for
his affront to the goddess.

I closed my window, laughing heartily.

“Still another vandal chastised by Venus!” I thought. “May all the
destroyers of our ancient monuments have their heads broken thus!”

And with that charitable prayer, I fell asleep.

It was broad daylight when I woke. Beside my bed were, on one side, M.
de Peyrehorade in his _robe-de-chambre_; on the other a servant, sent
by his wife, with a cup of chocolate in his hand.

“Come, up with you, Parisian! This is just like you sluggards from the
capital!” said my host, while I hastily dressed myself. “It is eight
o’clock, and you are still in bed! I have been up since six. This is
the third time I have come upstairs; I came to your door on tiptoe; not
a sound, not a sign of life. It will injure you to sleep too much at
your age. And you haven’t seen my Venus yet! Come, drink this cup of
Barcelona chocolate quickly. Genuine contraband, such chocolate as you
don’t get in Paris. You must lay up some strength, for, when you once
stand in front of my Venus, I shall not be able to tear you away from
her.”

In five minutes I was ready--that is to say, half shaved, my clothes
half buttoned, and my throat scalded by the chocolate, which I had
swallowed boiling hot. I went down into the garden and found myself
before a really beautiful statue.

It was, in truth, a Venus, and wonderfully lovely. The upper part of
the body was nude, as the ancients ordinarily represented the great
divinities; the right hand, raised as high as the breast, was turned
with the palm inward, the thumb and first two fingers extended, the
other two slightly bent. The other hand was near the hip and held the
drapery that covered the lower part of the body. The pose of the statue
recalled that of the Morra Player, usually known, I know not why, by
the name of Germanicus. Perhaps the sculptor intended to represent the
goddess playing the game of morra.

However that may be, it is impossible to imagine anything more perfect
than the body of that Venus; anything more harmonious, more voluptuous
than her outlines, anything more graceful and more dignified than her
drapery. I expected to see some work of the later Empire; I saw a
_chef-d’œuvre_ of the best period of statuary. What especially struck
me was the exquisite verisimilitude of the forms, which one might have
believed to have been moulded from nature, if nature ever produced such
flawless models.

The hair, which was brushed back from the forehead, seemed to have
been gilded formerly. The head, which was small, like those of almost
all Greek statues, was bent slightly forward. As for the face, I
shall never succeed in describing its peculiar character; it was of
a type which in no wise resembled that of any antique statue that I
can remember. It was not the tranquil, severe beauty of the Greek
sculptors, who systematically imparted a majestic immobility to all the
features. Here, on the contrary, I observed with surprise a clearly
marked intention on the part of the artist to express mischievousness
amounting almost to deviltry. All the features were slightly
contracted; the eyes were a little oblique, the corners of the mouth
raised, the nostrils a little dilated. Disdain, irony, cruelty could
be read upon that face, which none the less was inconceivably lovely.
In truth, the more one looked at that marvellous statue, the more
distressed one felt at the thought that such wonderful beauty could be
conjoined to utter absence of sensibility.

“If the model ever existed,” I said to M. de Peyrehorade,--“and I doubt
whether Heaven ever produced such a woman--how I pity her lovers! She
must have delighted in driving them to death from despair. There is
something downright savage in her expression, and yet I never have seen
anything so beautiful!”

“’T is Venus all intent upon her prey!” quoted M. de Peyrehorade,
delighted with my enthusiasm.

That expression of infernal irony was heightened perhaps by the
contrast between the very brilliant silver eyes and the coating of
blackish green with which time had overlaid the whole statue. Those
gleaming eyes created a certain illusion which suggested reality, life.
I remembered what my guide had said, that she made those who looked
at her lower their eyes. That was almost true, and I could not help
feeling angry with myself as I realised that I was perceptibly ill at
ease before that bronze figure.

“Now that you have admired her in every detail, my dear colleague
in antiquarian research,” said my host, “let us open a scientific
conference, if you please. What do you say to this inscription, which
you have not noticed as yet?”

He pointed to the base of the statue, and I read there these words:

  CAVE AMANTEM.

“_Quid dicis, doctissime?_” (“What do you say, most learned of men?”)
he asked, rubbing his hands. “Let us see if we shall agree as to the
meaning of this _cave amantem_.”

“Why, there are two possible meanings,” I said. “It may be translated:
‘Beware of him who loves you--distrust lovers.’ But I am not sure that
_cave amantem_ would be good Latin in that sense. In view of the lady’s
diabolical expression, I should be inclined to believe rather that the
artist meant to put the spectator on his guard against that terrible
beauty. So that I should translate: ‘Look out for yourself if _she_
loves you.’”

“Humph!” ejaculated M. de Peyrehorade; “yes, that is a possible
translation; but, with all respect, I prefer the first, which I will
develop a little, however. You know who Venus’s lover was?”

“She had several.”

“Yes, but the first one was Vulcan. Did not the artist mean to say:
‘Despite all your beauty, and your scornful air, you shall have a
blacksmith, a wretched cripple, for a lover’? A solemn lesson for
coquettes, monsieur!”

I could not help smiling, the interpretation seemed to me so
exceedingly far-fetched.

“The Latin is a terrible language, with its extraordinary
conciseness,” I observed, to avoid contradicting my antiquary directly;
and I stepped back a few steps, to obtain a better view of the statue.

“One moment, colleague!” said M. de Peyrehorade, seizing my arm, “you
have not seen all. There is still another inscription. Stand on the
pedestal and look at the right arm.”

As he spoke, he helped me to climb up.

I clung somewhat unceremoniously to the neck of the Venus, with whom
I was beginning to feel on familiar terms. I even looked her in the
eye for an instant, and I found her still more diabolical and still
lovelier at close quarters. Then I saw that there were some letters,
in what I took to be the antique cursive hand, engraved on the right
arm. With the aid of a strong glass I spelled out what follows, M. de
Peyrehorade repeating each word as I pronounced it, and expressing his
approbation with voice and gesture. I read:

  VENERI TVRBVL--

  EVTYCHES MYRO

  IMPERIO FECIT

After the word _tvrbvl_ in the first line several letters seemed to
have become effaced, but _tvrbvl_ was perfectly legible.

“Which means?”--queried my host, with a beaming face, and winking
maliciously, for he had a shrewd idea that I would not easily handle
that _tvrbvl_.

“There is one word here which I do not understand as yet,” I said;
“all the rest is simple. ‘Eutyches made this offering to Venus by her
order.’”

“Excellent. But what do you make of _tvrbvl_? What is _tvrbvl_?”

“_Tvrbvl_ puzzles me a good deal. I have tried in vain to think of
some known epithet of Venus to assist me. What would you say to
_Turbulenta_? Venus, who disturbs, who excites--as you see, I am still
engrossed by her evil expression. _Turbulenta_ is not a very inapt
epithet for Venus,” I added modestly, for I was not very well satisfied
myself with my explanation.

“Turbulent Venus! Venus the roisterer! Ah! so you think that my Venus
is a wine-shop Venus, do you? Not by any means, monsieur; she is a
Venus in good society. But I will explain this _tvrbvl_ to you. Of
course you will promise not to divulge my discovery before my memoir is
printed. You see, I am very proud of this find of mine. You must leave
us poor devils in the provinces a few spears to glean. You are so rich,
you Parisian scholars!”

From the top of the pedestal, whereon I was still perched, I solemnly
promised him that I would never be guilty of the baseness of stealing
his discovery.

“_Tvrbvl_--monsieur,” he said, coming nearer to me and lowering
his voice, for fear that some other than myself might hear--“read
_tvrbvlneræ_.”

“I don’t understand any better.”

“Listen. About a league from here, at the foot of the mountain, is a
village called Boulternère. That name is a corruption of the Latin word
_Turbulnera_. Nothing is more common than such inversions. Boulternère,
monsieur, was a Roman city. I have always suspected as much, but I have
never had a proof of it. Here is the proof. This Venus was the local
divinity of the city of Boulternère; and this word Boulternère, whose
antique origin I have just demonstrated, proves something even more
interesting--namely, that Boulternère, before it became a Roman city,
was a Phœnician city!”

He paused a moment to take breath and to enjoy my surprise. I succeeded
in restraining a very strong inclination to laugh.

“It is a fact,” he continued, “_Turbulnera_ is pure Phœnician; _Tur_,
pronounced _Tour_--_Tour_ and _Sour_ are the same word, are they not?
_Sour_ is the Phœnician name of Tyre; I do not need to remind you of
its meaning. _Bul_ is Baal; Bal, Bel, Bul--slight differences in
pronunciation. As for _nera_--that gives me a little trouble. I am
inclined to believe, failing to find a Phœnician word, that it comes
from the Greek word νηρός, damp, swampy. In that case the word would
be a hybrid. To justify my suggestion of νηρός, I will show you that
at Boulternère the streams from the mountain form miasmatic pools. On
the other hand, the termination _nera_ may have been added much later,
in honour of Nera Pivesuvia, wife of Tetricus, who may have had some
property in the city of Turbul. But on account of the pools I prefer
the etymology from νηρός.”

And he took a pinch of snuff with a self-satisfied air.

“But let us leave the Phœnicians and return to the inscription. I
translate then: ‘To Venus of Boulternère, Myron, at her command,
dedicates this statue, his work.’”

I had no idea of criticising his etymology, but I did desire to exhibit
some little penetration on my own part; so I said to him:

“Stop there a moment, monsieur. Myron dedicated something, but I see
nothing to indicate that it was this statue.”

“What!” he cried, “was not Myron a famous Greek sculptor? The talent
probably was handed down in the family; it was one of his descendants
who executed this statue. Nothing can be more certain.”

“But,” I rejoined, “I see a little hole in the arm. I believe that it
was made to fasten something to--a bracelet, perhaps, which this Myron
presented to Venus as an expiatory offering.--Myron was an unsuccessful
lover; Venus was irritated with him and he appeased her by consecrating
a gold bracelet to her. Observe that _fecit_ is very often used in the
sense of _consecravit_; they are synonymous terms. I could show you
more than one example of what I say if I had Gruter or Orellius at
hand. It would be quite natural for a lover to see Venus in a dream and
to fancy that she ordered him to give a gold bracelet to her statue.
So Myron consecrated a bracelet to her; then the barbarians, or some
sacrilegious thief----”

“Ah! it is easy to see that you have written novels!” cried my host,
giving me his hand to help me descend. “No, monsieur, it is a work of
the school of Myron. Look at the workmanship simply and you will agree.”

Having made it a rule never to contradict outright an obstinate
antiquarian, I hung my head with the air of one fully persuaded, saying:

“It’s an admirable thing.”

“Ah! mon Dieu!” cried M. de Peyrehorade; “still another piece of
vandalism! Somebody must have thrown a stone at my statue!”

He had just discovered a white mark a little above Venus’s breast. I
observed a similar mark across the fingers of the right hand, which I
then supposed had been grazed by the stone; or else that a fragment
of the stone had been broken off by the blow and had bounded against
the hand. I told my host about the insult that I had witnessed, and
the speedy retribution that had followed. He laughed heartily, and,
comparing the apprentice to Diomedes, expressed a hope that, like the
Grecian hero, he might see all his companions transformed into birds.

The breakfast bell interrupted this classical conversation, and I was
again obliged, as on the preceding day, to eat for four. Then M. de
Peyrehorade’s farmers appeared; and while he gave audience to them,
his son took me to see a calèche which he had bought at Toulouse for
his fiancée, and which I admired, it is needless to say. Then I went
with him into the stable, where he kept me half an hour, boasting of
his horses, giving me their genealogies, and telling me of the prizes
they had won at various races in the province. At last he reached the
subject of his future wife, by a natural transition from a gray mare he
intended for her.

“We shall see her to-day,” he said. “I do not know whether you will
think her pretty; but everybody here and at Perpignan considers her
charming. The best thing about her is that she’s very rich. Her aunt
at Prades left her all her property. Oh! I am going to be very happy.”

I was intensely disgusted to see a young man more touched by the dowry
than by the _beaux yeux_ of his betrothed.

“You know something about jewels,” continued M. Alphonse; “what do
you think of this one? This is the ring that I am going to give her
to-morrow.”

As he spoke, he took from the first joint of his little finger a huge
ring with many diamonds, made in the shape of two clasped hands; an
allusion which seemed to me exceedingly poetical. The workmanship was
very old, but I judged that it had been changed somewhat to allow the
diamonds to be set. On the inside of the ring were these words in
Gothic letters: _Sempr’ ab ti_; that is to say, “Always with thee.”

“It is a handsome ring,” I said, “but these diamonds have taken away
something of its character.”

“Oh! it is much handsomer so,” he replied, with a smile. “There are
twelve hundred francs’ worth of diamonds. My mother gave it to me. It
was a very old family ring--of the times of chivalry. It belonged to my
grandmother, who had it from hers. God knows when it was made.”

“The custom in Paris,” I said, “is to give a very simple ring, usually
made of two different metals, as gold and platinum, for instance. See,
that other ring, which you wear on this finger, would be most suitable.
This one, with its diamonds and its hands in relief, is so big that one
could not wear a glove over it.”

“Oh! Madame Alphonse may arrange that as she pleases. I fancy that she
will be very glad to have it all the same. Twelve hundred francs on
one’s finger is very pleasant. This little ring,” he added, glancing
fatuously at the plain one which he wore, “was given me by a woman in
Paris one Mardi Gras. Ah! how I did go it when I was in Paris two
years ago! That’s the place where one enjoys one’s self!”

And he heaved a sigh of regret.

We were to dine that day at Puygarrig with the bride’s parents; we
drove in the calèche to the château, about a league and a half from
Ille. I was presented and made welcome as a friend of the family. I
will say nothing of the dinner or of the conversation which followed
it, and in which I took little part. M. Alphonse, seated beside his
fiancée, said a word in her ear every quarter of an hour. As for her,
she hardly raised her eyes, and whenever her future husband addressed
her she blushed modestly, but replied without embarrassment.

Mademoiselle de Puygarrig was eighteen years of age; her supple and
delicate figure formed a striking contrast to the bony frame of her
athletic fiancé. She was not only lovely, but fascinating. I admired
the perfect naturalness of all her replies; and her good-humoured air,
which however was not exempt from a slight tinge of mischief, reminded
me, in spite of myself, of my host’s Venus. As I made this comparison
mentally, I asked myself whether the superiority in the matter of
beauty which I could not choose but accord to the statue, did not
consist in large measure in her tigress-like expression; for energy,
even in evil passions, always arouses in us a certain surprise and a
sort of involuntary admiration.

“What a pity,” I said to myself as we left Puygarrig, “that such an
attractive person should be rich, and that her dowry should cause her
to be sought in marriage by a man who is unworthy of her!”

On the way back to Ille, finding some difficulty in talking with Madame
de Peyrehorade, whom, however, I thought it only courteous to address
now and then, I exclaimed:

“You are very strong-minded here in Roussillon! To think of having a
wedding on a Friday, madame! We are more superstitious in Paris; no
one would dare to take a wife on that day.”

“Mon Dieu! don’t mention it,” said she; “if it had depended on me,
they certainly would have chosen another day. But Peyrehorade would
have it so, and I had to give way to him. It distresses me, however.
Suppose anything should happen? There must surely be some reason for
the superstition, for why else should every one be afraid of Friday?”

“Friday!” cried her husband; “Friday is Venus’s day! A splendid day
for a wedding! You see, my dear colleague, I think of nothing but my
Venus. On my honour, it was on her account that I chose a Friday.
To-morrow, if you are willing, before the wedding, we will offer a
little sacrifice to her; we will sacrifice two pigeons, if I can find
any incense.”

“For shame, Peyrehorade!” his wife interposed, scandalised to the last
degree. “Burn incense to an idol! That would be an abomination! What
would people in the neighbourhood say about you?”

“At least,” said M. de Peyrehorade, “you will allow me to place a
wreath of roses and lilies on her head:

  “‘Manibus date lilia plenis.’

The charter, you see, monsieur, is an empty word; we have no freedom of
worship!”

The order of ceremonies for the following day was thus arranged:
everybody was to be fully dressed and ready at precisely ten o’clock.
After taking a cup of chocolate, we were to drive to Puygarrig. The
civil ceremony would take place at the mayor’s office of that village,
and the religious ceremony in the chapel of the château. Then there
would be a breakfast. After that, we were to pass the time as best we
could until seven o’clock, when we were to return to Ille, to M. de
Peyrehorade’s, where the two families were to sup together. The rest
followed as a matter of course. Being unable to dance, the plan was to
eat as much as possible.

At eight o’clock I was already seated in front of the Venus, pencil
in hand, beginning for the twentieth time to draw the head of the
statue, whose expression I was still absolutely unable to catch.
M. de Peyrehorade hovered about me, gave me advice, and repeated
his Phœnician etymologies; then he arranged some Bengal roses on
the pedestal of the statue, and in a tragi-comic tone addressed
supplications to it for the welfare of the couple who were to live
under his roof. About nine o’clock he returned to the house to dress,
and at the same time M. Alphonse appeared, encased in a tightly fitting
new coat, white gloves, patent-leather shoes, and carved buttons, with
a rose in his buttonhole.

“Will you paint my wife’s portrait?” he asked, leaning over my drawing;
“she is pretty, too.”

At that moment a game of tennis began on the court I have mentioned,
and it immediately attracted M. Alphonse’s attention. And I myself,
being rather tired, and hopeless of being able to reproduce that
diabolical face, soon left my drawing to watch the players. Among them
were several Spanish muleteers who had arrived in the town the night
before. There were Aragonese and Navarrese, almost all wonderfully
skillful at the game. So that the men of Ille, although encouraged by
the presence and counsels of M. Alphonse, were speedily beaten by these
new champions. The native spectators were appalled. M. Alphonse glanced
at his watch. It was only half after nine. His mother’s hair was not
dressed. He no longer hesitated, but took off his coat, asked for a
jacket, and challenged the Spaniards. I watched him, smiling at his
eagerness, and a little surprised.

“I must uphold the honour of the province,” he said to me.

At that moment I considered him really handsome. He was thoroughly
in earnest. His costume, which engrossed him so completely a moment
before, was of no consequence. A few minutes earlier he was afraid to
turn his head for fear of disarranging his cravat. Now, he paid no heed
to his carefully curled locks, or to his beautifully laundered ruff.
And his fiancée?--Faith, I believe that, if it had been necessary, he
would have postponed the wedding. I saw him hastily put on a pair of
sandals, turn back his sleeves, and with an air of confidence take his
place at the head of the beaten side, like Cæsar rallying his legions
at Dyrrhachium. I leaped over the hedge and found a convenient place in
the shade of a plum-tree, where I could see both camps.

Contrary to general expectation, M. Alphonse missed the first ball; to
be sure, it skimmed along the ground, driven with astounding force by
an Aragonese who seemed to be the leader of the Spaniards.

He was a man of some forty years, thin and wiry, about six feet tall;
and his olive skin was almost as dark as the bronze of the Venus.

M. Alphonse dashed his racquet to the ground in a passion.

“It was this infernal ring,” he cried: “it caught my finger and made me
miss a sure ball!”

He removed the diamond ring, not without difficulty, and I stepped
forward to take it; but he anticipated me, ran to the Venus, slipped
the ring on her third finger, and resumed his position at the head of
his townsmen.

He was pale, but calm and determined. Thereafter he did not make
a single mistake, and the Spaniards were completely routed. The
enthusiasm of the spectators was a fine spectacle; some shouted for joy
again and again, and tossed their caps in the air; others shook his
hands and called him an honour to the province. If he had repelled an
invasion, I doubt whether he would have received more enthusiastic and
more sincere congratulations. The chagrin of the defeated party added
still more to the splendour of his victory.

“We will play again, my good fellow,” he said to the Aragonese in a
lofty tone; “but I will give you points.”

I should have been glad if M. Alphonse had been more modest, and I
was almost distressed by his rival’s humiliation. The Spanish giant
felt the insult keenly. I saw him turn pale under his tanned skin. He
glanced with a sullen expression at his racquet, and ground his teeth;
then he muttered in a voice choked with rage:

“_Me lo pagarás!_”

M. de Peyrehorade’s appearance interrupted his son’s triumph. My host,
greatly surprised not to find him superintending the harnessing of
the new calèche, was much more surprised when he saw him drenched
with perspiration, and with his racquet in his hand. M. Alphonse ran
to the house, washed his face and hands, resumed his new coat and his
patent-leather boots, and five minutes later we were driving rapidly
toward Puygarrig. All the tennis players of the town and a great number
of spectators followed us with joyous shouts. The stout horses that
drew us could hardly keep in advance of those dauntless Catalans.

We had reached Puygarrig, and the procession was about to start for
the mayor’s office, when M. Alphonse put his hand to his forehead and
whispered to me:

“What a fool I am! I have forgotten the ring! It is on the Venus’s
finger, the devil take her! For Heaven’s sake, don’t tell my mother.
Perhaps she will not notice anything.”

“You might send some one to get it,” I said.

“No, no! my servant stayed at Ille, and I don’t trust these people
here. Twelve hundred francs’ worth of diamonds! that might be too much
of a temptation for more than one of them. Besides, what would they all
think of my absent-mindedness? They would make too much fun of me. They
would call me the statue’s husband.--However, I trust that no one will
steal it. Luckily, all my knaves are afraid of the idol. They don’t
dare go within arm’s length of it.--Bah! it’s no matter; I have another
ring.”

The two ceremonies, civil and religious, were performed with suitable
pomp, and Mademoiselle de Puygarrig received a ring that formerly
belonged to a milliner’s girl at Paris, with no suspicion that her
husband was bestowing upon her a pledge of love. Then we betook
ourselves to the table, where we ate and drank, yes, and sang, all at
great length. I sympathised with the bride amid the vulgar merriment
that burst forth all about her; however, she put a better face on it
than I could have hoped, and her embarrassment was neither awkwardness
nor affectation. It may be that courage comes of itself with difficult
situations.

The breakfast came to an end when God willed; it was four o’clock; the
men went out to walk in the park, which was magnificent, or watched the
peasant girls of Puygarrig, dressed in their gala costumes, dance on
the lawn in front of the château. In this way, we passed several hours.
Meanwhile the women were hovering eagerly about the bride, who showed
them her wedding gifts. Then she changed her dress, and I observed
that she had covered her lovely hair with a cap and a hat adorned with
feathers; for there is nothing that wives are in such a hurry to do as
to assume as soon as possible those articles of apparel which custom
forbids them to wear when they are still unmarried.

It was nearly eight o’clock when we prepared to start for Ille.
But before we started there was a pathetic scene. Mademoiselle de
Puygarrig’s aunt, who had taken the place of a mother to her, a woman
of a very advanced age and very religious, was not to go to the town
with us. At our departure, she delivered a touching sermon to her niece
on her duties as a wife, the result of which was a torrent of tears,
and embraces without end. M. de Peyrehorade compared this separation to
the abduction of the Sabine women.

We started at last, however, and on the road we all exerted ourselves
to the utmost to divert the bride and make her laugh; but it was all to
no purpose.

At Ille supper awaited us, and such a supper! If the vulgar hilarity of
the morning had disgusted me, I was fairly sickened by the equivocal
remarks and jests which were aimed at the groom, and especially at the
bride. M. Alphonse, who had disappeared a moment before taking his
place at the table, was as pale as death and as solemn as an iceberg.
He kept drinking old Collioure wine, almost as strong as brandy. I was
by his side and felt in duty bound to warn him.

“Take care! they say that this wine----”

I have no idea what foolish remark I made, to put myself in unison with
the other guests.

He pressed my knee with his and said in a very low tone:

“When we leave the table, let me have a word with you.”

His solemn tone surprised me. I looked at him more closely and noticed
the extraordinary change in his expression.

“Are you feeling ill?” I asked him.

“No.”

And he returned to his drinking.

Meanwhile, amid shouts and clapping of hands, a child of eleven years,
who had slipped under the table, exhibited to the guests a dainty white
and rose-coloured ribbon which he had taken from the bride’s ankle.
They called that her garter. It was immediately cut into pieces and
distributed among the young men, who decorated their buttonholes with
them, according to an ancient custom still observed in some patriarchal
families. This episode caused the bride to blush to the whites of her
eyes. But her confusion reached its height when M. de Peyrehorade,
having called for silence, sang some Catalan verses, impromptu, so he
said. Their meaning, so far as I understood it, was this:

“Pray, what is this, my friends? Does the wine I have drunk make me see
double? There are two Venuses here----”

The bridegroom abruptly turned his head away with a terrified
expression which made everybody laugh.

“Yes,” continued M. de Peyrehorade, “there are two Venuses beneath my
roof. One I found in the earth, like a truffle; the other, descended
from the skies, has come to share her girdle with us.”

He meant to say her garter.

“My son, choose whichever you prefer--the Roman or the Catalan Venus.
The rascal chooses the Catalan, and his choice is wise. The Roman is
black, the Catalan white. The Roman is cold, the Catalan inflames all
who approach her.”

This deliverance caused such an uproar, such noisy applause and such
roars of laughter, that I thought that the ceiling would fall on our
heads. There were only three sober faces at the table--those of the
bride and groom, and my own. I had a terrible headache; and then,
for some unknown reason, a wedding always depresses me. This one, in
addition, disgusted me more or less.

The last couplets having been sung by the mayor’s deputy--and they were
very free, I must say--we went to the salon to make merry over the
retirement of the bride, who was soon to be escorted to her chamber,
for it was near midnight.

M. Alphonse led me into a window recess, and said to me, averting his
eyes:

“You will laugh at me, but I don’t know what the matter is with me; I
am bewitched! the devil has got hold of me!”

The first idea that came to my mind was that he believed himself to be
threatened by some misfortune of the sort of which Montaigne and Madame
de Sévigné speak:

“The sway of love is always full of tragic episodes,” etc.

“I supposed that accidents of that sort happened only to men of
intellect,” I said to myself.--“You have drunk too much Collioure wine,
my dear Monsieur Alphonse,” I said aloud. “I warned you.”

“Yes, that may be. But there is something much more terrible than
that.”

He spoke in a halting voice. I concluded that he was downright tipsy.

“You remember my ring?” he continued, after a pause.

“Well! has it been stolen?”

“No.”

“Then you have it?”

“No--I--I can’t take it off that infernal Venus’s finger!”

“Nonsense! you didn’t pull hard enough.”

“Yes, I did. But the Venus--she has bent her finger.”

He looked me in the eye with a haggard expression, leaning against the
window-frame to avoid falling.

“What a fable!” I said. “You pushed the ring on too far. To-morrow you
can recover it with a pair of pincers. But take care that you don’t
injure the statue.”

“No, I tell you. The Venus’s finger is drawn in, bent; she has closed
her hand--do you understand? She is my wife, apparently, as I have
given her my ring. She refuses to give it back.”

I felt a sudden shiver, and for a moment I was all goose-flesh. Then,
as he heaved a profound sigh, he sent a puff of alcoholic fumes into my
face, and all my emotion vanished.

“The wretch is completely drunk,” I thought.

“You are an antiquary, monsieur,” continued the bridegroom in a piteous
tone; “you know all about these statues; perhaps there is some spring,
some devilish contrivance that I don’t know about. Suppose you were to
go out and look?”

“Willingly,” I said; “come with me.”

“No, I prefer that you should go alone.”

I left the salon.

The weather had changed while we were at supper, and the rain was
beginning to fall violently. I was about to ask for an umbrella when a
sudden reflection detained me. “I should be a great fool,” I said to
myself, “to take any trouble to verify what an intoxicated man tells
me! Perhaps, too, he is trying to play some wretched joke on me, in
order to give these worthy provincials something to laugh at; and the
least that can happen to me is to be drenched to the skin and to catch
a heavy cold.”

I glanced from the door at the statue, which was dripping wet, and
then went up to my room without returning to the salon. I went to bed,
but sleep was a long while coming. All the scenes of the day passed
through my mind. I thought of that lovely, pure maiden delivered to the
tender mercies of a brutal sot. “What a hateful thing a _mariage de
convenance_ is!” I said to myself. “A mayor dons a tri-coloured scarf,
a curé a stole, and lo! the most virtuous girl imaginable is abandoned
to the Minotaur! Two persons who do not love each other--what can they
have to say at such a moment, which two true lovers would purchase at
the cost of their lives? Can a woman ever love a man whom she has once
seen make a beast of himself? First impressions are not easily effaced,
and I am sure that this Monsieur Alphonse well deserves to be detested.”

During my monologue, which I have abridged very materially, I had heard
much coming and going about the house, doors opening and closing,
carriages driving away; then I fancied that I heard in the hall the
light footsteps of several women walking toward the farther end of
the corridor opposite my room. It was probably the procession of the
bride, who was being escorted to her bedroom. Then I heard the steps go
downstairs again. Madame de Peyrehorade’s door closed.

“How perturbed and ill at ease that poor child must be,” I thought.

I turned and twisted in my bed, in an execrable humour. A bachelor
plays an absurd rôle in a house where a marriage is being celebrated.

Silence had reigned for some time, when it was broken by heavy steps
ascending the staircase. The wooden stairs creaked loudly.

“What a brute!” I cried. “I’ll wager that he will fall on the stairs!”

Everything became quiet once more. I took up a book in order to change
the current of my thoughts. It was a volume of departmental statistics,
embellished by an article from the pen of M. de Peyrehorade on the
druidical remains in the arrondissement of Prades. I dozed at the third
page.

I slept badly and woke several times. It might have been five o’clock,
and I had been awake more than twenty minutes, when a cock crew. Day
was just breaking. Suddenly I heard the same heavy steps, the same
creaking of the stairs that I had heard before I fell asleep. That
struck me as peculiar. I tried, yawning sleepily, to divine why M.
Alphonse should rise so early. I could imagine no probable cause. I was
about to close my eyes again when my attention was once more attracted
by a strange tramping, to which was soon added the jangling of bells
and the noise of doors violently thrown open; then I distinguished
confused outcries.

“My drunkard must have set fire to something!” I thought, as I leaped
out of bed.

I dressed in hot haste and went out into the corridor. From the farther
end came shrieks and lamentations, and one heartrending voice rose
above all the rest: “My son! my son!” It was evident that something
had happened to M. Alphonse. I ran to the bridal chamber; it was full
of people. The first object that caught my eye was the young man, half
dressed, lying across the bed, the framework of which was broken.
He was livid and absolutely motionless. His mother was weeping and
shrieking by his side. M. de Peyrehorade was bustling about, rubbing
his temples with eau de cologne, or holding salts to his nose. Alas!
his son had been dead a long while.

On a couch, at the other end of the room, was the bride, in frightful
convulsions. She was uttering incoherent cries, and two strong
maidservants had all the difficulty in the world in holding her.

“Great God!” I cried, “what has happened?”

I walked to the bed and raised the unfortunate young man’s body; it was
already cold and stiff. His clenched teeth and livid face expressed
the most horrible anguish. It seemed perfectly evident that his death
had been a violent one, and the death agony indescribably terrible.
But there was no sign of blood on his clothes. I opened his shirt and
found on his breast a purple mark which extended around the loins and
across the back. One would have said that he had been squeezed by an
iron ring. My foot came in contact with something hard on the carpet; I
stooped and saw the diamond ring.

I dragged M. de Peyrehorade and his wife to their room; then I caused
the bride to be taken thither.

“You still have a daughter,” I said to them; “you owe to her your
devoted care.”

Then I left them alone.

It seemed to me to be beyond question that M. Alphonse had been the
victim of a murder, the authors of which had found a way to introduce
themselves into the bride’s bedroom at night. The marks on the breast
and their circular character puzzled me a good deal, however, for a
club or an iron bar could not have produced them. Suddenly I remembered
having heard that in Valencia the _bravi_ used long leather bags
filled with fine sand to murder people whom they were hired to kill.
I instantly recalled the Aragonese muleteer and his threat; and yet I
hardly dared think that he would have wreaked such a terrible vengeance
for a trivial jest.

I walked about the house, looking everywhere for traces of a break,
and finding nothing. I went down into the garden, to see whether the
assassins might have forced their way in on that side of the house;
but I found no definite indications. Indeed, the rain of the preceding
night had so saturated the ground that it could not have retained any
distinct impression. I observed, however, several very deep footprints;
they pointed in two opposite directions, but in the same line, leading
from the corner of the hedge next the tennis-court to the gateway of
the house. They might well be M. Alphonse’s steps when he went out to
take his ring from the finger of the statue. On the other hand, the
hedge was less dense at that point than elsewhere, and the murderers
might have passed through it there. As I went back and forth in front
of the statue, I paused a moment to look at it. That time, I will
confess, I was unable to contemplate without terror its expression
of devilish irony; and, with my head full of the horrible scenes I
had witnessed, I fancied that I had before me an infernal divinity,
exulting over the disaster that had stricken that house.

I returned to my room and remained there till noon. Then I went out and
inquired concerning my hosts. They were a little calmer. Mademoiselle
de Puygarrig--I should say M. Alphonse’s widow--had recovered her
senses. She had even talked with the king’s attorney from Perpignan,
then on circuit at Ille, and that magistrate had taken her deposition.
He desired mine also. I told him what I knew and made no secret of my
suspicions of the Aragonese muleteer. He ordered that he should be
arrested immediately.

“Did you learn anything from Madame Alphonse?” I asked the king’s
attorney, when my deposition was written out and signed.

“That unfortunate young woman has gone mad,” he replied, with a sad
smile. “Mad! absolutely mad! This is what she told me:

“She had been in bed, she said, a few minutes, with the curtains drawn,
when her bedroom door opened and some one came in. At that time Madame
Alphonse was on the inside of the bed, with her face towards the wall.
Supposing, of course, that it was her husband, she did not move. A
moment later, the bed creaked as if under an enormous weight. She was
terribly frightened, but dared not turn her head. Five minutes, ten
minutes perhaps,--she can only guess at the time--passed in this way.
Then she made an involuntary movement, or else the other person in the
bed made one, and she felt the touch of something as cold as ice--that
was her expression. She moved closer to the wall, trembling in every
limb. Shortly after, the door opened a second time, and some one came
in, who said: ‘Good-evening, my little wife.’ Soon the curtains were
drawn aside. She heard a stifled cry. The person who was in the bed by
her side sat up and seemed to put out its arms. Thereupon she turned
her head, and saw, so she declares, her husband on his knees beside the
bed, with his head on a level with the pillow, clasped in the arms of a
sort of greenish giant, who was squeezing him with terrible force. She
says--and she repeated it twenty times, poor woman!--she says that she
recognised--can you guess whom?--the bronze Venus, M. de Peyrehorade’s
statue. Since she was unearthed, the whole neighbourhood dreams of her.
But I continue the story of that unhappy mad woman. At that sight she
lost consciousness, and it is probable that she had lost her reason
some moments before. She could give me no idea at all how long she
remained in her swoon. Recovering her senses, she saw the phantom, or,
as she still insists, the statue, motionless, with its legs and the
lower part of the body in the bed, the bust and arms stretched out, and
in its arms her husband, also motionless. A cock crew. Thereupon the
statue got out of bed, dropped the dead body, and left the room. Madame
Alphonse rushed for the bell-cord, and you know the rest.”

The Spaniard was arrested; he was calm, and defended himself with much
self-possession and presence of mind. He did not deny making the remark
I had overheard; but he explained it by saying that he had meant
simply this: that, on the following day, having rested meanwhile, he
would beat his victorious rival at tennis. I remember that he added:

“An Aragonese, when he is insulted, doesn’t wait until the next day for
his revenge. If I had thought that Monsieur Alphonse intended to insult
me, I would have driven my knife into his belly on the spot.”

His shoes were compared with the footprints in the garden, and were
found to be much larger.

Lastly, the innkeeper at whose house he was staying deposed that he had
passed the whole night rubbing and doctoring one of his mules, which
was sick. Furthermore, the Aragonese was a man of excellent reputation,
well known in the province, where he came every year in the course of
his business. So he was released with apologies.

I have forgotten the deposition of a servant, who was the last person
to see M. Alphonse alive. It was just as he was going up to his wife;
he called the man and asked him with evident anxiety if he knew where I
was. The servant replied that he had not seen me. Thereupon M. Alphonse
sighed and stood more than a minute without speaking; then he said:

“_Well! the devil must have taken him away, too!_”

I asked him if M. Alphonse had his diamond ring on his finger when he
spoke to him. The servant hesitated before he replied; at last he said
that he did not think so, but that he had not noticed particularly.

“If he had had that ring on his finger,” he added upon reflection, “I
should certainly have noticed it, for I thought that he had given it to
Madame Alphonse.”

As I questioned this man, I was conscious of a touch of the
superstitious terror with which Madame Alphonse’s deposition had
infected the whole household. The king’s attorney glanced at me with a
smile, and I did not persist.

Some hours after M. Alphonse’s funeral, I prepared to leave Ille. M.
de Peyrehorade’s carriage was to take me to Perpignan. Despite his
enfeebled condition, the poor old man insisted upon attending me to his
garden gate. We passed through the garden in silence; he, hardly able
to drag himself alone, leaning on my arm. As we were about to part,
I cast a last glance at the Venus. I foresaw that my host, although
he did not share the terror and detestation which she inspired in a
portion of his family, would be glad to be rid of an object which would
constantly remind him of a shocking calamity. It was my purpose to urge
him to place it in some museum. I hesitated about opening the subject,
when M. de Peyrehorade mechanically turned his head in the direction in
which he saw that I was gazing earnestly. His eye fell upon the statue,
and he instantly burst into tears. I embraced him, and, afraid to say a
single word, entered the carriage.

I never learned, subsequent to my departure, that any new light had
been thrown upon that mysterious catastrophe.

M. de Peyrehorade died a few months after his son. By his will he
bequeathed to me his manuscripts, which I shall publish some day,
perhaps. I found among them no memoir relating to the inscriptions on
the Venus.

       *       *       *       *       *

P. S.--My friend M. de P. has recently written me from Perpignan that
the statue no longer exists. After her husband’s death, Madame de
Peyrehorade’s first care was to have it melted into a bell, and in that
new shape it is now used in the church at Ille.

“But,” M. de P. adds, “it would seem that an evil fate pursues all
those who possess that bronze. Since that bell has rung at Ille the
vines have frozen twice.”

 1837.




Transcriber’s Note


Minor printer’s errors were corrected by the transcriber; otherwise, as
far as possible, original spelling and punctuation have been retained.

There were many errors in the ancient Greek in the printed text; some
of these were introduced by the translator, and some were present in
the French edition. In this file, as far as possible, the ancient Greek
is identical to that of the English text as printed.

In this file, text in _italics_ is indicated by underscores.