Uncle Bernac eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about Uncle Bernac.

Uncle Bernac eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about Uncle Bernac.

I think that it may have been his purpose—­for he never did anything without a purpose—­to give me an object-lesson of his own capacity for governing, with the idea, perhaps, that I might in turn influence others of the Emigres by what I told them.  At any rate he left me there to stand and to watch the curious succession of points upon which he had to give an opinion during a few hours.  Nothing seemed to be either too large or too small for that extraordinary mind.  At one instant it was the arrangements for the winter cantonments of two hundred thousand men, at the next he was discussing with de Caulaincourt the curtailing of the expenses of the household, and the possibility of suppressing some of the carriages.

’It is my desire to be economical at home so as to make a good show abroad,’ said he.  ’For myself, when I had the honour to be a sub-lieutenant I found that I could live very well upon 1,200 francs a year, and it would be no hardship to me to go back to it.  This extravagance of the palace must be stopped.  For example, I see upon your accounts that 155 cups of coffee are drunk a day, which with sugar at 4 francs and coffee at 5 francs a pound come to 20 sous a cup.  It would be better to make an allowance for coffee.  The stable bills are also too high.  At the present price of fodder seven or eight francs a week should be enough for each horse in a stable of two hundred.  I will not have any waste at the Tuileries.’

Thus within a few minutes he would pass from a question of milliards to a question of sous, and from the management of a empire to that of a stable.  From time to time I could observe that he threw a little oblique glance at me as if to ask what I thought of it all, and at the time I wondered very much why my approval should be of any consequence to him.  But now, when I look back and see that my following his fortunes brought over so many others of the young nobility, I understand that he saw very much further than I did.

‘Well, Monsieur de Laval,’ said he suddenly, ’you have seen something of my methods.  Are you prepared to enter my service?’

‘Assuredly, Sire,’ I answered.

‘I can be a very hard master when I like,’ said he smiling.  ’You were there when I spoke to Admiral Bruix.  We have all our duty to do, and discipline is as necessary in the highest as in the lowest ranks.  But anger with me never rises above here,’ and he drew his hand across his throat.  ’I never permit it to cloud my brain.  Dr. Corvisart here would tell you that I have the slowest pulse of all his patients.’

‘And that you are the fastest eater, Sire,’ said a large-faced, benevolent-looking person who had been whispering to Marshal Berthier.

’Ohe, you rascal, you rake that up against me, do you?  The Doctor will not forgive me because I tell him when I am unwell that I had rather die of the disease than of the remedies.  If I eat too fast it is the fault of the State, which does not allow me more than a few minutes for my meals.  Which reminds me that it must be rather after my dinner hour, Constant?’

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Uncle Bernac from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.