The Deputy of Arcis eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 341 pages of information about The Deputy of Arcis.

The Deputy of Arcis eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 341 pages of information about The Deputy of Arcis.

I’ll describe that man to you in a single word.  Envy.  In Monsieur Bixiou there is, unquestionably, the makings of a great artist; but in the economy of his existence the belly has annihilated the heart and the head, and he is now and forever under the dominion of sensual appetites; he is riveted to the condition of a caricaturist,—­that is to say, to the condition of a man who from day to day discounts himself in petty products, regular galley-slave pot-boilers, which, to be sure, give him a lively living, but in themselves are worthless and have no future.  With talents misused and now impotent, he has in his mind, as he has on his face, that everlasting and despairing grin which human thought instinctively attributes to fallen angels.  Just as the Spirit of darkness attacks, in preference, great saints because they recall to him most bitterly the angelic nature from which he has fallen, so Monsieur Bixiou delights to slaver the talents and characters of those who he sees have courageously refused to squander their strength, sap, and aims as he has done.

But the thing which ought to reassure you somewhat as to the danger of his calumny and his slander (for he employs both forms of backbiting) is that at the very time when he believes he is making a burlesque autopsy of me he is actually an obedient puppet whose wire I hold in my hands, and whom I am making talk as I please.  Being convinced that a certain amount of noisy discussion would advance my political career, I looked about me for what I may call a public crier.  Among these circus trumpets, if I could have found one with a sharper tone, a more deafening blare than Bixiou’s, I would have chosen it.  As it was, I have profited by the malevolent curiosity which induces that amiable lepidopter to insinuate himself into all studios.  I confided the whole affair to him; even to the two hundred and fifty thousand francs (which I attributed to a lucky stroke at the Bourse), I told him all my plans of parliamentary conduct, down to the number of the house I have bought to conform to the requirements of the electoral law.  It is all jotted down in his notebook.

That statement, I think, would somewhat reduce the admiration of his hearers in the salon Montcornet did they know of it.  As for the political horoscope which he has been so kind as to draw for me, I cannot honestly say that his astrology is at fault.  It is very certain that with my intention of following no set of fixed opinions, I must reach the situation so admirably summed up by the lawyer of Monsieur de la Palisse, when he exclaimed with burlesque emphasis:  “What do you do, gentlemen, when you place a man in solitude?  You isolate him.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Deputy of Arcis from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.