melancholy sweetness. A little while after this
great misfortune, M. Hardy became more closely connected
with his workmen. He had always been a just and
good master; but, although the place that his mother
left in his heart would ever remain void, he felt
as it were a redoubled overflowing of the affections,
and the more he suffered, the more he craved to see
happy faces around him. The wonderful ameliorations,
which he now produced in the physical and moral condition
of all about him, served, not to divert, but to occupy
his grief. Little by little, he withdrew from
the world, and concentrated his life in three affections:
a tender and devoted friendship, which seemed to include
all past friendships—a love ardent and
sincere, like a last passion—and a paternal
attachment to his workmen. His days therefore
passed in the heart of that little world, so full
of respect and gratitude towards him—a world,
which he had, as it were, created after the image
of his mind, that he might find there a refuge from
the painful realities he dreaded, surrounded with good,
intelligent, happy beings, capable of responding to
the noble thoughts which had become more and more
necessary to his existence. Thus, after many
sorrows, M. Hardy, arrived at the maturity of age,
possessing a sincere friend, a mistress worthy of
his love, and knowing himself certain of the passionate
devotion of his workmen, had attained, at the period
of this history, all the happiness he could hope for
since his mother’s death.
M. de Blessac, his bosom friend, had long been worthy
of his touching and fraternal affection; but we have
seen by what diabolical means Father d’Aigrigny
and Rodin had succeeded in making M. de Blessac, until
then upright and sincere, the instrument of their
machinations. The two friends, who had felt on
their journey a little of the sharp influence of the
north wind, were warming themselves at a good fire
lighted in M. Hardy’s parlor.
“Oh! my dear Marcel, I begin really to get old,”
said M. Hardy, with a smile, addressing M. de Blessac;
“I feel more and more the want of being at home.
To depart from my usual habits has become painful to
me, and I execrate whatever obliges me to leave this
happy little spot of ground.”
“And when I think,” answered M. de Blessac,
unable to forbear blushing, “when I think, my
friend, that you undertook this long journey only for
my sake!—”
“Well, my dear Marcel! have you not just accompanied
me in your turn, in an excursion which, without you,
would have been as tiresome as it has been charming?”
“What a difference, my friend! I have contracted
towards you a debt that I can never repay.”
“Nonsense, my dear Marcel! Between us,
there are no distinctions of meum and tuum. Besides,
in matters of friendship, it is as sweet to give as
to receive.”
“Noble heart! noble heart!”
“Say, happy heart!—most happy, in
the last affections for which it beats.”