An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete eBook

Émile Souvestre
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete.

An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete eBook

Émile Souvestre
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete.

The joiner looked at his wife and son with astonishment.  It was necessary to come to an explanation.  The latter related how he had entered into a negotiation with Master Benoit, who had positively refused to sell his business unless one half of the two thousand francs were first paid down.  It was in the hopes of obtaining this sum that he had gone to work with the contractor at Versailles; he had had an opportunity of trying his invention, and of finding a purchaser.  Thanks to the money he received for it, he had just concluded the bargain with Benoit, and had brought his father the key of the new work-yard.

This explanation was given by the young workman with so much modesty and simplicity that I was quite affected by it.  Genevieve cried; Michael pressed his son to his heart, and in a long embrace he seemed to ask his pardon for having unjustly accused him.

All was now explained with honor to Robert.  The conduct which his parents had ascribed to indifference really sprang from affection; he had neither obeyed the voice of ambition nor of avarice, nor even the nobler inspiration of inventive genius:  his whole motive and single aim had been the happiness of Genevieve and Michael.  The day for proving his gratitude had come, and he had returned them sacrifice for sacrifice!

After the explanations and exclamations of joy were over, all three were about to leave me; but, the cloth being laid, I added three more places, and kept them to breakfast.

The meal was prolonged:  the fare was only tolerable; but the over-flowings of affection made it delicious.  Never had I better understood the unspeakable charm of family love.  What calm enjoyment in that happiness which is always shared with others; in that community of interests which unites such various feelings; in that association of existences which forms one single being of so many!  What is man without those home affections, which, like so many roots, fix him firmly in the earth, and permit him to imbibe all the juices of life?  Energy, happiness—­do not all these come from them?  Without family life where would man learn to love, to associate, to deny himself?  A community in little, is it not this which teaches us how to live in the great one?  Such is the holiness of home, that, to express our relation with God, we have been obliged to borrow the words invented for our family life.  Men have named themselves the sons of a heavenly Father!

Ah! let us carefully preserve these chains of domestic union.  Do not let us unbind the human sheaf, and scatter its ears to all the caprices of chance and of the winds; but let us rather enlarge this holy law; let us carry the principles and the habits of home beyond set bounds; and, if it may be, let us realize the prayer of the Apostle of the Gentiles when he exclaimed to the newborn children of Christ:  “Be ye like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind.”

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Project Gutenberg
An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.