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the nabob-第20章

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r in quitting this evil place。 But what! You would have me then renounce the hope of getting back anything of all I have put in here。 No; it is not possible。 There is urgent need on the contrary that I should remain; that I should be on the watch; always at hand; ready to profit by any windfall; if one should come。 Oh; for example; I swear it upon my ribbon; upon my thirty years of academical service; if ever an affair like this of the Nabob allow me to recover my disbursements; I shall not wait another single minute。 I shall quickly be off to look after my pretty vineyard down yonder; near Monbars; cured forever of my thoughts of speculation。 But; alas! that is a very chimerical hope。 Exhausted; used up; known as we are upon the Paris market; with our stocks which are no longer quoted on the Bourse; our bonds which are near being waste paper; so many lies; so many debts; and the hole that grows ever deeper and deeper。 (We owe at this moment three million five hundred thousand francs。 It is not; however; those three millions that worry us。 On the contrary; it is they that keep us going; but we have with the /concierge/ a little bill of a hundred and twenty…five francs for postage…stamps; a month's gas bill; and other little things。 That is the really terrible part of it。) and we are expected to believe that a man; a great financier like this Nabob; even though he were just arrived from the Congo; or dropped from the moon the same day; would be fool enough to put his money into a concern like this。 Come! Is the thing possible? You may tell that story to the marines; my dear governor。



A DEBUT IN SOCIETY


〃M。 BERNARD JANSOULET!〃

The plebeian name; accentuated proudly by the liveried servants; and announced in a resounding voice; sounded in Jenkins's drawing…rooms like the clash of a cymbal; one of those gongs which; in fairy pieces at the theatre; are the prelude to fantastic apparitions。 The light of the chandeliers paled; every eye sparkled at the dazzling perspective of the treasures of the Orient; of the showers of the sequins and of pearls evoked by the magic syllables of that name; yesterday unknown。

He; it was he himself; the Nabob; the rich among the rich; the great Parisian curiosity; spiced by that relish of adventure which is so pleasing to the surfeited crowd。 All heads turned; all conversations were interrupted; near the door there was a pushing among the guests; a crush as upon the quay of a seaport to witness the entry of a felucca laden with gold。

Jenkins himself; so hospitable; so self…possessed; who was standing in the first drawing…room receiving his guests; abruptly quitted the group of men about him and hurried to place himself at the head of the galleons bearing down upon the guest。

〃You are a thousand times; a thousand times kind。 Mme。 Jenkins will be so glad; so proud。Come; let me conduct you!〃

And in his haste; in his vainglorious delight; he bore Jansoulet off so quickly that the latter had no time to present his companion; Paul de Gery; to whom he was giving his first entry into society。 The young man welcomed this forgetfulness。 He slipped away among the crowd of black dress…coats constantly pressed back at each new arrival; buried himself in it; seized by that wild terror which is experienced by every young man from the country at his first introduction to a Paris drawing…room; especially when he is intelligent and refined; and beneath his breastplate of linen does not wear like a coat of mail the imperturbable assurance of a boor。

All you; Parisians of Paris; who from the age of sixteen; in your first dress…coat and with opera…hat against your thigh; have been wont to air your adolescence at receptions of all kinds; you know nothing of that anguish; compounded of vanity; of timidity; of recollections of romantic readings; which keeps a young man from opening his mouth and so makes him awkward and for a whole night pins him down to one spot in a doorway; and converts him into a piece of furniture in a recess; a poor; wandering and wretched being; incapable of manifesting his existence save by an occasional change of place; dying of thirst rather than approach the buffet; and going away without having uttered a word; unless perhaps to stammer out one of those incoherent pieces of foolishness which he remembers for months; and which make him; at night; as he thinks of them; heave an 〃Ah!〃 of raging shame; with head buried in the pillow。

Paul de Gery was that martyr。 Away yonder in his country home he had always lived a very retired existence with an old; pious; and gloomy aunt; up to the time when the law…student; destined in the first instance to the career in which his father had left an excellent reputation; had found himself introduced to a few judges' drawing… rooms; ancient; melancholy dwellings with faded pier…glasses; where he used to go to make a fourth at whist with venerable shadows。 Jenkins's evening party was therefore a /debut/ for this provincial; of whom his very ignorance and his southern adaptability made immediately an observer。

From the place where he stood; he watched the curious defile of Jenkins's guests which had not yet come to an end at midnight; all the clients of the fashionable physician; the fine flower of society; a strong political and financial element; bankers; deputies; a few artists; all the jaded people of Parisian 〃high life;〃 wan…faced; with glittering eyes; saturated with arsenic like greedy mice; but with appetite insatiable for poison and for life。 The drawing…room being thrown open; the vast antechamber of which the doors had been removed to be seen; laden with flowers at the sides; the principal staircase of the mansion; over which swept; now shaken out to their full extent; the long trains; whose silky weight seemed to give a backward pull to the undraped busts of the women in the course of that pretty ascending movement which brought them into view; little by little; till the complete flower of their splendour was reached。 The couples as they gained the top seemed to be making an entry on the stage of a theatre; and that was twice true; since each person left on the last step the contracted eyebrows; the lines that marked preoccupation; the wearied air; his vexations; his sorrows; to display instead a contented face; a gay smile over the reposeful harmony of the features。 The men exchanged honest shakes of the hand; exhibitions of fraternal good… feeling; the women; preoccupied with themselves; as they stood making little caracoling movements; with trembling graces; play of eyes and shoulders; murmured; without meaning anything; a few words of greeting:

〃Thank youoh; thank you! How kind you are!〃

Then the couples would separate; for evening parties are no longer the gatherings of charming wits; in which feminine delicacy was wont to compel the character; the lofty knowledge; the genius; even; of men to bow graciously before it; but these overcrowded routs; in which the women; who alone are seated; chattering together like slaves in a harem; have no longer aught save the pleasure of being beautiful or appearing so。 De Gery; after having wandered through the doctor's library; the conservatory; the billiard…room; where men w
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