登陆注册
5470700000027

第27章 CHAPTER VI A KEYNOTE(1)

When Theodose reached home he found, waiting for him on the landing, a personage who is, as it were, the submarine current of this history;he will be found within it like some buried church on which has risen the facade of a palace. The sight of this man, who, after vainly ringing at la Peyrade's door, was now trying that of Dutocq, made the Provencal barrister tremble--but secretly, within himself, not betraying externally his inward emotion. This man was Cerizet, whom Dutocq had mentioned to Thuillier as his copying-clerk.

Cerizet was only thirty-eight years old, but he looked a man of fifty, so aged had he become from causes which age all men. His hairless head had a yellow skull, ill-covered by a rusty, discolored wig; the mask of his face, pale, flabby, and unnaturally rough, seemed the more horrible because the nose was eaten away, though not sufficiently to admit of its being replaced by a false one. From the spring of this nose at the forehead, down to the nostrils, it remained as nature had made it; but disease, after gnawing away the sides near the extremities, had left two holes of fantastic shape, which vitiated pronunciation and hampered speech. The eyes, originally handsome, but weakened by misery of all kinds and by sleepless nights, were red around the edges, and deeply sunken; the glance of those eyes, when the soul sent into them an expression of malignancy, would have frightened both judges and criminals, or any others whom nothing usually affrights.

The mouth, toothless except for a few black fangs, was threatening;the saliva made a foam within it, which did not, however, pass the pale thin lips. Cerizet, a short man, less spare than shrunken, endeavored to remedy the defects of his person by his clothes, and although his garments were not those of opulence, he kept them in a condition of neatness which may even have increased his forlorn appearance. Everything about him seemed dubious; his age, his nose, his glance inspired doubt. It was impossible to know if he were thirty-eight or sixty; if his faded blue trousers, which fitted him well, were of a coming or a past fashion. His boots, worn at the heels, but scrupulously blacked, resoled for the third time, and very choice, originally, may have trodden in their day a ministerial carpet. The frock coat, soaked by many a down-pour, with its brandebourgs, the frogs of which were indiscreet enough to show their skeletons, testified by its cut to departed elegance. The satin stock-cravat fortunately concealed the shirt, but the tongue of the buckle behind the neck had frayed the satin, which was re-satined, that is, re-polished, by a species of oil distilled from the wig. In the days of its youth the waistcoat was not, of course, without freshness, but it was one of those waistcoats, bought for four francs, which come from the hooks of the ready-made clothing dealer. All these things were carefully brushed, and so was the shiny and misshapen hat. They harmonized with each other, even to the black gloves which covered the hands of this subaltern Mephistopheles, whose whole anterior life may be summed up in a single phrase:--He was an artist in evil, with whom, from the first, evil had succeeded; a man misled by these early successes to continue the plotting of infamous deeds within the lines of strict legality.

Becoming the head of a printing-office by betraying his master [see "Lost Illusions"], he had afterwards been condemned to imprisonment as editor of a liberal newspaper. In the provinces, under the Restoration, he became the bete noire of the government, and was called "that unfortunate Cerizet" by some, as people spoke of "the unfortunate Chauvet" and "the heroic Mercier." He owed to this reputation of persecuted patriotism a place as sub-prefect in 1830.

Six months later he was dismissed; but he insisted that he was judged without being heard; and he made so much talk about it that, under the ministry of Casimir Perier, he became the editor of an anti-republican newspaper in the pay of the government. He left that position to go into business, one phase of which was the most nefarious stock-company that ever fell into the hands of the correctional police. Cerizet proudly accepted the severe sentence he received; declaring it to be a revengeful plot on the part of the republicans, who, he said, would never forgive him for the hard blows he had dealt them in his journal.

He spent the time of his imprisonment in a hospital. The government by this time were ashamed of a man whose almost infamous habits and shameful business transactions, carried on in company with a former banker, named Claparon, led him at last into well-deserved public contempt.

Cerizet, thus fallen, step by step, to the lowest rung of the social ladder, had recourse to pity in order to obtain the place of copying clerk in Dutocq's office. In the depths of his wretchedness the man still dreamed of revenge, and, as he had nothing to lose, he employed all means to that end. Dutocq and himself were bound together in depravity. Cerizet was to Dutocq what the hound is the huntsman.

Knowing himself the necessities of poverty and wretchedness, he set up that business of gutter usury called, in popular parlance, "the loan by the little week." He began this at first by help of Dutocq, who shared the profits; but, at the present moment this man of many legal crimes, now the banker of fishwives, the money-lender of costermongers, was the gnawing rodent of the whole faubourg.

"Well," said Cerizet as Dutocq opened his door, "Theodose has just come in; let us go to his room."The advocate of the poor was fain to allow the two men to pass before him.

同类推荐
  • 佛说业报差别经

    佛说业报差别经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说文殊师利现宝藏经

    佛说文殊师利现宝藏经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 东茶颂

    东茶颂

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 一山文集

    一山文集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 巫庙

    巫庙

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 隐婚密爱,冷情总裁缠爱妻

    隐婚密爱,冷情总裁缠爱妻

    慕司城收了一个养女,却不想……九年后,突然被养女沐瑶赖上了,不许谈恋爱就算了,沐瑶还经常半夜半夜爬上慕司城的床。慕司城明明可以直接将沐瑶送出国或者断绝关系,人都送到了机场门口,偏偏……狠不下心又接了回来,这一心软,就被沐瑶给吃定了,时间不长不短,恰好一辈子沐瑶还厚着脸皮:“你既然要养我,那就得养我一辈子。”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 潜龙之途

    潜龙之途

    十五年前身怀绝佳天赋的张哲天,在不得人赏识下,一步一步从魔道统治下的青天大陆崛起,在四块大陆的征途中,邪魔,正道,奇遇,人类最终的征途在哪?
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 至尊神魔

    至尊神魔

    “师姐,你们为何总盯着我看...?!”凌风低头看看自己身材,难道是因为本钱太好,身强力撞?他魂穿废体,悲催重生,却可揽群英征天伐地。他偷喝真水,洗髓铸体,但能伴兄弟废墟崛起。这一生,他将古武耀世;这一世,他竟诛魔封神、把酒屠天!“敢藐视个的人,统统拍死!”“不敬我者,永坠轮回!”
  • 凰女逆天:绝代风华

    凰女逆天:绝代风华

    俏皮可爱奇葩机灵自恋变态逆天……想来也只有她能够冠上这些词,她就是凰玥璃。九转千魂,九次重生,是与天的对抗,是生与死的抉择。她说:并不是我要逆天,而是天逼我逆,既然如此,我何不顺尽天意,逆了天下。总之,这是一个女强文,不过更是宠文,君上我保证,一句话:男强女强强强对阵,外加一生一世一双人。他说:天下于我何用,我有你足矣。很甜很宠的,愿亲们喜欢。
  • 泡沫易破烟易散

    泡沫易破烟易散

    民国初年,军阀当道,四大家族白、沈、江、赵进行权力纷争,从而展开一系列的爱恨情仇。以一个女子沈烟沫的一生为明线,以军阀主权的变动为暗线,叙述她遭遇两段刻骨铭心的爱情。
  • 幻世界成长

    幻世界成长

    品名称、资金来源;作品简介、主创人员;预计周期、目标受众;播放渠道、预期效果
  • 毒步医妃

    毒步医妃

    (已完结。容洛篇《穿书后我成了太子的心尖宠》已开启预收藏功能,大家可以去加入书架,等待更新日期啦!)大婚之日,她遭至亲背叛算计,狼狈丧命。一朝重生,成为废材弃女宁欢!废材?逆天神功、绝世医术!控万物驭万兽!弃女也能惊华!打脸虐渣、打怪升级,小日子滋润得不要不要的!可这传闻中高贵无双容冠天下酷炫狂拽神秘莫测的战神王爷非得缠上她算怎么回事——“你做什么?!”某女单脚抵在某战神王爷的胸前,阻止他靠近。“你说让我做你的人,我当然是听夫人的话,主动来献了!”某王爷甚是无辜。“滚!”“我这就滚过来!”宁欢懵逼,明明是她利用他脱离虎窟,不料竟却被他打包进了狼窝,成了他的……
  • 雄鹰盾牌

    雄鹰盾牌

    晨光领地的早晨,星星点点地下着几滴雨,干燥闷热的空气,立马变得湿润、细腻、舒适起来。游萌公主早早起床,站在窗户旁边,优雅地掀开了窗帘,看着如珍珠一般滑落而下的小雨滴,她欣喜地伸手,去触摸小雨滴。“滴答、滴答”,小雨滴发出有节奏感的声音,像是曼妙动人的旋律。看着美丽动人的风景,听着悦耳动听的音乐,呼吸着甜滋滋的新鲜空气,游萌公主满脸笑容,因为她守护的维卡尼亚王国的四大领地之一晨光领地,一派生机勃勃的景象,人们安居乐业。“该换衣服,开始工作了!”游萌公主想着,既然父王把晨光领地交给了她守护,那么就要及时处理公务,让整个晨光领地,井然有序!小雨滴还是“滴答滴答”地下着,游萌公主甜美可爱一笑,转身,就在游萌的一转身之间……小雨滴是黑色的!
  • 神君溺宠:携手游天下

    神君溺宠:携手游天下

    她从天而降来到异世成为一个婴儿,由狼王陪伴长成翩翩少女。当她遇到他时,他仿佛是那沉睡中等待被唤醒的王子。而那双璀璨紫眸睁开的刹那——一眼万年。一次又一次的一见钟情,是命运捉弄还是情缘天定。有些感情你越是想要逃离,却始终逃离不了。既然如此那就不要逃了吧,无论人间还是地狱,我都陪你。有你的世界,哪里都是风景。(一对一甜宠文)