8. Chapter VI. The Bee-Hive, the Bees, and the Honey.

The Man in the Iron Mask / 铁面人

1The bishop of Vannes, much annoyed at having met D’Artagnan at M. Percerin’s, returned to Saint-Mande in no very good humor. Moliere, on the other hand, quite delighted at having made such a capital rough sketch, and at knowing where to find his original again, whenever he should desire to convert his sketch into a picture, Moliere arrived in the merriest of moods. All the first story of the left wing was occupied by the most celebrated Epicureans in Paris, and those on the freest footing in the houseevery one in his compartment, like the bees in their cells, employed in producing the honey intended for that royal cake which M. Fouquet proposed to offer his majesty Louis XIV. during the fete at Vaux. Pelisson, his head leaning on his hand, was engaged in drawing out the plan of the prologue to the “Facheux,” a comedy in three acts, which was to be put on the stage by Poquelin de Moliere, as D’Artagnan called him, or Coquelin de Voliere, as Porthos styled him. Loret, with all the charming innocence of a gazetteer,—the gazetteers of all ages have always been so artless! —Loret was composing an account of the fetes at Vaux, before those fetes had taken place. La Fontaine sauntered about from one to the other, a peripatetic, absent-minded, boring, unbearable dreamer, who kept buzzing and humming at everybodys elbow a thousand poetic abstractions. He so often disturbed Pelisson, that the latter, raising his head, crossly said, “At least, La Fontaine, supply me with a rhyme, since you have the run of the gardens at Parnassus.”

2What rhyme do you want?” asked the Fabler as Madame de Sevigne used to call him.

3I want a rhyme to lumiere.”

4“Orniere,” answered La Fontaine.

5Ah, but, my good friend, one cannot talk of wheel-ruts when celebrating the delights of Vaux,” said Loret.

6Besides, it doesn’t rhyme,” answered Pelisson.

7What! doesn’t rhyme!” cried La Fontaine, in surprise.

8Yes; you have an abominable habit, my friend,—a habit which will ever prevent your becoming a poet of the first order. You rhyme in a slovenly manner.”

9Oh, oh, you think so, do you, Pelisson?”

10Yes, I do, indeed. Remember that a rhyme is never good so long as one can find a better.”

11Then I will never write anything again save in prose,” said La Fontaine, who had taken up Pelisson’s reproach in earnest. Ah! I often suspected I was nothing but a rascally poet! Yes, ‘tis the very truth.”

12Do not say so; your remark is too sweeping, and there is much that is good in yourFables.’”

13And to begin,” continued La Fontaine, following up his idea, “I will go and burn a hundred verses I have just made.”

14Where are your verses?”

15In my head.”

16Well, if they are in your head you cannot burn them.”

17True,” said La Fontaine; “but if I do not burn them—”

18Well, what will happen if you do not burn them?”

19They will remain in my mind, and I shall never forget them!”

20The deuce!” cried Loret; “what a dangerous thing! One would go mad with it!”

21The deuce! the deuce!” repeated La Fontaine; “what can I do?”

22I have discovered the way,” said Moliere, who had entered just at this point of the conversation.

23What way?”

24Write them first and burn them afterwards.”

25How simple! Well, I should never have discovered that. What a mind that devil of a Moliere has!” said La Fontaine. Then, striking his forehead, “Oh, thou wilt never be aught but an ass, Jean La Fontaine!” he added.

26What are you saying there, my friend?” broke in Moliere, approaching the poet, whose aside he had heard.

27I say I shall never be aught but an ass,” answered La Fontaine, with a heavy sigh and swimming eyes. Yes, my friend,” he added, with increasing grief, “it seems that I rhyme in a slovenly manner.”

28Oh, ‘tis wrong to say so.”

29Nay, I am a poor creature!”

30Who said so?”

31“Parbleu! ‘twas Pelisson; did you not, Pelisson?”

32Pelisson, again absorbed in his work, took good care not to answer.

33But if Pelisson said you were so,” cried Moliere, “Pelisson has seriously offended you.”

34Do you think so?”

35Ah! I advise you, as you are a gentleman, not to leave an insult like that unpunished.”

36What!” exclaimed La Fontaine.

37Did you ever fight?”

38Once only, with a lieutenant in the light horse.”

39What wrong had he done you?”

40It seems he ran away with my wife.”

41Ah, ah!” said Moliere, becoming slightly pale; but as, at La Fontaine’s declaration, the others had turned round, Moliere kept upon his lips the rallying smile which had so nearly died away, and continuing to make La Fontaine speak

42And what was the result of the duel?”

43The result was, that on the ground my opponent disarmed me, and then made an apology, promising never again to set foot in my house.”

44And you considered yourself satisfied?” said Moliere.

45Not at all! on the contrary, I picked up my sword. ‘I beg your pardon, monsieur,’ I said, ‘I have not fought you because you were my wifes friend, but because I was told I ought to fight. So, as I have never known any peace save since you made her acquaintance, do me the pleasure to continue your visits as heretofore, or morbleu! let us set to again.’ And so,” continued La Fontaine, “he was compelled to resume his friendship with madame, and I continue to be the happiest of husbands.”

46All burst out laughing. Moliere alone passed his hand across his eyes. Why? Perhaps to wipe away a tear, perhaps to smother a sigh. Alas! we know that Moliere was a moralist, but he was not a philosopher. “‘Tis all one,” he said, returning to the topic of the conversation, “Pelisson has insulted you.”

47Ah, truly! I had already forgotten it.”

48And I am going to challenge him on your behalf.”

49Well, you can do so, if you think it indispensable.”

50I do think it indispensable, and I am going to—”

51Stay,” exclaimed La Fontaine, “I want your advice.”

52Upon what? this insult?”

53No; tell me really now whether lumiere does not rhyme with orniere.”

54I should make them rhyme.”

55Ah! I knew you would.”

56And I have made a hundred thousand such rhymes in my time.”

57A hundred thousand!” cried La Fontaine. Four times as many asLa Pucelle,’ which M. Chaplain is meditating. Is it also on this subject, too, that you have composed a hundred thousand verses?”

58Listen to me, you eternally absent-minded creature,” said Moliere.

59It is certain,” continued La Fontaine, “that legume, for instance, rhymes with posthume.”

60In the plural, above all.”

61Yes, above all in the plural, seeing that then it rhymes not with three letters, but with four; as orniere does with lumiere.”

62But give me ornieres and lumieres in the plural, my dear Pelisson,” said La Fontaine, clapping his hand on the shoulder of his friend, whose insult he had quite forgotten, “and they will rhyme.”

63Hem!” coughed Pelisson.

64“Moliere says so, and Moliere is a judge of such things; he declares he has himself made a hundred thousand verses.”

65Come,” said Moliere, laughing, “he is off now.”

66It is like rivage, which rhymes admirably with herbage. I would take my oath of it.”

67But—” said Moliere.

68I tell you all this,” continued La Fontaine, “because you are preparing a divertissement for Vaux, are you not?”

69Yes, the ‘Facheux.’”

70Ah, yes, the ‘Facheux;’ yes, I recollect. Well, I was thinking a prologue would admirably suit your divertissement.”

71Doubtless it would suit capitally.”

72Ah! you are of my opinion?”

73So much so, that I have asked you to write this very prologue.”

74You asked me to write it?”

75Yes, you, and on your refusal begged you to ask Pelisson, who is engaged upon it at this moment.”

76Ah! that is what Pelisson is doing, then? Ifaith, my dear Moliere, you are indeed often right.”

77When?”

78When you call me absent-minded. It is a monstrous defect; I will cure myself of it, and do your prologue for you.”

79But inasmuch as Pelisson is about it!—”

80Ah, true, miserable rascal that I am! Loret was indeed right in saying I was a poor creature.”

81It was not Loret who said so, my friend.”

82Well, then, whoever said so, ‘tis the same to me! And so your divertissement is called the ‘Facheux?’ Well, can you make heureux rhyme with facheux?”

83If obliged, yes.”

84And even with capriceux.”

85Oh, no, no.”

86It would be hazardous, and yet why so?”

87There is too great a difference in the cadences.”

88I was fancying,” said La Fontaine, leaving Moliere for Loret—“I was fancying—”

89What were you fancying?” said Loret, in the middle of a sentence. Make haste.”

90You are writing the prologue to the ‘Facheux,’ are you not?”

91No! mordieu! it is Pelisson.”

92Ah, Pelisson,” cried La Fontaine, going over to him, “I was fancying,” he continued, “that the nymph of Vaux—”

93Ah, beautiful!” cried Loret. The nymph of Vaux! thank you, La Fontaine; you have just given me the two concluding verses of my paper.”

94Well, if you can rhyme so well, La Fontaine,” said Pelisson, “tell me now in what way you would begin my prologue?”

95I should say, for instance, ‘Oh! nymph, who—’ AfterwhoI should place a verb in the second person singular of the present indicative; and should go on thus: ‘this grot profound.’”

96But the verb, the verb?” asked Pelisson.

97To admire the greatest king of all kings round,” continued La Fontaine.

98But the verb, the verb,” obstinately insisted Pelisson. This second person singular of the present indicative?”

99Well, then; quittest:

100Oh, nymph, who quittest now this grot profound, To admire the greatest king of all kings round.”

101You would not putwho quittest,’ would you?”

102Why not?”

103“‘Quittest,’ afteryou who’?”

104Ah! my dear fellow,” exclaimed La Fontaine, “you are a shocking pedant!”

105Without counting,” said Moliere, “that the second verse, ‘king of all kings round,’ is very weak, my dear La Fontaine.”

106Then you see clearly I am nothing but a poor creature,—a shuffler, as you said.”

107I never said so.”

108Then, as Loret said.”

109And it was not Loret either; it was Pelisson.”

110Well, Pelisson was right a hundred times over. But what annoys me more than anything, my dear Moliere, is, that I fear we shall not have our Epicurean dresses.”

111You expected yours, then, for the fete?”

112Yes, for the fete, and then for after the fete. My housekeeper told me that my own is rather faded.”

113“Diable! your housekeeper is right; rather more than faded.”

114Ah, you see,” resumed La Fontaine, “the fact is, I left it on the floor in my room, and my cat—”

115Well, your cat—”

116She made her nest upon it, which has rather changed its color.”

117Moliere burst out laughing; Pelisson and Loret followed his example. At this juncture, the bishop of Vannes appeared, with a roll of plans and parchments under his arm. As if the angel of death had chilled all gay and sprightly fanciesas if that wan form had scared away the Graces to whom Xenocrates sacrificedsilence immediately reigned through the study, and every one resumed his self-possession and his pen. Aramis distributed the notes of invitation, and thanked them in the name of M. Fouquet. The superintendent,” he said, “being kept to his room by business, could not come and see them, but begged them to send him some of the fruits of their days work, to enable him to forget the fatigue of his labor in the night.”

118At these words, all settled down to work. La Fontaine placed himself at a table, and set his rapid pen an endless dance across the smooth white vellum; Pelisson made a fair copy of his prologue; Moliere contributed fifty fresh verses, with which his visit to Percerin had inspired him; Loret, an article on the marvelous fetes he predicted; and Aramis, laden with his booty like the king of the bees, that great black drone, decked with purple and gold, re-entered his apartment, silent and busy. But before departing, “Remember, gentlemen,” said he, “we leave to-morrow evening.”

119In that case, I must give notice at home,” said Moliere.

120Yes; poor Moliere!” said Loret, smiling; “he loves his home.”

121“‘He loves,’ yes,” replied Moliere, with his sad, sweet smile. “‘He loves,’ that does not mean, they love him.”

122As for me,” said La Fontaine, “they love me at Chateau Thierry, I am very sure.”

123Aramis here re-entered after a brief disappearance.

124Will any one go with me?” he asked. I am going by Paris, after having passed a quarter of an hour with M. Fouquet. I offer my carriage.”

125Good,” said Moliere, “I accept it. I am in a hurry.”

126I shall dine here,” said Loret. M. de Gourville has promised me some craw-fish.”

127He has promised me some whitings. Find a rhyme for that, La Fontaine.”

128Aramis went out laughing, as only he could laugh, and Moliere followed him. They were at the bottom of the stairs, when La Fontaine opened the door, and shouted out:

129He has promised us some whitings, In return for these our writings.”

130The shouts of laughter reached the ears of Fouquet at the moment Aramis opened the door of the study. As to Moliere, he had undertaken to order the horses, while Aramis went to exchange a parting word with the superintendent. Oh, how they are laughing there!” said Fouquet, with a sigh.

131Do you not laugh, monseigneur?”

132I laugh no longer now, M. d’Herblay. The fete is approaching; money is departing.”

133Have I not told you that was my business?”

134Yes, you promised me millions.”

135You shall have them the day after the kings entree into Vaux.”

136Fouquet looked closely at Aramis, and passed the back of his icy hand across his moistened brow. Aramis perceived that the superintendent either doubted him, or felt he was powerless to obtain the money. How could Fouquet suppose that a poor bishop, ex-abbe, ex-musketeer, could find any?

137Why doubt me?” said Aramis. Fouquet smiled and shook his head.

138Man of little faith!” added the bishop.

139My dear M. d’Herblay,” answered Fouquet, “if I fall—”

140Well; if youfall’?”

141I shall, at least, fall from such a height, that I shall shatter myself in falling.” Then giving himself a shake, as though to escape from himself, “Whence came you,” said he, “my friend?”

142From Paris—from Percerin.”

143And what have you been doing at Percerin’s, for I suppose you attach no great importance to our poetsdresses?”

144No; I went to prepare a surprise.”

145Surprise?”

146Yes; which you are going to give to the king.”

147And will it cost much?”

148Oh! a hundred pistoles you will give Lebrun.”

149A painting?—Ah! all the better! And what is this painting to represent?”

150I will tell you; then at the same time, whatever you may say or think of it, I went to see the dresses for our poets.”

151Bah! and they will be rich and elegant?”

152Splendid! There will be few great monseigneurs with so good. People will see the difference there is between the courtiers of wealth and those of friendship.”

153Ever generous and grateful, dear prelate.”

154In your school.”

155Fouquet grasped his hand. And where are you going?” he said.

156I am off to Paris, when you shall have given a certain letter.”

157For whom?”

158M. de Lyonne.”

159And what do you want with Lyonne?”

160I wish to make him sign a lettre de cachet.”

161“‘Lettre de cachet!’ Do you desire to put somebody in the Bastile?”

162On the contraryto let somebody out.”

163And who?”

164A poor devila youth, a lad who has been Bastiled these ten years, for two Latin verses he made against the Jesuits.”

165“‘Two Latin verses!’ and, fortwo Latin verses,’ the miserable being has been in prison for ten years!”

166Yes!”

167And has committed no other crime?”

168Beyond this, he is as innocent as you or I.”

169On your word?”

170On my honor!”

171And his name is—”

172“Seldon.”

173Yes.—But it is too bad. You knew this, and you never told me!”

174“‘Twas only yesterday his mother applied to me, monseigneur.”

175And the woman is poor!”

176In the deepest misery.”

177Heaven,” said Fouquet, “sometimes bears with such injustice on earth, that I hardly wonder there are wretches who doubt of its existence. Stay, M. d’Herblay.” And Fouquet, taking a pen, wrote a few rapid lines to his colleague Lyonne. Aramis took the letter and made ready to go.

178Wait,” said Fouquet. He opened his drawer, and took out ten government notes which were there, each for a thousand francs. Stay,” he said; “set the son at liberty, and give this to the mother; but, above all, do not tell her—”

179What, monseigneur?”

180That she is ten thousand livres richer than I. She would say I am but a poor superintendent! Go! and I pray that God will bless those who are mindful of his poor!”

181So also do I pray,” replied Aramis, kissing Fouquet’s hand.

182And he went out quickly, carrying off the letter for Lyonne and the notes for Seldon’s mother, and taking up Moliere, who was beginning to lose patience.