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sons of the soil-第51节

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military collar; a black cravat; with waistcoat and trousers of black

cloth。 His shoes; very thick soled; had iron nails outside; and inside

woollen linings knit by his wife in the winter evenings。 Annette and

her mistress also knit the master's stockings。 Rigou's name was

Gregoire。



Though this sketch gives some idea of the man's character; no one can

imagine the point to which; in his private and unthwarted life; the

ex…Benedictine had pushed the science of selfishness; good living; and

sensuality。 In the first place; he dined alone; waited upon by his

wife and Annette; who themselves dined with Jean in the kitchen; while

the master digested his meal and disposed of his wine as he read 〃the

news。〃



In the country the special names of journals are never mentioned; they

are all called by the general name of 〃the news。〃



Rigou's dinner; like his breakfast and supper; was always of choice

delicacies; cooked with the art which distinguishes a priest's

housekeeper from all other cooks。 Madame Rigou made the butter herself

twice a week。 Cream was a concomitant of many sauces。 The vegetables

came at a jump; as it were; from their frames to the saucepan。

Parisians; who are accustomed to eat the fruits of the earth after

they have had a second ripening in the sun of a city; infected by the

air of the streets; fermenting in close shops; and watered from time

to time by the market…women to give them a deceitful freshness; have

little idea of the exquisite flavors of really fresh produce; to which

nature has lent fugitive but powerful charms when eaten as it were

alive。



The butcher of Soulanges brought his best meat under fear of losing

Rigou's custom。 The poultry; raised on the premises; was of the finest

quality。



This system of secret pampering embraced everything in which Rigou was

personally concerned。 Though the slippers of the knowing Thelemist

were of stout leather they were lined with lamb's wool。 Though his

coat was of rough cloth it did not touch his skin; for his shirt;

washed and ironed at home; was of the finest Frisian linen。 His wife;

Annette; and Jean drank the common wine of the country; the wine he

reserved from his own vineyards; but in his private cellar; as well

stocked as the cellars of Belgium; the finest vintages of Burgundy

rubbed sides with those of Bordeaux; Champagne; Roussillon; not to

speak of Spanish and Rhine wines; all bought ten years in advance of

use and bottled by Brother Jean。 The liqueurs in that cellar were

those of the Isles; and came originally from Madame Amphoux。 Rigou had

laid in a supply to last him the rest of his days; at the national

sale of a chateau in Burgundy。



The ex…monk ate and drank like Louis XIV。 (one of the greatest

consumers of food and drink ever known); which reveals the costs of a

life that was more than voluptuous。 Careful and very shrewd in

managing his secret prodigalities; he disputed all purchases as only

churchmen can dispute。 Instead of taking infinite precautions against

being cheated; the sly monk kept patterns and samples; had the

agreements reduced to writing; and warned those who forwarded his

wines or his provisions that if they fell short of the mark in any way

he should refuse to accept their consignments。



Jean; who had charge of the fruit…room; was trained to keep fresh the

finest fruits grown in the department; so that Rigou ate pears and

apples and sometimes grapes; at Easter。



No prophet regarded as a God was ever more blindly obeyed than was

Rigou in his own home。 A mere motion of his black eyelashes could

plunge his wife; Annette; and Jean into the deepest anxiety。 He held

his three slaves by the multiplicity of their many duties; which were

like a chain in his hands。 These poor creatures were under the

perpetual yoke of some ordered duty; with an eye always on them; but

they had come to take a sort of pleasure in accomplishing these tasks;

and did not suffer under them。 All three had the comfort and well…

being of that one man before their minds as the sole end and object of

all their thoughts。



Annette was (since 1795) the tenth pretty girl in Rigou's service; and

he expected to go down to his grave with relays of such servants。

Brought to him at sixteen; she would be sent away at nineteen。 All

these girls; carefully chosen at Auxerre; Clamecy; or in the Morvan;

were enticed by the promise of future prosperity; but Madame Rigou

persisted in living。 So at the end of every three years some quarrel;

usually brought about by the insolence of the servant to the poor

mistress; caused their dismissal。



Annette; who was a picture of delicate beauty; ingenuous and

sparkling; deserved to be a duchess。 Rigou knew nothing of the love

affair between her and Jean…Louis Tonsard; which proves that he had

let himself be fooled by the girl;the only one of his many servants

whose ambition had taught her to flatter the lynx as the only way to

blind him。



This uncrowned Louis XV。 did not keep himself wholly to his pretty

Annette。 Being the mortgagee of lands bought by peasants who were

unable to pay for them; he kept a harem in the valley; from Soulanges

to five miles beyond Conches on the road to La Brie; without making

other payments than 〃extension of time;〃 for those fugitive pleasures

which eat into the fortunes of so many old men。



This luxurious life; a life like that of Bouret; cost Rigou almost

nothing。 Thanks to his white slaves; he could cut and mow down and

gather in his wood; hay; and grain。 To the peasant manual labor is a

small matter; especially if it serves to postpone the payment of

interest due。 And so Rigou; while requiring little premiums on each

month's delay; squeezed a great deal of manual labor out of his

debtors;positive drudgery; to which they submitted thinking they

gave little because nothing left their pockets。 Rigou sometimes

obtained in this way more than the principal of a debt。



Deep as a monk; silent as a Benedictine in the throes of writing

history; sly as a priest; deceitful as all misers; carefully keeping

within the limits of the law; the man might have been Tiberius in

Rome; Richelieu under Louis XIII。; or Fouche; had the ambition seized

him to go to the Convention; but; instead of all that; Rigou had the

common sense to remain a Lucullus without ostentation; in other words;

a parsimonious voluptuary。 To occupy his mind he indulged a hatred

manufactured out of the whole cloth。 He harassed the Comte de

Montcornet。 He worked the peasants like puppets by hidden wires; the

handling of which amused him as though it were a game of chess where

the pawns were alive; the knights caracoled; the bishops; like

Fourchon; gabbled; the feudal castles shone in the sun; and the queen

maliciously checkmated the king。 Every day; when he got out of bed and

saw from his window the proud towers of Les Aigues; the chimneys of

the pavilions; and the noble gates; he said to himself: 〃They shall

fall! I'll dry up the brooks; I'll chop down the woods。〃 But he had

two victims in mind; a chief one and a lesser one。 Though he meditated

the dismemberment of the chateau; the apostate also intended to make

an end of the Abbe Brossette by pin…pricks。



To complete the portrait of the ex…priest it will suffice to add that

he went to mass regretting that his wife still lived; and expressed

the desire to be reconciled with the Church as soon as he became a

widower。 He bowed deferentially to the Abbe Brossette whenever he met

him; and spoke to him courteously and without heat。 As a general thing

all men who belong to the Church; or who have come out of it; have the

patience of insects; they owe this to the obligation they have been

under; ecclesiastically; to preserve decorum;a training which has

been lacking for the last twenty years to the vast majority of the

French nation; even those who think themselves well…bred。 All the

monks which the Revolution brought out of their monasteries and forced

into business; public or private; showed in their coldness and reserve

the great advantage which ecclesiastical discipline gives to the sons

of the Church; even those who desert her。



Gaubertin had understood Rigou from the days when the Abbe Niseron

made his will and the ex…monk married the heiress; he fathomed the

craft hidden behind the jaundiced face of that accomplished hypocrite;

and he made himself the man's fellow…worshipper before the altar of

the Golden Calf。 When the banking…house of Leclercq was first started

he advised Rigou to put fifty thousand francs into it; guaranteeing

their security himself。 Rigou was all the more desirable as an

investor; or sleeping partner; because he drew no interest but allowed

his capital to accumulate。 At the period of which we write it amounted

to over a hundred thousand francs; although in 1816 he had taken out

one hundred and eighty thousand for investment in the Public Funds;

from which he

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