登陆注册
20075400000155

第155章 CHAPTER XII A STAR(1)

The dinner on the great occasion was ordered from Chabot and Potel, and not from Chevet, by which act Brigitte intended to prove her initiative and her emancipation from the late Madame de Godollo. The invited guests were as follows: three Collevilles, including the bride, la Peyrade the groom, Dutocq and Fleury, whom he had asked to be his witnesses, the extremely limited number of his relatives leaving him no choice, Minard and Rabourdin, chosen as witnesses for Celeste, Madame and Mademoiselle Minard and Minard junior, two of Thuillier's colleagues in the Council-general; the notary Dupuis, charged with the duty of drawing up the contract, and lastly, the Abbe Gondrin, director of the consciences of Madame Thuillier and Celeste, who was to give the nuptial blessing.

The latter was the former vicar of Saint-Jacques du Haut-Pas, whose great refinement of manner and gift of preaching had induced the archbishop to remove him from the humble parish where his career had begun to the aristocratic church of the Madeleine. Since Madame Thuillier and Celeste had again become his parishioners, the young abbe visited them occasionally, and Thuillier, who had gone to him to explain, after his own fashion, the suitableness of the choice made for Celeste in the person of la Peyrade (taking pains as he did so to cast reflections on the religious opinions of Felix Phellion), had easily led him to contribute by his persuasive words to the resignation of the victim.

When the time came to sit down to table three guests were missing,--two Minards, father and son, and the notary Dupuis. The latter had written a note to Thuillier in the morning, excusing himself from the dinner, but saying that at nine o'clock precisely he would bring the contract and place himself at the orders of Mademoiselle Thuillier. As for Julien Minard, his mother excused him as being confined to his room with a sore-throat. The absence of Minard senior remained unexplained, but Madame Minard insisted that they should sit down to table without him; which was done, Brigitte ordering that the soup be kept hot for him, because in the bourgeois code of manners and customs a dinner without soup is no dinner at all.

The repast was far from gay, and though the fare was better, the vivacity and the warmth of the conversation was far, indeed, from that of the famous improvised banquet at the time of the election to the Council-general. The gaps occasioned by the absence of three guests may have been one reason; then Flavie was glum; she had had an interview with la Peyrade in the afternoon which ended in tears;Celeste, even if she had been content with the choice imposed on her, would scarcely, as a matter of propriety, have seemed joyful; in fact, she made no effort to brighten a sad face, and dared not look at her godmother, whose own countenance gave the impression, if we may so express it, of the long bleating of a sheep. The poor girl seeing this feared to exchange a look with her lest she might drive her to tears.

Thuillier now felt himself, on all sides, of such importance that he was pompous and consequential; while Brigitte, uneasy out of her own world, where she could lord it over every one without competition, seemed constrained and embarrassed.

Colleville tried by a few jovialities to raise the temperature of the assemblage; but the coarse salt of his witticisms had an effect, in the atmosphere in which he produced them, of a loud laugh in a sick-chamber; and a mute intimation from his wife, Thuillier, and la Peyrade to BEHAVE HIMSELF put a stopper on his liveliness and turbulent expansion. It was somewhat remarkable that the gravest member of the party, aided by Rabourdin, was the person who finally warmed up the atmosphere. The Abbe Gondrin, a man of a most refined and cultivated mind, had, like every pure and well-ordered soul, a fund of gentle gaiety which he was well able to communicate, and liveliness was beginning to dawn upon the party when Minard entered the room.

After making his excuses on the ground of important duties, the mayor of the eleventh arrondissement, who was in the habit of taking the lead in the conversation wherever he went, said, having swallowed a few hasty mouthfuls:--"Messieurs and mesdames, have you heard the great news?""No, what is it?" cried several voices at once.

"The Academy of Sciences received, to-day, at its afternoon session, the announcement of a vast discovery: the heavens possess a new star!""Tiens!" said Colleville; "that will help to replace the one that Beranger thought was lost when he grieved (to that air of 'Octavie')over Chateaubriand's departure: 'Chateaubriand, why fly thy land?'"This quotation, which he sang, exasperated Flavie, and if the custom had been for wives to sit next to their husbands, the former clarionet of the Opera-Comique would not have escaped with a mere "Colleville!"imperiously calling him to order.

"The point which gives this great astronomical event a special interest on this occasion," continued Minard, "is that the author of the discovery is a denizen of the twelfth arrondissement, which many of you still inhabit, or have inhabited. But other points are striking in this great scientific fact. The Academy, on the reading of the communication which announced it, was so convinced of the existence of this star that a deputation was appointed to visit the domicile of the modern Galileo and compliment him in the name of the whole body. And yet this star is not visible to either the eye or the telescope! It is only by the power of calculation and induction that its existence and the place it occupies in the heavens have been proved in the most irrefutable manner: 'There MUST be THERE a hitherto unknown star; Icannot see it, but I am sure of it,'--that is what this man of science said to the Academy, whom he instantly convinced by his deductions.

同类推荐
  • 集诸法宝最上义论

    集诸法宝最上义论

    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。
  • 六壬拃河棹

    六壬拃河棹

    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。
  • 声无哀乐论

    声无哀乐论

    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。
  • 桂林风土记

    桂林风土记

    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。
  • 大乘宝云经

    大乘宝云经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 父仇记

    父仇记

    讲述了一个学武报仇的故事。武侠小说,怎么能不报个仇呢?
  • 中书集:朱湘作品精选

    中书集:朱湘作品精选

    一个时代的开拓者和各种文学形式的集大成者,他们的作品来源于他们生活的时代,记载了那个时代社会生活的缩影,包含了作家本人对社会、生活的体验与思考,影响着社会的发展进程,具有永恒的魅力。他们是我们心灵的工程师,能够指导我们的人生发展,给予我们心灵鸡汤般的精神滋养。
  • 翻转吧!罗密欧大人

    翻转吧!罗密欧大人

    她是积极向上,乐观开朗的孤儿;他是脾气暴躁、单纯善良的富家公子。他们此生原本不在同一条起跑线上,注定有着各自不同的世界。一场不大不小的雨,一个人群零乱的车站,却出现了0.0001的几率,把原本不同世界的两个人连在了一起……当睿智的夏默然遇到了冷酷的肖韶炎,就如同天雷勾动了地火般一发不可收拾。明明就是互相讨厌的两人为何突然间惊觉对方有些可爱?明明吵闹不断的两人为何会出现心跳加速的瞬间?
  • 自作多情之你不爱我

    自作多情之你不爱我

    ‘同学,你叫什么名字?’‘娇果聊’。。。几天后。。‘嗨,果聊,还记得我吗?’‘嗯’。。。几个月后。。。‘我喜欢你’。。。。敬请期待
  • 半夏田园

    半夏田园

    刻薄彪悍继祖母,很难对付;善良包子亲爹娘,必须改造;纵使生活一地鸡毛,也要努力把日子过好。喂,隔壁山头的将军大哥,能帮把我牛放一放吗?
  • 当说者被说的时候:比较叙述学导论

    当说者被说的时候:比较叙述学导论

    在叙述中,说者先要被说,然后才能说。主要靠主体意识回向自身才能出现。《当说者被说的时候(比较叙述学导论)》由赵毅衡所著,本书介绍了叙述行为、叙述主体、叙述层次、叙述时间、叙述方位、叙述中的语言行为、情节、叙述形式的意义等内容,深入浅出、通俗易懂,可供读者阅读学习。
  • 挂科时期的爱情

    挂科时期的爱情

    无止境地等,无止境地寻,或是冷漠转身,伙食痴痴怀念?
  • 小白帮主的坑货日常

    小白帮主的坑货日常

    玩游戏要花RMB?白甜甜偏不!玩游戏要看攻略?白甜甜也不!玩游戏要拉帮结派?白甜甜就喜欢独来独往刷小怪!于是,这个国际大型动作类游戏就彻底变成了白甜甜消遣娱乐看风景的好地方……
  • 富有天下

    富有天下

    在一个普遍仇富的社会里,李然坐拥娇妻、豪宅无数,却罕见的为人津津乐道,喜闻乐见!这不仅是一段引人遐想的梦幻传奇……也是一段无法复制的炫丽神话!
  • Awakening & To Let

    Awakening & To Let

    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。