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the lesser bourgeoisie-第34部分

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will go into partnership later; if you like; in some serious
enterprise; some good opportunity which may require; say; fifty
thousand francs。 When you have got that sum to invest; let me know;
and we'll talk about it。〃

Cerizet had only suggested the affair of the house to Theodose after
making sure that among the three; Madame Poiret; Cadenet; and himself;
it was impossible to raise the full sum of one hundred thousand
francs。

The 〃lender by the little week〃 was thus in perfect safety in his den;
where he could even; if necessity came; appeal to the law。 On certain
mornings there might be seen as many as sixty or eighty persons; men
as often as women; either in the wine…shop; or the alley; or sitting
on the staircase; for the distrustful Cerizet would only admit six
persons at a time into his office。 The first comers were first served;
and each had to go by his number; which the wine…merchant; or his
shop…boy; affixed to the hats of the man and the backs of the women。
Sometimes the clients would sell to each other (as hackney…coachmen do
on the cabstands); head numbers for tail numbers。 On certain days;
when the market business was pressing; a head number was often sold
for a glass of brandy and a sou。 The numbers; as they issued from
Cerizet's office; called up the succeeding numbers; and if any
disputes arose Cadenet put a stop to the fray at once my remarking:

〃If you get the police here you won't gain anything; HE'll shut up
shop。〃

HE was Cerizet's name。 When; in the course of the day; some hapless
woman; without an atom of food in her room; and seeing her children
pale with hunger; would come to borrow ten or twenty sous; she would
say to the wine…merchant anxiously:

〃Is HE there?〃

Cadenet; a short; stout man; dressed in blue; with outer sleeves of
black stuff and a wine…merchant's apron; and always wearing a cap;
seemed an angel to these mothers when he replied to them:

〃HE told me that you were an honest woman and I might give you forty
sous。 You know what you must do about it〃

And; strange to say; HE was blessed by these poor people; even as they
had lately blessed Popinot。

But Cerizet was cursed on Sunday mornings when accounts were settled;
and they cursed him even more on Saturdays; when it was necessary to
work in order to repay the sum borrowed with interest。 But; after all;
he was Providence; he was God from Tuesday to Friday of every week。

The room which he made his office; formerly the kitchen of the next
floor; was bare; the beams of the ceiling had been whitewashed; but
still bore marks of smoke。 The walls; along which he had put benches;
and the stone floor; retained and gave out dampness。 The fireplace;
where the crane remained; was partly filled by an iron stove in which
Cerizet burned sea…coal when the weather was severe。 A platform about
half a foot high and eight feet square extended from the edge of the
fireplace; on it was fastened a common table and an armchair with a
round cushion covered with green leather。 Behind him; Cerizet had
sheathed the walls with planks; also protecting himself with a little
wooden screen; painted white; from the draught between the window and
door; but this screen; made of two leaves; was so placed that the
warmth from the stove reached him。 The window had enormous inside
shutters of cast…iron; held; when closed; by a bar。 The door commanded
respect by an armor of the same character。

At the farther end of this room; in a corner; was a spiral…staircase;
coming; evidently; from some pulled…down shop; and bought in the rue
Chapon by Cadenet; who had fitted it through the ceiling into the room
in the entresol occupied by Cerizet。 In order to prevent all
communication with the upper floors; Cerizet had exacted that the door
of that room which opened on the common landing should be walled up。
The place had thus become a fortress。 The bedroom above had a cheap
carpet bought for twenty francs; an iron bedstead; a bureau; three
chairs; and an iron safe; made by a good workman; which Cerizet had
bought at a bargain。 He shaved before a glass on the chimney…piece; he
owned two pairs of cotton sheets and six cotton shirts; the rest of
his visible wardrobe was of the same character。 Cadenet had once seen
Cerizet dressed like a dandy of the period; he must; therefore; have
kept hidden; in some drawer of his bureau; a complete disguise with
which he could go to the opera; see the world; and not be recognized;
for; had it not been that Cadenet heard his voice; he would certainly
have asked him who he was。

What pleased the clients of this man most was his joviality and his
repartees; he talked their language。 Cadenet; his two shop…men; and
Cerizet; living in the midst of dreadful misery; behaved with the
calmness of undertakers in presence of afflicted heirs; of old
sergeants of the Guard among heaps of dead。 They no more shuddered on
hearing cries of hunger and despair than surgeons shudder at the cries
of their patients in hospital; they said; as the soldiers and the
dressers said; the perfunctory words; 〃Have patience! a little
courage! What's the good of grieving? Suppose you kill yourself; what
then? One gets accustomed to everything; be reasonable!〃

Though Cerizet took the precaution to hide the money necessary for his
morning operations in the hollow seat of the chair in which he sat;
taking out no more than a hundred francs at a time; which he put in
the pockets of his trousers; never dipping into the funds of the chair
except between the entrance of two batches of clients (keeping his
door locked and not opening it till all was safely stowed in his
pockets); he had really nothing to fear from the various despairs
which found their way from all sides to this rendezvous of misery。
Certainly; there are many different ways of being honest and virtuous;
and the 〃Monograph of Virtue〃 has no other basis than this social
axiom。'*' A man is false to his conscience; he fails; apparently; in
delicacy; he forfeits that bloom of honor which; though lost; does
not; as yet; mean general disrepute; at last; however; he fails
decidedly in honor; if he falls into the hands of the correctional
police; he is not; as yet; guilty of crime before the court of
assizes; but after he is branded with infamy by the verdict of a jury
he may still be honored at the galleys for the species of honor and
integrity practised by criminals among themselves; which consists in
not betraying each other; in sharing booty loyally; and in running all
dangers。 Well; this last form of honorwhich is perhaps a
calculation; a necessity; the practice of which offers certain
opportunities for grandeur to the guilty man and the possibility of a
return to goodreigned absolutely between Cerizet and his clients。
Never did Cerizet make an error; nor his poor people either; neither
side ever denied what was due; either capital or interests。 Many a
time Cerizet; who was born among the people; corrected from one week
to another some accidental error; to the benefit of a poor man who had
never discovered it。 He was called a Jew; but an honest one; and his
word in that city of sorrows was sacred。 A woman died;
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