登陆注册
5589800000018

第18章 CHAPTER III(4)

The devotee of the Royal Lottery fetched twenty francs and gave them to the artist, who slipped them secretly into his brother's hand. All the company were now assembled. There were two tables of boston; and the party grew lively. Philippe proved a bad player: after winning for awhile, he began to lose; and by eleven o'clock he owed fifty francs to young Desroches and to Bixiou. The racket and the disputes at the ecarte table resounded more than once in the ears of the more peaceful boston players, who were watching Philippe surreptitiously. The exile showed such signs of bad temper that in his final dispute with the younger Desroches, who was none too amiable himself, the elder Desroches joined in, and though his son was decidedly in the right, he declared he was in the wrong, and forbade him to play any more. Madame Descoings did the same with her grandson, who was beginning to let fly certain witticisms; and although Philippe, so far, had not understood him, there was always a chance that one of the barbed arrows might piece the colonel's thick skull and put the sharp jester in peril.

"You must be tired," whispered Agathe in Philippe's ear; "come to bed."

"Travel educates youth," said Bixiou, grinning, when Madame Bridau and the colonel had disappeared.

Joseph, who got up at dawn and went to bed early, did not see the end of the party. The next morning Agathe and Madame Descoings, while preparing breakfast, could not help remarking that soires would be terribly expensive if Philippe were to go on playing that sort of game, as the Descoings phrased it. The worthy old woman, then seventy- six years of age, proposed to sell her furniture, give up her appartement on the second floor (which the owner was only too glad to occupy), and take Agathe's parlor for her chamber, making the other room a sitting-room and dining-room for the family. In this way they could save seven hundred francs a year; which would enable them to give Philippe fifty francs a month until he could find something to do. Agathe accepted the sacrifice. When the colonel came down and his mother had asked how he liked his little bedroom, the two widows explained to him the situation of the family. Madame Descoings and Agathe possessed, by putting all their resources together, an income of five thousand three hundred francs, four thousand of which belonged to Madame Descoings and were merely a life annuity. The Descoings made an allowance of six hundred a year to Bixiou, whom she had acknowledged as her grandson during the last few months, also six hundred to Joseph; the rest of her income, together with that of Agathe, was spent for the household wants. All their savings were by this time eaten up.

"Make yourselves easy," said the lieutenant-colonel. "I'll find a situation and put you to no expense; all I need for the present is board and lodging."

Agathe kissed her son, and Madame Descoings slipped a hundred francs into his hand to pay for his losses of the night before. In ten days the furniture was sold, the appartement given up, and the change in Agathe's domestic arrangements accomplished with a celerity seldom seen outside of Paris. During those ten days, Philippe regularly decamped after breakfast, came back for dinner, was off again for the evening, and only got home about midnight to go to bed. He contracted certain habits half mechanically, and they soon became rooted in him; he got his boots blacked on the Pont Neuf for the two sous it would have cost him to go by the Pont des Arts to the Palais-Royal, where he consumed regularly two glasses of brandy while reading the newspapers, --an occupation which employed him till midday; after that he sauntered along the rue Vivienne to the cafe Minerve, where the Liberals congregated, and where he played at billiards with a number of old comrades. While winning and losing, Philippe swallowed four or five more glasses of divers liquors, and smoked ten or a dozen cigars in going and coming, and idling along the streets. In the evening, after consuming a few pipes at the Hollandais smoking-rooms, he would go to some gambling-place towards ten o'clock at night. The waiter handed him a card and a pin; he always inquired of certain well- seasoned players about the chances of the red or the black, and staked ten francs when the lucky moment seemed to come; never playing more than three times, win or lose. If he won, which usually happened, he drank a tumbler of punch and went home to his garret; but by that time he talked of smashing the ultras and the Bourbon body-guard, and trolled out, as he mounted the staircase, "We watch to save the Empire!" His poor mother, hearing him, used to think "How gay Philippe is to-night!" and then she would creep up and kiss him, without complaining of the fetid odors of the punch, and the brandy, and the pipes.

"You ought to be satisfied with me, my dear mother," he said, towards the end of January; "I lead the most regular of lives."

The colonel had dined five times at a restaurant with some of his army comrades. These old soldiers were quite frank with each other on the state of their own affairs, all the while talking of certain hopes which they based on the building of a submarine vessel, expected to bring about the deliverance of the Emperor. Among these former comrades, Philippe particularly liked an old captain of the dragoons of the Guard, named Giroudeau, in whose company he had seen his first service. This friendship with the late dragoon led Philippe into completing what Rabelais called "the devil's equipage"; and he added to his drams, and his tobacco, and his play, a "fourth wheel."

同类推荐
  • 佛说如幻三昧经

    佛说如幻三昧经

    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。
  • 仁王护国般若波罗蜜多经疏

    仁王护国般若波罗蜜多经疏

    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。
  • Hospital Sketches

    Hospital Sketches

    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。
  • 伊江集载

    伊江集载

    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。
  • 贤首五教仪开蒙

    贤首五教仪开蒙

    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
  • 垂钓日记

    垂钓日记

    本书收录了《“战”安昌》、《云竹风光掠影》、《冰天雪地独斗寒》、《寒风砭骨》、《倾听冰声》、《在大风中搏击》、《暖泉沟空军之行》、《青海湖散记》、《买鱼竿》、《夏钓清潭》等作品。
  • 我真只是想赚钱

    我真只是想赚钱

    “少年,给你个系统。”“不要。”“有了这个系统你就可以逆天!”“天又没惹我,我逆他干嘛?我找死啊?”“有了这个系统你就可以拯救世界!”“我连我自己都拯救不了,你让我拯救世界?”“这个系统可以帮你赚钱!”“我……考虑考虑?”我叫叶小乐,我真的只是想赚钱,但最后我发现,我被套路了。哎,无所谓,套路就套路吧,反正钱到手就行了。
  • 想乐:聆听音符背后的美丽心灵

    想乐:聆听音符背后的美丽心灵

    这样听音乐,你就懂了。杨照介绍了自己喜爱的100首西方古典乐曲,包括晶莹清响的钢琴独奏曲、深沉隽永的大提琴曲、层次丰盈的小提琴协奏曲等等,他通过长年积累的音乐深度,书写乐曲创作故事、时代背景和乐段精华,让人得以感受音声下的丰富与感动。作者自幼学习小提琴和乐理,又将各领域的知识带入音乐,结晶为一篇篇精简迷人的短文,通过独特的切入点,透过历史听音乐,字里行间闪耀着智慧光芒和独到的见解,足以燃起所有读者对每首乐曲无限的好奇和遐想。
  • 末日之丧尸侵袭

    末日之丧尸侵袭

    贺豪,一名死刑犯人。在押赴刑场的途中遭遇末日的陨石浩劫,意外失去右臂的他获得了名为渡鸦的机械手臂。且看他如何利用科技的力量封为末世王侯——“胜利的喜悦,令我咆哮不已!”
  • 异战

    异战

    这个世界上充满着未知的力量与无数我们至今仍然无法解开的谜团。一群人,也可以称他们为‘亡命徒’他们与活人为伍,却与鬼怪为敌,探寻这个世界中那些并不为人所知的神秘力量。以凡人之躯对抗鬼神之力!他们的目的不是研究,而是清除……
  • 商务礼仪实用手册

    商务礼仪实用手册

    本书从仪表、仪态、服饰、用餐、拜访等14个方面,详细讲解了商务礼仪的各个细节以及具体的行为规范和注意事项,将礼仪融入到了商务生活的各个方面,更加贴近读者需求,是商务人士成功塑造个人形象的必读书籍,也是职场人士提高个人素养、推动事业成功的有效指南。本书适合企业管理者、人力资源管理者、培训经理以及想在职场有所作为的人士阅读,还可以用作商务礼仪培训教材。
  • 乱世美人赋

    乱世美人赋

    白玉奉师命下山游历,路上被一纨绔子弟所救,二人一路结伴同行...所历的故事中满是列国尘封的旧史,以及久久不愿散去的幽魂。...当历尽红尘种种后,白玉遗失的记忆再度被开启命运又会引起怎样的的波澜
  • 重生废柴要逆天之暗帝来护驾

    重生废柴要逆天之暗帝来护驾

    她来自未来,银发蓝眸,额间一颗蓝眼泪,这是她的标志。她身兼数职,横扫世界。身为最强特工却因一场意外穿成了废柴,偏偏还有一个渣爹将她卖了。这还不算,偏偏还要卖她第二次。她笑了笑,不在乎,既然渣爹这么渣,那就让他变成渣!家里有两姐姐使绊子,怕什么?让她们跪地道歉!说她废柴,那么就来比一比。手持一把玉笛,空间手镯,极品丹药,你想要?有本事就自己来抢。别人仰慕神兽?不好意思,那是她的小跟班。说她猖狂逆天有人看不下去,那真没关系,她有暗帝护航,担心个毛?且看她如何玩转整个大陆。
  • 我的银红时代

    我的银红时代

    主要收录了季羡林在德国留学十年生活的文章,包括当时留学热的时代背景、德国哥廷根大学学习生活、选择梵文专业的前情后果,并对其倾注近十年的热情和辛劳,最终以优异的成绩获得博士学位,还回顾记录了第二次世界大战时德国人的生活状态,着力描写自己在轰炸和饥饿的交相压迫下坚持完成学业,以及遭遇美好的情愫并怀念德国师友等内容。作者认为,这一时期“倘若用了象征派诗人的话,这也算是粉红色的一段了”,他的留德生涯也渗入了这种粉红色的甜蜜。
  • 做个女配真难

    做个女配真难

    终于等到投胎了,却没有喝到孟婆汤,只因为排到的时候摔了一跤就跳号了,想喝!可以,重新排号去,看着这犹如春运般的浪潮,颤抖了我的小心肝,心想着检票没有上车重要,错过了这趟,下趟不知是何年月呢。上吧!妹子,向着新生命出发……然而车做反了,乘警帅哥哥可以告诉我那个站台可以换乘吗?什么!这是单程车,还是有去无回的那种,不要啊……我可是投胎到未来的啊!!!我要投诉你们!差评,必须差评!!!我要找你们领导,我要曝光你们,我要……!!啊~!哐当…………我出生了!