登陆注册
15697200000002

第2章

Tired of frequenting fairs and roaming the country, the Auvergnat settled at Limoges, where he married, in 1797, the daughter of a coppersmith, a widower, named Champagnac. When his father-in-law died he bought the house in which he had been carrying on his trade of old- iron dealer, after ceasing to roam the country as a peddler. Sauviat was fifty years of age when he married old Champagnac's daughter, who was herself not less than thirty. Neither handsome nor pretty, she was nevertheless born in Auvergne, and the /patois/ seemed to be the mutual attraction; also she had the sturdy frame which enables women to bear hard work. In the first three years of their married life Sauviat continued to do some peddling, and his wife accompanied him, carrying iron or lead on her back, and leading the miserable horse and cart full of crockery with which her husband plied a disguised usury.

Dark-skinned, high-colored, enjoying robust health, and showing when she laughed a brilliant set of teeth, white, long, and broad as almonds, Madame Sauviat had the hips and bosom of a woman made by Nature expressly for maternity.

If this strong girl were not earlier married, the fault must be attributed to the Harpagon "no dowry" her father practised, though he never read Moliere. Sauviat was not deterred by the lack of dowry; besides, a man of fifty can't make difficulties, not to speak of the fact that such a wife would save him the cost of a servant. He added nothing to the furniture of his bedroom where, from the day of his wedding to the day he left the house, twenty years later, there was never anything but a single four-post bed, with valance and curtains of green serge, a chest, a bureau, four chairs, a table, and a looking-glass, all collected from different localities. The chest contained in its upper section pewter plates, dishes, etc., each article dissimilar from the rest. The kitchen can be imagined from the bedroom.

Neither husband nor wife knew how to read,--a slight defect of education which did not prevent them from ciphering admirably and doing a most flourishing business. Sauviat never bought any article without the certainty of being able to sell it for one hundred per cent profit. To relieve himself of the necessity of keeping books and accounts, he bought and sold for cash only. He had, moreover, such a perfect memory that the cost of any article, were it only a farthing, remained in his mind year after year, together with its accrued interest.

Except during the time required for her household duties, Madame Sauviat was always seated in a rickety wooden chair placed against the corner pillar of the building. There she knitted and looked at the passers, watched over the old iron, sold and weighed it, and received payment if Sauviat was away making purchases. When at home the husband could be heard at daybreak pushing open his shutters; the household dog rushed out into the street; and Madame Sauviat presently came out to help her man in spreading upon the natural counter made by the low walls on either side of the corner of the house on the two streets, the multifarious collection of bells, springs, broken gunlocks, and the other rubbish of their business, which gave a poverty-stricken look to the establishment, though it usually contained as much as twenty thousand francs' worth of lead, steel, iron, and other metals.

Never were the former peddler and his wife known to speak of their fortune; they concealed its amount as carefully as a criminal hides a crime; and for years they were suspected of shaving both gold and silver coins. When Champagnac died the Sauviats made no inventory of his property; but they rummaged, with the intelligence of rats, into every nook and corner of the old man's house, left it as naked as a corpse, and sold the wares it contained in their own shop.

Once a year, in December, Sauviat went to Paris in one of the public conveyances. The gossips of the neighborhood concluded that in order to conceal from others the amount of his fortune, he invested it himself on these occasions. It was known later that, having been connected in his youth with one of the most celebrated dealers in metal, an Auvergnat like himself, who was living in Paris, Sauviat placed his funds with the firm of Bresac, the mainspring and spine of that famous association known by the name of the "Bande Noire," which, as we have already said, took its rise from a suggestion made by Sauviat himself.

Sauviat was a fat little man with a weary face, endowed by Nature with a look of honesty which attracted customers and facilitated the sale of goods. His straightforward assertions, and the perfect indifference of his tone and manner, increased this impression. In person, his naturally ruddy complexion was hardly perceptible under the black metallic dust which powdered his curly black hair and the seams of a face pitted with the small-pox. His forehead was not without dignity; in fact, it resembled the well-known brow given by all painters to Saint Peter, the man of the people, the roughest, but withal the shrewdest, of the apostles. His hands were those of an indefatigable worker,--large, thick, square, and wrinkled with deep furrows. His chest was of seemingly indestructible muscularity. He never relinquished his peddler's costume,--thick, hobnailed shoes; blue stockings knit by his wife and hidden by leather gaiters; bottle-green velveteen trousers; a checked waistcoat, from which depended the brass key of his silver watch by an iron chain which long usage had polished till it shone like steel; a jacket with short tails, also of velveteen, like that of the trousers; and around his neck a printed cotton cravat much frayed by the rubbing of his beard.

同类推荐
  • 岭表录异

    岭表录异

    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。
  • The Choir Invisible

    The Choir Invisible

    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。
  • 九章算术

    九章算术

    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。
  • 往生礼赞偈

    往生礼赞偈

    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。
  • 绛云楼题跋

    绛云楼题跋

    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
  • 重生之电商帝国

    重生之电商帝国

    2005年,国内的电子商务刚刚掀开波澜壮阔的画卷。——05年,eBay收购易趣,誓言要终结国内电子商务市场的战争;——05年,国内第一大3C商城创始人还在半夜刷论坛,回答消费者的评论;——05年,国内第一大C2C购物网站才正从休养生息中悄然清醒;——05年,国内第一大私营快递公司抵押物业,正力图使企业从发展的困境中挣脱出来;张旗梦中惊醒,才发现自己重生到了十二年前,高中生涯的终点,同时也是他生活的拐点。
  • 小草人

    小草人

    成人也可以有一颗童心,适合成人看的儿童读物
  • 红尘劫之心殇

    红尘劫之心殇

    这是一个仙已消失的年代,少年自森莽大山而出,身上却背负着血海深仇,他如何在这险恶红尘爱恨情仇,如何登临绝巅…………待回头来看,绝巅又如何?没有了她的人生不叫人生,不过一场空而已……
  • 上清骨髓灵文鬼律

    上清骨髓灵文鬼律

    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。
  • 那年,我们最初

    那年,我们最初

    夜晚昏暗的街道,兮木安静的牵着我的手慢步走在这条我们曾多次走过的旧路口,路口仍如最初那般一年如一日的漆黑,不同的是我们都已不是那年最初的我们。
  • 圣堂行者

    圣堂行者

    莫名其妙的成为了圣堂的一员,看董海川如何成为穿越一个个世界成为最顶尖的圣堂行者。跟随董海川的脚步去领略大千世界的无尽风光
  • 无上战皇

    无上战皇

    麒麟附体,无上神功!少年自平凡崛起,脚踩万古星空路,成就无上战皇!
  • 棋决天下

    棋决天下

    机甲没落的年代,博弈时代来临,棋斗士横空出世。当天下大势化为一场场棋局,人生如棋,人入棋局,征战沙场。“人生如棋,我愿为卒,行动虽缓,但可曾见我后退一步!”“人生如棋,我愿为車,天下纵横踏于足!”“人生如棋,我愿为帅,坐卧中军帐,指点天下兵马。”“……”“天下若为棋,我愿化为兵卒,以一兵之力,兵行天下!”无悔坐看天下大势道,“我要下不后悔的棋!”
  • 天界传说之灵猫

    天界传说之灵猫

    我不是猫!我是天神!天神啊!愚蠢的人类!
  • 末秋

    末秋

    我从来都不是一个平凡的人,从一开始就注定了,当我的混蛋父亲进入监狱的一刹那,我知道我是母亲的全部,一次机会我回到了国内,开始了我以为平凡,而又快乐的青春,可他出现了。