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Alkahest, The
CHAPTER 16
Honore de Balzac
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       _ Marguerite continued to keep watch over her father's material comfort,
       aided in the sweet task by Emmanuel. The noble girl received from the
       hands of love that most envied of all garlands, the wreath that
       happiness entwines and constancy keeps ever fresh. No couple ever
       afforded a better illustration of the complete, acknowledged, spotless
       felicity which all women cherish in their dreams. The union of two
       beings so courageous in the trials of life, who had loved each other
       through years with so sacred an affection, drew forth the respectful
       admiration of the whole community. Monsieur de Solis, who had long
       held an appointment as inspector-general of the University, resigned
       those functions to enjoy his happiness more freely, and remained at
       Douai where every one did such homage to his character and attainments
       that his name was proposed as candidate for the Electoral college
       whenever he should reach the required age. Marguerite, who had shown
       herself so strong in adversity, became in prosperity a sweet and
       tender woman.
       Throughout the following year Claes was grave and preoccupied; and
       yet, though he made a few inexpensive experiments for which his
       ordinary income sufficed, he seemed to neglect his laboratory.
       Marguerite restored all the old customs of the House of Claes, and
       gave a family fete every month in honor of her father, at which the
       Pierquins and the Conyncks were present; and she also received the
       upper ranks of society one day in the week at a "cafe" which became
       celebrated. Though frequently absent-minded, Claes took part in all
       these assemblages and became, to please his daughter, so willingly a
       man of the world that the family were able to believe he had renounced
       his search for the solution of the great problem.
       Three years went by. In 1828 family affairs called Emmanuel de Solis
       to Spain. Although there were three numerous branches between himself
       and the inheritance of the house of Solis, yellow fever, old age,
       barrenness, and other caprices of fortune, combined to make him the
       last lineal descendant of the family and heir to the titles and
       estates of his ancient house. Moreover, by one of those curious
       chances which seem impossible except in a book, the house of Solis had
       acquired the territory and titles of the Comtes de Nourho. Marguerite
       did not wish to separate from her husband, who was to stay in Spain
       long enough to settle his affairs, and she was, moreover, curious to
       see the castle of Casa-Real where her mother had passed her childhood,
       and the city of Granada, the cradle of the de Solis family. She left
       Douai, consigning the care of the house to Martha, Josette, and
       Lemulquinier. Balthazar, to whom Marguerite had proposed a journey
       into Spain, declined to accompany her on the ground of his advanced
       age; but certain experiments which he had long meditated, and to which
       he now trusted for the realization of his hopes were the real reason
       of his refusal.
       The Comte and Comtesse de Solis y Nourho were detained in Spain longer
       than they intended. Marguerite gave birth to a son. It was not until
       the middle of 1830 that they reached Cadiz, intending to embark for
       Italy on their way back to France. There, however, they received a
       letter from Felicie conveying disastrous news. Within a few months,
       their father had completely ruined himself. Gabriel and Pierquin were
       obliged to pay Lemulquinier a monthly stipend for the bare necessaries
       of the household. The old valet had again sacrificed his little
       property to his master. Balthazar was no longer willing to see any
       one, and would not even admit his children to the house. Martha and
       Josette were dead. The coachman, the cook, and the other servants had
       long been dismissed; the horses and carriages were sold. Though
       Lemulquinier maintained the utmost secrecy as to his master's
       proceedings, it was believed that the thousand francs supplied by
       Gabriel and Pierquin were spent chiefly on experiments. The small
       amount of provisions which the old valet purchased in the town seemed
       to show that the two old men contented themselves with the barest
       necessaries. To prevent the sale of the House of Claes, Gabriel and
       Pierquin were paying the interest of the sums which their father had
       again borrowed on it. None of his children had the slightest influence
       upon the old man, who at seventy years of age displayed extraordinary
       energy in bending everything to his will, even in matters that were
       trivial. Gabriel, Conyncks, and Pierquin had decided not to pay off
       his debts.
       This letter changed all Marguerite's travelling plans, and she
       immediately took the shortest road to Douai. Her new fortune and her
       past savings enabled her to pay off Balthazar's debts; but she wished
       to do more, she wished to obey her mother's last injunction and save
       him from sinking dishonored to the grave. She alone could exercise
       enough ascendancy over the old man to keep him from completing the
       work of ruin, at an age when no fruitful toil could be expected from
       his enfeebled faculties. But she was also anxious to control him
       without wounding his susceptibilities,--not wishing to imitate the
       children of Sophocles, in case her father neared the scientific result
       for which he had sacrificed so much.
       Monsieur and Madame de Solis reached Flanders in the last days of
       September, 1831, and arrived at Douai during the morning. Marguerite
       ordered the coachman to drive to the house in the rue de Paris, which
       they found closed. The bell was loudly rung, but no one answered. A
       shopkeeper left his door-step, to which he had been attracted by the
       noise of the carriages; others were at their windows to enjoy a sight
       of the return of the de Solis family to whom all were attached,
       enticed also by a vague curiosity as to what would happen in that
       house on Marguerite's return to it. The shopkeeper told Monsieur de
       Solis's valet that old Claes had gone out an hour before, and that
       Monsieur Lemulquinier was no doubt taking him to walk on the ramparts.
       Marguerite sent for a locksmith to force the door,--glad to escape a
       scene in case her father, as Felicie had written, should refuse to
       admit her into the house. Meantime Emmanuel went to meet the old man
       and prepare him for the arrival of his daughter, despatching a servant
       to notify Monsieur and Madame Pierquin.
       When the door was opened, Marguerite went directly to the parlor.
       Horror overcame her and she trembled when she saw the walls as bare as
       if a fire had swept over them. The glorious carved panellings of Van
       Huysum and the portrait of the great Claes had been sold. The dining-
       room was empty: there was nothing in it but two straw chairs and a
       common deal table, on which Marguerite, terrified, saw two plates, two
       bowls, two forks and spoons, and the remains of a salt herring which
       Claes and his servant had evidently just eaten. In a moment she had
       flown through her father's portion of the house, every room of which
       exhibited the same desolation as the parlor and dining-room. The idea
       of the Alkahest had swept like a conflagration through the building.
       Her father's bedroom had a bed, one chair, and one table, on which
       stood a miserable pewter candlestick with a tallow candle burned
       almost to the socket. The house was so completely stripped that not so
       much as a curtain remained at the windows. Every object of the
       smallest value,--everything, even the kitchen utensils, had been sold.
       Moved by that feeling of curiosity which never entirely leaves us even
       in moments of misfortune, Marguerite entered Lemulquinier's chamber
       and found it as bare as that of his master. In a half-opened table-
       drawer she found a pawnbroker's ticket for the old servant's watch
       which he had pledged some days before. She ran to the laboratory and
       found it filled with scientific instruments, the same as ever. Then
       she returned to her own appartement and ordered the door to be broken
       open--her father had respected it!
       Marguerite burst into tears and forgave her father all. In the midst
       of his devastating fury he had stopped short, restrained by paternal
       feeling and the gratitude he owed to his daughter! This proof of
       tenderness, coming to her at a moment when despair had reached its
       climax, brought about in Marguerite's soul one of those moral
       reactions against which the coldest hearts are powerless. She returned
       to the parlor to wait her father's arrival, in a state of anxiety that
       was cruelly aggravated by doubt and uncertainty. In what condition was
       she about to see him? Ruined, decrepit, suffering, enfeebled by the
       fasts his pride compelled him to undergo? Would he have his reason?
       Tears flowed unconsciously from her eyes as she looked about the
       desecrated sanctuary. The images of her whole life, her past efforts,
       her useless precautions, her childhood, her mother happy and unhappy,
       --all, even her little Joseph smiling on that scene of desolation, all
       were parts of a poem of unutterable melancholy.
       Marguerite foresaw an approaching misfortune, yet she little expected
       the catastrophe that was to close her father's life,--that life at
       once so grand and yet so miserable.
       The condition of Monsieur Claes was no secret in the community. To the
       lasting shame of men, there were not in all Douai two hearts generous
       enough to do honor to the perseverance of this man of genius. In the
       eyes of the world Balthazar was a man to be condemned, a bad father
       who had squandered six fortunes, millions, who was actually seeking
       the philosopher's stone in the nineteenth century, this enlightened
       century, this sceptical century, this century!--etc. They calumniated
       his purposes and branded him with the name of "alchemist," casting up
       to him in mockery that he was trying to make gold. Ah! what eulogies
       are uttered on this great century of ours, in which, as in all others,
       genius is smothered under an indifference as brutal a that of the gate
       in which Dante died, and Tasso and Cervantes and "tutti quanti." The
       people are as backward as kings in understanding the creations of
       genius.
       These opinions on the subject of Balthazar Claes filtered, little by
       little, from the upper society of Douai to the bourgeoisie, and from
       the bourgeoisie to the lower classes. The old chemist excited pity
       among persons of his own rank, satirical curiosity among the others,--
       two sentiments big with contempt and with the "vae victis" with which
       the masses assail a man of genius when they see him in misfortune.
       Persons often stopped before the House of Claes to show each other the
       rose window of the garret where so much gold and so much coal had been
       consumed in smoke. When Balthazar passed along the streets they
       pointed to him with their fingers; often, on catching sight of him, a
       mocking jest or a word of pity would escape the lips of a working-man
       or some mere child. But Lemulquinier was careful to tell his master it
       was homage; he could deceive him with impunity, for though the old
       man's eyes retained the sublime clearness which results from the habit
       of living among great thoughts, his sense of hearing was enfeebled.
       To most of the peasantry, and to all vulgar and superstitious minds,
       Balthazar Claes was a sorcerer. The noble old mansion, once named by
       common consent "the House of Claes," was now called in the suburbs and
       the country districts "the Devil's House." Every outward sign, even
       the face of Lemulquinier, confirmed the ridiculous beliefs that were
       current about Balthazar. When the old servant went to market to
       purchase the few provisions necessary for their subsistence, picking
       out the cheapest he could find, insults were flung in as make-weights,
       --just as butchers slip bones into their customers' meat,--and he was
       fortunate, poor creature, if some superstitious market-woman did not
       refuse to sell him his meagre pittance lest she be damned by contact
       with an imp of hell.
       Thus the feelings of the whole town of Douai were hostile to the grand
       old man and to his attendant. The neglected state of their clothes
       added to this repulsion; they went about clothed like paupers who have
       seen better days, and who strive to keep a decent appearance and are
       ashamed to beg. It was probable that sooner or later Balthazar would
       be insulted in the streets. Pierquin, feeling how degrading to the
       family any public insult would be, had for some time past sent two or
       three of his own servants to follow the old man whenever he went out,
       and keep him in sight at a little distance, for the purpose of
       protecting him if necessary,--the revolution of July not having
       contributed to make the citizens respectful.
       By one of those fatalities which can never be explained, Claes and
       Lemulquinier had gone out early in the morning, thus evading the
       secret guardianship of Monsieur and Madame Pierquin. On their way back
       from the ramparts they sat down to sun themselves on a bench in the
       place Saint-Jacques, an open space crossed by children on their way to
       school. Catching sight from a distance of the defenceless old men,
       whose faces brightened as they sat basking in the sun, a crowd of boys
       began to talk of them. Generally, children's chatter ends in laughter;
       on this occasion the laughter led to jokes of which they did not know
       the cruelty. Seven or eight of the first-comers stood at a little
       distance, and examined the strange old faces with smothered laughter
       and remarks which attracted Lemulquinier's attention.
       "Hi! do you see that one with a head as smooth as my knee?"
       "Yes."
       "Well, he was born a Wise Man."
       "My papa says he makes gold," said another.
       The youngest of the troop, who had his basket full of provisions and
       was devouring a slice of bread and butter, advanced to the bench and
       said boldly to Lemulquinier,--
       "Monsieur, is it true you make pearls and diamonds?"
       "Yes, my little man," replied the valet, smiling and tapping him on
       the cheek; "we will give you some of you study well."
       "Ah! monsieur, give me some, too," was the general exclamation.
       The boys all rushed together like a flock of birds, and surrounded the
       old men. Balthazar, absorbed in meditation from which he was drawn by
       these sudden cries, made a gesture of amazement which caused a general
       shout of laughter.
       "Come, come, boys; be respectful to a great man," said Lemulquinier.
       "Hi, the old harlequin!" cried the lads; "the old sorcerer! you are
       sorcerers! sorcerers! sorcerers!"
       Lemulquinier sprang to his feet and threatened the crowd with his
       cane; they all ran to a little distance, picking up stones and mud. A
       workman who was eating his breakfast near by, seeing Lemulquinier
       brandish his cane to drive the boys away, thought he had struck them,
       and took their part, crying out,--
       "Down with the sorcerers!"
       The boys, feeling themselves encouraged, flung their missiles at the
       old men, just as the Comte de Solis, accompanied by Pierquin's
       servants, appeared at the farther end of the square. The latter were
       too late, however, to save the old man and his valet from being pelted
       with mud. The shock was given. Balthazar, whose faculties had been
       preserved by a chastity of spirit natural to students absorbed in a
       quest of discovery that annihilates all passions, now suddenly
       divined, by the phenomenon of introsusception, the true meaning of the
       scene: his decrepit body could not sustain the frightful reaction he
       underwent in his feelings, and he fell, struck with paralysis, into
       the arms of Lemulquinier, who brought him to his home on a shutter,
       attended by his sons-in-law and their servants. No power could prevent
       the population of Douai from following the body of the old man to the
       door of his house, where Felicie and her children, Jean, Marguerite,
       and Gabriel, whom his sister had sent for, were waiting to receive
       him.
       The arrival of the old man gave rise to a frightful scene; he
       struggled less against the assaults of death than against the horror
       of seeing that his children had entered the house and penetrated the
       secret of his impoverished life. A bed was at once made up in the
       parlor and every care bestowed upon the stricken man, whose condition,
       towards evening, allowed hopes that his life might be preserved. The
       paralysis, though skilfully treated, kept him for some time in a state
       of semi-childhood; and when by degrees it relaxed, the tongue was
       found to be especially affected, perhaps because the old man's anger
       had concentrated all his forces upon it at the moment when he was
       about to apostrophize the children.
       This incident roused a general indignation throughout the town. By a
       law, up to that time unknown, which guides the affects of the masses,
       this event brought back all hearts to Monsieur Claes. He became once
       more a great man; he excited the admiration and received the good-will
       that a few hours earlier were denied to him. Men praised his patience,
       his strength of will, his courage, his genius. The authorities wished
       to arrest all those who had a share in dealing him this blow. Too
       late,--the evil was done! The Claes family were the first to beg that
       the matter might be allowed to drop.
       Marguerite ordered furniture to be brought into the parlor, and the
       denuded walls to be hung with silk; and when, a few days after his
       seizure, the old father recovered his faculties and found himself once
       more in a luxurious room surrounded by all that makes life easy, he
       tried to express his belief that his daughter Marguerite had returned.
       At that moment she entered the room. When Balthazar caught sight of
       her he colored, and his eyes grew moist, though the tears did not
       fall. He was able to press his daughter's hand with his cold fingers,
       putting into that pressure all the thoughts, all the feelings he no
       longer had the power to utter. There was something holy and solemn in
       that farewell of the brain which still lived, of the heart which
       gratitude revived. Worn out by fruitless efforts, exhausted in the
       long struggle with the gigantic problem, desperate perhaps at the
       oblivion which awaited his memory, this giant among men was about to
       die. His children surrounded him with respectful affection; his dying
       eyes were cheered with images of plenty and the touching picture of
       his prosperous and noble family. His every look--by which alone he
       could manifest his feelings--was unchangeably affectionate; his eyes
       acquired such variety of expression that they had, as it were, a
       language of light, easy to comprehend.
       Marguerite paid her father's debts, and restored a modern splendor to
       the House of Claes which removed all outward signs of decay. She never
       left the old man's bedside, endeavoring to divine his every thought
       and accomplish his slightest wish.
       Some months went by with those alternations of better and worse which
       attend the struggle of life and death in old people; every morning his
       children came to him and spent the day in the parlor, dining by his
       bedside and only leaving him when he went to sleep for the night. The
       occupation which gave him most pleasure, among the many with which his
       family sought to enliven him, was the reading of newspapers, to which
       the political events then occurring gave great interest. Monsieur
       Claes listened attentively as Monsieur de Solis read them aloud beside
       his bed.
       Towards the close of the year 1832, Balthazar passed an extremely
       critical night, during which Monsieur Pierquin, the doctor, was
       summoned by the nurse, who was greatly alarmed at the sudden change
       which took place in the patient. For the rest of the night the doctor
       remained to watch him, fearing he might at any moment expire in the
       throes of inward convulsion, whose effects were like those of a last
       agony.
       The old man made incredible efforts to shake off the bonds of his
       paralysis; he tried to speak and moved his tongue, unable to make a
       sound; his flaming eyes emitted thoughts; his drawn features expressed
       an untold agony; his fingers writhed in desperation; the sweat stood
       out in drops upon his brow. In the morning when his children came to
       his bedside and kissed him with an affection which the sense of coming
       death made day by day more ardent and more eager, he showed none of
       his usual satisfaction at these signs of their tenderness. Emmanuel,
       instigated by the doctor, hastened to open the newspaper to try if the
       usual reading might not relieve the inward crisis in which Balthazar
       was evidently struggling. As he unfolded the sheet he saw the words,
       "DISCOVERY OF THE ABSOLUTE,"--which startled him, and he read a
       paragraph to Marguerite concerning a sale made by a celebrated Polish
       mathematician of the secret of the Absolute. Though Emmanuel read in a
       low voice, and Marguerite signed to him to omit the passage, Balthazar
       heard it.
       Suddenly the dying man raised himself by his wrists and cast on his
       frightened children a look which struck like lightning; the hairs that
       fringed the bald head stirred, the wrinkles quivered, the features
       were illumined with spiritual fires, a breath passed across that face
       and rendered it sublime; he raised a hand, clenched in fury, and
       uttered with a piercing cry the famous word of Archimedes, "EUREKA!"--
       I have found.
       He fell back upon his bed with the dull sound of an inert body, and
       died, uttering an awful moan,--his convulsed eyes expressing to the
       last, when the doctor closed them, the regret of not bequeathing to
       Science the secret of an Enigma whose veil was rent away,--too late!--
       by the fleshless fingers of Death.
       -The End-
       "The Alkahest", a fiction by Honore de Balzac
       ADDENDUM
       The following personages appear in other stories of the Human Comedy.
       Note: The Alkahest is also known as The Quest of the Absolute and is
       referred to by that title when mentioned in other addendums.
       Casa-Real, Duc de
       The Quest of the Absolute
       A Marriage Settlement
       Chiffreville, Monsieur and Madame
       Cesar Birotteau
       The Quest of the Absolute
       Claes, Josephine de Temninck, Madame
       The Quest of the Absolute
       A Marriage Settlement
       Protez and Chiffreville
       The Quest of the Absolute
       Cesar Birotteau
       Savaron de Savarus
       The Quest of the Absolute
       Albert Savarus
       Savarus, Albert Savaron de
       The Quest of the Absolute
       Albert Savarus _