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Count of Monte Cristo, The
Chapter 65 - A Conjugal Scene
Alexandre Dumas
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       _ At the Place Louis XV. the three young people separated --
       that is to say, Morrel went to the Boulevards,
       Chateau-Renaud to the Pont de la Revolution, and Debray to
       the Quai. Most probably Morrel and Chateau-Renaud returned
       to their "domestic hearths," as they say in the gallery of
       the Chamber in well-turned speeches, and in the theatre of
       the Rue Richelieu in well-written pieces; but it was not the
       case with Debray. When he reached the wicket of the Louvre,
       he turned to the left, galloped across the Carrousel, passed
       through the Rue Saint-Roch, and, issuing from the Rue de la
       Michodiere, he arrived at M. Danglars' door just at the same
       time that Villefort's landau, after having deposited him and
       his wife at the Faubourg St. Honore, stopped to leave the
       baroness at her own house. Debray, with the air of a man
       familiar with the house, entered first into the court, threw
       his bridle into the hands of a footman, and returned to the
       door to receive Madame Danglars, to whom he offered his arm,
       to conduct her to her apartments. The gate once closed, and
       Debray and the baroness alone in the court, he asked, --
       "What was the matter with you, Hermine? and why were you so
       affected at that story, or rather fable, which the count
       related?"
       "Because I have been in such shocking spirits all the
       evening, my friend," said the baroness.
       "No, Hermine," replied Debray; "you cannot make me believe
       that; on the contrary, you were in excellent spirits when
       you arrived at the count's. M. Danglars was disagreeable,
       certainly, but I know how much you care for his ill-humor.
       Some one has vexed you; I will allow no one to annoy you."
       "You are deceived, Lucien, I assure you," replied Madame
       Danglars; "and what I have told you is really the case,
       added to the ill-humor you remarked, but which I did not
       think it worth while to allude to." It was evident that
       Madame Danglars was suffering from that nervous irritability
       which women frequently cannot account for even to
       themselves; or that, as Debray had guessed, she had
       experienced some secret agitation that she would not
       acknowledge to any one. Being a man who knew that the former
       of these symptoms was one of the inherent penalties of
       womanhood, he did not then press his inquiries, but waited
       for a more appropriate opportunity when he should again
       interrogate her, or receive an avowal proprio motu. At the
       door of her apartment the baroness met Mademoiselle
       Cornelie, her confidential maid. "What is my daughter
       doing?" asked Madame Danglars.
       "She practiced all the evening, and then went to bed,"
       replied Mademoiselle Cornelie.
       "Yet I think I hear her piano."
       "It is Mademoiselle Louise d'Armilly, who is playing while
       Mademoiselle Danglars is in bed."
       "Well," said Madame Danglars, "come and undress me." They
       entered the bedroom. Debray stretched himself upon a large
       couch, and Madame Danglars passed into her dressing-room
       with Mademoiselle Cornelie. "My dear M. Lucien," said Madame
       Danglars through the door, "you are always complaining that
       Eugenie will not address a word to you."
       "Madame," said Lucien, playing with a little dog, who,
       recognizing him as a friend of the house, expected to be
       caressed, "I am not the only one who makes similar
       complaints, I think I heard Morcerf say that he could not
       extract a word from his betrothed."
       "True," said Madame Danglars; "yet I think this will all
       pass off, and that you will one day see her enter your
       study."
       "My study?"
       "At least that of the minister."
       "Why so!"
       "To ask for an engagement at the Opera. Really, I never saw
       such an infatuation for music; it is quite ridiculous for a
       young lady of fashion." Debray smiled. "Well," said he, "let
       her come, with your consent and that of the baron, and we
       will try and give her an engagement, though we are very poor
       to pay such talent as hers."
       "Go, Cornelie," said Madame Danglars, "I do not require you
       any longer."
       Cornelie obeyed, and the next minute Madame Danglars left
       her room in a charming loose dress, and came and sat down
       close to Debray. Then she began thoughtfully to caress the
       little spaniel. Lucien looked at her for a moment in
       silence. "Come, Hermine," he said, after a short time,
       "answer candidly, -- something vexes you -- is it not so?"
       "Nothing," answered the baroness.
       And yet, as she could scarcely breathe, she rose and went
       towards a looking-glass. "I am frightful to-night," she
       said. Debray rose, smiling, and was about to contradict the
       baroness upon this latter point, when the door opened
       suddenly. M. Danglars appeared; Debray reseated himself. At
       the noise of the door Madame Danglars turned round, and
       looked upon her husband with an astonishment she took no
       trouble to conceal. "Good-evening, madame," said the banker;
       "good-evening, M. Debray."
       Probably the baroness thought this unexpected visit
       signified a desire to make up for the sharp words he had
       uttered during the day. Assuming a dignified air, she turned
       round to Debray, without answering her husband. "Read me
       something, M. Debray," she said. Debray, who was slightly
       disturbed at this visit, recovered himself when he saw the
       calmness of the baroness, and took up a book marked by a
       mother-of-pearl knife inlaid with gold. "Excuse me," said
       the banker, "but you will tire yourself, baroness, by such
       late hours, and M. Debray lives some distance from here."
       Debray was petrified, not only to hear Danglars speak so
       calmly and politely, but because it was apparent that
       beneath outward politeness there really lurked a determined
       spirit of opposition to anything his wife might wish to do.
       The baroness was also surprised, and showed her astonishment
       by a look which would doubtless have had some effect upon
       her husband if he had not been intently occupied with the
       paper, where he was looking to see the closing stock
       quotations. The result was, that the proud look entirely
       failed of its purpose.
       "M. Lucien," said the baroness, "I assure you I have no
       desire to sleep, and that I have a thousand things to tell
       you this evening, which you must listen to, even though you
       slept while hearing me."
       "I am at your service, madame," replied Lucien coldly.
       "My dear M. Debray," said the banker, "do not kill yourself
       to-night listening to the follies of Madame Danglars, for
       you can hear them as well to-morrow; but I claim to-night
       and will devote it, if you will allow me, to talk over some
       serious matters with my wife." This time the blow was so
       well aimed, and hit so directly, that Lucien and the
       baroness were staggered, and they interrogated each other
       with their eyes, as if to seek help against this aggression,
       but the irresistible will of the master of the house
       prevailed, and the husband was victorious.
       "Do not think I wish to turn you out, my dear Debray,"
       continued Danglars; "oh, no, not at all. An unexpected
       occurrence forces me to ask my wife to have a little
       conversation with me; it is so rarely I make such a request,
       I am sure you cannot grudge it to me." Debray muttered
       something, bowed and went out, knocking himself against the
       edge of the door, like Nathan in "Athalie."
       "It is extraordinary," he said, when the door was closed
       behind him, "how easily these husbands, whom we ridicule,
       gain an advantage over us."
       Lucien having left, Danglars took his place on the sofa,
       closed the open book, and placing himself in a dreadfully
       dictatorial attitude, he began playing with the dog; but the
       animal, not liking him as well as Debray, and attempting to
       bite him, Danglars seized him by the skin of his neck and
       threw him upon a couch on the other side of the room. The
       animal uttered a cry during the transit, but, arrived at its
       destination, it crouched behind the cushions, and stupefied
       at such unusual treatment remained silent and motionless.
       "Do you know, sir," asked the baroness, "that you are
       improving? Generally you are only rude, but to-night you are
       brutal."
       "It is because I am in a worse humor than usual," replied
       Danglars. Hermine looked at the banker with supreme disdain.
       These glances frequently exasperated the pride of Danglars,
       but this evening he took no notice of them.
       "And what have I to do with your ill-humor?" said the
       baroness, irritated at the impassibility of her husband; "do
       these things concern me? Keep your ill-humor at home in your
       money boxes, or, since you have clerks whom you pay, vent it
       upon them."
       "Not so," replied Danglars; "your advice is wrong, so I
       shall not follow it. My money boxes are my Pactolus, as, I
       think, M. Demoustier says, and I will not retard its course,
       or disturb its calm. My clerks are honest men, who earn my
       fortune, whom I pay much below their deserts, if I may value
       them according to what they bring in; therefore I shall not
       get into a passion with them; those with whom I will be in a
       passion are those who eat my dinners, mount my horses, and
       exhaust my fortune."
       "And pray who are the persons who exhaust your fortune?
       Explain yourself more clearly, I beg, sir."
       "Oh, make yourself easy! -- I am not speaking riddles, and
       you will soon know what I mean. The people who exhaust my
       fortune are those who draw out 700,000 francs in the course
       of an hour."
       "I do not understand you, sir," said the baroness, trying to
       disguise the agitation of her voice and the flush of her
       face. "You understand me perfectly, on the contrary," said
       Danglars: "but, if you will persist, I will tell you that I
       have just lost 700,000 francs upon the Spanish loan."
       "And pray," asked the baroness, "am I responsible for this
       loss?"
       "Why not?"
       "Is it my fault you have lost 700,000 francs?"
       "Certainly it is not mine."
       "Once for all, sir," replied the baroness sharply, "I tell
       you I will not hear cash named; it is a style of language I
       never heard in the house of my parents or in that of my
       first husband."
       "Oh, I can well believe that, for neither of them was worth
       a penny."
       "The better reason for my not being conversant with the
       slang of the bank, which is here dinning in my ears from
       morning to night; that noise of jingling crowns, which are
       constantly being counted and re-counted, is odious to me. I
       only know one thing I dislike more, which is the sound of
       your voice."
       "Really?" said Danglars. "Well, this surprises me, for I
       thought you took the liveliest interest in all my affairs!"
       "I? What could put such an idea into your head?"
       "Yourself."
       "Ah? -- what next?"
       "Most assuredly."
       "I should like to know upon what occasion?"
       "Oh, mon Dieu, that is very easily done. Last February you
       were the first who told me of the Haitian funds. You had
       dreamed that a ship had entered the harbor at Havre, that
       this ship brought news that a payment we had looked upon as
       lost was going to be made. I know how clear-sighted your
       dreams are; I therefore purchased immediately as many shares
       as I could of the Haitian debt, and I gained 400,000 francs
       by it, of which 100,000 have been honestly paid to you. You
       spent it as you pleased; that was your business. In March
       there was a question about a grant to a railway. Three
       companies presented themselves, each offering equal
       securities. You told me that your instinct, -- and although
       you pretend to know nothing about speculations, I think on
       the contrary, that your comprehension is very clear upon
       certain affairs, -- well, you told me that your instinct led
       you to believe the grant would be given to the company
       called the Southern. I bought two thirds of the shares of
       that company; as you had foreseen, the shares trebled in
       value, and I picked up a million, from which 250,000 francs
       were paid to you for pin-money. How have you spent this
       250,000 francs? -- it is no business of mine."
       "When are you coming to the point?" cried the baroness,
       shivering with anger and impatience.
       "Patience, madame, I am coming to it."
       "That's fortunate."
       "In April you went to dine at the minister's. You heard a
       private conversation respecting Spanish affairs -- on the
       expulsion of Don Carlos. I bought some Spanish shares. The
       expulsion took place and I pocketed 600,000 francs the day
       Charles V. repassed the Bidassoa. Of these 600,000 francs
       you took 50,000 crowns. They were yours, you disposed of
       them according to your fancy, and I asked no questions; but
       it is not the less true that you have this year received
       500,000 livres."
       "Well, sir, and what then?"
       "Ah, yes, it was just after this that you spoiled
       everything."
       "Really, your manner of speaking" --
       "It expresses my meaning, and that is all I want. Well,
       three days after that you talked politics with M. Debray,
       and you fancied from his words that Don Carlos had returned
       to Spain. Well, I sold my shares, the news got out, and I no
       longer sold -- I gave them away, next day I find the news
       was false, and by this false report I have lost 700,000
       francs."
       "Well?"
       "Well, since I gave you a fourth of my gains, I think you
       owe me a fourth of my losses; the fourth of 700,000 francs
       is 175,000 francs."
       "What you say is absurd, and I cannot see why M. Debray's
       name is mixed up in this affair."
       "Because if you do not possess the 175,000 francs I reclaim,
       you must have lent them to your friends, and M. Debray is
       one of your friends."
       "For shame!" exclaimed the baroness.
       "Oh, let us have no gestures, no screams, no modern drama,
       or you will oblige me to tell you that I see Debray leave
       here, pocketing the whole of the 500,000 livres you have
       handed over to him this year, while he smiles to himself,
       saying that he has found what the most skilful players have
       never discovered -- that is, a roulette where he wins
       without playing, and is no loser when he loses." The
       baroness became enraged. "Wretch!" she cried, "will you dare
       to tell me you did not know what you now reproach me with?"
       "I do not say that I did know it, and I do not say that I
       did not know it. I merely tell you to look into my conduct
       during the last four years that we have ceased to be husband
       and wife, and see whether it has not always been consistent.
       Some time after our rupture, you wished to study music,
       under the celebrated baritone who made such a successful
       appearance at the Theatre Italien; at the same time I felt
       inclined to learn dancing of the danseuse who acquired such
       a reputation in London. This cost me, on your account and
       mine, 100,000 francs. I said nothing, for we must have peace
       in the house; and 100,000 francs for a lady and gentleman to
       be properly instructed in music and dancing are not too
       much. Well, you soon become tired of singing, and you take a
       fancy to study diplomacy with the minister's secretary. You
       understand, it signifies nothing to me so long as you pay
       for your lessons out of your own cashbox. But to-day I find
       you are drawing on mine, and that your apprenticeship may
       cost me 700,000 francs per month. Stop there, madame, for
       this cannot last. Either the diplomatist must give his
       lessons gratis, and I will tolerate him, or he must never
       set his foot again in my house; -- do you understand,
       madame?"
       "Oh, this is too much," cried Hermine, choking, "you are
       worse than despicable."
       "But," continued Danglars, "I find you did not even pause
       there" --
       "Insults!"
       "You are right; let us leave these facts alone, and reason
       coolly. I have never interfered in your affairs excepting
       for your good; treat me in the same way. You say you have
       nothing to do with my cash-box. Be it so. Do as you like
       with your own, but do not fill or empty mine. Besides, how
       do I know that this was not a political trick, that the
       minister enraged at seeing me in the opposition, and jealous
       of the popular sympathy I excite, has not concerted with M.
       Debray to ruin me?"
       "A probable thing!"
       "Why not? Who ever heard of such an occurrence as this? -- a
       false telegraphic despatch -- it is almost impossible for
       wrong signals to be made as they were in the last two
       telegrams. It was done on purpose for me -- I am sure of
       it."
       "Sir," said the baroness humbly, "are you not aware that the
       man employed there was dismissed, that they talked of going
       to law with him, that orders were issued to arrest him and
       that this order would have been put into execution if he had
       not escaped by flight, which proves that he was either mad
       or guilty? It was a mistake."
       "Yes, which made fools laugh, which caused the minister to
       have a sleepless night, which has caused the minister's
       secretaries to blacken several sheets of paper, but which
       has cost me 700,000 francs."
       "But, sir," said Hermine suddenly, "if all this is, as you
       say, caused by M. Debray, why, instead of going direct to
       him, do you come and tell me of it? Why, to accuse the man,
       do you address the woman?"
       "Do I know M. Debray? -- do I wish to know him? -- do I wish
       to know that he gives advice? -- do I wish to follow it? --
       do I speculate? No; you do all this, not I."
       "Still it seems to me, that as you profit by it -- "
       Danglars shrugged his shoulders. "Foolish creature," he
       exclaimed. "Women fancy they have talent because they have
       managed two or three intrigues without being the talk of
       Paris! But know that if you had even hidden your
       irregularities from your husband, who has but the
       commencement of the art -- for generally husbands will not
       see -- you would then have been but a faint imitation of
       most of your friends among the women of the world. But it
       has not been so with me, -- I see, and always have seen,
       during the last sixteen years. You may, perhaps, have hidden
       a thought; but not a step, not an action, not a fault, has
       escaped me, while you flattered yourself upon your address,
       and firmly believed you had deceived me. What has been the
       result? -- that, thanks to my pretended ignorance, there is
       none of your friends, from M. de Villefort to M. Debray, who
       has not trembled before me. There is not one who has not
       treated me as the master of the house, -- the only title I
       desire with respect to you; there is not one, in fact, who
       would have dared to speak of me as I have spoken of them
       this day. I will allow you to make me hateful, but I will
       prevent your rendering me ridiculous, and, above all, I
       forbid you to ruin me."
       The baroness had been tolerably composed until the name of
       Villefort had been pronounced; but then she became pale,
       and, rising, as if touched by a spring, she stretched out
       her hands as though conjuring an apparition; she then took
       two or three steps towards her husband, as though to tear
       the secret from him, of which he was ignorant, or which he
       withheld from some odious calculation, -- odious, as all his
       calculations were. "M. de Villefort! -- What do you mean?"
       "I mean that M. de Nargonne, your first husband, being
       neither a philosopher nor a banker, or perhaps being both,
       and seeing there was nothing to be got out of a king's
       attorney, died of grief or anger at finding, after an
       absence of nine months, that you had been enceinte six. I am
       brutal, -- I not only allow it, but boast of it; it is one
       of the reasons of my success in commercial business. Why did
       he kill himself instead of you? Because he had no cash to
       save. My life belongs to my cash. M. Debray has made me lose
       700,000 francs; let him bear his share of the loss, and we
       will go on as before; if not, let him become bankrupt for
       the 250,000 livres, and do as all bankrupts do -- disappear.
       He is a charming fellow, I allow, when his news is correct;
       but when it is not, there are fifty others in the world who
       would do better than he."
       Madame Danglars was rooted to the spot; she made a violent
       effort to reply to this last attack, but she fell upon a
       chair thinking of Villefort, of the dinner scene, of the
       strange series of misfortunes which had taken place in her
       house during the last few days, and changed the usual calm
       of her establishment to a scene of scandalous debate.
       Danglars did not even look at her, though she did her best
       to faint. He shut the bedroom door after him, without adding
       another word, and returned to his apartments; and when
       Madame Danglars recovered from her half-fainting condition,
       she could almost believe that she had had a disagreeable
       dream. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1 Marseilles - The Arrival
Chapter 2 - Father and Son
Chapter 3 - The Catalans
Chapter 4 - Conspiracy
Chapter 5 - The Marriage-Feast
Chapter 6 - The Deputy Procureur du Roi
Chapter 7 - The Examination
Chapter 8 - The Chateau D'If
Chapter 9 - The Evening of the Betrothal
Chapter 10 - The King's Closet at the Tuileries
Chapter 11 - The Corsican Ogre
Chapter 12 - Father and Son
Chapter 13 - The Hundred Days
Chapter 14 - The Two Prisoners
Chapter 15 - Number 34 and Number 27
Chapter 16 - A Learned Italian
Chapter 17 - The Abbe's Chamber
Chapter 18 - The Treasure
Chapter 19 - The Third Attack
Chapter 20 - The Cemetery of the Chateau D'If
Chapter 21 - The Island of Tiboulen
Chapter 22 - The Smugglers
Chapter 23 - The Island of Monte Cristo
Chapter 24 - The Secret Cave
Chapter 25 - The Unknown
Chapter 26 - The Pont du Gard Inn
Chapter 27 - The Story
Chapter 28 - The Prison Register
Chapter 29 - The House of Morrel & Son
Chapter 30 - The Fifth of September
Chapter 31 - Italy: Sinbad the Sailor
Chapter 32 - The Waking
Chapter 33 - Roman Bandits
Chapter 34 - The Colosseum
Chapter 35 - La Mazzolata
Chapter 36 - The Carnival at Rome
Chapter 37 - The Catacombs of Saint Sebastian
Chapter 38 - The Compact
Chapter 39 - The Guests
Chapter 40 - The Breakfast
Chapter 41 - The Presentation
Chapter 42 - Monsieur Bertuccio
Chapter 43 - The House at Auteuil
Chapter 44 - The Vendetta
Chapter 45 - The Rain of Blood
Chapter 46 - Unlimited Credit
Chapter 47 - The Dappled Grays
Chapter 48 - Ideology
Chapter 49 - Haidee
Chapter 50 - The Morrel Family
Chapter 51 - Pyramus and Thisbe
Chapter 52 - Toxicology
Chapter 53 - Robert le Diable
Chapter 54 - A Flurry in Stocks
Chapter 55 - Major Cavalcanti
Chapter 56 - Andrea Cavalcanti
Chapter 57 - In the Lucerne Patch
Chapter 58 - M Noirtier de Villefort
Chapter 59 - The Will
Chapter 60 - The Telegraph
Chapter 61 - How a Gardener may get rid of the Dormice that eat His Peaches
Chapter 62 - Ghosts
Chapter 63 - The Dinner
Chapter 64 - The Beggar
Chapter 65 - A Conjugal Scene
Chapter 66 - Matrimonial Projects
Chapter 67 - At the Office of the King's Attorney
Chapter 68 - A Summer Ball
Chapter 69 - The Inquiry
Chapter 70 - The Ball
Chapter 71 - Bread and Salt
Chapter 72 - Madame de Saint-Meran
Chapter 73 - The Promise
Chapter 74 - The Villefort Family Vault
Chapter 75 - A Signed Statement
Chapter 76 - Progress of Cavalcanti the Younger
Chapter 77 - Haidee
Chapter 78 - We hear From Yanina
Chapter 79 - The Lemonade
Chapter 80 - The Accusation
Chapter 81 - The Room of the Retired Baker
Chapter 82 - The Burglary
Chapter 83 - The Hand of God
Chapter 84 - Beauchamp
Chapter 85 - The Journey
Chapter 86 - The Trial
Chapter 87 - The Challenge
Chapter 88 - The Insult
Chapter 89 - A Nocturnal Interview
Chapter 90 - The Meeting
Chapter 91 - Mother and Son
Chapter 92 - The Suicide
Chapter 93 - Valentine
Chapter 94 - Maximilian's Avowal
Chapter 95 - Father and Daughter
Chapter 96 - The Contract
Chapter 97 - The Departure for Belgium
Chapter 98 - The Bell and Bottle Tavern
Chapter 99 - The Law
Chapter 100 - The Apparition
Chapter 101 - Locusta
Chapter 102 - Valentine
Chapter 103 - Maximilian
Chapter 104 - Danglars Signature
Chapter 105 - The Cemetery of Pere-la-Chaise
Chapter 106 - Dividing the Proceeds
Chapter 107 - The Lions' Den
Chapter 108 - The Judge
Chapter 109 - The Assizes
Chapter 110 - The Indictment
Chapter 111 - Expiation
Chapter 112 - The Departure
Chapter 113 - The Past
Chapter 114 - Peppino
Chapter 115 - Luigi Vampa's Bill of Fare
Chapter 116 - The Pardon
Chapter 117 - The Fifth of October