登陆注册
19306700000024

第24章 THE TEREDOS NAVALIS, OTHERWISE CALLED SHIP-WORM(8)

If, for some extraordinary reason, you happen to be in the streets of Paris at half-past seven or eight o'clock of a winter's morning, and see through piercing cold or fog or rain a timid, pale young man loom up, cigarless, take notice of his pockets. You will be sure to see the outline of a roll which his mother has given him to stay his stomach between breakfast and dinner. The guilelessness of the supernumerary does not last long. A youth enlightened by gleams by Parisian life soon measures the frightful distance that separates him from the head-clerkship, a distance which no mathematician, neither Archimedes, nor Leibnitz, nor Laplace has ever reckoned, the distance that exists between 0 and the figure 1. He begins to perceive the impossibilities of his career; he hears talk of favoritism; he discovers the intrigues of officials: he sees the questionable means by which his superiors have pushed their way,--one has married a young woman who made a false step; another, the natural daughter of a minister; this one shouldered the responsibility of another's fault; that one, full of talent, risks his health in doing, with the perseverance of a mole, prodigies of work which the man of influence feels incapable of doing for himself, though he takes the credit. Everything is known in a government office. The incapable man has a wife with a clear head, who has pushed him along and got him nominated for deputy; if he has not talent enough for an office, he cabals in the Chamber. The wife of another has a statesman at her feet. A third is the hidden informant of a powerful journalist. Often the disgusted and hopeless supernumerary sends in his resignation. About three fourths of his class leave the government employ without ever obtaining an appointment, and their number is winnowed down to either those young men who are foolish or obstinate enough to say to themselves, "I have been here three years, and I must end sooner or later by getting a place," or to those who are conscious of a vocation for the work. Undoubtedly the position of supernumerary in a government office is precisely what the novitiate is in a religious order,--a trial. It is a rough trial. The State discovers how many of them can bear hunger, thirst, and penury without breaking down, how many can toil without revolting against it; it learns which temperaments can bear up under the horrible experience--or if you like, the disease--of government official life. From this point of view the apprenticeship of the supernumerary, instead of being an infamous device of the government to obtain labor gratis, becomes a useful institution.

The young man with whom Rabourdin was talking was a poor supernumerary named Sebastien de la Roche, who had picked his way on the points of his toes, without incurring the least splash upon his boots, from the rue du Roi-Dore in the Marais. He talked of his mamma, and dared not raise his eyes to Madame Rabourdin, whose house appeared to him as gorgeous as the Louvre. He was careful to show his gloves, well cleaned with india-rubber, as little as he could. His poor mother had put five francs in his pocket in case it became absolutely necessary that he should play cards; but she enjoined him to take nothing, to remain standing, and to be very careful not to knock over a lamp or the bric-a-brac from an etagere. His dress was all of the strictest black. His fair face, his eyes, of a fine shade of green with golden reflections, were in keeping with a handsome head of auburn hair. The poor lad looked furtively at Madame Rabourdin, whispering to himself, "How beautiful!" and was likely to dream of that fairy when he went to bed.

Rabourdin had noted a vocation for his work in the lad, and as he himself took the whole service seriously, he felt a lively interest in him. He guessed the poverty of his mother's home, kept together on a widow's pension of seven hundred francs a year--for the education of the son, who was just out of college, had absorbed all her savings. He therefore treated the youth almost paternally; often endeavoured to get him some fee from the Council, or paid it from his own pocket. He overwhelmed Sebastien with work, trained him, and allowed him to do the work of du Bruel's place, for which that vaudevillist, otherwise known as Cursy, paid him three hundred francs out of his salary. In the minds of Madame de la Roche and her son, Rabourdin was at once a great man, a tyrant, and an angel. On him all the poor fellow's hopes of getting an appointment depended, and the lad's devotion to his chief was boundless. He dined once a fortnight in the rue Duphot; but always at a family dinner, invited by Rabourdin himself; Madame asked him to evening parties only when she wanted partners.

At that moment Rabourdin was scolding poor Sebastien, the only human being who was in the secret of his immense labors. The youth copied and recopied the famous "statement," written on a hundred and fifty folio sheets, besides the corroborative documents, and the summing up (contained in one page), with the estimates bracketed, the captions in a running hand, and the sub-titles in a round one. Full of enthusiasm, in spite of his merely mechanical participation in the great idea, the lad of twenty would rewrite whole pages for a single blot, and made it his glory to touch up the writing, regarding it as the element of a noble undertaking. Sebastien had that afternoon committed the great imprudence of carrying into the general office, for the purpose of copying, a paper which contained the most dangerous facts to make known prematurely, namely, a memorandum relating to the officials in the central offices of all ministries, with facts concerning their fortunes, actual and prospective, together with the individual enterprises of each outside of his government employment.

同类推荐
  • 嵩山太无先生气经

    嵩山太无先生气经

    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。
  • Cabin Fever

    Cabin Fever

    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。
  • 得遇龙华修证忏仪

    得遇龙华修证忏仪

    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。
  • A Blot In The Scutcheon

    A Blot In The Scutcheon

    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。
  • 大集譬喻王经

    大集譬喻王经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 都市文武全才

    都市文武全才

    我有进化系统,我要文武全才。文能提笔写广告,武能街边斗野狗。
  • 明珠几斛为君倾

    明珠几斛为君倾

    那是一个战火纷飞,诸侯争霸的年代。那是一场空前绝后,盛大浩然的动乱。父母早亡,孤女在世,独自飘零。再次醒来,她将不再是怯弱不堪的她!”卿卿这样,可真是伤透了寡人的心。”明珠一扬眉,明媚动人,英气朗然。“君既已弃,又何必再重来!”这一世,她必定要亲手掌握属于自己的幸福!
  • 穿越从聊斋开始

    穿越从聊斋开始

    现代学生周青,穿越到聊斋世界中成为了一个普通书生。在这个王朝末世、鬼狐横行的黑暗世界中,他读书、科举、修仙,一步步走向巅峰!
  • 美人风云

    美人风云

    “你能给我什么?”“你想要什么只要本王给得起,都会满足你。”他微微一笑,语气也柔和,看得出心情不错。“也包括自由?”她问。“是的。”他是如此的果绝与笃定。可是他忘了,爱情并不是他想给,她就能拥有的。
  • 爱情之所以为爱情

    爱情之所以为爱情

    上班第一天,苡萌华丽丽的迟到了,还把豆浆洒了boss一身,苡萌从此惹上了boss。“徐苡萌,你一句对不起就把我打发了?”“那要怎么办?”“没关系,你可以慢慢还。”他淡淡一笑,用一生来还吧
  • 三只的恋爱季

    三只的恋爱季

    我就不透漏剧情啦哈!想知道这部书写的是什么内容的话自己看咯!不要说我写得很不好,其实我知道,当别说出来伤害我这幼小的心灵哦
  • 末世头狼

    末世头狼

    核武器摧毁了大部分大陆许久之后人们回到地表发现人类在这里并不孤单一群渴望生存的佣兵被卷入这片新大陆的漩涡中
  • 道具赋

    道具赋

    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。
  • 黑道妈咪:惹上腹黑病夫

    黑道妈咪:惹上腹黑病夫

    【每日分时多更】她是狠辣美丽的黑帮女老大,他是病弱腹黑的神秘家族掌门人。当两个不同世界的人相遇,谁降服谁?“我不过就是借了你的种嘛,何必这么吝啬的……”
  • 对对碰:只想宠爱你

    对对碰:只想宠爱你

    在外修行的好姐妹凯旋回归,自己的好友早已心属自己的哥哥,两情相悦,而自己的真命天子终究在何处?殊不知,早已在她身边。