登陆注册
38611000000010

第10章 CHAPTER II(3)

The boy, thus stimulated, naturally and out of bravado, assumed a resolute manner. That turn once given to his character, he became very adroit at all bodily exercises; his fights at the Lyceum taught him the endurance and contempt for pain which lays the foundation of military valor. He also acquired, very naturally, a distaste for study; public education being unable to solve the difficult problem of developing "pari passu" the body and the mind.

Agathe believed that the purely physical resemblance which Philippe bore to her carried with it a moral likeness; and she confidently expected him to show at a future day her own delicacy of feeling, heightened by the vigor of manhood. Philippe was fifteen years old when his mother moved into the melancholy appartement in the rue Mazarin; and the winning ways of a lad of that age went far to confirm the maternal beliefs. Joseph, three years younger, was like his father, but only on the defective side. In the first place, his thick black hair was always in disorder, no matter what pains were taken with it; while Philippe's, notwithstanding his vivacity, was invariably neat. Then, by some mysterious fatality, Joseph could not keep his clothes clean; dress him in new clothes, and he immediately made them look like old ones. The elder, on the other hand, took care of his things out of mere vanity. Unconsciously, the mother acquired a habit of scolding Joseph and holding up his brother as an example to him. Agathe did not treat the two children alike; when she went to fetch them from school, the thought in her mind as to Joseph always was, "What sort of state shall I find him in?" These trifles drove her heart into the gulf of maternal preference.

No one among the very ordinary persons who made the society of the two widows--neither old Du Bruel nor old Claparon, nor Desroches the father, nor even the Abbe Loraux, Agathe's confessor--noticed Joseph's faculty for observation. Absorbed in the line of his own tastes, the future colorist paid no attention to anything that concerned himself.

During his childhood this disposition was so like torpor that his father grew uneasy about him. The remarkable size of the head and the width of the brow roused a fear that the child might be liable to water on the brain. His distressful face, whose originality was thought ugliness by those who had no eye for the moral value of a countenance, wore rather a sullen expression during his childhood. The features, which developed later in life, were pinched, and the close attention the child paid to what went on about him still further contracted them. Philippe flattered his mother's vanity, but Joseph won no compliments. Philippe sparkled with the clever sayings and lively answers that lead parents to believe their boys will turn out remarkable men; Joseph was taciturn, and a dreamer. The mother hoped great things of Philippe, and expected nothing of Joseph.

Joseph's predilection for art was developed by a very commonplace incident. During the Easter holidays of 1812, as he was coming home from a walk in the Tuileries with his brother and Madame Descoings, he saw a pupil drawing a caricature of some professor on the wall of the Institute, and stopped short with admiration at the charcoal sketch, which was full of satire. The next day the child stood at the window watching the pupils as they entered the building by the door on the rue Mazarin; then he ran downstairs and slipped furtively into the long courtyard of the Institute, full of statues, busts, half-finished marbles, plasters, and baked clays; at all of which he gazed feverishly, for his instinct was awakened, and his vocation stirred within him. He entered a room on the ground-floor, the door of which was half open; and there he saw a dozen young men drawing from a statue, who at once began to make fun of him.

"Hi! little one," cried the first to see him, taking the crumbs of his bread and scattering them at the child.

"Whose child is he?"

"Goodness, how ugly!"

For a quarter of an hour Joseph stood still and bore the brunt of much teasing in the atelier of the great sculptor, Chaudet. But after laughing at him for a time, the pupils were struck with his persistency and with the expression of his face. They asked him what he wanted. Joseph answered that he wished to know how to draw; thereupon they all encouraged him. Won by such friendliness, the child told them he was Madame Bridau's son.

"Oh! if you are Madame Bridau's son," they cried, from all parts of the room, "you will certainly be a great man. Long live the son of Madame Bridau! Is your mother pretty? If you are a sample of her, she must be stylish!"

"Ha! you want to be an artist?" said the eldest pupil, coming up to Joseph, "but don't you know that that requires pluck; you'll have to bear all sorts of trials,--yes, trials,--enough to break your legs and arms and soul and body. All the fellows you see here have gone through regular ordeals. That one, for instance, he went seven days without eating! Let me see, now, if you can be an artist."

He took one of the child's arms and stretched it straight up in the air; then he placed the other arm as if Joseph were in the act of delivering a blow with his fist.

"Now that's what we call the telegraph trial," said the pupil. "If you can stand like that, without lowering or changing the position of your arms for a quarter of an hour, then you'll have proved yourself a plucky one."

"Courage, little one, courage!" cried all the rest. "You must suffer if you want to be an artist."

Joseph, with the good faith of his thirteen years, stood motionless for five minutes, all the pupils gazing solemnly at him.

"There! you are moving," cried one.

"Steady, steady, confound you!" cried another.

"The Emperor Napoleon stood a whole month as you see him there," said a third, pointing to the fine statue by Chaudet, which was in the room.

That statue, which represents the Emperor standing with the Imperial sceptre in his hand, was torn down in 1814 from the column it surmounted so well.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 00后的心情苦

    00后的心情苦

    以一个零零后的内心来反馈,我们00后真的不容易,多给00后点爱和关心陪伴吧!
  • 玄运仙

    玄运仙

    因为某任天道操作失误,不小心(故意)把福运大量汇集在主角周晋玄身边,这让一个身为普通人的周晋玄还能怎么普通下去,自然是装天大的逼,搞最大的事情。本文不种马,世界略大,带点幽默,更多的是看着爽,总之先这样吧,认真写简介不也一定会有人看到最后面。所以最后面这句话就是感谢你真的看到了最后面,爱你~
  • 戏闯天下

    戏闯天下

    再世为人的她,将掀起一阵狂潮,时而男装行天下,时而女装魅人生,但看她在江湖、商界翻手为云,覆手为雨,戏闯天下……他一袭墨衫,一双蓝瞳,妖邪魅惑,他要攀上世界的最高端,只是,遇到了她,生冷的心也有了一丝撼动……<br>情节虚构,切勿模仿。
  • 创世经文

    创世经文

    一本《创世经文》引起的离奇故事,未来世界,谁主沉浮。少年的放纵,凡人的不甘,高手的寂寞,帝王的权谋,神女的情怀。注定的宿命,已烟消云散………………
  • 随笔先生

    随笔先生

    人生是一本书,或许它能感染你,又或者什么都不是。你好,我是随笔先生。
  • 快穿之攻略娱乐圈男神

    快穿之攻略娱乐圈男神

    叮——白澄绑定了一个快穿系统,系统名曰“娱乐圈之辉煌恋爱”[手动微笑]。从此,她走上人生巅峰。“亲爱的,我肩膀宽阔,任你依靠。”“可以。”“亲爱的,我名下房产证堆积如山,任你挑选。”“可以。”“亲爱的,我命有九格,分你八格。”“可以。”待到千帆过尽,有三个字,白澄都说倦了,但她还是要说——我可以!
  • 迟来的再见

    迟来的再见

    本文讲述的是于安来到城市里的感情成长故事,何晏是于安的室友,一直帮助于安,于安为自己拥有这么一个朋友而窃喜的时候,发现何晏是一个同性恋!她喜欢自己!本想和何晏恢复成以前的关系,但是何晏却受不了拒绝选择了出国,偶然之下认识了何晏的心理医生单俊,于安发现自己喜欢上了这个可靠的男人,可单俊总是有意无意的拒绝自己。这让于安有些无奈,接着自己的好朋友高志远也对自己告白了……尽管对于高志远的告白心动不已,而单俊又对着自己不理不睬,于安还是没有选择放弃,在对着单俊进行糖衣炮弹攻势的时候,于安也在不断的打扮自己,单俊也在于安的努力下发现了这个女孩儿的善良单纯,渐渐喜欢上了于安,而后和于安幸福的在一起了。
  • 爱住不放,首席总裁不离婚

    爱住不放,首席总裁不离婚

    父亲被未婚夫陷害,作为帝京集团的掌上明珠,她沦为陌生男人套房内的尊贵客人!为救出父亲,她放弃婚约,闪婚嫁给和自己有一次情缘的男人,步步为营,重振家族声威。一场盛世婚礼,三年契约婚姻,他对她宠溺之极,她始终守护着自己的心,生怕越雷池半步。然而契约已满,她淡然想要退出,却被自己的前夫逼在墙角。“慕太太,我为你付出三年青春,你说走就走?”“慕先生,我们契约已满,这些年,多谢……”“别跟我说这些客套话,三年来,我遵守承诺,没有碰你,但是现在契约已满……”说好的好聚好散呢,这个男人不但还缠着她,竟然让处处掐断她的桃花……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 会杀人的影子

    会杀人的影子

    在繁华的都市里,所有人都为了生活在忙碌着,但还有一类人你们并不知道。他们深夜站在高楼之上,俯视众生,他们将厮杀,决斗看作稀松平常。他们一个个身怀绝技,都有着常人所没有的本事,因此,他们都有一个相同的名字—异能高手。凌影也是异能高手其中的一个,只是他暗影的异能并不多见,与他异能同时存在的是黑暗的自己,他影子里存在的黑暗一面一旦被觉醒,那便是这个世界的恶梦。