Produced by David Widger
JACK
By Alphonse Daudet
Translated by Mary Neal Sherwood
From The Fortieth Thousand, French Edition.
Estes And Lauriat, 1877
JACK
CHAPTER I.~~VAURIGARD.
"With a _k_, sir; with a _k_. The name is written and pronounced as in English. The child's godfather was English. A major-general in the Indian army. Lord Pembroke. You know him, perhaps? A man of distinction and of the highest connections. But--you understand--M. l'Abbe! How deliciously he danced! He died a frightful death at Singapore some years since, in a tiger-chase organized in his honor by a rajah, one of his friends. These rajahs, it seems, are absolute monarchs in their own country,--and one especially is very celebrated. What is his name? Wait a moment. Ah! I have it. Rana-Ramah."
"Pardon me, madame," interrupted the abbe, smiling, in spite of himself, at the rapid flow of words, and at the swift change of ideas. "After Jack, what name?"
With his elbow on his desk, and his head slightly bent, the priest examined from out the corners of eyes bright with ecclesiastical shrewdness, the young woman who sat before him, with her Jack standing at her side.
The lady was faultlessly dressed in the fashion of the day and the hour. It was December, 1858. The richness of her furs, the lustrous folds of her black costume, and the discreet originality of her hat, all told the story of a woman who owns her carriage, and who steps from her carpets to her coupe without the vulgar contact of the streets. Her head was small, which always lends height to a woman. Her pretty face had all the bloom of fresh fruit. Smiling and gay, additional vivacity was imparted by large, clear eyes and brilliant teeth, which were to be seen even when her face was in repose. The mobility of her countenance was extraordinary. Either this, or the lips half parted as if about to speak, or the narrow brow,--something there was, at all events, that indicated an absence of reflective powers, a lack of culture, and possibly explained the blanks in the conversation of this pretty woman; blanks that reminded one of those little Japanese baskets fitting one into another, the last of which is always empty.
As to the child, picture to yourself an emaciated boy of seven or eight, who had evidently outgrown his strength. He was dressed as English boys are dressed, and as befitted his name spelled with a _k_. His legs were bare, and he wore a Scotch cap and a plaid. The costume was in accordance with his years, but not with his long neck and slim figure.
He seemed embarrassed by it himself, for, awkward and timid, he would occasionally glance at his half-frozen legs with a despairing expression, as if he cursed within his soul Lord Pembroke and the whole Indian army.
Physically, he resembled his mother, with a look of higher breeding, and with the transformation of a pretty woman's face to that of an intelligent man. There were the same eyes, but deeper in color and in meaning; the same brow, but wider; the same mouth, but the lips were firmly closed.
Over the woman's face, ideas and impressions glided without leaving a furrow or a trace; in fact, so hastily, that her eyes always seemed to retain a certain astonishment at their flight. With the child, on the contrary, one felt that impressions remained, and his thoughtful air would have been almost painful, had it not been combined with a certain caressing indolence of attitude that indicated a petted child.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Jack by Alphonse Daudet
- 2: Suddenly he arose from his chair
- 3: Take this child out to walk with you
- 4: The name of Barancy was not hers
- 5: Madame la Comtesse Ida de Barancy was not a comtesse at all
- 6: One day Ida was born in the colonies
- 7: How happy would he have been curled up at her side
- 8: Madame de Barancy tossed down her card
- 9: Master Jack was confided to the tender mercies of Constant
- 10: Not college but the Moronval Academy
- 11: That the Moronval Academy was there situated
- 12: Moronval begged Madame Constant to walk in
- 13: Upon which Madame Moronval repented of her urbanity
- 14: Moronval waved his hand condescendingly
- 15: Hirsch and the singer Labassandre
- 16: The conversation finished between Moronval and Constant
- 17: He at once remembered Augustin
- 18: When Moronval offered himself and was accepted
- 19: Moronval wished to start a journal
- 20: Madame Moronval ventured to ask
- 21: As soon as the pupils were in bed
- 22: But Jack had no idea what a Gri gri was
- 23: However terrible Kerika might have been on the battlefield
- 24: Madou seeing the effect he had produced
- 25: Bonfils to take him to the wharves
- 26: Bonfils arrived suddenly one day
- 27: When Madou goes home to Dahomey
- 28: The signs made to him by Madou
- 29: Madame de Barancy came to see Jack
- 30: Madame de Barancy accepted the invitation with eagerness
- 31: Little Madame de Moronval went from group to group
- 32: To see Madame Moronval open her mouth to sound her o's
- 33: But Moronval profited by this opening
- 34: Madame Moronval had dispatched Jack to bed
- 35: Without flattering the countess as openly as did Moronval
- 36: Little Madame Moronval pattering on in front of them
- 37: Such a childhood ripens early into bitter maturity
- 38: Every two weeks Jack dined with his mother
- 39: Ida and the poet talked in low voices
- 40: But as Ida brought the quarterly payment
- 41: Madou stood still in amazement
- 42: Madou was absolutely faint with emotion
- 43: Madame de Barancy for a wonder was also very silent
- 44: His cries summoned Moronval to the scene
- 45: Moronval shrewdly suspected the truth
- 46: This question Moronval did not ask
- 47: Madou glided about almost unseen
- 48: What is he going to do now to Madou
- 49: Moronval decided to strike a great blow
- 50: And if Labassandre were mistaken
- 51: Then she informed little Jack that madame was at Etiolles
- 52: And that was that Moronval would find him
- 53: And to see the cheerful light from the lantern
- 54: Vague noises bewildered little Jack
- 55: Is that place far from Etiolles
- 56: That he fancied Madou was at his side or behind him
- 57: Mechanically he asks if it is far to Etiolles
- 58: Mere Archambauld laughed at her awkwardness
- 59: Pere Archambauld came for his wife
- 60: And to wipe out even the name of Ida de Barancy
- 61: Served her husband's breakfast in a fresh
- 62: This sap they pour over their enemies
- 63: To absolute solitude mental solitude
- 64: I will write myself to this Monsieur Angier
- 65: And Charlotte was shaking the poet's coat
- 66: Charlotte petted and soothed him
- 67: Hirsch and Labassandre were soon to visit them
- 68: Where Labassandre was already trying his voice
- 69: Cecile presented her bag with a gentle
- 70: But little Cecile often stood on the threshold
- 71: And Jack and Cecile became close companions
- 72: And when Charlotte would say to him
- 73: The child has a positive genius for mechanics
- 74: On the Henri Deux chair D'Argenton sat
- 75: The idea of wearing a blouse was the first that struck him
- 76: Manual labor does not degrade a man
- 77: Concealing in this way her trouble and remorse
- 78: Labassandre in a most extraordinary costume
- 79: Though Rondic was older and not so stout
- 80: Rondic lingered and said a few words to his master
- 81: Labassandre was greeted with enthusiasm
- 82: Labescam muttered that he looked like a sick chicken
- 83: Then Zenaide spoke remonstrating
- 84: Old Rondic felt a great respect for Jack's attainments
- 85: But while Father Rondic smiled contentedly
- 86: But Belisaire said he was in haste
- 87: Madame Rondic met him at the door
- 88: Belisaire looked at him with amazement
- 89: Let the soldier have Zenaide and the seven thousand francs
- 90: In the parlor Zenaide and Maugin were alone
- 91: The future Madame Maugin shut her wardrobe
- 92: The key is not in the wardrobe
- 93: Chariot accepting the offer with enthusiasm
- 94: Clarisse knew this shed very well
- 95: With which he could buy some little souvenir for Zenaide
- 96: Every one at Indret thought Jack guilty
- 97: But old Rondic gave him no time
- 98: Zenaide felt a ray of hope at this
- 99: And he handed the sheet to Charlotte
- 100: We are obliged to go to Indret
- 101: In placing him in the Maison Paternelle
- 102: An old woman pointed out the house of the Rondics
- 103: Neither the superintendent nor Clarisse spoke
- 104: Chariot turned beseechingly toward Clarisse
- 105: Who fairly talked Father Rondic to sleep
- 106: Father Rondic alone preserves his former serenity
- 107: The garret room at the Rondics
- 108: Stood looking down at the passengers
- 109: The stoker mechanically turned its leaves
- 110: They charged the furnaces with wet coal
- 111: Hirsch ends this deplorable scene
- 112: There is no intelligence of the Cydnus
- 113: Moronval generally brought with him his two last pupils
- 114: He was called the Marquis de l'Epau
- 115: Moronval had a certain fixed salary on the magazine
- 116: Cecile knows nothing of all your troubles
- 117: Cecile turned toward their guest
- 118: Who was dragging a fagot of wood
- 119: And asked if the house at Aulnettes was rented
- 120: He was connected then with the Bulac family
- 121: And the gentle footfall of Cecile
- 122: The poet wrote himself I sent Hirsch to cure you
- 123: The fog showing through a golden mist
- 124: Jack knew now that he loved Cecile
- 125: As well as to the care of Mother Archambauld
- 126: I know nothing of the Comte Nadine
- 127: At Turin he had been arrested on an order of extradition
- 128: I think if we had not had little Cecile
- 129: Jack looked in and saw Belisaire
- 130: Belisaire believed him guilty of the robbery
- 131: Belisaire lighted his lamp and arranged his dinner
- 132: This establishment recalled to him Indret on a smaller scale
- 133: Hirsch still came to pursue certain experiments
- 134: In front of Jack was a zinc roof
- 135: When he went to Indret with that money
- 136: Belisaire started as he thought
- 137: Belisaire was somewhat out of spirits
- 138: Belisaire himself looked almost handsome
- 139: The one who terrified Belisaire so much
- 140: Belisaire disappeared for a few moments
- 141: Mere Archambauld was delighted to see her old mistress
- 142: Occasionally Madame Leveque passed a Sunday with friends
- 143: A melancholy looking spot on the old heights of Montfaucon
- 144: Maugin got his position in Paris
- 145: Suddenly she crossed the room to Jack
- 146: By the Vicomte Amacry d'Abgentoh
- 147: Ida was asleep on her bed in the alcove
- 148: Even that I was old and had wrinkles
- 149: But Belisaire brought a note from her
- 150: And when he repeated them to Belisaire
- 151: Rivals said to his granddaughter
- 152: The doctor looked at Mother Sale
- 153: Who had told Jack Cecile's history
- 154: Under the chandeliers of the Moronval salon
- 155: And turning toward Labassandre
- 156: Said Madame Belisaire to her husband
- 157: Madame Belisaire was much startled
- 158: Belisaire stood behind him with a face full of anxiety
- 159: He heard her nearer and nearer
- 160: But Belisaire does not wish his wife to go
- 161: Madame Belisaire knows not what to say
- 162: Just as Madame Belisaire left the hospital
