The Adventures of Gil Blas of Santillane - Alain René le Sage (best fiction books of all time .txt) 📗
- Author: Alain René le Sage
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yearnings of nature, I left Bertrand with my stud and baggage at
the inn: then, with my secretary at my heels, who would not
desert me in my time of need, I repaired to my uncle’s house. The
moment I came within my mother’s reach, a natural emotion of
maternal instinct unfolded to her who I was, before her eyes
could possibly have run over the traces of my countenance. Son,
said she, with a melancholy expression, after having embraced me,
come and be present at your father’s death; your visit is just in
time to take in all the piteous circumstances of so deplorable an
event. With this heart-rending reception, she led me by the hand
into a chamber where the wretched Blas of Santillane, stretched
on a comfortless bed, in cold and dismal accord with the thinness
of his fortunes, was just entering on the last great act of human
nature. Though surrounded by the shades of death, he was not
quite unconscious of what was passing about him. My dearest
friend, said my mother, here is your son Gil Blas, who entreats
your forgiveness for all his undutiful behaviour, and is come to
ask your blessing before you die. At these tidings my father
opened his eyes, which where on the point of closing for ever: he
fixed them upon me; and reading in my countenance,
notwithstanding the awful brink on which he stood, that I was a
sincere mourner for his loss, his feelings were recalled to
sympathy by my sorrow. He even made an attempt to speak, but his
strength was too much exhausted. I took one of his hands in mine,
and while I bathed it with my tears, in speechless agony of soul,
he breathed his last, as if he had only waited my arrival to pay
the debt of nature, and wing his way to scenes of untried being.
This event had been too long present to my mother’s mind to
overwhelm her with any unparalleled affliction. Perhaps it sat
more heavily on me than on her, though my father had never in his
life given me any reason to feel for him as a father. But besides
that mere filial instinct would have made me weep over his cold
remains, I reproached myself with not having contributed to the
comfort of his latter days; then, when I considered what a hard-hearted villain I had been, I seemed to myself like a monster of
ingratitude, or rather like an impious parricide. My uncle, whom
I afterwards saw lying at his length on another wretched couch,
and in a most lamentable pickle, made me experience fresh agonies
of upbraiding conscience. Unnatural son! said I, communing with
my own uneasy thoughts, behold the chastisement of heaven upon
thy sins, in the disconsolate condition of thy nearest relations.
Hadst thou but thrown to them the superflux of that abundance, in
which before thy imprisonment thou rolledst, thou mightest have
procured for them those little comforts which thy uncle’s
ecclesiastical pittance was too scanty to furnish, and perhaps
have lengthened out the term of thy father’s life.
Gil Perez had fallen into a state of second childhood, and was,
though numerically upon the list of the living, in every
individual organ a mere corpse. His memory, nay, his very senses
had retired from their allotted stations in his system. Bootless
was it for me to strain him in my pious arms, and lavish outward
tokens of affection on him: they might as well have been wasted
on the desert air. To as little purpose did my mother ring in his
unnerved ear, that I was his nephew Gil Blas; be gazed at me with
a vacant, stupid stare, and gave neither sign nor answer. Had the
ties of consanguinity and gratitude been all too weak, to awaken
my tender sympathy for an uncle, to whom I owed the means of my
first launch into the world, the impression of helpless dotage on
my senses must have softened me into something like the
counterfeit of virtuous emotion.
While this scene was passing, Scipio preserved a melancholy
silence, sharing in all my sorrows, and mingling his sighs with
mine in the chastised luxury of friendship. But concluding that
my mother, after so long an absence, might wish to have some such
conversation with me, as the presence of a stranger must rather
repress than promote, I drew him aside, saying, Go, my good
fellow, sit down quietly at the inn, and leave me here with my
only surviving parent, who might consider your company as an
intrusion, while talking over family affairs. Scipio withdrew,
for fear of being a clog upon our confidence; and I sat down with
my mother to an interchange of communication, which lasted all
night. We reciprocally gave a faithful account of all that had
happened to each of us, since my first sally from Oviedo. She
related, in full measure and running over, all the petty insults,
disappointments, and mortifications, which she had undergone in
her pilgrimage from house to house as a duenna. A great number of
these little anecdotes it would have hurt my pride that my
secretary should have noted down in his biographical budget,
though I had never concealed from him the ups and downs in the
lottery of my own life. With all the respect I owe to my mother’s
sainted memory, the good lady had not the knack of going the
shortest road to the end of a story; had she but pruned her own
memoirs of all luxuriant circumstances, there would not have been
materials for more than a tithe of her narrative.
At length she got to the end of her tether, and I began my
career. With respect to my general adventures, I passed them over
lightly; but when I came to speak of the visit which the son of
Bertrand Muscada, the grocer of Oviedo, had paid me at Madrid, I
enlarged with decent compunction on that dark article in the
history of my life. I must frankly own, said I to my mother, that
I gave that young fellow a very bad reception; and he, doubtless,
in revenge, must have drawn a hideous outline of my moral
features. He did you more than justice, I trust, answered she;
for he told us that he found you so puffed and swollen with the
good fortune thrust upon you by the prime minister, as scarcely
to acknowledge him among your former acquaintance; and when he
gave you a moving description of our miseries, you listened as if
you had no interest in the tale, or knowledge of the parties. But
as fathers and mothers can always find some clue for palliation
in the conduct of their graceless children, we were loath to
believe that you had so bad a heart. Your arrival at Oviedo
justifies our favourable interpretation, and those tears which
are now flowing down your cheeks, are so many pledges either of
your innocence or your reformation.
Your constructions were too partial, replied I; there was a great
deal of truth in young Muscada’s report. When he came to see me
all my faculties were engrossed by vanity and mammon; ambition,
the prevailing devil which possessed me, left not a thought to
throw away on the desolate condition of my parents. It therefore
could be no wonder, if in such a disposition of mind I gave
rather a freezing reception to a man who, accosting me in a
peremptory style, took upon him to say, without mincing the
matter, that it was well known I was as rich as a Jew, and
therefore he advised me to send you a good round sum, seeing that
you were very much put to your shifts: nay, he went so far as to
reproach me, in phrase of more sincerity than good manners, with
my unfeeling negligence of my family. His confounded personality
stuck in my throat; so that losing my little stock of patience, I
shoved him fairly by the shoulders out of my closet. It must be
confessed that I took the administration of justice a little too
much into my own hands, being judge and party in the same cause;
neither was it proper that you should bear the brunt, because the
grocer was a little anti-saccharine in his phraseology; nor was
his advice the less pertinent or just, though couched in homely
terms, or urged with plodding vulgarity.
All this came plump in the teeth of my conscience, the moment I
had turned Muscada out of doors. The voice of natural instinct
contrived to make its way; my duty to my parents brought the
blood into my face; but it was the blush of shame for its
neglect, and not the glow of triumph at its performance. Yet even
my remorse can give me little credit in your eyes, since it was
soon stifled in the fumes of avarice and ambition. But some time
afterwards, having been safely lodged in the tower of Segovia by
royal mandate, I fell dangerously ill there; and that timely
remembrancer was the cause of bringing back your son to you. So
true is it, that sickness and imprisonment were my best moral
tutors; for they enabled nature to resume her rights, and weaned
me effectually from the court. Henceforth all my dear delight is
in solitude; and my only business in the Asturias is to entreat
that you would share with me in the mild pleasures of a retired
life. If you reject not my earnest petition, I will attend you to
an estate of mine in the kingdom of Valencia, and we will live
there together very comfortably. You are of course aware that I
intended to take my father thither also; but since heaven has
ordained it otherwise, let me at least have the satisfaction of
affording an asylum to my mother, and making amends by all the
attentions in my power for the fallow seasons in the former
harvest of my filial duty.
I accept your kind intentions in very good part, said my mother;
and would take the journey without hesitation, if I saw no
obstacles in the way. But to desert your uncle in his present
condition would be unpardonable; and I am too much accustomed to
this part of the country, to like living elsewhere: nevertheless,
as the proposal deserves to be maturely weighed, I will consider
further of it at my leisure, At present, your father’s funeral
requires to be ordered and arranged. As for that, said I, we will
leave it to the care of the young man whom you saw with me; he is
my secretary, with as clever a head and as good a heart as you
have often been acquainted with; let the business rest with him;
it cannot be in better hands.
Hardly had I pronounced these words, when Scipio came back; for
it was already broad day. He inquired whether he could be of any
service in our present distresses. I answered that he was come
just in time to receive some very important directions. As soon
as he was made acquainted with the business in hand: A word to
the wise! said he: the whole procession with its appropriate
heraldry is already marshalled in this head of mine; you may
trust me for a very pretty funeral. Have a care, said my mother,
to make it plain and decent without anything like pomp or parade.
It can scarcely be too humble for my husband, whom all the town
knows to have been low in rank, and indigent in circumstances.
Madam, replied Scipio, though he had been the meanest and most
destitute of the human race, I would not bate one button in the
array of his posthumous honours. My master’s credit is at stake
in the proper conduct of
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