Louise de la Valliere. Dumas Alexandre

Louise de la Valliere - Dumas Alexandre


Скачать книгу
that in the advanced years of his life, he had certainly neglected agricultural pursuits for commerce, but that his childhood had been passed in Picardy in the beautiful meadows where the grass grew as high as the knees, and where he had played under the green apple-trees covered with red-cheeked fruit; he went on to say, that he had solemnly promised himself that as soon as he should have made his fortune, he would return to nature, and end his days, as he had begun them, as near as he possibly could to the earth itself, where all men must sleep at last.

      “Eh, eh!” said Porthos; “in that case, my dear Monsieur Planchet, your retirement is not far distant.”

      “How so?”

      “Why, you seem to be in the way of making your fortune very soon.”

      “Well, we are getting on pretty well, I must admit,” replied Planchet.

      “Come, tell me what is the extent of your ambition, and what is the amount you intend to retire upon?”

      “There is one circumstance, monsieur,” said Planchet, without answering the question, “which occasions me a good deal of anxiety.”

      “What is it?” inquired Porthos, looking all round him as if in search of the circumstance that annoyed Planchet, and desirous of freeing him from it.

      “Why, formerly,” said the grocer, “you used to call me Planchet quite short, and you would have spoken to me then in a much more familiar manner than you do now.”

      “Certainly, certainly, I should have said so formerly,” replied the good-natured Porthos, with an embarrassment full of delicacy; “but formerly – ”

      “Formerly I was M. d’Artagnan’s lackey; is not that what you mean?”

      “Yes.”

      “Well if I am not quite his lackey, I am as much as ever I was his devoted servant; and more than that, since that time – ”

      “Well, Planchet?”

      “Since that time, I have had the honor of being in partnership with him.”

      “Oh, oh!” said Porthos. “What, has D’Artagnan gone into the grocery business?”

      “No, no,” said D’Artagnan, whom these words had drawn out of his reverie, and who entered into the conversation with that readiness and rapidity which distinguished every operation of his mind and body. “It was not D’Artagnan who entered into the grocery business, but Planchet who entered into a political affair with me.”

      “Yes,” said Planchet, with mingled pride and satisfaction, “we transacted a little business which brought me in a hundred thousand francs and M. d’Artagnan two hundred thousand.”

      “Oh, oh!” said Porthos, with admiration.

      “So that, monsieur le baron,” continued the grocer, “I again beg you to be kind enough to call me Planchet, as you used to do; and to speak to me as familiarly as in old times. You cannot possibly imagine the pleasure it would give me.”

      “If that be the case, my dear Planchet, I will do so, certainly,” replied Porthos. And as he was quite close to Planchet, he raised his hand, as if to strike him on the shoulder, in token of friendly cordiality; but a fortunate movement of the horse made him miss his aim, so that his hand fell on the crupper of Planchet’s horse, instead; which made the animal’s legs almost give way.

      D’Artagnan burst out laughing, as he said, “Take care, Planchet; for if Porthos begins to like you so much, he will caress you, and if he caresses you he will knock you as flat as a pancake. Porthos is still as strong as ever, you know.”

      “Oh,” said Planchet, “Mousqueton is not dead, and yet monsieur le baron is very fond of him.”

      “Certainly,” said Porthos, with a sigh which made all the three horses rear; “and I was only saying, this very morning, to D’Artagnan, how much I regretted him. But tell me, Planchet?”

      “Thank you, monsieur le baron, thank you.”

      “Good lad, good lad! How many acres of park have you got?”

      “Of park?”

      “Yes; we will reckon up the meadows presently, and the woods afterwards.”

      “Whereabouts, monsieur?” “At your chateau.”

      “Oh, monsieur le baron, I have neither chateau, nor park, nor meadows, nor woods.”

      “What have you got, then?” inquired Porthos, “and why do you call it a country-seat?”

      “I did not call it a country-seat, monsieur le baron,” replied Planchet, somewhat humiliated, “but a country-box.”

      “Ah, ah! I understand. You are modest.”

      “No, monsieur le baron, I speak the plain truth. I have rooms for a couple of friends, that’s all.”

      “But in that case, whereabouts do your friends walk?”

      “In the first place, they can walk about the king’s forest, which is very beautiful.”

      “Yes, I know the forest is very fine,” said Porthos; “nearly as beautiful as my forest at Berry.”

      Planchet opened his eyes very wide. “Have you a forest of the same kind as the forest at Fontainebleau, monsieur le baron?” he stammered out.

      “Yes; I have two, indeed, but the one at Berry is my favorite.”

      “Why so?” asked Planchet.

      “Because I don’t know where it ends; and, also, because it is full of poachers.”

      “How can the poachers make the forest so agreeable to you?”

      “Because they hunt my game, and I hunt them – which, in these peaceful times, is for me a sufficiently pleasing picture of war on a small scale.”

      They had reached this turn of conversation, when Planchet, looking up, perceived the houses at the commencement of Fontainebleau, the lofty outlines of which stood out strongly against the misty visage of the heavens; whilst, rising above the compact and irregularly formed mass of buildings, the pointed roofs of the chateau were clearly visible, the slates of which glistened beneath the light of the moon, like the scales of an immense fish. “Gentlemen,” said Planchet, “I have the honor to inform you that we have arrived at Fontainebleau.”

      Chapter V. Planchet’s Country-House

      The cavaliers looked up, and saw that what Planchet had announced to them was true. Ten minutes afterwards they were in the street called the Rue de Lyon, on the opposite side of the hostelry of the Beau Paon. A high hedge of bushy elders, hawthorn, and wild hops formed an impenetrable fence, behind which rose a white house, with a high tiled roof. Two of the windows, which were quite dark, looked upon the street. Between the two, a small door, with a porch supported by a couple of pillars, formed the entrance to the house. The door was gained by a step raised a little from the ground. Planchet got off his horse, as if he intended to knock at the door; but, on second thoughts, he took hold of his horse by the bridle, and led it about thirty paces further on, his two companions following him. He then advanced about another thirty paces, until he arrived at the door of a cart-house, lighted by an iron grating; and, lifting up a wooden latch, pushed open one of the folding-doors. He entered first, leading his horse after him by the bridle, into a small courtyard, where an odor met them which revealed their close vicinity to a stable. “That smells all right,” said Porthos, loudly, getting off his horse, “and I almost begin to think I am near my own cows at Pierrefonds.”

      “I have only one cow,” Planchet hastened to say modestly.

      “And I have thirty,” said Porthos; “or rather, I don’t exactly know how many I have.”

      When the two cavaliers had entered, Planchet fastened the door behind them. In the meantime, D’Artagnan, who had dismounted with his usual agility, inhaled the fresh perfumed air with the delight a Parisian feels at the sight of green fields and fresh foliage, plucked a piece of honeysuckle with one hand, and of sweet-briar with the other.


Скачать книгу