The Joy of Life by Emile Zola (Illustrated)
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The Joy of Life by Emile Zola (Illustrated)

Emile Zola, Delphi Classics

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eBook - ePub

The Joy of Life by Emile Zola (Illustrated)

Emile Zola, Delphi Classics

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This eBook features the unabridged text of 'The Joy of Life' from the bestselling edition of 'The Complete Works of Emile Zola'.

Having established their name as the leading publisher of classic literature and art, Delphi Classics produce publications that are individually crafted with superior formatting, while introducing many rare texts for the first time in digital print. The Delphi Classics edition of Zola includes original annotations and illustrations relating to the life and works of the author, as well as individual tables of contents, allowing you to navigate eBooks quickly and easily.

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CHAPTER I

When the cuckoo-clock in the dining-room struck six, Chanteau lost all hope. He rose with a painful effort from the arm-chair in which he was sitting, warming his heavy, gouty legs before a coke fire. Ever since two o’clock he had been awaiting the arrival of Madame Chanteau, who, after five weeks’ absence, was to-day expected to bring from Paris their little cousin, Pauline Quenu, an orphan girl, ten years of age, whose guardianship they had undertaken.
‘I can’t understand it at all, VĂ©ronique,’ he said, opening the kitchen-door. ‘Some accident must have happened to them.’
The cook, a tall stout woman of five-and-thirty, with hands like a man’s and a face like a gendarme’s, was just removing from the fire a leg of mutton, which seemed in imminent danger of being over-done. She did not express her irritation in words, but the pallor of her usually ruddy cheeks betokened her displeasure.
‘Madame has, no doubt, stayed in Paris,’ she said curtly, ‘looking after that endless business which is putting us all topsy-turvy.’
‘No! no!’ answered Chanteau. ‘The letter we had yesterday evening said that the little girl’s affairs were com­pletely settled. Madame was to arrive this morning at Caen, where she intended making a short stay to see Davoine. At one o’clock she was to take the train again; at two she would alight at Bayeux; at three, old Malivoire’s coach would put her down at Arromanches. Even if Malivoire wasn’t ready to start at once, Madame ought to have been here by four o’clock, or by half-past at the latest. There are scarcely six miles from Arromanches to Bonneville.’
The cook kept her eyes fixed on the joint, and only shook her head while these calculations were thrown at her. After some little hesitation Chanteau added: ‘I think you had better go to the corner of the road and look if you can see anything of them, VĂ©ronique.’
She glared at him, growing still paler with suppressed anger.
‘Why? What for? Monsieur Lazare is already out there, getting drenched in looking for them: and what’s the good of my going and getting wet through also?’
‘The truth is,’ murmured Chanteau, softly, ‘that I am beginning to feel a little uneasy about my son as well. He ought to have been back by this time. What can he have been doing out on the road for the last hour?’
Without vouchsafing any answer VĂ©ronique took from a nail an old black woollen shawl, which she threw over her head and shoulders. Then, as she saw her master following her into the passage, she said to him, rather snappishly: ‘Go back to your fire, if you don’t want to be bellowing with pain to-morrow.’
She shut the door with a bang, and put on her clogs while standing on the steps and crying out to the wind:
‘The horrid little brat! Putting us to all this trouble!’
Chanteau’s composure remained perfect. He was accus­tomed to VĂ©ronique’s ebullitions of temper. She had entered his service in the first year of his married life, when she was but a girl of fifteen. As soon as the sound of her clogs had died away, he bolted off like a schoolboy, and planted himself at the other end of the passage, before a glass door which overlooked the sea. There he stood for a moment, gazing at the sky with his blue eyes. He was a short, stout man, with thick closely-cut white hair. He was scarcely fifty-six years old, but gout, to which he was a martyr, had prematurely aged him.
Just then he was feeling anxious and troubled, and hoped that little Pauline would be able to win VĂ©ronique’s affec­tion. But was it his fault that she was coming? When the Paris notary had written to tell him that his cousin Quenu, whose wife had died some six months previously, had just died also, charging him in his will with the guardianship of his little daughter, he had not felt able to refuse the trust.
It was true they had not seen much of one another, as the family had been dispersed. Chanteau’s father, after leaving the South and wandering all over France as a journeyman carpenter, had established a timber-yard at Caen; while, on the other hand, Quenu, at his mother’s death, had gone to Paris, where one of his uncles had subsequently given him a flourishing pork-butcher’s business, in the very centre of the market district.1 They had only met each other some two or three times, on occasions when Chanteau had been compelled by his gout to quit his business and repair to Paris for special medical advice. But the two men had ever had a genuine respect for one another, and the dying father had probably thought that the sea air would be beneficial to his daughter. The girl, too, as the heiress of the pork-butcher’s business, would certainly be no charge upon them. Madame Chanteau, indeed, had fallen so heartily into the scheme that she had insisted upon saving her husband all the dangerous fatigue of the journey to Paris. Setting off alone and bustling about she had settled everything, in her perpetual craving for activity; and Chanteau was quite contented so long as his wife was pleased.
But what could be detaining the pair of them? Anxiety seized him again, as he looked out upon the dark sky, over which the west wind was driving huge masses of black clouds, like sooty rags whose tattered ends draggled far away into the sea. It was one of those March gales, when the equinoctial tides beat furiously upon the shores. The flux was only just setting in, and all that could be seen of it was a thin white bar of foam, far away towards the horizon. The wide expanse of bare beach, a league of rocks and gloomy seaweed, its level surface blotched here and there with dark pools, had a weirdly melancholy aspect as it lay stretched out beneath the quickly increasing darkness that fell from the black clouds scudding across the skies.
‘Perhaps the wind has overturned them into some ditch’ murmured Chanteau.
He felt constrained to go out and look. He opened the glass door, and ventured in his list-slippers on to the gravelled terrace which commanded a view of the village. A few drops of rain were dashed against his face by thehurricane, and a terrific gust made his thick blue woollen dressing-jacket flap and sap again. But he struggled on, bareheaded and bending down, and at last reached the parapet, over which he leaned while glancing at the road that ran beneath. This road descended between two steep cliffs, and looked almost as though it had been hewn out of the solid rock to afford a resting-place for the twenty or thirty hovels of which Bonneville consisted. Every tide threatened to hurl the houses from their narrow shingle-strewn anchorage and crush them against the rocky cliff. To the left there was a little landing-place, a mere strip of sand, whither amid rhythmic calls men hoisted up some half-score boats. The inhabitants did not number more than a couple of hundred souls. They made a bare living out of the sea, clinging to their native rocks with all the unreasoning persistence of limpets. And on the cliffs above their miserable roofs, which every winter were battered by the storms, there was nothing to be seen except the church, standing about half­way up on the right, and the Chanteaus’ house across the cleft on the other hand. Bonneville contained nothing more.
‘What dreadful weather it is!’ cried a voice.
Chanteau raised his head and recognised the priest, Abbé Horteur, a thick-set man of peasant-like build, whose red hair was still unsilvered by his fifty years. He used a plot of graveyard land in front of the church as a vegetable garden, and was now examining his early salad plants, tucking his cassock the while between his legs in order to prevent the wind from blowing it over his head. Chanteau, who could not make himself heard amidst the roaring of the gale, contented himself with waving his hand.
‘They are doing right in getting their boats up, I think,’ shouted the priest.
But just then a gust of wind caught hold of his cassock and wrapt it round his head, so he fled for refuge behind the church.
Chanteau turned round to escape the violence of the blast. With his eyes streaming with moisture he cast a glance at his garden, over which the spray was sweeping, and the brick-built two-storeyed house with five windows, whose shutters seemed in imminent danger of being torn away from their fastenings. When the sudden squall had subsided, he bent down again to look at the road; and just at that moment VĂ©ronique returned. She shook her hands at him.
‘What! you have actually come out! — Be good enough to go into the house again at once, sir!’
She caught him up in the passage, and scolded him like a child detected in wrong-doing. Wouldn’t she have all the trouble of looking after him in the morning when he suffered agonies of pain from his indiscretion?
‘Have you seen nothing of them?’ he asked, submis­sively.
‘No, indeed, I have seen nothing — Madame is no doubt taking shelter somewhere.’
He dared not tell her that she should have gone further on. However, he was now beginning to feel especially anxious about his son.
‘I saw that all the neighbourhood was being blown into the air,’ continued the cook. ‘They are quite afraid of being done for this time. Last September the Ouches’ house was cracked from top to bottom, and Prouane, who was going up to the church to ring the Angelus, has just told me that he is sure it will topple over before morning.’
Just as she spoke a big lad of nineteen sprang up the three steps before the door. He had a spreading brow and sparkling eyes, and a fine chestnut down fringed his long oval face.
‘Ah! here’s Lazare at last!’ said Chanteau, feeling much relieved. ‘How wet you are, my poor boy!’
In the passage the young man hung his hooded cloak, which was quite saturated with sea-water.
‘Well?’ interrogated his father.
‘I can see nothing of them,’ replied Lazare. ‘I have been as far as Verchemont, and waited under the shed at the inn there, and kept my eyes on the road, which is a river of mud. But I could see no signs of them. Then, as I began to feel afraid that you might get uneasy about me, I came back.’
The previous August Lazare had left the College of Caen, after gaining his Bachelor’s degree; and for the last eight months he had been roaming about the cliffs, unable to make any choice of a profession, for he only felt enthusiastic about music, a predisposition which distressed his mother extremely. She had gone away very much displeased with him, as he had refused to accompany her to Paris, where she had thought she might be able to place him in some advantageous position.
‘Now that I have let you know I am all right,’ the young man resumed, ‘I should like to go on to Arromanches.’
‘No, no! it is getting late,’ said Chanteau. ‘We shall be having some news of your mother presently. I am expecting a message every moment. Listen! Isn’t that a carriage?’
VĂ©ronique had gone to open the door.
‘It is Doctor Cazenove’s gig,’ she said. ‘Shall I bring him in, sir? Why! good gracious! there’s madame in it!’
They all three hurried down the steps. A huge dog, a cross between a sheep-dog and a Newfoundland, who had been lying asleep in a corner of the passage, sprang forward and began to bark furiously. Upon hearing this barking, a small white cat of delicate aspect made its way to the door, but, at the sight of the wet and dirt outside, it gave a slight wriggle of disgust with its tail, and sat down very sedately on the top step to see what was going to happen.
A lady about fifty years of age sprang from the gig with all the agility of a young girl. She was short and slight, her hair was still perfectly black, and her face would have been quite pleasant but for the largeness of her nose. The dog sprang forward and placed his big paws on her shoulders, as though he wanted to kiss her; but this displeased her.
‘Down! down! Matthew. Get away, will you? Tiresome animal!’
Lazare ran across the yard behind the dog, calling as he went, ‘All right, mother?’
‘Yes, yes!’ replied Madame Chanteau.
‘We have been very anxious about you,’ said Chanteau, who had followed his son, in spite of the wind. ‘What has happened to make you so late?’
‘Oh! we’ve had nothing but troubles,’ she answered. ‘To begin with, the roads are so bad that it has taken us nearly two hours to come from Bayeux. Then, at Arromanches, one of Malivoire’s horses went lame and he couldn’t let us have another. At one time I really thought we should have to stay with him all night. But the Doctor was kind enough to offer us his gig, and Martin here has driven us home.’
The driver, an old man with a wooden leg, who had formerly served in the navy, and had there had his limb amputated by Cazenove, then a naval surgeon, had after­wards taken service under the Doctor. He was tethering the horse when Madame Chanteau suddenly checked her flow of speech and called to him:
‘Martin! help the little girl to get down!’
No one had yet given a thought to the child. The hood of the gig fell very low, and only her black skirt and little black-gloved hands could be seen. She did not wait, how­ever, for the coachman’s assistance, but sprang lightly to the ground. Just then there came a fierce puff of wind, which whirled her clothes about her and sent the curls of her dark brown hair flying from under her crape-trimmed hat. She did not seem very strong for her ten years. Her lips were thick; and her face, if full, showed the pallor of the girls who are brought up in the back shops of Paris. The others stared at her. VĂ©ronique, who had just bustled up to welcome her mistress, checked herself, her face assuming an icy and jealous expression. But Matthew showed none of this reserve. He sprang up between the child’s arms and licked her with his tongue.
‘Don’t be afraid of him!’ cried Madame Chanteau. ‘He won’t hurt you.’
‘Oh! I’m not at all afraid of him,’ said Pauline quietly; ‘I am very fond of dogs.’
Indeed, Matthew’s boisterous welcome did not seem to disturb her in the slightest degree. Her grave little face broke out into a smile beneath her black hat, and she affectionately kissed the dog on his snout.
‘Aren’t you going to kiss your relations too?’ exclaimed Madame Chanteau. ‘See, this is your uncle, since you call me your aunt; and this is your cousin, a great strapping scapegrace, who ...

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