in three words. Who am I? Vautrin. What do I do? Just what I please. Let us change the subject. You want to know my character. I am good-natured to those who do me a good turn, or to those whose hearts speak to mine. These last may do anything they like with me; they may bruise my shins, and I shall not tell them to âmind what they are aboutâ; but, nom dâune pipe, the devil himself is not an uglier customer than I can be if people annoy me, or if I donât happen to take to them; and you may just as well know at once that I think no more of killing a man than of that,â and he spat before him as he spoke. âOnly when it is absolutely necessary to do so, I do my best to kill him properly. I am what you call an artist. I have read Benvenuto Celliniâs Memoirs, such as you see me; and, what is more, in Italian: A fine-spirited fellow he was! From him I learned to follow the example set us by Providence, who strikes us down at random, and to admire the beautiful whenever and wherever it is found. And, setting other questions aside, is it not a glorious part to play, when you pit yourself against mankind, and the luck is on your side? I have thought a good deal about the constitution of your present social Dis-order. A duel is downright childish, my boy! utter nonsense and folly! When one of two living men must be got out of the way, none but an idiot would leave chance to decide which it is to be; and in a duel it is a tossupâ âheads or tailsâ âand there you are! Now I, for instance, can hit the ace in the middle of a card five times running, send one bullet after another through the same hole, and at thirty-five paces, moreover! With that little accomplishment you might think yourself certain of killing your man, mightnât you. Well, I have fired, at twenty paces, and missed, and the rogue who had never handled a pistol in his lifeâ âlook here!ââ â(he unbuttoned his waistcoat and exposed his chest, covered, like a bearâs back, with a shaggy fell; the student gave a startled shudder)â ââhe was a raw lad, but he made his mark on me,â the extraordinary man went on, drawing Rastignacâs fingers over a deep scar on his breast. âBut that happened when I myself was a mere boy; I was one-and-twenty then (your age), and I had some beliefs leftâ âin a womanâs love, and in a pack of rubbish that you will be over head and ears in directly. You and I were to have fought just now, werenât we? You might have killed me. Suppose that I were put under the earth, where would you be? You would have to clear out of this, go to Switzerland, draw on papaâs purseâ âand he has none too much in it as it is. I mean to open your eyes to your real position, that is what I am going to do: but I shall do it from the point of view of a man who, after studying the world very closely, sees that there are but two alternativesâ âstupid obedience or revolt. I obey nobody; is that clear? Now, do you know how much you will want at the pace you are going? A million; and promptly, too, or that little head of ours will be swaying to and fro in the dragnets at Saint-Cloud, while we are gone to find out whether or no there is a Supreme Being. I will put you in the way of that million.â
Comments (0)