CHAPTER ONE, THE DUCHESSE DE
GUERMANTES
The twittering of the birds at daybreak
sounded insipid to Françoise. Every word uttered by the maids
upstairs made her jump; disturbed by all their running about, she
kept asking herself what they could be doing. In other words, we
had moved. Certainly the servants had made no less noise in the
attics of our old home; but she knew them, she had made of their
comings and goings familiar events. Now she faced even silence with
a strained attention. And as our new neighbourhood appeared to be
as quiet as the boulevard on to which we had hitherto looked had
been noisy, the song (distinct at a distance, when it was still
quite faint, like an orchestral motif) of a passer-by brought tears
to the eyes of a Françoise in exile. And so if I had been tempted
to laugh at her in her misery at having to leave a house in which
she was 'so well respected on all sides' and had packed her trunks
with tears, according to the Use of Combray, declaring superior to
all possible houses that which had been ours, on the other hand I,
who found it as hard to assimilate new as I found it easy to
abandon old conditions, I felt myself drawn towards our old servant
when I saw that this installation of herself in a building where
she had not received from the hall-porter, who did not yet know us,
the marks of respect necessary to her moral wellbeing, had brought
her positively to the verge of dissolution. She alone could
understand what I was feeling; certainly her young footman was not
the person to do so; for him, who was as unlike the Combray type as
it was possible to conceive, packing up, moving, living in another
district, were all like taking a holiday in which the novelty of
one's surroundings gave one the same sense of refreshment as if one
had actually travelled; he thought he was in the country; and a
cold in the head afforded him, as though he had been sitting in a
draughty railway carriage, the delicious sensation of having seen
the world; at each fresh sneeze he rejoiced that he had found so
smart a place, having always longed to be with people who travelled
a lot. And so, without giving him a thought, I went straight to
Françoise, who, in return for my having laughed at her tears over a
removal which had left me cold, now shewed an icy indifference to
my sorrow, but because she shared it. The 'sensibility' claimed by
neurotic people is matched by their egotism; they cannot abide the
flaunting by others of the sufferings to which they pay an ever
increasing attention in themselves. Françoise, who would not allow
the least of her own ailments to pass unnoticed, if I were in pain
would turn her head from me so that I should not have the
satisfaction of seeing my sufferings pitied, or so much as
observed. It was the same as soon as I tried to speak to her about
our new house. Moreover, having been obliged, a day or two later,
to return to the house we had just left, to retrieve some clothes
which had been overlooked in our removal, while I, as a result of
it, had still a 'temperature,' and like a boa constrictor that has
just swallowed an ox felt myself painfully distended by the sight
of a long trunk which my eyes had still to digest, Françoise, with
true feminine inconstancy, came back saying that she had really
thought she would stifle on our old boulevard, it was so stuffy,
that she had found it quite a day's journey to get there, that
never had she seen such stairs, that she would not go back to live
there for a king's ransom, not if you were to offer her millions—a
pure hypothesis—and that everything (everything, that is to say, to
do with the kitchen and 'usual offices') was much better fitted up
in the new house. Which, it is high time now that the reader should
be told—and told also that we had moved into it because my
grandmother, not having been at all well (though we took care to
keep this reason from her), was in need of better air—was a flat
forming part of the Hôtel de Guermantes.
At the age when a Name, offering us an image of the unknowable
which we have poured into its mould, while at the same moment it
connotes for us also an existing place, forces us accordingly to
identify one with the other to such a point that we set out to seek
in a city for a soul which it cannot embody but which we have no
longer the power to expel from the sound of its name, it is not
only to towns and rivers that names give an individuality, as do
allegorical paintings, it is not only the physical universe which
they pattern with differences, people with marvels, there is the
social universe also; and so every historic house, in town or
country, has its lady or its fairy, as every forest has its spirit,
as there is a nymph for every stream. Sometimes, hidden in the
heart of its name, the fairy is transformed to suit the life of our
imagination by which she lives; thus it was that the atmosphere in
which Mme. de Guermantes existed in me, after having been for years
no more than the shadow cast by a magic lantern slide or the light
falling through a painted window, began to let its colours fade
when quite other dreams impregnated it with the bubbling coolness
of her flowing streams.
And yet the fairy must perish if we come in contact with the real
person to whom her name corresponds, for that person the name then
begins to reflect, and she has in her nothing of the fairy; the
fairy may revive if we remove ourself from the person, but if we
remain in her presence the fairy definitely dies and with her the
name, as happened to the family of Lusignan, which was fated to
become extinct on the day when the fairy Mélusine should disappear.
Then the Name, beneath our successive 'restorations' of which we
may end by finding, as their original, the beautiful portrait of a
strange lady whom we are never to meet, is nothing more than the
mere photograph, for identification, to which we refer in order to
decide whether we know, whether or not we ought to bow to a person
who passes us in the street. But let a sensation from a bygone
year—like those recording instruments which preserve the sound and
the manner of the various artists who have sung or played into
them—enable our memory to make us hear that name with the
particular ring with which it then sounded in our ears, then, while
the name itself has apparently not changed, we feel the distance
that separates the dreams which at different times its same
syllables have meant to us. For a moment, from the clear echo of
its warbling in some distant spring, we can extract, as from the
little tubes which we use in painting, the exact, forgotten,
mysterious, fresh tint of the days which we had believed ourself to
be recalling, when, like a bad painter, we were giving to the whole
of our past, spread out on the same canvas, the tones, conventional
and all alike, of our unprompted memory. Whereas on the contrary,
each of the moments that composed it employed, for an original
creation, in a matchless harmony, the colour of those days which we
no longer know, and which, for that matter, will still suddenly
enrapture me if by any chance the name 'Guermantes,' resuming for a
moment, after all these years, the sound, so different from its
sound to-day, which it had for me on the day of Mile. Percepied's
marriage, brings back to me that mauve—so delicate, almost too
bright, too new—with which the billowy scarf of the young Duchess
glowed, and, like two periwinkle flowers, growing beyond reach and
blossoming now again, her two eyes, sunlit with an azure smile. And
the name Guermantes of those days is also like one of those little
balloons which have been filled wilh oxygen, or some such gas; when
I come to explode it, to make it emit what it contains, I breathe
the air of the Combray of that year, of that day, mingled with a
fragrance of hawthorn blossom blown by the wind from the corner of
the square, harbinger of rain, which now sent the sun packing, now
let him spread himself over the red woollen carpet to the sacristy,
steeping it in a bright geranium scarlet, with that, so to speak,
Wagnerian harmony in its gaiety which makes the wedding service
always impressive. But even apart from rare moments such as these,
in which suddenly we feel the original entity quiver and resume its
form, carve itself out of the syllables now soundless, dead; if, in
the giddy rush of daily life, in which they serve only the most
practical purposes, names have lost all their colour, like a
prismatic top that spins too quickly and seems only grey, when, on
the other hand, in our musings we reflect, we seek, so as to return
to the past, to slacken, to suspend the perpetual motion by which
we are borne alcng, gradually we see once more appear, side by
side, but entirely distinct from one another, the tints which in
the course of our existence have been successively presented to us
by a single name.
What form was assumed in my mind by this name Guermantes when my
first nurse—knowing no more, probably, than I know to-day in whose
honour it had been composed—sang me to sleep with that old ditty,
Gloire À la Marquise de Guermantes, or when, some years later, the
veteran Maréchal de Guermantes, making my nursery-maid's bosom
swell with pride, stopped in the Champs-Elysées to remark: "A fine
child that!" and gave me a chocolate drop from his comfit-box, I
cannot, of course, now say. Those years of my earliest childhood
are no longer a part of myself; they are external to me; I can
learn nothing of them save as we learn things that happened before
we were born—from the accounts given me by other people. But more
recently I find in the period of that name's occupation of me seven
or eight different shapes which it has successively assumed; the
earliest were the most beautiful; gradually my musings, forced by
reality to abandon a position that was no longer tenable,
established themselves anew in one slightly less advanced until
they were obliged to retire still farther. And, with Mme. de
Guermantes, was transformed simultaneously her dwelling, itself
also the offspring of that name, fertilised from year to year by
some word or other that came to my ears and modulated the tone of
my musings; that dwelling of hers reflected them in its very
stones, which had turned to mirrors, like the surface of a cloud or
of a lake. A dungeon keep without mass, no more indeed than a band
of orange light from the summit of which the lord and his lady
dealt out life and death to their vassals, had given place—right at
the end of that 'Guermantes way' along which, on so many summer
afternoons, I retraced with my parents the course of the Vivonne—to
that land of bubbling streams where the Duchess taught me to fish
for trout and to know the names of the flowers whose red and purple
clusters adorned the walls of the neighbouring gardens; then it had
been the ancient heritage, famous in song and story, from which the
proud race of Guermantes, like a carved and mellow tower that
traverses the ages, had risen already over France when the sky was
still empty at those points where, later, were to rise Notre Dame
of Paris and Notre Dame of Chartres, when on the summit of the hill
of Laon the nave of its cathedral had not yet been poised, like the
Ark of the Deluge on the summit of Mount Ararat, crowded with
Patriarchs and Judges anxiously leaning from its windows to see
whether the wrath of God were yet appeased, carrying with it the
types of the vegetation that was to multiply on the earth, brimming
over with animals which have escaped even by the towers, where oxen
grazing calmly upon the roof look down over the plains of
Champagne; when the traveller who left Beauvais at the close of day
did not yet see, following him and turning with his road, outspread
against the gilded screen of the western sky, the black, ribbed
wings of the cathedral. It was, this 'Guermantes,' like the scene
of a novel, an imaginary landscape which I could with difficulty
picture to myself and longed all the more to discover, set in the
midst of real lands and roads which all of a sudden would become
alive with heraldic details, within a few miles of a railway
station; I recalled the names of the places round it as if they had
been situated at the foot of Parnassus or of Helicon, and they
seemed precious to me, as the physical conditions—in the realm of
topographical science—required for the production of an
unaccountable phenomenon. I saw again the escutcheons blazoned
beneath the windows of Combray church; their quarters filled,
century after century, with all the lordships which, by marriage or
conquest, this illustrious house had brought flying to it from all
the corners of Germany, Italy and France; vast territories in the
North, strong cities in the South, assembled there to group
themselves in Guermantes, and, losing their material quality, to
inscribe allegorically their dungeon vert, or castle triple-towered
argent upon its azure field. I had heard of the famous tapestries
of Guermantes, I could see them, mediaeval and blue, a trifle
coarse, detach themselves like a floating cloud from the legendary,
amaranthine name at the foot of the ancient forest in which
Childebert went so often hunting; and this delicate, mysterious
background of their lands, this vista of the ages, it seemed to me
that, as effectively as by journeying to see them, I might
penetrate all their secrets simply by coming in contact for a
moment in Paris with Mme. de Guermantes, the princess paramount of
the place and lady of the lake, as if her face, her speech must
possess the local charm of forest groves and streams, and the same
secular peculiarities as the old customs recorded in her archives.
But then I had met Saint-Loup; he had told me that the castle had
borne the name of Guermantes only since the seventeenth century,
when that family had acquired it. They had lived, until then, in
the neighbourhood, but their title was not taken from those parts.
The village of Guermantes had received its name from the castle
round which it had been built, and so that it should not destroy
the view from the castle, a servitude, still in force, traced the
line of its streets and limited the height of its houses. As for
the tapestries, they were by Boucher, bought in the nineteenth
century by a Guermantes with a taste for the arts, and hung,
interspersed with a number of sporting pictures of no merit which
he himself had painted, in a hideous drawing-room upholstered in
'adrianople' and plush. By these revelations Saint-Loup had
introduced into the castle elements foreign to the name of
Guermantes which made it impossible for me to continue to extract
solely from the resonance of the syllables the stone and mortar of
its walls. And so, in the heart of the name, was effaced the castle
mirrored in its lake, and what now became apparent to me,
surrounding Mme. de Guermantes as her dwelling, had been her house
in Paris, the Hôtel de Guermantes, limpid like its name, for no
material and opaque element intervened to interrupt and blind its
transparence. As the word church signifies not only the temple but
the assembly of the faithful also, this Hôtel de Guermantes
comprised all those who shared the life of the Duchess, but these
intimates on whom I had never set eyes were for me only famous and
poetic names, and knowing exclusively persons who themselves also
were names only, did but enhance and protect the mystery of the
Duchess by extending all round her a vast halo which at the most
declined in brilliance as its circumference increased.
In the parties which she gave, since I could not imagine the guests
as having any bodies, any moustaches, any boots, as making any
utterances that were commonplace, or even original in a human and
rational way, this whirlpool of names, introducing less material
substance than would a phantom banquet or a spectral ball, round
that statuette in Dresden china which was Madame de Guermantes,
kept for her palace of glass the transparence of a showcase. Then,
after Saint-Loup had told me various anecdotes about his cousin's
chaplain, her gardener, and the rest, the Hôtel de Guermantes had
become—as the Louvre might have been in days gone by—a kind of
castle, surrounded, in the very heart of Paris, by its own domains,
acquired by inheritance, by virtue of an ancient right that had
quaintly survived, over which she still enjoyed feudal privileges.
But this last dwelling itself vanished when we had come to live
beside Mme. de Villeparisis in one of the flats adjoining that
occupied by Mme. de Guermantes in a wing of the Hôtel. It was one
of those old town houses, a few of which are perhaps still to be
found, in which the court of honour—whether they were alluvial
deposits washed there by the rising tide of democracy, or a legacy
from a more primitive time when the different trades were clustered
round the overlord—is flanked by little shops and workrooms, a
shoemaker's, for instance, or a tailor's, such as we see nestling
between the buttresses of those cathedrals which the aesthetic zeal
of the restorer has not swept clear of such accretions; a porter
who also does cobbling, keeps hens, grows flowers, and, at the far
end, in the main building, a 'Comtesse' who, when she drives out in
her old carriage and pair, flaunting on her hat a few nasturtiums
which seem to have escaped from the plot by the porter's lodge
(with, by the coachman's side on the box, a footman who gets down
to leave cards at every aristocratic mansion in the neighbourhood),
scatters vague little smiles and waves her hand in greeting to the
porter's children and to such of her respectable fellow-tenants as
may happen to be passing, who, to her contemptuous affability and
levelling pride, seem all the same.
In the house in which we had now come to live, the great lady at
the end of the courtyard was a Duchess, smart and still quite
young. She was, in fact, Mme. de Guermantes and, thanks to
Françoise, I soon came to know all about her household. For the
Guermantes (to whom Françoise regularly alluded as the people
'below,' or 'downstairs') were her constant preoccupation from the
first thing in the morning when, as she did Mamma's hair, casting a
forbidden, irresistible, furtive glance down into the courtyard,
she would say: "Look at that, now; a pair of holy Sisters; that'll
be for downstairs, surely;" or, "Oh! just look at the fine
pheasants in the kitchen window; no need to ask where they came
from, the Duke will have been out with his gun!"—until the last
thing at night when, if her ear, while she was putting out my
night-things, caught a few notes of a song, she would conclude:
"They're having company down below; gay doings, I'll be bound;"
whereupon, in her symmetrical face, beneath the arch of her now
snow-white hair, a smile from her young days, sprightly but proper,
would for a moment set each of her features in its place, arranging
them in an intricate and special order, as though for a
country-dance.
But the moment in the life of the Guermantes which excited the
keenest interest in Françoise, gave her the most complete
satisfaction and at the same time the sharpest annoyance was that
at which, the two halves of the great gate having been thrust
apart, the Duchess stepped into her carriage. It was generally a
little while after our servants had finished the celebration of
that sort of solemn passover which none might disturb, called their
midday dinner, during which they were so far taboo that my father
himself was not allowed to ring for them, knowing moreover that
none of them would have paid any more attention to the fifth peal
than to the first, and that the discourtesy would therefore have
been a pure waste of time and trouble, though not without trouble
in store for himself. For Françoise (who, in her old age, lost no
opportunity of standing upon her dignity) would without fail have
presented him, for the rest of the day, with a face covered with
the tiny red cuneiform hieroglyphs by which she made visible—though
by no means legible—to the outer world the long tale of her griefs
and the profound reasons for her dissatisfactions. She would
enlarge upon them, too, in a running 'aside,' but not so that we
could catch her words. She called this practice—which, she
imagined, must be infuriating, 'mortifying' as she herself put
it,'vexing' to us—'saying low masses all the blessed day.'
The last rites accomplished, Françoise, who was at one and the same
time, as in the primitive church, the celebrant and one of the
faithful, helped herself to a final glass, undid the napkin from
her throat, folded it after wiping from her lips a stain of watered
wine and coffee, slipped it into its ring, turned a doleful eye to
thank 'her' young footman who, to shew his zeal in her service, was
saying: "Come, ma'am, a drop more of the grape; it's d'licious
to-day," and went straight across to the window, which she flung
open, protesting that it was too hot to breathe in 'this wretched
kitchen.' Dexterously casting, as she turned the latch and let in
the fresh air, a glance of studied indifference into the courtyard
below, she furtively elicited the conclusion that the Duchess was
not ready yet to start, brooded for a moment with contemptuous,
impassioned eyes over the waiting carriage, and, this meed of
attention once paid to the things of the earth, raised them towards
the heavens, whose purity she had already divined from the
sweetness of the air and the warmth of the sun; and let them rest
on a corner of the roof, at the place where, every spring, there
came and built, immediately over the chimney of my bedroom, a pair
of pigeons like those she used to hear cooing from her kitchen at
Combray.
"Ah! Combray, Combray!" she cried. And the almost singing tone in
which she declaimed this invocation might, taken with the Arlesian
purity of her features, have made the onlooker suspect her of a
Southern origin and that the lost land which she was lamenting was
no more, really, than a land of adoption. If so, he would have been
wrong, for it seems that there is no province that has not its own
South-country; do we not indeed constantly meet Savoyards and
Bretons in whose speech we find all those pleasing transpositions
of longs and shorts that are characteristic of the Southerner? "Ah,
Combray, when shall I look on thee again, poor land! When shall I
pass the blessed day among thy hawthorns, under our own poor
lily-oaks, hearing the grasshoppers sing, and the Vivonne making a
little noise like someone whispering, instead of that wretched bell
from our young master, who can never stay still for half an hour on
end without having me run the length of that wicked corridor. And
even then he makes out I don't come quick enough; you'd need to
hear the bell ring before he has pulled it, and if you're a minute
late, away he flies into the most towering rage. Alas, poor
Combray; maybe I shall see thee only in death, when they drop me
like a stone into the hollow of the tomb. And so, nevermore shall I
smell thy lovely hawthorns, so white and all. But in the sleep of
death I dare say I shall still hear those three peals of the bell
which will have driven me to damnation in this world."
Her soliloquy was interrupted by the voice of the waistcoat-maker
downstairs, the same who had so delighted my grandmother once, long
ago, when she had gone to pay a call on Mme. de Villeparisis, and
now occupied no less exalted a place in Franchise's affections.
Having raised his head when he heard our window open, he had
already been trying for some time to attract his neighbour's
attention, in order to bid her good day. The coquetry of the young
girl that Françoise had once been softened and refined for M.
Jupien the querulous face of our old cook, dulled by age,
ill-temper and the heat of the kitchen fire, and it was with a
charming blend of reserve, familiarity and modesty that she
bestowed a gracious salutation on the waistcoat-maker, but without
making any audible response, for if she did infringe Mamma's orders
by looking into the courtyard, she would never have dared to go the
length of talking from the window, which would have been quite
enough (according to her) to bring down on her 'a whole chapter'
from the Mistress. She pointed to the waiting carriage, as who
should say: "A fine pair, eh!" though what she actually muttered
was: "What an old rattle-trap!" but principally because she knew
that he would be bound to answer, putting his hand to his lips so
as to be audible without having to shout:
"You could have one too if you liked, as good as they have and
better, I dare say, only you don't care for that sort of
thing."
And Françoise, after a modest, evasive signal of delight, the
meaning of which was, more or less: "Tastes differ, you know;
simplicity's the rule in this house," shut the window again in case
Mamma should come in. These 'you' who might have had more horses
than the Guermantes were ourselves, but Jupien was right in saying
'you' since, except for a few purely personal gratifications, such
as, when she coughed all day long without ceasing and everyone in
the house was afraid of catching her cold, that of pretending, with
an irritating little titter, that she had not got a cold, like
those plants that an animal to which they are wholly attached keeps
alive with food which it catches, eats and digests for them and of
which it offers them the ultimate and easily assimilable residue,
Françoise lived with us in full community; it was we who, with our
virtues, our wealth, our style of living, must take on ourselves
the task of concocting those little sops to her vanity out of which
was formed—with the addition of the recognised rights of freely
practising the cult of the midday dinner according to the
traditional custom, which included a mouthful of air at the window
when the meal was finished, a certain amount of loitering in the
street when she went out to do her marketing, and a holiday on
Sundays when she paid a visit to her niece—the portion of happiness
indispensable to her existence. And so it can be understood that
Françoise might well have succumbed in those first days of our
migration, a victim, in a house where my father's claims to
distinction were not yet known, to a malady which she herself
called 'wearying,' wearying in the active sense in which the word
ennui is employed by Corneille, or in the last letters of soldiers
who end by taking their own lives because they are wearying for
their girls or for their native villages. Françoise's wearying had
soon been cured by none other than Jupien, for he at once procured
her a pleasure no less keen, indeed more refined than she would
have felt if we had decided to keep a carriage. "Very good class,
those Juliens," (for Françoise readily assimilated new names to
those with which she was already familiar) "very worthy people; you
can see it written on their faces." Jupien was in fact able to
understand, and to inform the world that if we did not keep a
carriage it was because we had no wish for one. This new friend of
Françoise was very little at home, having obtained a post in one of
the Government offices. A waistcoat-maker first of all, with the
'chit of a girl' whom my grandmother had taken for his daughter, he
had lost all interest in the exercise of that calling after his
assistant (who, when still little more than a child, had shewn
great skill in darning a torn skirt, that day when my grandmother
had gone to call on Mme. de Villeparisis) had turned to ladies'
fashions and become a seamstress. A prentice hand, to begin with,
in a dressmaker's workroom, set to stitch a seam, to fasten a
flounce, to sew on a button or to press a crease, to fix a
waistband with hooks and eyes, she had quickly risen to be second
and then chief assistant, and having formed a connexion of her own
among ladies of fashion now worked at home, that is to say in our
courtyard, generally with one or two of her young friends from the
workroom, whom she had taken on as apprentices. After this,
Jupien's presence in the place had ceased to matter. No doubt the
little girl (a big girl by this time) had often to cut out
waistcoats still. But with her friends to assist her she needed no
one besides. And so Jupien, her uncle, had sought employment
outside. He was free at first to return home at midday, then, when
he had definitely succeeded the man whose substitute only he had
begun by being, not before dinner-time. His appointment to the
'regular establishment' was, fortunately, not announced until some
weeks after our arrival, so that his courtesy could be brought to
bear on her long enough to help Françoise to pass through the
first, most difficult phase without undue suffering. At the same
time, and without underrating his value to Françoise as, so to
speak, a sedative during the period of transition, I am bound to
say that my first impression of Jupien had been far from
favourable. At a little distance, entirely ruining the effect that
his plump cheeks and vivid colouring would otherwise have produced,
his eyes, brimming with a compassionate, mournful, dreamy gaze, led
one to suppose that he was seriously ill or had just suffered a
great bereavement. Not only was he nothing of the sort, but as soon
as he opened his mouth (and his speech, by the way, was perfect) he
was quite markedly cynical and cold. There resulted from this
discord between eyes and lips a certain falsity which was not
attractive, and by which he had himself the air of being made as
uncomfortable as a guest who arrives in morning dress at a party
where everyone else is in evening dress, or as a commoner who
having to speak to a Royal Personage does not know exactly how he
ought to address him and gets round the difficulty by cutting down
his remarks to almost nothing. Jupien's (here the comparison ends)
were, on the contrary, charming. Indeed, corresponding possibly to
this overflowing of his face by his eyes (which one ceased to
notice when one came to know him), I soon discerned in him a rare
intellect, and one of the most spontaneously literary that it has
been my privilege to come across, in the sense that, probably
without education, he possessed or had assimilated, with the help
only of a few books skimmed in early life, the most ingenious turns
of speech. The most gifted people that I had known had died young.
And so I was convinced that Jupien's life would soon be cut short.
Kindness was among his qualities, and pity, the most delicate and
the most generous feelings for others. But his part in the life of
Françoise had soon ceased to be indispensable. She had learned to
put up with understudies.
Indeed, when a tradesman or servant came to our door with a parcel
or message, while seeming to pay no attention and merely pointing
vaguely to an empty chair, Françoise so skilfully put to the best
advantage the few seconds that he spent in the kitchen, while he
waited for Mamma's answer, that it was very seldom that the
stranger went away without having ineradicably engraved upon his
memory the conviction that, if we 'did not have' any particular
thing, it was because we had 'no wish' for it. If she made such a
point of other people's knowing that we 'had money' (for she knew
nothing of what Saint-Loup used to call partitive articles, and
said simply 'have money,' 'fetch water'), of their realising that
we were rich, it was not because riches with nothing else besides,
riches without virtue, were in her eyes the supreme good in life;
but virtue without riches was not her ideal either. Riches were for
her, so to speak, a necessary condition of virtue, failing which
virtue itself would lack both merit and charm. She distinguished so
little between them that she had come in time to invest each with
the other's attributes, to expect some material comfort from
virtue, to discover something edifying in riches.
As soon as she had shut the window again, which she did
quickly—otherwise Mamma would, it appeared, have heaped on her
'every conceivable insult'—Françoise began with many groans and
sighs to put straight the kitchen table.
"There are some Guermantes who stay in the Rue de la Chaise," began
my father's valet; "I had a friend who used to be with them; he was
their second coachman. And I know a fellow, not my old pal, but his
brother-in-law, who did his time in the Army with one of the Baron
de Guermantes's stud grooms. Does your mother know you're out?"
added the valet, who was in the habit, just as he used to hum the
popular airs of the season, of peppering his conversation with all
the latest witticisms.
Françoise, with the tired eyes of an ageing woman, eyes which
moreover saw everything from Combray, in a hazy distance, made out
not the witticism that underlay the words, but that there must be
something witty in them since they bore no relation to the rest of
his speech and had been uttered with considerable emphasis by one
whom she knew to be a joker. She smiled at him, therefore, with an
air of benevolent bewilderment, as who should say: "Always the
same, that Victor!" And she was genuinely pleased, knowing that
listening to smart sayings of this sort was akin—if remotely—to
those reputable social pleasures for which, in every class of
society, people make haste to dress themselves in their best and
run the risk of catching cold. Furthermore, she believed the valet
to be a friend after her own heart, for he never left off
denouncing, with fierce indignation, the appalling measures which
the Republic was about to enforce against the clergy. Françoise had
not yet learned that our cruellest adversaries are not those who
contradict and try to convince us, but those who magnify or invent
reports which may make us unhappy, taking care not to include any
appearance of justification, which might lessen our discomfort, and
perhaps give us some slight regard for a party which they make a
point of displaying to us, to complete our torment, as being at
once terrible and triumphant.
"The Duchess must be connected with all that lot," said Françoise,
bringing the conversation back to the Guermantes of the Rue de la
Chaise, as one plays a piece over again from the andante. "I can't
recall who it was told me that one of them had married a cousin of
the Duke. It's the same kindred, anyway. Ay, they're a great
family, the Guermantes!" she added, in a tone of respect founding
the greatness of the family at once on the number of its branches
and the brilliance of its connexions, as Pascal founds the truth of
Religion on Reason and on the Authority of the Scriptures. For
since there was but the single word 'great' to express both
meanings, it seemed to her that they formed a single idea, her
vocabulary, like cut stones sometimes, shewing thus on certain of
its facets a flaw which projected a ray of darkness into the
recesses of her mind. "I wonder now if it wouldn't be them that
have their castle at Guermantes, not a score of miles from Combray;
then they must be kin to their cousin at Algiers, too." My mother
and I long asked ourselves who this cousin at Algiers could be
until finally we discovered that Françoise meant by the name
'Algiers' the town of Angers. What is far off may be more familiar
to us than what is quite near. Françoise, who knew the name
'Algiers' from some particularly unpleasant dates that used to be
given us at the New Year, had never heard of Angers. Her language,
like the French language itself, and especially that of
place-names, was thickly strewn with errors. "I meant to talk to
their butler about it. What is it again you call him?" she
interrupted herself as though putting a formal question as to the
correct procedure, which she went on to answer with: "Oh, of
course, it's Antoine you call him!" as though Antoine had been a
title. "He's the one who could tell me, but he's quite the
gentleman, he is, a great scholar, you'd say they'd cut his tongue
out, or that he'd forgotten to learn to speak. He makes no response
when you talk to him," went on Françoise, who used 'make response'
in the same sense as Mme. de Sévigné. "But," she added, quite
untruthfully, "so long as I know what's boiling in my pot, I don't
bother my head about what's in other people's. Whatever he is, he's
not a Catholic. Besides, he's not a courageous man." (This
criticism might have led one to suppose that Françoise had changed
her mind about physical bravery which, according to her, in Combray
days, lowered men to the level of wild beasts. But it was not so.
'Courageous' meant simply a hard worker.) "They do say, too, that
he's thievish as a magpie, but it doesn't do to believe all one
hears. The servants never stay long there because of the lodge; the
porters are jealous and set the Duchess against them. But it's safe
to say that he's a real twister, that Antoine, and his Antoinesse
is no better," concluded Françoise, who, in furnishing the name
'Antoine' with a feminine ending that would designate the butler's
wife, was inspired, no doubt, in her act of word-formation by an
unconscious memory of the words chanoine and chanoinesse. If so,
she was not far wrong. There is still a street near Notre-Dame
called Rue Chanoinesse, a name which must have been given to it
(since it was never inhabited by any but male Canons) by those
Frenchmen of olden days of whom Françoise was, properly speaking,
the contemporary. She proceeded, moreover, at once to furnish
another example of this way of forming feminine endings, for she
went on: "But one thing sure and certain is that it's the Duchess
that has Guermantes Castle. And it's she that is the Lady Mayoress
down in those parts. That's always something."
"I can well believe that it is something," came with conviction
from the footman, who had not detected the irony.
"You think so, do you, my boy, you think it's something? Why, for
folk like them to be Mayor and Mayoress, it's just thank you for
nothing. Ah, if it was mine, that Guermantes Castle, you wouldn't
see me setting foot in Paris, I can tell you. I'm sure a family
who've got something to go on with, like Monsieur and Madame here,
must have queer ideas to stay on in this wretched town rather than
get away down to Combray the moment they're free to start, and no
one hindering them. Why do they put off retiring? They've got
everything they want. Why wait till they're dead? Ah, if I had only
a crust of dry bread to eat and a faggot to keep me warm in winter,
a fine time I'd have of it at home in my brother's poor old house
at Combray. Down there you do feel you're alive; you haven't all
these houses stuck up in front of you, there is so little noise at
night-time, you can hear the frogs singing five miles off and
more."
"That must indeed be fine!" exclaimed the young footman with
enthusiasm, as though this last attraction had been as peculiar to
Combray as the gondola is to Venice. A more recent arrival in the
household than my father's valet, he used to talk to Françoise
about things which might interest not himself so much as her. And
Françoise, whose face wrinkled up in disgust when she was treated
as a mere cook, had for the young footman, who referred to her
always as the 'housekeeper,' that peculiar tenderness which Princes
not of the blood royal feel towards the well-meaning young men who
dignify them with a 'Highness.'
"At any rate one knows what one's about, there, and what time of
year it is. It isn't like here where you won't find one wretched
buttercup flowering at holy Easter any more than you would at
Christmas, and I can't hear so much as the tiniest angelus ring
when I lift my old bones out of bed in the morning. Down there, you
can hear every hour; there's only the one poor bell, but you say to
yourself: 'My brother will be coming in from the field now,' and
you watch the daylight fade, and the bell rings to bless the fruits
of the earth, and you have time to take a turn before you light the
lamp. But here it's daytime and it's night time, and you go to bed,
and you can't say any more than the dumb beasts what you've been
about all day."
"I gather Méséglise is a fine place, too, Madame," broke in the
young footman, who found that the conversation was becoming a
little too abstract for his liking, and happened to remember having
heard us, at table, mention Méséglise.
"Oh! Méséglise, is it?" said Françoise with the broad smile which
one could always bring to her lips by uttering any of those
names—Méséglise, Combray, Tansonville. They were so intimate a part
of her life that she felt, on meeting them outside it, on hearing
them used in conversation, a hilarity more or less akin to that
which a professor excites in his class by making an allusion to
some contemporary personage whose name the students had never
supposed could possibly greet their ears from the height of the
academic chair. Her pleasure arose also from the feeling that these
places were something to her which they were not for the rest of
the world, old companions with whom one has shared many delights;
and she smiled at them as if she found in them something witty,
because she did find there a great part of herself.
"Yes, you may well say so, son, it is a pretty enough place is
Méséglise;" she went on with a tinkling laugh, "but how did you
ever come to hear tell of Méséglise?"
"How did I hear of Méséglise? But it's a well-known place; people
have told me about it—yes, over and over again," he assured her
with that criminal inexactitude of the informer who, whenever we
attempt to form an impartial estimate of the importance that a
thing which matters to us may have for other people, makes it
impossible for us to succeed.
"I can tell you, it's better down there, under the cherry trees,
than standing before the fire all day."
She spoke to them even of Eulalie as a good person. For since
Eulalie's death Françoise had completely forgotten that she had
loved her as little in her lifetime as she loved every one whose
cupboard was bare, who was dying of hunger, and after that came,
like a good for nothing, thanks to the bounty of the rich, to 'put
on airs.' It no longer pained her that Eulalie had so skilfully
managed, Sunday after Sunday, to secure her 'trifle' from my aunt.
As for the latter, Françoise never left off singing her
praises.
"But it was at Combray, surely, that you used to be, with a cousin
of Madame?" asked the young footman.
"Yes, with Mme. Octave—oh, a dear, good, holy woman, my poor
friends, and a house where there was always enough and to spare,
and all of the very best, a good woman, you may well say, who had
no pity on the partridges, or the pheasants, or anything; you might
turn up five to dinner or six, it was never the meat that was
lacking, and of the first quality too, and white wine, and red
wine, and everything you could wish." (Françoise used the word
'pity' in the sense given it by Labruyère.) "It was she that paid
the damages, always, even if the family stayed for months and
years." (This reflection was not really a slur upon us, for
Françoise belonged to an epoch when the words 'damages' was not
restricted to a legal use and meant simply expense.) "Ah, I can
tell you, people didn't go empty away from that house. As his
reverence the Curé has told us, many's the time, if there ever was
a woman who could count on going straight before the Throne of God,
it was she. Poor Madame, I can hear her saying now, in the little
voice she had: 'You know, Françoise, I can eat nothing myself, but
I want it all to be just as nice for the others as if I could.'
They weren't for her, the victuals, you may be quite sure. If you'd
only seen her, she weighed no more than a bag of cherries; there
wasn't that much of her. She would never listen to a word I said,
she would never send for the doctor. Ah, it wasn't in that house
that you'd have to gobble down your dinner. She liked her servants
to be fed properly. Here, it's been just the same again to-day; we
haven't had time for so much as to break a crust of bread;
everything goes like ducks and drakes."
What annoyed her more than anything were the rusks of pulled bread
that my father used to eat. She was convinced that he had them
simply to give himself airs and to keep her 'dancing.' "I can tell
you frankly," the young footman assured her, "that I never saw the
like." He said it as if he had seen everything, and as if in him
the range of a millennial experience extended over all countries
and their customs, among which was not anywhere to be found a
custom of eating pulled bread. "Yes, yes," the butler muttered,
"but that will all be changed; the men are going on strike in
Canada, and the Minister told Monsieur the other evening that he's
clearing two hundred thousand francs out of it." There was no note
of censure in his tone, not that he was not himself entirely
honest, but since he regarded all politicians as unsound the crime
of peculation seemed to him less serious than the pettiest larceny.
He did not even stop to ask himself whether he had heard this
historic utterance aright, and was not struck by the improbability
that such a thing would have been admitted by the guilty party
himself to my father without my father's immediately turning him
out of the house. But the philosophy of Combray made it impossible
for Françoise to expect that the strikes in Canada could have any
repercussion on the use of pulled bread. "So long as the world goes
round, look, there'll be masters to keep us on the trot, and
servants to do their bidding." In disproof of this theory of
perpetual motion, for the last quarter of an hour my mother (who
probably did not employ the same measures of time as Françoise in
reckoning the duration of the latter's dinner) had been saying:
"What on earth can they be doing? They've been at least two hours
at their dinner."
And she rang timidly three or four times. Françoise, 'her' footman,
the butler, heard the bell ring, not as a summons to themselves,
and with no thought of answering it, but rather like the first
sounds of the instruments being tuned when the next part of a
concert is just going to begin, and one knows that there will be
only a few minutes more of interval. And so, when the peals were
repeated and became more urgent, our servants began to pay
attention, and, judging that they had not much time left and that
the resumption of work was at hand, at a peal somewhat louder than
the rest gave a collective sigh and went their several ways, the
footman slipping downstairs to smoke a cigarette outside the door,
Françoise, after a string of reflexions on ourselves, such as:
"They've got the jumps to-day, surely," going up to put her things
tidy in her attic, while the butler, having supplied himself first
with note-paper from my bedroom, polished off the arrears of his
private correspondence.
Despite the apparent stiffness of their butler, Françoise had been
in a position, from the first, to inform me that the Guermantes
occupied their mansion by virtue not of an immemorial right but of
a quite recent tenancy, and that the garden over which it looked on
the side that I did not know was quite small and just like all the
gardens along the street; and I realised at length that there were
not to be seen there pit and gallows or fortified mill, secret
chamber, pillared dovecot, manorial bakehouse or tithe-barn,
dungeon or drawbridge, or fixed bridge either for that matter, any
more than toll-houses or pinnacles, charters, muniments, ramparts
or commemorative mounds. But just as Elstir, when the bay of
Balbec, losing its mystery, had become for me simply a portion,
interchangeable with any other, of the total quantity of salt water
distributed over the earth's surface, had suddenly restored to it a
personality of its own by telling me that it was the gulf of opal,
painted by Whistler in his 'Harmonies in Blue and Silver,' so the
name Guermantes had seen perish under the strokes of Françoise's
hammer the last of the dwellings that had issued from its syllables
when one day an old friend of my father said to us, speaking of the
Duchess: "She is the first lady in the Faubourg Saint-Germain; hers
is the leading house in the Faubourg Saint-Germain." No doubt the
most exclusive drawing-room, the leading house in the Faubourg
Saint-Germain was little or nothing after all those other mansions
of which in turn I had dreamed. And yet in this one too (and it was
to be the last of the series), there was something, however humble,
quite apart from its material components, a secret
differentiation.
And it became all the more essential that I should be able to
explore in the drawing-room of Mme. de Guermantes, among her
friends, the mystery of her name, since I did not find it in her
person when I saw her leave the house in the morning on foot, or in
the afternoon in her carriage. Once before, indeed, in the church
at Combray, she had appeared to me in the blinding flash of a
transfiguration, with cheeks irreducible to, impenetrable by, the
colour of the name Guermantes and of afternoons on the banks of the
Vivonne, taking the place of my shattered dream like a swan or
willow into which has been changed a god or nymph, and which
henceforward, subjected to natural laws, will glide over the water
or be shaken by the wind. And yet, when that radiance had vanished,
hardly had I lost sight of it before it formed itself again, like
the green and rosy afterglow of sunset after the sweep of the oar
has broken it, and in the solitude of my thoughts the name had
quickly appropriated to itself my impression of the face. But now,
frequently, I saw her at her window, in the courtyard, in the
street, and for myself at least if I did not succeed in integrating
in her the name Guermantes, I cast the blame on the impotence of my
mind to accomplish the whole act that I demanded of it; but she,
our neighbour, she seemed to make the same error, nay more to make
it without discomfiture, without any of my scruples, without even
suspecting that it was an error. Thus Mme. de Guermantes shewed in
her dresses the same anxiety to follow the fashions as if,
believing herself to have become simply a woman like all the rest,
she had aspired to that elegance in her attire in which other
ordinary women might equal and perhaps surpass her; I had seen her
in the street gaze admiringly at a well-dressed actress; and in the
morning, before she sallied forth on foot, as if the opinion of the
passers-by, whose vulgarity she accentuated by parading familiarly
through their midst her inaccessible life, could be a tribunal
competent to judge her, I would see her before the glass playing,
with a conviction free from all pretence or irony, with passion,
with ill-humour, with conceit, like a queen who has consented to
appear as a servant-girl in theatricals at court, this part, so
unworthy of her, of a fashionable woman; and in this mythological
oblivion of her natural grandeur, she looked to see whether her
veil was hanging properly, smoothed her cuffs, straightened her
cloak, as the celestial swan performs all the movements natural to
his animal species, keeps his eyes painted on either side of his
beak without putting into them any glint of life, and darts
suddenly after a bud or an umbrella, as a swan would, without
remembering that he is a god. But as the traveller, disappointed by
the first appearance of a strange town, reminds himself that he
will doubtless succeed in penetrating its charm if he visits its
museums and galleries, so I assured myself that, had I been given
the right of entry into Mme. de Guermantes's house, were I one of
her friends, were I to penetrate into her life, I should then know
what, within its glowing orange-tawny envelope, her name did
really, objectively enclose for other people, since, after all, my
father's friend had said that the Guermantes set was something
quite by itself in the Faubourg Saint-Germain.
The life which I supposed them to lead there flowed from a source
so different from anything in my experience, and must, I felt, be
so indissolubly associated with that particular house that I could
not have imagined the presence, at the Duchess's parties, of people
in whose company I myself had already been, of people who really
existed. For not being able suddenly to change their nature, they
would have carried on conversations there of the sort that I knew;
their partners would perhaps have stooped to reply to them in the
same human speech; and, in the course of an evening spent in the
leading house in the Faubourg Saint-Germain, there would have been
moments identical with moments that I had already lived. Which was
impossible. It was thus that my mind was embarrassed by certain
difficulties, and the Presence of Our Lord's Body in the Host
seemed to me no more obscure a mystery than this leading house in
the Faubourg, situated here, on the right bank of the river, and so
near that from my bed, in the morning, I could hear its carpets
being beaten. But the line of demarcation that separated me from
the Faubourg Saint-Germain seemed to me all the more real because
it was purely ideal. I felt clearly that it was already part of the
Faubourg, when I saw the Guermantes doormat, spread out beyond that
intangible Equator, of which my mother had made bold to say, having
like myself caught a glimpse of it one day when their door stood
open, that it was a shocking state. For the rest, how could their
dining-room, their dim gallery upholstered in red plush, into which
I could see sometimes from our kitchen window, have failed to
possess in my eyes the mysterious charm of the Faubourg
Saint-Germain, to form part of it in an essential fashion, to be
geographically situated within it, since to have been entertained
to dinner in that room was to have gone into the Faubourg
Saint-Germain, to have breathed its atmosphere, since the people
who, before going to table, sat down by the side of Mme. de
Guermantes on the leather-covered sofa in that gallery were all of
the Faubourg Saint-Germain. No doubt elsewhere than in the
Faubourg, at certain parties, one might see now and then,
majestically enthroned amid the vulgar herd of fashion, one of
those men who were mere names and varyingly assumed, when one tried
to form a picture of them, the aspect of a tournament or of a royal
forest. But here, in the leading house in the Faubourg
Saint-Germain, in the drawing-room, in the dim gallery, there were
only they. They were wrought of precious materials, the columns
that upheld the temple. Indeed for quiet family parties it was from
among them only that Mme. de Guermantes might select her guests,
and in the dinners for twelve, gathered around the dazzling napery
and plate, they were like the golden statues of the Apostles in the
Sainte-Chapelle, symbolic, consecrative pillars before the Holy
Table. As for the tiny strip of garden that stretched between high
walls at the back of the house, where on summer evenings Mme. de
Guermantes had liqueurs and orangeade brought out after dinner, how
could I not have felt that to sit there of an evening, between nine
and eleven, on its iron chairs—endowed with a magic as potent as
the leathern sofa—without inhaling the breezes peculiar to the
Faubourg Saint-Germain was as impossible as to take a siesta in the
oasis of Figuig without thereby being necessarily in Africa. Only
imagination and belief can differentiate from the rest certain
objects, certain people, and can create an atmosphere. Alas, those
picturesque sites, those natural accidents, those local
curiosities, those works of art of the Faubourg Saint-Germain,
never probably should I be permitted to set my feet among them. And
I must content myself with a shiver of excitement as I sighted,
from the deep sea (and without the least hope of ever landing
there) like an outstanding minaret, like the first palm, like the
first signs of some exotic industry or vegetation, the well-trodden
doormat of its shore.
But if the Hôtel de Guermantes began for me at its hall-door, its
dependencies must be regarded as extending a long way farther,
according to the Duke, who, looking on all the other tenants as
farmers, peasants, purchasers of forfeited estates, whose opinion
was of no account, shaved himself every morning in his nightshirt
at the window, came down into the courtyard, according to the
warmth or coldness of the day, in his shirtsleeves, in pyjamas, in
a plaid coat of startling colours, with a shaggy nap, in little
light-coloured coats shorter than the jackets beneath, and made one
of his grooms lead past him at a trot some horse that he had just
been buying. More than once, indeed, the horse broke the window of
Jupien's shop, whereupon Jupien, to the Duke's indignation,
demanded compensation. "If it were only in consideration of all the
good that Madame la Duchesse does in the house, here, and in the
parish," said M. de Guermantes, "it is an outrage on this fellow's
part to claim a penny from us." But Jupien had stuck to his point,
apparently not having the faintest idea what 'good' the Duchess had
ever done. And yet she did do good, but—since one cannot do good to
everybody at once—the memory of the benefits that we have heaped on
one person is a valid reason for our abstaining from helping
another, whose discontent we thereby make all the stronger. From
other points of view than that of charity the quarter appeared to
the Duke—and this over a considerable area—to be only an extension
of his courtyard, a longer track for his horses. After seeing how a
new acquisition trotted by itself he would have it harnessed and
taken through all the neighbouring streets, the groom running
beside the carriage holding the reins, making it pass to and fro
before the Duke who stood on the pavement, erect, gigantic,
enormous in his vivid clothes, a cigar between his teeth, his head
in the air, his eyeglass scrutinous, until the moment when he
sprang on the box, drove the horse up and down for a little to try
it, then set off with his new turn-out to pick up his mistress in
the Champs-Elysées. M. de Guermantes bade good day, before leaving
the courtyard, to two couples who belonged more or less to his
world; the first, some cousins of his who, like working-class
parents, were never at home to look after their children, since
every morning the wife went off to the Schola to study counterpoint
and fugue, and the husband to his studio to carve wood and beat
leather; and after them the Baron and Baronne de Norpois, always
dressed in black, she like a pew-opener and he like a mute at a
funeral, who emerged several times daily on their way to church.
They were the nephew and niece of the old Ambassador who was our
friend, and whom my father had, in fact, met at the foot of the
staircase without realising from where he came; for my father
supposed that so important a personage, one who had come in contact
with the most eminent men in Europe and was probably quite
indifferent to the empty distinctions of rank, was hardly likely to
frequent the society of these obscure, clerical and narrow-minded
nobles. They had not been long in the place; Jupien, who had come
out into the courtyard to say a word to the husband just as he was
greeting M. de Guermantes, called him 'M. Norpois,' not being
certain of his name.
"Monsieur Norpois, indeed! Oh, that really is good! Just wait a
little! This individual will be calling you Comrade Norpois next!"
exclaimed M. de Guermantes, turning to the Baron. He was at last
able to vent his spleen against Jupien who addressed him as
'Monsieur,' instead of 'Monsieur le Duc.'
One day when M. de Guermantes required some information upon a
matter of which my father had professional knowledge, he had
introduced himself to him with great courtesy. After that, he had
often some neighbourly service to ask of my father and, as soon as
he saw him begin to come downstairs, his mind occupied with his
work and anxious to avoid any interruption, the Duke, leaving his
stable-boys, would come up to him in the courtyard, straighten the
collar of his great-coat, with the serviceable deftness inherited
from a line of royal body-servants in days gone by, take him by the
hand, and, holding it in his own, patting it even to prove to my
father, with a courtesan's or courtier's shamelessness, that he,
the Duc de Guermantes, made no bargain about my father's right to
the privilege of contact with the ducal flesh, lead him, so to
speak, on leash, extremely annoyed and thinking only how he might
escape, through the carriage entrance out into the street. He had
given us a sweeping bow one day when we had come in just as he was
going out in the carriage with his wife; he was bound to have told
her my name; but what likelihood was there of her remembering it,
or my face either? And besides, what a feeble recommendation to be
pointed out simply as being one of her tenants! Another, more
valuable, would have been my meeting the Duchess in the
drawing-room of Mme. de Villeparisis, who, as it happened, had just
sent word by my grandmother that I was to go and see her, and,
remembering that I had been intending to go in for literature, had
added that I should meet several authors there. But my father felt
that I was still a little young to go into society, and as the
state of my health continued to give him uneasiness he did not see
the use of establishing precedents that would do me no good.
As one of Mme. de Guermantes's footmen was in the habit of talking
to Françoise, I picked up the names of several of the houses which
she frequented, but formed no impression of any of them; from the
moment in which they were a part of her life, of that life which I
saw only through the veil of her name, were they not
inconceivable?
"To-night there's a big party with a Chinese shadow show at the
Princesse de Parme's," said the footman, "but we shan't be going,
because at five o'clock Madame is taking the train to Chantilly, to
spend a few days with the Duc d'Aumale; but it'll be the lady's
maid and valet that are going with her. I'm to stay here. She won't
be at all pleased, the Princesse de Parme won't, that's four times
already she's written to Madame la Duchesse."
"Then you won't be going down to Guermantes Castle this year?"