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bureaucracy-第22部分
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was round and projecting; had the impertinence; so Bixiou said; to
enter the room first; Paulmier's corporation spread to right and left。
A favorite amusement with Bixiou was to measure them quarterly。 The
two clerks; by dint of quarrelling over the details of their lives;
and washing much of their dirty linen at the office; had obtained the
disrepute which they merited。 〃Do you take me for a Chazelle?〃 was a
frequent saying that served to end many an annoying discussion。
Monsieur Poiret junior; called 〃junior〃 to distinguish him from his
brother Monsieur Poiret senior (now living in the Maison Vanquer;
where Poiret junior sometimes dined; intending to end his days in the
same retreat); had spent thirty years in the Civil Service。 Nature
herself is not so fixed and unvarying in her evolutions as was Poiret
junior in all the acts of his daily life; he always laid his things in
precisely the same place; put his pen in the same rack; sat down in
his seat at the same hour; warmed himself at the stove at the same
moment of the day。 His sole vanity consisted in wearing an infallible
watch; timed daily at the Hotel de Ville as he passed it on his way to
the office。 From six to eight o'clock in the morning he kept the books
of a large shop in the rue Saint…Antoine; and from six to eight
o'clock in the evening those of the Maison Camusot; in the rue des
Bourdonnais。 He thus earned three thousand francs a year; counting his
salary from the government。 In a few months his term of service would
be up; when he would retire on a pension; he therefore showed the
utmost indifference to the political intrigues of the bureaus。 Like
his elder brother; to whom retirement from active service had proved a
fatal blow; he would probably grow an old man when he could no longer
come from his home to the ministry; sit in the same chair and copy a
certain number of pages。 Poiret's eyes were dim; his glance weak and
lifeless; his skin discolored and wrinkled; gray in tone and speckled
with bluish dots; his nose flat; his lips drawn inward to the mouth;
where a few defective teeth still lingered。 His gray hair; flattened
to the head by the pressure of his hat; gave him the look of an
ecclesiastic;a resemblance he would scarcely have liked; for he
hated priests and clergy; though he could give no reasons for his
anti…religious views。 This antipathy; however; did not prevent him
from being extremely attached to whatever administration happened to
be in power。 He never buttoned his old green coat; even on the coldest
days; and he always wore shoes with ties; and black trousers。
No human life was ever lived so thoroughly by rule。 Poiret kept all
his receipted bills; even the most trifling; and all his account…
books; wrapped in old shirts and put away according to their
respective years from the time of his entrance at the ministry。 Rough
copies of his letters were dated and put away in a box; ticketed 〃My
Correspondence。〃 He dined at the same restaurant (the Sucking Calf in
the place du Chatelet); and sat in the same place; which the waiters
kept for him。 He never gave five minutes more time to the shop in the
rue Saint Antoine than justly belonged to it; and at half…past eight
precisely he reached the Cafe David; where he breakfasted and remained
till eleven。 There he listened to political discussions; his arms
crossed on his cane; his chin in his right hand; never saying a word。
The dame du comptoir; the only woman to whom he ever spoke with
pleasure; was the sole confidant of the little events of his life; for
his seat was close to her counter。 He played dominoes; the only game
he was capable of understanding。 When his partners did not happen to
be present; he usually went to sleep with his back against the
wainscot; holding a newspaper in his hand; the wooden file resting on
the marble of his table。 He was interested in the buildings going up
in Paris; and spent his Sundays in walking about to examine them。 He
was often heard to say; 〃I saw the Louvre emerge from its rubbish; I
saw the birth of the place du Chatelet; the quai aux Fleurs and the
Markets。〃 He and his brother; both born at Troyes; were sent in youth
to serve their apprenticeship in a government office。 Their mother
made herself notorious by misconduct; and the two brothers had the
grief of hearing of her death in the hospital at Troyes; although they
had frequently sent money for her support。 This event led them both
not only to abjure marriage; but to feel a horror of children; ill at
ease with them; they feared them as others fear madmen; and watched
them with haggard eyes。
Since the day when he first came to Paris Poiret junior had never gone
outside the city。 He began at that time to keep a journal of his life;
in which he noted down all the striking events of his day。 Du Bruel
told him that Lord Byron did the same thing。 This likeness filled
Poiret junior with delight; and led him to buy the works of Lord
Byron; translated by Chastopalli; of which he did not understand a
word。 At the office he was often seen in a melancholy attitude; as
though absorbed in thought; when in fact he was thinking of nothing at
all。 He did not know a single person in the house where he lived; and
always carried the keys of his apartment about with him。 On New…Year's
day he went round and left his own cards on all the clerks of the
division。 Bixiou took it into his head on one of the hottest of dog…
days to put a layer of lard under the lining of a certain old hat
which Poiret junior (he was; by the bye; fifty…two years old) had worn
for the last nine years。 Bixiou; who had never seen any other hat on
Poiret's head; dreamed of it and declared he tasted it in his food; he
therefore resolved; in the interests of his digestion; to relieve the
bureau of the sight of that amorphous old hat。 Poiret junior left the
office regularly at four o'clock。 As he walked along; the sun's rays
reflected from the pavements and walls produced a tropical heat; he
felt that his head was inundated;he; who never perspired! Feeling
that he was ill; or on the point of being so; instead of going as
usual to the Sucking Calf he went home; drew out from his desk the
journal of his life; and recorded the fact in the following manner:
〃To…day; July 3; 1823; overtaken by extraordinary perspiration; a
sign; perhaps; of the sweating…sickness; a malady which prevails
in Champagne。 I am about to consult Doctor Haudry。 The disease
first appeared as I reached the highest part of the quai des
Ecoles。〃
Suddenly; having taken off his hat; he became aware that the
mysterious sweat had some cause independent of his own person。 He
wiped his face; examined the hat; and could find nothing; for he did
not venture to take out the lining。 All this he noted in his
journal:
〃Carried my hat to the Sieur Tournan; hat…maker in the rue Saint…
Martin; for the reason that I suspect some unknown cause for this
perspiration; which; in that case; might not be perspiration; but;
possibly; the effect of something lately added; or formerly done;
to my hat。〃
Monsieur Tournan at once informed his customer of the presence of a
greasy substance; obtained by the trying…out of the fat of a pig or
sow。 The next day Poiret appeared at the office with another hat; lent
by Monsieur Tournan while a new one was making; but he did not sleep
that night until he had added the following sentence to the preceding
entries in his journal: 〃It is asserted that my hat contained lard;
the fat of a pig。〃
This inexplicable fact occupied the intellect of Poiret junior for the
space of two weeks; and he never knew how the phenomenon was produced。
The clerks told him tales of showers of frogs; and other dog…day
wonders; also the startling fact that an imprint of the head of
Napoleon had been found in the root of a young elm; with other
eccentricities of natural history。 Vimeux informed him that one day
his hathis; Vimeux'shad stained his forehead black; and that hat…
makers were in the habit of using drugs。 After that Poiret paid many
visits to Monsieur Tournan to inquire into his methods of manufacture。
In the Rabourdin bureau was a clerk who played the man of courage and
audacity; professed the opinions of the Left centre; and rebelled
against the tyrannies of Baudoyer as exercised upon what he called the
unhappy slaves of that office。 His name was Fleury。 He boldly
subscribed to an opposition newspaper; wore a gray hat with a broad
brim; red bands on his blue trousers; a blue waistcoat with gilt
buttons; and a surtout coat crossed over the breast like that of a
quartermaster of gendarmerie。 Though unyielding in his opinions; he
continued to be employed in the service; all the while predicting a
fatal end to a government which persisted in upholding religion。 He
openly avowed his sympathy for Napoleon; now that the death of that
great man put an end to the
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