<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">wherein it is set forth how the angel mirar,
when bearing grace and consolation to
those dwelling in the neighbourhood of
the champs élysées in paris, beheld a music-hall
singer named bouchotte and fell in
love with her</span></p>
</div>
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<p>HROUGH streets filled with brown
fog, pierced with white and yellow
lights, where horses exhaled their
smoking breath and motors radiated
their rapid search-lights, the angel
made his way, and, mingling with the black flood
of foot-passengers which rolled unceasingly along,
proceeded across the town from north to south till
he came to the lonely boulevards on the left bank
of the river. Not far from the old walls of Port
Royal, a small restaurant flings night by night
athwart the pavement the clouded rays of its
streaming windows. Coming to a halt there,
Arcade entered a room full of warm, savoury odours,
pleasing to the unfortunate beings faint with cold
and hunger. Glancing round him he beheld Russian
Nihilists, Italian Anarchists, refugees, con<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>spirators,
revolutionaries from every quarter of the
globe, picturesque old faces with tumbled masses
of hair and beard that swept downwards even as the
torrent and the waterfall sweep over their rocky
bed. There were young faces of virginal coldness,
expressions sombre and wild, pale eyes of infinite
sweetness, drawn faces, and, in a corner, there were
two Russian women, one extremely lovely, the
other hideous, but both resembling each other in
their indifference to ugliness and to beauty. But
failing to find the face he sought, for there were
no angels in the room, he sat down at a small vacant
marble table.</p>
</div>
<p>Angels, when driven by hunger, eat as do the
animals of this earth, and their food, transformed
by digestive heat, becomes one with their celestial
substance. Seeing three angels under the oaks of
Mamre, Abraham offered them cakes, kneaded by
Sarah, an whole calf, butter and milk, and they ate.
Lot, on receiving two angels in his house, ordered
unleavened bread to be baked, and they did eat.
Arcade was given a tough beef-steak by a seedy
waiter, and he did eat. Nevertheless, his dreams
were of the sweet leisure, of the repose, of the
delightful studies he had quitted, of the heavy task
he had undertaken, of the toil, the weariness, the
perils which he would have to endure, and his soul
was sad and his heart troubled.</p>
<p>As he was finishing his modest repast, a young<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
man of poor appearance and thinly clad entered the
room, and rapidly surveying the tables approached
the angel and greeted him by the name of Abdiel,
because he himself was a celestial spirit.</p>
<p>"I knew you would answer my call, Mirar,"
replied Arcade, addressing his angelic brother in his
turn by the name he formerly bore in heaven. But
Mirar was remembered no more in heaven since he,
an Archangel, had left the service of God. He was
called Théophile Belais on earth, and to earn his
bread gave music lessons to small children in the
day-time and at night played the violin in dancing
saloons.</p>
<p>"It is you, dear Abdiel?" replied Théophile.
"So here we are reunited in this sad world. I am
pleased to see you again. All the same I pity you,
for we lead a hard life here."</p>
<p>But Arcade answered:</p>
<p>"Friend, your exile draws to an end. I have
great plans. I will confide them to you and associate
you with them."</p>
<p>And Maurice's guardian angel, having ordered
two coffees, revealed his ideas and his projects to
his companion: he told how, during his visit on
earth, he had abandoned himself to researches little
practised by celestial spirits and had studied theologies,
cosmogonies, the system of the Universe,
theories of matter, modern essays on the transformation
and loss of energy. Having, he explained,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
studied Nature, he had found her in perpetual
conflict with the teachings of the Master he served.
This Master, greedy of praise, whom he had for a
long time adored, appeared to him now as an ignorant,
stupid, and cruel tyrant. He had denied
Him, blasphemed Him, and was burning to combat
Him. His plan was to recommence the revolt of
the angels. He wished for war, and hoped for
victory.</p>
<p>"But," he added, "it is necessary above all to
know our strength and that of our adversary."
And he asked if the enemies of Ialdabaoth were
numerous and powerful on earth.</p>
<p>Théophile looked wonderingly at his brother.
He appeared not to understand the questions
addressed him.</p>
<p>"Dear compatriot," he said, "I came at your
invitation because it was the invitation of an old
comrade. But I do not know what you expect of
me, and I fear I shall be unable to help you in
anything. I take no hand in politics, neither do I
stand forth as a reformer. I am not like you, a
spirit in revolt, a freethinker, a revolutionary. I
remain faithful, in the depths of my soul, to the
Celestial Creator. I still adore the Master I no
longer serve, and I lament the days when shrouding
myself with my wings I formed with the multitude
of the children of light a wheel of flame around
His throne of glory. Love, profane love has alone<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
separated me from God. I quitted heaven to follow
a daughter of men. She was beautiful and sang in
music-halls."</p>
<p>They rose. Arcade accompanied Théophile, who
was living at the other end of the town, at the
corner of the Boulevard Rochechouart and the Rue
de Steinkerque. While walking through the deserted
streets he who loved the singer told his brother of
his love and his sorrows.</p>
<p>His fall, which dated from two years back, had
been sudden. Belonging to the eighth choir of the
third hierarchy he was a bearer of grace to the
faithful who are still to be found in large numbers
in France, especially among the higher ranks of the
officers of the army and navy.</p>
<p>"One summer night," he said, "as I was descending
from Heaven, to distribute consolations, the
grace of perseverance and of good deaths to divers
pious persons in the neighbourhood of the Étoile,
my eyes, although well accustomed to immortal
light, were dazzled by the fiery flowers with which
the Champs Élysées were sown. Great candelabra,
under the trees, marking the entrances to cafés and
restaurants, gave the foliage the precious glitter
of an emerald. Long garlands of luminous pearl
surrounded the open-air enclosures where a crowd of
men and women sat closely packed listening to the
sounds of a lively orchestra, whose strains reached
my ears confusedly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"The night was warm, my wings were beginning
to grow tired. I descended into one of the concerts
and sat down, invisible, among the audience. At
this moment, a woman appeared on the stage, clad
in a short spangled frock. Owing to the reflection
of the footlights and the paint on her face all that
was visible of the latter was the expression and the
smile. Her body was supple and voluptuous.</p>
<p>"She sang and danced.... Arcade, I have always
loved dancing and music, but this creature's thrilling
voice and insidious movements created in
me an uneasiness I had never known before. My
colour came and went. My eyelids drooped, my
tongue clove to my mouth. I could not leave the
spot."</p>
<p>And Théophile related, groaning, how, possessed
by desire for this woman, he did not return to
Heaven again, but, taking the shape of a man,
lived an earthly life, for it is written: "In those
days the sons of God saw that the daughters of men
were beautiful."</p>
<p>A fallen angel, having lost his innocence along
with the vision of God, Théophile at heart still
retained his simplicity of soul. Clad in rags,
filched from the stall of a Jewish hawker, he went
to seek the woman he loved. She was called Bouchotte
and lodged in a small house in Montmartre.
He flung himself at her feet and told her she was
adorable, that she sang delightfully, that he loved<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span>
her madly, that, for her, he would renounce his
family and his country, that he was a musician and
had nothing to eat. Touched by such youthful
ingenuousness, candour, poverty, and love, she fed,
clothed, and loved him.</p>
<p>However, after long and painful struggles, he
procured employment as a music-teacher, and
made some money, which he brought to his mistress,
keeping nothing for himself. From that time forward
she loved him no longer. She despised him for
earning so little and did not conceal her indifference,
weariness, and disgust. She overwhelmed him with
reproaches, irony, and abuse, in spite of which she
kept him, for she had had experience of worse
partners and was used to domestic quarrels. For
the rest, she led a busy, serious, and rather hard life
as artist and woman. Théophile loved her as he
had loved her the first night, and he suffered.</p>
<p>"She overworks herself," he told his celestial
brother, "that is what makes her so hard to please,
but I am certain she loves me. I hope soon to give
her more comfort."</p>
<p>And he spoke at length of an operetta at which he
was working and which he hoped to have brought
out at a Paris theatre. A young poet had given him
the libretto. It was the story of Aline, queen of
Golconda, after an eighteenth-century tale.</p>
<p>"I am strewing it profusely with melodies," said
Théophile; "my music comes from my heart. My<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span>
heart is an inexhaustible source of melody. Unfortunately
nowadays people like recondite arrangements,
difficult scoring. They accuse me of being
too fluid, too limpid, of not imparting enough colour
to my style, not aiming at stronger effects in harmony
and more vigorous contrasts. Harmony,
harmony!... No doubt it has given its merits, but
it does not appeal to the heart. It is melody which
carries us away and ravishes us and brings smiles and
tears to our eyes." At these words he smiled and
wept to himself. Then he continued with emotion:</p>
<p>"I am a fountain of melody. But the orchestration!
there's the rub! In Paradise, you know,
Arcade, in the matter of instruments, we only
possess the harp, the psaltery, and the hydraulic
organ."</p>
<p>Arcade was only listening to him with half an ear.
He was meditating plans which filled his soul and
swelled his heart.</p>
<p>"Do you know any angels in revolt?" he asked
his companion. "As for me, I know only one,
Prince Istar, with whom I have exchanged a few
letters and who offered to share his attic with me
while I was finding a lodging in this town, where I
believe rents are very high."</p>
<p>Of angels in revolt Théophile knew none. When
he met a fallen spirit who had formerly been one
of his comrades he shook him by the hand, for he
was a faithful friend. Sometimes he saw Prince<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
Istar. But he avoided all those bad angels who
shocked him by the violence of their opinions and
whose conversations plagued him to death.</p>
<p>"Then you don't approve of me?" asked the
impulsive Arcade.</p>
<p>"Friend, I neither approve of you nor blame
you. I understand nothing of the ideas which
trouble you. Neither do I think it good for an
artist to concern himself with politics. One has
quite sufficient to occupy oneself with one's art."</p>
<p>He loved his profession, and had hopes of "arriving"
one day, but theatrical ways disgusted
him. The only chance he saw of having his piece
played was to take one or two—perhaps three—collaborators,
who, without having done any work,
would sign their names and share the profits. Soon
Bouchotte would fail to find engagements. When
she offered her services in some small hall the
manager began by asking her how many shares she
was taking in the business. Such customs, thought
Théophile, were deplorable.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span></p>
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