The Artist
By Guy De Maupassant
Bah!
Monsieur," the old mountebank said to me; "it is a matter of exercise
and habit, that is all! Of course, one requires to be a little gifted that way
and not to be butter-fingered, but what is chiefly necessary is patience and
daily practice for long, long years."
His
modesty surprised me all the more, because of all performers who are generally
infatuated with their own skill, he was the most wonderfully clever one I had
met. Certainly I had frequently seen him, for everybody had seen him in some
circus or other, or even in traveling shows, performing the trick that consists
of putting a man or woman with extended arms against a wooden target, and in
throwing knives between their fingers and round their heads, from a distance.
There is nothing very extraordinary in it, after all, when one knows THE TRICKS
OF THE TRADE, and that the knives are not the least sharp, and stick into the
wood at some distance from the flesh. It is the rapidity of the throws, the
glitter of the blades, and the curve which the handles make toward their living
object, which give an air of danger to an exhibition that has become
commonplace, and only requires very middling skill.
But here
there was no trick and no deception, and no dust thrown into the eyes. It was
done in good earnest and in all sincerity. The knives were as sharp as razors,
and the old mountebank planted them close to the flesh, exactly in the angle
between the fingers. He surrounded the head with a perfect halo of knives, and
the neck with a collar from which nobody could have extricated himself without
cutting his carotid artery, while, to increase the difficulty, the old fellow
went through the performance without seeing, his whole face being covered with
a close mask of thick oilcloth.
Naturally, like other great artists, he was not understood by the crowd,
who confounded him with vulgar tricksters, and his mask only appeared to them a
trick the more, and a very common trick into the bargain.
"He
must think us very stupid," they said. "How could he possibly aim
without having his eyes open?"
And they
thought there must be imperceptible holes in the oilcloth, a sort of
latticework concealed in the material. It was useless for him to allow the
public to examine the mask for themselves before the exhibition began. It was
all very well that they could not discover any trick, but they were only all
the more convinced that they were being tricked. Did not the people know that
they ought to be tricked?
I had
recognized a great artist in the old mountebank, and I was quite sure that he
was altogether incapable of any trickery. I told him so, while expressing my
admiration to him; and he had been touched by my open admiration and above all
by the justice I had done him. Thus we became good friends, and he explained to
me, very modestly, the real trick which the crowd do not understand, the
eternal trick contained in these simple words: "To be gifted by nature and
to practice every day for long, long years."
He had
been especially struck by the certainty which I expressed that any trickery
must become impossible to him. "Yes," he said to me; "quite
impossible! Impossible to a degree which you cannot imagine. If I were to tell
you! But where would be the use?"
His face clouded over, and his
eyes filled with tears. I did not venture to force myself into his confidence.
My looks, however, were not so discreet as my silence, and begged him to speak;
so he responded to their mute appeal.
"After all," he said; "why should I not tell you about
it? You will understand me." And he added, with a look of sudden ferocity:
"She understood it, at any rate!"
"Who?" I asked.
"My
strumpet of a wife," he replied. "Ah! Monsieur, what an abominable
creature she was--if you only knew! Yes, she understood it too well, too well,
and that is why I hate her so; even more on that account, than for having
deceived me. For that is a natural fault, is it not, and may be pardoned? But
the other thing was a crime, a horrible crime."
The
woman, who stood against the wooden target every night with her arms stretched
out and her finger extended, and whom the old mountebank fitted with gloves and
with a halo formed of his knives, which were as sharp as razors and which he
planted close to her, was his wife. She might have been a woman of forty, and
must have been fairly pretty, but with a perverse prettiness; she had an
impudent mouth, a mouth that was at the same time sensual and bad, with the
lower lip too thick for the thin, dry upper lip.
I had
several times noticed that every time he planted a knife in the board, she
uttered a laugh, so low as scarcely to be heard, but which was very significant
when one heard it, for it was a hard and very mocking laugh. I had always
attributed that sort of reply to an artifice which the occasion required. It
was intended, I thought, to accentuate the danger she incurred and the contempt
that she felt for it, thanks to the sureness of the thrower's hands, and so I
was very much surprised when the mountebank said to me:
"Have you observed her laugh, I say? Her evil laugh which makes fun
of me, and her cowardly laugh which defies me? Yes, cowardly, because she knows
that nothing can happen to her, nothing, in spite of all she deserves, in spite
of all that I ought to do to her, in spite of all that I WANT to do to
her."
"What do you want to do?"
"Confound it! Cannot you guess? I want to kill her."
"To
kill her, because she has--"
"Because she has deceived me? No, no, not that, I tell you again. I
have forgiven her for that a long time ago, and I am too much accustomed to it!
But the worst of it is that the first time I forgave her, when I told her that
all the same I might some day have my revenge by cutting her throat, if I
chose, without seeming to do it on purpose, as if it were an accident, mere
awkwardness--"
"Oh! So you said that to her?"
"Of
course I did, and I meant it. I thought I might be able to do it, for you see I
had the perfect right to do so. It was so simple, so easy, so tempting! Just
think! A mistake of less than half an inch, and her skin would be cut at the
neck where the jugular vein is, and the jugular would be severed. My knives cut
very well! And when once the jugular is cut--good-bye. The blood would spurt
out, and one, two, three red jets, and all would be over; she would be dead,
and I should have had my revenge!"
"That is true, certainly, horribly true!"
"And without any risk to me, eh? An accident, that is all; bad
luck, one of those mistakes which happen every day in our business. What could
they accuse me of? Whoever would think of accusing me, even? Homicide through
imprudence, that would be all! They would even pity me, rather than accuse me.
'My wife! My poor wife!' I should say, sobbing. 'My wife, who is so necessary
to me, who is half the breadwinner, who takes part in my performance!' You must
acknowledge that I should be pitied!"
"Certainly; there is not the least doubt about that."
"And you must allow that such a revenge would he a very nice
revenge, the best possible revenge which I could have with assured
impunity."
"Evidently that is so."
"Very well! But when I told her so, as I have told you, and more
forcibly still; threatening her as I was mad with rage and ready to do the deed
that I had dreamed of on the spot, what do you think she said?"
"That you were a good fellow, and would certainly not have the
atrocious courage to--"
"Tut! tut! tut! I am not such a good fellow as you think. I am not
frightened of blood, and that I have proved already, though it would be useless
to tell you how and where. But I had no necessity to prove it to her, for she
knows that I am capable of a good many things; even of crime; especially of one
crime."
"And she was not frightened?"
"No. She merely replied that I could not do what I said; you
understand. That I could not do it!"
"Why
not?"
"Ah! Monsieur, so you do not understand? Why do you not? I have I
not explained to you by what constant, long, daily practice I have learned to
plant my knives without seeing what I am doing?"
"Yes, well, what then?"
"Well! Cannot you understand what she has understood with such
terrible results, that now my hand would no longer obey me if I wished to make
a mistake as I threw?"
"Is
it possible?"
"Nothing is truer, I am sorry to say. For I really have wished to
have the revenge which I have dreamed of, and which I thought so easy.
Exasperated by that bad woman's insolence and confidence in her own safety, I
have several times made up my mind to kill her, and have exerted all my energy
and all my skill to make my knives fly aside when I threw them to make a border
round her neck. I have tried with all my might to make them deviate half an
inch, just enough to cut her throat. I wanted to, and I have never succeeded,
never. And always the slut's horrible laugh makes fun of me, always,
always."
And with
a deluge of tears, with something like a roar of unsatiated and muzzled rage,
he ground his teeth as he wound up: "She knows me, the jade; she is in the
secret of my work, of my patience, of my trick, routine, whatever you may call
it! She lives in my innermost being, and sees into it more closely than you do,
or than I do myself. She knows what a faultless machine I have become, the
machine of which she makes fun, the machine which is too well wound up, the
machine which cannot get out of order--and she knows that I CANNOT make a
mistake."
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