Mercadet

Honoré de Balzac
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Mercadet

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Title: Mercadet A Comedy In Three Acts
Author: Honore De Balzac
Release Date: December 3, 2004 [EBook #14246]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
MERCADET ***

Produced by Dagny and John Bickers

MERCADET A COMEDY IN THREE ACTS
BY

HONORE DE BALZAC

Presented for the First Time in Paris At the Theatre du
Gymnase-Dramatique August 24, 1851

PERSONS OF THE PLAY
Mercadet, a speculator Madame Mercadet, his wife Julie, their daughter
Minard, clerk of Mercadet Verdelin, friend of Mercadet Goulard,
creditor of Mercadet Pierquin, creditor of Mercadet Violette, creditor of
Mercadet Mericourt, acquaintance of Mercadet De la Brive, suitor to
Julie Justin, valet Therese, lady's maid Virginie, cook Various other
creditors of Mercadet

SCENE: Paris, in the house of Mercadet
TIME: About 1845

MERCADET

ACT I

SCENE FIRST
(A drawing-room. A door in the centre. Side doors. At the front, to the
left, a mantel-piece with a mirror. To the right, a window, and next it a
writing-table. Armchairs.)
Justin, Virginie and Therese

Justin (finishing dusting the room) Yes, my dears, he finds it very hard
to swim; he is certain to drown, poor M. Mercadet.
Virginie (her basket on her arm) Honestly, do you think that?
Justin He is ruined! And although there is much fat to be stewed from a
master while he is financially embarrassed, you must not forget that he
owes us a year's wages, and we had better get ourselves discharged.
Therese Some masters are so frightfully stubborn! I spoke to the
mistress disrespectfully two or three times, and she pretended not to
hear me.
Virginie Ah! I have been at service in many middle-class houses; but I
have never seen one like this! I am going to leave my stove, and
become an actress in some theatre.
Justin All of us here are nothing but actors in a theatre.
Virginie Yes, indeed, sometimes one has to put on an air of
astonishment, as if just fallen from the moon, when a creditor appears:
"Didn't you know it, sir?"--"No."--"M. Mercadet has gone to
Lyons."--"Ah! He is away?" --"Yes, his prospects are most brilliant; he
has discovered some coal- mines."--"Ah! So much the better! When
does he return?"--"I do not know." Sometimes I put on an expression as
if I had lost the dearest friend I had in the world.
Justin (aside) That would be her money.
Virginie (pretending to cry) "Monsieur and mademoiselle are in the
greatest distress. It seems that we are going to lose poor Madame
Mercadet. They have taken her away to the waters! Ah!"
Therese And then, there are some creditors who are actual brutes! They
speak to you as if you were the masters!
Virginie There's an end of it. I ask them for their bill and tell them I am
going to settle. But now, the tradesmen refuse to give anything without

the money! And you may be sure that I am not going to lend any of
mine.
Justin Let us demand our wages.
Virginie and Therese Yes, let us demand our wages.
Virginie Who are middle-class people? Middle-class people are those
who spend a great deal on their kitchen--
Justin Who are devoted to their servants--
Virginie And who leave them a pension. That is how middle-class
people ought to behave to their servants.
Therese The lady of Picardy speaks well. But all the same, I pity
mademoiselle and young Minard, her suitor.
Justin M. Mercadet is not going to give his daughter to a miserable
bookkeeper who earns no more than eighteen hundred francs a year; he
has better views for her than that.
Therese and Virginie Who is the man he thinks of?
Justin Yesterday two fine young gentlemen came here in a carriage,
and their groom told old Gruneau that one of them was going to marry
Mlle. Mercadet.
Virginie You don't mean to say so! Are those gentlemen in yellow
gloves, with fine flowered waistcoats, going to marry mademoiselle?
Justin Not both of them, lady of Picardy.
Virginie The panels of their carriage shone like satin. Their horse had
rosettes here. (She points to her ears.) It was held by a boy of eight, fair,
with frizzed hair and top boots. He looked as sly as a mouse--a very
Cupid, though he swore like a trooper. His master is as fine
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