Complete Works of James Joyce (297 page)

THE CAT AND THE DEVIL LETTER

 

To Stephen Joyce

Villers sur Mer

10 August 1936

 

My dear Stevie,

I sent you a little cat filled with sweets a few days ago but perhaps you do not know the story about the cat of Beaugency.

Beaugency is a tiny old town on the bank of Loire, France’s longest river. It is also a very wide river, for France at least. At Beaugency it is so wide that if you wanted to cross it from one bank to the other you would have to take at least one thousand steps. Long ago the people of Beaugency, when they wanted to cross it, had to go in a boat for there was no bridge. And they could not make one for themselves or pay anybody else to make one. So what were they to do?

The devil, who is always reading the newspapers, heard about this sad state of theirs so he dressed himself and came to call on the lord mayor of Beaugency, who was named Monsieur Alfred Byrne. This lord mayor was very fond of dressing himself too. He wore a scarlet robe and always had a great golden chain round his neck even when he was fast asleep in bed with his knees in his mouth.

The devil told the lord mayor what he had read in the newspaper and said he could make a bridge for the people of Beaugency so that they could cross the river as often as they wished. He said he could make a bridge as good as ever was made, and make it in one single night.

The lord mayor asked him how much money he wanted for making such a bridge. No money at all, said the devil, all I ask is that the first person who crosses the bridge shall belong to me. Good, said the lord mayor.

The night came down, all the people in Beaugency went to bed and slept. The morning came. And when they put their heads out of their windows they cried: O Loire, what a fine bridge! For they saw a fine strong stone bridge thrown across the wide river.

All the people ran down to the head of the bridge and looked across it. There was the devil, standing at the other side of the bridge, waiting for the first person who should cross it. But nobody dared to cross it for fear of the devil. Then there was the sound of bugles – that was a sign for the people to be silent – and the lord mayor M. Alfred Byrne appeared in his great scarlet robe and wearing his heavy golden chain round his neck. He had a bucket of water in one hand and under his arm – the other arm – he carried a cat.

The devil stopped dancing when he saw him from the other side of the bridge and put up his long spyglass. All the people whispered to one another and the cat looked up at the lord mayor because in the town of Beaugency it was allowed that a cat should look at a lord mayor. When he was tired of looking at the lord mayor (because even a cat gets tired of looking at a lord mayor) he began to play with the lord mayor’s heavy golden chain.

When the lord mayor came to the head of the bridge every man held his breath and every woman held her tongue. The lord mayor put the cat down on the bridge and, quick as a thought, splash! he emptied the whole bucket of water over it.

The cat who was now between the devil and the bucket of water made up his mind quite as quickly and ran with his ears back across the bridge and into the devil’s arms.

The devil was as angry as the devil himself.
Messieurs les Balgentiens, he shouted across the bridge, vous n’ etes pas de belles gens du tout! Vous n’ ete que des chats!*

And he said to the cat: Viens ici, mon petit chat! Tu as peur, mon petit chou-chat! Viens ici, le diable t’ emporte! On va se chauffer tous les deuex.
And off he went with the cat.

And since that time the people of that town are called le chats de Beaugency.

But the bridge is there still and there are boys walking and riding and playing upon it.

I hope you will like this story.

Nonno

 

P.S. The devil mostly speaks a language of his own called Bellsybabble which he makes up himself as he goes along but when he is very angry he can speak quite bad French very well, though some who have heard him, say that he has a strong Dublin accent.

Other Prose Works

 

Nora, Joyce’s wife and muse

EPIPHANIES

 

These forty brief prose works are among some of Joyce’s earliest writings, which he titled ‘epiphanies’, being ‘sudden spiritual manifestations’.
 
They form a series that originally contained at least seventy-one pieces, but sadly some have been lost. The
Epiphanies
are a link between Joyce’s early poetry and his early fiction, aiding us in understanding the formative stages of the writer’s art.
 
They were written from 1901 to 1904 and they include fragmentary recordings of overheard dialogue, as well as Joyce’s own personal thoughts. He kept hold of these fragments and later drew upon them in his famous novels, often repeating specific spiritual images.
 
Joyce regarded these enigmatical works as being “little errors and gestures - mere straws in the wind - by which people betrayed the very things they were most careful to conceal”. Therefore, the
Epiphanies
are, broadly speaking, sketches, objective in form and deliberately incomplete.

1

 

            
(Bray: in the parlour of the house

            
in Martello Terrace)

Mr Vance - (
comes in with a stick)
... O, you know,

   
he’ll have to apologise, Mrs Joyce.

Mrs Joyce - O yes... Do you hear that, Jim?

Mr Vance - Or else - if he doesn’t - the eagles’11

   
come and pull out his eyes.

Mrs Joyce - O, but I’m sure he will apologise.

Joyce - (
under the table, to himself)

 
 
— Pull out his eyes,

   
Apologise,

   
Apologise,

   
Pull out his eyes.

   
Apologise,

   
Pull out his eyes,

   
Pull out his eyes,

   
Apologise.

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The Woman on the Train by Colley, Rupert
The Weight of Shadows by José Orduña
He Who Fears the Wolf by Karin Fossum
Fractions = Trouble! by Claudia Mills