XIV
Eugenie came slowly back from the
garden to the house, and avoided passing, as was her
custom, through the corridor. But the memory of
her cousin was in the gray old hall and on the chimney-piece,
where stood a certain saucer and the old Sevres sugar-bowl
which she used every morning at her breakfast.
This day was destined to be solemn
throughout and full of events. Nanon announced
the cure of the parish church. He was related
to the Cruchots, and therefore in the interests of
Monsieur de Bonfons. For some time past the old
abbe had urged him to speak to Mademoiselle Grandet,
from a purely religious point of view, about the duty
of marriage for a woman in her position. When
she saw her pastor, Eugenie supposed he had come for
the thousand francs which she gave monthly to the
poor, and she told Nanon to go and fetch them; but
the cure only smiled.
“To-day, mademoiselle,”
he said, “I have come to speak to you about a
poor girl in whom the whole town of Saumur takes an
interest, who, through lack of charity to herself,
neglects her Christian duties.”
“Monsieur le cure, you have
come to me at a moment when I cannot think of my neighbor,
I am filled with thoughts of myself. I am very
unhappy; my only refuge is in the Church; her bosom
is large enough to hold all human woe, her love so
full that we may draw from its depths and never drain
it dry.”
“Mademoiselle, in speaking of
this young girl we shall speak of you. Listen!
If you wish to insure your salvation you have only
two paths to take,—either leave the world
or obey its laws. Obey either your earthly destiny
or your heavenly destiny.”
“Ah! your voice speaks to me
when I need to hear a voice. Yes, God has sent
you to me; I will bid farewell to the world and live
for God alone, in silence and seclusion.”
“My daughter, you must think
long before you take so violent a step. Marriage
is life, the veil is death.”
“Yes, death,—a quick
death!” she said, with dreadful eagerness.
“Death? but you have great obligations
to fulfil to society, mademoiselle. Are you not
the mother of the poor, to whom you give clothes and
wood in winter and work in summer? Your great
fortune is a loan which you must return, and you have
sacredly accepted it as such. To bury yourself
in a convent would be selfishness; to remain an old
maid is to fail in duty. In the first place, can
you manage your vast property alone? May you
not lose it? You will have law-suits, you will
find yourself surrounded by inextricable difficulties.
Believe your pastor: a husband is useful; you
are bound to preserve what God has bestowed upon you.
I speak to you as a precious lamb of my flock.
You love God too truly not to find your salvation
in the midst of his world, of which you are noble
ornament and to which you owe your example.”
At this moment Madame des Grassins
was announced. She came incited by vengeance
and the sense of a great despair.
“Mademoiselle,” she said—“Ah!
here is monsieur le cure; I am silent. I came
to speak to you on business; but I see that you are
conferring with—”
“Madame,” said the cure, “I leave
the field to you.”
“Oh! monsieur le cure,”
said Eugenie, “come back later; your support
is very necessary to me just now.”
“Ah, yes, indeed, my poor child!”
said Madame des Grassins.
“What do you mean?” asked Eugenie and
the cure together.
“Don’t I know about your
cousin’s return, and his marriage with Mademoiselle
d’Aubrion? A woman doesn’t carry her
wits in her pocket.”
Eugenie blushed, and remained silent
for a moment. From this day forth she assumed
the impassible countenance for which her father had
been so remarkable.
“Well, madame,” she presently
said, ironically, “no doubt I carry my wits
in my pocket, for I do not understand you. Speak,
say what you mean, before monsieur le cure; you know
he is my director.”
“Well, then, mademoiselle, here
is what des Grassins writes me. Read it.”
Eugenie read the following letter:—
My dear Wife,—Charles Grandet
has returned from the Indies and
has been in Paris about a month—
“A month!” thought Eugenie,
her hand falling to her side. After a pause she
resumed the letter,—
I had to dance attendance before I was
allowed to see the future
Vicomte d’Aubrion. Though all
Paris is talking of his marriage and
the banns are published—
“He wrote to me after that!”
thought Eugenie. She did not conclude the thought;
she did not cry out, as a Parisian woman would have
done, “The villain!” but though she said
it not, contempt was none the less present in her
mind.
The marriage, however, will not come off.
The Marquis d’Aubrion will never give his
daughter to the son of a bankrupt. I went to
tell Grandet of the steps his uncle and I took in
his father’s business, and the clever manoeuvres
by which we had managed to keep the creditor’s
quiet until the present time. The insolent fellow
had the face to say to me—to me, who for
five years have devoted myself night and day to
his interests and his honor!—that his
father’s affairs were not his! A solicitor
would have had the right to demand fees amounting
to thirty or forty thousand francs, one per cent
on the total of the debts. But patience! there
are twelve hundred thousand francs legitimately owing
to the creditors, and I shall at once declare his
father a bankrupt.
I went into this business on the word
of that old crocodile Grandet, and I have made promises
in the name of his family. If Monsieur de vicomte
d’Aubrion does not care for his honor, I care
for mine. I shall explain my position to the
creditors. Still, I have too much respect for
Mademoiselle Eugenie (to whom under happier circumstances
we once hoped to be allied) to act in this matter
before you have spoken to her about it—
There Eugenie paused, and coldly returned
the letter without finishing it.
“I thank you,” she said to Madame des
Grassins.
“Ah! you have the voice and
manner of your deceased father,” Madame des
Grassins replied.
“Madame, you have eight thousand
francs to pay us,” said Nanon, producing Charles’s
cheque.
“That’s true; have the
kindness to come with me now, Madame Cornoiller.”
“Monsieur le cure,” said
Eugenie with a noble composure, inspired by the thought
she was about to express, “would it be a sin
to remain a virgin after marriage?”
“That is a case of conscience
whose solution is not within my knowledge. If
you wish to know what the celebrated Sanchez says of
it in his treatise ‘De Matrimonio,’ I
shall be able to tell you to-morrow.”
The cure went away; Mademoiselle Grandet
went up to her father’s secret room and spent
the day there alone, without coming down to dinner,
in spite of Nanon’s entreaties. She appeared
in the evening at the hour when the usual company
began to arrive. Never was the old hall so full
as on this occasion. The news of Charles’s
return and his foolish treachery had spread through
the whole town. But however watchful the curiosity
of the visitors might be, it was left unsatisfied.
Eugenie, who expected scrutiny, allowed none of the
cruel emotions that wrung her soul to appear on the
calm surface of her face. She was able to show
a smiling front in answer to all who tried to testify
their interest by mournful looks or melancholy speeches.
She hid her misery behind a veil of courtesy.
Towards nine o’clock the games ended and the
players left the tables, paying their losses and discussing
points of the game as they joined the rest of the company.
At the moment when the whole party rose to take leave,
an unexpected and striking event occurred, which resounded
through the length and breadth of Saumur, from thence
through the arrondissement, and even to the four surrounding
prefectures.
“Stay, monsieur le president,”
said Eugenie to Monsieur de Bonfons as she saw him
take his cane.
There was not a person in that numerous
assembly who was unmoved by these words. The
president turned pale, and was forced to sit down.
“The president gets the millions,”
said Mademoiselle de Gribeaucourt.
“It is plain enough; the president
marries Mademoiselle Grandet,” cried Madame
d’Orsonval.
“All the trumps in one hand,” said the
abbe.
“A love game,” said the notary.
Each and all said his say, made his
pun, and looked at the heiress mounted on her millions
as on a pedestal. The drama begun nine years
before had reached its conclusion. To tell the
president, in face of all Saumur, to “stay,”
was surely the same thing as proclaiming him her husband.
In provincial towns social conventionalities are so
rigidly enforced than an infraction like this constituted
a solemn promise.
“Monsieur le president,”
said Eugenie in a voice of some emotion when they
were left alone, “I know what pleases you in
me. Swear to leave me free during my whole life,
to claim none of the rights which marriage will give
you over me, and my hand is yours. Oh!”
she added, seeing him about to kneel at her feet,
“I have more to say. I must not deceive
you. In my heart I cherish one inextinguishable
feeling. Friendship is the only sentiment which
I can give to a husband. I wish neither to affront
him nor to violate the laws of my own heart. But
you can possess my hand and my fortune only at the
cost of doing me an inestimable service.”
“I am ready for all things,” said the
president.
“Here are fifteen hundred thousand
francs,” she said, drawing from her bosom a
certificate of a hundred shares in the Bank of France.
“Go to Paris,—not to-morrow, but
instantly. Find Monsieur des Grassins, learn
the names of my uncle’s creditors, call them
together, pay them in full all that was owing, with
interest at five per cent from the day the debt was
incurred to the present time. Be careful to obtain
a full and legal receipt, in proper form, before a
notary. You are a magistrate, and I can trust
this matter in your hands. You are a man of honor;
I will put faith in your word, and meet the dangers
of life under shelter of your name. Let us have
mutual indulgence. We have known each other so
long that we are almost related; you would not wish
to render me unhappy.”
The president fell at the feet of
the rich heiress, his heart beating and wrung with
joy.
“I will be your slave!” he said.
“When you obtain the receipts,
monsieur,” she resumed, with a cold glance,
“you will take them with all the other papers
to my cousin Grandet, and you will give him this letter.
On your return I will keep my word.”
The president understood perfectly
that he owed the acquiescence of Mademoiselle Grandet
to some bitterness of love, and he made haste to obey
her orders, lest time should effect a reconciliation
between the pair.
When Monsieur de Bonfons left her,
Eugenie fell back in her chair and burst into tears.
All was over.
The president took the mail-post,
and reached Paris the next evening. The morning
after his arrival he went to see des Grassins, and
together they summoned the creditors to meet at the
notary’s office where the vouchers had been
deposited. Not a single creditor failed to be
present. Creditors though they were, justice must
be done to them, —they were all punctual.
Monsieur de Bonfons, in the name of Mademoiselle Grandet,
paid them the amount of their claims with interest.
The payment of interest was a remarkable event in the
Parisian commerce of that day. When the receipts
were all legally registered, and des Grassins had
received for his services the sum of fifty thousand
francs allowed to him by Eugenie, the president made
his way to the hotel d’Aubrion and found Charles
just entering his own apartment after a serious encounter
with his prospective father-in-law. The old marquis
had told him plainly that he should not marry his
daughter until all the creditors of Guillaume Grandet
had been paid in full.
The president gave Charles the following letter:—
My Cousin,—Monsieur le president
de Bonfons has undertaken to place in your hands
the aquittance for all claims upon my uncle, also
a receipt by which I acknowledge having received from
you the sum total of those claims. I have heard
of a possible failure, and I think that the son
of a bankrupt may not be able to marry Mademoiselle
d’Aubrion. Yes, my cousin, you judged rightly
of my mind and of my manners. I have, it is
true, no part in the world; I understand neither
its calculations nor its customs; and I could not
give you the pleasures that you seek in it. Be
happy, according to the social conventions to which
you have sacrificed our love. To make your
happiness complete I can only offer you your father’s
honor. Adieu! You will always have a faithful
friend in your cousin
Eugenie.
The president smiled at the exclamation
which the ambitious young man could not repress as
he received the documents.
“We shall announce our marriages
at the same time,” remarked Monsieur de Bonfons.
“Ah! you marry Eugenie?
Well, I am delighted; she is a good girl. But,”
added Charles, struck with a luminous idea, “she
must be rich?”
“She had,” said the president,
with a mischievous smile, “about nineteen millions
four days ago; but she has only seventeen millions
to-day.”
Charles looked at him thunderstruck.
“Seventeen mil—”
“Seventeen millions; yes, monsieur.
We shall muster, Mademoiselle Grandet and I, an income
of seven hundred and fifty thousand francs when we
marry.”
“My dear cousin,” said
Charles, recovering a little of his assurance, “we
can push each other’s fortunes.”
“Agreed,” said the president.
“Here is also a little case which I am charged
to give into your own hands,” he added, placing
on the table the leather box which contained the dressing-case.
“Well, my dear friend,”
said Madame d’Aubrion, entering the room without
noticing the president, “don’t pay any
attention to what poor Monsieur d’Aubrion has
just said to you; the Duchesse de Chaulieu has turned
his head. I repeat, nothing shall interfere with
the marriage—”
“Very good, madame. The
three millions which my father owed were paid yesterday.”
“In money?” she asked.
“Yes, in full, capital and interest;
and I am about to do honor to his memory—”
“What folly!” exclaimed
his mother-in-law. “Who is this?”
she whispered in Grandet’s ear, perceiving the
president.
“My man of business,” he answered in a
low voice.
The marquise bowed superciliously to Monsieur de Bonfons.
“We are pushing each other’s
fortunes already,” said the president, taking
up his hat. “Good-by, cousin.”
“He is laughing at me, the old
cockatoo! I’d like to put six inches of
iron into him!” muttered Charles.
The president was out of hearing.
Three days later Monsieur de Bonfons, on his return
to Saumur, announced his marriage with Eugenie.
Six months after the marriage he was appointed councillor
in the Cour royale at Angers. Before leaving
Saumur Madame de Bonfons had the gold of certain jewels,
once so precious to her, melted up, and put, together
with the eight thousand francs paid back by her cousin,
into a golden pyx, which she gave to the parish church
where she had so long prayed for him.
She now spent her time between Angers and Saumur.
Her husband, who had shown some public spirit on a
certain occasion, became a judge in the superior courts,
and finally, after a few years, president of them.
He was anxiously awaiting a general election, in the
hope of being returned to the Chamber of deputies.
He hankered after a peerage; and then—
“The king will be his cousin,
won’t he?” said Nanon, la Grande Nanon,
Madame Cornoiller, bourgeoise of Saumur, as she listened
to her mistress, who was recounting the honors to
which she was called.
Nevertheless, Monsieur de Bonfons
(he had finally abolished his patronymic of Cruchot)
did not realize any of his ambitious ideas. He
died eight days after his election as deputy of Saumur.
God, who sees all and never strikes amiss, punished
him, no doubt, for his sordid calculations and the
legal cleverness with which, accurante Cruchot,
he had drawn up his marriage contract, in which husband
and wife gave to each other, “in case they should
have no children, their entire property of every kind,
landed or otherwise, without exception or reservation,
dispensing even with the formality of an inventory;
provided that said omission of said inventory shall
not injure their heirs and assigns, it being understood
that this deed of gift is, etc., etc.”
This clause of the contract will explain the profound
respect which monsieur le president always testified
for the wishes, and above all, for the solitude of
Madame de Bonfons. Women cited him as the most
considerate and delicate of men, pitied him, and even
went so far as to find fault with the passion and
grief of Eugenie, blaming her, as women know so well
how to blame, with cruel but discreet insinuation.
“Madame de Bonfons must be very
ill to leave her husband entirely alone. Poor
woman! Is she likely to get well? What is
it? Something gastric? A cancer?”—“She
has grown perfectly yellow. She ought to consult
some celebrated doctor in Paris.”—“How
can she be happy without a child? They say she
loves her husband; then why not give him an heir?—in
his position, too!”—“Do you
know, it is really dreadful! If it is the result
of mere caprice, it is unpardonable. Poor president!”
Endowed with the delicate perception
which a solitary soul acquires through constant meditation,
through the exquisite clear-sightedness with which
a mind aloof from life fastens on all that falls within
its sphere, Eugenie, taught by suffering and by her
later education to divine thought, knew well that
the president desired her death that he might step
into possession of their immense fortune, augmented
by the property of his uncle the notary and his uncle
the abbe, whom it had lately pleased God to call to
himself. The poor solitary pitied the president.
Providence avenged her for the calculations and the
indifference of a husband who respected the hopeless
passion on which she spent her life because it was
his surest safeguard. To give life to a child
would give death to his hopes,—the hopes
of selfishness, the joys of ambition, which the president
cherished as he looked into the future.
God thus flung piles of gold upon
this prisoner to whom gold was a matter of indifference,
who longed for heaven, who lived, pious and good,
in holy thoughts, succoring the unfortunate in secret,
and never wearying of such deeds. Madame de Bonfons
became a widow at thirty-six. She is still beautiful,
but with the beauty of a woman who is nearly forty
years of age. Her face is white and placid and
calm; her voice gentle and self-possessed; her manners
are simple. She has the noblest qualities of
sorrow, the saintliness of one who has never soiled
her soul by contact with the world; but she has also
the rigid bearing of an old maid and the petty habits
inseparable from the narrow round of provincial life.
In spite of her vast wealth, she lives as the poor
Eugenie Grandet once lived. The fire is never
lighted on her hearth until the day when her father
allowed it to be lighted in the hall, and it is put
out in conformity with the rules which governed her
youthful years. She dresses as her mother dressed.
The house in Saumur, without sun, without warmth, always
in shadow, melancholy, is an image of her life.
She carefully accumulates her income, and might seem
parsimonious did she not disarm criticism by a noble
employment of her wealth. Pious and charitable
institutions, a hospital for old age, Christian schools
for children, a public library richly endowed, bear
testimony against the charge of avarice which some
persons lay at her door. The churches of Saumur
owe much of their embellishment to her. Madame
de Bonfons (sometimes ironically spoken of as mademoiselle)
inspires for the most part reverential respect:
and yet that noble heart, beating only with tenderest
emotions, has been, from first to last, subjected
to the calculations of human selfishness; money has
cast its frigid influence upon that hallowed life
and taught distrust of feelings to a woman who is all
feeling.
“I have none but you to love me,” she
says to Nanon.
The hand of this woman stanches the
secret wounds in many families. She goes on her
way to heaven attended by a train of benefactions.
The grandeur of her soul redeems the narrowness of
her education and the petty habits of her early life.
Such is the history of Eugenie Grandet,
who is in the world but not of it; who, created to
be supremely a wife and mother, has neither husband
nor children nor family. Lately there has been
some question of her marrying again. The Saumur
people talk of her and of the Marquis de Froidfond,
whose family are beginning to beset the rich widow
just as, in former days, the Cruchots laid siege to
the rich heiress. Nanon and Cornoiller are, it
is said, in the interests of the marquis. Nothing
could be more false. Neither la Grande Nanon nor
Cornoiller has sufficient mind to understand the corruptions
of the world.