VI
About four o’clock an abrupt
knock at the door struck sharply on the heart of Madame
Grandet.
“What can have happened to your
father?” she said to her daughter.
Grandet entered joyously. After
taking off his gloves, he rubbed his hands hard enough
to take off their skin as well, if his epidermis had
not been tanned and cured like Russia leather,—saving,
of course, the perfume of larch-trees and incense.
Presently his secret escaped him.
“Wife,” he said, without
stuttering, “I’ve trapped them all!
Our wine is sold! The Dutch and the Belgians
have gone. I walked about the market-place in
front of their inn, pretending to be doing nothing.
That Belgian fellow—you know who I mean—came
up to me. The owners of all the good vineyards
have kept back their vintages, intending to wait;
well, I didn’t hinder them. The Belgian
was in despair; I saw that. In a minute the bargain
was made. He takes my vintage at two hundred
francs the puncheon, half down. He paid me in
gold; the notes are drawn. Here are six louis
for you. In three months wines will have fallen.”
These words, uttered in a quiet tone
of voice, were nevertheless so bitterly sarcastic
that the inhabitants of Saumur, grouped at this moment
in the market-place and overwhelmed by the news of
the sale Grandet had just effected, would have shuddered
had they heard them. Their panic would have brought
the price of wines down fifty per cent at once.
“Did you have a thousand puncheons this year,
father?”
“Yes, little one.”
That term applied to his daughter
was the superlative expression of the old miser’s
joy.
“Then that makes two hundred thousand pieces
of twenty sous each?”
“Yes, Mademoiselle Grandet.”
“Then, father, you can easily help Charles.”
The amazement, the anger, the stupefaction
of Belshazzar when he saw the Mene-Tekel-Upharsin
before his eyes is not to be compared with the cold
rage of Grandet, who, having forgotten his nephew,
now found him enshrined in the heart and calculations
of his daughter.
“What’s this? Ever
since that dandy put foot in my house everything
goes wrong! You behave as if you had the right
to buy sugar-plums and make feasts and weddings.
I won’t have that sort of thing. I hope
I know my duty at my time of life! I certainly
sha’n’t take lessons from my daughter,
or from anybody else. I shall do for my nephew
what it is proper to do, and you have no need to poke
your nose into it. As for you, Eugenie,”
he added, facing her, “don’t speak of this
again, or I’ll send you to the Abbaye des Noyers
with Nanon, see if I don’t; and no later than
to-morrow either, if you disobey me! Where is
that fellow, has he come down yet?”
“No, my friend,” answered Madame Grandet.
“What is he doing then?”
“He is weeping for his father,” said Eugenie.
Grandet looked at his daughter without
finding a word to say; after all, he was a father.
He made a couple of turns up and down the room, and
then went hurriedly to his secret den to think over
an investment he was meditating in the public Funds.
The thinning out of his two thousand acres of forest
land had yielded him six hundred thousand francs:
putting this sum to that derived from the sale of his
poplars and to his other gains for the last year and
for the current year, he had amassed a total of nine
hundred thousand francs, without counting the two
hundred thousand he had got by the sale just concluded.
The twenty per cent which Cruchot assured him would
gain in a short time from the Funds, then quoted at
seventy, tempted him. He figured out his calculation
on the margin of the newspaper which gave the account
of his brother’s death, all the while hearing
the moans of his nephew, but without listening to
them. Nanon came and knocked on the wall to summon
him to dinner. On the last step of the staircase
he was saying to himself as he came down,—
“I’ll do it; I shall get
eight per cent interest. In two years I shall
have fifteen hundred thousand francs, which I will
then draw out in good gold,—Well, where’s
my nephew?”
“He says he doesn’t want
anything to eat,” answered Nanon; “that’s
not good for him.”
“So much saved,” retorted her master.
“That’s so,” she said.
“Bah! he won’t cry long. Hunger drives
the wolves out of the woods.”
The dinner was eaten in silence.
“My good friend,” said
Madame Grandet, when the cloth was removed, “we
must put on mourning.”
“Upon my word, Madame Grandet!
what will you invent next to spend money on?
Mourning is in the heart, and not in the clothes.”
“But mourning for a brother
is indispensable; and the Church commands us to—”
“Buy your mourning out of your
six louis. Give me a hat-band; that’s enough
for me.”
Eugenie raised her eyes to heaven
without uttering a word. Her generous instincts,
slumbering and long repressed but now suddenly and
for the first time awakened, were galled at every turn.
The evening passed to all appearance like a thousand
other evenings of their monotonous life, yet it was
certainly the most horrible. Eugenie sewed without
raising her head, and did not use the workbox which
Charles had despised the night before. Madame
Grandet knitted her sleeves. Grandet twirled
his thumbs for four hours, absorbed in calculations
whose results were on the morrow to astonish Saumur.
No one came to visit the family that day. The
whole town was ringing with the news of the business
trick just played by Grandet, the failure of his brother,
and the arrival of his nephew. Obeying the desire
to gossip over their mutual interests, all the upper
and middle-class wine-growers in Saumur met at Monsieur
des Grassins, where terrible imprecations were being
fulminated against the ex-mayor. Nanon was spinning,
and the whirr of her wheel was the only sound heard
beneath the gray rafters of that silent hall.
“We don’t waste our tongues,”
she said, showing her teeth, as large and white as
peeled almonds.
“Nothing should be wasted,”
answered Grandet, rousing himself from his reverie.
He saw a perspective of eight millions in three years,
and he was sailing along that sheet of gold.
“Let us go to bed. I will bid my nephew
good-night for the rest of you, and see if he will
take anything.”
Madame Grandet remained on the landing
of the first storey to hear the conversation that
was about to take place between the goodman and his
nephew. Eugenie, bolder than her mother, went
up two stairs.
“Well, nephew, you are in trouble.
Yes, weep, that’s natural. A father is
a father; but we must bear our troubles patiently.
I am a good uncle to you, remember that. Come,
take courage! Will you have a little glass of
wine?” (Wine costs nothing in Saumur, and they
offer it as tea is offered in China.) “Why!”
added Grandet, “you have got no light!
That’s bad, very bad; you ought to see what you
are about,” and he walked to the chimney-piece.
“What’s this?” he cried. “A
wax candle! How the devil did they filch a wax
candle? The spendthrifts would tear down the
ceilings of my house to boil the fellow’s eggs.”
Hearing these words, mother and daughter
slipped back into their rooms and burrowed in their
beds, with the celerity of frightened mice getting
back to their holes.
“Madame Grandet, have you found
a mine?” said the man, coming into the chamber
of his wife.
“My friend, wait; I am saying
my prayers,” said the poor mother in a trembling
voice.
“The devil take your good God!”
growled Grandet in reply.
Misers have no belief in a future
life; the present is their all in all. This thought
casts a terrible light upon our present epoch, in
which, far more than at any former period, money sways
the laws and politics and morals. Institutions,
books, men, and dogmas, all conspire to undermine
belief in a future life,—a belief upon which
the social edifice has rested for eighteen hundred
years. The grave, as a means of transition, is
little feared in our day. The future, which once
opened to us beyond the requiems, has now been imported
into the present. To obtain per fas et nefas
a terrestrial paradise of luxury and earthly enjoyment,
to harden the heart and macerate the body for the
sake of fleeting possessions, as the martyrs once
suffered all things to reach eternal joys, this is
now the universal thought—a thought written
everywhere, even in the very laws which ask of the
legislator, “What do you pay?” instead
of asking him, “What do you think?” When
this doctrine has passed down from the bourgeoisie
to the populace, where will this country be?
“Madame Grandet, have you done?” asked
the old man.
“My friend, I am praying for you.”
“Very good! Good-night; to-morrow morning
we will have a talk.”
The poor woman went to sleep like
a schoolboy who, not having learned his lessons, knows
he will see his master’s angry face on the morrow.
At the moment when, filled with fear, she was drawing
the sheet above her head that she might stifle hearing,
Eugenie, in her night-gown and with naked feet, ran
to her side and kissed her brow.
“Oh! my good mother,” she said, “to-morrow
I will tell him it was I.”
“No; he would send you to Noyers.
Leave me to manage it; he cannot eat me.”
“Do you hear, mamma?”
“What?”
“He is weeping still.”
“Go to bed, my daughter; you
will take cold in your feet: the floor is damp.”
* * * *
Thus passed the solemn day which was
destined to weight upon the whole life of the rich
and poor heiress, whose sleep was never again to be
so calm, nor yet so pure, as it had been up to this
moment. It often happens that certain actions
of human life seem, literally speaking, improbable,
though actual. Is not this because we constantly
omit to turn the stream of psychological light upon
our impulsive determinations, and fail to explain
the subtile reasons, mysteriously conceived in our
minds, which impelled them? Perhaps Eugenie’s
deep passion should be analyzed in its most delicate
fibres; for it became, scoffers might say, a malady
which influenced her whole existence. Many people
prefer to deny results rather than estimate the force
of ties and links and bonds, which secretly join one
fact to another in the moral order. Here, therefore,
Eugenie’s past life will offer to observers
of human nature an explanation of her naive want of
reflection and the suddenness of the emotions which
overflowed her soul. The more tranquil her life
had been, the more vivid was her womanly pity, the
more simple-minded were the sentiments now developed
in her soul.
Made restless by the events of the
day, she woke at intervals to listen to her cousin,
thinking she heard the sighs which still echoed in
her heart. Sometimes she saw him dying of his
trouble, sometimes she dreamed that he fainted from
hunger. Towards morning she was certain that
she heard a startling cry. She dressed at once
and ran, in the dawning light, with a swift foot to
her cousin’s chamber, the door of which he had
left open. The candle had burned down to the
socket. Charles, overcome by nature, was sleeping,
dressed and sitting in an armchair beside the bed,
on which his head rested; he dreamed as men dream
on an empty stomach. Eugenie might weep at her
ease; she might admire the young and handsome face
blotted with grief, the eyes swollen with weeping,
that seemed, sleeping as they were, to well forth
tears. Charles felt sympathetically the young
girl’s presence; he opened his eyes and saw
her pitying him.
“Pardon me, my cousin,”
he said, evidently not knowing the hour nor the place
in which he found himself.
“There are hearts who hear you,
cousin, and we thought you might need something.
You should go to bed; you tire yourself by sitting
thus.”
“That is true.”
“Well, then, adieu!”
She escaped, ashamed and happy at
having gone there. Innocence alone can dare to
be so bold. Once enlightened, virtue makes her
calculations as well as vice. Eugenie, who had
not trembled beside her cousin, could scarcely stand
upon her legs when she regained her chamber.
Her ignorant life had suddenly come to an end; she
reasoned, she rebuked herself with many reproaches.
“What will he think of me? He will think
that I love him!”
That was what she most wished him
to think. An honest love has its own prescience,
and knows that love begets love. What an event
for this poor solitary girl thus to have entered the
chamber of a young man! Are there not thoughts
and actions in the life of love which to certain souls
bear the full meaning of the holiest espousals?
An hour later she went to her mother and dressed her
as usual. Then they both came down and sat in
their places before the window waiting for Grandet,
with that cruel anxiety which, according to the individual
character, freezes the heart or warms it, shrivels
or dilates it, when a scene is feared, a punishment
expected,—a feeling so natural that even
domestic animals possess it, and whine at the slightest
pain of punishment, though they make no outcry when
they inadvertently hurt themselves. The goodman
came down; but he spoke to his wife with an absent
manner, kissed Eugenie, and sat down to table without
appearing to remember his threats of the night before.
“What has become of my nephew? The lad
gives no trouble.”
“Monsieur, he is asleep,” answered Nanon.
“So much the better; he won’t
want a wax candle,” said Grandet in a jeering
tone.
This unusual clemency, this bitter
gaiety, struck Madame Grandet with amazement, and
she looked at her husband attentively. The goodman
—here it may be well to explain that in
Touraine, Anjou, Pitou, and Bretagne the word “goodman,”
already used to designate Grandet, is bestowed as
often upon harsh and cruel men as upon those of kindly
temperament, when either have reached a certain age;
the title means nothing on the score of individual
gentleness—the goodman took his hat and
gloves, saying as he went out,—
“I am going to loiter about
the market-place and find Cruchot.”
“Eugenie, your father certainly
has something on his mind.”
Grandet, who was a poor sleeper, employed
half his nights in the preliminary calculations which
gave such astonishing accuracy to his views and observations
and schemes, and secured to them the unfailing success
at sight of which his townsmen stood amazed. All
human power is a compound of time and patience.
Powerful beings will and wait. The life of a
miser is the constant exercise of human power put to
the service of self. It rests on two sentiments
only,—self-love and self-interest; but
self-interest being to a certain extent compact and
intelligent self-love, the visible sign of real superiority,
it follows that self-love and self-interest are two
parts of the same whole,—egotism.
From this arises, perhaps, the excessive curiosity
shown in the habits of a miser’s life whenever
they are put before the world. Every nature holds
by a thread to those beings who challenge all human
sentiments by concentrating all in one passion.
Where is the man without desire? and what social desire
can be satisfied without money?
Grandet unquestionably “had
something on his mind,” to use his wife’s
expression. There was in him, as in all misers,
a persistent craving to play a commercial game with
other men and win their money legally. To impose
upon other people was to him a sign of power, a perpetual
proof that he had won the right to despise those feeble
beings who suffer themselves to be preyed upon in
this world. Oh! who has ever truly understood
the lamb lying peacefully at the feet of God? —touching
emblem of all terrestrial victims, myth of their future,
suffering and weakness glorified! This lamb it
is which the miser fattens, puts in his fold, slaughters,
cooks, eats, and then despises. The pasture of
misers is compounded of money and disdain. During
the night Grandet’s ideas had taken another
course, which was the reason of his sudden clemency.
He had hatched a plot by which to trick the Parisians,
to decoy and dupe and snare them, to drive them into
a trap, and make them go and come and sweat and hope
and turn pale,—a plot by which to amuse
himself, the old provincial cooper, sitting there
beneath his gloomy rafters, or passing up and down
the rotten staircase of his house in Saumur.
His nephew filled his mind. He wished to save
the honor of his dead brother without the cost of a
penny to the son or to himself. His own funds
he was about to invest for three years; he had therefore
nothing further to do than to manage his property
in Saumur. He needed some nutriment for his malicious
activity, and he found it suddenly in his brother’s
failure. Feeling nothing to squeeze between his
own paws, he resolved to crush the Parisians in behalf
of Charles, and to play the part of a good brother
on the cheapest terms. The honor of the family
counted for so little in this scheme that his good
intentions might be likened to the interest a gambler
takes in seeing a game well played in which he has
no stake. The Cruchots were a necessary part of
his plan; but he would not seek them,—he
resolved to make them come to him, and to lead up
that very evening to a comedy whose plot he had just
conceived, which should make him on the morrow an
object of admiration to the whole town without its
costing him a single penny.
In her father’s absence Eugenie
had the happiness of busying herself openly with her
much-loved cousin, of spending upon him fearlessly
the treasures of her pity,—woman’s
sublime superiority, the sole she desires to have
recognized, the sole she pardons man for letting her
assume. Three or four times the young girl went
to listen to her cousin’s breathing, to know
if he were sleeping or awake; then, when he had risen,
she turned her thoughts to the cream, the eggs, the
fruits, the plates, the glasses,—all that
was a part of his breakfast became the object of some
special care. At length she ran lightly up the
old staircase to listen to the noise her cousin made.
Was he dressing? Did he still weep? She
reached the door.
“My cousin!”
“Yes, cousin.”
“Will you breakfast downstairs, or in your room?”
“Where you like.”
“How do you feel?”
“Dear cousin, I am ashamed of being hungry.”
This conversation, held through the
closed door, was like an episode in a poem to Eugenie.
“Well, then, we will bring your
breakfast to your own room, so as not to annoy my
father.”
She ran to the kitchen with the swiftness and lightness
of a bird.
“Nanon, go and do his room!”
That staircase, so often traversed,
which echoed to the slightest noise, now lost its
decaying aspect in the eyes of Eugenie. It grew
luminous; it had a voice and spoke to her; it was young
like herself, —young like the love it was
now serving. Her mother, her kind, indulgent
mother, lent herself to the caprices of the child’s
love, and after the room was put in order, both went
to sit with the unhappy youth and keep him company.
Does not Christian charity make consolation a duty?
The two women drew a goodly number of little sophistries
from their religion wherewith to justify their conduct.
Charles was made the object of the tenderest and most
loving care. His saddened heart felt the sweetness
of the gentle friendship, the exquisite sympathy which
these two souls, crushed under perpetual restraint,
knew so well how to display when, for an instant, they
were left unfettered in the regions of suffering,
their natural sphere.
Claiming the right of relationship,
Eugenie began to fold the linen and put in order the
toilet articles which Charles had brought; thus she
could marvel at her ease over each luxurious bauble
and the various knick-knacks of silver or chased gold,
which she held long in her hand under a pretext of
examining them. Charles could not see without
emotion the generous interest his aunt and cousin felt
in him; he knew society in Paris well enough to feel
assured that, placed as he now was, he would find
all hearts indifferent or cold. Eugenie thus
appeared to him in the splendor of a special beauty,
and from thenceforth he admired the innocence of life
and manners which the previous evening he had been
inclined to ridicule. So when Eugenie took from
Nanon the bowl of coffee and cream, and began to pour
it out for her cousin with the simplicity of real
feeling, giving him a kindly glance, the eyes of the
Parisian filled with tears; he took her hand and kissed
it.
“What troubles you?” she said.
“Oh! these are tears of gratitude,” he
answered.
Eugenie turned abruptly to the chimney-piece to take
the candlesticks.
“Here, Nanon, carry them away!” she said.
When she looked again towards her
cousin she was still blushing, but her looks could
at least deceive, and did not betray the excess of
joy which innundated her heart; yet the eyes of both
expressed the same sentiment as their souls flowed
together in one thought,—the future was
theirs. This soft emotion was all the more precious
to Charles in the midst of his heavy grief because
it was wholly unexpected. The sound of the knocker
recalled the women to their usual station. Happily
they were able to run downstairs with sufficient rapidity
to be seated at their work when Grandet entered; had
he met them under the archway it would have been enough
to rouse his suspicions. After breakfast, which
the goodman took standing, the keeper from Froidfond,
to whom the promised indemnity had never yet been paid,
made his appearance, bearing a hare and some partridges
shot in the park, with eels and two pike sent as tribute
by the millers.
“Ha, ha! poor Cornoiller; here
he comes, like fish in Lent. Is all that fit
to eat?”
“Yes, my dear, generous master; it has been
killed two days.”
“Come, Nanon, bestir yourself,”
said Grandet; “take these things, they’ll
do for dinner. I have invited the two Cruchots.”
Nanon opened her eyes, stupid with
amazement, and looked at everybody in the room.
“Well!” she said, “and
how am I to get the lard and the spices?”
“Wife,” said Grandet,
“give Nanon six francs, and remind me to get
some of the good wine out of the cellar.”
“Well, then, Monsieur Grandet,”
said the keeper, who had come prepared with an harangue
for the purpose of settling the question of the indemnity,
“Monsieur Grandet—”
“Ta, ta, ta, ta!” said
Grandet; “I know what you want to say. You
are a good fellow; we will see about it to-morrow,
I’m too busy to-day. Wife, give him five
francs,” he added to Madame Grandet as he decamped.
The poor woman was only too happy
to buy peace at the cost of eleven francs. She
knew that Grandet would let her alone for a fortnight
after he had thus taken back, franc by franc, the money
he had given her.
“Here, Cornoiller,” she
said, slipping ten francs into the man’s hand,
“some day we will reward your services.”
Cornoiller could say nothing, so he went away.
“Madame,” said Nanon,
who had put on her black coif and taken her basket,
“I want only three francs. You keep the
rest; it’ll go fast enough somehow.”
“Have a good dinner, Nanon;
my cousin will come down,” said Eugenie.
“Something very extraordinary
is going on, I am certain of it,” said Madame
Grandet. “This is only the third time since
our marriage that your father has given a dinner.”
* * *
*
About four o’clock, just as
Eugenie and her mother had finished setting the table
for six persons, and after the master of the house
had brought up a few bottles of the exquisite wine
which provincials cherish with true affection, Charles
came down into the hall. The young fellow was
pale; his gestures, the expression of his face, his
glance, and the tones of his voice, all had a sadness
which was full of grace. He was not pretending
grief, he truly suffered; and the veil of pain cast
over his features gave him an interesting air dear
to the heart of women. Eugenie loved him the
more for it. Perhaps she felt that sorrow drew
him nearer to her. Charles was no longer the rich
and distinguished young man placed in a sphere far
above her, but a relation plunged into frightful misery.
Misery begets equality. Women have this in common
with the angels,—suffering humanity belongs
to them. Charles and Eugenie understood each
other and spoke only with their eyes; for the poor
fallen dandy, orphaned and impoverished, sat apart
in a corner of the room, and was proudly calm and silent.
Yet, from time to time, the gentle and caressing glance
of the young girl shone upon him and constrained him
away from his sad thoughts, drawing him with her into
the fields of hope and of futurity, where she loved
to hold him at her side.