II
It is now easy to understand the full
meaning of the term, “the house of Monsieur
Grandet,”—that cold, silent, pallid
dwelling, standing above the town and sheltered by
the ruins of the ramparts. The two pillars and
the arch, which made the porte-cochere on which the
door opened, were built, like the house itself, of
tufa,—a white stone peculiar to the shores
of the Loire, and so soft that it lasts hardly more
than two centuries. Numberless irregular holes,
capriciously bored or eaten out by the inclemency
of the weather, gave an appearance of the vermiculated
stonework of French architecture to the arch and the
side walls of this entrance, which bore some resemblance
to the gateway of a jail. Above the arch was a
long bas-relief, in hard stone, representing the four
seasons, the faces already crumbling away and blackened.
This bas-relief was surmounted by a projecting plinth,
upon which a variety of chance growths had sprung up,—yellow
pellitory, bindweed, convolvuli, nettles, plantain,
and even a little cherry-tree, already grown to some
height.
The door of the archway was made of
solid oak, brown, shrunken, and split in many places;
though frail in appearance, it was firmly held in
place by a system of iron bolts arranged in symmetrical
patterns. A small square grating, with close
bars red with rust, filled up the middle panel and
made, as it were, a motive for the knocker, fastened
to it by a ring, which struck upon the grinning head
of a huge nail. This knocker, of the oblong shape
and kind which our ancestors called jaquemart,
looked like a huge note of exclamation; an antiquary
who examined it attentively might have found indications
of the figure, essentially burlesque, which it once
represented, and which long usage had now effaced.
Through this little grating—intended in
olden times for the recognition of friends in times
of civil war—inquisitive persons could
perceive, at the farther end of the dark and slimy
vault, a few broken steps which led to a garden, picturesquely
shut in by walls that were thick and damp, and through
which oozed a moisture that nourished tufts of sickly
herbage. These walls were the ruins of the ramparts,
under which ranged the gardens of several neighboring
houses.
The most important room on the ground-floor
of the house was a large hall, entered directly from
beneath the vault of the porte-cochere. Few people
know the importance of a hall in the little towns of
Anjou, Touraine, and Berry. The hall is at one
and the same time antechamber, salon, office, boudoir,
and dining-room; it is the theatre of domestic life,
the common living-room. There the barber of the
neighborhood came, twice a year, to cut Monsieur Grandet’s
hair; there the farmers, the cure, the under-prefect,
and the miller’s boy came on business.
This room, with two windows looking on the street,
was entirely of wood. Gray panels with ancient
mouldings covered the walls from top to bottom; the
ceiling showed all its beams, which were likewise painted
gray, while the space between them had been washed
over in white, now yellow with age. An old brass
clock, inlaid with arabesques, adorned the mantel
of the ill-cut white stone chimney-piece, above which
was a greenish mirror, whose edges, bevelled to show
the thickness of the glass, reflected a thread of
light the whole length of a gothic frame in damascened
steel-work. The two copper-gilt candelabra which
decorated the corners of the chimney-piece served a
double purpose: by taking off the side-branches,
each of which held a socket, the main stem—which
was fastened to a pedestal of bluish marble tipped
with copper—made a candlestick for one
candle, which was sufficient for ordinary occasions.
The chairs, antique in shape, were covered with tapestry
representing the fables of La Fontaine; it was necessary,
however, to know that writer well to guess at the subjects,
for the faded colors and the figures, blurred by much
darning, were difficult to distinguish.
At the four corners of the hall were
closets, or rather buffets, surmounted by dirty shelves.
An old card-table in marquetry, of which the upper
part was a chess-board, stood in the space between
the two windows. Above this table was an oval
barometer with a black border enlivened with gilt
bands, on which the flies had so licentiously disported
themselves that the gilding had become problematical.
On the panel opposite to the chimney-piece were two
portraits in pastel, supposed to represent the grandfather
of Madame Grandet, old Monsieur de la Bertelliere,
as a lieutenant in the French guard, and the deceased
Madame Gentillet in the guise of a shepherdess.
The windows were draped with curtains of red gros
de Tours held back by silken cords with ecclesiastical
tassels. This luxurious decoration, little in
keeping with the habits of Monsieur Grandet, had been,
together with the steel pier-glass, the tapestries,
and the buffets, which were of rose-wood, included
in the purchase of the house.
By the window nearest to the door
stood a straw chair, whose legs were raised on castors
to lift its occupant, Madame Grandet, to a height
from which she could see the passers-by. A work-table
of stained cherry-wood filled up the embrasure, and
the little armchair of Eugenie Grandet stood beside
it. In this spot the lives had flowed peacefully
onward for fifteen years, in a round of constant work
from the month of April to the month of November.
On the first day of the latter month they took their
winter station by the chimney. Not until that
day did Grandet permit a fire to be lighted; and on
the thirty-first of March it was extinguished, without
regard either to the chills of the early spring or
to those of a wintry autumn. A foot-warmer, filled
with embers from the kitchen fire, which la Grande
Nanon contrived to save for them, enabled Madame and
Mademoiselle Grandet to bear the chilly mornings and
evenings of April and October. Mother and daughter
took charge of the family linen, and spent their days
so conscientiously upon a labor properly that of working-women,
that if Eugenie wished to embroider a collar for her
mother she was forced to take the time from sleep,
and deceive her father to obtain the necessary light.
For a long time the miser had given out the tallow
candle to his daughter and la Grande Nanon just as
he gave out every morning the bread and other necessaries
for the daily consumption.
La Grande Nanon was perhaps the only
human being capable of accepting willingly the despotism
of her master. The whole town envied Monsieur
and Madame Grandet the possession of her. La Grande
Nanon, so called on account of her height, which was
five feet eight inches, had lived with Monsieur Grandet
for thirty-five years. Though she received only
sixty francs a year in wages, she was supposed to be
one of the richest serving-women in Saumur. Those
sixty francs, accumulating through thirty-five years,
had recently enabled her to invest four thousand francs
in an annuity with Maitre Cruchot. This result
of her long and persistent economy seemed gigantic.
Every servant in the town, seeing that the poor sexagenarian
was sure of bread for her old age, was jealous of
her, and never thought of the hard slavery through
which it had been won.
At twenty-two years of age the poor
girl had been unable to find a situation, so repulsive
was her face to almost every one. Yet the feeling
was certainly unjust: the face would have been
much admired on the shoulders of a grenadier of the
guard; but all things, so they say, should be in keeping.
Forced to leave a farm where she kept the cows, because
the dwelling-house was burned down, she came to Saumur
to find a place, full of the robust courage that shrinks
from no labor. Le Pere Grandet was at that time
thinking of marriage and about to set up his household.
He espied the girl, rejected as she was from door
to door. A good judge of corporeal strength in
his trade as a cooper, he guessed the work that might
be got out of a female creature shaped like a Hercules,
as firm on her feet as an oak sixty years old on its
roots, strong in the hips, square in the back, with
the hands of a cartman and an honesty as sound as
her unblemished virtue. Neither the warts which
adorned her martial visage, nor the red-brick tints
of her skin, nor the sinewy arms, nor the ragged garments
of la Grande Nanon, dismayed the cooper, who was at
that time still of an age when the heart shudders.
He fed, shod, and clothed the poor girl, gave her
wages, and put her to work without treating her too
roughly. Seeing herself thus welcomed, la Grande
Nanon wept secretly tears of joy, and attached herself
in all sincerity to her master, who from that day
ruled her and worked her with feudal authority.
Nanon did everything. She cooked, she made the
lye, she washed the linen in the Loire and brought
it home on her shoulders; she got up early, she went
to bed late; she prepared the food of the vine-dressers
during the harvest, kept watch upon the market-people,
protected the property of her master like a faithful
dog, and even, full of blind confidence, obeyed without
a murmur his most absurd exactions.
In the famous year of 1811, when the
grapes were gathered with unheard-of difficulty, Grandet
resolved to give Nanon his old watch, —the
first present he had made her during twenty years of
service. Though he turned over to her his old
shoes (which fitted her), it is impossible to consider
that quarterly benefit as a gift, for the shoes were
always thoroughly worn-out. Necessity had made
the poor girl so niggardly that Grandet had grown
to love her as we love a dog, and Nanon had let him
fasten a spiked collar round her throat, whose spikes
no longer pricked her. If Grandet cut the bread
with rather too much parsimony, she made no complaint;
she gaily shared the hygienic benefits derived from
the severe regime of the household, in which no one
was ever ill. Nanon was, in fact, one of the family;
she laughed when Grandet laughed, felt gloomy or chilly,
warmed herself, and toiled as he did. What pleasant
compensations there were in such equality! Never
did the master have occasion to find fault with the
servant for pilfering the grapes, nor for the plums
and nectarines eaten under the trees. “Come,
fall-to, Nanon!” he would say in years when
the branches bent under the fruit and the farmers were
obliged to give it to the pigs.
To the poor peasant who in her youth
had earned nothing but harsh treatment, to the pauper
girl picked up by charity, Grandet’s ambiguous
laugh was like a sunbeam. Moreover, Nanon’s
simple heart and narrow head could hold only one feeling
and one idea. For thirty-five years she had never
ceased to see herself standing before the wood-yard
of Monsieur Grandet, ragged and barefooted, and to
hear him say: “What do you want, young
one?” Her gratitude was ever new. Sometimes
Grandet, reflecting that the poor creature had never
heard a flattering word, that she was ignorant of
all the tender sentiments inspired by women, that
she might some day appear before the throne of God
even more chaste than the Virgin Mary herself,—Grandet,
struck with pity, would say as he looked at her, “Poor
Nanon!” The exclamation was always followed
by an undefinable look cast upon him in return by
the old servant. The words, uttered from time
to time, formed a chain of friendship that nothing
ever parted, and to which each exclamation added a
link. Such compassion arising in the heart of
the miser, and accepted gratefully by the old spinster,
had something inconceivably horrible about it.
This cruel pity, recalling, as it did, a thousand
pleasures to the heart of the old cooper, was for
Nanon the sum total of happiness. Who does not
likewise say, “Poor Nanon!” God will recognize
his angels by the inflexions of their voices and by
their secret sighs.
There were very many households in
Saumur where the servants were better treated, but
where the masters received far less satisfaction in
return. Thus it was often said: “What
have the Grandets ever done to make their Grande Nanon
so attached to them? She would go through fire
and water for their sake!” Her kitchen, whose
barred windows looked into the court, was always clean,
neat, cold,—a true miser’s kitchen,
where nothing went to waste. When Nanon had washed
her dishes, locked up the remains of the dinner, and
put out her fire, she left the kitchen, which was
separated by a passage from the living-room, and went
to spin hemp beside her masters. One tallow candle
sufficed the family for the evening. The servant
slept at the end of the passage in a species of closet
lighted only by a fan-light. Her robust health
enabled her to live in this hole with impunity; there
she could hear the slightest noise through the deep
silence which reigned night and day in that dreary
house. Like a watch-dog, she slept with one ear
open, and took her rest with a mind alert.
A description of the other parts of
the dwelling will be found connected with the events
of this history, though the foregoing sketch of the
hall, where the whole luxury of the household appears,
may enable the reader to surmise the nakedness of
the upper floors.
In 1819, at the beginning of an evening
in the middle of November, la Grande Nanon lighted
the fire for the first time. The autumn had been
very fine. This particular day was a fete-day
well known to the Cruchotines and the Grassinists.
The six antagonists, armed at all points, were making
ready to meet at the Grandets and surpass each other
in testimonials of friendship. That morning all
Saumur had seen Madame and Mademoiselle Grandet, accompanied
by Nanon, on their way to hear Mass at the parish
church, and every one remembered that the day was
the anniversary of Mademoiselle Eugenie’s birth.
Calculating the hour at which the family dinner would
be over, Maitre Cruchot, the Abbe Cruchot, and Monsieur
C. de Bonfons hastened to arrive before the des Grassins,
and be the first to pay their compliments to Mademoiselle
Eugenie. All three brought enormous bouquets,
gathered in their little green-houses. The stalks
of the flowers which the president intended to present
were ingeniously wound round with a white satin ribbon
adorned with gold fringe. In the morning Monsieur
Grandet, following his usual custom on the days that
commemorated the birth and the fete of Eugenie, went
to her bedside and solemnly presented her with his
paternal gift,—which for the last thirteen
years had consisted regularly of a curious gold-piece.
Madame Grandet gave her daughter a winter dress or
a summer dress, as the case might be. These two
dresses and the gold-pieces, of which she received
two others on New Year’s day and on her father’s
fete-day, gave Eugenie a little revenue of a hundred
crowns or thereabouts, which Grandet loved to see
her amass. Was it not putting his money from one
strong-box to another, and, as it were, training the
parsimony of his heiress? from whom he sometimes demanded
an account of her treasure (formerly increased by
the gifts of the Bertellieres), saying: “It
is to be your marriage dozen.”
The “marriage dozen” is
an old custom sacredly preserved and still in force
in many parts of central France. In Berry and
in Anjou, when a young girl marries, her family, or
that of the husband, must give her a purse, in which
they place, according to their means, twelve pieces,
or twelve dozen pieces, or twelve hundred pieces of
gold. The poorest shepherd-girl never marries
without her dozen, be it only a dozen coppers.
They still tell in Issoudun of a certain “dozen”
presented to a rich heiress, which contained a hundred
and forty-four portugaises d’or.
Pope Clement VII., uncle of Catherine de’ Medici,
gave her when he married her to Henri II. a dozen
antique gold medals of priceless value.
During dinner the father, delighted
to see his Eugenie looking well in a new gown, exclaimed:
“As it is Eugenie’s birthday let us have
a fire; it will be a good omen.”
“Mademoiselle will be married
this year, that’s certain,” said la Grande
Nanon, carrying away the remains of the goose,—the
pheasant of tradesmen.
“I don’t see any one suitable
for her in Saumur,” said Madame Grandet, glancing
at her husband with a timid look which, considering
her years, revealed the conjugal slavery under which
the poor woman languished.
Grandet looked at his daughter and exclaimed gaily,—
“She is twenty-three years old
to-day, the child; we must soon begin to think of
it.”
Eugenie and her mother silently exchanged
a glance of intelligence.
Madame Grandet was a dry, thin woman,
as yellow as a quince, awkward, slow, one of those
women who are born to be down-trodden. She had
big bones, a big nose, a big forehead, big eyes, and
presented at first sight a vague resemblance to those
mealy fruits that have neither savor nor succulence.
Her teeth were black and few in number, her mouth
was wrinkled, her chin long and pointed. She was
an excellent woman, a true la Bertelliere. L’abbe
Cruchot found occasional opportunity to tell her that
she had not done ill; and she believed him. Angelic
sweetness, the resignation of an insect tortured by
children, a rare piety, a good heart, an unalterable
equanimity of soul, made her universally pitied and
respected. Her husband never gave her more than
six francs at a time for her personal expenses.
Ridiculous as it may seem, this woman, who by her own
fortune and her various inheritances brought Pere
Grandet more than three hundred thousand francs, had
always felt so profoundly humiliated by her dependence
and the slavery in which she lived, against which the
gentleness of her spirit prevented her from revolting,
that she had never asked for one penny or made a single
remark on the deeds which Maitre Cruchot brought for
her signature. This foolish secret pride, this
nobility of soul perpetually misunderstood and wounded
by Grandet, ruled the whole conduct of the wife.
Madame Grandet was attired habitually
in a gown of greenish levantine silk, endeavoring
to make it last nearly a year; with it she wore a
large kerchief of white cotton cloth, a bonnet made
of plaited straws sewn together, and almost always
a black-silk apron. As she seldom left the house
she wore out very few shoes. She never asked anything
for herself. Grandet, seized with occasional remorse
when he remembered how long a time had elapsed since
he gave her the last six francs, always stipulated
for the “wife’s pin-money” when he
sold his yearly vintage. The four or five louis
presented by the Belgian or the Dutchman who purchased
the wine were the chief visible signs of Madame Grandet’s
annual revenues. But after she had received the
five louis, her husband would often say to her, as
though their purse were held in common: “Can
you lend me a few sous?” and the poor woman,
glad to be able to do something for a man whom her
confessor held up to her as her lord and master, returned
him in the course of the winter several crowns out
of the “pin-money.” When Grandet drew
from his pocket the five-franc piece which he allowed
monthly for the minor expenses, —thread,
needles, and toilet,—of his daughter, he
never failed to say as he buttoned his breeches’
pocket: “And you, mother, do you want anything?”
“My friend,” Madame Grandet
would answer, moved by a sense of maternal dignity,
“we will see about that later.”
Wasted dignity! Grandet thought
himself very generous to his wife. Philosophers
who meet the like of Nanon, of Madame Grandet, of
Eugenie, have surely a right to say that irony is at
the bottom of the ways of Providence.
After the dinner at which for the
first time allusion had been made to Eugenie’s
marriage, Nanon went to fetch a bottle of black-currant
ratafia from Monsieur Grandet’s bed-chamber,
and nearly fell as she came down the stairs.
“You great stupid!” said
her master; “are you going to tumble about like
other people, hey?”
“Monsieur, it was that step
on your staircase which has given way.”
“She is right,” said Madame
Grandet; “it ought to have been mended long
ago. Yesterday Eugenie nearly twisted her ankle.”
“Here,” said Grandet to
Nanon, seeing that she looked quite pale, “as
it is Eugenie’s birthday, and you came near falling,
take a little glass of ratafia to set you right.”
“Faith! I’ve earned
it,” said Nanon; “most people would have
broken the bottle; but I’d sooner have broken
my elbow holding it up high.”
“Poor Nanon!” said Grandet, filling a
glass.
“Did you hurt yourself?” asked Eugenie,
looking kindly at her.
“No, I didn’t fall; I threw myself back
on my haunches.”
“Well! as it is Eugenie’s
birthday,” said Grandet, “I’ll have
the step mended. You people don’t know
how to set your foot in the corner where the wood
is still firm.”
Grandet took the candle, leaving his
wife, daughter, and servant without any other light
than that from the hearth, where the flames were lively,
and went into the bakehouse to fetch planks, nails,
and tools.
“Can I help you?” cried
Nanon, hearing him hammer on the stairs.
“No, no! I’m an old
hand at it,” answered the former cooper.
At the moment when Grandet was mending
his worm-eaten staircase and whistling with all his
might, in remembrance of the days of his youth, the
three Cruchots knocked at the door.
“Is it you, Monsieur Cruchot?”
asked Nanon, peeping through the little grating.
“Yes,” answered the president.
Nanon opened the door, and the light
from the hearth, reflected on the ceiling, enabled
the three Cruchots to find their way into the room.
“Ha! you’ve come a-greeting,”
said Nanon, smelling the flowers.
“Excuse me, messieurs,”
cried Grandet, recognizing their voices; “I’ll
be with you in a moment. I’m not proud;
I am patching up a step on my staircase.”
“Go on, go on, Monsieur Grandet;
a man’s house is his castle,” said the
president sententiously.
Madame and Mademoiselle Grandet rose.
The president, profiting by the darkness, said to
Eugenie:
“Will you permit me, mademoiselle,
to wish you, on this the day of your birth, a series
of happy years and the continuance of the health which
you now enjoy?”
He offered her a huge bouquet of choice
flowers which were rare in Saumur; then, taking the
heiress by the elbows, he kissed her on each side
of her neck with a complacency that made her blush.
The president, who looked like a rusty iron nail,
felt that his courtship was progressing.
“Don’t stand on ceremony,”
said Grandet, entering. “How well you do
things on fete-days, Monsieur le president!”
“When it concerns mademoiselle,”
said the abbe, armed with his own bouquet, “every
day is a fete-day for my nephew.”
The abbe kissed Eugenie’s hand.
As for Maitre Cruchot, he boldly kissed her on both
cheeks, remarking: “How we sprout up, to
be sure! Every year is twelve months.”
As he replaced the candlestick beside
the clock, Grandet, who never forgot his own jokes,
and repeated them to satiety when he thought them
funny, said,—
“As this is Eugenie’s birthday let us
illuminate.”
He carefully took off the branches
of the candelabra, put a socket on each pedestal,
took from Nanon a new tallow candle with paper twisted
round the end of it, put it into the hollow, made it
firm, lit it, and then sat down beside his wife, looking
alternately at his friends, his daughter, and the
two candles. The Abbe Cruchot, a plump, puffy
little man, with a red wig plastered down and a face
like an old female gambler, said as he stretched out
his feet, well shod in stout shoes with silver buckles:
“The des Grassins have not come?”
“Not yet,” said Grandet.
“But are they coming?”
asked the old notary, twisting his face, which had
as many holes as a collander, into a queer grimace.
“I think so,” answered Madame Grandet.
“Are your vintages all finished?” said
Monsieur de Bonfons to Grandet.
“Yes, all of them,” said
the old man, rising to walk up and down the room,
his chest swelling with pride as he said the words,
“all of them.” Through the door of
the passage which led to the kitchen he saw la Grande
Nanon sitting beside her fire with a candle and preparing
to spin there, so as not to intrude among the guests.
“Nanon,” he said, going
into the passage, “put out that fire and that
candle, and come and sit with us. Pardieu! the
hall is big enough for all.”
“But monsieur, you are to have the great people.”
“Are not you as good as they?
They are descended from Adam, and so are you.”
Grandet came back to the president and said,—
“Have you sold your vintage?”
“No, not I; I shall keep it.
If the wine is good this year, it will be better two
years hence. The proprietors, you know, have made
an agreement to keep up the price; and this year the
Belgians won’t get the better of us. Suppose
they are sent off empty-handed for once, faith! they’ll
come back.”
“Yes, but let us mind what we
are about,” said Grandet in a tone which made
the president tremble.
“Is he driving some bargain?” thought
Cruchot.
At this moment the knocker announced
the des Grassins family, and their arrival interrupted
a conversation which had begun between Madame Grandet
and the abbe.
Madame des Grassins was one of those
lively, plump little women, with pink-and-white skins,
who, thanks to the claustral calm of the provinces
and the habits of a virtuous life, keep their youth
until they are past forty. She was like the last
rose of autumn,—pleasant to the eye, though
the petals have a certain frostiness, and their perfume
is slight. She dressed well, got her fashions
from Paris, set the tone to Saumur, and gave parties.
Her husband, formerly a quartermaster in the Imperial
guard, who had been desperately wounded at Austerlitz,
and had since retired, still retained, in spite of
his respect for Grandet, the seeming frankness of
an old soldier.
“Good evening, Grandet,”
he said, holding out his hand and affecting a sort
of superiority, with which he always crushed the Cruchots.
“Mademoiselle,” he added, turning to Eugenie,
after bowing to Madame Grandet, “you are always
beautiful and good, and truly I do not know what to
wish you.” So saying, he offered her a little
box which his servant had brought and which contained
a Cape heather,—a flower lately imported
into Europe and very rare.
Madame des Grassins kissed Eugenie
very affectionately, pressed her hand, and said:
“Adolphe wishes to make you my little offering.”
A tall, blond young man, pale and
slight, with tolerable manners and seemingly rather
shy, although he had just spent eight or ten thousand
francs over his allowance in Paris, where he had been
sent to study law, now came forward and kissed Eugenie
on both cheeks, offering her a workbox with utensils
in silver-gilt,—mere show-case trumpery,
in spite of the monogram E.G. in gothic letters rather
well engraved, which belonged properly to something
in better taste. As she opened it, Eugenie experienced
one of those unexpected and perfect delights which
make a young girl blush and quiver and tremble with
pleasure. She turned her eyes to her father as
if to ask permission to accept it, and Monsieur Grandet
replied: “Take it, my daughter,” in
a tone which would have made an actor illustrious.
The three Cruchots felt crushed as
they saw the joyous, animated look cast upon Adolphe
des Grassins by the heiress, to whom such riches were
unheard-of. Monsieur des Grassins offered Grandet
a pinch of snuff, took one himself, shook off the
grains as they fell on the ribbon of the Legion of
honor which was attached to the button-hole of his
blue surtout; then he looked at the Cruchots with an
air that seemed to say, “Parry that thrust if
you can!” Madame des Grassins cast her eyes
on the blue vases which held the Cruchot bouquets,
looking at the enemy’s gifts with the pretended
interest of a satirical woman. At this delicate
juncture the Abbe Cruchot left the company seated
in a circle round the fire and joined Grandet at the
lower end of the hall. As the two men reached
the embrasure of the farthest window the priest said
in the miser’s ear: “Those people
throw money out of the windows.”
“What does that matter if it
gets into my cellar?” retorted the old wine-grower.
“If you want to give gilt scissors
to your daughter, you have the means,” said
the abbe.
“I give her something better
than scissors,” answered Grandet.
“My nephew is a blockhead,”
thought the abbe as he looked at the president, whose
rumpled hair added to the ill grace of his brown countenance.
“Couldn’t he have found some little trifle
which cost money?”
“We will join you at cards,
Madame Grandet,” said Madame des Grassins.
“We might have two tables, as we are all here.”
“As it is Eugenie’s birthday
you had better play loto all together,” said
Pere Grandet: “the two young ones can join”;
and the old cooper, who never played any game, motioned
to his daughter and Adolphe. “Come, Nanon,
set the tables.”
“We will help you, Mademoiselle
Nanon,” said Madame des Grassins gaily, quite
joyous at the joy she had given Eugenie.
“I have never in my life been
so pleased,” the heiress said to her; “I
have never seen anything so pretty.”
“Adolphe brought it from Paris,
and he chose it,” Madame des Grassins whispered
in her ear.
“Go on! go on! damned intriguing
thing!” thought the president. “If
you ever have a suit in court, you or your husband,
it shall go hard with you.”
The notary, sitting in his corner,
looked calmly at the abbe, saying to himself:
“The des Grassins may do what they like; my property
and my brother’s and that of my nephew amount
in all to eleven hundred thousand francs. The
des Grassins, at the most, have not half that; besides,
they have a daughter. They may give what presents
they like; heiress and presents too will be ours one
of these days.”
At half-past eight in the evening
the two card-tables were set out. Madame des
Grassins succeeded in putting her son beside Eugenie.
The actors in this scene, so full of interest, commonplace
as it seems, were provided with bits of pasteboard
striped in many colors and numbered, and with counters
of blue glass, and they appeared to be listening to
the jokes of the notary, who never drew a number without
making a remark, while in fact they were all thinking
of Monsieur Grandet’s millions. The old
cooper, with inward self-conceit, was contemplating
the pink feathers and the fresh toilet of Madame des
Grassins, the martial head of the banker, the faces
of Adolphe, the president, the abbe, and the notary,
saying to himself:—
“They are all after my money.
Hey! neither the one nor the other shall have my daughter;
but they are useful—useful as harpoons to
fish with.”
This family gaiety in the old gray
room dimly lighted by two tallow candles; this laughter,
accompanied by the whirr of Nanon’s spinning-wheel,
sincere only upon the lips of Eugenie or her mother;
this triviality mingled with important interests; this
young girl, who, like certain birds made victims of
the price put upon them, was now lured and trapped
by proofs of friendship of which she was the dupe,
—all these things contributed to make the
scene a melancholy comedy. Is it not, moreover,
a drama of all times and all places, though here brought
down to its simplest expression? The figure of
Grandet, playing his own game with the false friendship
of the two families and getting enormous profits from
it, dominates the scene and throws light upon it.
The modern god,—the only god in whom faith
is preserved, —money, is here, in all its
power, manifested in a single countenance. The
tender sentiments of life hold here but a secondary
place; only the three pure, simple hearts of Nanon,
of Eugenie, and of her mother were inspired by them.
And how much of ignorance there was in the simplicity
of these poor women! Eugenie and her mother knew
nothing of Grandet’s wealth; they could only
estimate the things of life by the glimmer of their
pale ideas, and they neither valued nor despised money,
because they were accustomed to do without it.
Their feelings, bruised, though they did not know
it, but ever-living, were the secret spring of their
existence, and made them curious exceptions in the
midst of these other people whose lives were purely
material. Frightful condition of the human race!
there is no one of its joys that does not come from
some species of ignorance.
At the moment when Madame Grandet
had won a loto of sixteen sous,—the largest
ever pooled in that house,—and while la
Grande Nanon was laughing with delight as she watched
madame pocketing her riches, the knocker resounded
on the house-door with such a noise that the women
all jumped in their chairs.
“There is no man in Saumur who
would knock like that,” said the notary.
“How can they bang in that way!”
exclaimed Nanon; “do they want to break in the
door?”
“Who the devil is it?” cried Grandet.