I
There are houses in certain provincial
towns whose aspect inspires melancholy, akin to that
called forth by sombre cloisters, dreary moorlands,
or the desolation of ruins. Within these houses
there is, perhaps, the silence of the cloister, the
barrenness of moors, the skeleton of ruins; life and
movement are so stagnant there that a stranger might
think them uninhabited, were it not that he encounters
suddenly the pale, cold glance of a motionless person,
whose half-monastic face peers beyond the window-casing
at the sound of an unaccustomed step.
Such elements of sadness formed the
physiognomy, as it were, of a dwelling-house in Saumur
which stands at the end of the steep street leading
to the chateau in the upper part of the town.
This street—now little frequented, hot
in summer, cold in winter, dark in certain sections—is
remarkable for the resonance of its little pebbly
pavement, always clean and dry, for the narrowness
of its tortuous road-way, for the peaceful stillness
of its houses, which belong to the Old town and are
over-topped by the ramparts. Houses three centuries
old are still solid, though built of wood, and their
divers aspects add to the originality which commends
this portion of Saumur to the attention of artists
and antiquaries.
It is difficult to pass these houses
without admiring the enormous oaken beams, their ends
carved into fantastic figures, which crown with a
black bas-relief the lower floor of most of them.
In one place these transverse timbers are covered
with slate and mark a bluish line along the frail
wall of a dwelling covered by a roof en colombage
which bends beneath the weight of years, and whose
rotting shingles are twisted by the alternate action
of sun and rain. In another place blackened,
worn-out window-sills, with delicate sculptures now
scarcely discernible, seem too weak to bear the brown
clay pots from which springs the heart’s-ease
or the rose-bush of some poor working-woman.
Farther on are doors studded with enormous nails, where
the genius of our forefathers has traced domestic hieroglyphics,
of which the meaning is now lost forever. Here
a Protestant attested his belief; there a Leaguer
cursed Henry IV.; elsewhere some bourgeois has carved
the insignia of his noblesse de cloches, symbols
of his long-forgotten magisterial glory. The
whole history of France is there.
Next to a tottering house with roughly
plastered walls, where an artisan enshrines his tools,
rises the mansion of a country gentleman, on the stone
arch of which above the door vestiges of armorial
bearings may still be seen, battered by the many revolutions
that have shaken France since 1789. In this hilly
street the ground-floors of the merchants are neither
shops nor warehouses; lovers of the Middle Ages will
here find the ouvrouere of our forefathers in
all its naive simplicity. These low rooms, which
have no shop-frontage, no show-windows, in fact no
glass at all, are deep and dark and without interior
or exterior decoration. Their doors open in two
parts, each roughly iron-bound; the upper half is
fastened back within the room, the lower half, fitted
with a spring-bell, swings continually to and fro.
Air and light reach the damp den within, either through
the upper half of the door, or through an open space
between the ceiling and a low front wall, breast-high,
which is closed by solid shutters that are taken down
every morning, put up every evening, and held in place
by heavy iron bars.
This wall serves as a counter for
the merchandise. No delusive display is there;
only samples of the business, whatever it may chance
to be, —such, for instance, as three or
four tubs full of codfish and salt, a few bundles
of sail-cloth, cordage, copper wire hanging from the
joists above, iron hoops for casks ranged along the
wall, or a few pieces of cloth upon the shelves.
Enter. A neat girl, glowing with youth, wearing
a white kerchief, her arms red and bare, drops her
knitting and calls her father or her mother, one of
whom comes forward and sells you what you want, phlegmatically,
civilly, or arrogantly, according to his or her individual
character, whether it be a matter of two sous’
or twenty thousand francs’ worth of merchandise.
You may see a cooper, for instance, sitting in his
doorway and twirling his thumbs as he talks with a
neighbor. To all appearance he owns nothing more
than a few miserable boat-ribs and two or three bundles
of laths; but below in the port his teeming wood-yard
supplies all the cooperage trade of Anjou. He
knows to a plank how many casks are needed if the
vintage is good. A hot season makes him rich,
a rainy season ruins him; in a single morning puncheons
worth eleven francs have been known to drop to six.
In this country, as in Touraine, atmospheric vicissitudes
control commercial life. Wine-growers, proprietors,
wood-merchants, coopers, inn-keepers, mariners, all
keep watch of the sun. They tremble when they
go to bed lest they should hear in the morning of
a frost in the night; they dread rain, wind, drought,
and want water, heat, and clouds to suit their fancy.
A perpetual duel goes on between the heavens and their
terrestrial interests. The barometer smooths,
saddens, or makes merry their countenances, turn and
turn about. From end to end of this street, formerly
the Grand’Rue de Saumur, the words: “Here’s
golden weather,” are passed from door to door;
or each man calls to his neighbor: “It rains
louis,” knowing well what a sunbeam or the opportune
rainfall is bringing him.
On Saturdays after midday, in the
fine season, not one sou’s worth of merchandise
can be bought from these worthy traders. Each
has his vineyard, his enclosure of fields, and all
spend two days in the country. This being foreseen,
and purchases, sales, and profits provided for, the
merchants have ten or twelve hours to spend in parties
of pleasure, in making observations, in criticisms,
and in continual spying. A housewife cannot buy
a partridge without the neighbors asking the husband
if it were cooked to a turn. A young girl never
puts her head near a window that she is not seen by
idling groups in the street. Consciences are
held in the light; and the houses, dark, silent, impenetrable
as they seem, hide no mysteries. Life is almost
wholly in the open air; every household sits at its
own threshold, breakfasts, dines, and quarrels there.
No one can pass along the street without being examined;
in fact formerly, when a stranger entered a provincial
town he was bantered and made game of from door to
door. From this came many good stories, and the
nickname copieux, which was applied to the
inhabitants of Angers, who excelled in such urban
sarcasms.
The ancient mansions of the old town
of Saumur are at the top of this hilly street, and
were formerly occupied by the nobility of the neighborhood.
The melancholy dwelling where the events of the following
history took place is one of these mansions,—venerable
relics of a century in which men and things bore the
characteristics of simplicity which French manners
and customs are losing day by day. Follow the
windings of the picturesque thoroughfare, whose irregularities
awaken recollections that plunge the mind mechanically
into reverie, and you will see a somewhat dark recess,
in the centre of which is hidden the door of the house
of Monsieur Grandet. It is impossible to understand
the force of this provincial expression—the
house of Monsieur Grandet—without giving
the biography of Monsieur Grandet himself.
Monsieur Grandet enjoyed a reputation
in Saumur whose causes and effects can never be fully
understood by those who have not, at one time or another,
lived in the provinces. In 1789 Monsieur Grandet
—still called by certain persons le Pere
Grandet, though the number of such old persons has
perceptibly diminished—was a master-cooper,
able to read, write, and cipher. At the period
when the French Republic offered for sale the church
property in the arrondissement of Saumur, the cooper,
then forty years of age, had just married the daughter
of a rich wood-merchant. Supplied with the ready
money of his own fortune and his wife’s dot,
in all about two thousand louis-d’or, Grandet
went to the newly established “district,”
where, with the help of two hundred double louis given
by his father-in-law to the surly republican who presided
over the sales of the national domain, he obtained
for a song, legally if not legitimately, one of the
finest vineyards in the arrondissement, an old abbey,
and several farms. The inhabitants of Saumur
were so little revolutionary that they thought Pere
Grandet a bold man, a republican, and a patriot with
a mind open to all the new ideas; though in point
of fact it was open only to vineyards. He was
appointed a member of the administration of Saumur,
and his pacific influence made itself felt politically
and commercially. Politically, he protected the
ci-devant nobles, and prevented, to the extent of
his power, the sale of the lands and property of the
emigres; commercially, he furnished the Republican
armies with two or three thousand puncheons of white
wine, and took his pay in splendid fields belonging
to a community of women whose lands had been reserved
for the last lot.
Under the Consulate Grandet became
mayor, governed wisely, and harvested still better
pickings. Under the Empire he was called Monsieur
Grandet. Napoleon, however, did not like republicans,
and superseded Monsieur Grandet (who was supposed
to have worn the Phrygian cap) by a man of his own
surroundings, a future baron of the Empire. Monsieur
Grandet quitted office without regret. He had
constructed in the interests of the town certain fine
roads which led to his own property; his house and
lands, very advantageously assessed, paid moderate
taxes; and since the registration of his various estates,
the vineyards, thanks to his constant care, had become
the “head of the country,”—a
local term used to denote those that produced the
finest quality of wine. He might have asked for
the cross of the Legion of honor.
This event occurred in 1806.
Monsieur Grandet was then fifty-seven years of age,
his wife thirty-six, and an only daughter, the fruit
of their legitimate love, was ten years old.
Monsieur Grandet, whom Providence no doubt desired
to compensate for the loss of his municipal honors,
inherited three fortunes in the course of this year,
—that of Madame de la Gaudiniere, born de
la Bertelliere, the mother of Madame Grandet; that
of old Monsieur de la Bertelliere, her grandfather;
and, lastly, that of Madame Gentillet, her grandmother
on the mother’s side: three inheritances,
whose amount was not known to any one. The avarice
of the deceased persons was so keen that for a long
time they had hoarded their money for the pleasure
of secretly looking at it. Old Monsieur de la
Bertelliere called an investment an extravagance,
and thought he got better interest from the sight of
his gold than from the profits of usury. The
inhabitants of Saumur consequently estimated his savings
according to “the revenues of the sun’s
wealth,” as they said.
Monsieur Grandet thus obtained that
modern title of nobility which our mania for equality
can never rub out. He became the most imposing
personage in the arrondissement. He worked a hundred
acres of vineyard, which in fruitful years yielded
seven or eight hundred hogsheads of wine. He
owned thirteen farms, an old abbey, whose windows
and arches he had walled up for the sake of economy,—a
measure which preserved them,—also a hundred
and twenty-seven acres of meadow-land, where three
thousand poplars, planted in 1793, grew and flourished;
and finally, the house in which he lived. Such
was his visible estate; as to his other property,
only two persons could give even a vague guess at
its value: one was Monsieur Cruchot, a notary
employed in the usurious investments of Monsieur Grandet;
the other was Monsieur des Grassins, the richest banker
in Saumur, in whose profits Grandet had a certain
covenanted and secret share.
Although old Cruchot and Monsieur
des Grassins were both gifted with the deep discretion
which wealth and trust beget in the provinces, they
publicly testified so much respect to Monsieur Grandet
that observers estimated the amount of his property
by the obsequious attention which they bestowed upon
him. In all Saumur there was no one not persuaded
that Monsieur Grandet had a private treasure, some
hiding-place full of louis, where he nightly took ineffable
delight in gazing upon great masses of gold.
Avaricious people gathered proof of this when they
looked at the eyes of the good man, to which the yellow
metal seemed to have conveyed its tints. The glance
of a man accustomed to draw enormous interest from
his capital acquires, like that of the libertine,
the gambler, or the sycophant, certain indefinable
habits,—furtive, eager, mysterious movements,
which never escape the notice of his co-religionists.
This secret language is in a certain way the freemasonry
of the passions. Monsieur Grandet inspired the
respectful esteem due to one who owed no man anything,
who, skilful cooper and experienced wine-grower that
he was, guessed with the precision of an astronomer
whether he ought to manufacture a thousand puncheons
for his vintage, or only five hundred, who never failed
in any speculation, and always had casks for sale when
casks were worth more than the commodity that filled
them, who could store his whole vintage in his cellars
and bide his time to put the puncheons on the market
at two hundred francs, when the little proprietors
had been forced to sell theirs for five louis.
His famous vintage of 1811, judiciously stored and
slowly disposed of, brought him in more than two hundred
and forty thousand francs.
Financially speaking, Monsieur Grandet
was something between a tiger and a boa-constrictor.
He could crouch and lie low, watch his prey a long
while, spring upon it, open his jaws, swallow a mass
of louis, and then rest tranquilly like a snake in
process of digestion, impassible, methodical, and
cold. No one saw him pass without a feeling of
admiration mingled with respect and fear; had not every
man in Saumur felt the rending of those polished steel
claws? For this one, Maitre Cruchot had procured
the money required for the purchase of a domain, but
at eleven per cent. For that one, Monsieur des
Grassins discounted bills of exchange, but at a frightful
deduction of interest. Few days ever passed that
Monsieur Grandet’s name was not mentioned either
in the markets or in social conversations at the evening
gatherings. To some the fortune of the old wine-grower
was an object of patriotic pride. More than one
merchant, more than one innkeeper, said to strangers
with a certain complacency: “Monsieur, we
have two or three millionaire establishments; but as
for Monsieur Grandet, he does not himself know how
much he is worth.”
In 1816 the best reckoners in Saumur
estimated the landed property of the worthy man at
nearly four millions; but as, on an average, he had
made yearly, from 1793 to 1817, a hundred thousand
francs out of that property, it was fair to presume
that he possessed in actual money a sum nearly equal
to the value of his estate. So that when, after
a game of boston or an evening discussion on the matter
of vines, the talk fell upon Monsieur Grandet, knowing
people said: “Le Pere Grandet? le Pere
Grandet must have at least five or six millions.”
“You are cleverer than I am;
I have never been able to find out the amount,”
answered Monsieur Cruchot or Monsieur des Grassins,
when either chanced to overhear the remark.
If some Parisian mentioned Rothschild
or Monsieur Lafitte, the people of Saumur asked if
he were as rich as Monsieur Grandet. When the
Parisian, with a smile, tossed them a disdainful affirmative,
they looked at each other and shook their heads with
an incredulous air. So large a fortune covered
with a golden mantle all the actions of this man.
If in early days some peculiarities of his life gave
occasion for laughter or ridicule, laughter and ridicule
had long since died away. His least important
actions had the authority of results repeatedly shown.
His speech, his clothing, his gestures, the blinking
of his eyes, were law to the country-side, where every
one, after studying him as a naturalist studies the
result of instinct in the lower animals, had come
to understand the deep mute wisdom of his slightest
actions.
“It will be a hard winter,”
said one; “Pere Grandet has put on his fur gloves.”
“Pere Grandet is buying quantities
of staves; there will be plenty of wine this year.”
Monsieur Grandet never bought either
bread or meat. His farmers supplied him weekly
with a sufficiency of capons, chickens, eggs, butter,
and his tithe of wheat. He owned a mill; and the
tenant was bound, over and above his rent, to take
a certain quantity of grain and return him the flour
and bran. La Grande Nanon, his only servant,
though she was no longer young, baked the bread of
the household herself every Saturday. Monsieur
Grandet arranged with kitchen-gardeners who were his
tenants to supply him with vegetables. As to
fruits, he gathered such quantities that he sold the
greater part in the market. His fire-wood was
cut from his own hedgerows or taken from the half-rotten
old sheds which he built at the corners of his fields,
and whose planks the farmers carted into town for him,
all cut up, and obligingly stacked in his wood-house,
receiving in return his thanks. His only known
expenditures were for the consecrated bread, the clothing
of his wife and daughter, the hire of their chairs
in church, the wages of la Grand Nanon, the tinning
of the saucepans, lights, taxes, repairs on his buildings,
and the costs of his various industries. He had
six hundred acres of woodland, lately purchased, which
he induced a neighbor’s keeper to watch, under
the promise of an indemnity. After the acquisition
of this property he ate game for the first time.
Monsieur Grandet’s manners were
very simple. He spoke little. He usually
expressed his meaning by short sententious phrases
uttered in a soft voice. After the Revolution,
the epoch at which he first came into notice, the
good man stuttered in a wearisome way as soon as he
was required to speak at length or to maintain an argument.
This stammering, the incoherence of his language,
the flux of words in which he drowned his thought,
his apparent lack of logic, attributed to defects
of education, were in reality assumed, and will be
sufficiently explained by certain events in the following
history. Four sentences, precise as algebraic
formulas, sufficed him usually to grasp and solve
all difficulties of life and commerce: “I
don’t know; I cannot; I will not; I will see
about it.” He never said yes, or no, and
never committed himself to writing. If people
talked to him he listened coldly, holding his chin
in his right hand and resting his right elbow in the
back of his left hand, forming in his own mind opinions
on all matters, from which he never receded. He
reflected long before making any business agreement.
When his opponent, after careful conversation, avowed
the secret of his own purposes, confident that he
had secured his listener’s assent, Grandet answered:
“I can decide nothing without consulting my
wife.” His wife, whom he had reduced to
a state of helpless slavery, was a useful screen to
him in business. He went nowhere among friends;
he neither gave nor accepted dinners; he made no stir
or noise, seeming to economize in everything, even
movement. He never disturbed or disarranged the
things of other people, out of respect for the rights
of property. Nevertheless, in spite of his soft
voice, in spite of his circumspect bearing, the language
and habits of a coarse nature came to the surface,
especially in his own home, where he controlled himself
less than elsewhere.
Physically, Grandet was a man five
feet high, thick-set, square-built, with calves twelve
inches in circumference, knotted knee-joints, and
broad shoulders; his face was round, tanned, and pitted
by the small-pox; his chin was straight, his lips
had no curves, his teeth were white; his eyes had
that calm, devouring expression which people attribute
to the basilisk; his forehead, full of transverse wrinkles,
was not without certain significant protuberances;
his yellow-grayish hair was said to be silver and
gold by certain young people who did not realize the
impropriety of making a jest about Monsieur Grandet.
His nose, thick at the end, bore a veined wen, which
the common people said, not without reason, was full
of malice. The whole countenance showed a dangerous
cunning, an integrity without warmth, the egotism
of a man long used to concentrate every feeling upon
the enjoyments of avarice and upon the only human
being who was anything whatever to him,—his
daughter and sole heiress, Eugenie. Attitude,
manners, bearing, everything about him, in short,
testified to that belief in himself which the habit
of succeeding in all enterprises never fails to give
to a man.
Thus, though his manners were unctuous
and soft outwardly, Monsieur Grandet’s nature
was of iron. His dress never varied; and those
who saw him to-day saw him such as he had been since
1791. His stout shoes were tied with leathern
thongs; he wore, in all weathers, thick woollen stockings,
short breeches of coarse maroon cloth with silver
buckles, a velvet waistcoat, in alternate stripes of
yellow and puce, buttoned squarely, a large maroon
coat with wide flaps, a black cravat, and a quaker’s
hat. His gloves, thick as those of a gendarme,
lasted him twenty months; to preserve them, he always
laid them methodically on the brim of his hat in one
particular spot. Saumur knew nothing further
about this personage.
Only six individuals had a right of
entrance to Monsieur Grandet’s house. The
most important of the first three was a nephew of Monsieur
Cruchot. Since his appointment as president of
the Civil courts of Saumur this young man had added
the name of Bonfons to that of Cruchot. He now
signed himself C. de Bonfons. Any litigant so
ill-advised as to call him Monsieur Cruchot would soon
be made to feel his folly in court. The magistrate
protected those who called him Monsieur le president,
but he favored with gracious smiles those who addressed
him as Monsieur de Bonfons. Monsieur le president
was thirty-three years old, and possessed the estate
of Bonfons (Boni Fontis), worth seven thousand francs
a year; he expected to inherit the property of his
uncle the notary and that of another uncle, the Abbe
Cruchot, a dignitary of the chapter of Saint-Martin
de Tours, both of whom were thought to be very rich.
These three Cruchots, backed by a goodly number of
cousins, and allied to twenty families in the town,
formed a party, like the Medici in Florence; like the
Medici, the Cruchots had their Pazzi.
Madame des Grassins, mother of a son
twenty-three years of age, came assiduously to play
cards with Madame Grandet, hoping to marry her dear
Adolphe to Mademoiselle Eugenie. Monsieur des
Grassins, the banker, vigorously promoted the schemes
of his wife by means of secret services constantly
rendered to the old miser, and always arrived in time
upon the field of battle. The three des Grassins
likewise had their adherents, their cousins, their
faithful allies. On the Cruchot side the abbe,
the Talleyrand of the family, well backed-up by his
brother the notary, sharply contested every inch of
ground with his female adversary, and tried to obtain
the rich heiress for his nephew the president.
This secret warfare between the Cruchots
and des Grassins, the prize thereof being the hand
in marriage of Eugenie Grandet, kept the various social
circles of Saumur in violent agitation. Would
Mademoiselle Grandet marry Monsieur le president or
Monsieur Adolphe des Grassins? To this problem
some replied that Monsieur Grandet would never give
his daughter to the one or to the other. The old
cooper, eaten up with ambition, was looking, they
said, for a peer of France, to whom an income of three
hundred thousand francs would make all the past, present,
and future casks of the Grandets acceptable. Others
replied that Monsieur and Madame des Grassins were
nobles, and exceedingly rich; that Adolphe was a personable
young fellow; and that unless the old man had a nephew
of the pope at his beck and call, such a suitable
alliance ought to satisfy a man who came from nothing,—a
man whom Saumur remembered with an adze in his hand,
and who had, moreover, worn the bonnet rouge.
Certain wise heads called attention to the fact that
Monsieur Cruchot de Bonfons had the right of entry
to the house at all times, whereas his rival was received
only on Sundays. Others, however, maintained
that Madame des Grassins was more intimate with the
women of the house of Grandet than the Cruchots were,
and could put into their minds certain ideas which
would lead, sooner or later, to success. To this
the former retorted that the Abbe Cruchot was the
most insinuating man in the world: pit a woman
against a monk, and the struggle was even. “It
is diamond cut diamond,” said a Saumur wit.
The oldest inhabitants, wiser than
their fellows, declared that the Grandets knew better
than to let the property go out of the family, and
that Mademoiselle Eugenie Grandet of Saumur would be
married to the son of Monsieur Grandet of Paris, a
wealthy wholesale wine-merchant. To this the
Cruchotines and the Grassinists replied: “In
the first place, the two brothers have seen each other
only twice in thirty years; and next, Monsieur Grandet
of Paris has ambitious designs for his son. He
is mayor of an arrondissement, a deputy, colonel of
the National Guard, judge in the commercial courts;
he disowns the Grandets of Saumur, and means to ally
himself with some ducal family,—ducal under
favor of Napoleon.” In short, was there
anything not said of an heiress who was talked of through
a circumference of fifty miles, and even in the public
conveyances from Angers to Blois, inclusively!
At the beginning of 1811, the Cruchotines
won a signal advantage over the Grassinists.
The estate of Froidfond, remarkable for its park, its
mansion, its farms, streams, ponds, forests, and worth
about three millions, was put up for sale by the young
Marquis de Froidfond, who was obliged to liquidate
his possessions. Maitre Cruchot, the president,
and the abbe, aided by their adherents, were able to
prevent the sale of the estate in little lots.
The notary concluded a bargain with the young man
for the whole property, payable in gold, persuading
him that suits without number would have to be brought
against the purchasers of small lots before he could
get the money for them; it was better, therefore,
to sell the whole to Monsieur Grandet, who was solvent
and able to pay for the estate in ready money.
The fine marquisate of Froidfond was accordingly conveyed
down the gullet of Monsieur Grandet, who, to the great
astonishment of Saumur, paid for it, under proper
discount, with the usual formalities.
This affair echoed from Nantes to
Orleans. Monsieur Grandet took advantage of a
cart returning by way of Froidfond to go and see his
chateau. Having cast a master’s eye over
the whole property, he returned to Saumur, satisfied
that he had invested his money at five per cent, and
seized by the stupendous thought of extending and
increasing the marquisate of Froidfond by concentrating
all his property there. Then, to fill up his
coffers, now nearly empty, he resolved to thin out
his woods and his forests, and to sell off the poplars
in the meadows.