the way that the
system worked, would have thought that here was
the stuff of which a
minister is made. Patient, active, and
persevering,
energetic and
prompt in action, he surveyed his
business
horizon with an eagle eye. Nothing there took him by
surprise; he foresaw all things, knew all that was
happening, and
kept his own
counsel; he was a diplomatist in his quick
comprehension of a situation; and in the
routine of business he
was as patient and plodding as a soldier on the march. But beyond
this business
horizon he could not see. He used to spend his
hours of
leisure on the
threshold of his shop, leaning against
the
framework of the door. Take him from his dark little
counting-house, and he became once more the rough, slow-witted
workman, a man who cannot understand a piece of
reasoning, who is
indifferent to all
intellectual pleasures, and falls asleep at
the play, a Parisian Dolibom in short, against whose stupidity
other minds are powerless.
Natures of this kind are nearly all alike; in almost all of them
you will find some
hidden depth of
sublimeaffection. Two all-
absorbing
affections filled the vermicelli maker's heart to the
exclusion of every other feeling; into them he seemed to put all
the forces of his nature, as he put the whole power of his brain
into the corn trade. He had regarded his wife, the only daughter
of a rich farmer of La Brie, with a
devoutadmiration; his love
for her had been
boundless. Goriot had felt the charm of a lovely
and
sensitive nature, which, in its
delicate strength, was the
very opposite of his own. Is there any
instinct more deeply
implanted in the heart of man than the pride of
protection, a
protection which is
constantly exerted for a
fragile and
defenceless creature? Join love
thereto, the
warmth of gratitude
that all
generous souls feel for the source of their pleasures,
and you have the
explanation of many strange incongruities in
human nature.
After seven years of unclouded happiness, Goriot lost his wife.
It was very
unfortunate for him. She was
beginning to gain an
ascendency over him in other ways; possibly she might have
brought that
barren soil under
cultivation, she might have
widened his ideas and given other directions to his thoughts. But
when she was dead, the
instinct of fatherhood developed in him
till it almost became a mania. All the
affection balked by death
seemed to turn to his daughters, and he found full satisfaction
for his heart in
loving them. More or less
brilliant proposals
were made to him from time to time;
wealthy merchants or farmers
with daughters vied with each other in
offering inducements to
him to marry again; but he determined to remain a widower. His
father-in-law, the only man for whom he felt a decided
friendship, gave out that Goriot had made a vow to be
faithful to
his wife's memory. The frequenters of the Corn Exchange, who
could not
comprehend this
sublime piece of folly, joked about it
among themselves, and found a
ridiculousnickname for him. One of
them ventured (after a glass over a bargain) to call him by it,
and a blow from the vermicelli maker's fist sent him headlong
into a
gutter in the Rue Oblin. He could think of nothing else
when his children were
concerned; his love for them made him
fidgety and
anxious; and this was so well known, that one day a
competitor, who wished to get rid of him to secure the field to
himself, told Goriot that Delphine had just been knocked down by
a cab. The vermicelli maker turned
ghastly pale, left the
Exchange at once, and did not return for several days afterwards;
he was ill in
consequence of the shock and the
subsequent relief
on discovering that it was a false alarm. This time, however, the
offender did not escape with a bruised shoulder; at a critical
moment in the man's affairs, Goriot drove him into bankruptcy,
and forced him to disappear from the Corn Exchange.
As might have been expected, the two girls were spoiled. With an
income of sixty thousand francs, Goriot scarcely spent twelve
hundred on himself, and found all his happiness in satisfying the
whims of the two girls. The best masters were engaged, that
Anastasie and Delphine might be endowed with all the
accomplishments which
distinguish a good education. They had a
chaperon--luckily for them, she was a woman who had good sense
and good taste;--they
learned to ride; they had a
carriage for
their use; they lived as the
mistress of a rich old lord might
live; they had only to express a wish, their father would hasten
to give them their most
extravagant desires, and asked nothing of
them in return but a kiss. Goriot had raised the two girls to the
level of the angels; and, quite naturally, he himself was left
beneath them. Poor man! he loved them even for the pain that they
gave him.
When the girls were old enough to be married, they were left free
to choose for themselves. Each had half her father's fortune as
her dowry; and when the Comte de Restaud came to woo Anastasie
for her beauty, her social aspirations led her to leave her
father's house for a more exalted
sphere. Delphine wished for
money; she married Nucingen, a
banker of German extraction, who
became a Baron of the Holy Roman Empire. Goriot remained a
vermicelli maker as before. His daughters and his sons-in-law
began to demur; they did not like to see him still engaged in
trade, though his whole life was bound up with his business. For
five years he stood out against their entreaties, then he
yielded, and consented to
retire on the
amount realized by the
sale of his business and the savings of the last few years. It
was this capital that Mme. Vauquer, in the early days of his
residence with her, had calculated would bring in eight or ten
thousand livres in a year. He had taken
refuge in her lodging-
house,
driven there by
despair when he knew that his daughters
were compelled by their husbands not only to refuse to receive
him as an
inmate in their houses, but even to see him no more
except in private.
This was all the information which Rastignac gained from a M.
Muret who had purchased Goriot's business, information which
confirmed the Duchesse de Langeais' suppositions, and herewith
the
preliminaryexplanation of this obscure but terrible Parisian
tragedy comes to an end.
Towards the end of the first week in December Rastignac received
two letters--one from his mother, and one from his
eldest sister.
His heart beat fast, half with happiness, half with fear, at the
sight of the familiar
writing" target="_blank" title="n.笔迹;书法">
handwriting. Those two little scraps of
paper contained life or death for his hopes. But while he felt a
shiver of dread as he remembered their dire
poverty at home, he
knew their love for him so well that he could not help fearing
that he was draining their very life-blood. His mother's letter
ran as follows:--
"My Dear Child,--I am sending you the money that you asked for.
Make a good use of it. Even to save your life I could not raise
so large a sum a second time without your father's knowledge, and
there would be trouble about it. We should be obliged to mortgage
the land. It is impossible to judge of the merits of schemes of
which I am
ignorant; but what sort of schemes can they be, that
you should fear to tell me about them? Volumes of
explanationwould not have been needed; we mothers can understand at a word,
and that word would have spared me the
anguish of
uncertainty. I
do not know how to hide the
painfulimpression that your letter
has made upon me, my dear son. What can you have felt when you
were moved to send this chill of dread through my heart? It must
have been very
painful to you to write the letter that gave me so
much pain as I read it. To what courses are you committed? You
are going to appear to be something that you are not, and your
whole life and success depends upon this? You are about to see a
society into which you cannot enter without rushing into expense
that you cannot afford, without losing precious time that is