The Readers Review: Literature from 1714 to 1910 discussion

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Eugénie Grandet
Honoré de Balzac Collection
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Eugenie Grandet - Discussion - Week 3
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Robin P, Moderator
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Feb 20, 2018 02:44PM

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Grandet seems to value Eugenie as his offspring (I wonder if she would have been ignored if he had a son.) He seems proud of her when she corresponds to his values and sentiments. He wouldn't have believed she would ever lie to him or disobey him. In my Garden of Eden analogy, Grandet is the punishing God, throwing Eugenie out of her previous paradise (not much of one as we see it!) for the sins of love and disobedience.


Balzac, a catholic, also observed: "In Protestantism there is no possible future for the woman who has sinned; while, in the Catholic Church, the hope of forgiveness makes her sublime. Hence, for the Protestant writer there is but one woman, while the Catholic writer finds a new woman in each new situation."

Eugenie's womanliness is strange, she is only in word a lover. Her behaviours are more in keeping with a mother or a daughter. I think this is an exposé of the childishness of her cousin and the tyranny of her father.
The exposure reveals that Eugenie is not her father. We all of us make the mistake of thinking that actions always mean the same thing. That when our children say or do things we would do, that they are motivated by the same force and derive the same meaning.
Eugenie cares for her coin collection because of her father but not the same way as her father.

I think Grandet could never fathom giving money away - so in a sense Eugenie became somewhat alien to him.
Balzac had to know the classic Moliere play The Miser, as well as The Merchant of Venice, where Shylock mourns the loss of "my daughter and my ducats". I have the feeling here that Grandet wouldn't mind losing his daughter if she left all his money behind (although he would no longer be able to use her as a pawn in his manipulation of her suitors.)
These stereotypical misers love the physical coins which make up their treasure. Today none of us ever sees our wealth in one physical heap.
These stereotypical misers love the physical coins which make up their treasure. Today none of us ever sees our wealth in one physical heap.

Every interaction with him that excludes the desire to enrich in his protagonist puzzles him deeply. He never really understands his daughter or his wife at this stage, even Nanon eludes him. Assuming he ever wanted to comprehend their actions.
There is at the same time as finding his behaviours loathsome a pity created by Balzac for Grandet, he is empty and can never be satiated. I assume that Balzac had read de la Motte and I had great pleasure in the thought of Grandet watching Eugenie increase 'his' fortune and hen spend it on the church.

(view spoiler)