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Authors: Honoré de Balzac

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After a lifetime avoiding marriage, Balzac wed his longtime paramour, Eveline Rzewuska, Countess Hanska, in the spring of 1850. When he died on August 21 of that year, Victor Hugo honored his passing with a memorial speech. Honoré de Balzac is buried at Père-Lachaise cemetery in Paris.
The World of Honoré de Balzac and
Père Goriot
1799
Honoré de Balzac is born in Tours on May 20. His civil- servant father, Bernard-François Balzac (originally, Balssa) has moved the bourgeois family from Paris to Tours because of his Royalist sympathies during the French Revolution. Honoré's mother, Anne-Charlotte- Laure Sallambier, is some thirty years her husband's junior. Honoré is put in the care of a nurse till age four. Napoleon enters Paris.
1801
The Louvre is opened to the public.
1802
Victor Hugo is born.
1804
Napoleon proclaims himself emperor of the French; the years that follow will be an era of intense upheaval, including the rise and decline of Napoleon's empire, which will culminate in the 1815 Battle of Waterloo. Charles-Augustin Sainte-Beuve is born.
1807
After spending time at grade school in Tours, Honoré is sent to boarding school in Vendôme, where he will re main until 1813. He almost never sees his family while at school, and loneliness causes him to have a spiritual crisis. Not a stellar student, Honoré nevertheless has a voracious appetite for literature. Works by E. T. A. Hoff mann (1776-1822) will be an enduring influence on the future author.
1814
The Balzac family returns to Paris. Napoleon steps down and is banished to Elba.
1815
Napoleon escapes Elba and enters Paris, beginning his “100 Days” retaking of France. He is then defeated at Waterloo. Louis XVIII comes to power, restoring France's monarchy. Napoleon is exiled to Santa Helena, off the African coast.
1816
Balzac studies law at the Sorbonne and works as a law clerk for Guyonnet de Merville, upon whom his charac ter Derville is based in his later novels.
1819
Balzac receives his law degree but decides to try to earn a living by writing. He moves to a tawdry attic apartment on the rue Lesdiguières, in the Bastille area.
1820
He returns to live with his family, who now reside in a small town, Villeparisis, outside Paris. He writes a tragic drama in verse,
Cromwell.
1821
Desperate for money, Balzac writes sensational novels under various pseudonyms and will do so throughout the 1820s; the books fail, forcing him to seek other work. Around this time he meets Laure-Antoinette Hin ner, Madame de Berny, a wealthy woman twice his age who offers encouragement and financial aid, as well as inspiration for several of his female characters.
1825
Balzac turns to business, becoming an editor of French classics, a publisher, and a printer, but with scant suc cess. His failed efforts and mounting debt over the next few years place him on the verge of financial ruin.
1828
Desperate to save himself from bankruptcy, Balzac once again takes up writing.
1829
He succeeds with the publication of a historical novel, Les Chouans (originally published as Le Dernier Chouan), and the satirical, provocative
Physiologie du Manage.
He thoroughly enjoys his newfound place in Parisian liter ary circles, seducing women and living lavishly. Bernard- François Balzac dies.
1830
A workaholic with little need for sleep, Balzac drinks large amounts of coffee and spends entire days and nights at the writing desk in his apartment on the rue Cassini. In addition to fiction, he publishes many arti cles in journals. He adds the aristocratic de to his name.
1831
La Peau de chagrin (The Wild Ass's Skin,
sometimes trans lated as The Magic Skin) is published to great success. Hugo's
Notre Dame de Paris (The Hunchback of Notre Dame)
is published.
1832
The semi autobiographical novel Louis Lambert, relating Balzac's experiences as a student at the College de Vendôme, is published. Balzac writes articles for the Royalist paper
Le Rénovateur.
He receives a letter from a Polish noblewoman, Eveline Rzewuska, Countess Han ska, and the two begin to correspond.
1833
A rendezvous with Mme. Hanska begins a primarily epis tolary affair that lasts until Balzac's death. Balzac begins an affair with a married woman, Marie Daminois. George Sand's Lelia appears.
1834
La Recherche de l‘absolu (The Quest for the Absolute)
is pub lished. A daughter, Marie-Caroline du Fresnay, is born to Balzac and Daminois.
1835
Père Goriot
is published. Despite his literary success, Balzac lives beyond his means and is pursued by debt collectors.
1836
Balzac acquires a periodical,
Chronique de Paris,
which soon fails. While traveling in Italy he hears that Madame de Berny has died.
1837
Although bowed by debt, Balzac builds a home outside Sèvres and names it Les Jardies. The first installment of one of his masterpieces, Illusions perdues (Lost Illusions), appears. Around this time, Balzac embarks on a scheme to make money from Sardinian silver mines, which fails miserably.
1840
Balzac founds the
Revue Parisienne,
which he uses as a forum to critique various contemporaries.
1841
111 health compromises Balzac's vigorous way of life and causes him to spend more time at his home near Sèvres. The author decides to group his voluminous portrayal of post-Napoleonic Paris—comprising more than ninety novels and an astonishing 2,000 to 3,000 characters—under the umbrella title
La Comédie humaine
(The
Human Comedy) .
His works are early examples of the Re alist style that will influence countless later novelists.
1842
Balzac publishes his famous
avant-propos
(“foreword”) to
La Comédie humaine.
Taking Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire's the ories about the animal world and applying them to hu manity, Balzac asserts that human beings are shaped by their environments. His publisher, Hetzel, also prints works by Jules Verne, Victor Hugo, and George Sand.
1843
The final installment of Illusions perdues is published.
1844
Alexandre Dumas's Count of Monte Cristo is published.
1848
Balzac's masterpieces
La Cousine Bette
and
Le Cousin Pons
are published. Revolutions occur throughout Europe.
1849
Eugène Delacroix paints the ceiling of the Louvre's Salon d'Apollon.
1850
Countess Hanska and Balzac marry in Ukraine in early spring. His health deteriorates, and Balzac dies on Au gust 18. Buried at Père-Lachaise cemetery in Paris, he is honored with a funeral speech by Victor Hugo.
Introduction
Subject of
Père Goriot
—A good man—middle-class
lodging house—600 fr. income—having spent every
penny for his daughters who each has 50,000 fr.
income—dying like a dog.
—BALZAC
 
 
Père Goriot
is one of Balzac's best-known novels, and is widely regarded as a classic of world literature. It is often read in schools and universities, perhaps because one of the main characters in the book, the young Eugène de Rastignac, is a student (although he spends little time studying), and parts of the novel take place in and around the Latin Quarter, which houses the great French institutions of learning. A strong appeal of the book is its wonderfully vivid description of this part of the city, and indeed of all of Paris—its splendor, its squalor, its social divisions, its characters, its institutions, its life. Anyone acquainted with the architecture and topography of Paris will recognize familiar and evocative place names—the Jardin des Plantes, the Opera, the rue Saint-Jacques, Montmartre, the Place Sorbonne, Père-Lachaise cemetery—and can follow Eugene step by step on his long walks between the Chaussée d'Antin and the Faubourg Saint-Germain. So Parisian is the setting of this work that its author wondered: “Will any one without the walls of Paris understand it?” (p. 9).
Père Goriot
is also the perfect novel to start with if one has read none of the roughly ninety novels and stories that make up
La Comédie humaine (The Human Comedy),
the title Balzac gave to his collected oeuvre. It is probably with
Père Goriot
that Balzac consciously set about perfecting the technique of recurring characters that marks his signal contribution to literary
history; in it, he introduces a number of people who reappear in later novels, and brings back a few who have been introduced already in earlier ones. Indeed, Rastignac stands out as an exemplary figure in this new way of envisioning the novel. Avid readers of Balzac at the time had encountered him already in
La Peau de chagrin ( The Wild Ass's Skin,
1831), a novel published before
Père Goriot
(1835) but in which Rastignac appears as a mature man, older than the young student living at the Maison Vauquer in
Père Goriot. Pere Goriot
gives us the story of Rastignac's beginnings in society; a prequel to
The Wild Ass's Skin,
it provides the backstory (as they say in Hollywood), just as other novels in
La Comédie humaine
will inform us about Rastignac's adventures later in life. Explaining his system of composition in the preface to Illusions perdues (Lost Illusions, 1843), Balzac writes: “When one of these characters finds himself, like M. de Rastignac in
Père Goriot,
arrested in mid-career, you should seek him out again in Profil de Marquise
(Profile of a Marquesa),
in
The Interdiction [L'Interdiction] ,
in The Firm of
Nucingen [La Maison Nucingen],
and finally in The Wild Ass's Skin, acting in each epoch according to the rank he has then reached.”
This explains the occasional reference in
Père Goriot
to the future life of one of its characters, as for example when Balzac writes of Rastignac that “the self-possession which pre-eminently distinguished him in later life already stood him in good stead” (p. 129). Rastignac appears in more than twenty of the novels in
La Comédie humaine,
a vast tapestry of characters whose lives are interwoven in different ways at different periods. (When one considers the incidence of recurrence of other characters from
Père Goriot
—the Baron de Nucingen appears or is mentioned in thirty-one stories, Bianchon in twenty-nine, Delphine in seventeen, Gobseck in thirteen, Madame de Beauséant in ten, etc.—one begins to get an idea of the complexity of the social tableau Balzac painted.) The interweaving is crucial: Balzac is less interested in individual characters than in the relations that bind them together at different moments in their lives. Fascinated by the social bond in its manifold forms, Balzac wrote novels and stories that abound in the representation of alliances, friendships, associations, groups, gangs, families (and pseudofamilies, such as the boarders at the Maison Vauquer). Although he is known as the creator of some of the most compelling characters of nineteenth-century fiction (including Rastignac and Vautrin from Goriot), and in spite of the fact that he wrote in an era of unprecedented individualism—the era of individual rights and bourgeois liberalism that came fast upon the revolutionary turmoil of the late eighteenth century—one could perhaps argue that Balzac's work demonstrates that there is no such entity as the individual ; there is only the collective, shared existence of humanity (the boardinghouse in
Père Goriot
is a fine example of this commonality) , along with a thoroughly modern sense of the precariousness of the very categories of individual, self, and identity, which Balzac approaches with skepticism. The method of recurring characters is designed precisely to allow for the representation of a vast social panorama in all its multiplicity as well as the successive and different selves (or “incarnations,” as he liked to say; see
La Dernière incarnation de Vautrin
[1847;
The Last Incarnation of Yautrin] )
for a single character who is anything but an individual.

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