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The Mysterious Mansion – Honore De Balzac (1799-1850)
Born at Tours in 1799, Balzac left his native city at an early age and after various attempts at making a living went into the publishing business in Paris. Failing at that, he set to work more earnestly than ever at writing, and until the end of his life he toiled incessantly at the series of novels and tales which have rendered him famous as one of the great novelists of the world. In his Human Comedy, Balzac included several short stories, which are among the very first of their kind; in them the short story is at last entirely free of the past. His work has that contemporary quality that is one of the distinguishing marks of all great art.

The Mysterious Mansion – The Mysterious Mansion is grouped among the Scenes from Private Life. It is one of the great stories of modern times.

The present version, anonymously translated, is reprinted from Great Short Stories, Collier’s Sons, New York. The original title of the story is La Grande Bretiche.
The Mysterious Mansion
About a hundred yards from the town of Vendome, on the borders of the Loire, there is an old gray house, surmounted by very high gables, and so completely isolated that neither tanyard nor shabby hostelry, such as you may find at the entrance to all small towns, exists in its immediate neighborhood.

In front of this building, overlooking the river, is a garden, where the once well-trimmed box borders that used to define the walks now grow wild as they list. Several willows that spring from the Loire have grown as rapidly as the hedge that encloses it, and half conceal the house. The rich vegetation of those weeds that we call foul adorns the sloping shore.

The Mysterious Mansion part 10

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When the wall was about half-way up, the sly workman took advantage of a moment when the Count`s back was turned, to strike a blow with his trowel in one of the glass panes...

The Mysterious Mansion part 9

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The Count had lately had all the ceilings of his reception rooms on the ground floor repaired. Plaster of Paris is difficult to obtain in Ven- dome; the carriage raises its price. The Count...

The Mysterious Mansion part 8

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At these words Madame de Merret turned a haggard gaze upon her husband.“Here, take your crucifix,” he added. “Swear to me before God that there is no one in there; I will believe you,...

The Mysterious Mansion part 7

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His unmistakable step resounded under the vaulted corridor. At the moment that the Count turned the handle of his wife`s door, he fancied he could hear the door of the closet I spoke of...

The Mysterious Mansion part 6

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One morning I said to Rosalie: “Tell me all you know about Madame de Merret.”“Oh!” she replied in terror, “do not ask that of me, Monsieur Horace.”Her pretty face fell—her clear, bright color faded—and...

The Mysterious Mansion part 5

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After exchanging a few more words with me, my landlady left me a prey to vague and gloomy thoughts, to a romantic curiosity, and a religious terror not unlike the profound impression produced on...

The Mysterious Mansion part 4

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After that, one of our stable-men told us that in the evening when he led the horses to the water, he thought he had seen the Spanish grandee swimming far down the river like...

The Mysterious Mansion part 3

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“Sir,” she said, “when the Emperor sent the Spanish prisoners of war and others here, the Government quartered on me a young Span¬iard who had been sent to Vendome on parole. Parole notwithstanding he...

The Mysterious Mansion part 2

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An arbor is still visible, or rather the ddbris of an arbor, where there is a table that time has not quite destroyed. The aspect of this garden of bygone days suggests the negative...

The Mysterious Mansion part 1

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Honore De Balzac (1799-1850)Born at Tours in 1799, Balzac left his native city at an early age and after various attempts at making a living went into the publishing business in Paris. Failing at...

Kas

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