he volunteered as nurse at the bedside of the dying
minister, in the hope of being remembered in his will.
One evening about this same time he took Raoul Nathan
and Emile Blondet, whom he had met in society, to
supper with him at Very’s. He then advised
Nathan to profit by the advances made him by the Comtesse
Felix de Vandenesse. [A Daughter of Eve.] In 1833,
at the Princesse de Cadignan’s home, in the presence
of the Marquise d’Espard, the old Ducs de Lenoncourt
and de Navarreins, the Comte and the Comtesse de Vandenesse,
D’Arthez, two ambassadors, and two well-known
orators of the Chamber of Peers, Rastignac heard his
minister reveal the secrets of the abduction of Senator
Malin, an affair which took place in 1806. [The Gondreville
Mystery.] In 1836, having become enriched by the third
Nucingen failure, in which he was more or less a willing
accomplice, he became possessed of an income of forty
thousand francs. [The Firm of Nucingen.] In 1838 he
attended the opening reception given at Josepha’s
mansion on rue de la Ville-l’Eveque. He
was also witness at Hortense Hulot’s marriage
to Wenceslas Steinbock. He married Augusta de
Nucingen, daughter of Delphine de Nucingen, his former
mistress, whom he had quitted five years previously.
In 1839, Rastignac, minister once more, and this time
of public works, was made count almost in spite of
himself. In 1845 he was, moreover, made a peer.
He had then an income of 300,000 francs. He was
in the habit of saying: “There is no absolute
virtue, all things are dependent on circumstances.”
[Cousin Betty. The Member for Arcis. The
Unconscious Humorists.]
[*] In a recent publication of Monsieur S. de Lovenjoul,
he speaks of
a recent abridged biography
of Eugene de Rastignac.
RASTIGNAC (Laure-Rose and Agathe de),[*] sisters of
Eugene de Rastignac; second and third children of
the Baron and Baronne de Rastignac; Laure, the elder,
born in 1801; Agathe, the second, born in 1802; both
were reared unostentatiously in the Rastignac chateau.
In 1819 they sent what they had saved by economy to
their brother Eugene, then a student. Several
years after, when he was wealthy and powerful, he
married one of them to Martial de la Roche-Hugon, the
other to a minister. In 1821, Laure, with her
father and mother, was present at a reception of M.
de Bargeton’s, where she admired Lucien de Rubempre.
[Father Goriot. Lost Illusions.] Madame de la
Roche-Hugon in 1839 took her several daughters to
a children’s dance at Madame de l’Estorade’s
in Paris. [The Member for Arcis.]
[*] The Mesdemoiselles de Rastignac are here placed
together under
their maiden name, as it is
not known which one married Martial de
la Roche-Hugon.
RASTIGNAC (Monseigneur Gabriel de), brother of Eugene
de Rastignac; one of the youngest two children of
the Baron and Baronne de Rastignac; was private secretary
to the Bishop of Limoges towards the end of the Restoration,
during the trial of Tascheron. In 1832 he became,
when only a young man of thirty, a bishop. He
was consecrated by the Archbishop Dutheil. [Father
Goriot. The Country Parson. A Daughter of
Eve.]