Repertory of the Comedie Humaine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about Repertory of the Comedie Humaine.

Repertory of the Comedie Humaine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about Repertory of the Comedie Humaine.

GRANDLIEU (Camille de). (See Restaud, Comtesse Ernest de.)

GRANDLIEU (Vicomte Juste de), son of Vicomtesse de Grandlieu; brother of Comtesse Ernest de Restaud; cousin and afterwards husband of Marie-Athenais de Grandlieu, combining by this marriage the fortunes of the two houses of Grandlieu and obtaining the title of duke. [Scenes from a Courtesan’s Life.  Gobseck.]

GRANDLIEU (Vicomtesse Juste de), born about 1820, Marie-Athenais de Grandlieu; last daughter of Duc and Duchesse de Grandlieu; married to her cousin, the Vicomte Juste de Grandlieu.  She received at Paris in the first days of the July government, a young married woman like herself, Mme. Felix de Vandenesse, then in the midst of a flirtation with Raoul Nathan. [Scenes from a Courtesan’s Life.  Gobseck.  A Daughter of Eve.]

GRANET, deputy-mayor of the second arrondissement of Paris, in 1818, under La Billardiere.  With his homely wife he was invited to the Birotteau ball. [Cesar Birotteau.]

GRANET, one of the leading men of Besancon, under Louis Philippe.  In gratitude for a favor done him by Albert Savarus he nominated the latter for deputy. [Albert Savarus.]

GRANSON (Madame), poor widow of a lieutenant-colonel of artillery killed at Jena, by whom she had a son, Athanase.  From 1816 she lived at No. 8 rue du Bercail in Alencon, where the benevolence of a distant relative, Mme. du Bousquier, put in her charge the treasury of a maternal society against infanticide, and brought her into contact, under peculiar circumstances, with the woman who afterwards became Mme. Theodore Gaillard. [Jealousies of a Country Town.]

GRANSON (Athanase), son of the preceding; born in 1793; subordinate in the mayor’s office at Alencon in charge of registry.  A sort of poet, liberal in politics and filled with ambition; weary of poverty and overflowing with grandiose sentiments.  In 1816 he loved, with a passion that his commonsense combated, Mme. du Bousquier, then Mlle. Cormon, his senior by more than seventeen years.  In 1816 the marriage dreaded by him took place.  He could not brook the blow and drowned himself in the Sarthe.  He was mourned only by his mother and Suzanne du Val-Noble. [Jealousies of a Country Town.] Nevertheless, eight years after it was said of him:  “The Athanase Gransons must die, withered up, like the grains which fall on barren rock.” [The Government Clerks.]

GRANVILLE (Comte de), had a defective civil status, the orthography of the name varying frequently through the insertion of the letter “d” between the “n” and “v.”  In 1805 at an advanced age he lived at Bayeux, where he was probably born.  His father was a president of the Norman Parliament.  At Bayeux the Comte married his son to the wealthy Angelique Bontems. [A Second Home.]

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Repertory of the Comedie Humaine from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.