P re Goriot is a novel of beautifully balanced ironies. A young provincial, Eug ne de Rastignac, comes to Paris and finds lodging in the same boardinghouse as a decrepit former pasta maker, P re Goriot. While the other lodgers make Goriot the butt of their jokes, Eug ne feels an instinctive sympathy for him. Goriot, formerly wealthy, has inexplicably fallen upon hard times; for no visible reason, his fortune has melted away. He bears his humiliation with a seemingly imbecilic meekness. Another mysterious lodger, Vautrin, takes a liking to young Eug ne and shocks him with a cynical offer to help him escape poverty. Vautrin eloquently states the philosophy that the ends always justify the means. The setting is Balzac's Paris, a semimythic place that foreshadows the Paris of Charles Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du mal (1857, 1861, 1868; Flowers of Evil, 1931). The evil and the angelic live side by side and wrestle in this setting. Evil, with the unbridled power of money on its side, appears to have the upper hand. Eug ne, from motives of wishing to help his family, especially his two sisters, decides to put aside the drudgery of his law studies and apprenticeship and take a shortcut to easy wealth. He persuades his mother, back home in the provinces, to sell her jewels and asks his sisters for their savings in order to outfit him for his great adventure of storming high society. While only a poor relation, he wishes to exploit...