fbpx
Wikipedia

Miser

A miser /ˈmzər/ is a person who is reluctant to spend money, sometimes to the point of forgoing even basic comforts and some necessities, in order to hoard money or other possessions.[1] Although the word is sometimes used loosely to characterise anyone who is mean with their money, if such behaviour is not accompanied by taking delight in what is saved, it is not properly miserly.

A detail from L'Avaro, a print by Antonio Piccinni (1878)

Misers as a type have been a perennial object of popular fascination and a fruitful source for writers and artists in many cultures.

Accounting for misers

One attempt to account for miserly behaviour was Sigmund Freud's theory of anal retentiveness, attributing the development of miserly behaviour to toilet training in childhood,[2] although this explanation is not accepted by modern evidence-based psychology.[3]

In the Christian West the attitude to those whose interest centred on gathering money has been coloured by the teachings of the Church. From its point of view, both the miser and the usurer were guilty of the cardinal sin of avarice and shared behaviours.[4] According to the parable of the Elm and the Vine in the quasi-Biblical Shepherd of Hermas, the rich and the poor should be in a relationship of mutual support. Those with wealth are in need of the prayers of the poor for their salvation and can only earn them by acts of charity.[5] A typical late example of Christian doctrine on the subject is the Reverend Erskine Neale's The Riches that Bring No Sorrow (1852), a moralising work based on a succession of biographies contrasting philanthropists and misers.[6]

Running parallel has been a disposition, inherited from Classical times, to class miserly behaviour as a type of eccentricity. Accounts of misers were included in such 19th century works as G. H. Wilson's four-volume compendium of short biographies, The Eccentric Mirror (1807).[7] Such books were put to comic use by Charles Dickens in Our Mutual Friend (serialised 1864/5), with its cutting analysis of Victorian capitalism. In the third section of that novel, Mr Boffin decides to cure his ward Bella Wilfer of her obsession with wealth and position by appearing to become a miser. Taking her with him on a round of the bookshops,

Mr Boffin would say, 'Now, look well all round, my dear, for a Life of a Miser, or any book of that sort; any Lives of odd characters who may have been Misers.' .... The moment she pointed out any book as being entitled Lives of eccentric personages, Anecdotes of strange characters, Records of remarkable individuals, or anything to that purpose, Mr Boffin's countenance would light up, and he would instantly dart in and buy it.'[8]

In the following chapter, Mr Boffin brings a coachload of the books to his premises and readers are introduced to a selection of typical titles and to the names of several of the misers treated in them. Among the books appear James Caulfield's Portraits, Memoirs, and Characters of Remarkable Persons (1794-5);[9] Kirby's Wonderful Museum of Remarkable Characters (1803);[10] Henry Wilson's Wonderful Characters (1821);[11] and F. Somner Merryweather's Lives and Anecdotes of Misers or The Passion of Avarice displayed in the parsimonious habits, unaccountable lives and remarkable deaths of the most notorious misers of all ages (1850).[12]

The majority of the misers are 18th century characters, with John Elwes and Daniel Dancer at their head. The first account of Elwes' life was Edward Topham's The Life of the Late John Elwes: Esquire (1790), which was initially published in his paper The World. The popularity of such accounts is attested by the seven editions printed in the book's first year and the many later reprintings under various titles.[13] Biographies of Dancer followed soon after, at first in periodicals such as the Edinburgh Magazine[14] and the Sporting Magazine,[15] then in the compendiums Biographical Curiosities (which also included Elwes)[16] and The Strange and Unaccountable Life of Daniel Dancer, Esq. ... with singular anecdotes of the famous Jemmy Taylor, the Southwark usurer (1797), which was often to be reissued under various titles.[17]

 
A pencil drawing of Daniel Dancer by Richard Cooper Jr, 1790s

Jemmy Taylor's name also appears in the list of notable misers that Mr Boffin enumerates. He is coupled with the banker Jemmy Wood of Gloucester, a more recent miser about whom Dickens later wrote an article in his magazine All The Year Round.[18] Others include John Little (who appears in Merryweather), Reverend Mr Jones of Blewbury (also in Merryweather) and Dick Jarrel, whose surname was really Jarrett and an account of whom appeared in the Annual Register for 1806.[19] The many volumes of this publication also figured among Mr Boffin's purchases.

Two more of the misers mentioned made their way into other literary works. John Hopkins, known as Vulture Hopkins, was the subject of a scornful couplet in the third of Alexander Pope's Moral Essays, "Of the Use of Riches":

When Hopkins dies, a thousand lights attend
The wretch who living saved a candle's end.[20]

John Overs, with a slight change to his name, became the subject of a three-act drama by Douglas William Jerrold, John Overy or The Miser of Southwark Ferry (1828), roughly based on an incident when he feigned death to save expenses and was killed by accident.[21]

Another public source of information about misers, in Scotland at least, was the prose broadside. One example concerns Isobel Frazer or Frizzle, who died in Stirling on 26 May 1820.[22] Much of the broadside is taken up with detailing the contents of her three rooms, into which she had let no one enter. Not more than £8 in currency was discovered there, but she had bought and hoarded many articles of dress over the years, although rarely wearing them. She had also carefully picked up every pin that fell in her way, till she nearly filled one hundred pincushions. In addition to much other bric-a-brac, there were a great number of buttons, which had been cut off old coats. This makes her sound more like a compulsive hoarder than the "Female Miser" that she is called in the report. The title was more deserved by Joseph MacWilliam, who was found dead of a fire on 13 June 1826. A servant whose home was a damp Edinburgh cellar without either bed, chair or table, his colleagues and neighbours claimed to have seen him in the same threadbare clothes for 15 years. After his death, property to the value of more than £3,000 was found in the cellar, some in the form of property deeds, and more in bank receipts.[23]

Later in the 19th century there were small regional publications dealing with single individuals of local interest. Examples of such works include Frances Blair's 32-page Memoir of Margery Jackson, the Carlisle miser and misanthrope (Carlisle 1847)[24] and in the United States the 46-page Lochy Ostrom, the maiden miser of Poughkeepsie; or the love of a long lifetime. An authentic biography of Rachel Ostrom who recently died in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., aged ninety years, apparently very poor, but really wealthy (Philadelphia 1870).[25]

One trait of misers arising out of the accounts about them was their readiness to incur legal expenses where money was involved. Daniel Dancer was notorious for spending five shillings in an unsuccessful effort to recover three pence from a shop woman.[26] He was also involved in a lawsuit with his equally miserly brothers when his sister died intestate, although this time he was more successful.[27] In the same century, Margery Jackson was involved in an epic Chancery suit between 1776 and 1791 over a family inheritance.[28] The American Hetty Green, who despite being a multimillionaire had also a reputation as a miser, involved herself in a six-year lawsuit to obtain her aunt's fortune, only to have it proved against her that she had forged the will.[29] More modern times yield the Chinese example of an 80-year-old affronted by being called a miser in a poem by his son-in-law. Blaming his hospitalization with Parkinson's disease three years later on this, he sued his daughter for medical fees and 'spiritual compensation'.[30]

Misers in literature

Fables

There were two famous references to misers in ancient Greek sources. One was Aesop's fable of "The Miser and his Gold" which he had buried and came back to view every day. When his treasure was eventually stolen and he was lamenting his loss, he was consoled by a neighbour that he might as well bury a stone (or return to look at the hole) and it would serve the same purpose.[31] The other was a two-line epigram in the Greek Anthology, once ascribed to Plato. In this a man, intending to hang himself, discovered hidden gold and left the rope behind him; on returning, the man who had hidden the gold hanged himself with the noose he found in its place.[32] Both these stories were alluded to or retold in the following centuries, the most famous versions appearing in La Fontaine's Fables as L'avare qui a perdu son trésor (IV.20)[33] and Le trésor et les deux hommes (IX.15)[34] respectively. Yet another of La Fontaine's fables was the late addition, ""The miser and the monkey" (XII.3),[35] used as a cautionary tale for financiers. Here a man keeps his hoard in a sea-encircled tower until a pet monkey amuses itself one day in throwing the coins out of the window.

In Asia misers were the butt of humorous folklore. One very early cautionary tale is the Illisa Jataka from the Buddhist scriptures. This includes two stories, in the first of which a rich miser is miraculously converted to generosity by a disciple of the Buddha; following this, the Buddha tells another story of a miser whose wealth is given away when the king of the gods impersonates him, and when he tries to intervene is threatened with what will happen if he does not change his ways.[36] Two 16th century stories concerning misers are included among the witticisms attributed to Birbal during Mughal times. In one he extracts from a casuistical miser a fee for a poem written in his praise.[37] In the other the miser is forced to reward a merchant who rescued his hoard from a fire with the whole of it.[38] Arabs similarly made extensive use of misers in their literature. The most famous being the 600 page collection of anecdotes called Kitab Al Bukhala or Book of Misers by Al-Jāḥiẓ. He lived in 800 CE during the Abbasid Caliphate in Basra, making this the earliest and largest known work on the subject in Arabic literature.

When there was renewed European interest in Aesop during the early Renaissance, the Neo-Latin poet Laurentius Abstemius wrote two collections of original fables, among which appeared Avarus et poma marcescentia (The miser and the rotten apples, fable 179), published in 1499. This was eventually translated into English by Roger L'Estrange and published in his fable collection of 1692.[39] It concerns a miser who cannot bring himself to eat the apples in his orchard until they start to go rotten. His son invites in his playmates to pick the fruit but asks them not to eat the rotten ones since his father prefers those. The 18th century French fabulist Claris de Florian was to adapt the story in his "L'avare et son fils" (The miser and his son, IV.9). In this version the miserly father hoards his apples and only eats those going rotten. His son, upon being caught raiding them, excuses himself on the grounds that he was confining himself to eating just the sound ones.[40]

 
A print of John Gay's "The Miser and Plutus" by William Blake, 1793

In 18th century Britain, when there was a vogue for creating original fables in verse, a number featured misers. Anne Finch's "Tale of the Miser and the Poet" was included among others in her 1713 Miscellany.[41] There an unsuccessful poet meets Mammon in the guise of a miser digging up his buried gold and debates with him whether the life of wit and learning is a better calling than the pursuit of wealth. Eventually the poet is convinced that keeping his talent hidden until it is better regarded is the more prudent course. It was followed by John Gay's "The Miser and Plutus", published in his collection of fables in 1737.[42] A miser frightened for the security of his hoard denounces gold as the corruptor of virtue and is visited by the angry god of wealth, who asserts that not gold but the attitude towards it is what damages the personality.

While these are more or less original interpretations of the theme, French fabulist Antoine Houdar de la Motte harks back to the light-hearted approach of the Greek Anthology in "The Miser and Minos", first published in his fables of 1719.[43] Descending to the Classical underworld at his death, the miser is brought before the judge of the dead and is given the extreme punishment of returning to earth to witness how his wealth is now being spent. The Scottish poet Allan Ramsay adapted this into dialect two years later,[44] and Charles Denis provided a version in standard English in his Select Fables (1754), reversing the title to "Minos and the Miser".[45]

Poetry

Misers are frequent figures of fun in the epigrams of the Greek Anthology.[46] It is charged of them that they are not masters of their own money if they do not spend it. Niarchus tells of one who does not commit suicide because of the cost of the rope to do so; Lucillius tells of another who dies because funeral expenses are cheaper than calling in a doctor. Elsewhere in the anthology is another epigram by Lucillius of a miser's encounter with a mouse that assures him he only wants lodging, not board.[47] In one more, a miser dreams that he is in debt and hangs himself.[48]

The Latin writer Horace put miserly behaviour at the centre of the first poem in his first collection of satires, dealing with extremes of behaviour.[49] In writing an imitation of it, an English poet who provides only his surname, Minshull, was to emphasise this by titling his work The Miser, a Poem (London, 1735).[50]

In Dante Alighieri's Inferno, misers are put in the fourth circle of hell, in company with spendthrifts as part of their mutual punishment. They roll weights representing their wealth, constantly colliding and quarreling.[51]

During the 16th century, emblem books began using an illustration of an ass eating thistles as symbol of miserly behaviour, often with an accompanying poem. They appeared in various European languages, among them the illustrated trencher by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, dating from about 1630, on which an ass laden with rich foods is shown cropping a thistle, surrounding which is the quatrain:

The Asse which dainty meates doth beare
And feedes on thistles all the yeare
Is like the wretch that hourds up gold
And yet for want doth suffer cold.[52]

In the third book of The Faerie Queene, Edmund Spenser created a portrait of a man trapped between conflicting desires in Malbecco, who appears in cantos 9–10. He is torn between his miserliness and love for his wife Hellenore. Wishing to escape with a lover, she sets fire to his storeroom and forces him to choose between them:

Ay when to him she cryde, to her he turnd,
And left the fyre; love money overcame:
But when he marked how him money burnd,
He left his wyf; money did love disclame.[53]

Eventually losing both, he becomes the embodiment of frustrated jealousy.

The 18th century, so culturally rich in miser lore, furnished some notable poetic examples. Allan Ramsay's “Last speech of a wretched miser” dates from 1728 and is written in modified Scots dialect. The miser bids farewell to his riches in a comic monologue and details some of his shifts to avoid expense.[54] Alexander Pope created another masterly portrait in the character of Cotta in his Epistle to Bathurst (1733). Reluctance to spend confines this aristocrat to his ancestral hall, where he refuses to engage with the world.[55] Later in the century another Scottish poet, Dr William Stevenson (1719–83), included nine satirical epitaphs on misers among his collected works, of which the last begins:

A miser rots beneath this mould'ring stone,
Who starv'd himself through spleen to skin and bone,
Lest worms might riot on his flesh at last
And boast, what he ne'er could, a full repast.[56]

Poetic titles from the 19th century include the Irish Arthur Geoghegan's The Old Miser and Mammon: an Incident Poem (Newry 1818) and Frederick Featherstone's New Christmas Poem entitled The Miser's Christmas Eve (1893). There was also an anonymous didactic poem titled The Miser (London 1831). Although miserly behaviour is referenced during the course of its 78 pages, the real focus there is the attraction of money in all its manifestations.[57]

Broadside ballads

 
The broadside ballad of "The Old Miser", early 19th century

In the realm of popular poetry, there were a range of narrative broadside ballads concerning misers from the 17th century onward. Some of the earliest deal with the grain speculators who caused such suffering to the poorest. A representative example is "The Wretched Miser" (1682), prefaced as "a brief Account of a covetous Farmer, who bringing a Load of Corn to Market, swore the Devil should have it before he would take the honest Market price". The devil closes with the bargain and on accounting day carries off the farmer as well.[58] The social message is carried by the refrain that follows each stanza: "O Farmers, covetous Farmers,/ why would you pinch the Poor?" The religious aspect is dealt with in the contemporary "A Looking-glass for a covetous Miser" by Thomas Jordan. Here a West Country entrepreneur and a poor husbandman debate the respective merits of anxious profit-making and contentment. The miser laments the current low price of grain and resolves not to sell or plant more until the price rises.[59] The theme continued into the early 19th century, where a farmer is again the subject of "The life and awful death of a rich miser ".[60]

Another common subject of these ballads was the dilemma of the miser's daughter unable to marry the man of her choice and the stratagems employed to overcome her father. In "Bite Upon the Miser", printed in the late 18th century, a sailor dresses up as the devil and scares the miser and the parson he intended as her husband into allowing the match.[61] Much the same situation occurs in "The Politic Lovers or the Windsor Miser Outwitted", where it is a butcher who impersonates the devil and scares the miser into handing over his riches.[62] In about 1800 there appeared an English broadside ballad called “The old miser” which was to serve as basis for what grew into a folk song with multiple versions.[63] The scene is set in London, where a miser's daughter is courted by a sailor and the father arranges for him to be press-ganged to get him out of the way. As well as persisting in England, there are also versions in the US and Tristan de Cunha.[64] Misers were notorious tricksters, so ingenuity transcending barely credible impersonations was generally needed. "Bite upon bite or the miser outwitted by the country lass" (1736–63) does not feature the miser's daughter but another sort of damsel in distress. A girl bears a child out of wedlock and is advised by her mother to name it Maidenhead and offer it for sale. A rich miser closes the bargain and is eventually forced to support the child by the magistrate.[65]

Still another ballad theme was the privations of the miser's servant, a comic situation in drama and fiction also, and here principally concerned with how little food the household has to live on. One example is "The Miser's Man (dating from between 1863-85).[66] At the start of the 19th century, the theme had figured as an episode in Robert Anderson's "Croglin Watty". A simple-minded countryman down from the fells, Watty was hired by the real-life Carlisle miser Margery Jackson (1722–1812) and served her for a quarter. The ballad mixes sung verses with prose description, both in Cumberland dialect:

Neist my deame she e'en starv'd me, that niver liv'd weel;
Her hard words and luiks wou'd ha'e freeten'd the deil:

She hed a lang beard, for aw t' warl leyke a billy goat, wi' a kil-dried frosty feace: and then the smawest leg o' mutton in aw Carel market sarrad the cat, me, and hur for a week.[67]

Dame Margery is not named in the poem because at the time of writing (1805) she was still alive and known to be litigious. We know that it is meant to be her from the fact that in William Brown's painting of the ballad, "Hiring Croglin Watty at Carlisle Cross", it is she who figures in the foreground.[68] About 1811, just before her death, Brown had already devoted another painting to her alone as she tramped through the town.[69] That she is still amusedly remembered there is witnessed by the modern Miser! The Musical (2011), based on her life.[70]

Drama

Misers were represented onstage as comic figures from Classical times. One of the earliest appears in the comic Phlyax plays developed in the Greek colonies in Italy during the 4th century BCE, which are known only from rare fragments and titles. They were also popularly represented on Greek vases, often with the names of the characters written above them. In one of these by Asteas two men are depicted robbing a miser.[71] At the centre the miser Charinos has settled for sleep on top of his strongbox in the comfort of two blankets. He is rudely awoken by two rascals mishandling him in an effort to lay their hands on his riches. On the left, Gymnilos has already pulled away the blanket on top of him while, on the right, Kosios drags out the blanket beneath. On the far right, the miser's slave Karion stands with outstretched arms and knocking knees.[72]

Such stock figures eventually provided inspiration for the Latin dramas of Plautus.[73] The character of Euclio in his Aulularia was to be particularly influential, as was the complicating subplot of a marriageable daughter.[74] One of the earliest Renaissance writers to adapt the play was the Croatian Marin Držić in about 1555, whose Skup (The Miser) is set in Dubrovnik. Ben Jonson adapted elements from Plautus for his early comedy The Case is Altered (c. 1597).[75] The miser there is the Milanese Jaques de Prie, who has a (supposed) daughter, Rachel. Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft and Samuel Coster followed with their very popular Dutch comedy Warenar (1617). The play is named from the miser, whose daughter is Claartje. Molière adapted Plautus' play into French as L'Avare (The Miser, 1668) while in England Thomas Shadwell adapted Molière's work in 1672[76] and a version based on both Plautus and Molière was produced by Henry Fielding in 1732.[77] Among later adaptations there was Vasily Pashkevich's 18th-century Russian comic opera The Miser and pioneering dramatic works in Arabic by Marun Al Naqqash (1817–55)[78] and in Serbian by Jovan Sterija Popović.[79]

 
Aubrey Beardsley's 1898 title page for Ben Jonson's play Volpone

There were also independent dramatic depictions of misers, some of them being variations of the Pantaleone figure in 16th-century Italian commedia dell’arte. He is represented as a rich and miserly Venetian merchant, later to become the father of Columbina.[80] The Venetian characters who reappear in English drama include the Jewish moneylender Shylock in William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (1598) and the title character of Ben Jonson's Volpone (1606). In Aubrey Beardsley's title page for the latter, Volpone is shown worshiping his possessions, in illustration of the lines from the play, "Dear Saint, / Riches, the dumb god that giv'st all men tongues."[81] A similar scene takes place in the second act of Alexander Pushkin's short tragedy Skupoi rytsar (1836). This concerns a son, Albert, kept short of funds by his father, the Baron. Under the title The Miserly Knight, it was made an opera by Sergei Rachmaninoff in 1906.[82] In the corresponding act in the latter, the Baron visits his underground storehouse, where he gloats at a new addition to his coffers and moodily contemplates the extravagance of his son during a 15-minute solo.

Following on from the continuing success of Molière's L'Avare, there was a spate of French plays dealing with misers and their matrimonial plans over the next century and a half. What complicates matters is that several of these had the same title but were in fact separate plays written by different authors. L'Avare Amoureux (The Miser in Love) by Jean du Mas d' Aigueberre (1692–1755) was a one-act comedy acted in Paris in 1729.[83] It is not the same as the anonymous one-act comedy of the same title published in 1777.[84]

Another set of plays borrows a title from the Italian dramatist Carlo Goldoni, who was working in France at the end of his life. He had already produced a one-act comedy titled L'avaro (The Miser) in Bologna in 1756. In 1776 he produced in France the five-act L' avare fastueux (The Spendthrift Miser).[85] The same title was used by L. Reynier for his five-act verse drama of 1794[86] and by Claude Baron Godart d'Aucourt de Saint Just (1769-1826) for his three-act verse drama of 1805.[87]

The early 19th century saw misers become the subject of the musicals then fashionable in France. Eugène Scribe and Germain Delavigne collaborated on L'avare en goguette (The miser's spree) in 1823,[88] while Jean-François Bayard and Paul Duport collaborated on the two-act La fille de l'avare (The Miser's Daughter) in 1835.[87] The latter play was freely adapted in 1835 by John G. Millingen under the title of The Miser’s Daughter. Two further adaptations of the French play were to follow later: Love and Avarice (1859) by J. V. Bridgeman (1819-89), and John Palgrave Simpson's Daddy Hardacre in 1857. Meanwhile, William Harrison Ainsworth's period novel The Miser's Daughter (first serialised in 1842) was spawning a fresh crop of dramas of that title. Two were played in 1842 and a further adaptation called Hilda in 1872. A similarly titled play was the five-act comedy partially in verse, The Miser's Daughter or The Lover's Curse of 1839, a schoolboy indiscretion of the future controversial churchman, Rev.John Purchas.[89] And on the other side of the Atlantic there was a stage production of Julietta Gordini:The Miser's Daughter, a verse play in five acts, which claimed to derive its plot 'from an Italian story'.[90]

Douglas William Jerrold's John Overy or The Miser of Southwark Ferry, (1828) also brings in a daughter whom the miser attempts to sell off as a mistress to her disguised lover.[91] Earlier Jerrold had written a one-act farce, The Smoked Miser or The Benefit of Hanging (1823), in which a miser tries to marry off his ward to advantage.[92] Another farce produced in Canada, Major John Richardson's The Miser Outwitted (1841), had an Irish theme and dealt with a plot to trick a miser out of his money.[93] The later Thomas Peckett Prest's The Miser of Shoreditch or the Curse of Avarice (1854) was based on a penny dreadful story by him; later he adapted it as a two-act romantic drama set in time of Henry VIII.[94]

The popularity of these theatrical misers is evident from the number of paintings and drawings based on them, many of which were then adapted as prints. In 18th-century England, it was Fielding's "The Miser" that attracted most attention. Samuel Wale's drawing of the second act was also made into a print.[95] But it was principally depictions of various actors in the character of Lovegold, the play's anti-hero, which attracted artists. Samuel De Wilde pictured William Farren in the role at the Theatre Royal, Bath.[96] Several other works became plates in one or another book dedicated to English drama. James Roberts II (1753 – c. 1810) executed a pen and ink watercolour of Edward Shuter in character which was adapted as a print for the six-volume play collection, Bell's British Theatre.[97] Charles Reuben Ryley made a print of Thomas Ryder in the role for Lowndes' British Theatre (1788),[98] while Thomas Parkinson's painting of Richard Yates as Lovegold was adapted for the 1776 edition of that work.[99] In the following century, Thomas Charles Wageman's dramatic head and shoulders drawing of William Farren as Lovegold illustrated William Oxberry's collection of texts, The New English Drama (1820).[100] From this time too dates the coloured print of Samuel Vale acting the part of Goliah Spiderlimb, the comic servant in Jerrold's The Smoked Miser.[101]

Molière's L'Avare was not altogether eclipsed in England by the work adapted from it. A drawing by William Hogarth of the play's denouement was included as a print in the translation of Molière's work[102] and prints based upon it were made by various other engravers.[103] William Powell Frith devoted one of his theatrical paintings to a scene from L'Avare in 1876[104] while the French actor Grandmesnil in the role of Harpagon was painted by Jean-Baptiste François Desoria.[105]

In addition, the challenging and complex part of Shylock was favoured by English artists. Johann Zoffany painted Charles Macklin in the role that had brought him fame at the Covent Garden Theatre (1767–68)[106] and Thomas Gray portrayed a confrontation between Shylock and his daughter Jessica (1868).[107] Character portraits of other actors in Shylock's role have included Henry Urwick (1859–1931) by Walter Chamberlain Urwick (1864-1943),[108] Herbert Beerbohm Tree by Charles Buchel[109] and Arthur Bourchier, also by Buchel.[110]

Fiction

Characterisation of misers has been a frequent focus in prose fiction:

 
The miser discovers the loss of his money, George Cruickshank's 1842 illustration for Ainsworth's The Miser's Daughter
  • The miserly priest who was Lazarillo de Tormes' second master in the Spanish picaresque novel published in 1554.[111]
  • Yan Jiansheng in an episode of The Scholars by Wu Jingzi (吳敬梓), written about 1750. This miser was unable to die easily until a wasteful second wick was removed from the lamp at his bedside.[112]
  • Jean-Esther van Gobseck – an affluent usurer in the novel Gobseck (1830) by Balzac.[113]
  • Felix Grandet – whose daughter is the title character in the novel Eugénie Grandet (1833) by Balzac.[114]
  • Fardarougha Donovan in the Irish William Carleton's Fardarougha the Miser (1839).[115]
  • John Scarve – in the novel The Miser's Daughter (1842) by William Harrison Ainsworth.[116] The story is set in the 1770s and the character of Scarve was inspired by the real-life miser John Elwes.
  • Ebenezer Scrooge – the lead character of A Christmas Carol (1843) by Charles Dickens.[117] He too was based on John Elwes. The story has been adapted many times for stage and screen.
  • Mr. Prokharchin – title character of the short story Mr. Prokharchin (1846) by Fyodor Dostoyevsky.[118]
  • Uncle Jan and his nephew Thijs in Hendrik Conscience's novel of Flemish peasant life, De Gierigaard (1853, translated into English as "The Miser" in 1855).[119]
  • Silas Marner – title character of George Eliot's novel Silas Marner (1861), who eventually abandons his avaricious ways.[120]
  • Ebenezer Balfour the villain of Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped (1886), which is set during the Jacobite disturbances in 18th century Scotland. Attempting to deprive his nephew David (the hero of the novel) of his inheritance, he arranges to have the young man kidnapped.[121]
  • Francisco Torquemada, the main character in Perez Galdós' Torquemada en la hoguera (Toquemada on the pire, 1889). The novel is centred on a Madrid moneylender who had appeared incidentally in earlier novels of his and now had three more devoted to him: Torquemada en la cruz (Toquemada on the cross, 1893), Torquemada en el purgatorio (Toquemada in Purgatory, 1894) and Torquemada y San Pedro (Torquemada and Saint Peter, 1895). All of these deal with Spanish social trends in the closing years of the 19th century.[122]
  • Trina McTeague, the miserly wife in McTeague: a story of San Francisco (1899) by Frank Norris.[123] As avarice slowly overtakes her, she withdraws her savings so that she can gloat over the money and even roll about in it. The book was the basis for a silent film in 1916 and Erich von Stroheim's Greed in 1924. More recently, it was also the basis for William Bolcom's opera McTeague (1992).[124]
  • Henry Earlforward in Arnold Bennett's novel Riceyman Steps (1923), who makes life miserable for the wife who married him in the hope of security.[125]
  • Séraphin Poudrier, the central figure in Claude-Henri Grignon's Un Homme et son péché (1933). This French-Canadian novel was translated into English as "The Woman and the Miser" in 1978. Set at the end of the 19th century, the novel broke with the convention of extolling rural life and depicts a miser who mistreats his wife and lets her die because calling in a doctor would cost money. There have been adaptations for stage, radio, TV and two films, of which the most recent was Séraphin: un homme et son péché (2002), titled Séraphin: Heart of Stone in the English-language version.

There were beside many other prolific and once popular novelists who addressed themselves to the subject of miserliness. For the most part theirs were genre works catering to readers in the circulating libraries of the 19th century. Among them was the gothic novel The miser and his family (1800) by Eliza Parsons and Catherine Hutton's The miser married (1813). The latter was an epistolary novel in which Charlotte Montgomery describes her own romantic affairs and in addition those of her mother, an unprincipled spendthrift who has just married the miser of the title.[126] Another female novelist, Mary E. Bennett (1813–99), set her The Gipsy Bride or the Miser's Daughter (1841) in the 16th century.[127] Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Aurora Floyd (1863) was a successful sensation novel in which banknotes rather than gold are the object of desire and a motive for murder.[128] It was dramatised the same year and later toured the US; in 1912 it was made a silent film. Later examples include Eliza Lynn Linton's Paston Carew, Millionaire and Miser (1886); Miser Farebrother (1888) by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon;[129] and Dollikins and the Miser (1890) by the American Frances Eaton.[130] In 1904 Jerome K. Jerome created Nicholas Snyders, The Miser of Zandam in a sentimental story of the occult in which the Dutch merchant persuades a generous young man to exchange souls with him.[131]

Misers in art

Mediaeval art works of Christian origin take a clear moral stance on the sin of avarice in its various manifestations. The frieze on the west wall of Lincoln Cathedral depicts the torments of Hell visited on those guilty of this sin,[132] while Sassetta made "The Blessed Ranieri showing the friars the soul of the Miser of Citerna carried to hell by demons" a panel of an altarpiece (now in the Louvre).[133] But the bracketing of the miser and the usurer as equally culpable types, mentioned earlier, makes it difficult to interpret the subject of later moralistic paintings, since they may represent either a hoarder, a money lender or even a tax collector.

Such paintings cluster into recognisable genres, all of which point to the sinful nature of preoccupation with money for its own sake. Hieronymus Bosch's panel of Death and the Miser, dating from the 1490s, started a fashion in depicting this subject among Low Countries artists. Bosch shows the miser on his deathbed, with various demons crowding about his possessions, while an angel supports him and directs his attention to higher things. The link between finance and the diabolical is also drawn by another Fleming, Jan Matsys, in his portrayal of the man of affairs being assisted in his double bookkeeping by a demon.[134] The same connection is made in "The devil and the usurer" in the Valenciennes Musée des beaux-arts, formerly attributed to Pieter Bruegel the Younger, in which two devils pluck at the sleeve of a poorly dressed moneylender.[135]

The Gospel Parable of the Rich Fool[136] lies behind another series of paintings which stem ultimately from mediaeval illustrations of the Dance of Death. There a skeleton compels those from all walks of life, but particularly types of the rich and the powerful, to join him in his dance to the grave. In 1538 Hans Holbein the Younger initiated a popular treatment of this subject in which each type is separately illustrated, of which there were many imitations in succeeding centuries.[137] Among the depictions is a man starting up in protest behind a table piled with wealth on which a skeleton is laying hands. In his print of 1651, Wenceslas Hollar makes the connection with the parable clear by quoting from it in the frame.[138] A variation is provided by Jan Provoost's 16th century diptych in which death confronts the man of affairs with his own account.[139] A century later, Frans Francken the Younger treats the theme twice, in both versions of which a skeleton serenades a luxuriously dressed greybeard sitting at a table.[140] Another curious variation occurs in Pieter Quast's print of "The Miser and Death" (1643). Here the man sits at table clasping his money bags while contemplating a skull wearing a plumed hat, beside which is an hour-glass. The visitation of death is carried forward in the 19th century in similarly titled works. They include a portrayal by Franz Häussler (1845-1920) of an old man standing at his desk who peers round fearfully as he glimpses a skull reflected in a mirror.[141] The charcoal and watercolour drawing by the Austrian Albert Plattner (1869–1919) is more ambiguous and has the figures facing away from each other in a cramped space.[142]

Yet another genre was the Allegory of Avarice, of which one of the earliest examples is Albrecht Dürer's painting of a naked old woman with a sack of coins (1507).[143] This makes the point that age comes to all and confiscates all consolations. A woman is chosen as subject because the Latin avaritia is of the feminine gender. Low Countries artists who took up the allegorical theme added the variation of making the woman examine a coin by the light of a candle or lantern, as in the paintings by Gerrit van Honthorst[144] and Mathias Stomer.[145] In his own allegorical treatment, Paulus Moreelse made the link with the dance of death genre by introducing a young boy slyly fingering the coins while keeping a wary eye on the woman to see if she has noticed.[146] These Dutch variations were mostly painted during the 1620s, when Rembrandt too borrowed the imagery, but his candlelit examiner of a coin is male and the piece is variously titled "The Money Changer" or "The Rich Fool", in reference to the parable already mentioned.[147] Jan Steen, on the other hand, makes his subject very obviously a miser who hugs a small sack of coins and holds one up for intent inspection.[148]

In the Hieronymus Bosch Death and the Miser, the pull between spirituality and materialism is highlighted by making the deathbed a scene of conflict between the angel and demons. Quentin Matsys suggests the same polarity in his The moneylender and his wife (1514).[149] Here the woman is studying a religious book while her husband is testing coins by weight. In the hands of the later Marinus van Reymerswaele the contrast disappears. The wife of his moneylender is shown helping with the bookkeeping and leaning sideways, as mesmerised as her husband by the pile of coins.[150] Gillis van Tilborch's painting of much the same scene is titled The Misers and again demonstrates the ambivalent targets of the moral message. The only difference is that the couple engaged in inspecting their money are old, as was the case in all the allegories of avarice.[151] David Teniers the Younger depicted a couple similarly engaged in 1648 which was later engraved in France by Pierre-François Basan under the title Le plaisir des vieillards (the pleasures of old age). Verses as the bottom underline the moral: "Why do you make/ such piles of gold?/ Soon you’ll grow old/ and Death takes all.[152]

Another area of ambivalence centres on the kind of clothes worn by the so-called misers. The subject of Hendrik Gerritsz Pot's painting from the 1640s in the Uffizi is fashionably dressed and wearing a ring. He may be inspired by the wealth and jewelry piled on his table, but he obviously has no objection to advertising his well-to-do status.[153] On the other hand, the Miser Casting His Accounts presented by Jan Lievens is poorly dressed and his interest in hoarding is indicated by the way he gloats on the key that will lock his money away.[154] The same dichotomy occurs in later centuries. Jean-Baptiste Le Prince's miser is also richly robed as he sits surrounded by his possessions,[155] while Theodore Bernard Heuvel's miser sits on the chest containing his hoard and looks anxiously over his shoulder.[156] Paul Gavarni's miser shows much the same apprehension as he leans on the table where his money is piled and glances round suspiciously.[157]

 
Old Gripus plundered by his young wife (1773)

A sub-theme of this kind of contrast occurred in Hans Holbein the Younger's "The Miser and his Mistress". There a young woman in luxuriant Renaissance dress stands behind an ugly miser, reaching across him to take coins from the money bags he clutches to his chest, while he looks up at her, crying out with a grimace and trying to push away her hand. An updated version by Philip Dawe was published as a print in 1773 under the title of The Scramble, or Old Gripus plunder'd by his Young Wife. Underneath is a verse commentary:

How hard is the conflict, yet claims ridicule,
When doting and avarice possess an old fool!
His wife while she plunders with smiles and caresses,
At once cools his love and his avarice distresses.[158]

Literary manifestations of the theme of the mismatched couple include the Malbecco episode in "The Faerie Queene" and Catherine Hutton's novel "The Miser Married".

English depictions of misers in the 18th century begin as genre paintings. Gainsborough Dupont's poorly dressed character clutches a bag of coin and looks up anxiously in the painting in the Ashmolean Museum.[159] John Cranch (1751-1821) pictures two armed desperadoes breaking in on his.[160] However, it is in the realm of satirical prints that the most inventiveness is found. James Gillray does not neglect the moral dimension either in his "The miser's feast" (1786). He is pictured seated at a table eating a meager meal, attended by Death in the guise of an emaciated and naked manservant holding in his right hand a tray with a bone on it and behind him, in his left hand, the dart of death. Famine, a withered hag naked to the waist, is also in attendance wearing a large hat and fashionable skirt. These characters are identified by the verse at the bottom: "What else can follow but destructive fate,/When Famine holds the cup and Death the plate?"[161]

Among other details in Gillray's crowded print is a fashionably dressed prostitute coming through the door. Lechery was supposed to be an attribute of some misers, exposing them to a contest between satisfying this weakness and their overmastering passion to save expense, as exemplified in the Old Gripus print. Thomas Rowlandson points to one solution of his dilemma in a print showing a miser engaged with two nude prostitutes whom has hired for the price of one.[162] In another Rowlandson revisits the theme of the meager feast, depicting his miser crouched by an empty grate and keeping himself warm by hugging his money-bags. A hag enters, bringing a tiny portion to eat on a plate which a famished cat scrambles to reach.[163] One more dichotomy explored by Rowlandson appears in his watercolour of "The spendthrift and the miser".[164] The drunken young man alarming the miser there is probably his son, taking up a literary theme to be found, among other places, in Allan Ramsay's comic monologue. It will be remembered too that the thriftless ne'er-do-well of A Rake's Progress inherited his money from a miserly father.

By the end of the 19th century the theme of the miser was distancing itself from the simple moralities of journeyman painters and becoming a subject for aristocratic amateurs. The Empress Maria Feodorovna's miser of 1890 handles a small strongbox.[165] The Indian Raja Ravi Varma paints a Jewish character type for his miser, dated 1901,[166] while the Hungarian nobleman Ladislav Medňanský titles his humanised study "Shylock" (1900).[167] Apart from them, there is an etching by James Abbott McNeill Whistler which emphasises the essential isolation of such figures. His enigmatic "The Miser" of 1860 pictures an individual of indeterminate gender seated with its back to the viewer in the corner of a bare room next to the window. He is looking down as if examining something and the room behind him is spartanly furnished with just a table and bench, while a broadsheet is tacked to the wall.[168]

References

  1. ^ . oxforddictionaries.com. Archived from the original on August 11, 2012.
  2. ^ Nicky Hayes (2000), Foundations of psychology, Cengage Learning, ISBN 1861525893
  3. ^ Berger, Kathleen (2000). The Developing Person. New York: Worth Publishers. p. 218. ISBN 1-57259-417-9.
  4. ^ Richard Newhauser, The Early History of Greed: The Sin of Avarice in Early Medieval Thought and Literature, Cambridge 2000, p.31
  5. ^ "Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol II: THE PASTOR OF HERMAS: Similitude Second. As the Vine is Supported by the Elm, So is the Rich Man Helped by the Prayer of the Poor". sacred-texts.com.
  6. ^ "The Riches that Bring No Sorrow". archive.org. 1852.
  7. ^ "The Eccentric Mirror:: Reflecting a Faithful and Interesting Delineation of ..." archive.org. 1813.
  8. ^ Chapter 5 Gutenberg site
  9. ^ Various volumes appear in Google Books
  10. ^ "Kirby's Wonderful and Scientific Museum". google.co.uk. 1803.
  11. ^ Wilson, Henry (1821). "Wonderful Characters". google.co.uk.
  12. ^ "Lives and anecdotes of misers". archive.org. 1850.
  13. ^ Topham, Edward (1790). "The Life of the Late John Elwes". google.co.uk.
  14. ^ "Anecdotes of the late Daniel Dancer Esq", 1794, pp.399-40
  15. ^ "Anecdotes of the Late Daniel Dancer" 1795
  16. ^ "Biographical Curiosities; or, Various pictures of human nature. Containing ..." google.co.uk. 1797.
  17. ^ Roy Bearden-White, How the Wind Sits; Or, The History of Henry and Ann Lemoine, Chapbook Writers and Publishers of the Late Eighteenth Century, Southern Illinois University 2007 pp.55-7
  18. ^ April 10, 1869 pp.454-6
  19. ^ "Annual Register". google.co.uk. 1808.
  20. ^ An account of him was given in The Gentleman's Magazine for 1788, pp.510-11
  21. ^ The Dramatic Magazine 1, 1829 pp.78-9
  22. ^ "Broadside entitled 'Female Miser'". nls.uk.
  23. ^ "Broadside entitled 'Miser'". nls.uk.
  24. ^ "Memoir of Margery Jackson, the Carlisle miser & misanthrope". archive.org. 1848.
  25. ^ "Lochy Ostrom, the maiden miser of Poughkeepsie; or, The love of a long lifetime. An authentic biography of Rachel Ostrom who recently died in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., aged ninety years, apparently very poor, but really wealthy ." archive.org. 1870.
  26. ^ Biographical Curiosities, (London 1797), pp.14-15
  27. ^ Biographical Curiosities (London 1797), p.6
  28. ^ Frances Blair, Memoir of Margery Jackson, pp.12-14
  29. ^ Notable American Women. (Harvard Univ 1971), vol.1, p.81
  30. ^ China Daily, 13 Feb 2009, "Daughter sued by dad over 'miser' poem"
  31. ^ "THE MAN AND HIS GOLD". mythfolklore.net.
  32. ^ The Greek Anthology III, London 1917, pp.25-6
  33. ^ The Complete Fables of Jean de La Fontaine, translated by Norman Shapiro, University of Illinois 2007, p.101
  34. ^ "Jean de La Fontaine's Fable Poem: The Treasure And The Two Men". readbookonline.org.
  35. ^ "Jean de La Fontaine Fables". nvg.org.
  36. ^ Tale 78, Sacred texts online
  37. ^ Anindya Roy, Akbar-Birbal Jokes, New Delhi 2005 "The Miser's Misery", pp. 125–6
  38. ^ Clifford Sawhney, 50 Wittiest Tales Of Birbal, Bangalore 2005, "A question of 'like'", pp. 47–9
  39. ^ Fable 458, p. 430
  40. ^ Fables de Florian, Paris 1846, p. 109
  41. ^ "A Tale of the Miser and the Poet". upenn.edu.
  42. ^ "The Miser and Plutus". Immortal Poetry.
  43. ^ Fable XIX, Internet Archive
  44. ^ Poems vol. 2 (1761) pp. 37–9
  45. ^ Fable XC p. 326
  46. ^ A group of eight in Book XI are numbered 165-73
  47. ^ The Greek anthology for schools, poem 29
  48. ^ Poems of the Orient p.323
  49. ^ Satires, Epistles and Ars Poetica, Loeb edition translated by H. Rushton Fairclough, London 1942 p.5 ff
  50. ^ Kupersmith, William (2007). English Versions of Roman Satire in the Earlier Eighteenth Century. Cranbury, NJ: Associated University Presses. p. 95.
  51. ^ Jennifer Doane Upton (March 2005), Dark Way to Paradise, ISBN 9781597310093
  52. ^ "British Museum - Image gallery: Scenes from Aesop's Fables". British Museum.
  53. ^ III.10, stanza 15
  54. ^ The Poems of Allan Ramsay, London 1800, pp.304-11
  55. ^ Moral Essays III, lines 177-196
  56. ^ Original Poems on Several Subjects Volume 2, p.280
  57. ^ "The miser: a poem". archive.org. 1831.
  58. ^ University of California
  59. ^ English Broadside Ballad Archive
  60. ^ James G. Hepburn, A Book of Scattered Leaves: Poetry of Poverty in Broadside Ballads Bucknell University 2000 p.201
  61. ^ "Lewis Walpole Library Digital Collection". yale.edu.
  62. ^ "Bodleian Library".
  63. ^ "Vaughan Williams Memorial Library - Welcome to the English Folk Dance and Song Society". vwml.org.
  64. ^ Folk Songs of the Catskills, State University of New York, 1982, pp.187-9
  65. ^ Scarlet Bowen, The Politics of Custom in Eighteenth-Century British Fiction, London 2010 footnote on p.185
  66. ^ "Bodleian Library".
  67. ^ The Songs and Ballads of Cumberland, George Routledge & Sons, 1866, pp. 330–3
  68. ^ "Margery Jackson (1722–1812), Hiring Croglin Watty at Carlisle Cross". Art UK.
  69. ^ "Margery Jackson, the Carlisle Miser". Art UK.
  70. ^ Tony Henderson (6 June 2011). "Margery Jackson's remarkable life inspires Miser! The Musical". journallive. Archived from the original on April 21, 2013.
  71. ^ "File:Phlyax scene on a calyx krater by Asteas Antikensammlung Berlin F3044 5.jpg". wikimedia.org.
  72. ^ Klaus Neiiendam, The Art of Acting in Antiquity, Museum Tusculanum Press, 1992, pp.25-7
  73. ^ Sean McGrath, South Italian Phylax Plays, University of Arizona
  74. ^ Translated into blank verse in the 18th century by Bonnell Thornton, available on Google Books
  75. ^ The text is online
  76. ^ Albert S. Borgman, Thomas Shadwell, his life and comedies, New York 1969, pp.141-7
  77. ^ Fielding, Henry (1803). "The miser". google.co.uk.
  78. ^ M.M.Badawi, "Arabic drama: early developments" in Modern Arabic Literature, Cambridge 1992, pp.331-2
  79. ^ McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Drama. 1984. ISBN 9780070791695.
  80. ^ The Methuen Drama Dictionary of the Theatre,Pantaloon entry, p.374
  81. ^ Wikimedia
  82. ^ There is a complete performance on YouTube
  83. ^ "Les trois spectacles, ou Polixene". google.co.uk. 1729.
  84. ^ "L'Avare amoureux". google.co.uk. 1777.
  85. ^ Edward Copping, Alfieri and Goldoni: Their Lives and Adventures, London 1857, p.259
  86. ^ Reynier, L. (1794). "L' avare fastueux". google.co.uk.
  87. ^ a b Bayard, Jean François Alfred; Duport, Paul (1835). "La fille de l'avare". google.co.uk.
  88. ^ Scribe, Eugène; Delavigne, Germain (1823). "L'avare en goguettes". google.co.uk.
  89. ^ New Monthly Magazine 1839 p.583
  90. ^ Pray, Isaac Clarke (1839). "Julietta Gordini". google.co.uk.
  91. ^ The Dramatic Magazine 1, 1829 p.79
  92. ^ Text at Victorian Plays project 2014-04-07 at the Wayback Machine
  93. ^ Theatre Research in Canada, Spring 1986[permanent dead link]
  94. ^ Victorian Plays project[dead link]
  95. ^ "British Museum - Image gallery: drawing". British Museum.
  96. ^ "Art UK - William Farren as Lovegold in 'The Miser' by Henry Fielding". Art UK.
  97. ^ "British Museum - Image gallery: Mr Shutter in the Character of Lovegold". British Museum.
  98. ^ "British Museum - Mr Ryder in the character of Lovegold". British Museum.
  99. ^ "British Museum - Mr Yates in the character of Lovegold". British Museum.
  100. ^ "British Museum - Image gallery: Mr W. Farren, as Lovegold". British Museum.
  101. ^ "British Museum - Mr Vale as Goliah Spiderlimb". British Museum.
  102. ^ P.J.De Voogd, Henry Fielding and William Hogarth, Amsterdam NL 1981, pp.38-9
  103. ^ "H Beard Print Collection". vam.ac.uk.
  104. ^ rfdarsie (6 July 2012). "Victorian British Painting". 19thcenturybritpaint.blogspot.co.uk.
  105. ^ . artflakes.com. Archived from the original on 2013-06-08. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  106. ^ "The Merchant of Venice". Shmoop.
  107. ^ Wikimedia
  108. ^ "Art UK - Henry Urwick (1859–1931), as Shylock". Art UK.
  109. ^ "The Merchant of Venice". Shmoop.
  110. ^ "Art UK - Arthur Bourchier (1863–1927), as Shylock". Art UK.
  111. ^ The Universal Anthology vol.12, 1899, pp.94-103
  112. ^ C. T. Hsia, The Classic Chinese Novel: A Critical Introduction, Chinese University Press, 2016
  113. ^ A translation on the Gutenberg site
  114. ^ A translation on the Gutenberg site
  115. ^ "Fardorougha, the Miser, by William Carleton". gutenberg.org.
  116. ^ Ainsworth, William Harrison (1855). "The miser's daughter". google.co.uk.
  117. ^ Available on the Gutenberg site
  118. ^ Lantz, K. A. (2004). The Dostoevsky encyclopedia. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 118. ISBN 0-313-30384-3.
  119. ^ Available in Google Books
  120. ^ Available on the Gutenberg site
  121. ^ Available on the Gutenberg site
  122. ^ "The Perez Galdos Editions Project - Summary of the Torquemada novels". shef.ac.uk.
  123. ^ Available online at Gutenberg
  124. ^ "New York Magazine". google.co.uk. 16 November 1992.
  125. ^ . Several eBooks Free. Archived from the original on 2020-08-04. Retrieved 2014-08-20.
  126. ^ "The miser married : a novel. In three volumes : Hutton, Catherine, 1756-1846 : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive". Internet Archive. 1813.
  127. ^ Bennett, Mary E. (1841). "The Gipsey Bride: Or, the Miser's Daughter. By the Author of Jane Shore ..." google.co.uk.
  128. ^ "Aurora Floyd. A novel". archive.org. 1863.
  129. ^ Farjeon, Benjamin Leopold (1889). Miser Farebrother: A Novel (Complete). ISBN 9781465528162.
  130. ^ "Dollikins and the Miser : Frances Eaton : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive". Internet Archive. 1890.
  131. ^ "The Soul of Nicholas Snyders, Or the Miser Of Zandam, by Jerome K. Jerome". gutenberg.org.
  132. ^ Wikimedia
  133. ^ "File:Sassetta - Damnation of the Soul of the Miser of Citerna - WGA20866.jpg". wikimedia.org.
  134. ^ "Art UK - The Miser". Art UK.
  135. ^ "French Government arts site".
  136. ^ "Luke 12:20 "But God said to him, 'You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?'". bible.cc.
  137. ^ "Hans Holbein's dance of death, Rich man / Miser". dodedans.com.
  138. ^ Wikimedia Commons
  139. ^ "File:Jan Provoost - Death and the Miser - WGA18447.jpg". wikimedia.org.
  140. ^ "Death and the Miser". NiceArtGallery.com.
  141. ^ "File:Glaspalast München 1891 025a.jpg". wikimedia.org.
  142. ^ "Der Geizhals und der Tod". artnet.com.
  143. ^ Wikimedia Commons
  144. ^ "Web Gallery of Art, image collection, virtual museum, searchable database of European fine arts (1000-1900)". wga.hu.
  145. ^ "French Government cultural site".
  146. ^ "The Athenaeum - Allegory of avarice (Paulus Moreelse - )". www.the-athenaeum.org.
  147. ^ Wikimedia Commons
  148. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-10-18.
  149. ^ Wikimedia
  150. ^ Wikimedia Commons
  151. ^ . linternaute.com. Archived from the original on 2015-02-13. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
  152. ^ "Le Plaisir Des Vieillards". FAMSF Explore the Art.
  153. ^ "Web Gallery of Art".
  154. ^ "Art UK - A Miser Casting His Accounts". Art UK.
  155. ^ "Jean Baptiste Leprince. Expert art authentication, certificates of authenticity and expert art appraisals - Art Experts". artexpertswebsite.com.
  156. ^ "The Miser". NiceArtGallery.com.
  157. ^ "French government arts site".
  158. ^ "British Museum - Image gallery: The Scramble, or Old Gripus plunder'd by his Young Wife". British Museum.
  159. ^ "Art UK - The Miser". Art UK.
  160. ^ "Art UK - The Miser". Art UK.
  161. ^ "British Museum".
  162. ^ Mike Hannon. . eroti-cart.com. Archived from the original on 2014-08-26. Retrieved 2014-08-22.
  163. ^ "The Miser". davidrumsey.com.
  164. ^ "A&A - The Spendthrift and the Miser". artandarchitecture.org.uk.
  165. ^ Wikimedia
  166. ^ "Raja Ravi Varma Oil Painting 59 - The Miser". cyberkerala.com.
  167. ^ "File:Mednyánszky Shylock.jpg". wikimedia.org.
  168. ^ "Whistler Etchings :: Image of Impression". gla.ac.uk.

External links

  •   Quotations related to Misers at Wikiquote
  •   The dictionary definition of miser at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Misers at Wikimedia Commons
  • Miserliness – Sermons and Biblical Studies

miser, this, article, about, parsimonious, people, other, uses, disambiguation, cheapskate, redirects, here, supergrass, song, cheapskate, song, skinflint, redirects, here, band, skinflint, skinflint, band, miser, person, reluctant, spend, money, sometimes, po. This article is about parsimonious people For other uses see Miser disambiguation Cheapskate redirects here For the Supergrass song see Cheapskate song Skinflint redirects here For the band Skinflint see Skinflint band A miser ˈ m aɪ z er is a person who is reluctant to spend money sometimes to the point of forgoing even basic comforts and some necessities in order to hoard money or other possessions 1 Although the word is sometimes used loosely to characterise anyone who is mean with their money if such behaviour is not accompanied by taking delight in what is saved it is not properly miserly A detail from L Avaro a print by Antonio Piccinni 1878 Misers as a type have been a perennial object of popular fascination and a fruitful source for writers and artists in many cultures Contents 1 Accounting for misers 2 Misers in literature 2 1 Fables 2 2 Poetry 2 3 Broadside ballads 2 4 Drama 2 5 Fiction 3 Misers in art 4 References 5 External linksAccounting for misers EditOne attempt to account for miserly behaviour was Sigmund Freud s theory of anal retentiveness attributing the development of miserly behaviour to toilet training in childhood 2 although this explanation is not accepted by modern evidence based psychology 3 In the Christian West the attitude to those whose interest centred on gathering money has been coloured by the teachings of the Church From its point of view both the miser and the usurer were guilty of the cardinal sin of avarice and shared behaviours 4 According to the parable of the Elm and the Vine in the quasi Biblical Shepherd of Hermas the rich and the poor should be in a relationship of mutual support Those with wealth are in need of the prayers of the poor for their salvation and can only earn them by acts of charity 5 A typical late example of Christian doctrine on the subject is the Reverend Erskine Neale s The Riches that Bring No Sorrow 1852 a moralising work based on a succession of biographies contrasting philanthropists and misers 6 Running parallel has been a disposition inherited from Classical times to class miserly behaviour as a type of eccentricity Accounts of misers were included in such 19th century works as G H Wilson s four volume compendium of short biographies The Eccentric Mirror 1807 7 Such books were put to comic use by Charles Dickens in Our Mutual Friend serialised 1864 5 with its cutting analysis of Victorian capitalism In the third section of that novel Mr Boffin decides to cure his ward Bella Wilfer of her obsession with wealth and position by appearing to become a miser Taking her with him on a round of the bookshops Mr Boffin would say Now look well all round my dear for a Life of a Miser or any book of that sort any Lives of odd characters who may have been Misers The moment she pointed out any book as being entitled Lives of eccentric personages Anecdotes of strange characters Records of remarkable individuals or anything to that purpose Mr Boffin s countenance would light up and he would instantly dart in and buy it 8 In the following chapter Mr Boffin brings a coachload of the books to his premises and readers are introduced to a selection of typical titles and to the names of several of the misers treated in them Among the books appear James Caulfield s Portraits Memoirs and Characters of Remarkable Persons 1794 5 9 Kirby s Wonderful Museum of Remarkable Characters 1803 10 Henry Wilson s Wonderful Characters 1821 11 and F Somner Merryweather s Lives and Anecdotes of Misers or The Passion of Avarice displayed in the parsimonious habits unaccountable lives and remarkable deaths of the most notorious misers of all ages 1850 12 The majority of the misers are 18th century characters with John Elwes and Daniel Dancer at their head The first account of Elwes life was Edward Topham s The Life of the Late John Elwes Esquire 1790 which was initially published in his paper The World The popularity of such accounts is attested by the seven editions printed in the book s first year and the many later reprintings under various titles 13 Biographies of Dancer followed soon after at first in periodicals such as the Edinburgh Magazine 14 and the Sporting Magazine 15 then in the compendiums Biographical Curiosities which also included Elwes 16 and The Strange and Unaccountable Life of Daniel Dancer Esq with singular anecdotes of the famous Jemmy Taylor the Southwark usurer 1797 which was often to be reissued under various titles 17 A pencil drawing of Daniel Dancer by Richard Cooper Jr 1790s Jemmy Taylor s name also appears in the list of notable misers that Mr Boffin enumerates He is coupled with the banker Jemmy Wood of Gloucester a more recent miser about whom Dickens later wrote an article in his magazine All The Year Round 18 Others include John Little who appears in Merryweather Reverend Mr Jones of Blewbury also in Merryweather and Dick Jarrel whose surname was really Jarrett and an account of whom appeared in the Annual Register for 1806 19 The many volumes of this publication also figured among Mr Boffin s purchases Two more of the misers mentioned made their way into other literary works John Hopkins known as Vulture Hopkins was the subject of a scornful couplet in the third of Alexander Pope s Moral Essays Of the Use of Riches When Hopkins dies a thousand lights attend The wretch who living saved a candle s end 20 John Overs with a slight change to his name became the subject of a three act drama by Douglas William Jerrold John Overy or The Miser of Southwark Ferry 1828 roughly based on an incident when he feigned death to save expenses and was killed by accident 21 Another public source of information about misers in Scotland at least was the prose broadside One example concerns Isobel Frazer or Frizzle who died in Stirling on 26 May 1820 22 Much of the broadside is taken up with detailing the contents of her three rooms into which she had let no one enter Not more than 8 in currency was discovered there but she had bought and hoarded many articles of dress over the years although rarely wearing them She had also carefully picked up every pin that fell in her way till she nearly filled one hundred pincushions In addition to much other bric a brac there were a great number of buttons which had been cut off old coats This makes her sound more like a compulsive hoarder than the Female Miser that she is called in the report The title was more deserved by Joseph MacWilliam who was found dead of a fire on 13 June 1826 A servant whose home was a damp Edinburgh cellar without either bed chair or table his colleagues and neighbours claimed to have seen him in the same threadbare clothes for 15 years After his death property to the value of more than 3 000 was found in the cellar some in the form of property deeds and more in bank receipts 23 Later in the 19th century there were small regional publications dealing with single individuals of local interest Examples of such works include Frances Blair s 32 page Memoir of Margery Jackson the Carlisle miser and misanthrope Carlisle 1847 24 and in the United States the 46 page Lochy Ostrom the maiden miser of Poughkeepsie or the love of a long lifetime An authentic biography of Rachel Ostrom who recently died in Poughkeepsie N Y aged ninety years apparently very poor but really wealthy Philadelphia 1870 25 One trait of misers arising out of the accounts about them was their readiness to incur legal expenses where money was involved Daniel Dancer was notorious for spending five shillings in an unsuccessful effort to recover three pence from a shop woman 26 He was also involved in a lawsuit with his equally miserly brothers when his sister died intestate although this time he was more successful 27 In the same century Margery Jackson was involved in an epic Chancery suit between 1776 and 1791 over a family inheritance 28 The American Hetty Green who despite being a multimillionaire had also a reputation as a miser involved herself in a six year lawsuit to obtain her aunt s fortune only to have it proved against her that she had forged the will 29 More modern times yield the Chinese example of an 80 year old affronted by being called a miser in a poem by his son in law Blaming his hospitalization with Parkinson s disease three years later on this he sued his daughter for medical fees and spiritual compensation 30 Misers in literature EditFables Edit There were two famous references to misers in ancient Greek sources One was Aesop s fable of The Miser and his Gold which he had buried and came back to view every day When his treasure was eventually stolen and he was lamenting his loss he was consoled by a neighbour that he might as well bury a stone or return to look at the hole and it would serve the same purpose 31 The other was a two line epigram in the Greek Anthology once ascribed to Plato In this a man intending to hang himself discovered hidden gold and left the rope behind him on returning the man who had hidden the gold hanged himself with the noose he found in its place 32 Both these stories were alluded to or retold in the following centuries the most famous versions appearing in La Fontaine s Fables as L avare qui a perdu son tresor IV 20 33 and Le tresor et les deux hommes IX 15 34 respectively Yet another of La Fontaine s fables was the late addition The miser and the monkey XII 3 35 used as a cautionary tale for financiers Here a man keeps his hoard in a sea encircled tower until a pet monkey amuses itself one day in throwing the coins out of the window In Asia misers were the butt of humorous folklore One very early cautionary tale is the Illisa Jataka from the Buddhist scriptures This includes two stories in the first of which a rich miser is miraculously converted to generosity by a disciple of the Buddha following this the Buddha tells another story of a miser whose wealth is given away when the king of the gods impersonates him and when he tries to intervene is threatened with what will happen if he does not change his ways 36 Two 16th century stories concerning misers are included among the witticisms attributed to Birbal during Mughal times In one he extracts from a casuistical miser a fee for a poem written in his praise 37 In the other the miser is forced to reward a merchant who rescued his hoard from a fire with the whole of it 38 Arabs similarly made extensive use of misers in their literature The most famous being the 600 page collection of anecdotes called Kitab Al Bukhala or Book of Misers by Al Jaḥiẓ He lived in 800 CE during the Abbasid Caliphate in Basra making this the earliest and largest known work on the subject in Arabic literature When there was renewed European interest in Aesop during the early Renaissance the Neo Latin poet Laurentius Abstemius wrote two collections of original fables among which appeared Avarus et poma marcescentia The miser and the rotten apples fable 179 published in 1499 This was eventually translated into English by Roger L Estrange and published in his fable collection of 1692 39 It concerns a miser who cannot bring himself to eat the apples in his orchard until they start to go rotten His son invites in his playmates to pick the fruit but asks them not to eat the rotten ones since his father prefers those The 18th century French fabulist Claris de Florian was to adapt the story in his L avare et son fils The miser and his son IV 9 In this version the miserly father hoards his apples and only eats those going rotten His son upon being caught raiding them excuses himself on the grounds that he was confining himself to eating just the sound ones 40 A print of John Gay s The Miser and Plutus by William Blake 1793 In 18th century Britain when there was a vogue for creating original fables in verse a number featured misers Anne Finch s Tale of the Miser and the Poet was included among others in her 1713 Miscellany 41 There an unsuccessful poet meets Mammon in the guise of a miser digging up his buried gold and debates with him whether the life of wit and learning is a better calling than the pursuit of wealth Eventually the poet is convinced that keeping his talent hidden until it is better regarded is the more prudent course It was followed by John Gay s The Miser and Plutus published in his collection of fables in 1737 42 A miser frightened for the security of his hoard denounces gold as the corruptor of virtue and is visited by the angry god of wealth who asserts that not gold but the attitude towards it is what damages the personality While these are more or less original interpretations of the theme French fabulist Antoine Houdar de la Motte harks back to the light hearted approach of the Greek Anthology in The Miser and Minos first published in his fables of 1719 43 Descending to the Classical underworld at his death the miser is brought before the judge of the dead and is given the extreme punishment of returning to earth to witness how his wealth is now being spent The Scottish poet Allan Ramsay adapted this into dialect two years later 44 and Charles Denis provided a version in standard English in his Select Fables 1754 reversing the title to Minos and the Miser 45 Poetry Edit Misers are frequent figures of fun in the epigrams of the Greek Anthology 46 It is charged of them that they are not masters of their own money if they do not spend it Niarchus tells of one who does not commit suicide because of the cost of the rope to do so Lucillius tells of another who dies because funeral expenses are cheaper than calling in a doctor Elsewhere in the anthology is another epigram by Lucillius of a miser s encounter with a mouse that assures him he only wants lodging not board 47 In one more a miser dreams that he is in debt and hangs himself 48 The Latin writer Horace put miserly behaviour at the centre of the first poem in his first collection of satires dealing with extremes of behaviour 49 In writing an imitation of it an English poet who provides only his surname Minshull was to emphasise this by titling his work The Miser a Poem London 1735 50 In Dante Alighieri s Inferno misers are put in the fourth circle of hell in company with spendthrifts as part of their mutual punishment They roll weights representing their wealth constantly colliding and quarreling 51 During the 16th century emblem books began using an illustration of an ass eating thistles as symbol of miserly behaviour often with an accompanying poem They appeared in various European languages among them the illustrated trencher by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger dating from about 1630 on which an ass laden with rich foods is shown cropping a thistle surrounding which is the quatrain The Asse which dainty meates doth beare And feedes on thistles all the yeare Is like the wretch that hourds up gold And yet for want doth suffer cold 52 In the third book of The Faerie Queene Edmund Spenser created a portrait of a man trapped between conflicting desires in Malbecco who appears in cantos 9 10 He is torn between his miserliness and love for his wife Hellenore Wishing to escape with a lover she sets fire to his storeroom and forces him to choose between them Ay when to him she cryde to her he turnd And left the fyre love money overcame But when he marked how him money burnd He left his wyf money did love disclame 53 Eventually losing both he becomes the embodiment of frustrated jealousy The 18th century so culturally rich in miser lore furnished some notable poetic examples Allan Ramsay s Last speech of a wretched miser dates from 1728 and is written in modified Scots dialect The miser bids farewell to his riches in a comic monologue and details some of his shifts to avoid expense 54 Alexander Pope created another masterly portrait in the character of Cotta in his Epistle to Bathurst 1733 Reluctance to spend confines this aristocrat to his ancestral hall where he refuses to engage with the world 55 Later in the century another Scottish poet Dr William Stevenson 1719 83 included nine satirical epitaphs on misers among his collected works of which the last begins A miser rots beneath this mould ring stone Who starv d himself through spleen to skin and bone Lest worms might riot on his flesh at last And boast what he ne er could a full repast 56 Poetic titles from the 19th century include the Irish Arthur Geoghegan s The Old Miser and Mammon an Incident Poem Newry 1818 and Frederick Featherstone s New Christmas Poem entitled The Miser s Christmas Eve 1893 There was also an anonymous didactic poem titled The Miser London 1831 Although miserly behaviour is referenced during the course of its 78 pages the real focus there is the attraction of money in all its manifestations 57 Broadside ballads Edit The broadside ballad of The Old Miser early 19th century In the realm of popular poetry there were a range of narrative broadside ballads concerning misers from the 17th century onward Some of the earliest deal with the grain speculators who caused such suffering to the poorest A representative example is The Wretched Miser 1682 prefaced as a brief Account of a covetous Farmer who bringing a Load of Corn to Market swore the Devil should have it before he would take the honest Market price The devil closes with the bargain and on accounting day carries off the farmer as well 58 The social message is carried by the refrain that follows each stanza O Farmers covetous Farmers why would you pinch the Poor The religious aspect is dealt with in the contemporary A Looking glass for a covetous Miser by Thomas Jordan Here a West Country entrepreneur and a poor husbandman debate the respective merits of anxious profit making and contentment The miser laments the current low price of grain and resolves not to sell or plant more until the price rises 59 The theme continued into the early 19th century where a farmer is again the subject of The life and awful death of a rich miser 60 Another common subject of these ballads was the dilemma of the miser s daughter unable to marry the man of her choice and the stratagems employed to overcome her father In Bite Upon the Miser printed in the late 18th century a sailor dresses up as the devil and scares the miser and the parson he intended as her husband into allowing the match 61 Much the same situation occurs in The Politic Lovers or the Windsor Miser Outwitted where it is a butcher who impersonates the devil and scares the miser into handing over his riches 62 In about 1800 there appeared an English broadside ballad called The old miser which was to serve as basis for what grew into a folk song with multiple versions 63 The scene is set in London where a miser s daughter is courted by a sailor and the father arranges for him to be press ganged to get him out of the way As well as persisting in England there are also versions in the US and Tristan de Cunha 64 Misers were notorious tricksters so ingenuity transcending barely credible impersonations was generally needed Bite upon bite or the miser outwitted by the country lass 1736 63 does not feature the miser s daughter but another sort of damsel in distress A girl bears a child out of wedlock and is advised by her mother to name it Maidenhead and offer it for sale A rich miser closes the bargain and is eventually forced to support the child by the magistrate 65 Still another ballad theme was the privations of the miser s servant a comic situation in drama and fiction also and here principally concerned with how little food the household has to live on One example is The Miser s Man dating from between 1863 85 66 At the start of the 19th century the theme had figured as an episode in Robert Anderson s Croglin Watty A simple minded countryman down from the fells Watty was hired by the real life Carlisle miser Margery Jackson 1722 1812 and served her for a quarter The ballad mixes sung verses with prose description both in Cumberland dialect Neist my deame she e en starv d me that niver liv d weel Her hard words and luiks wou d ha e freeten d the deil She hed a lang beard for aw t warl leyke a billy goat wi a kil dried frosty feace and then the smawest leg o mutton in aw Carel market sarrad the cat me and hur for a week 67 Dame Margery is not named in the poem because at the time of writing 1805 she was still alive and known to be litigious We know that it is meant to be her from the fact that in William Brown s painting of the ballad Hiring Croglin Watty at Carlisle Cross it is she who figures in the foreground 68 About 1811 just before her death Brown had already devoted another painting to her alone as she tramped through the town 69 That she is still amusedly remembered there is witnessed by the modern Miser The Musical 2011 based on her life 70 Drama Edit Misers were represented onstage as comic figures from Classical times One of the earliest appears in the comic Phlyax plays developed in the Greek colonies in Italy during the 4th century BCE which are known only from rare fragments and titles They were also popularly represented on Greek vases often with the names of the characters written above them In one of these by Asteas two men are depicted robbing a miser 71 At the centre the miser Charinos has settled for sleep on top of his strongbox in the comfort of two blankets He is rudely awoken by two rascals mishandling him in an effort to lay their hands on his riches On the left Gymnilos has already pulled away the blanket on top of him while on the right Kosios drags out the blanket beneath On the far right the miser s slave Karion stands with outstretched arms and knocking knees 72 Such stock figures eventually provided inspiration for the Latin dramas of Plautus 73 The character of Euclio in his Aulularia was to be particularly influential as was the complicating subplot of a marriageable daughter 74 One of the earliest Renaissance writers to adapt the play was the Croatian Marin Drzic in about 1555 whose Skup The Miser is set in Dubrovnik Ben Jonson adapted elements from Plautus for his early comedy The Case is Altered c 1597 75 The miser there is the Milanese Jaques de Prie who has a supposed daughter Rachel Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft and Samuel Coster followed with their very popular Dutch comedy Warenar 1617 The play is named from the miser whose daughter is Claartje Moliere adapted Plautus play into French as L Avare The Miser 1668 while in England Thomas Shadwell adapted Moliere s work in 1672 76 and a version based on both Plautus and Moliere was produced by Henry Fielding in 1732 77 Among later adaptations there was Vasily Pashkevich s 18th century Russian comic opera The Miser and pioneering dramatic works in Arabic by Marun Al Naqqash 1817 55 78 and in Serbian by Jovan Sterija Popovic 79 Aubrey Beardsley s 1898 title page for Ben Jonson s play Volpone There were also independent dramatic depictions of misers some of them being variations of the Pantaleone figure in 16th century Italian commedia dell arte He is represented as a rich and miserly Venetian merchant later to become the father of Columbina 80 The Venetian characters who reappear in English drama include the Jewish moneylender Shylock in William Shakespeare s The Merchant of Venice 1598 and the title character of Ben Jonson s Volpone 1606 In Aubrey Beardsley s title page for the latter Volpone is shown worshiping his possessions in illustration of the lines from the play Dear Saint Riches the dumb god that giv st all men tongues 81 A similar scene takes place in the second act of Alexander Pushkin s short tragedy Skupoi rytsar 1836 This concerns a son Albert kept short of funds by his father the Baron Under the title The Miserly Knight it was made an opera by Sergei Rachmaninoff in 1906 82 In the corresponding act in the latter the Baron visits his underground storehouse where he gloats at a new addition to his coffers and moodily contemplates the extravagance of his son during a 15 minute solo Following on from the continuing success of Moliere s L Avare there was a spate of French plays dealing with misers and their matrimonial plans over the next century and a half What complicates matters is that several of these had the same title but were in fact separate plays written by different authors L Avare Amoureux The Miser in Love by Jean du Mas d Aigueberre 1692 1755 was a one act comedy acted in Paris in 1729 83 It is not the same as the anonymous one act comedy of the same title published in 1777 84 Another set of plays borrows a title from the Italian dramatist Carlo Goldoni who was working in France at the end of his life He had already produced a one act comedy titled L avaro The Miser in Bologna in 1756 In 1776 he produced in France the five act L avare fastueux The Spendthrift Miser 85 The same title was used by L Reynier for his five act verse drama of 1794 86 and by Claude Baron Godart d Aucourt de Saint Just 1769 1826 for his three act verse drama of 1805 87 The early 19th century saw misers become the subject of the musicals then fashionable in France Eugene Scribe and Germain Delavigne collaborated on L avare en goguette The miser s spree in 1823 88 while Jean Francois Bayard and Paul Duport collaborated on the two act La fille de l avare The Miser s Daughter in 1835 87 The latter play was freely adapted in 1835 by John G Millingen under the title of The Miser s Daughter Two further adaptations of the French play were to follow later Love and Avarice 1859 by J V Bridgeman 1819 89 and John Palgrave Simpson s Daddy Hardacre in 1857 Meanwhile William Harrison Ainsworth s period novel The Miser s Daughter first serialised in 1842 was spawning a fresh crop of dramas of that title Two were played in 1842 and a further adaptation called Hilda in 1872 A similarly titled play was the five act comedy partially in verse The Miser s Daughter or The Lover s Curse of 1839 a schoolboy indiscretion of the future controversial churchman Rev John Purchas 89 And on the other side of the Atlantic there was a stage production of Julietta Gordini The Miser s Daughter a verse play in five acts which claimed to derive its plot from an Italian story 90 Douglas William Jerrold s John Overy or The Miser of Southwark Ferry 1828 also brings in a daughter whom the miser attempts to sell off as a mistress to her disguised lover 91 Earlier Jerrold had written a one act farce The Smoked Miser or The Benefit of Hanging 1823 in which a miser tries to marry off his ward to advantage 92 Another farce produced in Canada Major John Richardson s The Miser Outwitted 1841 had an Irish theme and dealt with a plot to trick a miser out of his money 93 The later Thomas Peckett Prest s The Miser of Shoreditch or the Curse of Avarice 1854 was based on a penny dreadful story by him later he adapted it as a two act romantic drama set in time of Henry VIII 94 The popularity of these theatrical misers is evident from the number of paintings and drawings based on them many of which were then adapted as prints In 18th century England it was Fielding s The Miser that attracted most attention Samuel Wale s drawing of the second act was also made into a print 95 But it was principally depictions of various actors in the character of Lovegold the play s anti hero which attracted artists Samuel De Wilde pictured William Farren in the role at the Theatre Royal Bath 96 Several other works became plates in one or another book dedicated to English drama James Roberts II 1753 c 1810 executed a pen and ink watercolour of Edward Shuter in character which was adapted as a print for the six volume play collection Bell s British Theatre 97 Charles Reuben Ryley made a print of Thomas Ryder in the role for Lowndes British Theatre 1788 98 while Thomas Parkinson s painting of Richard Yates as Lovegold was adapted for the 1776 edition of that work 99 In the following century Thomas Charles Wageman s dramatic head and shoulders drawing of William Farren as Lovegold illustrated William Oxberry s collection of texts The New English Drama 1820 100 From this time too dates the coloured print of Samuel Vale acting the part of Goliah Spiderlimb the comic servant in Jerrold s The Smoked Miser 101 Moliere s L Avare was not altogether eclipsed in England by the work adapted from it A drawing by William Hogarth of the play s denouement was included as a print in the translation of Moliere s work 102 and prints based upon it were made by various other engravers 103 William Powell Frith devoted one of his theatrical paintings to a scene from L Avare in 1876 104 while the French actor Grandmesnil in the role of Harpagon was painted by Jean Baptiste Francois Desoria 105 In addition the challenging and complex part of Shylock was favoured by English artists Johann Zoffany painted Charles Macklin in the role that had brought him fame at the Covent Garden Theatre 1767 68 106 and Thomas Gray portrayed a confrontation between Shylock and his daughter Jessica 1868 107 Character portraits of other actors in Shylock s role have included Henry Urwick 1859 1931 by Walter Chamberlain Urwick 1864 1943 108 Herbert Beerbohm Tree by Charles Buchel 109 and Arthur Bourchier also by Buchel 110 Fiction Edit Characterisation of misers has been a frequent focus in prose fiction The miser discovers the loss of his money George Cruickshank s 1842 illustration for Ainsworth s The Miser s Daughter The miserly priest who was Lazarillo de Tormes second master in the Spanish picaresque novel published in 1554 111 Yan Jiansheng in an episode of The Scholars by Wu Jingzi 吳敬梓 written about 1750 This miser was unable to die easily until a wasteful second wick was removed from the lamp at his bedside 112 Jean Esther van Gobseck an affluent usurer in the novel Gobseck 1830 by Balzac 113 Felix Grandet whose daughter is the title character in the novel Eugenie Grandet 1833 by Balzac 114 Fardarougha Donovan in the Irish William Carleton s Fardarougha the Miser 1839 115 John Scarve in the novel The Miser s Daughter 1842 by William Harrison Ainsworth 116 The story is set in the 1770s and the character of Scarve was inspired by the real life miser John Elwes Ebenezer Scrooge the lead character of A Christmas Carol 1843 by Charles Dickens 117 He too was based on John Elwes The story has been adapted many times for stage and screen Mr Prokharchin title character of the short story Mr Prokharchin 1846 by Fyodor Dostoyevsky 118 Uncle Jan and his nephew Thijs in Hendrik Conscience s novel of Flemish peasant life De Gierigaard 1853 translated into English as The Miser in 1855 119 Silas Marner title character of George Eliot s novel Silas Marner 1861 who eventually abandons his avaricious ways 120 Ebenezer Balfour the villain of Robert Louis Stevenson s Kidnapped 1886 which is set during the Jacobite disturbances in 18th century Scotland Attempting to deprive his nephew David the hero of the novel of his inheritance he arranges to have the young man kidnapped 121 Francisco Torquemada the main character in Perez Galdos Torquemada en la hoguera Toquemada on the pire 1889 The novel is centred on a Madrid moneylender who had appeared incidentally in earlier novels of his and now had three more devoted to him Torquemada en la cruz Toquemada on the cross 1893 Torquemada en el purgatorio Toquemada in Purgatory 1894 and Torquemada y San Pedro Torquemada and Saint Peter 1895 All of these deal with Spanish social trends in the closing years of the 19th century 122 Trina McTeague the miserly wife in McTeague a story of San Francisco 1899 by Frank Norris 123 As avarice slowly overtakes her she withdraws her savings so that she can gloat over the money and even roll about in it The book was the basis for a silent film in 1916 and Erich von Stroheim s Greed in 1924 More recently it was also the basis for William Bolcom s opera McTeague 1992 124 Henry Earlforward in Arnold Bennett s novel Riceyman Steps 1923 who makes life miserable for the wife who married him in the hope of security 125 Seraphin Poudrier the central figure in Claude Henri Grignon s Un Homme et son peche 1933 This French Canadian novel was translated into English as The Woman and the Miser in 1978 Set at the end of the 19th century the novel broke with the convention of extolling rural life and depicts a miser who mistreats his wife and lets her die because calling in a doctor would cost money There have been adaptations for stage radio TV and two films of which the most recent was Seraphin un homme et son peche 2002 titled Seraphin Heart of Stone in the English language version There were beside many other prolific and once popular novelists who addressed themselves to the subject of miserliness For the most part theirs were genre works catering to readers in the circulating libraries of the 19th century Among them was the gothic novel The miser and his family 1800 by Eliza Parsons and Catherine Hutton s The miser married 1813 The latter was an epistolary novel in which Charlotte Montgomery describes her own romantic affairs and in addition those of her mother an unprincipled spendthrift who has just married the miser of the title 126 Another female novelist Mary E Bennett 1813 99 set her The Gipsy Bride or the Miser s Daughter 1841 in the 16th century 127 Mary Elizabeth Braddon s Aurora Floyd 1863 was a successful sensation novel in which banknotes rather than gold are the object of desire and a motive for murder 128 It was dramatised the same year and later toured the US in 1912 it was made a silent film Later examples include Eliza Lynn Linton s Paston Carew Millionaire and Miser 1886 Miser Farebrother 1888 by Benjamin Leopold Farjeon 129 and Dollikins and the Miser 1890 by the American Frances Eaton 130 In 1904 Jerome K Jerome created Nicholas Snyders The Miser of Zandam in a sentimental story of the occult in which the Dutch merchant persuades a generous young man to exchange souls with him 131 Misers in art Edit Death and the Miser by Hieronymus Bosch in 1494 Mediaeval art works of Christian origin take a clear moral stance on the sin of avarice in its various manifestations The frieze on the west wall of Lincoln Cathedral depicts the torments of Hell visited on those guilty of this sin 132 while Sassetta made The Blessed Ranieri showing the friars the soul of the Miser of Citerna carried to hell by demons a panel of an altarpiece now in the Louvre 133 But the bracketing of the miser and the usurer as equally culpable types mentioned earlier makes it difficult to interpret the subject of later moralistic paintings since they may represent either a hoarder a money lender or even a tax collector Such paintings cluster into recognisable genres all of which point to the sinful nature of preoccupation with money for its own sake Hieronymus Bosch s panel of Death and the Miser dating from the 1490s started a fashion in depicting this subject among Low Countries artists Bosch shows the miser on his deathbed with various demons crowding about his possessions while an angel supports him and directs his attention to higher things The link between finance and the diabolical is also drawn by another Fleming Jan Matsys in his portrayal of the man of affairs being assisted in his double bookkeeping by a demon 134 The same connection is made in The devil and the usurer in the Valenciennes Musee des beaux arts formerly attributed to Pieter Bruegel the Younger in which two devils pluck at the sleeve of a poorly dressed moneylender 135 The Gospel Parable of the Rich Fool 136 lies behind another series of paintings which stem ultimately from mediaeval illustrations of the Dance of Death There a skeleton compels those from all walks of life but particularly types of the rich and the powerful to join him in his dance to the grave In 1538 Hans Holbein the Younger initiated a popular treatment of this subject in which each type is separately illustrated of which there were many imitations in succeeding centuries 137 Among the depictions is a man starting up in protest behind a table piled with wealth on which a skeleton is laying hands In his print of 1651 Wenceslas Hollar makes the connection with the parable clear by quoting from it in the frame 138 A variation is provided by Jan Provoost s 16th century diptych in which death confronts the man of affairs with his own account 139 A century later Frans Francken the Younger treats the theme twice in both versions of which a skeleton serenades a luxuriously dressed greybeard sitting at a table 140 Another curious variation occurs in Pieter Quast s print of The Miser and Death 1643 Here the man sits at table clasping his money bags while contemplating a skull wearing a plumed hat beside which is an hour glass The visitation of death is carried forward in the 19th century in similarly titled works They include a portrayal by Franz Haussler 1845 1920 of an old man standing at his desk who peers round fearfully as he glimpses a skull reflected in a mirror 141 The charcoal and watercolour drawing by the Austrian Albert Plattner 1869 1919 is more ambiguous and has the figures facing away from each other in a cramped space 142 Yet another genre was the Allegory of Avarice of which one of the earliest examples is Albrecht Durer s painting of a naked old woman with a sack of coins 1507 143 This makes the point that age comes to all and confiscates all consolations A woman is chosen as subject because the Latin avaritia is of the feminine gender Low Countries artists who took up the allegorical theme added the variation of making the woman examine a coin by the light of a candle or lantern as in the paintings by Gerrit van Honthorst 144 and Mathias Stomer 145 In his own allegorical treatment Paulus Moreelse made the link with the dance of death genre by introducing a young boy slyly fingering the coins while keeping a wary eye on the woman to see if she has noticed 146 These Dutch variations were mostly painted during the 1620s when Rembrandt too borrowed the imagery but his candlelit examiner of a coin is male and the piece is variously titled The Money Changer or The Rich Fool in reference to the parable already mentioned 147 Jan Steen on the other hand makes his subject very obviously a miser who hugs a small sack of coins and holds one up for intent inspection 148 In the Hieronymus Bosch Death and the Miser the pull between spirituality and materialism is highlighted by making the deathbed a scene of conflict between the angel and demons Quentin Matsys suggests the same polarity in his The moneylender and his wife 1514 149 Here the woman is studying a religious book while her husband is testing coins by weight In the hands of the later Marinus van Reymerswaele the contrast disappears The wife of his moneylender is shown helping with the bookkeeping and leaning sideways as mesmerised as her husband by the pile of coins 150 Gillis van Tilborch s painting of much the same scene is titled The Misers and again demonstrates the ambivalent targets of the moral message The only difference is that the couple engaged in inspecting their money are old as was the case in all the allegories of avarice 151 David Teniers the Younger depicted a couple similarly engaged in 1648 which was later engraved in France by Pierre Francois Basan under the title Le plaisir des vieillards the pleasures of old age Verses as the bottom underline the moral Why do you make such piles of gold Soon you ll grow old and Death takes all 152 Another area of ambivalence centres on the kind of clothes worn by the so called misers The subject of Hendrik Gerritsz Pot s painting from the 1640s in the Uffizi is fashionably dressed and wearing a ring He may be inspired by the wealth and jewelry piled on his table but he obviously has no objection to advertising his well to do status 153 On the other hand the Miser Casting His Accounts presented by Jan Lievens is poorly dressed and his interest in hoarding is indicated by the way he gloats on the key that will lock his money away 154 The same dichotomy occurs in later centuries Jean Baptiste Le Prince s miser is also richly robed as he sits surrounded by his possessions 155 while Theodore Bernard Heuvel s miser sits on the chest containing his hoard and looks anxiously over his shoulder 156 Paul Gavarni s miser shows much the same apprehension as he leans on the table where his money is piled and glances round suspiciously 157 Old Gripus plundered by his young wife 1773 A sub theme of this kind of contrast occurred in Hans Holbein the Younger s The Miser and his Mistress There a young woman in luxuriant Renaissance dress stands behind an ugly miser reaching across him to take coins from the money bags he clutches to his chest while he looks up at her crying out with a grimace and trying to push away her hand An updated version by Philip Dawe was published as a print in 1773 under the title of The Scramble or Old Gripus plunder d by his Young Wife Underneath is a verse commentary How hard is the conflict yet claims ridicule When doting and avarice possess an old fool His wife while she plunders with smiles and caresses At once cools his love and his avarice distresses 158 dd dd Literary manifestations of the theme of the mismatched couple include the Malbecco episode in The Faerie Queene and Catherine Hutton s novel The Miser Married English depictions of misers in the 18th century begin as genre paintings Gainsborough Dupont s poorly dressed character clutches a bag of coin and looks up anxiously in the painting in the Ashmolean Museum 159 John Cranch 1751 1821 pictures two armed desperadoes breaking in on his 160 However it is in the realm of satirical prints that the most inventiveness is found James Gillray does not neglect the moral dimension either in his The miser s feast 1786 He is pictured seated at a table eating a meager meal attended by Death in the guise of an emaciated and naked manservant holding in his right hand a tray with a bone on it and behind him in his left hand the dart of death Famine a withered hag naked to the waist is also in attendance wearing a large hat and fashionable skirt These characters are identified by the verse at the bottom What else can follow but destructive fate When Famine holds the cup and Death the plate 161 Among other details in Gillray s crowded print is a fashionably dressed prostitute coming through the door Lechery was supposed to be an attribute of some misers exposing them to a contest between satisfying this weakness and their overmastering passion to save expense as exemplified in the Old Gripus print Thomas Rowlandson points to one solution of his dilemma in a print showing a miser engaged with two nude prostitutes whom has hired for the price of one 162 In another Rowlandson revisits the theme of the meager feast depicting his miser crouched by an empty grate and keeping himself warm by hugging his money bags A hag enters bringing a tiny portion to eat on a plate which a famished cat scrambles to reach 163 One more dichotomy explored by Rowlandson appears in his watercolour of The spendthrift and the miser 164 The drunken young man alarming the miser there is probably his son taking up a literary theme to be found among other places in Allan Ramsay s comic monologue It will be remembered too that the thriftless ne er do well of A Rake s Progress inherited his money from a miserly father By the end of the 19th century the theme of the miser was distancing itself from the simple moralities of journeyman painters and becoming a subject for aristocratic amateurs The Empress Maria Feodorovna s miser of 1890 handles a small strongbox 165 The Indian Raja Ravi Varma paints a Jewish character type for his miser dated 1901 166 while the Hungarian nobleman Ladislav Mednansky titles his humanised study Shylock 1900 167 Apart from them there is an etching by James Abbott McNeill Whistler which emphasises the essential isolation of such figures His enigmatic The Miser of 1860 pictures an individual of indeterminate gender seated with its back to the viewer in the corner of a bare room next to the window He is looking down as if examining something and the room behind him is spartanly furnished with just a table and bench while a broadsheet is tacked to the wall 168 References Edit miser definition of miser in English from the Oxford dictionary oxforddictionaries com Archived from the original on August 11 2012 Nicky Hayes 2000 Foundations of psychology Cengage Learning ISBN 1861525893 Berger Kathleen 2000 The Developing Person New York Worth Publishers p 218 ISBN 1 57259 417 9 Richard Newhauser The Early History of Greed The Sin of Avarice in Early Medieval Thought and Literature Cambridge 2000 p 31 Ante Nicene Fathers Vol II THE PASTOR OF HERMAS Similitude Second As the Vine is Supported by the Elm So is the Rich Man Helped by the Prayer of the Poor sacred texts com The Riches that Bring No Sorrow archive org 1852 The Eccentric Mirror Reflecting a Faithful and Interesting Delineation of archive org 1813 Chapter 5 Gutenberg site Various volumes appear in Google Books Kirby s Wonderful and Scientific Museum google co uk 1803 Wilson Henry 1821 Wonderful Characters google co uk Lives and anecdotes of misers archive org 1850 Topham Edward 1790 The Life of the Late John Elwes google co uk Anecdotes of the late Daniel Dancer Esq 1794 pp 399 40 Anecdotes of the Late Daniel Dancer 1795 Biographical Curiosities or Various pictures of human nature Containing google co uk 1797 Roy Bearden White How the Wind Sits Or The History of Henry and Ann Lemoine Chapbook Writers and Publishers of the Late Eighteenth Century Southern Illinois University 2007 pp 55 7 April 10 1869 pp 454 6 Annual Register google co uk 1808 An account of him was given in The Gentleman s Magazine for 1788 pp 510 11 The Dramatic Magazine 1 1829 pp 78 9 Broadside entitled Female Miser nls uk Broadside entitled Miser nls uk Memoir of Margery Jackson the Carlisle miser amp misanthrope archive org 1848 Lochy Ostrom the maiden miser of Poughkeepsie or The love of a long lifetime An authentic biography of Rachel Ostrom who recently died in Poughkeepsie N Y aged ninety years apparently very poor but really wealthy archive org 1870 Biographical Curiosities London 1797 pp 14 15 Biographical Curiosities London 1797 p 6 Frances Blair Memoir of Margery Jackson pp 12 14 Notable American Women Harvard Univ 1971 vol 1 p 81 China Daily 13 Feb 2009 Daughter sued by dad over miser poem THE MAN AND HIS GOLD mythfolklore net The Greek Anthology III London 1917 pp 25 6 The Complete Fables of Jean de La Fontaine translated by Norman Shapiro University of Illinois 2007 p 101 Jean de La Fontaine s Fable Poem The Treasure And The Two Men readbookonline org Jean de La Fontaine Fables nvg org Tale 78 Sacred texts online Anindya Roy Akbar Birbal Jokes New Delhi 2005 The Miser s Misery pp 125 6 Clifford Sawhney 50 Wittiest Tales Of Birbal Bangalore 2005 A question of like pp 47 9 Fable 458 p 430 Fables de Florian Paris 1846 p 109 A Tale of the Miser and the Poet upenn edu The Miser and Plutus Immortal Poetry Fable XIX Internet Archive Poems vol 2 1761 pp 37 9 Fable XC p 326 A group of eight in Book XI are numbered 165 73 The Greek anthology for schools poem 29 Poems of the Orient p 323 Satires Epistles and Ars Poetica Loeb edition translated by H Rushton Fairclough London 1942 p 5 ff Kupersmith William 2007 English Versions of Roman Satire in the Earlier Eighteenth Century Cranbury NJ Associated University Presses p 95 Jennifer Doane Upton March 2005 Dark Way to Paradise ISBN 9781597310093 British Museum Image gallery Scenes from Aesop s Fables British Museum III 10 stanza 15 The Poems of Allan Ramsay London 1800 pp 304 11 Moral Essays III lines 177 196 Original Poems on Several Subjects Volume 2 p 280 The miser a poem archive org 1831 University of California English Broadside Ballad Archive James G Hepburn A Book of Scattered Leaves Poetry of Poverty in Broadside Ballads Bucknell University 2000 p 201 Lewis Walpole Library Digital Collection yale edu Bodleian Library Vaughan Williams Memorial Library Welcome to the English Folk Dance and Song Society vwml org Folk Songs of the Catskills State University of New York 1982 pp 187 9 Scarlet Bowen The Politics of Custom in Eighteenth Century British Fiction London 2010 footnote on p 185 Bodleian Library The Songs and Ballads of Cumberland George Routledge amp Sons 1866 pp 330 3 Margery Jackson 1722 1812 Hiring Croglin Watty at Carlisle Cross Art UK Margery Jackson the Carlisle Miser Art UK Tony Henderson 6 June 2011 Margery Jackson s remarkable life inspires Miser The Musical journallive Archived from the original on April 21 2013 File Phlyax scene on a calyx krater by Asteas Antikensammlung Berlin F3044 5 jpg wikimedia org Klaus Neiiendam The Art of Acting in Antiquity Museum Tusculanum Press 1992 pp 25 7 Sean McGrath South Italian Phylax Plays University of Arizona Translated into blank verse in the 18th century by Bonnell Thornton available on Google Books The text is online Albert S Borgman Thomas Shadwell his life and comedies New York 1969 pp 141 7 Fielding Henry 1803 The miser google co uk M M Badawi Arabic drama early developments in Modern Arabic Literature Cambridge 1992 pp 331 2 McGraw Hill Encyclopedia of World Drama 1984 ISBN 9780070791695 The Methuen Drama Dictionary of the Theatre Pantaloon entry p 374 Wikimedia There is a complete performance on YouTube Les trois spectacles ou Polixene google co uk 1729 L Avare amoureux google co uk 1777 Edward Copping Alfieri and Goldoni Their Lives and Adventures London 1857 p 259 Reynier L 1794 L avare fastueux google co uk a b Bayard Jean Francois Alfred Duport Paul 1835 La fille de l avare google co uk Scribe Eugene Delavigne Germain 1823 L avare en goguettes google co uk New Monthly Magazine 1839 p 583 Pray Isaac Clarke 1839 Julietta Gordini google co uk The Dramatic Magazine 1 1829 p 79 Text at Victorian Plays project Archived 2014 04 07 at the Wayback Machine Theatre Research in Canada Spring 1986 permanent dead link Victorian Plays project dead link British Museum Image gallery drawing British Museum Art UK William Farren as Lovegold in The Miser by Henry Fielding Art UK British Museum Image gallery Mr Shutter in the Character of Lovegold British Museum British Museum Mr Ryder in the character of Lovegold British Museum British Museum Mr Yates in the character of Lovegold British Museum British Museum Image gallery Mr W Farren as Lovegold British Museum British Museum Mr Vale as Goliah Spiderlimb British Museum P J De Voogd Henry Fielding and William Hogarth Amsterdam NL 1981 pp 38 9 H Beard Print Collection vam ac uk rfdarsie 6 July 2012 Victorian British Painting 19thcenturybritpaint blogspot co uk The Actor Grandmesnil picture art prints and posters by Jean Baptiste Francois Desoria ARTFLAKES COM artflakes com Archived from the original on 2013 06 08 Retrieved 2013 03 19 The Merchant of Venice Shmoop Wikimedia Art UK Henry Urwick 1859 1931 as Shylock Art UK The Merchant of Venice Shmoop Art UK Arthur Bourchier 1863 1927 as Shylock Art UK The Universal Anthology vol 12 1899 pp 94 103 C T Hsia The Classic Chinese Novel A Critical Introduction Chinese University Press 2016 A translation on the Gutenberg site A translation on the Gutenberg site Fardorougha the Miser by William Carleton gutenberg org Ainsworth William Harrison 1855 The miser s daughter google co uk Available on the Gutenberg site Lantz K A 2004 The Dostoevsky encyclopedia Greenwood Publishing Group p 118 ISBN 0 313 30384 3 Available in Google Books Available on the Gutenberg site Available on the Gutenberg site The Perez Galdos Editions Project Summary of the Torquemada novels shef ac uk Available online at Gutenberg New York Magazine google co uk 16 November 1992 Riceyman Steps Arnold Bennett Several eBooks Free Archived from the original on 2020 08 04 Retrieved 2014 08 20 The miser married a novel In three volumes Hutton Catherine 1756 1846 Free Download amp Streaming Internet Archive Internet Archive 1813 Bennett Mary E 1841 The Gipsey Bride Or the Miser s Daughter By the Author of Jane Shore google co uk Aurora Floyd A novel archive org 1863 Farjeon Benjamin Leopold 1889 Miser Farebrother A Novel Complete ISBN 9781465528162 Dollikins and the Miser Frances Eaton Free Download amp Streaming Internet Archive Internet Archive 1890 The Soul of Nicholas Snyders Or the Miser Of Zandam by Jerome K Jerome gutenberg org Wikimedia File Sassetta Damnation of the Soul of the Miser of Citerna WGA20866 jpg wikimedia org Art UK The Miser Art UK French Government arts site Luke 12 20 But God said to him You fool This very night your life will be demanded from you Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself bible cc Hans Holbein s dance of death Rich man Miser dodedans com Wikimedia Commons File Jan Provoost Death and the Miser WGA18447 jpg wikimedia org Death and the Miser NiceArtGallery com File Glaspalast Munchen 1891 025a jpg wikimedia org Der Geizhals und der Tod artnet com Wikimedia Commons Web Gallery of Art image collection virtual museum searchable database of European fine arts 1000 1900 wga hu French Government cultural site The Athenaeum Allegory of avarice Paulus Moreelse www the athenaeum org Wikimedia Commons arthistoryimages org Archived from the original on 2014 10 18 Wikimedia Wikimedia Commons Les avares linternaute com Archived from the original on 2015 02 13 Retrieved 2013 05 08 Le Plaisir Des Vieillards FAMSF Explore the Art Web Gallery of Art Art UK A Miser Casting His Accounts Art UK Jean Baptiste Leprince Expert art authentication certificates of authenticity and expert art appraisals Art Experts artexpertswebsite com The Miser NiceArtGallery com French government arts site British Museum Image gallery The Scramble or Old Gripus plunder d by his Young Wife British Museum Art UK The Miser Art UK Art UK The Miser Art UK British Museum Mike Hannon The Miser eroti cart com Archived from the original on 2014 08 26 Retrieved 2014 08 22 The Miser davidrumsey com A amp A The Spendthrift and the Miser artandarchitecture org uk Wikimedia Raja Ravi Varma Oil Painting 59 The Miser cyberkerala com File Mednyanszky Shylock jpg wikimedia org Whistler Etchings Image of Impression gla ac uk External links Edit Quotations related to Misers at Wikiquote The dictionary definition of miser at Wiktionary Media related to Misers at Wikimedia Commons Miserliness Sermons and Biblical Studies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miser amp oldid 1156390467, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.