The House of the Spirits

by

Isabel Allende

Pancha García and Esteban Trueba’s grandson. Esteban García grows up as a peasant at Tres Marías, and he is never acknowledged by Esteban Trueba (the owner of the hacienda) as his biological grandson. Pancha teaches Esteban García from a young age that Esteban Trueba’s blood runs in his veins, and she tells him that had he been born in place of Blanca, Jaime, or Nicolás (whom Esteban Trueba accepts as his legitimate children), he would inherit Tres Marías and maybe even be President of the Republic. Regardless, Esteban García seems to have inherited his grandfather’s violent streak and exhibits sadistic tendencies from an early age: as a child, he drives nails into the eyes of chickens. When Blanca and Pedro Tercero are caught in their forbidden affair, Esteban García leads Esteban Trueba to Pedro Tercero’s hiding place, where Esteban Trueba assaults Pedro and severs three fingers from his right hand. Esteban García later visits Esteban Trueba at the big house on the corner and asks him for a recommendation to become a police officer. Esteban Trueba writes the recommendation, as he owes Esteban García an award for finding Pedro Tercero, but Esteban never realizes the young man is his grandson. Esteban García grows up resenting Esteban Trueba and his biological family, especially Alba, whom he encounters multiple times throughout the book. When he visits Esteban Trueba to ask for the recommendation letter, Esteban García has erotic fantasies about strangling six-year-old Alba and sexually assaults her. Later, when Alba turns 14, Esteban García (now a police officer) forcibly kisses Alba in the garden, humiliating and scaring her. By the time of the military coup d’état, Esteban Garcia is a colonel, and he plays a significant role in torturing Alba after she is arrested. He rapes her repeatedly, and even electrocutes her before she is finally released. Esteban García is the personification of violence—especially against women—but Alba’s anger at Esteban García doesn’t last long. She knows that Esteban is the way he is for a reason: Esteban Trueba’s violent rape of Pancha, Esteban García’s grandmother, decades earlier. Esteban García is consumed with the desire for revenge, and Alba vows to “break that terrible chain.”

Esteban García Quotes in The House of the Spirits

The The House of the Spirits quotes below are all either spoken by Esteban García or refer to Esteban García. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Class, Politics, and Corruption Theme Icon
).
Chapter 2 Quotes

Esteban did not remove his clothes. He attacked her savagely, thrusting himself into her without preamble, with unnecessary brutality. He realized too late, from the blood spattered on her dress, that the young girl was a virgin, but neither Pancha’s humble origin nor the pressing demands of his desire allowed him to reconsider. Pancha García made no attempt to defend herself. She did not complain, nor did she shut her eyes. She lay on her back, staring at the sky with terror, until she felt the man drop to the ground beside her with a moan. She began to whimper softly. Before her, her mother—and before her, her grandmother—had suffered the same animal fate.

Related Characters: Esteban Trueba, Alba de Satigny, Esteban García, Pancha García
Page Number: 64-5
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

He was the son of Esteban García, the only bastard offspring of the patrón named for him. No one knew his origin, or the reason he had that name, except himself, because his grandmother, Pancha García, had managed before she died to poison his childhood with the story that if only his father had been born in place of Blanca, Jaime, or Nicolás, he would have inherited Tres Marías, and could even have been President of the Republic if he wanted. In that part of the country, which was littered with illegitimate children and even legitimate ones who had never met their fathers, he was probably the only one to grow up hating his last name. He hated Esteban Trueba, his seduced grandmother, his bastard father, and his own inexorable peasant fate.

Related Characters: Esteban Trueba, Blanca Trueba, Esteban García, Jaime Trueba/del Valle, Nicolás Trueba, Pancha García
Page Number: 210
Explanation and Analysis:
Epilogue Quotes

The day my grandfather tumbled his grandmother, Pancha García, among the rushes of the riverbank, he added another link to the chain of events that had to complete itself. Afterward the grandson of the woman who was raped repeats the gesture with the granddaughter of the rapist, and perhaps forty years from now my grandson will knock García’s granddaughter down among the rushes, and so on down through the centuries in an unending tale of sorrow, blood, and love.

Related Characters: Alba de Satigny (speaker), Esteban Trueba, Esteban García, Pancha García
Page Number: 479-80
Explanation and Analysis:
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Esteban García Quotes in The House of the Spirits

The The House of the Spirits quotes below are all either spoken by Esteban García or refer to Esteban García. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Class, Politics, and Corruption Theme Icon
).
Chapter 2 Quotes

Esteban did not remove his clothes. He attacked her savagely, thrusting himself into her without preamble, with unnecessary brutality. He realized too late, from the blood spattered on her dress, that the young girl was a virgin, but neither Pancha’s humble origin nor the pressing demands of his desire allowed him to reconsider. Pancha García made no attempt to defend herself. She did not complain, nor did she shut her eyes. She lay on her back, staring at the sky with terror, until she felt the man drop to the ground beside her with a moan. She began to whimper softly. Before her, her mother—and before her, her grandmother—had suffered the same animal fate.

Related Characters: Esteban Trueba, Alba de Satigny, Esteban García, Pancha García
Page Number: 64-5
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

He was the son of Esteban García, the only bastard offspring of the patrón named for him. No one knew his origin, or the reason he had that name, except himself, because his grandmother, Pancha García, had managed before she died to poison his childhood with the story that if only his father had been born in place of Blanca, Jaime, or Nicolás, he would have inherited Tres Marías, and could even have been President of the Republic if he wanted. In that part of the country, which was littered with illegitimate children and even legitimate ones who had never met their fathers, he was probably the only one to grow up hating his last name. He hated Esteban Trueba, his seduced grandmother, his bastard father, and his own inexorable peasant fate.

Related Characters: Esteban Trueba, Blanca Trueba, Esteban García, Jaime Trueba/del Valle, Nicolás Trueba, Pancha García
Page Number: 210
Explanation and Analysis:
Epilogue Quotes

The day my grandfather tumbled his grandmother, Pancha García, among the rushes of the riverbank, he added another link to the chain of events that had to complete itself. Afterward the grandson of the woman who was raped repeats the gesture with the granddaughter of the rapist, and perhaps forty years from now my grandson will knock García’s granddaughter down among the rushes, and so on down through the centuries in an unending tale of sorrow, blood, and love.

Related Characters: Alba de Satigny (speaker), Esteban Trueba, Esteban García, Pancha García
Page Number: 479-80
Explanation and Analysis: