O thou my friend! The prosperity of Crime is like unto the lightning, whose
traitorous1 brilliancies
embellish2 the atmosphere but for an instant, in order to
hurl3 into death's very depths the luckless one they have dazzled.
Yes, Constance, it is to thee I address this work; at once the example and honor of thy sex, with a spirit of profoundest sensibility combining the most
judicious4 and the most enlightened of minds, thou art she to whom I
confide5 my book, which will acquaint thee with the sweetness of the tears
Virtue6 sore
beset7 doth shed and doth cause to flow.
Detesting8 the
sophistries9 of
libertinage10 and of irreligion, in word and deed combating them unwearingly, I fear not that those
necessitated11 by the order of personages appearing in these
Memoirs12 will put thee in any
peril13; the cynicism
remarkable14 in certain portraits (they were
softened15 as much as ever they could be) is no more apt to frighten thee; for it is only
Vice16 that trembles when Vice is found out, and cries scandal immediately it is attacked. To bigots Tartuffe was indebted for his
ordeal17; Justine's will be the achievement of
libertines19, and little do I
dread20 them: they'll not betray my intentions, these thou shalt perceive; thy opinion is sufficient to make my whole glory and after having pleased thee I must either please universally or find
consolation21 in a general
censure22.
The scheme of this novel (yet, 'tis less a novel than one might suppose) is doubtless new; the victory gained by Virtue over Vice, the rewarding of good, the punishment of evil, such is the usual scheme in every other work of this species: ah! the lesson cannot be too often
dinned23 in our ears!
But throughout to present Vice
triumphant24 and Virtue a victim of its sacrifices, to exhibit a wretched creature wandering from one
misery25 to the next; the toy of villainy; the target of every
debauch26; exposed to the most barbarous, the most
monstrous27 caprices; driven witless by the most
brazen28, the most
specious29 sophistries;
prey30 to the most cunning seductions, the most
irresistible31 subornations for
defense32 against so many disappointments, so much bane and
pestilence33, to
repulse34 such a quantity of
corruption35 having nothing but a sensitive soul, a mind naturally formed, and considerable courage:
briefly36, to employ the boldest scenes, the most extraordinary situations, the most dreadful
maxims37, the most energetic brush strokes, with the sole object of obtaining from all this one of the
sublimest39 parables40 ever penned for human edification; now, such were, 'twill be allowed, to seek to reach one's destination by a road not much traveled heretofore.
Have I succeeded, Constance? Will a tear in thy eye determine my triumph? After having read Justine,
wilt41 say: "Oh, how these
renderings42 of crime make me proud of my love for Virtue! How
sublime38 does it appear through tears! How 'tis
embellished43 by misfortunes !"
Oh, Constance! may these words but escape thy lips, and my
labors44 shall be crowned.
The very masterpiece of philosophy would be to develop the means
Providence45 employs to arrive at the ends she designs for man, and from this construction to deduce some rules of conduct acquainting this wretched two-footed individual with the manner wherein he must proceed along life's
thorny46 way, forewarned of the strange caprices of that
fatality47 they denominate by twenty different titles, and all unavailingly, for it has not yet been scanned nor defined.
If, though full of respect for social conventions and never overstepping the bounds they draw round us, if, nonetheless, it should come to pass that we meet with nothing but brambles and briars, while the wicked tread upon flowers, will it not be reckoned - save by those in whom a fund of incoercible
virtues48 renders deaf to these remarks-, will it not be
decided49 that it is preferable to abandon oneself to the tide rather than to resist it? Will it not be felt that Virtue, however beautiful, becomes the worst of all attitudes when it is found too feeble to contend with Vice, and that, in an
entirely50 corrupted51 age, the safest course is to follow along after the others? Somewhat better informed, if one wishes, and abusing the knowledge they have acquired, will they not say, as did the angel Jesrad in `Zadig', that there is no evil whereof some good is not born? and will they not declare, that this being the case, they can give themselves over to evil since, indeed, it is but one of the fashions of producing good? Will they not add, that it makes no difference to the general plan whether such-and-such a one is by preference good or bad, that if misery
persecutes52 virtue and prosperity accompanies crime, those things being as one in Nature's view, far better to join company with the wicked who flourish, than to be counted amongst the
virtuous53 who
founder54? Hence, it is important to anticipate those dangerous sophistries of a false philosophy; it is essential to show that through examples of
afflicted55 virtue presented to a depraved spirit in which, however, there remain a few good principles, it is essential, I say,- to show that spirit quite as surely restored to righteousness by these means as by
portraying56 this virtuous career ornate with the most glittering honors and the most flattering rewards. Doubtless it is cruel to have to describe, on the one hand, a host of ills overwhelming a sweet-tempered and sensitive woman who, as best she is able, respects virtue, and, on the other, the
affluence57 of prosperity of those who crush and
mortify58 this same woman. But were there nevertheless some good
engendered59 of the
demonstration60, would one have to
repent61 of making it? Ought one be sorry for having established a fact whence there resulted, for the wise man who reads to some purpose, so useful a lesson of
submission62 to providential decrees and the fateful warning that it is often to recall us to our duties that Heaven strikes down beside us the person who seems to us best to have fulfilled his own ?#p#分页标题#e#
Such are the sentiments which are going to direct our labors, and it is in consideration of these intentions that we ask the reader's indulgence for the erroneous
doctrines63 which are to be placed in the mouths of our characters, and for the sometimes rather painful situations which, out of love for truth, we have been obliged to dress before his eyes.
Madame la Comtesse de Lorsange was one of those priestesses of Venus whose fortune is the product of a pretty face and much misconduct, and whose titles,
pompous64 though they are, are not to be found but in the archives of Cythera, forged by the impertinence that seeks, and sustained by the fool's credulity that
bestows65, them; brunette, a fine figure, eyes of a singular expression, that
modish66 unbelief which, contributing one further spice to the passions, causes those women in whom it is suspected to be sought after that much more
diligently67; a trifle wicked, unfurnished with any principle, allowing evil to exist in nothing, lacking however that amount of depravation in the heart to have extinguished its sensibility;
haughty68,
libertine18; such was Madame de Lorsange.
Nevertheless, this woman had received the best education; daughter of a very rich Parisian banker, she had been brought up, together with a sister named Justine, by three years younger than she, in one of the capital's most
celebrated69 abbeys where, until the ages of twelve and fifteen years, the one and the other of the two sisters had been denied no counsels, no masters, no books, and no polite talents.
At this period crucial to the virtue of the two
maidens70, they were in one day made
bereft71 of everything: a
frightful72 bankruptcy73 precipitated74 their father into circumstances so cruel that he perished of grief. One month later, his wife followed him into the grave. Two distant and heartless relatives deliberated what should be done with the young
orphans75; a hundred crowns apiece was their share of a
legacy76 mostly swallowed up by
creditors77. No one caring to be burdened with them, the convent's door was opened, their dowry was put into their hands, and they were left at liberty to become what they wished.
Madame de Lorsange, at the time called Juliette, whose mind and character were to all intents and purposes as completely formed then as at thirty, the age she had
attained78 at the opening of the tale we are about to relate, seemed nothing but overjoyed to be put at large; she gave not a moment's thought to the cruel events which had broken her chains. As for Justine,
aged79 as we have remarked, twelve, hers was of a
pensive80 and
melancholy81 character, which made her far more keenly appreciate all the horrors of her situation. Full of tenderness, endowed with a surprising sensibility instead of with her sister's art and
finesse82, she was ruled by an
ingenuousness83, a
candor84 that were to cause her to tumble into not a few
pitfalls85. To so many qualities this girl joined a sweet
countenance86, absolutely unlike that with which Nature had embellished Juliette; for all the
artifice87,
wiles88, coquetry one noticed in the features of the one, there were proportionate amounts of
modesty89,
decency90, and timidity to be admired in the other; a virginal air, large blue eyes very soulful and appealing, a dazzling fair skin, a
supple91 and resilient body, a
touching92 voice, teeth of ivory and the loveliest blond hair, there you have a
sketch93 of this charming creature whose
naive94 graces and delicate traits are beyond our power to describe.
They were given twenty-four hours to leave the convent; into their hands, together with their five score crowns, was thrown the responsibility to provide for themselves as they saw fit. Delighted to be her own mistress, Juliette spent a minute, perhaps two, wiping away Justine's tears, then, observing it was in vain, she fell to scolding instead of comforting her; she
rebuked95 Justine for her sensitiveness; she told her, with a
philosophic96 acuity97 far beyond her years, that in this world one must not be afflicted save by what affects one personally; that it was possible to find in oneself physical sensations of a
sufficiently98 voluptuous99 piquancy100 to extinguish all the moral affections whose shock could be painful; that it was all the more essential so to proceed, since true wisdom consists
infinitely101 more in doubling the sum of one's pleasures than in increasing the sum of one's pains; that, in a word, there was nothing one ought not do in order to deaden in oneself that
perfidious102 sensibility from which none but others profit while to us it brings
naught103 but troubles. But it is difficult to harden a gentle good heart, it resists the arguments of a toughened bad mind, and its solemn satisfactions console it for the loss of the bel-esprit's false
splendors104.