Juliette, employing other resources, then said to her sister, that with the age and the figure they both of them had, they could not die of hunger she cited the example of one of their neighbors' daughters who, having escaped from her father's house, was presently very royally maintained and far happier, doubtless, than if she had remained at home with her family; one must, said Juliette, take good care to avoid believing it is marriage that renders a girl happy; that, a captive under the hymeneal laws, she has, with much ill-humor to suffer, a very slight measure of joys to expect; instead of which, were she to surrender herself to
libertinage1, she might always be able to protect herself against her lovers' moods, or be comforted by their number.
After each had announced her very different intentions, the two girls separated without exchanging any promises to see each another again. Would Juliette, who, so she affirmed, intended to become a lady of consequence, would Juliette consent to receive a little girl whose
virtuous8 but base
inclinations9 might be able to bring her into dishonor? and, on her side, would Justine wish to
jeopardize10 her morals in the society of a
perverse11 creature who was bound to become public debauchery's toy and the
lewd12 mob's victim? And so each bid an eternal adieu to the other, and they left the convent on the morrow.
During early childhood
caressed13 by her mother's dressmaker, Justine believes this woman will treat her
kindly14 now in this hour of her
distress15; she goes in search of the woman, she tells the tale of her
woes16, she asks employment . . . she is scarcely recognized; and is harshly driven out the door.
"Oh Heaven I" cries the poor little creature, "must my initial steps in this world be so quickly stamped with ill-fortune? That woman once loved me; why does she cast me away today?
Alas17! 'tis because I am poor and an
orphan18, because I have no more means and people are not
esteemed19 save in reason of the aid and benefits one imagines may be had of them."
Wringing20 her hands, Justine goes to find her cure; she describes her circumstances with the vigorous
candor21 proper to her years.... She was wearing a little white garment, her lovely hair was
negligently22 tucked up under her
bonnet23, her breast, whose development had scarcely begun, was hidden beneath two or three folds of gauze, her pretty face had somewhat of pallor owing to the unhappiness consuming her, a few tears rolled from her eyes and lent to them an additional
expressiveness24...
"You observe me, Monsieur," said she to the saintly
ecclesiastic25... "Yes, you observe me in what for a girl is a most dreadful position; I have lost my father and mother... Heaven has taken them from me at an age when I stand in greatest need of their assistance... They died ruined, Monsieur; we no longer have anything. There," she continued, "is all they left me," and she displayed her dozen louis, "and nowhere to rest my poor head.... You will have pity upon me, Monsieur, will you not? You are Religion's minister and Religion was always my heart's
virtue26; in the name of that God I adore and whose organ you are, tell me, as if you were a second father unto me, what must I do? what must become of me ?"
The charitable priest clapped an
inquisitive27 eye upon Justine, and made her answer, saying that the parish was heavily loaded; that it could not easily take new charges unto its
bosom28, but that if Justine wished to serve him, if she were prepared for hard
toil29, there would always be a crust of bread in his kitchen for her. And as he uttered those words, the gods' interpreter chuck'ed her under the chin; the kiss he gave her
bespoke30 rather too much worldliness for a man of the church, and Justine, who had understood only too well, thrust him away. "Monsieur," said she, "I ask neither alms of you nor a position as your scullion; it was all too recently I took leave of an estate loftier than that which might make those two favors desirable; I am not yet reduced to
imploring31 them; I am
soliciting32 advice whereof my youth and my misfortunes put me in need, and you would have me purchase it at an excessively
inflated34 price." Ashamed thus to have been unmasked, the
pastor35 promptly36 drove the little creature away, and the unhappy Justine, twice rejected on the first day of her
condemnation37 to
isolation38, now enters a house above whose door she spies a
shingle39; she rents a small
chamber40 on the fourth floor, pays in advance for it, and, once established, gives herself over to lamentations all the more bitter because she is sensitive and because her little pride has just been compromised cruelly.#p#分页标题#e#
We will allow ourselves to leave her in this state for a short while in order to return to Juliette and to relate how, from the very ordinary condition in which she sets
forth41, no better furnished with resources than her sister, she nevertheless
attains43, over a period of fifteen years, the position of a titled woman, with an income of thirty thousand pounds, very handsome jewels, two or three houses in the city, as many in the country and, at the present moment, the heart, the fortune and the confidence of Monsieur de Corville, Councillor to the State, an important man much esteemed and about to have a minister's post. Her rise was not, there can be no question of it, unattended by difficulties: 'tis by way of the most
shameful45, most
onerous46 apprenticeship47 that these ladies
attain42 their objectives; and 'tis in all likelihood a veteran of unnumbered campaigns one may find today abed with a Prince: perhaps she yet carries the humiliating marks of the
brutality48 of the
libertines49 into whose hands her youth and inexperience flung her long ago.
Upon leaving the convent, Juliette went to find a woman whose name she had once heard mentioned by a youthful friend;
perverted51 was what she desired to be and this woman was to
pervert50 her; she arrived at her house with a small parcel under her arm, clad in a blue
dressing52 gown nicely
disarrayed53, her hair straggling carelessly about, and showing the prettiest face in the world, if it is true that for certain eyes indecency may have its charms; she told her story to this woman and begged her to afford her the
sanctuary54 she had provided her former friend.
"How old are you?" Madame Duvergier demanded.
"I will be fifteen in a few days, Madame," Juliette replied.
"And never hath mortal . . ." the matron continued.
"No, Madame, I swear it," answered Juliette.
"But, you know, in those convents," said the old
dame55, "sometimes a confessor, a
nun56, a companion... I must have
conclusive57 evidence."
"You have but to look for it," Juliette replied with a blush.
And, having put on her spectacles, and having
scrupulously58 examined things here and there, the duenna declared to the girl:
"Why, you've only to remain here, pay strict attention to what I say, give proof of unending
complaisance59 and submissiveness to my practices, you need but be clean, economical, and frank with me, be
prudent60 with your comrades and fraudulent when
dealing61 with men, and before ten years' time I shall have you fit to occupy the best second-story apartment: you'll have a commode, pier-glass mirrors before you and a maid behind, and the art you will have acquired from me will give you what you need to
procure62 yourself the rest."
These suggestions having left her lips, Duvergier lays hands on Juliette's little parcel; she asks her whether she does not have some money, and Juliette having too
candidly63 admitted she had a hundred crowns, the dear mother
confiscates64 them, giving her new boarding guest the assurance her little fortune will be chanced at the
lottery65 for her, but that a girl must not have money. "It is," says she, "a means to doing evil, and in a period as
corrupt66 as ours, a wise and well-born girl should carefully avoid all which might
lure67 her into any
snares68. It is for your own good I speak, my little one," adds the duenna, "and you ought to be grateful for what I am doing." The sermon delivered, the newcomer is introduced to her colleagues; she is assigned a room in the house, and on the next day her maidenhead is put on sale.
Within four months the merchandise is sold successively to about one hundred buyers; some are content with the rose, others more fastidious or more depraved (for the question has not yet been decided) wish to bring to full flower the bud that grows adjacently. After each
bout44, Duvergier makes a few tailor's readjustments and for four months it is always the
pristine69 fruits the
rascal70 puts on the block. Finally, at the end of this
harassing71 novitiate, Juliette obtains a lay sister's patents; from this moment
onward72, she is a recognized girl of the house; thereafter she is to share in its profits and losses. Another apprenticeship; if in the first school, aside from a few extravagances, Juliette served Nature, she altogether ignores Nature's laws in the second, where a complete
shambles73 is made of what she once had of moral behavior; the triumph she obtains in
vice33 totally degrades her soul; she feels that, having been born for crime, she must at least commit it grandly and give over
languishing74 in a subaltern's role, which, although
entailing75 the same misconduct, although
abasing76 her equally, brings her a slighter, a much slighter profit. She is found agreeable by an elderly gentleman, much debauched, who at first has her come merely to attend to the affairs of the moment; she has the skill to cause herself magnificently to be kept; it is not long before she is appearing at the theater, at
promenades77, amongst the
elite78, the very
cordon79 bleu of the Cytherean order; she is
beheld80, mentioned, desired, and the clever creature knows so well how to manage her affairs that in less than four years she ruins six men, the poorest of whom had an
annuity81 of one hundred thousand crowns. Nothing more is needed to make her reputation; the blindness of fashionable people is such that the more one of these creatures has demonstrated her dishonesty, the more eager they are to get upon her list; it seems that the degree of her
degradation82 and her
corruption83 becomes the measure of the sentiments they dare display for her.#p#分页标题#e#