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+Project Gutenberg's The Physiology of Marriage, Complete, by Honore de Balzac
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Physiology of Marriage, Complete
+
+Author: Honore de Balzac
+
+Translator: Katharine Prescott Wormeley
+
+Release Date: July 4, 2005 [EBook #16205]
+Posting Date: March 7, 2010
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PHYSIOLOGY OF MARRIAGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Bickers, and Dagny
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PHYSIOLOGY OF MARRIAGE;
+
+OR, THE MUSINGS OF AN ECLECTIC PHILOSOPHER
+
+ON THE HAPPINESS AND UNHAPPINESS OF MARRIED LIFE
+
+
+By Honore De Balzac
+
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+"Marriage is not an institution of nature. The family in the east is
+entirely different from the family in the west. Man is the servant of
+nature, and the institutions of society are grafts, not spontaneous
+growths of nature. Laws are made to suit manners, and manners vary.
+
+"Marriage must therefore undergo the gradual development towards
+perfection to which all human affairs submit."
+
+These words, pronounced in the presence of the Conseil d'Etat by
+Napoleon during the discussion of the civil code, produced a profound
+impression upon the author of this book; and perhaps unconsciously
+he received the suggestion of this work, which he now presents to the
+public. And indeed at the period during which, while still in his youth,
+he studied French law, the word ADULTERY made a singular impression upon
+him. Taking, as it did, a prominent place in the code, this word
+never occurred to his mind without conjuring up its mournful train of
+consequences. Tears, shame, hatred, terror, secret crime, bloody wars,
+families without a head, and social misery rose like a sudden line of
+phantoms before him when he read the solemn word ADULTERY! Later on,
+when he became acquainted with the most cultivated circles of society,
+the author perceived that the rigor of marriage laws was very generally
+modified by adultery. He found that the number of unhappy homes was
+larger than that of happy marriages. In fact, he was the first to notice
+that of all human sciences that which relates to marriage was the least
+progressive. But this was the observation of a young man; and with him,
+as with so many others, this thought, like a pebble flung into the
+bosom of a lake, was lost in the abyss of his tumultuous thoughts.
+Nevertheless, in spite of himself the author was compelled to
+investigate, and eventually there was gathered within his mind, little
+by little, a swarm of conclusions, more or less just, on the subject of
+married life. Works like the present one are formed in the mind of the
+author with as much mystery as that with which truffles grow on the
+scented plains of Perigord. Out of the primitive and holy horror which
+adultery caused him and the investigation which he had thoughtlessly
+made, there was born one morning a trifling thought in which his ideas
+were formulated. This thought was really a satire upon marriage. It was
+as follows: A husband and wife found themselves in love with each other
+for the first time after twenty-seven years of marriage.
+
+He amused himself with this little axiom and passed a whole week in
+delight, grouping around this harmless epigram the crowd of ideas which
+came to him unconsciously and which he was astonished to find that he
+possessed. His humorous mood yielded at last to the claims of serious
+investigation. Willing as he was to take a hint, the author returned to
+his habitual idleness. Nevertheless, this slight germ of science and
+of joke grew to perfection, unfostered, in the fields of thought. Each
+phase of the work which had been condemned by others took root and
+gathered strength, surviving like the slight branch of a tree which,
+flung upon the sand by a winter's storm, finds itself covered at morning
+with white and fantastic icicles, produced by the caprices of nightly
+frosts. So the sketch lived on and became the starting point of myriad
+branching moralizations. It was like a polypus which multiplies itself
+by generation. The feelings of youth, the observations which a favorable
+opportunity led him to make, were verified in the most trifling events
+of his after life. Soon this mass of ideas became harmonized, took life,
+seemed, as it were, to become a living individual and moved in the midst
+of those domains of fancy, where the soul loves to give full rein to its
+wild creations. Amid all the distractions of the world and of life, the
+author always heard a voice ringing in his ears and mockingly revealing
+the secrets of things at the very moment he was watching a woman as she
+danced, smiled, or talked. Just as Mephistopheles pointed out to Faust
+in that terrific assemblage at the Brocken, faces full of frightful
+augury, so the author was conscious in the midst of the ball of a demon
+who would strike him on the shoulder with a familiar air and say to him:
+"Do you notice that enchanting smile? It is a grin of hatred." And then
+the demon would strut about like one of the captains in the old comedies
+of Hardy. He would twitch the folds of a lace mantle and endeavor to
+make new the fretted tinsel and spangles of its former glory. And then
+like Rabelais he would burst into loud and unrestrainable laughter, and
+would trace on the street-wall a word which might serve as a pendant
+to the "Drink!" which was the only oracle obtainable from the heavenly
+bottle. This literary Trilby would often appear seated on piles of
+books, and with hooked fingers would point out with a grin of malice
+two yellow volumes whose title dazzled the eyes. Then when he saw he had
+attracted the author's attention he spelt out, in a voice alluring as
+the tones of an harmonica, _Physiology of Marriage_! But, almost always
+he appeared at night during my dreams, gentle as some fairy guardian;
+he tried by words of sweetness to subdue the soul which he would
+appropriate to himself. While he attracted, he also scoffed at me;
+supple as a woman's mind, cruel as a tiger, his friendliness was more
+formidable than his hatred, for he never yielded a caress without also
+inflicting a wound. One night in particular he exhausted the resources
+of his sorceries, and crowned all by a last effort. He came, he sat on
+the edge of the bed like a young maiden full of love, who at first keeps
+silence but whose eyes sparkle, until at last her secret escapes her.
+
+"This," said he, "is a prospectus of a new life-buoy, by means of which
+one can pass over the Seine dry-footed. This other pamphlet is the
+report of the Institute on a garment by wearing which we can pass
+through flames without being burnt. Have you no scheme which can
+preserve marriage from the miseries of excessive cold and excessive
+heat? Listen to me! Here we have a book on the _Art_ of preserving
+foods; on the _Art_ of curing smoky chimneys; on the _Art_ of making
+good mortar; on the _Art_ of tying a cravat; on the _Art_ of carving
+meat."
+
+In a moment he had named such a prodigious number of books that the
+author felt his head go round.
+
+"These myriads of books," says he, "have been devoured by readers; and
+while everybody does not build a house, and some grow hungry, and others
+have no cravat, or no fire to warm themselves at, yet everybody to some
+degree is married. But come look yonder."
+
+He waved his hand, and appeared to bring before me a distant ocean where
+all the books of the world were tossing up and down like agitated waves.
+The octodecimos bounded over the surface of the water. The octavos as
+they were flung on their way uttered a solemn sound, sank to the bottom,
+and only rose up again with great difficulty, hindered as they were by
+duodecimos and works of smaller bulk which floated on the top and melted
+into light foam. The furious billows were crowded with journalists,
+proof-readers, paper-makers, apprentices, printers' agents, whose hands
+alone were seen mingled in the confusion among the books. Millions of
+voices rang in the air, like those of schoolboys bathing. Certain men
+were seen moving hither and thither in canoes, engaged in fishing out
+the books, and landing them on the shore in the presence of a tall man,
+of a disdainful air, dressed in black, and of a cold, unsympathetic
+expression. The whole scene represented the libraries and the public.
+The demon pointed out with his finger a skiff freshly decked out with
+all sails set and instead of a flag bearing a placard. Then with a peal
+of sardonic laughter, he read with a thundering voice: _Physiology of
+Marriage_.
+
+The author fell in love, the devil left him in peace, for he would have
+undertaken more than he could handle if he had entered an apartment
+occupied by a woman. Several years passed without bringing other
+torments than those of love, and the author was inclined to believe that
+he had been healed of one infirmity by means of another which took its
+place. But one evening he found himself in a Parisian drawing-room where
+one of the men among the circle who stood round the fireplace began the
+conversation by relating in a sepulchral voice the following anecdote:
+
+
+A peculiar thing took place at Ghent while I was staying there. A lady
+ten years a widow lay on her bed attacked by mortal sickness. The three
+heirs of collateral lineage were waiting for her last sigh. They did
+not leave her side for fear that she would make a will in favor of the
+convent of Beguins belonging to the town. The sick woman kept silent,
+she seemed dozing and death appeared to overspread very gradually her
+mute and livid face. Can't you imagine those three relations seated in
+silence through that winter midnight beside her bed? An old nurse is
+with them and she shakes her head, and the doctor sees with anxiety that
+the sickness has reached its last stage, and holds his hat in one hand
+and with the other makes a sign to the relations, as if to say to them:
+"I have no more visits to make here." Amid the solemn silence of the
+room is heard the dull rustling of a snow-storm which beats upon the
+shutters. For fear that the eyes of the dying woman might be dazzled by
+the light, the youngest of the heirs had fitted a shade to the candle
+which stood near that bed so that the circle of light scarcely reached
+the pillow of the deathbed, from which the sallow countenance of the
+sick woman stood out like a figure of Christ imperfectly gilded and
+fixed upon a cross of tarnished silver. The flickering rays shed by the
+blue flames of a crackling fire were therefore the sole light of this
+sombre chamber, where the denouement of a drama was just ending. A
+log suddenly rolled from the fire onto the floor, as if presaging some
+catastrophe. At the sound of it the sick woman quickly rose to a sitting
+posture. She opened two eyes, clear as those of a cat, and all present
+eyed her in astonishment. She saw the log advance, and before any one
+could check an unexpected movement which seemed prompted by a kind of
+delirium, she bounded from her bed, seized the tongs and threw the coal
+back into the fireplace. The nurse, the doctor, the relations rushed to
+her assistance; they took the dying woman in their arms. They put her
+back in bed; she laid her head upon her pillow and after a few minutes
+died, keeping her eyes fixed even after her death upon that plank in the
+floor which the burning brand had touched. Scarcely had the Countess Van
+Ostroem expired when the three co-heirs exchanged looks of suspicion,
+and thinking no more about their aunt, began to examine the mysterious
+floor. As they were Belgians their calculations were as rapid as their
+glances. An agreement was made by three words uttered in a low voice
+that none of them should leave the chamber. A servant was sent to fetch
+a carpenter. Their collateral hearts beat excitedly as they gathered
+round the treasured flooring, and watched their young apprentice giving
+the first blow with his chisel. The plank was cut through.
+
+"My aunt made a sign," said the youngest of the heirs.
+
+"No; it was merely the quivering light that made it appear so," replied
+the eldest, who kept one eye on the treasure and the other on the
+corpse.
+
+The afflicted relations discovered exactly on the spot where the brand
+had fallen a certain object artistically enveloped in a mass of plaster.
+
+"Proceed," said the eldest of the heirs.
+
+The chisel of the apprentice then brought to light a human head and some
+odds and ends of clothing, from which they recognized the count whom all
+the town believed to have died at Java, and whose loss had been bitterly
+deplored by his wife.
+
+
+The narrator of this old story was a tall spare man, with light eyes and
+brown hair, and the author thought he saw in him a vague resemblance to
+the demon who had before this tormented him; but the stranger did not
+show the cloven foot. Suddenly the word ADULTERY sounded in the ears of
+the author; and this word woke up in his imagination the most mournful
+countenances of that procession which before this had streamed by on the
+utterance of the magic syllables. From that evening he was haunted and
+persecuted by dreams of a work which did not yet exist; and at no period
+of his life was the author assailed with such delusive notions about the
+fatal subject of this book. But he bravely resisted the fiend, although
+the latter referred the most unimportant incidents of life to this
+unknown work, and like a customhouse officer set his stamp of mockery
+upon every occurrence.
+
+Some days afterwards the author found himself in the company of two
+ladies. The first of them had been one of the most refined and the most
+intellectual women of Napoleon's court. In his day she occupied a
+lofty position, but the sudden appearance of the Restoration caused her
+downfall; she became a recluse. The second, who was young and beautiful,
+was at that time living at Paris the life of a fashionable woman. They
+were friends, because, the one being forty and the other twenty-two
+years old, they were seldom rivals on the same field. The author was
+considered quite insignificant by the first of the two ladies, and since
+the other soon discovered this, they carried on in his presence the
+conversation which they had begun in a frank discussion of a woman's
+lot.
+
+"Have you noticed, dear, that women in general bestow their love only
+upon a fool?"
+
+"What do you mean by that, duchess? And how can you make your remark fit
+in with the fact that they have an aversion for their husbands?"
+
+"These women are absolute tyrants!" said the author to himself. "Has the
+devil again turned up in a mob cap?"
+
+"No, dear, I am not joking," replied the duchess, "and I shudder with
+fear for myself when I coolly consider people whom I have known in other
+times. Wit always has a sparkle which wounds us, and the man who has
+much of it makes us fear him perhaps, and if he is a proud man he will
+be capable of jealousy, and is not therefore to our taste. In fact, we
+prefer to raise a man to our own height rather than to have to climb
+up to his. Talent has great successes for us to share in, but the fool
+affords enjoyment to us; and we would sooner hear said 'that is a very
+handsome man' than to see our lover elected to the Institute."
+
+"That's enough, duchess! You have absolutely startled me."
+
+And the young coquette began to describe the lovers about whom all the
+women of her acquaintance raved; there was not a single man of intellect
+among them.
+
+"But I swear by my virtue," she said, "their husbands are worth more."
+
+"But these are the sort of people they choose for husbands," the duchess
+answered gravely.
+
+"Tell me," asked the author, "is the disaster which threatens the
+husband in France quite inevitable?"
+
+"It is," replied the duchess, with a smile; "and the rage which
+certain women breathe out against those of their sex, whose unfortunate
+happiness it is to entertain a passion, proves what a burden to them is
+their chastity. If it were not for fear of the devil, one would be Lais;
+another owes her virtue to the dryness of her selfish heart; a third to
+the silly behaviour of her first lover; another still--"
+
+The author checked this outpour of revelation by confiding to the two
+ladies his design for the work with which he had been haunted; they
+smiled and promised him their assistance. The youngest, with an air of
+gaiety suggested one of the first chapters of the undertaking, by saying
+that she would take upon herself to prove mathematically that women who
+are entirely virtuous were creatures of reason.
+
+When the author got home he said at once to his demon:
+
+"Come! I am ready; let us sign the compact."
+
+But the demon never returned.
+
+If the author has written here the biography of his book he has not
+acted on the prompting of fatuity. He relates facts which may furnish
+material for the history of human thought, and will without doubt
+explain the work itself. It may perhaps be important to certain
+anatomists of thought to be told that the soul is feminine. Thus
+although the author made a resolution not to think about the book which
+he was forced to write, the book, nevertheless, was completed. One
+page of it was found on the bed of a sick man, another on the sofa of a
+boudoir. The glances of women when they turned in the mazes of a waltz
+flung to him some thoughts; a gesture or a word filled his disdainful
+brain with others. On the day when he said to himself, "This work, which
+haunts me, shall be achieved," everything vanished; and like the three
+Belgians, he drew forth a skeleton from the place over which he had bent
+to seize a treasure.
+
+A mild, pale countenance took the place of the demon who had tempted
+me; it wore an engaging expression of kindliness; there were no sharp
+pointed arrows of criticism in its lineaments. It seemed to deal more
+with words than with ideas, and shrank from noise and clamor. It was
+perhaps the household genius of the honorable deputies who sit in the
+centre of the Chamber.
+
+"Wouldn't it be better," it said, "to let things be as they are? Are
+things so bad? We ought to believe in marriage as we believe in the
+immortality of the soul; and you are certainly not making a book to
+advertise the happiness of marriage. You will surely conclude that among
+a million of Parisian homes happiness is the exception. You will find
+perhaps that there are many husbands disposed to abandon their wives to
+you; but there is not a single son who will abandon his mother. Certain
+people who are hit by the views which you put forth will suspect your
+morals and will misrepresent your intentions. In a word, in order
+to handle social sores, one ought to be a king, or a first consul at
+least."
+
+Reason, although it appeared under a form most pleasing to the author,
+was not listened to; for in the distance Folly tossed the coxcomb of
+Panurge, and the author wished to seize it; but, when he tried to catch
+it, he found that it was as heavy as the club of Hercules. Moreover, the
+cure of Meudon adorned it in such fashion that a young man who was less
+pleased with producing a good work than with wearing fine gloves could
+not even touch it.
+
+"Is our work completed?" asked the younger of the two feminine
+assistants of the author.
+
+"Alas! madame," I said, "will you ever requite me for all the hatreds
+which that work will array against me?"
+
+She waved her hand, and then the author replied to her doubt by a look
+of indifference.
+
+"What do you mean? Would you hesitate? You must publish it without fear.
+In the present day we accept a book more because it is in fashion than
+because it has anything in it."
+
+Although the author does not here represent himself as anything more
+than the secretary of two ladies, he has in compiling their observations
+accomplished a double task. With regard to marriage he has here arranged
+matters which represent what everybody thinks but no one dares to say;
+but has he not also exposed himself to public displeasure by expressing
+the mind of the public? Perhaps, however, the eclecticism of the present
+essay will save it from condemnation. All the while that he indulges in
+banter the author has attempted to popularize certain ideas which are
+particularly consoling. He has almost always endeavored to lay bare the
+hidden springs which move the human soul. While undertaking to defend
+the most material interests of man, judging them or condemning them, he
+will perhaps bring to light many sources of intellectual delight. But
+the author does not foolishly claim always to put forth his pleasantries
+in the best of taste; he has merely counted upon the diversity of
+intellectual pursuits in expectation of receiving as much blame
+as approbation. The subject of his work was so serious that he is
+constantly launched into anecdote; because at the present day anecdotes
+are the vehicle of all moral teaching, and the anti-narcotic of every
+work of literature. In literature, analysis and investigation prevail,
+and the wearying of the reader increases in proportion with the egotism
+of the writer. This is one of the greatest misfortunes that can befall
+a book, and the present author has been quite aware of it. He has
+therefore so arranged the topics of this long essay as to afford resting
+places for the reader. This method has been successfully adopted by a
+writer, who produced on the subject of Taste a work somewhat parallel to
+that which is here put forth on the subject of Marriage. From the former
+the present writer may be permitted to borrow a few words in order
+to express a thought which he shares with the author of them. This
+quotation will serve as an expression of homage to his predecessor,
+whose success has been so swiftly followed by his death:
+
+"When I write and speak of myself in the singular, this implies a
+confidential talk with the reader; he can examine the statement,
+discuss it, doubt and even ridicule it; but when I arm myself with
+the formidable WE, I become the professor and demand
+submission."--Brillat-Savarin, Preface to the _Physiology of Taste_.
+
+DECEMBER 5, 1829.
+
+
+
+
+FIRST PART. A GENERAL CONSIDERATION.
+
+
+We will declaim against stupid laws until they are changed, and in the
+meantime blindly submit to them.--Diderot, _Supplement to the Voyage of
+Bougainville_.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION I. THE SUBJECT.
+
+Physiology, what must I consider your meaning?
+
+Is not your object to prove that marriage unites for life two beings who
+do not know each other?
+
+That life consists in passion, and that no passion survives marriage?
+
+That marriage is an institution necessary for the preservation of
+society, but that it is contrary to the laws of nature?
+
+That divorce, this admirable release from the misfortunes of marriage,
+should with one voice be reinstated?
+
+That, in spite of all its inconveniences, marriage is the foundation on
+which property is based?
+
+That it furnishes invaluable pledges for the security of government?
+
+That there is something touching in the association of two human beings
+for the purpose of supporting the pains of life?
+
+That there is something ridiculous in the wish that one and the same
+thoughts should control two wills?
+
+That the wife is treated as a slave?
+
+That there has never been a marriage entirely happy?
+
+That marriage is filled with crimes and that the known murders are not
+the worst?
+
+That fidelity is impossible, at least to the man?
+
+That an investigation if it could be undertaken would prove that in the
+transmission of patrimonial property there was more risk than security?
+
+That adultery does more harm than marriage does good?
+
+That infidelity in a woman may be traced back to the earliest ages
+of society, and that marriage still survives this perpetuation of
+treachery?
+
+That the laws of love so strongly link together two human beings that no
+human law can put them asunder?
+
+That while there are marriages recorded on the public registers, there
+are others over which nature herself has presided, and they have
+been dictated either by the mutual memory of thought, or by an utter
+difference of mental disposition, or by corporeal affinity in the
+parties named; that it is thus that heaven and earth are constantly at
+variance?
+
+That there are many husbands fine in figure and of superior intellect
+whose wives have lovers exceedingly ugly, insignificant in appearance or
+stupid in mind?
+
+All these questions furnish material for books; but the books have been
+written and the questions are constantly reappearing.
+
+Physiology, what must I take you to mean?
+
+Do you reveal new principles? Would you pretend that it is the right
+thing that woman should be made common? Lycurgus and certain Greek
+peoples as well as Tartars and savages have tried this.
+
+Can it possibly be right to confine women? The Ottomans once did so, and
+nowadays they give them their liberty.
+
+Would it be right to marry young women without providing a dowry and
+yet exclude them from the right of succeeding to property? Some English
+authors and some moralists have proved that this with the admission of
+divorce is the surest method of rendering marriage happy.
+
+Should there be a little Hagar in each marriage establishment? There is
+no need to pass a law for that. The provision of the code which makes
+an unfaithful wife liable to a penalty in whatever place the crime
+be committed, and that other article which does not punish the
+erring husband unless his concubine dwells beneath the conjugal roof,
+implicitly admits the existence of mistresses in the city.
+
+Sanchez has written a dissertation on the penal cases incident to
+marriage; he has even argued on the illegitimacy and the opportuneness
+of each form of indulgence; he has outlined all the duties, moral,
+religious and corporeal, of the married couple; in short his work would
+form twelve volumes in octavo if the huge folio entitled _De Matrimonio_
+were thus represented.
+
+Clouds of lawyers have flung clouds of treatises over the legal
+difficulties which are born of marriage. There exist several works on
+the judicial investigation of impotency.
+
+Legions of doctors have marshaled their legions of books on the subject
+of marriage in its relation to medicine and surgery.
+
+In the nineteenth century the _Physiology of Marriage_ is either an
+insignificant compilation or the work of a fool written for other fools;
+old priests have taken their balances of gold and have weighed the most
+trifling scruples of the marriage consciences; old lawyers have put on
+their spectacles and have distinguished between every kind of married
+transgression; old doctors have seized the scalpel and drawn it over all
+the wounds of the subject; old judges have mounted to the bench and have
+decided all the cases of marriage dissolution; whole generations have
+passed unuttered cries of joy or of grief on the subject, each age has
+cast its vote into the urn; the Holy Spirit, poets and writers have
+recounted everything from the days of Eve to the Trojan war, from Helen
+to Madame de Maintenon, from the mistress of Louis XIV to the woman of
+their own day.
+
+Physiology, what must I consider your meaning?
+
+Shall I say that you intend to publish pictures more or less skillfully
+drawn, for the purpose of convincing us that a man marries:
+
+From ambition--that is well known;
+
+From kindness, in order to deliver a girl from the tyranny of her
+mother;
+
+From rage, in order to disinherit his relations;
+
+From scorn of a faithless mistress;
+
+From weariness of a pleasant bachelor life;
+
+From folly, for each man always commits one;
+
+In consequence of a wager, which was the case with Lord Byron;
+
+From interest, which is almost always the case;
+
+From youthfulness on leaving college, like a blockhead;
+
+From ugliness,--fear of some day failing to secure a wife;
+
+Through Machiavelism, in order to be the heir of some old woman at an
+early date;
+
+From necessity, in order to secure the standing to _our_ son;
+
+From obligation, the damsel having shown herself weak;
+
+From passion, in order to become more surely cured of it;
+
+On account of a quarrel, in order to put an end to a lawsuit;
+
+From gratitude, by which he gives more than he has received;
+
+From goodness, which is the fate of doctrinaires;
+
+From the condition of a will when a dead uncle attaches his legacy to
+some girl, marriage with whom is the condition of succession;
+
+From custom, in imitation of his ancestors;
+
+From old age, in order to make an end of life;
+
+From _yatidi_, that is the hour of going to bed and signifies amongst
+the Turks all bodily needs;
+
+From religious zeal, like the Duke of Saint-Aignan, who did not wish to
+commit sin?[*]
+
+ [*] The foregoing queries came in (untranslatable) alphabetic order in
+ the original.--Editor
+
+But these incidents of marriage have furnished matter for thirty
+thousand comedies and a hundred thousand romances.
+
+Physiology, for the third and last time I ask you--What is your meaning?
+
+So far everything is commonplace as the pavement of the street, familiar
+as a crossway. Marriage is better known than the Barabbas of the
+Passion. All the ancient ideas which it calls to light permeate
+literature since the world is the world, and there is not a single
+opinion which might serve to the advantage of the world, nor a
+ridiculous project which could not find an author to write it up, a
+printer to print it, a bookseller to sell it and a reader to read it.
+
+Allow me to say to you like Rabelais, who is in every sense our master:
+
+"Gentlemen, God save and guard you! Where are you? I cannot see you;
+wait until I put on my spectacles. Ah! I see you now; you, your wives,
+your children. Are you in good health? I am glad to hear it."
+
+But it is not for you that I am writing. Since you have grown-up
+children that ends the matter.
+
+Ah! it is you, illustrious tipplers, pampered and gouty, and you,
+tireless pie-cutters, favorites who come dear; day-long pantagruellists
+who keep your private birds, gay and gallant, and who go to tierce,
+to sexts, to nones, and also to vespers and compline and never tire of
+going.
+
+It is not for you that the _Physiology of Marriage_ is addressed, for
+you are not married and may you never be married. You herd of bigots,
+snails, hypocrites, dotards, lechers, booted for pilgrimage to Rome,
+disguised and marked, as it were, to deceive the world. Go back, you
+scoundrels, out of my sight! Gallows birds are ye all--now in the
+devil's name will you not begone? There are none left now but the good
+souls who love to laugh; not the snivelers who burst into tears in prose
+or verse, whatever their subject be, who make people sick with their
+odes, their sonnets, their meditation; none of these dreamers, but
+certain old-fashioned pantagruellists who don't think twice about it
+when they are invited to join a banquet or provoked to make a repartee,
+who can take pleasure in a book like _Pease and the Lard_ with
+commentary of Rabelais, or in the one entitled _The Dignity of
+Breeches_, and who esteem highly the fair books of high degree, a quarry
+hard to run down and redoubtable to wrestle with.
+
+It no longer does to laugh at a government, my friend, since it has
+invented means to raise fifteen hundred millions by taxation. High
+ecclesiastics, monks and nuns are no longer so rich that we can drink
+with them; but let St. Michael come, he who chased the devil from
+heaven, and we shall perhaps see the good time come back again! There is
+only one thing in France at the present moment which remains a laughing
+matter, and that is marriage. Disciples of Panurge, ye are the only
+readers I desire. You know how seasonably to take up and lay down a
+book, how to get the most pleasure out of it, to understand the hint in
+a half word--how to suck nourishment from a marrow-bone.
+
+The men of the microscope who see nothing but a speck, the
+census-mongers--have they reviewed the whole matter? Have they
+pronounced without appeal that it is as impossible to write a book on
+marriage as to make new again a broken pot?
+
+Yes, master fool. If you begin to squeeze the marriage question you
+squirt out nothing but fun for the bachelors and weariness for the
+married men. It is everlasting morality. A million printed pages would
+have no other matter in them.
+
+In spite of this, here is my first proposition: marriage is a fight to
+the death, before which the wedded couple ask a blessing from heaven,
+because it is the rashest of all undertakings to swear eternal love; the
+fight at once commences and victory, that is to say liberty, remains in
+the hands of the cleverer of the two.
+
+Undoubtedly. But do you see in this a fresh idea?
+
+Well, I address myself to the married men of yesterday and of to-day; to
+those who on leaving the Church or the registration office indulge the
+hope of keeping their wives for themselves alone; to those whom some
+form or other of egotism or some indefinable sentiment induces to say
+when they see the marital troubles of another, "This will never happen
+to me."
+
+I address myself to those sailors who after witnessing the foundering
+of other ships still put to sea; to those bachelors who after witnessing
+the shipwreck of virtue in a marriage of another venture upon wedlock.
+And this is my subject, eternally now, yet eternally old!
+
+A young man, or it may be an old one, in love or not in love, has
+obtained possession by a contract duly recorded at the registration
+office in heaven and on the rolls of the nation, of a young girl with
+long hair, with black liquid eyes, with small feet, with dainty tapering
+fingers, with red lips, with teeth of ivory, finely formed, trembling
+with life, tempting and plump, white as a lily, loaded with the most
+charming wealth of beauty. Her drooping eyelashes seem like the points
+of the iron crown; her skin, which is as fresh as the calyx of a white
+camelia, is streaked with the purple of the red camelia; over her
+virginal complexion one seems to see the bloom of young fruit and the
+delicate down of a young peach; the azure veins spread a kindling warmth
+over this transparent surface; she asks for life and she gives it; she
+is all joy and love, all tenderness and candor; she loves her husband,
+or at least believes she loves him.
+
+The husband who is in love says in the bottom of his heart: "Those eyes
+will see no one but me, that mouth will tremble with love for me alone,
+that gentle hand will lavish the caressing treasures of delight on me
+alone, that bosom will heave at no voice but mine, that slumbering soul
+will awake at my will alone; I only will entangle my fingers in those
+shining tresses; I alone will indulge myself in dreamily caressing that
+sensitive head. I will make death the guardian of my pillow if only I
+may ward off from the nuptial couch the stranger who would violate it;
+that throne of love shall swim in the blood of the rash or of my own.
+Tranquillity, honor, happiness, the ties of home, the fortune of my
+children, all are at stake there; I would defend them as a lioness
+defends her cubs. Woe unto him who shall set foot in my lair!"
+
+Well now, courageous athlete, we applaud your intention. Up to the
+present moment no geographer has ventured to trace the lines of
+longitude and latitude in the ocean of marriage. Old husbands have
+been ashamed to point out the sand banks, the reefs, the shallows, the
+breakers, the monsoons, the coasts and currents which have wrecked their
+ships, for their shipwrecks brought them shame. There was no pilot, no
+compass for those pilgrims of marriage. This work is intended to supply
+the desideratum.
+
+Without mentioning grocers and drapers, there are so many people
+occupied in discovering the secret motives of women, that it is really
+a work of charity to classify for them, by chapter and verse, all the
+secret situations of marriage; a good table of contents will enable them
+to put their finger on each movement of their wives' heart, as a table
+of logarithms tells them the product of a given multiplication.
+
+And now what do you think about that? Is not this a novel undertaking,
+and one which no philosopher has as yet approached, I mean this attempt
+to show how a woman may be prevented from deceiving her husband? Is
+not this the comedy of comedies? Is it not a second _speculum vitae
+humanae_. We are not now dealing with the abstract questions which we
+have done justice to already in this Meditation. At the present day in
+ethics as in exact science, the world asks for facts for the results of
+observation. These we shall furnish.
+
+Let us begin then by examining the true condition of things, by
+analyzing the forces which exist on either side. Before arming our
+imaginary champion let us reckon up the number of his enemies. Let us
+count the Cossacks who intend to invade his little domain.
+
+All who wish may embark with us on this voyage, all who can may laugh.
+Weigh anchor; hoist sail! You know exactly the point from which you
+start. You have this advantage over a great many books that are written.
+
+As for our fancy of laughing while we weep, and of weeping while we
+laugh, as the divine Rabelais drank while he ate and ate while he drank;
+as for our humor, to put Heraclitus and Democritus on the same page
+and to discard style or premeditated phrase--if any of the crew mutiny,
+overboard with the doting cranks, the infamous classicists, the dead and
+buried romanticists, and steer for the blue water!
+
+Everybody perhaps will jeeringly remark that we are like those who say
+with smiling faces, "I am going to tell you a story that will make you
+laugh!" But it is the proper thing to joke when speaking of marriage!
+In short, can you not understand that we consider marriage as a trifling
+ailment to which all of us are subject and upon which this volume is a
+monograph?
+
+"But you, your bark or your work starts off like those postilions who
+crack their whips because their passengers are English. You will not
+have galloped at full speed for half a league before you dismount to
+mend a trace or to breathe your horses. What is the good of blowing the
+trumpet before victory?"
+
+Ah! my dear pantagruellists, nowadays to claim success is to obtain
+it, and since, after all, great works are only due to the expansion of
+little ideas, I do not see why I should not pluck the laurels, if only
+for the purpose of crowning those dirty bacon faces who join us in
+swallowing a dram. One moment, pilot, let us not start without making
+one little definition.
+
+Reader, if from time to time you meet in this work the terms virtue or
+virtuous, let us understand that virtue means a certain labored facility
+by which a wife keeps her heart for her husband; at any rate, that the
+word is not used in a general sense, and I leave this distinction to the
+natural sagacity of all.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION II. MARRIAGE STATISTICS.
+
+The administration has been occupied for nearly twenty years in
+reckoning how many acres of woodland, meadow, vineyard and fallow are
+comprised in the area of France. It has not stopped there, but has also
+tried to learn the number and species of the animals to be found there.
+Scientific men have gone still further; they have reckoned up the cords
+of wood, the pounds of beef, the apples and eggs consumed in Paris. But
+no one has yet undertaken either in the name of marital honor or in the
+interest of marriageable people, or for the advantage of morality and
+the progress of human institutions, to investigate the number of honest
+wives. What! the French government, if inquiry is made of it, is able to
+say how many men it has under arms, how many spies, how many employees,
+how many scholars; but, when it is asked how many virtuous women, it can
+answer nothing! If the King of France took into his head to choose his
+august partner from among his subjects, the administration could not
+even tell him the number of white lambs from whom he could make his
+choice. It would be obliged to resort to some competition which awards
+the rose of good conduct, and that would be a laughable event.
+
+Were the ancients then our masters in political institutions as in
+morality? History teaches us that Ahasuerus, when he wished to take a
+wife from among the damsels of Persia, chose Esther, the most virtuous
+and the most beautiful. His ministers therefore must necessarily
+have discovered some method of obtaining the cream of the population.
+Unfortunately the Bible, which is so clear on all matrimonial questions,
+has omitted to give us a rule for matrimonial choice.
+
+Let us try to supply this gap in the work of the administration by
+calculating the sum of the female sex in France. Here we call the
+attention of all friends to public morality, and we appoint them judges
+of our method of procedure. We shall attempt to be particularly liberal
+in our estimations, particularly exact in our reasoning, in order that
+every one may accept the result of this analysis.
+
+The inhabitants of France are generally reckoned at thirty millions.
+
+Certain naturalists think that the number of women exceeds that of men;
+but as many statisticians are of the opposite opinion, we will make the
+most probable calculation by allowing fifteen millions for the women.
+
+We will begin by cutting down this sum by nine millions, which stands
+for those who seem to have some resemblance to women, but whom we are
+compelled to reject upon serious considerations.
+
+Let us explain:
+
+Naturalists consider man to be no more than a unique species of the
+order bimana, established by Dumeril in his _Analytic Zoology_, page
+16; and Bory de Saint Vincent thinks that the ourang-outang ought to be
+included in the same order if we would make the species complete.
+
+If these zoologists see in us nothing more than a mammal with thirty-two
+vertebrae possessing the hyoid bone and more folds in the hemispheres
+of the brain than any other animal; if in their opinion no other
+differences exist in this order than those produced by the influence of
+climate, on which are founded the nomenclature of fifteen species whose
+scientific names it is needless to cite, the physiologists ought also
+to have the right of making species and sub-species in accordance with
+definite degrees of intelligence and definite conditions of existence,
+oral and pecuniary.
+
+Now the nine millions of human creatures which we here refer to present
+at first sight all the attributes of the human race; they have the hyoid
+bone, the coracoid process, the acromion, the zygomatic arch. It is
+therefore permitted for the gentlemen of the Jardin des Plantes to
+classify them with the bimana; but our Physiology will never admit that
+women are to be found among them. In our view, and in the view of those
+for whom this book is intended, a woman is a rare variety of the human
+race, and her principal characteristics are due to the special care men
+have bestowed upon its cultivation,--thanks to the power of money and
+the moral fervor of civilization! She is generally recognized by the
+whiteness, the fineness and softness of her skin. Her taste inclines
+to the most spotless cleanliness. Her fingers shrink from encountering
+anything but objects which are soft, yielding and scented. Like the
+ermine she sometimes dies for grief on seeing her white tunic soiled.
+She loves to twine her tresses and to make them exhale the most
+attractive scents; to brush her rosy nails, to trim them to an almond
+shape, and frequently to bathe her delicate limbs. She is not satisfied
+to spend the night excepting on the softest down, and excepting on
+hair-cushioned lounges, she loves best to take a horizontal position.
+Her voice is of penetrating sweetness; her movements are full of grace.
+She speaks with marvelous fluency. She does not apply herself to any
+hard work; and, nevertheless, in spite of her apparent weakness, there
+are burdens which she can bear and move with miraculous ease. She avoids
+the open sunlight and wards it off by ingenious appliances. For her to
+walk is exhausting. Does she eat? This is a mystery. Has she the needs
+of other species? It is a problem. Although she is curious to excess she
+allows herself easily to be caught by any one who can conceal from her
+the slightest thing, and her intellect leads her to seek incessantly
+after the unknown. Love is her religion; she thinks how to please the
+one she loves. To be beloved is the end of all her actions; to excite
+desire is the motive of every gesture. She dreams of nothing excepting
+how she may shine, and moves only in a circle filled with grace and
+elegance. It is for her the Indian girl has spun the soft fleece of
+Thibet goats, Tarare weaves its airy veils, Brussels sets in motion
+those shuttles which speed the flaxen thread that is purest and most
+fine, Bidjapour wrenches from the bowels of the earth its sparkling
+pebbles, and the Sevres gilds its snow-white clay. Night and day she
+reflects upon new costumes and spends her life in considering dress and
+in plaiting her apparel. She moves about exhibiting her brightness and
+freshness to people she does not know, but whose homage flatters her,
+while the desire she excites charms her, though she is indifferent to
+those who feel it. During the hours which she spends in private, in
+pleasure, and in the care of her person, she amuses herself by caroling
+the sweetest strains. For her France and Italy ordain delightful
+concerts and Naples imparts to the strings of the violin an harmonious
+soul. This species is in fine at once the queen of the world and the
+slave of passion. She dreads marriage because it ends by spoiling her
+figure, but she surrenders herself to it because it promises happiness.
+If she bears children it is by pure chance, and when they are grown up
+she tries to conceal them.
+
+These characteristics taken at random from among a thousand others are
+not found amongst those beings whose hands are as black as those of apes
+and their skin tanned like the ancient parchments of an _olim_; whose
+complexion is burnt brown by the sun and whose neck is wrinkled like
+that of a turkey; who are covered with rags; whose voice is hoarse;
+whose intelligence is nil; who think of nothing but the bread box,
+and who are incessantly bowed in toil towards the ground; who dig; who
+harrow; who make hay, glean, gather in the harvest, knead the bread and
+strip hemp; who, huddled among domestic beasts, infants and men, dwell
+in holes and dens scarcely covered with thatch; to whom it is of little
+importance from what source children rain down into their homes. Their
+work it is to produce many and to deliver them to misery and toil, and
+if their love is not like their labor in the fields it is at least as
+much a work of chance.
+
+Alas! if there are throughout the world multitudes of trades-women who
+sit all day long between the cradle and the sugar-cask, farmers' wives
+and daughters who milk the cows, unfortunate women who are employed like
+beasts of burden in the manufactories, who all day long carry the loaded
+basket, the hoe and the fish-crate, if unfortunately there exist these
+common human beings to whom the life of the soul, the benefits of
+education, the delicious tempests of the heart are an unattainable
+heaven; and if Nature has decreed that they should have coracoid
+processes and hyoid bones and thirty-two vertebrae, let them remain for
+the physiologist classed with the ourang-outang. And here we make no
+stipulations for the leisure class; for those who have the time and
+the sense to fall in love; for the rich who have purchased the right
+of indulging their passions; for the intellectual who have conquered a
+monopoly of fads. Anathema on all those who do not live by thought. We
+say Raca and fool to all those who are not ardent, young, beautiful
+and passionate. This is the public expression of that secret sentiment
+entertained by philanthropists who have learned to read and can keep
+their own carriage. Among the nine millions of the proscribed, the
+tax-gatherer, the magistrate, the law-maker and the priest doubtless see
+living souls who are to be ruled and made subject to the administration
+of justice. But the man of sentiment, the philosopher of the boudoir,
+while he eats his fine bread, made of corn, sown and harvested by these
+creatures, will reject them and relegate them, as we do, to a place
+outside the genus Woman. For them, there are no women excepting those
+who can inspire love; and there is no living being but the creature
+invested with the priesthood of thought by means of a privileged
+education, and with whom leisure has developed the power of imagination;
+in other words that only is a human being whose soul dreams, in love,
+either of intellectual enjoyments or of physical delights.
+
+We would, however, make the remark that these nine million female
+pariahs produce here and there a thousand peasant girls who from
+peculiar circumstances are as fair as Cupids; they come to Paris or to
+the great cities and end up by attaining the rank of _femmes comme
+il faut_; but to set off against these two or three thousand favored
+creatures, there are one hundred thousand others who remain servants
+or abandon themselves to frightful irregularities. Nevertheless, we
+are obliged to count these Pompadours of the village among the feminine
+population.
+
+Our first calculation is based upon the statistical discovery that in
+France there are eighteen millions of the poor, ten millions of people
+in easy circumstances and two millions of the rich.
+
+There exist, therefore, in France only six millions of women in whom
+men of sentiment are now interested, have been interested, or will be
+interested.
+
+Let us subject this social elite to a philosophic examination.
+
+We think, without fear of being deceived, that married people who have
+lived twenty years together may sleep in peace without fear of having
+their love trespassed upon or of incurring the scandal of a lawsuit for
+criminal conversation.
+
+From these six millions of individuals we must subtract about two
+millions of women who are extremely attractive, because for the last
+forty years they have seen the world; but since they have not the power
+to make any one fall in love with them, they are on the outside of
+the discussion now before us. If they are unhappy enough to receive no
+attention for the sake of amiability, they are soon seized with ennui;
+they fall back upon religion, upon the cultivation of pets, cats,
+lap-dogs, and other fancies which are no more offensive than their
+devoutness.
+
+The calculations made at the Bureau of Longitudes concerning population
+authorize us again to subtract from the total mentioned two millions of
+young girls, pretty enough to kill; they are at present in the A B C
+of life and innocently play with other children, without dreading that
+these little hobbledehoys, who now make them laugh, will one day make
+them weep.
+
+Again, of the two millions of the remaining women, what reasonable man
+would not throw out a hundred thousand poor girls, humpbacked, plain,
+cross-grained, rickety, sickly, blind, crippled in some way, well
+educated but penniless, all bound to be spinsters, and by no means
+tempted to violate the sacred laws of marriage?
+
+Nor must we retain the one hundred thousand other girls who become
+sisters of St. Camille, Sisters of Charity, monastics, teachers, ladies'
+companions, etc. And we must put into this blessed company a number of
+young people difficult to estimate, who are too grown up to play with
+little boys and yet too young to sport their wreath of orange blossoms.
+
+Finally, of the fifteen million subjects which remain at the bottom of
+our crucible we must eliminate five hundred thousand other individuals,
+to be reckoned as daughters of Baal, who subserve the appetites of the
+base. We must even comprise among those, without fear that they will
+be corrupted by their company, the kept women, the milliners, the shop
+girls, saleswomen, actresses, singers, the girls of the opera, the
+ballet-dancers, upper servants, chambermaids, etc. Most of these
+creatures excite the passions of many people, but they would consider
+it immodest to inform a lawyer, a mayor, an ecclesiastic or a laughing
+world of the day and hour when they surrendered to a lover. Their
+system, justly blamed by an inquisitive world, has the advantage of
+laying upon them no obligations towards men in general, towards the
+mayor or the magistracy. As these women do not violate any oath made
+in public, they have no connection whatever with a work which treats
+exclusively of lawful marriage.
+
+Some one will say that the claims made by this essay are very slight,
+but its limitations make just compensation for those which amateurs
+consider excessively padded. If any one, through love for a wealthy
+dowager, wishes to obtain admittance for her into the remaining
+million, he must classify her under the head of Sisters of Charity,
+ballet-dancers, or hunchbacks; in fact we have not taken more than five
+hundred thousand individuals in forming this last class, because it
+often happens, as we have seen above, that the nine millions of peasant
+girls make a large accession to it. We have for the same reason omitted
+the working-girl class and the hucksters; the women of these two
+sections are the product of efforts made by nine millions of female
+bimana to rise to the higher civilization. But for its scrupulous
+exactitude many persons might regard this statistical meditation as a
+mere joke.
+
+We have felt very much inclined to form a small class of a hundred
+thousand individuals as a crowning cabinet of the species, to serve as
+a place of shelter for women who have fallen into a middle estate,
+like widows, for instance; but we have preferred to estimate in round
+figures.
+
+It would be easy to prove the fairness of our analysis: let one
+reflection be sufficient.
+
+The life of a woman is divided into three periods, very distinct from
+each other: the first begins in the cradle and ends on the attainment
+of a marriageable age; the second embraces the time during which a
+woman belongs to marriage; the third opens with the critical period,
+the ending with which nature closes the passions of life. These three
+spheres of existence, being almost equal in duration, might be employed
+for the classification into equal groups of a given number of women.
+Thus in a mass of six millions, omitting fractions, there are about
+two million girls between one and eighteen, two millions women between
+eighteen and forty and two millions of old women. The caprices of
+society have divided the two millions of marriageable women into three
+main classes, namely: those who remain spinsters for reasons which we
+have defined; those whose virtue does not reckon in the obtaining of
+husbands, and the million of women lawfully married, with whom we have
+to deal.
+
+You see then, by the exact sifting out of the feminine population, that
+there exists in France a little flock of barely a million white lambs, a
+privileged fold into which every wolf is anxious to enter.
+
+Let us put this million of women, already winnowed by our fan, through
+another examination.
+
+To arrive at the true idea of the degree of confidence which a man ought
+to have in his wife, let us suppose for a moment that all wives will
+deceive their husbands.
+
+On this hypothesis, it will be proper to cut out about one-twentieth,
+viz., young people who are newly married and who will be faithful to
+their vows for a certain time.
+
+Another twentieth will be in ill-health. This will be to make a very
+modest allowance for human infirmities.
+
+Certain passions, which we are told destroy the dominion of the man over
+the heart of his wife, namely, aversion, grief, the bearing of children,
+will account for another twentieth.
+
+Adultery does not establish itself in the heart of a married woman with
+the promptness of a pistol-shot. Even when sympathy with another rouses
+feelings on first sight, a struggle always takes place, whose duration
+discounts the total sum of conjugal infidelities. It would be an insult
+to French modesty not to admit the duration of this struggle in
+a country so naturally combative, without referring to at least a
+twentieth in the total of married women; but then we will suppose that
+there are certain sickly women who preserve their lovers while they
+are using soothing draughts, and that there are certain wives whose
+confinement makes sarcastic celibates smile. In this way we shall
+vindicate the modesty of those who enter upon the struggle from motives
+of virtue. For the same reason we should not venture to believe that a
+woman forsaken by her lover will find a new one on the spot; but this
+discount being much more uncertain than the preceding one, we will
+estimate it at one-fortieth.
+
+These several rebates will reduce our sum total to eight hundred
+thousand women, when we come to calculate the number of those who are
+likely to violate married faith. Who would not at the present moment
+wish to retain the persuasion that wives are virtuous? Are they not
+the supreme flower of the country? Are they not all blooming creatures,
+fascinating the world by their beauty, their youth, their life and their
+love? To believe in their virtue is a sort of social religion, for they
+are the ornament of the world, and form the chief glory of France.
+
+It is in the midst of this million we are bound to investigate:
+
+The number of honest women;
+
+The number of virtuous women.
+
+The work of investigating this and of arranging the results under two
+categories requires whole meditations, which may serve as an appendix to
+the present one.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION III. OF THE HONEST WOMAN.
+
+The preceding meditation has proved that we possess in France a floating
+population of one million women reveling in the privilege of inspiring
+those passions which a gallant man avows without shame, or dissembles
+with delight. It is then among this million of women that we must carry
+our lantern of Diogenes in order to discover the honest women of the
+land.
+
+This inquiry suggests certain digressions.
+
+Two young people, well dressed, whose slender figures and rounded arms
+suggest a paver's tool, and whose boots are elegantly made, meet one
+morning on the boulevard, at the end of the Passage des Panoramas.
+
+"What, is this you?"
+
+"Yes, dear boy; it looks like me, doesn't it?"
+
+Then they laugh, with more or less intelligence, according to the nature
+of the joke which opens the conversation.
+
+When they have examined each other with the sly curiosity of a police
+officer on the lookout for a clew, when they are quite convinced of the
+newness of each other's gloves, of each other's waistcoat and of the
+taste with which their cravats are tied; when they are pretty certain
+that neither of them is down in the world, they link arms and if they
+start from the Theater des Varietes, they have not reached Frascati's
+before they have asked each other a roundabout question whose free
+translation may be this:
+
+"Whom are you living with now?"
+
+As a general rule she is a charming woman.
+
+Who is the infantryman of Paris into whose ear there have not dropped,
+like bullets in the day of battle, thousands of words uttered by the
+passer-by, and who has not caught one of those numberless sayings which,
+according to Rabelais, hang frozen in the air? But the majority of men
+take their way through Paris in the same manner as they live and
+eat, that is, without thinking about it. There are very few skillful
+musicians, very few practiced physiognomists who can recognize the key
+in which these vagrant notes are set, the passion that prompts
+these floating words. Ah! to wander over Paris! What an adorable
+and delightful existence is that! To saunter is a science; it is the
+gastronomy of the eye. To take a walk is to vegetate; to saunter is to
+live. The young and pretty women, long contemplated with ardent eyes,
+would be much more admissible in claiming a salary than the cook who
+asks for twenty sous from the Limousin whose nose with inflated nostrils
+took in the perfumes of beauty. To saunter is to enjoy life; it is to
+indulge the flight of fancy; it is to enjoy the sublime pictures of
+misery, of love, of joy, of gracious or grotesque physiognomies; it is
+to pierce with a glance the abysses of a thousand existences; for the
+young it is to desire all, and to possess all; for the old it is to
+live the life of the youthful, and to share their passions. Now how
+many answers have not the sauntering artists heard to the categorical
+question which is always with us?
+
+"She is thirty-five years old, but you would not think she was more than
+twenty!" said an enthusiastic youth with sparkling eyes, who, freshly
+liberated from college, would, like Cherubin, embrace all.
+
+"Zounds! Mine has dressing-gowns of batiste and diamond rings for the
+evening!" said a lawyer's clerk.
+
+"But she has a box at the Francais!" said an army officer.
+
+"At any rate," cried another one, an elderly man who spoke as if he
+were standing on the defence, "she does not cost me a sou! In our
+case--wouldn't you like to have the same chance, my respected friend?"
+
+And he patted his companion lightly on the shoulder.
+
+"Oh! she loves me!" said another. "It seems too good to be true; but she
+has the most stupid of husbands! Ah!--Buffon has admirably described the
+animals, but the biped called husband--"
+
+What a pleasant thing for a married man to hear!
+
+"Oh! what an angel you are, my dear!" is the answer to a request
+discreetly whispered into the ear.
+
+"Can you tell me her name or point her out to me?"
+
+"Oh! no; she is an honest woman."
+
+When a student is loved by a waitress, he mentions her name with pride
+and takes his friends to lunch at her house. If a young man loves a
+woman whose husband is engaged in some trade dealing with articles
+of necessity, he will answer, blushingly, "She is the wife of a
+haberdasher, of a stationer, of a hatter, of a linen-draper, of a clerk,
+etc."
+
+But this confession of love for an inferior which buds and blows in
+the midst of packages, loaves of sugar, or flannel waistcoats is always
+accompanied with an exaggerated praise of the lady's fortune. The
+husband alone is engaged in the business; he is rich; he has fine
+furniture. The loved one comes to her lover's house; she wears a
+cashmere shawl; she owns a country house, etc.
+
+In short, a young man is never wanting in excellent arguments to prove
+that his mistress is very nearly, if not quite, an honest woman. This
+distinction originates in the refinement of our manners and has become
+as indefinite as the line which separates _bon ton_ from vulgarity. What
+then is meant by an honest woman?
+
+On this point the vanity of women, of their lovers, and even that of
+their husbands, is so sensitive that we had better here settle upon some
+general rules, which are the result of long observation.
+
+Our one million of privileged women represent a multitude who are
+eligible for the glorious title of honest women, but by no means all are
+elected to it. The principles on which these elections are based may be
+found in the following axioms:
+
+
+
+
+APHORISMS.
+
+ I.
+ An honest woman is necessarily a married woman.
+
+ II.
+ An honest woman is under forty years old.
+
+ III.
+ A married woman whose favors are to be paid for is not an honest
+ woman.
+
+ IV.
+ A married woman who keeps a private carriage is an honest woman.
+
+ V.
+ A woman who does her own cooking is not an honest woman.
+
+ VI.
+When a man has made enough to yield an income of twenty thousand francs,
+his wife is an honest woman, whatever the business in which his fortune
+was made.
+
+ VII.
+A woman who says "letter of change" for letter of exchange, who says
+of a man, "He is an elegant gentleman," can never be an honest woman,
+whatever fortune she possesses.
+
+ VIII.
+ An honest woman ought to be in a financial condition such as forbids
+ her lover to think she will ever cost him anything.
+
+ IX.
+ A woman who lives on the third story of any street excepting the Rue
+ de Rivoli and the Rue de Castiglione is not an honest woman.
+
+ X.
+The wife of a banker is always an honest woman, but the woman who sits
+at the cashier's desk cannot be one, unless her husband has a very large
+business and she does not live over his shop.
+
+ XI.
+The unmarried niece of a bishop when she lives with him can pass for
+an honest woman, because if she has an intrigue she has to deceive her
+uncle.
+
+ XII.
+ An honest woman is one whom her lover fears to compromise.
+
+ XIII.
+ The wife of an artist is always an honest woman.
+
+
+By the application of these principles even a man from Ardeche can
+resolve all the difficulties which our subject presents.
+
+In order that a woman may be able to keep a cook, may be finely
+educated, may possess the sentiment of coquetry, may have the right to
+pass whole hours in her boudoir lying on a sofa, and may live a life of
+soul, she must have at least six thousand francs a year if she lives
+in the country, and twenty thousand if she lives at Paris. These two
+financial limits will suggest to you how many honest women are to be
+reckoned on in the million, for they are really a mere product of our
+statistical calculations.
+
+Now three hundred thousand independent people, with an income of fifteen
+thousand francs, represent the sum total of those who live on pensions,
+on annuities and the interest of treasury bonds and mortgages.
+
+Three hundred thousand landed proprietors enjoy an income of three
+thousand five hundred francs and represent all territorial wealth.
+
+Two hundred thousand payees, at the rate of fifteen hundred francs each,
+represent the distribution of public funds by the state budget, by the
+budgets of the cities and departments, less the national debt, church
+funds and soldier's pay, (i.e. five sous a day with allowances for
+washing, weapons, victuals, clothes, etc.).
+
+Two hundred thousand fortunes amassed in commerce, reckoning the capital
+at twenty thousand francs in each case, represent all the commercial
+establishments possible in France.
+
+Here we have a million husbands represented.
+
+But at what figure shall we count those who have an income of fifty, of
+a hundred, of two, three, four, five, and six hundred francs only, from
+consols or some other investment?
+
+How many landed proprietors are there who pay taxes amounting to no more
+than a hundred sous, twenty francs, one hundred francs, two hundred, or
+two hundred and eighty?
+
+At what number shall we reckon those of the governmental leeches, who
+are merely quill-drivers with a salary of six hundred francs a year?
+
+How many merchants who have nothing but a fictitious capital shall we
+admit? These men are rich in credit and have not a single actual sou,
+and resemble the sieves through which Pactolus flows. And how many
+brokers whose real capital does not amount to more than a thousand, two
+thousand, four thousand, five thousand francs? Business!--my respects to
+you!
+
+Let us suppose more people to be fortunate than actually are so. Let
+us divide this million into parts; five hundred thousand domestic
+establishments will have an income ranging from a hundred to three
+thousand francs, and five thousand women will fulfill the conditions
+which entitle them to be called honest women.
+
+After these observations, which close our meditation on statistics, we
+are entitled to cut out of this number one hundred thousand individuals;
+consequently we can consider it to be proven mathematically that there
+exist in France no more than four hundred thousand women who can furnish
+to men of refinement the exquisite and exalted enjoyments which they
+look for in love.
+
+And here it is fitting to make a remark to the adepts for whom we write,
+that love does not consist in a series of eager conversations, of nights
+of pleasure, of an occasional caress more or less well-timed and a spark
+of _amour-propre_ baptized by the name of jealousy. Our four hundred
+thousand women are not of those concerning whom it may be said, "The
+most beautiful girl in the world can give only what she has." No,
+they are richly endowed with treasures which appeal to our ardent
+imaginations, they know how to sell dear that which they do not possess,
+in order to compensate for the vulgarity of that which they give.
+
+Do we feel more pleasure in kissing the glove of a grisette than in
+draining the five minutes of pleasure which all women offer to us?
+
+Is it the conversation of a shop-girl which makes you expect boundless
+delights?
+
+In your intercourse with a woman who is beneath you, the delight of
+flattered _amour-propre_ is on her side. You are not in the secret of
+the happiness which you give.
+
+In a case of a woman above you, either in fortune or social position,
+the ticklings of vanity are not only intense, but are equally shared.
+A man can never raise his mistress to his own level; but a woman always
+puts her lover in the position that she herself occupies. "I can make
+princes and you can make nothing but bastards," is an answer sparkling
+with truth.
+
+If love is the first of passions, it is because it flatters all the
+rest of them at the same time. We love with more or less intensity in
+proportion to the number of chords which are touched by the fingers of a
+beautiful mistress.
+
+Biren, the jeweler's son, climbing into the bed of the Duchesse de
+Courlande and helping her to sign an agreement that he should be
+proclaimed sovereign of the country, as he was already of the young and
+beautiful queen, is an example of the happiness which ought to be given
+to their lovers by our four hundred thousand women.
+
+If a man would have the right to make stepping-stones of all the heads
+which crowd a drawing-room, he must be the lover of some artistic woman
+of fashion. Now we all love more or less to be at the top.
+
+It is on this brilliant section of the nation that the attack is made by
+men whose education, talent or wit gives them the right to be considered
+persons of importance with regard to that success of which people of
+every country are so proud; and only among this class of women is the
+wife to be found whose heart has to be defended at all hazard by our
+husband.
+
+What does it matter whether the considerations which arise from the
+existence of a feminine aristocracy are or are not equally applicable
+to other social classes? That which is true of all women exquisite
+in manners, language and thought, in whom exceptional educational
+facilities have developed a taste for art and a capacity for feeling,
+comparing and thinking, who have a high sense of propriety and
+politeness and who actually set the fashion in French manners, ought
+to be true also in the case of women whatever their nation and whatever
+their condition. The man of distinction to whom this book is dedicated
+must of necessity possess a certain mental vision, which makes
+him perceive the various degrees of light that fill each class and
+comprehend the exact point in the scale of civilization to which each of
+our remarks is severally applicable.
+
+Would it not be then in the highest interests of morality, that we
+should in the meantime try to find out the number of virtuous women who
+are to be found among these adorable creatures? Is not this a question
+of marito-national importance?
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION IV. OF THE VIRTUOUS WOMAN.
+
+The question, perhaps, is not so much how many virtuous women there are,
+as what possibility there is of an honest woman remaining virtuous.
+
+In order to throw light upon a point so important, let us cast a rapid
+glance over the male population.
+
+From among our fifteen millions of men we must cut off, in the first
+place, the nine millions of bimana of thirty-two vertebrae and exclude
+from our physiological analysis all but six millions of people. The
+Marceaus, the Massenas, the Rousseaus, the Diderots and the Rollins
+often sprout forth suddenly from the social swamp, when it is in a
+condition of fermentation; but, here we plead guilty of deliberate
+inaccuracy. These errors in calculation are likely, however, to give all
+their weight to our conclusion and to corroborate what we are forced to
+deduce in unveiling the mechanism of passion.
+
+From the six millions of privileged men, we must exclude three millions
+of old men and children.
+
+It will be affirmed by some one that this subtraction leaves a remainder
+of four millions in the case of women.
+
+This difference at first sight seems singular, but is easily accounted
+for.
+
+The average age at which women are married is twenty years and at forty
+they cease to belong to the world of love.
+
+Now a young bachelor of seventeen is apt to make deep cuts with his
+penknife in the parchment of contracts, as the chronicles of scandal
+will tell you.
+
+On the other hand, a man at fifty-two is more formidable than at any
+other age. It is at this fair epoch of life that he enjoys an experience
+dearly bought, and probably all the fortune that he will ever require.
+The passions by which his course is directed being the last under whose
+scourge he will move, he is unpitying and determined, like the man
+carried away by a current who snatches at a green and pliant branch of
+willow, the young nursling of the year.
+
+
+ XIV.
+ Physically a man is a man much longer than a woman is a woman.
+
+
+With regard to marriage, the difference in duration of the life of love
+with a man and with a woman is fifteen years. This period is equal to
+three-fourths of the time during which the infidelities of the woman
+can bring unhappiness to her husband. Nevertheless, the remainder in our
+subtraction from the sum of men only differs by a sixth or so from that
+which results in our subtraction from the sum of women.
+
+Great is the modest caution of our estimates. As to our arguments, they
+are founded on evidence so widely known, that we have only expounded
+them for the sake of being exact and in order to anticipate all
+criticism.
+
+It has, therefore, been proved to the mind of every philosopher, however
+little disposed he may be to forming numerical estimates, that there
+exists in France a floating mass of three million men between seventeen
+and fifty-two, all perfectly alive, well provided with teeth, quite
+resolved on biting, in fact, biting and asking nothing better than the
+opportunity of walking strong and upright along the way to Paradise.
+
+The above observations entitle us to separate from this mass of men a
+million husbands. Suppose for an instant that these, being satisfied
+and always happy, like our model husband, confine themselves to conjugal
+love.
+
+Our remainder of two millions do not require five sous to make love.
+
+It is quite sufficient for a man to have a fine foot and a clear eye in
+order to dismantle the portrait of a husband.
+
+It is not necessary that he should have a handsome face nor even a good
+figure;
+
+Provided that a man appears to be intellectual and has a distinguished
+expression of face, women never look where he comes from but where he is
+going to;
+
+The charms of youth are the unique equipage of love;
+
+A coat made by Brisson, a pair of gloves bought from Boivin, elegant
+shoes, for whose payment the dealer trembles, a well-tied cravat are
+sufficient to make a man king of the drawing-room;
+
+And soldiers--although the passion for gold lace and aiguillettes has
+died away--do not soldiers form of themselves a redoubtable legion of
+celibates? Not to mention Eginhard--for he was a private secretary--has
+not a newspaper recently recorded how a German princess bequeathed her
+fortune to a simple lieutenant of cuirassiers in the imperial guard?
+
+But the notary of the village, who in the wilds of Gascony does not draw
+more than thirty-six deeds a year, sends his son to study law at Paris;
+the hatter wishes his son to be a notary, the lawyer destines his to be
+a judge, the judge wishes to become a minister in order that his sons
+may be peers. At no epoch in the world's history has there been so eager
+a thirst for education. To-day it is not intellect but cleverness that
+promenades the streets. From every crevice in the rocky surface of
+society brilliant flowers burst forth as the spring brings them on the
+walls of a ruin; even in the caverns there droop from the vaulted
+roof faintly colored tufts of green vegetation. The sun of education
+permeates all. Since this vast development of thought, this even and
+fruitful diffusion of light, we have scarcely any men of superiority,
+because every single man represents the whole education of his age. We
+are surrounded by living encyclopaedias who walk about, think, act and
+wish to be immortalized. Hence the frightful catastrophes of climbing
+ambitions and insensate passions. We feel the want of other worlds;
+there are more hives needed to receive the swarms, and especially are we
+in need of more pretty women.
+
+But the maladies by which a man is afflicted do not nullify the sum
+total of human passion. To our shame be it spoken, a woman is never so
+much attached to us as when we are sick.
+
+With this thought, all the epigrams written against the little sex--for
+it is antiquated nowadays to say the fair sex--ought to be disarmed
+of their point and changed into madrigals of eulogy! All men ought to
+consider that the sole virtue of a woman is to love and that all women
+are prodigiously virtuous, and at that point to close the book and end
+their meditation.
+
+Ah! do you not remember that black and gloomy hour when lonely and
+suffering, making accusations against men and especially against your
+friends, weak, discouraged, and filled with thoughts of death, your head
+supported by a fevered pillow and stretched upon a sheet whose white
+trellis-work of linen was stamped upon your skin, you traced with your
+eyes the green paper which covered the walls of your silent chamber?
+Do you recollect, I say, seeing some one noiselessly open your door,
+exhibiting her fair young face, framed with rolls of gold, and a bonnet
+which you had never seen before? She seemed like a star in a stormy
+night, smiling and stealing towards you with an expression in which
+distress and happiness were blended, and flinging herself into your
+arms!
+
+"How did you manage it? What did you tell your husband?" you ask.
+
+"Your husband!"--Ah! this brings us back again into the depths of our
+subject.
+
+
+ XV.
+ Morally the man is more often and longer a man than the woman is a
+ women.
+
+
+On the other hand we ought to consider that among these two millions of
+celibates there are many unhappy men, in whom a profound sense of their
+misery and persistent toil have quenched the instinct of love;
+
+That they have not all passed through college, that there are many
+artisans among them, many footmen--the Duke of Gevres, an extremely
+plain and short man, as he walked through the park of Versailles saw
+several lackeys of fine appearance and said to his friends, "Look how
+these fellows are made by us, and how they imitate us"--that there are
+many contractors, many trades people who think of nothing but money;
+many drudges of the shop;
+
+That there are men more stupid and actually more ugly than God would
+have made them;
+
+That there are those whose character is like a chestnut without a
+kernel;
+
+That the clergy are generally chaste;
+
+That there are men so situated in life that they can never enter the
+brilliant sphere in which honest women move, whether for want of a coat,
+or from their bashfulness, or from the failure of a mahout to introduce
+them.
+
+But let us leave to each one the task of adding to the number of these
+exceptions in accordance with his personal experience--for the object
+of a book is above all things to make people think--and let us instantly
+suppress one-half of the sum total and admit only that there are one
+million of hearts worthy of paying homage to honest women. This number
+approximately includes those who are superior in all departments. Women
+love only the intellectual, but justice must be done to virtue.
+
+As for these amiable celibates, each of them relates a string of
+adventures, all of which seriously compromise honest women. It would be
+a very moderate and reserved computation to attribute no more than three
+adventures to each celibate; but if some of them count their adventures
+by the dozen, there are many more who confine themselves to two or three
+incidents of passion and some to a single one in their whole life,
+so that we have in accordance with the statistical method taken the
+average. Now if the number of celibates be multiplied by the number of
+their excesses in love the result will be three millions of adventures;
+to set against this we have only four hundred thousand honest women!
+
+If the God of goodness and indulgence who hovers over the worlds does
+not make a second washing of the human race, it is doubtless because so
+little success attended the first.
+
+Here then we have a people, a society which has been sifted, and you see
+the result!
+
+
+ XVI.
+ Manners are the hypocrisy of nations, and hypocrisy is more or less
+ perfect.
+
+
+ XVII.
+ Virtue, perhaps, is nothing more than politeness of soul.
+
+
+Physical love is a craving like hunger, excepting that man eats all the
+time, and in love his appetite is neither so persistent nor so regular
+as at the table.
+
+A piece of bread and a carafe of water will satisfy the hunger of
+any man; but our civilization has brought to light the science of
+gastronomy.
+
+Love has its piece of bread, but it has also its science of loving, that
+science which we call coquetry, a delightful word which the French alone
+possess, for that science originated in this country.
+
+Well, after all, isn't it enough to enrage all husbands when they think
+that man is so endowed with an innate desire to change from one food
+to another, that in some savage countries, where travelers have landed,
+they have found alcoholic drinks and ragouts?
+
+Hunger is not so violent as love; but the caprices of the soul are more
+numerous, more bewitching, more exquisite in their intensity than the
+caprices of gastronomy; but all that the poets and the experiences
+of our own life have revealed to us on the subject of love, arms us
+celibates with a terrible power: we are the lion of the Gospel seeking
+whom we may devour.
+
+Then, let every one question his conscience on this point, and search
+his memory if he has ever met a man who confined himself to the love of
+one woman only!
+
+How, alas! are we to explain, while respecting the honor of all the
+peoples, the problem which results from the fact that three millions
+of burning hearts can find no more than four hundred thousand women on
+which they can feed? Should we apportion four celibates for each woman
+and remember that the honest women would have already established,
+instinctively and unconsciously, a sort of understanding between
+themselves and the celibates, like that which the presidents of royal
+courts have initiated, in order to make their partisans in each chamber
+enter successively after a certain number of years?
+
+That would be a mournful way of solving the difficulty!
+
+Should we make the conjecture that certain honest women act in dividing
+up the celibates, as the lion in the fable did? What! Surely, in that
+case, half at least of our altars would become whited sepulchres!
+
+Ought one to suggest for the honor of French ladies that in the time of
+peace all other countries should import into France a certain number of
+their honest women, and that these countries should mainly consist of
+England, Germany and Russia? But the European nations would in that
+case attempt to balance matters by demanding that France should export a
+certain number of her pretty women.
+
+Morality and religion suffer so much from such calculations as this,
+that an honest man, in an attempt to prove the innocence of married
+women, finds some reason to believe that dowagers and young people are
+half of them involved in this general corruption, and are liars even
+more truly than are the celibates.
+
+But to what conclusion does our calculation lead us? Think of our
+husbands, who to the disgrace of morals behave almost all of them like
+celibates and glory _in petto_ over their secret adventures.
+
+Why, then we believe that every married man, who is at all attached
+to his wife from honorable motives, can, in the words of the elder
+Corneille, seek a rope and a nail; _foenum habet in cornu_.
+
+It is, however, in the bosom of these four hundred thousand honest women
+that we must, lantern in hand, seek for the number of the virtuous women
+in France! As a matter of fact, we have by our statistics of marriage so
+far only set down the number of those creatures with which society has
+really nothing to do. Is it not true that in France the honest people,
+the people _comme il faut_, form a total of scarcely three million
+individuals, namely, our one million of celibates, five hundred thousand
+honest women, five hundred thousand husbands, and a million of dowagers,
+of infants and of young girls?
+
+Are you then astonished at the famous verse of Boileau? This verse
+proves that the poet had cleverly fathomed the discovery mathematically
+propounded to you in these tiresome meditations and that his language is
+by no means hyperbolical.
+
+Nevertheless, virtuous women there certainly are:
+
+Yes, those who have never been tempted and those who die at their first
+child-birth, assuming that their husbands had married them virgins;
+
+Yes, those who are ugly as the Kaifakatadary of the Arabian Nights;
+
+Yes, those whom Mirabeau calls "fairy cucumbers" and who are composed
+of atoms exactly like those of strawberry and water-lily roots.
+Nevertheless, we need not believe that!
+
+Further, we acknowledge that, to the credit of our age, we meet, ever
+since the revival of morality and religion and during our own times,
+some women, here and there, so moral, so religious, so devoted to their
+duties, so upright, so precise, so stiff, so virtuous, so--that the
+devil himself dare not even look at them; they are guarded on all sides
+by rosaries, hours of prayer and directors. Pshaw!
+
+We will not attempt to enumerate the women who are virtuous from
+stupidity, for it is acknowledged that in love all women have intellect.
+
+In conclusion, we may remark that it is not impossible that there exist
+in some corner of the earth women, young, pretty and virtuous, whom the
+world does not suspect.
+
+But you must not give the name of virtuous woman to her who, in her
+struggle against an involuntary passion, has yielded nothing to her
+lover whom she idolizes. She does injury in the most cruel way in which
+it can possibly be done to a loving husband. For what remains to him of
+his wife? A thing without name, a living corpse. In the very midst of
+delight his wife remains like the guest who has been warned by Borgia
+that certain meats were poisoned; he felt no hunger, he ate sparingly or
+pretended to eat. He longed for the meat which he had abandoned for that
+provided by the terrible cardinal, and sighed for the moment when the
+feast was over and he could leave the table.
+
+What is the result which these reflections on the feminine virtue lead
+to? Here they are; but the last two maxims have been given us by an
+eclectic philosopher of the eighteenth century.
+
+
+ XVIII.
+ A virtuous woman has in her heart one fibre less or one fibre more
+ than other women; she is either stupid or sublime.
+
+
+ XIX.
+ The virtue of women is perhaps a question of temperament.
+
+
+ XX.
+The most virtuous women have in them something which is never chaste.
+
+
+ XXI.
+"That a man of intellect has doubts about his mistress is conceivable,
+ but about his wife!--that would be too stupid."
+
+
+ XXII.
+ "Men would be insufferably unhappy if in the presence of women they
+thought the least bit in the world of that which they know by heart."
+
+
+The number of those rare women who, like the Virgins of the Parable,
+have kept their lamps lighted, will always appear very small in the eyes
+of the defenders of virtue and fine feeling; but we must needs exclude
+it from the total sum of honest women, and this subtraction, consoling
+as it is, will increase the danger which threatens husbands, will
+intensify the scandal of their married life, and involve, more or less,
+the reputation of all other lawful spouses.
+
+What husband will be able to sleep peacefully beside his young and
+beautiful wife while he knows that three celibates, at least, are on
+the watch; that if they have not already encroached upon his little
+property, they regard the bride as their destined prey, for sooner or
+later she will fall into their hands, either by stratagem, compulsive
+conquest or free choice? And it is impossible that they should fail some
+day or other to obtain victory!
+
+What a startling conclusion!
+
+On this point the purist in morality, the _collets montes_ will
+accuse us perhaps of presenting here conclusions which are excessively
+despairing; they will be desirous of putting up a defence, either for
+the virtuous women or the celibates; but we have in reserve for them a
+final remark.
+
+Increase the number of honest women and diminish the number of
+celibates, as much as you choose, you will always find that the result
+will be a larger number of gallant adventurers than of honest women; you
+will always find a vast multitude driven through social custom to commit
+three sorts of crime.
+
+If they remain chaste, their health is injured, while they are the
+slaves of the most painful torture; they disappoint the sublime ends of
+nature, and finally die of consumption, drinking milk on the mountains
+of Switzerland!
+
+If they yield to legitimate temptations, they either compromise the
+honest women, and on this point we re-enter on the subject of this book,
+or else they debase themselves by a horrible intercourse with the five
+hundred thousand women of whom we spoke in the third category of the
+first Meditation, and in this case, have still considerable chance of
+visiting Switzerland, drinking milk and dying there!
+
+Have you never been struck, as we have been, by a certain error of
+organization in our social order, the evidence of which gives a moral
+certainty to our last calculations?
+
+The average age at which a man marries is thirty years; the average age
+at which his passions, his most violent desires for genesial delight
+are developed, is twenty years. Now during the ten fairest years of his
+life, during the green season in which his beauty, his youth and his wit
+make him more dangerous to husbands than at any other epoch of his life,
+his finds himself without any means of satisfying legitimately that
+irresistible craving for love which burns in his whole nature. During
+this time, representing the sixth part of human life, we are obliged to
+admit that the sixth part or less of our total male population and the
+sixth part which is the most vigorous is placed in a position which is
+perpetually exhausting for them, and dangerous for society.
+
+"Why don't they get married?" cries a religious woman.
+
+But what father of good sense would wish his son to be married at twenty
+years of age?
+
+Is not the danger of these precocious unions apparent at all? It would
+seem as if marriage was a state very much at variance with natural
+habitude, seeing that it requires a special ripeness of judgment in
+those who conform to it. All the world knows what Rousseau said: "There
+must always be a period of libertinage in life either in one state or
+another. It is an evil leaven which sooner or later ferments."
+
+Now what mother of a family is there who would expose her daughter to
+the risk of this fermentation when it has not yet taken place?
+
+On the other hand, what need is there to justify a fact under whose
+domination all societies exist? Are there not in every country, as
+we have demonstrated, a vast number of men who live as honestly as
+possible, without being either celibates or married men?
+
+Cannot these men, the religious women will always ask, abide in
+continence like the priests?
+
+Certainly, madame.
+
+Nevertheless, we venture to observe that the vow of chastity is the most
+startling exception to the natural condition of man which society makes
+necessary; but continence is the great point in the priest's profession;
+he must be chaste, as the doctor must be insensible to physical
+sufferings, as the notary and the advocate insensible to the misery
+whose wounds are laid bare to their eyes, as the soldier to the sight
+of death which he meets on the field of battle. From the fact that the
+requirements of civilization ossify certain fibres of the heart and
+render callous certain membranes, we must not necessarily conclude that
+all men are bound to undergo this partial and exceptional death of the
+soul. This would be to reduce the human race to a condition of atrocious
+moral suicide.
+
+But let it be granted that, in the atmosphere of a drawing-room the most
+Jansenistic in the world, appears a young man of twenty-eight who has
+scrupulously guarded his robe of innocence and is as truly virginal
+as the heath-cock which gourmands enjoy. Do you not see that the most
+austere of virtuous women would merely pay him a sarcastic compliment
+on his courage; the magistrate, the strictest that ever mounted a
+bench, would shake his head and smile, and all the ladies would hide
+themselves, so that he might not hear their laughter? When the heroic
+and exceptional young victim leaves the drawing-room, what a deluge of
+jokes bursts upon his innocent head? What a shower of insults! What is
+held to be more shameful in France than impotence, than coldness, than
+the absence of all passion, than simplicity?
+
+The only king of France who would not have laughed was perhaps Louis
+XIII; but as for his roue of a father, he would perhaps have banished
+the young man, either under the accusation that he was no Frenchman or
+from a conviction that he was setting a dangerous example.
+
+Strange contradiction! A young man is equally blamed if he passes life
+in Holy Land, to use an expression of bachelor life. Could it possibly
+be for the benefit of the honest women that the prefects of police, and
+mayors of all time have ordained that the passions of the public shall
+not manifest themselves until nightfall, and shall cease at eleven
+o'clock in the evening?
+
+Where do you wish that our mass of celibates should sow their wild oats?
+And who is deceived on this point? as Figaro asks. Is it the governments
+or the governed? The social order is like the small boys who stop their
+ears at the theatre, so as not to hear the report of the firearms. Is
+society afraid to probe its wound or has it recognized the fact that
+evil is irremediable and things must be allowed to run their course? But
+there crops up here a question of legislation, for it is impossible to
+escape the material and social dilemma created by this balance of public
+virtue in the matter of marriage. It is not our business to solve this
+difficulty; but suppose for a moment that society in order to save a
+multitude of families, women and honest girls, found itself compelled to
+grant to certain licensed hearts the right of satisfying the desire of
+the celibates; ought not our laws then to raise up a professional body
+consisting of female Decii who devote themselves for the republic,
+and make a rampart of their bodies round the honest families? The
+legislators have been very wrong hitherto in disdaining to regulate the
+lot of courtesans.
+
+
+ XXIII.
+ The courtesan is an institution if she is a necessity.
+
+
+This question bristles with so many ifs and buts that we will bequeath
+it for solution to our descendants; it is right that we shall leave them
+something to do. Moreover, its discussion is not germane to this work;
+for in this, more than in any other age, there is a great outburst of
+sensibility; at no other epoch have there been so many rules of conduct,
+because never before has it been so completely accepted that pleasure
+comes from the heart. Now, what man of sentiment is there, what celibate
+is there, who, in the presence of four hundred thousand young and pretty
+women arrayed in the splendors of fortune and the graces of wit, rich in
+treasures of coquetry, and lavish in the dispensing of happiness, would
+wish to go--? For shame!
+
+Let us put forth for the benefit of our future legislature in clear and
+brief axioms the result arrived at during the last few years.
+
+
+ XXIV.
+ In the social order, inevitable abuses are laws of nature, in
+ accordance with which mankind should frame their civil and political
+ institutes.
+
+
+ XXV.
+"Adultery is like a commercial failure, with this difference," says
+Chamfort, "that it is the innocent party who has been ruined and who
+bears the disgrace."
+
+
+In France the laws that relate to adultery and those that relate to
+bankruptcy require great modifications. Are they too indulgent? Do they
+sin on the score of bad principles? _Caveant consules_!
+
+Come now, courageous athlete, who have taken as your task that which is
+expressed in the little apostrophe which our first Meditation addresses
+to people who have the charge of a wife, what are you going to say about
+it? We hope that this rapid review of the question does not make you
+tremble, that you are not one of those men whose nervous fluid congeals
+at the sight of a precipice or a boa constrictor! Well! my friend, he
+who owns soil has war and toil. The men who want your gold are more
+numerous than those who want your wife.
+
+After all, husbands are free to take these trifles for arithmetical
+estimates, or arithmetical estimates for trifles. The illusions of life
+are the best things in life; that which is most respectable in life is
+our futile credulity. Do there not exist many people whose principles
+are merely prejudices, and who not having the force of character to form
+their own ideas of happiness and virtue accept what is ready made for
+them by the hand of legislators? Nor do we address those Manfreds who
+having taken off too many garments wish to raise all the curtains, that
+is, in moments when they are tortured by a sort of moral spleen. By
+them, however, the question is boldly stated and we know the extent of
+the evil.
+
+It remains that we should examine the chances and changes which each man
+is likely to meet in marriage, and which may weaken him in that struggle
+from which our champion should issue victorious.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION V. OF THE PREDESTINED.
+
+Predestined means destined in advance for happiness or unhappiness.
+Theology has seized upon this word and employs it in relation to the
+happy; we give to the term a meaning which is unfortunate to our elect
+of which one can say in opposition to the Gospel, "Many are called, many
+are chosen."
+
+Experience has demonstrated that there are certain classes of men more
+subject than others to certain infirmities; the Gascons are given to
+exaggeration and Parisians to vanity. As we see that apoplexy attacks
+people with short necks, or butchers are liable to carbuncle, as
+gout attacks the rich, health the poor, deafness kings, paralysis
+administrators, so it has been remarked that certain classes of husbands
+and their wives are more given to illegitimate passions. Thus they
+forestall the celibates, they form another sort of aristocracy. If any
+reader should be enrolled in one of these aristocratic classes he will,
+we hope, have sufficient presence of mind, he or at least his wife,
+instantly to call to mind the favorite axiom of Lhomond's Latin Grammar:
+"No rule without exception." A friend of the house may even recite the
+verse--
+
+ "Present company always excepted."
+
+And then every one will have the right to believe, _in petto_, that
+he forms the exception. But our duty, the interest which we take in
+husbands and the keen desire which we have to preserve young and pretty
+women from the caprices and catastrophes which a lover brings in
+his train, force us to give notice to husbands that they ought to be
+especially on their guard.
+
+In this recapitulation first are to be reckoned the husbands whom
+business, position or public office calls from their houses and detains
+for a definite time. It is these who are the standard-bearers of the
+brotherhood.
+
+Among them, we would reckon magistrates, holding office during pleasure
+or for life, and obliged to remain at the Palace for the greater portion
+of the day; other functionaries sometimes find means to leave their
+office at business hours; but a judge or a public prosecutor, seated on
+his cushion of lilies, is bound even to die during the progress of the
+hearing. There is his field of battle.
+
+It is the same with the deputies and peers who discuss the laws, of
+ministers who share the toils of the king, of secretaries who work with
+the ministers, of soldiers on campaign, and indeed with the corporal
+of the police patrol, as the letter of Lafleur, in the _Sentimental
+Journey_, plainly shows.
+
+Next to the men who are obliged to be absent from home at certain fixed
+hours, come the men whom vast and serious undertakings leave not
+one minute for love-making; their foreheads are always wrinkled with
+anxiety, their conversation is generally void of merriment.
+
+At the head of these unfortunates we must place the bankers, who toil
+in the acquisition of millions, whose heads are so full of calculations
+that the figures burst through their skulls and range themselves in
+columns of addition on their foreheads.
+
+These millionaires, forgetting most of the time the sacred laws of
+marriage and the attention due to the tender flower which they have
+undertaken to cultivate, never think of watering it or of defending
+it from the heat and cold. They scarcely recognize the fact that the
+happiness of their spouses is in their keeping; if they ever do remember
+this, it is at table, when they see seated before them a woman in rich
+array, or when a coquette, fearing their brutal repulse, comes, gracious
+as Venus, to ask them for cash--Oh! it is then, that they recall,
+sometimes very vividly, the rights specified in the two hundred and
+thirteenth article of the civil code, and their wives are grateful
+to them; but like the heavy tariff which the law lays upon foreign
+merchandise, their wives suffer and pay the tribute, in virtue of the
+axiom which says: "There is no pleasure without pain."
+
+The men of science who spend whole months in gnawing at the bone of an
+antediluvian monster, in calculating the laws of nature, when there is
+an opportunity to peer into her secrets, the Grecians and Latinists who
+dine on a thought of Tacitus, sup on a phrase of Thucydides, spend their
+life in brushing the dust from library shelves, in keeping guard over a
+commonplace book, or a papyrus, are all predestined. So great is their
+abstraction or their ecstasy, that nothing that goes on around them
+strikes their attention. Their unhappiness is consummated; in full light
+of noon they scarcely even perceive it. Oh happy men! a thousand times
+happy! Example: Beauzee, returning home after session at the Academy,
+surprises his wife with a German. "Did not I tell you, madame, that
+it was necessary that I shall go," cried the stranger. "My dear sir,"
+interrupted the academician, "you ought to say that I _should_ go!"
+
+Then there come, lyre in hand, certain poets whose whole animal strength
+has left the ground floor and mounted to the upper story. They know
+better how to mount Pegasus than the beast of old Peter, they rarely
+marry, although they are accustomed to lavish the fury of their passions
+on some wandering or imaginary Chloris.
+
+But the men whose noses are stained with snuff;
+
+But those who, to their misfortune, have a perpetual cold in their head;
+
+But the sailors who smoke or chew;
+
+But those men whose dry and bilious temperament makes them always look
+as if they had eaten a sour apple;
+
+But the men who in private life have certain cynical habits, ridiculous
+fads, and who always, in spite of everything, look unwashed;
+
+But the husbands who have obtained the degrading name of "hen-pecked";
+
+Finally the old men who marry young girls.
+
+All these people are _par excellence_ among the predestined.
+
+There is a final class of the predestined whose ill-fortune is almost
+certain, we mean restless and irritable men, who are inclined to meddle
+and tyrannize, who have a great idea of domestic domination, who openly
+express their low ideas of women and who know no more about life than
+herrings about natural history. When these men marry, their homes have
+the appearance of a wasp whose head a schoolboy has cut off, and who
+dances here and there on a window pane. For this sort of predestined
+the present work is a sealed book. We do not write any more for those
+imbeciles, walking effigies, who are like the statues of a cathedral,
+than for those old machines of Marly which are too weak to fling
+water over the hedges of Versailles without being in danger of sudden
+collapse.
+
+I rarely make my observations on the conjugal oddities with which the
+drawing-room is usually full, without recalling vividly a sight which I
+once enjoyed in early youth:
+
+In 1819 I was living in a thatched cottage situated in the bosom of the
+delightful valley l'Isle-Adam. My hermitage neighbored on the park of
+Cassan, the sweetest of retreats, the most fascinating in aspect, the
+most attractive as a place to ramble in, the most cool and refreshing
+in summer, of all places created by luxury and art. This verdant
+country-seat owes its origin to a farmer-general of the good old times,
+a certain Bergeret, celebrated for his originality; who among other
+fantastic dandyisms adopted the habit of going to the opera, with his
+hair powdered in gold; he used to light up his park for his own solitary
+delectation and on one occasion ordered a sumptuous entertainment there,
+in which he alone took part. This rustic Sardanapalus returned from
+Italy so passionately charmed with the scenery of that beautiful country
+that, by a sudden freak of enthusiasm, he spent four or five millions
+in order to represent in his park the scenes of which he had pictures in
+his portfolio. The most charming contrasts of foliage, the rarest trees,
+long valleys, and prospects the most picturesque that could be brought
+from abroad, Borromean islands floating on clear eddying streams like so
+many rays, which concentrate their various lustres on a single point, on
+an Isola Bella, from which the enchanted eye takes in each detail at
+its leisure, or on an island in the bosom of which is a little house
+concealed under the drooping foliage of a century-old ash, an island
+fringed with irises, rose-bushes, and flowers which appears like an
+emerald richly set. Ah! one might rove a thousand leagues for such a
+place! The most sickly, the most soured, the most disgusted of our men
+of genius in ill health would die of satiety at the end of fifteen days,
+overwhelmed with the luscious sweetness of fresh life in such a spot.
+
+The man who was quite regardless of the Eden which he thus possessed
+had neither wife nor children, but was attached to a large ape which
+he kept. A graceful turret of wood, supported by a sculptured column,
+served as a dwelling place for this vicious animal, who being kept
+chained and rarely petted by his eccentric master, oftener at Paris
+than in his country home, had gained a very bad reputation. I recollect
+seeing him once in the presence of certain ladies show almost as much
+insolence as if he had been a man. His master was obliged to kill him,
+so mischievous did he gradually become.
+
+One morning while I was sitting under a beautiful tulip tree in flower,
+occupied in doing nothing but inhaling the lovely perfumes which the
+tall poplars kept confined within the brilliant enclosure, enjoying
+the silence of the groves, listening to the murmuring waters and the
+rustling leaves, admiring the blue gaps outlined above my head by clouds
+of pearly sheen and gold, wandering fancy free in dreams of my future,
+I heard some lout or other, who had arrived the day before from Paris,
+playing on a violin with the violence of a man who has nothing else to
+do. I would not wish for my worst enemy to hear anything so utterly
+in discord with the sublime harmony of nature. If the distant notes of
+Roland's Horn had only filled the air with life, perhaps--but a noisy
+fiddler like this, who undertakes to bring to you the expression of
+human ideas and the phraseology of music! This Amphion, who was
+walking up and down the dining-room, finished by taking a seat on the
+window-sill, exactly in front of the monkey. Perhaps he was looking for
+an audience. Suddenly I saw the animal quietly descend from his little
+dungeon, stand upon his hind feet, bow his head forward like a swimmer
+and fold his arms over his bosom like Spartacus in chains, or Catiline
+listening to Cicero. The banker, summoned by a sweet voice whose silvery
+tone recalled a boudoir not unknown to me, laid his violin on the
+window-sill and made off like a swallow who rejoins his companion by a
+rapid level swoop. The great monkey, whose chain was sufficiently long,
+approached the window and gravely took in hand the violin. I don't know
+whether you have ever had as I have the pleasure of seeing a monkey try
+to learn music, but at the present moment, when I laugh much less than
+I did in those careless days, I never think of that monkey without a
+smile; the semi-man began by grasping the instrument with his fist and
+by sniffing at it as if he were tasting the flavor of an apple. The
+snort from his nostrils probably produced a dull harmonious sound in the
+sonorous wood and then the orang-outang shook his head, turned over the
+violin, turned it back again, raised it up in the air, lowered it, held
+it straight out, shook it, put it to his ear, set it down, and picked it
+up again with a rapidity of movement peculiar to these agile creatures.
+He seemed to question the dumb wood with faltering sagacity and in his
+gestures there was something marvelous as well as infantile. At last he
+undertook with grotesque gestures to place the violin under his chin,
+while in one hand he held the neck; but like a spoiled child he soon
+wearied of a study which required skill not to be obtained in a moment
+and he twitched the strings without being able to draw forth anything
+but discordant sounds. He seemed annoyed, laid the violin on the
+window-sill and snatching up the bow he began to push it to and fro
+with violence, like a mason sawing a block of stone. This effort only
+succeeded in wearying his fastidious ears, and he took the bow with
+both hands and snapped it in two on the innocent instrument, source of
+harmony and delight. It seemed as if I saw before me a schoolboy holding
+under him a companion lying face downwards, while he pommeled him with a
+shower of blows from his fist, as if to punish him for some delinquency.
+The violin being now tried and condemned, the monkey sat down upon the
+fragments of it and amused himself with stupid joy in mixing up the
+yellow strings of the broken bow.
+
+Never since that day have I been able to look upon the home of
+the predestined without comparing the majority of husbands to this
+orang-outang trying to play the violin.
+
+Love is the most melodious of all harmonies and the sentiment of love
+is innate. Woman is a delightful instrument of pleasure, but it is
+necessary to know its trembling strings, to study the position of them,
+the timid keyboard, the fingering so changeful and capricious which
+befits it. How many monkeys--men, I mean--marry without knowing what a
+woman is! How many of the predestined proceed with their wives as the
+ape of Cassan did with his violin! They have broken the heart which
+they did not understand, as they might dim and disdain the amulet whose
+secret was unknown to them. They are children their whole life through,
+who leave life with empty hands after having talked about love, about
+pleasure, about licentiousness and virtue as slaves talk about liberty.
+Almost all of them married with the most profound ignorance of women and
+of love. They commenced by breaking in the door of a strange house and
+expected to be welcomed in this drawing-room. But the rudest artist
+knows that between him and his instrument, of wood, or of ivory, there
+exists a mysterious sort of friendship. He knows by experience that it
+takes years to establish this understanding between an inert matter and
+himself. He did not discover, at the first touch, the resources, the
+caprices, the deficiencies, the excellencies of his instrument. It did
+not become a living soul for him, a source of incomparable melody until
+he had studied for a long time; man and instrument did not come to
+understand each other like two friends, until both of them had been
+skillfully questioned and tested by frequent intercourse.
+
+Can a man ever learn woman and know how to decipher this wondrous strain
+of music, by remaining through life like a seminarian in his cell? Is
+it possible that a man who makes it his business to think for others,
+to judge others, to rule others, to steal money from others, to feed, to
+heal, to wound others--that, in fact, any of our predestined, can spare
+time to study a woman? They sell their time for money, how can they give
+it away for happiness? Money is their god. No one can serve two masters
+at the same time. Is not the world, moreover, full of young women who
+drag along pale and weak, sickly and suffering? Some of them are the
+prey of feverish inflammations more or less serious, others lie under
+the cruel tyranny of nervous attacks more or less violent. All the
+husbands of these women belong to the class of the ignorant and the
+predestined. They have caused their own misfortune and expended as
+much pains in producing it as the husband artist would have bestowed in
+bringing to flower the late and delightful blooms of pleasure. The time
+which an ignorant man passes to consummate his own ruin is precisely
+that which a man of knowledge employs in the education of his happiness.
+
+
+ XXVI.
+ Do not begin marriage by a violation of law.
+
+
+In the preceding meditations we have indicated the extent of the evil
+with the reckless audacity of those surgeons, who boldly induce the
+formation of false tissues under which a shameful wound is concealed.
+Public virtue, transferred to the table of our amphitheatre, has lost
+even its carcass under the strokes of the scalpel. Lover or husband,
+have you smiled, or have you trembled at this evil? Well, it is with
+malicious delight that we lay this huge social burden on the conscience
+of the predestined. Harlequin, when he tried to find out whether his
+horse could be accustomed to go without food, was not more ridiculous
+than the men who wish to find happiness in their home and yet refuse to
+cultivate it with all the pains which it demands. The errors of women
+are so many indictments of egotism, neglect and worthlessness in
+husbands.
+
+Yet it is yours, reader, it pertains to you, who have often condemned
+in another the crime which you yourself commit, it is yours to hold the
+balance. One of the scales is quite loaded, take care what you are going
+to put in the other. Reckon up the number of predestined ones who may be
+found among the total number of married people, weigh them, and you will
+then know where the evil is seated.
+
+Let us try to penetrate more deeply into the causes of this conjugal
+sickliness.
+
+The word love, when applied to the reproduction of the species, is the
+most hateful blasphemy which modern manners have taught us to utter.
+Nature, in raising us above the beasts by the divine gift of thought,
+had rendered us very sensitive to bodily sensations, emotional
+sentiment, cravings of appetite and passions. This double nature of ours
+makes of man both an animal and a lover. This distinction gives the key
+to the social problem which we are considering.
+
+Marriage may be considered in three ways, politically, as well as from
+a civil and moral point of view: as a law, as a contract and as an
+institution. As a law, its object is a reproduction of the species; as a
+contract, it relates to the transmission of property; as an institution,
+it is a guarantee which all men give and by which all are bound:
+they have father and mother, and they will have children. Marriage,
+therefore, ought to be the object of universal respect. Society can
+only take into consideration those cardinal points, which, from a social
+point of view, dominate the conjugal question.
+
+Most men have no other views in marrying, than reproduction, property or
+children; but neither reproduction nor property nor children constitutes
+happiness. The command, "Increase and multiply," does not imply love. To
+ask of a young girl whom we have seen fourteen times in fifteen days, to
+give you love in the name of law, the king and justice, is an absurdity
+worthy of the majority of the predestined.
+
+Love is the union between natural craving and sentiment; happiness in
+marriage results in perfect union of soul between a married pair. Hence
+it follows that in order to be happy a man must feel himself bound by
+certain rules of honor and delicacy. After having enjoyed the benefit of
+the social law which consecrates the natural craving, he must obey also
+the secret laws of nature by which sentiments unfold themselves. If
+he stakes his happiness on being himself loved, he must himself love
+sincerely: nothing can resist a genuine passion.
+
+But to feel this passion is always to feel desire. Can a man always
+desire his wife?
+
+Yes.
+
+It is as absurd to deny that it is possible for a man always to love the
+same woman, as it would be to affirm that some famous musician needed
+several violins in order to execute a piece of music or compose a
+charming melody.
+
+Love is the poetry of the senses. It has the destiny of all that which
+is great in man and of all that which proceeds from his thought. Either
+it is sublime, or it is not. When once it exists, it exists forever and
+goes on always increasing. This is the love which the ancients made the
+child of heaven and earth.
+
+Literature revolves round seven situations; music expresses everything
+with seven notes; painting employs but seven colors; like these three
+arts, love perhaps founds itself on seven principles, but we leave this
+investigation for the next century to carry out.
+
+If poetry, music and painting have found infinite forms of expression,
+pleasure should be even more diversified. For in the three arts which
+aid us in seeking, often with little success, truth by means of analogy,
+the man stands alone with his imagination, while love is the union of
+two bodies and of two souls. If the three principal methods upon which
+we rely for the expression of thought require preliminary study in those
+whom nature has made poets, musicians or painters, is it not obvious
+that, in order, to be happy, it is necessary to be initiated into the
+secrets of pleasure? All men experience the craving for reproduction,
+as all feel hunger and thirst; but all are not called to be lovers
+and gastronomists. Our present civilization has proved that taste is a
+science, and it is only certain privileged beings who have learned how
+to eat and drink. Pleasure considered as an art is still waiting for its
+physiologists. As for ourselves, we are contented with pointing out that
+ignorance of the principles upon which happiness is founded, is the sole
+cause of that misfortune which is the lot of all the predestined.
+
+It is with the greatest timidity that we venture upon the publication
+of a few aphorisms which may give birth to this new art, as casts have
+created the science of geology; and we offer them for the meditation of
+philosophers, of young marrying people and of the predestined.
+
+
+ CATECHISM OF MARRIAGE.
+
+
+ XXVII.
+ Marriage is a science.
+
+
+ XXVIII.
+A man ought not to marry without having studied anatomy, and dissected
+ at least one woman.
+
+
+ XXIX.
+ The fate of the home depends on the first night.
+
+
+ XXX.
+A woman deprived of her free will can never have the credit of making
+a sacrifice.
+
+
+ XXXI.
+In love, putting aside all consideration of the soul, the heart of a
+woman is like a lyre which does not reveal its secret, excepting to him
+who is a skillful player.
+
+
+ XXXII.
+Independently of any gesture of repulsion, there exists in the soul of
+all women a sentiment which tends, sooner or later, to proscribe all
+pleasure devoid of passionate feeling.
+
+
+ XXXIII.
+The interest of a husband as much as his honor forbids him to indulge
+a pleasure which he has not had the skill to make his wife desire.
+
+
+ XXXIV.
+Pleasure being caused by the union of sensation and sentiment, we can
+say without fear of contradiction that pleasures are a sort of material
+ideas.
+
+
+ XXXV.
+As ideas are capable of infinite combination, it ought to be the same
+ with pleasures.
+
+
+ XXXVI.
+In the life of man there are no two moments of pleasure exactly alike,
+ any more than there are two leaves of identical shape upon the same
+ tree.
+
+
+ XXXVII.
+If there are differences between one moment of pleasure and another, a
+ man can always be happy with the same woman.
+
+
+ XXXVIII.
+To seize adroitly upon the varieties of pleasure, to develop them, to
+impart to them a new style, an original expression, constitutes the
+genius of a husband.
+
+
+ XXXIX.
+Between two beings who do not love each other this genius is
+licentiousness; but the caresses over which love presides are always
+pure.
+
+
+ XL.
+ The married woman who is the most chaste may be also the most
+ voluptuous.
+
+
+ XLI.
+ The most virtuous woman can be forward without knowing it.
+
+
+ XLII.
+When two human beings are united by pleasure, all social
+conventionalities are put aside. This situation conceals a reef on which
+many vessels are wrecked. A husband is lost, if he once forgets there is
+a modesty which is quite independent of coverings. Conjugal love
+ought never either to put on or to take away the bandage of its eyes,
+excepting at the due season.
+
+
+ XLIII.
+ Power does not consist in striking with force or with frequency, but
+ in striking true.
+
+
+ XLIV.
+To call a desire into being, to nourish it, to develop it, to bring
+it to full growth, to excite it, to satisfy it, is a complete poem of
+itself.
+
+
+ XLV.
+The progression of pleasures is from the distich to the quatrain, from
+the quatrain to the sonnet, from the sonnet to the ballad, from the
+ballad to the ode, from the ode to the cantata, from the cantata to the
+dithyramb. The husband who commences with dithyramb is a fool.
+
+
+ XLVI.
+ Each night ought to have its _menu_.
+
+
+ XLVII.
+ Marriage must incessantly contend with a monster which devours
+ everything, that is, familiarity.
+
+
+ XLVIII.
+ If a man cannot distinguish the difference between the pleasures of
+ two consecutive nights, he has married too early.
+
+
+ XLIX.
+ It is easier to be a lover than a husband, for the same reason that it
+is more difficult to be witty every day, than to say bright things from
+time to time.
+
+
+ L.
+ A husband ought never to be the first to go to sleep and the last to
+ awaken.
+
+
+ LI.
+ The man who enters his wife's dressing-room is either a philosopher or
+ an imbecile.
+
+
+ LII.
+ The husband who leaves nothing to desire is a lost man.
+
+
+ LIII.
+ The married woman is a slave whom one must know how to set upon a
+ throne.
+
+
+ LIV.
+ A man must not flatter himself that he knows his wife, and is making
+ her happy unless he sees her often at his knees.
+
+
+It is to the whole ignorant troop of our predestined, of our legions
+of snivelers, of smokers, of snuff-takers, of old and captious men that
+Sterne addressed, in _Tristram Shandy_, the letter written by Walter
+Shandy to his brother Toby, when this last proposed to marry the widow
+Wadman.
+
+These celebrated instructions which the most original of English writers
+has comprised in this letter, suffice with some few exceptions to
+complete our observations on the manner in which husbands should behave
+to their wives; and we offer it in its original form to the reflections
+of the predestined, begging that they will meditate upon it as one of
+the most solid masterpieces of human wit.
+
+
+ "MY DEAR BROTHER TOBY,
+
+ "What I am going to say to thee is upon the nature of women, and of
+ love-making to them; and perhaps it is as well for thee--tho' not
+ so well for me--that thou hast occasion for a letter of
+ instructions upon that head, and that I am able to write it to
+ thee.
+
+ "Had it been the good pleasure of Him who disposes of our lots, and
+ thou no sufferer by the knowledge, I had been well content that
+ thou should'st have dipped the pen this moment into the ink
+ instead of myself; but that not being the case--Mrs. Shandy being
+ now close beside me, preparing for bed--I have thrown together
+ without order, and just as they have come into my mind, such hints
+ and documents as I deem may be of use to thee; intending, in this,
+ to give thee a token of my love; not doubting, my dear Toby, of
+ the manner in which it will be accepted.
+
+ "In the first place, with regard to all which concerns religion in
+ the affair--though I perceive from a glow in my cheek, that I
+ blush as I begin to speak to thee upon the subject, as well
+ knowing, notwithstanding thy unaffected secrecy, how few of its
+ offices thou neglectest--yet I would remind thee of one (during
+ the continuance of thy courtship) in a particular manner, which I
+ would not have omitted; and that is, never to go forth upon the
+ enterprise, whether it be in the morning or in the afternoon,
+ without first recommending thyself to the protection of Almighty
+ God, that He may defend thee from the evil one.
+
+ "Shave the whole top of thy crown clean once at least every four or
+ five days, but oftener if convenient; lest in taking off thy wig
+ before her, thro' absence of mind, she should be able to discover
+ how much has been cut away by Time--how much by Trim.
+
+ "'Twere better to keep ideas of baldness out of her fancy.
+
+ "Always carry it in thy mind, and act upon it as a sure maxim,
+ Toby--
+
+ "_'That women are timid.'_ And 'tis well they are--else there would
+ be no dealing with them.
+
+ "Let not thy breeches be too tight, or hang too loose about thy
+ thighs, like the trunk-hose of our ancestors.
+
+ "A just medium prevents all conclusions.
+
+ "Whatever thou hast to say, be it more or less, forget not to utter
+ it in a low soft tone of voice. Silence, and whatever approaches
+ it, weaves dreams of midnight secrecy into the brain: For this
+ cause, if thou canst help it, never throw down the tongs and
+ poker.
+
+ "Avoid all kinds of pleasantry and facetiousness in thy discourse
+ with her, and do whatever lies in thy power at the same time, to
+ keep from her all books and writings which tend there to: there
+ are some devotional tracts, which if thou canst entice her to
+ read over, it will be well: but suffer her not to look into
+ _Rabelais_, or _Scarron_, or _Don Quixote_.
+
+ "They are all books which excite laughter; and thou knowest, dear
+ Toby, that there is no passion so serious as lust.
+
+ "Stick a pin in the bosom of thy shirt, before thou enterest her
+ parlor.
+
+ "And if thou art permitted to sit upon the same sofa with her, and
+ she gives thee occasion to lay thy hand upon hers--beware of
+ taking it--thou canst not lay thy hand upon hers, but she will
+ feel the temper of thine. Leave that and as many other things as
+ thou canst, quite undetermined; by so doing, thou wilt have her
+ curiosity on thy side; and if she is not conquered by that, and
+ thy Asse continues still kicking, which there is great reason to
+ suppose--thou must begin, with first losing a few ounces of blood
+ below the ears, according to the practice of the ancient
+ Scythians, who cured the most intemperate fits of the appetite by
+ that means.
+
+ "_Avicenna_, after this, is for having the part anointed with the
+ syrup of hellebore, using proper evacuations and purges--and I
+ believe rightly. But thou must eat little or no goat's flesh, nor
+ red deer--nor even foal's flesh by any means; and carefully
+ abstain--that is, as much as thou canst,--from peacocks, cranes,
+ coots, didappers and water-hens.
+
+ "As for thy drink--I need not tell thee, it must be the infusion of
+ Vervain and the herb Hanea, of which Aelian relates such effects;
+ but if thy stomach palls with it--discontinue it from time to
+ time, taking cucumbers, melons, purslane, water-lilies, woodbine,
+ and lettuce, in the stead of them.
+
+ "There is nothing further for thee, which occurs to me at present--
+
+ "Unless the breaking out of a fresh war.--So wishing everything,
+ dear Toby, for the best,
+
+ "I rest thy affectionate brother,
+
+ "WALTER SHANDY."
+
+
+Under the present circumstances Sterne himself would doubtless have
+omitted from his letter the passage about the ass; and, far from
+advising the predestined to be bled he would have changed the regimen of
+cucumbers and lettuces for one eminently substantial. He recommended the
+exercise of economy, in order to attain to the power of magic liberality
+in the moment of war, thus imitating the admirable example of the
+English government, which in time of peace has two hundred ships in
+commission, but whose shipwrights can, in time of need, furnish double
+that quantity when it is desirable to scour the sea and carry off a
+whole foreign navy.
+
+When a man belongs to the small class of those who by a liberal
+education have been made masters of the domain of thought, he ought
+always, before marrying, to examine his physical and moral resources. To
+contend advantageously with the tempest which so many attractions tend
+to raise in the heart of his wife, a husband ought to possess, besides
+the science of pleasure and a fortune which saves him from sinking
+into any class of the predestined, robust health, exquisite tact,
+considerable intellect, too much good sense to make his superiority
+felt, excepting on fit occasions, and finally great acuteness of hearing
+and sight.
+
+If he has a handsome face, a good figure, a manly air, and yet falls
+short of all these promises, he will sink into the class of the
+predestined. On the other hand, a husband who is plain in features
+but has a face full of expression, will find himself, if his wife once
+forgets his plainness, in a situation most favorable for his struggle
+against the genius of evil.
+
+He will study (and this is a detail omitted from the letter of Sterne)
+to give no occasion for his wife's disgust. Also, he will resort
+moderately to the use of perfumes, which, however, always expose beauty
+to injurious suspicions.
+
+He ought as carefully to study how to behave and how to pick out
+subjects of conversation, as if he were courting the most inconstant
+of women. It is for him that a philosopher has made the following
+reflection:
+
+"More than one woman has been rendered unhappy for the rest of her
+life, has been lost and dishonored by a man whom she has ceased to
+love, because he took off his coat awkwardly, trimmed one of his nails
+crookedly, put on a stocking wrong side out, and was clumsy with a
+button."
+
+One of the most important of his duties will be to conceal from his wife
+the real state of his fortune, so that he may satisfy her fancies and
+caprices as generous celibates are wont to do.
+
+Then the most difficult thing of all, a thing to accomplish which
+superhuman courage is required, is to exercise the most complete control
+over the ass of which Sterne speaks. This ass ought to be as submissive
+as a serf of the thirteenth century was to his lord; to obey and be
+silent, advance and stop, at the slightest word.
+
+Even when equipped with these advantages, a husband enters the lists
+with scarcely any hope of success. Like all the rest, he still runs the
+risk of becoming, for his wife, a sort of responsible editor.
+
+"And why!" will exclaim certain good but small-minded people, whose
+horizon is limited to the tip of their nose, "why is it necessary to
+take so much pains in order to love, and why is it necessary to go
+to school beforehand, in order to be happy in your own home? Does the
+government intend to institute a professional chair of love, just as it
+has instituted a chair of law?"
+
+This is our answer:
+
+These multiplied rules, so difficult to deduce, these minute
+observations, these ideas which vary so as to suit different
+temperaments, are innate, so to speak, in the heart of those who are
+born for love; just as his feeling of taste and his indescribable
+felicity in combining ideas are natural to the soul of the poet, the
+painter or the musician. The men who would experience any fatigue in
+putting into practice the instructions given in this Meditation are
+naturally predestined, just as he who cannot perceive the connection
+which exists between two different ideas is an imbecile. As a matter of
+fact, love has its great men although they be unrecognized, as war has
+its Napoleons, poetry its Andre Cheniers and philosophy its Descartes.
+
+This last observation contains the germ of a true answer to the question
+which men from time immemorial have been asking: Why are happy marriages
+so very rare?
+
+This phenomenon of the moral world is rarely met with for the reason
+that people of genius are rarely met with. A passion which lasts is a
+sublime drama acted by two performers of equal talent, a drama in which
+sentiments form the catastrophe, where desires are incidents and the
+lightest thought brings a change of scene. Now how is it possible, in
+this herd of bimana which we call a nation, to meet, on any but rare
+occasions, a man and a woman who possess in the same degree the genius
+of love, when men of talent are so thinly sown and so rare in all other
+sciences, in the pursuit of which the artist needs only to understand
+himself, in order to attain success?
+
+Up to the present moment, we have been confronted with making a forecast
+of the difficulties, to some degree physical, which two married people
+have to overcome, in order to be happy; but what a task would be ours
+if it were necessary to unfold the startling array of moral obligations
+which spring from their differences in character? Let us cry halt! The
+man who is skillful enough to guide the temperament will certainly show
+himself master of the soul of another.
+
+We will suppose that our model husband fulfills the primary conditions
+necessary, in order that he may dispute or maintain possession of his
+wife, in spite of all assailants. We will admit that he is not to be
+reckoned in any of the numerous classes of the predestined which we have
+passed in review. Let us admit that he has become imbued with the spirit
+of all our maxims; that he has mastered the admirable science, some of
+whose precepts we have made known; that he has married wisely, that
+he knows his wife, that he is loved by her; and let us continue the
+enumeration of all those general causes which might aggravate the
+critical situation which we shall represent him as occupying for the
+instruction of the human race.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION VI. OF BOARDING SCHOOLS.
+
+If you have married a young lady whose education has been carried on at
+a boarding school, there are thirty more obstacles to your happiness,
+added to all those which we have already enumerated, and you are exactly
+like a man who thrusts his hands into a wasp's nest.
+
+Immediately, therefore, after the nuptial blessing has been pronounced,
+without allowing yourself to be imposed upon by the innocent ignorance,
+the frank graces and the modest countenance of your wife, you ought to
+ponder well and faithfully follow out the axioms and precepts which we
+shall develop in the second part of this book. You should even put into
+practice the rigors prescribed in the third part, by maintaining an
+active surveillance, a paternal solicitude at all hours, for the very
+day after your marriage, perhaps on the evening of your wedding day,
+there is danger in the house.
+
+I mean to say that you should call to mind the secret and profound
+instruction which the pupils have acquired _de natura rerum_,--of the
+nature of things. Did Lapeyrouse, Cook or Captain Peary ever show so
+much ardor in navigating the ocean towards the Poles as the scholars of
+the Lycee do in approaching forbidden tracts in the ocean of pleasure?
+Since girls are more cunning, cleverer and more curious than boys, their
+secret meetings and their conversations, which all the art of their
+teachers cannot check, are necessarily presided over by a genius a
+thousand times more informal than that of college boys. What man has
+ever heard the moral reflections and the corrupting confidences of
+these young girls? They alone know the sports at which honor is lost in
+advance, those essays in pleasure, those promptings in voluptuousness,
+those imitations of bliss, which may be compared to the thefts made by
+greedy children from a dessert which is locked up. A girl may come
+forth from her boarding school a virgin, but never chaste. She will
+have discussed, time and time again at secret meetings, the important
+question of lovers, and corruption will necessarily have overcome her
+heart or her spirit.
+
+Nevertheless, we will admit that your wife has not participated in these
+virginal delights, in these premature deviltries. Is she any better
+because she has never had any voice in the secret councils of grown-up
+girls? No! She will, in any case, have contracted a friendship with
+other young ladies, and our computation will be modest, if we attribute
+to her no more than two or three intimate friends. Are you certain that
+after your wife has left boarding school, her young friends have not
+there been admitted to those confidences, in which an attempt is made to
+learn in advance, at least by analogy, the pastimes of doves? And then
+her friends will marry; you will have four women to watch instead of
+one, four characters to divine, and you will be at the mercy of four
+husbands and a dozen celibates, of whose life, principles and habits you
+are quite ignorant, at a time when our meditations have revealed to
+you certain coming of a day when you will have your hands full with the
+people whom you married with your wife. Satan alone could have thought
+of placing a girl's boarding school in the middle of a large town!
+Madame Campan had at least the wisdom to set up her famous institution
+at Ecouen. This sensible precaution proved that she was no ordinary
+woman. There, her young ladies did not gaze upon the picture gallery of
+the streets, the huge and grotesque figures and the obscene words drawn
+by some evil-spirited pencil. They had not perpetually before their eyes
+the spectacle of human infirmities exhibited at every barrier in France,
+and treacherous book-stalls did not vomit out upon them in secret the
+poison of books which taught evil and set passion on fire. This wise
+school-mistress, moreover, could only at Ecouen preserve a young lady
+for you spotless and pure, if, even there, that were possible. Perhaps
+you hope to find no difficulty in preventing your wife from seeing
+her school friends? What folly! She will meet them at the ball, at the
+theatre, out walking and in the world at large; and how many services
+two friends can render each other! But we will meditate upon this new
+subject of alarm in its proper place and order.
+
+Nor is this all; if your mother-in-law sent her daughter to a boarding
+school, do you believe that this was out of solicitude for her
+daughter? A girl of twelve or fifteen is a terrible Argus; and if your
+mother-in-law did not wish to have an Argus in her house I should be
+inclined to suspect that your mother-in-law belonged undoubtedly to the
+most shady section of our honest women. She will, therefore, prove for
+her daughter on every occasion either a deadly example or a dangerous
+adviser.
+
+Let us stop here!--The mother-in-law requires a whole Meditation for
+herself.
+
+So that, whichever way you turn, the bed of marriage, in this
+connection, is equally full of thorns.
+
+Before the Revolution, several aristocratic families used to send their
+daughters to the convent. This example was followed by a number of
+people who imagined that in sending their daughters to a school where
+the daughters of some great noblemen were sent, they would assume the
+tone and manners of aristocrats. This delusion of pride was, from
+the first, fatal to domestic happiness; for the convents had all the
+disadvantages of other boarding schools. The idleness that prevailed
+there was more terrible. The cloister bars inflame the imagination.
+Solitude is a condition very favorable to the devil; and one can
+scarcely imagine what ravages the most ordinary phenomena of life are
+able to leave in the soul of these young girls, dreamy, ignorant and
+unoccupied.
+
+Some of them, by reason of their having indulged idle fancies, are led
+into curious blunders. Others, having indulged in exaggerated ideas of
+married life, say to themselves, as soon as they have taken a husband,
+"What! Is this all?" In every way, the imperfect instruction, which is
+given to girls educated in common, has in it all the danger of ignorance
+and all the unhappiness of science.
+
+A young girl brought up at home by her mother or by her virtuous,
+bigoted, amiable or cross-grained old aunt; a young girl, whose steps
+have never crossed the home threshold without being surrounded by
+chaperons, whose laborious childhood has been wearied by tasks, albeit
+they were profitless, to whom in short everything is a mystery, even the
+Seraphin puppet show, is one of those treasures which are met with, here
+and there in the world, like woodland flowers surrounded by brambles so
+thick that mortal eye cannot discern them. The man who owns a flower
+so sweet and pure as this, and leaves it to be cultivated by others,
+deserves his unhappiness a thousand times over. He is either a monster
+or a fool.
+
+And if in the preceding Meditation we have succeeded in proving to
+you that by far the greater number of men live in the most absolute
+indifference to their personal honor, in the matter of marriage, is
+it reasonable to believe that any considerable number of them are
+sufficiently rich, sufficiently intellectual, sufficiently penetrating
+to waste, like Burchell in the _Vicar of Wakefield_, one or two years in
+studying and watching the girls whom they mean to make their wives, when
+they pay so little attention to them after conjugal possession during
+that period of time which the English call the honeymoon, and whose
+influence we shall shortly discuss?
+
+Since, however, we have spent some time in reflecting upon this
+important matter, we would observe that there are many methods of
+choosing more or less successfully, even though the choice be promptly
+made.
+
+It is, for example, beyond doubt that the probabilities will be in your
+favor:
+
+I. If you have chosen a young lady whose temperament resembles that of
+the women of Louisiana or the Carolinas.
+
+To obtain reliable information concerning the temperament of a young
+person, it is necessary to put into vigorous operation the system which
+Gil Blas prescribes, in dealing with chambermaids, a system employed by
+statesmen to discover conspiracies and to learn how the ministers have
+passed the night.
+
+II. If you choose a young lady who, without being plain, does not belong
+to the class of pretty women.
+
+We regard it as an infallible principle that great sweetness of
+disposition united in a woman with plainness that is not repulsive, form
+two indubitable elements of success in securing the greatest possible
+happiness to the home.
+
+But would you learn the truth? Open your Rousseau; for there is not a
+single question of public morals whose trend he has not pointed out in
+advance. Read:
+
+"Among people of fixed principles the girls are careless, the women
+severe; the contrary is the case among people of no principle."
+
+To admit the truth enshrined in this profound and truthful remark is
+to conclude, that there would be fewer unhappy marriages if men wedded
+their mistresses. The education of girls requires, therefore, important
+modifications in France. Up to this time French laws and French manners
+instituted to distinguish between a misdemeanor and a crime, have
+encouraged crime. In reality the fault committed by a young girl is
+scarcely ever a misdemeanor, if you compare it with that committed by
+the married woman. Is there any comparison between the danger of giving
+liberty to girls and that of allowing it to wives? The idea of taking a
+young girl on trial makes more serious men think than fools laugh. The
+manners of Germany, of Switzerland, of England and of the United States
+give to young ladies such rights as in France would be considered
+the subversion of all morality; and yet it is certain that in these
+countries there are fewer unhappy marriages than in France.
+
+
+ LV.
+ "Before a woman gives herself entirely up to her lover, she ought to
+consider well what his love has to offer her. The gift of her esteem and
+confidence should necessarily precede that of her heart."
+
+
+Sparkling with truth as they are, these lines probably filled with light
+the dungeon, in the depths of which Mirabeau wrote them; and the keen
+observation which they bear witness to, although prompted by the most
+stormy of his passions, has none the less influence even now in solving
+the social problem on which we are engaged. In fact, a marriage sealed
+under the auspices of the religious scrutiny which assumes the existence
+of love, and subjected to the atmosphere of that disenchantment which
+follows on possession, ought naturally to be the most firmly-welded of
+all human unions.
+
+A woman then ought never to reproach her husband for the legal right,
+in virtue of which she belongs to him. She ought not to find in this
+compulsory submission any excuse for yielding to a lover, because some
+time after her marriage she has discovered in her own heart a traitor
+whose sophisms seduce her by asking twenty times an hour, "Wherefore,
+since she has been given against her will to a man whom she does not
+love, should she not give herself, of her own free-will, to a man
+whom she does love." A woman is not to be tolerated in her complaints
+concerning faults inseparable from human nature. She has, in advance,
+made trial of the tyranny which they exercise, and taken sides with the
+caprices which they exhibit.
+
+A great many young girls are likely to be disappointed in their hopes of
+love!--But will it not be an immense advantage to them to have escaped
+being made the companions of men whom they would have had the right to
+despise?
+
+Certain alarmists will exclaim that such an alteration in our manners
+would bring about a public dissoluteness which would be frightful; that
+the laws, and the customs which prompt the laws, could not after all
+authorize scandal and immorality; and if certain unavoidable abuses do
+exist, at least society ought not to sanction them.
+
+It is easy to say, in reply, first of all, that the proposed system
+tends to prevent those abuses which have been hitherto regarded as
+incapable of prevention; but, the calculations of our statistics,
+inexact as they are, have invariably pointed out a widely prevailing
+social sore, and our moralists may, therefore, be accused of preferring
+the greater to the lesser evil, the violation of the principle on which
+society is constituted, to the granting of a certain liberty to girls;
+and dissoluteness in mothers of families, such as poisons the springs of
+public education and brings unhappiness upon at least four persons, to
+dissoluteness in a young girl, which only affects herself or at the
+most a child besides. Let the virtue of ten virgins be lost rather than
+forfeit this sanctity of morals, that crown of honor with which the
+mother of a family should be invested! In the picture presented by
+a young girl abandoned by her betrayer, there is something imposing,
+something indescribably sacred; here we see oaths violated, holy
+confidences betrayed, and on the ruins of a too facile virtue innocence
+sits in tears, doubting everything, because compelled to doubt the love
+of a father for his child. The unfortunate girl is still innocent; she
+may yet become a faithful wife, a tender mother, and, if the past is
+mantled in clouds, the future is blue as the clear sky. Shall we not
+find these tender tints in the gloomy pictures of loves which violate
+the marriage law? In the one, the woman is the victim, in the other,
+she is a criminal. What hope is there for the unfaithful wife? If God
+pardons the fault, the most exemplary life cannot efface, here below,
+its living consequences. If James I was the son of Rizzio, the crime of
+Mary lasted as long as did her mournful though royal house, and the fall
+of the Stuarts was the justice of God.
+
+But in good faith, would the emancipation of girls set free such a host
+of dangers?
+
+It is very easy to accuse a young person for suffering herself to be
+deceived, in the desire to escape, at any price, from the condition of
+girlhood; but such an accusation is only just in the present condition
+of our manners. At the present day, a young person knows nothing about
+seduction and its snares, she relies altogether upon her weakness, and
+mingling with this reliance the convenient maxims of the fashionable
+world, she takes as her guide while under the control of those desires
+which everything conspires to excite, her own deluding fancies, which
+prove a guide all the more treacherous, because a young girl rarely ever
+confides to another the secret thoughts of her first love.
+
+If she were free, an education free from prejudices would arm her
+against the love of the first comer. She would, like any one else, be
+very much better able to meet dangers of which she knew, than perils
+whose extent had been concealed from her. And, moreover, is it necessary
+for a girl to be any the less under the watchful eye of her mother,
+because she is mistress of her own actions? Are we to count as nothing
+the modesty and the fears which nature has made so powerful in the
+soul of a young girl, for the very purpose of preserving her from the
+misfortune of submitting to a man who does not love her? Again, what
+girl is there so thoughtless as not to discern, that the most immoral
+man wishes his wife to be a woman of principle, as masters desire their
+servants to be perfect; and that, therefore, her virtue is the richest
+and the most advantageous of all possessions?
+
+After all, what is the question before us? For what do you think we
+are stipulating? We are making a claim for five or six hundred thousand
+maidens, protected by their instinctive timidity, and by the high price
+at which they rate themselves; they understand how to defend themselves,
+just as well as they know how to sell themselves. The eighteen millions
+of human beings, whom we have excepted from this consideration, almost
+invariably contract marriages in accordance with the system which we
+are trying to make paramount in our system of manners; and as to the
+intermediary classes by which we poor bimana are separated from the men
+of privilege who march at the head of a nation, the number of castaway
+children which these classes, although in tolerably easy circumstances,
+consign to misery, goes on increasing since the peace, if we may believe
+M. Benoiston de Chateauneuf, one of the most courageous of those savants
+who have devoted themselves to the arid yet useful study of statistics.
+We may guess how deep-seated is the social hurt, for which we propound
+a remedy, if we reckon the number of natural children which statistics
+reveal, and the number of illicit adventures whose evidence in high
+society we are forced to suspect. But it is difficult here to make quite
+plain all the advantages which would result from the emancipation of
+young girls. When we come to observe the circumstances which attend a
+marriage, such as our present manners approve of, judicious minds must
+appreciate the value of that system of education and liberty, which we
+demand for young girls, in the name of reason and nature. The prejudice
+which we in France entertain in favor of the virginity of brides is the
+most silly of all those which still survive among us. The Orientals take
+their brides without distressing themselves about the past and lock them
+up in order to be more certain about the future; the French put
+their daughters into a sort of seraglio defended by their mothers, by
+prejudice, and by religious ideas, and give the most complete liberty
+to their wives, thus showing themselves much more solicitous about a
+woman's past than about her future. The point we are aiming at is to
+bring about a reversal of our system of manners. If we did so we should
+end, perhaps, by giving to faithful married life all the flavor and the
+piquancy which women of to-day find in acts of infidelity.
+
+But this discussion would take us far from our subject, if it led us
+to examine, in all its details, the vast improvement in morals which
+doubtless will distinguish twentieth century France; for morals are
+reformed only very gradually! Is it not necessary, in order to produce
+the slightest change, that the most daring dreams of the past century
+become the most trite ideas of the present one? We have touched upon
+this question merely in a trifling mood, for the purposes of showing
+that we are not blind to its importance, and of bequeathing also to
+posterity the outline of a work, which they may complete. To speak more
+accurately there is a third work to be composed; the first concerns
+courtesans, while the second is the physiology of pleasure!
+
+"When there are ten of us, we cross ourselves."
+
+In the present state of our morals and of our imperfect civilization,
+a problem crops up which for the moment is insoluble, and which renders
+superfluous all discussion on the art of choosing a wife; we commend it,
+as we have done all the others, to the meditation of philosophers.
+
+
+
+ PROBLEM.
+
+It has not yet been decided whether a wife is forced into infidelity by
+the impossibility of obtaining any change, or by the liberty which is
+allowed her in this connection.
+
+Moreover, as in this work we pitch upon a man at the moment that he
+is newly married, we declare that if he has found a wife of sanguine
+temperament, of vivid imagination, of a nervous constitution or of an
+indolent character, his situation cannot fail to be extremely serious.
+
+A man would find himself in a position of danger even more critical if
+his wife drank nothing but water [see the Meditation entitled _Conjugal
+Hygiene_]; but if she had some talent for singing, or if she were
+disposed to take cold easily, he should tremble all the time; for it
+must be remembered that women who sing are at least as passionate as
+women whose mucous membrane shows extreme delicacy.
+
+Again, this danger would be aggravated still more if your wife were less
+than seventeen; or if, on the other hand, her general complexion were
+pale and dull, for this sort of woman is almost always artificial.
+
+But we do not wish to anticipate here any description of the terrors
+which threaten husbands from the symptoms of unhappiness which they read
+in the character of their wives. This digression has already taken
+us too far from the subject of boarding schools, in which so many
+catastrophes are hatched, and from which issue so many young girls
+incapable of appreciating the painful sacrifices by which the honest man
+who does them the honor of marrying them, has obtained opulence; young
+girls eager for the enjoyments of luxury, ignorant of our laws, ignorant
+of our manners, claim with avidity the empire which their beauty yields
+them, and show themselves quite ready to turn away from the genuine
+utterances of the heart, while they readily listen to the buzzing of
+flattery.
+
+This Meditation should plant in the memory of all who read it, even
+those who merely open the book for the sake of glancing at it or
+distracting their mind, an intense repugnance for young women educated
+in a boarding school, and if it succeeds in doing so, its services to
+the public will have already proved considerable.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION VII. OF THE HONEYMOON.
+
+If our meditations prove that it is almost impossible for a married
+woman to remain virtuous in France, our enumeration of the celibates and
+the predestined, our remarks upon the education of girls, and our
+rapid survey of the difficulties which attend the choice of a wife
+will explain up to a certain point this national frailty. Thus, after
+indicating frankly the aching malady under which the social slate is
+laboring, we have sought for the causes in the imperfection of the laws,
+in the irrational condition of our manners, in the incapacity of our
+minds, and in the contradictions which characterize our habits. A single
+point still claims our observation, and that is the first onslaught of
+the evil we are confronting.
+
+We reach this first question on approaching the high problems suggested
+by the honeymoon; and although we find here the starting point of all
+the phenomena of married life, it appears to us to be the brilliant
+link round which are clustered all our observations, our axioms, our
+problems, which have been scattered deliberately among the wise quips
+which our loquacious meditations retail. The honeymoon would seem to be,
+if we may use the expression, the apogee of that analysis to which
+we must apply ourselves, before engaging in battle our two imaginary
+champions.
+
+The expression _honeymoon_ is an Anglicism, which has become an idiom in
+all languages, so gracefully does it depict the nuptial season which is
+so fugitive, and during which life is nothing but sweetness and rapture;
+the expression survives as illusions and errors survive, for it contains
+the most odious of falsehoods. If this season is presented to us as a
+nymph crowned with fresh flowers, caressing as a siren, it is because in
+it is unhappiness personified and unhappiness generally comes during the
+indulgence of folly.
+
+The married couple who intend to love each other during their whole life
+have no notion of a honeymoon; for them it has no existence, or rather
+its existence is perennial; they are like the immortals who do not
+understand death. But the consideration of this happiness is not germane
+to our book; and for our readers marriage is under the influence of two
+moons, the honeymoon and the Red-moon. This last terminates its course
+by a revolution, which changes it to a crescent; and when once it rises
+upon a home its light there is eternal.
+
+How can the honeymoon rise upon two beings who cannot possibly love each
+other?
+
+How can it set, when once it has risen?
+
+Have all marriages their honeymoon?
+
+Let us proceed to answer these questions in order.
+
+It is in this connection that the admirable education which we give to
+girls, and the wise provisions made by the law under which men marry,
+bear all their fruit. Let us examine the circumstances which precede and
+attend those marriages which are least disastrous.
+
+The tone of our morals develops in the young girl whom you make your
+wife a curiosity which is naturally excessive; but as mothers in France
+pique themselves on exposing their girls every day to the fire which
+they do not allow to scorch them, this curiosity has no limit.
+
+Her profound ignorance of the mysteries of marriage conceals from this
+creature, who is as innocent as she is crafty, a clear view of the
+dangers by which marriage is followed; and as marriage is incessantly
+described to her as an epoch in which tyranny and liberty equally
+prevail, and in which enjoyment and supremacy are to be indulged in,
+her desires are intensified by all her interest in an existence as yet
+unfulfilled; for her to marry is to be called up from nothingness into
+life!
+
+If she has a disposition for happiness, for religion, for morality,
+the voices of the law and of her mother have repeated to her that this
+happiness can only come to her from you.
+
+Obedience if it is not virtue, is at least a necessary thing with
+her; for she expects everything from you. In the first place, society
+sanctions the slavery of a wife, but she does not conceive even the wish
+to be free, for she feels herself weak, timid and ignorant.
+
+Of course she tries to please you, unless a chance error is committed,
+or she is seized by a repugnance which it would be unpardonable in you
+not to divine. She tries to please because she does not know you.
+
+In a word, in order to complete your triumph, you take her at a moment
+when nature demands, often with some violence, the pleasure of which you
+are the dispenser. Like St. Peter you hold the keys of Paradise.
+
+I would ask of any reasonable creature, would a demon marshal round the
+angel whose ruin he had vowed all the elements of disaster with more
+solicitude than that with which good morals conspire against the
+happiness of a husband? Are you not a king surrounded by flatterers?
+
+This young girl, with all her ignorance and all her desires, committed
+to the mercy of a man who, even though he be in love, cannot know her
+shrinking and secret emotions, will submit to him with a certain sense
+of shame, and will be obedient and complaisant so long as her young
+imagination persuades her to expect the pleasure or the happiness of
+that morrow which never dawns.
+
+In this unnatural situation social laws and the laws of nature are in
+conflict, but the young girl obediently abandons herself to it, and,
+from motives of self-interest, suffers in silence. Her obedience is a
+speculation; her complaisance is a hope; her devotion to you is a
+sort of vocation, of which you reap the advantage; and her silence is
+generosity. She will remain the victim of your caprices so long as she
+does not understand them; she will suffer from the limitations of your
+character until she has studied it; she will sacrifice herself without
+love, because she believed in the show of passion you made at the first
+moment of possession; she will no longer be silent when once she has
+learned the uselessness of her sacrifices.
+
+And then the morning arrives when the inconsistencies which have
+prevailed in this union rise up like branches of a tree bent down for
+a moment under a weight which has been gradually lightened. You have
+mistaken for love the negative attitude of a young girl who was waiting
+for happiness, who flew in advance of your desires, in the hope that
+you would go forward in anticipation of hers, and who did not dare
+to complain of the secret unhappiness, for which she at first accused
+herself. What man could fail to be the dupe of a delusion prepared at
+such long range, and in which a young innocent woman is at once the
+accomplice and the victim? Unless you were a divine being it would
+be impossible for you to escape the fascination with which nature and
+society have surrounded you. Is not a snare set in everything which
+surrounds you on the outside and influences you within? For in order to
+be happy, is it not necessary to control the impetuous desires of your
+senses? Where is the powerful barrier to restrain her, raised by the
+light hand of a woman whom you wish to please, because you do not
+possess? Moreover, you have caused your troops to parade and march by,
+when there was no one at the window; you have discharged your fireworks
+whose framework alone was left, when your guest arrived to see them.
+Your wife, before the pledges of marriage, was like a Mohican at
+the Opera: the teacher becomes listless, when the savage begins to
+understand.
+
+
+ LVI.
+ In married life, the moment when two hearts come to understand each
+other is sudden as a flash of lightning, and never returns, when once it
+is passed.
+
+
+This first entrance into life of two persons, during which a woman is
+encouraged by the hope of happiness, by the still fresh sentiment of her
+married duty, by the wish to please, by the sense of virtue which begins
+to be so attractive as soon as it shows love to be in harmony with duty,
+is called the honeymoon. How can it last long between two beings who are
+united for their whole life, unless they know each other perfectly? If
+there is one thing which ought to cause astonishment it is this, that
+the deplorable absurdities which our manners heap up around the nuptial
+couch give birth to so few hatreds! But that the life of the wise man
+is a calm current, and that of the prodigal a cataract; that the child,
+whose thoughtless hands have stripped the leaves from every rose upon
+his pathway, finds nothing but thorns on his return, that the man who
+in his wild youth has squandered a million, will never enjoy, during his
+life, the income of forty thousand francs, which this million would have
+provided--are trite commonplaces, if one thinks of the moral theory of
+life; but new discoveries, if we consider the conduct of most men. You
+may see here a true image of all honeymoons; this is their history, this
+is the plain fact and not the cause that underlies it.
+
+But that men endowed with a certain power of thought by a privileged
+education, and accustomed to think deliberately, in order to shine in
+politics, literature, art, commerce or private life--that these men
+should all marry with the intention of being happy, of governing a wife,
+either by love or by force, and should all tumble into the same pitfall
+and should become foolish, after having enjoyed a certain happiness for
+a certain time,--this is certainly a problem whose solution is to be
+found rather in the unknown depths of the human soul, than in the quasi
+physical truths, on the basis of which we have hitherto attempted to
+explain some of these phenomena. The risky search for the secret laws,
+which almost all men are bound to violate without knowing it, under
+these circumstances, promises abundant glory for any one even though he
+make shipwreck in the enterprise upon which we now venture to set forth.
+Let us then make the attempt.
+
+In spite of all that fools have to say about the difficulty they have
+had in explaining love, there are certain principles relating to it
+as infallible as those of geometry; but in each character these are
+modified according to its tendency; hence the caprices of love, which
+are due to the infinite number of varying temperaments. If we were
+permitted never to see the various effects of light without also
+perceiving on what they were based, many minds would refuse to believe
+in the movement of the sun and in its oneness. Let the blind men cry
+out as they like; I boast with Socrates, although I am not as wise as
+he was, that I know of naught save love; and I intend to attempt the
+formulation of some of its precepts, in order to spare married people
+the trouble of cudgeling their brains; they would soon reach the limit
+of their wit.
+
+Now all the preceding observations may be resolved into a single
+proposition, which may be considered either the first or last term in
+this secret theory of love, whose statement would end by wearying us, if
+we did not bring it to a prompt conclusion. This principle is contained
+in the following formula:
+
+
+ LVII.
+ Between two beings susceptible of love, the duration of passion is in
+proportion to the original resistance of the woman, or to the obstacles
+which the accidents of social life put in the way of your happiness.
+
+
+If you have desired your object only for one day, your love perhaps will
+not last more than three nights. Where must we seek for the causes of
+this law? I do not know. If you cast your eyes around you, you will find
+abundant proof of this rule; in the vegetable world the plants which
+take the longest time to grow are those which promise to have the
+longest life; in the moral order of things the works produced yesterday
+die to-morrow; in the physical world the womb which infringes the laws
+of gestation bears dead fruit. In everything, a work which is permanent
+has been brooded over by time for a long period. A long future requires
+a long past. If love is a child, passion is a man. This general law,
+which all men obey, to which all beings and all sentiments must submit,
+is precisely that which every marriage infringes, as we have plainly
+shown. This principle has given rise to the love tales of the Middle
+Ages; the Amadises, the Lancelots, the Tristans of ballad literature,
+whose constancy may justly be called fabulous, are allegories of the
+national mythology which our imitation of Greek literature nipped in the
+bud. These fascinating characters, outlined by the imagination of the
+troubadours, set their seal and sanction upon this truth.
+
+
+ LVIII.
+ We do not attach ourselves permanently to any possessions, excepting
+in proportion to the trouble, toil and longing which they have cost us.
+
+
+ All our meditations have revealed to us about the basis of the
+primordial law of love is comprised in the following axiom, which is at
+the same time the principle and the result of the law.
+
+
+ LIX.
+ In every case we receive only in proportion to what we give.
+
+
+This last principle is so self-evident that we will not attempt to
+demonstrate it. We merely add a single observation which appears to
+us of some importance. The writer who said: "Everything is true, and
+everything is false," announced a fact which the human intellect,
+naturally prone to sophism, interprets as it chooses, but it really
+seems as though human affairs have as many facets as there are minds
+that contemplate them. This fact may be detailed as follows:
+
+There cannot be found, in all creation, a single law which is not
+counterbalanced by a law exactly contrary to it; life in everything is
+maintained by the equilibrium of two opposing forces. So in the present
+subject, as regards love, if you give too much, you will not receive
+enough. The mother who shows her children her whole tenderness calls
+forth their ingratitude, and ingratitude is occasioned, perhaps, by
+the impossibility of reciprocation. The wife who loves more than she is
+loved must necessarily be the object of tyranny. Durable love is that
+which always keeps the forces of two human beings in equilibrium. Now
+this equilibrium may be maintained permanently; the one who loves the
+more ought to stop at the point of the one who loves the less. And is it
+not, after all the sweetest sacrifice that a loving heart can make, that
+love should so accommodate itself as to adjust the inequality?
+
+What sentiment of admiration must rise in the soul of a philosopher
+on discovering that there is, perhaps, but one single principle in the
+world, as there is but one God; and that our ideas and our affections
+are subject to the same laws which cause the sun to rise, the flowers to
+bloom, the universe to teem with life!
+
+Perhaps, we ought to seek in the metaphysics of love the reasons for the
+following proposition, which throws the most vivid light on the question
+of honeymoons and of Red-moons:
+
+
+ THEOREM.
+
+ Man goes from aversion to love; but if he has begun by loving, and
+ afterwards comes to feel aversion, he never returns to love.
+
+
+In certain human organisms the feelings are dwarfed, as the thought may
+be in certain sterile imaginations. Thus, just as some minds have the
+faculty of comprehending the connections existing between different
+things without formal deduction; and as they have the faculty of seizing
+upon each formula separately, without combining them, or without
+the power of insight, comparison and expression; so in the same way,
+different souls may have more or less imperfect ideas of the various
+sentiments. Talent in love, as in every other art, consists in the power
+of forming a conception combined with the power of carrying it out. The
+world is full of people who sing airs, but who omit the _ritornello_,
+who have quarters of an idea, as they have quarters of sentiment, but
+who can no more co-ordinate the movements of their affections than
+of their thoughts. In a word, they are incomplete. Unite a fine
+intelligence with a dwarfed intelligence and you precipitate a disaster;
+for it is necessary that equilibrium be preserved in everything.
+
+We leave to the philosophers of the boudoir or to the sages of the
+back parlor to investigate the thousand ways in which men of different
+temperaments, intellects, social positions and fortunes disturb this
+equilibrium. Meanwhile we will proceed to examine the last cause for the
+setting of the honeymoon and the rising of the Red-moon.
+
+There is in life one principle more potent than life itself. It is a
+movement whose celerity springs from an unknown motive power. Man is
+no more acquainted with the secret of this revolution than the earth is
+aware of that which causes her rotation. A certain something, which
+I gladly call the current of life, bears along our choicest thoughts,
+makes use of most people's will and carries us on in spite of ourselves.
+Thus, a man of common-sense, who never fails to pay his bills, if he is
+a merchant, a man who has been able to escape death, or what perhaps is
+more trying, sickness, by the observation of a certain easy but daily
+regimen, is completely and duly nailed up between the four planks of his
+coffin, after having said every evening: "Dear me! to-morrow I will not
+forget my pills!" How are we to explain this magic spell which rules all
+the affairs of life? Do men submit to it from a want of energy? Men who
+have the strongest wills are subject to it. Is it default of memory?
+People who possess this faculty in the highest degree yield to its
+fascination.
+
+Every one can recognize the operation of this influence in the case of
+his neighbor, and it is one of the things which exclude the majority of
+husbands from the honeymoon. It is thus that the wise man, survivor of
+all reefs and shoals, such as we have pointed out, sometimes falls into
+the snares which he himself has set.
+
+I have myself noticed that man deals with marriage and its dangers
+in very much the same way that he deals with wigs; and perhaps the
+following phases of thought concerning wigs may furnish a formula for
+human life in general.
+
+FIRST EPOCH.--Is it possible that I shall ever have white hair?
+
+SECOND EPOCH.--In any case, if I have white hair, I shall never wear a
+wig. Good Lord! what is more ugly than a wig?
+
+One morning you hear a young voice, which love much oftener makes to
+vibrate than lulls to silence, exclaiming:
+
+"Well, I declare! You have a white hair!"
+
+THIRD EPOCH.--Why not wear a well-made wig which people would not
+notice? There is a certain merit in deceiving everybody; besides, a wig
+keeps you warm, prevents taking cold, etc.
+
+FOURTH EPOCH.--The wig is so skillfully put on that you deceive every
+one who does not know you.
+
+The wig takes up all your attention, and _amour-propre_ makes you every
+morning as busy as the most skillful hairdresser.
+
+FIFTH EPOCH.--The neglected wig. "Good heavens! How tedious it is, to
+have to go with bare head every evening, and to curl one's wig every
+morning!"
+
+SIXTH EPOCH.--The wig allows certain white hairs to escape; it is put on
+awry and the observer perceives on the back of your neck a white line,
+which contrasts with the deep tints pushed back by the collar of your
+coat.
+
+SEVENTH EPOCH.--Your wig is as scraggy as dog's tooth grass; and--excuse
+the expression--you are making fun of your wig.
+
+"Sir," said one of the most powerful feminine intelligences which have
+condescended to enlighten me on some of the most obscure passages in my
+book, "what do you mean by this wig?"
+
+"Madame," I answered, "when a man falls into a mood of indifference with
+regard to his wig, he is,--he is--what your husband probably is not."
+
+"But my husband is not--" (she paused and thought for a moment). "He is
+not amiable; he is not--well, he is not--of an even temper; he is not--"
+
+"Then, madame, he would doubtless be indifferent to his wig!"
+
+We looked at each other, she with a well-assumed air of dignity, I with
+a suppressed smile.
+
+"I see," said I, "that we must pay special respect to the ears of the
+little sex, for they are the only chaste things about them."
+
+I assumed the attitude of a man who has something of importance to
+disclose, and the fair dame lowered her eyes, as if she had some reason
+to blush.
+
+"Madame, in these days a minister is not hanged, as once upon a time,
+for saying yes or no; a Chateaubriand would scarcely torture Francoise
+de Foix, and we wear no longer at our side a long sword ready to avenge
+an insult. Now in a century when civilization has made such rapid
+progress, when we can learn a science in twenty-four lessons, everything
+must follow this race after perfection. We can no longer speak the
+manly, rude, coarse language of our ancestors. The age in which are
+fabricated such fine, such brilliant stuffs, such elegant furniture, and
+when are made such rich porcelains, must needs be the age of periphrase
+and circumlocution. We must try, therefore, to coin a new word in place
+of the comic expression which Moliere used; since the language of this
+great man, as a contemporary author has said, is too free for ladies who
+find gauze too thick for their garments. But people of the world
+know, as well as the learned, how the Greeks had an innate taste for
+mysteries. That poetic nation knew well how to invest with the tints
+of fable the antique traditions of their history. At the voice of their
+rhapsodists together with their poets and romancers, kings became
+gods and their adventures of gallantry were transformed into immortal
+allegories. According to M. Chompre, licentiate in law, the classic
+author of the _Dictionary of Mythology_, the labyrinth was 'an enclosure
+planted with trees and adorned with buildings arranged in such a way
+that when a young man once entered, he could no more find his way out.'
+Here and there flowery thickets were presented to his view, but in the
+midst of a multitude of alleys, which crossed and recrossed his path and
+bore the appearance of a uniform passage, among the briars, rocks and
+thorns, the patient found himself in combat with an animal called the
+Minotaur.
+
+"Now, madame, if you will allow me the honor of calling to your mind
+the fact that the Minotaur was of all known beasts that which Mythology
+distinguishes as the most dangerous; that in order to save themselves
+from his ravages, the Athenians were bound to deliver to him, every
+single year, fifty virgins; you will perhaps escape the error of good M.
+Chompre, who saw in the labyrinth nothing but an English garden; and
+you will recognize in this ingenious fable a refined allegory, or we may
+better say a faithful and fearful image of the dangers of marriage. The
+paintings recently discovered at Herculaneum have served to confirm
+this opinion. And, as a matter of fact, learned men have for a long time
+believed, in accordance with the writings of certain authors, that
+the Minotaur was an animal half-man, half-bull; but the fifth panel
+of ancient paintings at Herculaneum represents to us this allegorical
+monster with a body entirely human; and, to take away all vestige of
+doubt, he lies crushed at the feet of Theseus. Now, my dear madame, why
+should we not ask Mythology to come and rescue us from that hypocrisy
+which is gaining ground with us and hinders us from laughing as our
+fathers laughed? And thus, since in the world a young lady does not very
+well know how to spread the veil under which an honest woman hides her
+behavior, in a contingency which our grandfathers would have roughly
+explained by a single word, you, like a crowd of beautiful but
+prevaricating ladies, you content yourselves with saying, 'Ah! yes,
+she is very amiable, but,'--but what?--'but she is often very
+inconsistent--.' I have for a long time tried to find out the meaning of
+this last word, and, above all, the figure of rhetoric by which you
+make it express the opposite of that which it signifies; but all my
+researches have been in vain. Vert-Vert used the word last, and was
+unfortunately addressed to the innocent nuns whose infidelities did not
+in any way infringe the honor of the men. When a woman is _inconsistent_
+the husband must be, according to me, _minotaurized_. If the
+minotaurized man is a fine fellow, if he enjoys a certain esteem,--and
+many husbands really deserve to be pitied,--then in speaking of him, you
+say in a pathetic voice, 'M. A--- is a very estimable man, his wife
+is exceedingly pretty, but they say he is not happy in his domestic
+relations.' Thus, madame, the estimable man who is unhappy in his
+domestic relations, the man who has an inconsistent wife, or the husband
+who is minotaurized are simply husbands as they appear in Moliere. Well,
+then, O goddess of modern taste, do not these expressions seem to you
+characterized by a transparency chaste enough for anybody?"
+
+"Ah! mon Dieu!" she answered, laughing, "if the thing is the same,
+what does it matter whether it be expressed in two syllables or in a
+hundred?"
+
+She bade me good-bye, with an ironical nod and disappeared, doubtless to
+join the countesses of my preface and all the metaphorical creatures,
+so often employed by romance-writers as agents for the recovery or
+composition of ancient manuscripts.
+
+As for you, the more numerous and the more real creatures who read my
+book, if there are any among you who make common cause with my conjugal
+champion, I give you notice that you will not at once become unhappy in
+your domestic relations. A man arrives at this conjugal condition
+not suddenly, but insensibly and by degrees. Many husbands have even
+remained unfortunate in their domestic relations during their whole life
+and have never known it. This domestic revolution develops itself in
+accordance with fixed rules; for the revolutions of the honeymoon are as
+regular as the phases of the moon in heaven, and are the same in every
+married house. Have we not proved that moral nature, like physical
+nature, has its laws?
+
+Your young wife will never take a lover, as we have elsewhere said,
+without making serious reflections. As soon as the honeymoon wanes, you
+will find that you have aroused in her a sentiment of pleasure which you
+have not satisfied; you have opened to her the book of life; and she has
+derived an excellent idea from the prosaic dullness which distinguishes
+your complacent love, of the poetry which is the natural result when
+souls and pleasures are in accord. Like a timid bird, just startled by
+the report of a gun which has ceased, she puts her head out of her nest,
+looks round her, and sees the world; and knowing the word of a charade
+which you have played, she feels instinctively the void which exists in
+your languishing passion. She divines that it is only with a lover that
+she can regain the delightful exercise of her free will in love.
+
+You have dried the green wood in preparation for a fire.
+
+In the situation in which both of you find yourselves, there is no
+woman, even the most virtuous, who would not be found worthy of a
+_grande passion_, who has not dreamed of it, and who does not believe
+that it is easily kindled, for there is always found a certain
+_amour-propre_ ready to reinforce that conquered enemy--a jaded wife.
+
+"If the role of an honest woman were nothing more than perilous,"
+said an old lady to me, "I would admit that it would serve. But it is
+tiresome; and I have never met a virtuous woman who did not think about
+deceiving somebody."
+
+And then, before any lover presents himself, a wife discusses with
+herself the legality of the act; she enters into a conflict with her
+duties, with the law, with religion and with the secret desires of a
+nature which knows no check-rein excepting that which she places upon
+herself. And then commences for you a condition of affairs totally
+new; then you receive the first intimation which nature, that good and
+indulgent mother, always gives to the creatures who are exposed to any
+danger. Nature has put a bell on the neck of the Minotaur, as on the
+tail of that frightful snake which is the terror of travelers. And then
+appear in your wife what we will call the first symptoms, and woe to
+him who does not know how to contend with them. Those who in reading our
+book will remember that they saw those symptoms in their own domestic
+life can pass to the conclusion of this work, where they will find how
+they may gain consolation.
+
+The situation referred to, in which a married couple bind themselves for
+a longer or a shorter time, is the point from which our work starts,
+as it is the end at which our observations stop. A man of intelligence
+should know how to recognize the mysterious indications, the obscure
+signs and the involuntary revelation which a wife unwittingly exhibits;
+for the next Meditation will doubtless indicate the more evident of the
+manifestations to neophytes in the sublime science of marriage.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION VIII. OF THE FIRST SYMPTOMS.
+
+When your wife reaches that crisis in which we have left her, you
+yourself are wrapped in a pleasant and unsuspicious security. You
+have so often seen the sun that you begin to think it is shining over
+everybody. You therefore give no longer that attention to the least
+action of your wife, which was impelled by your first outburst of
+passion.
+
+This indolence prevents many husbands from perceiving the symptoms
+which, in their wives, herald the first storm; and this disposition
+of mind has resulted in the minotaurization of more husbands than have
+either opportunity, carriages, sofas and apartments in town.
+
+The feeling of indifference in the presence of danger is to some
+degree justified by the apparent tranquillity which surrounds you.
+The conspiracy which is formed against you by our million of hungry
+celibates seems to be unanimous in its advance. Although all are enemies
+of each other and know each other well, a sort of instinct forces them
+into co-operation.
+
+Two persons are married. The myrmidons of the Minotaur, young and old,
+have usually the politeness to leave the bride and bridegroom entirely
+to themselves at first. They look upon the husband as an artisan, whose
+business it is to trim, polish, cut into facets and mount the diamond,
+which is to pass from hand to hand in order to be admired all around.
+Moreover, the aspect of a young married couple much taken with each
+other always rejoices the heart of those among the celibates who are
+known as _roues_; they take good care not to disturb the excitement by
+which society is to be profited; they also know that heavy showers to
+not last long. They therefore keep quiet; they watch, and wait, with
+incredible vigilance, for the moment when bride and groom begin to weary
+of the seventh heaven.
+
+The tact with which celibates discover the moment when the breeze begins
+to rise in a new home can only be compared to the indifference of those
+husbands for whom the Red-moon rises. There is, even in intrigue, a
+moment of ripeness which must be waited for. The great man is he who
+anticipates the outcome of certain circumstances. Men of fifty-two, whom
+we have represented as being so dangerous, know very well, for example,
+that any man who offers himself as lover to a woman and is haughtily
+rejected, will be received with open arms three months afterwards. But
+it may be truly said that in general married people in betraying their
+indifference towards each other show the same naivete with which they
+first betrayed their love. At the time when you are traversing with
+madame the ravishing fields of the seventh heaven--where according to
+their temperament, newly married people remain encamped for a longer or
+shorter time, as the preceding Meditation has proved--you go little or
+not at all into society. Happy as you are in your home, if you do go
+abroad, it will be for the purpose of making up a choice party and
+visiting the theatre, the country, etc. From the moment you the newly
+wedded make your appearance in the world again, you and your bride
+together, or separately, and are seen to be attentive to each other at
+balls, at parties, at all the empty amusements created to escape the
+void of an unsatisfied heart, the celibates discern that your wife comes
+there in search of distraction; her home, her husband are therefore
+wearisome to her.
+
+At this point the celibate knows that half of the journey is
+accomplished. At this point you are on the eve of being minotaurized,
+and your wife is likely to become inconsistent; which means that she is
+on the contrary likely to prove very consistent in her conduct, that she
+has reasoned it out with astonishing sagacity and that you are likely
+very soon to smell fire. From that moment she will not in appearance
+fail in any of her duties, and will put on the colors of that virtue in
+which she is most lacking. Said Crebillon:
+
+ "Alas!
+ Is it right to be heir of the man who we slay?"
+
+Never has she seemed more anxious to please you. She will seek, as
+much as possible, to allay the secret wounds which she thinks about
+inflicting upon your married bliss, she will do so by those little
+attentions which induce you to believe in the eternity of her love;
+hence the proverb, "Happy as a fool." But in accordance with the
+character of women, they either despise their own husbands from the very
+fact that they find no difficulty in deceiving them; or they hate them
+when they find themselves circumvented by them; or they fall into a
+condition of indifference towards them, which is a thousand times worse
+than hatred. In this emergency, the first thing which may be diagnosed
+in a woman is a decided oddness of behavior. A woman loves to be saved
+from herself, to escape her conscience, but without the eagerness shown
+in this connection by wives who are thoroughly unhappy. She dresses
+herself with especial care, in order, she will tell you, to flatter your
+_amour-propre_ by drawing all eyes upon her in the midst of parties and
+public entertainments.
+
+When she returns to the bosom of her stupid home you will see that, at
+times, she is gloomy and thoughtful, then suddenly laughing and gay as
+if beside herself; or assuming the serious expression of a German
+when he advances to the fight. Such varying moods always indicate the
+terrible doubt and hesitation to which we have already referred. There
+are women who read romances in order to feast upon the images of love
+cleverly depicted and always varied, of love crowned yet triumphant;
+or in order to familiarize themselves in thought with the perils of an
+intrigue.
+
+She will profess the highest esteem for you, she will tell you that she
+loves you as a sister; and that such reasonable friendship is the only
+true, the only durable friendship, the only tie which it is the aim of
+marriage to establish between man and wife.
+
+She will adroitly distinguish between the duties which are all she has
+to perform and the rights which she can demand to exercise.
+
+She views with indifference, appreciated by you alone, all the details
+of married happiness. This sort of happiness, perhaps, has never been
+very agreeable to her and moreover it is always with her. She knows it
+well, she has analyzed it; and what slight but terrible evidence comes
+from these circumstances to prove to an intelligent husband that this
+frail creature argues and reasons, instead of being carried away on the
+tempest of passion.
+
+
+ LX.
+ The more a man judges the less he loves.
+
+
+And now will burst forth from her those pleasantries at which you will
+be the first to laugh and those reflections which will startle you
+by their profundity; now you will see sudden changes of mood and the
+caprices of a mind which hesitates. At times she will exhibit extreme
+tenderness, as if she repented of her thoughts and her projects;
+sometimes she will be sullen and at cross-purposes with you; in a word,
+she will fulfill the _varium et mutabile femina_ which we hitherto have
+had the folly to attribute to the feminine temperament. Diderot, in his
+desire to explain the mutations almost atmospheric in the behavior of
+women, has even gone so far as to make them the offspring of what he
+calls _la bete feroce_; but we never see these whims in a woman who is
+happy.
+
+These symptoms, light as gossamer, resemble the clouds which scarcely
+break the azure surface of the sky and which they call flowers of the
+storm. But soon their colors take a deeper intensity.
+
+In the midst of this solemn premeditation, which tends, as Madame de
+Stael says, to bring more poetry into life, some women, in whom virtuous
+mothers either from considerations of worldly advantage of duty or
+sentiment, or through sheer hypocrisy, have inculcated steadfast
+principles, take the overwhelming fancies by which they are assailed
+for suggestions of the devil; and you will see them therefore trotting
+regularly to mass, to midday offices, even to vespers. This false
+devotion exhibits itself, first of all in the shape of pretty books of
+devotion in a costly binding, by the aid of which these dear sinners
+attempt in vain to fulfill the duties imposed by religion, and long
+neglected for the pleasures of marriage.
+
+Now here we will lay down a principle, and you must engrave it on your
+memory in letters of fire.
+
+When a young woman suddenly takes up religious practices which she has
+before abandoned, this new order of life always conceals a motive highly
+significant, in view of her husband's happiness. In the case of at least
+seventy-nine women out of a hundred this return to God proves that they
+have been inconsistent, or that they intend to become so.
+
+But a symptom more significant still and more decisive, and one that
+every husband should recognize under pain of being considered a fool, is
+this:
+
+At the time when both of you are immersed in the illusive delights of
+the honeymoon, your wife, as one devoted to you, would constantly carry
+out your will. She was happy in the power of showing the ready will,
+which both of you mistook for love, and she would have liked for you to
+have asked her to walk on the edge of the roof, and immediately, nimble
+as a squirrel, she would have run over the tiles. In a word, she found
+an ineffable delight in sacrificing to you that _ego_ which made her a
+being distinct from yours. She had identified herself with your nature
+and was obedient to that vow of the heart, _Una caro_.
+
+All this delightful promptness of an earlier day gradually faded away.
+Wounded to find her will counted as nothing, your wife will attempt,
+nevertheless, to reassert it by means of a system developed gradually,
+and from day to day, with increased energy.
+
+This system is founded upon what we may call the dignity of the married
+woman. The first effect of this system is to mingle with your pleasures
+a certain reserve and a certain lukewarmness, of which you are the sole
+judge.
+
+According to the greater or lesser violence of your sensual passion, you
+have perhaps discerned some of those twenty-two pleasures which in
+other times created in Greece twenty-two kinds of courtesans, devoted
+especially to these delicate branches of the same art. Ignorant and
+simple, curious and full of hope, your young wife may have taken
+some degrees in this science as rare as it is unknown, and which we
+especially commend to the attention of the future author of _Physiology
+of Pleasure_.
+
+Lacking all these different kinds of pleasure, all these caprices of
+soul, all these arrows of love, you are reduced to the most common of
+love fashions, of that primitive and innocent wedding gait, the calm
+homage which the innocent Adam rendered to our common Mother and which
+doubtless suggested to the Serpent the idea of taking them in. But a
+symptom so complete is not frequent. Most married couples are too good
+Christians to follow the usages of pagan Greece, so we have ranged,
+among the last symptoms, the appearance in the calm nuptial couch of
+those shameless pleasures which spring generally from lawless passion.
+In their proper time and place we will treat more fully of this
+fascinating diagnostic; at this point, things are reduced to a
+listlessness and conjugal repugnance which you alone are in a condition
+to appreciate.
+
+At the same time that she is ennobling by her dignity the objects of
+marriage, your wife will pretend that she ought to have her opinion and
+you yours. "In marrying," she will say, "a woman does not vow that she
+will abdicate the throne of reason. Are women then really slaves? Human
+laws can fetter the body; but the mind!--ah! God has placed it so near
+Himself that no human hand can touch it."
+
+These ideas necessarily proceed either from the too liberal teachings
+which you have allowed her to receive, or from some reflections which
+you have permitted her to make. A whole Meditation has been devoted to
+_Home Instruction_.
+
+Then your wife begins to say, "_My_ chamber, _my_ bed, _my_ apartment."
+To many of your questions she will reply, "But, my dear, this is no
+business of yours!" Or: "Men have their part in the direction of
+the house, and women have theirs." Or, laughing at men who meddle in
+household affairs, she will affirm that "men do not understand some
+things."
+
+The number of things which you do not understand increases day by day.
+
+One fine morning, you will see in your little church two altars, where
+before you never worshiped but at one. The altar of your wife and
+your own altar have become distinct, and this distinction will go
+on increasing, always in accordance with the system founded upon the
+dignity of woman.
+
+Then the following ideas will appear, and they will be inculcated in you
+whether you like it or not, by means of a living force very ancient
+in origin and little known. Steam-power, horse-power, man-power, and
+water-power are good inventions, but nature has provided women with a
+moral power, in comparison with which all other powers are nothing; we
+may call it _rattle-power_. This force consists in a continuance of the
+same sound, in an exact repetition of the same words, in a reversion,
+over and over again, to the same ideas, and this so unvaried, that from
+hearing them over and over again you will admit them, in order to be
+delivered from the discussion. Thus the power of the rattle will prove
+to you:
+
+That you are very fortunate to have such an excellent wife;
+
+That she has done you too much honor in marrying you;
+
+That women often see clearer than men;
+
+That you ought to take the advice of your wife in everything, and almost
+always ought to follow it;
+
+That you ought to respect the mother of your children, to honor her and
+have confidence in her;
+
+That the best way to escape being deceived, is to rely upon a wife's
+refinement, for according to certain old ideas which we have had the
+weakness to give credit, it is impossible for a man to prevent his wife
+from minotaurizing him;
+
+That a lawful wife is a man's best friend;
+
+That a woman is mistress in her own house and queen in her drawing-room,
+etc.
+
+Those who wish to oppose a firm resistance to a woman's conquest,
+effected by means of her dignity over man's power, fall into the
+category of the predestined.
+
+At first, quarrels arise which in the eye of wives give an air of
+tyranny to husbands. The tyranny of a husband is always a terrible
+excuse for inconsistency in a wife. Then, in their frivolous discussions
+they are enabled to prove to their families and to ours, to everybody
+and to ourselves, that we are in the wrong. If, for the sake of peace,
+or from love, you acknowledge the pretended rights of women, you yield
+an advantage to your wife by which she will profit eternally. A husband,
+like a government, ought never to acknowledge a mistake. In case you do
+so, your power will be outflanked by the subtle artifices of feminine
+dignity; then all will be lost; from that moment she will advance from
+concession to concession until she has driven you from her bed.
+
+The woman being shrewd, intelligent, sarcastic and having leisure to
+meditate over an ironical phrase, can easily turn you into ridicule
+during a momentary clash of opinions. The day on which she turns you
+into ridicule, sees the end of your happiness. Your power has expired.
+A woman who has laughed at her husband cannot henceforth love him. A man
+should be, to the woman who is in love with him, a being full of
+power, of greatness, and always imposing. A family cannot exist without
+despotism. Think of that, ye nations!
+
+Now the difficult course which a man has to steer in presence of such
+serious incidents as these, is what we may call the _haute politique_ of
+marriage, and is the subject of the second and third parts of our book.
+That breviary of marital Machiavelism will teach you the manner in which
+you may grow to greatness within that frivolous mind, within that soul
+of lacework, to use Napoleon's phrase. You may learn how a man may
+exhibit a soul of steel, may enter upon this little domestic war without
+ever yielding the empire of his will, and may do so without compromising
+his happiness. For if you exhibit any tendency to abdication, your wife
+will despise you, for the sole reason that she has discovered you to be
+destitute of mental vigor; you are no longer a _man_ to her.
+
+But we have not yet reached the point at which are to be developed those
+theories and principles, by means of which a man may unite elegance of
+manners with severity of measures; let it suffice us, for the moment,
+to point out the importance of impending events and let us pursue our
+theme.
+
+At this fatal epoch, you will see that she is adroitly setting up a
+right to go out alone.
+
+You were at one time her god, her idol. She has now reached that height
+of devotion at which it is permitted to see holes in the garments of the
+saints.
+
+"Oh, mon Dieu! My dear," said Madame de la Valliere to her husband, "how
+badly you wear your sword! M. de Richelieu has a way of making it hang
+straight at his side, which you ought to try to imitate; it is in much
+better taste."
+
+"My dear, you could not tell me in a more tactful manner that we have
+been married five months!" replied the Duke, whose repartee made his
+fortune in the reign of Louis XV.
+
+She will study your character in order to find weapons against you. Such
+a study, which love would hold in horror, reveals itself in the thousand
+little traps which she lays purposely to make you scold her; when a
+woman has no excuse for minotaurizing her husband she sets to work to
+make one.
+
+She will perhaps begin dinner without waiting for you.
+
+If you drive through the middle of the town, she will point out certain
+objects which escaped your notice; she will sing before you without
+feeling afraid; she will interrupt you, sometimes vouchsafe no reply to
+you, and will prove to you, in a thousand different ways, that she is
+enjoying at your side the use of all her faculties and exercising her
+private judgment.
+
+She will try to abolish entirely your influence in the management of
+the house and to become sole mistress of your fortune. At first this
+struggle will serve as a distraction for her soul, whether it be empty
+or in too violent commotion; next, she will find in your opposition a
+new motive for ridicule. Slang expressions will not fail her, and in
+France we are so quickly vanquished by the ironical smile of another!
+
+At other times headaches and nervous attacks make their appearance;
+but these symptoms furnish matter for a whole future Meditation. In the
+world she will speak of you without blushing, and will gaze at you with
+assurance. She will begin to blame your least actions because they are
+at variance with her ideas, or her secret intentions. She will take no
+care of what pertains to you, she will not even know whether you have
+all you need. You are no longer her paragon.
+
+In imitation of Louis XIV, who carried to his mistresses the bouquets of
+orange blossoms which the head gardener of Versailles put on his table
+every morning, M. de Vivonne used almost every day to give his wife
+choice flowers during the early period of his marriage. One morning he
+found the bouquet lying on the side table without having been placed, as
+usual, in a vase of water.
+
+"Oh! Oh!" said he, "if I am not a cuckold, I shall very soon be one."
+
+You go on a journey for eight days and you receive no letters, or you
+receive one, three pages of which are blank.--Symptom.
+
+You come home mounted on a valuable horse which you like very much, and
+between her kisses your wife shows her uneasiness about the horse and
+his fodder.--Symptom.
+
+To these features of the case, you will be able to add others. We shall
+endeavor in the present volume always to paint things in bold fresco
+style and leave the miniatures to you. According to the characters
+concerned, the indications which we are describing, veiled under
+the incidents of ordinary life, are of infinite variety. One man may
+discover a symptom in the way a shawl is put on, while another needs to
+receive a fillip to his intellect, in order to notice the indifference
+of his mate.
+
+Some fine spring morning, the day after a ball, or the eve of a country
+party, this situation reaches its last phase; your wife is listless
+and the happiness within her reach has no more attractions for her. Her
+mind, her imagination, perhaps her natural caprices call for a
+lover. Nevertheless, she dare not yet embark upon an intrigue whose
+consequences and details fill her with dread. You are still there for
+some purpose or other; you are a weight in the balance, although a very
+light one. On the other hand, the lover presents himself arrayed in all
+the graces of novelty and all the charms of mystery. The conflict which
+has arisen in the heart of your wife becomes, in presence of the enemy,
+more real and more full of peril than before. Very soon the more dangers
+and risks there are to be run, the more she burns to plunge into that
+delicious gulf of fear, enjoyment, anguish and delight. Her imagination
+kindles and sparkles, her future life rises before her eyes, colored
+with romantic and mysterious hues. Her soul discovers that existence has
+already taken its tone from this struggle which to a woman has so much
+solemnity in it. All is agitation, all is fire, all is commotion within
+her. She lives with three times as much intensity as before, and judges
+the future by the present. The little pleasure which you have lavished
+upon her bears witness against you; for she is not excited as much by
+the pleasures which she has received, as by those which she is yet to
+enjoy; does not imagination show her that her happiness will be keener
+with this lover, whom the laws deny her, than with you? And then, she
+finds enjoyment even in her terror and terror in her enjoyment. Then
+she falls in love with this imminent danger, this sword of Damocles hung
+over her head by you yourself, thus preferring the delirious agonies
+of such a passion, to that conjugal inanity which is worse to her than
+death, to that indifference which is less a sentiment than the absence
+of all sentiment.
+
+You, who must go to pay your respects to the Minister of Finance, to
+write memorandums at the bank, to make your reports at the Bourse, or to
+speak in the Chamber; you, young men, who have repeated with many others
+in our first Meditation the oath that you will defend your happiness in
+defending your wife, what can you oppose to these desires of hers which
+are so natural? For, with these creatures of fire, to live is to feel;
+the moment they cease to experience emotion they are dead. The law in
+virtue of which you take your position produces in her this involuntary
+act of minotaurism. "There is one sequel," said D'Alembert, "to the
+laws of movement." Well, then, where are your means of defence?--Where,
+indeed?
+
+Alas! if your wife has not yet kissed the apple of the Serpent, the
+Serpent stands before her; you sleep, we are awake, and our book begins.
+
+Without inquiring how many husbands, among the five hundred thousand
+which this book concerns, will be left with the predestined; how
+many have contracted unfortunate marriages; how many have made a bad
+beginning with their wives; and without wishing to ask if there be many
+or few of this numerous band who can satisfy the conditions required for
+struggling against the danger which is impending, we intend to expound
+in the second and third part of this work the methods of fighting the
+Minotaur and keeping intact the virtue of wives. But if fate, the devil,
+the celibate, opportunity, desire your ruin, in recognizing the progress
+of all intrigues, in joining in the battles which are fought by every
+home, you will possibly be able to find some consolation. Many people
+have such a happy disposition, that on showing to them the condition of
+things and explaining to them the why and the wherefore, they scratch
+their foreheads, rub their hands, stamp on the ground, and are
+satisfied.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION IX. EPILOGUE.
+
+Faithful to our promise, this first part has indicated the general
+causes which bring all marriages to the crises which we are about to
+describe; and, in tracing the steps of this conjugal preamble, we have
+also pointed out the way in which the catastrophe is to be avoided, for
+we have pointed out the errors by which it is brought about.
+
+But these first considerations would be incomplete if, after endeavoring
+to throw some light upon the inconsistency of our ideas, of our manners
+and of our laws, with regard to a question which concerns the life of
+almost all living beings, we did not endeavor to make plain, in a short
+peroration, the political causes of the infirmity which pervades all
+modern society. After having exposed the secret vices of marriage, would
+it not be an inquiry worthy of philosophers to search out the causes
+which have rendered it so vicious?
+
+The system of law and of manners which so far directs women and controls
+marriage in France, is the outcome of ancient beliefs and traditions
+which are no longer in accordance with the eternal principles of reason
+and of justice, brought to light by the great Revolution of 1789.
+
+Three great disturbances have agitated France; the conquest of the
+country by the Romans, the establishment of Christianity and the
+invasion of the Franks. Each of these events has left a deep impress
+upon the soil, upon the laws, upon the manners and upon the intellect of
+the nation.
+
+Greece having one foot on Europe and the other on Asia, was influenced
+by her voluptuous climate in the choice of her marriage institutions;
+she received them from the East, where her philosophers, her legislators
+and her poets went to study the abstruse antiquities of Egypt and
+Chaldea. The absolute seclusion of women which was necessitated under
+the burning sun of Asia prevailed under the laws of Greece and Ionia.
+The women remained in confinement within the marbles of the gyneceum.
+The country was reduced to the condition of a city, to a narrow
+territory, and the courtesans who were connected with art and religion
+by so many ties, were sufficient to satisfy the first passions of the
+young men, who were few in number, since their strength was elsewhere
+taken up in the violent exercises of that training which was demanded of
+them by the military system of those heroic times.
+
+At the beginning of her royal career Rome, having sent to Greece to seek
+such principles of legislation as might suit the sky of Italy, stamped
+upon the forehead of the married woman the brand of complete servitude.
+The senate understood the importance of virtue in a republic, hence
+the severity of manners in the excessive development of the marital
+and paternal power. The dependence of the woman on her husband is found
+inscribed on every code. The seclusion prescribed by the East becomes
+a duty, a moral obligation, a virtue. On these principles were raised
+temples to modesty and temples consecrated to the sanctity of marriage;
+hence, sprang the institution of censors, the law of dowries, the
+sumptuary laws, the respect for matrons and all the characteristics
+of the Roman law. Moreover, three acts of feminine violation either
+accomplished or attempted, produced three revolutions! And was it not
+a grand event, sanctioned by the decrees of the country, that these
+illustrious women should make their appearances on the political
+arena! Those noble Roman women, who were obliged to be either brides
+or mothers, passed their life in retirement engaged in educating the
+masters of the world. Rome had no courtesans because the youth of the
+city were engaged in eternal war. If, later on, dissoluteness appeared,
+it merely resulted from the despotism of emperors; and still the
+prejudices founded upon ancient manners were so influential that Rome
+never saw a woman on a stage. These facts are not put forth idly in
+scanning the history of marriage in France.
+
+After the conquest of Gaul, the Romans imposed their laws upon the
+conquered; but they were incapable of destroying both the profound
+respect which our ancestors entertained for women and the ancient
+superstitions which made women the immediate oracles of God. The Roman
+laws ended by prevailing, to the exclusion of all others, in this
+country once known as the "land of written law," or _Gallia togata_,
+and their ideas of marriage penetrated more or less into the "land of
+customs."
+
+But, during the conflict of laws with manners, the Franks invaded the
+Gauls and gave to the country the dear name of France. These warriors
+came from the North and brought the system of gallantry which had
+originated in their western regions, where the mingling of the sexes did
+not require in those icy climates the jealous precautions of the East.
+The women of that time elevated the privations of that kind of life by
+the exaltation of their sentiments. The drowsy minds of the day made
+necessary those varied forms of delicate solicitation, that versatility
+of address, the fancied repulse of coquetry, which belong to the system
+whose principles have been unfolded in our First Part, as admirably
+suited to the temperate clime of France.
+
+To the East, then, belong the passion and the delirium of passion, the
+long brown hair, the harem, the amorous divinities, the splendor, the
+poetry of love and the monuments of love.--To the West, the liberty of
+wives, the sovereignty of their blond locks, gallantry, the fairy life
+of love, the secrecy of passion, the profound ecstasy of the soul, the
+sweet feelings of melancholy and the constancy of love.
+
+These two systems, starting from opposite points of the globe, have
+come into collision in France; in France, where one part of the country,
+Languedoc, was attracted by Oriental traditions, while the other,
+Languedoil, was the native land of a creed which attributes to woman
+a magical power. In the Languedoil, love necessitates mystery, in the
+Languedoc, to see is to love.
+
+At the height of this struggle came the triumphant entry of Christianity
+into France, and there it was preached by women, and there it
+consecrated the divinity of a woman who in the forests of Brittany, of
+Vendee and of Ardennes took, under the name of Notre-Dame, the place of
+more than one idol in the hollow of old Druidic oaks.
+
+If the religion of Christ, which is above all things a code of morality
+and politics, gave a soul to all living beings, proclaimed that equality
+of all in the sight of God, and by such principles as these
+fortified the chivalric sentiments of the North, this advantage was
+counterbalanced by the fact, that the sovereign pontiff resided at
+Rome, of which seat he considered himself the lawful heir, through the
+universality of the Latin tongue, which became that of Europe during the
+Middle Ages, and through the keen interest taken by monks, writers and
+lawyers in establishing the ascendency of certain codes, discovered by a
+soldier in the sack of Amalfi.
+
+These two principles of the servitude and the sovereignty of women
+retain possession of the ground, each of them defended by fresh
+arguments.
+
+The Salic law, which was a legal error, was a triumph for the principle
+of political and civil servitude for women, but it did not diminish the
+power which French manners accorded them, for the enthusiasm of chivalry
+which prevailed in Europe supplanted the party of manners against the
+party of law.
+
+And in this way was created that strange phenomenon which since that
+time has characterized both our national despotism and our legislation;
+for ever since those epochs which seemed to presage the Revolution,
+when the spirit of philosophy rose and reflected upon the history of
+the past, France has been the prey of many convulsions. Feudalism, the
+Crusades, the Reformation, the struggle between the monarchy and the
+aristocracy. Despotism and Priestcraft have so closely held the country
+within their clutches, that woman still remains the subject of strange
+counter-opinions, each springing from one of the three great movements
+to which we have referred. Was it possible that the woman question
+should be discussed and woman's political education and marriage should
+be ventilated when feudalism threatened the throne, when reform menaced
+both king and barons, and the people, between the hierarchy and the
+empire, were forgotten? According to a saying of Madame Necker, women,
+amid these great movements, were like the cotton wool put into a case
+of porcelain. They were counted for nothing, but without them everything
+would have been broken.
+
+A married woman, then, in France presents the spectacle of a queen out
+at service, of a slave, at once free and a prisoner; a collision between
+these two principles which frequently occurred, produced odd situations
+by the thousand. And then, woman was physically little understood, and
+what was actually sickness in her, was considered a prodigy, witchcraft
+or monstrous turpitude. In those days these creatures, treated by
+the law as reckless children, and put under guardianship, were by the
+manners of the time deified and adored. Like the freedmen of emperors,
+they disposed of crowns, they decided battles, they awarded fortunes,
+they inspired crimes and revolutions, wonderful acts of virtue, by the
+mere flash of their glances, and yet they possessed nothing and were
+not even possessors of themselves. They were equally fortunate and
+unfortunate. Armed with their weakness and strong in instinct, they
+launched out far beyond the sphere which the law allotted them, showing
+themselves omnipotent for evil, but impotent for good; without merit in
+the virtues that were imposed upon them, without excuse in their vices;
+accused of ignorance and yet denied an education; neither altogether
+mothers nor altogether wives. Having all the time to conceal their
+passions, while they fostered them, they submitted to the coquetry of
+the Franks, while they were obliged like Roman women, to stay within the
+ramparts of their castles and bring up those who were to be warriors.
+While no system was definitely decided upon by legislation as to the
+position of women, their minds were left to follow their inclinations,
+and there are found among them as many who resemble Marion Delorme as
+those who resemble Cornelia; there are vices among them, but there are
+as many virtues. These were creatures as incomplete as the laws which
+governed them; they were considered by some as a being midway between
+man and the lower animals, as a malignant beast which the laws could not
+too closely fetter, and which nature had destined, with so many other
+things, to serve the pleasure of men; while others held woman to be an
+angel in exile, a source of happiness and love, the only creature who
+responded to the highest feelings of man, while her miseries were to be
+recompensed by the idolatry of every heart. How could the consistency,
+which was wanting in a political system, be expected in the general
+manners of the nation?
+
+And so woman became what circumstances and men made her, instead of
+being what the climate and native institutions should have made
+her; sold, married against her taste, in accordance with the _Patria
+potestas_ of the Romans, at the same time that she fell under the
+marital despotism which desired her seclusion, she found herself tempted
+to take the only reprisals which were within her power. Then she became
+a dissolute creature, as soon as men ceased to be intently occupied in
+intestine war, for the same reason that she was a virtuous woman in
+the midst of civil disturbances. Every educated man can fill in this
+outline, for we seek from movements like these the lessons and not the
+poetic suggestion which they yield.
+
+The Revolution was too entirely occupied in breaking down and building
+up, had too many enemies, or followed perhaps too closely on the
+deplorable times witnessed under the regency and under Louis XV, to pay
+any attention to the position which women should occupy in the social
+order.
+
+The remarkable men who raised the immortal monument which our codes
+present were almost all old-fashioned students of law deeply imbued with
+a spirit of Roman jurisprudence; and moreover they were not the founders
+of any political institutions. Sons of the Revolution, they believed, in
+accordance with that movement, that the law of divorce wisely restricted
+and the bond of dutiful submission were sufficient ameliorations of the
+previous marriage law. When that former order of things was remembered,
+the change made by the new legislation seemed immense.
+
+At the present day the question as to which of these two principles
+shall triumph rests entirely in the hands of our wise legislators. The
+past has teaching which should bear fruit in the future. Have we lost
+all sense of the eloquence of fact?
+
+The principles of the East resulted in the existence of eunuchs and
+seraglios; the spurious social standing of France has brought in the
+plague of courtesans and the more deadly plague of our marriage system;
+and thus, to use the language of a contemporary, the East sacrifices to
+paternity men and the principle of justice; France, women and
+modesty. Neither the East nor France has attained the goal which their
+institutions point to; for that is happiness. The man is not more loved
+by the women of a harem than the husband is sure of being in France, as
+the father of his children; and marrying is not worth what it costs. It
+is time to offer no more sacrifice to this institution, and to amass a
+larger sum of happiness in the social state by making our manners and
+our institution conformable to our climate.
+
+Constitutional government, a happy mixture of two extreme political
+systems, despotism and democracy, suggests by the necessity of blending
+also the two principles of marriage, which so far clash together in
+France. The liberty which we boldly claim for young people is the
+only remedy for the host of evils whose source we have pointed out, by
+exposing the inconsistencies resulting from the bondage in which girls
+are kept. Let us give back to youth the indulgence of those passions,
+those coquetries, love and its terrors, love and its delights, and that
+fascinating company which followed the coming of the Franks. At this
+vernal season of life no fault is irreparable, and Hymen will come
+forth from the bosom of experiences, armed with confidence, stripped of
+hatred, and love in marriage will be justified, because it will have had
+the privilege of comparison.
+
+In this change of manners the disgraceful plague of public prostitution
+will perish of itself. It is especially at the time when the man
+possesses the frankness and timidity of adolescence, that in his pursuit
+of happiness he is competent to meet and struggle with great and genuine
+passions of the heart. The soul is happy in making great efforts of
+whatever kind; provided that it can act, that it can stir and move,
+it makes little difference, even though it exercise its power against
+itself. In this observation, the truth of which everybody can see, there
+may be found one secret of successful legislation, of tranquillity and
+happiness. And then, the pursuit of learning has now become so highly
+developed that the most tempestuous of our coming Mirabeaus can consume
+his energy either in the indulgence of a passion or the study of a
+science. How many young people have been saved from debauchery by
+self-chosen labors or the persistent obstacles put in the way of a
+first love, a love that was pure! And what young girl does not desire to
+prolong the delightful childhood of sentiment, is not proud to have her
+nature known, and has not felt the secret tremblings of timidity, the
+modesty of her secret communings with herself, and wished to oppose them
+to the young desires of a lover inexperienced as herself! The gallantry
+of the Franks and the pleasures which attend it should then be the
+portion of youth, and then would naturally result a union of soul, of
+mind, of character, of habits, of temperament and of fortune, such as
+would produce the happy equilibrium necessary for the felicity of the
+married couple. This system would rest upon foundations wider and
+freer, if girls were subjected to a carefully calculated system of
+disinheritance; or if, in order to force men to choose only those who
+promised happiness by their virtues, their character or their talents,
+they married as in the United States without dowry.
+
+In that case, the system adopted by the Romans could advantageously
+be applied to the married women who when they were girls used their
+liberty. Being exclusively engaged in the early education of their
+children, which is the most important of all maternal obligations,
+occupied in creating and maintaining the happiness of the household,
+so admirably described in the fourth book of _Julie_, they would be
+in their houses like the women of ancient Rome, living images of
+Providence, which reigns over all, and yet is nowhere visible. In this
+case, the laws covering the infidelity of the wife should be extremely
+severe. They should make the penalty disgrace, rather than inflict
+painful or coercive sentences. France has witnessed the spectacle
+of women riding asses for the pretended crime of magic, and many an
+innocent woman has died of shame. In this may be found the secret
+of future marriage legislation. The young girls of Miletus delivered
+themselves from marriage by voluntary death; the senate condemned
+the suicides to be dragged naked on a hurdle, and the other virgins
+condemned themselves for life.
+
+Women and marriage will never be respected until we have that radical
+change in manners which we are now begging for. This profound thought
+is the ruling principle in the two finest productions of an immortal
+genius. _Emile_ and _La Nouvelle Heloise_ are nothing more than two
+eloquent pleas for the system. The voice there raised will resound
+through the ages, because it points to the real motives of true
+legislation, and the manners which will prevail in the future. By
+placing children at the breast of their mothers, Jean-Jacques rendered
+an immense service to the cause of virtue; but his age was too deeply
+gangrened with abuses to understand the lofty lessons unfolded in those
+two poems; it is right to add also that the philosopher was in these
+works overmastered by the poet, and in leaving in the heart of _Julie_
+after her marriage some vestiges of her first love, he was led astray by
+the attractiveness of a poetic situation, more touching indeed, but less
+useful than the truth which he wished to display.
+
+Nevertheless, if marriage in France is an unlimited contract to which
+men agree with a silent understanding that they may thus give
+more relish to passion, more curiosity, more mystery to love,
+more fascination to women; if a woman is rather an ornament to the
+drawing-room, a fashion-plate, a portmanteau, than a being whose
+functions in the order politic are an essential part of the country's
+prosperity and the nation's glory, a creature whose endeavors in life
+vie in utility with those of men--I admit that all the above theory, all
+these long considerations sink into nothingness at the prospect of such
+an important destiny!----
+
+But after having squeezed a pound of actualities in order to obtain one
+drop of philosophy, having paid sufficient homage to that passion for
+the historic, which is so dominant in our time, let us turn our glance
+upon the manners of the present period. Let us take the cap and bells
+and the coxcomb of which Rabelais once made a sceptre, and let us pursue
+the course of this inquiry without giving to one joke more seriousness
+than comports with it, and without giving to serious things the jesting
+tone which ill befits them.
+
+
+
+
+
+SECOND PART. MEANS OF DEFENCE, INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR.
+
+ "To be or not to be,
+ That is the question."
+ --Shakspeare, _Hamlet_.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION X. A TREATISE ON MARITAL POLICY.
+
+When a man reaches the position in which the first part of this book
+sets him, we suppose that the idea of his wife being possessed by
+another makes his heart beat, and rekindles his passion, either by an
+appeal to his _amour propre_, his egotism, or his self-interest, for
+unless he is still on his wife's side, he must be one of the lowest of
+men and deserves his fate.
+
+In this trying moment it is very difficult for a husband to avoid making
+mistakes; for, with regard to most men, the art of ruling a wife is
+even less known than that of judiciously choosing one. However, marital
+policy consists chiefly in the practical application of three principles
+which should be the soul of your conduct. The first is never to believe
+what a woman says; the second, always to look for the spirit without
+dwelling too much upon the letter of her actions; and the third, not to
+forget that a woman is never so garrulous as when she holds her tongue,
+and is never working with more energy than when she keeps quiet.
+
+From the moment that your suspicions are aroused, you ought to be like a
+man mounted on a tricky horse, who always watches the ears of the beast,
+in fear of being thrown from the saddle.
+
+But art consists not so much in the knowledge of principles, as in the
+manner of applying them; to reveal them to ignorant people is to put
+a razor in the hand of a monkey. Moreover, the first and most vital of
+your duties consists in perpetual dissimulation, an accomplishment in
+which most husbands are sadly lacking. In detecting the symptoms of
+minotaurism a little too plainly marked in the conduct of their wives,
+most men at once indulge in the most insulting suspicions. Their
+minds contract a tinge of bitterness which manifests itself in their
+conversation, and in their manners; and the alarm which fills their
+heart, like the gas flame in a glass globe, lights up their countenances
+so plainly, that it accounts for their conduct.
+
+Now a woman, who has twelve hours more than you have each day to reflect
+and to study you, reads the suspicion written upon your face at the very
+moment that it arises. She will never forget this gratuitous insult.
+Nothing can ever remedy that. All is now said and done, and the
+very next day, if she has opportunity, she will join the ranks of
+inconsistent women.
+
+You ought then to begin under these circumstances to affect towards your
+wife the same boundless confidence that you have hitherto had in her. If
+you begin to lull her anxieties by honeyed words, you are lost, she will
+not believe you; for she has her policy as you have yours. Now there is
+as much need for tact as for kindliness in your behavior, in order to
+inculcate in her, without her knowing it, a feeling of security, which
+will lead her to lay back her ears, and prevent you from using rein or
+spur at the wrong moment.
+
+But how can we compare a horse, the frankest of all animals, to a being,
+the flashes of whose thought, and the movements of whose impulses
+render her at moments more prudent than the Servite Fra-Paolo, the most
+terrible adviser that the Ten at Venice ever had; more deceitful than
+a king; more adroit than Louis XI; more profound than Machiavelli; as
+sophistical as Hobbes; as acute as Voltaire; as pliant as the fiancee of
+Mamolin; and distrustful of no one in the whole wide world but you?
+
+Moreover, to this dissimulation, by means of which the springs that move
+your conduct ought to be made as invisible as those that move the world,
+must be added absolute self-control. That diplomatic imperturbability,
+so boasted of by Talleyrand, must be the least of your qualities; his
+exquisite politeness and the grace of his manners must distinguish your
+conversation. The professor here expressly forbids you to use your whip,
+if you would obtain complete control over your gentle Andalusian steed.
+
+
+ LXI.
+ If a man strike his mistress it is a self-inflicted wound; but if he
+ strike his wife it is suicide!
+
+
+How can we think of a government without police, an action without
+force, a power without weapons?--Now this is exactly the problem which
+we shall try to solve in our future meditations. But first we must
+submit two preliminary observations. They will furnish us with two other
+theories concerning the application of all the mechanical means which we
+propose you should employ. An instance from life will refresh these arid
+and dry dissertations: the hearing of such a story will be like laying
+down a book, to work in the field.
+
+In the year 1822, on a fine morning in the month of February, I was
+traversing the boulevards of Paris, from the quiet circles of the Marais
+to the fashionable quarters of the Chaussee-d'Antin, and I observed for
+the first time, not without a certain philosophic joy, the diversity
+of physiognomy and the varieties of costume which, from the Rue du
+Pas-de-la-Mule even to the Madeleine, made each portion of the boulevard
+a world of itself, and this whole zone of Paris, a grand panorama of
+manners. Having at that time no idea of what the world was, and little
+thinking that one day I should have the audacity to set myself up as
+a legislator on marriage, I was going to take lunch at the house of a
+college friend, who was perhaps too early in life afflicted with a wife
+and two children. My former professor of mathematics lived at a short
+distance from the house of my college friend, and I promised myself the
+pleasure of a visit to this worthy mathematician before indulging my
+appetite for the dainties of friendship. I accordingly made my way to
+the heart of a study, where everything was covered with a dust which
+bore witness to the lofty abstraction of the scholar. But a surprise was
+in store for me there. I perceived a pretty woman seated on the arm of
+an easy chair, as if mounted on an English horse; her face took on the
+look of conventional surprise worn by mistresses of the house towards
+those they do not know, but she did not disguise the expression of
+annoyance which, at my appearance, clouded her countenance with the
+thought that I was aware how ill-timed was my presence. My master,
+doubtless absorbed in an equation, had not yet raised his head; I
+therefore waved my right hand towards the young lady, like a fish moving
+his fin, and on tiptoe I retired with a mysterious smile which might be
+translated "I will not be the one to prevent him committing an act of
+infidelity to Urania." She nodded her head with one of those sudden
+gestures whose graceful vivacity is not to be translated into words.
+
+"My good friend, don't go away," cried the geometrician. "This is my
+wife!"
+
+I bowed for the second time!--Oh, Coulon! Why wert thou not present to
+applaud the only one of thy pupils who understood from that moment the
+expression, "anacreontic," as applied to a bow?--The effect must have
+been very overwhelming; for Madame the Professoress, as the Germans say,
+rose hurriedly as if to go, making me a slight bow which seemed to say:
+"Adorable!----" Her husband stopped her, saying:
+
+"Don't go, my child, this is one of my pupils."
+
+The young woman bent her head towards the scholar as a bird perched on a
+bough stretches its neck to pick up a seed.
+
+"It is not possible," said the husband, heaving a sigh, "and I am going
+to prove it to you by A plus B."
+
+"Let us drop that, sir, I beg you," she answered, pointing with a wink
+to me.
+
+If it had been a problem in algebra, my master would have understood
+this look, but it was Chinese to him, and so he went on.
+
+"Look here, child, I constitute you judge in the matter; our income is
+ten thousand francs."
+
+At these words I retired to the door, as if I were seized with a wild
+desire to examine the framed drawings which had attracted my attention.
+My discretion was rewarded by an eloquent glance. Alas! she did not know
+that in Fortunio I could have played the part of Sharp-Ears, who heard
+the truffles growing.
+
+"In accordance with the principles of general economy," said my master,
+"no one ought to spend in rent and servant's wages more than two-tenths
+of his income; now our apartment and our attendance cost altogether
+a hundred louis. I give you twelve hundred francs to dress with" [in
+saying this he emphasized every syllable]. "Your food," he went on,
+takes up four thousand francs, our children demand at lest twenty-five
+louis; I take for myself only eight hundred francs; washing, fuel
+and light mount up to about a thousand francs; so that there does
+not remain, as you see, more than six hundred francs for unforeseen
+expenses. In order to buy the cross of diamonds, we must draw a thousand
+crowns from our capital, and if once we take that course, my little
+darling, there is no reason why we should not leave Paris which you love
+so much, and at once take up our residence in the country, in order to
+retrench. Children and household expenses will increase fast enough!
+Come, try to be reasonable!"
+
+"I suppose I must," she said, "but you will be the only husband in Paris
+who has not given a New Year's gift to his wife."
+
+And she stole away like a school-boy who goes to finish an imposed duty.
+My master made a gesture of relief. When he saw the door close he rubbed
+his hands, he talked of the war in Spain; and I went my way to the Rue
+de Provence, little knowing that I had received the first installment
+of a great lesson in marriage, any more than I dreamt of the conquest of
+Constantinople by General Diebitsch. I arrived at my host's house at the
+very moment they were sitting down to luncheon, after having waited for
+me the half hour demanded by usage. It was, I believe, as she opened a
+_pate de foie gras_ that my pretty hostess said to her husband, with a
+determined air:
+
+"Alexander, if you were really nice you would give me that pair of
+ear-rings that we saw at Fossin's."
+
+"You shall have them," cheerfully replied my friend, drawing from his
+pocketbook three notes of a thousand francs, the sight of which made his
+wife's eyes sparkle. "I can no more resist the pleasure of offering them
+to you," he added, "than you can that of accepting them. This is the
+anniversary of the day I first saw you, and the diamonds will perhaps
+make you remember it!----"
+
+"You bad man!" said she, with a winning smile.
+
+She poked two fingers into her bodice, and pulling out a bouquet of
+violets she threw them with childlike contempt into the face of my
+friend. Alexander gave her the price of the jewels, crying out:
+
+"I had seen the flowers!"
+
+I shall never forget the lively gesture and the eager joy with which,
+like a cat which lays its spotted paw upon a mouse, the little woman
+seized the three bank notes; she rolled them up blushing with pleasure,
+and put them in the place of the violets which before had perfumed her
+bosom. I could not help thinking about my old mathematical master. I did
+not then see any difference between him and his pupil, than that which
+exists between a frugal man and a prodigal, little thinking that he
+of the two who seemed to calculate the better, actually calculated the
+worse. The luncheon went off merrily. Very soon, seated in a little
+drawing-room newly decorated, before a cheerful fire which gave warmth
+and made our hearts expand as in spring time, I felt compelled to make
+this loving couple a guest's compliments on the furnishing of their
+little bower.
+
+"It is a pity that all this costs so dear," said my friend, "but it
+is right that the nest be worthy of the bird; but why the devil do
+you compliment me upon curtains which are not paid for?--You make me
+remember, just at the time I am digesting lunch, that I still owe two
+thousand francs to a Turk of an upholsterer."
+
+At these words the mistress of the house made a mental inventory of
+the pretty room with her eyes, and the radiancy of her face changed to
+thoughtfulness. Alexander took me by the hand and led me to the recess
+of a bay window.
+
+"Do you happen," he said in a low voice, "to have a thousand crowns to
+lend me? I have only twelve thousand francs income, and this year--"
+
+"Alexander," cried the dear creature, interrupting her husband, while,
+rushing up, she offered him the three banknotes, "I see now that it is a
+piece of folly--"
+
+"What do you mean?" answered he, "keep your money."
+
+"But, my love, I am ruining you! I ought to know that you love me so
+much, that I ought not to tell you all that I wish for."
+
+"Keep it, my darling, it is your lawful property--nonsense, I shall
+gamble this winter and get all that back again!"
+
+"Gamble!" cried she, with an expression of horror. "Alexander, take back
+these notes! Come, sir, I wish you to do so."
+
+"No, no," replied my friend, repulsing the white and delicious little
+hand. "Are you not going on Thursday to a ball of Madame de B-----?"
+
+"I will think about what you asked of me," said I to my comrade.
+
+I went away bowing to his wife, but I saw plainly after that scene that
+my anacreontic salutation did not produce much effect upon her.
+
+"He must be mad," thought I as I went away, "to talk of a thousand
+crowns to a law student."
+
+Five days later I found myself at the house of Madame de B-----, whose
+balls were becoming fashionable. In the midst of the quadrilles I saw
+the wife of my friend and that of the mathematician. Madame Alexander
+wore a charming dress; some flowers and white muslin were all that
+composed it. She wore a little cross _a la Jeannette_, hanging by a
+black velvet ribbon which set off the whiteness of her scented skin;
+long pears of gold decorated her ears. On the neck of Madame the
+Professoress sparkled a superb cross of diamonds.
+
+"How funny that is," said I to a personage who had not yet studied the
+world's ledger, nor deciphered the heart of a single woman.
+
+That personage was myself. If I had then the desire to dance with those
+fair women, it was simply because I knew a secret which emboldened my
+timidity.
+
+"So after all, madame, you have your cross?" I said to her first.
+
+"Well, I fairly won it!" she replied, with a smile hard to describe.
+
+"How is this! no ear-rings?" I remarked to the wife of my friend.
+
+"Ah!" she replied, "I have enjoyed possession of them during a whole
+luncheon time, but you see that I have ended by converting Alexander."
+
+"He allowed himself to be easily convinced?"
+
+She answered with a look of triumph.
+
+Eight years afterwards, this scene suddenly rose to my memory, though
+I had long since forgotten it, and in the light of the candles I
+distinctly discerned the moral of it. Yes, a woman has a horror of being
+convinced of anything; when you try to persuade her she immediately
+submits to being led astray and continues to play the role which nature
+gave her. In her view, to allow herself to be won over is to grant a
+favor, but exact arguments irritate and confound her; in order to guide
+her you must employ the power which she herself so frequently employs
+and which lies in an appeal to sensibility. It is therefore in his
+wife, and not in himself, that a husband can find the instruments of
+his despotism; as diamond cuts diamond so must the woman be made to
+tyrannize over herself. To know how to offer the ear-rings in such a way
+that they will be returned, is a secret whose application embraces
+the slightest details of life. And now let us pass to the second
+observation.
+
+"He who can manage property of one toman, can manage one of an hundred
+thousand," says an Indian proverb; and I, for my part, will enlarge upon
+this Asiatic adage and declare, that he who can govern one woman can
+govern a nation, and indeed there is very much similarity between these
+two governments. Must not the policy of husbands be very nearly the same
+as the policy of kings? Do not we see kings trying to amuse the people
+in order to deprive them of their liberty; throwing food at their heads
+for one day, in order to make them forget the misery of a whole year;
+preaching to them not to steal and at the same time stripping them
+of everything; and saying to them: "It seems to me that if I were the
+people I should be virtuous"? It is from England that we obtain the
+precedent which husbands should adopt in their houses. Those who have
+eyes ought to see that when the government is running smoothly the
+Whigs are rarely in power. A long Tory ministry has always succeeded an
+ephemeral Liberal cabinet. The orators of a national party resemble the
+rats which wear their teeth away in gnawing the rotten panel; they close
+up the hole as soon as they smell the nuts and the lard locked up in the
+royal cupboard. The woman is the Whig of our government. Occupying the
+situation in which we have left her she might naturally aspire to the
+conquest of more than one privilege. Shut your eyes to the intrigues,
+allow her to waste her strength in mounting half the steps of your
+throne; and when she is on the point of touching your sceptre, fling her
+back to the ground, quite gently and with infinite grace, saying to
+her: "Bravo!" and leaving her to expect success in the hereafter. The
+craftiness of this manoeuvre will prove a fine support to you in the
+employment of any means which it may please you to choose from your
+arsenal, for the object of subduing your wife.
+
+Such are the general principles which a husband should put into
+practice, if he wishes to escape mistakes in ruling his little kingdom.
+Nevertheless, in spite of what was decided by the minority at the
+council of Macon (Montesquieu, who had perhaps foreseen the coming of
+constitutional government has remarked, I forget in what part of his
+writings, that good sense in public assemblies is always found on the
+side of the minority), we discern in a woman a soul and a body, and we
+commence by investigating the means to gain control of her moral nature.
+The exercise of thought, whatever people may say, is more noble than
+the exercise of bodily organs, and we give precedence to science over
+cookery and to intellectual training over hygiene.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XI. INSTRUCTION IN THE HOME.
+
+Whether wives should or should not be put under instruction--such is
+the question before us. Of all those which we have discussed this is the
+only one which has two extremes and admits of no compromise. Knowledge
+and ignorance, such are the two irreconcilable terms of this problem.
+Between these two abysses we seem to see Louis XVIII reckoning up
+the felicities of the eighteenth century, and the unhappiness of the
+nineteenth. Seated in the centre of the seesaw, which he knew so well
+how to balance by his own weight, he contemplates at one end of it the
+fanatic ignorance of a lay brother, the apathy of a serf, the shining
+armor on the horses of a banneret; he thinks he hears the cry, "France
+and Montjoie-Saint-Denis!" But he turns round, he smiles as he sees the
+haughty look of a manufacturer, who is captain in the national guard;
+the elegant carriage of a stock broker; the simple costume of a peer of
+France turned journalist and sending his son to the Polytechnique; then
+he notices the costly stuffs, the newspapers, the steam engines; and
+he drinks his coffee from a cup of Sevres, at the bottom of which still
+glitters the "N" surmounted by a crown.
+
+"Away with civilization! Away with thought!"--That is your cry. You
+ought to hold in horror the education of women for the reason so well
+realized in Spain, that it is easier to govern a nation of idiots than
+a nation of scholars. A nation degraded is happy: if she has not the
+sentiment of liberty, neither has she the storms and disturbances which
+it begets; she lives as polyps live; she can be cut up into two or three
+pieces and each piece is still a nation, complete and living, and ready
+to be governed by the first blind man who arms himself with the pastoral
+staff.
+
+What is it that produces this wonderful characteristic of humanity?
+Ignorance; ignorance is the sole support of despotism, which lives on
+darkness and silence. Now happiness in the domestic establishment as in
+a political state is a negative happiness. The affection of a people for
+a king, in an absolute monarchy, is perhaps less contrary to nature than
+the fidelity of a wife towards her husband, when love between them no
+longer exists. Now we know that, in your house, love at this moment has
+one foot on the window-sill. It is necessary for you, therefore, to put
+into practice that salutary rigor by which M. de Metternich prolongs his
+_statu quo_; but we would advise you to do so with more tact and with
+still more tenderness; for your wife is more crafty than all the Germans
+put together, and as voluptuous as the Italians.
+
+You should, therefore, try to put off as long as possible the fatal
+moment when your wife asks you for a book. This will be easy. You will
+first of all pronounce in a tone of disdain the phrase "Blue stocking;"
+and, on her request being repeated, you will tell her what ridicule
+attaches, among the neighbors, to pedantic women.
+
+You will then repeat to her, very frequently, that the most lovable and
+the wittiest women in the world are found at Paris, where women never
+read;
+
+That women are like people of quality who, according to Mascarillo, know
+everything without having learned anything; that a woman while she
+is dancing, or while she is playing cards, without even having
+the appearance of listening, ought to know how to pick up from the
+conversation of talented men the ready-made phrases out of which fools
+manufacture their wit at Paris;
+
+That in this country decisive judgments on men and affairs are passed
+round from hand to hand; and that the little cutting phrase with which
+a woman criticises an author, demolishes a work, or heaps contempt on a
+picture, has more power in the world than a court decision;
+
+That women are beautiful mirrors, which naturally reflect the most
+brilliant ideas;
+
+That natural wit is everything, and the best education is gained rather
+from what we learn in the world than by what we read in books;
+
+That, above all, reading ends in making the eyes dull, etc.
+
+To think of leaving a woman at liberty to read the books which her
+character of mind may prompt her to choose! This is to drop a spark in
+a powder magazine; it is worse than that, it is to teach your wife to
+separate herself from you; to live in an imaginary world, in a Paradise.
+For what do women read? Works of passion, the _Confessions_ of Rousseau,
+romances, and all those compositions which work most powerfully on
+their sensibility. They like neither argument nor the ripe fruits of
+knowledge. Now have you ever considered the results which follow these
+poetical readings?
+
+Romances, and indeed all works of imagination, paint sentiments and
+events with colors of a very different brilliancy from those presented
+by nature. The fascination of such works springs less from the desire
+which each author feels to show his skill in putting forth choice and
+delicate ideas than from the mysterious working of the human intellect.
+It is characteristic of man to purify and refine everything that he lays
+up in the treasury of his thoughts. What human faces, what monuments of
+the dead are not made more beautiful than actual nature in the artistic
+representation? The soul of the reader assists in this conspiracy
+against the truth, either by means of the profound silence which it
+enjoys in reading or by the fire of mental conception with which it
+is agitated or by the clearness with which imagery is reflected in
+the mirror of the understanding. Who has not seen on reading the
+_Confessions_ of Jean-Jacques, that Madame de Warens is described as
+much prettier than she ever was in actual life? It might almost be said
+that our souls dwell with delight upon the figures which they had met in
+a former existence, under fairer skies; that they accept the creations
+of another soul only as wings on which they may soar into space;
+features the most delicate they bring to perfection by making them their
+own; and the most poetic expression which appears in the imagery of an
+author brings forth still more ethereal imagery in the mind of a reader.
+To read is to join with the writer in a creative act. The mystery of
+the transubstantiation of ideas, originates perhaps in the instinctive
+consciousness that we have of a vocation loftier than our present
+destiny. Or, is it based on the lost tradition of a former life? What
+must that life have been, if this slight residuum of memory offers us
+such volumes of delight?
+
+Moreover, in reading plays and romances, woman, a creature much more
+susceptible than we are to excitement, experiences the most violent
+transport. She creates for herself an ideal existence beside which all
+reality grows pale; she at once attempts to realize this voluptuous
+life, to take to herself the magic which she sees in it. And, without
+knowing it, she passes from spirit to letter and from soul to sense.
+
+And would you be simple enough to believe that the manners, the
+sentiments of a man like you, who usually dress and undress before your
+wife, can counterbalance the influence of these books and outshine the
+glory of their fictitious lovers, in whose garments the fair reader sees
+neither hole nor stain?--Poor fool! too late, alas! for her happiness
+and for yours, your wife will find out that the _heroes_ of poetry are
+as rare in real life as the _Apollos_ of sculpture!
+
+Very many husbands will find themselves embarrassed in trying to prevent
+their wives from reading, yet there are certain people who allege that
+reading has this advantage, that men know what their wives are about
+when they have a book in hand. In the first place you will see, in the
+next Meditation, what a tendency the sedentary life has to make a woman
+quarrelsome; but have you never met those beings without poetry, who
+succeed in petrifying their unhappy companions by reducing life to its
+most mechanical elements? Study great men in their conversation and
+learn by heart the admirable arguments by which they condemn poetry and
+the pleasures of imagination.
+
+But if, after all your efforts, your wife persists in wishing to read,
+put at her disposal at once all possible books from the A B C of her
+little boy to _Rene_, a book more dangerous to you when in her hands
+than _Therese Philosophe_. You might create in her an utter disgust for
+reading by giving her tedious books; and plunge her into utter idiocy
+with _Marie Alacoque_, _The Brosse de Penitence_, or with the chansons
+which were so fashionable in the time of Louis XV; but later on you will
+find, in the present volume, the means of so thoroughly employing your
+wife's time, that any kind of reading will be quite out of the question.
+
+And first of all, consider the immense resources which the education of
+women has prepared for you in your efforts to turn your wife from her
+fleeting taste for science. Just see with what admirable stupidity girls
+lend themselves to reap the benefit of the education which is imposed
+upon them in France; we give them in charge to nursery maids, to
+companions, to governesses who teach them twenty tricks of coquetry and
+false modesty, for every single noble and true idea which they impart
+to them. Girls are brought up as slaves, and are accustomed to the idea
+that they are sent into the world to imitate their grandmothers, to
+breed canary birds, to make herbals, to water little Bengal rose-bushes,
+to fill in worsted work, or to put on collars. Moreover, if a little
+girl in her tenth year has more refinement than a boy of twenty, she
+is timid and awkward. She is frightened at a spider, chatters nonsense,
+thinks of dress, talks about the fashions and has not the courage to be
+either a watchful mother or a chaste wife.
+
+Notice what progress she had made; she has been shown how to paint
+roses, and to embroider ties in such a way as to earn eight sous a day.
+She has learned the history of France in _Ragois_ and chronology in the
+_Tables du Citoyen Chantreau_, and her young imagination has been set
+free in the realm of geography; all without any aim, excepting that of
+keeping away all that might be dangerous to her heart; but at the same
+time her mother and her teachers repeat with unwearied voice the lesson,
+that the whole science of a woman lies in knowing how to arrange the fig
+leaf which our Mother Eve wore. "She does not hear for fifteen years,"
+says Diderot, "anything else but 'my daughter, your fig leaf is on
+badly; my daughter, your fig leaf is on well; my daughter, would it not
+look better so?'"
+
+Keep your wife then within this fine and noble circle of knowledge.
+If by chance your wife wishes to have a library, buy for her Florian,
+Malte-Brun, _The Cabinet des Fees_, _The Arabian Nights_, Redoute's
+_Roses_, _The Customs of China_, _The Pigeons_, by Madame Knip, the
+great work on Egypt, etc. Carry out, in short, the clever suggestion
+of that princess who, when she was told of a riot occasioned by the
+dearness of bread, said, "Why don't they eat cake?"
+
+Perhaps, one evening, your wife will reproach you for being sullen and
+not speaking to her; perhaps she will say that you are ridiculous,
+when you have just made a pun; but this is one of the slight annoyances
+incident to our system; and, moreover, what does it matter to you that
+the education of women in France is the most pleasant of absurdities,
+and that your marital obscurantism has brought a doll to your arms? As
+you have not sufficient courage to undertake a fairer task, would it not
+be better to lead your wife along the beaten track of married life in
+safety, than to run the risk of making her scale the steep precipices of
+love? She is likely to be a mother: you must not exactly expect to have
+Gracchi for sons, but to be really _pater quem nuptiae demonstrant_;
+now, in order to aid you in reaching this consummation, we must make
+this book an arsenal from which each one, in accordance with his wife's
+character and his own, may choose weapons fit to employ against the
+terrible genius of evil, which is always ready to rise up in the soul of
+a wife; and since it may fairly be considered that the ignorant are the
+most cruel opponents of feminine education, this Meditation will serve
+as a breviary for the majority of husbands.
+
+If a woman has received a man's education, she possesses in very truth
+the most brilliant and most fertile sources of happiness both to herself
+and to her husband; but this kind of woman is as rare as happiness
+itself; and if you do not possess her for your wife, your best course is
+to confine the one you do possess, for the sake of your common felicity,
+to the region of ideas she was born in, for you must not forget that
+one moment of pride in her might destroy you, by setting on the throne a
+slave who would immediately be tempted to abuse her power.
+
+After all, by following the system prescribed in this Meditation, a
+man of superiority will be relieved from the necessity of putting his
+thoughts into small change, when he wishes to be understood by his
+wife, if indeed this man of superiority has been guilty of the folly of
+marrying one of those poor creatures who cannot understand him, instead
+of choosing for his wife a young girl whose mind and heart he has tested
+and studied for a considerable time.
+
+Our aim in this last matrimonial observation has not been to advise all
+men of superiority to seek for women of superiority and we do not wish
+each one to expound our principles after the manner of Madame de Stael,
+who attempted in the most indelicate manner to effect a union between
+herself and Napoleon. These two beings would have been very unhappy in
+their domestic life; and Josephine was a wife accomplished in a very
+different sense from this virago of the nineteenth century.
+
+And, indeed, when we praise those undiscoverable girls so happily
+educated by chance, so well endowed by nature, whose delicate souls
+endure so well the rude contact of the great soul of him we call _a
+man_, we mean to speak of those rare and noble creatures of whom Goethe
+has given us a model in his Claire of _Egmont_; we are thinking of those
+women who seek no other glory than that of playing their part well; who
+adapt themselves with amazing pliancy to the will and pleasure of those
+whom nature has given them for masters; soaring at one time into the
+boundless sphere of their thought and in turn stooping to the simple
+task of amusing them as if they were children; understanding well the
+inconsistencies of masculine and violent souls, understanding also their
+slightest word, their most puzzling looks; happy in silence, happy also
+in the midst of loquacity; and well aware that the pleasures, the
+ideas and the moral instincts of a Lord Byron cannot be those of a
+bonnet-maker. But we must stop; this fair picture has led us too far
+from our subject; we are treating of marriage and not of love.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XII. THE HYGIENE OF MARRIAGE.
+
+The aim of this Meditation is to call to your attention a new method
+of defence, by which you may reduce the will of your new wife to a
+condition of utter and abject submission. This is brought about by
+the reaction upon her moral nature of physical changes, and the wise
+lowering of her physical condition by a diet skillfully controlled.
+
+This great and philosophical question of conjugal medicine will
+doubtless be regarded favorably by all who are gouty, are impotent, or
+suffer from catarrh; and by that legion of old men whose dullness we
+have quickened by our article on the predestined. But it principally
+concerns those husbands who have courage enough to enter into those
+paths of machiavelism, such as would not have been unworthy of that
+great king of France who endeavored to secure the happiness of the
+nation at the expense of certain noble heads. Here, the subject is the
+same. The amputation or the weakening of certain members is always to
+the advantage of the whole body.
+
+Do you think seriously that a celibate who has been subject to a
+diet consisting of the herb hanea, of cucumbers, of purslane and the
+applications of leeches to his ears, as recommended by Sterne, would be
+able to carry by storm the honor of your wife? Suppose that a diplomat
+had been clever enough to affix a permanent linen plaster to the head
+of Napoleon, or to purge him every morning: Do you think that Napoleon,
+Napoleon the Great, would ever have conquered Italy? Was Napoleon,
+during his campaign in Russia, a prey to the most horrible pangs of
+dysuria, or was he not? That is one of the questions which has weighed
+upon the minds of the whole world. Is it not certain that cooling
+applications, douches, baths, etc., produce great changes in more or
+less acute affections of the brain? In the middle of the heat of July
+when each one of your pores slowly filters out and returns to the
+devouring atmosphere the glasses of iced lemonade which you have drunk
+at a single draught, have you ever felt the flame of courage, the vigor
+of thought, the complete energy which rendered existence light and sweet
+to you some months before?
+
+No, no; the iron most closely cemented into the hardest stone will
+raise and throw apart the most durable monument, by reason of the secret
+influence exercised by the slow and invisible variations of heat and
+cold, which vex the atmosphere. In the first place, let us be sure that
+if atmospheric mediums have an influence over man, there is still
+a stronger reason for believing that man, in turn, influences the
+imagination of his kind, by the more or less vigor with which he
+projects his will and thus produces a veritable atmosphere around him.
+
+It is in this fact that the power of the actor's talent lies, as well
+as that of poetry and of fanaticism; for the former is the eloquence of
+words, as the latter is the eloquence of actions; and in this lies the
+foundation of a science, so far in its infancy.
+
+This will, so potent in one man against another, this nervous and fluid
+force, eminently mobile and transmittable, is itself subject to the
+changing condition of our organization, and there are many circumstances
+which make this frail organism of ours to vary. At this point, our
+metaphysical observation shall stop and we will enter into an analysis
+of the circumstances which develop the will of man and impart to it a
+grater degree of strength or weakness.
+
+Do not believe, however, that it is our aim to induce you to put
+cataplasms on the honor of your wife, to lock her up in a sweating
+house, or to seal her up like a letter; no. We will not even attempt
+to teach you the magnetic theory which would give you the power to
+make your will triumph in the soul of your wife; there is not a single
+husband who would accept the happiness of an eternal love at the price
+of this perpetual strain laid upon his animal forces. But we shall
+attempt to expound a powerful system of hygiene, which will enable you
+to put out the flame when your chimney takes fire. The elegant women
+of Paris and the provinces (and these elegant women form a very
+distinguished class among the honest women) have plenty of means of
+attaining the object which we propose, without rummaging in the arsenal
+of medicine for the four cold specifics, the water-lily and the thousand
+inventions worthy only of witches. We will leave to Aelian his herb
+hanea and to Sterne the purslane and cucumber which indicate too plainly
+his antiphlogistic purpose.
+
+You should let your wife recline all day long on soft armchairs, in
+which she sinks into a veritable bath of eiderdown or feathers; you
+should encourage in every way that does no violence to your conscience,
+the inclination which women have to breathe no other air but the scented
+atmosphere of a chamber seldom opened, where daylight can scarcely enter
+through the soft, transparent curtains.
+
+You will obtain marvelous results from this system, after having
+previously experienced the shock of her excitement; but if you are
+strong enough to support this momentary transport of your wife you will
+soon see her artificial energy die away. In general, women love to live
+fast, but, after their tempest of passion, return to that condition of
+tranquillity which insures the happiness of a husband.
+
+Jean-Jacques, through the instrumentality of his enchanting Julie, must
+have proved to your wife that it was infinitely becoming to refrain from
+affronting her delicate stomach and her refined palate by making chyle
+out of coarse lumps of beef, and enormous collops of mutton. Is there
+anything purer in the world than those interesting vegetables, always
+fresh and scentless, those tinted fruits, that coffee, that fragrant
+chocolate, those oranges, the golden apples of Atalanta, the dates of
+Arabia and the biscuits of Brussels, a wholesome and elegant food which
+produces satisfactory results, at the same time that it imparts to a
+woman an air of mysterious originality? By the regimen which she chooses
+she becomes quite celebrated in her immediate circle, just as she would
+be by a singular toilet, a benevolent action or a _bon mot_. Pythagoras
+must needs have cast his spell over her, and become as much petted by
+her as a poodle or an ape.
+
+Never commit the imprudence of certain men who, for the sake of putting
+on the appearance of wit, controvert the feminine dictum, _that the
+figure is preserved by meagre diet_. Women on such a diet never grow
+fat, that is clear and positive; do you stick to that.
+
+Praise the skill with which some women, renowned for their beauty, have
+been able to preserve it by bathing themselves in milk, several times
+a day, or in water compounded of substances likely to render the skin
+softer and to lower the nervous tension.
+
+Advise her above all things to refrain from washing herself in cold
+water; because water warm or tepid is the proper thing for all kinds of
+ablutions.
+
+Let Broussais be your idol. At the least indisposition of your wife, and
+on the slightest pretext, order the application of leeches; do not even
+shrink from applying from time to time a few dozen on yourself, in order
+to establish the system of that celebrated doctor in your household. You
+will constantly be called upon from your position as husband to discover
+that your wife is too ruddy; try even sometimes to bring the blood to
+her head, in order to have the right to introduce into the house at
+certain intervals a squad of leeches.
+
+Your wife ought to drink water, lightly tinged with a Burgundy wine
+agreeable to her taste, but destitute of any tonic properties; every
+other kind of wine would be bad for her. Never allow her to drink water
+alone; if you do, you are lost.
+
+"Impetuous fluid! As soon as you press against the floodgates of the
+brain, how quickly do they yield to your power! Then Curiosity comes
+swimming by, making signs to her companions to follow; they plunge into
+the current. Imagination sits dreaming on the bank. She follows the
+torrent with her eyes and transforms the fragments of straw and reed
+into masts and bowsprit. And scarcely has the transformation taken
+place, before Desire, holding in one hand her skirt drawn up even to
+her knees, appears, sees the vessel and takes possession of it. O ye
+drinkers of water, it is by means of that magic spring that you have so
+often turned and turned again the world at your will, throwing beneath
+your feet the weak, trampling on his neck, and sometimes changing even
+the form and aspect of nature!"
+
+If by this system of inaction, in combination with our system of diet,
+you fail to obtain satisfactory results, throw yourself with might and
+main into another system, which we will explain to you.
+
+Man has a certain degree of energy given to him. Such and such a man or
+woman stands to another as ten is to thirty, as one to five; and there
+is a certain degree of energy which no one of us ever exceeds. The
+quantity of energy, or willpower, which each of us possesses diffuses
+itself like sound; it is sometimes weak, sometimes strong; it modifies
+itself according to the octaves to which it mounts. This force is
+unique, and although it may be dissipated in desire, in passion, in
+toils of intellect or in bodily exertion, it turns towards the object to
+which man directs it. A boxer expends it in blows of the fist, the baker
+in kneading his bread, the poet in the enthusiasm which consumes and
+demands an enormous quantity of it; it passes to the feet of the dancer;
+in fact, every one diffuses it at will, and may I see the Minotaur
+tranquilly seated this very evening upon my bed, if you do not know as
+well as I do how he expends it. Almost all men spend in necessary toils,
+or in the anguish of direful passions, this fine sum of energy and of
+will, with which nature has endowed them; but our honest women are all
+the prey to the caprices and the struggles of this power which knows not
+what to do with itself. If, in the case of your wife, this energy has
+not been subdued by the prescribed dietary regimen, subject her to some
+form of activity which will constantly increase in violence. Find some
+means by which her sum of force which inconveniences you may be carried
+off, by some occupation which shall entirely absorb her strength.
+Without setting your wife to work the crank of a machine, there are a
+thousand ways of tiring her out under the load of constant work.
+
+In leaving it to you to find means for carrying out our design--and
+these means vary with circumstances--we would point out that dancing is
+one of the very best abysses in which love may bury itself. This point
+having been very well treated by a contemporary, we will give him here
+an opportunity of speaking his mind:
+
+
+ "The poor victim who is the admiration of an enchanted audience
+ pays dear for her success. What result can possibly follow on
+ exertions so ill-proportioned to the resources of the delicate
+ sex? The muscles of the body, disproportionately wearied, are
+ forced to their full power of exertion. The nervous forces,
+ intended to feed the fire of passions, and the labor of the brain,
+ are diverted from their course. The failure of desire, the wish
+ for rest, the exclusive craving for substantial food, all point to
+ a nature impoverished, more anxious to recruit than to enjoy.
+ Moreover, a denizen of the side scenes said to me one day,
+ 'Whoever has lived with dancers has lived with sheep; for in their
+ exhaustion they can think of nothing but strong food.' Believe me,
+ then, the love which a ballet girl inspires is very delusive; in
+ her we find, under an appearance of an artificial springtime, a
+ soil which is cold as well as greedy, and senses which are utterly
+ dulled. The Calabrian doctors prescribed the dance as a remedy for
+ the hysteric affections which are common among the women of their
+ country; and the Arabs use a somewhat similar recipe for the
+ highbred mares, whose too lively temperament hinders their
+ fecundity. 'Dull as a dancer' is a familiar proverb at the
+ theatre. In fact, the best brains of Europe are convinced that
+ dancing brings with it a result eminently cooling.
+
+ "In support of this it may be necessary to add other observations.
+ The life of shepherds gives birth to irregular loves. The morals
+ of weavers were horribly decried in Greece. The Italians have
+ given birth to a proverb concerning the lubricity of lame women.
+ The Spanish, in whose veins are found many mixtures of African
+ incontinence, have expressed their sentiments in a maxim which is
+ familiar with them: _Muger y gallina pierna quebrantada_ [it is
+ good that a woman and a hen have one broken leg]. The profound
+ sagacity of the Orientals in the art of pleasure is altogether
+ expressed by this ordinance of the caliph Hakim, founder of the
+ Druses, who forbade, under pain of death, the making in his
+ kingdom of any shoes for women. It seems that over the whole
+ globe the tempests of the heart wait only to break out after the
+ limbs are at rest!"
+
+
+What an admirable manoeuvre it would be to make a wife dance, and to
+feed her on vegetables!
+
+Do not believe that these observations, which are as true as they
+are wittily stated, contradict in any way the system which we have
+previously prescribed; by the latter, as by the former, we succeed in
+producing in a woman that needed listlessness, which is the pledge of
+repose and tranquility. By the latter you leave a door open, that the
+enemy may flee; by the former, you slay him.
+
+Now at this point it seems to us that we hear timorous people and those
+of narrow views rising up against our idea of hygiene in the name of
+morality and sentiment.
+
+"Is not woman endowed with a soul? Has she not feelings as we have?
+What right has any one, without regard to her pain, her ideas, or
+her requirements, to hammer her out, as a cheap metal, out of which a
+workman fashions a candlestick or an extinguisher? Is it because the
+poor creatures are already so feeble and miserable that a brute claims
+the power to torture them, merely at the dictate of his own fancies,
+which may be more or less just? And, if by this weakening or heating
+system of yours, which draws out, softens, hardens the fibres, you cause
+frightful and cruel sickness, if you bring to the tomb a woman who is
+dear to you; if, if,--"
+
+This is our answer:
+
+Have you never noticed into how many different shapes harlequin and
+columbine change their little white hats? They turn and twist them so
+well that they become, one after another, a spinning-top, a boat, a
+wine-glass, a half-moon, a cap, a basket, a fish, a whip, a dagger, a
+baby, and a man's head.
+
+This is an exact image of the despotism with which you ought to shape
+and reshape your wife.
+
+The wife is a piece of property, acquired by contract; she is part of
+your furniture, for possession is nine-tenths of the law; in fact, the
+woman is not, to speak correctly, anything but an adjunct to the man;
+therefore abridge, cut, file this article as you choose; she is in every
+sense yours. Take no notice at all of her murmurs, of her cries, of
+her sufferings; nature has ordained her for your use, that she may bear
+everything--children, griefs, blows and pains from man.
+
+Don't accuse yourself of harshness. In the codes of all the nations
+which are called civilized, man has written the laws which govern
+the destiny of women in these cruel terms: _Vae victis!_ Woe to the
+conquered!
+
+Finally, think upon this last observation, the most weighty, perhaps, of
+all that we have made up to this time: if you, her husband, do not break
+under the scourge of your will this weak and charming reed, there will
+be a celibate, capricious and despotic, ready to bring her under a yoke
+more cruel still; and she will have to endure two tyrannies instead
+of one. Under all considerations, therefore, humanity demands that you
+should follow the system of our hygiene.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XIII. OF PERSONAL MEASURES.
+
+Perhaps the preceding Meditations will prove more likely to develop
+general principles of conduct, than to repel force by force. They
+furnish, however, the pharmacopoeia of medicine and not the practice of
+medicine. Now consider the personal means which nature has put into your
+hands for self-defence; for Providence has forgotten no one; if to the
+sepia (that fish of the Adriatic) has been given the black dye by which
+he produces a cloud in which he disappears from his enemy, you should
+believe that a husband has not been left without a weapon; and now the
+time has come for you to draw yours.
+
+You ought to have stipulated before you married that your wife should
+nurse her own children; in this case, as long as she is occupied in
+bearing children or in nursing them you will avoid the danger from one
+or two quarters. The wife who is engaged in bringing into the world and
+nursing a baby has not really the time to bother with a lover, not to
+speak of the fact that before and after her confinement she cannot
+show herself in the world. In short, how can the most bold of the
+distinguished women who are the subject of this work show herself under
+these circumstances in public? O Lord Byron, thou didst not wish to see
+women even eat!
+
+Six months after her confinement, and when the child is on the eve
+of being weaned, a woman just begins to feel that she can enjoy her
+restoration and her liberty.
+
+If your wife has not nursed her first child, you have too much sense
+not to notice this circumstance, and not to make her desire to nurse
+her next one. You will read to her the _Emile_ of Jean-Jacques; you will
+fill her imagination with a sense of motherly duties; you will excite
+her moral feelings, etc.: in a word, you are either a fool or a man of
+sense; and in the first case, even after reading this book, you will
+always be minotaurized; while in the second, you will understand how to
+take a hint.
+
+This first expedient is in reality your own personal business. It will
+give you a great advantage in carrying out all the other methods.
+
+Since Alcibiades cut the ears and the tail of his dog, in order to do a
+service to Pericles, who had on his hands a sort of Spanish war, as well
+as an Ouvrard contract affair, such as was then attracting the notice of
+the Athenians, there is not a single minister who has not endeavored to
+cut the ears of some dog or other.
+
+So in medicine, when inflammation takes place at some vital point of
+the system, counter-irritation is brought about at some other point, by
+means of blisters, scarifications and cupping.
+
+Another method consists in blistering your wife, or giving her, with a
+mental needle, a prod whose violence is such as to make a diversion in
+your favor.
+
+A man of considerable mental resources had made his honeymoon last for
+about four years; the moon began to wane, and he saw appearing the fatal
+hollow in its circle. His wife was exactly in that state of mind which
+we attributed at the close of our first part to every honest woman; she
+had taken a fancy to a worthless fellow who was both insignificant in
+appearance and ugly; the only thing in his favor was, he was not her
+own husband. At this juncture, her husband meditated the cutting of some
+dog's tail, in order to renew, if possible, his lease of happiness. His
+wife had conducted herself with such tact, that it would have been very
+embarrassing to forbid her lover the house, for she had discovered some
+slight tie of relationship between them. The danger became, day by day,
+more imminent. The scent of the Minotaur was all around. One evening the
+husband felt himself plunged into a mood of deep vexation so acute as
+to be apparent to his wife. His wife had begun to show him more kindness
+than she had ever exhibited, even during the honeymoon; and hence
+question after question racked his mind. On her part a dead silence
+reigned. The anxious questionings of his mind were redoubled; his
+suspicions burst forth, and he was seized with forebodings of future
+calamity! Now, on this occasion, he deftly applied a Japanese blister,
+which burned as fiercely as an _auto-da-fe_ of the year 1600. At
+first his wife employed a thousand stratagems to discover whether the
+annoyance of her husband was caused by the presence of her lover; it
+was her first intrigue and she displayed a thousand artifices in it. Her
+imagination was aroused; it was no longer taken up with her lover; had
+she not better, first of all, probe her husband's secret?
+
+One evening the husband, moved by the desire to confide in his loving
+helpmeet all his troubles, informed her that their whole fortune was
+lost. They would have to give up their carriage, their box at the
+theatre, balls, parties, even Paris itself; perhaps, by living on their
+estate in the country a year or two, they might retrieve all! Appealing
+to the imagination of his wife, he told her how he pitied her for her
+attachment to a man who was indeed deeply in love with her, but was now
+without fortune; he tore his hair, and his wife was compelled in honor
+to be deeply moved; then in this first excitement of their conjugal
+disturbance he took her off to his estate. Then followed scarifications,
+mustard plaster upon mustard plaster, and the tails of fresh dogs were
+cut: he caused a Gothic wing to be built to the chateau; madame
+altered the park ten time over in order to have fountains and lakes
+and variations in the grounds; finally, the husband in the midst of her
+labors did not forget his own, which consisted in providing her with
+interesting reading, and launching upon her delicate attentions, etc.
+Notice, he never informed his wife of the trick he had played on her;
+and if his fortune was recuperated, it was directly after the
+building of the wing, and the expenditure of enormous sums in making
+water-courses; but he assured her that the lake provided a water-power
+by which mills might be run, etc.
+
+Now, there was a conjugal blister well conceived, for this husband
+neither neglected to rear his family nor to invite to his house
+neighbors who were tiresome, stupid or old; and if he spent the winter
+in Paris, he flung his wife into the vortex of balls and races, so that
+she had not a minute to give to lovers, who are usually the fruit of a
+vacant life.
+
+Journeys to Italy, Switzerland or Greece, sudden complaints which
+require a visit to the waters, and the most distant waters, are pretty
+good blisters. In fact, a man of sense should know how to manufacture a
+thousand of them.
+
+Let us continue our examination of such personal methods.
+
+And here we would have you observe that we are reasoning upon a
+hypothesis, without which this book will be unintelligible to you;
+namely, we suppose that your honeymoon has lasted for a respectable time
+and that the lady that you married was not a widow, but a maid; on the
+opposite supposition, it is at least in accordance with French manners
+to think that your wife married you merely for the purpose of becoming
+inconsistent.
+
+From the moment when the struggle between virtue and inconsistency
+begins in your home, the whole question rests upon the constant and
+involuntary comparison which your wife is instituting between you and
+her lover.
+
+And here you may find still another mode of defence, entirely personal,
+seldom employed by husbands, but the men of superiority will not fear
+to attempt it. It is to belittle the lover without letting your wife
+suspect your intention. You ought to be able to bring it about so that
+she will say to herself some evening while she is putting her hair in
+curl-papers, "My husband is superior to him."
+
+In order to succeed, and you ought to be able to succeed, since you have
+the immense advantage over the lover in knowing the character of your
+wife, and how she is most easily wounded, you should, with all the tact
+of a diplomat, lead this lover to do silly things and cause him to annoy
+her, without his being aware of it.
+
+In the first place, this lover, as usual, will seek your friendship,
+or you will have friends in common; then, either through the
+instrumentality of these friends or by insinuations adroitly but
+treacherously made, you will lead him astray on essential points; and,
+with a little cleverness, you will succeed in finding your wife ready to
+deny herself to her lover when he calls, without either she or he being
+able to tell the reason. Thus you will have created in the bosom of
+your home a comedy in five acts, in which you play, to your profit, the
+brilliant role of Figaro or Almaviva; and for some months you will amuse
+yourself so much the more, because your _amour-propre_, your vanity,
+your all, were at stake.
+
+I had the good fortune in my youth to win the confidence of an old
+_emigre_ who gave me those rudiments of education which are generally
+obtained by young people from women. This friend, whose memory will
+always be dear to me, taught me by his example to put into practice
+those diplomatic stratagems which require tact as well as grace.
+
+The Comte de Noce had returned from Coblenz at a time when it was
+dangerous for the nobility to be found in France. No one had such
+courage and such kindness, such craft and such recklessness as this
+aristocrat. Although he was sixty years old he had married a woman of
+twenty-five, being compelled to this act of folly by soft-heartedness;
+for he thus delivered this poor child from the despotism of a capricious
+mother. "Would you like to be my widow?" this amiable old gentleman had
+said to Mademoiselle de Pontivy, but his heart was too affectionate not
+to become more attached to his wife than a sensible man ought to be.
+As in his youth he had been under the influence of several among the
+cleverest women in the court of Louis XV, he thought he would have no
+difficulty in keeping his wife from any entanglement. What man excepting
+him have I ever seen, who could put into successful practice the
+teachings which I am endeavoring to give to husbands! What charm
+could he impart to life by his delightful manners and fascinating
+conversation!--His wife never knew until after his death what she then
+learned from me, namely, that he had the gout. He had wisely retired to
+a home in the hollow of a valley, close to a forest. God only knows
+what rambles he used to take with his wife!--His good star decreed that
+Mademoiselle de Pontivy should possess an excellent heart and should
+manifest in a high degree that exquisite refinement, that sensitive
+modesty which renders beautiful the plainest girl in the world. All of a
+sudden, one of his nephews, a good-looking military man, who had escaped
+from the disasters of Moscow, returned to his uncle's house, as much for
+the sake of learning how far he had to fear his cousins, as heirs, as in
+the hope of laying siege to his aunt. His black hair, his moustache,
+the easy small-talk of the staff officer, a certain freedom which was
+elegant as well as trifling, his bright eyes, contrasted favorably with
+the faded graces of his uncle. I arrived at the precise moment when the
+young countess was teaching her newly found relation to play backgammon.
+The proverb says that "women never learn this game excepting from their
+lovers, and vice versa." Now, during a certain game, M. de Noce had
+surprised his wife and the viscount in the act of exchanging one of
+those looks which are full of mingled innocence, fear, and desire. In
+the evening he proposed to us a hunting-party, and we agreed. I never
+saw him so gay and so eager as he appeared on the following morning, in
+spite of the twinges of gout which heralded an approaching attack. The
+devil himself could not have been better able to keep up a conversation
+on trifling subjects than he was. He had formerly been a musketeer
+in the Grays and had known Sophie Arnoud. This explains all. The
+conversation after a time became so exceedingly free among us three,
+that I hope God may forgive me for it!
+
+"I would never have believed that my uncle was such a dashing blade?"
+said the nephew.
+
+We made a halt, and while we were sitting on the edge of a green forest
+clearing, the count led us on to discourse about women just as Brantome
+and Aloysia might have done.
+
+"You fellows are very happy under the present government!--the women of
+the time are well mannered" (in order to appreciate the exclamation of
+the old gentleman, the reader should have heard the atrocious stories
+which the captain had been relating). "And this," he went on, "is one of
+the advantages resulting from the Revolution. The present system gives
+very much more charm and mystery to passion. In former times women were
+easy; ah! indeed, you would not believe what skill it required, what
+daring, to wake up those worn-out hearts; we were always on the _qui
+vive_. But yet in those days a man became celebrated for a broad joke,
+well put, or for a lucky piece of insolence. That is what women love,
+and it will always be the best method of succeeding with them!"
+
+These last words were uttered in a tone of profound contempt; he
+stopped, and began to play with the hammer of his gun as if to disguise
+his deep feeling.
+
+"But nonsense," he went on, "my day is over! A man ought to have the
+body as well as the imagination young. Why did I marry? What is most
+treacherous in girls educated by mothers who lived in that brilliant era
+of gallantry, is that they put on an air of frankness, of reserve; they
+look as if butter would not melt in their mouths, and those who know
+them well feel that they would swallow anything!"
+
+He rose, lifted his gun with a gesture of rage, and dashing it to the
+ground thrust it far up the butt in the moist sod.
+
+"It would seem as if my dear aunt were fond of a little fun," said the
+officer to me in a low voice.
+
+"Or of denouements that do not come off!" I added.
+
+The nephew tightened his cravat, adjusted his collar and gave a jump
+like a Calabrian goat. We returned to the chateau at about two in the
+afternoon. The count kept me with him until dinner-time, under the
+pretext of looking for some medals, of which he had spoken during our
+return home. The dinner was dull. The countess treated her nephew with
+stiff and cold politeness. When we entered the drawing-room the count
+said to his wife:
+
+"Are you going to play backgammon?--We will leave you."
+
+The young countess made no reply. She gazed at the fire, as if she had
+not heard. Her husband took some steps towards the door, inviting me by
+the wave of his hand to follow him. At the sound of his footsteps, his
+wife quickly turned her head.
+
+"Why do you leave us?" said she, "you will have all tomorrow to show
+your friend the reverse of the medals."
+
+The count remained. Without paying any attention to the awkwardness
+which had succeeded the former military aplomb of his nephew, the
+count exercised during the whole evening his full powers as a charming
+conversationalist. I had never before seen him so brilliant or so
+gracious. We spoke a great deal about women. The witticisms of our host
+were marked by the most exquisite refinement. He made me forget that
+his hair was white, for he showed the brilliancy which belonged to a
+youthful heart, a gaiety which effaces the wrinkles from the cheek and
+melts the snow of wintry age.
+
+The next day the nephew went away. Even after the death of M. de Noce, I
+tried to profit by the intimacy of those familiar conversations in which
+women are sometimes caught off their guard to sound her, but I could
+never learn what impertinence the viscount had exhibited towards his
+aunt. His insolence must have been excessive, for since that time Madame
+de Noce has refused to see her nephew, and up to the present moment
+never hears him named without a slight movement of her eyebrows. I did
+not at once guess the end at which the Comte de Noce aimed, in inviting
+us to go shooting; but I discovered later that he had played a pretty
+bold game.
+
+Nevertheless, if you happen at last, like M. de Noce, to carry off a
+decisive victory, do not forget to put into practice at once the system
+of blisters; and do not for a moment imagine that such _tours de force_
+are to be repeated with safety. If that is the way you use your talents,
+you will end by losing caste in your wife's estimation; for she will
+demand of you, reasonably enough, double what you would give her, and
+the time will come when you declare bankruptcy. The human soul in its
+desires follows a sort of arithmetical progression, the end and origin
+of which are equally unknown. Just as the opium-eater must constantly
+increase his doses in order to obtain the same result, so our mind,
+imperious as it is weak, desires that feeling, ideas and objects should
+go on ever increasing in size and in intensity. Hence the necessity of
+cleverly distributing the interest in a dramatic work, and of graduating
+doses in medicine. Thus you see, if you always resort to the employment
+of means like these, that you must accommodate such daring measures to
+many circumstances, and success will always depend upon the motives to
+which you appeal.
+
+And finally, have you influence, powerful friends, an important post?
+The last means I shall suggest cuts to the root of the evil. Would you
+have the power to send your wife's lover off by securing his promotion,
+or his change of residence by an exchange, if he is a military man? You
+cut off by this means all communication between them; later on we will
+show you how to do it; for _sublata causa tollitur effectus_,--Latin
+words which may be freely translated "there is no effect without a
+cause."
+
+Nevertheless, you feel that your wife may easily choose another lover;
+but in addition to these preliminary expedients, you will always have
+a blister ready, in order to gain time, and calculate how you may bring
+the affair to an end by fresh devices.
+
+Study how to combine the system of blisters with the mimic wiles of
+Carlin, the immortal Carlin of the _Comedie-Italienne_ who always held
+and amused an audience for whole hours, by uttering the same words,
+varied only by the art of pantomime and pronounced with a thousand
+inflections of different tone,--"The queen said to the king!" Imitate
+Carlin, discover some method of always keeping your wife in check, so
+as not to be checkmated yourself. Take a degree among constitutional
+ministers, a degree in the art of making promises. Habituate yourself to
+show at seasonable times the punchinello which makes children run after
+you without knowing the distance they run. We are all children, and
+women are all inclined through their curiosity to spend their time
+in pursuit of a will-o'-the-wisp. The flame is brilliant and quickly
+vanishes, but is not the imagination at hand to act as your ally?
+Finally, study the happy art of being near her and yet not being near
+her; of seizing the opportunity which will yield you pre-eminence in her
+mind without ever crushing her with a sense of your superiority, or even
+of her own happiness. If the ignorance in which you have kept her does
+not altogether destroy her intellect, you must remain in such relations
+with her that each of you will still desire the company of the other.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XIV. OF APARTMENTS.
+
+The preceding methods and systems are in a way purely moral; they share
+the nobility of the soul, there is nothing repulsive in them; but now we
+must proceed to consider precautions _a la Bartholo_. Do not give way to
+timidity. There is a marital courage, as there is a civil and military
+courage, as there is the courage of the National Guard.
+
+What is the first course of a young girl after having purchased a
+parrot? Is it not to fasten it up in a pretty cage, from which it cannot
+get out without permission?
+
+You may learn your duty from this child.
+
+Everything that pertains to the arrangement of your house and of your
+apartments should be planned so as not to give your wife any advantage,
+in case she has decided to deliver you to the Minotaur; half of all
+actual mischances are brought about by the deplorable facilities which
+the apartments furnish.
+
+Before everything else determine to have for your porter a _single man_
+entirely devoted to your person. This is a treasure easily to be
+found. What husband is there throughout the world who has not either a
+foster-father or some old servant, upon whose knees he has been dandled!
+There ought to exist by means of your management, a hatred like that of
+Artreus and Thyestes between your wife and this Nestor--guardian of
+your gate. This gate is the Alpha and Omega of an intrigue. May not all
+intrigues in love be confined in these words--entering and leaving?
+
+Your house will be of no use to you if it does not stand between a
+court and a garden, and so constructed as to be detached from all other
+buildings. You must abolish all recesses in your apartments. A cupboard,
+if it contain but six pots of preserves, should be walled in. You are
+preparing yourself for war, and the first thought of a general is to cut
+his enemy off from supplies. Moreover, all the walls must be smooth, in
+order to present to the eye lines which may be taken in at a glance,
+and permit the immediate recognition of the least strange object. If you
+consult the remains of antique monuments you will see that the beauty of
+Greek and Roman apartments sprang principally from the purity of their
+lines, the clear sweep of their walls and scantiness of furniture. The
+Greeks would have smiled in pity, if they had seen the gaps which our
+closets make in our drawing-rooms.
+
+This magnificent system of defence should above all be put in active
+operation in the apartment of your wife; never let her curtain her bed
+in such a way that one can walk round it amid a maze of hangings; be
+inexorable in the matter of connecting passages, and let her chamber be
+at the bottom of your reception-rooms, so as to show at a glance those
+who come and go.
+
+_The Marriage of Figaro_ will no doubt have taught you to put your
+wife's chamber at a great height from the ground. All celibates are
+Cherubins.
+
+Your means, doubtless, will permit your wife to have a dressing-room,
+a bath-room, and a room for her chambermaid. Think then on Susanne,
+and never commit the fault of arranging this little room below that of
+madame's, but place it always above, and do not shrink from disfiguring
+your mansion by hideous divisions in the windows.
+
+If, by ill luck, you see that this dangerous apartment communicates with
+that of your wife by a back staircase, earnestly consult your architect;
+let his genius exhaust itself in rendering this dangerous staircase as
+innocent as the primitive garret ladder; we conjure you let not this
+staircase have appended to it any treacherous lurking-place; its stiff
+and angular steps must not be arranged with that tempting curve which
+Faublas and Justine found so useful when they waited for the exit of
+the Marquis de B-----. Architects nowadays make such staircases as are
+absolutely preferable to ottomans. Restore rather the virtuous garret
+steps of our ancestors.
+
+Concerning the chimneys in the apartment of madame, you must take care
+to place in the flue, five feet from the ground, an iron grill, even
+though it be necessary to put up a fresh one every time the chimney is
+swept. If your wife laughs at this precaution, suggest to her the number
+of murders that have been committed by means of chimneys. Almost all
+women are afraid of robbers. The bed is one of those important pieces
+of furniture whose structure will demand long consideration. Everything
+concerning it is of vital importance. The following is the result of
+long experience in the construction of beds. Give to this piece of
+furniture a form so original that it may be looked upon without disgust,
+in the midst of changes of fashion which succeed so rapidly in rendering
+antiquated the creations of former decorators, for it is essential that
+your wife be unable to change, at pleasure, this theatre of married
+happiness. The base should be plain and massive and admit of no
+treacherous interval between it and the floor; and bear in mind always
+that the Donna Julia of Byron hid Don Juan under her pillow. But it
+would be ridiculous to treat lightly so delicate a subject.
+
+
+ LXII.
+ The bed is the whole of marriage.
+
+
+Moreover, we must not delay to direct your attention to this wonderful
+creation of human genius, an invention which claims our recognition much
+more than ships, firearms, matches, wheeled carriages, steam engines
+of all kinds, more than even barrels and bottles. In the first place,
+a little thought will convince us that this is all true of the bed;
+but when we begin to think that it is our second father, that the most
+tranquil and most agitated half of our existence is spent under its
+protecting canopy, words fail in eulogizing it. (See Meditation XVII,
+entitled "Theory of the Bed.")
+
+When the war, of which we shall speak in our third part, breaks out
+between you and madame, you will always have plenty of ingenious excuses
+for rummaging in the drawers and escritoires; for if your wife is trying
+to hide from you some statue of her adoration, it is your interest to
+know where she has hidden it. A gyneceum, constructed on the method
+described, will enable you to calculate at a glance, whether there is
+present in it two pounds of silk more than usual. Should a single closet
+be constructed there, you are a lost man! Above all, accustom your wife,
+during the honeymoon, to bestow especial pains in the neatness of her
+apartment; let nothing put off that. If you do not habituate her to be
+minutely particular in this respect, if the same objects are not always
+found in the same places, she will allow things to become so untidy,
+that you will not be able to see that there are two pounds of silk more
+or less in her room.
+
+The curtains of your apartments ought to be of a stuff which is quite
+transparent, and you ought to contract the habit in the evenings of
+walking outside so that madame may see you come right up to the window
+just out of absent-mindedness. In a word, with regard to windows, let
+the sills be so narrow that even a sack of flour cannot be set up on
+them.
+
+If the apartment of your wife can be arranged on these principles, you
+will be in perfect safety, even if there are niches enough there to
+contain all the saints of Paradise. You will be able, every evening,
+with the assistance of your porter, to strike the balance between
+the entrances and exits of visitors; and, in order to obtain accurate
+results, there is nothing to prevent your teaching him to keep a book of
+visitors, in double entry.
+
+If you have a garden, cultivate a taste for dogs, and always keep at
+large one of these incorruptible guardians under your windows; you will
+thus gain the respect of the Minotaur, especially if you accustom your
+four-footed friend to take nothing substantial excepting from the
+hand of your porter, so that hard-hearted celibates may not succeed in
+poisoning him.
+
+But all these precautions must be taken as a natural thing so that they
+may not arouse suspicions. If husbands are so imprudent as to neglect
+precautions from the moment they are married, they ought at once to sell
+their house and buy another one, or, under the pretext of repairs, alter
+their present house in the way prescribed.
+
+You will without scruple banish from your apartment all sofas, ottomans,
+lounges, sedan chairs and the like. In the first place, this is the
+kind of furniture that adorns the homes of grocers, where they are
+universally found, as they are in those of barbers; but they are
+essentially the furniture of perdition; I can never see them without
+alarm. It has always seemed to me that there the devil himself is
+lurking with his horns and cloven foot.
+
+After all, nothing is so dangerous as a chair, and it is extremely
+unfortunate that women cannot be shut up within the four walls of a bare
+room! What husband is there, who on sitting down on a rickety chair is
+not always forced to believe that this chair has received some of the
+lessons taught by the _Sofa_ of Crebillion junior? But happily we have
+arranged your apartment on such a system of prevention that nothing
+so fatal can happen, or, at any rate, not without your contributory
+negligence.
+
+One fault which you must contract, and which you must never correct,
+will consist in a sort of heedless curiosity, which will make you
+examine unceasingly all the boxes, and turn upside down the contents
+of all dressing-cases and work-baskets. You must proceed to this
+domiciliary visit in a humorous mood, and gracefully, so that each time
+you will obtain pardon by exciting the amusement of your wife.
+
+You must always manifest a most profound astonishment on noticing any
+piece of furniture freshly upholstered in her well-appointed apartment.
+You must immediately make her explain to you the advantages of the
+change; and then you must ransack your mind to discover whether there be
+not some underhand motive in the transaction.
+
+This is by no means all. You have too much sense to forget that your
+pretty parrot will remain in her cage only so long as that cage is
+beautiful. The least accessory of her apartment ought, therefore, to
+breathe elegance and taste. The general appearance should always present
+a simple, at the same time a charming picture. You must constantly renew
+the hangings and muslin curtains. The freshness of the decorations
+is too essential to permit of economy on this point. It is the fresh
+chickweed each morning carefully put into the cage of their birds, that
+makes their pets believe it is the verdure of the meadows. An apartment
+of this character is then the _ultima ratio_ of husbands; a wife has
+nothing to say when everything is lavished on her.
+
+Husbands who are condemned to live in rented apartments find themselves
+in the most terrible situation possible. What happy or what fatal
+influence cannot the porter exercise upon their lot?
+
+Is not their home flanked on either side by other houses? It is true
+that by placing the apartment of their wives on one side of the house
+the danger is lessened by one-half; but are they not obliged to learn by
+heart and to ponder the age, the condition, the fortune, the character,
+the habits of the tenants of the next house and even to know their
+friends and relations?
+
+A husband will never take lodgings on the ground floor.
+
+Every man, however, can apply in his apartments the precautionary
+methods which we have suggested to the owner of a house, and thus the
+tenant will have this advantage over the owner, that the apartment,
+which is less spacious than the house, is more easily guarded.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XV. OF THE CUSTOM HOUSE.
+
+"But no, madame, no--"
+
+"Yes, for there is such inconvenience in the arrangement."
+
+"Do you think, madame, that we wish, as at the frontier, to watch
+the visits of persons who cross the threshold of your apartments, or
+furtively leave them, in order to see whether they bring to you articles
+of contraband? That would not be proper; and there is nothing odious in
+our proceeding, any more than there is anything of a fiscal character;
+do not be alarmed."
+
+The Custom House of the marriage state is, of all the expedients
+prescribed in this second part, that which perhaps demands the most tact
+and the most skill as well as the most knowledge acquired _a priori_,
+that is to say before marriage. In order to carry it out, a husband
+ought to have made a profound study of Lavater's book, and to be imbued
+with all his principles; to have accustomed his eye to judge and to
+apprehend with the most astonishing promptitude, the slightest physical
+expressions by which a man reveals his thoughts.
+
+Lavater's _Physiognomy_ originated a veritable science, which has won
+a place in human investigation. If at first some doubts, some jokes
+greeted the appearance of this book, since then the celebrated Doctor
+Gall is come with his noble theory of the skull and has completed the
+system of the Swiss savant, and given stability to his fine and luminous
+observations. People of talent, diplomats, women, all those who are
+numbered among the choice and fervent disciples of these two celebrated
+men, have often had occasion to recognize many other evident signs, by
+which the course of human thought is indicated. The habits of the body,
+the handwriting, the sound of the voice, have often betrayed the woman
+who is in love, the diplomat who is attempting to deceive, the clever
+administrator, or the sovereign who is compelled to distinguish at
+a glance love, treason or merit hitherto unknown. The man whose soul
+operates with energy is like a poor glowworm, which without knowing it
+irradiates light from every pore. He moves in a brilliant sphere where
+each effort makes a burning light and outlines his actions with long
+streamers of fire.
+
+These, then, are all the elements of knowledge which you should possess,
+for the conjugal custom house insists simply in being able by a rapid
+but searching examination to know the moral and physical condition of
+all who enter or leave your house--all, that is, who have seen or intend
+to see your wife. A husband is, like a spider, set at the centre of an
+invisible net, and receives a shock from the least fool of a fly who
+touches it, and from a distance, hears, judges and sees what is either
+his prey or his enemy.
+
+Thus you must obtain means to examine the celibate who rings at your
+door under two circumstances which are quite distinct, namely, when he
+is about to enter and when he is inside.
+
+At the moment of entering how many things does he utter without even
+opening his mouth!
+
+It may be by a slight wave of his hand, or by his plunging his
+fingers many times into his hair, he sticks up or smoothes down his
+characteristic bang.
+
+Or he hums a French or an Italian air, merry or sad, in a voice which
+may be either tenor, contralto, soprano or baritone.
+
+Perhaps he takes care to see that the ends of his necktie are properly
+adjusted.
+
+Or he smoothes down the ruffles or front of his shirt or evening-dress.
+
+Or he tries to find out by a questioning and furtive glance whether his
+wig, blonde or brown, curled or plain, is in its natural position.
+
+Perhaps he looks at his nails to see whether they are clean and duly
+cut.
+
+Perhaps with a hand which is either white or untidy, well-gloved or
+otherwise, he twirls his moustache, or his whiskers, or picks his teeth
+with a little tortoise-shell toothpick.
+
+Or by slow and repeated movements he tries to place his chin exactly
+over the centre of his necktie.
+
+Or perhaps he crosses one foot over the other, putting his hands in his
+pockets.
+
+Or perhaps he gives a twist to his shoe, and looks at it as if he
+thought, "Now, there's a foot that is not badly formed."
+
+Or according as he has come on foot or in a carriage, he rubs off or he
+does not rub off the slight patches of mud which soil his shoes.
+
+Or perhaps he remains as motionless as a Dutchman smoking his pipe.
+
+Or perhaps he fixes his eyes on the door and looks like a soul escaped
+from Purgatory and waiting for Saint Peter with the keys.
+
+Perhaps he hesitates to pull the bell; perhaps he seizes it negligently,
+precipitately, familiarly, or like a man who is quite sure of himself.
+
+Perhaps he pulls it timidly, producing a faint tinkle which is lost
+in the silence of the apartments, as the first bell of matins in
+winter-time, in a convent of Minims; or perhaps after having rung with
+energy, he rings again impatient that the footman has not heard him.
+
+Perhaps he exhales a delicate scent, as he chews a pastille.
+
+Perhaps with a solemn air he takes a pinch of snuff, brushing off with
+care the grains that might mar the whiteness of his linen.
+
+Perhaps he looks around like a man estimating the value of the staircase
+lamp, the balustrade, the carpet, as if he were a furniture dealer or a
+contractor.
+
+Perhaps this celibate seems a young or an old man, is cold or hot,
+arrives slowly, with an expression of sadness or merriment, etc.
+
+You see that here, at the very foot of your staircase, you are met by an
+astonishing mass of things to observe.
+
+The light pencil-strokes, with which we have tried to outline this
+figure, will suggest to you what is in reality a moral kaleidoscope with
+millions of variations. And yet we have not even attempted to bring any
+woman on to the threshold which reveals so much; for in that case our
+remarks, already considerable in number, would have been countless and
+light as the grains of sand on the seashore.
+
+For as a matter of fact, when he stands before the shut door, a man
+believes that he is quite alone; and he would have no hesitation in
+beginning a silent monologue, a dreamy soliloquy, in which he revealed
+his desires, his intentions, his personal qualities, his faults, his
+virtues, etc.; for undoubtedly a man on a stoop is exactly like a young
+girl of fifteen at confession, the evening before her first communion.
+
+Do you want any proof of this? Notice the sudden change of face and
+manner in this celibate from the very moment he steps within the house.
+No machinist in the Opera, no change in the temperature in the clouds or
+in the sun can more suddenly transform the appearance of a theatre, the
+effect of the atmosphere, or the scenery of the heavens.
+
+On reaching the first plank of your antechamber, instead of betraying
+with so much innocence the myriad thoughts which were suggested to you
+on the steps, the celibate has not a single glance to which you could
+attach any significance. The mask of social convention wraps with its
+thick veil his whole bearing; but a clever husband must already have
+divined at a single look the object of his visit, and he reads the soul
+of the new arrival as if it were a printed book.
+
+The manner in which he approaches your wife, in which he addresses her,
+looks at her, greets her and retires--there are volumes of observations,
+more or less trifling, to be made on these subjects.
+
+The tone of his voice, his bearing, his awkwardness, it may be his
+smile, even his gloom, his avoidance of your eye,--all are significant,
+all ought to be studied, but without apparent attention. You ought to
+conceal the most disagreeable discovery you may make by an easy manner
+and remarks such as are ready at hand to a man of society. As we are
+unable to detail the minutiae of this subject we leave them entirely
+to the sagacity of the reader, who must by this time have perceived the
+drift of our investigation, as well as the extent of this science which
+begins at the analysis of glances and ends in the direction of such
+movements as contempt may inspire in a great toe hidden under the satin
+of a lady's slipper or the leather of a man's boot.
+
+But the exit!--for we must allow for occasions where you have omitted
+your rigid scrutiny at the threshold of the doorway, and in that case
+the exit becomes of vital importance, and all the more so because this
+fresh study of the celibate ought to be made on the same lines, but from
+an opposite point of view, from that which we have already outlined.
+
+In the exit the situation assumes a special gravity; for then is the
+moment in which the enemy has crossed all the intrenchments within which
+he was subject to our examination and has escaped into the street! At
+this point a man of understanding when he sees a visitor passing under
+the _porte-cochere_ should be able to divine the import of the whole
+visit. The indications are indeed fewer in number, but how distinct
+is their character! The denouement has arrived and the man instantly
+betrays the importance of it by the frankest expression of happiness,
+pain or joy.
+
+These revelations are therefore easy to apprehend; they appear in the
+glance cast either at the building or at the windows of the apartment;
+in a slow or loitering gait, in the rubbing of hands, on the part of a
+fool, in the bounding gait of a coxcomb, or the involuntary arrest of
+his footsteps, which marks the man who is deeply moved; in a word, you
+see upon the stoop certain questions as clearly proposed to you as if a
+provincial academy had offered a hundred crowns for an essay; but in the
+exit you behold the solution of these questions clearly and precisely
+given to you. Our task would be far above the power of human
+intelligence if it consisted in enumerating the different ways by which
+men betray their feelings, the discernment of such things is purely a
+matter of tact and sentiment.
+
+If strangers are the subject of these principles of observation, you
+have a still stronger reason for submitting your wife to the formal
+safeguards which we have outlined.
+
+A married man should make a profound study of his wife's countenance.
+Such a study is easy, it is even involuntary and continuous. For him the
+pretty face of his wife must needs contain no mysteries, he knows how
+her feelings are depicted there and with what expression she shuns the
+fire of his glance.
+
+The slightest movement of the lips, the faintest contraction of the
+nostrils, scarcely perceptible changes in the expression of the eye, an
+altered voice, and those indescribable shades of feeling which pass over
+her features, or the light which sometimes bursts forth from them, are
+intelligible language to you.
+
+The whole woman nature stands before you; all look at her, but none can
+interpret her thoughts. But for you, the eye is more or less dimmed,
+wide-opened or closed; the lid twitches, the eyebrow moves; a wrinkle,
+which vanishes as quickly as a ripple on the ocean, furrows her brow for
+one moment; the lip tightens, it is slightly curved or it is wreathed
+with animation--for you the woman has spoken.
+
+If in those puzzling moments in which a woman tries dissimulation in
+presence of her husband, you have the spirit of a sphinx in seeing
+through her, you will plainly observe that your custom-house
+restrictions are mere child's play to her.
+
+When she comes home or goes out, when in a word she believes she is
+alone, your wife will exhibit all the imprudence of a jackdaw and will
+tell her secret aloud to herself; moreover, by her sudden change of
+expression the moment she notices you (and despite the rapidity of
+this change, you will not fail to have observed the expression she wore
+behind your back) you may read her soul as if you were reading a book
+of Plain Song. Moreover, your wife will often find herself just on the
+point of indulging in soliloquies, and on such occasions her husband may
+recognize the secret feelings of his wife.
+
+Is there a man as heedless of love's mysteries as not to have admired,
+over and over again, the light, mincing, even bewitching gait of a woman
+who flies on her way to keep an assignation? She glides through the
+crowd, like a snake through the grass. The costumes and stuffs of the
+latest fashion spread out their dazzling attractions in the shop windows
+without claiming her attention; on, on she goes like the faithful animal
+who follows the invisible tracks of his master; she is deaf to all
+compliments, blind to all glances, insensible even to the light touch
+of the crowd, which is inevitable amid the circulation of Parisian
+humanity. Oh, how deeply she feels the value of a minute! Her gait,
+her toilet, the expression of her face, involve her in a thousand
+indiscretions, but oh, what a ravishing picture she presents to the
+idler, and what an ominous page for the eye of a husband to read, is the
+face of this woman when she returns from the secret place of rendezvous
+in which her heart ever dwells! Her happiness is impressed even on the
+unmistakable disarray of her hair, the mass of whose wavy tresses has
+not received from the broken comb of the celibate that radiant lustre,
+that elegant and well-proportioned adjustment which only the practiced
+hand of her maid can give. And what charming ease appears in her gait!
+How is it possible to describe the emotion which adds such rich tints to
+her complexion!--which robs her eyes of all their assurance and gives to
+them an expression of mingled melancholy and delight, of shame which is
+yet blended with pride!
+
+These observations, stolen from our Meditation, _Of the Last Symptoms_,
+and which are really suggested by the situation of a woman who tries to
+conceal everything, may enable you to divine by analogy the rich crop
+of observation which is left for you to harvest when your wife arrives
+home, or when, without having committed the great crime she innocently
+lets out the secrets of her thoughts. For our own part we never see
+a landing without wishing to set up there a mariner's card and a
+weather-cock.
+
+As the means to be employed for constructing a sort of domestic
+observatory depend altogether on places and circumstances, we must
+leave to the address of a jealous husband the execution of the methods
+suggested in this Meditation.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XVI. THE CHARTER OF MARRIAGE.
+
+I acknowledge that I really know of but one house in Paris which is
+managed in accordance with the system unfolded in the two preceding
+Meditations. But I ought to add, also, that I have built up my system on
+the example of that house. The admirable fortress I allude to belonged
+to a young councillor of state, who was mad with love and jealousy.
+
+As soon as he learned that there existed a man who was exclusively
+occupied in bringing to perfection the institution of marriage in
+France, he had the generosity to open the doors of his mansion to me and
+to show me his gyneceum. I admired the profound genius which so cleverly
+disguised the precautions of almost oriental jealousy under the elegance
+of furniture, beauty of carpets and brightness of painted decorations. I
+agreed with him that it was impossible for his wife to render his home a
+scene of treachery.
+
+"Sir," said I, to this Othello of the council of state who did not seem
+to me peculiarly strong in the _haute politique_ of marriage, "I have no
+doubt that the viscountess is delighted to live in this little Paradise;
+she ought indeed to take prodigious pleasure in it, especially if you
+are here often. But the time will come when she will have had enough of
+it; for, my dear sir, we grow tired of everything, even of the sublime.
+What will you do then, when madame, failing to find in all your
+inventions their primitive charm, shall open her mouth in a yawn, and
+perhaps make a request with a view to the exercise of two rights, both
+of which are indispensable to her happiness: individual liberty, that
+is, the privilege of going and coming according to the caprice of her
+will; and the liberty of the press, that is, the privilege of writing
+and receiving letters without fear of your censure?"
+
+Scarcely had I said these words when the Vicomte de V----- grasped my
+arm tightly and cried:
+
+"Yes, such is the ingratitude of woman! If there is any thing more
+ungrateful than a king, it is a nation; but, sir, woman is more
+ungrateful than either of them. A married woman treats us as the
+citizens of a constitutional monarchy treat their king; every measure
+has been taken to give these citizens a life of prosperity in a
+prosperous country; the government has taken all the pains in the world
+with its gendarmes, its churches, its ministry and all the paraphernalia
+of its military forces, to prevent the people from dying of hunger, to
+light the cities by gas at the expense of the citizens, to give warmth
+to every one by means of the sun which shines at the forty-fifth degree
+of latitude, and to forbid every one, excepting the tax-gatherers, to
+ask for money; it has labored hard to give to all the main roads a more
+or less substantial pavement--but none of these advantages of our fair
+Utopia is appreciated! The citizens want something else. They are not
+ashamed to demand the right of traveling over the roads at their own
+will, and of being informed where that money given to the tax-gatherers
+goes. And, finally, the monarch will soon be obliged, if we pay any
+attention to the chatter of certain scribblers, to give to every
+individual a share in the throne or to adopt certain revolutionary
+ideas, which are mere Punch and Judy shows for the public, manipulated
+by a band of self-styled patriots, riff-raff, always ready to sell their
+conscience for a million francs, for an honest woman, or for a ducal
+coronet."
+
+"But, monsieur," I said, interrupting him, "while I perfectly agree with
+you on this last point, the question remains, how will you escape giving
+an answer to the just demands of your wife?"
+
+"Sir" he replied, "I shall do--I shall answer as the government answers,
+that is, those governments which are not so stupid as the opposition
+would make out to their constituents. I shall begin by solemnly
+interdicting any arrangement, by virtue of which my wife will be
+declared entirely free. I fully recognize her right to go wherever it
+seems good to her, to write to whom she chooses, and to receive letters,
+the contents of which I do not know. My wife shall have all the rights
+that belong to an English Parliament; I shall let her talk as much
+as she likes, discuss and propose strong and energetic measures, but
+without the power to put them into execution, and then after that--well,
+we shall see!"
+
+"By St. Joseph!" said I to myself, "Here is a man who understands the
+science of marriage as well as I myself do. And then, you will see,
+sir," I answered aloud, in order to obtain from him the fullest
+revelation of his experience; "you will see, some fine morning, that you
+are as big a fool as the next man."
+
+"Sir," he gravely replied, "allow me to finish what I was saying. Here
+is what the great politicians call a theory, but in practice they can
+make that theory vanish in smoke; and ministers possess in a greater
+degree than even the lawyers of Normandy, the art of making fact
+yield to fancy. M. de Metternich and M. de Pilat, men of the highest
+authority, have been for a long time asking each other whether Europe is
+in its right senses, whether it is dreaming, whether it knows whither it
+is going, whether it has ever exercised its reason, a thing impossible
+on the part of the masses, of nations and of women. M. de Metternich and
+M. de Pilat are terrified to see this age carried away by a passion for
+constitutions, as the preceding age was by the passion for philosophy,
+as that of Luther was for a reform of abuses in the Roman religion;
+for it truly seems as if different generations of men were like those
+conspirators whose actions are directed to the same end, as soon as the
+watchword has been given them. But their alarm is a mistake, and it is
+on this point alone that I condemn them, for they are right in their
+wish to enjoy power without permitting the middle class to come on a
+fixed day from the depth of each of their six kingdoms, to torment
+them. How could men of such remarkable talent fail to divine that the
+constitutional comedy has in it a moral of profound meaning, and to see
+that it is the very best policy to give the age a bone to exercise its
+teeth upon! I think exactly as they do on the subject of sovereignty.
+A power is a moral being as much interested as a man is in
+self-preservation. This sentiment of self-preservation is under the
+control of an essential principle which may be expressed in three
+words--_to lose nothing_. But in order to lose nothing, a power must
+grow or remain indefinite, for a power which remains stationary is
+nullified. If it retrogrades, it is under the control of something else,
+and loses its independent existence. I am quite as well aware, as are
+those gentlemen, in what a false position an unlimited power puts itself
+by making concessions; it allows to another power whose essence is
+to expand a place within its own sphere of activity. One of them will
+necessarily nullify the other, for every existing thing aims at the
+greatest possible development of its own forces. A power, therefore,
+never makes concessions which it does not afterwards seek to retract.
+This struggle between two powers is the basis on which stands the
+balance of government, whose elasticity so mistakenly alarmed the
+patriarch of Austrian diplomacy, for comparing comedy with comedy the
+least perilous and the most advantageous administration is found in
+the seesaw system of the English and of the French politics. These two
+countries have said to the people, 'You are free;' and the people have
+been satisfied; they enter the government like the zeros which give
+value to the unit. But if the people wish to take an active part in the
+government, immediately they are treated, like Sancho Panza, on that
+occasion when the squire, having become sovereign over an island on
+terra firma, made an attempt at dinner to eat the viands set before him.
+
+"Now we ought to parody this admirable scene in the management of our
+homes. Thus, my wife has a perfect right to go out, provided she tell
+me where she is going, how she is going, what is the business she is
+engaged in when she is out and at what hour she will return. Instead of
+demanding this information with the brutality of the police, who will
+doubtless some day become perfect, I take pains to speak to her in the
+most gracious terms. On my lips, in my eyes, in my whole countenance,
+an expression plays, which indicates both curiosity and indifference,
+seriousness and pleasantry, harshness and tenderness. These little
+conjugal scenes are so full of vivacity, of tact and address that it is
+a pleasure to take part in them. The very day on which I took from
+the head of my wife the wreath of orange blossoms which she wore, I
+understood that we were playing at a royal coronation--the first scene
+in a comic pantomime!--I have my gendarmes!--I have my guard royal!--I
+have my attorney general--that I do!" he continued enthusiastically. "Do
+you think that I would allow madame to go anywhere on foot unaccompanied
+by a lackey in livery? Is not that the best style? Not to count the
+pleasure she takes in saying to everybody, 'I have my people here.'
+It has always been a conservative principle of mine that my times of
+exercise should coincide with those of my wife, and for two years I have
+proved to her that I take an ever fresh pleasure in giving her my arm.
+If the weather is not suitable for walking, I try to teach her how to
+drive with success a frisky horse; but I swear to you that I undertake
+this in such a manner that she does not learn very quickly!--If either
+by chance, or prompted by a deliberate wish, she takes measures to
+escape without a passport, that is to say, alone in the carriage, have I
+not a driver, a footman, a groom? My wife, therefore, go where she will,
+takes with her a complete _Santa Hermandad_, and I am perfectly easy in
+mind--But, my dear sir, there is abundance of means by which to annul
+the charter of marriage by our manner of fulfilling it! I have remarked
+that the manners of high society induce a habit of idleness which
+absorbs half of the life of a woman without permitting her to feel that
+she is alive. For my part, I have formed the project of dexterously
+leading my wife along, up to her fortieth year, without letting her
+think of adultery, just as poor Musson used to amuse himself in leading
+some simple fellow from the Rue Saint-Denis to Pierrefitte without
+letting him think that he had left the shadows of St. Lew's tower."
+
+"How is it," I said, interrupting him, "that you have hit upon those
+admirable methods of deception which I was intending to describe in
+a Meditation entitled _The Act of Putting Death into Life!_ Alas! I
+thought I was the first man to discover that science. The epigrammatic
+title was suggested to me by an account which a young doctor gave me of
+an excellent composition of Crabbe, as yet unpublished. In this work,
+the English poet has introduced a fantastic being called _Life in
+Death_. This personage crosses the oceans of the world in pursuit of a
+living skeleton called _Death in Life_--I recollect at the time very
+few people, among the guests of a certain elegant translator of English
+poetry, understood the mystic meaning of a fable as true as it was
+fanciful. Myself alone, perhaps, as I sat buried in silence, thought of
+the whole generations which as they were hurried along by life, passed
+on their way without living. Before my eyes rose faces of women by the
+million, by the myriad, all dead, all disappointed and shedding tears
+of despair, as they looked back upon the lost moments of their ignorant
+youth. In the distance I saw a playful Meditation rise to birth, I heard
+the satanic laughter which ran through it, and now you doubtless are
+about to kill it.--But come, tell me in confidence what means you have
+discovered by which to assist a woman to squander the swift moments
+during which her beauty is at its full flower and her desires at their
+full strength.--Perhaps you have some stratagems, some clever devices,
+to describe to me--"
+
+The viscount began to laugh at this literary disappointment of mine, and
+he said to me, with a self-satisfied air:
+
+"My wife, like all the young people of our happy century, has been
+accustomed, for three or four consecutive years, to press her fingers on
+the keys of a piano, a long-suffering instrument. She has hammered out
+Beethoven, warbled the airs of Rossini and run through the exercises of
+Crammer. I had already taken pains to convince her of the excellence of
+music; to attain this end, I have applauded her, I have listened without
+yawning to the most tiresome sonatas in the world, and I have at last
+consented to give her a box at the Bouffons. I have thus gained three
+quiet evenings out of the seven which God has created in the week. I am
+the mainstay of the music shops. At Paris there are drawing-rooms which
+exactly resemble the musical snuff-boxes of Germany. They are a sort of
+continuous orchestra to which I regularly go in search of that surfeit
+of harmony which my wife calls a concert. But most part of the time my
+wife keeps herself buried in her music-books--"
+
+"But, my dear sir, do you not recognize the danger that lies in
+cultivating in a woman a taste for singing, and allowing her to yield
+to all the excitements of a sedentary life? It is only less dangerous to
+make her feed on mutton and drink cold water."
+
+"My wife never eats anything but the white meat of poultry, and I always
+take care that a ball shall come after a concert and a reception after
+an Opera! I have also succeeded in making her lie down between one
+and two in the day. Ah! my dear sir, the benefits of this nap are
+incalculable! In the first place each necessary pleasure is accorded
+as a favor, and I am considered to be constantly carrying out my wife's
+wishes. And then I lead her to imagine, without saying a single word,
+that she is being constantly amused every day from six o'clock in the
+evening, the time of our dinner and of her toilet, until eleven o'clock
+in the morning, the time when we get up."
+
+"Ah! sir, how grateful you ought to be for a life which is so completely
+filled up!"
+
+"I have scarcely more than three dangerous hours a day to pass; but she
+has, of course, sonatas to practice and airs to go over, and there are
+always rides in the Bois de Boulogne, carriages to try, visits to pay,
+etc. But this is not all. The fairest ornament of a woman is the most
+exquisite cleanliness. A woman cannot be too particular in this respect,
+and no pains she takes can be laughed at. Now her toilet has also
+suggested to me a method of thus consuming the best hours of the day in
+bathing."
+
+"How lucky I am in finding a listener like you!" I cried; "truly, sir,
+you could waste for her four hours a day, if only you were willing to
+teach her an art quite unknown to the most fastidious of our modern
+fine ladies. Why don't you enumerate to the viscountess the astonishing
+precautions manifest in the Oriental luxury of the Roman dames? Give her
+the names of the slaves merely employed for the bath in Poppea's palace:
+the _unctores_, the _fricatores_, the _alipilarili_, the _dropacistae_,
+the _paratiltriae_, the _picatrices_, the _tracatrices_, the swan
+whiteners, and all the rest.--Talk to her about this multitude of slaves
+whose names are given by Mirabeau in his _Erotika Biblion_. If she tries
+to secure the services of all these people you will have the fine times
+of quietness, not to speak of the personal satisfaction which will
+redound to you yourself from the introduction into your house of the
+system invented by these illustrious Romans, whose hair, artistically
+arranged, was deluged with perfumes, whose smallest vein seemed to have
+acquired fresh blood from the myrrh, the lint, the perfume, the douches,
+the flowers of the bath, all of which were enjoyed to the strains of
+voluptuous music."
+
+"Ah! sir," continued the husband, who was warming to his subject, "can
+I not find also admirable pretexts in my solicitude for her heath? Her
+health, so dear and precious to me, forces me to forbid her going out
+in bad weather, and thus I gain a quarter of the year. And I have also
+introduced the charming custom of kissing when either of us goes out,
+this parting kiss being accompanied with the words, 'My sweet angel, I
+am going out.' Finally, I have taken measures for the future to make
+my wife as truly a prisoner in the house as the conscript in his sentry
+box! For I have inspired her with an incredible enthusiasm for the
+sacred duties of maternity."
+
+"You do it by opposing her?" I asked.
+
+"You have guessed it," he answered, laughing. "I have maintained to her
+that it is impossible for a woman of the world to discharge her duties
+towards society, to manage her household, to devote herself to fashion,
+as well as to the wishes of her husband, whom she loves, and, at the
+same time, to rear children. She then avers that, after the example of
+Cato, who wished to see how the nurse changed the swaddling bands of the
+infant Pompey, she would never leave to others the least of the services
+required in shaping the susceptible minds and tender bodies of these
+little creatures whose education begins in the cradle. You understand,
+sir, that my conjugal diplomacy would not be of much service to me
+unless, after having put my wife in solitary confinement, I did not also
+employ a certain harmless machiavelism, which consists in begging her to
+do whatever she likes, and asking her advice in every circumstance and
+on every contingency. As this delusive liberty has entirely deceived
+a creature so high-minded as she is, I have taken pains to stop at no
+sacrifice which would convince Madame de V----- that she is the freest
+woman in Paris; and, in order to attain this end, I take care not to
+commit those gross political blunders into which our ministers so often
+fall."
+
+"I can see you," said I, "when you wish to cheat your wife out of some
+right granted her by the charter, I can see you putting on a mild and
+deliberate air, hiding your dagger under a bouquet of roses, and as
+you plunge it cautiously into her heart, saying to her with a friendly
+voice, 'My darling, does it hurt?' and she, like those on whose toes you
+tread in a crowd, will probably reply, 'Not in the least.'"
+
+He could not restrain a laugh and said:
+
+"Won't my wife be astonished at the Last Judgment?"
+
+"I scarcely know," I replied, "whether you or she will be most
+astonished."
+
+The jealous man frowned, but his face resumed its calmness as I added:
+
+"I am truly grateful, sir, to the chance which has given me the pleasure
+of your acquaintance. Without the assistance of your remarks I should
+have been less successful than you have been in developing certain ideas
+which we possess in common. I beg of you that you will give me leave to
+publish this conversation. Statements which you and I find pregnant with
+high political conceptions, others perhaps will think characterized by
+more or less cutting irony, and I shall pass for a clever fellow in the
+eyes of both parties."
+
+While I thus tried to express my thanks to the viscount (the first
+husband after my heart that I had met with), he took me once more
+through his apartments, where everything seemed to be beyond criticism.
+
+I was about to take leave of him, when opening the door of a little
+boudoir he showed me a room with an air which seemed to say, "Is there
+any way by which the least irregularity should occur without my seeing
+it?"
+
+I replied to this silent interrogation by an inclination of the
+head, such as guests make to their Amphytrion when they taste some
+exceptionally choice dish.
+
+"My whole system," he said to me in a whisper, "was suggested to me
+by three words which my father heard Napoleon pronounce at a crowded
+council of state, when divorce was the subject of conversation.
+'Adultery,' he exclaimed, 'is merely a matter of opportunity!' See,
+then, I have changed these accessories of crime, so that they become
+spies," added the councillor, pointing out to me a divan covered with
+tea-colored cashmere, the cushions of which were slightly pressed.
+"Notice that impression,--I learn from it that my wife has had a
+headache, and has been reclining there."
+
+We stepped toward the divan, and saw the word FOOL lightly traced upon
+the fatal cushion, by four
+
+
+ Things that I know not, plucked by lover's hand
+ From Cypris' orchard, where the fairy band
+ Are dancing, once by nobles thought to be
+ Worthy an order of new chivalry,
+ A brotherhood, wherein, with script of gold,
+ More mortal men than gods should be enrolled.
+
+
+"Nobody in my house has black hair!" said the husband, growing pale.
+
+I hurried away, for I was seized with an irresistible fit of laughter,
+which I could not easily overcome.
+
+"That man has met his judgment day!" I said to myself; "all the barriers
+by which he has surrounded her have only been instrumental in adding to
+the intensity of her pleasures!"
+
+This idea saddened me. The adventure destroyed from summit to foundation
+three of my most important Meditations, and the catholic infallibility
+of my book was assailed in its most essential point. I would gladly have
+paid to establish the fidelity of the Viscountess V----- a sum as great
+as very many people would have offered to secure her surrender. But
+alas! my money will now be kept by me.
+
+Three days afterwards I met the councillor in the foyer of the Italiens.
+As soon as he saw me he rushed up. Impelled by a sort of modesty I tried
+to avoid him, but grasping my arm: "Ah! I have just passed three cruel
+days," he whispered in my ear. "Fortunately my wife is as innocent as
+perhaps a new-born babe--"
+
+"You have already told me that the viscountess was extremely ingenious,"
+I said, with unfeeling gaiety.
+
+"Oh!" he said, "I gladly take a joke this evening; for this morning I
+had irrefragable proofs of my wife's fidelity. I had risen very early
+to finish a piece of work for which I had been rushed, and in looking
+absently in my garden, I suddenly saw the _valet de chambre_ of a
+general, whose house is next to mine, climbing over the wall. My wife's
+maid, poking her head from the vestibule, was stroking my dog and
+covering the retreat of the gallant. I took my opera glass and examined
+the intruder--his hair was jet black!--Ah! never have I seen a Christian
+face that gave me more delight! And you may well believe that during the
+day all my perplexities vanished. So, my dear sir," he continued, "if
+you marry, let your dog loose and put broken bottles over the top of
+your walls."
+
+"And did the viscountess perceive your distress during these three days?
+
+"Do you take me for a child?" he said, shrugging his shoulders. "I have
+never been so merry in all my life as I have been since we met."
+
+"You are a great man unrecognized," I cried, "and you are not--"
+
+He did not permit me to conclude; for he had disappeared on seeing one
+of his friends who approached as if to greet the viscountess.
+
+Now what can we add that would not be a tedious paraphrase of the
+lessons suggested by this conversation? All is included in it, either
+as seed or fruit. Nevertheless, you see, O husband! that your happiness
+hangs on a hair.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XVII. THE THEORY OF THE BED.
+
+It was about seven o'clock in the evening. They were seated upon the
+academic armchairs, which made a semi-circle round a huge hearth, on
+which a coal fire was burning fitfully--symbol of the burning subject of
+their important deliberations. It was easy to guess, on seeing the grave
+but earnest faces of all the members of this assembly, that they were
+called upon to pronounce sentence upon the life, the fortunes and the
+happiness of people like themselves. They had no commission excepting
+that of their conscience, and they gathered there as the assessors of
+an ancient and mysterious tribunal; but they represented interests much
+more important than those of kings or of peoples; they spoke in the
+name of the passions and on behalf of the happiness of the numberless
+generations which should succeed them.
+
+The grandson of the celebrated Boulle was seated before a round table
+on which were placed the criminal exhibits which had been collected with
+remarkable intelligence. I, the insignificant secretary of the meeting,
+occupied a place at this desk, where it was my office to take down a
+report of the meeting.
+
+"Gentlemen," said an old man, "the first question upon which we have to
+deliberate is found clearly stated in the following passage of a letter.
+The letter was written to the Princess of Wales, Caroline of Anspach,
+by the widow of the Duke of Orleans, brother of Louis XIV, mother of
+the Regent: 'The Queen of Spain has a method of making her husband say
+exactly what she wishes. The king is a religious man; he believes that
+he will be damned if he touched any woman but his wife, and still
+this excellent prince is of a very amorous temperament. Thus the queen
+obtains her every wish. She has placed castors on her husband's bed.
+If he refuses her anything, she pushes the bed away. If he grants her
+request, the beds stand side by side, and she admits him into hers. And
+so the king is highly delighted, since he likes -----' I will not go any
+further, gentlemen, for the virtuous frankness of the German princess
+might in this assembly be charged with immorality."
+
+Should wise husbands adopt these beds on castors? This is the problem
+which we have to solve.
+
+The unanimity of the vote left no doubt about the opinion of the
+assembly. I was ordered to inscribe in the records, that if two married
+people slept on two separate beds in the same room the beds ought not to
+be set on castors.
+
+"With this proviso," put in one of the members, "that the present
+decision should have no bearing on any subsequent ruling upon the best
+arrangement of the beds of married people."
+
+The president passed to me a choicely bound volume, in which was
+contained the original edition, published in 1788, of the letters of
+Charlotte Elizabeth de Baviere, widow of the Duke of Orleans, the only
+brother of Louis XIV, and, while I was transcribing the passage already
+quoted, he said:
+
+"But, gentlemen, you must all have received at your houses the
+notification in which the second question is stated."
+
+"I rise to make an observation," exclaimed the youngest of the jealous
+husbands there assembled.
+
+The president took his seat with a gesture of assent.
+
+"Gentlemen," said the young husband, "are we quite prepared to
+deliberate upon so grave a question as that which is presented by the
+universally bad arrangement of the beds? Is there not here a much wider
+question than that of mere cabinet-making to decide? For my own part I
+see in it a question which concerns that of universal human intellect.
+The mysteries of conception, gentlemen, are still enveloped in a
+darkness which modern science has but partially dissipated. We do not
+know how far external circumstances influence the microscopic beings
+whose discovery is due to the unwearied patience of Hill, Baker, Joblot,
+Eichorn, Gleichen, Spallanzani, and especially of Muller, and last of
+all of M. Bory de Saint Vincent. The imperfections of the bed opens up a
+musical question of the highest importance, and for my part I declare
+I shall write to Italy to obtain clear information as to the manner in
+which beds are generally arranged. We do not know whether there are in
+the Italian bed numerous curtain rods, screws and castors, or whether
+the construction of beds is in this country more faulty than everywhere
+else, or whether the dryness of timber in Italy, due to the influence of
+the sun, does not _ab ovo_ produce the harmony, the sense of which is to
+so large an extent innate in Italians. For these reasons I move that we
+adjourn."
+
+"What!" cried a gentleman from the West, impatiently rising to his feet,
+"are we here to dilate upon the advancement of music? What we have to
+consider first of all is manners, and the moral question is paramount in
+this discussion."
+
+"Nevertheless," remarked one of the most influential members of the
+council, "the suggestion of the former speaker is not in my opinion to
+be passed by. In the last century, gentlemen, Sterne, one of the writers
+most philosophically delightful and most delightfully philosophic,
+complained of the carelessness with which human beings were procreated;
+'Shame!' he cried 'that he who copies the divine physiognomy of man
+receives crowns and applause, but he who achieves the masterpiece,
+the prototype of mimic art, feels that like virtue he must be his own
+reward.'
+
+"Ought we not to feel more interest in the improvement of the human race
+than in that of horses? Gentlemen, I passed through a little town of
+Orleanais where the whole population consisted of hunchbacks, of glum
+and gloomy people, veritable children of sorrow, and the remark of the
+former speaker caused me to recollect that all the beds were in a very
+bad condition and the bedchambers presented nothing to the eyes of the
+married couple but what was hideous and revolting. Ah! gentlemen, how is
+it possible that our minds should be in an ideal state, when instead of
+the music of angels flying here and there in the bosom of that heaven
+to which we have attained, our ears are assailed by the most detestable,
+the most angry, the most piercing of human cries and lamentations? We
+are perhaps indebted for the fine geniuses who have honored humanity to
+beds which are solidly constructed; and the turbulent population which
+caused the French Revolution were conceived perhaps upon a multitude of
+tottering couches, with twisted and unstable legs; while the Orientals,
+who are such a beautiful race, have a unique method of making their
+beds. I vote for the adjournment."
+
+And the gentleman sat down.
+
+A man belonging to the sect of Methodists arose. "Why should we change
+the subject of debate? We are not dealing here with the improvement of
+the race nor with the perfecting of the work. We must not lose sight of
+the interests of the jealous husband and the principles on which moral
+soundness is based. Don't you know that the noise of which you complain
+seems more terrible to the wife uncertain of her crime, than the trumpet
+of the Last Judgment? Can you forget that a suit for infidelity could
+never be won by a husband excepting through this conjugal noise? I will
+undertake, gentlemen, to refer to the divorces of Lord Abergavenny, of
+Viscount Bolingbroke, of the late Queen Caroline, of Eliza Draper, of
+Madame Harris, in fact, of all those who are mentioned in the twenty
+volumes published by--." (The secretary did not distinctly hear the name
+of the English publisher.)
+
+The motion to adjourn was carried. The youngest member proposed to make
+up a purse for the author producing the best dissertation addressed to
+the society upon a subject which Sterne considered of such importance;
+but at the end of the seance eighteen shillings was the total sum found
+in the hat of the president.
+
+The above debate of the society, which had recently been formed in
+London for the improvement of manners and of marriage and which Lord
+Byron scoffed at, was transmitted to us by the kindness of W. Hawkins,
+Esq., cousin-german of the famous Captain Clutterbuck. The extract may
+serve to solve any difficulties which may occur in the theory of bed
+construction.
+
+But the author of the book considers that the English society has given
+too much importance to this preliminary question. There exists in fact
+quite as many reasons for being a _Rossinist_ as for being a _Solidist_
+in the matter of beds, and the author acknowledges that it is either
+beneath or above him to solve this difficulty. He thinks with Laurence
+Sterne that it is a disgrace to European civilization that there exist
+so few physiological observations on callipedy, and he refuses to state
+the results of his Meditations on this subject, because it would be
+difficult to formulate them in terms of prudery, and they would be but
+little understood, and misinterpreted. Such reserve produces an hiatus
+in this part of the book; but the author has the pleasant satisfaction
+of leaving a fourth work to be accomplished by the next century, to
+which he bequeaths the legacy of all that he has not accomplished, a
+negative munificence which may well be followed by all those who may be
+troubled by an overplus of ideas.
+
+The theory of the bed presents questions much more important than those
+put forth by our neighbors with regard to castors and the murmurs of
+criminal conversation.
+
+We know only three ways in which a bed (in the general sense of this
+term) may be arranged among civilized nations, and particularly among
+the privileged classes to whom this book is addressed. These three ways
+are as follows:
+
+
+ 1. TWIN BEDS.
+ 2. SEPARATE ROOMS.
+ 3. ONE BED FOR BOTH.
+
+
+Before applying ourselves to the examination of these three methods of
+living together, which must necessarily have different influences upon
+the happiness of husbands and wives, we must take a rapid survey of
+the practical object served by the bed and the part it plays in the
+political economy of human existence.
+
+The most incontrovertible principle which can be laid down in this
+matter is, _that the bed was made to sleep upon_.
+
+It would be easy to prove that the practice of sleeping together was
+established between married people but recently, in comparison with the
+antiquity of marriage.
+
+By what reasonings has man arrived at that point in which he brought
+in vogue a practice so fatal to happiness, to health, even to
+_amour-propre_? Here we have a subject which it would be curious to
+investigate.
+
+If you knew one of your rivals who had discovered a method of placing
+you in a position of extreme absurdity before the eyes of those who were
+dearest to you--for instance, while you had your mouth crooked like
+that of a theatrical mask, or while your eloquent lips, like the copper
+faucet of a scanty fountain, dripped pure water--you would probably stab
+him. This rival is sleep. Is there a man in the world who knows how he
+appears to others, and what he does when he is asleep?
+
+In sleep we are living corpses, we are the prey of an unknown power
+which seizes us in spite of ourselves, and shows itself in the oddest
+shapes; some have a sleep which is intellectual, while the sleep of
+others is mere stupor.
+
+There are some people who slumber with their mouths open in the silliest
+fashion.
+
+There are others who snore loud enough to make the timbers shake.
+
+Most people look like the impish devils that Michael Angelo sculptured,
+putting out their tongues in silent mockery of the passers-by.
+
+The only person I know of in the world who sleeps with a noble air is
+Agamemnon, whom Guerin has represented lying on his bed at the moment
+when Clytemnestra, urged by Egisthus, advances to slay him. Moreover, I
+have always had an ambition to hold myself on my pillow as the king of
+kings Agamemnon holds himself, from the day that I was seized with dread
+of being seen during sleep by any other eyes than those of Providence.
+In the same way, too, from the day I heard my old nurse snorting in her
+sleep "like a whale," to use a slang expression, I have added a petition
+to the special litany which I address to Saint-Honore, my patron saint,
+to the effect that he would save me from indulging in this sort of
+eloquence.
+
+When a man wakes up in the morning, his drowsy face grotesquely
+surmounted by the folds of a silk handkerchief which falls over his left
+temple like a police cap, he is certainly a laughable object, and it
+is difficult to recognize in him the glorious spouse, celebrated in the
+strophes of Rousseau; but, nevertheless, there is a certain gleam of
+life to illume the stupidity of a countenance half dead--and if you
+artists wish to make fine sketches, you should travel on the stage-coach
+and, when the postilion wakes up the postmaster, just examine the
+physiognomies of the departmental clerks! But, were you a hundred times
+as pleasant to look upon as are these bureaucratic physiognomies, at
+least, while you have your mouth shut, your eyes are open, and you have
+some expression in your countenance. Do you know how you looked an hour
+before you awoke, or during the first hour of your sleep, when you were
+neither a man nor an animal, but merely a thing, subject to the dominion
+of those dreams which issue from the gate of horn? But this is a secret
+between your wife and God.
+
+Is it for the purpose of insinuating the imbecility of slumber that the
+Romans decorated the heads of their beds with the head of an ass?
+We leave to the gentlemen who form the academy of inscriptions the
+elucidation of this point.
+
+Assuredly, the first man who took it into his head, at the inspiration
+of the devil, not to leave his wife, even while she was asleep, should
+know how to sleep in the very best style; but do not forget to reckon
+among the sciences necessary to a man on setting up an establishment,
+the art of sleeping with elegance. Moreover, we will place here as
+a corollary to Axiom XXV of our Marriage Catechism the two following
+aphorisms:
+
+
+ A husband should sleep as lightly as a watch-dog, so as never to
+ be caught with his eyes shut.
+
+
+ A man should accustom himself from childhood to go to bed
+ bareheaded.
+
+
+Certain poets discern in modesty, in the alleged mysteries of love, some
+reason why the married couple should share the same bed; but the fact
+must be recognized that if primitive men sought the shade of caverns,
+the mossy couch of deep ravines, the flinty roof of grottoes to protect
+his pleasure, it was because the delight of love left him without
+defence against his enemies. No, it is not more natural to lay two heads
+upon the same pillow, than it is reasonable to tie a strip of muslin
+round the neck. Civilization is come. It has shut up a million of men
+within an area of four square leagues; it has stalled them in streets,
+houses, apartments, rooms, and chambers eight feet square; after a
+time it will make them shut up one upon another like the tubes of a
+telescope.
+
+From this cause and from many others, such as thrift, fear, and
+ill-concealed jealousy, has sprung the custom of the sleeping together
+of the married couple; and this custom has given rise to punctuality and
+simultaneity in rising and retiring.
+
+And here you find the most capricious thing in the world, the feeling
+most pre-eminently fickle, the thing which is worthless without its own
+spontaneous inspiration, which takes all its charm from the suddenness
+of its desires, which owes its attractions to the genuineness of its
+outbursts--this thing we call love, subjugated to a monastic rule, to
+that law of geometry which belongs to the Board of Longitude!
+
+If I were a father I should hate the child, who, punctual as the clock,
+had every morning and evening an explosion of tenderness and wished me
+good-day and good-evening, because he was ordered to do so. It is in
+this way that all that is generous and spontaneous in human sentiment
+becomes strangled at its birth. You may judge from this what love means
+when it is bound to a fixed hour!
+
+Only the Author of everything can make the sun rise and set, morn and
+eve, with a pomp invariably brilliant and always new, and no one here
+below, if we may be permitted to use the hyperbole of Jean-Baptiste
+Rousseau, can play the role of the sun.
+
+From these preliminary observations, we conclude that it is not natural
+for two to lie under the canopy in the same bed;
+
+That a man is almost always ridiculous when he is asleep;
+
+And that this constant living together threatens the husband with
+inevitable dangers.
+
+We are going to try, therefore, to find out a method which will bring
+our customs in harmony with the laws of nature, and to combine custom
+and nature in a way that will enable a husband to find in the mahogany
+of his bed a useful ally, and an aid in defending himself.
+
+
+ 1. TWIN BEDS.
+
+If the most brilliant, the best-looking, the cleverest of husbands
+wishes to find himself minotaurized just as the first year of his
+married life ends, he will infallibly attain that end if he is unwise
+enough to place two beds side by side, under the voluptuous dome of the
+same alcove.
+
+The argument in support of this may be briefly stated. The following are
+its main lines:
+
+The first husband who invented the twin beds was doubtless an
+obstetrician, who feared that in the involuntary struggles of some dream
+he might kick the child borne by his wife.
+
+But no, he was rather some predestined one who distrusted his power of
+checking a snore.
+
+Perhaps it was some young man who, fearing the excess of his own
+tenderness, found himself always lying at the edge of the bed and in
+danger of tumbling off, or so near to a charming wife that he disturbed
+her slumber.
+
+But may it not have been some Maintenon who received the suggestion from
+her confessor, or, more probably, some ambitious woman who wished to
+rule her husband? Or, more undoubtedly, some pretty little Pompadour
+overcome by that Parisian infirmity so pleasantly described by M. de
+Maurepas in that quatrain which cost him his protracted disgrace and
+certainly contributed to the disasters of Louis XVI's reign:
+
+
+ "Iris, we love those features sweet,
+ Your graces all are fresh and free;
+ And flowerets spring beneath your feet,
+ Where naught, alas! but flowers are seen."
+
+
+But why should it not have been a philosopher who dreaded the
+disenchantment which a woman would experience at the sight of a man
+asleep? And such a one would always roll himself up in a coverlet and
+keep his head bare.
+
+Unknown author of this Jesuitical method, whoever thou art, in the
+devil's name, we hail thee as a brother! Thou hast been the cause of
+many disasters. Thy work has the character of all half measures; it is
+satisfactory in no respect, and shares the bad points of the two other
+methods without yielding the advantages of either. How can the man of
+the nineteenth century, how can this creature so supremely intelligent,
+who has displayed a power well-nigh supernatural, who has employed the
+resources of his genius in concealing the machinery of his life, in
+deifying his necessary cravings in order that he might not despise them,
+going so far as to wrest from Chinese leaves, from Egyptian beans, from
+seeds of Mexico, their perfume, their treasure, their soul; going so far
+as to chisel the diamond, chase the silver, melt the gold ore, paint
+the clay and woo every art that may serve to decorate and to dignify the
+bowl from which he feeds!--how can this king, after having hidden under
+folds of muslin covered with diamonds, studded with rubies, and buried
+under linen, under folds of cotton, under the rich hues of silk, under
+the fairy patterns of lace, the partner of his wretchedness, how can
+he induce her to make shipwreck in the midst of all this luxury on the
+decks of two beds. What advantage is it that we have made the whole
+universe subserve our existence, our delusions, the poesy of our life?
+What good is it to have instituted law, morals and religion, if the
+invention of an upholsterer [for probably it was an upholsterer who
+invented the twin beds] robs our love of all its illusions, strips it
+bare of the majestic company of its delights and gives it in their
+stead nothing but what is ugliest and most odious? For this is the whole
+history of the two bed system.
+
+
+ LXIII.
+ That it shall appear either sublime or grotesque are the alternatives
+ to which we have reduced a desire.
+
+
+If it be shared, our love is sublime; but should you sleep in twin beds,
+your love will always be grotesque. The absurdities which this half
+separation occasions may be comprised in either one of two situations,
+which will give us occasion to reveal the causes of very many marital
+misfortunes.
+
+Midnight is approaching as a young woman is putting on her curl
+papers and yawning as she did so. I do not know whether her melancholy
+proceeded from a headache, seated in the right or left lobe of her
+brain, or whether she was passing through one of those seasons of
+weariness during which all things appear black to us; but to see her
+negligently putting up her hair for the night, to see her languidly
+raising her leg to take off her garter, it seemed to me that she would
+prefer to be drowned rather than to be denied the relief of plunging her
+draggled life into the slumber that might restore it. At this instant,
+I know not to what degree from the North Pole she stands, whether
+at Spitzberg or in Greenland. Cold and indifferent she goes to bed
+thinking, as Mistress Walter Shandy might have thought, that the morrow
+would be a day of sickness, that her husband is coming home very late,
+that the beaten eggs which she has just eaten were not sufficiently
+sweetened, that she owes more than five hundred francs to her
+dressmaker; in fine, thinking about everything which you may suppose
+would occupy the mind of a tired woman. In the meanwhile arrives her
+great lout of a husband, who, after some business meeting, has drunk
+punch, with a consequent elation. He takes off his boots, leaves his
+stockings on a lounge, his bootjack lies before the fireplace; and
+wrapping his head up in a red silk handkerchief, without giving himself
+the trouble to tuck in the corners, he fires off at his wife certain
+interjectory phrases, those little marital endearments, which form
+almost the whole conversation at those twilight hours, where drowsy
+reason is no longer shining in this mechanism of ours. "What, in bed
+already! It was devilish cold this evening! Why don't you speak, my pet?
+You've already rolled yourself up in bed, then! Ah! you are in the dumps
+and pretend to be asleep!" These exclamations are mingled with yawns;
+and after numberless little incidents which according to the usage of
+each home vary this preface of the night, our friend flings himself into
+his own bed with a heavy thud.
+
+Alas! before a woman who is cold, how mad a man must appear when desire
+renders him alternately angry and tender, insolent and abject, biting as
+an epigram and soothing as a madrigal; when he enacts with more or less
+sprightliness the scene where, in _Venice Preserved_, the genius of
+Orway has represented the senator Antonio, repeating a hundred times
+over at the feet of Aquilina: "Aquilina, Quilina, Lina, Aqui, Nacki!"
+without winning from her aught save the stroke of her whip, inasmuch
+as he has undertaken to fawn upon her like a dog. In the eyes of every
+woman, even of a lawful wife, the more a man shows eager passion under
+these circumstances, the more silly he appears. He is odious when he
+commands, he is minotaurized if he abuses his power. On this point I
+would remind you of certain aphorisms in the marriage catechism from
+which you will see that you are violating its most sacred precepts.
+Whether a woman yields, or does not yield, this institution of twin beds
+gives to marriage such an element of roughness and nakedness that the
+most chaste wife and the most intelligent husband are led to immodesty.
+
+This scene, which is enacted in a thousand ways and which may originate
+in a thousand different incidents, has a sequel in that other situation
+which, while it is less pleasant, is far more terrible.
+
+One evening when I was talking about these serious matters with the
+late Comte de Noce, of whom I have already had occasion to speak, a tall
+white-haired old man, his intimate friend, whose name I will not give,
+because he is still alive, looked at us with a somewhat melancholy air.
+We guessed that he was about to relate some tale of scandal, and we
+accordingly watched him, somewhat as the stenographer of the _Moniteur_
+might watch, as he mounted the tribune, a minister whose speech had
+already been written out for the reporter. The story-teller on this
+occasion was an old marquis, whose fortune, together with his wife
+and children, had perished in the disasters of the Revolution. The
+marchioness had been one of the most inconsistent women of the past
+generation; the marquis accordingly was not wanting in observations on
+feminine human nature. Having reached an age in which he saw nothing
+before him but the gulf of the grave, he spoke about himself as if the
+subject of his talk were Mark Antony or Cleopatra.
+
+"My young friend"--he did me the honor to address me, for it was I who
+made the last remark in this discussion--"your reflections make me think
+of a certain evening, in the course of which one of my friends conducted
+himself in such a manner as to lose forever the respect of his
+wife. Now, in those days a woman could take vengeance with marvelous
+facility--for it was always a word and a blow. The married couple I
+speak of were particular in sleeping on separate beds, with their head
+under the arch of the same alcove. They came home one night from a
+brilliant ball given by the Comte de Mercy, ambassador of the emperor.
+The husband had lost a considerable sum at play, so he was completely
+absorbed in thought. He had to pay a debt, the next day, of six thousand
+crowns!--and you will recollect, Noce, that a hundred crowns couldn't be
+made up from scraping together the resources of ten such musketeers.
+The young woman, as generally happens under such circumstances, was in
+a gale of high spirits. 'Give to the marquis,' she said to a _valet de
+chambre_, 'all that he requires for his toilet.' In those days people
+dressed for the night. These extraordinary words did not rouse the
+husband from his mood of abstraction, and then madame, assisted by her
+maid, began to indulge in a thousand coquetries. 'Was my appearance to
+your taste this evening?' 'You are always to my taste,' answered the
+marquis, continuing to stride up and down the room. 'You are very
+gloomy! Come and talk to me, you frowning lover,' said she, placing
+herself before him in the most seductive negligee. But you can have no
+idea of the enchantments of the marchioness unless you had known her.
+Ah! you have seen her, Noce!" he said with a mocking smile. "Finally, in
+spite of all her allurements and beauty, the marchioness was lost sight
+of amid thoughts of the six thousand crowns which this fool of a husband
+could not get out of his head, and she went to bed all alone. But women
+always have one resource left; so that the moment that the good husband
+made as though he would get into his bed, the marchioness cried, 'Oh,
+how cold I am!' 'So am I,' he replied. 'How is it that the servants have
+not warmed our beds?'--And then I rang."
+
+The Comte de Noce could not help laughing, and the old marquis, quite
+put out of countenance, stopped short.
+
+Not to divine the desire of a wife, to snore while she lies awake, to
+be in Siberia when she is in the tropics, these are the slighter
+disadvantages of twin beds. What risks will not a passionate woman run
+when she becomes aware that her husband is a heavy sleeper?
+
+I am indebted to Beyle for an Italian anecdote, to which his dry and
+sarcastic manner lent an infinite charm, as he told me this tale of
+feminine hardihood.
+
+Ludovico had his palace at one end of the town of Milan; at the
+other was that of the Countess of Pernetti. At midnight, on a certain
+occasion, Ludovico resolved, at the peril of his life, to make a rash
+expedition for the sake of gazing for one second on the face he
+adored, and accordingly appeared as if by magic in the palace of his
+well-beloved. He reached the nuptial chamber. Elisa Pernetti, whose
+heart most probably shared the desire of her lover, heard the sound of
+his footsteps and divined his intention. She saw through the walls of
+her chamber a countenance glowing with love. She rose from her marriage
+bed, light as a shadow she glided to the threshold of her door, with a
+look she embraced him, she seized his hand, she made a sign to him, she
+drew him in.
+
+"But he will kill you!" said he.
+
+"Perhaps so."
+
+But all this amounts to nothing. Let us grant that most husbands sleep
+lightly. Let us grant that they sleep without snoring, and that they
+always discern the degree of latitude at which their wives are to be
+found. Moreover, all the reasons which we have given why twin beds
+should be condemned, let us consider but dust in the balance. But, after
+all, a final consideration would make us also proscribe the use of beds
+ranged within the limits of the same alcove.
+
+To a man placed in the position of a husband, there are circumstances
+which have led us to consider the nuptial couch as an actual means of
+defence. For it is only in bed that a man can tell whether his wife's
+love is increasing or decreasing. It is the conjugal barometer. Now to
+sleep in twin beds is to wish for ignorance. You will understand,
+when we come to treat of _civil war_ (See Part Third) of what extreme
+usefulness a bed is and how many secrets a wife reveals in bed, without
+knowing it.
+
+Do not therefore allow yourself to be led astray by the specious good
+nature of such an institution as that of twin beds.
+
+It is the silliest, the most treacherous, the most dangerous in the
+world. Shame and anathema to him who conceived it!
+
+But in proportion as this method is pernicious in the case of young
+married people, it is salutary and advantageous for those who have
+reached the twentieth year of married life. Husband and wife can then
+most conveniently indulge their duets of snoring. It will, moreover,
+be more convenient for their various maladies, whether rheumatism,
+obstinate gout, or even the taking of a pinch of snuff; and the cough or
+the snore will not in any respect prove a greater hindrance than it is
+found to be in any other arrangement.
+
+We have not thought it necessary to mention the exceptional cases which
+authorize a husband to resort to twin beds. However, the opinion of
+Bonaparte was that when once there had taken place an interchange of
+life and breath (such are his words), nothing, not even sickness,
+should separate married people. This point is so delicate that it is not
+possible here to treat it methodically.
+
+Certain narrow minds will object that there are certain patriarchal
+families whose legislation of love is inflexible in the matter of two
+beds and an alcove, and that, by this arrangement, they have been happy
+from generation to generation. But, the only answer that the author
+vouchsafes to this is that he knows a great many respectable people who
+pass their lives in watching games of billiards.
+
+
+ 2. SEPARATE ROOMS.
+
+There cannot be found in Europe a hundred husbands of each nation
+sufficiently versed in the science of marriage, or if you like, of life,
+to be able to dwell in an apartment separate from that of their wives.
+
+The power of putting this system into practice shows the highest degree
+of intellectual and masculine force.
+
+The married couple who dwell in separate apartments have become either
+divorced, or have attained to the discovery of happiness. They either
+abominate or adore each other. We will not undertake to detail here the
+admirable precepts which may be deduced from this theory whose end is to
+make constancy and fidelity easy and delightful. It may be sufficient
+to declare that by this system alone two married people can realize the
+dream of many noble souls. This will be understood by all the faithful.
+
+As for the profane, their curious questionings will be sufficiently
+answered by the remark that the object of this institution is to give
+happiness to one woman. Which among them will be willing to deprive
+general society of any share in the talents with which they think
+themselves endowed, to the advantage of one woman? Nevertheless, the
+rendering of his mistress happy gives any one the fairest title to glory
+which can be earned in this valley of Jehosaphat, since, according to
+Genesis, Eve was not satisfied even with a terrestrial Paradise. She
+desired to taste the forbidden fruit, the eternal emblem of adultery.
+
+But there is an insurmountable reason why we should refrain from
+developing this brilliant theory. It would cause a digression from the
+main theme of our work. In the situation which we have supposed to be
+that of a married establishment, a man who is sufficiently unwise to
+sleep apart from his wife deserves no pity for the disaster which he
+himself invites.
+
+Let us then resume our subject. Every man is not strong enough to
+undertake to occupy an apartment separate from that of his wife;
+although any man might derive as much good as evil from the difficulties
+which exist in using but one bed.
+
+We now proceed to solve the difficulties which superficial minds may
+detect in this method, for which our predilection is manifest.
+
+But this paragraph, which is in some sort a silent one, inasmuch as we
+leave it to the commentaries which will be made in more than one home,
+may serve as a pedestal for the imposing figure of Lycurgus, that
+ancient legislator, to whom the Greeks are indebted for their
+profoundest thoughts on the subject of marriage. May his system be
+understood by future generations! And if modern manners are too much
+given to softness to adopt his system in its entirety, they may at least
+be imbued with the robust spirit of this admirable code.
+
+
+ 3. ONE BED FOR BOTH.
+
+On a night in December, Frederick the Great looked up at the sky, whose
+stars were twinkling with that clear and living light which presages
+heavy frost, and he exclaimed, "This weather will result in a great many
+soldiers to Prussia."
+
+The king expressed here, by a single phrase, the principal disadvantage
+which results from the constant living together of married people.
+Although it may be permitted to Napoleon and to Frederick to estimate
+the value of a woman more or less according to the number of her
+children, yet a husband of talent ought, according to the maxims of the
+thirteenth Meditation, to consider child-begetting merely as a means of
+defence, and it is for him to know to what extent it may take place.
+
+The observation leads into mysteries from which the physiological Muse
+recoils. She has been quite willing to enter the nuptial chambers
+while they are occupied, but she is a virgin and a prude, and there are
+occasions on which she retires. For, since it is at this passage in my
+book that the Muse is inclined to put her white hands before her eyes so
+as to see nothing, like the young girl looking through the interstices
+of her tapering fingers, she will take advantage of this attack of
+modesty, to administer a reprimand to our manners. In England the
+nuptial chamber is a sacred place. The married couple alone have the
+privilege of entering it, and more than one lady, we are told, makes her
+bed herself. Of all the crazes which reign beyond the sea, why should
+the only one which we despise be precisely that, whose grace and mystery
+ought undoubtedly to meet the approval of all tender souls on this
+continent? Refined women condemn the immodesty with which strangers
+are introduced into the sanctuary of marriage. As for us, who have
+energetically anathematized women who walk abroad at the time when they
+expect soon to be confined, our opinion cannot be doubted. If we wish
+the celibate to respect marriage, married people ought to have some
+regard for the inflammability of bachelors.
+
+To sleep every night with one's wife may seem, we confess, an act of the
+most insolent folly.
+
+Many husbands are inclined to ask how a man, who desires to bring
+marriage to perfection, dare prescribe to a husband a rule of conduct
+which would be fatal in a lover.
+
+Nevertheless, such is the decision of a doctor of arts and sciences
+conjugal.
+
+In the first place, without making a resolution never to sleep by
+himself, this is the only course left to a husband, since we have
+demonstrated the dangers of the preceding systems. We must now try to
+prove that this last method yields more advantage and less disadvantage
+than the two preceding methods, that is, so far as relates to the
+critical position in which a conjugal establishment stands.
+
+Our observations on the twin beds ought to have taught husbands that
+they should always be strung into the same degree of fervor as that
+which prevails in the harmonious organization of their wives. Now it
+seems to us that this perfect equality in feelings would naturally
+be created under the white Aegis, which spreads over both of them its
+protecting sheet; this at the outset is an immense advantage, and really
+nothing is easier to verify at any moment than the degree of love and
+expansion which a woman reaches when the same pillow receives the heads
+of both spouses.
+
+Man [we speak now of the species] walks about with a memorandum always
+totalized, which shows distinctly and without error the amount of
+passion which he carries within him. This mysterious gynometer is
+traced in the hollow of the hand, for the hand is really that one of
+our members which bears the impress most plainly of our characters.
+Chirology is a fifth work which I bequeath to my successors, for I
+am contented here to make known but the elements of this interesting
+science.
+
+The hand is the essential organ of touch. Touch is the sense which
+very nearly takes the place of all the others, and which alone is
+indispensable. Since the hand alone can carry out all that a man
+desires, it is to an extent action itself. The sum total of our vitality
+passes through it; and men of powerful intellects are usually
+remarkable for their shapely hands, perfection in that respect being a
+distinguishing trait of their high calling.
+
+Jesus Christ performed all His miracles by the imposition of hands.
+The hand is the channel through which life passes. It reveals to the
+physician all the mysteries of our organism. It exhales more than any
+other part of our bodies the nervous fluid, or that unknown substance,
+which for want of another term we style _will_. The eye can discover the
+mood of our soul but the hand betrays at the same time the secrets of
+the body and those of the soul. We can acquire the faculty of imposing
+silence on our eyes, on our lips, on our brows, and on our forehead; but
+the hand never dissembles and nothing in our features can be compared to
+the richness of its expression. The heat and cold which it feels in such
+delicate degrees often escape the notice of other senses in thoughtless
+people; but a man knows how to distinguish them, however little time he
+may have bestowed in studying the anatomy of sentiments and the affairs
+of human life. Thus the hand has a thousand ways of becoming dry, moist,
+hot, cold, soft, rough, unctuous. The hand palpitates, becomes supple,
+grows hard and again is softened. In fine it presents a phenomenon which
+is inexplicable so that one is tempted to call it the incarnation of
+thought. It causes the despair of the sculptor and the painter when they
+wish to express the changing labyrinth of its mysterious lineaments.
+To stretch out your hand to a man is to save him, it serves as a
+ratification of the sentiments we express. The sorcerers of every age
+have tried to read our future destines in those lines which have nothing
+fanciful in them, but absolutely correspond with the principles of each
+one's life and character. When she charges a man with want of tact,
+which is merely touch, a woman condemns him without hope. We use the
+expressions, the "Hand of Justice," the "Hand of God;" and a _coup de
+main_ means a bold undertaking.
+
+To understand and recognize the hidden feelings by the atmospheric
+variations of the hand, which a woman almost always yields without
+distrust, is a study less unfruitful and surer than that of physiognomy.
+
+In this way you will be able, if you acquire this science, to wield vast
+power, and to find a clue which will guide you through the labyrinth of
+the most impenetrable heart. This will render your living together free
+from very many mistakes, and, at the same time, rich in the acquisition
+of many a treasure.
+
+Buffon and certain physiologists affirm that our members are more
+completely exhausted by desire than by the most keen enjoyments.
+And really, does not desire constitute of itself a sort of intuitive
+possession? Does it not stand in the same relation to visible action,
+as those incidents in our mental life, in which we take part in a dream,
+stand to the incidents of our actual life? This energetic apprehension
+of things, does it not call into being an internal emotion more
+powerful than that of the external action? If our gestures are only the
+accomplishment of things already enacted by our thought, you may easily
+calculate how desire frequently entertained must necessarily consume the
+vital fluids. But the passions which are no more than the aggregation
+of desires, do they not furrow with the wrinkle of their lightning the
+faces of the ambitious, of gamblers, for instance, and do they not wear
+out their bodies with marvelous swiftness?
+
+These observations, therefore, necessarily contain the germs of a
+mysterious system equally favored by Plato and by Epicurus; we will
+leave it for you to meditate upon, enveloped as it is in the veil which
+enshrouds Egyptian statues.
+
+But the greatest mistake that a man commits is to believe that love
+can belong only to those fugitive moments which, according to the
+magnificent expression of Bossuet, are like to the nails scattered over
+a wall: to the eye they appear numerous; but when they are collected
+they make but a handful.
+
+Love consists almost always in conversation. There are few things
+inexhaustible in a lover: goodness, gracefulness and delicacy. To feel
+everything, to divine everything, to anticipate everything; to reproach
+without bringing affliction upon a tender heart; to make a present
+without pride; to double the value of a certain action by the way in
+which it is done; to flatter rather by actions than by words; to make
+oneself understood rather than to produce a vivid impression; to touch
+without striking; to make a look and the sound of the voice produce the
+effect of a caress; never to produce embarrassment; to amuse without
+offending good taste; always to touch the heart; to speak to the
+soul--this is all that women ask. They will abandon all the delights of
+all the nights of Messalina, if only they may live with a being who will
+yield them those caresses of the soul, for which they are so eager, and
+which cost nothing to men if only they have a little consideration.
+
+This outline comprises a great portion of such secrets as belong to the
+nuptial couch. There are perhaps some witty people who may take this
+long definition of politeness for a description of love, while in any
+case it is no more than a recommendation to treat your wife as you would
+treat the minister on whose good-will depends your promotion to the post
+you covet.
+
+I hear numberless voices crying out that this book is a special advocate
+for women and neglects the cause of men;
+
+That the majority of women are unworthy of these delicate attentions and
+would abuse them;
+
+That there are women given to licentiousness who would not lend
+themselves to very much of what they would call mystification;
+
+That women are nothing but vanity and think of nothing but dress;
+
+That they have notions which are truly unreasonable;
+
+That they are very often annoyed by an attention;
+
+That they are fools, they understand nothing, are worth nothing, etc.
+
+In answer to all these clamors we will write here the following phrases,
+which, placed between two spaces, will perhaps have the air of a
+thought, to quote an expression of Beaumarchais.
+
+
+ LXIV.
+ A wife is to her husband just what her husband has made her.
+
+
+The reasons why the single bed must triumph over the other two methods
+of organizing the nuptial couch are as follows: In the single couch we
+have a faithful interpreter to translate with profound truthfulness the
+sentiments of a woman, to render her a spy over herself, to keep her at
+the height of her amorous temperature, never to leave her, to have
+the power of hearing her breathe in slumber, and thus to avoid all the
+nonsense which is the ruin of so many marriages.
+
+As it is impossible to receive benefits without paying for them, you are
+bound to learn how to sleep gracefully, to preserve your dignity under
+the silk handkerchief that wraps your head, to be polite, to see that
+your slumber is light, not to cough too much, and to imitate those
+modern authors who write more prefaces than books.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XVIII. OF MARITAL REVOLUTIONS.
+
+The time always comes in which nations and women even the most stupid
+perceive that their innocence is being abused. The cleverest policy
+may for a long time proceed in a course of deceit; but it would be very
+happy for men if they could carry on their deceit to an infinite period;
+a vast amount of bloodshed would then be avoided, both in nations and in
+families.
+
+Nevertheless, we hope that the means of defence put forth in the
+preceding Meditations will be sufficient to deliver a certain number
+of husbands from the clutches of the Minotaur! You must agree with
+the doctor that many a love blindly entered upon perishes under the
+treatment of hygiene or dies away, thanks to marital policy. Yes [what
+a consoling mistake!] many a lover will be driven away by personal
+efforts, many a husband will learn how to conceal under an impenetrable
+veil the machinery of his machiavelism, and many a man will have better
+success than the old philosopher who cried: _Nolo coronari!_
+
+But we are here compelled to acknowledge a mournful truth. Despotism has
+its moments of secure tranquillity. Her reign seems like the hour which
+precedes the tempest, and whose silence enables the traveler, stretched
+upon the faded grass, to hear at a mile's distance, the song of the
+cicada. Some fine morning an honest woman, who will be imitated by a
+great portion of our own women, discerns with an eagle eye the clever
+manoeuvres which have rendered her the victim of an infernal policy.
+She is at first quite furious at having for so long a time preserved her
+virtue. At what age, in what day, does this terrible revolution occur?
+This question of chronology depends entirely upon the genius of each
+husband; for it is not the vocation of all to put in practice with the
+same talent the precepts of our conjugal gospel.
+
+"A man must have very little love," the mystified wife will exclaim, "to
+enter upon such calculations as these! What! From the first day I have
+been to him perpetually an object of suspicion! It is monstrous, even a
+woman would be incapable of such artful and cruel treachery!"
+
+This is the question. Each husband will be able to understand the
+variations of this complaint which will be made in accordance with the
+character of the young Fury, of whom he has made a companion.
+
+A woman by no means loses her head under these circumstances; she holds
+her tongue and dissembles. Her vengeance will be concealed. Only you
+will have some symptoms of hesitation to contend with on the arrival of
+the crisis, which we presume you to have reached on the expiration of
+the honeymoon; but you will also have to contend against a resolution.
+She has determined to revenge herself. From that day, so far as regards
+you, her mask, like her heart, has turned to bronze. Formerly you were
+an object of indifference to her; you are becoming by degrees absolutely
+insupportable. The Civil War commences only at the moment in which, like
+the drop of water which makes the full glass overflow, some incident,
+whose more or less importance we find difficulty in determining, has
+rendered you odious. The lapse of time which intervenes between this
+last hour, the limit of your good understanding, and the day when
+your wife becomes cognizant of your artifices, is nevertheless quite
+sufficient to permit you to institute a series of defensive operations,
+which we will now explain.
+
+Up to this time you have protected your honor solely by the exertion of
+a power entirely occult. Hereafter the wheels of your conjugal machinery
+must be set going in sight of every one. In this case, if you would
+prevent a crime you must strike a blow. You have begun by negotiating,
+you must end by mounting your horse, sabre in hand, like a Parisian
+gendarme. You must make your horse prance, you must brandish your sabre,
+you must shout strenuously, and you must endeavor to calm the revolt
+without wounding anybody.
+
+Just as the author has found a means of passing from occult methods to
+methods that are patent, so it is necessary for the husband to justify
+the sudden change in his tactics; for in marriage, as in literature, art
+consists entirely in the gracefulness of the transitions. This is of the
+highest importance for you. What a frightful position you will occupy
+if your wife has reason to complain of your conduct at the moment, which
+is, perhaps, the most critical of your whole married life!
+
+You must therefore find some means or other to justify the secret
+tyranny of your initial policy; some means which still prepare the mind
+of your wife for the severe measures which you are about to take; some
+means which so far from forfeiting her esteem will conciliate her; some
+means which will gain her pardon, which will restore some little of that
+charm of yours, by which you won her love before your marriage.
+
+"But what policy is it that demands this course of action? Is there such
+a policy?"
+
+Certainly there is.
+
+But what address, what tact, what histrionic art must a husband possess
+in order to display the mimic wealth of that treasure which we are about
+to reveal to him! In order to counterfeit the passion whose fire is to
+make you a new man in the presence of your wife, you will require all
+the cunning of Talma.
+
+This passion is JEALOUSY.
+
+"My husband is jealous. He has been so from the beginning of our
+marriage. He has concealed this feeling from me by his usual refined
+delicacy. Does he love me still? I am going to do as I like with him!"
+
+Such are the discoveries which a woman is bound to make, one after
+another, in accordance with the charming scenes of the comedy which
+you are enacting for your amusement; and a man of the world must be an
+actual fool, if he fails in making a woman believe that which flatters
+her.
+
+With what perfection of hypocrisy must you arrange, step by step, your
+hypocritical behavior so as to rouse the curiosity of your wife, to
+engage her in a new study, and to lead her astray among the labyrinths
+of your thought!
+
+Ye sublime actors! Do ye divine the diplomatic reticence, the gestures
+of artifice, the veiled words, the looks of doubtful meaning which
+some evening may induce your wife to attempt the capture of your secret
+thoughts?
+
+Ah! to laugh in your sleeve while you are exhibiting the fierceness of
+a tiger; neither to lie nor to tell the truth; to comprehend the
+capricious mood of a woman, and yet to make her believe that she
+controls you, while you intend to bind her with a collar of iron! O
+comedy that has no audience, which yet is played by one heart before
+another heart and where both of you applaud because both of you think
+that you have obtained success!
+
+She it is who will tell you that you are jealous, who will point out to
+you that she knows you better than you know yourself, who will prove to
+you the uselessness of your artifices and who perhaps will defy you.
+She triumphs in the excited consciousness of the superiority which she
+thinks she possesses over you; you of course are ennobled in her eyes;
+for she finds your conduct quite natural. The only thing she feels is
+that your want of confidence was useless; if she wished to betray, who
+could hinder her?
+
+Then, some evening, you will burst into a passion, and, as some trifle
+affords you a pretext, you will make a scene, in the course of which
+your anger will make you divulge the secret of your distress. And here
+comes in the promulgation of our new code.
+
+Have no fear that a woman is going to trouble herself about this. She
+needs your jealousy, she rather likes your severity. This comes from the
+fact that in the first place she finds there a justification for her own
+conduct; and then she finds immense satisfaction in playing before other
+people the part of a victim. What delightful expressions of sympathy
+will she receive! Afterwards she will use this as a weapon against you,
+in the expectation thereby of leading you into a pitfall.
+
+She sees in your conduct the source of a thousand more pleasures in her
+future treachery, and her imagination smiles at all the barricades with
+which you surround her, for will she not have the delight of surmounting
+them all?
+
+Women understand better than we do the art of analyzing the two human
+feelings, which alternately form their weapons of attack, or the weapons
+of which they are victims. They have the instinct of love, because it is
+their whole life, and of jealousy, because it is almost the only
+means by which they can control us. Within them jealousy is a genuine
+sentiment and springs from the instinct of self-preservation; it is
+vital to their life or death. But with men this feeling is absolutely
+absurd when it does not subserve some further end.
+
+To entertain feelings of jealousy towards the woman you love, is to
+start from a position founded on vicious reasoning. We are loved, or
+we are not loved; if a man entertains jealousy under either of these
+circumstances, it is a feeling absolutely unprofitable to him; jealousy
+may be explained as fear, fear in love. But to doubt one's wife is to
+doubt one's self.
+
+To be jealous is to exhibit, at once, the height of egotism, the error
+of _amour-propre_, the vexation of morbid vanity. Women rather encourage
+this ridiculous feeling, because by means of it they can obtain cashmere
+shawls, silver toilet sets, diamonds, which for them mark the high
+thermometer mark of their power. Moreover, unless you appear blinded by
+jealousy, your wife will not keep on her guard; for there is no pitfall
+which she does not distrust, excepting that which she makes for herself.
+
+Thus the wife becomes the easy dupe of a husband who is clever enough
+to give to the inevitable revolution, which comes sooner or later, the
+advantageous results we have indicated.
+
+You must import into your establishment that remarkable phenomenon whose
+existence is demonstrated in the asymptotes of geometry. Your wife will
+always try to minotaurize you without being successful. Like those knots
+which are never so tight as when one tries to loosen them, she will
+struggle to the advantage of your power over her, while she believes
+that she is struggling for her independence.
+
+The highest degree of good play on the part of a prince lies in
+persuading his people that he goes to war for them, while all the time
+he is causing them to be killed for his throne.
+
+But many husbands will find a preliminary difficulty in executing this
+plan of campaign. If your wife is a woman of profound dissimulation, the
+question is, what signs will indicate to her the motives of your long
+mystification?
+
+It will be seen that our Meditation on the Custom House, as well as that
+on the Bed, has already revealed certain means of discerning the thought
+of a woman; but we make no pretence in this book of exhaustively stating
+the resources of human wit, which are immeasurable. Now here is a
+proof of this. On the day of the Saturnalia the Romans discovered more
+features in the character of their slaves, in ten minutes, than they
+would have found out during the rest of the year! You ought therefore
+to ordain Saturnalia in your establishment, and to imitate Gessler, who,
+when he saw William Tell shoot the apple off his son's head, was forced
+to remark, "Here is a man whom I must get rid of, for he could not miss
+his aim if he wished to kill me."
+
+You understand, then, that if your wife wishes to drink Roussillon
+wine, to eat mutton chops, to go out at all hours and to read the
+encyclopaedia, you are bound to take her very seriously. In the first
+place, she will begin to distrust you against her own wish, on seeing
+that your behaviour towards her is quite contrary to your previous
+proceedings. She will suppose that you have some ulterior motive in this
+change of policy, and therefore all the liberty that you give her will
+make her so anxious that she cannot enjoy it. As regards the misfortunes
+that this change may bring, the future will provide for them. In a
+revolution the primary principle is to exercise a control over the evil
+which cannot be prevented and to attract the lightning by rods which
+shall lead it to the earth.
+
+And now the last act of the comedy is in preparation.
+
+The lover who, from the day when the feeblest of all first symptoms
+shows itself in your wife until the moment when the marital revolution
+takes place, has jumped upon the stage, either as a material creature or
+as a being of the imagination--the LOVER, summoned by a sign from her,
+now declares: "Here I am!"
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XIX. OF THE LOVER.
+
+We offer the following maxims for your consideration:
+
+We should despair of the human race if these maxims had been made
+before 1830; but they set forth in so clear a manner the agreements
+and difficulties which distinguish you, your wife and a lover; they so
+brilliantly describe what your policy should be, and demonstrate to you
+so accurately the strength of the enemy, that the teacher has put
+his _amour-propre_ aside, and if by chance you find here a single new
+thought, send it to the devil, who suggested this work.
+
+
+ LXV.
+ To speak of love is to make love.
+
+
+ LXVI.
+ In a lover the coarsest desire always shows itself as a burst of
+ honest admiration.
+
+
+ LXVII.
+ A lover has all the good points and all the bad points which are
+ lacking in a husband.
+
+
+ LXVIII.
+ A lover not only gives life to everything, he makes one forget life;
+ the husband does not give life to anything.
+
+
+ LXIX.
+ All the affected airs of sensibility which a woman puts on invariably
+deceive a lover; and on occasions when a husband shrugs his shoulders, a
+lover is in ecstasies.
+
+
+ LXX.
+ A lover betrays by his manner alone the degree of intimacy in which he
+ stands to a married woman.
+
+
+ LXXI.
+ A woman does not always know why she is in love. It is rarely that a
+man falls in love without some selfish purpose. A husband should
+discover this secret motive of egotism, for it will be to him the lever
+of Archimedes.
+
+
+ LXXII.
+ A clever husband never betrays his supposition that his wife has a
+ lover.
+
+
+ LXXIII.
+ The lover submits to all the caprices of a woman; and as a man is
+never vile while he lies in the arms of his mistress, he will take the
+means to please her that a husband would recoil from.
+
+
+ LXXIV.
+ A lover teaches a wife all that her husband has concealed from her.
+
+
+ LXXV.
+ All the sensations which a woman yields to her lover, she gives in
+exchange; they return to her always intensified; they are as rich in
+what they give as in what they receive. This is the kind of commerce in
+which almost all husbands end by being bankrupt.
+
+
+ LXXVI.
+ A lover speaks of nothing to a woman but that which exalts her; while
+a husband, although he may be a loving one, can never refrain from
+giving advice which always has the appearance of reprimand.
+
+
+ LXXVII.
+ A lover always starts from his mistress to himself; with a husband the
+ contrary is the case.
+
+
+ LXXVIII.
+ A lover always has a desire to appear amiable. There is in this
+sentiment an element of exaggeration which leads to ridicule; study how
+to take advantage of this.
+
+
+ LXXIX.
+ When a crime has been committed the magistrate who investigates the
+case knows [excepting in the case of a released convict who commits
+murder in jail] that there are not more than five persons to whom he can
+attribute the act. He starts from this premise a series of conjectures.
+The husband should reason like the judge; there are only three people in
+society whom he can suspect when seeking the lover of his wife.
+
+
+ LXXX.
+ A lover is never in the wrong.
+
+
+ LXXXI.
+ The lover of a married woman says to her: "Madame, you have need of
+rest. You have to give an example of virtue to your children. You have
+sworn to make your husband happy, and although he has some faults--he
+has fewer than I have--he is worthy of your esteem. Nevertheless you
+have sacrificed everything for me. Do not let a single murmur escape
+you; for regret is an offence which I think worthy of a severer
+penalty than the law decrees against infidelity. As a reward for
+these sacrifices, I will bring you as much pleasure as pain." And the
+incredible part about it is, that the lover triumphs. The form which his
+speech takes carries it. He says but one phrase: "I love you." A lover
+is a herald who proclaims either the merit, the beauty, or the wit of a
+woman. What does a husband proclaim?
+
+
+To sum up all, the love which a married woman inspires, or that which
+she gives back, is the least creditable sentiment in the world; in her
+it is boundless vanity; in her lover it is selfish egotism. The lover of
+a married woman contracts so many obligations, that scarcely three men
+in a century are met with who are capable of discharging them. He
+ought to dedicate his whole life to his mistress, but he always ends by
+deserting her; both parties are aware of this, and, from the beginning
+of social life, the one has always been sublime in self-sacrifice, the
+other an ingrate. The infatuation of love always rouses the pity of the
+judges who pass sentence on it. But where do you find such love genuine
+and constant? What power must a husband possess to struggle successfully
+against a man who casts over a woman a spell strong enough to make her
+submit to such misfortunes!
+
+
+
+We think, then, as a general rule, a husband, if he knows how to use
+the means of defence which we have outlined, can lead his wife up to her
+twenty-seventh year, not without her having chosen a lover, but without
+her having committed the great crime. Here and there we meet with men
+endowed with deep marital genius, who can keep their wives, body and
+soul to themselves alone up to their thirtieth or thirty-fifth year;
+but these exceptions cause a sort of scandal and alarm. The phenomenon
+scarcely ever is met with excepting in the country, where life is
+transparent and people live in glass houses and the husband wields
+immense power. The miraculous assistance which men and things thus give
+to a husband always vanishes in the midst of a city whose population
+reaches to two hundred and fifty thousand.
+
+It would therefore almost appear to be demonstrated that thirty is the
+age of virtue. At that critical period, a woman becomes so difficult
+to guard, that in order successfully to enchain her within the conjugal
+Paradise, resort must be had to those last means of defence which remain
+to be described, and which we will reveal in the _Essay on Police_, the
+_Art of Returning Home_, and _Catastrophes_.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XX. ESSAY ON POLICE.
+
+The police of marriage consist of all those means which are given you
+by law, manners, force, and stratagem for preventing your wife in her
+attempt to accomplish those three acts which in some sort make up the
+life of love: writing, seeing and speaking.
+
+The police combine in greater or less proportion the means of defence
+put forth in the preceding Meditations. Instinct alone can teach in what
+proportions and on what occasions these compounded elements are to be
+employed. The whole system is elastic; a clever husband will easily
+discern how it must be bent, stretched or retrenched. By the aid of
+the police a man can guide his wife to her fortieth year pure from any
+fault.
+
+We will divide this treatise on Police into five captions:
+
+
+ 1. OF MOUSE-TRAPS.
+ 2. OF CORRESPONDENCE.
+ 3. OF SPIES.
+ 4. THE INDEX.
+ 5. OF THE BUDGET.
+
+
+ 1. OF MOUSE-TRAPS.
+
+In spite of the grave crisis which the husband has reached, we do not
+suppose that the lover has completely acquired the freedom of the city
+in the marital establishment. Many husbands often suspect that their
+wives have a lover, and yet they do not know upon which of the five or
+six chosen ones of whom we have spoken their suspicions ought to fall.
+This hesitation doubtless springs from some moral infirmity, to whose
+assistance the professor must come.
+
+Fouche had in Paris three or four houses resorted to by people of the
+highest distinction; the mistresses of these dwellings were devoted to
+him. This devotion cost a great deal of money to the state. The minister
+used to call these gatherings, of which nobody at the time had any
+suspicion, his _mouse-traps_. More than one arrest was made at the end
+of the ball at which the most brilliant people of Paris had been made
+accomplices of this oratorian.
+
+The act of offering some fragments of roasted nuts, in order to see your
+wife put her white hand in the trap, is certainly exceedingly delicate,
+for a woman is certain to be on her guard; nevertheless, we reckon
+upon at least three kinds of mouse-traps: _The Irresistible_, _The
+Fallacious_, and that which is _Touch and Go_.
+
+
+ _The Irresistible._
+
+Suppose two husbands, we will call them A and B, wish to discover who
+are the lovers of their wives. We will put the husband A at the centre
+of a table loaded with the finest pyramids of fruit, of crystals, of
+candies and of liqueurs, and the husband B shall be at whatever point of
+this brilliant circle you may please to suppose. The champagne has gone
+round, every eye is sparkling and every tongue is wagging.
+
+HUSBAND A. (peeling a chestnut)--Well, as for me, I admire literary
+people, but from a distance. I find them intolerable; in conversation
+they are despotic; I do not know what displeases me more, their faults
+or their good qualities. In short (he swallows his chestnut), people of
+genius are like tonics--you like, but you must use them temperately.
+
+WIFE B. (who has listened attentively)--But, M. A., you are very
+exacting (with an arch smile); it seems to me that dull people have as
+many faults as people of talent, with this difference perhaps, that the
+former have nothing to atone for them!
+
+HUSBAND A. (irritably)--You will agree at least, madame, that they are
+not very amiable to you.
+
+WIFE B. (with vivacity)--Who told you so?
+
+HUSBAND A. (smiling)--Don't they overwhelm you all the time with their
+superiority? Vanity so dominates their souls that between you and them
+the effort is reciprocal--
+
+THE MISTRESS OF THE HOUSE. (aside to Wife A)--You well deserved it, my
+dear. (Wife A shrugs her shoulders.)
+
+HUSBAND A. (still continuing)--Then the habit they have of combining
+ideas which reveal to them the mechanism of feeling! For them love is
+purely physical and every one knows that they do not shine.
+
+WIFE B. (biting her lips, interrupting him)--It seems to me, sir, that
+we are the sole judges in this matter. I can well understand why men of
+the world do not like men of letters! But it is easier to criticise than
+to imitate them.
+
+HUSBAND A. (disdainfully)--Oh, madame, men of the world can assail the
+authors of the present time without being accused of envy. There is many
+a gentleman of the drawing-room, who if he undertook to write--
+
+WIFE B. (with warmth)--Unfortunately for you, sir, certain friends of
+yours in the Chamber have written romances; have you been able to
+read them?--But really, in these days, in order to attain the least
+originality, you must undertake historic research, you must--
+
+HUSBAND B. (making no answer to the lady next him and speaking
+aside)--Oh! Oh! Can it be that it is M. de L-----, author of the _Dreams
+of a Young Girl_, whom my wife is in love with?--That is singular; I
+thought that it was Doctor M-----. But stay! (Aloud.) Do you know, my
+dear, that you are right in what you say? (All laugh.) Really, I
+should prefer to have always artists and men of letters in my
+drawing-room--(aside) when we begin to receive!--rather than to see
+there other professional men. In any case artists speak of things about
+which every one is enthusiastic, for who is there who does not believe
+in good taste? But judges, lawyers, and, above all, doctors--Heavens!
+I confess that to hear them constantly speaking about lawsuits and
+diseases, those two human ills--
+
+WIFE A. (sitting next to Husband B, speaking at the same time)--What is
+that you are saying, my friend? You are quite mistaken. In these days
+nobody wishes to wear a professional manner; doctors, since you have
+mentioned doctors, try to avoid speaking of professional matters.
+They talk politics, discuss the fashions and the theatres, they tell
+anecdotes, they write books better than professional authors do;
+there is a vast difference between the doctors of to-day and those of
+Moliere--
+
+HUSBAND A. (aside)--Whew! Is it possible my wife is in love with Dr.
+M-----? That would be odd. (Aloud.) That is quite possible, my dear, but
+I would not give a sick dog in charge of a physician who writes.
+
+WIFE A. (interrupting her husband)--I know people who have five or six
+offices, yet the government has the greatest confidence in them; anyway,
+it is odd that you should speak in this way, you who were one of Dr.
+M-----'s great cases--
+
+HUSBAND A. (aside)--There can be no doubt of it!
+
+
+ _The Fallacious._
+
+A HUSBAND. (as he reaches home)--My dear, we are invited by Madame de
+Fischtaminel to a concert which she is giving next Tuesday. I reckoned
+on going there, as I wanted to speak with a young cousin of the minister
+who was among the singers; but he is gone to Frouville to see his aunt.
+What do you propose doing?
+
+HIS WIFE.--These concerts tire me to death!--You have to sit nailed to
+your chair whole hours without saying a word.--Besides, you know quite
+well that we dine with my mother on that day, and it is impossible to
+miss paying her a visit.
+
+HER HUSBAND. (carelessly)--Ah! that is true.
+
+_(Three days afterwards.)_
+
+THE HUSBAND. (as he goes to bed)--What do you think, my darling?
+To-morrow I will leave you at your mother's, for the count has returned
+from Frouville and will be at Madame de Fischtaminel's concert.
+
+HIS WIFE. (vivaciously)--But why should you go alone? You know how I
+adore music!
+
+
+ _The Touch and Go Mouse-Trap._
+
+THE WIFE.--Why did you go away so early this evening?
+
+THE HUSBAND. (mysteriously)--Ah! It is a sad business, and all the more
+so because I don't know how I can settle it.
+
+THE WIFE.--What is it all about, Adolph? You are a wretch if you do not
+tell me what you are going to do!
+
+THE HUSBAND.--My dear, that ass of a Prosper Magnan is fighting a duel
+with M. de Fontanges, on account of an Opera singer.--But what is the
+matter with you?
+
+THE WIFE.--Nothing.--It is very warm in this room and I don't know what
+ails me, for the whole day I have been suffering from sudden flushing of
+the face.
+
+THE HUSBAND. (aside)--She is in love with M. de Fontanges. (Aloud.)
+Celestine! (He shouts out still louder.) Celestine! Come quick, madame
+is ill!
+
+You will understand that a clever husband will discover a thousand ways
+of setting these three kinds of traps.
+
+
+ 2. OF CORRESPONDENCE.
+
+To write a letter, and to have it posted; to get an answer, to read it
+and burn it; there we have correspondence stated in the simplest terms.
+
+Yet consider what immense resources are given by civilization, by our
+manners and by our love to the women who wish to conceal these material
+actions from the scrutiny of a husband.
+
+The inexorable box which keeps its mouth open to all comers receives its
+epistolary provender from all hands.
+
+There is also the fatal invention of the General Delivery. A lover finds
+in the world a hundred charitable persons, male and female, who, for a
+slight consideration, will slip the billets-doux into the amorous and
+intelligent hand of his fair mistress.
+
+A correspondence is a variable as Proteus. There are sympathetic inks. A
+young celibate has told us in confidence that he has written a letter on
+the fly-leaf of a new book, which, when the husband asked for it of the
+bookseller, reached the hands of his mistress, who had been prepared the
+evening before for this charming article.
+
+A woman in love, who fears her husband's jealousy, will write and read
+billets-doux during the time consecrated to those mysterious occupations
+during which the most tyrannical husband must leave her alone.
+
+Moreover, all lovers have the art of arranging a special code of
+signals, whose arbitrary import it is difficult to understand. At a
+ball, a flower placed in some odd way in the hair; at the theatre, a
+pocket handkerchief unfolded on the front of the box; rubbing the nose,
+wearing a belt of a particular color, putting the hat on one side,
+wearing one dress oftener than another, singing a certain song in a
+concert or touching certain notes on the piano; fixing the eyes on a
+point agreed; everything, in fact, from the hurdy-gurdy which passes
+your windows and goes away if you open the shutter, to the newspaper
+announcement of a horse for sale--all may be reckoned as correspondence.
+
+How many times, in short, will a wife craftily ask her husband to do
+such and such commission for her, to go to such and such a shop or
+house, having previously informed her lover that your presence at such
+or such a place means yes or no?
+
+On this point the professor acknowledges with shame that there is no
+possible means of preventing correspondence between lovers. But a little
+machiavelism on the part of the husband will be much more likely to
+remedy the difficulty than any coercive measures.
+
+An agreement, which should be kept sacred between married people, is
+their solemn oath that they will respect each other's sealed letters.
+Clever is the husband who makes this pledge on his wedding-day and is
+able to keep it conscientiously.
+
+In giving your wife unrestrained liberty to write and to receive
+letters, you will be enabled to discern the moment she begins to
+correspond with a lover.
+
+But suppose your wife distrusts you and covers with impenetrable clouds
+the means she takes to conceal from you her correspondence. Is it not
+then time to display that intellectual power with which we armed you in
+our Meditation entitled _Of the Custom House_? The man who does not see
+when his wife writes to her lover, and when she receives an answer, is a
+failure as a husband.
+
+The proposed study which you ought to bestow upon the movements,
+the actions, the gestures, the looks of your wife, will be perhaps
+troublesome and wearying, but it will not last long; the only point is
+to discover when your wife and her lover correspond and in what way.
+
+We cannot believe that a husband, even of moderate intelligence, will
+fail to see through this feminine manoeuvre, when once he suspects its
+existence.
+
+Meanwhile, you can judge from a single incident what means of police and
+of restraint remain to you in the event of such a correspondence.
+
+A young lawyer, whose ardent passion exemplified certain of the
+principles dwelt upon in this important part of our work, had married a
+young person whose love for him was but slight; yet this circumstance
+he looked upon as an exceedingly happy one; but at the end of his first
+year of marriage he perceived that his dear Anna [for Anna was her name]
+had fallen in love with the head clerk of a stock-broker.
+
+Adolph was a young man of about twenty-five, handsome in face and
+as fond of amusement as any other celibate. He was frugal, discreet,
+possessed of an excellent heart, rode well, talked well, had fine black
+hair always curled, and dressed with taste. In short, he would have done
+honor and credit to a duchess. The advocate was ugly, short, stumpy,
+square-shouldered, mean-looking, and, moreover, a husband. Anna, tall
+and pretty, had almond eyes, white skin and refined features. She
+was all love; and passion lighted up her glance with a bewitching
+expression. While her family was poor, Maitre Lebrun had an income of
+twelve thousand francs. That explains all.
+
+One evening Lebrun got home looking extremely chop-fallen. He went into
+his study to work; but he soon came back shivering to his wife, for he
+had caught a fever and hurriedly went to bed. There he lay groaning and
+lamenting for his clients and especially for a poor widow whose
+fortune he was to save the very next day by effecting a compromise. An
+appointment had been made with certain business men and he was quite
+incapable of keeping it. After having slept for a quarter of an hour,
+he begged his wife in a feeble voice to write to one of his intimate
+friends, asking him to take his (Lebrun's) place next day at the
+conference. He dictated a long letter and followed with his eye the
+space taken up on the paper by his phrases. When he came to begin the
+second page of the last sheet, the advocate set out to describe to
+his confrere the joy which his client would feel on the signing of the
+compromise, and the fatal page began with these words:
+
+
+ "My good friend, go for Heaven's sake to Madame Vernon's at once;
+ you are expected with impatience there; she lives at No. 7 Rue de
+ Sentier. Pardon my brevity; but I count on your admirable good
+ sense to guess what I am unable to explain.
+
+ "Tout a vous."
+
+
+"Give me the letter," said the lawyer, "that I may see whether it is
+correct before signing it."
+
+The unfortunate wife, who had been taken off her guard by this letter,
+which bristled with the most barbarous terms of legal science, gave up
+the letter. As soon as Lebrun got possession of the wily script he began
+to complain, to twist himself about, as if in pain, and to demand one
+little attention after another of his wife. Madame left the room for two
+minutes during which the advocate leaped from his bed, folded a piece of
+paper in the form of a letter and hid the missive written by his wife.
+When Anna returned, the clever husband seized the blank paper, made her
+address it to the friend of his, to whom the letter which he had taken
+out was written, and the poor creature handed the blank letter to his
+servant. Lebrun seemed to grow gradually calmer; he slept or pretended
+to do so, and the next morning he still affected to feel strange pains.
+Two days afterwards he tore off the first leaf of the letter and put
+an "e" to the word _tout_ in the phrase "tout a vous."[*] He folded
+mysteriously the paper which contained the innocent forgery, sealed it,
+left his bedroom and called the maid, saying to her:
+
+ [*] Thus giving a feminine ending to the signature, and lending the
+ impression that the note emanated from the wife personally--J.W.M.
+
+"Madame begs that you will take this to the house of M. Adolph; now, be
+quick about it."
+
+He saw the chambermaid leave the house and soon afterwards he, on a
+plea of business, went out, hurried to Rue de Sentier, to the address
+indicated, and awaited the arrival of his rival at the house of a friend
+who was in the secret of his stratagem. The lover, intoxicated with
+happiness, rushed to the place and inquired for Madame de Vernon; he was
+admitted and found himself face to face with Maitre Lebrun, who showed
+a countenance pale but chill, and gazed at him with tranquil but
+implacable glance.
+
+"Sir," he said in a tone of emotion to the young clerk, whose heart
+palpitated with terror, "you are in love with my wife, and you are
+trying to please her; I scarcely know how to treat you in return for
+this, because in your place and at your age I should have done exactly
+the same. But Anna is in despair; you have disturbed her happiness, and
+her heart is filled with the torments of hell. Moreover, she has told me
+all, a quarrel soon followed by a reconciliation forced her to write the
+letter which you have received, and she has sent me here in her place. I
+will not tell you, sir, that by persisting in your plan of seduction
+you will cause the misery of her you love, that you will forfeit her my
+esteem, and eventually your own; that your crime will be stamped on the
+future by causing perhaps sorrow to my children. I will not even speak
+to you of the bitterness you will infuse into my life;--unfortunately
+these are commonplaces! But I declare to you, sir, that the first step
+you take in this direction will be the signal for a crime; for I will
+not trust the risk of a duel in order to stab you to the heart!"
+
+And the eyes of the lawyer flashed ominously.
+
+"Now, sir," he went on in a gentler voice, "you are young, you have a
+generous heart. Make a sacrifice for the future happiness of her you
+love; leave her and never see her again. And if you must needs be a
+member of my family, I have a young aunt who is yet unsettled in life;
+she is charming, clever and rich. Make her acquaintance, and leave a
+virtuous woman undisturbed."
+
+This mixture of raillery and intimidation, together with the unwavering
+glance and deep voice of the husband, produced a remarkable impression
+on the lover. He remained for a moment utterly confused, like people
+overcome with passion and deprived of all presence of mind by a
+sudden shock. If Anna has since then had any lovers [which is a pure
+hypothesis] Adolph certainly is not one of them.
+
+This occurrence may help you to understand that correspondence is a
+double-edged weapon which is of as much advantage for the defence of
+the husband as for the inconsistency of the wife. You should therefore
+encourage correspondence for the same reason that the prefect of police
+takes special care that the street lamps of Paris are kept lighted.
+
+
+ 3. OF SPIES.
+
+To come so low as to beg servants to reveal secrets to you, and to fall
+lower still by paying for a revelation, is not a crime; it is perhaps
+not even a dastardly act, but it is certainly a piece of folly; for
+nothing will ever guarantee to you the honesty of a servant who betrays
+her mistress, and you can never feel certain whether she is operating
+in your interest or in that of your wife. This point therefore may be
+looked upon as beyond controversy.
+
+Nature, that good and tender parent, has set round about the mother of
+a family the most reliable and the most sagacious of spies, the most
+truthful and at the same time the most discreet in the world. They
+are silent and yet they speak, they see everything and appear to see
+nothing.
+
+One day I met a friend of mine on the boulevard. He invited me to
+dinner, and we went to his house. Dinner had been already served, and
+the mistress of the house was helping her two daughters to plates of
+soup.
+
+"I see here my first symptoms," I said to myself.
+
+We sat down. The first word of the husband, who spoke without thinking,
+and for the sake of talking, was the question:
+
+"Has any one been here to-day?"
+
+"Not a soul," replied his wife, without lifting her eyes.
+
+I shall never forget the quickness with which the two daughters looked
+up to their mother. The elder girl, aged eight, had something especially
+peculiar in her glance. There was at the same time revelation and
+mystery, curiosity and silence, astonishment and apathy in that look.
+If there was anything that could be compared to the speed with which the
+light of candor flashed from their eyes, it was the prudent reserve with
+which both of them closed down, like shutters, the folds of their white
+eyelids.
+
+Ye sweet and charming creatures, who from the age of nine even to the
+age of marriage too often are the torment of a mother even when she is
+not a coquette, is it by the privilege of your years or the instinct of
+your nature that your young ears catch the faint sound of a man's voice
+through walls and doors, that your eyes are awake to everything, and
+that your young spirit busies itself in divining all, even the meaning
+of a word spoken in the air, even the meaning of your mother's slightest
+gesture?
+
+There is something of gratitude, something in fact instinctive, in the
+predilection of fathers for their daughters and mothers for their sons.
+
+But the act of setting spies which are in some way inanimate is mere
+dotage, and nothing is easier than to find a better plan than that of
+the beadle, who took it into his head to put egg-shells in his bed, and
+who obtained no other sympathy from his confederate than the words, "You
+are not very successful in breaking them."
+
+The Marshal de Saxe did not give much consolation to his Popeliniere
+when they discovered in company that famous revolving chimney, invented
+by the Duc de Richelieu.
+
+"That is the finest piece of horn work that I have ever seen!" cried the
+victor of Fontenoy.
+
+Let us hope that your espionage will not give you so troublesome a
+lesson. Such misfortunes are the fruits of the civil war and we do not
+live in that age.
+
+
+ 4. THE INDEX.
+
+The Pope puts books only on the Index; you will mark with a stigma of
+reprobation men and things.
+
+It is forbidden to madame to go into a bath except in her own house.
+
+It is forbidden to madame to receive into her house him whom you suspect
+of being her lover, and all those who are the accomplices of their love.
+
+It is forbidden to madame to take a walk without you.
+
+But the peculiarities which in each household originate from the
+diversity of characters, the numberless incidents of passion, and the
+habits of the married people give to this black book so many variations,
+the lines in it are multiplied or erased with such rapidity that a
+friend of the author has called this Index _The History of Changes in
+the Marital Church_.
+
+There are only two things which can be controlled or prescribed in
+accordance with definite rules; the first is the country, the second is
+the promenade.
+
+A husband ought never to take his wife to the country nor permit her to
+go there. Have a country home if you like, live there, entertain there
+nobody excepting ladies or old men, but never leave your wife alone
+there. But to take her, for even half a day, to the house of another man
+is to show yourself as stupid as an ostrich.
+
+To keep guard over a wife in the country is a task most difficult
+of accomplishment. Do you think that you will be able to be in the
+thickets, to climb the trees, to follow the tracks of a lover over the
+grass trodden down at night, but straightened by the dew in the morning
+and refreshed by the rays of the sun? Can you keep your eye on every
+opening in the fence of the park? Oh! the country and the Spring! These
+are the two right arms of the celibate.
+
+When a woman reaches the crisis at which we suppose her to be, a husband
+ought to remain in town till the declaration of war, or to resolve on
+devoting himself to all the delights of a cruel espionage.
+
+With regard to the promenade: Does madame wish to go to parties, to the
+theatre, to the Bois de Boulogne, to purchase her dresses, to find
+out what is the fashion? Madame shall go, shall see everything in the
+respectable company of her lord and master.
+
+If she take advantage of the moment when a business appointment, which
+you cannot fail to keep, detains you, in order to obtain your tacit
+permission to some meditated expedition; if in order to obtain that
+permission she displays all the witcheries of those cajoleries in which
+women excel and whose powerful influence you ought already to have
+known, well, well, the professor implores you to allow her to win you
+over, while at the same time you sell dear the boon she asks; and above
+all convince this creature, whose soul is at once as changeable as water
+and as firm as steel, that it is impossible for you from the importance
+of your work to leave your study.
+
+But as soon as your wife has set foot upon the street, if she goes on
+foot, don't give her time to make fifty steps; follow and track her in
+such a way that you will not be noticed.
+
+It is possible that there exist certain Werthers whose refined and
+delicate souls recoil from this inquisition. But this is not more
+blamable than that of a landed proprietor who rises at night and looks
+through the windows for the purpose of keeping watch over the peaches
+on his _espaliers_. You will probably by this course of action obtain,
+before the crime is committed, exact information with regard to the
+apartments which so many lovers rent in the city under fictitious
+names. If it happens [which God forbid!] that your wife enters a house
+suspected by you, try to find out if the place has several exits.
+
+Should your wife take a hack, what have you to fear? Is there not a
+prefect of police, to whom all husbands ought to decree a crown of solid
+gold, and has he not set up a little shed or bench where there is a
+register, an incorruptible guardian of public morality? And does he not
+know all the comings and goings of these Parisian gondolas?
+
+One of the vital principles of our police will consist in always
+following your wife to the furnishers of your house, if she is
+accustomed to visit them. You will carefully find out whether there is
+any intimacy between her and her draper, her dressmaker or her milliner,
+etc. In this case you will apply the rules of the conjugal Custom House,
+and draw your own conclusions.
+
+If in your absence your wife, having gone out against your will, tells
+you that she had been to such a place, to such a shop, go there yourself
+the next day and try to find out whether she has spoken the truth.
+
+But passion will dictate to you, even better than the Meditation, the
+various resources of conjugal tyranny, and we will here cut short these
+tiresome instructions.
+
+
+ 5. OF THE BUDGET.
+
+In outlining the portrait of a sane and sound husband (See _Meditation
+on the Predestined_), we urgently advise that he should conceal from his
+wife the real amount of his income.
+
+In relying upon this as the foundation stone of our financial system we
+hope to do something towards discounting the opinion, so very generally
+held, that a man ought not to give the handling of his income to his
+wife. This principle is one of the many popular errors and is one of the
+chief causes of misunderstanding in the domestic establishment.
+
+But let us, in the first place, deal with the question of heart, before
+we proceed to that of money.
+
+To draw up a little civil list for your wife and for the requirements of
+the house and to pay her money as if it were a contribution, in twelve
+equal portions month by month, has something in it that is a little mean
+and close, and cannot be agreeable to any but sordid and mistrustful
+souls. By acting in this way you prepare for yourself innumerable
+annoyances.
+
+I could wish that during the first year of your mellifluous union,
+scenes more or less delightful, pleasantries uttered in good taste,
+pretty purses and caresses might accompany and might decorate the
+handing over of this monthly gift; but the time will come when the
+self-will of your wife or some unforeseen expenditure will compel her to
+ask a loan of the Chamber; I presume that you will always grant her the
+bill of indemnity, as our unfaithful deputies never fail to do. They
+pay, but they grumble; you must pay and at the same time compliment her.
+I hope it will be so.
+
+But in the crisis which we have reached, the provisions of the annual
+budget can never prove sufficient. There must be an increase of fichus,
+of bonnets, of frocks; there is an expense which cannot be calculated
+beforehand demanded by the meetings, by the diplomatic messengers, by
+the ways and means of love, even while the receipts remain the same as
+usual. Then must commence in your establishment a course of education
+the most odious, and the most dreadful which a woman can undergo. I know
+but few noble and generous souls who value, more than millions, purity
+of heart, frankness of soul, and who would a thousand times more readily
+pardon a passion than a lie, whose instinctive delicacy has divined
+the existence of this plague of the soul, the lowest step in human
+degradation.
+
+Under these circumstances there occur in the domestic establishment the
+most delightful scenes of love. It is then that a woman becomes utterly
+pliant and like to the most brilliant of all the strings of a harp, when
+thrown before the fire; she rolls round you, she clasps you, she holds
+you tight; she defers to all your caprices; never was her conversation
+so full of tenderness; she lavishes her endearments upon you, or rather
+she sells them to you; she at last becomes lower than a chorus girl, for
+she prostitutes herself to her husband. In her sweetest kisses there is
+money; in all her words there is money. In playing this part her heart
+becomes like lead towards you. The most polished, the most treacherous
+usurer never weighs so completely with a single glance the future value
+in bullion of a son of a family who may sign a note to him, than your
+wife appraises one of your desires as she leaps from branch to branch
+like an escaping squirrel, in order to increase the sum of money she may
+demand by increasing the appetite which she rouses in you. You must not
+expect to get scot-free from such seductions. Nature has given boundless
+gifts of coquetry to a woman, the usages of society have increased them
+tenfold by its fashions, its dresses, its embroideries and its tippets.
+
+"If I ever marry," one of the most honorable generals of our ancient
+army used to say, "I won't put a sou among the wedding presents--"
+
+"What will you put there then, general?" asked a young girl.
+
+"The key of my safe."
+
+The young girl made a curtsey of approbation. She moved her little head
+with a quiver like that of the magnetic needle; raised her chin slightly
+as if she would have said:
+
+"I would gladly marry the general in spite of his forty-five years."
+
+But with regard to money, what interest can you expect your wife to take
+in a machine in which she is looked upon as a mere bookkeeper?
+
+Now look at the other system.
+
+In surrendering to your wife, with an avowal of absolute confidence in
+her, two-thirds of your fortune and letting her as mistress control the
+conjugal administration, you win from her an esteem which nothing can
+destroy, for confidence and high-mindedness find powerful echoes in the
+heart of a woman. Madame will be loaded with a responsibility which will
+often raise a barrier against extravagances, all the stronger because it
+is she herself who has created it in her heart. You yourself have made a
+portion of the work, and you may be sure that from henceforth your wife
+will never perhaps dishonor herself.
+
+Moreover, by seeking in this way a method of defence, consider what
+admirable aids are offered to you by this plan of finances.
+
+You will have in your house an exact estimate of the morality of your
+wife, just as the quotations of the Bourse give you a just estimate of
+the degree of confidence possessed by the government.
+
+And doubtless, during the first years of your married life, your wife
+will take pride in giving you every luxury and satisfaction which your
+money can afford.
+
+She will keep a good table, she will renew the furniture, and the
+carriages; she will always keep in her drawer a sum of money sacred to
+her well-beloved and ready for his needs. But of course, in the actual
+circumstances of life, the drawer will be very often empty and monsieur
+will spend a great deal too much. The economies ordered by the Chamber
+never weigh heavily upon the clerks whose income is twelve hundred
+francs; and you will be the clerk at twelve hundred francs in your
+own house. You will laugh in your sleeve, because you will have saved,
+capitalized, invested one-third of your income during a long time, like
+Louis XV, who kept for himself a little separate treasury, "against a
+rainy day," he used to say.
+
+Thus, if your wife speaks of economy, her discourse will be equal to the
+varying quotations of the money-market. You will be able to divine the
+whole progress of the lover by these financial fluctuations, and you
+will have avoided all difficulties. _E sempre bene._
+
+If your wife fails to appreciate the excessive confidence, and
+dissipates in one day a large proportion of your fortune, in the first
+place it is not probable that this prodigality will amount to one-third
+of the revenue which you have been saving for ten years; moreover you
+will learn, from the Meditation on _Catastrophes_, that in the very
+crisis produced by the follies of your wife, you will have brilliant
+opportunities of slaying the Minotaur.
+
+But the secret of the treasure which has been amassed by your
+thoughtfulness need never be known till after your death; and if you
+have found it necessary to draw upon it, in order to assist your wife,
+you must always let it be thought that you have won at play, or made a
+loan from a friend.
+
+These are the true principles which should govern the conjugal budget.
+
+
+
+The police of marriage has its martyrology. We will cite but one
+instance which will make plain how necessary it is for husbands who
+resort to severe measures to keep watch over themselves as well as over
+their wives.
+
+An old miser who lived at T-----, a pleasure resort if there ever was
+one, had married a young and pretty woman, and he was so wrapped up in
+her and so jealous that love triumphed over avarice; he actually gave up
+trade in order to guard his wife more closely, but his only real change
+was that his covetousness took another form. I acknowledge that I owe
+the greater portion of the observations contained in this essay, which
+still is doubtless incomplete, to the person who made a study of this
+remarkable marital phenomenon, to portray which, one single detail will
+be amply sufficient. When he used to go to the country, this husband
+never went to bed without secretly raking over the pathways of his park,
+and he had a special rake for the sand of his terraces. He had made
+a close study of the footprints made by the different members of his
+household; and early in the morning he used to go and identify the
+tracks that had been made there.
+
+"All this is old forest land," he used to say to the person I have
+referred to, as he showed him over the park; "for nothing can be seen
+through the brushwood."
+
+His wife fell in love with one of the most charming young men of the
+town. This passion had continued for nine years bright and fresh in the
+hearts of the two lovers, whose sole avowal had been a look exchanged
+in a crowded ball-room; and while they danced together their trembling
+hands revealed through the scented gloves the depth of their love. From
+that day they had both of them taken great delight on those trifles
+which happy lovers never disdain. One day the young man led his only
+confidant, with a mysterious air, into a chamber where he kept under
+glass globes upon his table, with more care than he would have bestowed
+upon the finest jewels in the world, the flowers that, in the excitement
+of the dance, had fallen from the hair of his mistress, and the finery
+which had been caught in the trees which she had brushed through in the
+park. He also preserved there the narrow footprint left upon the clay
+soil by the lady's step.
+
+"I could hear," said this confidant to me afterwards, "the violent and
+repressed palpitations of his heart sounding in the silence which we
+preserved before the treasures of this museum of love. I raised my eyes
+to the ceiling, as if to breathe to heaven the sentiment which I dared
+not utter. 'Poor humanity!' I thought. 'Madame de ----- told me that one
+evening at a ball you had been found nearly fainting in her card-room?'
+I remarked to him.
+
+"'I can well believe it,' said he casting down his flashing glance, 'I
+had kissed her arm!--But,' he added as he pressed my hand and shot at me
+a glance that pierced my heart, 'her husband at that time had the gout
+which threatened to attack his stomach.'"
+
+Some time afterwards, the old man recovered and seemed to take a new
+lease of life; but in the midst of his convalescence he took to his
+bed one morning and died suddenly. There were such evident symptoms of
+poisoning in the condition of the dead man that the officers of justice
+were appealed to, and the two lovers were arrested. Then was enacted at
+the court of assizes the most heartrending scene that ever stirred the
+emotions of the jury. At the preliminary examination, each of the two
+lovers without hesitation confessed to the crime, and with one thought
+each of them was solely bent on saving, the one her lover, the other his
+mistress. There were two found guilty, where justice was looking for
+but a single culprit. The trial was entirely taken up with the flat
+contradictions which each of them, carried away by the fury of devoted
+love, gave to the admissions of the other. There they were united for
+the first time, but on the criminals' bench with a gendarme seated
+between them. They were found guilty by the unanimous verdict of a
+weeping jury. No one among those who had the barbarous courage to
+witness their conveyance to the scaffold can mention them to-day without
+a shudder. Religion had won for them a repentance for their crime,
+but could not induce them to abjure their love. The scaffold was their
+nuptial bed, and there they slept together in the long night of death.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXI. THE ART OF RETURNING HOME.
+
+Finding himself incapable of controlling the boiling transports of his
+anxiety, many a husband makes the mistake of coming home and rushing
+into the presence of his wife, with the object of triumphing over
+her weakness, like those bulls of Spain, which, stung by the red
+_banderillo_, disembowel with furious horns horses, matadors, picadors,
+toreadors and their attendants.
+
+But oh! to enter with a tender gentle mien, like Mascarillo, who expects
+a beating and becomes merry as a lark when he finds his master in a good
+humor! Well--that is the mark of a wise man--!
+
+"Yes, my darling, I know that in my absence you could have behaved
+badly! Another in your place would have turned the house topsy-turvy,
+but you have only broken a pane of glass! God bless you for your
+considerateness. Go on in the same way and you will earn my eternal
+gratitude."
+
+Such are the ideas which ought to be expressed by your face and bearing,
+but perhaps all the while you say to yourself:
+
+"Probably he has been here!"
+
+Always to bring home a pleasant face, is a rule which admits of no
+exception.
+
+But the art of never leaving your house without returning when the
+police have revealed to you a conspiracy--to know how to return at the
+right time--this is the lesson which is hard to learn. In this matter
+everything depends upon tact and penetration. The actual events of life
+always transcend anything that is imaginable.
+
+The manner of coming home is to be regulated in accordance with a number
+of circumstances. For example:
+
+Lord Catesby was a man of remarkable strength. It happened one day that
+he was returning from a fox hunt, to which he had doubtless promised to
+go, with some ulterior view, for he rode towards the fence of his park
+at a point where, he said, he saw an extremely fine horse. As he had
+a passion for horses, he drew near to examine this one close at hand,
+There he caught sight of Lady Catesby, to whose rescue it was certainly
+time to go, if he were in the slightest degree jealous for his own
+honor. He rushed upon the gentleman he saw there, and seizing him by the
+belt he hurled him over the fence on to the road side.
+
+"Remember, sir," he said calmly, "it rests with me to decide whether it
+well be necessary to address you hereafter and ask for satisfaction on
+this spot."
+
+"Very well, my lord; but would you have the goodness to throw over my
+horse also?"
+
+But the phlegmatic nobleman had already taken the arm of his wife as he
+gravely said:
+
+"I blame you very much, my dear creature, for not having told me that I
+was to love you for two. Hereafter every other day I shall love you for
+the gentleman yonder, and all other days for myself."
+
+This adventure is regarded in England as one of the best returns home
+that were ever known. It is true it consisted in uniting, with singular
+felicity, eloquence of deed to that of word.
+
+But the art of re-entering your home, principles of which are
+nothing else but natural deductions from the system of politeness and
+dissimulation which have been commended in preceding Meditations,
+is after all merely to be studied in preparation for the conjugal
+catastrophes which we will now consider.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXII. OF CATASTROPHES.
+
+The word _Catastrophe_ is a term of literature which signifies the final
+climax of a play.
+
+To bring about a catastrophe in the drama which you are playing is a
+method of defence which is as easy to undertake as it is certain to
+succeed. In advising to employ it, we would not conceal from you its
+perils.
+
+The conjugal catastrophe may be compared to one of those high fevers
+which either carry off a predisposed subject or completely restore his
+health. Thus, when the catastrophe succeeds, it keeps a woman for years
+in the prudent realms of virtue.
+
+Moreover, this method is the last of all those which science has been
+able to discover up to this present moment.
+
+The massacre of St. Bartholomew, the Sicilian Vespers, the death of
+Lucretia, the two embarkations of Napoleon at Frejus are examples of
+political catastrophe. It will not be in your power to act on such a
+large scale; nevertheless, within their own area, your dramatic climaxes
+in conjugal life will not be less effective than these.
+
+But since the art of creating a situation and of transforming it, by the
+introduction of natural incidents, constitutes genius; since the return
+to virtue of a woman, whose foot has already left some tracks upon
+the sweet and gilded sand which mark the pathway of vice, is the most
+difficult to bring about of all denouements, and since genius neither
+knows it nor teaches it, the practitioner in conjugal laws feels
+compelled to confess at the outset that he is incapable of reducing to
+definite principles a science which is as changeable as circumstances,
+as delusive as opportunity, and as indefinable as instinct.
+
+If we may use an expression which neither Diderot, d'Alembert nor
+Voltaire, in spite of every effort, have been able to engraft on our
+language, a conjugal catastrophe _se subodore_ is scented from afar; so
+that our only course will be to sketch out imperfectly certain conjugal
+situations of an analogous kind, thus imitating the philosopher of
+ancient time who, seeking in vain to explain motion, walked forward in
+his attempt to comprehend laws which were incomprehensible.
+
+A husband, in accordance with the principles comprised in our Meditation
+on _Police_, will expressly forbid his wife to receive the visits of a
+celibate whom he suspects of being her lover, and whom she has promised
+never again to see. Some minor scenes of the domestic interior we leave
+for matrimonial imaginations to conjure up; a husband can delineate them
+much better than we can; he will betake himself in thought back to those
+days when delightful longings invited sincere confidences and when
+the workings of his policy put into motion certain adroitly handled
+machinery.
+
+Let us suppose, in order to make more interesting the natural scene
+to which I refer, that you who read are a husband, whose carefully
+organized police has made the discovery that your wife, profiting by
+the hours devoted by you to a ministerial banquet, to which she probably
+procured you an invitation, received at your house M. A----z.
+
+Here we find all the conditions necessary to bring about the finest
+possible of conjugal catastrophes.
+
+You return home just in time to find your arrival has coincided with
+that of M. A----z, for we would not advise you to have the interval
+between acts too long. But in what mood should you enter? Certainly not
+in accordance with the rules of the previous Meditation. In a rage then?
+Still less should you do that. You should come in with good-natured
+carelessness, like an absent-minded man who has forgotten his purse,
+the statement which he has drawn up for the minister, his
+pocket-handkerchief or his snuff-box.
+
+In that case you will either catch two lovers together, or your wife,
+forewarned by the maid, will have hidden the celibate.
+
+Now let us consider these two unique situations.
+
+But first of all we will observe that husbands ought always to be in a
+position to strike terror in their homes and ought long before to make
+preparations for the matrimonial second of September.
+
+Thus a husband, from the moment that his wife has caused him to perceive
+certain _first symptoms_, should never fail to give, time after time,
+his personal opinion on the course of conduct to be pursued by a husband
+in a great matrimonial crisis.
+
+"As for me," you should say, "I should have no hesitation in killing the
+man I caught at my wife's feet."
+
+With regard to the discussion that you will thus give rise to, you will
+be led on to aver that the law ought to have given to the husband, as it
+did in ancient Rome, the right of life and death over his children, so
+that he could slay those who were spurious.
+
+These ferocious opinions, which really do not bind you to anything, will
+impress your wife with salutary terror; you will enumerate them lightly,
+even laughingly--and say to her, "Certainly, my dear, I would kill you
+right gladly. Would you like to be murdered by me?"
+
+A woman cannot help fearing that this pleasantry may some day become a
+very serious matter, for in these crimes of impulse there is a certain
+proof of love; and then women who know better than any one else how
+to say true things laughingly at times suspect their husbands of this
+feminine trick.
+
+When a husband surprises his wife engaged in even innocent conversation
+with her lover, his face still calm, should produce the effect
+mythologically attributed to the celebrated Gorgon.
+
+In order to produce a favorable catastrophe at this juncture, you
+must act in accordance with the character of your wife, either play a
+pathetic scene a la Diderot, or resort to irony like Cicero, or rush to
+your pistols loaded with a blank charge, or even fire them off, if you
+think that a serious row is indispensable.
+
+A skillful husband may often gain a great advantage from a scene
+of unexaggerated sentimentality. He enters, he sees the lover and
+transfixes him with a glance. As soon as the celibate retires, he falls
+at the feet of his wife, he declaims a long speech, in which among other
+phrases there occurs this:
+
+"Why, my dear Caroline, I have never been able to love you as I should!"
+
+He weeps, and she weeps, and this tearful catastrophe leaves nothing to
+be desired.
+
+We would explain, apropos of the second method by which the catastrophe
+may be brought about, what should be the motives which lead a husband
+to vary this scene, in accordance with the greater or less degree of
+strength which his wife's character possesses.
+
+Let us pursue this subject.
+
+If by good luck it happens that your wife has put her lover in a place
+of concealment, the catastrophe will be very much more successful.
+
+Even if the apartment is not arranged according to the principles
+prescribed in the Meditation, you will easily discern the place into
+which the celibate has vanished, although he be not, like Lord Byron's
+Don Juan, bundled up under the cushion of a divan. If by chance your
+apartment is in disorder, you ought to have sufficient discernment to
+know that there is only one place in which a man could bestow himself.
+Finally, if by some devilish inspiration he has made himself so small
+that he has squeezed into some unimaginable lurking-place (for we may
+expect anything from a celibate), well, either your wife cannot help
+casting a glance towards this mysterious spot, or she will pretend to
+look in an exactly opposite direction, and then nothing is easier for a
+husband than to set a mouse-trap for his wife.
+
+The hiding-place being discovered, you must walk straight up to the
+lover. You must meet him face to face!
+
+And now you must endeavor to produce a fine effect. With your face
+turned three-quarters towards him, you must raise your head with an air
+of superiority. This attitude will enhance immensely the effect which
+you aim at producing.
+
+The most essential thing to do at this moment, is to overwhelm the
+celibate by some crushing phrase which you have been manufacturing all
+the time; when you have thus floored him, you will coldly show him the
+door. You will be very polite, but as relentless as the executioner's
+axe, and as impassive as the law. This freezing contempt will already
+probably have produced a revolution in the mind of your wife. There
+must be no shouts, no gesticulations, no excitement. "Men of high social
+rank," says a young English author, "never behave like their inferiors,
+who cannot lose a fork without sounding the alarm throughout the whole
+neighborhood."
+
+When the celibate has gone, you will find yourself alone with your wife,
+and then is the time when you must subjugate her forever.
+
+You should therefore stand before her, putting on an air whose affected
+calmness betrays the profoundest emotion; then you must choose from
+among the following topics, which we have rhetorically amplified, and
+which are most congenial to your feelings: "Madame," you must say, "I
+will speak to you neither of your vows, nor of my love; for you have too
+much sense and I have too much pride to make it possible that I should
+overwhelm you with those execrations, which all husbands have a right
+to utter under these circumstances; for the least of the mistakes that I
+should make, if I did so, is that I would be fully justified. I will not
+now, even if I could, indulge either in wrath or resentment. It is not
+I who have been outraged; for I have too much heart to be frightened
+by that public opinion which almost always treats with ridicule and
+condemnation a husband whose wife has misbehaved. When I examine my
+life, I see nothing there that makes this treachery deserved by me,
+as it is deserved by many others. I still love you. I have never been
+false, I will not say to my duty, for I have found nothing onerous in
+adoring you, but not even to those welcome obligations which sincere
+feeling imposes upon us both. You have had all my confidence and you
+have also had the administration of my fortune. I have refused you
+nothing. And now this is the first time that I have turned to you a
+face, I will not say stern, but which is yet reproachful. But let us
+drop this subject, for it is of no use for me to defend myself at
+a moment when you have proved to me with such energy that there is
+something lacking in me, and that I am not intended by nature to
+accomplish the difficult task of rendering you happy. But I would ask
+you, as a friend speaking to a friend, how could you have the heart to
+imperil at the same time the lives of three human creatures: that of the
+mother of my children, who will always be sacred to me; that of the
+head of the family; and finally of him--who loves--[she perhaps at these
+words will throw herself at your feet; you must not permit her to do so;
+she is unworthy of kneeling there]. For you no longer love me, Eliza.
+Well, my poor child [you must not call her _my poor child_ excepting
+when the crime has not been committed]--why deceive ourselves? Why do
+you not answer me? If love is extinguished between a married couple,
+cannot friendship and confidence still survive? Are we not two
+companions united in making the same journey? Can it be said that during
+the journey the one must never hold out his hand to the other to raise
+up a comrade or to prevent a comrade's fall? But I have perhaps said too
+much and I am wounding your pride--Eliza! Eliza!"
+
+Now what the deuce would you expect a woman to answer? Why a catastrophe
+naturally follows, without a single word.
+
+In a hundred women there may be found at least a good half dozen of
+feeble creatures who under this violent shock return to their husbands
+never perhaps again to leave them, like scorched cats that dread the
+fire. But this scene is a veritable alexipharmaca, the doses of which
+should be measured out by prudent hands.
+
+For certain women of delicate nerves, whose souls are soft and timid, it
+would be sufficient to point out the lurking-place where the lover lies,
+and say: "M. A----z is there!" [at this point shrug your shoulders].
+"How can you thus run the risk of causing the death of two worthy
+people? I am going out; let him escape and do not let this happen
+again."
+
+But there are women whose hearts, too violently strained in these
+terrible catastrophes, fail them and they die; others whose blood
+undergoes a change, and they fall a prey to serious maladies; others
+actually go out of their minds. These are examples of women who take
+poison or die suddenly--and we do not suppose that you wish the death of
+the sinner.
+
+Nevertheless, the most beautiful and impressionable of all the queens
+of France, the charming and unfortunate Mary Stuart, after having seen
+Rizzio murdered almost in her arms, fell in love, nevertheless, with
+the Earl of Bothwell; but she was a queen and queens are abnormal in
+disposition.
+
+We will suppose, then, that the woman whose portrait adorns our first
+Meditation is a little Mary Stuart, and we will hasten to raise the
+curtain for the fifth act in this grand drama entitled _Marriage_.
+
+A conjugal catastrophe may burst out anywhere, and a thousand
+incidents which we cannot describe may give it birth. Sometimes it is a
+handkerchief, as in _Othello_; or a pair of slippers, as in _Don
+Juan_; sometimes it is the mistake of your wife, who cries out--"Dear
+Alphonse!" instead of "Dear Adolph!" Sometimes a husband, finding out
+that his wife is in debt, will go and call on her chief creditor, and
+will take her some morning to his house, as if by chance, in order to
+bring about a catastrophe. "Monsieur Josse, you are a jeweler and you
+sell your jewels with a readiness which is not equaled by the readiness
+of your debtors to pay for them. The countess owes you thirty thousand
+francs. If you wish to be paid to-morrow [tradesmen should always be
+visited at the end of the month] come to her at noon; her husband will
+be in the chamber. Do not attend to any sign which she may make to
+impose silence upon you--speak out boldly. I will pay all."
+
+So that the catastrophe in the science of marriage is what figures are
+in arithmetic.
+
+
+
+All the principles of higher conjugal philosophy, on which are based the
+means of defence outlined in this second part of our book, are derived
+from the nature of human sentiments, and we have found them in different
+places in the great book of the world. Just as persons of intellect
+instinctively apply the laws of taste whose principles they would find
+difficulty in formulating, so we have seen numberless people of deep
+feeling employing with singular felicity the precepts which we are about
+to unfold, yet none of them consciously acted on a definite system.
+The sentiments which this situation inspired only revealed to them
+incomplete fragments of a vast system; just as the scientific men of the
+sixteenth century found that their imperfect microscopes did not enable
+them to see all the living organisms, whose existence had yet been
+proved to them by the logic of their patient genius.
+
+We hope that the observations already made in this book, and in those
+which follow, will be of a nature to destroy the opinion which frivolous
+men maintain, namely that marriage is a sinecure. According to our view,
+a husband who gives way to ennui is a heretic, and more than that, he is
+a man who lives quite out of sympathy with the marriage state, of whose
+importance he has no conception. In this connection, these Meditations
+perhaps will reveal to very many ignorant men the mysteries of a world
+before which they stand with open eyes, yet without seeing it.
+
+We hope, moreover, that these principles when well applied will produce
+many conversions, and that among the pages that separate this second
+part from that entitled _Civil War_ many tears will be shed and many
+vows of repentance breathed.
+
+Yes, among the four hundred thousand honest women whom we have so
+carefully sifted out from all the European nations, we indulge the
+belief that there are a certain number, say three hundred thousand, who
+will be sufficiently self-willed, charming, adorable, and bellicose to
+raise the standard of _Civil War_.
+
+To arms then, to arms!
+
+
+
+
+
+THIRD PART. RELATING TO CIVIL WAR.
+
+ "Lovely as the seraphs of Klopstock,
+ Terrible as the devils of Milton."
+ --DIDEROT.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXIII. OF MANIFESTOES.
+
+The Preliminary precepts, by which science has been enabled at this
+point to put weapons into the hand of a husband, are few in number; it
+is not of so much importance to know whether he will be vanquished, as
+to examine whether he can offer any resistance in the conflict.
+
+Meanwhile, we will set up here certain beacons to light up the arena
+where a husband is soon to find himself, in alliance with religion and
+law, engaged single-handed in a contest with his wife, who is supported
+by her native craft and the whole usages of society as her allies.
+
+
+ LXXXII.
+ Anything may be expected and anything may be supposed of a woman who
+ is in love.
+
+
+ LXXXIII.
+ The actions of a woman who intends to deceive her husband are almost
+ always the result of study, but never dictated by reason.
+
+
+ LXXXIV.
+The greater number of women advance like the fleas, by erratic leaps
+and bounds, They owe their escape to the height or depth of their
+first ideas, and any interruption of their plans rather favors their
+execution. But they operate only within a narrow area which it is easy
+for the husband to make still narrower; and if he keeps cool he will end
+by extinguishing this piece of living saltpetre.
+
+
+ LXXXV.
+ A husband should never allow himself to address a single disparaging
+ remark to his wife, in presence of a third party.
+
+
+ LXXXVI.
+The moment a wife decides to break her marriage vow she reckons her
+husband as everything or nothing. All defensive operations must start
+from this proposition.
+
+
+ LXXXVII.
+The life of a woman is either of the head, of the heart, or of passion.
+When a woman reaches the age to form an estimate of life, her husband
+ought to find out whether the primary cause of her intended infidelity
+proceeds from vanity, from sentiment or from temperament. Temperament
+may be remedied like disease; sentiment is something in which the
+husband may find great opportunities of success; but vanity is
+incurable. A woman whose life is of the head may be a terrible scourge.
+She combines the faults of a passionate woman with those of the
+tender-hearted woman, without having their palliations. She is destitute
+alike of pity, love, virtue or sex.
+
+
+ LXXXVIII.
+A woman whose life is of the head will strive to inspire her husband
+with indifference; the woman whose life is of the heart, with hatred;
+the passionate woman, with disgust.
+
+
+ LXXXIX.
+A husband never loses anything by appearing to believe in the fidelity
+of his wife, by preserving an air of patience and by keeping silence.
+Silence especially troubles a woman amazingly.
+
+
+ XC.
+To show himself aware of the passion of his wife is the mark of a fool;
+but to affect ignorance of all proves that a man has sense, and this
+is in fact the only attitude to take. We are taught, moreover, that
+everybody in France is sensible.
+
+
+ XCI.
+The rock most to be avoided is ridicule.--"At least, let us
+be affectionate in public," ought to be the maxim of a married
+establishment. For both the married couple to lose honor, esteem,
+consideration, respect and all that is worth living for in society, is
+to become a nonentity.
+
+
+These axioms relate to the contest alone. As for the catastrophe, others
+will be needed for that.
+
+
+We have called this crisis _Civil War_ for two reasons; never was a war
+more really intestine and at the same time so polite as this war. But in
+what point and in what manner does this fatal war break out? You do not
+believe that your wife will call out regiments and sound the trumpet, do
+you? She will, perhaps, have a commanding officer, but that is all. And
+this feeble army corps will be sufficient to destroy the peace of your
+establishment.
+
+"You forbid me to see the people that I like!" is an exordium which has
+served for a manifesto in most homes. This phrase, with all the ideas
+that are concomitant, is oftenest employed by vain and artificial women.
+
+The most usual manifesto is that which is proclaimed in the conjugal
+bed, the principal theatre of war. This subject will be treated
+in detail in the Meditation entitled: _Of Various Weapons_, in the
+paragraph, _Of Modesty in its Connection with Marriage_.
+
+Certain women of a lymphatic temperament will pretend to have the spleen
+and will even feign death, if they can only gain thereby the benefit of
+a secret divorce.
+
+But most of them owe their independence to the execution of a plan,
+whose effect upon the majority of husbands is unfailing and whose
+perfidies we will now reveal.
+
+One of the greatest of human errors springs from the belief that our
+honor and our reputation are founded upon our actions, or result from
+the approbation which the general conscience bestows upon on conduct. A
+man who lives in the world is born to be a slave to public opinion. Now
+a private man in France has less opportunity of influencing the world
+than his wife, although he has ample occasion for ridiculing it. Women
+possess to a marvelous degree the art of giving color by specious
+arguments to the recriminations in which they indulge. They never set
+up any defence, excepting when they are in the wrong, and in this
+proceeding they are pre-eminent, knowing how to oppose arguments by
+precedents, proofs by assertions, and thus they very often obtain
+victory in minor matters of detail. They see and know with admirable
+penetration, when one of them presents to another a weapon which she
+herself is forbidden to whet. It is thus that they sometimes lose a
+husband without intending it. They apply the match and long afterwards
+are terror-stricken at the conflagration.
+
+As a general thing, all women league themselves against a married man
+who is accused of tyranny; for a secret tie unites them all, as it
+unites all priests of the same religion. They hate each other, yet
+shield each other. You can never gain over more than one of them; and
+yet this act of seduction would be a triumph for your wife.
+
+You are, therefore, outlawed from the feminine kingdom. You see ironical
+smiles on every lip, you meet an epigram in every answer. These clever
+creatures force their daggers and amuse themselves by sculpturing the
+handle before dealing you a graceful blow.
+
+The treacherous art of reservation, the tricks of silence, the malice
+of suppositions, the pretended good nature of an inquiry, all these arts
+are employed against you. A man who undertakes to subjugate his wife is
+an example too dangerous to escape destruction from them, for will not
+his conduct call up against them the satire of every husband? Moreover,
+all of them will attack you, either by bitter witticisms, or by serious
+arguments, or by the hackneyed maxims of gallantry. A swarm of celibates
+will support all their sallies and you will be assailed and persecuted
+as an original, a tyrant, a bad bed-fellow, an eccentric man, a man not
+to be trusted.
+
+Your wife will defend you like the bear in the fable of La Fontaine;
+she will throw paving stones at your head to drive away the flies that
+alight on it. She will tell you in the evening all the things that have
+been said about you, and will ask an explanation of acts which you never
+committed, and of words which you never said. She professes to have
+justified you for faults of which you are innocent; she has boasted of
+a liberty which she does not possess, in order to clear you of the wrong
+which you have done in denying that liberty. The deafening rattle which
+your wife shakes will follow you everywhere with its obtrusive din. Your
+darling will stun you, will torture you, meanwhile arming herself by
+making you feel only the thorns of married life. She will greet you with
+a radiant smile in public, and will be sullen at home. She will be dull
+when you are merry, and will make you detest her merriment when you are
+moody. Your two faces will present a perpetual contrast.
+
+Very few men have sufficient force of mind not to succumb to this
+preliminary comedy, which is always cleverly played, and resembles
+the _hourra_ raised by the Cossacks, as they advance to battle. Many
+husbands become irritated and fall into irreparable mistakes. Others
+abandon their wives. And, indeed, even those of superior intelligence do
+not know how to get hold of the enchanted ring, by which to dispel this
+feminine phantasmagoria.
+
+Two-thirds of such women are enabled to win their independence by this
+single manoeuvre, which is no more than a review of their forces. In
+this case the war is soon ended.
+
+But a strong man who courageously keeps cool throughout this first
+assault will find much amusement in laying bare to his wife, in a light
+and bantering way, the secret feelings which make her thus behave, in
+following her step by step through the labyrinth which she treads, and
+telling her in answer to her every remark, that she is false to herself,
+while he preserves throughout a tone of pleasantry and never becomes
+excited.
+
+Meanwhile war is declared, and if her husband has not been dazzled by
+these first fireworks, a woman has yet many other resources for securing
+her triumph; and these it is the purpose of the following Meditations to
+discover.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXIV. PRINCIPLES OF STRATEGY.
+
+The Archduke Charles published a very fine treatise on military under
+the title _Principles of Strategy in Relation to the Campaigns of 1796_.
+These principles seem somewhat to resemble poetic canons prepared for
+poems already published. In these days we are become very much more
+energetic, we invent rules to suit works and works to suit rules. But
+of what use were ancient principles of military art in presence of the
+impetuous genius of Napoleon? If, to-day, however, we reduce to a
+system the lessons taught by this great captain whose new tactics have
+destroyed the ancient ones, what future guarantee do we possess that
+another Napoleon will not yet be born? Books on military art meet, with
+few exceptions, the fate of ancient works on Chemistry and Physics.
+Everything is subject to change, either constant or periodic.
+
+This, in a few words, is the history of our work.
+
+So long as we have been dealing with a woman who is inert or lapped in
+slumber, nothing has been easier than to weave the meshes with which we
+have bound her; but the moment she wakes up and begins to struggle,
+all is confusion and complication. If a husband would make an effort
+to recall the principles of the system which we have just described in
+order to involve his wife in the nets which our second part has set for
+her, he would resemble Wurmser, Mack and Beaulieu arranging their halts
+and their marches while Napoleon nimbly turns their flank, and makes use
+of their own tactics to destroy them.
+
+This is just what your wife will do.
+
+How is it possible to get at the truth when each of you conceals it
+under the same lie, each setting the same trap for the other? And whose
+will be the victory when each of you is caught in a similar snare?
+
+"My dear, I have to go out; I have to pay a visit to Madame So and So.
+I have ordered the carriage. Would you like to come with me? Come, be
+good, and go with your wife."
+
+You say to yourself:
+
+"She would be nicely caught if I consented! She asks me only to be
+refused."
+
+Then you reply to her:
+
+"Just at the moment I have some business with Monsieur Blank, for he has
+to give a report in a business matter which deeply concerns us both, and
+I must absolutely see him. Then I must go to the Minister of Finance. So
+your arrangement will suit us both."
+
+"Very well, dearest, go and dress yourself, while Celine finishes
+dressing me; but don't keep me waiting."
+
+"I am ready now, love," you cry out, at the end of ten minutes, as you
+stand shaved and dressed.
+
+But all is changed. A letter has arrived; madame is not well; her dress
+fits badly; the dressmaker has come; if it is not the dressmaker it is
+your mother. Ninety-nine out of a hundred husbands will leave the house
+satisfied, believing that their wives are well guarded, when, as a
+matter of fact, the wives have gotten rid of them.
+
+A lawful wife who from her husband cannot escape, who is not distressed
+by pecuniary anxiety, and who in order to give employment to a vacant
+mind, examines night and day the changing tableaux of each day's
+experience, soon discovers the mistake she has made in falling into a
+trap or allowing herself to be surprised by a catastrophe; she will then
+endeavor to turn all these weapons against you.
+
+There is a man in society, the sight of whom is strangely annoying to
+your wife; she can tolerate neither his tone, his manners nor his way of
+regarding things. Everything connected with him is revolting to her; she
+is persecuted by him, he is odious to her; she hopes that no one will
+tell him this. It seems almost as if she were attempting to oppose you;
+for this man is one for whom you have the highest esteem. You like his
+disposition because he flatters you; and thus your wife presumes that
+your esteem for him results from flattered vanity. When you give a ball,
+an evening party or a concert, there is almost a discussion on this
+subject, and madame picks a quarrel with you, because you are compelling
+her to see people who are not agreeable to her.
+
+"At least, sir, I shall never have to reproach myself with omitting
+to warn you. That man will yet cause you trouble. You should put some
+confidence in women when they pass sentence on the character of a man.
+And permit me to tell you that this baron, for whom you have such a
+predilection, is a very dangerous person, and you are doing very
+wrong to bring him to your house. And this is the way you behave; you
+absolutely force me to see one whom I cannot tolerate, and if I ask you
+to invite Monsieur A-----, you refuse to do so, because you think that
+I like to have him with me! I admit that he talks well, that he is kind
+and amiable; but you are more to me than he can ever be."
+
+These rude outlines of feminine tactics, which are emphasized by
+insincere gestures, by looks of feigned ingenuousness, by artful
+intonations of the voice and even by the snare of cunning silence, are
+characteristic to some degree of their whole conduct.
+
+There are few husbands who in such circumstances as these do not form
+the idea of setting a mouse-trap; they welcome as their guests both
+Monsieur A----- and the imaginary baron who represents the person whom
+their wives abhor, and they do so in the hope of discovering a lover in
+the celibate who is apparently beloved.
+
+Oh yes, I have often met in the world young men who were absolutely
+starlings in love and complete dupes of a friendship which women
+pretended to show them, women who felt themselves obliged to make a
+diversion and to apply a blister to their husbands as their husbands had
+previously done to them! These poor innocents pass their time in running
+errands, in engaging boxes at the theatre, in riding in the Bois de
+Boulogne by the carriages of their pretended mistresses; they are
+publicly credited with possessing women whose hands they have not even
+kissed. Vanity prevents them from contradicting these flattering rumors,
+and like the young priests who celebrate masses without a Host, they
+enjoy a mere show passion, and are veritable supernumeraries of love.
+
+Under these circumstances sometimes a husband on returning home asks the
+porter: "Has no one been here?"--"M. le Baron came past at two o'clock
+to see monsieur; but as he found no one was in but madame he went away;
+but Monsieur A----- is with her now."
+
+You reach the drawing-room, you see there a young celibate, sprightly,
+scented, wearing a fine necktie, in short a perfect dandy. He is a man
+who holds you in high esteem; when he comes to your house your wife
+listens furtively for his footsteps; at a ball she always dances with
+him. If you forbid her to see him, she makes a great outcry and it is
+not till many years afterwards [see Meditation on _Las Symptoms_] that
+you see the innocence of Monsieur A----- and the culpability of the
+baron.
+
+We have observed and noted as one of the cleverest manoeuvres, that of
+a young woman who, carried away by an irresistible passion, exhibited a
+bitter hatred to the man she did not love, but lavished upon her
+lover secret intimations of her love. The moment that her husband was
+persuaded that she loved the _Cicisbeo_ and hated the _Patito_, she
+arranged that she and the _Patito_ should be found in a situation whose
+compromising character she had calculated in advance, and her husband
+and the execrated celibate were thus induced to believe that her love
+and her aversion were equally insincere. When she had brought her
+husband into the condition of perplexity, she managed that a passionate
+letter should fall into his hands. One evening in the midst of the
+admirable catastrophe which she had thus brought to a climax, madame
+threw herself at her husband's feet, wet them with her tears, and thus
+concluded the climax to her own satisfaction.
+
+"I esteem and honor you profoundly," she cried, "for keeping your own
+counsel as you have done. I am in love! Is this a sentiment which is
+easy for me to repress? But what I can do is to confess the fact to you;
+to implore you to protect me from myself, to save me from my own folly.
+Be my master and be a stern master to me; take me away from this place,
+remove me from what has caused all this trouble, console me; I will
+forget him, I desire to do so. I do not wish to betray you. I humbly ask
+your pardon for the treachery love has suggested to me. Yes, I confess
+to you that the love which I pretended to have for my cousin was a
+snare set to deceive you. I love him with the love of friendship and no
+more.--Oh! forgive me! I can love no one but"--her voice was choked in
+passionate sobs--"Oh! let us go away, let us leave Paris!"
+
+She began to weep; her hair was disheveled, her dress in disarray; it
+was midnight, and her husband forgave her. From henceforth, the cousin
+made his appearance without risk, and the Minotaur devoured one victim
+more.
+
+What instructions can we give for contending with such adversaries as
+these? Their heads contain all the diplomacy of the congress of Vienna;
+they have as much power when they are caught as when they escape. What
+man has a mind supple enough to lay aside brute force and strength and
+follow his wife through such mazes as these?
+
+To make a false plea every moment, in order to elicit the truth, a true
+plea in order to unmask falsehood; to charge the battery when least
+expected, and to spike your gun at the very moment of firing it; to
+scale the mountain with the enemy, in order to descend to the plain
+again five minutes later; to accompany the foe in windings as rapid, as
+obscure as those of a plover on the breezes; to obey when obedience is
+necessary, and to oppose when resistance is inertial; to traverse the
+whole scale of hypotheses as a young artist with one stroke runs from
+the lowest to the highest note of his piano; to divine at last the
+secret purpose on which a woman is bent; to fear her caresses and to
+seek rather to find out what are the thoughts that suggested them and
+the pleasure which she derived from them--this is mere child's pay for
+the man of intellect and for those lucid and searching imaginations
+which possess the gift of doing and thinking at the same time. But there
+are a vast number of husbands who are terrified at the mere idea of
+putting in practice these principles in their dealings with a woman.
+
+Such men as these prefer passing their lives in making huge efforts
+to become second-class chess-players, or to pocket adroitly a ball in
+billiards.
+
+Some of them will tell you that they are incapable of keeping their
+minds on such a constant strain and breaking up the habits of their
+life. In that case the woman triumphs. She recognizes that in mind and
+energy she is her husband's superior, although the superiority may be
+but temporary; and yet there rises in her a feeling of contempt for the
+head of the house.
+
+If many man fail to be masters in their own house this is not from lack
+of willingness, but of talent. As for those who are ready to undergo
+the toils of this terrible duel, it is quite true that they must needs
+possess great moral force.
+
+And really, as soon as it is necessary to display all the resources of
+this secret strategy, it is often useless to attempt setting any traps
+for these satanic creatures. Once women arrive at a point when they
+willfully deceive, their countenances become as inscrutable as vacancy.
+Here is an example which came within my own experience.
+
+A very young, very pretty, and very clever coquette of Paris had not
+yet risen. Seated by her bed was one of her dearest friends. A letter
+arrived from another, a very impetuous fellow, to whom she had allowed
+the right of speaking to her like a master. The letter was in pencil and
+ran as follows:
+
+"I understand that Monsieur C----- is with you at this moment. I am
+waiting for him to blow his brains out."
+
+Madame D----- calmly continued the conversation with Monsieur C-----.
+She asked him to hand her a little writing desk of red leather which
+stood on the table, and he brought it to her.
+
+"Thanks, my dear," she said to him; "go on talking, I am listening to
+you."
+
+C----- talked away and she replied, all the while writing the following
+note:
+
+"As soon as you become jealous of C----- you two can blow out
+each other's brains at your pleasure. As for you, you may die; but
+brains--you haven't any brains to blow out."
+
+"My dear friend," she said to C-----, "I beg you will light this candle.
+Good, you are charming. And now be kind enough to leave me and let me
+get up, and give this letter to Monsieur d'H-----, who is waiting at the
+door."
+
+All this was said with admirable coolness. The tones and intonations of
+her voice, the expression of her face showed no emotion. Her audacity
+was crowned with complete success. On receiving the answer from the hand
+of Monsieur C-----, Monsieur d'H----- felt his wrath subside. He
+was troubled with only one thing and that was how to disguise his
+inclination to laugh.
+
+The more torch-light one flings into the immense cavern which we are now
+trying to illuminate, the more profound it appears. It is a bottomless
+abyss. It appears to us that our task will be accomplished more
+agreeably and more instructively if we show the principles of strategy
+put into practice in the case of a woman, when she has reached a high
+degree of vicious accomplishment. An example suggests more maxims and
+reveals the existence of more methods than all possible theories.
+
+One day at the end of a dinner given to certain intimate friends by
+Prince Lebrun, the guests, heated by champagne, were discussing the
+inexhaustible subject of feminine artifice. The recent adventure
+which was credited to the Countess R. D. S. J. D. A-----, apropos of a
+necklace, was the subject first broached. A highly esteemed artist, a
+gifted friend of the emperor, was vigorously maintaining the opinion,
+which seemed somewhat unmanly, that it was forbidden to a man to resist
+successfully the webs woven by a woman.
+
+"It is my happy experience," he said, "that to them nothing is sacred."
+
+The ladies protested.
+
+"But I can cite an instance in point."
+
+"It is an exception!"
+
+"Let us hear the story," said a young lady.
+
+"Yes, tell it to us," cried all the guests.
+
+The prudent old gentleman cast his eyes around, and, after having formed
+his conclusions as to the age of the ladies, smiled and said:
+
+"Since we are all experienced in life, I consent to relate the
+adventure."
+
+Dead silence followed, and the narrator read the following from a little
+book which he had taken from his pocket:
+
+
+I was head over ears in love with the Comtesse de -----. I was twenty
+and I was ingenuous. She deceived me. I was angry; she threw me over.
+I was ingenuous, I repeat, and I was grieved to lose her. I was twenty;
+she forgave me. And as I was twenty, as I was always ingenuous, always
+deceived, but never again thrown over by her, I believed myself to have
+been the best beloved of lovers, consequently the happiest of men. The
+countess had a friend, Madame de T-----, who seemed to have some designs
+on me, but without compromising her dignity; for she was scrupulous and
+respected the proprieties. One day while I was waiting for the countess
+in her Opera box, I heard my name called from a contiguous box. It was
+Madame de T-----.
+
+"What," she said, "already here? Is this fidelity or merely a want of
+something to do? Won't you come to me?"
+
+Her voice and her manner had a meaning in them, but I was far from
+inclined at that moment to indulge in a romance.
+
+"Have you any plans for this evening?" she said to me. "Don't make any!
+If I cheer your tedious solitude you ought to be devoted to me. Don't
+ask any questions, but obey. Call my servants."
+
+I answered with a bow and on being requested to leave the Opera box, I
+obeyed.
+
+"Go to this gentleman's house," she said to the lackey. "Say he will not
+be home till to-morrow."
+
+She made a sign to him, he went to her, she whispered in his ear, and
+he left us. The Opera began. I tried to venture on a few words, but
+she silenced me; some one might be listening. The first act ended, the
+lackey brought back a note, and told her that everything was ready. Then
+she smiled, asked for my hand, took me off, put me in her carriage, and
+I started on my journey quite ignorant of my destination. Every inquiry
+I made was answered by a peal of laughter. If I had not been aware that
+this was a woman of great passion, that she had long loved the Marquis
+de V-----, that she must have known I was aware of it, I should have
+believed myself in good luck; but she knew the condition of my heart,
+and the Comtesse de -----. I therefore rejected all presumptuous ideas
+and bided my time. At the first stop, a change of horses was supplied
+with the swiftness of lightning and we started afresh. The matter was
+becoming serious. I asked with some insistency, where this joke was to
+end.
+
+"Where?" she said, laughing. "In the pleasantest place in the world, but
+can't you guess? I'll give you a thousand chances. Give it up, for you
+will never guess. We are going to my husband's house. Do you know him?"
+
+"Not in the least."
+
+"So much the better, I thought you didn't. But I hope you will like him.
+We have lately become reconciled. Negotiations went on for six months;
+and we have been writing to one another for a month. I think it is very
+kind of me to go and look him up."
+
+"It certainly is, but what am I going to do there? What good will I be
+in this reconciliation?"
+
+"Ah, that is my business. You are young, amiable, unconventional; you
+suit me and will save me from the tediousness of a tete-a-tete."
+
+"But it seems odd to me, to choose the day or the night of a
+reconciliation to make us acquainted; the awkwardness of the first
+interview, the figure all three of us will cut,--I don't see anything
+particularly pleasant in that."
+
+"I have taken possession of you for my own amusement!" she said with an
+imperious air, "so please don't preach."
+
+I saw she was decided, so surrendered myself to circumstances. I began
+to laugh at my predicament and we became exceedingly merry. We again
+changed horses. The mysterious torch of night lit up a sky of extreme
+clearness and shed around a delightful twilight. We were approaching the
+spot where our tete-a-tete must end. She pointed out to me at intervals
+the beauty of the landscape, the tranquillity of the night, the
+all-pervading silence of nature. In order to admire these things in
+company as it was natural we should, we turned to the same window and
+our faces touched for a moment. In a sudden shock she seized my hand,
+and by a chance which seemed to me extraordinary, for the stone over
+which our carriage had bounded could not have been very large, I found
+Madame de T----- in my arms. I do not know what we were trying to see;
+what I am sure of is that the objects before our eyes began in spite
+of the full moon to grow misty, when suddenly I was released from her
+weight, and she sank into the back cushions of the carriage.
+
+"Your object," she said, rousing herself from a deep reverie, "is
+possibly to convince me of the imprudence of this proceeding. Judge,
+therefore, of my embarrassment!"
+
+"My object!" I replied, "what object can I have with regard to you? What
+a delusion! You look very far ahead; but of course the sudden surprise
+or turn of chance may excuse anything."
+
+"You have counted, then, upon that chance, it seems to me?"
+
+We had reached our destination, and before we were aware of it, we had
+entered the court of the chateau. The whole place was brightly lit up.
+Everything wore a festal air, excepting the face of its master, who
+at the sight of me seemed anything but delighted. He came forward and
+expressed in somewhat hesitating terms the tenderness proper to
+the occasion of a reconciliation. I understood later on that this
+reconciliation was absolutely necessary from family reasons. I was
+presented to him and was coldly greeted. He extended his hand to his
+wife, and I followed the two, thinking of my part in the past, in the
+present and in the future. I passed through apartments decorated with
+exquisite taste. The master in this respect had gone beyond all the
+ordinary refinement of luxury, in the hope of reanimating, by the
+influence of voluptuous imagery, a physical nature that was dead. Not
+knowing what to say, I took refuge in expressions of admiration. The
+goddess of the temple, who was quite ready to do the honors, accepted my
+compliments.
+
+"You have not seen anything," she said. "I must take you to the
+apartments of my husband."
+
+"Madame, five years ago I caused them to be pulled down."
+
+"Oh! Indeed!" said she.
+
+At the dinner, what must she do but offer the master some fish, on which
+he said to her:
+
+"Madame, I have been living on milk for the last three years."
+
+"Oh! Indeed!" she said again.
+
+Can any one imagine three human beings as astonished as we were to
+find ourselves gathered together? The husband looked at me with a
+supercilious air, and I paid him back with a look of audacity.
+
+Madame de T----- smiled at me and was charming to me; Monsieur de T-----
+accepted me as a necessary evil. Never in all my life have I taken part
+in a dinner which was so odd as that. The dinner ended, I thought that
+we would go to bed early--that is, I thought that Monsieur de T-----
+would. As we entered the drawing-room:
+
+"I appreciate, madame," said he, "your precaution in bringing this
+gentleman with you. You judged rightly that I should be but poor company
+for the evening, and you have done well, for I am going to retire."
+
+Then turning to me, he added in a tone of profound sarcasm:
+
+"You will please to pardon me, and obtain also pardon from madame."
+
+He left us. My reflections? Well, the reflections of a twelvemonth were
+then comprised in those of a minute. When we were left alone, Madame
+de T----- and I, we looked at each other so curiously that, in order to
+break through the awkwardness, she proposed that we should take a turn
+on the terrace while we waited, as she said, until the servants had
+supped.
+
+It was a superb night. It was scarcely possible to discern surrounding
+objects, they seemed to be covered with a veil, that imagination might
+be permitted to take a loftier flight. The gardens, terraced on the side
+of a mountain, sloped down, platform after platform, to the banks of the
+Seine, and the eye took in the many windings of the stream covered with
+islets green and picturesque. These variations in the landscape made
+up a thousand pictures which gave to the spot, naturally charming, a
+thousand novel features. We walked along the most extensive of these
+terraces, which was covered with a thick umbrage of trees. She had
+recovered from the effects of her husband's persiflage, and as we walked
+along she gave me her confidence. Confidence begets confidence, and as
+I told her mine, all she said to me became more intimate and more
+interesting. Madame de T----- at first gave me her arm; but soon this
+arm became interlaced in mine, I know not how, but in some way almost
+lifted her up and prevented her from touching the ground. The position
+was agreeable, but became at last fatiguing. We had been walking for
+a long time and we still had much to say to each other. A bank of turf
+appeared and she sat down without withdrawing her arm. And in this
+position we began to sound the praises of mutual confidence, its charms
+and its delights.
+
+"Ah!" she said to me, "who can enjoy it more than we and with less cause
+of fear? I know well the tie that binds you to another, and therefore
+have nothing to fear."
+
+Perhaps she wished to be contradicted. But I answered not a word. We
+were then mutually persuaded that it was possible for us to be friends
+without fear of going further.
+
+"But I was afraid, however," I said, "that that sudden jolt in the
+carriage and the surprising consequences may have frightened you."
+
+"Oh, I am not so easily alarmed!"
+
+"I fear it has left a little cloud on your mind?"
+
+"What must I do to reassure you?"
+
+"Give me the kiss here which chance--"
+
+"I will gladly do so; for if I do not, your vanity will lead you to
+think that I fear you."
+
+I took the kiss.
+
+It is with kisses as with confidences, the first leads to another. They
+are multiplied, they interrupt conversation, they take its place; they
+scarce leave time for a sigh to escape. Silence followed. We could hear
+it, for silence may be heard. We rose without a word and began to walk
+again.
+
+"We must go in," said she, "for the air of the river is icy, and it is
+not worth while--"
+
+"I think to go in would be more dangerous," I answered.
+
+"Perhaps so! Never mind, we will go in."
+
+"Why, is this out of consideration for me? You wish doubtless to save me
+from the impressions which I may receive from such a walk as this--the
+consequences which may result. Is it for me--for me only--?"
+
+"You are modest," she said smiling, "and you credit me with singular
+consideration."
+
+"Do you think so? Well, since you take it in this way, we will go in; I
+demand it."
+
+A stupid proposition, when made by two people who are forcing themselves
+to say something utterly different from what they think.
+
+Then she compelled me to take the path that led back to the chateau. I
+do not know, at least I did not then know, whether this course was one
+which she forced upon herself, whether it was the result of a vigorous
+resolution, or whether she shared my disappointment in seeing an
+incident which had begun so well thus suddenly brought to a close but
+by a mutual instinct our steps slackened and we pursued our way gloomily
+dissatisfied the one with the other and with ourselves. We knew not the
+why and the wherefore of what we were doing. Neither of us had the right
+to demand or even to ask anything. We had neither of us any ground for
+uttering a reproach. O that we had got up a quarrel! But how could I
+pick one with her? Meanwhile we drew nearer and nearer, thinking how we
+might evade the duty which we had so awkwardly imposed upon ourselves.
+We reached the door, when Madame de T-----said to me:
+
+"I am angry with you! After the confidences I have given you, not to
+give me a single one! You have not said a word about the countess.
+And yet it is so delightful to speak of the one we love! I should have
+listened with such interest! It was the very best I could do after I had
+taken you away from her!"
+
+"Cannot I reproach you with the same thing?" I said, interrupting her,
+"and if instead of making me a witness to this singular reconciliation
+in which I play so odd a part, you had spoken to me of the marquis--"
+
+"Stop," she said, "little as you know of women, you are aware that their
+confidences must be waited for, not asked. But to return to yourself.
+Are you very happy with my friend? Ah! I fear the contrary--"
+
+"Why, madame, should everything that the public amuses itself by saying
+claim our belief?"
+
+"You need not dissemble. The countess makes less a mystery of things
+than you do. Women of her stamp do not keep the secrets of their loves
+and of their lovers, especially when you are prompted by discretion to
+conceal her triumph. I am far from accusing her of coquetry; but a prude
+has as much vanity as a coquette.--Come, tell me frankly, have you not
+cause of complaint against her?"
+
+"But, madame, the air is really too icy for us to stay here. Would you
+like to go in?" said I with a smile.
+
+"Do you find it so?--That is singular. The air is quite warm."
+
+She had taken my arm again, and we continued to walk, although I did not
+know the direction which we took. All that she had hinted at concerning
+the lover of the countess, concerning my mistress, together with this
+journey, the incident which took place in the carriage, our conversation
+on the grassy bank, the time of night, the moonlight--all made me feel
+anxious. I was at the same time carried along by vanity, by desire, and
+so distracted by thought, that I was too excited perhaps to take notice
+of all that I was experiencing. And, while I was overwhelmed with these
+mingled feelings, she continued talking to me of the countess, and my
+silence confirmed the truth of all that she chose to say about her.
+Nevertheless, certain passages in her talk recalled me to myself.
+
+"What an exquisite creature she is!" she was saying. "How graceful! On
+her lips the utterances of treachery sound like witticism; an act of
+infidelity seems the prompting of reason, a sacrifice to propriety;
+while she is never reckless, she is always lovable; she is seldom tender
+and never sincere; amorous by nature, prudish on principle; sprightly,
+prudent, dexterous though utterly thoughtless, varied as Proteus in her
+moods, but charming as the Graces in her manner; she attracts but she
+eludes. What a number of parts I have seen her play! _Entre nous_, what
+a number of dupes hang round her! What fun she has made of the baron,
+what a life she has led the marquis! When she took you, it was merely
+for the purpose of throwing the two rivals off the scent; they were on
+the point of a rupture; for she had played with them too long, and they
+had had time to see through her. But she brought you on the scene. Their
+attention was called to you, she led them to redouble their pursuit, she
+was in despair over you, she pitied you, she consoled you--Ah! how happy
+is a clever woman when in such a game as this she professes to stake
+nothing of her own! But yet, is this true happiness?"
+
+This last phrase, accompanied by a significant sigh, was a
+master-stroke. I felt as if a bandage had fallen from my eyes, without
+seeing who had put it there. My mistress appeared to me the falsest of
+women, and I believed that I held now the only sensible creature in the
+world. Then I sighed without knowing why. She seemed grieved at having
+given me pain and at having in her excitement drawn a picture, the truth
+of which might be open to suspicion, since it was the work of a woman.
+I do not know how I answered; for without realizing the drift of all I
+heard, I set out with her on the high road of sentiment, and we mounted
+to such lofty heights of feeling that it was impossible to guess what
+would be the end of our journey. It was fortunate that we also took the
+path towards a pavilion which she pointed out to me at the end of the
+terrace, a pavilion, the witness of many sweet moments. She described
+to me the furnishing of it. What a pity that she had not the key! As she
+spoke we reached the pavilion and found that it was open. The clearness
+of the moonlight outside did not penetrate, but darkness has many
+charms. We trembled as we went in. It was a sanctuary. Might it not be
+the sanctuary of love? We drew near a sofa and sat down, and there we
+remained a moment listening to our heart-beats. The last ray of the moon
+carried away the last scruple. The hand which repelled me felt my heart
+beat. She struggled to get away, but fell back overcome with tenderness.
+We talked together through that silence in the language of thought.
+Nothing is more rapturous than these mute conversations. Madame de
+T----- took refuge in my arms, hid her head in my bosom, sighed and then
+grew calm under my caresses. She grew melancholy, she was consoled,
+and she asked of love all that love had robbed her of. The sound of the
+river broke the silence of night with a gentle murmur, which seemed in
+harmony with the beating of our hearts. Such was the darkness of the
+place it was scarcely possible to discern objects; but through the
+transparent crepe of a fair summer's night, the queen of that lovely
+place seemed to me adorable.
+
+"Oh!" she said to me with an angelic voice, "let us leave this dangerous
+spot. Resistance here is beyond our strength."
+
+She drew me away and we left the pavilion with regret.
+
+"Ah! how happy is she!" cried Madame de T-----.
+
+"Whom do you mean?" I asked.
+
+"Did I speak?" said she with a look of alarm.
+
+And then we reached the grassy bank, and stopped there involuntarily.
+"What a distance there is," she said to me, "between this place and the
+pavilion!"
+
+"Yes indeed," said I. "But must this bank be always ominous? Is there a
+regret? Is there--?"
+
+I do not know by what magic it took place; but at this point the
+conversation changed and became less serious. She ventured even to speak
+playfully of the pleasures of love, to eliminate from them all moral
+considerations, to reduce them to their simplest elements, and to
+prove that the favors of lovers were mere pleasure, that there were no
+pledges--philosophically speaking--excepting those which were given to
+the world, when we allowed it to penetrate our secrets and joined it in
+the acts of indiscretion.
+
+"How mild is the night," she said, "which we have by chance picked out!
+Well, if there are reasons, as I suppose there are, which compel us to
+part to-morrow, our happiness, ignored as it is by all nature, will not
+leave us any ties to dissolve. There will, perhaps, be some regrets, the
+pleasant memory of which will give us reparation; and then there will be
+a mutual understanding, without all the delays, the fuss and the tyranny
+of legal proceedings. We are such machines--and I blush to avow it--that
+in place of all the shrinkings that tormented me before this scene took
+place, I was half inclined to embrace the boldness of these principles,
+and I felt already disposed to indulge in the love of liberty.
+
+"This beautiful night," she continued, "this lovely scenery at this
+moment have taken on fresh charms. O let us never forget this pavilion!
+The chateau," she added smilingly, "contains a still more charming
+place, but I dare not show you anything; you are like a child, who
+wishes to touch everything and breaks everything that he touches."
+
+Moved by a sentiment of curiosity I protested that I was a very good
+child. She changed the subject.
+
+"This night," she said, "would be for me without a regret if I were not
+vexed with myself for what I said to you about the countess. Not that
+I wish to find fault with you. Novelty attracts me. You have found me
+amiable, I should like to believe in your good faith. But the dominion
+of habit takes a long time to break through and I have not learned the
+secret of doing this--By the bye, what do you think of my husband?"
+
+"Well, he is rather cross, but I suppose he could not be otherwise to
+me."
+
+"Oh, that is true, but his way of life isn't pleasant, and he could
+not see you here with indifference. He might be suspicious even of our
+friendship."
+
+"Oh! he is so already."
+
+"Confess that he has cause. Therefore you must not prolong this visit;
+he might take it amiss. As soon as any one arrives--" and she added with
+a smile, "some one is going to arrive--you must go. You have to keep up
+appearance, you know. Remember his manner when he left us to-night."
+
+I was tempted to interpret this adventure as a trap, but as she noticed
+the impression made by her words, she added:
+
+"Oh, he was very much gayer when he was superintending the arrangement
+of the cabinet I told you about. That was before my marriage. This
+passage leads to my apartment. Alas! it testifies to the cunning
+artifices to which Monsieur de T----- has resorted in protecting his
+love for me."
+
+"How pleasant it would be," I said to her, keenly excited by the
+curiosity she had roused in me, "to take vengeance in this spot for the
+insults which your charms have suffered, and to seek to make restitution
+for the pleasures of which you have been robbed."
+
+She doubtless thought this remark in good taste, but she said: "You
+promised to be good!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I threw a veil over the follies which every age will pardon to youth,
+on the ground of so many balked desires and bitter memories. In the
+morning, scarcely raising her liquid eyes, Madame de T-----, fairer than
+ever, said to me:
+
+"Now will you ever love the countess as much as you do me?"
+
+I was about to answer when her maid, her confidante, appeared saying:
+
+"You must go. It is broad daylight, eleven o'clock, and the chateau is
+already awake."
+
+All had vanished like a dream! I found myself wandering through the
+corridors before I had recovered my senses. How could I regain my
+apartment, not knowing where it was? Any mistake might bring about an
+exposure. I resolved on a morning walk. The coolness of the fresh air
+gradually tranquilized my imagination and brought me back to the world
+of reality; and now instead of a world of enchantment I saw myself in my
+soul, and my thoughts were no longer disturbed but followed each other
+in connected order; in fact, I breathed once more. I was, above all
+things, anxious to learn what I was to her so lately left--I who knew
+that she had been desperately in love with the Marquis de V-----. Could
+she have broken with him? Had she taken me to be his successor, or
+only to punish him? What a night! What an adventure! Yes, and what a
+delightful woman! While I floated on the waves of these thoughts, I
+heard a sound near at hand. I raised my eyes, I rubbed them, I could not
+believe my senses. Can you guess who it was? The Marquis de V-----!
+
+"You did not expect to see me so early, did you?" he said. "How has it
+all gone off?"
+
+"Did you know that I was here?" I asked in utter amazement.
+
+"Oh, yes, I received word just as you left Paris. Have you played your
+part well? Did not the husband think your visit ridiculous? Was he put
+out? When are you going to take leave? You had better go, I have made
+every provision for you. I have brought you a good carriage. It is at
+your service. This is the way I requite you, my dear friend. You may
+rely on me in the future, for a man is grateful for such services as
+yours."
+
+These last words gave me the key to the whole mystery, and I saw how I
+stood.
+
+"But why should you have come so soon?" I asked him; "it would have been
+more prudent to have waited a few days."
+
+"I foresaw that; and it is only chance that has brought me here. I am
+supposed to be on my way back from a neighboring country house. But has
+not Madame de T----- taken you into her secret? I am surprised at her
+want of confidence, after all you have done for us."
+
+"My dear friend," I replied, "she doubtless had her reasons. Perhaps I
+did not play my part very well."
+
+"Has everything been very pleasant? Tell me the particulars; come, tell
+me."
+
+"Now wait a moment. I did not know that this was to be a comedy; and
+although Madame de T----- gave me a part in the play--"
+
+"It wasn't a very nice one."
+
+"Do not worry yourself; there are no bad parts for good actors."
+
+"I understand, you acquitted yourself well."
+
+"Admirably."
+
+"And Madame de T-----?"
+
+"Is adorable."
+
+"To think of being able to win such a woman!" said he, stopping short in
+our walk, and looking triumphantly at me. "Oh, what pains I have taken
+with her! And I have at last brought her to a point where she is perhaps
+the only woman in Paris on whose fidelity a man may infallibly count!"
+
+"You have succeeded--?"
+
+"Yes; in that lies my special talent. Her inconstancy was mere
+frivolity, unrestrained imagination. It was necessary to change that
+disposition of hers, but you have no idea of her attachment to me. But
+really, is she not charming?"
+
+"I quite agree with you."
+
+"And yet _entre nous_ I recognize one fault in her. Nature in giving her
+everything, has denied her that flame divine which puts the crown on all
+other endowments; while she rouses in others the ardor of passion, she
+feels none herself, she is a thing of marble."
+
+"I am compelled to believe you, for I have had no opportunity of
+judging, but do you think that you know that woman as well as if you
+were her husband? It is possible to be deceived. If I had not dined
+yesterday with the veritable--I should take you--"
+
+"By the way, has he been good?"
+
+"Oh, I was received like a dog!"
+
+"I understand. Let us go in, let us look for Madame de T-----. She must
+be up by this time."
+
+"But should we not out of decency begin with the husband?" I said to
+him.
+
+"You are right. Let us go to your room, I wish to put on a little
+powder. But tell me, did he really take you for her lover?"
+
+"You may judge by the way he receives me; but let us go at once to his
+apartment."
+
+I wished to avoid having to lead him to an apartment whose whereabouts
+I did not know; but by chance we found it. The door was open and there I
+saw my _valet de chambre_ asleep on an armchair. A candle was going out
+on a table beside him. He drowsily offered a night robe to the marquis.
+I was on pins and needles; but the marquis was in a mood to be easily
+deceived, took the man for a mere sleepy-head, and made a joke of the
+matter. We passed on to the apartment of Monsieur de T-----. There was
+no misunderstanding the reception which he accorded me, and the welcome,
+the compliments which he addressed to the marquis, whom he almost forced
+to stay. He wished to take him to madame in order that she might insist
+on his staying. As for me, I received no such invitation. I was reminded
+that my health was delicate, the country was damp, fever was in the air,
+and I seemed so depressed that the chateau would prove too gloomy for
+me. The marquis offered me his chaise and I accepted it. The husband
+seemed delighted and we were all satisfied. But I could not refuse
+myself the pleasure of seeing Madame de T----- once more. My impatience
+was wonderful. My friend conceived no suspicions from the late sleep of
+his mistress.
+
+"Isn't this fine?" he said to me as we followed Monsieur de T-----. "He
+couldn't have spoken more kindly if she had dictated his words. He is a
+fine fellow. I am not in the least annoyed by this reconciliation; they
+will make a good home together, and you will agree with me, that he
+could not have chosen a wife better able to do the honors."
+
+"Certainly," I replied.
+
+"However pleasant the adventure has been," he went on with an air of
+mystery, "you must be off! I will let Madame de T----- understand that
+her secret will be well kept."
+
+"On that point, my friend, she perhaps counts more on me than on you;
+for you see her sleep is not disturbed by the matter."
+
+"Oh! I quite agree that there is no one like you for putting a woman to
+sleep."
+
+"Yes, and a husband too, and if necessary a lover, my dear friend."
+
+At last Monsieur de T----- was admitted to his wife's apartment, and
+there we were all summoned.
+
+"I trembled," said Madame de T----- to me, "for fear you would go before
+I awoke, and I thank you for saving me the annoyance which that would
+have caused me."
+
+"Madame," I said, and she must have perceived the feeling that was in my
+tones--"I come to say good-bye."
+
+She looked at me and at the marquis with an air of disquietude; but the
+self-satisfied, knowing look of her lover reassured her. She laughed
+in her sleeve with me as if she would console me as well as she could,
+without lowering herself in my eyes.
+
+"He has played his part well," the marquis said to her in a low voice,
+pointing to me, "and my gratitude--"
+
+"Let us drop the subject," interrupted Madame de T-----; "you may be
+sure that I am well aware of all I owe him."
+
+At last Monsieur de T-----, with a sarcastic remark, dismissed me; my
+friend threw the dust in his eyes by making fun of me; and I paid back
+both of them by expressing my admiration for Madame de T-----, who made
+fools of us all without forfeiting her dignity. I took myself off; but
+Madame de T----- followed me, pretending to have a commission to give
+me.
+
+"Adieu, monsieur!" she said, "I am indebted to you for the very great
+pleasure you have given me; but I have paid you back with a beautiful
+dream," and she looked at me with an expression of subtle meaning. "But
+adieu, and forever! You have plucked a solitary flower, blossoming in
+its loveliness, which no man--"
+
+She stopped and her thought evaporated in a sigh; but she checked the
+rising flood of sensibility and smiled significantly.
+
+"The countess loves you," she said. "If I have robbed her of some
+transports, I give you back to her less ignorant than before. Adieu! Do
+not make mischief between my friend and me."
+
+She wrung my hand and left me.
+
+
+
+More than once the ladies who had mislaid their fans blushed as they
+listened to the old gentleman, whose brilliant elocution won their
+indulgence for certain details which we have suppressed, as too erotic
+for the present age; nevertheless, we may believe that each lady
+complimented him in private; for some time afterwards he gave to each
+of them, as also to the masculine guests, a copy of this charming story,
+twenty-five copies of which were printed by Pierre Didot. It is
+from copy No. 24 that the author has transcribed this tale, hitherto
+unpublished, and, strange to say, attributed to Dorat. It has the merit
+of yielding important lessons for husbands, while at the same time it
+gives the celibates a delightful picture of morals in the last century.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXV. OF ALLIES.
+
+Of all the miseries that civil war can bring upon a country the greatest
+lies in the appeal which one of the contestants always ends by making to
+some foreign government.
+
+Unhappily we are compelled to confess that all women make this great
+mistake, for the lover is only the first of their soldiers. It may be
+a member of their family or at least a distant cousin. This Meditation,
+then, is intended to answer the inquiry, what assistance can each of the
+different powers which influence human life give to your wife? or better
+than that, what artifices will she resort to to arm them against you?
+
+Two beings united by marriage are subject to the laws of religion and
+society; to those of private life, and, from considerations of health,
+to those of medicine. We will therefore divide this important Meditation
+into six paragraphs:
+
+
+ 1. OF RELIGIONS AND OF CONFESSION; CONSIDERED IN THEIR CONNECTION
+ WITH MARRIAGE.
+ 2. OF THE MOTHER-IN-LAW.
+ 3. OF BOARDING SCHOOL FRIENDS AND INTIMATE FRIENDS.
+ 4. OF THE LOVER'S ALLIES.
+ 5. OF THE MAID.
+ 6. OF THE DOCTOR.
+
+
+
+
+1. OF RELIGIONS AND OF CONFESSION; CONSIDERED IN THEIR CONNECTION WITH
+MARRIAGE.
+
+La Bruyere has very wittily said, "It is too much for a husband to have
+ranged against him both devotion and gallantry; a woman ought to choose
+but one of them for her ally."
+
+The author thinks that La Bruyere is mistaken.
+
+
+
+
+2. OF THE MOTHER-IN-LAW.
+
+Up to the age of thirty the face of a woman is a book written in a
+foreign tongue, which one may still translate in spite of all the
+_feminisms_ of the idiom; but on passing her fortieth year a woman
+becomes an insoluble riddle; and if any one can see through an old
+woman, it is another old woman.
+
+Some diplomats have attempted on more than one occasion the diabolical
+task of gaining over the dowagers who opposed their machinations; but if
+they have ever succeeded it was only after making enormous concessions
+to them; for diplomats are practiced people and we do not think that you
+can employ their recipe in dealing with your mother-in-law. She will be
+the first aid-de-camp of her daughter, for if the mother did not take
+her daughter's side, it would be one of those monstrous and unnatural
+exceptions, which unhappily for husbands are extremely rare.
+
+When a man is so happy as to possess a mother-in-law who is
+well-preserved, he may easily keep her in check for a certain time,
+although he may not know any young celibate brave enough to assail her.
+But generally husbands who have the slightest conjugal genius will find
+a way of pitting their own mother against that of their wife, and in
+that case they will naturally neutralize each other's power.
+
+To be able to keep a mother-in-law in the country while he lives in
+Paris, and vice versa, is a piece of good fortune which a husband too
+rarely meets with.
+
+What of making mischief between the mother and the daughter?--That may
+be possible; but in order to accomplish such an enterprise he must have
+the metallic heart of Richelieu, who made a son and a mother deadly
+enemies to each other. However, the jealousy of a husband who forbids
+his wife to pray to male saints and wishes her to address only female
+saints, would allow her liberty to see her mother.
+
+Many sons-in-law take an extreme course which settles everything,
+which consists in living on bad terms with their mothers-in-law. This
+unfriendliness would be very adroit policy, if it did not inevitably
+result in drawing tighter the ties that unite mother and daughter. These
+are about all the means which you have for resisting maternal influence
+in your home. As for the services which your wife can claim from her
+mother, they are immense; and the assistance which she may derive from
+the neutrality of her mother is not less powerful. But on this point
+everything passes out of the domain of science, for all is veiled in
+secrecy. The reinforcements which a mother brings up in support of a
+daughter are so varied in nature, they depend so much on circumstances,
+that it would be folly to attempt even a nomenclature for them. Yet you
+may write out among the most valuable precepts of this conjugal gospel,
+the following maxims.
+
+A husband should never let his wife visit her mother unattended.
+
+A husband ought to study all the reasons why all the celibates under
+forty who form her habitual society are so closely united by ties of
+friendship to his mother-in-law; for, if a daughter rarely falls in love
+with the lover of her mother, her mother has always a weak spot for her
+daughter's lover.
+
+
+
+
+3. OF BOARDING SCHOOL FRIENDS AND INTIMATE FRIENDS.
+
+Louise de L-----, daughter of an officer killed at Wagram, had been
+the object of Napoleon's special protection. She left Ecouen to marry a
+commissary general, the Baron de V-----, who is very rich.
+
+Louise was eighteen and the baron forty. She was ordinary in face and
+her complexion could not be called white, but she had a charming
+figure, good eyes, a small foot, a pretty hand, good taste and abundant
+intelligence. The baron, worn out by the fatigues of war and still more
+by the excesses of a stormy youth, had one of those faces upon which the
+Republic, the Directory, the Consulate and the Empire seemed to have set
+their impress.
+
+He became so deeply in love with his wife, that he asked and obtained
+from the Emperor a post at Paris, in order that he might be enabled to
+watch over his treasure. He was as jealous as Count Almaviva, still more
+from vanity than from love. The young orphan had married her husband
+from necessity, and, flattered by the ascendancy she wielded over a man
+much older than herself, waited upon his wishes and his needs; but
+her delicacy was offended from the first days of their marriage by the
+habits and ideas of a man whose manners were tinged with republican
+license. He was a predestined.
+
+I do not know exactly how long the baron made his honeymoon last, nor
+when war was declared in his household; but I believe it happened in
+1816, at a very brilliant ball given by Monsieur D-----, a commissariat
+officer, that the commissary general, who had been promoted head of the
+department, admired the beautiful Madame B-----, the wife of a banker,
+and looked at her much more amorously than a married man should have
+allowed himself to do.
+
+At two o'clock in the morning it happened that the banker, tired of
+waiting any longer, went home leaving his wife at the ball.
+
+"We are going to take you home to your house," said the baroness to
+Madame B-----. "Monsieur de V-----, offer your arm to Emilie!"
+
+And now the baron is seated in his carriage next to a woman who,
+during the whole evening, had been offered and had refused a thousand
+attentions, and from whom he had hoped in vain to win a single look.
+There she was, in all the lustre of her youth and beauty, displaying
+the whitest shoulders and the most ravishing lines of beauty. Her face,
+which still reflected the pleasures of the evening, seemed to vie with
+the brilliancy of her satin gown; her eyes to rival the blaze of her
+diamonds; and her skin to cope with the soft whiteness of the marabouts
+which tied in her hair, set off the ebon tresses and the ringlets
+dangling from her headdress. Her tender voice would stir the chords of
+the most insensible hearts; in a word, so powerfully did she wake up
+love in the human breast that Robert d'Abrissel himself would perhaps
+have yielded to her.
+
+The baron glanced at his wife, who, overcome with fatigue, had sunk to
+sleep in a corner of the carriage. He compared, in spite of himself, the
+toilette of Louise and that of Emilie. Now on occasions of this kind the
+presence of a wife is singularly calculated to sharpen the unquenchable
+desires of a forbidden love. Moreover, the glances of the baron,
+directed alternately to his wife and to her friend, were easy to
+interpret, and Madame B----- interpreted them.
+
+"Poor Louise," she said, "she is overtired. Going out does not suit her,
+her tastes are so simple. At Ecouen she was always reading--"
+
+"And you, what used you to do?"
+
+"I, sir? Oh, I thought about nothing but acting comely. It was my
+passion!"
+
+"But why do you so rarely visit Madame de V-----? We have a country
+house at Saint-Prix, where we could have a comedy acted, in a little
+theatre which I have built there."
+
+"If I have not visited Madame de V-----, whose fault is it?" she
+replied. "You are so jealous that you will not allow her either to visit
+her friends or to receive them."
+
+"I jealous!" cried Monsieur de V-----, "after four years of marriage,
+and after having had three children!"
+
+"Hush," said Emilie, striking the fingers of the baron with her fan,
+"Louise is not asleep!"
+
+The carriage stopped, and the baron offered his hand to his wife's fair
+friend and helped her to get out.
+
+"I hope," said Madame B-----, "that you will not prevent Louise from
+coming to the ball which I am giving this week."
+
+The baron made her a respectful bow.
+
+This ball was a triumph of Madame B-----'s and the ruin of the husband
+of Louise; for he became desperately enamored of Emilie, to whom he
+would have sacrificed a hundred lawful wives.
+
+Some months after that evening on which the baron gained some hopes of
+succeeding with his wife's friend, he found himself one morning at the
+house of Madame B-----, when the maid came to announce the Baroness de
+V-----.
+
+"Ah!" cried Emilie, "if Louise were to see you with me at such an hour
+as this, she would be capable of compromising me. Go into that closet
+and don't make the least noise."
+
+The husband, caught like a mouse in a trap, concealed himself in the
+closet.
+
+"Good-day, my dear!" said the two women, kissing each other.
+
+"Why are you come so early?" asked Emilie.
+
+"Oh! my dear, cannot you guess? I came to have an understanding with
+you!"
+
+"What, a duel?"
+
+"Precisely, my dear. I am not like you, not I! I love my husband and am
+jealous of him. You! you are beautiful, charming, you have the right to
+be a coquette, you can very well make fun of B-----, to whom your virtue
+seems to be of little importance. But as you have plenty of lovers in
+society, I beg you that you will leave me my husband. He is always
+at your house, and he certainly would not come unless you were the
+attraction."
+
+"What a very pretty jacket you have on."
+
+"Do you think so? My maid made it."
+
+"Then I shall get Anastasia to take a lesson from Flore--"
+
+"So, then, my dear, I count on your friendship to refrain from bringing
+trouble in my house."
+
+"But, my child, I do not know how you can conceive that I should fall in
+love with your husband; he is coarse and fat as a deputy of the centre.
+He is short and ugly--Ah! I will allow that he is generous, but that is
+all you can say for him, and this is a quality which is all in all only
+to opera girls; so that you can understand, my dear, that if I were
+choosing a lover, as you seem to suppose I am, I wouldn't choose an old
+man like your baron. If I have given him any hopes, if I have received
+him, it was certainly for the purpose of amusing myself, and of giving
+you liberty; for I believed you had a weakness for young Rostanges."
+
+"I?" exclaimed Louise, "God preserve me from it, my dear; he is the most
+intolerable coxcomb in the world. No, I assure you, I love my husband!
+You may laugh as you choose; it is true. I know it may seem ridiculous,
+but consider, he has made my fortune, he is no miser, and he is
+everything to me, for it has been my unhappy lot to be left an orphan.
+Now even if I did not love him, I ought to try to preserve his esteem.
+Have I a family who will some day give me shelter?"
+
+"Come, my darling, let us speak no more about it," said Emilie,
+interrupting her friend, "for it tires me to death."
+
+After a few trifling remarks the baroness left.
+
+"How is this, monsieur?" cried Madame B-----, opening the door of the
+closet where the baron was frozen with cold, for this incident took
+place in winter; "how is this? Aren't you ashamed of yourself for not
+adoring a little wife who is so interesting? Don't speak to me of love;
+you may idolize me, as you say you do, for a certain time, but you will
+never love me as you love Louise. I can see that in your heart I shall
+never outweigh the interest inspired by a virtuous wife, children, and
+a family circle. I should one day be deserted and become the object of
+your bitter reflections. You would coldly say of me 'I have had that
+woman!' That phrase I have heard pronounced by men with the most
+insulting indifference. You see, monsieur, that I reason in cold blood,
+and that I do not love you, because you never would be able to love me."
+
+"What must I do then to convince you of my love?" cried the baron,
+fixing his gaze on the young woman.
+
+She had never appeared to him so ravishingly beautiful as at that
+moment, when her soft voice poured forth a torrent of words whose
+sternness was belied by the grace of her gestures, by the pose of her
+head and by her coquettish attitude.
+
+"Oh, when I see Louise in possession of a lover," she replied, "when I
+know that I am taking nothing away from her, and that she has nothing to
+regret in losing your affection; when I am quite sure that you love her
+no longer, and have obtained certain proof of your indifference towards
+her--Oh, then I may listen to you!--These words must seem odious to
+you," she continued in an earnest voice; "and so indeed they are, but
+do not think that they have been pronounced by me. I am the rigorous
+mathematician who makes his deductions from a preliminary proposition.
+You are married, and do you deliberately set about making love to some
+one else? I should be mad to give any encouragement to a man who cannot
+be mine eternally."
+
+"Demon!" exclaimed the husband. "Yes, you are a demon, and not a woman!"
+
+"Come now, you are really amusing!" said the young woman as she seized
+the bell-rope.
+
+"Oh! no, Emilie," continued the lover of forty, in a calmer voice. "Do
+not ring; stop, forgive me! I will sacrifice everything for you."
+
+"But I do not promise you anything!" she answered quickly with a laugh.
+
+"My God! How you make me suffer!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Well, and have not you in your life caused the unhappiness of more than
+one person?" she asked. "Remember all the tears which have been shed
+through you and for you! Oh, your passion does not inspire me with the
+least pity. If you do not wish to make me laugh, make me share your
+feelings."
+
+"Adieu, madame, there is a certain clemency in your sternness. I
+appreciate the lesson you have taught me. Yes, I have many faults to
+expiate."
+
+"Well then, go and repent of them," she said with a mocking smile; "in
+making Louise happy you will perform the rudest penance in your power."
+
+They parted. But the love of the baron was too violent to allow of
+Madame B-----'s harshness failing to accomplish her end, namely, the
+separation of the married couple.
+
+At the end of some months the Baron de V----- and his wife lived apart,
+though they lived in the same mansion. The baroness was the object of
+universal pity, for in public she always did justice to her husband
+and her resignation seemed wonderful. The most prudish women of society
+found nothing to blame in the friendship which united Louise to the
+young Rostanges. And all was laid to the charge of Monsieur de V-----'s
+folly.
+
+When this last had made all the sacrifices that a man could make for
+Madame B-----, his perfidious mistress started for the waters of Mount
+Dore, for Switzerland and for Italy, on the pretext of seeking the
+restoration of her health.
+
+The baron died of inflammation of the liver, being attended during his
+sickness by the most touching ministrations which his wife could lavish
+upon him; and judging from the grief which he manifested at having
+deserted her, he seemed never to have suspected her participation in the
+plan which had been his ruin.
+
+This anecdote, which we have chosen from a thousand others, exemplifies
+the services which two women can render each other.
+
+From the words--"Let me have the pleasure of bringing my husband" up to
+the conception of the drama, whose denouement was inflammation of the
+liver, every female perfidy was assembled to work out the end. Certain
+incidents will, of course, be met with which diversify more or less
+the typical example which we have given, but the march of the drama is
+almost always the same. Moreover a husband ought always to distrust the
+woman friends of his wife. The subtle artifices of these lying creatures
+rarely fail of their effect, for they are seconded by two enemies, who
+always keep close to a man--and these are vanity and desire.
+
+
+
+
+4. OF THE LOVER'S ALLIES.
+
+The man who hastens to tell another man that he has dropped a thousand
+franc bill from his pocket-book, or even that the handkerchief is coming
+out of his pocket, would think it a mean thing to warn him that some one
+was carrying off his wife. There is certainly something extremely odd in
+this moral inconsistency, but after all it admits of explanation. Since
+the law cannot exercise any interference with matrimonial rights,
+the citizens have even less right to constitute themselves a conjugal
+police; and when one restores a thousand franc bill to him who has lost
+it, he acts under a certain kind of obligation, founded on the principle
+which says, "Do unto others as ye would they should do unto you!"
+
+But by what reasoning can justification be found for the help which one
+celibate never asks in vain, but always receives from another celibate
+in deceiving a husband, and how shall we qualify the rendering of such
+help? A man who is incapable of assisting a gendarme in discovering an
+assassin, has no scruple in taking a husband to a theatre, to a concert
+or even to a questionable house, in order to help a comrade, whom
+he would not hesitate to kill in a duel to-morrow, in keeping an
+assignation, the result of which is to introduce into a family a
+spurious child, and to rob two brothers of a portion of their fortune by
+giving them a co-heir whom they never perhaps would otherwise have had;
+or to effect the misery of three human beings. We must confess that
+integrity is a very rare virtue, and, very often, the man that thinks
+he has most actually has least. Families have been divided by feuds, and
+brothers have been murdered, which events would never have taken place
+if some friend had refused to perform what passes to the world as a
+harmless trick.
+
+It is impossible for a man to be without some hobby or other, and all
+of us are devoted either to hunting, fishing, gambling, music, money, or
+good eating. Well, your ruling passion will always be an accomplice in
+the snare which a lover sets for you, the invisible hand of this passion
+will direct your friends, or his, whether they consent or not, to play
+a part in the little drama when they want to take you away from home, or
+to induce you to leave your wife to the mercy of another. A lover will
+spend two whole months, if necessary, in planning the construction of
+the mouse-trap.
+
+I have seen the most cunning men on earth thus taken in.
+
+There was a certain retired lawyer of Normandy. He lived in the little
+town of B-----, where a regiment of the chasseurs of Cantal were
+garrisoned. A fascinating officer of this regiment had fallen in love
+with the wife of this pettifogger, and the regiment was leaving before
+the two lovers had been able to enjoy the least privacy. It was the
+fourth military man over whom the lawyer had triumphed. As he left the
+dinner-table one evening, about six o'clock, the husband took a walk
+on the terrace of his garden from which he could see the whole country
+side. The officers arrived at this moment to take leave of him. Suddenly
+the flame of a conflagration burst forth on the horizon. "Heavens! La
+Daudiniere is on fire!" exclaimed the major. He was an old simple-minded
+soldier, who had dined at home. Every one mounted horse. The young wife
+smiled as she found herself alone, for her lover, hidden in the coppice,
+had said to her, "It is a straw stack on fire!" The flank of the
+husband was turned with all the more facility in that a fine courser was
+provided for him by the captain, and with a delicacy very rare in the
+cavalry, the lover actually sacrificed a few moments of his happiness
+in order to catch up with the cavalcade, and return in company with the
+husband.
+
+Marriage is a veritable duel, in which persistent watchfulness is
+required in order to triumph over an adversary; for, if you are unlucky
+enough to turn your head, the sword of the celibate will pierce you
+through and through. 5. OF THE MAID.
+
+The prettiest waiting-maid I have ever seen is that of Madame V----y,
+a lady who to-day plays at Paris a brilliant part among the most
+fashionable women, and passes for a wife who keeps on excellent terms
+with her husband. Mademoiselle Celestine is a person whose points of
+beauty are so numerous that, in order to describe her, it would be
+necessary to translate the thirty verses which we are told form an
+inscription in the seraglio of the Grand Turk and contain each of them
+an excellent description of one of the thirty beauties of women.
+
+"You show a great deal of vanity in keeping near you such an
+accomplished creature," said a lady to the mistress of the house.
+
+"Ah! my dear, some day perhaps you will find yourself jealous of me in
+possessing Celestine."
+
+"She must be endowed with very rare qualities, I suppose? She perhaps
+dresses you well?"
+
+"Oh, no, very badly!"
+
+"She sews well?"
+
+"She never touches her needle."
+
+"She is faithful?"
+
+"She is one of those whose fidelity costs more than the most cunning
+dishonesty."
+
+"You astonish me, my dear; she is then your foster-sister?"
+
+"Not at all; she is positively good for nothing, but she is more useful
+to me than any other member of my household. If she remains with me ten
+years, I have promised her twenty thousand francs. It will be money
+well earned, and I shall not forget to give it!" said the young woman,
+nodding her head with a meaning gesture.
+
+At last the questioner of Madame V----y understood.
+
+When a woman has no friend of her own sex intimate enough to assist
+her in proving false to marital love, her maid is a last resource which
+seldom fails in bringing about the desired result.
+
+Oh! after ten years of marriage to find under his roof, and to see all
+the time, a young girl of from sixteen to eighteen, fresh, dressed with
+taste, the treasures of whose beauty seem to breathe defiance, whose
+frank bearing is irresistibly attractive, whose downcast eyes seem to
+fear you, whose timid glance tempts you, and for whom the conjugal bed
+has no secrets, for she is at once a virgin and an experienced woman!
+How can a man remain cold, like St. Anthony, before such powerful
+sorcery, and have the courage to remain faithful to the good principles
+represented by a scornful wife, whose face is always stern, whose
+manners are always snappish, and who frequently refuses to be caressed?
+What husband is stoical enough to resist such fires, such frosts? There,
+where you see a new harvest of pleasure, the young innocent sees an
+income, and your wife her liberty. It is a little family compact, which
+is signed in the interest of good will.
+
+In this case, your wife acts with regard to marriage as young
+fashionables do with regard to their country. If they are drawn for the
+army, they buy a man to carry the musket, to die in their place and to
+spare them the hardships of military life.
+
+In compromises of this sort there is not a single woman who does not
+know how to put her husband in the wrong. I have noticed that, by a
+supreme stroke of diplomacy, the majority of wives do not admit their
+maids into the secret of the part which they give them to play. They
+trust to nature, and assume an affected superiority over the lover and
+his mistress.
+
+These secret perfidies of women explain to a great degree the odd
+features of married life which are to be observed in the world; and I
+have heard women discuss, with profound sagacity, the dangers which are
+inherent in this terrible method of attack, and it is necessary to
+know thoroughly both the husband and the creature to whom he is to be
+abandoned, in order to make successful use of her. Many a woman, in this
+connection, has been the victim of her own calculations.
+
+Moreover, the more impetuous and passionate a husband shows himself, the
+less will a woman dare to employ this expedient; but a husband caught
+in this snare will never have anything to say to his stern better-half,
+when the maid, giving evidence of the fault she has committed, is sent
+into the country with an infant and a dowry.
+
+
+
+
+6. OF THE DOCTOR.
+
+The doctor is one of the most potent auxiliaries of an honest woman,
+when she wishes to acquire a friendly divorce from her husband. The
+services that the doctor renders, most of the time without knowing it,
+to a woman, are of such importance that there does not exist a single
+house in France where the doctor is chosen by any one but the wife.
+
+All doctors know what great influence women have on their reputation;
+thus we meet with few doctors who do not study to please the ladies.
+When a man of talent has become celebrated it is true that he does not
+lend himself to the crafty conspiracies which women hatch; but without
+knowing it he becomes involved in them.
+
+I suppose that a husband taught by the adventures of his own youth makes
+up his mind to pick out a doctor for his wife, from the first days of
+his marriage. So long as his feminine adversary fails to conceive
+the assistance that she may derive from this ally, she will submit in
+silence; but later on, if all her allurements fail to win over the man
+chosen by her husband, she will take a more favorable opportunity to
+give her husband her confidence, in the following remarkable manner.
+
+"I don't like the way in which the doctor feels my pulse!"
+
+And of course the doctor is dropped.
+
+Thus it happens that either a woman chooses her doctor, wins over the
+man who has been imposed upon her, or procures his dismissal. But this
+contest is very rare; the majority of young men who marry are acquainted
+with none but beardless doctors whom they have no anxiety to procure for
+their wives, and almost always the Esculapius of the household is
+chosen by the feminine power. Thus it happens that some fine morning the
+doctor, when he leaves the chamber of madame, who has been in bed for a
+fortnight, is induced by her to say to you:
+
+"I do not say that the condition of madame presents any serious
+symptoms; but this constant drowsiness, this general listlessness, and
+her natural tendency to a spinal affection demand great care. Her lymph
+is inspissated. She wants a change of air. She ought to be sent either
+to the waters of Bareges or to the waters of Plombieres."
+
+"All right, doctor."
+
+You allow your wife to go to Plombieres; but she goes there because
+Captain Charles is quartered in the Vosges. She returns in capital
+health and the waters of Plombieres have done wonders for her. She has
+written to you every day, she has lavished upon you from a distance
+every possible caress. The danger of a spinal affection has utterly
+disappeared.
+
+There is extant a little pamphlet, whose publication was prompted
+doubtless by hate. It was published in Holland, and it contains some
+very curious details of the manner in which Madame de Maintenon entered
+into an understanding with Fagon, for the purposes of controlling
+Louis XIV. Well, some morning your doctor will threaten you, as Fagon
+threatened his master, with a fit of apoplexy, if you do not diet
+yourself. This witty work of satire, doubtless the production of some
+courtier, entitled "Madame de Saint Tron," has been interpreted by the
+modern author who has become proverbial as "the young doctor." But his
+delightful sketch is very much superior to the work whose title I
+cite for the benefit of the book-lovers, and we have great pleasure in
+acknowledging that the work of our clever contemporary has prevented us,
+out of regard for the glory of the seventeenth century, from publishing
+the fragment of the old pamphlet.
+
+Very frequently a doctor becomes duped by the judicious manoeuvres of a
+young and delicate wife, and comes to you with the announcement:
+
+"Sir, I would not wish to alarm madame with regard to her condition;
+but I will advise you, if you value her health, to keep her in perfect
+tranquillity. The irritation at this moment seems to threaten the chest,
+and we must gain control of it; there is need of rest for her, perfect
+rest; the least agitation might change the seat of the malady. At this
+crisis, the prospect of bearing a child would be fatal to her."
+
+"But, doctor--"
+
+"Ah, yes! I know that!"
+
+He laughs and leaves the house.
+
+Like the rod of Moses, the doctor's mandate makes and unmakes
+generations. The doctor will restore you to your marriage bed with the
+same arguments that he used in debarring you. He treats your wife for
+complaints which she has not, in order to cure her of those which she
+has, and all the while you have no idea of it; for the scientific jargon
+of doctors can only be compared to the layers in which they envelop
+their pills.
+
+An honest woman in her chamber with the doctor is like a minister sure
+of a majority; she has it in her power to make a horse, or a carriage,
+according to her good pleasure and her taste; she will send you away or
+receive you, as she likes. Sometimes she will pretend to be ill in
+order to have a chamber separate from yours; sometimes she will surround
+herself with all the paraphernalia of an invalid; she will have an old
+woman for a nurse, regiments of vials and of bottles, and, environed by
+these ramparts, will defy you by her invalid airs. She will talk to you
+in such a depressing way of the electuaries and of the soothing draughts
+which she has taken, of the agues which she has had, of her plasters and
+cataplasms, that she will fill you with disgust at these sickly details,
+if all the time these sham sufferings are not intended to serve as
+engines by means of which, eventually, a successful attack may be made
+on that singular abstraction known as _your honor_.
+
+In this way your wife will be able to fortify herself at every point of
+contact which you possess with the world, with society and with life.
+Thus everything will take arms against you, and you will be alone among
+all these enemies. But suppose that it is your unprecedented privilege
+to possess a wife who is without religious connections, without parents
+or intimate friends; that you have penetration enough to see through
+all the tricks by which your wife's lover tries to entrap you; that you
+still have sufficient love for your fair enemy to resist all the Martons
+of the earth; that, in fact, you have for your doctor a man who is so
+celebrated that he has no time to listen to the maunderings of your
+wife; or that if your Esculapius is madame's vassal, you demand a
+consultation, and an incorruptible doctor intervenes every time the
+favorite doctor prescribes a remedy that disquiets you; even in that
+case, your prospects will scarcely be more brilliant. In fact, even if
+you do not succumb to this invasion of allies, you must not forget that,
+so far, your adversary has not, so to speak, struck the decisive blow.
+If you hold out still longer, your wife, having flung round you thread
+upon thread, as a spider spins his web, an invisible net, will resort to
+the arms which nature has given her, which civilization has perfected,
+and which will be treated of in the next Meditation.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXVI. OF DIFFERENT WEAPONS.
+
+A weapon is anything which is used for the purpose of wounding. From
+this point of view, some sentiments prove to be the most cruel weapons
+which man can employ against his fellow man. The genius of Schiller,
+lucid as it was comprehensive, seems to have revealed all the phenomena
+which certain ideas bring to light in the human organization by their
+keen and penetrating action. A man may be put to death by a thought.
+Such is the moral of those heartrending scenes, when in _The Brigands_
+the poet shows a young man, with the aid of certain ideas, making such
+powerful assaults on the heart of an old man, that he ends by causing
+the latter's death. The time is not far distant when science will
+be able to observe the complicated mechanism of our thoughts and to
+apprehend the transmission of our feelings. Some developer of the occult
+sciences will prove that our intellectual organization constitutes
+nothing more than a kind of interior man, who projects himself with less
+violence than the exterior man, and that the struggle which may take
+place between two such powers as these, although invisible to our feeble
+eyes, is not a less mortal struggle than that in which our external man
+compels us to engage.
+
+But these considerations belong to a different department of study from
+that in which we are now engaged; these subjects we intend to deal with
+in a future publication; some of our friends are already acquainted with
+one of the most important,--that, namely, entitled "THE PATHOLOGY
+OF SOCIAL LIFE, _or Meditations mathematical, physical, chemical and
+transcendental on the manifestations of thought, taken under all the
+forms which are produced by the state of society, whether by living,
+marriage, conduct, veterinary medicine, or by speech and action, etc._,"
+in which all these great questions are fully discussed. The aim of this
+brief metaphysical observation is only to remind you that the higher
+classes of society reason too well to admit of their being attacked by
+any other than intellectual arms.
+
+Although it is true that tender and delicate souls are found enveloped
+in a body of metallic hardness, at the same time there are souls of
+bronze enveloped in bodies so supple and capricious that their grace
+attracts the friendship of others, and their beauty calls for a caress.
+But if you flatter the exterior man with your hand, the _Homo duplex_,
+the interior man, to use an expression of Buffon, immediately rouses
+himself and rends you with his keen points of contact.
+
+This description of a special class of human creatures, which we hope
+you will not run up against during your earthly journey, presents a
+picture of what your wife may be to you. Every one of the sentiments
+which nature has endowed your heart with, in their gentlest form, will
+become a dagger in the hand of your wife. You will be stabbed every
+moment, and you will necessarily succumb; for your love will flow like
+blood from every wound.
+
+This is the last struggle, but for her it also means victory.
+
+In order to carry out the distinction which we think we have established
+among three sorts of feminine temperament, we will divide this
+Meditation into three parts, under the following titles:
+
+
+ 1. OF HEADACHES.
+ 2. OF NERVOUS AFFECTATIONS.
+ 3. OF MODESTY, IN ITS CONNECTION WITH MARRIAGE.
+
+
+ 1. OF HEADACHES.
+
+Women are constantly the dupes or the victims of excessive sensibility;
+but we have already demonstrated that with the greater number of them
+this delicacy of soul must needs, almost without their knowing it,
+receive many rude blows, from the very fact of their marriage. (See
+Meditations entitled _The Predestined_ and _Of the Honeymoon_.) Most of
+the means of defence instinctively employed by husbands are nothing but
+traps set for the liveliness of feminine affections.
+
+Now the moment comes when the wife, during the Civil War, traces by a
+single act of thought the history of her moral life, and is irritated on
+perceiving the prodigious way in which you have taken advantage of her
+sensibility. It is very rarely that women, moved either by an innate
+feeling for revenge, which they themselves can never explain, or by
+their instinct of domination, fail to discover that this quality in
+their natural machinery, when brought into play against the man, is
+inferior to no other instrument for obtaining ascendancy over him.
+
+With admirable cleverness, they proceed to find out what chords in the
+hearts of their husbands are most easily touched; and when once they
+discover this secret, they eagerly proceed to put it into practice;
+then, like a child with a mechanical toy, whose spring excites their
+curiosity, they go on employing it, carelessly calling into play the
+movements of the instrument, and satisfied simply with their success in
+doing so. If they kill you, they will mourn over you with the best
+grace in the world, as the most virtuous, the most excellent, the most
+sensible of men.
+
+In this way your wife will first arm herself with that generous
+sentiment which leads us to respect those who are in pain. The man
+most disposed to quarrel with a woman full of life and health becomes
+helpless before a woman who is weak and feeble. If your wife has not
+attained the end of her secret designs, by means of those various
+methods already described, she will quickly seize this all-powerful
+weapon. In virtue of this new strategic method, you will see the young
+girl, so strong in life and beauty, whom you had wedded in her flower,
+metamorphosing herself into a pale and sickly woman.
+
+Now headache is an affection which affords infinite resources to a
+woman. This malady, which is the easiest of all to feign, for it is
+destitute of any apparent symptom, merely obliges her to say: "I have a
+headache." A woman trifles with you and there is no one in the world who
+can contradict her skull, whose impenetrable bones defy touch or ocular
+test. Moreover, headache is, in our opinion, the queen of maladies, the
+pleasantest and the most terrible weapon employed by wives against their
+husbands. There are some coarse and violent men who have been taught
+the tricks of women by their mistresses, in the happy hours of their
+celibacy, and so flatter themselves that they are never to be caught
+by this vulgar trap. But all their efforts, all their arguments end by
+being vanquished before the magic of these words: "I have a headache."
+If a husband complains, or ventures on a reproach, if he tries to resist
+the power of this _Il buondo cani_ of marriage, he is lost.
+
+Imagine a young woman, voluptuously lying on a divan, her head softly
+supported by a cushion, one hand hanging down; on a small table close at
+hand is her glass of lime-water. Now place by her side a burly husband.
+He has made five or six turns round the room; but each time he has
+turned on his heels to begin his walk all over again, the little invalid
+has made a slight movement of her eyebrows in a vain attempt to remind
+him that the slightest noise fatigues her. At last he musters all his
+courage and utters a protest against her pretended malady, in the bold
+phrase:
+
+"And have you really a headache?"
+
+At these words the young woman slightly raises her languid head, lifts
+an arm, which feebly falls back again upon her divan, raises her eyes to
+the ceiling, raises all that she has power to raise; then darting at you
+a leaden glance, she says in a voice of remarkable feebleness:
+
+"Oh! What can be the matter with me? I suffer the agonies of death! And
+this is all the comfort you give me! Ah! you men, it is plainly seen
+that nature has not given you the task of bringing children into the
+world. What egoists and tyrants you are! You take us in all the beauty
+of our youth, fresh, rosy, with tapering waist, and then all is well!
+When your pleasures have ruined the blooming gifts which we received
+from nature, you never forgive us for having forfeited them to you! That
+was all understood. You will allow us to have neither the virtues nor
+the sufferings of our condition. You must needs have children, and we
+pass many nights in taking care of them. But child-bearing has ruined
+our health, and left behind the germs of serious maladies.--Oh, what
+pain I suffer! There are few women who are not subject to headaches; but
+your wife must be an exception. You even laugh at our sufferings; that
+is generosity!--please don't walk about--I should not have expected this
+of you!--Stop the clock; the click of the pendulum rings in my head.
+Thanks! Oh, what an unfortunate creature I am! Have you a scent-bottle
+with you? Yes, oh! for pity's sake, allow me to suffer in peace, and go
+away; for this scent splits my head!"
+
+What can you say in reply? Do you not hear within you a voice which
+cries, "And what if she is actually suffering?" Moreover, almost all
+husbands evacuate the field of battle very quietly, while their wives
+watch them from the corner of their eyes, marching off on tip-toe and
+closing the door quietly on the chamber henceforth to be considered
+sacred by them.
+
+Such is the headache, true or false, which is patronized at your home.
+Then the headache begins to play a regular role in the bosom of
+your family. It is a theme on which a woman can play many admirable
+variations. She sets it forth in every key. With the aid of the headache
+alone a wife can make a husband desperate. A headache seizes madame when
+she chooses, where she chooses, and as much as she chooses. There
+are headaches of five days, of ten minutes, periodic or intermittent
+headaches.
+
+You sometimes find your wife in bed, in pain, helpless, and the blinds
+of her room are closed. The headache has imposed silence on every one,
+from the regions of the porter's lodge, where he is cutting wood, even
+to the garret of your groom, from which he is throwing down innocent
+bundles of straw. Believing in this headache, you leave the house, but
+on your return you find that madame has decamped! Soon madame returns,
+fresh and ruddy:
+
+"The doctor came," she says, "and advised me to take exercise, and I
+find myself much better!"
+
+Another day you wish to enter madame's room.
+
+"Oh, sir," says the maid, showing the most profound astonishment,
+"madame has her usual headache, and I have never seen her in such pain!
+The doctor has been sent for."
+
+"You are a happy man," said Marshal Augereau to General R-----, "to have
+such a pretty wife!"
+
+"To have!" replied the other. "If I have my wife ten days in the
+year, that is about all. These confounded women have always either the
+headache or some other thing!"
+
+The headache in France takes the place of the sandals, which, in Spain,
+the Confessor leaves at the door of the chamber in which he is with his
+penitent.
+
+If your wife, foreseeing some hostile intentions on your part, wishes
+to make herself as inviolable as the charter, she immediately gets up
+a little headache performance. She goes to bed in a most deliberate
+fashion, she utters shrieks which rend the heart of the hearer. She goes
+gracefully through a series of gesticulations so cleverly executed that
+you might think her a professional contortionist. Now what man is there
+so inconsiderate as to dare to speak to a suffering woman about desires
+which, in him, prove the most perfect health? Politeness alone demands
+of him perfect silence. A woman knows under these circumstances that by
+means of this all-powerful headache, she can at her will paste on her
+bed the placard which sends back home the amateurs who have been allured
+by the announcement of the Comedie Francaise, when they read the words:
+"Closed through the sudden indisposition of Mademoiselle Mars."
+
+O headache, protectress of love, tariff of married life, buckler against
+which all married desires expire! O mighty headache! Can it be possible
+that lovers have never sung thy praises, personified thee, or raised
+thee to the skies? O magic headache, O delusive headache, blest be the
+brain that first invented thee! Shame on the doctor who shall find out
+thy preventive! Yes, thou art the only ill that women bless, doubtless
+through gratitude for the good things thou dispensest to them, O
+deceitful headache! O magic headache!
+
+
+ 2. OF NERVOUS AFFECTATIONS.
+
+There is, however, a power which is superior even to that of the
+headache; and we must avow to the glory of France, that this power is
+one of the most recent which has been won by Parisian genius. As in the
+case with all the most useful discoveries of art and science, no one
+knows to whose intellect it is due. Only, it is certain that it was
+towards the middle of the last century that "Vapors" made their first
+appearance in France. Thus while Papin was applying the force of
+vaporized water in mechanical problems, a French woman, whose name
+unhappily is unknown, had the glory of endowing her sex with the faculty
+of vaporizing their fluids. Very soon the prodigious influence obtained
+by vapors was extended to the nerves; it was thus in passing from fibre
+to fibre that the science of neurology was born. This admirable science
+has since then led such men as Philips and other clever physiologists
+to the discovery of the nervous fluid in its circulation; they are now
+perhaps on the eve of identifying its organs, and the secret of its
+origin and of its evaporation. And thus, thanks to certain quackeries of
+this kind, we may be enabled some day to penetrate the mysteries of that
+unknown power which we have already called more than once in the present
+book, the _Will_. But do not let us trespass on the territory of medical
+philosophy. Let us consider the nerves and the vapors solely in their
+connection with marriage.
+
+Victims of Neurosis (a pathological term under which are comprised all
+affections of the nervous system) suffer in two ways, as far as married
+women are concerned; for our physiology has the loftiest disdain for
+medical classifications. Thus we recognize only:
+
+
+ 1. CLASSIC NEUROSIS.
+ 2. ROMANTIC NEUROSIS.
+
+
+The classic affection has something bellicose and excitable on it.
+Those who thus suffer are as violent in their antics as pythonesses,
+as frantic as _monads_, as excited as _bacchantes_; it is a revival of
+antiquity, pure and simple.
+
+The romantic sufferers are mild and plaintive as the ballads sung amid
+the mists of Scotland. They are pallid as young girls carried to their
+bier by the dance or by love; they are eminently elegiac and they
+breathe all the melancholy of the North.
+
+That woman with black hair, with piercing eye, with high color, with
+dry lips and a powerful hand, will become excited and convulsive; she
+represents the genius of classic neurosis; while a young blonde woman,
+with white skin, is the genius of romantic neurosis; to one belongs the
+empire gained by nerves, to the other the empire gained by vapors.
+
+Very frequently a husband, when he comes home, finds his wife in tears.
+
+"What is the matter, my darling?"
+
+"It is nothing."
+
+"But you are in tears!"
+
+"I weep without knowing why. I am quite sad! I saw faces in the clouds,
+and those faces never appear to me except on the eve of some disaster--I
+think I must be going to die."
+
+Then she talks to you in a low voice of her dead father, of her dead
+uncle, of her dead grandfather, of her dead cousin. She invokes all
+these mournful shades, she feels as if she had all their sicknesses, she
+is attacked with all the pains they felt, she feels her heart palpitate
+with excessive violence, she feels her spleen swelling. You say to
+yourself, with a self-satisfied air:
+
+"I know exactly what this is all about!"
+
+And then you try to soothe her; but you find her a woman who yawns like
+an open box, who complains of her chest, who begins to weep anew, who
+implores you to leave her to her melancholy and her mournful memories.
+She talks to you about her last wishes, follows her own funeral, is
+buried, plants over her tomb the green canopy of a weeping willow, and
+at the very time when you would like to raise a joyful epithalamium,
+you find an epitaph to greet you all in black. Your wish to console her
+melts away in the cloud of Ixion.
+
+There are women of undoubted fidelity who in this way extort from their
+feeling husbands cashmere shawls, diamonds, the payment of their debts,
+or the rent of a box at the theatre; but almost always vapors are
+employed as decisive weapons in Civil War.
+
+On the plea of her spinal affection or of her weak chest, a woman
+takes pains to seek out some distraction or other; you see her dressing
+herself in soft fabrics like an invalid with all the symptoms of spleen;
+she never goes out because an intimate friend, her mother or her sister,
+has tried to tear her away from that divan which monopolizes her and
+on which she spends her life in improvising elegies. Madame is going to
+spend a fortnight in the country because the doctor orders it. In short,
+she goes where she likes and does what she likes. Is it possible that
+there can be a husband so brutal as to oppose such desires, by hindering
+a wife from going to seek a cure for her cruel sufferings? For it
+has been established after many long discussions that in the nerves
+originate the most fearful torture.
+
+But it is especially in bed that vapors play their part. There when a
+woman has not a headache she has her vapors; and when she has neither
+vapors nor headache, she is under the protection of the girdle of Venus,
+which, as you know, is a myth.
+
+Among the women who fight with you the battle of vapors, are some more
+blonde, more delicate, more full of feeling than others, and who possess
+the gift of tears. How admirably do they know how to weep! They weep
+when they like, as they like and as much as they like. They organize
+a system of offensive warfare which consists of manifesting sublime
+resignation, and they gain victories which are all the more brilliant,
+inasmuch as they remain all the time in excellent health.
+
+Does a husband, irritated beyond all measure, at last express his wishes
+to them? They regard him with an air of submission, bow their heads and
+keep silence. This pantomime almost always puts a husband to rout. In
+conjugal struggles of this kind, a man prefers a woman should speak and
+defend herself, for then he may show elation or annoyance; but as for
+these women, not a word. Their silence distresses you and you experience
+a sort of remorse, like the murderer who, when he finds his victim
+offers no resistance, trembles with redoubled fear. He would prefer to
+slay him in self-defence. You return to the subject. As you draw near,
+your wife wipes away her tears and hides her handkerchief, so as to
+let you see that she has been weeping. You are melted, you implore your
+little Caroline to speak, your sensibility has been touched and you
+forget everything; then she sobs while she speaks, and speaks while
+she sobs. This is a sort of machine eloquence; she deafens you with
+her tears, with her words which come jerked out in confusion; it is the
+clapper and torrent of a mill.
+
+French women and especially Parisians possess in a marvelous degree
+the secret by which such scenes are enacted, and to these scenes their
+voices, their sex, their toilet, their manner give a wonderful charm.
+How often do the tears upon the cheeks of these adorable actresses give
+way to a piquant smile, when they see their husbands hasten to break the
+silk lace, the weak fastening of their corsets, or to restore the comb
+which holds together the tresses of their hair and the bunch of golden
+ringlets always on the point of falling down?
+
+But how all these tricks of modernity pale before the genius of
+antiquity, before nervous attacks which are violent, before the Pyrrhic
+dance of married life! Oh! how many hopes for a lover are there in the
+vivacity of those convulsive movements, in the fire of those glances,
+in the strength of those limbs, beautiful even in contortion! It is then
+that a woman is carried away like an impetuous wind, darts forth like
+the flames of a conflagration, exhibits a movement like a billow which
+glides over the white pebbles. She is overcome with excess of love, she
+sees the future, she is the seer who prophesies, but above all, she sees
+the present moment and tramples on her husband, and impresses him with a
+sort of terror.
+
+The sight of his wife flinging off vigorous men as if they were so many
+feathers, is often enough to deter a man from ever striving to wrong
+her. He will be like the child who, having pulled the trigger of some
+terrific engine, has ever afterwards an incredible respect for the
+smallest spring. I have known a man, gentle and amiable in his ways,
+whose eyes were fixed upon those of his wife, exactly as if he had been
+put into a lion's cage, and some one had said to him that he must not
+irritate the beast, if he would escape with his life.
+
+Nervous attacks of this kind are very fatiguing and become every day
+more rare. Romanticism, however, has maintained its ground.
+
+Sometimes, we meet with phlegmatic husbands, those men whose love is
+long enduring, because they store up their emotions, whose genius gets
+the upper hand of these headaches and nervous attacks; but these sublime
+creatures are rare. Faithful disciples of the blessed St. Thomas,
+who wished to put his finger into the wound, they are endowed with an
+incredulity worthy of an atheist. Imperturbable in the midst of all
+these fraudulent headaches and all these traps set by neurosis, they
+concentrate their attention on the comedy which is being played before
+them, they examine the actress, they search for one of the springs that
+sets her going; and when they have discovered the mechanism of
+this display, they arm themselves by giving a slight impulse to the
+puppet-valve, and thus easily assure themselves either of the reality of
+the disease or the artifices of these conjugal mummeries.
+
+But if by study which is almost superhuman in its intensity a husband
+escapes all the artifices which lawless and untamable love suggests to
+women, he will beyond doubt be overcome by the employment of a terrible
+weapon, the last which a woman would resort to, for she never destroys
+with her own hands her empire over her husband without some sort of
+repugnance. But this is a poisoned weapon as powerful as the fatal knife
+of the executioner. This reflection brings us to the last paragraph of
+the present Meditation.
+
+
+ 3. OF MODESTY, IN ITS CONNECTION WITH MARRIAGE.
+
+Before taking up the subject of modesty, it may perhaps be necessary
+to inquire whether there is such a thing. Is it anything in a woman but
+well understood coquetry? Is it anything but a sentiment that claims the
+right, on a woman's part, to dispose of her own body as she chooses, as
+one may well believe, when we consider that half the women in the
+world go almost naked? Is it anything but a social chimera, as Diderot
+supposed, reminding us that this sentiment always gives way before
+sickness and before misery?
+
+Justice may be done to all these questions.
+
+An ingenious author has recently put forth the view that men are much
+more modest than women. He supports this contention by a great mass
+of surgical experiences; but, in order that his conclusions merit
+our attention, it would be necessary that for a certain time men were
+subjected to treatment by women surgeons.
+
+The opinion of Diderot is of still less weight.
+
+To deny the existence of modesty, because it disappears during those
+crises in which almost all human sentiments are annihilated, is as
+unreasonable as to deny that life exists because death sooner or later
+comes.
+
+Let us grant, then, that one sex has as much modesty as the other, and
+let us inquire in what modesty consists.
+
+Rousseau makes modesty the outcome of all those coquetries which females
+display before males. This opinion appears to us equally mistaken.
+
+The writers of the eighteenth century have doubtless rendered immense
+services to society; but their philosophy, based as it is upon
+sensualism, has never penetrated any deeper than the human epidermis.
+They have only considered the exterior universe; and so they have
+retarded, for some time, the moral development of man and the progress
+of science which will always draw its first principles from the Gospel,
+principles hereafter to be best understood by the fervent disciples of
+the Son of Man.
+
+The study of thought's mysteries, the discovery of those organs which
+belong to the human soul, the geometry of its forces, the phenomena of
+its active power, the appreciation of the faculty by which we seem
+to have an independent power of bodily movement, so as to transport
+ourselves whither we will and to see without the aid of bodily
+organs,--in a word the laws of thought's dynamic and those of its
+physical influence,--these things will fall to the lot of the next
+century, as their portion in the treasury of human sciences. And perhaps
+we, of the present time, are merely occupied in quarrying the enormous
+blocks which later on some mighty genius will employ in the building of
+a glorious edifice.
+
+Thus the error of Rousseau is simply the error of his age. He explains
+modesty by the relations of different human beings to each other instead
+of explaining it by the moral relations of each one with himself.
+Modesty is no more susceptible of analysis than conscience; and this
+perhaps is another way of saying that modesty is the conscience of the
+body; for while conscience directs our sentiments and the least movement
+of our thoughts towards the good, modesty presides over external
+movements. The actions which clash with our interests and thus disobey
+the laws of conscience wound us more than any other; and if they are
+repeated call forth our hatred. It is the same with acts which violate
+modesty in their relations to love, which is nothing but the expression
+of our whole sensibility. If extreme modesty is one of the conditions on
+which the reality of marriage is based, as we have tried to prove [See
+_Conjugal Catechism, Meditation IV._], it is evident that immodesty will
+destroy it. But this position, which would require long deductions for
+the acceptance of the physiologist, women generally apply, as it were,
+mechanically; for society, which exaggerates everything for the benefit
+of the exterior man, develops this sentiment of women from childhood,
+and around it are grouped almost every other sentiment. Moreover, the
+moment that this boundless veil, which takes away the natural brutality
+from the least gesture, is dragged down, woman disappears. Heart,
+mind, love, grace, all are in ruins. In a situation where the virginal
+innocence of a daughter of Tahiti is most brilliant, the European
+becomes detestable. In this lies the last weapon which a wife seizes,
+in order to escape from the sentiment which her husband still fosters
+towards her. She is powerful because she had made herself loathsome; and
+this woman, who would count it as the greatest misfortune that her lover
+should be permitted to see the slightest mystery of her toilette, is
+delighted to exhibit herself to her husband in the most disadvantageous
+situation that can possibly be imagined.
+
+It is by means of this rigorous system that she will try to banish
+you from the conjugal bed. Mrs. Shandy may be taken to mean us harm in
+bidding the father of Tristram wind up the clock; so long as your wife
+is not blamed for the pleasure she takes in interrupting you by the most
+imperative questions. Where there formerly was movement and life is now
+lethargy and death. An act of love becomes a transaction long discussed
+and almost, as it were, settled by notarial seal. But we have in another
+place shown that we never refuse to seize upon the comic element in a
+matrimonial crisis, although here we may be permitted to disdain the
+diversion which the muse of Verville and of Marshall have found in the
+treachery of feminine manoeuvres, the insulting audacity of their talk,
+amid the cold-blooded cynicism which they exhibit in certain situations.
+It is too sad to laugh at, and too funny to mourn over. When a woman
+resorts to such extreme measures, worlds at once separate her from her
+husband. Nevertheless, there are some women to whom Heaven has given the
+gift of being charming under all circumstances, who know how to put a
+certain witty and comic grace into these performances, and who have
+such smooth tongues, to use the expression of Sully, that they obtain
+forgiveness for their caprices and their mockeries, and never estrange
+the hearts of their husbands.
+
+What soul is so robust, what man so violently in love as to persist
+in his passion, after ten years of marriage, in presence of a wife who
+loves him no longer, who gives him proofs of this every moment, who
+repulses him, who deliberately shows herself bitter, caustic, sickly and
+capricious, and who will abjure her vows of elegance and cleanliness,
+rather than not see her husband turn away from her; in presence of a
+wife who will stake the success of her schemes upon the horror caused by
+her indecency?
+
+All this, my dear sir, is so much more horrible because--
+
+
+ XCII.
+ LOVERS IGNORE MODESTY.
+
+
+We have now arrived at the last infernal circle in the Divine Comedy
+of Marriage. We are at the very bottom of Hell. There is something
+inexpressibly terrible in the situation of a married woman at the moment
+when unlawful love turns her away from her duties as mother and wife. As
+Diderot has very well put it, "infidelity in a woman is like unbelief in
+a priest, the last extreme of human failure; for her it is the greatest
+of social crimes, since it implies in her every other crime besides, and
+indeed either a wife profanes her lawless love by continuing to belong
+to her husband, or she breaks all the ties which attach her to her
+family, by giving herself over altogether to her lover. She ought to
+choose between the two courses, for her sole possible excuse lies in the
+intensity of her love."
+
+She lives then between the claims of two obligations. It is a dilemma;
+she will work either the unhappiness of her lover, if he is sincere in
+his passion, or that of her husband, if she is still beloved by him.
+
+It is to this frightful dilemma of feminine life that all the strange
+inconsistencies of women's conduct is to be attributed. In this lies the
+origin of all their lies, all their perfidies; here is the secret of all
+their mysteries. It is something to make one shudder. Moreover, even as
+simply based upon cold-blooded calculations, the conduct of a woman who
+accepts the unhappiness which attends virtue and scorns the bliss which
+is bought by crime, is a hundred times more reasonable. Nevertheless,
+almost all women will risk suffering in the future and ages of
+anguish for the ecstasy of one half hour. If the human feeling of
+self-preservation, if the fear of death does not check them, how
+fruitless must be the laws which send them for two years to the
+Madelonnettes? O sublime infamy! And when one comes to think that he for
+whom these sacrifices are to be made is one of our brethren, a gentleman
+to whom we would not trust our fortune, if we had one, a man who buttons
+his coat just as all of us do, it is enough to make one burst into a
+roar of laughter so loud, that starting from the Luxembourg it would
+pass over the whole of Paris and startle an ass browsing in the pasture
+at Montmartre.
+
+It will perhaps appear extraordinary that in speaking of marriage we
+have touched upon so many subjects; but marriage is not only the whole
+of human life, it is the whole of two human lives. Now just as the
+addition of a figure to the drawing of a lottery multiplies the chances
+a hundredfold, so one single life united to another life multiplies by a
+startling progression the risks of human life, which are in any case so
+manifold.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXVII. OF THE LAST SYMPTOMS.
+
+The author of this book has met in the world so many people possessed by
+a fanatic passion for a knowledge of the mean time, for watches with a
+second hand, and for exactness in the details of their existence, that
+he has considered this Meditation too necessary for the tranquillity of
+a great number of husbands, to be omitted. It would have been cruel to
+leave men, who are possessed with the passion for learning the hour of
+the day, without a compass whereby to estimate the last variations in
+the matrimonial zodiac, and to calculate the precise moment when the
+sign of the Minotaur appears on the horizon. The knowledge of conjugal
+time would require a whole book for its exposition, so fine and delicate
+are the observations required by the task. The master admits that his
+extreme youth has not permitted him as yet to note and verify more than
+a few symptoms; but he feels a just pride, on his arrival at the end of
+his difficult enterprise, from the consciousness that he is leaving to
+his successors a new field of research; and that in a matter apparently
+so trite, not only was there much to be said, but also very many points
+are found remaining which may yet be brought into the clear light of
+observation. He therefore presents here without order or connection the
+rough outlines which he has so far been able to execute, in the hope
+that later he may have leisure to co-ordinate them and to arrange
+them in a complete system. If he has been so far kept back in the
+accomplishment of a task of supreme national importance, he believes,
+he may say, without incurring the charge of vanity, that he has here
+indicated the natural division of those symptoms. They are necessarily
+of two kinds: the unicorns and the bicorns. The unicorn Minotaur is the
+least mischievous. The two culprits confine themselves to a platonic
+love, in which their passion, at least, leaves no visible traces among
+posterity; while the bicorn Minotaur is unhappiness with all its fruits.
+
+We have marked with an asterisk the symptoms which seem to concern the
+latter kind.
+
+
+
+
+MINOTAURIC OBSERVATIONS.
+
+
+ I.
+
+*When, after remaining a long time aloof from her husband, a woman makes
+overtures of a very marked character in order to attract his love, she
+acts in accordance with the axiom of maritime law, which says: _The flag
+protects the cargo_.
+
+
+ II.
+
+A woman is at a ball, one of her friends comes up to her and says:
+
+"Your husband has much wit."
+
+"You find it so?"
+
+
+ III.
+
+Your wife discovers that it is time to send your boy to a boarding
+school, with whom, a little time ago, she was never going to part.
+
+
+ IV.
+
+*In Lord Abergavenny's suit for divorce, the _valet de chambre_ deposed
+that "the countess had such a detestation of all that belonged to my
+lord that he had very often seen her burning the scraps of paper which
+he had touched in her room."
+
+
+ V.
+
+If an indolent woman becomes energetic, if a woman who formerly hated
+study learns a foreign language; in short, every appearance of a
+complete change in character is a decisive symptom.
+
+
+ VI.
+
+The woman who is happy in her affections does not go much into the
+world.
+
+
+ VII.
+
+The woman who has a lover becomes very indulgent in judging others.
+
+
+ VIII.
+
+*A husband gives to his wife a hundred crowns a month for dress; and,
+taking everything into account, she spends at least five hundred francs
+without being a sou in debt; the husband is robbed every night with a
+high hand by escalade, but without burglarious breaking in.
+
+
+ IX.
+
+*A married couple slept in the same bed; madame was always sick. Now
+they sleep apart, she has no more headache, and her health becomes more
+brilliant than ever; an alarming symptom!
+
+
+ X.
+
+A woman who was a sloven suddenly develops extreme nicety in her attire.
+There is a Minotaur at hand!
+
+
+ XI.
+
+"Ah! my dear, I know no greater torment than not to be understood."
+
+"Yes, my dear, but when one is--"
+
+"Oh, that scarcely ever happens."
+
+"I agree with you that it very seldom does. Ah! it is great happiness,
+but there are not two people in the world who are able to understand
+you."
+
+
+ XII.
+
+*The day when a wife behaves nicely to her husband--all is over.
+
+
+ XIII.
+
+I asked her: "Where have you been, Jeanne?"
+
+"I have been to your friend's to get your plate that you left there."
+
+"Ah, indeed! everything is still mine," I said. The following year I
+repeated the question under similar circumstances.
+
+"I have been to bring back our plate."
+
+"Well, well, part of the things are still mine," I said. But after that,
+when I questioned her, she spoke very differently.
+
+"You wish to know everything, like great people, and you have only
+three shirts. I went to get my plate from my friend's house, where I had
+stopped."
+
+"I see," I said, "nothing is left me."
+
+
+ XIV.
+
+Do not trust a woman who talks of her virtue.
+
+
+ XV.
+
+Some one said to the Duchess of Chaulnes, whose life was despaired of:
+
+"The Duke of Chaulnes would like to see you once more."
+
+"Is he there?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Let him wait; he shall come in with the sacraments." This minotauric
+anecdote has been published by Chamfort, but we quote it here as
+typical.
+
+
+ XVI.
+
+*Some women try to persuade their husbands that they have duties to
+perform towards certain persons.
+
+"I am sure that you ought to pay a visit to such and such a man.... We
+cannot avoid asking such and such a man to dinner."
+
+
+ XVII.
+
+"Come, my son, hold yourself straight: try to acquire good manners!
+Watch such and such a man! See how he walks! Notice the way in which he
+dresses."
+
+
+ XVIII.
+
+When a woman utters the name of a man but twice a day, there is perhaps
+some uncertainty about her feelings toward him--but if thrice?--Oh! oh!
+
+
+ XIX.
+
+When a woman goes home with a man who is neither a lawyer nor a
+minister, to the door of his apartment, she is very imprudent.
+
+
+ XX.
+
+It is a terrible day when a husband fails to explain to himself the
+motive of some action of his wife.
+
+
+ XXI.
+
+*The woman who allows herself to be found out deserves her fate.
+
+
+
+What should be the conduct of a husband, when he recognizes a last
+symptom which leaves no doubt as to the infidelity of his wife? There
+are only two courses open; that of resignation or that of vengeance;
+there is no third course. If vengeance is decided upon, it should be
+complete.
+
+The husband who does not separate himself forever from his wife is a
+veritable simpleton. If a wife and husband think themselves fit for
+that union of friendship which exists between men, it is odious in the
+husband to make his wife feel his superiority over her.
+
+Here are some anecdotes, most of them as yet unpublished, which indicate
+pretty plainly, in my opinion, the different shades of conduct to be
+observed by a husband in like case.
+
+M. de Roquemont slept once a month in the chamber of his wife, and he
+used to say, as he went away:
+
+"I wash my hands of anything that may happen."
+
+There is something disgusting in that remark, and perhaps something
+profound in its suggestion of conjugal policy.
+
+A diplomat, when he saw his wife's lover enter, left his study and,
+going to his wife's chamber, said to the two:
+
+"I hope you will at least refrain from fighting."
+
+This was good humor.
+
+M. de Boufflers was asked what he would do if on returning after a long
+absence he found his wife with child?
+
+"I would order my night dress and slippers to be taken to her room."
+
+This was magnanimity.
+
+"Madame, if this man ill treats you when you are alone, it is your
+own fault; but I will not permit him to behave ill towards you in my
+presence, for this is to fail in politeness in me."
+
+This was nobility.
+
+The sublime is reached in this connection when the square cap of the
+judge is placed by the magistrate at the foot of the bed wherein the two
+culprits are asleep.
+
+There are some fine ways of taking vengeance. Mirabeau has admirably
+described in one of the books he wrote to make a living the mournful
+resignation of that Italian lady who was condemned by her husband to
+perish with him in the Maremma.
+
+
+
+
+LAST AXIOMS.
+
+
+ XCIII.
+It is no act of vengeance to surprise a wife and her lover and to kill
+them locked in each other's arms; it is a great favor to them both.
+
+
+ XCIV.
+ A husband will be best avenged by his wife's lover.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXVIII. OF COMPENSATIONS.
+
+The marital catastrophe which a certain number of husbands cannot avoid,
+almost always forms the closing scene of the drama. At that point all
+around you is tranquil. Your resignation, if you are resigned, has the
+power of awakening keen remorse in the soul of your wife and of her
+lover; for their happiness teaches them the depth of the wound they have
+inflicted upon you. You are, you may be sure, a third element in all
+their pleasures. The principle of kindliness and goodness which lies at
+the foundation of the human soul, is not so easily repressed as
+people think; moreover the two people who are causing you tortures are
+precisely those for whom you wish the most good.
+
+In the conversations so sweetly familiar which link together the
+pleasures of love, and form in some way to lovers the caresses of
+thought, your wife often says to your rival:
+
+"Well, I assure you, Auguste, that in any case I should like to see my
+poor husband happy; for at bottom he is good; if he were not my husband,
+but were only my brother, there are so many things I would do to please
+him! He loves me, and--his friendship is irksome to me."
+
+"Yes, he is a fine fellow!"
+
+Then you become an object of respect to the celibate, who would yield to
+you all the indemnity possible for the wrong he has done you; but he
+is repelled by the disdainful pride which gives a tone to your whole
+conversation, and is stamped upon your face.
+
+So that actually, during the first moments of the Minotaur's arrival,
+a man is like an actor who feels awkward in a theatre where he is not
+accustomed to appear. It is very difficult to bear the affront with
+dignity; but though generosity is rare, a model husband is sometimes
+found to possess it.
+
+Eventually you are little by little won over by the charming way in
+which your wife makes herself agreeable to you. Madame assumes a tone of
+friendship which she never henceforth abandons. The pleasant atmosphere
+of your home is one of the chief compensations which renders the
+Minotaur less odious to a husband. But as it is natural to man to
+habituate himself to the hardest conditions, in spite of the sentiment
+of outraged nobility which nothing can change, you are gradually induced
+by a fascination whose power is constantly around you, to accept the
+little amenities of your position.
+
+Suppose that conjugal misfortune has fallen upon an epicure. He
+naturally demands the consolations which suit his taste. His sense of
+pleasure takes refuge in other gratifications, and forms other
+habits. You shape your life in accordance with the enjoyment of other
+sensations.
+
+One day, returning from your government office, after lingering for a
+long time before the rich and tasteful book shop of Chevet, hovering
+in suspense between the hundred francs of expense, and the joys of a
+Strasbourg _pate de fois gras_, you are struck dumb on finding this
+_pate_ proudly installed on the sideboard of your dining-room. Is this
+the vision offered by some gastronomic mirage? In this doubting mood you
+approach with firm step, for a _pate_ is a living creature, and seem to
+neigh as you scent afar off the truffles whose perfumes escape through
+the gilded enclosure. You stoop over it two distinct times; all the
+nerve centres of your palate have a soul; you taste the delights of a
+genuine feast, etc.; and during this ecstasy a feeling of remorse seizes
+upon you, and you go to your wife's room.
+
+"Really, my dear girl, we have not means which warrant our buying
+_pates_."
+
+"But it costs us nothing!"
+
+"Oh! ho!"
+
+"Yes, it is M. Achille's brother who sent it to him."
+
+You catch sight of M. Achille in a corner. The celibate greets you, he
+is radiant on seeing that you have accepted the _pate_. You look at
+your wife, who blushes; you stroke your beard a few times; and, as
+you express no thanks, the two lovers divine your acceptance of the
+compensation.
+
+A sudden change in the ministry takes place. A husband, who is
+Councillor of State, trembles for fear of being wiped from the roll,
+when the night before he had been made director-general; all the
+ministers are opposed to him and he has turned Constitutionalist.
+Foreseeing his disgrace he has betaken himself to Auteuil, in search of
+consolation from an old friend who quotes Horace and Tibullus to him.
+On returning home he sees the table laid as if to receive the most
+influential men of the assembly.
+
+"In truth, madame," he says with acrimony as he enters his wife's
+room, where she is finishing her toilette, "you seem to have lost your
+habitual tact. This is a nice time to be giving dinner parties! Twenty
+persons will soon learn--"
+
+"That you are director-general!" she cries, showing him a royal
+despatch.
+
+He is thunderstruck. He takes the letter, he turns it now one way, now
+another; he opens it. He sits down and spreads it out.
+
+"I well know," he says, "that justice would be rendered me under
+whatever ministers I served."
+
+"Yes, my dear! But M. Villeplaine has answered for you with his life,
+and his eminence the Cardinal de ----- of whom he is the--"
+
+"M. de Villeplaine?"
+
+This is such a munificent recompense, that the husband adds with the
+smile of a director-general:
+
+"Why, deuce take it, my dear, this is your doing!"
+
+"Ah! don't thank me for it; Adolphe did it from personal attachment to
+you."
+
+On a certain evening a poor husband was kept at home by a pouring rain,
+or tired, perhaps, of going to spend his evening in play, at the cafe,
+or in the world, and sick of all this he felt himself carried away by an
+impulse to follow his wife to the conjugal chamber. There he sank into
+an arm-chair and like any sultan awaited his coffee, as if he would say:
+
+"Well, after all, she is my wife!"
+
+The fair siren herself prepares the favorite draught; she strains it
+with special care, sweetens it, tastes it, and hands it to him; then,
+with a smile, she ventures like a submissive odalisque to make a joke,
+with a view to smoothing the wrinkles on the brow of her lord and
+master. Up to that moment he had thought his wife stupid; but on hearing
+a sally as witty as that which even you would cajole with, madame, he
+raises his head in the way peculiar to dogs who are hunting the hare.
+
+"Where the devil did she get that--but it's a random shot!" he says to
+himself.
+
+From the pinnacle of his own greatness he makes a piquant repartee.
+Madame retorts, the conversation becomes as lively as it is interesting,
+and this husband, a very superior man, is quite astonished to discover
+the wit of his wife, in other respects, an accomplished woman; the
+right word occurs to her with wonderful readiness; her tact and keenness
+enable her to meet an innuendo with charming originality. She is no
+longer the same woman. She notices the effect she produces upon her
+husband, and both to avenge herself for his neglect and to win his
+admiration for the lover from whom she has received, so to speak, the
+treasures of her intellect, she exerts herself, and becomes actually
+dazzling. The husband, better able than any one else to appreciate a
+species of compensation which may have some influence on his future, is
+led to think that the passions of women are really necessary to their
+mental culture.
+
+But how shall we treat those compensations which are most pleasing to
+husbands?
+
+Between the moment when the last symptoms appear, and the epoch of
+conjugal peace, which we will not stop to discuss, almost a dozen years
+have elapsed. During this interval and before the married couple sign
+the treaty which, by means of a sincere reconciliation of the feminine
+subject with her lawful lord, consecrates their little matrimonial
+restoration, in order to close in, as Louis XVIII said, the gulf of
+revolutions, it is seldom that the honest woman has but one lover.
+Anarchy has its inevitable phases. The stormy domination of tribunes is
+supplanted by that of the sword and the pen, for few loves are met with
+whose constancy outlives ten years. Therefore, since our calculations
+prove that an honest woman has merely paid strictly her physiological
+or diabolical dues by rendering but three men happy, it is probable
+that she has set foot in more than one region of love. Sometimes it may
+happen that in an interregnum of love too long protracted, the wife,
+whether from whim, temptation or the desire of novelty, undertakes to
+seduce her own husband.
+
+Imagine charming Mme. de T-----, the heroine of our Meditation of
+_Strategy_, saying with a fascinating smile:
+
+"I never before found you so agreeable!"
+
+By flattery after flattery, she tempts, she rouses curiosity, she
+soothes, she rouses in you the faintest spark of desire, she carries
+you away with her, and makes you proud of yourself. Then the right
+of indemnifications for her husband comes. On this occasion the wife
+confounds the imagination of her husband. Like cosmopolitan travelers
+she tells tales of all the countries which she had traversed. She
+intersperses her conversation with words borrowed from several
+languages. The passionate imagery of the Orient, the unique emphasis of
+Spanish phraseology, all meet and jostle one another. She opens out the
+treasures of her notebook with all the mysteries of coquetry, she is
+delightful, you never saw her thus before! With that remarkable art
+which women alone possess of making their own everything that has been
+told them, she blends all shades and variations of character so as to
+create a manner peculiarly her own. You received from the hands of Hymen
+only one woman, awkward and innocent; the celibate returns you a dozen
+of them. A joyful and rapturous husband sees his bed invaded by the
+giddy and wanton courtesans, of whom we spoke in the Meditation on _The
+First Symptoms_. These goddesses come in groups, they smile and sport
+under the graceful muslin curtains of the nuptial bed. The Phoenician
+girl flings to you her garlands, gently sways herself to and fro; the
+Chalcidian woman overcomes you by the witchery of her fine and snowy
+feet; the Unelmane comes and speaking the dialect of fair Ionia reveals
+the treasures of happiness unknown before, and in the study of which she
+makes you experience but a single sensation.
+
+Filled with regret at having disdained so many charms, and frequently
+tired of finding too often as much perfidiousness in priestesses of
+Venus as in honest women, the husband sometimes hurries on by his
+gallantry the hour of reconciliation desired of worthy people. The
+aftermath of bliss is gathered even with greater pleasure, perhaps, than
+the first crop. The Minotaur took your gold, he makes restoration in
+diamonds. And really now seems the time to state a fact of the utmost
+importance. A man may have a wife without possessing her. Like most
+husbands you had hitherto received nothing from yours, and the powerful
+intervention of the celibate was needed to make your union complete. How
+shall we give a name to this miracle, perhaps the only one wrought upon
+a patient during his absence? Alas, my brothers, we did not make Nature!
+
+But how many other compensations, not less precious, are there, by
+which the noble and generous soul of the young celibate may many a time
+purchase his pardon! I recollect witnessing one of the most magnificent
+acts of reparation which a lover should perform toward the husband he is
+minotaurizing.
+
+One warm evening in the summer of 1817, I saw entering one of the rooms
+of Tortoni one of the two hundred young men whom we confidently style
+our friends; he was in the full bloom of his modesty. A lovely woman,
+dressed in perfect taste, and who had consented to enter one of the
+cool parlors devoted to people of fashion, had stepped from an elegant
+carriage which had stopped on the boulevard, and was approaching on foot
+along the sidewalk. My young friend, the celibate, then appeared and
+offered his arm to his queen, while the husband followed holding by the
+hand two little boys, beautiful as cupids. The two lovers, more nimble
+than the father of the family, reached in advance of him one of the
+small rooms pointed out by the attendant. In crossing the vestibule
+the husband knocked up against some dandy, who claimed that he had been
+jostled. Then arose a quarrel, whose seriousness was betrayed by the
+sharp tones of the altercation. The moment the dandy was about to make
+a gesture unworthy of a self-respecting man, the celibate intervened,
+seized the dandy by the arm, caught him off his guard, overcame and
+threw him to the ground; it was magnificent. He had done the very thing
+the aggressor was meditating, as he exclaimed:
+
+"Monsieur!"
+
+This "Monsieur" was one of the finest things I have ever heard. It was
+as if the young celibate had said: "This father of a family belongs to
+me; as I have carried off his honor, it is mine to defend him. I know
+my duty, I am his substitute and will fight for him." The young woman
+behaved superbly! Pale, and bewildered, she took the arm of her husband,
+who continued his objurgations; without a word she led him away to the
+carriage, together with her children. She was one of those women of the
+aristocracy, who also know how to retain their dignity and self-control
+in the midst of violent emotions.
+
+"O Monsieur Adolphe!" cried the young lady as she saw her friend with an
+air of gayety take his seat in the carriage.
+
+"It is nothing, madame, he is one of my friends; we have shaken hands."
+
+Nevertheless, the next morning, the courageous celibate received a sword
+thrust which nearly proved fatal, and confined him six months to his
+bed. The attentions of the married couple were lavished upon him. What
+numerous compensations do we see here! Some years afterwards, an old
+uncle of the husband, whose opinions did not fit in with those of
+the young friend of the house, and who nursed a grudge against him on
+account of some political discussion, undertook to have him driven from
+the house. The old fellow went so far as to tell his nephew to choose
+between being his heir and sending away the presumptuous celibate. It
+was then that the worthy stockbroker said to his uncle:
+
+"Ah, you must never think, uncle, that you will succeed in making me
+ungrateful! But if I tell him to do so this young man will let himself
+be killed for you. He has saved my credit, he would go through fire and
+water for me, he has relieved me of my wife, he has brought me clients,
+he has procured for me almost all the business in the Villele loans--I
+owe my life to him, he is the father of my children; I can never forget
+all this."
+
+In this case the compensations may be looked upon as complete; but
+unfortunately there are compensations of all kinds. There are those
+which must be considered negative, deluding, and those which are both in
+one.
+
+I knew a husband of advanced years who was possessed by the demon of
+gambling. Almost every evening his wife's lover came and played with
+him. The celibate gave him a liberal share of the pleasures which come
+from games of hazard, and knew how to lose to him a certain number
+of francs every month; but madame used to give them to him, and the
+compensation was a deluding one.
+
+You are a peer of France, and you have no offspring but daughters. Your
+wife is brought to bed of a boy! The compensation is negative.
+
+The child who is to save your name from oblivion is like his mother. The
+duchess persuades you that the child is yours. The negative compensation
+becomes deluding.
+
+Here is one of the most charming compensations known. One morning the
+Prince de Ligne meets his wife's lover and rushes up to him, laughing
+wildly:
+
+"My friend," he says to him, "I cuckolded you, last night!"
+
+If some husbands attain to conjugal peace by quiet methods, and carry
+so gracefully the imaginary ensigns of matrimonial pre-eminence, their
+philosophy is doubtless based on the _comfortabilisme_ of accepting
+certain compensations, a _comfortabilisme_ which indifferent men cannot
+imagine. As years roll by the married couple reach the last stage in
+that artificial existence to which their union has condemned them.
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXIX. OF CONJUGAL PEACE.
+
+My imagination has followed marriage through all the phases of its
+fantastic life in so fraternal a spirit, that I seem to have grown old
+with the house I made my home so early in life at the commencement of
+this work.
+
+After experiencing in thought the ardor of man's first passion; and
+outlining, in however imperfect a way, the principal incidents of
+married life; after struggling against so many wives that did not belong
+to me, exhausting myself in conflict with so many personages called up
+from nothingness, and joining so many battles, I feel an intellectual
+lassitude, which makes me see everything in life hang, as it were, in
+mournful crape. I seem to have a catarrh, to look at everything through
+green spectacles, I feel as if my hands trembled, as if I must needs
+employ the second half of my existence and of my book in apologizing for
+the follies of the first half.
+
+I see myself surrounded by tall children of whom I am not the father,
+and seated beside a wife I never married. I think I can feel wrinkles
+furrowing my brow. The fire before which I am placed crackles, as if in
+derision, the room is ancient in its furniture; I shudder with sudden
+fright as I lay my hand upon my heart, and ask myself: "Is that, too,
+withered?"
+
+I am like an old attorney, unswayed by any sentiment whatever. I never
+accept any statement unless it be confirmed, according to the poetic
+maxim of Lord Byron, by the testimony of at least two false witnesses.
+No face can delude me. I am melancholy and overcast with gloom. I know
+the world and it has no more illusions for me. My closest friends have
+proved traitors. My wife and myself exchange glances of profound meaning
+and the slightest word either of us utters is a dagger which pierces
+the heart of the other through and through. I stagnate in a dreary
+calm. This then is the tranquillity of old age! The old man possesses
+in himself the cemetery which shall soon possess him. He is growing
+accustomed to the chill of the tomb. Man, according to philosophers,
+dies in detail; at the same time he may be said even to cheat death; for
+that which his withered hand has laid hold upon, can it be called life?
+
+Oh, to die young and throbbing with life! 'Tis a destiny enviable
+indeed! For is not this, as a delightful poet has said, "to take away
+with one all one's illusions, to be buried like an Eastern king, with
+all one's jewels and treasures, with all that makes the fortune of
+humanity!"
+
+How many thank-offerings ought we to make to the kind and beneficent
+spirit that breathes in all things here below! Indeed, the care which
+nature takes to strip us piece by piece of our raiment, to unclothe the
+soul by enfeebling gradually our hearing, sight, and sense of touch, in
+making slower the circulation of our blood, and congealing our humors so
+as to make us as insensible to the approach of death as we were to the
+beginnings of life, this maternal care which she lavishes on our frail
+tabernacle of clay, she also exhibits in regard to the emotions of man,
+and to the double existence which is created by conjugal love. She first
+sends us Confidence, which with extended hand and open heart says to us:
+"Behold, I am thine forever!" Lukewarmness follows, walking with languid
+tread, turning aside her blonde face with a yawn, like a young widow
+obliged to listen to the minister of state who is ready to sign for her
+a pension warrant. Then Indifference comes; she stretches herself on the
+divan, taking no care to draw down the skirts of her robe which Desire
+but now lifted so chastely and so eagerly. She casts a glance upon the
+nuptial bed, with modesty and without shamelessness; and, if she longs
+for anything, it is for the green fruit that calls up again to life the
+dulled papillae with which her blase palate is bestrewn. Finally the
+philosophical Experience of Life presents herself, with careworn and
+disdainful brow, pointing with her finger to the results, and not
+the causes of life's incidents; to the tranquil victory, not to the
+tempestuous combat. She reckons up the arrearages, with farmers, and
+calculates the dowry of a child. She materializes everything. By a touch
+of her wand, life becomes solid and springless; of yore, all was fluid,
+now it is crystallized into rock. Delight no longer exists for our
+hearts, it has received its sentence, 'twas but mere sensation, a
+passing paroxysm. What the soul desires to-day is a condition of fixity;
+and happiness alone is permanent, and consists in absolute tranquillity,
+in the regularity with which eating and sleeping succeed each other, and
+the sluggish organs perform their functions.
+
+"This is horrible!" I cried; "I am young and full of life! Perish all
+the books in the world rather than my illusions should perish!"
+
+I left my laboratory and plunged into the whirl of Paris. As I saw the
+fairest faces glide by before me, I felt that I was not old. The first
+young woman who appeared before me, lovely in face and form and dressed
+to perfection, with one glance of fire made all the sorcery whose spells
+I had voluntarily submitted to vanish into thin air. Scarcely had I
+walked three steps in the Tuileries gardens, the place which I had
+chosen as my destination, before I saw the prototype of the matrimonial
+situation which has last been described in this book. Had I desired to
+characterize, to idealize, to personify marriage, as I conceived it
+to be, it would have been impossible for the Creator himself to have
+produced so complete a symbol of it as I then saw before me.
+
+Imagine a woman of fifty, dressed in a jacket of reddish brown merino,
+holding in her left hand a green cord, which was tied to the collar of
+an English terrier, and with her right arm linked with that of a man
+in knee-breeches and silk stockings, whose hat had its brim whimsically
+turned up, while snow-white tufts of hair like pigeon plumes rose at its
+sides. A slender queue, thin as a quill, tossed about on the back of
+his sallow neck, which was thick, as far as it could be seen above the
+turned down collar of a threadbare coat. This couple assumed the stately
+tread of an ambassador; and the husband, who was at least seventy,
+stopped complaisantly every time the terrier began to gambol. I hastened
+to pass this living impersonation of my Meditation, and was surprised to
+the last degree to recognize the Marquis de T-----, friend of the Comte
+de Noce, who had owed me for a long time the end of the interrupted
+story which I related in the _Theory of the Bed_. [See Meditation XVII.]
+
+"I have the honor to present to you the Marquise de T-----," he said to
+me.
+
+I made a low bow to a lady whose face was pale and wrinkled; her
+forehead was surmounted by a toupee, whose flattened ringlets, ranged
+around it, deceived no one, but only emphasized, instead of concealing,
+the wrinkles by which it was deeply furrowed. The lady was slightly
+roughed, and had the appearance of an old country actress.
+
+"I do not see, sir, what you can say against a marriage such as ours,"
+said the old man to me.
+
+"The laws of Rome forefend!" I cried, laughing.
+
+The marchioness gave me a look filled with inquietude as well as
+disapprobation, which seemed to say, "Is it possible that at my age I
+have become but a concubine?"
+
+We sat down upon a bench, in the gloomy clump of trees planted at the
+corner of the high terrace which commands La Place Louis XV, on the
+side of the Garde-Meuble. Autumn had already begun to strip the trees of
+their foliage, and was scattering before our eyes the yellow leaves
+of his garland; but the sun nevertheless filled the air with grateful
+warmth.
+
+"Well, is your work finished?" asked the old man, in the unctuous tones
+peculiar to men of the ancient aristocracy.
+
+And with these words he gave a sardonic smile, as if for commentary.
+
+"Very nearly, sir," I replied. "I have come to the philosophic
+situation, which you appear to have reached, but I confess that I--"
+
+"You are searching for ideas?" he added--finishing for me a sentence,
+which I confess I did not know how to end.
+
+"Well," he continued, "you may boldly assume, that on arriving at the
+winter of his life, a man--a man who thinks, I mean--ends by denying
+that love has any existence, in the wild form with which our illusions
+invested it!"
+
+"What! would you deny the existence of love on the day after that of
+marriage?"
+
+"In the first place, the day after would be the very reason; but my
+marriage was a commercial speculation," replied he, stooping to speak
+into my ear. "I have thereby purchased the care, the attention, the
+services which I need; and I am certain to obtain all the consideration
+my age demands; for I have willed all my property to my nephew, and as
+my wife will be rich only during my life, you can imagine how--"
+
+I turned on the old marquis a look so piercing that he wrung my hand
+and said: "You seem to have a good heart, for nothing is certain in this
+life--"
+
+"Well, you may be sure that I have arranged a pleasant surprise for her
+in my will," he replied, gayly.
+
+"Come here, Joseph," cried the marchioness, approaching a servant who
+carried an overcoat lined with silk. "The marquis is probably feeling
+the cold."
+
+The old marquis put on his overcoat, buttoned it up, and taking my arm,
+led me to the sunny side of the terrace.
+
+"In your work," he continued, "you have doubtless spoken of the love of
+a young man. Well, if you wish to act up to the scope which you give to
+your work--in the word ec--elec--"
+
+"Eclectic," I said, smiling, seeing he could not remember this
+philosophic term.
+
+"I know the word well!" he replied. "If then you wish to keep your vow
+of eclecticism, you should be willing to express certain virile ideas
+on the subject of love which I will communicate to you, and I will not
+grudge you the benefit of them, if benefit there be; I wish to bequeath
+my property to you, but this will be all that you will get of it."
+
+"There is no money fortune which is worth as much as a fortune of ideas
+if they be valuable ideas! I shall, therefore, listen to you with a
+grateful mind."
+
+"There is no such thing as love," pursued the old man, fixing his gaze
+upon me. "It is not even a sentiment, it is an unhappy necessity, which
+is midway between the needs of the body and those of the soul. But
+siding for a moment with your youthful thoughts, let us try to reason
+upon this social malady. I suppose that you can only conceive of love as
+either a need or a sentiment."
+
+I made a sign of assent.
+
+"Considered as a need," said the old man, "love makes itself felt last
+of all our needs, and is the first to cease. We are inclined to love in
+our twentieth year, to speak in round numbers, and we cease to do so at
+fifty. During these thirty years, how often would the need be felt, if
+it were not for the provocation of city manners, and the modern custom
+of living in the presence of not one woman, but of women in general?
+What is our debt to the perpetuation of the race? It probably consists
+in producing as many children as we have breasts--so that if one
+dies the other may live. If these two children were always faithfully
+produced, what would become of nations? Thirty millions of people
+would constitute a population too great for France, for the soil is
+not sufficient to guarantee more than ten millions against misery and
+hunger. Remember that China is reduced to the expedient of throwing its
+children into the water, according to the accounts of travelers. Now
+this production of two children is really the whole of marriage. The
+superfluous pleasures of marriage are not only profligate, but involve
+an immense loss to the man, as I will now demonstrate. Compare then
+with this poverty of result, and shortness of duration, the daily and
+perpetual urgency of other needs of our existence. Nature reminds us
+every hour of our real needs; and, on the other hand, refuses absolutely
+to grant the excess which our imagination sometimes craves in love.
+It is, therefore, the last of our needs, and the only one which may be
+forgotten without causing any disturbance in the economy of the body.
+Love is a social luxury like lace and diamonds. But if we analyze it as
+a sentiment, we find two distinct elements in it; namely, pleasure
+and passion. Now analyze pleasure. Human affections rest upon two
+foundations, attraction and repulsion. Attraction is a universal feeling
+for those things which flatter our instinct of self-preservation;
+repulsion is the exercise of the same instinct when it tells us that
+something is near which threatens it with injury. Everything which
+profoundly moves our organization gives us a deeper sense of our
+existence; such a thing is pleasure. It is contracted of desire, of
+effort, and the joy of possessing something or other. Pleasure is a
+unique element in life, and our passions are nothing but modifications,
+more or less keen, of pleasure; moreover, familiarity with one pleasure
+almost always precludes the enjoyment of all others. Now, love is the
+least keen and the least durable of our pleasures. In what would you say
+the pleasure of love consists? Does it lie in the beauty of the beloved?
+In one evening you may obtain for money the loveliest odalisques; but
+at the end of a month you will in this way have burnt out all your
+sentiment for all time. Would you love a women because she is well
+dressed, elegant, rich, keeps a carriage, has commercial credit? Do
+not call this love, for it is vanity, avarice, egotism. Do you love her
+because she is intellectual? You are in that case merely obeying the
+dictates of literary sentiment."
+
+"But," I said, "love only reveals its pleasures to those who mingle in
+one their thoughts, their fortunes, their sentiments, their souls, their
+lives--"
+
+"Oh dear, dear!" cried the old man, in a jeering tone. "Can you show me
+five men in any nation who have sacrificed anything for a woman? I do
+not say their life, for that is a slight thing,--the price of a human
+life under Napoleon was never more than twenty thousand francs; and
+there are in France to-day two hundred and fifty thousand brave men who
+would give theirs for two inches of red ribbon; while seven men have
+sacrificed for a woman ten millions on which they might have slept in
+solitude for a whole night. Dubreuil and Phmeja are still rarer than
+is the love of Dupris and Bolingbroke. These sentiments proceed from
+an unknown cause. But you have brought me thus to consider love as
+a passion. Yes, indeed, it is the last of them all and the most
+contemptible. It promises everything, and fulfils nothing. It comes,
+like love, as a need, the last, and dies away the first. Ah, talk to
+me of revenge, hatred, avarice, of gaming, of ambition, of fanaticism.
+These passions have something virile in them; these sentiments are
+imperishable; they make sacrifices every day, such as love only makes
+by fits and starts. But," he went on, "suppose you abjure love. At first
+there will be no disquietudes, no anxieties, no worry, none of those
+little vexations that waste human life. A man lives happy and tranquil;
+in his social relations he becomes infinitely more powerful and
+influential. This divorce from the thing called love is the primary
+secret of power in all men who control large bodies of men; but this
+is a mere trifle. Ah! if you knew with what magic influence a man is
+endowed, what wealth of intellectual force, what longevity in physical
+strength he enjoys, when detaching himself from every species of human
+passion he spends all his energy to the profit of his soul! If you could
+enjoy for two minutes the riches which God dispenses to the enlightened
+men who consider love as merely a passing need which it is sufficient to
+satisfy for six months in their twentieth year; to the men who, scorning
+the luxurious and surfeiting beefsteaks of Normandy, feed on the roots
+which God has given in abundance, and take their repose on a bed of
+withered leaves, like the recluses of the Thebaid!--ah! you would not
+keep on three seconds the wool of fifteen merinos which covers you; you
+would fling away your childish switch, and go to live in the heaven of
+heavens! There you would find the love you sought in vain amid the swine
+of earth; there you would hear a concert of somewhat different melody
+from that of M. Rossini, voices more faultless than that of Malibran.
+But I am speaking as a blind man might, and repeating hearsays. If I had
+not visited Germany about the year 1791, I should know nothing of all
+this. Yes!--man has a vocation for the infinite. There dwells within
+him an instinct that calls him to God. God is all, gives all, brings
+oblivion on all, and thought is the thread which he has given us as a
+clue to communication with himself!"
+
+He suddenly stopped, and fixed his eyes upon the heavens.
+
+"The poor fellow has lost his wits!" I thought to myself.
+
+"Sir," I said to him, "it would be pushing my devotion to eclectic
+philosophy too far to insert your ideas in my book; they would destroy
+it. Everything in it is based on love, platonic and sensual. God forbid
+that I should end my book by such social blasphemies! I would rather
+try to return by some pantagruelian subtlety to my herd of celibates and
+honest women, with many an attempt to discover some social utility in
+their passions and follies. Oh! if conjugal peace leads us to arguments
+so disillusionizing and so gloomy as these, I know a great many husbands
+who would prefer war to peace."
+
+"At any rate, young man," the old marquis cried, "I shall never have to
+reproach myself with refusing to give true directions to a traveler who
+had lost his way."
+
+"Adieu, thou old carcase!" I said to myself; "adieu, thou walking
+marriage! Adieu, thou stick of a burnt-out fire-work! Adieu, thou
+machine! Although I have given thee from time to time some glimpses of
+people dear to me, old family portraits,--back with you to the picture
+dealer's shop, to Madame de T-----, and all the rest of them; take your
+place round the bier with undertaker's mutes, for all I care!"
+
+
+
+
+MEDITATION XXX. CONCLUSION.
+
+A recluse, who was credited with the gift of second sight, having
+commanded the children of Israel to follow him to a mountain top in
+order to hear the revelation of certain mysteries, saw that he was
+accompanied by a crowd which took up so much room on the road that,
+prophet as he was, his _amour-propre_ was vastly tickled.
+
+But as the mountain was a considerable distance off, it happened that at
+the first halt, an artisan remembered that he had to deliver a new pair
+of slippers to a duke and peer, a publican fell to thinking how he had
+some specie to negotiate, and off they went.
+
+A little further on two lovers lingered under the olive trees and forgot
+the discourse of the prophet; for they thought that the promised land
+was the spot where they stood, and the divine word was heard when they
+talked to one another.
+
+The fat people, loaded with punches a la Sancho, had been wiping their
+foreheads with their handkerchiefs, for the last quarter of an hour, and
+began to grow thirsty, and therefore halted beside a clear spring.
+
+Certain retired soldiers complained of the corns which tortured them,
+and spoke of Austerlitz, and of their tight boots.
+
+At the second halt, certain men of the world whispered together:
+
+"But this prophet is a fool."
+
+"Have you ever heard him?"
+
+"I? I came from sheer curiosity."
+
+"And I because I saw the fellow had a large following." (The last man
+who spoke was a fashionable.)
+
+"He is a mere charlatan."
+
+The prophet kept marching on. But when he reached the plateau, from
+which a wide horizon spread before him, he turned back, and saw no one
+but a poor Israelite, to whom he might have said as the Prince de Ligne
+to the wretched little bandy-legged drummer boy, whom he found on the
+spot where he expected to see a whole garrison awaiting him: "Well, my
+readers, it seems that you have dwindled down to one."
+
+Thou man of God who has followed me so far--I hope that a short
+recapitulation will not terrify thee, and I have traveled on under the
+impression that thou, like me, hast kept saying to thyself, "Where the
+deuce are we going?"
+
+Well, well, this is the place and the time to ask you, respected reader,
+what your opinion is with regard to the renewal of the tobacco monopoly,
+and what you think of the exorbitant taxes on wines, on the right to
+carry firearms, on gaming, on lotteries, on playing cards, on brandy, on
+soap, cotton, silks, etc.
+
+"I think that since all these duties make up one-third of the public
+revenues, we should be seriously embarrassed if--"
+
+So that, my excellent model husband, if no one got drunk, or gambled,
+or smoked, or hunted, in a word if we had neither vices, passions, nor
+maladies in France, the State would be within an ace of bankruptcy; for
+it seems that the capital of our national income consists of popular
+corruptions, as our commerce is kept alive by national luxury. If you
+cared to look a little closer into the matter you would see that all
+taxes are based upon some moral malady. As a matter of fact, if we
+continue this philosophical scrutiny it will appear that the gendarmes
+would want horses and leather breeches, if every one kept the peace,
+and if there were neither foes nor idle people in the world. Therefore
+impose virtue on mankind! Well, I consider that there are more parallels
+than people think between my honest woman and the budget, and I will
+undertake to prove this by a short essay on statistics, if you will
+permit me to finish my book on the same lines as those on which I have
+begun it. Will you grant that a lover must put on more clean shirts than
+are worn by either a husband, or a celibate unattached? This to me seems
+beyond doubt. The difference between a husband and a lover is seen
+even in the appearance of their toilette. The one is careless, he is
+unshaved, and the other never appears excepting in full dress. Sterne
+has pleasantly remarked that the account book of the laundress was the
+most authentic record he knew, as to the life of Tristram Shandy;
+and that it was easy to guess from the number of shirts he wore what
+passages of his book had cost him most. Well, with regard to lovers the
+account book of their laundresses is the most faithful historic record
+as well as the most impartial account of their various amours. And
+really a prodigious quantity of tippets, cravats, dresses, which are
+absolutely necessary to coquetry, is consumed in the course of an amour.
+A wonderful prestige is gained by white stockings, the lustre of a
+collar, or a shirt-waist, the artistically arranged folds of a man's
+shirt, or the taste of his necktie or his collar. This will explain
+the passages in which I said of the honest woman [Meditation II],
+"She spends her life in having her dresses starched." I have sought
+information on this point from a lady in order to learn accurately at
+what sum was to be estimated the tax thus imposed by love, and after
+fixing it at one hundred francs per annum for a woman, I recollect what
+she said with great good humor: "It depends on the character of the man,
+for some are so much more particular than others." Nevertheless, after
+a very profound discussion, in which I settled upon the sum for the
+celibates, and she for her sex, it was agreed that, one thing with
+another, since the two lovers belong to the social sphere which this
+work concerns, they ought to spend between them, in the matter referred
+to, one hundred and fifty francs more than in time of peace.
+
+By a like treaty, friendly in character and long discussed, we arranged
+that there should be a collective difference of four hundred francs
+between the expenditure for all parts of the dress on a war footing, and
+for that on a peace footing. This provision was considered very paltry
+by all the powers, masculine or feminine, whom we consulted. The light
+thrown upon these delicate matters by the contributions of certain
+persons suggested to us the idea of gathering together certain savants
+at a dinner party, and taking their wise counsels for our guidance in
+these important investigations. The gathering took place. It was with
+glass in hand and after listening to many brilliant speeches that I
+received for the following chapters on the budget of love, a sort of
+legislative sanction. The sum of one hundred francs was allowed for
+porters and carriages. Fifty crowns seemed very reasonable for the
+little patties that people eat on a walk, for bouquets of violets and
+theatre tickets. The sum of two hundred francs was considered necessary
+for the extra expense of dainties and dinners at restaurants. It was
+during this discussion that a young cavalryman, who had been made almost
+tipsy by the champagne, was called to order for comparing lovers to
+distilling machines. But the chapter that gave occasion for the most
+violent discussion, and the consideration of which was adjourned for
+several weeks, when a report was made, was that concerning presents. At
+the last session, the refined Madame de D----- was the first speaker;
+and in a graceful address, which testified to the nobility of her
+sentiments, she set out to demonstrate that most of the time the gifts
+of love had no intrinsic value. The author replied that all lovers had
+their portraits taken. A lady objected that a portrait was invested
+capital, and care should always be taken to recover it for a second
+investment. But suddenly a gentleman of Provence rose to deliver a
+philippic against women. He spoke of the greediness which most women in
+love exhibited for furs, satins, silks, jewels and furniture; but a lady
+interrupted him by asking if Madame d'O-----y, his intimate friend, had
+not already paid his debts twice over.
+
+"You are mistaken, madame," said the Provencal, "it was her husband."
+
+"The speaker is called to order," cried the president, "and condemned to
+dine the whole party, for having used the word _husband_."
+
+The Provencal was completely refuted by a lady who undertook to prove
+that women show much more self-sacrifice in love than men; that lovers
+cost very dear, and that the honest woman may consider herself very
+fortunate if she gets off with spending on them two thousand francs
+for a single year. The discussion was in danger of degenerating into
+an exchange of personalities, when a division was called for. The
+conclusions of the committee were adopted by vote. The conclusions were,
+in substance, that the amount for presents between lovers during
+the year should be reckoned at five hundred francs, but that in this
+computation should be included: (1) the expense of expeditions into the
+country; (2) the pharmaceutical expenses, occasioned by the colds caught
+from walking in the damp pathways of parks, and in leaving the theatre,
+which expenses are veritable presents; (3) the carrying of letters,
+and law expenses; (4) journeys, and expenses whose items are forgotten,
+without counting the follies committed by the spenders; inasmuch as,
+according to the investigations of the committee, it had been proved
+that most of a man's extravagant expenditure profited the opera girls,
+rather than the married women. The conclusion arrived at from this
+pecuniary calculation was that, in one way or another, a passion costs
+nearly fifteen hundred francs a year, which were required to meet
+the expense borne more unequally by lovers, but which would not have
+occurred, but for their attachment. There was also a sort of unanimity
+in the opinion of the council that this was the lowest annual figure
+which would cover the cost of a passion. Now, my dear sir, since we have
+proved, by the statistics of our conjugal calculations [See Meditations
+I, II, and III.] and proved irrefragably, that there exists a floating
+total of at least fifteen hundred thousand unlawful passions, it
+follows:
+
+That the criminal conversations of a third among the French population
+contribute a sum of nearly three thousand millions to that vast
+circulation of money, the true blood of society, of which the budget is
+the heart;
+
+That the honest woman not only gives life to the children of the
+peerage, but also to its financial funds;
+
+That manufacturers owe their prosperity to this _systolic_ movement;
+
+That the honest woman is a being essentially _budgetative_, and active
+as a consumer;
+
+That the least decline in public love would involve incalculable
+miseries to the treasury, and to men of invested fortunes;
+
+That a husband has at least a third of his fortune invested in the
+inconstancy of his wife, etc.
+
+I am well aware that you are going to open your mouth and talk to me
+about manners, politics, good and evil. But, my dear victim of the
+Minotaur, is not happiness the object which all societies should set
+before them? Is it not this axiom that makes these wretched kings give
+themselves so much trouble about their people? Well, the honest woman
+has not, like them, thrones, gendarmes and tribunals; she has only a bed
+to offer; but if our four hundred thousand women can, by this ingenious
+machine, make a million celibates happy, do not they attain in a
+mysterious manner, and without making any fuss, the end aimed at by a
+government, namely, the end of giving the largest possible amount of
+happiness to the mass of mankind?
+
+"Yes, but the annoyances, the children, the troubles--"
+
+Ah, you must permit me to proffer the consolatory thought with which one
+of our wittiest caricaturists closes his satiric observations: "Man is
+not perfect!" It is sufficient, therefore, that our institutions have
+no more disadvantages than advantages in order to be reckoned excellent;
+for the human race is not placed, socially speaking, between the good
+and the bad, but between the bad and the worse. Now if the work, which
+we are at present on the point of concluding, has had for its object the
+diminution of the worse, as it is found in matrimonial institutions,
+in laying bare the errors and absurdities due to our manners and our
+prejudices, we shall certainly have won one of the fairest titles that
+can be put forth by a man to a place among the benefactors of humanity.
+Has not the author made it his aim, by advising husbands, to make
+women more self-restrained and consequently to impart more violence
+to passions, more money to the treasury, more life to commerce and
+agriculture? Thanks to this last Meditation he can flatter himself that
+he has strictly kept the vow of eclecticism, which he made in projecting
+the work, and he hopes he has marshaled all details of the case, and yet
+like an attorney-general refrained from expressing his personal opinion.
+And really what do you want with an axiom in the present matter? Do you
+wish that this book should be a mere development of the last opinion
+held by Tronchet, who in his closing days thought that the law of
+marriage had been drawn up less in the interest of husbands than of
+children? I also wish it very much. Would you rather desire that this
+book should serve as proof to the peroration of the Capuchin, who
+preached before Anne of Austria, and when he saw the queen and her
+ladies overwhelmed by his triumphant arguments against their frailty,
+said as he came down from the pulpit of truth, "Now you are all
+honorable women, and it is we who unfortunately are sons of Samaritan
+women." I have no objection to that either. You may draw what conclusion
+you please; for I think it is very difficult to put forth two contrary
+opinions, without both of them containing some grains of truth. But the
+book has not been written either for or against marriage; all I have
+thought you needed was an exact description of it. If an examination of
+the machine shall lead us to make one wheel of it more perfect; if
+by scouring away some rust we have given more elastic movement to its
+mechanism; then give his wage to the workman. If the author has had
+the impertinence to utter truths too harsh for you, if he has too often
+spoken of rare and exceptional facts as universal, if he has omitted
+the commonplaces which have been employed from time immemorial to offer
+women the incense of flattery, oh, let him be crucified! But do not
+impute to him any motive of hostility to the institution itself; he
+is concerned merely for men and women. He knows that from the moment
+marriage ceases to defeat the purpose of marriage, it is unassailable;
+and, after all, if there do arise serious complaints against this
+institution, it is perhaps because man has no memory excepting for
+his disasters, that he accuses his wife, as he accuses his life, for
+marriage is but a life within a life. Yet people whose habit it is to
+take their opinions from newspapers would perhaps despise a book in
+which they see the mania of eclecticism pushed too far; for then they
+absolutely demand something in the shape of a peroration, it is not hard
+to find one for them. And since the words of Napoleon served to start
+this book, why should it not end as it began? Before the whole Council
+of State the First Consul pronounced the following startling phrase, in
+which he at the same time eulogized and satirized marriage, and summed
+up the contents of this book:
+
+"If a man never grew old, I would never wish him to have a wife!"
+
+
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT.
+
+"And so you are going to be married?" asked the duchess of the author
+who had read his manuscript to her.
+
+She was one of those ladies to whom the author has already paid his
+respects in the introduction of this work.
+
+"Certainly, madame," I replied. "To meet a woman who has courage enough
+to become mine, would satisfy the wildest of my hopes."
+
+"Is this resignation or infatuation?"
+
+"That is my affair."
+
+"Well, sir, as you are doctor of conjugal arts and sciences, allow me to
+tell you a little Oriental fable, that I read in a certain sheet, which
+is published annually in the form of an almanac. At the beginning of the
+Empire ladies used to play at a game in which no one accepted a
+present from his or her partner in the game, without saying the word,
+_Diadeste_. A game lasted, as you may well suppose, during a week, and
+the point was to catch some one receiving some trifle or other without
+pronouncing the sacramental word."
+
+"Even a kiss?"
+
+"Oh, I have won the _Diadeste_ twenty times in that way," she laughingly
+replied.
+
+"It was, I believe, from the playing of this game, whose origin is
+Arabian or Chinese, that my apologue takes its point. But if I tell
+you," she went on, putting her finger to her nose, with a charming air
+of coquetry, "let me contribute it as a finale to your work."
+
+"This would indeed enrich me. You have done me so many favors already,
+that I cannot repay--"
+
+She smiled slyly, and replied as follows:
+
+
+
+A philosopher had compiled a full account of all the tricks that women
+could possibly play, and in order to verify it, he always carried it
+about with him. One day he found himself in the course of his travels
+near an encampment of Arabs. A young woman, who had seated herself under
+the shade of a palm tree, rose on his approach. She kindly asked him to
+rest himself in her tent, and he could not refuse. Her husband was then
+absent. Scarcely had the traveler seated himself on a soft rug, when the
+graceful hostess offered him fresh dates, and a cup of milk; he could
+not help observing the rare beauty of her hands as she did so. But, in
+order to distract his mind from the sensations roused in him by the fair
+young Arabian girl, whose charms were most formidable, the sage took his
+book, and began to read.
+
+The seductive creature piqued by this slight said to him in a melodious
+voice:
+
+"That book must be very interesting since it seems to be the sole object
+worthy of your attention. Would it be taking a liberty to ask what
+science it treats of?"
+
+The philosopher kept his eyes lowered as he replied:
+
+"The subject of this book is beyond the comprehension of ladies."
+
+This rebuff excited more than ever the curiosity of the young Arabian
+woman. She put out the prettiest little foot that had ever left its
+fleeting imprint on the shifting sands of the desert. The philosopher
+was perturbed, and his eyes were too powerfully tempted to resist
+wandering from these feet, which betokened so much, up to the bosom,
+which was still more ravishingly fair; and soon the flame of his
+admiring glance was mingled with the fire that sparkled in the pupils
+of the young Asiatic. She asked again the name of the book in tones so
+sweet that the philosopher yielded to the fascination, and replied:
+
+"I am the author of the book; but the substance of it is not mine: it
+contains an account of all the ruses and stratagems of women."
+
+"What! Absolutely all?" said the daughter of the desert.
+
+"Yes, all! And it has been only by a constant study of womankind that I
+have come to regard them without fear."
+
+"Ah!" said the young Arabian girl, lowering the long lashes of her white
+eyelids.
+
+Then, suddenly darting the keenest of her glances at the pretended sage,
+she made him in one instant forget the book and all its contents. And
+now our philosopher was changed to the most passionate of men. Thinking
+he saw in the bearing of the young woman a faint trace of coquetry, the
+stranger was emboldened to make an avowal. How could he resist doing
+so? The sky was blue, the sand blazed in the distance like a scimitar
+of gold, the wind of the desert breathed love, and the woman of Arabia
+seemed to reflect all the fire with which she was surrounded; her
+piercing eyes were suffused with a mist; and by a slight nod of the head
+she seemed to make the luminous atmosphere undulate, as she consented
+to listen to the stranger's words of love. The sage was intoxicated
+with delirious hopes, when the young woman, hearing in the distance the
+gallop of a horse which seemed to fly, exclaimed:
+
+"We are lost! My husband is sure to catch us. He is jealous as a tiger,
+and more pitiless than one. In the name of the prophet, if you love your
+life, conceal yourself in this chest!"
+
+The author, frightened out of his wits, seeing no other way of getting
+out of a terrible fix, jumped into the box, and crouched down there. The
+woman closed down the lid, locked it, and took the key. She ran to meet
+her husband, and after some caresses which put him into a good humor,
+she said:
+
+"I must relate to you a very singular adventure I have just had."
+
+"I am listening, my gazelle," replied the Arab, who sat down on a rug
+and crossed his feet after the Oriental manner.
+
+"There arrived here to-day a kind of philosopher," she began, "he
+professes to have compiled a book which describes all the wiles of which
+my sex is capable; and then this sham sage made love to me."
+
+"Well, go on!" cried the Arab.
+
+"I listened to his avowal. He was young, ardent--and you came just in
+time to save my tottering virtue."
+
+The Arab leaped to his feet like a lion, and drew his scimitar with a
+shout of fury. The philosopher heard all from the depths of the chest
+and consigned to Hades his book, and all the men and women of Arabia
+Petraea.
+
+"Fatima!" cried the husband, "if you would save your life, answer
+me--Where is the traitor?"
+
+Terrified at the tempest which she had roused, Fatima threw herself at
+her husband's feet, and trembling beneath the point of his sword, she
+pointed out the chest with a prompt though timid glance of her eye. Then
+she rose to her feet, as if in shame, and taking the key from her girdle
+presented it to the jealous Arab; but, just as he was about to open the
+chest, the sly creature burst into a peal of laughter. Faroun stopped
+with a puzzled expression, and looked at his wife in amazement.
+
+"So I shall have my fine chain of gold, after all!" she cried, dancing
+for joy. "You have lost the _Diadeste_. Be more mindful next time."
+
+The husband, thunderstruck, let fall the key, and offered her the
+longed-for chain on bended knee, and promised to bring to his darling
+Fatima all the jewels brought by the caravan in a year, if she would
+refrain from winning the _Diadeste_ by such cruel stratagems. Then, as
+he was an Arab, and did not like forfeiting a chain of gold, although
+his wife had fairly won it, he mounted his horse again, and galloped
+off, to complain at his will, in the desert, for he loved Fatima too
+well to let her see his annoyance. The young woman then drew forth the
+philosopher from the chest, and gravely said to him, "Do not forget,
+Master Doctor, to put this feminine trick into your collection."
+
+
+"Madame," said I to the duchess, "I understand! If I marry, I am bound
+to be unexpectedly outwitted by some infernal trick or other; but I
+shall in that case, you may be quite sure, furnish a model household for
+the admiration of my contemporaries."
+
+
+PARIS, 1824-29.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Physiology of Marriage, Complete, by
+Honore de Balzac
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+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PHYSIOLOGY OF MARRIAGE ***
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