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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/3901.txt b/3901.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2eca10d --- /dev/null +++ b/3901.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2087 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Confessions of J. J. Rousseau, Book I. +by Jean Jacques Rousseau + +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 Confessions of J. J. Rousseau, Book I. + +Author: Jean Jacques Rousseau + +Release Date: December 6, 2004 [EBook #3901] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROUSSEAU *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +THE CONFESSIONS OF JEAN JACQUES ROUSSEAU +(In 12 books) + +Privately Printed for the Members of the Aldus Society + +London, 1903 + + + +BOOK I. + + +CONTENTS: + Introduction--S.W. Orson + Book I. + + + +INTRODUCTION. + +Among the notable books of later times-we may say, without exaggeration, +of all time--must be reckoned The Confessions of Jean Jacques Rousseau. +It deals with leading personages and transactions of a momentous epoch, +when absolutism and feudalism were rallying for their last struggle +against the modern spirit, chiefly represented by Voltaire, the +Encyclopedists, and Rousseau himself--a struggle to which, after many +fierce intestine quarrels and sanguinary wars throughout Europe and +America, has succeeded the prevalence of those more tolerant and rational +principles by which the statesmen of our own day are actuated. + +On these matters, however, it is not our province to enlarge; nor is it +necessary to furnish any detailed account of our author's political, +religious, and philosophic axioms and systems, his paradoxes and his +errors in logic: these have been so long and so exhaustively disputed +over by contending factions that little is left for even the most +assiduous gleaner in the field. The inquirer will find, in Mr. John +Money's excellent work, the opinions of Rousseau reviewed succinctly and +impartially. The 'Contrat Social', the 'Lattres Ecrites de la Montagne', +and other treatises that once aroused fierce controversy, may therefore +be left in the repose to which they have long been consigned, so far as +the mass of mankind is concerned, though they must always form part of +the library of the politician and the historian. One prefers to turn to +the man Rousseau as he paints himself in the remarkable work before us. + +That the task which he undertook in offering to show himself--as Persius +puts it--'Intus et in cute', to posterity, exceeded his powers, is a +trite criticism; like all human enterprises, his purpose was only +imperfectly fulfilled; but this circumstance in no way lessens the +attractive qualities of his book, not only for the student of history or +psychology, but for the intelligent man of the world. Its startling +frankness gives it a peculiar interest wanting in most other +autobiographies. + +Many censors have elected to sit in judgment on the failings of this +strangely constituted being, and some have pronounced upon him very +severe sentences. Let it be said once for all that his faults and +mistakes were generally due to causes over which he had but little +control, such as a defective education, a too acute sensitiveness, which +engendered suspicion of his fellows, irresolution, an overstrained sense +of honour and independence, and an obstinate refusal to take advice from +those who really wished to befriend him; nor should it be forgotten that +he was afflicted during the greater part of his life with an incurable +disease. + +Lord Byron had a soul near akin to Rousseau's, whose writings naturally +made a deep impression on the poet's mind, and probably had an influence +on his conduct and modes of thought: In some stanzas of 'Childe Harold' +this sympathy is expressed with truth and power; especially is the +weakness of the Swiss philosopher's character summed up in the following +admirable lines: + + "Here the self-torturing sophist, wild Rousseau, + The apostle of affliction, he who threw + Enchantment over passion, and from woe + Wrung overwhelming eloquence, first drew + The breath which made him wretched; yet he knew + How to make madness beautiful, and cast + O'er erring deeds and thoughts a heavenly hue + Of words, like sunbeams, dazzling as they passed + The eyes, which o'er them shed tears feelingly and fast. + + "His life was one long war with self-sought foes, + Or friends by him self-banished; for his mind + Had grown Suspicion's sanctuary, and chose, + For its own cruel sacrifice, the kind, + 'Gainst whom he raged with fury strange and blind. + But he was frenzied,-wherefore, who may know? + Since cause might be which skill could never find; + But he was frenzied by disease or woe + To that worst pitch of all, which wears a reasoning show." + +One would rather, however, dwell on the brighter hues of the picture than +on its shadows and blemishes; let us not, then, seek to "draw his +frailties from their dread abode." His greatest fault was his +renunciation of a father's duty to his offspring; but this crime he +expiated by a long and bitter repentance. We cannot, perhaps, very +readily excuse the way in which he has occasionally treated the memory of +his mistress and benefactress. That he loved Madame de Warens--his +'Mamma'--deeply and sincerely is undeniable, notwithstanding which he now +and then dwells on her improvidence and her feminine indiscretions with +an unnecessary and unbecoming lack of delicacy that has an unpleasant +effect on the reader, almost seeming to justify the remark of one of his +most lenient critics--that, after all, Rousseau had the soul of a lackey. +He possessed, however, many amiable and charming qualities, both as a man +and a writer, which were evident to those amidst whom he lived, and will +be equally so to the unprejudiced reader of the Confessions. He had a +profound sense of justice and a real desire for the improvement and +advancement of the race. Owing to these excellences he was beloved to +the last even by persons whom he tried to repel, looking upon them as +members of a band of conspirators, bent upon destroying his domestic +peace and depriving him of the means of subsistence. + +Those of his writings that are most nearly allied in tone and spirit to +the 'Confessions' are the 'Reveries d'un Promeneur Solitaire' and +'La Nouvelle Heloise'. His correspondence throws much light on his life +and character, as do also parts of 'Emile'. It is not easy in our day to +realize the effect wrought upon the public mind by the advent of +'La Nouvelle Heloise'. Julie and Saint-Preux became names to conjure +with; their ill-starred amours were everywhere sighed and wept over by +the tender-hearted fair; indeed, in composing this work, Rousseau may be +said to have done for Switzerland what the author of the Waverly Novels +did for Scotland, turning its mountains, lakes and islands, formerly +regarded with aversion, into a fairyland peopled with creatures whose +joys and sorrows appealed irresistibly to every breast. Shortly after +its publication began to flow that stream of tourists and travellers +which tends to make Switzerland not only more celebrated but more opulent +every year. It, is one of the few romances written in the epistolary +form that do not oppress the reader with a sense of languor and +unreality; for its creator poured into its pages a tide of passion +unknown to his frigid and stilted predecessors, and dared to depict +Nature as she really is, not as she was misrepresented by the modish +authors and artists of the age. Some persons seem shy of owning an +acquaintance with this work; indeed, it has been made the butt of +ridicule by the disciples of a decadent school. Its faults and its +beauties are on the surface; Rousseau's own estimate is freely expressed +at the beginning of the eleventh book of the Confessions and elsewhere. +It might be wished that the preface had been differently conceived and +worded; for the assertion made therein that the book may prove dangerous +has caused it to be inscribed on a sort of Index, and good folk who never +read a line of it blush at its name. Its "sensibility," too, is a little +overdone, and has supplied the wits with opportunities for satire; for +example, Canning, in his 'New Morality': + + "Sweet Sensibility, who dwells enshrined + In the fine foldins of the feeling mind.... + Sweet child of sickly Fancy!-her of yore + From her loved France Rousseau to exile bore; + And while 'midst lakes and mountains wild he ran, + Full of himself, and shunned the haunts of man, + Taught her o'er each lone vale and Alpine, steep + To lisp the story of his wrongs and weep." + +As might be imagined, Voltaire had slight sympathy with our social +reformer's notions and ways of promulgating them, and accordingly took +up his wonted weapons--sarcasm and ridicule--against poor Jean-Jacques. +The quarrels of these two great men cannot be described in this place; +but they constitute an important chapter in the literary and social +history of the time. In the work with which we are immediately +concerned, the author seems to avoid frequent mention of Voltaire, even +where we should most expect it. However, the state of his mind when he +penned this record of his life should be always remembered in relation to +this as well as other occurrences. + +Rousseau had intended to bring his autobiography down to a later date, +but obvious causes prevented this: hence it is believed that a summary of +the chief events that marked his closing years will not be out of place +here. + +On quitting the Ile de Saint-Pierre he travelled to Strasbourg, where he +was warmly received, and thence to Paris, arriving in that city on +December I6, 1765. The Prince de Conti provided him with a lodging in +the Hotel Saint-Simon, within the precincts of the Temple--a place of +sanctuary for those under the ban of authority. 'Every one was eager to +see the illustrious proscript, who complained of being made a daily show, +"like Sancho Panza in his island of Barataria." During his short stay in +the capital there was circulated an ironical letter purporting to come +from the Great Frederick, but really written by Horace Walpole. This +cruel, clumsy, and ill-timed joke angered Rousseau, who ascribed it to, +Voltaire. A few sentences may be quoted: + + "My Dear Jean-Jacques,--You have renounced Geneva, your native + place. You have caused your expulsion from Switzerland, a country + so extolled in your writings; France has issued a warrant against + you: so do you come to me. My states offer you a peaceful retreat. + I wish you well, and will treat you well, if you will let me. But, + if you persist in refusing my help, do not reckon upon my telling + any one that you did so. If you are bent on tormenting your spirit + to find new misfortunes, choose whatever you like best. I am a + king, and can procure them for you at your pleasure; and, what will + certainly never happen to you in respect of your enemies, I will + cease to persecute you as soon as you cease to take a pride in being + persecuted. Your good friend, + "FREDERICK." + + +Early in 1766 David Hume persuaded Rousseau to go with him to England, +where the exile could find a secure shelter. In London his appearance +excited general attention. Edmund Burke had an interview with him and +held that inordinate vanity was the leading trait in his character. +Mr. Davenport, to whom he was introduced by Hume, generously offered +Rousseau a home at Wootton, in Staffordshire, near the, Peak Country; the +latter, however, would only accept the offer on condition that he should +pay a rent of L 30 a year. He was accorded a pension of L 100 by George +III., but declined to draw after the first annual payment. The climate +and scenery of Wootton being similar to those of his native country, he +was at first delighted with his new abode, where he lived with Therese, +and devoted his time to herborising and inditing the first six books of +his Confessions. Soon, however, his old hallucinations acquired +strength, and Rousseau convinced himself that enemies were bent upon his +capture, if not his death. In June, 1766, he wrote a violent letter to +Hume, calling him "one of the worst of men." Literary Paris had combined +with Hume and the English Government to surround him--as he supposed +--with guards and spies; he revolved in his troubled mind all the reports +and rumours he had heard for months and years; Walpole's forged letter +rankled in his bosom; and in the spring of 1767 he fled; first to +Spalding, in Lincolnshire, and subsequently to Calais, where he landed in +May. + +On his arrival in France his restless and wandering disposition forced +him continually to change his residence, and acquired for him the title +of "Voyageur Perpetuel." While at Trye, in Gisors, in 1767--8, he wrote +the second part of the Confessions. He had assumed the surname of Renou, +and about this time he declared before two witnesses that Therese was his +wife--a proceeding to which he attached the sanctity of marriage. In +1770 he took up his abode in Paris, where he lived continuously for seven +years, in a street which now bears his name, and gained a living by +copying music. Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, the author of 'Paul and +Virginia', who became acquainted with him in 1772, has left some +interesting particulars of Rousseau's daily mode of life at this period. +Monsieur de Girardin having offered him an asylum at Ermemonville in the +spring of 1778, he and Therese went thither to reside, but for no long +time. On the 3d of July, in the same year, this perturbed spirit at last +found rest, stricken by apoplexy. A rumor that he had committed suicide +was circulated, but the evidence of trustworthy witnesses, including a +physician, effectually contradicts this accusation. His remains, first +interred in the Ile des Peupliers, were, after the Revolution, removed to +the Pantheon. In later times the Government of Geneva made some +reparation for their harsh treatment of a famous citizen, and erected his +statue, modelled by his compatriot, Pradier, on an island in the Rhone. + + "See nations, slowly wise and meanly just, + To buried merit raise the tardy bust." + +November, 1896. + S. W. ORSON. + + + + + + THE CONFESSIONS + + OF + + J. J. ROUSSEAU + + +BOOK I. + +I have entered upon a performance which is without example, whose +accomplishment will have no imitator. I mean to present my +fellow-mortals with a man in all the integrity of nature; and this man +shall be myself. + +I know my heart, and have studied mankind; I am not made like any one I +have been acquainted with, perhaps like no one in existence; if not +better, I at least claim originality, and whether Nature did wisely in +breaking the mould with which she formed me, can only be determined after +having read this work. + +Whenever the last trumpet shall sound, I will present myself before the +sovereign judge with this book in my hand, and loudly proclaim, thus have +I acted; these were my thoughts; such was I. With equal freedom and +veracity have I related what was laudable or wicked, I have concealed no +crimes, added no virtues; and if I have sometimes introduced superfluous +ornament, it was merely to occupy a void occasioned by defect of memory: +I may have supposed that certain, which I only knew to be probable, but +have never asserted as truth, a conscious falsehood. Such as I was, I +have declared myself; sometimes vile and despicable, at others, virtuous, +generous and sublime; even as thou hast read my inmost soul: Power +eternal! assemble round thy throne an innumerable throng of my +fellow-mortals, let them listen to my confessions, let them blush at my +depravity, let them tremble at my sufferings; let each in his turn expose +with equal sincerity the failings, the wanderings of his heart, and, if +he dare, aver, I was better than that man. + +I was born at Geneva, in 1712, son of Isaac Rousseau and Susannah +Bernard, citizens. My father's share of a moderate competency, which was +divided among fifteen children, being very trivial, his business of a +watchmaker (in which he had the reputation of great ingenuity) was his +only dependence. My mother's circumstances were more affluent; she was +daughter of a Mons. Bernard, minister, and possessed a considerable share +of modesty and beauty; indeed, my father found some difficulty in +obtaining her hand. + +The affection they entertained for each other was almost as early as +their existence; at eight or nine years old they walked together every +evening on the banks of the Treille, and before they were ten, could not +support the idea of separation. A natural sympathy of soul confined +those sentiments of predilection which habit at first produced; born with +minds susceptible of the most exquisite sensibility and tenderness, it +was only necessary to encounter similar dispositions; that moment +fortunately presented itself, and each surrendered a willing heart. + +The obstacles that opposed served only to give a decree of vivacity to +their affection, and the young lover, not being able to obtain his +mistress, was overwhelmed with sorrow and despair. She advised him to +travel--to forget her. He consented--he travelled, but returned more +passionate than ever, and had the happiness to find her equally constant, +equally tender. After this proof of mutual affection, what could they +resolve?--to dedicate their future lives to love! the resolution was +ratified with a vow, on which Heaven shed its benediction. + +Fortunately, my mother's brother, Gabriel Bernard, fell in love with one +of my father's sisters; she had no objection to the match, but made the +marriage of his sister with her brother an indispensable preliminary. +Love soon removed every obstacle, and the two weddings were celebrated +the same day: thus my uncle became the husband of my aunt, and their +children were doubly cousins german. Before a year was expired, both had +the happiness to become fathers, but were soon after obliged to submit to +a separation. + +My uncle Bernard, who was an engineer, went to serve in the empire and +Hungary, under Prince Eugene, and distinguished himself both at the siege +and battle of Belgrade. My father, after the birth of my only brother, +set off, on recommendation, for Constantinople, and was appointed +watchmaker to the Seraglio. During his absence, the beauty, wit, and +accomplishments-- + + [They were too brilliant for her situation, the minister, her + father, having bestowed great pains on her education. She was aught + drawing, singing, and to play on the theorbo; had learning, and + wrote very agreeable verses. The following is an extempore piece + which she composed in the absence of her husband and brother, in a + conversation with some person relative to them, while walking with + her sister--in--law, and their two children: + + Ces deux messieurs, qui sont absens, + Nous sont chers e bien des manieres; + Ce sont nos amiss, nos amans, + Ce sont nos maris et nos freres, + Et les peres de ces enfans. + + These absent ones, who just claim + Our hearts, by every tender name, + To whom each wish extends + Our husbands and our brothers are, + The fathers of this blooming pair, + Our lovers and our friends.] + +of my mother attracted a number of admirers, among whom Mons. de la +Closure, Resident of France, was the most assiduous in his attentions. +His passion must have been extremely violent, since after a period of +thirty years I have seen him affected at the very mention of her name. +My mother had a defence more powerful even than her virtue; she tenderly +loved my father, and conjured him to return; his inclination seconding +his request, he gave up every prospect of emolument, and hastened to +Geneva. + +I was the unfortunate fruit of this return, being born ten months after, +in a very weakly and infirm state; my birth cost my mother her life, and +was the first of my misfortunes. I am ignorant how my father supported +her loss at that time, but I know he was ever after inconsolable. In me +he still thought he saw her he so tenderly lamented, but could never +forget I had been the innocent cause of his misfortune, nor did he ever +embrace me, but his sighs, the convulsive pressure of his arms, witnessed +that a bitter regret mingled itself with his caresses, though, as may be +supposed, they were not on this account less ardent. When he said to me, +"Jean Jacques, let us talk of your mother," my usual reply was, "Yes, +father, but then, you know, we shall cry," and immediately the tears +started from his eyes. "Ah!" exclaimed he, with agitation, "Give me back +my wife; at least console me for her loss; fill up, dear boy, the void +she has left in my soul. Could I love thee thus wert thou only my son?" +Forty years after this loss he expired in the arms of his second wife, +but the name of the first still vibrated on his lips, still was her image +engraved on his heart. + +Such were the authors of my being: of all the gifts it had pleased Heaven +to bestow on them, a feeling heart was the only one that descended to me; +this had been the source of their felicity, it was the foundation of all +my misfortunes. + +I came into the world with so few signs of life, that they entertained +but little hope of preserving me, with the seeds of a disorder that has +gathered strength with years, and from which I am now relieved at +intervals, only to suffer a different, though more intolerable evil. +I owed my preservation to one of my father's sisters, an amiable and +virtuous girl, who took the most tender care of me; she is yet living, +nursing, at the age of four--score, a husband younger than herself, but +worn out with excessive drinking. Dear aunt! I freely forgive your +having preserved my life, and only lament that it is not in my power to +bestow on the decline of your days the tender solicitude and care you +lavished on the first dawn of mine. My nurse, Jaqueline, is likewise +living: and in good health--the hands that opened my eyes to the light of +this world may close them at my death. We suffer before we think; it is +the common lot of humanity. I experienced more than my proportion of it. +I have no knowledge of what passed prior to my fifth or sixth year; I +recollect nothing of learning to read, I only remember what effect the +first considerable exercise of it produced on my mind; and from that +moment I date an uninterrupted knowledge of myself. + +Every night, after supper, we read some part of a small collection of +romances which had been my mother's. My father's design was only to +improve me in reading, and he thought these entertaining works were +calculated to give me a fondness for it; but we soon found ourselves so +interested in the adventures they contained, that we alternately read +whole nights together, and could not bear to give over until at the +conclusion of a volume. Sometimes, in a morning, on hearing the swallows +at our window, my father, quite ashamed of this weakness, would cry, +"Come, come, let us go to bed; I am more a child than thou art." + +I soon acquired, by this dangerous custom, not only an extreme facility +in reading and comprehending, but, for my age, a too intimate +acquaintance with the passions. An infinity of sensations were familiar +to me, without possessing any precise idea of the objects to which they +related--I had conceived nothing--I had felt the whole. This confused +succession of emotions did not retard the future efforts of my reason, +though they added an extravagant, romantic notion of human life, which +experience and reflection have never been able to eradicate. + +My romance reading concluded with the summer of 1719, the following +winter was differently employed. My mother's library being quite +exhausted, we had recourse to that part of her father's which had +devolved to us; here we happily found some valuable books, which was by +no means extraordinary, having been selected by a minister that truly +deserved that title, in whom learning (which was the rage of the times) +was but a secondary commendation, his taste and good sense being most +conspicuous. The history of the Church and Empire by Le Sueur, +Bossuett's Discourses on Universal History, Plutarch's Lives, the history +of Venice by Nani, Ovid's Metamorphoses, La Bruyere, Fontenelle's World, +his Dialogues of the Dead, and a few volumes of Moliere, were soon ranged +in my father's closet, where, during the hours he was employed in his +business, I daily read them, with an avidity and taste uncommon, perhaps +unprecedented at my age. + +Plutarch presently became my greatest favorite. The satisfaction I +derived from repeated readings I gave this author, extinguished my +passion for romances, and I shortly preferred Agesilaus, Brutus, and +Aristides, to Orondates, Artemenes, and Juba. These interesting +studies, seconded by the conversations they frequently occasioned with my +father, produced that republican spirit and love of liberty, that haughty +and invincible turn of mind, which rendered me impatient of restraint or +servitude, and became the torment of my life, as I continually found +myself in situations incompatible with these sentiments. Incessantly +occupied with Rome and Athens, conversing, if I may so express myself +with their illustrious heroes; born the citizen of a republic, of a +father whose ruling passion was a love of his country, I was fired with +these examples; could fancy myself a Greek or Roman, and readily give +into the character of the personage whose life I read; transported by the +recital of any extraordinary instance of fortitude or intrepidity, +animation flashed from my eyes, and gave my voice additional strength and +energy. One day, at table, while relating the fortitude of Scoevola, +they were terrified at seeing me start from my seat and hold my hand over +a hot chafing--dish, to represent more forcibly the action of that +determined Roman. + +My brother, who was seven years older than myself, was brought up to my +father's profession. The extraordinary affection they lavished on me +might be the reason he was too much neglected: this certainly was a fault +which cannot be justified. His education and morals suffered by this +neglect, and he acquired the habits of a libertine before he arrived at +an age to be really one. My father tried what effect placing him with a +master would produce, but he still persisted in the same ill conduct. +Though I saw him so seldom that it could hardly be said we were +acquainted. I loved him tenderly, and believe he had as strong an +affection for me as a youth of his dissipated turn of mind could be +supposed capable of. One day, I remember, when my father was correcting +him severely, I threw myself between them, embracing my brother, whom I +covered with my body, receiving the strokes designed for him; I persisted +so obstinately in my protection, that either softened by my cries and +tears, or fearing to hurt me most, his anger subsided, and he pardoned +his fault. In the end, my brother's conduct became so bad that he +suddenly disappeared, and we learned some time after that he was in +Germany, but he never wrote to us, and from that day we heard no news of +him: thus I became an only son. + +If this poor lad was neglected, it was quite different with his brother, +for the children of a king could not be treated with more attention and +tenderness than were bestowed on my infancy, being the darling of the +family; and what is rather uncommon, though treated as a beloved, never +a spoiled child; was never permitted, while under paternal inspection, +to play in the street with other children; never had any occasion to +contradict or indulge those fantastical humors which are usually +attributed to nature, but are in reality the effects of an injudicious +education. I had the faults common to my age, was talkative, a glutton, +and sometimes a liar, made no scruple of stealing sweetmeats, fruits, +or, indeed, any kind of eatables; but never took delight in mischievous +waste, in accusing others, or tormenting harmless animals. I recollect, +indeed, that one day, while Madam Clot, a neighbor of ours, was gone to +church, I made water in her kettle: the remembrance even now makes me +smile, for Madame Clot (though, if you please, a good sort of creature) +was one of the most tedious grumbling old women I ever knew. Thus have I +given a brief, but faithful, history of my childish transgressions. + +How could I become cruel or vicious, when I had before my eyes only +examples of mildness, and was surrounded by some of the best people in +the world? My father, my aunt, my nurse, my relations, our friends, our +neighbors, all I had any connection with, did not obey me, it is true, +but loved me tenderly, and I returned their affection. I found so little +to excite my desires, and those I had were so seldom contradicted, that I +was hardly sensible of possessing any, and can solemnly aver I was an +absolute stranger to caprice until after I had experienced the authority +of a master. + +Those hours that were not employed in reading or writing with my father, +or walking with my governess, Jaqueline, I spent with my aunt; and +whether seeing her embroider, or hearing her sing, whether sitting or +standing by her side, I was ever happy. Her tenderness and unaffected +gayety, the charms of her figure and countenance have left such indelible +impressions on my mind, that her manner, look, and attitude are still +before my eyes; I recollect a thousand little caressing questions; could +describe her clothes, her head-dress, nor have the two curls of fine +black hair which hung on her temples, according to the mode of that time, +escaped my memory. + +Though my taste, or rather passion, for music, did not show itself until +a considerable time after, I am fully persuaded it is to her I am +indebted for it. She knew a great number of songs, which she sung with +great sweetness and melody. The serenity and cheerfulness which were +conspicuous in this lovely girl, banished melancholy, and made all round +her happy. + +The charms of her voice had such an effect on me, that not only several +of her songs have ever since remained on my memory, but some I have not +thought of from my infancy, as I grow old, return upon my mind with a +charm altogether inexpressible. Would any one believe that an old dotard +like me, worn out with care and infirmity, should sometime surprise +himself weeping like a child, and in a voice querulous, and broken by +age, muttering out one of those airs which were the favorites of my +infancy? There is one song in particular, whose tune I perfectly +recollect, but the words that compose the latter half of it constantly +refuse every effort to recall them, though I have a confused idea of the +rhymes. The beginning, with what I have been able to recollect of the +remainder, is as follows: + + Tircis, je n'ose + Ecouter ton Chalumeau + Sous l'Ormeau; + Car on en cause + Deja dans notre hameau. + ---- ---- ------- + ------ --- un Berger + s'engager + sans danger, + Et toujours l'epine est sons la rose. + + +I have endeavored to account for the invincible charm my heart feels on +the recollection of this fragment, but it is altogether inexplicable. +I only know, that before I get to the end of it, I always find my voice +interrupted by tenderness, and my eyes suffused with tears. I have a +hundred times formed the resolution of writing to Paris for the remainder +of these words, if any one should chance to know them: but I am almost +certain the pleasure I take in the recollection would be greatly +diminished was I assured any one but my poor aunt Susan had sung them. + +Such were my affections on entering this life. Thus began to form and +demonstrate itself, a heart, at once haughty and tender, a character +effeminate, yet invincible; which, fluctuating between weakness and +courage, luxury and virtue, has ever set me in contradiction to myself; +causing abstinence and enjoyment, pleasure and prudence, equally to shun +me. + +This course of education was interrupted by an accident, whose +consequences influenced the rest of my life. My father had a quarrel +with M. G----, who had a captain's commission in France, and was related +to several of the Council. This G----, who was an insolent, ungenerous +man, happening to bleed at the nose, in order to be revenged, accused my +father of having drawn his sword on him in the city, and in consequence +of this charge they were about to conduct him to prison. He insisted +(according to the law of this republic) that the accuser should be +confined at the same time; and not being able to obtain this, preferred a +voluntary banishment for the remainder of his life, to giving up a point +by which he must sacrifice his honor and liberty. + +I remained under the tuition of my uncle Bernard, who was at that time +employed in the fortifications of Geneva. He had lost his eldest +daughter, but had a son about my own age, and we were sent together to +Bossey, to board with the Minister Lambercier. Here we were to learn +Latin, with all the insignificant trash that has obtained the name of +education. + +Two years spent in this village softened, in some degree, my Roman +fierceness, and again reduced me to a state of childhood. At Geneva, +where nothing was exacted, I loved reading, which was, indeed, my +principal amusement; but, at Bossey, where application was expected, +I was fond of play as a relaxation. The country was so new, so charming +in my idea, that it seemed impossible to find satiety in its enjoyments, +and I conceived a passion for rural life, which time has not been able to +extinguish; nor have I ever ceased to regret the pure and tranquil +pleasures I enjoyed at this place in my childhood; the remembrance having +followed me through every age, even to that in which I am hastening again +towards it. + +M. Lambercier was a worthy, sensible man, who, without neglecting our +instruction, never made our acquisitions burthensome, or tasks tedious. +What convinces me of the rectitude of his method is, that notwithstanding +my extreme aversion to restraint, the recollection of my studies is never +attended with disgust; and, if my improvement was trivial, it was +obtained with ease, and has never escaped memory. + +The simplicity of this rural life was of infinite advantage in opening my +heart to the reception of true friendship. The sentiments I had hitherto +formed on this subject were extremely elevated, but altogether imaginary. +The habit of living in this peaceful manner soon united me tenderly to my +cousin Bernard; my affection was more ardent than that I had felt for my +brother, nor has time ever been able to efface it. He was a tall, lank, +weakly boy, with a mind as mild as his body was feeble, and who did not +wrong the good opinion they were disposed to entertain for the son of my +guardian. Our studies, amusements, and tasks, were the same; we were +alone; each wanted a playmate; to separate would in some measure, have +been to annihilate us. Though we had not many opportunities of +demonstrating our attachment to each other, it was certainly extreme; and +so far from enduring the thought of separation, we could not even form an +idea that we should ever be able to submit to it. Each of a disposition +to be won by kindness, and complaisant, when not soured by contradiction, +we agreed in every particular. If, by the favor of those who governed us +he had the ascendant while in their presence, I was sure to acquire it +when we were alone, and this preserved the equilibrium so necessary in +friendship. If he hesitated in repeating his task, I prompted him; when +my exercises were finished, I helped to write his; and, in our +amusements, my disposition being most active, ever had the lead. In a +word, our characters accorded so well, and the friendship that subsisted +between us was so cordial, that during the five years we were at Bossey +and Geneva we were inseparable: we often fought, it is true, but there +never was any occasion to separate us. No one of our quarrels lasted +more than a quarter of an hour, and never in our lives did we make any +complaint of each other. It may be said, these remarks are frivolous; +but, perhaps, a similiar example among children can hardly be produced. + +The manner in which I passed my time at Bossey was so agreeable to my +disposition, that it only required a longer duration absolutely to have +fixed my character, which would have had only peaceable, affectionate, +benevolent sentiments for its basis. I believe no individual of our kind +ever possessed less natural vanity than myself. At intervals, by an +extraordinary effort, I arrived at sublime ideas, but presently sunk +again into my original languor. To be loved by every one who knew me was +my most ardent wish. I was naturally mild, my cousin was equally so, and +those who had the care of us were of similiar dispositions. Everything +contributed to strengthen those propensities which nature had implanted +in my breast, and during the two years I was neither the victim nor +witness of any violent emotions. + +I knew nothing so delightful as to see every one content, not only with +me, but all that concerned them. When repeating our catechism at church, +nothing could give me greater vexation, on being obliged to hesitate, +than to see Miss Lambercier's countenance express disapprobation and +uneasiness. This alone was more afflicting to me than the shame of +faltering before so many witnesses, which, notwithstanding, was +sufficiently painful; for though not oversolicitous of praise, I was +feelingly alive to shame; yet I can truly affirm, the dread of being +reprimanded by Miss Lambercier alarmed me less than the thought of making +her uneasy. + +Neither she nor her brother were deficient in a reasonable severity, but +as this was scarce ever exerted without just cause, I was more afflicted +at their disapprobation than the punishment. Certainly the method of +treating youth would be altered if the distant effects, this +indiscriminate, and frequently indiscreet method produces, were more +conspicuous. I would willingly excuse myself from a further explanation, +did not the lesson this example conveys (which points out an evil as +frequent as it is pernicious) forbid my silence. + +As Miss Lambercier felt a mother's affection, she sometimes exerted a +mother's authority, even to inflicting on us when we deserved it, the +punishment of infants. She had often threatened it, and this threat of a +treatment entirely new, appeared to me extremely dreadful; but I found +the reality much less terrible than the idea, and what is still more +unaccountable, this punishment increased my affection for the person who +had inflicted it. All this affection, aided by my natural mildness, was +scarcely sufficient to prevent my seeking, by fresh offences, a return of +the same chastisement; for a degree of sensuality had mingled with the +smart and shame, which left more desire than fear of a repetition. I was +well convinced the same discipline from her brother would have produced a +quite contrary effect; but from a man of his disposition this was not +probable, and if I abstained from meriting correction it was merely from +a fear of offending Miss Lambercier, for benevolence, aided by the +passions, has ever maintained an empire over me which has given law to my +heart. + +This event, which, though desirable, I had not endeavored to accelerate, +arrived without my fault; I should say, without my seeking; and I +profited by it with a safe conscience; but this second, was also the last +time, for Miss Lambercier, who doubtless had some reason to imagine this +chastisement did not produce the desired effect, declared it was too +fatiguing, and that she renounced it for the future. Till now we had +slept in her chamber, and during the winter, even in her bed; but two +days after another room was prepared for us, and from that moment I had +the honor (which I could very well have dispensed with) of being treated +by her as a great boy. + +Who would believe this childish discipline, received at eight years old, +from the hands of a woman of thirty, should influence my propensities, +my desires, my passions, for the rest of my life, and that in quite a +contrary sense from what might naturally have been expected? The very +incident that inflamed my senses, gave my desires such an extraordinary +turn, that, confined to what I had already experienced, I sought no +further, and, with blood boiling with sensuality, almost from my birth, +preserved my purity beyond the age when the coldest constitutions lose +their insensibility; long tormented, without knowing by what, I gazed on +every handsome woman with delight; imagination incessantly brought their +charms to my remembrance, only to transform them into so many Miss +Lamberciers. + +If ever education was perfectly chaste, it was certainly that I received; +my three aunts were not only of exemplary prudence, but maintained a +degree of modest reserve which women have long since thought unnecessary. +My father, it is true, loved pleasure, but his gallantry was rather of +the last than the present century, and he never expressed his affection +for any woman he regarded in terms a virgin could have blushed at; +indeed, it was impossible more attention should be paid to that regard we +owe the morals of children than was uniformly observed by every one I had +any concern with. An equal degree of reserve in this particular was +observed at M. Lambercier's, where a good maid-servant was discharged for +having once made use of an expression before us which was thought to +contain some degree of indelicacy. I had no precise idea of the ultimate +effect of the passions, but the conception I had formed was extremely +disgusting; I entertained a particular aversion for courtesans, nor could +I look on a rake without a degree of disdain mingled with terror. + +These prejudices of education, proper in themselves to retard the first +explosions of a combustible constitution, were strengthened, as I have +already hinted, by the effect the first moments of sensuality produced in +me, for notwithstanding the troublesome ebullition of my blood, I was +satisfied with the species of voluptuousness I had already been +acquainted with, and sought no further. + +Thus I passed the age of puberty, with a constitution extremely ardent, +without knowing or even wishing for any other gratification of the +passions than what Miss Lambercier had innocently given me an idea of; +and when I became a man, that childish taste, instead of vanishing, only +associated with the other. This folly, joined to a natural timidity, has +always prevented my being very enterprising with women, so that I have +passed my days in languishing in silence for those I most admired, +without daring to disclose my wishes. + +To fall at the feet of an imperious mistress, obey her mandates, or +implore pardon, were for me the most exquisite enjoyments, and the more +my blood was inflamed by the efforts of a lively imagination the more I +acquired the appearance of a whining lover. + +It will be readily conceived that this mode of making love is not +attended with a rapid progress or imminent danger to the virtue of its +object; yet, though I have few favors to boast of, I have not been +excluded from enjoyment, however imaginary. Thus the senses, in +concurrence with a mind equally timid and romantic, have preserved my +moral chaste, and feelings uncorrupted, with precisely the same +inclinations, which, seconded with a moderate portion of effrontery, +might have plunged me into the most unwarrantable excesses. + +I have made the first, most difficult step, in the obscure and painful +maze of my Confessions. We never feel so great a degree of repugnance in +divulging what is really criminal, as what is merely ridiculous. I am +now assured of my resolution, for after what I have dared disclose, +nothing can have power to deter me. The difficulty attending these +acknowledgments will be readily conceived, when I declare, that during +the whole of my life, though frequently laboring under the most violent +agitation, being hurried away with the impetuosity of a passion which +(when in company with those I loved) deprived me of the faculty of sight +and hearing, I could never, in the course of the most unbounded +familiarity, acquire sufficient resolution to declare my folly, and +implore the only favor that remained to bestow. + +In thus investigating the first traces of my sensible existence, I find +elements, which, though seemingly incompatible, have united to produce a +simple and uniform effect; while others, apparently the same, have, by +the concurrence of certain circumstances, formed such different +combinations, that it would never be imagined they had any affinity; who +would believe, for example, that one of the most vigorous springs of my +soul was tempered in the identical source from whence luxury and ease +mingled with my constitution and circulated in my veins? Before I quit +this subject, I will add a striking instance of the different effects +they produced. + +One day, while I was studying in a chamber contiguous to the kitchen, the +maid set some of Miss Lambercier's combs to dry by the fire, and on +coming to fetch them some time after, was surprised to find the teeth of +one of them broken off. Who could be suspected of this mischief? No one +but myself had entered the room: I was questioned, but denied having any +knowledge of it. Mr. and Miss Lambercier consult, exhort, threaten, but +all to no purpose; I obstinately persist in the denial; and, though this +was the first time I had been detected in a confirmed falsehood, +appearances were so strong that they overthrew all my protestations. +This affair was thought serious; the mischief, the lie, the obstinacy, +were considered equally deserving of punishment, which was not now to be +administered by Miss Lambercier. My uncle Bernard was written to; he +arrived; and my poor cousin being charged with a crime no less serious, +we were conducted to the same execution, which was inflicted with great +severity. If finding a remedy in the evil itself, they had sought ever +to allay my depraved desires, they could not have chosen a shorter method +to accomplish their designs, and, I can assure my readers, I was for a +long time freed from the dominion of them. + +As this severity could not draw from me the expected acknowledgment, +which obstinacy brought on several repetitions, and reduced me to a +deplorable situation, yet I was immovable, and resolutely determined to +suffer death rather than submit. Force, at length, was obliged to yield +to the diabolical infatuation of a child, for no better name was bestowed +on my constancy, and I came out of this dreadful trial, torn, it is true, +but triumphant. Fifty years have expired since this adventure--the fear +of punishment is no more. Well, then, I aver, in the face of Heaven, I +was absolutely innocent: and, so far from breaking, or even touching the +comb, never came near the fire. It will be asked, how did this mischief +happen? I can form no conception of it, I only know my own innocence. + +Let any one figure to himself a character whose leading traits were +docility and timidity, but haughty, ardent, and invincible, in its +passions; a child, hitherto governed by the voice of reason, treated with +mildness, equity, and complaisance, who could not even support the idea +of injustice, experiencing, for the first time, so violent an instance of +it, inflicted by those he most loved and respected. What perversion of +ideas! What confusion in the heart, the brain, in all my little being, +intelligent and moral!--let any one, I say, if possible, imagine all +this, for I am incapable of giving the least idea of what passed in my +mind at that period. + +My reason was not sufficiently established to enable me to put myself in +the place of others, and judge how much appearances condemned me, I only +beheld the rigor of a dreadful chastisement, inflicted for a crime I had +not committed; yet I can truly affirm, the smart I suffered, though +violent, was inconsiderable compared to what I felt from indignation, +rage, and despair. My cousin, who was almost in similar circumstances, +having been punished for an involuntary fault as guilty of a premediated +crime, became furious by my example. Both in the same bed, we embraced +each other with convulsive transport; we were almost suffocated; and when +our young hearts found sufficient relief to breathe out our indigination, +we sat up in the bed, and with all our force, repeated a hundred times, +Carnifex! Carnifex! Carnifex! executioner, tormentor. + +Even while I write this I feel my pulse quicken, and should I live a +hundred thousand years, the agitation of that moment would still be fresh +in my memory. The first instance of violence and oppression is so deeply +engraved on my soul, that every relative idea renews my emotion: the +sentiment of indignation, which in its origin had reference only to +myself, has acquired such strength, and is at present so completely +detached from personal motives, that my heart is as much inflamed at the +sight or relation of any act of injustice (whatever may be the object, or +wheresoever it may be perpetrated) as if I was the immediate sufferer. +When I read the history of a merciless tyrant, or the dark and the subtle +machination of a knavish designing priest, I could on the instant set off +to stab the miscreants, though I was certain to perish in the attempt. + +I have frequently fatigued myself by running after and stoning a cock, a +cow, a dog, or any animal I saw tormenting another, only because it was +conscious of possessing superior strength. This may be natural to me, +and I am inclined to believe it is, though the lively impression of the +first injustice I became the victim of was too long and too powerfully +remembered not to have added considerable force to it. + +This occurrence terminated my infantine serenity; from that moment I +ceased to enjoy a pure unadulterated happiness, and on a retrospection of +the pleasure of my childhood, I yet feel they ended here. We continue at +Bossey some months after this event, but were like our first parents in +the Garden of Eden after they had lost their innocence; in appearance our +situation was the same, in effect it was totally different. + +Affection, respect; intimacy, confidence, no longer attached the pupils +to their guides; we beheld them no longer as divinities, who could read +the secrets of our hearts; we were less ashamed of committing faults, +more afraid of being accused of them: we learned to dissemble, to rebel, +to lie: all the vices common to our years began to corrupt our happy +innocence, mingle with our sports, and embitter our amusements. The +country itself, losing those sweet and simple charms which captivate the +heart, appeared a gloomy desert, or covered with a veil that concealed +its beauties. We cultivated our little gardens no more: our flowers were +neglected. We no longer scratched away the mould, and broke out into +exclamations of delight, on discovering that the grain we had sown began +to shoot. We were disgusted with our situation; our preceptors were +weary of us. In a word, my uncle wrote for our return, and we left Mr. +and Miss Lambercier without feeling any regret at the separation. + +Near thirty years passed away from my leaving Bossey, without once +recalling the place to my mind with any degree of satisfaction; but after +having passed the prime of life, as I decline into old age (while more +recent occurrences are wearing out apace) I feel these remembrances +revive and imprint themselves on my heart, with a force and charm that +every day acquires fresh strength; as if, feeling life fleet from me, +I endeavored to catch it again by its commencement. The most trifling +incident of those happy days delight me, for no other reason than being +of those days. I recall every circumstance of time, place, and persons; +I see the maid or footman busy in the chamber, a swallow entering the +window, a fly settling on my hand while repeating my lessons. I see the +whole economy of the apartment; on the right hand Mr. Lambercier's +closet, with a print representing all the popes, a barometer, a large +almanac, the windows of the house (which stood in a hollow at the bottom +of the garden) shaded by raspberry shrubs, whose shoots sometimes found +entrance; I am sensible the reader has no occasion to know all this, but +I feel a kind of necessity for relating it. Why am I not permitted to +recount all the little anecdotes of that thrice happy age, at the +recollection of whose joys I ever tremble with delight? Five or six +particularly--let us compromise the matter--I will give up five, but +then I must have one, and only one, provided I may draw it out to its +utmost length, in order to prolong my satisfaction. + +If I only sought yours, I should choose that of Miss Lambercier's +backside, which by an unlucky fall at the bottom of the meadow, was +exposed to the view of the King of Sardinia, who happened to be passing +by; but that of the walnut tree on the terrace is more amusing to me, +since here I was an actor, whereas, in the abovementioned scene I was +only a spectator; and I must confess I see nothing that should occasion +risibility in an accident, which, however laughable in itself, alarmed me +for a person I loved as a mother, or perhaps something more. + +Ye curious readers, whose expectations are already on the stretch for the +noble history of the terrace, listen to the tragedy, and abstain from +trembling, if you can, at the horrible catastrophe! + +At the outside of the courtyard door, on the left hand, was a terrace; +here they often sat after dinner; but it was subject to one +inconvenience, being too much exposed to the rays of the sun; to obviate +this defect, Mr. Lambercier had a walnut tree set there, the planting of +which was attended with great solemnity. The two boarders were +godfathers, and while the earth was replacing round the root, each held +the tree with one hand, singing songs of triumph. In order to water it +with more effect, they formed a kind of luson around its foot: myself and +cousin, who were every day ardent spectators of this watering, confirmed +each other in the very natural idea that it was nobler to plant trees on +the terrace than colors on a breach, and this glory we were resolved to +procure without dividing it with any one. + +In pursuance of this resolution, we cut a slip off a willow, and planted +it on the terrace, at about eight or ten feet distance from the august +walnut tree. We did not forget to make a hollow round it, but the +difficulty was how to procure a supply of water, which was brought from a +considerable distance, and we not permitted to fetch it: but water was +absolutely necessary for our willow, and we made use of every stratagem +to obtain it. + +For a few days everything succeeded so well that it began to bud, and +throw out small leaves, which we hourly measured convinced (tho' now +scarce a foot from the ground) it would soon afford us a refreshing +shade. This unfortunate willow, by engrossing our whole time, rendered +us incapable of application to any other study, and the cause of our +inattention not being known, we were kept closer than before. The fatal +moment approached when water must fail, and we were already afflicted +with the idea that our tree must perish with drought. At length +necessity, the parent of industry, suggested an invention, by which we +might save our tree from death, and ourselves from despair; it was to +make a furrow underground, which would privately conduct a part of the +water from the walnut tree to our willow. This undertaking was executed +with ardor, but did not immediately succeed--our descent was not +skilfully planned--the water did not run, the earth falling in and +stopping up the furrow; yet, though all went contrary, nothing +discouraged us, 'omnia vincit labor improbus'. We made the bason deeper, +to give the water a more sensible descent; we cut the bottom of a box +into narrow planks; increased the channel from the walnut tree to our +willow and laying a row flat at the bottom, set two others inclining +towards each other, so as to form a triangular channel; we formed a kind +of grating with small sticks at the end next the walnut tree, to prevent +the earth and stones from stopping it up, and having carefully covered +our work with well--trodden earth, in a transport of hope and fear +attended the hour of watering. After an interval, which seemed an age of +expectation, this hour arrived. Mr. Lambercier, as usual, assisted at +the operation; we contrived to get between him and our tree, towards +which he fortunately turned his back. They no sooner began to pour the +first pail of water, than we perceived it running to the willow; this +sight was too much for our prudence, and we involuntarily expressed our +transport by a shout of joy. The sudden exclamation made Mr. Lambercier +turn about, though at that instant he was delighted to observe how +greedily the earth, which surrounded the root of his walnut tree, imbibed +the water. Surprised at seeing two trenches partake of it, he shouted in +his turn, examines, perceives the roguery, and, sending instantly for a +pick axe, at one fatal blow makes two or three of our planks fly, crying +out meantime with all his strength, an aqueduct! an aqueduct! His +strokes redoubled, every one of which made an impression on our hearts; +in a moment the planks, the channel, the bason, even our favorite willow, +all were ploughed up, nor was one word pronounced during this terrible +transaction, except the above mentioned exclamation. An aqueduct! +repeated he, while destroying all our hopes, an aqueduct! an aqueduct! + +It maybe supposed this adventure had a still more melancholy end for the +young architects; this, however, was not the case; the affair ended here. +Mr. Lambercier never reproached us on this account, nor was his +countenance clouded with a frown; we even heard him mention the +circumstance to his sister with loud bursts of laughter. The laugh of +Mr. Lambercier might be heard to a considerable distance. But what is +still more surprising after the first transport of sorrow had subsided, +we did not find ourselves violently afflicted; we planted a tree in +another spot, and frequently recollected the catastrophe of the former, +repeating with a significant emphasis, an aqueduct! an aqueduct! +Till then, at intervals, I had fits of ambition, and could fancy myself +Brutus or Aristides, but this was the first visible effect of my vanity. +To have constructed an aqueduct with our own hands, to have set a slip of +willow in competition with a flourishing tree, appeared to me a supreme +degree of glory! I had a juster conception of it at ten than Caesar +entertained at thirty. + +The idea of this walnut tree, with the little anecdotes it gave rise to, +have so well continued, or returned to my memory, that the design which +conveyed the most pleasing sensations, during my journey to Geneva, in +the year 1754, was visiting Bossey, and reviewing the monuments of my +infantine amusement, above all, the beloved walnut tree, whose age at +that time must have been verging on a third of a century, but I was so +beset with company that I could not find a moment to accomplish my +design. There is little appearance now of the occasion being renewed; +but should I ever return to that charming spot, and find my favorite +walnut tree still existing, I am convinced I should water it with my +tears. + +On my return to Geneva, I passed two or three years at my uncle's, +expecting the determination of my friends respecting my future +establishment. His own son being devoted to genius, was taught drawing, +and instructed by his father in the elements of Euclid; I partook of +these instructions, but was principally fond of drawing. Meantime, they +were irresolute, whether to make me a watchmaker, a lawyer, or a +minister. I should have preferred being a minister, as I thought it must +be a charming thing to preach, but the trifling income which had been my +mother's, and was to be divided between my brother and myself, was too +inconsiderable to defray the expense attending the prosecution of my +studies. As my age did not render the choice very pressing, I remained +with my uncle, passing my time with very little improvement, and paying +pretty dear, though not unreasonably, for my board. + +My uncle, like my father, was a man of pleasure, but had not learned, +like him, to abridge his amusements for the sake of instructing his +family, consequently our education was neglected. My aunt was a devotee, +who loved singing psalms better than thinking of our improvement, so that +we were left entirely to ourselves, which liberty we never abused. + +Ever inseparable, we were all the world to each other; and, feeling no +inclination to frequent the company of a number of disorderly lads of our +own age, we learned none of those habits of libertinism to which our idle +life exposed us. Perhaps I am wrong in charging myself and cousin with +idleness at this time, for, in our lives, we were never less so; and what +was extremely fortunate, so incessantly occupied with our amusements, +that we found no temptation to spend any part of our time in the streets. +We made cages, pipes, kites, drums, houses, ships, and bows; spoiled the +tools of my good old grandfather by endeavoring to make watches in +imitation of him; but our favorite amusement was wasting paper, in +drawing, washing, coloring, etc. There came an Italian mountebank to +Geneva, called Gamber-Corta, who had an exhibition of puppets, that he +made play a kind of comedy. We went once to see them, but could not +spare time to go again, being busily employed in making puppets of our +own and inventing comedies, which we immediately set about making them +perform, mimicking to the best of our abilities the uncouth voice of +Punch; and, to complete the business, my good aunt and uncle Bernard had +the patience to see and listen to our imitations; but my uncle, having +one day read an elaborate discourse to his family, we instantly gave up +our comedies, and began composing sermons. + +These details, I confess, are not very amusing, but they serve to +demonstrate that the former part of our education was well directed, +since being, at such an early age, the absolute masters of our time, +we found no inclination to abuse it; and so little in want of other +companions, that we constantly neglected every occasion of seeking them. +When taking our walks together, we observed their diversions without +feeling any inclination to partake of them. Friendship so entirely +occupied our hearts, that, pleased with each other's company the simplest +pastimes were sufficient to delight us. + +We were soon remarked for being thus inseparable: and what rendered us +more conspicuous, my cousin was very tall, myself extremely short, so +that we exhibited a very whimsical contrast. This meagre figure, small, +sallow countenance, heavy air, and supine gait, excited the ridicule of +the children, who, in the gibberish of the country, nicknamed him 'Barna +Bredanna'; and we no sooner got out of doors than our ears were assailed +with a repetition of "Barna Bredanna." He bore this indignity with +tolerable patience, but I was instantly for fighting. This was what the +young rogues aimed at. I engaged accordingly, and was beat. My poor +cousin did all in his power to assist me, but he was weak, and a single +stroke brought him to the ground. I then became furious, and received +several smart blows, some of which were aimed at 'Barna Bredanna'. This +quarrel so far increased the evil, that, to avoid their insults, we could +only show ourselves in the streets while they were employed at school. + +I had already become a redresser of grievances; there only wanted a lady +in the way to be a knight-errant in form. This defect was soon supplied; +I presently had two. I frequently went to see my father at Nion, a small +city in the Vaudois country, where he was now settled. Being universally +respected, the affection entertained for him extended to me: and, during +my visits, the question seemed to be, who should show me most kindness. +A Madame de Vulson, in particular, loaded me with caresses; and, to +complete all, her daughter made me her gallant. I need not explain what +kind of gallant a boy of eleven must be to a girl of two and twenty; the +artful hussies know how to set these puppets up in front, to conceal more +serious engagements. On my part I saw no inequality between myself and +Miss Vulson, was flattered by the circumstance, and went into it with my +whole heart, or rather my whole head, for this passion certainly reached +no further, though it transported me almost to madness, and frequently +produced scenes sufficient to make even a cynic expire with laughter. + +I have experienced two kinds of love, equally real, which have scarce any +affinity, yet each differing materially from tender friendship. My whole +life has been divided between these affections, and I have frequently +felt the power of both at the same instant. For example, at the very +time I so publically and tyrannically claimed Miss Vulson, that I could +not suffer any other of my sex to approach her, I had short, but +passionate, assignations with a Miss Goton, who thought proper to act the +schoolmistress with me. Our meetings, though absolutely childish, +afforded me the height of happiness. I felt the whole charm of mystery, +and repaid Miss Vulson in kind, when she least expected it, the use she +made of me in concealing her amours. To my great mortification, this +secret was soon discovered, and I presently lost my young schoolmistress. + +Miss Goton was, in fact, a singular personage. She was not handsome, +yet there was a certain something in her figure which could not easily +be forgotten, and this for an old fool, I am too often convinced of. +Her eyes, in particular, neither corresponded with her age, her height, +nor her manner; she had a lofty imposing air, which agreed extremely well +with the character she assumed, but the most extraordinary part of her +composition was a mixture of forwardness and reserve difficult to be +conceived; and while she took the greatest liberties with me, would never +permit any to be taken with her in return, treating me precisely like a +child. This makes me suppose she had either ceased herself to be one, +or was yet sufficiently so to behold us play the danger to which this +folly exposed her. + +I was so absolutely in the power of both these mistresses, that when in +the presence of either, I never thought of her who was absent; in other +respects, the effects they produced on me bore no affinity. I could have +passed my whole life with Miss Vulson, without forming a wish to quit +her; but then, my satisfaction was attended with a pleasing serenity; +and, in numerous companies, I was particularly charmed with her. The +sprightly sallies of her wit, the arch glance of her eye, even jealousy +itself, strengthened my attachment, and I triumphed in the preference she +seemed to bestow on me, while addressed by more powerful rivals; +applause, encouragement, and smiles, gave animation to my happiness. +Surrounded by a throng of observers, I felt the whole force of love--I +was passionate, transported; in a tete-a-tete, I should have been +constrained, thoughtful, perhaps unhappy. If Miss Vulson was ill, I +suffered with her; would willingly have given up my own health to +establish hers (and, observe I knew the want of it from experience); if +absent, she employed my thoughts, I felt the want of her; when present, +her caresses came with warmth and rapture to my heart, though my senses +were unaffected. The familiarities she bestowed on me I could not have +supported the idea of her granting to another; I loved her with a +brother's affection only, but experienced all the jealousy of a lover. + +With Miss Goton this passion might have acquired a degree of fury; I +should have been a Turk, a tiger, had I once imagined she bestowed her +favors on any but myself. The pleasure I felt on approaching Miss Vulson +was sufficiently ardent, though unattended with uneasy sensations; but at +sight of Miss Goton, I felt myself bewildered--every sense was absorbed +in ecstasy. I believe it would have been impossible to have remained +long with her; I must have been suffocated with the violence of my +palpitations. I equally dreaded giving either of them displeasure; with +one I was more complaisant; with the other, more submissive. I would not +have offended Miss Vulson for the world; but if Miss Goton had commanded +me to throw myself into the flames, I think I should have instantly +obeyed her. Happily, both for her and myself, our amours; or rather +rendezvous, were not of long duration: and though my connection with Miss +Vulson was less dangerous, after a continuance of some greater length, +that likewise had its catastrophe; indeed the termination of a love +affair is good for nothing, unless it partakes of the romantic, and can +furnish out at least an exclamation. + +Though my correspondence with Miss Vulson was less animated, it was +perhaps more endearing; we never separated without tears, and it can +hardly be conceived what a void I felt in my heart. I could neither +think nor speak of anything but her. These romantic sorrows were not +affected, though I am inclined to believe they did not absolutely centre +in her, for I am persuaded (though I did not perceive it at that time) +being deprived of amusement bore a considerable share in them. + +To soften the rigor of absence, we agreed to correspond with each other, +and the pathetic expressions these letters contained were sufficient to +have split a rock. In a word, I had the honor of her not being able to +endure the pain of separation. She came to see me at Geneva. + +My head was now completely turned; and during the two days she remained +here, I was intoxicated with delight. At her departure, I would have +thrown myself into the water after her, and absolutely rent the air with +my cries. The week following she sent me sweetmeats, gloves, etc. This +certainly would have appeared extremely gallant, had I not been informed +of her marriage at the same instant, and that the journey I had thought +proper to give myself the honor of, was only to buy her wedding suit. + +My indignation may easily be conceived; I shall not attempt to describe +it. In this heroic fury, I swore never more to see the perfidious girl, +supposing it the greatest punishment that could be inflicted on her. +This, however, did not occasion her death, for twenty years after, while +on a visit to my father, being on the lake, I asked who those ladies were +in a boat not far from ours. "What!" said my father smiling, "does not +your heart inform you? It is your former flame, it is Madame Christin, +or, if you please, Miss Vulson." I started at the almost forgotten name, +and instantly ordered the waterman to turn off, not judging it worth +while to be perjured, however favorable the opportunity for revenge, in +renewing a dispute of twenty years past, with a woman of forty. + +Thus, before my future destination was determined, did I fool away the +most precious moments of my youth. After deliberating a long time on the +bent of my natural inclination, they resolved to dispose of me in a +manner the most repugnant to them. I was sent to Mr. Masseron, the City +Register, to learn (according to the expression of my uncle Bernard) the +thriving occupation of a scraper. This nickname was inconceivably +displeasing to me, and I promised myself but little satisfaction in the +prospect of heaping up money by a mean employment. The assiduity and +subjection required, completed my disgust, and I never set foot in the +office without feeling a kind of horror, which every day gained fresh +strength. + +Mr. Masseron, who was not better pleased with my abilities than I was +with the employment, treated me with disdain, incessantly upbraiding me +with being a fool and blockhead, not forgetting to repeat, that my uncle +had assured him I was a knowing one, though he could not find that I knew +anything. That he had promised to furnish him with a sprightly boy, but +had, in truth, sent him an ass. To conclude, I was turned out of the +registry, with the additional ignominy of being pronounced a fool by all +Mr. Masseron's clerks, and fit only to handle a file. + +My vocation thus determined, I was bound apprentice; not, however, to a +watchmaker, but to an engraver, and I had been so completely humiliated +by the contempt of the register, that I submitted without a murmur. My +master, whose name was M. Ducommon, was a young man of a very violent and +boorish character, who contrived in a short time to tarnish all the +amiable qualities of my childhood, to stupefy a disposition naturally +sprightly, and reduce my feelings, as well as my condition, to an +absolute state of servitude. I forgot my Latin, history, and +antiquities; I could hardly recollect whether such people as Romans ever +existed. When I visited my father, he no longer beheld his idol, nor +could the ladies recognize the gallant Jean Jacques; nay, I was so well +convinced that Mr. and Miss Lambercier would scarce receive me as their +pupil, that I endeavored to avoid their company, and from that time have +never seen them. The vilest inclinations, the basest actions, succeeded +my amiable amusements and even obliterated the very remembrance of them. +I must have had, in spite of my good education, a great propensity to +degenerate, else the declension could not have followed with such ease +and rapidity, for never did so promising a Caesar so quickly become a +Laradon. + +The art itself did not displease me. I had a lively taste for drawing. +There was nothing displeasing in the exercise of the graver; and as it +required no very extraordinary abilities to attain perfection as a +watchcase engraver, I hoped to arrive at it. Perhaps I should have +accomplished my design, if unreasonable restraint, added to the brutality +of my master, had not rendered my business disgusting. I wasted his +time, and employed myself in engraving medals, which served me and my +companions as a kind of insignia for a new invented order of chivalry, +and though this differed very little from my usual employ, I considered +it as a relaxation. Unfortunately, my master caught me at this +contraband labor, and a severe beating was the consequence. He +reproached me at the same time with attempting to make counterfeit money +because our medals bore the arms of the Republic, though, I can truly +aver, I had no conception of false money, and very little of the true, +knowing better how to make a Roman As than one of our threepenny pieces. + +My master's tyranny rendered insupportable that labor I should otherwise +have loved, and drove me to vices I naturally despised, such as +falsehood, idleness, and theft. Nothing ever gave me a clearer +demonstration of the difference between filial dependence and abject +slavery, than the remembrance of the change produced in me at that +period. Hitherto I had enjoyed a reasonable liberty; this I had suddenly +lost. I was enterprising at my father's, free at Mr. Lambercier's, +discreet at my uncle's; but, with my master, I became fearful, and from +that moment my mind was vitiated. Accustomed to live on terms of perfect +equality, to be witness of no pleasures I could not command, to see no +dish I was not to partake of, or be sensible of a desire I might not +express; to be able to bring every wish of my heart to my lips--what a +transition!--at my master's I was scarce allowed to speak, was forced to +quit the table without tasting what I most longed for, and the room when +I had nothing particular to do there; was incessantly confined to my +work, while the liberty my master and his journeymen enjoyed, served only +to increase the weight of my subjection. When disputes happened to +arise, though conscious that I understood the subject better than any of +them, I dared not offer my opinion; in a word, everything I saw became an +object of desire, for no other reason than because I was not permitted to +enjoy anything. Farewell gayety, ease, those happy turns of expressions, +which formerly even made my faults escape correction. I recollect, with +pleasure, a circumstance that happened at my father's, which even now +makes me smile. Being for some fault ordered to bed without my supper, +as I was passing through the kitchen, with my poor morsel of bread in my +hand, I saw the meat turning on the spit; my father and the rest were +round the fire; I must bow to every one as I passed. When I had gone +through this ceremony, leering with a wistful eye at the roast meat, +which looked so inviting, and smelt so savory, I could not abstain from +making that a bow likewise, adding in a pitiful tone, good bye, roast +meal! This unpremeditated pleasantry put them in such good humor, that I +was permitted to stay, and partake of it. Perhaps the same thing might +have produced a similar effect at my master's, but such a thought could +never have occurred to me, or, if it had, I should not have had courage +to express it. + +Thus I learned to covet, dissemble, lie, and, at length, to steal, a +propensity I never felt the least idea of before, though since that time +I have never been able entirely to divest myself of it. Desire and +inability united naturally led to this vice, which is the reason +pilfering is so common among footmen and apprentices, though the latter, +as they grow up, and find themselves in a situation where everything is +at their command, lose this shameful propensity. As I never experienced +the advantage, I never enjoyed the benefit. + +Good sentiments, ill-directed, frequently lead children into vice. +Notwithstanding my continual wants and temptations, it was more than a +year before I could resolve to take even eatables. My first theft was +occasioned by complaisance, but it was productive of others which had not +so plausible an excuse. + +My master had a journeyman named Verrat, whose mother lived in the +neighborhood, and had a garden at a considerable distance from the house, +which produced excellent asparagus. This Verrat, who had no great plenty +of money, took it in his head to rob her of the most early production of +her garden, and by the sale of it procure those indulgences he could not +otherwise afford himself; but not being very nimble, he did not care to +run the hazard of a surprise. After some preliminary flattery, which I +did not comprehend the meaning of, he proposed this expedition to me, as +an idea which had that moment struck him. At first I would not listen to +the proposal; but he persisted in his solicitation, and as I could never +resist the attacks of flattery, at length prevailed. In pursuance of +this virtuous resolution, I every morning repaired to the garden, +gathered the best of the asparagus, and took it to the Holard where some +good old women, who guessed how I came by it, wishing to diminish the +price, made no secret of their suspicions; this produced the desired +effect, for, being alarmed, I took whatever they offered, which being +taken to Mr. Verrat, was presently metamorphosed into a breakfast, and +divided with a companion of his; for, though I procured it, I never +partook of their good cheer, being fully satisfied with an inconsiderable +bribe. + +I executed my roguery with the greatest fidelity, seeking only to please +my employer; and several days passed before it came into my head, to rob +the robber, and tithe Mr. Verrat's harvest. I never considered the +hazard I run in these expeditions, not only of a torrent of abuse, but +what I should have been still more sensible of, a hearty beating; for the +miscreant, who received the whole benefit, would certainly have denied +all knowledge of the fact, and I should only have received a double +portion of punishment for daring to accuse him, since being only an +apprentice, I stood no chance of being believed in opposition to a +journeyman. Thus, in every situation, powerful rogues know how to save +themselves at the expense of the feeble. + +This practice taught me it was not so terrible to thieve as I had +imagined: I took care to make this discovery turn to some account, +helping myself to everything within my reach, that I conceived an +inclination for. I was not absolutely ill-fed at my master's, and +temperance was only painful to me by comparing it with the luxury he +enjoyed. The custom of sending young people from table precisely when +those things are served up which seem most tempting, is calculated to +increase their longing, and induces them to steal what they conceive to +be so delicious. It may be supposed I was not backward in this +particular: in general my knavery succeeded pretty well, though quite the +reverse when I happened to be detected. + +I recollect an attempt to procure some apples, which was attended with +circumstances that make me smile and shudder even at this instant. The +fruit was standing in the pantry, which by a lattice at a considerable +height received light from the kitchen. One day, being alone in the +house, I climbed up to see these precious apples, which being out of my +reach, made this pantry appear the garden of Hesperides. I fetched the +spit--tried if it would reach them--it was too short--I lengthened it +with a small one which was used for game,--my master being very fond of +hunting, darted at them several times without success; at length was more +fortunate; being transported to find I was bringing up an apple, I drew +it gently to the lattice--was going to seize it when (who can express my +grief and astonishment!) I found it would not pass through--it was too +large. I tried every expedient to accomplish my design, sought +supporters to keep the spits in the same position, a knife to divide the +apple, and a lath to hold it with; at length, I so far succeeded as to +effect the division, and made no doubt of drawing the pieces through; but +it was scarcely separated, (compassionate reader, sympathize with my +affliction) when both pieces fell into the pantry. + +Though I lost time by this experiment, I did not lose courage, but, +dreading a surprise, I put off the attempt till next day, when I hoped to +be more successful, and returned to my work as if nothing had happened, +without once thinking of what the two obvious witnesses I had left in the +pantry deposed against me. + +The next day (a fine opportunity offering) I renew the trial. I fasten +the spits together; get on the stool; take aim; am just going to dart at +my prey--unfortunately the dragon did not sleep; the pantry door opens, +my master makes his appearance, and, looking up, exclaims, "Bravo!" +--The horror of that moment returns--the pen drops from my hand. + +A continual repetition of ill treatment rendered me callous; it seemed a +kind of composition for my crimes, which authorized me to continue them, +and, instead of looking back at the punishment, I looked forward to +revenge. Being beat like a slave, I judged I had a right to all the +vices of one. I was convinced that to rob and be punished were +inseparable, and constituted, if I may so express myself, a kind of +traffic, in which, if I perform my part of the bargain, my master would +take care not to be deficient in his; that preliminary settled, I applied +myself to thieving with great tranquility, and whenever this +interrogatory occurred to my mind, "What will be the consequence?" the +reply was ready, "I know the worst, I shall be beat; no matter, I was +made for it." + +I love good eating; am sensual, but not greedy; I have such a variety of +inclinations to gratify, that this can never predominate; and unless my +heart is unoccupied, which very rarely happens, I pay but little +attention to my appetite; to purloining eatables, but extended this +propensity to everything I wished to possess, and if I did not become a +robber in form, it was only because money never tempted me. + +My master had a closet in the workshop, which he kept locked; this I +contrived to open and shut as often as I pleased, and laid his best +tools, fine drawings, impressions, in a word, everything he wished to +keep from me, under contribution. + +These thefts were so far innocent, that they were always employed in his +service, but I was transported at having the trifles in my possession, +and imagined I stole the art with its productions. Besides what I have +mentioned, his boxes contained threads of gold and silver, a number of +small jewels, valuable medals, and money; yet, though I seldom had five +sous in my pocket, I do not recollect ever having cast a wishful look at +them; on the contrary, I beheld these valuables rather with terror than +with delight. + +I am convinced the dread of taking money was, in a great measure, the +effect of education. There was mingled with the idea of it the fear of +infamy, a prison, punishment, and death: had I even felt the temptation, +these objects would have made me tremble; whereas my failings appeared a +species of waggery, and, in truth, they were little else; they could but +occasion a good trimming, and this I was already prepared for. A sheet +of fine drawing paper was a greater temptation than money sufficient to +have purchased a ream. This unreasonable caprice is connected with one +of the most striking singularities of my character, and has so far +influenced my conduct, that it requires a particular explanation. + +My passions are extremely violent; while under their influence, nothing +can equal my impetuosity; I am an absolute stranger to discretion, +respect, fear, or decorum; rude, saucy, violent, and intrepid: no shame +can stop, no danger intimidate me. My mind is frequently so engrossed by +a single object, that beyond it the whole world is not worth a thought; +this is the enthusiasm of a moment, the next, perhaps, I am plunged in a +state of annihilation. Take me in my moments of tranquility, I am +indolence and timidity itself; a word to speak, the least trifle to +perform, appear an intolerable labor; everything alarms and terrifies me; +the very buzzing of a fly will make me shudder; I am so subdued by fear +and shame, that I would gladly shield myself from mortal view. + +When obliged to exert myself, I am ignorant what to do! when forced to +speak, I am at a loss for words; and if any one looks at me, I am +instantly out of countenance. If animated with my subject, I express my +thoughts with ease, but, in ordinary conversations, I can say nothing +--absolutely nothing; and, being obliged to speak, renders them +insupportable. + +I may add, that none of my predominant inclinations centre in those +pleasures which are to be purchased: money empoisons my delight; I must +have them unadulterated; I love those of the table, for instance, but +cannot endure the restraints of good company, or the intemperance of +taverns; I can enjoy them only with a friend, for alone it is equally +impossible; my imagination is then so occupied with other things, that I +find no pleasure in eating. Women who are to be purchased have no charms +for me; my beating heart cannot be satisfied without affection; it is the +same with every other enjoyment, if not truly disinterested, they are +absolutely insipid; in a word, I am fond of those things which are only +estimable to minds formed for the peculiar enjoyment of them. + +I never thought money so desirable as it is usually imagined; if you +would enjoy you must transform it; and this transformation is frequently +attended with inconvenience; you must bargain, purchase, pay dear, be +badly served, and often duped. I buy an egg, am assured it is new-laid +--I find it stale; fruit in its utmost perfection--'tis absolutely green. +I love good wine, but where shall I get it? Not at my wine merchant's +--he will poison me to a certainty. I wish to be universally respected; +how shall I compass my design? I must make friends, send messages, write +letters, come, go, wait, and be frequently deceived. Money is the +perpetual source of uneasiness; I fear it more than I love good wine. + +A thousand times, both during and since my apprenticeship, have I gone +out to purchase some nicety, I approach the pastry-cook's, perceive some +women at the counter, and imagine they are laughing at me. I pass a +fruit shop, see some fine pears, their appearance tempts me; but then two +or three young people are near, or a man I am acquainted with is standing +at the door; I take all that pass for persons I have some knowledge of, +and my near sight contributes to deceive me. I am everywhere +intimidated, restrained by some obstacle, and with money in my pocket +return as I went, for want of resolution to purchase what I long for. + +I should enter into the most insipid details was I to relate the trouble, +shame, repugnance, and inconvenience of all kinds which I have +experienced in parting with my money, whether in my own person, or by the +agency of others; as I proceed, the reader will get acquainted with my +disposition, and perceive all this without my troubling him with the +recital. + +This once comprehended, one of my apparent contradictions will be easily +accounted for, and the most sordid avarice reconciled with the greatest +contempt of money. It is a movable which I consider of so little value, +that, when destitute of it, I never wish to acquire any; and when I have +a sum I keep it by me, for want of knowing how to dispose of it to my +satisfaction; but let an agreeable and convenient opportunity present +itself, and I empty my purse with the utmost freedom; not that I would +have the reader imagine I am extravagant from a motive of ostentation, +quite the reverse; it was ever in subservience to my pleasures, and, +instead of glorying in expense, I endeavor to conceal it. I so well +perceive that money is not made to answer my purposes, that I am almost +ashamed to have any, and, still more, to make use of it. + +Had I ever possessed a moderate independence, I am convinced I should +have had no propensity to become avaricious. I should have required no +more, and cheerfully lived up to my income; but my precarious situation +has constantly and necessarily kept me in fear. I love liberty, and I +loathe constraint, dependence, and all their kindred annoyances. As long +as my purse contains money it secures my independence, and exempts me +from the trouble of seeking other money, a trouble of which I have always +had a perfect horror; and the dread of seeing the end of my independence, +makes me proportionately unwilling to part with my money. The money that +we possess is the instrument of liberty, that which we lack and strive to +obtain is the instrument of slavery. Thence it is that I hold fast to +aught that I have, and yet covet nothing more. + +My disinterestedness, then, is in reality only idleness, the pleasure of +possessing is not in my estimation worth the trouble of acquiring: and my +dissipation is only another form of idleness; when we have an opportunity +of disbursing pleasantly we should make the best possible use of it. + +I am less tempted by money than by other objects, because between the +moment of possessing the money and that of using it to obtain the desired +object there is always an interval, however short; whereas to possess the +thing is to enjoy it. I see a thing and it tempts me; but if I see not +the thing itself but only the means of acquiring it, I am not tempted. +Therefore it is that I have been a pilferer, and am so even now, in the +way of mere trifles to which I take a fancy, and which I find it easier +to take than to ask for; but I never in my life recollect having taken a +farthing from any one, except about fifteen years ago, when I stole seven +francs and ten sous. The story is worth recounting, as it exhibits a +concurrence of ignorance and stupidity I should scarcely credit, did it +relate to any but myself. + +It was in Paris: I was walking with M. de Franceul at the Palais Royal; +he pulled out his watch, he looked at it, and said to me, "Suppose we go +to the opera?"--"With all my heart." We go: he takes two box tickets, +gives me one, and enters himself with the other; I follow, find the door +crowded; and, looking in, see every one standing; judging, therefore, +that M. de Franceul might suppose me concealed by the company, I go out, +ask for my ticket, and, getting the money returned, leave the house, +without considering, that by then I had reached the door every one would +be seated, and M. de Franceul might readily perceive I was not there. + +As nothing could be more opposite to my natural inclination than this +abominable meanness, I note it, to show there are moments of delirium +when men ought not to be judged by their actions: this was not stealing +the money, it was only stealing the use of it, and was the more infamous +for wanting the excuse of a temptation. + +I should never end these accounts, was I to describe all the gradations +through which I passed, during my apprenticeship, from the sublimity of a +hero to the baseness of a villain. Though I entered into most of the +vices of my situation, I had no relish for its pleasures; the amusements +of my companions were displeasing, and when too much restraint had made +my business wearisome, I had nothing to amuse me. This renewed my taste +for reading which had long been neglected. I thus committed a fresh +offence, books made me neglect my work, and brought on additional +punishment, while inclination, strengthened by constraint, became an +unconquerable passion. La Tribu, a well-known librarian, furnished me +with all kinds; good or bad, I perused them with avidity, and without +discrimination. + +It will be said; "at length, then, money became necessary"--true; but +this happened at a time when a taste for study had deprived me both of +resolution and activity; totally occupied by this new inclination, I only +wished to read, I robbed no longer. This is another of my peculiarities; +a mere nothing frequently calls me off from what I appear the most +attached to; I give in to the new idea; it becomes a passion, and +immediately every former desire is forgotten. + +Reading was my new hobby; my heart beat with impatience to run over the +new book I carried in my pocket; the first moment I was alone, I seized +the opportunity to draw it out, and thought no longer of rummaging my +master's closet. I was even ashamed to think that I had been guilty of +such meanness; and had my amusements been more expensive, I no longer +felt an inclination to continue it. La Tribu gave me credit, and when +once I had the book in my possession, I thought no more of the trifle I +was to pay for it; as money came it naturally passed to this woman; and +when she chanced to be pressing, nothing was so conveniently at hand as +my own effects; to steal in advance required foresight, and robbing to +pay was no temptation. + +The frequent blows I received from my master, with my private and +ill-chosen studies, rendered me reserved, unsociable, and almost +deranged my reason. Though my taste had not preserved me from silly +unmeaning books, by good fortune I was a stranger to licentious or +obscene ones; not that La Tribu (who was very accommodating) had any +scruple of lending these, on the contrary, to enhance their worth she +spoke of them with an air of mystery; this produced an effect she had +not foreseen, for both shame and disgust made me constantly refuse them. +Chance so well seconded my bashful disposition, that I was past the age +of thirty before I saw any of those dangerous compositions. + +In less than a year I had exhausted La Tribu's scanty library, and was +unhappy for want of further amusement. My reading, though frequently +bad, had worn off my childish follies, and brought back my heart to +nobler sentiments than my condition had inspired; meantime disgusted with +all within my reach, and thinking everything charming that was out of it, +my present situation appeared extremely miserable. My passions began to +acquire strength, I felt their influence, without knowing whither they +would conduct me. I sometimes, indeed, thought of my former follies, but +sought no further. + +At this time my imagination took a turn which helped to calm my +increasing emotions; it was, to contemplate those situations in the books +I had read, which produced the most striking effect on my mind; to +recall, combine, and apply them to myself in such a manner, as to become +one of the personages my recollection presented, and be continually in +those fancied circumstances which were most agreeable to my inclinations; +in a word, by contriving to place myself in these fictitious situations, +the idea of my real one was in a great measure obliterated. + +This fondness for imaginary objects, and the facility with which I could +gain possession of them, completed my disgust for everything around me, +and fixed that inclination for solitude which has ever since been +predominant. We shall have more than once occasion to remark the effects +of a disposition, misanthropic and melancholy in appearance, but which +proceed, in fact, from a heart too affectionate, too ardent, which, for +want of similar dispositions, is constrained to content itself with +nonentities, and be satisfied with fiction. It is sufficient, at +present, to have traced the origin of a propensity which has modified my +passions, set bounds to each, and by giving too much ardor to my wishes, +has ever rendered me too indolent to obtain them. + +Thus I attained my sixteenth year, uneasy, discontented with myself and +everything that surrounded me; displeased with my occupation; without +enjoying the pleasures common to my age, weeping without a cause, sighing +I knew not why, and fond of my chimerical ideas for want of more valuable +realities. + +Every Sunday, after sermon-time, my companions came to fetch me out, +wishing me to partake of their diversions. I would willingly have been +excused, but when once engaged in amusement, I was more animated and +enterprising than any of them; it was equally difficult to engage or +restrain me; indeed, this was ever a leading trait in my character. +In our country walks I was ever foremost, and never thought of returning +till reminded by some of my companions. I was twice obliged to be from +my master's the whole night, the city gates having been shut before I +could reach them. The reader may imagine what treatment this procured me +the following mornings; but I was promised such a reception for the +third, that I made a firm resolution never to expose myself to the danger +of it. Notwithstanding my determination, I repeated this dreaded +transgression, my vigilance having been rendered useless by a cursed +captain, named M. Minutoli, who, when on guard, always shut the gate he +had charge of an hour before the usual time. I was returning home with +my two companions, and had got within half a league of the city, when I +heard them beat the tattoo; I redouble my pace, I run with my utmost +speed, I approach the bridge, see the soldiers already at their posts, I +call out to them in a suffocated voice--it is too late; I am twenty paces +from the guard, the first bridge is already drawn up, and I tremble to +see those terrible horns advanced in the air which announce the fatal and +inevitable destiny, which from this moment began to pursue me. + +I threw myself on the glacis in a transport of despair, while my +companions, who only laughed at the accident, immediately determined what +to do. My resolution, though different from theirs, was equally sudden; +on the spot, I swore never to return to my master's, and the next +morning, when my companions entered the city, I bade them an eternal +adieu, conjuring them at the same time to inform my cousin Bernard of my +resolution, and the place where he might see me for the last time. + +From the commencement of my apprenticeship I had seldom seen him; at +first, indeed, we saw each other on Sundays, but each acquiring different +habits, our meetings were less frequent. I am persuaded his mother +contributed greatly towards this change; he was to consider himself as a +person of consequence, I was a pitiful apprentice; notwithstanding our +relationship, equality no longer subsisted between us, and it was +degrading himself to frequent my company. As he had a natural good heart +his mother's lessons did not take an immediate effect, and for some time +he continued to visit me. + +Having learned my resolution, he hastened to the spot I had appointed, +not, however, to dissuade me from it, but to render my flight agreeable, +by some trifling presents, as my own resources would not have carried me +far. He gave me among other things, a small sword, which I was very +proud of, and took with me as far as Turin, where absolute want +constrained me to dispose of it. The more I reflect on his behavior at +this critical moment, the more I am persuaded he followed the +instructions of his mother, and perhaps his father likewise: for, had he +been left to his own feelings, he would have endeavored to retain, or +have been tempted to accompany me; on the contrary, he encouraged the +design, and when he saw me resolutely determined to pursue it, without +seeming much affected, left me to my fate. We never saw or wrote to each +other from that time; I cannot but regret this loss, for his heart was +essentially good, and we seemed formed for a more lasting friendship. + +Before I abandon myself to the fatality of my destiny, let me contemplate +for a moment the prospect that awaited me had I fallen into the hands of +a better master. Nothing could have been more agreeable to my +disposition, or more likely to confer happiness, than the peaceful +condition of a good artificer, in so respectable a line as engravers are +considered at Geneva. I could have obtained an easy subsistence, if not +a fortune; this would have bounded my ambition; I should have had means +to indulge in moderate pleasures, and should have continued in my natural +sphere, without meeting with any temptation to go beyond it. Having an +imagination sufficiently fertile to embellish with its chimeras every +situation, and powerful enough to transport me from one to another, it +was immaterial in which I was fixed: that was best adapted to me, which, +requiring the least care or exertion, left the mind most at liberty; and +this happiness I should have enjoyed. In my native country, in the bosom +of my religion, family and friends, I should have passed a calm and +peaceful life, in the uniformity of a pleasing occupation, and among +connections dear to my heart. I should have been a good Christian, a +good citizen, a good friend, a good man. I should have relished my +condition, perhaps have been an honor to it, and after having passed a +life of happy obscurity, surrounded by my family, I should have died at +peace. Soon it may be forgotten, but while remembered it would have been +with tenderness and regret. + +Instead of this--what a picture am I about to draw!--Alas! why should I +anticipate the miseries I have endured? The reader will have but too +much of the melancholy subject. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Confessions of J. J. Rousseau, +Book I., by Jean Jacques Rousseau + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROUSSEAU *** + +***** This file should be named 3901.txt or 3901.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/0/3901/ + +Produced by David Widger + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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Hart +and may be reprinted only when these Etexts are free of all fees.] +[Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be used in any sales +of Project Gutenberg Etexts or other materials be they hardware or +software or any other related product without express permission.] + +*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.07/27/01*END* + + + + + +This etext was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net> + + + + + +[NOTE: There is a short list of bookmarks, or pointers, at the end of the +file for those who may wish to sample the author's ideas before making an +entire meal of them. D.W.] + + + + + +THE CONFESSIONS OF JEAN JACQUES ROUSSEAU +(In 12 books) + +Privately Printed for the Members of the Aldus Society + +London, 1903 + + + +BOOK I. + + +CONTENTS: + Introduction--S.W. Orson + Book I. + + + +INTRODUCTION. + +Among the notable books of later times-we may say, without exaggeration, +of all time--must be reckoned The Confessions of Jean Jacques Rousseau. +It deals with leading personages and transactions of a momentous epoch, +when absolutism and feudalism were rallying for their last struggle +against the modern spirit, chiefly represented by Voltaire, the +Encyclopedists, and Rousseau himself--a struggle to which, after many +fierce intestine quarrels and sanguinary wars throughout Europe and +America, has succeeded the prevalence of those more tolerant and rational +principles by which the statesmen of our own day are actuated. + +On these matters, however, it is not our province to enlarge; nor is it +necessary to furnish any detailed account of our author's political, +religious, and philosophic axioms and systems, his paradoxes and his +errors in logic: these have been so long and so exhaustively disputed +over by contending factions that little is left for even the most +assiduous gleaner in the field. The inquirer will find, in Mr. John +Money's excellent work, the opinions of Rousseau reviewed succinctly and +impartially. The 'Contrat Social', the 'Lattres Ecrites de la Montagne', +and other treatises that once aroused fierce controversy, may therefore +be left in the repose to which they have long been consigned, so far as +the mass of mankind is concerned, though they must always form part of +the library of the politician and the historian. One prefers to turn to +the man Rousseau as he paints himself in the remarkable work before us. + +That the task which he undertook in offering to show himself--as Persius +puts it--'Intus et in cute', to posterity, exceeded his powers, is a +trite criticism; like all human enterprises, his purpose was only +imperfectly fulfilled; but this circumstance in no way lessens the +attractive qualities of his book, not only for the student of history or +psychology, but for the intelligent man of the world. Its startling +frankness gives it a peculiar interest wanting in most other +autobiographies. + +Many censors have elected to sit in judgment on the failings of this +strangely constituted being, and some have pronounced upon him very +severe sentences. Let it be said once for all that his faults and +mistakes were generally due to causes over which he had but little +control, such as a defective education, a too acute sensitiveness, which +engendered suspicion of his fellows, irresolution, an overstrained sense +of honour and independence, and an obstinate refusal to take advice from +those who really wished to befriend him; nor should it be forgotten that +he was afflicted during the greater part of his life with an incurable +disease. + +Lord Byron had a soul near akin to Rousseau's, whose writings naturally +made a deep impression on the poet's mind, and probably had an influence +on his conduct and modes of thought: In some stanzas of 'Childe Harold' +this sympathy is expressed with truth and power; especially is the +weakness of the Swiss philosopher's character summed up in the following +admirable lines: + + "Here the self-torturing sophist, wild Rousseau, + The apostle of affliction, he who threw + Enchantment over passion, and from woe + Wrung overwhelming eloquence, first drew + The breath which made him wretched; yet he knew + How to make madness beautiful, and cast + O'er erring deeds and thoughts a heavenly hue + Of words, like sunbeams, dazzling as they passed + The eyes, which o'er them shed tears feelingly and fast. + + "His life was one long war with self-sought foes, + Or friends by him self-banished; for his mind + Had grown Suspicion's sanctuary, and chose, + For its own cruel sacrifice, the kind, + 'Gainst whom he raged with fury strange and blind. + But he was frenzied,-wherefore, who may know? + Since cause might be which skill could never find; + But he was frenzied by disease or woe + To that worst pitch of all, which wears a reasoning show." + +One would rather, however, dwell on the brighter hues of the picture than +on its shadows and blemishes; let us not, then, seek to "draw his +frailties from their dread abode." His greatest fault was his +renunciation of a father's duty to his offspring; but this crime he +expiated by a long and bitter repentance. We cannot, perhaps, very +readily excuse the way in which he has occasionally treated the memory of +his mistress and benefactress. That he loved Madame de Warens--his +'Mamma'--deeply and sincerely is undeniable, notwithstanding which he now +and then dwells on her improvidence and her feminine indiscretions with +an unnecessary and unbecoming lack of delicacy that has an unpleasant +effect on the reader, almost seeming to justify the remark of one of his +most lenient critics--that, after all, Rousseau had the soul of a lackey. +He possessed, however, many amiable and charming qualities, both as a man +and a writer, which were evident to those amidst whom he lived, and will +be equally so to the unprejudiced reader of the Confessions. He had a +profound sense of justice and a real desire for the improvement and +advancement of the race. Owing to these excellences he was beloved to +the last even by persons whom he tried to repel, looking upon them as +members of a band of conspirators, bent upon destroying his domestic +peace and depriving him of the means of subsistence. + +Those of his writings that are most nearly allied in tone and spirit to +the 'Confessions' are the 'Reveries d'un Promeneur Solitaire' and +'La Nouvelle Heloise'. His correspondence throws much light on his life +and character, as do also parts of 'Emile'. It is not easy in our day to +realize the effect wrought upon the public mind by the advent of +'La Nouvelle Heloise'. Julie and Saint-Preux became names to conjure +with; their ill-starred amours were everywhere sighed and wept over by +the tender-hearted fair; indeed, in composing this work, Rousseau may be +said to have done for Switzerland what the author of the Waverly Novels +did for Scotland, turning its mountains, lakes and islands, formerly +regarded with aversion, into a fairyland peopled with creatures whose +joys and sorrows appealed irresistibly to every breast. Shortly after +its publication began to flow that stream of tourists and travellers +which tends to make Switzerland not only more celebrated but more opulent +every year. It, is one of the few romances written in the epistolary +form that do not oppress the reader with a sense of languor and +unreality; for its creator poured into its pages a tide of passion +unknown to his frigid and stilted predecessors, and dared to depict +Nature as she really is, not as she was misrepresented by the modish +authors and artists of the age. Some persons seem shy of owning an +acquaintance with this work; indeed, it has been made the butt of +ridicule by the disciples of a decadent school. Its faults and its +beauties are on the surface; Rousseau's own estimate is freely expressed +at the beginning of the eleventh book of the Confessions and elsewhere. +It might be wished that the preface had been differently conceived and +worded; for the assertion made therein that the book may prove dangerous +has caused it to be inscribed on a sort of Index, and good folk who never +read a line of it blush at its name. Its "sensibility," too, is a little +overdone, and has supplied the wits with opportunities for satire; for +example, Canning, in his 'New Morality': + + "Sweet Sensibility, who dwells enshrined + In the fine foldins of the feeling mind.... + Sweet child of sickly Fancy!-her of yore + From her loved France Rousseau to exile bore; + And while 'midst lakes and mountains wild he ran, + Full of himself, and shunned the haunts of man, + Taught her o'er each lone vale and Alpine, steep + To lisp the story of his wrongs and weep." + +As might be imagined, Voltaire had slight sympathy with our social +reformer's notions and ways of promulgating them, and accordingly took +up his wonted weapons--sarcasm and ridicule--against poor Jean-Jacques. +The quarrels of these two great men cannot be described in this place; +but they constitute an important chapter in the literary and social +history of the time. In the work with which we are immediately +concerned, the author seems to avoid frequent mention of Voltaire, even +where we should most expect it. However, the state of his mind when he +penned this record of his life should be always remembered in relation to +this as well as other occurrences. + +Rousseau had intended to bring his autobiography down to a later date, +but obvious causes prevented this: hence it is believed that a summary of +the chief events that marked his closing years will not be out of place +here. + +On quitting the Ile de Saint-Pierre he travelled to Strasbourg, where he +was warmly received, and thence to Paris, arriving in that city on +December I6, 1765. The Prince de Conti provided him with a lodging in +the Hotel Saint-Simon, within the precincts of the Temple--a place of +sanctuary for those under the ban of authority. 'Every one was eager to +see the illustrious proscript, who complained of being made a daily show, +"like Sancho Panza in his island of Barataria." During his short stay in +the capital there was circulated an ironical letter purporting to come +from the Great Frederick, but really written by Horace Walpole. This +cruel, clumsy, and ill-timed joke angered Rousseau, who ascribed it to, +Voltaire. A few sentences may be quoted: + + "My Dear Jean-Jacques,--You have renounced Geneva, your native + place. You have caused your expulsion from Switzerland, a country + so extolled in your writings; France has issued a warrant against + you: so do you come to me. My states offer you a peaceful retreat. + I wish you well, and will treat you well, if you will let me. But, + if you persist in refusing my help, do not reckon upon my telling + any one that you did so. If you are bent on tormenting your spirit + to find new misfortunes, choose whatever you like best. I am a + king, and can procure them for you at your pleasure; and, what will + certainly never happen to you in respect of your enemies, I will + cease to persecute you as soon as you cease to take a pride in being + persecuted. Your good friend, + "FREDERICK." + + +Early in 1766 David Hume persuaded Rousseau to go with him to England, +where the exile could find a secure shelter. In London his appearance +excited general attention. Edmund Burke had an interview with him and +held that inordinate vanity was the leading trait in his character. +Mr. Davenport, to whom he was introduced by Hume, generously offered +Rousseau a home at Wootton, in Staffordshire, near the, Peak Country; the +latter, however, would only accept the offer on condition that he should +pay a rent of L 30 a year. He was accorded a pension of L 100 by George +III., but declined to draw after the first annual payment. The climate +and scenery of Wootton being similar to those of his native country, he +was at first delighted with his new abode, where he lived with Therese, +and devoted his time to herborising and inditing the first six books of +his Confessions. Soon, however, his old hallucinations acquired +strength, and Rousseau convinced himself that enemies were bent upon his +capture, if not his death. In June, 1766, he wrote a violent letter to +Hume, calling him "one of the worst of men." Literary Paris had combined +with Hume and the English Government to surround him--as he supposed-- +with guards and spies; he revolved in his troubled mind all the reports +and rumours he had heard for months and years; Walpole's forged letter +rankled in his bosom; and in the spring of 1767 he fled; first to +Spalding, in Lincolnshire, and subsequently to Calais, where he landed in +May. + +On his arrival in France his restless and wandering disposition forced +him continually to change his residence, and acquired for him the title +of "Voyageur Perpetuel." While at Trye, in Gisors, in 1767--8, he wrote +the second part of the Confessions. He had assumed the surname of Renou, +and about this time he declared before two witnesses that Therese was his +wife--a proceeding to which he attached the sanctity of marriage. In +1770 he took up his abode in Paris, where he lived continuously for seven +years, in a street which now bears his name, and gained a living by +copying music. Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, the author of 'Paul and +Virginia', who became acquainted with him in 1772, has left some +interesting particulars of Rousseau's daily mode of life at this period. +Monsieur de Girardin having offered him an asylum at Ermemonville in the +spring of 1778, he and Therese went thither to reside, but for no long +time. On the 3d of July, in the same year, this perturbed spirit at last +found rest, stricken by apoplexy. A rumor that he had committed suicide +was circulated, but the evidence of trustworthy witnesses, including a +physician, effectually contradicts this accusation. His remains, first +interred in the Ile des Peupliers, were, after the Revolution, removed to +the Pantheon. In later times the Government of Geneva made some +reparation for their harsh treatment of a famous citizen, and erected his +statue, modelled by his compatriot, Pradier, on an island in the Rhone. + + "See nations, slowly wise and meanly just, + To buried merit raise the tardy bust." + +November, 1896. + S. W. ORSON. + + + + + + THE CONFESSIONS + + OF + + J. J. ROUSSEAU + + +BOOK I. + +I have entered upon a performance which is without example, whose +accomplishment will have no imitator. I mean to present my fellow- +mortals with a man in all the integrity of nature; and this man shall be +myself. + +I know my heart, and have studied mankind; I am not made like any one I +have been acquainted with, perhaps like no one in existence; if not +better, I at least claim originality, and whether Nature did wisely in +breaking the mould with which she formed me, can only be determined after +having read this work. + +Whenever the last trumpet shall sound, I will present myself before the +sovereign judge with this book in my hand, and loudly proclaim, thus have +I acted; these were my thoughts; such was I. With equal freedom and +veracity have I related what was laudable or wicked, I have concealed no +crimes, added no virtues; and if I have sometimes introduced superfluous +ornament, it was merely to occupy a void occasioned by defect of memory: +I may have supposed that certain, which I only knew to be probable, but +have never asserted as truth, a conscious falsehood. Such as I was, I +have declared myself; sometimes vile and despicable, at others, virtuous, +generous and sublime; even as thou hast read my inmost soul: Power +eternal! assemble round thy throne an innumerable throng of my fellow- +mortals, let them listen to my confessions, let them blush at my +depravity, let them tremble at my sufferings; let each in his turn expose +with equal sincerity the failings, the wanderings of his heart, and, if +he dare, aver, I was better than that man. + +I was born at Geneva, in 1712, son of Isaac Rousseau and Susannah +Bernard, citizens. My father's share of a moderate competency, which was +divided among fifteen children, being very trivial, his business of a +watchmaker (in which he had the reputation of great ingenuity) was his +only dependence. My mother's circumstances were more affluent; she was +daughter of a Mons. Bernard, minister, and possessed a considerable share +of modesty and beauty; indeed, my father found some difficulty in +obtaining her hand. + +The affection they entertained for each other was almost as early as +their existence; at eight or nine years old they walked together every +evening on the banks of the Treille, and before they were ten, could not +support the idea of separation. A natural sympathy of soul confined +those sentiments of predilection which habit at first produced; born with +minds susceptible of the most exquisite sensibility and tenderness, it +was only necessary to encounter similar dispositions; that moment +fortunately presented itself, and each surrendered a willing heart. + +The obstacles that opposed served only to give a decree of vivacity to +their affection, and the young lover, not being able to obtain his +mistress, was overwhelmed with sorrow and despair. She advised him to +travel--to forget her. He consented--he travelled, but returned more +passionate than ever, and had the happiness to find her equally constant, +equally tender. After this proof of mutual affection, what could they +resolve?--to dedicate their future lives to love! the resolution was +ratified with a vow, on which Heaven shed its benediction. + +Fortunately, my mother's brother, Gabriel Bernard, fell in love with one +of my father's sisters; she had no objection to the match, but made the +marriage of his sister with her brother an indispensable preliminary. +Love soon removed every obstacle, and the two weddings were celebrated +the same day: thus my uncle became the husband of my aunt, and their +children were doubly cousins german. Before a year was expired, both had +the happiness to become fathers, but were soon after obliged to submit to +a separation. + +My uncle Bernard, who was an engineer, went to serve in the empire and +Hungary, under Prince Eugene, and distinguished himself both at the siege +and battle of Belgrade. My father, after the birth of my only brother, +set off, on recommendation, for Constantinople, and was appointed +watchmaker to the Seraglio. During his absence, the beauty, wit, and +accomplishments-- + + [They were too brilliant for her situation, the minister, her + father, having bestowed great pains on her education. She was aught + drawing, singing, and to play on the theorbo; had learning, and + wrote very agreeable verses. The following is an extempore piece + which she composed in the absence of her husband and brother, in a + conversation with some person relative to them, while walking with + her sister--in--law, and their two children: + + Ces deux messieurs, qui sont absens, + Nous sont chers e bien des manieres; + Ce sont nos amiss, nos amans, + Ce sont nos maris et nos freres, + Et les peres de ces enfans. + + These absent ones, who just claim + Our hearts, by every tender name, + To whom each wish extends + Our husbands and our brothers are, + The fathers of this blooming pair, + Our lovers and our friends.] + +of my mother attracted a number of admirers, among whom Mons. de la +Closure, Resident of France, was the most assiduous in his attentions. +His passion must have been extremely violent, since after a period of +thirty years I have seen him affected at the very mention of her name. +My mother had a defence more powerful even than her virtue; she tenderly +loved my father, and conjured him to return; his inclination seconding +his request, he gave up every prospect of emolument, and hastened to +Geneva. + +I was the unfortunate fruit of this return, being born ten months after, +in a very weakly and infirm state; my birth cost my mother her life, and +was the first of my misfortunes. I am ignorant how my father supported +her loss at that time, but I know he was ever after inconsolable. In me +he still thought he saw her he so tenderly lamented, but could never +forget I had been the innocent cause of his misfortune, nor did he ever +embrace me, but his sighs, the convulsive pressure of his arms, witnessed +that a bitter regret mingled itself with his caresses, though, as may be +supposed, they were not on this account less ardent. When he said to me, +"Jean Jacques, let us talk of your mother," my usual reply was, "Yes, +father, but then, you know, we shall cry," and immediately the tears +started from his eyes. "Ah!" exclaimed he, with agitation, "Give me back +my wife; at least console me for her loss; fill up, dear boy, the void +she has left in my soul. Could I love thee thus wert thou only my son?" +Forty years after this loss he expired in the arms of his second wife, +but the name of the first still vibrated on his lips, still was her image +engraved on his heart. + +Such were the authors of my being: of all the gifts it had pleased Heaven +to bestow on them, a feeling heart was the only one that descended to me; +this had been the source of their felicity, it was the foundation of all +my misfortunes. + +I came into the world with so few signs of life, that they entertained +but little hope of preserving me, with the seeds of a disorder that has +gathered strength with years, and from which I am now relieved at +intervals, only to suffer a different, though more intolerable evil. +I owed my preservation to one of my father's sisters, an amiable and +virtuous girl, who took the most tender care of me; she is yet living, +nursing, at the age of four--score, a husband younger than herself, but +worn out with excessive drinking. Dear aunt! I freely forgive your +having preserved my life, and only lament that it is not in my power to +bestow on the decline of your days the tender solicitude and care you +lavished on the first dawn of mine. My nurse, Jaqueline, is likewise +living: and in good health--the hands that opened my eyes to the light of +this world may close them at my death. We suffer before we think; it is +the common lot of humanity. I experienced more than my proportion of it. +I have no knowledge of what passed prior to my fifth or sixth year; I +recollect nothing of learning to read, I only remember what effect the +first considerable exercise of it produced on my mind; and from that +moment I date an uninterrupted knowledge of myself. + +Every night, after supper, we read some part of a small collection of +romances which had been my mother's. My father's design was only to +improve me in reading, and he thought these entertaining works were +calculated to give me a fondness for it; but we soon found ourselves so +interested in the adventures they contained, that we alternately read +whole nights together, and could not bear to give over until at the +conclusion of a volume. Sometimes, in a morning, on hearing the swallows +at our window, my father, quite ashamed of this weakness, would cry, +"Come, come, let us go to bed; I am more a child than thou art." + +I soon acquired, by this dangerous custom, not only an extreme facility +in reading and comprehending, but, for my age, a too intimate +acquaintance with the passions. An infinity of sensations were familiar +to me, without possessing any precise idea of the objects to which they +related--I had conceived nothing--I had felt the whole. This confused +succession of emotions did not retard the future efforts of my reason, +though they added an extravagant, romantic notion of human life, which +experience and reflection have never been able to eradicate. + +My romance reading concluded with the summer of 1719, the following +winter was differently employed. My mother's library being quite +exhausted, we had recourse to that part of her father's which had +devolved to us; here we happily found some valuable books, which was by +no means extraordinary, having been selected by a minister that truly +deserved that title, in whom learning (which was the rage of the times) +was but a secondary commendation, his taste and good sense being most +conspicuous. The history of the Church and Empire by Le Sueur, +Bossuett's Discourses on Universal History, Plutarch's Lives, the history +of Venice by Nani, Ovid's Metamorphoses, La Bruyere, Fontenelle's World, +his Dialogues of the Dead, and a few volumes of Moliere, were soon ranged +in my father's closet, where, during the hours he was employed in his +business, I daily read them, with an avidity and taste uncommon, perhaps +unprecedented at my age. + +Plutarch presently became my greatest favorite. The satisfaction I +derived from repeated readings I gave this author, extinguished my +passion for romances, and I shortly preferred Agesilaus, Brutus, and +Aristides, to Orondates, Artemenes, and Juba. These interesting +studies, seconded by the conversations they frequently occasioned with my +father, produced that republican spirit and love of liberty, that haughty +and invincible turn of mind, which rendered me impatient of restraint or +servitude, and became the torment of my life, as I continually found +myself in situations incompatible with these sentiments. Incessantly +occupied with Rome and Athens, conversing, if I may so express myself +with their illustrious heroes; born the citizen of a republic, of a +father whose ruling passion was a love of his country, I was fired with +these examples; could fancy myself a Greek or Roman, and readily give +into the character of the personage whose life I read; transported by the +recital of any extraordinary instance of fortitude or intrepidity, +animation flashed from my eyes, and gave my voice additional strength and +energy. One day, at table, while relating the fortitude of Scoevola, +they were terrified at seeing me start from my seat and hold my hand over +a hot chafing--dish, to represent more forcibly the action of that +determined Roman. + +My brother, who was seven years older than myself, was brought up to my +father's profession. The extraordinary affection they lavished on me +might be the reason he was too much neglected: this certainly was a fault +which cannot be justified. His education and morals suffered by this +neglect, and he acquired the habits of a libertine before he arrived at +an age to be really one. My father tried what effect placing him with a +master would produce, but he still persisted in the same ill conduct. +Though I saw him so seldom that it could hardly be said we were +acquainted. I loved him tenderly, and believe he had as strong an +affection for me as a youth of his dissipated turn of mind could be +supposed capable of. One day, I remember, when my father was correcting +him severely, I threw myself between them, embracing my brother, whom I +covered with my body, receiving the strokes designed for him; I persisted +so obstinately in my protection, that either softened by my cries and +tears, or fearing to hurt me most, his anger subsided, and he pardoned +his fault. In the end, my brother's conduct became so bad that he +suddenly disappeared, and we learned some time after that he was in +Germany, but he never wrote to us, and from that day we heard no news of +him: thus I became an only son. + +If this poor lad was neglected, it was quite different with his brother, +for the children of a king could not be treated with more attention and +tenderness than were bestowed on my infancy, being the darling of the +family; and what is rather uncommon, though treated as a beloved, never +a spoiled child; was never permitted, while under paternal inspection, +to play in the street with other children; never had any occasion to +contradict or indulge those fantastical humors which are usually +attributed to nature, but are in reality the effects of an injudicious +education. I had the faults common to my age, was talkative, a glutton, +and sometimes a liar, made no scruple of stealing sweetmeats, fruits, +or, indeed, any kind of eatables; but never took delight in mischievous +waste, in accusing others, or tormenting harmless animals. I recollect, +indeed, that one day, while Madam Clot, a neighbor of ours, was gone to +church, I made water in her kettle: the remembrance even now makes me +smile, for Madame Clot (though, if you please, a good sort of creature) +was one of the most tedious grumbling old women I ever knew. Thus have I +given a brief, but faithful, history of my childish transgressions. + +How could I become cruel or vicious, when I had before my eyes only +examples of mildness, and was surrounded by some of the best people in +the world? My father, my aunt, my nurse, my relations, our friends, our +neighbors, all I had any connection with, did not obey me, it is true, +but loved me tenderly, and I returned their affection. I found so little +to excite my desires, and those I had were so seldom contradicted, that I +was hardly sensible of possessing any, and can solemnly aver I was an +absolute stranger to caprice until after I had experienced the authority +of a master. + +Those hours that were not employed in reading or writing with my father, +or walking with my governess, Jaqueline, I spent with my aunt; and +whether seeing her embroider, or hearing her sing, whether sitting or +standing by her side, I was ever happy. Her tenderness and unaffected +gayety, the charms of her figure and countenance have left such indelible +impressions on my mind, that her manner, look, and attitude are still +before my eyes; I recollect a thousand little caressing questions; could +describe her clothes, her head-dress, nor have the two curls of fine +black hair which hung on her temples, according to the mode of that time, +escaped my memory. + +Though my taste, or rather passion, for music, did not show itself until +a considerable time after, I am fully persuaded it is to her I am +indebted for it. She knew a great number of songs, which she sung with +great sweetness and melody. The serenity and cheerfulness which were +conspicuous in this lovely girl, banished melancholy, and made all round +her happy. + +The charms of her voice had such an effect on me, that not only several +of her songs have ever since remained on my memory, but some I have not +thought of from my infancy, as I grow old, return upon my mind with a +charm altogether inexpressible. Would any one believe that an old dotard +like me, worn out with care and infirmity, should sometime surprise +himself weeping like a child, and in a voice querulous, and broken by +age, muttering out one of those airs which were the favorites of my +infancy? There is one song in particular, whose tune I perfectly +recollect, but the words that compose the latter half of it constantly +refuse every effort to recall them, though I have a confused idea of the +rhymes. The beginning, with what I have been able to recollect of the +remainder, is as follows: + + Tircis, je n'ose + Ecouter ton Chalumeau + Sous l'Ormeau; + Car on en cause + Deja dans notre hameau. + ---- ---- ------- + ------ --- un Berger + s'engager + sans danger, + Et toujours l'epine est sons la rose. + + +I have endeavored to account for the invincible charm my heart feels on +the recollection of this fragment, but it is altogether inexplicable. +I only know, that before I get to the end of it, I always find my voice +interrupted by tenderness, and my eyes suffused with tears. I have a +hundred times formed the resolution of writing to Paris for the remainder +of these words, if any one should chance to know them: but I am almost +certain the pleasure I take in the recollection would be greatly +diminished was I assured any one but my poor aunt Susan had sung them. + +Such were my affections on entering this life. Thus began to form and +demonstrate itself, a heart, at once haughty and tender, a character +effeminate, yet invincible; which, fluctuating between weakness and +courage, luxury and virtue, has ever set me in contradiction to myself; +causing abstinence and enjoyment, pleasure and prudence, equally to shun +me. + +This course of education was interrupted by an accident, whose +consequences influenced the rest of my life. My father had a quarrel +with M. G----, who had a captain's commission in France, and was related +to several of the Council. This G----, who was an insolent, ungenerous +man, happening to bleed at the nose, in order to be revenged, accused my +father of having drawn his sword on him in the city, and in consequence +of this charge they were about to conduct him to prison. He insisted +(according to the law of this republic) that the accuser should be +confined at the same time; and not being able to obtain this, preferred a +voluntary banishment for the remainder of his life, to giving up a point +by which he must sacrifice his honor and liberty. + +I remained under the tuition of my uncle Bernard, who was at that time +employed in the fortifications of Geneva. He had lost his eldest +daughter, but had a son about my own age, and we were sent together to +Bossey, to board with the Minister Lambercier. Here we were to learn +Latin, with all the insignificant trash that has obtained the name of +education. + +Two years spent in this village softened, in some degree, my Roman +fierceness, and again reduced me to a state of childhood. At Geneva, +where nothing was exacted, I loved reading, which was, indeed, my +principal amusement; but, at Bossey, where application was expected, +I was fond of play as a relaxation. The country was so new, so charming +in my idea, that it seemed impossible to find satiety in its enjoyments, +and I conceived a passion for rural life, which time has not been able to +extinguish; nor have I ever ceased to regret the pure and tranquil +pleasures I enjoyed at this place in my childhood; the remembrance having +followed me through every age, even to that in which I am hastening again +towards it. + +M. Lambercier was a worthy, sensible man, who, without neglecting our +instruction, never made our acquisitions burthensome, or tasks tedious. +What convinces me of the rectitude of his method is, that notwithstanding +my extreme aversion to restraint, the recollection of my studies is never +attended with disgust; and, if my improvement was trivial, it was +obtained with ease, and has never escaped memory. + +The simplicity of this rural life was of infinite advantage in opening my +heart to the reception of true friendship. The sentiments I had hitherto +formed on this subject were extremely elevated, but altogether imaginary. +The habit of living in this peaceful manner soon united me tenderly to my +cousin Bernard; my affection was more ardent than that I had felt for my +brother, nor has time ever been able to efface it. He was a tall, lank, +weakly boy, with a mind as mild as his body was feeble, and who did not +wrong the good opinion they were disposed to entertain for the son of my +guardian. Our studies, amusements, and tasks, were the same; we were +alone; each wanted a playmate; to separate would in some measure, have +been to annihilate us. Though we had not many opportunities of +demonstrating our attachment to each other, it was certainly extreme; and +so far from enduring the thought of separation, we could not even form an +idea that we should ever be able to submit to it. Each of a disposition +to be won by kindness, and complaisant, when not soured by contradiction, +we agreed in every particular. If, by the favor of those who governed us +he had the ascendant while in their presence, I was sure to acquire it +when we were alone, and this preserved the equilibrium so necessary in +friendship. If he hesitated in repeating his task, I prompted him; when +my exercises were finished, I helped to write his; and, in our +amusements, my disposition being most active, ever had the lead. In a +word, our characters accorded so well, and the friendship that subsisted +between us was so cordial, that during the five years we were at Bossey +and Geneva we were inseparable: we often fought, it is true, but there +never was any occasion to separate us. No one of our quarrels lasted +more than a quarter of an hour, and never in our lives did we make any +complaint of each other. It may be said, these remarks are frivolous; +but, perhaps, a similiar example among children can hardly be produced. + +The manner in which I passed my time at Bossey was so agreeable to my +disposition, that it only required a longer duration absolutely to have +fixed my character, which would have had only peaceable, affectionate, +benevolent sentiments for its basis. I believe no individual of our kind +ever possessed less natural vanity than myself. At intervals, by an +extraordinary effort, I arrived at sublime ideas, but presently sunk +again into my original languor. To be loved by every one who knew me was +my most ardent wish. I was naturally mild, my cousin was equally so, and +those who had the care of us were of similiar dispositions. Everything +contributed to strengthen those propensities which nature had implanted +in my breast, and during the two years I was neither the victim nor +witness of any violent emotions. + +I knew nothing so delightful as to see every one content, not only with +me, but all that concerned them. When repeating our catechism at church, +nothing could give me greater vexation, on being obliged to hesitate, +than to see Miss Lambercier's countenance express disapprobation and +uneasiness. This alone was more afflicting to me than the shame of +faltering before so many witnesses, which, notwithstanding, was +sufficiently painful; for though not oversolicitous of praise, I was +feelingly alive to shame; yet I can truly affirm, the dread of being +reprimanded by Miss Lambercier alarmed me less than the thought of making +her uneasy. + +Neither she nor her brother were deficient in a reasonable severity, but +as this was scarce ever exerted without just cause, I was more afflicted +at their disapprobation than the punishment. Certainly the method of +treating youth would be altered if the distant effects, this +indiscriminate, and frequently indiscreet method produces, were more +conspicuous. I would willingly excuse myself from a further explanation, +did not the lesson this example conveys (which points out an evil as +frequent as it is pernicious) forbid my silence. + +As Miss Lambercier felt a mother's affection, she sometimes exerted a +mother's authority, even to inflicting on us when we deserved it, the +punishment of infants. She had often threatened it, and this threat of a +treatment entirely new, appeared to me extremely dreadful; but I found +the reality much less terrible than the idea, and what is still more +unaccountable, this punishment increased my affection for the person who +had inflicted it. All this affection, aided by my natural mildness, was +scarcely sufficient to prevent my seeking, by fresh offences, a return of +the same chastisement; for a degree of sensuality had mingled with the +smart and shame, which left more desire than fear of a repetition. I was +well convinced the same discipline from her brother would have produced a +quite contrary effect; but from a man of his disposition this was not +probable, and if I abstained from meriting correction it was merely from +a fear of offending Miss Lambercier, for benevolence, aided by the +passions, has ever maintained an empire over me which has given law to my +heart. + +This event, which, though desirable, I had not endeavored to accelerate, +arrived without my fault; I should say, without my seeking; and I +profited by it with a safe conscience; but this second, was also the last +time, for Miss Lambercier, who doubtless had some reason to imagine this +chastisement did not produce the desired effect, declared it was too +fatiguing, and that she renounced it for the future. Till now we had +slept in her chamber, and during the winter, even in her bed; but two +days after another room was prepared for us, and from that moment I had +the honor (which I could very well have dispensed with) of being treated +by her as a great boy. + +Who would believe this childish discipline, received at eight years old, +from the hands of a woman of thirty, should influence my propensities, +my desires, my passions, for the rest of my life, and that in quite a +contrary sense from what might naturally have been expected? The very +incident that inflamed my senses, gave my desires such an extraordinary +turn, that, confined to what I had already experienced, I sought no +further, and, with blood boiling with sensuality, almost from my birth, +preserved my purity beyond the age when the coldest constitutions lose +their insensibility; long tormented, without knowing by what, I gazed on +every handsome woman with delight; imagination incessantly brought their +charms to my remembrance, only to transform them into so many Miss +Lamberciers. + +If ever education was perfectly chaste, it was certainly that I received; +my three aunts were not only of exemplary prudence, but maintained a +degree of modest reserve which women have long since thought unnecessary. +My father, it is true, loved pleasure, but his gallantry was rather of +the last than the present century, and he never expressed his affection +for any woman he regarded in terms a virgin could have blushed at; +indeed, it was impossible more attention should be paid to that regard we +owe the morals of children than was uniformly observed by every one I had +any concern with. An equal degree of reserve in this particular was +observed at M. Lambercier's, where a good maid-servant was discharged for +having once made use of an expression before us which was thought to +contain some degree of indelicacy. I had no precise idea of the ultimate +effect of the passions, but the conception I had formed was extremely +disgusting; I entertained a particular aversion for courtesans, nor could +I look on a rake without a degree of disdain mingled with terror. + +These prejudices of education, proper in themselves to retard the first +explosions of a combustible constitution, were strengthened, as I have +already hinted, by the effect the first moments of sensuality produced in +me, for notwithstanding the troublesome ebullition of my blood, I was +satisfied with the species of voluptuousness I had already been +acquainted with, and sought no further. + +Thus I passed the age of puberty, with a constitution extremely ardent, +without knowing or even wishing for any other gratification of the +passions than what Miss Lambercier had innocently given me an idea of; +and when I became a man, that childish taste, instead of vanishing, only +associated with the other. This folly, joined to a natural timidity, has +always prevented my being very enterprising with women, so that I have +passed my days in languishing in silence for those I most admired, +without daring to disclose my wishes. + +To fall at the feet of an imperious mistress, obey her mandates, or +implore pardon, were for me the most exquisite enjoyments, and the more +my blood was inflamed by the efforts of a lively imagination the more I +acquired the appearance of a whining lover. + +It will be readily conceived that this mode of making love is not +attended with a rapid progress or imminent danger to the virtue of its +object; yet, though I have few favors to boast of, I have not been +excluded from enjoyment, however imaginary. Thus the senses, in +concurrence with a mind equally timid and romantic, have preserved my +moral chaste, and feelings uncorrupted, with precisely the same +inclinations, which, seconded with a moderate portion of effrontery, +might have plunged me into the most unwarrantable excesses. + +I have made the first, most difficult step, in the obscure and painful +maze of my Confessions. We never feel so great a degree of repugnance in +divulging what is really criminal, as what is merely ridiculous. I am +now assured of my resolution, for after what I have dared disclose, +nothing can have power to deter me. The difficulty attending these +acknowledgments will be readily conceived, when I declare, that during +the whole of my life, though frequently laboring under the most violent +agitation, being hurried away with the impetuosity of a passion which +(when in company with those I loved) deprived me of the faculty of sight +and hearing, I could never, in the course of the most unbounded +familiarity, acquire sufficient resolution to declare my folly, and +implore the only favor that remained to bestow. + +In thus investigating the first traces of my sensible existence, I find +elements, which, though seemingly incompatible, have united to produce a +simple and uniform effect; while others, apparently the same, have, by +the concurrence of certain circumstances, formed such different +combinations, that it would never be imagined they had any affinity; who +would believe, for example, that one of the most vigorous springs of my +soul was tempered in the identical source from whence luxury and ease +mingled with my constitution and circulated in my veins? Before I quit +this subject, I will add a striking instance of the different effects +they produced. + +One day, while I was studying in a chamber contiguous to the kitchen, the +maid set some of Miss Lambercier's combs to dry by the fire, and on +coming to fetch them some time after, was surprised to find the teeth of +one of them broken off. Who could be suspected of this mischief? No one +but myself had entered the room: I was questioned, but denied having any +knowledge of it. Mr. and Miss Lambercier consult, exhort, threaten, but +all to no purpose; I obstinately persist in the denial; and, though this +was the first time I had been detected in a confirmed falsehood, +appearances were so strong that they overthrew all my protestations. +This affair was thought serious; the mischief, the lie, the obstinacy, +were considered equally deserving of punishment, which was not now to be +administered by Miss Lambercier. My uncle Bernard was written to; he +arrived; and my poor cousin being charged with a crime no less serious, +we were conducted to the same execution, which was inflicted with great +severity. If finding a remedy in the evil itself, they had sought ever +to allay my depraved desires, they could not have chosen a shorter method +to accomplish their designs, and, I can assure my readers, I was for a +long time freed from the dominion of them. + +As this severity could not draw from me the expected acknowledgment, +which obstinacy brought on several repetitions, and reduced me to a +deplorable situation, yet I was immovable, and resolutely determined to +suffer death rather than submit. Force, at length, was obliged to yield +to the diabolical infatuation of a child, for no better name was bestowed +on my constancy, and I came out of this dreadful trial, torn, it is true, +but triumphant. Fifty years have expired since this adventure--the fear +of punishment is no more. Well, then, I aver, in the face of Heaven, I +was absolutely innocent: and, so far from breaking, or even touching the +comb, never came near the fire. It will be asked, how did this mischief +happen? I can form no conception of it, I only know my own innocence. + +Let any one figure to himself a character whose leading traits were +docility and timidity, but haughty, ardent, and invincible, in its +passions; a child, hitherto governed by the voice of reason, treated with +mildness, equity, and complaisance, who could not even support the idea +of injustice, experiencing, for the first time, so violent an instance of +it, inflicted by those he most loved and respected. What perversion of +ideas! What confusion in the heart, the brain, in all my little being, +intelligent and moral!--let any one, I say, if possible, imagine all +this, for I am incapable of giving the least idea of what passed in my +mind at that period. + +My reason was not sufficiently established to enable me to put myself in +the place of others, and judge how much appearances condemned me, I only +beheld the rigor of a dreadful chastisement, inflicted for a crime I had +not committed; yet I can truly affirm, the smart I suffered, though +violent, was inconsiderable compared to what I felt from indignation, +rage, and despair. My cousin, who was almost in similar circumstances, +having been punished for an involuntary fault as guilty of a premediated +crime, became furious by my example. Both in the same bed, we embraced +each other with convulsive transport; we were almost suffocated; and when +our young hearts found sufficient relief to breathe out our indigination, +we sat up in the bed, and with all our force, repeated a hundred times, +Carnifex! Carnifex! Carnifex! executioner, tormentor. + +Even while I write this I feel my pulse quicken, and should I live a +hundred thousand years, the agitation of that moment would still be fresh +in my memory. The first instance of violence and oppression is so deeply +engraved on my soul, that every relative idea renews my emotion: the +sentiment of indignation, which in its origin had reference only to +myself, has acquired such strength, and is at present so completely +detached from personal motives, that my heart is as much inflamed at the +sight or relation of any act of injustice (whatever may be the object, or +wheresoever it may be perpetrated) as if I was the immediate sufferer. +When I read the history of a merciless tyrant, or the dark and the subtle +machination of a knavish designing priest, I could on the instant set off +to stab the miscreants, though I was certain to perish in the attempt. + +I have frequently fatigued myself by running after and stoning a cock, a +cow, a dog, or any animal I saw tormenting another, only because it was +conscious of possessing superior strength. This may be natural to me, +and I am inclined to believe it is, though the lively impression of the +first injustice I became the victim of was too long and too powerfully +remembered not to have added considerable force to it. + +This occurrence terminated my infantine serenity; from that moment I +ceased to enjoy a pure unadulterated happiness, and on a retrospection of +the pleasure of my childhood, I yet feel they ended here. We continue at +Bossey some months after this event, but were like our first parents in +the Garden of Eden after they had lost their innocence; in appearance our +situation was the same, in effect it was totally different. + +Affection, respect; intimacy, confidence, no longer attached the pupils +to their guides; we beheld them no longer as divinities, who could read +the secrets of our hearts; we were less ashamed of committing faults, +more afraid of being accused of them: we learned to dissemble, to rebel, +to lie: all the vices common to our years began to corrupt our happy +innocence, mingle with our sports, and embitter our amusements. The +country itself, losing those sweet and simple charms which captivate the +heart, appeared a gloomy desert, or covered with a veil that concealed +its beauties. We cultivated our little gardens no more: our flowers were +neglected. We no longer scratched away the mould, and broke out into +exclamations of delight, on discovering that the grain we had sown began +to shoot. We were disgusted with our situation; our preceptors were +weary of us. In a word, my uncle wrote for our return, and we left Mr. +and Miss Lambercier without feeling any regret at the separation. + +Near thirty years passed away from my leaving Bossey, without once +recalling the place to my mind with any degree of satisfaction; but after +having passed the prime of life, as I decline into old age (while more +recent occurrences are wearing out apace) I feel these remembrances +revive and imprint themselves on my heart, with a force and charm that +every day acquires fresh strength; as if, feeling life fleet from me, +I endeavored to catch it again by its commencement. The most trifling +incident of those happy days delight me, for no other reason than being +of those days. I recall every circumstance of time, place, and persons; +I see the maid or footman busy in the chamber, a swallow entering the +window, a fly settling on my hand while repeating my lessons. I see the +whole economy of the apartment; on the right hand Mr. Lambercier's +closet, with a print representing all the popes, a barometer, a large +almanac, the windows of the house (which stood in a hollow at the bottom +of the garden) shaded by raspberry shrubs, whose shoots sometimes found +entrance; I am sensible the reader has no occasion to know all this, but +I feel a kind of necessity for relating it. Why am I not permitted to +recount all the little anecdotes of that thrice happy age, at the +recollection of whose joys I ever tremble with delight? Five or six +particularly--let us compromise the matter --I will give up five, but +then I must have one, and only one, provided I may draw it out to its +utmost length, in order to prolong my satisfaction. + +If I only sought yours, I should choose that of Miss Lambercier's +backside, which by an unlucky fall at the bottom of the meadow, was +exposed to the view of the King of Sardinia, who happened to be passing +by; but that of the walnut tree on the terrace is more amusing to me, +since here I was an actor, whereas, in the abovementioned scene I was +only a spectator; and I must confess I see nothing that should occasion +risibility in an accident, which, however laughable in itself, alarmed me +for a person I loved as a mother, or perhaps something more. + +Ye curious readers, whose expectations are already on the stretch for the +noble history of the terrace, listen to the tragedy, and abstain from +trembling, if you can, at the horrible catastrophe! + +At the outside of the courtyard door, on the left hand, was a terrace; +here they often sat after dinner; but it was subject to one +inconvenience, being too much exposed to the rays of the sun; to obviate +this defect, Mr. Lambercier had a walnut tree set there, the planting of +which was attended with great solemnity. The two boarders were +godfathers, and while the earth was replacing round the root, each held +the tree with one hand, singing songs of triumph. In order to water it +with more effect, they formed a kind of luson around its foot: myself and +cousin, who were every day ardent spectators of this watering, confirmed +each other in the very natural idea that it was nobler to plant trees on +the terrace than colors on a breach, and this glory we were resolved to +procure without dividing it with any one. + +In pursuance of this resolution, we cut a slip off a willow, and planted +it on the terrace, at about eight or ten feet distance from the august +walnut tree. We did not forget to make a hollow round it, but the +difficulty was how to procure a supply of water, which was brought from a +considerable distance, and we not permitted to fetch it: but water was +absolutely necessary for our willow, and we made use of every stratagem +to obtain it. + +For a few days everything succeeded so well that it began to bud, and +throw out small leaves, which we hourly measured convinced (tho' now +scarce a foot from the ground) it would soon afford us a refreshing +shade. This unfortunate willow, by engrossing our whole time, rendered +us incapable of application to any other study, and the cause of our +inattention not being known, we were kept closer than before. The fatal +moment approached when water must fail, and we were already afflicted +with the idea that our tree must perish with drought. At length +necessity, the parent of industry, suggested an invention, by which we +might save our tree from death, and ourselves from despair; it was to +make a furrow underground, which would privately conduct a part of the +water from the walnut tree to our willow. This undertaking was executed +with ardor, but did not immediately succeed--our descent was not +skilfully planned--the water did not run, the earth falling in and +stopping up the furrow; yet, though all went contrary, nothing +discouraged us, 'omnia vincit labor improbus'. We made the bason deeper, +to give the water a more sensible descent; we cut the bottom of a box +into narrow planks; increased the channel from the walnut tree to our +willow and laying a row flat at the bottom, set two others inclining +towards each other, so as to form a triangular channel; we formed a kind +of grating with small sticks at the end next the walnut tree, to prevent +the earth and stones from stopping it up, and having carefully covered +our work with well--trodden earth, in a transport of hope and fear +attended the hour of watering. After an interval, which seemed an age of +expectation, this hour arrived. Mr. Lambercier, as usual, assisted at +the operation; we contrived to get between him and our tree, towards +which he fortunately turned his back. They no sooner began to pour the +first pail of water, than we perceived it running to the willow; this +sight was too much for our prudence, and we involuntarily expressed our +transport by a shout of joy. The sudden exclamation made Mr. Lambercier +turn about, though at that instant he was delighted to observe how +greedily the earth, which surrounded the root of his walnut tree, imbibed +the water. Surprised at seeing two trenches partake of it, he shouted in +his turn, examines, perceives the roguery, and, sending instantly for a +pick axe, at one fatal blow makes two or three of our planks fly, crying +out meantime with all his strength, an aqueduct! an aqueduct! His +strokes redoubled, every one of which made an impression on our hearts; +in a moment the planks, the channel, the bason, even our favorite willow, +all were ploughed up, nor was one word pronounced during this terrible +transaction, except the above mentioned exclamation. An aqueduct! +repeated he, while destroying all our hopes, an aqueduct! an aqueduct! + +It maybe supposed this adventure had a still more melancholy end for the +young architects; this, however, was not the case; the affair ended here. +Mr. Lambercier never reproached us on this account, nor was his +countenance clouded with a frown; we even heard him mention the +circumstance to his sister with loud bursts of laughter. The laugh of +Mr. Lambercier might be heard to a considerable distance. But what is +still more surprising after the first transport of sorrow had subsided, +we did not find ourselves violently afflicted; we planted a tree in +another spot, and frequently recollected the catastrophe of the former, +repeating with a significant emphasis, an aqueduct! an aqueduct! +Till then, at intervals, I had fits of ambition, and could fancy myself +Brutus or Aristides, but this was the first visible effect of my vanity. +To have constructed an aqueduct with our own hands, to have set a slip of +willow in competition with a flourishing tree, appeared to me a supreme +degree of glory! I had a juster conception of it at ten than Caesar +entertained at thirty. + +The idea of this walnut tree, with the little anecdotes it gave rise to, +have so well continued, or returned to my memory, that the design which +conveyed the most pleasing sensations, during my journey to Geneva, in +the year 1754, was visiting Bossey, and reviewing the monuments of my +infantine amusement, above all, the beloved walnut tree, whose age at +that time must have been verging on a third of a century, but I was so +beset with company that I could not find a moment to accomplish my +design. There is little appearance now of the occasion being renewed; +but should I ever return to that charming spot, and find my favorite +walnut tree still existing, I am convinced I should water it with my +tears. + +On my return to Geneva, I passed two or three years at my uncle's, +expecting the determination of my friends respecting my future +establishment. His own son being devoted to genius, was taught drawing, +and instructed by his father in the elements of Euclid; I partook of +these instructions, but was principally fond of drawing. Meantime, they +were irresolute, whether to make me a watchmaker, a lawyer, or a +minister. I should have preferred being a minister, as I thought it must +be a charming thing to preach, but the trifling income which had been my +mother's, and was to be divided between my brother and myself, was too +inconsiderable to defray the expense attending the prosecution of my +studies. As my age did not render the choice very pressing, I remained +with my uncle, passing my time with very little improvement, and paying +pretty dear, though not unreasonably, for my board. + +My uncle, like my father, was a man of pleasure, but had not learned, +like him, to abridge his amusements for the sake of instructing his +family, consequently our education was neglected. My aunt was a devotee, +who loved singing psalms better than thinking of our improvement, so that +we were left entirely to ourselves, which liberty we never abused. + +Ever inseparable, we were all the world to each other; and, feeling no +inclination to frequent the company of a number of disorderly lads of our +own age, we learned none of those habits of libertinism to which our idle +life exposed us. Perhaps I am wrong in charging myself and cousin with +idleness at this time, for, in our lives, we were never less so; and what +was extremely fortunate, so incessantly occupied with our amusements, +that we found no temptation to spend any part of our time in the streets. +We made cages, pipes, kites, drums, houses, ships, and bows; spoiled the +tools of my good old grandfather by endeavoring to make watches in +imitation of him; but our favorite amusement was wasting paper, in +drawing, washing, coloring, etc. There came an Italian mountebank to +Geneva, called Gamber-Corta, who had an exhibition of puppets, that he +made play a kind of comedy. We went once to see them, but could not +spare time to go again, being busily employed in making puppets of our +own and inventing comedies, which we immediately set about making them +perform, mimicking to the best of our abilities the uncouth voice of +Punch; and, to complete the business, my good aunt and uncle Bernard had +the patience to see and listen to our imitations; but my uncle, having +one day read an elaborate discourse to his family, we instantly gave up +our comedies, and began composing sermons. + +These details, I confess, are not very amusing, but they serve to +demonstrate that the former part of our education was well directed, +since being, at such an early age, the absolute masters of our time, +we found no inclination to abuse it; and so little in want of other +companions, that we constantly neglected every occasion of seeking them. +When taking our walks together, we observed their diversions without +feeling any inclination to partake of them. Friendship so entirely +occupied our hearts, that, pleased with each other's company the simplest +pastimes were sufficient to delight us. + +We were soon remarked for being thus inseparable: and what rendered us +more conspicuous, my cousin was very tall, myself extremely short, so +that we exhibited a very whimsical contrast. This meagre figure, small, +sallow countenance, heavy air, and supine gait, excited the ridicule of +the children, who, in the gibberish of the country, nicknamed him 'Barna +Bredanna'; and we no sooner got out of doors than our ears were assailed +with a repetition of "Barna Bredanna." He bore this indignity with +tolerable patience, but I was instantly for fighting. This was what the +young rogues aimed at. I engaged accordingly, and was beat. My poor +cousin did all in his power to assist me, but he was weak, and a single +stroke brought him to the ground. I then became furious, and received +several smart blows, some of which were aimed at 'Barna Bredanna'. This +quarrel so far increased the evil, that, to avoid their insults, we could +only show ourselves in the streets while they were employed at school. + +I had already become a redresser of grievances; there only wanted a lady +in the way to be a knight-errant in form. This defect was soon supplied; +I presently had two. I frequently went to see my father at Nion, a small +city in the Vaudois country, where he was now settled. Being universally +respected, the affection entertained for him extended to me: and, during +my visits, the question seemed to be, who should show me most kindness. +A Madame de Vulson, in particular, loaded me with caresses; and, to +complete all, her daughter made me her gallant. I need not explain what +kind of gallant a boy of eleven must be to a girl of two and twenty; the +artful hussies know how to set these puppets up in front, to conceal more +serious engagements. On my part I saw no inequality between myself and +Miss Vulson, was flattered by the circumstance, and went into it with my +whole heart, or rather my whole head, for this passion certainly reached +no further, though it transported me almost to madness, and frequently +produced scenes sufficient to make even a cynic expire with laughter. + +I have experienced two kinds of love, equally real, which have scarce any +affinity, yet each differing materially from tender friendship. My whole +life has been divided between these affections, and I have frequently +felt the power of both at the same instant. For example, at the very +time I so publically and tyrannically claimed Miss Vulson, that I could +not suffer any other of my sex to approach her, I had short, but +passionate, assignations with a Miss Goton, who thought proper to act the +schoolmistress with me. Our meetings, though absolutely childish, +afforded me the height of happiness. I felt the whole charm of mystery, +and repaid Miss Vulson in kind, when she least expected it, the use she +made of me in concealing her amours. To my great mortification, this +secret was soon discovered, and I presently lost my young schoolmistress. + +Miss Goton was, in fact, a singular personage. She was not handsome, +yet there was a certain something in her figure which could not easily +be forgotten, and this for an old fool, I am too often convinced of. +Her eyes, in particular, neither corresponded with her age, her height, +nor her manner; she had a lofty imposing air, which agreed extremely well +with the character she assumed, but the most extraordinary part of her +composition was a mixture of forwardness and reserve difficult to be +conceived; and while she took the greatest liberties with me, would never +permit any to be taken with her in return, treating me precisely like a +child. This makes me suppose she had either ceased herself to be one, +or was yet sufficiently so to behold us play the danger to which this +folly exposed her. + +I was so absolutely in the power of both these mistresses, that when in +the presence of either, I never thought of her who was absent; in other +respects, the effects they produced on me bore no affinity. I could have +passed my whole life with Miss Vulson, without forming a wish to quit +her; but then, my satisfaction was attended with a pleasing serenity; +and, in numerous companies, I was particularly charmed with her. The +sprightly sallies of her wit, the arch glance of her eye, even jealousy +itself, strengthened my attachment, and I triumphed in the preference she +seemed to bestow on me, while addressed by more powerful rivals; +applause, encouragement, and smiles, gave animation to my happiness. +Surrounded by a throng of observers, I felt the whole force of love--I +was passionate, transported; in a tete-a-tete, I should have been +constrained, thoughtful, perhaps unhappy. If Miss Vulson was ill, I +suffered with her; would willingly have given up my own health to +establish hers (and, observe I knew the want of it from experience); if +absent, she employed my thoughts, I felt the want of her; when present, +her caresses came with warmth and rapture to my heart, though my senses +were unaffected. The familiarities she bestowed on me I could not have +supported the idea of her granting to another; I loved her with a +brother's affection only, but experienced all the jealousy of a lover. + +With Miss Goton this passion might have acquired a degree of fury; I +should have been a Turk, a tiger, had I once imagined she bestowed her +favors on any but myself. The pleasure I felt on approaching Miss Vulson +was sufficiently ardent, though unattended with uneasy sensations; but at +sight of Miss Goton, I felt myself bewildered--every sense was absorbed +in ecstasy. I believe it would have been impossible to have remained +long with her; I must have been suffocated with the violence of my +palpitations. I equally dreaded giving either of them displeasure; with +one I was more complaisant; with the other, more submissive. I would not +have offended Miss Vulson for the world; but if Miss Goton had commanded +me to throw myself into the flames, I think I should have instantly +obeyed her. Happily, both for her and myself, our amours; or rather +rendezvous, were not of long duration: and though my connection with Miss +Vulson was less dangerous, after a continuance of some greater length, +that likewise had its catastrophe; indeed the termination of a love +affair is good for nothing, unless it partakes of the romantic, and can +furnish out at least an exclamation. + +Though my correspondence with Miss Vulson was less animated, it was +perhaps more endearing; we never separated without tears, and it can +hardly be conceived what a void I felt in my heart. I could neither +think nor speak of anything but her. These romantic sorrows were not +affected, though I am inclined to believe they did not absolutely centre +in her, for I am persuaded (though I did not perceive it at that time) +being deprived of amusement bore a considerable share in them. + +To soften the rigor of absence, we agreed to correspond with each other, +and the pathetic expressions these letters contained were sufficient to +have split a rock. In a word, I had the honor of her not being able to +endure the pain of separation. She came to see me at Geneva. + +My head was now completely turned; and during the two days she remained +here, I was intoxicated with delight. At her departure, I would have +thrown myself into the water after her, and absolutely rent the air with +my cries. The week following she sent me sweetmeats, gloves, etc. This +certainly would have appeared extremely gallant, had I not been informed +of her marriage at the same instant, and that the journey I had thought +proper to give myself the honor of, was only to buy her wedding suit. + +My indignation may easily be conceived; I shall not attempt to describe +it. In this heroic fury, I swore never more to see the perfidious girl, +supposing it the greatest punishment that could be inflicted on her. +This, however, did not occasion her death, for twenty years after, while +on a visit to my father, being on the lake, I asked who those ladies were +in a boat not far from ours. "What!" said my father smiling, "does not +your heart inform you? It is your former flame, it is Madame Christin, +or, if you please, Miss Vulson." I started at the almost forgotten name, +and instantly ordered the waterman to turn off, not judging it worth +while to be perjured, however favorable the opportunity for revenge, in +renewing a dispute of twenty years past, with a woman of forty. + +Thus, before my future destination was determined, did I fool away the +most precious moments of my youth. After deliberating a long time on the +bent of my natural inclination, they resolved to dispose of me in a +manner the most repugnant to them. I was sent to Mr. Masseron, the City +Register, to learn (according to the expression of my uncle Bernard) the +thriving occupation of a scraper. This nickname was inconceivably +displeasing to me, and I promised myself but little satisfaction in the +prospect of heaping up money by a mean employment. The assiduity and +subjection required, completed my disgust, and I never set foot in the +office without feeling a kind of horror, which every day gained fresh +strength. + +Mr. Masseron, who was not better pleased with my abilities than I was +with the employment, treated me with disdain, incessantly upbraiding me +with being a fool and blockhead, not forgetting to repeat, that my uncle +had assured him I was a knowing one, though he could not find that I knew +anything. That he had promised to furnish him with a sprightly boy, but +had, in truth, sent him an ass. To conclude, I was turned out of the +registry, with the additional ignominy of being pronounced a fool by all +Mr. Masseron's clerks, and fit only to handle a file. + +My vocation thus determined, I was bound apprentice; not, however, to a +watchmaker, but to an engraver, and I had been so completely humiliated +by the contempt of the register, that I submitted without a murmur. My +master, whose name was M. Ducommon, was a young man of a very violent and +boorish character, who contrived in a short time to tarnish all the +amiable qualities of my childhood, to stupefy a disposition naturally +sprightly, and reduce my feelings, as well as my condition, to an +absolute state of servitude. I forgot my Latin, history, and +antiquities; I could hardly recollect whether such people as Romans ever +existed. When I visited my father, he no longer beheld his idol, nor +could the ladies recognize the gallant Jean Jacques; nay, I was so well +convinced that Mr. and Miss Lambercier would scarce receive me as their +pupil, that I endeavored to avoid their company, and from that time have +never seen them. The vilest inclinations, the basest actions, succeeded +my amiable amusements and even obliterated the very remembrance of them. +I must have had, in spite of my good education, a great propensity to +degenerate, else the declension could not have followed with such ease +and rapidity, for never did so promising a Caesar so quickly become a +Laradon. + +The art itself did not displease me. I had a lively taste for drawing. +There was nothing displeasing in the exercise of the graver; and as it +required no very extraordinary abilities to attain perfection as a +watchcase engraver, I hoped to arrive at it. Perhaps I should have +accomplished my design, if unreasonable restraint, added to the brutality +of my master, had not rendered my business disgusting. I wasted his +time, and employed myself in engraving medals, which served me and my +companions as a kind of insignia for a new invented order of chivalry, +and though this differed very little from my usual employ, I considered +it as a relaxation. Unfortunately, my master caught me at this +contraband labor, and a severe beating was the consequence. He +reproached me at the same time with attempting to make counterfeit money +because our medals bore the arms of the Republic, though, I can truly +aver, I had no conception of false money, and very little of the true, +knowing better how to make a Roman As than one of our threepenny pieces. + +My master's tyranny rendered insupportable that labor I should otherwise +have loved, and drove me to vices I naturally despised, such as +falsehood, idleness, and theft. Nothing ever gave me a clearer +demonstration of the difference between filial dependence and abject +slavery, than the remembrance of the change produced in me at that +period. Hitherto I had enjoyed a reasonable liberty; this I had suddenly +lost. I was enterprising at my father's, free at Mr. Lambercier's, +discreet at my uncle's; but, with my master, I became fearful, and from +that moment my mind was vitiated. Accustomed to live on terms of perfect +equality, to be witness of no pleasures I could not command, to see no +dish I was not to partake of, or be sensible of a desire I might not +express; to be able to bring every wish of my heart to my lips--what a +transition!--at my master's I was scarce allowed to speak, was forced to +quit the table without tasting what I most longed for, and the room when +I had nothing particular to do there; was incessantly confined to my +work, while the liberty my master and his journeymen enjoyed, served only +to increase the weight of my subjection. When disputes happened to +arise, though conscious that I understood the subject better than any of +them, I dared not offer my opinion; in a word, everything I saw became an +object of desire, for no other reason than because I was not permitted to +enjoy anything. Farewell gayety, ease, those happy turns of expressions, +which formerly even made my faults escape correction. I recollect, with +pleasure, a circumstance that happened at my father's, which even now +makes me smile. Being for some fault ordered to bed without my supper, +as I was passing through the kitchen, with my poor morsel of bread in my +hand, I saw the meat turning on the spit; my father and the rest were +round the fire; I must bow to every one as I passed. When I had gone +through this ceremony, leering with a wistful eye at the roast meat, +which looked so inviting, and smelt so savory, I could not abstain from +making that a bow likewise, adding in a pitiful tone, good bye, roast +meal! This unpremeditated pleasantry put them in such good humor, that I +was permitted to stay, and partake of it. Perhaps the same thing might +have produced a similar effect at my master's, but such a thought could +never have occurred to me, or, if it had, I should not have had courage +to express it. + +Thus I learned to covet, dissemble, lie, and, at length, to steal, a +propensity I never felt the least idea of before, though since that time +I have never been able entirely to divest myself of it. Desire and +inability united naturally led to this vice, which is the reason +pilfering is so common among footmen and apprentices, though the latter, +as they grow up, and find themselves in a situation where everything is +at their command, lose this shameful propensity. As I never experienced +the advantage, I never enjoyed the benefit. + +Good sentiments, ill-directed, frequently lead children into vice. +Notwithstanding my continual wants and temptations, it was more than a +year before I could resolve to take even eatables. My first theft was +occasioned by complaisance, but it was productive of others which had not +so plausible an excuse. + +My master had a journeyman named Verrat, whose mother lived in the +neighborhood, and had a garden at a considerable distance from the house, +which produced excellent asparagus. This Verrat, who had no great plenty +of money, took it in his head to rob her of the most early production of +her garden, and by the sale of it procure those indulgences he could not +otherwise afford himself; but not being very nimble, he did not care to +run the hazard of a surprise. After some preliminary flattery, which I +did not comprehend the meaning of, he proposed this expedition to me, as +an idea which had that moment struck him. At first I would not listen to +the proposal; but he persisted in his solicitation, and as I could never +resist the attacks of flattery, at length prevailed. In pursuance of +this virtuous resolution, I every morning repaired to the garden, +gathered the best of the asparagus, and took it to the Holard where some +good old women, who guessed how I came by it, wishing to diminish the +price, made no secret of their suspicions; this produced the desired +effect, for, being alarmed, I took whatever they offered, which being +taken to Mr. Verrat, was presently metamorphosed into a breakfast, and +divided with a companion of his; for, though I procured it, I never +partook of their good cheer, being fully satisfied with an inconsiderable +bribe. + +I executed my roguery with the greatest fidelity, seeking only to please +my employer; and several days passed before it came into my head, to rob +the robber, and tithe Mr. Verrat's harvest. I never considered the +hazard I run in these expeditions, not only of a torrent of abuse, but +what I should have been still more sensible of, a hearty beating; for the +miscreant, who received the whole benefit, would certainly have denied +all knowledge of the fact, and I should only have received a double +portion of punishment for daring to accuse him, since being only an +apprentice, I stood no chance of being believed in opposition to a +journeyman. Thus, in every situation, powerful rogues know how to save +themselves at the expense of the feeble. + +This practice taught me it was not so terrible to thieve as I had +imagined: I took care to make this discovery turn to some account, +helping myself to everything within my reach, that I conceived an +inclination for. I was not absolutely ill-fed at my master's, and +temperance was only painful to me by comparing it with the luxury he +enjoyed. The custom of sending young people from table precisely when +those things are served up which seem most tempting, is calculated to +increase their longing, and induces them to steal what they conceive to +be so delicious. It may be supposed I was not backward in this +particular: in general my knavery succeeded pretty well, though quite the +reverse when I happened to be detected. + +I recollect an attempt to procure some apples, which was attended with +circumstances that make me smile and shudder even at this instant. The +fruit was standing in the pantry, which by a lattice at a considerable +height received light from the kitchen. One day, being alone in the +house, I climbed up to see these precious apples, which being out of my +reach, made this pantry appear the garden of Hesperides. I fetched the +spit--tried if it would reach them--it was too short--I lengthened it +with a small one which was used for game,--my master being very fond of +hunting, darted at them several times without success; at length was more +fortunate; being transported to find I was bringing up an apple, I drew +it gently to the lattice--was going to seize it when (who can express my +grief and astonishment!) I found it would not pass through--it was too +large. I tried every expedient to accomplish my design, sought +supporters to keep the spits in the same position, a knife to divide the +apple, and a lath to hold it with; at length, I so far succeeded as to +effect the division, and made no doubt of drawing the pieces through; but +it was scarcely separated, (compassionate reader, sympathize with my +affliction) when both pieces fell into the pantry. + +Though I lost time by this experiment, I did not lose courage, but, +dreading a surprise, I put off the attempt till next day, when I hoped to +be more successful, and returned to my work as if nothing had happened, +without once thinking of what the two obvious witnesses I had left in the +pantry deposed against me. + +The next day (a fine opportunity offering) I renew the trial. I fasten +the spits together; get on the stool; take aim; am just going to dart at +my prey--unfortunately the dragon did not sleep; the pantry door opens, +my master makes his appearance, and, looking up, exclaims, "Bravo!"-- +The horror of that moment returns--the pen drops from my hand. + +A continual repetition of ill treatment rendered me callous; it seemed a +kind of composition for my crimes, which authorized me to continue them, +and, instead of looking back at the punishment, I looked forward to +revenge. Being beat like a slave, I judged I had a right to all the +vices of one. I was convinced that to rob and be punished were +inseparable, and constituted, if I may so express myself, a kind of +traffic, in which, if I perform my part of the bargain, my master would +take care not to be deficient in his; that preliminary settled, I applied +myself to thieving with great tranquility, and whenever this +interrogatory occurred to my mind, "What will be the consequence?" the +reply was ready, "I know the worst, I shall be beat; no matter, I was +made for it." + +I love good eating; am sensual, but not greedy; I have such a variety of +inclinations to gratify, that this can never predominate; and unless my +heart is unoccupied, which very rarely happens, I pay but little +attention to my appetite; to purloining eatables, but extended this +propensity to everything I wished to possess, and if I did not become a +robber in form, it was only because money never tempted me. + +My master had a closet in the workshop, which he kept locked; this I +contrived to open and shut as often as I pleased, and laid his best +tools, fine drawings, impressions, in a word, everything he wished to +keep from me, under contribution. + +These thefts were so far innocent, that they were always employed in his +service, but I was transported at having the trifles in my possession, +and imagined I stole the art with its productions. Besides what I have +mentioned, his boxes contained threads of gold and silver, a number of +small jewels, valuable medals, and money; yet, though I seldom had five +sous in my pocket, I do not recollect ever having cast a wishful look at +them; on the contrary, I beheld these valuables rather with terror than +with delight. + +I am convinced the dread of taking money was, in a great measure, the +effect of education. There was mingled with the idea of it the fear of +infamy, a prison, punishment, and death: had I even felt the temptation, +these objects would have made me tremble; whereas my failings appeared a +species of waggery, and, in truth, they were little else; they could but +occasion a good trimming, and this I was already prepared for. A sheet +of fine drawing paper was a greater temptation than money sufficient to +have purchased a ream. This unreasonable caprice is connected with one +of the most striking singularities of my character, and has so far +influenced my conduct, that it requires a particular explanation. + +My passions are extremely violent; while under their influence, nothing +can equal my impetuosity; I am an absolute stranger to discretion, +respect, fear, or decorum; rude, saucy, violent, and intrepid: no shame +can stop, no danger intimidate me. My mind is frequently so engrossed by +a single object, that beyond it the whole world is not worth a thought; +this is the enthusiasm of a moment, the next, perhaps, I am plunged in a +state of annihilation. Take me in my moments of tranquility, I am +indolence and timidity itself; a word to speak, the least trifle to +perform, appear an intolerable labor; everything alarms and terrifies me; +the very buzzing of a fly will make me shudder; I am so subdued by fear +and shame, that I would gladly shield myself from mortal view. + +When obliged to exert myself, I am ignorant what to do! when forced to +speak, I am at a loss for words; and if any one looks at me, I am +instantly out of countenance. If animated with my subject, I express my +thoughts with ease, but, in ordinary conversations, I can say nothing-- +absolutely nothing; and, being obliged to speak, renders them +insupportable. + +I may add, that none of my predominant inclinations centre in those +pleasures which are to be purchased: money empoisons my delight; I must +have them unadulterated; I love those of the table, for instance, but +cannot endure the restraints of good company, or the intemperance of +taverns; I can enjoy them only with a friend, for alone it is equally +impossible; my imagination is then so occupied with other things, that I +find no pleasure in eating. Women who are to be purchased have no charms +for me; my beating heart cannot be satisfied without affection; it is the +same with every other enjoyment, if not truly disinterested, they are +absolutely insipid; in a word, I am fond of those things which are only +estimable to minds formed for the peculiar enjoyment of them. + +I never thought money so desirable as it is usually imagined; if you +would enjoy you must transform it; and this transformation is frequently +attended with inconvenience; you must bargain, purchase, pay dear, be +badly served, and often duped. I buy an egg, am assured it is new-laid-- +I find it stale; fruit in its utmost perfection--'tis absolutely green. +I love good wine, but where shall I get it? Not at my wine merchant's-- +he will poison me to a certainty. I wish to be universally respected; +how shall I compass my design? I must make friends, send messages, write +letters, come, go, wait, and be frequently deceived. Money is the +perpetual source of uneasiness; I fear it more than I love good wine. + +A thousand times, both during and since my apprenticeship, have I gone +out to purchase some nicety, I approach the pastry-cook's, perceive some +women at the counter, and imagine they are laughing at me. I pass a +fruit shop, see some fine pears, their appearance tempts me; but then two +or three young people are near, or a man I am acquainted with is standing +at the door; I take all that pass for persons I have some knowledge of, +and my near sight contributes to deceive me. I am everywhere +intimidated, restrained by some obstacle, and with money in my pocket +return as I went, for want of resolution to purchase what I long for. + +I should enter into the most insipid details was I to relate the trouble, +shame, repugnance, and inconvenience of all kinds which I have +experienced in parting with my money, whether in my own person, or by the +agency of others; as I proceed, the reader will get acquainted with my +disposition, and perceive all this without my troubling him with the +recital. + +This once comprehended, one of my apparent contradictions will be easily +accounted for, and the most sordid avarice reconciled with the greatest +contempt of money. It is a movable which I consider of so little value, +that, when destitute of it, I never wish to acquire any; and when I have +a sum I keep it by me, for want of knowing how to dispose of it to my +satisfaction; but let an agreeable and convenient opportunity present +itself, and I empty my purse with the utmost freedom; not that I would +have the reader imagine I am extravagant from a motive of ostentation, +quite the reverse; it was ever in subservience to my pleasures, and, +instead of glorying in expense, I endeavor to conceal it. I so well +perceive that money is not made to answer my purposes, that I am almost +ashamed to have any, and, still more, to make use of it. + +Had I ever possessed a moderate independence, I am convinced I should +have had no propensity to become avaricious. I should have required no +more, and cheerfully lived up to my income; but my precarious situation +has constantly and necessarily kept me in fear. I love liberty, and I +loathe constraint, dependence, and all their kindred annoyances. As long +as my purse contains money it secures my independence, and exempts me +from the trouble of seeking other money, a trouble of which I have always +had a perfect horror; and the dread of seeing the end of my independence, +makes me proportionately unwilling to part with my money. The money that +we possess is the instrument of liberty, that which we lack and strive to +obtain is the instrument of slavery. Thence it is that I hold fast to +aught that I have, and yet covet nothing more. + +My disinterestedness, then, is in reality only idleness, the pleasure of +possessing is not in my estimation worth the trouble of acquiring: and my +dissipation is only another form of idleness; when we have an opportunity +of disbursing pleasantly we should make the best possible use of it. + +I am less tempted by money than by other objects, because between the +moment of possessing the money and that of using it to obtain the desired +object there is always an interval, however short; whereas to possess the +thing is to enjoy it. I see a thing and it tempts me; but if I see not +the thing itself but only the means of acquiring it, I am not tempted. +Therefore it is that I have been a pilferer, and am so even now, in the +way of mere trifles to which I take a fancy, and which I find it easier +to take than to ask for; but I never in my life recollect having taken a +farthing from any one, except about fifteen years ago, when I stole seven +francs and ten sous. The story is worth recounting, as it exhibits a +concurrence of ignorance and stupidity I should scarcely credit, did it +relate to any but myself. + +It was in Paris: I was walking with M. de Franceul at the Palais Royal; +he pulled out his watch, he looked at it, and said to me, "Suppose we go +to the opera?"--"With all my heart." We go: he takes two box tickets, +gives me one, and enters himself with the other; I follow, find the door +crowded; and, looking in, see every one standing; judging, therefore, +that M. de Franceul might suppose me concealed by the company, I go out, +ask for my ticket, and, getting the money returned, leave the house, +without considering, that by then I had reached the door every one would +be seated, and M. de Franceul might readily perceive I was not there. + +As nothing could be more opposite to my natural inclination than this +abominable meanness, I note it, to show there are moments of delirium +when men ought not to be judged by their actions: this was not stealing +the money, it was only stealing the use of it, and was the more infamous +for wanting the excuse of a temptation. + +I should never end these accounts, was I to describe all the gradations +through which I passed, during my apprenticeship, from the sublimity of a +hero to the baseness of a villain. Though I entered into most of the +vices of my situation, I had no relish for its pleasures; the amusements +of my companions were displeasing, and when too much restraint had made +my business wearisome, I had nothing to amuse me. This renewed my taste +for reading which had long been neglected. I thus committed a fresh +offence, books made me neglect my work, and brought on additional +punishment, while inclination, strengthened by constraint, became an +unconquerable passion. La Tribu, a well-known librarian, furnished me +with all kinds; good or bad, I perused them with avidity, and without +discrimination. + +It will be said; "at length, then, money became necessary"--true; but +this happened at a time when a taste for study had deprived me both of +resolution and activity; totally occupied by this new inclination, I only +wished to read, I robbed no longer. This is another of my peculiarities; +a mere nothing frequently calls me off from what I appear the most +attached to; I give in to the new idea; it becomes a passion, and +immediately every former desire is forgotten. + +Reading was my new hobby; my heart beat with impatience to run over the +new book I carried in my pocket; the first moment I was alone, I seized +the opportunity to draw it out, and thought no longer of rummaging my +master's closet. I was even ashamed to think that I had been guilty of +such meanness; and had my amusements been more expensive, I no longer +felt an inclination to continue it. La Tribu gave me credit, and when +once I had the book in my possession, I thought no more of the trifle I +was to pay for it; as money came it naturally passed to this woman; and +when she chanced to be pressing, nothing was so conveniently at hand as +my own effects; to steal in advance required foresight, and robbing to +pay was no temptation. + +The frequent blows I received from my master, with my private and ill- +chosen studies, rendered me reserved, unsociable, and almost deranged my +reason. Though my taste had not preserved me from silly unmeaning books, +by good fortune I was a stranger to licentious or obscene ones; not that +La Tribu (who was very accommodating) had any scruple of lending these, +on the contrary, to enhance their worth she spoke of them with an air of +mystery; this produced an effect she had not foreseen, for both shame and +disgust made me constantly refuse them. Chance so well seconded my +bashful disposition, that I was past the age of thirty before I saw any +of those dangerous compositions. + +In less than a year I had exhausted La Tribu's scanty library, and was +unhappy for want of further amusement. My reading, though frequently +bad, had worn off my childish follies, and brought back my heart to +nobler sentiments than my condition had inspired; meantime disgusted with +all within my reach, and thinking everything charming that was out of it, +my present situation appeared extremely miserable. My passions began to +acquire strength, I felt their influence, without knowing whither they +would conduct me. I sometimes, indeed, thought of my former follies, but +sought no further. + +At this time my imagination took a turn which helped to calm my +increasing emotions; it was, to contemplate those situations in the books +I had read, which produced the most striking effect on my mind; to +recall, combine, and apply them to myself in such a manner, as to become +one of the personages my recollection presented, and be continually in +those fancied circumstances which were most agreeable to my inclinations; +in a word, by contriving to place myself in these fictitious situations, +the idea of my real one was in a great measure obliterated. + +This fondness for imaginary objects, and the facility with which I could +gain possession of them, completed my disgust for everything around me, +and fixed that inclination for solitude which has ever since been +predominant. We shall have more than once occasion to remark the effects +of a disposition, misanthropic and melancholy in appearance, but which +proceed, in fact, from a heart too affectionate, too ardent, which, for +want of similar dispositions, is constrained to content itself with +nonentities, and be satisfied with fiction. It is sufficient, at +present, to have traced the origin of a propensity which has modified my +passions, set bounds to each, and by giving too much ardor to my wishes, +has ever rendered me too indolent to obtain them. + +Thus I attained my sixteenth year, uneasy, discontented with myself and +everything that surrounded me; displeased with my occupation; without +enjoying the pleasures common to my age, weeping without a cause, sighing +I knew not why, and fond of my chimerical ideas for want of more valuable +realities. + +Every Sunday, after sermon-time, my companions came to fetch me out, +wishing me to partake of their diversions. I would willingly have been +excused, but when once engaged in amusement, I was more animated and +enterprising than any of them; it was equally difficult to engage or +restrain me; indeed, this was ever a leading trait in my character. +In our country walks I was ever foremost, and never thought of returning +till reminded by some of my companions. I was twice obliged to be from +my master's the whole night, the city gates having been shut before I +could reach them. The reader may imagine what treatment this procured me +the following mornings; but I was promised such a reception for the +third, that I made a firm resolution never to expose myself to the danger +of it. Notwithstanding my determination, I repeated this dreaded +transgression, my vigilance having been rendered useless by a cursed +captain, named M. Minutoli, who, when on guard, always shut the gate he +had charge of an hour before the usual time. I was returning home with +my two companions, and had got within half a league of the city, when I +heard them beat the tattoo; I redouble my pace, I run with my utmost +speed, I approach the bridge, see the soldiers already at their posts, I +call out to them in a suffocated voice--it is too late; I am twenty paces +from the guard, the first bridge is already drawn up, and I tremble to +see those terrible horns advanced in the air which announce the fatal and +inevitable destiny, which from this moment began to pursue me. + +I threw myself on the glacis in a transport of despair, while my +companions, who only laughed at the accident, immediately determined what +to do. My resolution, though different from theirs, was equally sudden; +on the spot, I swore never to return to my master's, and the next +morning, when my companions entered the city, I bade them an eternal +adieu, conjuring them at the same time to inform my cousin Bernard of my +resolution, and the place where he might see me for the last time. + +From the commencement of my apprenticeship I had seldom seen him; at +first, indeed, we saw each other on Sundays, but each acquiring different +habits, our meetings were less frequent. I am persuaded his mother +contributed greatly towards this change; he was to consider himself as a +person of consequence, I was a pitiful apprentice; notwithstanding our +relationship, equality no longer subsisted between us, and it was +degrading himself to frequent my company. As he had a natural good heart +his mother's lessons did not take an immediate effect, and for some time +he continued to visit me. + +Having learned my resolution, he hastened to the spot I had appointed, +not, however, to dissuade me from it, but to render my flight agreeable, +by some trifling presents, as my own resources would not have carried me +far. He gave me among other things, a small sword, which I was very +proud of, and took with me as far as Turin, where absolute want +constrained me to dispose of it. The more I reflect on his behavior at +this critical moment, the more I am persuaded he followed the +instructions of his mother, and perhaps his father likewise: for, had he +been left to his own feelings, he would have endeavored to retain, or +have been tempted to accompany me; on the contrary, he encouraged the +design, and when he saw me resolutely determined to pursue it, without +seeming much affected, left me to my fate. We never saw or wrote to each +other from that time; I cannot but regret this loss, for his heart was +essentially good, and we seemed formed for a more lasting friendship. + +Before I abandon myself to the fatality of my destiny, let me contemplate +for a moment the prospect that awaited me had I fallen into the hands of +a better master. Nothing could have been more agreeable to my +disposition, or more likely to confer happiness, than the peaceful +condition of a good artificer, in so respectable a line as engravers are +considered at Geneva. I could have obtained an easy subsistence, if not +a fortune; this would have bounded my ambition; I should have had means +to indulge in moderate pleasures, and should have continued in my natural +sphere, without meeting with any temptation to go beyond it. Having an +imagination sufficiently fertile to embellish with its chimeras every +situation, and powerful enough to transport me from one to another, it +was immaterial in which I was fixed: that was best adapted to me, which, +requiring the least care or exertion, left the mind most at liberty; and +this happiness I should have enjoyed. In my native country, in the bosom +of my religion, family and friends, I should have passed a calm and +peaceful life, in the uniformity of a pleasing occupation, and among +connections dear to my heart. I should have been a good Christian, a +good citizen, a good friend, a good man. I should have relished my +condition, perhaps have been an honor to it, and after having passed a +life of happy obscurity, surrounded by my family, I should have died at +peace. Soon it may be forgotten, but while remembered it would have been +with tenderness and regret. + +Instead of this--what a picture am I about to draw!--Alas! why should I +anticipate the miseries I have endured? The reader will have but too +much of the melancholy subject. + + + + +ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS: + +A feeling heart the foundation of all my misfortunes +Being beat like a slave, I judged I had a right to all vices +Degree of sensuality had mingled with the smart and shame +First instance of violence and oppression is so deeply engraved +Hold fast to aught that I have, and yet covet nothing more +Insignificant trash that has obtained the name of education +Law that the accuser should be confined at the same time +Less degree of repugnance in divulging what is really criminal +Money that we possess is the instrument of liberty +Money we lack and strive to obtain is the instrument of slavery +Necessity, the parent of industry, suggested an invention +Neither the victim nor witness of any violent emotions +Passed my days in languishing in silence for those I most admire +Rogues know how to save themselves at the expense of the feeble +Seeking, by fresh offences, a return of the same chastisement +Supposed that certain, which I only knew to be probable +Taught me it was not so terrible to thieve as I had imagined +We learned to dissemble, to rebel, to lie + + + + +End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of The Confessions of Rousseau, v1 +by Jean Jacques Rousseau + diff --git a/old/jj01b10.zip b/old/jj01b10.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f3d62df --- /dev/null +++ b/old/jj01b10.zip |
