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+The Project Gutenberg Ebook Belphegor &c., by Jean de La Fontaine
+#9 in our series by Jean de La Fontaine (The Tales and Novels)
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****
+
+
+Title: The Tales and Novels, v9: Belphegor and Others
+
+Author: Jean de La Fontaine
+
+Release Date: March, 2004 [EBook #5283]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on June 14, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+
+
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TALES AND NOVELS OF FONTAINE, V9 ***
+
+
+
+This eBook 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 TALES AND NOVELS
+ OF
+ J. DE LA FONTAINE
+
+
+
+ Volume 9.
+
+ Contains:
+ Belphegor
+ The Little Bell
+ The Glutton]
+
+
+
+ BELPHEGOR
+ ADDRESSED TO MISS DE CHAMMELAY
+
+
+ YOUR name with ev'ry pleasure here I place,
+ The last effusions of my muse to grace.
+ O charming Phillis! may the same extend
+ Through time's dark night: our praise together blend;
+ To this we surely may pretend to aim
+ Your acting and my rhymes attention claim.
+ Long, long in mem'ry's page your fame shall live;
+ You, who such ecstacy so often give;
+ O'er minds, o'er hearts triumphantly you reign:
+ In Berenice, in Phaedra, and Chimene,
+ Your tears and plaintive accents all engage:
+ Beyond compare in proud Camilla's rage;
+ Your voice and manner auditors delight;
+ Who strong emotions can so well excite?
+ No fine eulogium from my pen expect:
+ With you each air and grace appear correct
+ My first of Phillis's you ought to be;
+ My sole affection had been placed on thee;
+ Long since, had I presumed the truth to tell;
+ But he who loves would fain be loved as well.
+
+ NO hope of gaining such a charming fair,
+ Too soon, perhaps, I ceded to despair;
+ Your friend, was all I ventured to be thought,
+ Though in your net I more than half was caught.
+ Most willingly your lover I'd have been;
+ But time it is our story should be seen.
+
+ ONE, day, old Satan, sov'reign dread of hell;
+ Reviewed his subjects, as our hist'ries tell;
+ The diff'rent ranks, confounded as they stood,
+ Kings, nobles, females, and plebeian blood,
+ Such grief expressed, and made such horrid cries,
+ As almost stunned, and filled him with surprise.
+ The monarch, as he passed, desired to know
+ The cause that sent each shade to realms below.
+ Some said--my HUSBAND; others WIFE replied;
+ The same was echoed loud from ev'ry side.
+
+ His majesty on this was heard to say:
+ If truth these shadows to my ears convey,
+ With ease our glory we may now augment:
+ I'm fully bent to try th' experiment.
+ With this design we must some demon send,
+ Who wily art with prudence well can blend;
+ And, not content with watching Hymen's flock,
+ Must add his own experience to the stock.
+
+ THE sable senate instantly approved
+ The proposition that the monarch moved;
+ Belphegor was to execute the work;
+ The proper talent in him seemed to lurk:
+ All ears and eyes, a prying knave in grain
+ In short, the very thing they wished to gain.
+
+ THAT he might all expense and cost defray,
+ They gave him num'rous bills without delay,
+ And credit too, in ev'ry place of note,
+ With various things that might their plan promote.
+ He was, besides, the human lot to fill,
+ Of pleasure and of pain:--of good and ill;
+ In fact, whate'er for mortals was designed,
+ With his legation was to be combined.
+ He might by industry and wily art,
+ His own afflictions dissipate in part;
+ But die he could not, nor his country see,
+ Till he ten years complete on earth should be.
+
+ BEHOLD him trav'lling o'er th' extensive space;
+ Between the realms of darkness and our race.
+ To pass it, scarcely he a moment took;
+ On Florence instantly he cast a look;--
+ Delighted with the beauty of the spot,
+ He there resolved to fix his earthly lot,
+ Regarding it as proper for his wiles,
+ A city famed for wanton freaks and guiles.
+ Belphegor soon a noble mansion hired,
+ And furnished it with ev'ry thing desired;
+ As signor Roderick he designed to pass;
+ His equipage was large of ev'ry class;
+ Expense anticipating day by day,
+ What, in ten years, he had to throw away.
+
+ HIS noble entertainments raised surprise;
+ Magnificence alone would not suffice;
+ Delightful pleasures he dispensed around,
+ And flattery abundantly was found,
+ An art in which a demon should excel:
+ No devil surely e'er was liked so well.
+ His heart was soon the object of the FAIR;
+ To please Belphegor was their constant care.
+
+ WHO lib'rally with presents smoothes the road,
+ Will meet no obstacles to LOVE'S abode.
+ In ev'ry situation they are sweet,
+ I've often said, and now the same repeat:
+ The primum mobile of human kind,
+ Are gold and silver, through the world we find.
+
+ OUR envoy kept two books, in which he wrote
+ The names of all the married pairs of note;
+ But that assigned to couples satisfied,
+ He scarcely for it could a name provide,
+ Which made the demon almost blush to see,
+ How few, alas! in wedlock's chains agree;
+ While presently the other, which contained
+ Th' unhappy--not a leaf in blank remained.
+
+ No other choice Belphegor now had got,
+ Than--try himself the hymeneal knot.
+ In Florence he beheld a certain fair,
+ With charming face and smart engaging air;
+ Of noble birth, but puffed with empty pride;
+ Some marks of virtue, though not much beside.
+ For Roderick was asked this lofty dame;
+ The father said Honesta* (such her name)
+ Had many eligible offers found;
+ But, 'mong the num'rous band that hovered round,
+ Perhaps his daughter, Rod'rick's suit might take,
+ Though he should wish for time the choice to make.
+ This approbation met, and Rod'rick 'gan
+ To use his arts and execute his plan.
+
+ THE entertainments, balls, and serenades,
+ Plays, concerts, presents, feasts, and masquerades,
+ Much lessened what the demon with him brought;
+ He nothing grudged:--whate'er was wished he bought.
+ The dame believed high honour she bestowed,
+ When she attention to his offer showed;
+ And, after prayers, entreaties, and the rest,
+ To be his wife she full assent expressed.
+
+ BUT first a pettifogger to him came,
+ Of whom (aside) Belphegor made a game;
+ What! said the demon, is a lady gained
+ just like a house?--these scoundrels have obtained
+ Such pow'r and sway, without them nothing's done;
+ But hell will get them when their course is run.
+ He reasoned properly; when faith's no more,
+ True honesty is forced to leave the door;
+ When men with confidence no longer view
+ Their fellow-mortals,--happiness adieu!
+ The very means we use t' escape the snare,
+ Oft deeper plunge us in the gulph of care;
+ Avoid attorneys, if you comfort crave
+ Who knows a PETTIFOGGER, knows a KNAVE;
+ Their contracts, filled with IFS and FORS, appear
+ The gate through which STRIFE found admittance here.
+ In vain we hope again the earth 'twill leave
+ Still STRIFE remains, and we ourselves deceive:
+ In spite of solemn forms and laws we see,
+ That LOVE and HYMEN often disagree.
+ The heart alone can tranquilize the mind;
+ In mutual passion ev'ry bliss we find.
+
+ HOW diff'rent things in other states appear!
+ With friends--'tis who can be the most sincere;
+ With lovers--all is sweetness, balm of life;
+ While all is IRKSOMENESS with man and wife.
+ We daily see from DUTY springs disgust,
+ And PLEASURE likes true LIBERTY to trust.
+
+ ARE happy marriages for ever flown?
+ On full consideration I will own,
+ That when each other's follies couples bear;
+ They then deserve the name of HAPPY PAIR.
+
+ ENOUGH of this:--no sooner had our wight
+ The belle possessed, and passed the month's delight;
+ But he perceived what marriage must be here,
+ With such a demon in our nether sphere.
+ For ever jars and discords rang around;
+ Of follies, ev'ry class our couple found;
+ Honesta often times such noise would make,
+ Her screams and cries the neighbours kept awake,
+ Who, running thither, by the wife were told:--
+ Some paltry tradesman's daughter, coarse and bold,
+ He should have had:--not one of rank like me;
+ To treat me thus, what villain he must be!
+ A wife so virtuous, could he e'er deserve!
+ My scruples are too great, or I should swerve;
+ Indeed, without dispute, 'twould serve him right:--
+ We are not sure she nothing did in spite;
+ These prudes can make us credit what they please:
+ Few ponder long when they can dupe with ease.
+
+ THIS wife and husband, as our hist'ries say,
+ Each moment squabbled through the passing day;
+ Their disagreements often would arise
+ About a petticoat, cards, tables, pies,
+ Gowns, chairs, dice, summer-houses, in a word,
+ Things most ridiculous and quite absurd.
+
+ WELL might this spouse regret his Hell profound,
+ When he considered what he'd met on ground.
+ To make our demon's wretchedness complete,
+ Honesta's relatives, from ev'ry street,
+ He seemed to marry, since he daily fed
+ The father, mother, sister (fit to wed,)
+ And little brother, whom he sent to school;
+ While MISS he portioned to a wealthy fool.
+
+ His utter ruin, howsoe'er, arose
+ From his attorney-steward that he chose.
+ What's that? you ask--a wily sneaking knave,
+ Who, while his master spends, contrives to save;
+ Till, in the end, grown rich, the lands he buys,
+ Which his good lord is forced to sacrifice.
+
+ IF, in the course of time, the master take
+ The place of steward, and his fortune make,
+ 'Twould only to their proper rank restore,
+ Those who become just what they were before.
+
+ POOR Rod'rick now no other hope had got,
+ Than what the chance of traffick might allot;
+ Illusion vain, or doubtful at the best:--
+ Though some grow rich, yet all are not so blessed.
+ 'Twas said our husband never would succeed;
+ And truly, such it seemed to be decreed.
+ His agents (similar to those we see
+ In modern days) were with his treasure free;
+ His ships were wrecked; his commerce came to naught;
+ Deceived by knaves, of whom he well had thought;
+ Obliged to borrow money, which to pay,
+ He was unable at th' appointed day,
+ He fled, and with a farmer shelter took,
+ Where he might hope the bailiffs would not look.
+
+ HE told to Matthew, (such the farmer's name,)
+ His situation, character, and fame:
+ By duns assailed, and harassed by a wife,
+ Who proved the very torment of his life,
+ He knew no place of safety to obtain,
+ Like ent'ring other bodies, where 'twas plain,
+ He might escape the catchpole's prowling eye,
+ Honesta's wrath, and all her rage defy.
+ From these he promised he would thrice retire;
+ Whenever Matthew should the same desire:
+ Thrice, but no more, t'oblige this worthy man,
+ Who shelter gave when from the fiends he ran.
+
+ THE AMBASSADOR commenced his form to change:--
+ From human frame to frame he 'gan to range;
+ But what became his own fantastick state,
+ Our books are silent, nor the facts relate.
+
+ AN only daughter was the first he seized,
+ Whose charms corporeal much our demon pleased;
+ But Matthew, for a handsome sum of gold,
+ Obliged him, at a word, to quit his hold.
+ This passed at Naples--next to Rome he came,
+ Where, with another fair, he did the same;
+ But still the farmer banished him again,
+ So well he could the devil's will restrain;
+ Another weighty purse to him was paid
+ Thrice Matthew drove him out from belle and maid.
+
+ THE king of Naples had a daughter fair,
+ Admired, adored:--her parents' darling care;
+ In wedlock oft by many princes sought;
+ Within her form, the wily demon thought
+ He might be sheltered from Honesta's rage;
+ And none to drive him thence would dare engage.
+
+ NAUGHT else was talked of, in or out of town,
+ But devils driven by the cunning clown;
+ Large sums were offered, if, by any art,
+ He'd make the demon from the fair depart.
+
+ AFFLICTED much was Matthew, now to lose
+ The gold thus tendered, but he could not choose,
+ For since Belphegor had obliged him thrice,
+ He durst not hope the demon to entice;
+ Poor man was he, a sinner, who, by chance,
+ (He knew not how, it surely was romance,)
+ Had some few devils, truly, driven out:
+ Most worthy of contempt without a doubt.
+ But all in vain:--the man they took by force;
+ Proceed he must, or hanged he'd be of course.
+
+ THE demon was before our farmer placed;
+ The sight was by the prince in person graced;
+ The wond'rous contest numbers ran to see,
+ And all the world spectators fain would be.
+
+ IF vanquished by the devil:--he must swing;
+ If vanquisher:--'twould thousands to him bring:
+ The gallows was, no doubt, a horrid view;
+ Yet, at the purse, his glances often flew;
+ The evil spirit laughed within his sleeve,
+ To see the farmer tremble, fret, and grieve.
+ He pleaded that the wight he'd thrice obeyed;
+ The demon was by Matthew often prayed;
+ But all in vain,--the more he terror showed,
+ The more Belphegor ridicule bestowed.
+
+ AT length the clown was driven to declare,
+ The fiend he was unable to ensnare;
+ Away they Matthew to the gallows led;
+ But as he went, it entered in his head,
+ And, in a sort of whisper he averred
+ (As was in fact the case) a drum he heard.
+
+ THE demon, with surprise, to Matthew cried;
+ What noise is that? Honesta, he replied,
+ Who you demands, and every where pursues,
+ The spouse who treats her with such vile abuse.
+
+ THESE words were thunder to Belphegor's ears,
+ Who instantly took flight, so great his fears;
+ To hell's abyss he fled without delay,
+ To tell adventures through the realms of day.
+ Sire, said the demon, it is clearly true,
+ Damnation does the marriage knot pursue.
+ Your highness often hither sees arrive,
+ Not squads, but regiments, who, when alive,
+ By Hymen were indissolubly tied:--
+ In person I the fact have fully tried.
+ Th' institution, perhaps, most just could be:
+ Past ages far more happiness might see;
+ But ev'ry thing, with time, corruption shows;
+ No jewel in your crown more lustre throws.
+
+ BELPHEGOR'S tale by Satan was believed;
+ Reward he got: the term, which-sorely grieved,
+ Was now reduced; indeed, what had he done,
+ That should prevent it?--If away he'd run,
+ Who would not do the same who weds a shrew?
+ Sure worse below the devil never knew!
+ A brawling woman's tongue, what saint can bear?
+ E'en Job, Honesta would have taught despair.
+
+ WHAT is the inference? you ask:--I'll tell;--
+ Live single, if you know you are well;
+ But if old Hymen o'er your senses reign,
+ Beware Honestas, or you'll rue the chain.
+
+ * By this character La Fontaine is supposed to
+ have meant his own wife.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LITTLE BELL
+
+
+ HOW weak is man! how changeable his mind!
+ His promises are naught, too oft we find;
+ I vowed (I hope in tolerable verse,)
+ Again no idle story to rehearse.
+ And whence this promise?--Not two days ago;
+ I'm quite confounded; better I should know:
+ A rhymer hear then, who himself can boast,
+ Quite steady for--a minute at the most.
+ The pow'rs above could PRUDENCE ne'er design;
+ For those who fondly court the SISTERS NINE.
+ Some means to please they've got, you will confess;
+ But none with certainty the charm possess.
+ If, howsoever, I were doomed to find
+ Such lines as fully would content the mind:
+ Though I should fail in matter, still in art;
+ I might contrive some pleasure to impart.
+
+ LET'S see what we are able to obtain:--
+ A bachelor resided in Touraine.
+ A sprightly youth, who oft the maids beset,
+ And liked to prattle to the girls he met,
+ With sparkling eyes, white teeth, and easy air,
+ Plain russet petticoat and flowing hair,
+ Beside a rivulet, while Io round,
+ With little bell that gave a tinkling sound,
+ On herbs her palate gratified at will,
+ And gazed and played, and fondly took her fill.
+
+ AMONG the rustic nymphs our spark perceived
+ A charming girl, for whom his bosom heaved;
+ Too young, however, to feel the poignant smart,
+ By Cupid oft inflicted on the heart.
+ I will not say thirteen's an age unfit
+ The contrary most fully I admit;
+ The LAW supposes (such its prudent fears)
+ Maturity at still more early years;
+ But this apparently refers to towns,
+ While LOVE was born for groves, and lawns, and downs.
+
+ THE youth exerted ev'ry art to please;
+ But all in vain: he only seemed to teaze:
+ Whate'er he said, however nicely graced,
+ Ill-humour, inexperience, or distaste,
+ Induced the belle, unlearned in Cupid's book;
+ To treat his passion with a froward look.
+
+ BELIEVING ev'ry artifice in love
+ Was tolerated by the pow'rs above,
+ One eve he turned a heifer from the rest;
+ Conducted by the girl his thoughts possessed;
+ The others left, not counted by the fair,
+ (Youth seldom shows the necessary care,)
+ With easy, loit'ring steps the cottage sought,
+ Where ev'ry night they usually were brought.
+
+ HER mother, more experienced than the maid,
+ Observed, that from the cattle one had strayed;
+ The girl was scolded much, and sent to find
+ The heifer indiscreetly left behind.
+ Fair Isabella gave a vent to tears;
+ Invoked sweet echo to disperse her fears:
+ Solicited with fervent, piercing cry,
+ To tell her where lorn Io she might spy,
+ Whose little bell the spark deprived of sound;
+ When he withdrew her from the herd around.
+
+ THE lover now the tinkling metal shook;
+ The path that t'wards it led the charmer took.
+ The well known note was pleasing to her ear;
+ Without suspecting treachery was near,
+ She followed to a wood, both deep and large,
+ In hopes at least she might regain her charge.
+
+ GUESS her surprise, good reader, when she heard,
+ A lover's voice, who would not be deterred.
+ Said he, fair maid whene'er the heart's on fire,
+ 'Tis all permitted that can quench desire.
+ On this, with piercing cries she rent the air;
+ But no one came:--she sunk to dire despair.
+
+ YE beauteous dames avoid the Sylvan shade;
+ Dread dangers solitary woods pervade.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GLUTTON
+
+
+ A STURGEON, once, a glutton famed was led
+ To have for supper--all, except the head.
+ With wond'rous glee he feasted on the fish;
+ And quickly swallowed down the royal dish.
+ O'ercharged, howe'er, his stomach soon gave way;
+ And doctors were required without delay.
+
+ THE danger imminent, his friends desired
+ He'd settle ev'ry thing affairs required.
+ Said he, in that respect I'm quite prepared;
+ And, since my time so little is declared,
+ With diligence, I earnestly request,
+ The sturgeon's head you'll get me nicely dressed.
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+Avoid attorneys, if you comfort crave
+Few ponder long when they can dupe with ease
+He who loves would fain be loved as well
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TALES AND NOVELS OF FONTAINE, V9 ***
+
+*********** This file should be named 5283.txt or 5283.zip **********
+
+This eBook was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net>
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