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Crimes of Love PDF

387 Pages·2005·2.31 MB·English
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 ’  THE CRIMES OF LOVE D-A-F, M  S, was born in Paris in  into an old patrician family. He was educated at the Jesuit college of Louis-le-Grand and at military school at Versailles. The end of the Seven Years War in  dashed his hopes of a military career, and that same year he reluctantly made the good match his impoverished father forced on him by marrying Renée- Pélagie de Montreuil, daughter of a recently ennobled but wealthy lawyer. Serious sexual misdemeanours brought him to the attention of the police and he was jailed twice for his excesses. In , for attempted murder and sodomy, he was sentenced to death and his effigy was burned in his absence. In , after years spent in not uncomfortable hiding, mainly at his chateau at La Coste near Avignon, he was jailed and not released until . During his prison years study was his therapy and writing his salvation. It was now that he developed a coherent system of atheistical materialism and wrote plays, novels, and the stories of Les Crimes de l’amour (The Crimes of Love), which he published in . In the s, having no love for the ancien régime which had deprived him of his freedom, he played a minor role in the revolution. Jailed as a polit- ical moderate, he escaped the guillotine in July  by an adminis- trative accident. Describing himself as ‘a man of letters’, he tried to make a living from the novels (Justine, ; Aline et Valcour, ; La Nouvelle Justine and L’Histoire de Juliette, both ) which justified their obscenities by reference to a comprehensive system of sexual realpolitik. In  he was jailed as the author of Justine, and in  was transferred to the lunatic asylum at Charenton, diag- nosed as suffering from ‘libertine dementia’. He continued to write and even helped to stage plays for the inmates. His applications for release were consistently rejected, and he remained a captive until his death in December . Against his wishes, he was given a Christian funeral, but was buried in an unmarked grave. D C is the author of studies of Marivaux, Marguerite Duras, Marcel Pagnol, and Restif de la Bretonne, and of a History of French Literature. For Oxford World’s Classics he has edited eight novels by Alexandre Dumas père and translated Dumas fils’s La Dame aux camélias, two selections of Maupassant short stories, Sade’s Misfortunes of Virtue and Other Early Tales, Diderot’s Jacques le Fataliste, and Beaumarchais’s Figaro Trilogy. Winner of the  Scott-Moncrieff Prize for translation, he reviews regularly for the Times Literary Supplement, the London Review of Books, and other literary periodicals.  ’  For over  years Oxford World’s Classics have brought readers closer to the world’s great literature. Now with over  titles––from the ,-year-old myths of Mesopotamia to the twentieth century’s greatest novels––the series makes available lesser-known as well as celebrated writing. The pocket-sized hardbacks of the early years contained introductions by Virginia Woolf, T. S. Eliot, Graham Greene, and other literary figures which enriched the experience of reading. Today the series is recognized for its fine scholarship and reliability in texts that span world literature, drama and poetry, religion, philosophy and politics. Each edition includes perceptive commentary and essential background information to meet the changing needs of readers. OXFORD WORLD’S CLASSICS THE MARQUIS DE SADE The Crimes of Love Heroic and Tragic Tales, Preceded by an Essay on Novels A Selection translated with an Introduction and Notes by DAVID COWARD 1 3 Great Clarendon Street, Oxford   Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide in OxfordNew York AucklandCape TownDar es SalaamHong Kong KarachiKuala Lumpur MadridMelbourneMexico City Nairobi New DelhiShanghaiTaipeiToronto With offices in ArgentinaAustriaBrazilChileCzech RepublicFranceGreece GuatemalaHungaryItalyJapanSouth KoreaPoland Portugal SingaporeSwitzerlandThailand TurkeyUkraineVietnam Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries Published in the United States by Oxford University Press Inc., New York © David Coward 2005 The moral rights of the author have been asserted Database right Oxford University Press (maker) First published as an Oxford World’s Classics paperback 2005 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organizations. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above You must not circulate this book in any other binding or cover and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Data available Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Sade, marquis de, 1740–1814 Crimes de l’amour. English. Selections] The Marquis de Sade, The crimes of love: heroic and tragic tales; preceded by an Essay on novels: a selection/translated with an introduction and notes by David Coward. p. cm. – (Oxford world’s classics) Summary: ‘Murder, seduction, and incest are among the cruel rewards for selfless love in Sade’s stories; tragedy, despair, and death the inevitable outcome. In this text Sade asks questions about society, about ourselves, and about life, for which we have yet to find the answers’ – Provided by publisher. Includes bibliographical references. 1. Erotic literature, French. I. Title: Crimes of love. II. Coward, David. III. Sade, marquis de, 1740–1814. Idée sur les romans. English. IV. Title. V. Oxford world’s classics (Oxford University Press) PQ2063.S3A65213 2005 843′.6 – dc22 ISBN 0–19–280507–X 2004026058 13 57910 864 2 Typeset in Ehrhardt by RefineCatch Limited, Bungay, Suffolk Printed in Great Britain by Clays Ltd., St. Ives plc., Suffolk CONTENTS Introduction vii Note on the Text xxxiii Select Bibliography xxxvii A Chronology of the Marquis de Sade xl THE CRIMES OF LOVE An Essay on Novels  Miss Henrietta Stralson, or The Effects of Despair. An English Tale  Faxelange, or the Faults of Ambition  Florville and Courval, or Fatality  Rodrigo, or The Enchanted Tower. An Allegorical Tale  Ernestine. A Swedish Tale  The Countess of Sancerre, or Her Daughter’s Rival. An Anecdote of the Court of Burgundy  Eugénie de Franval. A Tragic Tale  Appendix I. Draft of the Author’s Foreword ()  Appendix II. The Controversy with Villeterque  . Review of The Crimes of Love by Villeterque  . The Author of ‘The Crimes of Love’ to Villeterque, Hack and Scribe  . From Le Journal des Arts,  nivôse, An IX ( January )  Explanatory Notes  This page intentionally left blank INTRODUCTION T M  S spent a third of his life under lock and key. Until  he was jailed for his actions. After  he was imprisoned for his writings. He never believed he had done anything wrong, and blamed his unjust captivity on the prejudices of his enemies. He was, however, jailed by every political regime he lived under, monarchical, republican, and imperial, as though no form of government could tolerate his provocations and excesses. Even before he published a word, his name was associated with cruelty and perversion. His brushes with the law were widely reported and, as they passed from pen to pen, they turned into lurid travesties of the facts. In  Restif de la Bretonne offered readers of Les Nuits de Paris glimpses of a ‘monster’ who cut up women, wallowed in blood, and was Caligula and Bluebeard rolled into one. When Justine was published in  reviewers pronounced it ‘odi- ous’, ‘depraved’, and ‘monstrous’, and compared it to a poisonous mushroom which, if tasted, would prove fatal. Restif claimed to have evidence that two hundred women had already died agonizing deaths at the hands of men who had read it, and he warned the authorities that if it were ever to fall into the hands of common soldiers, the fate of a further twenty thousand would be too gruesome to contemplate. Sade tried to make The Crimes of Love () conform to the more conservative social climate inaugurated by Napoleon, but he was arrested in  and deprived permanently of his liberty. Thereafter, Church and State continued to ban his books and moralists to think of him as the ultimate threat to everything civilization stands for. Was the Marquis de Sade the wickedest man in the world? The Life and Prisons of the Marquis de Sade Donatien-Alphonse-François de Sade was born in Paris in . His family had been noble for three centuries, not long enough perhaps to warrant the patrician arrogance with which he treated his inferiors, but the line was certainly ancient and honourable. Its roots were in Provence. One ancestor, Louis de Sade, financed the construction of the famous bridge at Avignon in : the family viii Introduction escutcheon was inscribed under the first arch and is still visible. Another, Laure de Sade, was the muse of Petrarch, an ideal of spiritual perfection. On his mother’s side he was connected to the Great Condé, one of the seventeenth century’s most celebrated generals, and he was born in the Condé palace and lived there with his Condé cousin, the Prince de Bourbon, until he was four. Unfortunately, his parents did not have the wealth to match their connections. In , in the absence of his father, the spendthrift, womanizing Comte de Sade, a diplomat then on a mission to Germany, his mother decided that the boy should be sent to the family estates near Avignon, where he was cared for by his grandmother, assorted aunts, and an uncle, the licentious Abbé de Sade. In  he was enrolled at the Jesuit College of Louis-le-Grand in Paris. His progress was guided by a tutor, the kindly Abbé Amblet, to whom Sade, never overburdened with parental affection, always remained close. In  he entered military college at Versailles. He was appointed sub-lieutenant in an infantry regiment the following year, became captain of cavalry in , and saw active service in the Seven Years War. He also acquired a reputation for wayward, lewd behaviour, to the point that his father complained that he had become ‘furiously combustible’. His parents separated in about , and the family’s fortunes did not improve. The outbreak of peace in  dashed Sade’s hopes of a military career. His father overrode his wish to marry a Mademoiselle de Lauris, to whom he was genuinely attached, and instead arranged his marriage with Renée-Pélagie de Montreuil, daughter of a wealthy but recently ennobled middle-class family. Sade obeyed reluctantly and acquired money, a wife whose social origins he despised, and a mother-in-law whom he would learn to fear and hate. He preferred the pleasure-haunts of Paris to home, and he soon attracted attention there. In October , after subjecting Jeanne Testard, a fan-maker, to a night of sado-masochistic terror and–– graver still––‘horrible impiety’, which included the desecration of a crucifix and other religious symbols, he was hauled before the just- ices, who jailed him briefly at the prison-fortress at Vincennes in eastern Paris. Unrepentant, he soon resumed his bad habits and consorted openly with expensive actresses, one of whom he passed off as his wife on a visit to his chateau at La Coste in the Midi. In , on the death of his father, he inherited large debts and the title Introduction ix of ‘Comte’, which he never used, preferring to style himself ‘Marquis’. By this time he was well known to the men who policed the capital’s buoyant vice trade. On  October  one of them predicted the worst: It will not be long before more is heard of the horrors perpetrated by the Comte de Sade. He is presently moving heaven and earth to persuade Mademoiselle Rivière of the Opera to live with him and has offered her  louis a month on the condition that the days when she is not performing on stage she will spend with him at the little house he owns at Arcueil. The lady has refused because she is currently in receipt of the attentions of Monsieur Hocquart de Coubron, but Monsieur de Sade continues to pester her. Until such time as he can overcome her resistance, he has applied persistently this week to Madame Brissault [one of Paris’s leading madams] asking her to furnish him with girls he can take to supper at his little retreat. But she has refused, for she knows all too well what he is capable of. However, he has probably approached others among her col- leagues who are either less scrupulous or else do not know him, and one thing is clear: it will not be long before more is heard of him. And so it proved. On Easter Day , in the Place des Victoires, he made an approach to Rose Keller, , who claimed to be a widow, an unemployed cotton-spinner reduced to begging for her bread: Monsieur de Sade ... going alone to his residence at Arcueil near Paris, chanced upon a beggar-woman whom he took with him to his house on the pretext that out of charity he wished to add her to his household, for his service. But when she arrived, he led her into an isolated room, bound her hands and feet, and stopped up her mouth to prevent her crying out. Taking a small knife, he made a number of incisions in various parts of her body and then melted some kind of Spanish wax into the cuts. Having done this, he calmly went out to take the air, leaving the victim of his ferocity under lock and key. However, she managed to free herself and jumped from the window without adding any more injury to herself than she had already sustained. All the villagers who saw her would have mas- sacred the Comte de Sade if he had not fled. It is thought that he has lost his reason. His family has been granted an order for him to be detained at the chateau of Saumur, and the perforated woman has withdrawn the complaint she had made in court in consideration of a sum of money. Like most reports of the ‘Arcueil Affair’ published at the time, this account in the Gazette d’Utrecht on  April was not altogether

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Who but the Marquis de Sade would write not of the pain, tragedy, and joy of love but of its crimes? Murder, seduction, and incest are among the cruel rewards for selfless love in his stories--tragedy, despair, and death the inevitable outcome. Sade's villains will stop at nothing to satisfy their d
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.