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.
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