The 120 Days of Sodom

INTRODUCTION
The extensive
wars wherewith Louis XIV was burdened during his reign, while
draining the State's treasury and exhausting the substance of the
people, none the less contained the secret that led to the
prosperity of a swarm of those bloodsuckers who are always on the
watch for public calamities, which, instead of appeasing, they
promote or invent so as, precisely, to be able to profit from them
the more advantageously. The end of this so very sublime reign was
perhaps one of the periods in the history of the French Empire when
one saw the emergence of the greatest number of these mysterious
fortunes whose origins are as obscure as the lust and debauchery
that accompany them. It was toward the close of this period, and
not long before the Regent sought, by means of the famous tribunal
which goes under the name of the Chambre de Justice, to flush this
multitude of traffickers, that four of them conceived the idea for
the singular revels whereof we are going to give an account. One
must not suppose that it was exclusively the low-born and vulgar
sort which did this swindling; gentlemen of the highest note led
the pack. The Duc de Blangis and his brother the Bishop of X***,
each of whom had thuswise amassed immense fortunes, are in
themselves solid proof that, like the others, the nobility
neglected no opportunities to take this road to wealth. These two
illustrious figures, through their pleasures and business closely
associated with the celebrated Durcet and the Président de Curval,
were the first to hit upon the debauch we propose to chronicle, and
having communicated the scheme to their two friends, all four
agreed to assume the major roles in these unusual orgies. For above
six years these four libertines, kindred through their wealth and
tastes, had thought to strengthen their ties by means of alliances
in which debauchery had by far a heavier part than any of the other
motives that ordinarily serve as a basis for such bonds. What they
arranged was as follows: the Duc de Blangis, thrice a widower and
sire of two daughters one wife had given him, having noticed that
the Président de Curval appeared interested in marrying the elder
of these girls, despite the familiarities he knew perfectly well
her father had indulged in with her, the Duc, I say, suddenly
conceived the idea of a triple alliance. "You want Julie for your
wife," said he to Curval, "I give her to you unhesitatingly and put
but one condition to the match: that you'll not be jealous when,
although your wife, she continues to show me the same complaisance
she always has in the past; what is more, I'd have you lend your
voice to mine in persuading our good Durcet to give me his daughter
Constance, for whom, I must confess, I have developed roughly the
same feelings you have formed for Julie." "But," said Curval, "you
are surely aware that Durcet, just as libertine as you..." "I know
all that's to be known," the Duc rejoined. "In this age, and with
our manner of thinking, is one halted by such things? do you think
I seek a wife in order to have a mistress? I want a wife that my
whims may be served, I want her to veil, to cover an infinite
number of little secret debauches the cloak of marriage wonderfully
conceals. In a word, I want her for the reasons you want my
daughter - do you fancy I am ignorant of your object and desires?
We libertines wed women to hold slaves: as wives they are rendered
more submissive than mistresse, and you know the value we set upon
despotism in the joys we pursue." It was at this point Durcet
entered. His two friends related their conversation and, delighted
by an overture which promptly induced him to avow the sentiments he
too had conceived for Adelaide, the Président's, Durcet accepted
the Duc as his son-in-law, provided he might become Curval's. The
three marriages were speedily concluded, the dowries were immense,
the wedding contracts identical. No less culpable than his two
colleagues, the Président had admitted to Durcet, who betrayed no
displeasure upon learning it, that he maintained a little
clandestine commerce with his own daughter; the three fathers, each
wishing not only to preserve his rights, but noticing here the
possibility of extending them, commonly agreed that the three young
ladies, bound to their husbands by goods and homes only, would not
in body belong more to one than to any of them, and the severest
punishments were prescribed for her who should take it into her
head not to comply with any of the conditions whereunto she was
subject. They were on the eve of realizing their plan when the
Bishop of X***, already closebound through pleasure shared with his
brother's two friends, proposed contributing a fourth element to
the alliance should the other three gentlemen consent to his
participation in the affair. This element, the Duc's second
daughter and hence the Bishop's niece, was already more thoroughly
his property than was generally imagined. He had effected
connections with his sister-in-law and the two brothers knew beyond
all shadow of doubt that the existence of this maiden, who was
called Aline, was far more accurately to be ascribed to the Bishop
than to the Duc; the former who, from the time she left the cradle,
had taken the girl into his keeping, had not, as one may well
suppose, stood idle as the years brought her charms to flower. And
so, upon this head, he was his colleagues' equal, and the article
he offered to put on the market was in an equal degree damaged or
degraded; but as Aline's attractions and tender youth outshone even
those of her three companions, she was unhesitatingly made a part
of the bargain. As had the other three, the Bishop yielded her up,
but retained the rights to her use; and so each of our four
characters thus found himself husband to four wives. Thus there
resulted an arrangement which, for the reader's convenience, we
shall recapitulate: The Duc, Julie's father, became the husband of
Constance, Durcet's daughter; Durcet, Constance's father, became
the husband of Adelaide, the Président's daughter; The Président,
Adelaide's father, became the husband of Julie, the Duc's elder
daughter; And the Bishop, Aline's uncle and father, became the
husband of the other three females by ceding this same Aline to his
friends, the while retaining the same rights over her. It was at a
superb estate of the Duc, situated in the Bourbonnais, that these
happy matches were made, and I leave to the reader to fancy how
they were consummated and in what orgies; obliged as we are to
describe others, we shall forego the pleasure of picturing these.
Upon their return to Paris, our four friends' association became
only the firmer; and as our next task is to make the reader
familiar with them, before proceeding to individual and more
searching developments, a few details of their lubricious
arrangements will serve, it seems to me, to shed a preliminary
light upon the character of these debauchees. The society had
created a common fund, which each of its members took his turn
administering for six months; the sums, allocated for nothing but
expenses in the interests of pleasure, were vast. Their excessive
wealth put the most unusual things within their reach, and the
reader ought not be surprised to hear that two million were
annually disbursed to obtain good cheer and lust's satisfaction.
Four accomplished procuresses to recruit women, and a similar
number of pimps to scout out men, had the sole duty to range both
the capital and the provinces and bring back everything, in the one
gender and in the other, that could best satisfy their sensuality's
demands. Four supper parties were held regularly every week in four
different country houses located at four extremities of Paris. At
the first of these gatherings, the one exclusively given over to
the pleasures of sodomy, only men were present; there would always
be at hand sixteen young men, ranging in age from twenty to thirty,
whose immense faculties permitted our four heroes, in feminine
guise, to taste the most agreeable delights. The youths were
selected solely upon the basis of the size of their member, and it
almost became necessary that this superb limb be of such
magnificence that it could never have penetrated any woman; this
was an essential clause, and as naught was spared by way of
expense, only very rarely would it fail to be fulfilled. But
simultaneously to sample every pleasure, to these sixteen husbands
was joined the same quantity of boys, much younger, whose purpose
was to assume the office of women. These lads were from twelve to
eighteen years old, and to be chosen for service each had to
possess a freshness, a face, graces, charms, an air, an innocence,
a candor which are far beyond what our brush could possibly paint.
No woman was admitted to these masculine orgies, in the course of
which everything of the lewdest invented in Sodom and Gomorrah was
executed. At the second supper were girls of superior class who,
upon these occasions forced to give up their proud ostentation and
the customary insolence of their bearing, were constrained, in
return for their hire, to abandon themselves to the most irregular
caprices, and often even to the outrages our libertines were
pleased to inflict upon them. Twelve of these girls would appear,
and as Paris could not have furnished a fresh supply of them as
often as would have been necessary, these evenings were
inters-persed with others at which were admitted, only in the same
number as the well-bred ladies, women ranging from procuresses up
through the class of officers' wives.
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