I have no need to thwart my inclinations in order to
flatter some god; these instincts were given me by Nature, and it
would be to irritate her were I to resist them; if she gave me bad
ones, that is because they were necessary to her designs. I am in
her hands but a machine which she runs as she likes, and not one of
my crimes does not serve her: the more she urges me to commit them,
the more of them she needs; I should be a fool to disobey her.
Thus, nothing but the law stands in my way, but I defy the law, my
gold and my prestige keep me well beyond reach of those vulgar
instruments of repression which should be employed only upon the
common sort." If one were to raise the objection that,
nevertheless, all men possess ideas of the just and the unjust
which can only be the product of Nature, since these notions are
found in every people and even amongst the uncivilized, the Duc
would reply affirmatively, saying that yes, those ideas have never
been anything if not relative, that the stronger has always
considered exceedingly just what the weaker regarded as flagrantly
unjust, and that it takes no more than the mere reversal of their
positions for each to be able to change his way of thinking too;
whence the Duc would conclude that nothing is really just but what
makes for pleasure, and what is unjust is the cause of pain; that
in taking a hundred louis from a man's pocket, he was doing
something very just for himself, although the victim of the robbery
might have to regard the action with another eye; that all these
notions therefore being very arbitrary, a fool he who would allow
himself to become their thrall. It was by means of arguments in
this kind the Duc used to justify his trans-gressions, and as he
was a man of greatest possible wit, his arguments had a decisive
ring. And so, modeling his conduct upon his philosophy, the Duc
had, from his most tender youth, abandoned himself unrestrainedly
to the most shameful extravagances, and to the most extraordinary
ones. His father, having died young and, as I indicated, left him
in control of a huge fortune, had however stipulated in his will
that the young man's mother should, while she lived, be allowed to
enjoy a large share of this legacy. Such a condition was not in
displeasing Blangis: poison appearing to be the only way to avoid
having to subscribe to this article, the knave straightway decided
to make use of it. But this was the period when he was only making
his first steps in a vicious career; not daring to act himself, he
brought one of his sisters, with whom he was carrying on a criminal
intrigue, to take charge of the execution, assuring her that if she
were to succeed, he would see to it that she would be the
beneficiary of that part of the fortune whereof death would deprive
their mother. However, the young lady was horrified by this
proposal, and the Duc, observing that this ill-confided secret was
perhaps going to betray him, decided on the spot to extend his
plans to include the sister he had hoped to have for an accomplice;
he conducted both women to one of his properties whence the two
unfortunate ones never returned. Nothing quite encourages as does
one's first unpunished crime. This hurdle once cleared, an open
field seemed to beckon to the Duc. Immediately any person
whomsoever showed opposition to his desires, poison was employed
forthwith. From necessary murders he soon passed to those of pure
pleasure; he was captivated by that regrettable folly which causes
us to find delight in the sufferings of others; he noticed that a
violent commotion inflicted upon any kind of an adversary is
answered by a vibrant thrill in our own nervous system; the effect
of this vibration, arousing the animal spirits which flow within
these nerves' con-cavities, obliges them to exert pressure on the
erector nerves and to produce in accordance with this perturbation
what is termed a lubricious sensation. Consequently, he set about
committing thefts and murders in the name of debauchery and
libertinage, just as someone else would be content, in order to
inflame these same passions, to chase a whore or two. At the age of
twenty-three, he and three of his companions in vice, whom he had
indoctrinated with his philosophy, made up a party whose aim was to
go out and stop a public coach on the highway, to rape the men
among the travelers along with the women, to assassinate them
afterward, to make off with their victims' money (the conspirators
certainly had no need of this), and to be back that same night, all
three of them, at the Opera Ball in order to have a sound alibi.
This crime took place, ah, yes: two charming maids were violated
and massacred in their mother's arms; to this was joined an endless
list of other horrors, and no one dared suspect the Duc. Weary of
the delightful wife his father had bestowed upon him before dying,
the young Blangis wasted no time uniting her shade to his mother's,
to his sister's, and to those of all his other victims. Why all
this? to be able to marry a girl, wealthy, to be sure, but publicly
dishonored and whom he knew full well was her brother's mistress.
The person in question was the mother of Aline, one of the figures
in our novel we mentioned above. This second wife, soon sacrificed
like the first, gave way to a third, who followed hard on the heels
of the second. It was rumored abroad that the Duc's huge
construction was responsible for the undoing of all his wives, and
as this gigantic tale corresponded in every point to its gigantic
inspiration, the Duc let the opinion take root and veil the truth.
That dreadful colossus did indeed make one think of Hercules or a
centaur: Blangis stood five foot eleven inches tall, had limbs of
great strength and energy, powerful sinews, elastic nerves, in
addition to that a proud and masculine visage, great dark eyes,
handsome black eyelashes, an aquiline nose, fine teeth, a quality
of health and exuberance, broad shoulders, a heavy chest but a
well-proportioned figure withal, splendid hips, superb buttocks,
the handsomest leg in the world, an iron temperament, the strength
of a horse, the member of a veritable mule, wondrously hirsute,
blessed with the ability to eject its sperm any number of times
within a given day and at will, even at the age of fifty, which was
his age at the time, a virtually constant erection in this member
whose dimensions were an exact eight inches for circumference and
twelve for length over-all, and there you have the portrait of the
Duc de Blangis, drawn as accurately as if you'd wielded the pencil
yourself. But if this masterpiece of Nature was violent in its
desires, what was it like, Great God! when crowned by drunken
voluptuousness? 'Twas a man no longer, 'twas a raging tiger. Woe
unto him who happened then to be serving its passions; frightful
cries, atrocious blasphemies sprang from the Duc's swollen breast,
flames seemed to dart from his eyes, he foamed at the mouth, he
whinnied like a stallion, you'd have taken him for the very god of
lust. Whatever then was his manner of having his pleasure, his
hands necessarily strayed, roamed continually, and he had been more
than once seen to strangle woman to death at the instant of his
perfidious discharge. His presence of mind once restored, his
frenzy was immediately replaced by the most complete indifference
to the infamies wherewith he had just indulged himself, and of this
indifference, of this kind of apathy, further sparks of lechery
would be born almost at once. In his youth, the Duc had been known
to discharge as often as eighteen times a day, and that without
appearing one jot more fatigued after the final than after the
initial ejaculation. Seven or eight crises within the same interval
still held no terrors for him, his half a century of years
notwithstanding. For roughly twenty-five years he had accustomed
himself to passive sodomy, and he withstood its assaults with the
identical vigor characterized his manner of delivering them
actively when, the very next moment, it pleased him to exchange
roles. He had once wagered he could sustain fifty-five attacks in a
day, and so he had. Furnished, as we have pointed out, with
prodigious strength, he needed only one hand to violate a girl, and
he had proved it upon several occasions. One day he boasted he
could squeeze the life out of a horse with his legs; he mounted the
beast, it collapsed at the instant he had predicted. His prowess at
the table outshone, if that is possible, what he demonstrated upon
the bed. There's no imagining what had come to be the quantity of
the food he consumed.
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