They were like two little
apples a frolicking Cupid had fetched hither from his mother's
garden. Her chest was a bit narrow, it was also a very delicate
chest, her belly was satin smooth, a little blond mound not much
garnished with hair served as peristyle to the temple in which
Venus seemed to call out for an homage. This temple was narrow to
such a point you could not insert a finger therein without
eliciting a cry from Adelaide; nevertheless, two lustrums had
revolved since the time when, thanks to the Président, the poor
child had ceased to be a virgin, either in that place or in the
delicious part it remains for us to sketch. Oh, what were the
attractions this second sanctuary possessed, what a flow in the
line of her back, how magnificently were those buttocks cut, what
whiteness there, and what dazzling rose blush! But all on all, it
was on the small side. Delicate in all her lines, she was rather
the sketch than the model of beauty, it seemed as though Nature had
only wished to indicate in Adelaide what she had so majestically
articulated in Constance. Peer into that appetizing behind, and lo!
a rosebud would offer itself to your gaze, and it was in all its
bloom and in the most tender pink Nature wished you to behold it;
but narrow? tiny? it had only been at the price of infinite labors
the Président had navigated through those straits, and he had only
renewed these assaults successfully two or three times. Durcet,
less exacting, gave her little affliction in this point, but, since
becoming his wife, in exchange for how many other cruel
complaisances, with what a quantity of other perilous submissions
had she not been obliged to purchase this little kindness? And,
furthermore, turned over to the four libertines, as by their mutual
consent she was, how many other cruel ordeals had she not to
undergo, both of the species Durcet spared her, and of every other.
Adelaide had the mind her face suggested, that is to say, an
extremely romantic mind, solitary places were the ones she
preferred, and once there, she would shed involuntary tears - tears
to which we do not pay sufficient heed - tears apparently torn from
Nature by foreboding. She was recently bereft of a friend, a girl
she idolized, and this frightful loss constantly haunted her
imagination. As she was thoroughly acquainted with her father, as
she knew to what extents he carried his wild behavior, she was
persuaded her young friend had fallen prey to the Président's
villainies, for he had never managed to induce the missing person
to accord him certain privileges. The thing was not unlikely.
Adelaide imagined the same would someday befall her; nor was that
improbable. The Président, in her regard, had not paid the same
attention to the problem of religion Durcet had in the interests of
Constance, no, he had allowed all that nonsense to be born, to be
fomented, supposing that his writings and his discourses would
easily destroy it. He was mistaken: religion is the nourishment
upon which a soul such as Adelaide's feeds. In vain the Président
had preached, in vain he had made her read books, the young lady
had remained a believer, and all these extravagances, which she did
not share, which she hated, of which she was the victim, fell far
short of disabusing her about illusions which continued to make for
her life's happiness. She would go and hide herself to pray to God,
she'd perform Christian duties on the sly, and was unfailingly and
very severely punished, either by her father or her husband, when
surprised in the act by the one or the other. Adelaide patiently
endured it all, fully convinced Heaven would someday reward her.
Her character was as gentle as her spirit, and her benevolence, one
of the virtues for which her father most detested her, went to the
point of extreme. Curval, whom that vile class of the
poverty-stricken irritated, sought only to humiliate it, to further
depress it, or to wring victims from it; his generous daughter, on
the other hand, would have foregone her own necessities to procure
them for the poor, and she had often been espied stealing off to
take to the needy sums which were intended for her pleasures.
Durcet and the Président finally succeeded in scolding and pounding
good manners into her, and in ridding her of this corrupt practice
by withholding absolutely all means whereby she could resume it.
Adelaide, having nothing left but her tears to bestow upon the
poor, went none the less to sprinkle them upon their woes, and her
powerless howbeit staunchly sensitive spirit was incapable of
ceasing to be virtuous. One day she learned that some poor woman
was to come to prostitute her daughter to the Président because
extreme need bade her do so; the enchanted old rake was already
preparing himself for the kind of pleasure-taking he liked best.
Adelaide had one of her dresses sold and immediately got the money
put it in the mother's hands; by means of this small assistance and
some sort of a sermon, she diverted the woman from the she was
about to commit. Hearing of what she had done, the Président
proceeded to such violences with her - his daughter was not yet
married at the time - that she was a fortnight abed; but all that
was to no avail: nothing could put a stop to this gentle soul's
tender impulses.
Julie, the Président's wife, the Duc's elder
daughter, would have eclipsed the two preceding women were it not
for something which many behold as a capital defect, but which had
perhaps in itself aroused Curval's passion for her, so true it is
that the effects of passion are unpredictable, nay, inconceivable,
and that their disorder, the outcome of disgust and satiety, can
only be matched by their irregular flights. Julie was tall, well
made although quite fat and fleshy, had the most lovely brown eyes
in the world, a charming nose, striking and gracious features, the
most beautiful chestnut brown hair, a fair body of the most
appetizing fullness, an ass which might easily have served as model
to the one Praxiteles sculpted, her cunt was hot, strait, and
yielded as agreeable a sensation as such a locale ever may; her
legs were handsome, her feet charming, but she had the worst-decked
mouth, the foulest teeth, and was by habit so dirty in every other
part of her body, and principally at the two temples of lubricity,
that no other being, let me repeat it, no other being but the
Président, himself subject to the same shortcomings and
unquestionably fond of them, nay, no one else, despite her
allurements, could have put up with Julie. Curval, however, was mad
about her; his most divine pleasures were gathered upon that
stinking mouth, to kiss it plunged him into delirium, and as for
her natural uncleanliness, far from rebuking her for it, to the
contrary he encouraged her in it, and had finally got her
accustomed to a perfect divorce from water. To these faults Julie
added a few others, but they were surely less disagreeable: she was
a vast eater, she had a leaning toward drunkenness, little virtue,
and I believe that had she dared try it, whoredom would have held
little by way of terror for her. Brought up by the Duc in a total
abandon of principles and manners, she adopted a whore's
philosophy, and she was probably an apt student of all its tenets;
but, through yet another very curious effect of libertinage, it
often happens that a woman who shares our faults pleases us a great
deal less in our pleasures than one who is full of naught but
virtues: the first resembles us, we scandalize her not; the other
is terrified, and there is one very certain charm more. Despite his
proportions, the Duc had sported with his daughter, but he had had
to wait until she was fifteen, and even so had not been able to
prevent Julie from being considerably damaged by the adventure,
indeed, so much so that, eager to marry her off, he had been forced
to put a term to pleasure-taking of this variety and to be content
with delights less dangerous for her, but at least as fatiguing.
Julie gained little by gaining the Président, whose prick, as we
know, was exceedingly thick and, furthermore, however much she was
dirty from neglect of herself, she could not in any wise keep up
with a filthiness in debauch such as the one that distinguished the
Président, her beloved spouse.
Aline, Julie's younger sister and really the
daughter of the Bishop, possessed habits and defects and a
character very unlike her sister's. She was the most youthful of
the four, she had just become eighteen; she had a fetching,
exuberantly healthy, and almost pert little countenance; a little
turned-up nose; brown eyes full of expression and vivacity; a
delicious mouth; a most shapely though somewhat tall figure,
well-fleshed; the skin a bit dark but soft and fine; ass rather on
the ample side but well-molded, a pair of the most voluptuous
buttocks that ever a libertine eye may behold, the love mound
brown-haired and pretty, the cunt a trifle low or, as they say, à
l'anglaise, but as tight as one might wish, and when she was
presented to the assembly she was thoroughly a maid. And she still
was at the time the party we are to chronicle got under way, and we
shall see in what manner her maidenhead was annihilated. As for the
first fruits of her ass, the Bishop had been peacefully plucking
them every day for the past eight years, but without, however,
arousing in his dear daughter much of a taste for these exercises:
she, despite her mischievous and randy air, only cooperated out of
obedience and had never hinted that she shared the slightest
pleasure in the infamies whose daily victim she was. The Bishop had
left her in the most profound ignorance, scarcely did she know how
to read or write, and she had absolutely no idea of religion's
existence; her mind was natural, it was that of a child, she would
give droll replies, she liked to play, she loved her sister a great
deal, detested the Bishop out of all measure, and feared the Duc as
she dreaded fire. On the wedding day, when she discovered herself
naked and surrounded by the four men, she wept, and moreover did
all that was asked of her, acting without pleasure as without
ill-temper. She was sober, very clean, and having no other fault
but that of laziness, nonchalance reigned in all her movements and
doings and everywhere about her person, despite the liveliness
announced by her bright eyes. She abhorred the Président almost as
much as she hated her uncle, and Durcet, who treated her with no
excess of consideration, nevertheless seemed to be the only one for
whom she appeared to have no repugnance.
These were the eight principal characters in whose
company we are going to enable you to live, good reader.
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