The Sorrows of Satan

The Sorrows of Satan
Marie Corelli
Published: 1895
Categorie(s): Fiction, Fantasy, Occult &
Supernatural
Source: Feedbooks
About Corelli:
Marie Corelli (1 May 1855 – 21 April 1924) was a British
novelist. She enjoyed a period of great literary success from the
publication of her first novel in 1886 until World War I. Corelli's
novels sold more copies than the combined sales of popular
contemporaries, including Arthur Conan Doyle, H. G. Wells, and
Rudyard Kipling, although critics often derided her work as "the
favourite of the common multitude."
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Chapter 1
Do you know what it is to be poor? Not poor with the arrogant
poverty complained of by certain people who have five or six
thousand a year to live upon, and who yet swear they can hardly
manage to make both ends meet, but really poor,—downright, cruelly,
hideously poor, with a poverty that is graceless, sordid and
miserable? Poverty that compels you to dress in your one suit of
clothes till it is worn threadbare,—that denies you clean linen on
account of the ruinous charges of washerwomen,—that robs you of
your own self-respect and causes you to slink along the streets
vaguely abashed, instead of walking erect among your fellow-men in
independent ease,—this is the sort of poverty I mean. This is the
grinding curse that keeps down noble aspiration under a load of
ignoble care; this is the moral cancer that eats into the heart of
an otherwise well-intentioned human creature and makes him envious
and malignant, and inclined to the use of dynamite. When he sees
the fat idle woman of society passing by in her luxurious carriage,
lolling back lazily, her face mottled with the purple and red signs
of superfluous eating,—when he observes the brainless and sensual
man of fashion smoking and dawdling away the hours in the Park as
if all the world and its millions of honest hard workers were
created solely for the casual diversion of the so-called 'upper'
classes,—then the good blood in him turns to gall and his suffering
spirit rises in fierce rebellion crying out— "Why in God's name,
should this injustice be? Why should a worthless lounger have his
pockets full of gold by mere
chance and heritage, while I, toiling wearily from morn till
midnight, can scarce afford myself a satisfying meal ?''
Why indeed! Why should the
wicked flourish like a green bay-tree? I have often thought about
it. Now however I believe I could help to solve the problem out of
my own personal experience. But … such an experience! Who will
credit it? Who will believe that anything so strange and terrific
ever chanced to the lot of a mortal man? No one. Yet it is
true;—truer than much so-called truth. Moreover I know that many
men are living through many such incidents as have occurred to me,
under precisely the same influence, conscious perhaps at times that
they are in the tangles of sin, but too weak of will to break the
net in which they have become voluntarily imprisoned. Will they be
taught, I wonder, the lesson I have learned? In the same bitter
school, under the same formidable taskmaster? Will they realize as
I have been forced to do,—aye, to the very fibres of my
intellectual perception,—the vast, individual, active Mind,which
behind all matter, works unceasingly, though silently, a very
eternal and positive God? If so, then dark problems will become
clear to them, and what seems injustice in the world will prove
pure equity! But I do not write with any hope of either persuading
or enlightening my fellow-men. I know their obstinacy too well; —I
can gauge it by my own. My proud belief in myself was, at one time,
not to be outdone by any human unit on the face of the globe. And I
am aware that others are in similar case. I merely intend to relate
the various incidents of my career in due order exactly as they
happened,—leaving to more confident heads the business of
propounding and answering the riddles of human existence as best
they may.
During a certain bitter
winter, long remembered for its arctic severity, when a great wave
of intense cold spread freezing influences not alone over the happy
isles of Britain, but throughout all Europe, I, Geoffrey Tempest,
was alone in London and well-nigh starving. Now a starving man
seldom gets the sympathy he
merits,—so few can be persuaded to believe in him. Worthy folks who
have just fed to repletion are the most incredulous, some of them
being even moved to smile when told of existing hungry people, much
as if these were occasional jests invented for after-dinner
amusement. Or, with that irritating vagueness of attention which
characterizes fashionable folk to such an extent that when asking a
question they neither wait for the answer nor understand it when
given, the well-dined groups, hearing of some one starved to death
will idly murmur ' How dreadful!' and at once turn to the
discussion of the latest 'fad' for killing time, ere it takes to
killing them with sheer ennui. The pronounced
fact of being hungry sounds coarse and common, and is not a topic
for polite society, which always eats more than sufficient for its
needs. At the period I am speaking of however, I, who have since
been one of the most envied of men, knew the cruel meaning of the
word hunger too well,—the gnawing pain, the sick faintness, the
deadly stupor, the insatiable animal craving for mere food, all of
which sensations are frightful enough to those who are, unhappily,
daily inured to them, but which when they afflict one who has been
tenderly reared and brought up to consider himself a
'gentleman,'—God save the mark! are perhaps still more painful to
bear. And I felt that I had not deserved to suffer the wretchedness
in which I found myself. I had worked hard. From the time my father
died, leaving me to discover that every penny of the fortune I
imagined he possessed was due to swarming creditors, and that
nothing of all our house and estate was left to me except a
jewelled miniature of my mother who had lost her own life in giving
me birth,—from that time I say, I had put my shoulder to the wheel
and toiled late and early. I had turned my University education to
the only use for which it or I seemed fitted,—literature. I had
sought for employment on almost every journal in London,—refused by
many, taken on trial by some, but getting steady pay from none.
Whoever seeks to live by brain and pen alone is, at the
beginning of such a career,
treated as a sort of social pariah. Nobody wants him,—everybody
despises him. His efforts are derided, his manuscripts are flung
back to him unread, and he is less cared for than the condemned
murderer in gaol. The murderer is at least fed and clothed,—a
worthy clergyman visits him, and his gaoler will occasionally
condescend to play cards with him. But a man gifted with original
thoughts and the power of expressing them, appears to be regarded
by everyone in authority as much worse than the worst criminal, and
all the 'jacks-in-office' unite to kick him to death if they can. I
took both kicks and blows in a sullen silence and lived on,— not
for the love of life, but simply because I scorned the cowardice of
self-destruction.
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