The Learned Women by Molière, 1622-1673, Wall, Charles Heron
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A word from our supporters: File extension DRV | Produced by Delphine Lettau, Charles Franks and the people at DP THE LEARNED WOMEN (LES FEMMES SAVANTES) BY MOLIERE TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH PROSE. _WITH SHORT INTRODUCTIONS AND EXPLANATORY NOTES_ BY CHARLES HERON WALL The comedy of 'Les Femmes Savantes' was acted on March 11, 1692 (see vol. i. p. 153). Moliere acted the part of Chrysale. PERSONS REPRESENTED CHRYSALE, _an honest bourgeois_ PHILAMINTE, _wife to_ CHRYSALE ARMANDE & HENRIETTE, _their daughters_ ARISTE, _brother to_ CHRYSALE BELISE, _his sister_ CLITANDRE, _lover to_ HENRIETTE TRISSOTIN, _a wit_ VADIUS, _a learned man_ MARTINE, _a kitchen-maid_ LEPINE, _servant to_ CHRYSALE JULIEN, _servant to_ VADIUS A NOTARY. THE LEARNED WOMEN. ACT I. SCENE I.--ARMANDE, HENRIETTE. ARM. What! Sister, you will give up the sweet and enchanting title of maiden? You can entertain thoughts of marrying! This vulgar wish can enter your head! HEN. Yes, sister. ARM. Ah! Who can bear that "yes"? Can anyone hear it without feelings of disgust? HEN. What is there in marriage which can oblige you, sister, to.... ARM. Ah! Fie! HEN. What? ARM. Fie! I tell you. Can you not conceive what offence the very mention of such a word presents to the imagination, and what a repulsive image it offers to the thoughts? Do you not shudder before it? And can you bring yourself to accept all the consequences which this word implies? HEN. When I consider all the consequences which this word implies, I only have offered to my thoughts a husband, children, and a home; and I see nothing in all this to defile the imagination, or to make one shudder. ARM. O heavens! Can such ties have charms for you? HEN. And what at my age can I do better than take a husband who loves me, and whom I love, and through such a tender union secure the delights of an innocent life? If there be conformity of tastes, do you see no attraction in such a bond? ARM. Ah! heavens! What a grovelling disposition! What a poor part you act in the world, to confine yourself to family affairs, and to think of no more soul-stirring pleasures than those offered by an idol of a husband and by brats of children! Leave these base pleasures to the low and vulgar. Raise your thoughts to more exalted objects; endeavour to cultivate a taste for nobler pursuits; and treating sense and matter with contempt, give yourself, as we do, wholly to the cultivation of your mind. You have for an example our mother, who is everywhere honoured with the name of learned. Try, as we do, to prove yourself her daughter; aspire to the enlightened intellectuality which is found in our family, and acquire a taste for the rapturous pleasures which the love of study brings to the heart and mind. Instead of being in bondage to the will of a man, marry yourself, sister, to philosophy, for it alone raises you above the rest of mankind, gives sovereign empire to reason, and submits to its laws the animal part, with those grovelling desires which lower us to the level of the brute. These are the gentle flames, the sweet ties, which should fill every moment of life. And the cares to which I see so many women given up, appear to me pitiable frivolities. |



