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Title: The Visions of Quevedo
Author: Quevedo, Dom Francisco de
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Visions of Quevedo" ***


Transcribed from the 1832 Literary Rooms edition by David Price, email
ccx074@pglaf.org



                                   THE
                           VISIONS OF QUEVEDO.


                       TRANSLATED FROM THE SPANISH.

                                * * * * *

                           BY WM. ELLIOT, ESQ.

                                * * * * *

                              PHILADELPHIA:
                    LITERARY ROOMS, 121 CHESNUT STREET
                       HENRY H. PORTER, PROPRIETOR.

                                * * * * *

                                  1832.

                                * * * * *

Entered according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1831, by HENRY H.
PORTER, in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court, of the Eastern
District of Pennsylvania.



PREFACE.


THE Translator of the Visions of Quevedo, can truly say, that the
pleasure he himself derived from their perusal in the original, alone
gave him the idea of translating them into English.  It is believed by
the writer of this article, that the present is the only English
translation of the Visions of Quevedo, although they have been translated
into many other languages, and into French no fewer than five several
times by as many different authors: the last of which, that has fallen
under his notice, was published at Paris in 1812, the plan of which has
been followed in the present version.  The advertisement to that edition,
contains the following just remarks—“The _Visions_, are regarded as the
most piquant production, that ever came from the fruitful and ingenious
pen of Quevedo, one of the best Spanish writers.  In general, the
criticisms they present, although mixed with some tedious detail, have
much point, and do not fail in their application at the present day.”  It
is hoped the reader will condescend to excuse any inaccuracies that have
escaped the translator’s attention, and realize from the perusal
entertainment sufficient to recompense him for his time.



CONTENTS.

Notice of the Life of Quevedo                                  7
Night First . . . The Demon                                   11
Night Second . . . Death and her Palace                       33
Night Third . . . The Last Judgment                           56
Night Fourth . . . The Country and the Palace of Love         70
Night Fifth . . . The World                                   84
Night Sixth . . . Hell                                       101
Night Seventh . . . Reformation of Hell                      146



NOTICE OF THE LIFE OF QUEVEDO.


FRACOIS DE QUEVEDO DE VILLEGAS, a Spanish gentleman, and knight of the
order of Saint James, was born in 1570, at Villa Nueva de l’Infantado;
and not at Madrid, as has been asserted by Moreri, and repeated after him
in the _Historical Dictionary_ of Lyons.  He was lord of Juan Abbate, in
the province of La Mancha, an estate of which he bore the title.  After
having visited Italy, France, and all Spain, and rendered the most signal
services to the Spanish ministry, he took up his residence at Madrid.

During his stay at court, he devoted himself to study and composition:
being considered the most polished writer of his time, and one who united
in himself the greatest versatility of talent.  The taste of Quevedo
naturally inclined him to fictitious composition.  Endowed with keen
perceptions, a vivid imagination, and rapidity of invention, he is not
indebted to the drudgery of research, and other men’s thoughts for his
immortal productions: depending solely upon his own resources, he was
emphatically an original writer.

The author of the _Spanish Library_, expresses himself of Quevedo, in the
following terms: “He knew how to reconcile the gravest studies with
pleasantries and wit.  His style is embellished with the ornaments of an
adroitly managed application: he has so much finesse, such an immense
fund of invention, of ideas as novel as ingenious—so much soft and
delicate irony: he understands so well, whether in verse or prose, how to
sketch with facility a pleasant or ridiculous subject, that among gay
writers there is not one comparable to him.  Nervous and sublime in
heroic poetry, graceful in lyric verse, full of wit and gaiety in his
sportive works, his genius illuminates the weakest subjects.”

His poetical effusions have been very much sought after.  Nicholas
Antonio, an excellent critic, says, also, that in the higher walks of
poetry, he has force and sublimity.  His luxuriant imagination carried
him alternately to both sacred and profane verse.  He wrote divers
religious treatises, and many essays extremely amusing, besides
translations in verse and prose.  He published, among other works, the
_Spanish Panassus_, and the novel known by the name of the _Sharper_.

His works have been published in four volumes folio, and in eleven
volumes octavo.  They comprise, under the title of _Dreams_ or _Visions_,
divers works of his, published at different times, in various places, and
with different titles.

Quevedo, in his old age, was very infirm; and, at an advanced period of
his life, was imprisoned by order of Count d’Olivarez, for a libel upon
his administration, in which situation he remained till the death of the
minister.  He died at Villa Nueva de l’Infantado, the place of his birth,
on the eighth day of September, 1645.



FIRST NIGHT.
THE DEMON.


THE prayers of the church being considered as the most efficacious
remedies that can be employed against the possession of the devil, a
malady almost invincible, some wealthy inhabitants of the country had
brought into this city of Seville, one of their relations, who was thus
afflicted, to confide his cure to a religious of renowned sanctity; or,
in other words, for the purpose of having him exorcised.  On the day
assigned for this operation, the possessed was carried to the church of
the Cordeliers, which very soon overflowed with spectators.  The gates
having been shut before my arrival, I engaged a religious of my
acquaintance to admit me.  He introduced me by the gate of the monastery;
but I had no sooner entered the church, than I had reason to repent my
curiosity: I was hustled by the crowd, and overcome with the heat.  There
my regards were attracted by an unhappy wretch, of an ill figure, with
wild eyes and dishevelled garments, his hands bound behind his back, and
uttering from time to time the most frightful yells.  There was much
impatience testified to behold this holy priest, of whom I have spoken,
whose name was _Juan de Cardanas_, father of Barnadino de Cardanas,
Capuchin, and Bishop of Paragua, in America.  After the performance of
mass, he found himself so much indisposed, that they were obliged to
postpone the exorcism till another day.  I was not sorry; for, not
partaking in the credulity of the people, who often impute epileptical
complaints to the operation of demons, I had for a long time been
desirous of personally verifying those things they relate concerning the
possessions of the devil.  I lost no time in visiting the relations of
this unhappy person, whom I shrewdly suspected had recourse to this
adroit method to rid themselves of the inconvenience of certain
pecadilloes he had been engaged in.  I inspired them with sufficient
confidence to obtain permission to visit their lodgings the following
night, with a view of making such an examination as I should judge
proper.  I preferred this time to any other, that I might the better
conceal the defeat of my enterprize if it should not succeed.

The night being come, I was introduced into the chamber of the possessed
whom they had placed upon a bed in such a manner that he could not rise.
The presence of his friends prevented me from the proposition of certain
questions I had meditated.  The following will serve as a sample:

Is it possible to find out the philosopher’s stone?

Can the quadrature of the circle be discovered?

Is there an universal panacea for every disease?

Is there among herbs, any simples which can inspire love in women, or
protect from blows and wounds?

I had put in writing some other objects of my curiosity; but as it was
not a convenient time to propound them, I began to feel the pulse of the
possessed.  It was frequent and elevated: from time to time his eyes were
troubled; and he had convulsive movements, from which he suffered very
much.

After having examined his body, I examined his mind, speaking to him in
Greek, Hebrew, Turkish, Indian, and even in the Mexican tongue.  He
answered me always very appropriately in Spanish, which convinced me that
he was in truth possessed with a devil; for although he spake not all
languages, he nevertheless understood them, which could not naturally
happen without study or travel.  His relations assured me he had done
neither the one nor the other.

I demanded of the demon, what name he had in hell?

He answered, “that he had no other appellation than that of the
employment which he exercised in the world: that he had been for a long
time in the service of an alguazil, in whom he inspired all the chicanery
and wickedness with which he plagued poor people.”

Let us remark here, that the word _alguazil_ is borrowed from the Moresco
tongue, and signifies in Spanish, a constable, a cryer, a clerk, or other
subaltern of justice.

“Why,” said I to the demon, “are you entered into the body of this man?”

“Because he was himself an alguazil, and a person of a licentious life.
After having been banished from his paternal home, finding himself
necessitous, he associated with alguazils to extort money, under pretence
of executing the decrees of justice, and in the arrest of bodies, which
he often abandoned for small sums.  It was in the execution of this
business, that he stole a silver cup from the house of a country curate,
and subtracted a purse of one hundred ducats from the pocket of a man,
who, for the stuff, was delivered from the hands of justice.”

I asked him if there were many of these people in hell?

“Very many,” answered he: “the constables have neither honour nor
conscience; they drive their trade whether they know any thing of the
matter or not: in that particular they resemble the poets.  You shall
scarcely find in hell, a single poet, who will not tell you that he was
sent there on account of the versified lies he told in praise of some
beauty.  The poetic spirit hath its origin in the disposition of the
heart, to receive tender impressions: it is the lover of heroism and
romance; and to sustain this character, must necessarily make use of much
artifice.  The old poets serve as secretaries to young lovers; the young
ones are ambitious of blazing as the heroes of their own compositions.
There are so many poets in hell, that it can hardly fail of aggrandizing
their quarter.  I wish to speak in such a manner, that you may comprehend
the nature of their occupations and torments there; but of which you
cannot have an adequate idea, unless I shall here adduce some examples:—

“When these authors enter the subterranean abodes, they look around for a
Charon, a dog Cerberus, a Rhadamanthus, a Pluto, and all the infernal
divinities of fable.  In place of that, the demons make them realize,
that this is a place much more horrible than that: but this is not their
severest punishment; they are forced to hear the compositions of other
poets, who are their superiors in talent; then they are tormented by
jealousy; they hate the _epigrams_ of Martial, the _stanzas_ of Catullus,
the _odes_ of Horace, the _beauties_ of Virgil, the _satires_ of Juvenal,
the _comedies_ of Terence, and the _tragedies_ of Seneca.  It is thus
also the historians suffer, when they listen to the histories of
Herodotus, of Titus, Livy, of Sallust, and of Cæsar.

“What a punishment for these rhymsters, when they recollect their own
works!  You cannot imagine the pain they experience, in finding a
felicitous rhyme, a happy epithet, a just pause, or an harmonious
cadence: they are more tormented by an _a_ or an _e_, than Tantalus is by
thirst, or the Italians are with their jealousy, when they have Frenchmen
at their houses.  And the comic poets, how are they punished, for having
filched away the reputation of so many princesses and queens of Castile,
of Leon, of Arragon, and other places!  This is as fertile a field for
them, as all the wars of the Moors of Granada; but for these larcenies,
they suffer sharper agonies as Christians, than will ever be inflicted
upon the barbarians and Mohammedans, for all their battles and burnings,
or upon the alguazils, even for their violences and exactions.

“Behold, in review of the subject,” said the demon, who spake by the
mouth of the possessed, “there is a much nearer resemblance between poets
and alguazils, than one would, at a first glance, imagine.”

“A fine comparison,” said I, “for such a false spirit as you!”

“How!” answered he, “are not poets and alguazils both thieves? and if you
would but confess it, you well know, that in making these remarks of
poets, I speak to a poet, whom I wish to undeceive.  Do you not recollect
the old Spanish proverb, _He who never composed two verses_, _had no
wit_; _and he who produced four_, _was a fool_?”

“I confess,” said I, “that to be a poet, one must have an original turn
of imagination; and the same qualification is necessary to a painter: one
would find it very difficult to assume, without merit, the rank of
Apelles and Michael Angelo: but as they cannot justly call these
celebrated artists so generally admired, fools, so neither do I believe
they can accuse of folly the great poets of Spain, of Italy, of France,
of Turkey, of Persia, and of China: for in all these places they have
made verses.”

“Yes,” said he, “and in all these places there are fools, alguazils,
painters, astrologers, jealous or complaisant husbands, mountebanks,
perfumers, plagiaries, triflers, and slaves of business or pleasure.  All
these, under pretext of pleasure or justice, steal, without compunction,
the wealth of others.”

“Oh!” said I to him, “I now recognize in you a true demon; you delight to
lie, and in crying out that all who serve the public rob them, you
enhance their reputation.  But tell me what robbery a magistrate commits,
when he obeys, and wishes to compel others to obey, the laws of his
prince? when, in fine, he distributes to every one justice?  Without
justice, which punishes and avenges, no one could enjoy security in his
own house.  A whole city might be given up to pillage, and become more
horrible than the hell you inhabit; a state of things which must excite a
very just indignation among reasonable people; that is, among those who
understand the principles of order, equity, and natural right.  And what
a picture would every family offer!  Children opposing themselves to
their fathers, and servants against their masters; brothers would make
laws for brothers, and mothers have no authority over their daughters!”

“Behold,” said the demon, “a superb description of the disorder which
would happen, if the gentlemen of justice did not make it their duty to
become the first robbers!”

“Do you call the pecuniary penalties they impose, robbery?” replied I.
“They are wisely established as a check upon avarice and usury, which are
the ruin of families.  The fines they impose are regarded sometimes as
extortions; but they are not so; for if the community provided not for
the necessities of all, do you believe that individuals would furnish of
themselves, what is necessary for the republic? do you believe they would
contribute without a demand?  There is not among the officers of
government, so much cupidity and bad faith, as you charge them with.  But
answer me: without their assistance, their care, their vigilance, would
there be any security to emperors, kings, popes, and bishops in their
beds, or repose in their dignities?”

“I have not,” said the demon, “so bad a tongue as you believe.  I know,
truly, all the affairs of the world, and the state of every condition in
republics.  In accusing the most of mankind, I do them no injustice: and
those evils which you say would happen, without the assistance of those
who are appointed to execute the laws, happen in spite of their wisdom.
The worst of it is, they are brought about by those very persons who are
expected to prevent it, and who are paid for that object.  Whence has it
arisen that so many emperors have been killed, so many kings dethroned,
so many popes declared anti-popes, so many bishops dismissed, so many
magistrates suppressed, so many families ruined, so many cities pillaged,
so many provinces reduced to famine?  It is by the ministers of justice,
by the overseers of administrations, that all these things are done,
either directly or indirectly: directly, with a view to profit by the
disorder; or indirectly, from a culpable inertness.  How do so many
officers of the long robe contrive to live?  They lengthen out their
robes with the pieces they snatch from the officers of the short robes.
A man who goes to law, may be compared to him who orders a coat: he will
have a good coat, but yet not receive all the stuff he delivered to his
tailor.  He will take enough for two pair of sleeves, and two fore parts;
he will take twice as many buttons, twice as much silk, binding, and
lining, as is necessary for one garment; and you shall have but one, when
you ought to have two out of the cloth you purchased.  A Spanish grandee,
wishing to have a coat in the French style, purchased as much cloth as
the tailor demanded of him, whom he also left at liberty to take as much
lining, assorted to the colour of the cloth.  After they had taken his
measure, he caused them to call the tailor, and told him that he desired
the lining of one coat to be red, and that of the other yellow.

“‘How, my lord,’ said the tailor, ‘do you wish me to make two coats, when
you have given me stuff but for one?’

“‘Yes; I do expect it,’ said the grandee; ‘and if you do not make them
both sufficiently large, I will put you in a safe place.’

“The tailor, who feared the prison, made two garments as long and large
as they ought to be, without purchasing another shred of cloth.  When he
brought them home, the lord caused all the stuff to be measured by an
engineer, in his service; he found that it yet wanted half a quarter of
an ell, besides the little pieces he was forced to cut out for the
angles.  This was not all; the Spanish grandee, whose name I can tell
you, which was _Don Pedro de Saccaso_, wished that the master tailor
should pay him for two garments, which he cabbaged out of stuff he had
delivered him the preceding spring; and as the tailor cried out at this
injustice, the grandee refused to pay him for the fashion, lining, and
trimming of gold of these two last.  Thus you will comprehend,” observed
the demon, “in what particular the people charged with the administration
of justice resemble tailors, and in what manner they are unjust, even in
rendering justice.  In their suits they generally make certain pieces of
meadow or vineyard the object of contention; and if the parties complain
of want of money to pay their fees, they take from them that which they
demand at their tribunal.”

“So,” said I to the demon, “there is no justice upon earth!”

“No, no, there is none,” added he; “and it is not to-day, that for the
first time the complaint has been uttered.  The fable says, that Astrea
being come with truth among men, was obliged to return to heaven, because
no person would receive her.  Truth met with the same fate, after having
wandered through the world, sometimes among the Egyptians, sometimes
among the Greeks, sometimes among the Romans, and sometimes even among
the Chinese; she was constrained, at length, to retire to the house of a
poor mute, who yet, by false and equivocal signs, gave her to understand
that he wished to get rid of her company.  She then returned to the place
from whence she came.  Justice perceiving they would not tolerate her in
courts, among the abodes of princes, in palaces, or great cities, fled
into the villages, where, however, she did not tarry a long-time; for the
stewards of the lords, that is, those ignorant stewards who seek but to
amass money with which to pay their charges, gave her chase, and forced
her to regain her own country.  The beauty of Astrea, or Justice,
resembles that of the stars—shining, noble, and worthy of admiration; but
this is only when beheld at a distance; for were you to approach too near
to a star, although it appears to you so diminutive, it would consume you
in an instant.  Justice is fair, but she is proud, austere, rigid,
inexorable, and no respecter of persons: she wishes to be sought and
beloved, but she loves not one friend more than another; and like love,
she travels a little in the rear.  Is it possible to find any thing more
exact, more faithful, more laborious, more submissive, more complaisant,
than a violent love?  It fails not in the minutest particular; it knows
no concealment; nothing appears difficult to it; it is always ready to
obey, accounting no toil disagreeable; in the desire, to please, it finds
every thing just as it wishes.  Justice does the same in another sense,
for she meets with exactness in the slightest circumstance: she is
faithful in the least things; she is laborious, and fears no pain; she is
submissive to the laws which she imposes; she is complaisant for herself,
and even sometimes appears unjust, so impartial and rigorous is she.”

“I suppose then,” said I, “there are many judges in hell, if what you say
is correct, which seems to me very probable.”

“Yes,” replied the demon, “they are there in great numbers, and we have
put them in the same place with thieves and robbers.  One circumstance
that will surprise you, is, that their multitude is as considerable as
that of the amorous; although they have among the former, only the men
who were judges: and among the latter, men and women who have loved once
at least in their lives.”

“You wish to give me to understand,” said I to him, “that there are many
lovers in hell; but can that be?  If men were damned for this passion, no
person should be exempt from your infernal jurisdiction.  But this
passion hath one great advantage; it is conformable to the charity that
men owe to one another, and is always accompanied with repentance, and
certain remorse of conscience, when it departs from those who have been
possessed.  One sees young girls even, who repent of their faults.  How
many religions houses are founded by penitence! how many old coquettes
give themselves up to devotion! how many men follow their example, after
love has fled with beauty, constitution, and wealth!”

“But,” said the demon, “how many men and women, young and old, die in
their amours, and count you for nothing the despair, the chagrin, the
secret pains under which so many lovers have succumbed?  Know you not
that some temperaments are so affected by this passion, that they quit it
but with life?  If I should relate to you the histories of both sexes
perverted by the perusal of gallant adventures, and having no other
desire in their souls but to experience the like; if I should cause you
to see the occupations of these people in hell, you would pity some,
while you could not help laughing at the folly of others.  You would see
young men burning at the feet of their mistresses; and old ones, who, to
please theirs, are continually shaving themselves, or plucking out their
beard, and who put on bland perukes, to give themselves a youthful
appearance; young girls, who imagine themselves to be Cleopatras,
Artemisias, and Clelias; old coquettes, who paint themselves continually
before their glass, who torment their locks, tightening the
forehead-cloth to efface the wrinkles, and adjusting to the mouth
artificial teeth of ivory or wax: but all their cases are lost, since
there is nothing substantial in the other world.  You would be
astonished, if I were to point out to you all the girls who have taken
certain means to hide the effects of their love sports.  It would of
necessity be seen, how many surgeons and physicians follow in their
train; and if any one should inquire why these people are in hell, who
have rendered such universal service, I answer, because they ought not to
afford assistance to every one.  Can they, for instance,” added he,
“conscientiously administer those remedies to cause hemorrhages, which
end in abortion?”

And as I was about to observe, that the physicians could not be cognizant
of a malady which they would not discover—

“I understand you,” interrupted the demon: “be sure they know well
enough, without that; at any rate, it is their duty to know, or to
suspect.”

“But,” said I to him, “is there not another secret you have omitted, of
similar effect to the assistance of the physicians?”

“Yes,” he answered: “there are the poisoners, sorcerers, and adroit
women, who teach these mysteries; and there are some in hell who yet
continue this infamous practice.”

“You would have it understood,” said I, “that you are a good devil; a
devil of honour and conscience: you would make a good preacher; the flock
would doubtless edify by your sermons.”

“Be persuaded,” said he, “that if I preach not agreeable things, I
announce wholesome truths: believe also, that I have many preachers
dependent upon me.  ‘Who are they?’ you inquire.  They are those who
preach for their own glory, to establish a reputation, to acquire
celebrity, to gain benefices, and levy contributions upon poor devotees.
They commit wickedness in doing good to others; in teaching and edifying
them.  If we lose the hearers through the instrumentality of their
discourses, we gain the pastors, which is more honourable to us.
Finally, I declare to you, that it is by the order of God, that I speak
to you before all these persons: I warn you, in particular, that you are
lost, unless you abandon all the projects of ambition you have formed,
and unless you renounce poetry, which is at the same time so agreeable
and fatal.

“Draw near,” said he, to an old man, a relation of the possessed:
“restore the three farms you illegally detain.  You, young man, imitate
Hercules no more with your strength and intrigue; Hercules is dead; you
may find men who will kill you.—You old judge of the village, you have a
very delicate and perilous charge: you were the valet of the lord of the
domain; you have preserved in your new station, the spirit of servitude,
which is not sympathetic with justice.  The petition of your ancient
master, you stupid wretch.  The three peasants who have bound and
strangled the helpless patient upon his bed, are those who enjoy the
benefit.  It is now six years since the farm-house of their master was
consumed with fire: they ought to be punished for these crimes.—As to
those young ladies, they would do well not to admit, for the future, the
two strangers, whom they entertain every evening in their chambers, and
whom they introduce by the garden.  Profit, all of you, by what you have
now heard: I shall speak to you no more, for to-morrow the priest comes
to exorcise me, and I shall depart from the body of this subject, it
being the will of God that I should go forth, to attest his power and the
glory of his name.”

The demon having finished this discourse, took pleasure in tormenting the
possessed, and making him utter moving cries.  I feared the neighbourhood
would be alarmed, and that some one would recognize me in a place where I
could not be with honour.  In returning to my house, I reflected upon the
wisdom of God, who draweth good from evil, and causeth demons to speak as
angels of light.  The prophet hath also remarked, that divine Providence
disposeth things in such a manner, that the hands of our enemies can
conduce to our welfare.  This is the first possessed I ever saw in the
course of my life, and the first time I ever conversed with a demon.  God
grant that I may never behold another, neither in this world, nor in the
world to come!



SECOND NIGHT
DEATH AND HER PALACE.


THERE are those who affirm that none but the wicked are subjected to
unpleasant thoughts.  I have been acquainted with many persons, but I
could never find one who was not ready to confess, there were moments of
sadness that invaded the soul, the cause of which they could not explain.
These spring, sometimes from a vicious temperament: the humours mixing
themselves with the blood, carry to the brain those spirits that trace
upon the imagination frightful and whimsical figures, from whence come
those disagreeable dreams and visions that surprise us in the night.
Dreams proceed often from heaven, often from the devil, and frequently
from natural causes; thus we have thoughts of death, after conversation
on the subject, or having read a book that treated of it.  To speak
plainly, it seems that Providence sends us such dreams, for the purpose
of forcing our attention to the consideration of those subjects we are
generally reluctant to reflect upon.  Such is, without doubt, the origin
of this I have had concerning death.

I read one night before retiring, the verse of Lucretius, one of the most
learned men, and best poets of antiquity.  I found an eminently beautiful
passage, where he says, that all nature, with one consent, elevating her
voice, speaks thus to mankind:—“Why, O mortals, do you groan for such a
length of time, and why are you so sharply afflicted?  Why do you submit
to the slavery of flying from death, and the fear thereof?  Why do you
continually reflect upon the pleasures of youth?  The enjoyments of this
season have passed with the days you regret, as grain escapes from a
sack, from whence it finds an issue.  You are fatigued with the world;
why do you not quit it, as one who returns satisfied from a feast, where
the viands were exquisite, and the pleasure of the highest flavour?  You
are convicted of a strange folly: it is in your power to enjoy
tranquillity; why not, then, seize upon possession?  Why fear death, that
will render you invulnerable?”

Such are the sentiments of the poet, and they appear like those of a
saint; but this is nature, or rather, natural reason, teaching us that
death is not so frightful as we are apt to imagine; and I am not
therefore surprised, that heathen philosophers have exhibited so constant
an example of exalted morality.

Likewise I remember what Job has said upon the brevity of human life, and
the swift arrival of death.  “The life of man,” says this illustrious
patriarch, “is of short duration: it is a flower, that before it is
scarcely blown, is despoiled of its leaves: it is a shadow, which flies
with the rapidity of the wind, without remaining stationary a single
moment;” and yet, in spite of its brevity, life is subject to so much
calamity, that it is doubtful whether it should not rather be called
misery, than life.

Indulging in these grave meditations, I threw myself upon my bed, and
slept.  My spirit was free from external impressions.  I thought there
came into the places where my fancy had transported me, a great multitude
of physicians, mounted upon mules, the housings of which, were clothes of
the dead.  In the suit of these physicians, who had an air of sourness
and chagrin, followed a crowd of apothecaries, surgeons, and young
barbers, who carried the drugs or instruments pertaining to their
professions.  When the physicians had descended from their mules, they
began to dance a ballet, to the sound of the mortars and sieves the
apothecaries and their adjuncts played upon.  This ballet was
interspersed with songs, in which the physicians took the upper part; the
words of one of them were as follows:—

    “Catholicum, rhubarbarae, opiata, theriaca,
    Opoponach, O opium, O laudanum anodinum,
    Polychrestum diureticum, senne anisatum.”

Two young physicians performed the air in these words:—

    “Recipe, recipe, recipe, recipe senne,
    Dragmas duas, dragmas duas, dragmas duas,
          Semi-dragmum rhei electac,
          Scrupulum unum polychresti,
    Infundantur, percolentur, hauriantur,
          Horâ sextâ matutinâ,
    Recipe, recipe, recipe, etc.”

Two surgeons answered to that, _seca_; _ure_; that is to say, _cut_,
_burn_; and directly both joined in chorus—these repeating _recipe_, the
others _ure_, and the last dancing.

This troop having sat, there entered another composed of newsmongers, and
people who followed them to learn what was transacted abroad in England,
France, Holland, Italy, and other places.  After these entered
solicitors, stewards of noble estates, soldiers, priests, and other
persons whom I did not know.  This cavalcade was terminated by a woman of
monstrous stature, meagre, pale, and having a very extraordinary
equipage.  Her head dress consisted of crowns, tiaras, electoral bonnets,
mitres, red and black hats, hats of straw, turbans, and bonnets of wool
and silk: upon one side of the head, she had her hair curled and
powdered; upon the other, shaven after the fashion of monks.  Her robe
was tissue of thread, wool, and silk, ornamented with trimmings of gold
and silver, chaplets, precious stones, and pearls: she had upon her feet
and legs, shoes of iron, wood, and leather: she bore upon a sceptre, a
shepherd’s crook, a scythe, and a great club: she had one eye open, and
the other shut; and carried, pendant from her neck, a sand box, with
crosses of the order of Saint James, of the Holy Ghost, and the medals of
other military orders: her gait was alternately slow, then quick and
precipitate.  She approached my bed, and said, “Arise, Chevalier, follow
me!”

“But, before I follow thee,” replied I, “inform me who you are.”

“I am _Death_,” answered she; “follow me!”

“Is it your pleasure, then, that I should die?”

“No, no! follow me, and leave behind thy garment; for a person is not to
be clothed when he follows Death.  I will show you my empire, and my
subjects.  I am the queen of queens, the empress of sovereigns, the
sovereign of the human race; and the powers of earth are but my
inspectors.”

“How!” exclaimed I, “dare you to say the king of Spain is your inspector?
he who possesses so many territories in the world?”

“Follow, follow,” said Death; “I will show you.”

Immediately all those who were there, went out in the same order they had
entered: Death following the rear of the procession, and I following
Death.

We traversed vast plains and deserts, which resembled cemeteries, or
fields of battle, covered with dead.  Directly I perceived, at a
distance, an immense castle, built in the antique style; and when I had
drawn near, I observed that the materials were nothing but bones cemented
with blood and apothecaries’ drugs.  The three porters in the court were
very pleasant to the sight.  The first resembled a harlequin assuming
divers attitudes, and having upon his habits the figures of kingdoms and
provinces of the earth; in such a fashion, indeed, that I seemed to look
upon a geographical map: his name was the _World_.  The second, who
called himself the _Flesh_, was naked, like those figures of Priapus one
sees upon medals.  The third was armed, _cap a pie_, in gold and silver,
like a curassier.  They told me those three guards were the enemies of
the world, and the porters of Death.  The pavement of the court was of
human sculls, as well as that of the chambers: these sculls were arranged
in such a manner, that they resembled a chess board; some being white,
and others, having the hair upon them, appeared black.  In the middle of
this court was a fountain of tears: the figures about the basin,
represented Uneasiness, Envy, Jealousy, Despair, Knavery, Sickness,
Medicine, War, Revenge, and Love.  The tapestries of the chambers were
all upon particular subjects.  One might see in one piece, people
contracting marriage; in another, lawyers pleading a case; in this,
merchants preparing for bankruptcy; in that, _honest_ thieves upon the
grand tour, stripping the peasantry.  The others represented an
ecclesiastic, who, dying in his bed, has, in his last moments, the
satisfaction of seeing his house pillaged; a courier riding from Madrid
to Rome, to solicit a benefice; a tiler falling from the roof of a house;
a drunken sailor precipitating himself from his vessel into the sea; a
house burning with such rapidity, that its master is consumed in the
flames; in fine, one might there perceive every species of human death.

But none of these impressed me with so much horror, as the paintings in
fresco under the grand portico.  There were here servants who strangled
their master to obtain his money; children who assassinated their father,
to come more speedily into possession of his property; subjects who kill
their king, after having pronounced his condemnation; a woman who poisons
her husband; and a mistress who does the same to her lover, to revenge
his infidelity.

In the middle of this gallery, was a colossal figure, representing
Ingratitude, and elevated upon a pedestal; the relief of which presented
on the one side Cruelty, on the second Infidelity, on the third Interest,
on the fourth Ambition.  The base was ornamented with sculptural emblems
of sporting cupids, satyrs, lions, and cats.

After having traversed the whole extent of this apartment, Death entered
into a grand and magnificent hall; the sable hangings of which were sown
with white drops, like the ornaments commonly seen on monuments in
burying places.  In this hall stood a throne composed of dead men’s
bones, and which appeared like ivory: four leg bones formed the
supporters; two arms, with their hands, the arms of the seat; a spinal
bone, with those of the thighs, composed the back part; the two pommels
above were two sculls, and the seat was of other bones.  It was ascended
by four steps, the first of which was called _infancy_, the second
_youth_, the third _manhood_, and the fourth _old age_.  Death being
seated, the whole medical corps ranged themselves on either side, the
others being seated at their feet.

Death spake for some time upon the limits of life, and of the grandeur of
her empire: she finished her discourse by observing that there was but
one way of coming into existence, but many ways of quitting it.  She then
gave a general order for the dead to appear, and all at once I saw them
fall from the wainscot, and come from the walls and pavement.  “Speak,”
said the queen, “each in turn.”

The first who commenced, said, “I am Romulus, first king of Rome; my
ministers not being able to tolerate my government, wished to change it;
they caused me to be assassinated, and a report spread, that I had, in
their presence, been translated to heaven.”

“I am,” said another, “Cæsar, first emperor of the Romans: the senate
caused me to perish by the hand of my adopted son.”

A third, “I am the emperor Claudius, poisoned by my wife.”

A fourth, “I am Alexander the great; I died in the very bosom of a
debauch.”

A fifth, “I am Codrus, king of the Athenians; I died for my country.”

“And I,” exclaimed a sixth, “am _Charles the fifth_, whose bones my son
exhumed, and burnt.”

In like manner appeared many of the illustrious dead, now confounded with
all kinds of people.  When they had spoken, they formed a great circle,
in the midst of which I perceived a large bottle, from whence issued a
voice, that said, “I am that famous necromancer, the great magician of
Europe.  I caused myself to be cut in pieces by one of my servants, and
shut up in this vessel, expecting my members would re-unite, and my body
be renewed in its pristine youth; I know not whether the secret was
false, or if he neglected to follow strictly my orders; but after boiling
a long time, I formed only a gross, misshapen, and lifeless mass.”

“You then were of opinion,” said death, “that the soul was but a subtle
fire; a flame that could animate your body, and repair itself!”

“Yes,” answered the necromancer.

“Close the vessel again,” said Death.

When all the by-standers had been heard, they were required to put their
names upon a great book; and while they were writing, I saw the bottle
move towards me.  The necromancer within immediately commenced a
conversation with me; inquiring, “who reigns in Spain?  Does Venice yet
exist?  What is the news in France?  Are the Calvinists constantly
triumphant?”

I answered him, “Philip IV. reigns in Spain; Venice is still beautiful,
rich, and powerful: the Calvinists and their king are always invincible.”

He then besought me to break the bottle.  As I hesitated, not being
without certain qualms of fear, it swelled, and burst of itself.  I then
saw what it had contained expand into a human form, and rising up,
resumed the discourse in this manner:—

“As it is impossible for me to return again into the world, place us
henceforth among the dead magicians.”

In the place of the bottle, there appeared an old man with a great head
and a long beard: he was of a grave mein, and held a globe in his hand.

“I am,” said he, “Nestradamus, that great French astrologer, who
predicted, during my life, every thing that has since happened.”

“How,” said I, “are you he that composed those famous centuries, which,
after death, were found in your tomb?  Resolve me, I pray you, one of
your prophecies now in my mind:—

    “‘The sign of Aries shall the world command;
    Taurus shall rule the waves and solid land;
    Mother and sire the virgin shall deceive,
    The mother’s breasts the tender twins shall leave.’”

“That,” said the astrologer, “is as clear as the light of day; and
signifies, that married men shall frequently resemble rams: the love of
woman, represented by the bull, shall mingle itself with affairs of every
kind; the daughter divert herself spite of the advice of her father, and
the sons laugh at maternal expostulation.”

“And this, what is its signification?” demanded I:—

    “‘Mothers soon shall children bear,
    Who to name no sire shall dare;
    None of all the babes they bear,
    E’er shall lack a father’s care.’”

“That is equally easy of explanation.  I wish to convey the idea, that
many children shall call those fathers, who are not so; and shall have
fathers whom they will never discover.”

He would have departed, after explaining these two prophecies; but I
stopped him, entreating him only to tell me the meaning of this last:—

    “‘Before another year is born,
    Many a goose quill shall be worn;
    Many a quill the ether bear,
    Many a man shall dance in air;
    Men shall sorely rue the attack,
    Of grey goose quill and Doctor Quack;
    Merchants be in bankrupt plight,
    Nobles turn to blackguards quite;
    Province, city, town, and village,
    Soon shall soldiers sack and pillage;
    Lads and lasses soon shall try,
    What darkness hides from every eye;
    No more shall widows’ weeds endure;
    The cloister virgins shall immure.’”

“That signifies,” said Nostradamus, who was in haste to depart, “that one
half of the world shall pillage the other; the people of justice shall
rob by their pen; false witnesses will support themselves by hanging upon
their skirts; the physicians will kill with physic, and be well paid for
it; the merchants thrive by bankruptcy; nobles shall be ruined by their
stewards; the soldiers will lay all under contribution; children shall
rob one another; widows contract new nuptials, and to enjoy the portions
of their daughters, make nuns of them.  Let go!”—and he hastily left me.

I then perceived before me a good old man, of a very sad aspect, who
demanded if I was dead?

“No,” answered I; “living, and at your service.”

“Good!” said he; “I expect a favour of you.  You must know, I am called
_They_.  I also bear the appellation of _Somebody_, of _Another_, of a
_certain Personage_, of _Author_, and of _I know who_.  While I lived in
the world, I was accused of having said and done every thing which could
not be traced: if a false report was circulated, it was _they_ who had
broached it: if any one was found assassinated in the high way, it was
_they_ who had killed him: if there was a man with a bad face, this was
_somebody_: if it was imprudent to name a person in an affair, they
called him _a certain person_: if a writer advanced bold things, this was
an _author_, who had spoken on the first impression: and, finally, when
the author was entirely concealed, it was _I know who_, that had said or
acted thus and so.  All this time I neither said nor did any thing; I
appeared no where; I knew not what passed, and kept house both day and
night; the chagrin of seeing myself in so bad repute, fairly put an end
to my existence.  I demand, therefore, of you, to vindicate me to your
friends, and those persons over whom you have any influence, that they
may not in future charge me with any thing; for, since I am dead, I can
of course have nothing more to do with the world.”

I promised the old gentleman I would remember what he desired, and he
retired contented.  At this moment a young woman coming up to me, fell
upon my neck, exclaiming,

“My dear Æneas, have you at length arrived!  I have for a long time
wished to see you.  Virgil hath spoken very illy of you: he has published
a history of our loves, which we knew nothing of: I have sought you among
all the dead, without being able to find you; but I know, from your air,
that you are Æneas; for, as you have been the greatest and most
illustrious of heroes, so here you surpass all the dead in demeanour and
beauty.”

As the surprise I felt at this unmerited compliment prevented answer, she
continued to speak, and embraced me so vehemently, that I was compelled
to cry out.

“Peace, there!” commanded the officer of the chamber, who was called
_Silence_.

I still continued to bawl out; and said to Madame Dido, “O Queen of
Carthage! will you not be undeceived?  I am Don Francisco de Quevedo de
Villegas, Chevalier of the order of Saint James!”

“Behold!” replied the queen, “behold this drunkard, who, being a Trojan,
would fain pass himself off for a Spaniard!  Go, pious Æneas; Virgil hath
done thee no great wrong in describing thee as thou art.  Where is thy
Palladium? thy nurse? thy son Ascanias? where are thy companions? why are
you here without attendants?”

“Be not disquieted,” said I: “address yourself to Charon; he would know
you as well as Æneas, who abandoned you in Africa; that was a meet
punishment for your prudery: but you have not yet been able to forget a
man, who surrendered his native city to the Greeks, and fled from his
ruined country.  You are a victim of love!”

“And you,” said she, retiring, “are very credulous!”

The officer again commanded silence, and before I had time to add any
thing more, I saw approaching a dead person of great size, with horns
upon his head, and who ran towards me as though he was going to strike
with them.  I stretched out my arms to defend myself, and perceiving near
me a large fork, that supported the tapestry, I took it in my hand, and
firmly awaited his onset.

“Do you recognize,” said he, “Don Diego Moreno, whom you have called in
your poems Signor Cornuto?”

“Yes,” replied I; “and to convince you, that I neither fear you, living
nor dead, take in advance a blow with this fork;” and at that endeavoured
to run him through, but his bones were too hard.  Moreno then gave me a
blow with his head, and casting himself upon me, threw me down: I stuck
to his sides, inserting my fingers into the openings beneath the sternum,
and as he arose, came up with him.  This noise causing considerable
confusion in the assembly, I saw coming upon me, a great number of the
dead, armed in the same manner with Moreno; and as they pressed upon one
another, each anxious to pass his neighbour, their bones made a very
curious clicking.  In the mean time, others marshalled themselves in
front, to protect me from their assault.

During these transactions, Death sat upon her throne in silence,
attentive only to the inscription of her subjects names; and as the
secretaries happened to finish at a moment when there was a slight
cessation in our tumult, the officer cried—

“Peace—listen!”

I seized this occasion to demand justice of the queen.

“I supplicate your sovereign majesty,” said I, “to do me justice on Diego
Moreno, who has insulted me in this palace; striking me with his horns,
knocking me down, and exciting against me the whole host of cuckolds.”

“What defence do you make to this accusation, Moreno?” asked the queen.

“Mighty and wan princess,” replied he, “behold the man who caused me to
pass in the world as a Vulcan, or a faun: I have always lived pleasantly
with my wife, never objecting to the French method, of receiving at her
house priests, soldiers, lawyers, politicians, merchants, and strangers
of every country.  As the house had a great deal of good company, where
nothing was wanting, although my wife was no expense to me, I found it
very convenient; and because I profited by the follies of others, because
I made that a part of my revenue, because I took advantage of my wife’s
friends, to amass an estate for my children, the chevalier Quevedo
derided me, rendering me ridiculous by his poems, and representing me as
the prince of accommodating husbands; he called me a ram, and made me one
of the signs of the zodiac: not content with that, he even comes hither,
and strikes me with a fork.  I demand that he should be retained here,
and that he be put in a situation during his slumbers, that will
effectually prevent his waking.”

“Which of the two began the affray?” said Death.

“It was I,” answered Moreno.

“_We ordain_ then, that the name and memory of Moreno shall never be
forgotten in Spain; that his grave shall be opened, and his compatriots,
if any yet exist, shall make a pilgrimage, to render homage to his
ashes.”

After that, they called over the names of the dead; and as they were
called, they answered _adsum_, “I am here.”  Hearing my own name
pronounced, which was also that of my uncle and god-father, I answered,
as the others, _adsum_; at which mistake Moreno taking advantage to laugh
at me, I hit him a heavy blow with my fist upon his head; but I hurt
myself more than him, for I almost broke my fingers.  Moreno cast himself
upon me; I stood firm, and thus we were again engaged in a new combat.
They endeavoured to separate us, but I had entangled my hands in such a
manner, in the bones of his arms, that I could not withdraw them; and as
they pulled me on one side, and him on the other, it gave me such
exquisite pain, that I awoke, happy and thankful to find myself in my
bed.  I reviewed in my mind all I had seen and heard, and which is here
reported.

This vision made such a forcible impression upon my imagination, that I
yet seem to behold the palace of death, the audience of the dead, and
Moreno pouncing upon me: finally, I made many reflections upon what I had
seen.  It is but too true, that all mankind must die; that we are
surrounded with constant peril; that there is but one thing that can
insure a tranquil death, and that is, a blameless life.  But to live
well, one must often think of death.  I believe the dream I have just
rehearsed, was inspired by heaven; for otherwise I should hardly have
thought upon my latter end, not even when my life was peculiarly exposed
amidst wars and battle.  At present, I reflect without ceasing; I have
totally abandoned trifling and poetry, which are synonymous; and, thanks
to God, have more satisfaction in reading books of devotion, than
romances and histories.



THIRD NIGHT.
THE LAST JUDGMENT.


I have read in Homer, that dreams come from Jupiter; and that this cannot
be doubted, especially when they regard things of importance.  I verily
believe those of kings and princes proceed from on high: but I will
substitute the true God in place of Jupiter, who is but a fabulous
divinity.  The vision I had last year, could not have been derived from
any other than a heavenly source.  Behold the events that passed: I was
reading the book of the blessed Hypolitus, which treats of the end of the
world, and of the coming of God, to judge the quick and the dead, the
just and the unjust.  I fell asleep over this book, sitting in a large
easy chair.  All at once, I thought I saw a noble young man, of
extraordinary beauty, flying through the air, having at his mouth a
trumpet, that sounded far and wide.  When he had made five or six great
circuits, I perceived soldiers starting from their graves, full of
courageous animation, thinking they heard the signal of battle.  Upon the
other hand, the misers started up, in terror, lest thieves had come to
rob.  The courtiers imagined that they enjoyed the agitations of the
ring, or of a carousal.  No one had the least idea that it announced the
last judgment.  I was strongly tempted to laugh at seeing the maimed, the
one-eyed, the blind, seeking the one their arms or legs, and the other
their eyes.  I was equally amused, to perceive the clerks unwilling to
resume their heads, the slanderers their tongues, and the old women their
throats.

After all these had come forth, and arrived in an immense and smooth
valley, very proper for so grand a spectacle, I saw appear people of
every art and trade; likewise the men of letters, among whose ranks there
appeared a very considerable embarrassment.  Each community placed itself
separately; each religion had also its sectaries apart: such as
Christians, Jews, Mahometans, Pagans, Heretics, and Schismatics.  All the
people being classed and placed, a judge presented himself, accompanied
by twelve counsellors, who seated themselves near his throne; beneath
them were the prophets, in the capacity of advocates.  Immediately a loud
flourish of trumpets was heard, as if an army of cavalry approached, and
legions of shining angels appeared, who poised themselves with their
wings, above those men to whom they had been guardians.  That done, the
archangel Michael, came and placed himself at the foot of the throne,
upon which the judge was seated, having in his hand a naked sword, and
beneath his feet a prostrate devil, as he is represented in churches, and
called the auditors each by his name.

Adam answered first; he was accused by his demon, with having eaten an
apple, contrary to the commands of his God; with having neglected the
gifts he had received at his creation; with having cast the blame upon
his wife; with having had a bad son, and of other faults which I do not
distinctly remember.  But I very well recollect, that these reproaches
produced such confusion in him, that he could answer nothing: his good
angel answered for him; he confessed the matters of which his party was
accused; he set forth the excess and duration of his penitence; the
agonies he had suffered from the decree that involved his posterity, the
goods which God had seen born of his sin; in fine, he pleaded with such
ability, that his client was acquitted.

When they called Judas, Herod, and Pilate, their crimes were so glaring,
that they could neither defend themselves, nor would any angel speak in
their favour; and they were accordingly condemned.  After them, were
examined the most noted heretics, and neither could they obtain pardon.

Presently there appeared a number of pagan philosophers, among whom, I
distinguished the seven sages of Greece, with Plato, Zeno, Socrates,
Aristotle, and others: there were also Mercury, Trismegistus, an
Egyptian, Sanconianthon, a Phenician, and Confucius, a Chinese.  The
majority of these avowed, that they had adored no other than the true
God.  The judge demanded, if they had given him all the glory, and
rendered to him all the honour that was his due.  They answered nothing,
and were not exculpated.

The corps of artists next presented themselves: some of them were
justified, but by far the greatest part were condemned for larcenies,
frauds, surprises, and infidelities.

The men of letters then had their turn: many of them were charged with
having taught and written contrary to their real opinions.  The poets
made every one laugh, on asserting, that when they spoke of Jupiter, of
gods and goddesses, they meant the true God, saints, and saintesses: that
they had never seriously deified the king of Candia, nor the first king
of Egypt, nor the queens of Cyprus and Sicily; that if these people had
become idolaters, they ought to take the blame upon themselves.  Virgil
in particular, was examined very minutely upon that passage of his poems,
where he invokes the Sicilian muses: he pretended to have spoken of the
birth of the Messiah; but he was answered that he must then have been in
the soul of the Son of Pollio.  Orpheus was accused by the ladies of
Thrace, because he had taught men a love that did not concern them.

The clerks, lawyers, and constables, applied to Saint _Ives de Chartres_,
to plead their cause; but he refused, saying, he had never been a robber,
but had always pursued the cause of truth and justice, and that they had
not acted in that manner.  The devils also accusing them of having often
been corrupted by presents, and the solicitations of women; few among
them escaped.

After these, the physicians, surgeons, and apothecaries, were brought
forward: they justified themselves by the authority of Hippocrates,
Galen, and Paracelsus; but those whom they summoned, mocked at them, and
their allegations.  “And who are they,” demanded those eminent
physicians, “who have cited us, and presume to shelter themselves behind
our example?”  The unhappy accused then sought the assistance of their
two saints, _Come_ and _Damiens_; but they refused to defend homicides,
and judgment of condemnation was accordingly pronounced.

As it is out of my power to follow all the judgments in their order, I
shall report only those that appeared most worthy of note.  A fencing
master, being unwilling to approach the bar, an angel extended his arm to
seize him; but the master, throwing himself into an attitude, made a
fanciful push towards the angel, telling him at the same time, that from
such a thrust with the small sword, he would have received a mortal
wound; that all those who had taken lessons of him, never failed to kill
their man, and that he himself had always been victorious, till he met
with his physician.  At last, constrained by force, he was brought
forward and convicted of all the homicides committed by his scholars,
who, confident in their skill, had often sought quarrels, for the purpose
of putting their theory in practice.  For these offences it was decreed
that he should go into hell in a perpendicular line.  “Zounds,” said the
master, “I will go as I may, but not in a perpendicular line; I am not a
mathematician.”  “How,” said the angel, “do you wish to go?”  “In making
leaps backward before the mouth of hell.”  “Not quite so much subtlety,”
said the devil; “I will make you obedient;” and he carried him into the
abyss, that was at the extremity of the valley.

This man gave place to a great astrologer, whom his angel endeavoured to
bring before the tribunal: he was loaded with almanacs, globes, spheres,
astrolabes, compasses, quadrants, rules, and papers, filled with
astronomical calculations.  “You are mistaken,” said he to the angel;
“the last judgment has not yet arrived, because the constellation of
Saturn, and that of fear, have not yet finished their courses; it ought
not to arrive in less than twenty-four thousand years; for God hath not
created the universe and the celestial globes, not to permit them to
finish their journeys; and there is yet no appearance of an union of the
sun and stars, to set fire to the world, as must necessarily happen at
the last day.  I appeal, then, in advance, against all other judgments.”
“March,” said the devil, “or I shall carry you.”  “Carry me,” said the
astronomer, “into the kingdom of the moon; I will reward you well; I am
curious to see those beautiful countries, we discover with our
telescopes; the countries of Galileo, of Copernicus, of Tycho Brahe, and
other celebrated astronomers, who are gone to dwell in the moon, and who
have bestowed their names upon those regions they inhabit.”  The
discourse of this fool, did not prevent an accusation before the judge,
of irreligion, superstition, and other vices which he could not dispute.

I then saw an operator, who, imagining himself to be in a proper place
for vending his drugs, praised the properties of his orrietan, and the
virtues of his counter-poisons.  When he came before his judges, he was
desirous of trying some experiments, and demanded if he should use
realgal, arsenic, or the blood of toads and spiders.  The devil, who
stood at his side, asked him if he had any fire ointment.  “How,” said
he, “are you in want?”  “It is yourself that will soon need it,” answered
the devil; “because you have cheated so many people with your lies and
knaveries.”  He was confounded at this discourse, and was led away to
hell.

When they were close by, he said to the devil, “I perceive the jest; you
keep here the feast of Peter; I am not so much alarmed as you think: let
us go, let us go,” said he, entering into hell, “let us go and see Don
Peter.”

There then came a troop of tailors, the chief one of whom diverted me
much: he had a pair of scissors in his hand, and a long slip of
parchment, with which he took measure for garments.  Perceiving me, he
stepped up and proposed to make me a coat in the French fashion: I
assured him that I had no need of such a garment; but he ran round me,
insisting upon taking my measure.  I observed that it was then no time to
transact such business; that he was before his judge, and had better
invoke his guardian angel: but the angel advised him to plead his own
cause, as he could not conscientiously defend a case so obvious.
“Signor,” answered the tailor, “I engage to give you a suit every year,
gratis; for it is doubtless for lack of tailors, that you angels go
always naked.”  “Without dispute;” replied the angel, “for there is not a
single tailor in heaven.”  “Very well,” resumed the tailor; “I go then in
person, to defend myself and brethren.  We have never stolen more stuff
than we could put into our eyes; we threw the useless pieces into the
street; we have always measured the trimmings of gold and silver, after
finishing the suit, and took no more than was absolutely necessary.  As
to the rest, our trade is one inculcating mercy; to clothe the naked, and
furnish a defence from the cold; meritoriously following the gospel
precept: thus have we acted, besides suffering patiently the prejudice
the embroiderers have done us in making the habits of the church.  I
demand that Saint Martin, archbishop of Tours, who gave the moiety of his
mantle to a poor beggar, should be heard in our behalf.”  “Saint Martin,”
said one of the angels, “hath never been the protector of tailors; and so
far would he be from defending you, that he would condemn you.”  “Ah!
well,” said the tailor, “oblige us by being yourself our interlocutor.”
“I consent,” replied he, “and will quickly expose the tricks of your
trade: the tailors have in their shops a private drawer, which they call
_the eye_; and it is there they deposit what they steal.  The under part
of their table and its immediate neighbourhood, they call the _street_;
and here they cast the superfluous stuffs: so when this master cheat
asserted, he had never stolen more than might have been contained in his
eye, or that he threw into the street the waste pieces of cloth, or
stuff, it was equivalent to saying, that, he had never taken more than
might be put into his drawer, or beneath his table.  As to the trimmings
of gold and silver, it is true, they are measured upon the garment, but
then it is found after the chain of binding is cut, that it stretches
very easily.  When he said that his trade was merciful and charitable, he
spoke the truth, if these are the attributes of thieves: but I demand,
if, without pillaging cloth, they could ornament chambers with rich
tapestry, build fine houses, give portions to their daughters, bear the
extravagancies of their children, give sumptuous entertainments, and
enjoy all the luxuries of life?”  “No, no,” simultaneously exclaimed the
whole assembly.  The corps of tailors was accordingly condemned, and they
were precipitated into the abyss.

When all the judgments had been pronounced, the judge, his counsellors,
the angels, and the elect, launched forth into the air, and ascended to
heaven, amid an harmonious concert of trumpets, and other instruments.
Those who remained in the valley, and had not been sent to hell, were in
despair, because they were not able to follow the array of the blessed.
When the celestial throng had wholly disappeared, a most horrid tumult
ensued: the planets fell from their orbits, the mountains came together
with dreadful washings, the earth gaped, and all who remained fell into
the abyss, uttering such piercing shrieks that I was seized with terror.
I awoke, and felt the most lively pleasure to find myself out of danger.
I reflected afterwards upon the multitude of the guilty, and the small
number adjudged innocent.  Oh, how necessary it is, that all the living
should experience a similar vision, that they might be witnesses of the
disorder, of the despair, and torments of the damned.  It would suffice
also to exemplify the piteous confusion, which can neither be expressed
nor comprehended, that will not fail to happen at the last day.  I am not
now surprised that the Israelites, at the foot of Mount Sinai, could not
endure the noise of the thunder that resounded from its summit.



FOURTH NIGHT.
THE COUNTRY AND THE PALACE OF LOVE.


ON the fourth day of January, I had passed the evening in the company of
some beautiful and amiable young ladies.  Contrary to my usual custom of
retiring at an early hour, I sat up late, amusing myself and trifling
with these ladies, which brought to my imagination, during sleep, the
most delightful images.  I fancied I heard a voice, which recited these
verses, borrowed by Virgil from Theocritus:

    “What phrensy, shepherd has thy soul possess’d?
    Thy vineyard lies half prun’d, and half undress’d,
    Quench, Corydon, thy long unanswered fire;
    Mind what the common wants of life require.
    On willow twigs employ thy weaving care;
    And find an easier love, though not so fair.”

I am ignorant by what paths I was conducted, but I suddenly found myself
in a most delightful country, such as the poets are wont to describe the
isle of Cyprus and the gardens of Love; it was bordered by two little
rivers, one of which was sweet, and the other bitter water.  These
waters, conducted by a subterranean canal, united in a great basin of
white marble, placed in the middle of a garden.  After I had promenaded a
little, to admire the beauty of the trees, and respire the perfume of the
flowers, I entered into a long and magnificent walk, planted with citrons
and oranges: upon each side were arbours, adorned interiorly with
paintings and sculpture, and surrounded without by jessamines, laurels,
honeysuckles, and other shrubs.  At the extremity of this walk, there
appeared, in perspective, a large and superb edifice, which was called
the _Palace of Love_.  The porticoes were of the Doric order: upon the
pedestals, the bases, the columns, the cornices, the friezes, the
architraves, and the chapters, were, in half relief, little cupids, who
disported themselves in all sorts of gambols.  There was written upon the
gate in letters of gold upon a black ground, this inscription:—

    ‘Behold the palace of the happy,
    The abode of lovers.’

The custody of the gate was committed to a woman of a nymph like
appearance: her name was Beauty.  She was tall and well proportioned: her
features were regular, and her whole appearance so seducing, that her
name seemed to answer her description exactly.  Her garments were
magnificent, but their transparency permitted the sight of charms that
eclipsed the light.  The whiteness of the snow would have yielded to the
whiteness of her bosom: in a word, she had about her that, I know not
what, of enchantment, which no pencil could delineate, or language
describe.  She made me so gracious a salutation, that I was emboldened to
request of her a conductor, to show me the apartments of the palace.

“Address yourself,” said she, “to the Introducer; he is lodged in this
wing,” motioning me with her right hand to the left side of the edifice.

I thanked her, and went in quest of the Introducer, who was at the same
time the Inspector of this smiling country.  I perceived in him an old
man with a long beard.  He received me with great civility; and having
signified to him my desire, he told me that he would himself conduct me
to the foot of the throne of the Queen.  He girded upon his thigh instead
of a sword, along sharp scythe.  He took for a cravat, an hour-glass with
golden sand; and for a hat, a bonnet of mercury with wings.  To do me
honour, he preceded me.  We entered immediately into the apartment of the
girls, which was separate from that of the women who have arrived at
maturity.  In perambulating these chambers, I saw all these girls
singularly occupied: there were some who wept with jealousy against the
widows; others were filled with inquietudes, not daring to avow the love
with which the other sex had inspired them.  “My lover,” said one, “is
extremely cold; he is too timid; O that the same privilege of declaring
our inclinations was permitted to us, as to the other sex!  I would speak
a language to him, which he should respond.”

Some of them read or wrote letters; they used a great deal of paper in
that business; for in order to say that they would not, they destroyed,
recommenced, destroyed again, and recomposed the same lines; they desired
that their words should have a double meaning, and that their lovers
should understand that, which they had no intention of making them
comprehend.  Others, placed before their mirrors, studied their gestures,
giving expression to their features, endeavouring to put grace into their
smile, and gaiety into their laugh.  Certain of them, plucked the hair
from the chin and eye-brows; others applied plaster to their faces; many
of them, to cause paleness and a more interesting appearance in the eyes
of their lovers, ate plaster, jet, charcoal, and Spanish wax, contrary to
the custom of the French, who diligently avoid those substances that can
give them a yellow appearance, as saffron, pepper, salt, and every thing
provocative.

From this apartment, I passed into that of the married women.  Some of
them grieved at the jealousy of their husbands, and others at the avarice
of theirs.  There were those who caressed their spouses, that they might
the more easily deceive them: there were others who concealed money from
their knowledge, to purchase finery, or make presents to their gallants:
there were others who made vows, and projected pilgrimages, to the end
that they might enjoy the company of those whom they could not otherwise
see: and others, who spoke continually of the sweetness, of the handsome
mein, and good proportions of their confessors.  Some there were, who
said that there could be no pleasure more consummate, than in revenging
ones self upon ones husband; some, also, that the most insupportable
torment to a married woman, was to be obliged to answer the caresses of a
husband whom she did not love: many, that the pleasantest hour was that
passed at the play with a gallant.  There were those too among them, who
had taken their waiting maids into confidence, and strove to engage them
in their interests by every indulgence.

Contiguous to this place, was a spacious pavilion where we found the
widows.  Some of this class affected austerity and modesty; but others
gave themselves up to all sorts of folly.  Many were exceedingly joyous,
although they were in mourning: many were sad, because black did not
become them; many, on the contrary, judged that crape was their chiefest
ornament, and that it served best to exhibit the brilliant whiteness of
their complexion.  The old widows wished to imitate the young, while
these sought to improve their time to the best advantage.  Those who
exhibited the most lassitude, were generally young widows, who waited
with impatience for the year of mourning to expire; but others spent
their time cursing the memory of their husbands, who had prohibited
second nuptials.

I was soon weary of my visit to this apartment; folly and libertinism
were not to my taste.  My conductor perceiving it, took me by the arm,
and said that he would show me the amorous devotees.

“Yet, for all that,” said I, “love and devotion can hardly agree;
however, let us see all.”

“Oh, ho,” said Time; “yes, true devotion; but know that it is as rare to
see true devotees, as women without love: these same true devotees have
at least those with whom they are not much upon their guard, and when
they are not observed, cannot resist the seductions of a handsome and
assiduous cavalier: in default of that they take their confessor.”

Thus conversing, we entered into the apartment of the devotees.  Almost
all prayed to God, either for the health or the return of a lover: many
to be soon married, or to be always handsome, or for death to rid them of
a rival.  Some of these women performed their devotions while waiting for
their gallants.

As the character of these women had in it nothing agreeable to me, I
besought my conductor to lead me to the abodes of the men; the more,
because I would hear from thence a concert of instruments; he showed me
the entrance into their quarter.  I found in the first hall, a great
number of fiddlers and pipers, who concerted a serenade for the following
night.  In the second, I saw men who made their toilets, and arrayed
themselves in new garments, of the favourite colours of their mistresses.
In the third, were those who prepared to send presents to their fair
friends.  In the fourth, were lovers who put themselves in attitudes to
fight in duel with their rivals.  In the fifth, they read novels, or made
extracts from them.  In the sixth, were the old fellows who were mad for
love.  In the seventh, were young men sick, and who dared not disclose
the causes of their indisposition.  In the eighth, married men did that
for their mistresses, which the wives did for their gallants.  In the
ninth, widowers imitated the actions of the widows.  In the tenth, in
fine, the gentlemen of the church showed themselves more amorous than the
men of the world, because they are addicted to less general dissipation,
and have fewer opportunities for the gratification of their inclinations.

As I came out of this place, I heard a clock striking with a heavy sound,
and reverberating throughout the palace.  “What is that?” said I to
Opportunity.

“That,” said he, “marks the hour for private conversation and
appointments; enter into this large hall; you shall soon see a great deal
of the world: wait for me, until I shall return to conduct you out of the
palace, for otherwise you will not be able to find your way.”

I went into the hall, in which were a great number of seats.  The
magnificence of the tapestry, which represented the fabulous
metamorphoses, corresponded with the style of the edifice: at the
extremity was a throne of ivory, silver, and gold, under a canopy
enriched with pearls and precious stones.  When the persons of both sexes
had entered and sat, a woman of a strange figure, and clad in a very
whimsical manner, placed herself upon the throne; they called her
Passion.  Another woman, whom they called Folly, sat near her, and spake
as if she was the queen’s chancellor.  Forthwith this princess began to
set forth the advantages that had been gained over the empire of Reason,
who had been for a long time her enemy.  While she was speaking, a
stately dame named Jealousy, promenaded through every part of the hall:
she inspired some with fear, and made others laugh; at length she came
near me, and said—

“It is not without some purpose, you are here and separate from the rest;
perhaps you are more fortunate.”

I answered, that “I found myself there without any particular
design.”—“Excellent,” replied she, retiring; and from time to time she
revisited the place where I was, to see if some girl did not come to join
me.  As I divined her thoughts, I strove to give her uneasiness; I
affected to exhibit the same myself; I looked anxiously from one side to
the other, as if I had expected some one.  I remarked this woman made the
same motions.

When the queen had finished her discourse, many persons presented
petitions, which were all forthwith granted.  After that, the princess
announced to all her votaries, that she granted them the propitious
moment, and retired.  Immediately each one presented his hand to his
partner, and hastened from the hall.  Some went into chambers, and others
walked about.  There was no one but Jealousy remaining in the chamber
where I was; she promenaded about the hall, murmuring:—

“I shall see,” said she: “I will watch; I will discover: I will hinder: I
will talk: I shall not be inactive.  Ah, good,” cried she to me with
vivacity; “what do you do here? depart, I wish to close the gate.”

As I expected my guide, I was not willing to go out, lest I might lose
myself in this vast edifice.  “I wish to wait here for Opportunity,” said
I, “who ordered me to remain in this hall, till he should come to rejoin
me.”

“Reckon not,” replied she, “upon this old dotard; he will not return; he
is gone upon the stream, with the others: believe me; quit this place:”
and thus speaking, she took me by the shoulders, and thrust me out.

I walked upon the garden terrace until I saw descend a silken ladder.  I
immediately thought that this was an invitation made to me, and thinking
of nothing but the novelty of the adventure, I ascended.  I entered by a
window into a chamber, where I saw a man and a young girl sitting at
table: they were both surprised at my presence, but especially the young
cavalier, who remained immovable: presently recovering himself, and
addressing himself to the lady:—

“Ingrate, this is then the manner in which you betray me! you have then
certainly two lovers, and perhaps fifty?”

“Me, sir!” said she; “I swear to you I know not this gentleman; assuredly
he has made a mistake, in taking my window for that of some other.”

“Yes, yes, he is deceived, but it is in these two particulars; that, in
the first place, he thought me gone; and secondly, in taking my ladder,
for that you are accustomed to hang out for his accommodation; but he
shall repent it.”

Immediately drawing his sword, and taking his dagger in the other hand,
he would have stabbed his mistress.  I also drew my sword, and put myself
before the lady, to guard her from the blows of this madman: he dealt me
several lunges, which I parried; I drove him to the window, and as he
perceived himself hotly pressed, he sprang out, which gave me immense
chagrin.  The lady had left the chamber; I sought her in vain, and the
agitation of this circumstance awoke me.

I leave it to the consideration of the reader, if this vision is not a
faithful image of profane love: this is the beauty that seduces us; this
is the time we improve; this is the passion which governs us; this is the
jealousy which torments us; this is the hour of temptation: a rendezvous,
a private conversation, a walk.  This is that violent motion which leads
to crime.  I leave also to the reader, to make his own reflections upon
the occupations of lovers, upon their desire of pleasure, upon their
intrigues, upon their pains.  I am persuaded that no one can have an idea
upon the subject, without disapproving of the wanderings of love.  It is
not reason which rules in the palace I have traversed: for reason is an
enemy whom they attack, whom they disarm, whom they put far from them,
although she is but a kind friend, who never takes up arms but to succour
us.



FIFTH NIGHT.
THE WORLD.


IF a man of genius, or one only of ordinary discernment, could view the
interior of the world, he would feel indignant at himself even for living
with so much degradation; he could not prevent himself from pitying or
despising those who are attached to it, and who allow themselves to be
deceived by its seductions and artifices.  There is hardly a person who
speaks as he thinks; one never sees the intention of the actor; honesty
and knavery have often an air of resemblance; truth and hypocrisy appear
like sisters of the same father; civility and curiosity assume the same
colours; friendship and interest are with difficulty distinguished.

These reflections occurred to me while walking in my garden; I entered
into a summer house, favourable for meditation, and inclined to slumber
by the coolness of the shade, and the murmur of a neighbouring rill, fell
asleep.  During my repose, I fancied myself in the midst of a great city,
called Hypocrisy.  They informed me that it was the capital of the
internal world, and bore the same relation to it, that Rome did to the
external world, in the time of the emperors.  It was here the king of the
internal world usually resided; he was called _Self Love_; and although
he had this appellation, which is, for the most part, in rather bad
odour, he was dear to his subjects, who made it their chiefest glory to
imitate him, and had no other object than the honour of their sovereign.
The two principal ministers of this king, were Interest and Ambition: the
governor of the city was Pleasure.  The guards of his majesty were
designated by the names of other human passions; the gentlemen of his
court were lackeys, well accoutred; the farmers of the revenue called
themselves _ministers of finance_: the lawyers, _counsellors of the
king_: the thieves, _judges of police_: the grooms of the stable,
_equeries of the king_: the mountebanks, _physicians_: the bankers,
_masters of accounts_: the clerks of the church, _abbots_: the clerks of
the palace, _secretaries_: the students, _doctors_.  There, tailors wear
velvet and gold lace; coblers are cordwainers to the king; gaming houses,
academies: discreditable places, houses of good society: pimps,
convenient people: coquettes, ladies of honour: women of pleasure,
devotees: black girls, handsome brunettes: in fine, coquetry is
friendship: usury, economy: deceit, wisdom, or prudence: malice, wit:
cowardice, equanimity of temper: temerity, valour: parasites are amiable
people: slanderers, free people: and in like manner of others; for in
this country we perceive every thing to be contrary to that we see in the
external world.

As I promenaded the streets of this city, I met an old man, who inquired
of me if I was a stranger.

“Yes, I am,” said I.

“That is very apparent, from the surprise you testify at the novelties of
this city; but if you choose, I will show you things that will astonish
you much more: come into my house.”

Having accepted this courteous invitation, he preceded me without
ceremony, observing, that this was the custom in France.

“Oh, signor,” said I, “it is no more than justice, that you should be
free in your own house; and I know that it is the French humour, not to
accord precedence upon such occasions: because he who first enters,
escapes closing the gate upon the inside.”

We found in the chamber of this old man, two young friars, preparing to
go abroad.  They assured us, they could not remain any longer, because
their superior had ordered them to be present at a funeral procession, to
get their wax taper, and customary gratuity.

“What admirable charity in these people,” said I, “who go to a funeral,
not to pray, but to gain.”

Soon after, hearing a chanting, we looked from the window to learn the
cause.  We saw a funeral procession, in which were arranged many priests
and religious, with a long file of relations.  It was a woman whom they
carried to the grave; the husband was almost mad; and I said to my old
friend, “My God! this man is extremely afflicted!”

“Do you believe that?” answered he: “listen to what he says, when he
arrives opposite.”

In fact, when he came near the house, I heard him say, “I am not so very
unhappy after all! she has wasted the half of my fortune: she has been
sick in bed at my expense these last six months; and her obsequies will
cost me a thousand crowns!  Ah, Lord!” cried he in a loud voice, “why is
she dead? and why did you not take me first? or rather, good Lord, why
did you not take her before she had dissipated my money?”  At length,
reverting to a more pleasant theme, “I must,” said he, “marry Lucilla:
she having been a serving girl, will not be fond of ostentation; she
knows nothing about luxuries, since she cannot even read.  To be sure,
being young and inexperienced, she made a misstep; but the remembrance of
her fault will make her wary.  Of the two maids my wife kept, I shall
discharge one; so in three or four years I shall save the expense of this
burial.”  “I gain by this chance,” said a relation of the deceased, who
came next: “I gain ten thousand crowns, because she died intestate.”
“This pest of a woman,” said a maid servant who followed, “never failed
to take advantage of every opportunity, and yet entertained an extreme
jealousy of my master and me.”

“Zounds!” said I to the old man, “these people are very sincere!”

“The things you see here,” observed he, “are those which are concealed in
the external world; but if now, you have any curiosity to know with what
occupations widows beguile the time, after the death of their husbands,
step with me a couple of paces and you shall see.”

I directly consented; the object appearing well worth the trouble.  There
was at the distance of three or four doors from this chamber a grand
apartment, the entrance of which was hung with black, and the stair-case
covered with the same material.  We went in, and after traversing a long
hall, garnished in the same manner, entered into a little room, the
tapestry of which was black velvet; the bed of beautiful red damask,
covered with black crape, with silver fringe.  In it reposed a young lady
of the most conspicuous loveliness, one of the fairest I have ever
beheld.  I offered her my condolences upon the death of her husband, whom
my old friend had informed me was a gentleman of the sword, and a loyal
subject of the king—_Self-love_.  She answered, smiling in the most
affable manner, that she was highly sensible of my politeness, and that
she felt very happy that the death of her husband had procured her the
pleasure of my acquaintance.

“Oh!” exclaimed I, to myself, “what affliction! but let us examine a
little farther.”

I approached the bed, and sat down upon a sofa near by: we conversed upon
many things indifferently, and at length came upon the adventures of
young widows.  At this period of the conversation, raising herself up to
take her handkerchief, she exposed to my view, with a beautiful shoulder,
a neck fairer than moonlight.  Just as this sight had inspired me with
love, I heard a man snore, who was upon the other side of the bed.  She
drew the curtain, and gave the gallant a slight cuff, saying, “you are
very impertinent to sleep thus near a lady in bed.”  The other awaking,
was going to revenge himself upon the lady for her slight buffet.

“No, no,” said I, “do not; I should rather be punished myself.”

Both of them then began to turn their raillery upon me.  Perceiving this,
I left the chamber, beckoning the old man to follow.  I was greatly
scandalized at such conduct, and my companion did nothing but laugh.
What people you have here! amiable widows!

Some hours afterwards, I accidentally met in the street, the beau whom I
parted with at the widow’s.

“It is thus,” said this man, accosting me, “that widows console
themselves, and redeem the time they may have lost with a cross, jealous,
or avaricious husband.”

“You understand these matters well,” answered I; “and madam will soon
forget her loss.”

Conferring thus together, we became familiar: he was anxious to learn my
name, and told me his own, which was Joy.

“I am not astonished,” said I, “the beauty listened to you.  A quarter of
an hour spent in your society, will abundantly recompense her for the sad
and weary years passed with a jealous spouse.”

When the old man saw us thus pleased with each other, he said he would
leave me in the company of this honest person, and that he should expect
me at his house to supper, after the play, to which we had determined to
go.

At the theatre we saw comedies about equivalent to our tragedies; and, in
fact, of so close a resemblance, that one might almost fancy them the
same.  The story of the one I saw was this:—Two young persons met at the
house of a mutual friend, to concert measures to gain the consent of
their parents to their marriage: their degree was not equal; the girl was
nobly born, and an heiress; the young man poor, and the son of a
merchant.  They both promised to put in requisition every possible method
that could be devised, to vanquish the opposition of the old folks upon
whom they depended.  The young man said he would make himself an
advocate, and afterwards a counsellor in parliament; the expence of which
he could easily defray in one year after his marriage, with the help of
his wife’s dowry.  The girl, on her part, promised not to refuse him any
token of affection; and agreeable to their plan, she was to inform her
mother, that she was pregnant by _Signor Virodeno_; for thus was her
lover called.  In order to the furtherance of this design, they
instigated their friend to pretend to betray them, and to apprise the
parents of both parties of what was passing.  The parents hastened to the
spot; the lovers came promptly from the chamber; they both heaped
reproaches upon their daughter, and as the mother was about to strike
her, she declared herself pregnant.  “Unhappy wretch,” exclaimed her
mother, “you will always be a grief to me; you will bring dishonour upon
the family: I will strangle you on the spot.”  “Stop,” said her husband,
“you will only expose yourself to be hanged: we must think rather now to
conceal this disgrace.”  “No, no,” said the mother; “let me stab her to
death with this knife.”  She would have executed her resolution, had not
her more discreet husband disarmed her, saying, “recollect yourself,
madam; you were in the same situation when I married you; and if your
mother had killed you, you would not to-day have made all this uproar.”
But as she continued to give way to fresh paroxysms of indignation, her
husband enforced his reasons with some wholesome correction.  He
subsequently conferred with the parents of the lover, who promised to do
every thing for the advancement of their son, in consideration of the
rank of the young lady’s family, with whom they would not be at variance.
The company then gave a loose to mirth; they found out the young couple
were well matched; they busied themselves in preparations for the
nuptials, and sent to apprise the young man, who had taken refuge at the
house of the governor of the city.  He came, accompanied by the proper
officers; the marriage was celebrated; nothing was wanting at the feast,
and they parted on the best of terms.  All this scene was in such perfect
keeping, that the young espoused were married at the house of the
maternal father-in-law, who himself did the honours of friendship.  Thus
they conclude marriages and other matters: so that there, one can see the
minds of people, and the purpose of every man’s action.

At the palace it is the same; every thing is laid open; the advocates
plead not, but _pro honorario_; the solicitors think of nothing but
prolonging the suits by those incidents they themselves devise; and the
judges, for the purpose of enhancing their fees, deliver a hundred
judgments, when one would answer.  As a specimen of their method, take
the following decree:

“Having taken into consideration the petition of Signor _Thief_,
solicitor to the lord _Stupid_, the court do order, that the parties have
day in court, for the space of four years, that the fees may absorb the
sum of three hundred pounds, which must be expended in this suit.  Done
at our court of the palace of _hypocrisy_, at the winter term of the
current year.  _Pecunia_, President.”

What I have related of the palace, is to exemplify the spirit that reigns
in this city; the same influence governs the court, the army, the
treasury, and the theatre.  There were in a box adjoining ours, at the
latter place, two men, who discoursed concerning the sale of certain
merchandize.  The seller said, “I wish you to give fifty thousand livres,
for what cost me thirty; but I wish to make a thousand crowns profit.”
The other was not willing to give more than a hundred pistoles.  At last
they agreed upon the thousand crowns, upon condition that the seller, who
was a steward, should give to the purchaser the titles to the rents of
certain farms, without the knowledge of his lord, and upon which event
the purchaser was also to give a feast.  After the play, I went to seek
my old friend; upon meeting him, he informed me that the king,
_Self-love_, was fallen ill; and that on account of his indisposition,
the whole city prepared to testify their gratitude.

“How,” said I, “can you think of diversions, when the father of the
country lies sick?”

“Yes,” said he, “it becomes us to rejoice; it would be hypocrisy to do
otherwise, when we have a prospect of changing our master.”

“In the world of which I am an inhabitant,” rejoined I, “we feel the most
lively sorrow, if our prince falls sick; and our religion commands us to
offer up prayers for his health.”

“And we,” answered the good man, “are taught to rejoice; for we have no
other policy than interest, and to which your religion is opposed.”

“If Self-love should die,” said I, “you would perhaps be governed by a
less popular king.  Pleasure, who aspires to the crown, Interest, nor
either of the other princes of the blood, would exercise a dominion so
happy and sweet.  These princes are naturally proud, cruel, and
vindictive: in the place of which, Self-love is often, nay, almost always
solicitous for the preservation of his subjects.”

The conversation turned upon this topic, for some time.  The old man,
contrary to the usual spirit of aged people, was desirous that Pleasure
should succeed to the throne.  As for myself, I maintained that the
nation would be less happy, under such a sway.  After our soup, he wanted
to carry me to see the fireworks, and the ball the governor gave upon the
occasion.  I refused to go; these things seeming to me very ridiculous,
on account of the cause that elicited them.  The old man was much
offended at my refusal; he told me that I was a sour, dissatisfied man,
and an enemy to the general joy.  I replied, that he was an old fool, and
that if he molested me any more, I would throw him out of the window, and
put his family to the sword.

At this moment we heard the cry of fire in the house; and the common
danger caused us to forego our quarrel.  The uproar was caused by a
servant girl, who, because her mistress refused, from some cause or
other, to pay her wages, had set fire to the house, from motives of
revenge.  They pretended to extinguish it in a very curious manner, which
was, by throwing on light stuffs, soaked in oil.  I dreamt that a great
sheet of flame suddenly enveloped me: I awoke on the instant, crying that
I was in a house environed: and thinking the noise I heard came from the
flame,—I cried, “_fire_!”  A servant that was seeking me in the garden,
ran, upon hearing me, and told me that some one waited to see me.  When I
had finished my business with this person, my dream caused me much
reflection; the more I thought upon it, the closer seemed the resemblance
to what is taking place in the world: in fact, it is _Self-love_ that
reigns, and these are the passions that govern us; and whoever could see
the heart and soul of men, would find them arrant hypocrites.  The world
itself is the city of Hypocrisy.  It is in this city, that interest,
ambition, pleasure, vengeance, anger, and all other evil passions conceal
themselves.  The more I examine, the more clearly these truths
appear:—That whosoever could disabuse himself for a single moment, would
be so, for the remainder of his life: and he who really desires to know
himself and the world, would learn from observation, more than he has an
idea of.  The world is, of all things, the most difficult to understand,
and that which one ought to know the best.  There is no person who
distrusts himself; consequently, there is no one who realizes, that it is
deceptive, filled with self-love, attached to its own interests, seeking
its own gratifications, vain, unquiet, restless, presumptuous,
vindictive, pure outwardly, criminal within, lovely and fair in
appearance—deserving, at bottom, of hatred and contempt: and what is
still more incomprehensible about this same world, is, there is hardly an
individual who doth not love it; they lose by this love, and they know of
a surety, that it is to this attachment they must attribute their losses:
meanwhile, it pleases all: they seek after it; they wish to serve it;
they abandon to it all which they hold most dear.  Some sacrifice to it
their honour for pleasure; others their lives for glory; and some
surrender their repose for the poor ambition of fortune.  But it was for
us, the world was created; and that is really the victim one ought to
sacrifice, to preserve his honour, to enjoy eternal pleasures, to acquire
true glory, and amass treasures, that neither rust nor envy can
spoil.—Think not, my dear reader, what I have here presented to you, a
dream, a vision; it is more real than you imagine.



SIXTH NIGHT.
HELL.


I had been, during the autumn, at the country house of one of my friends.
In the parish where he resided, that had not seen its bishop for thirty
years, there had recently been settled a new curate, a fluent preacher,
and very much devoted to the instruction of his flock—reading every
Sunday homilies and sermons, and the greater and lesser catechisms.  One
day, I went to hear one of the familiar exhortations, which he usually
gave to his people, concerning heaven and hell: he depicted the latter in
such strong colours, that the whole audience were moved; and each
whispered to himself, O frightful residence!  Full of these ideas myself,
I returned to sup at my entertainer’s house.  After quitting the table, I
extended myself on a couch; and my friend, seeing me soon overcome with a
pleasant slumber, for we had fared sumptuously, left me, to enjoy himself
the same refreshment.  During sleep, I dreamed that I was at the outlet
of an extensive forest, from whence diverged two roads, the one smooth
and broad, the other rough, covered with stones and ditches, thorns, and
thick entangled bushes.  I pursued the first, in which I remarked many
houses of pleasure, and multitudes of people, who travelled in carriages,
on horseback, or on foot, at a moderate pace, without fatiguing
themselves.  One might see there, persons of all ages, sexes, conditions,
and estates; one might find there, shops, magazines, taverns,
play-houses, and societies of women; in fine, people of every country and
religion.  I was not surprised that many came from the narrow way into
ours; but I was greatly so, at some who went from this fine road into the
other, which caused me to inquire where it terminated: as to ours, I
thought it led to Madrid.  Some one answered, that the little way
conducted to Paradise; and the one where I was, direct to Hell.  I
pursued my journey without making any other reflection.  Having travelled
about a quarter of a league, I began to perceive a bad odour, as of
sulphur and bitumen, and supposed it proceeded from baths of mineral
waters, which diffused a strong scent at a great distance around.  I
advanced constantly, and arrived at last before a large edifice, which
answered the description of Pluto’s palace, as it is represented in
fable.  I found at the gate an immense devil, horrible to look upon.  At
this apparition, I stepped hastily back, two or three paces, and drew my
sword, suspecting that some one was thus disguised, to do me an injury.
The porter, perceiving my embarrassment, approached, telling me to fear
nothing; for he was thus clothed, to deter the saints, who constantly
endeavoured to abstract the damned from hell.

“It is then true, that this is hell,” said I.

“Yes, at your service: enter, enter, my lord, one had better come here
living than dead.”

I immediately walked in, and besought a devil whom I met, to show me the
apartments of the palace: he called himself _Curiosity_; this was his
appellation of war, or rather that of his employment; for as angels take
theirs from their offices near God or men, so likewise demons are named,
from the services they execute, or the dignities with which they are
invested.

“They denominate me _Curiosity_,” said the demon, “because it is I who
inspire men with the desire of seeing, listening, proving, and tasting;
and as it is curiosity that opens the door of sin, so it is I who open
that of hell.”

“You may conduct me there,” said I, “on condition that you bring me back
to the gate again, after I have examined it; and you will oblige me still
farther, by leading me afterwards to paradise, which I would also visit.”

“It is not I,” replied Curiosity, “who can conduct you thither, and open
the door; the guide of the way is Retirement, the porter, Virtue; but I
will show you every thing worthy of notice here, and reconduct you to the
place from whence I take you.”

“Very well,” said I, and followed him.

We first entered into a spacious court, where the devils were scourging
the unhappy, who cried, “pardon, pardon, my God!  I did not reflect—I did
not believe—who told me of these things;” and many other similar
expostulations.

“These,” observed the devil, “are people, that have come to hell without
thinking about it, without fear, and without believing it.”

“They were then honest in their faith; but why punish those guilty only
through ignorance?”

The devil replied, “they ought to think upon the matter, to instruct
themselves, and be persuaded that hell is no place for mercy—so much the
worse for them.”

I passed from thence into a great chamber, where there were many men
gaming, who swore and blasphemed because they had lost a little money, or
played a bad card.  “Behold these people,” said I to the devil, “how
impatient and hasty!”

“That is the cause of their being here.”

In another room we found comedians, who mourned at their captivity, shut
up for having made the world laugh.  Said they; “if by chance some
equivocal words have impressed the spectators with evil thoughts, was it
not rather their fault than ours?”

“Oh,” said the devil to me, “if they had done no more than that, they
should scarcely have come here; but think of their lost time, knaveries,
and secret crimes!  In the terrestrial paradise, a male and female
comedian enacted a scene, that hath given to the devil the whole human
race.”

“Ah! who had they for spectators when they were alone in the world?”

“No, it is not the comedy which damns the players; it is what passes
behind the scenes.”

In the following chamber were the physicians and their suit: they
composed poisons for themselves; they took the doses when prepared; they
bled and purged themselves, and tried every dangerous and disagreeable
remedy in medicine, surgery, and chemistry, to procure death to
themselves, and could not succeed.

“They once used their art,” said the devil, “for a bad purpose, and now
their art fails them at their utmost need: do what they will, they cannot
die, because the air of hell is a fire which purifies and conserves.”

In a cabinet near this chamber, were a number of persons endeavouring to
make gold, or to speak more plainly, sought to discover the philosopher’s
stone: among them I recognised Tarnesier, he who made the nail half gold
and half iron, which is in the museum of the duke of Tuscany; also a duke
of Saxony, and a duke of the Medici, who knew how to make gold during
their lives, but forgot the secret when they came to hell.

“Is, then, the making of gold so heinous a sin?” inquired I of the devil.

“No,” answered he, “but it is a grievous offence not to know how to make
it, and that is the reason these gentlemen are here.”

“And the others,” said I, “who never pretended to have made the
discovery!”

“Oh, they have not passed off copper for gold, as these have done.”

“Let me see the devotees now,” said I to my conductor; “they are a
species of humanity that will divert me.”

“You are right; these are the fools of hell; it will be more instinctive
to look at them than those of this apartment.”

As we repassed the chambers we had visited, I heard some one exclaim,
“Look at this poor devil, who knows not where to bestow himself;
Curiosity is seeking a lodging for him.”

“Signor,” said one of them to me, “remain here, with the devil’s
permission, if you cannot be accommodated elsewhere.”

I passed by without answer, not wishing to hold any intercourse with the
damned.  I found in this place monks and devotees who had hated one
another so rancorously, that they had abused the most holy things of
religion, and wasted the time of the church in giving vent to their
malice, and afterwards would excuse their conduct in terms not used in
the world but to express the most moral, sacred, and holy actions.

“Ah, what hypocrites,” said the devil; “it would have been better for
them, if they had delivered themselves openly to those pleasures, they
concealed under the appearances which deceive the vulgar.”

In another part they were praying after this fashion:—“Lord, let my
father soon taste the joys of Paradise, that I may take possession of his
estate.”—“Lord, take speedily my uncle to thy bosom, that I may have his
benefice.”—“Great saint, make me fortunate at play; disdain not my
prayer; grant that my children may contract opulent marriages, and
prosper in the world.”—“Let my daughter espouse the noble Spaniard.”—They
uttered other supplications fully as extravagant, and added promises and
vows.—“I will give a hundred crowns to the poor, ornaments to my church,
a dowry to six unhappy orphans, two wax tapers, and a chaplet of flowers
to our lady.”—“I will wear a dark coloured habit,” said one girl; “and I
a white,” said another.  The first replies, “I am brunette, the violet
suits my complexion;” the second, “I am red, the white becomes me best.”

Next to this apartment was that of women and girls who had been lovers,
and whose number was very considerable.  As the history of their folly
was similar, I felt unwilling to listen to it, but traversed their
chamber without stopping, and entered into the quarter of the poets, to
have the satisfaction of beholding the great geniuses of antiquity.
There I was much surprised to find Homer, sitting in the midst of the
Grecian poets, and reading his own _Iliad_, he who had been so blind
during his life.  I was tempted to ask him some questions respecting his
works, and had an idea he would reply in verse.  With this view I walked
round the circle that was formed, and spoke in these terms to the prince
of poets:—“O, illustrious Homer! light of the universe! author of the
most sublime fictions! the beauty and price of thy writings surpass the
grandeur of the king of Spain, the wisdom of Charlemagne, the abundance
of Ceres, the girdle of the Graces, the tenderness of Venus, the
delicacies of Bacchus, the brightness of Aurora, the height of heaven,
the depth of hell, the vastidity of the ocean, and the variety of the
world, a Spaniard who wants neither spirit nor courage, of Quevedo,
demands of thee if the victory thou hast attributed to the Greeks before
Troy truly belongs to them; and if Paris, that tender lover, actually in
vain took so much trouble to carry off their chaste Helen.”

Homer, rubbing his eyes, answered me thus:—“Here there must needs be
sincerity and truth; for we pay dearly for the boldness and obloquy, that
weak mortals admire: our torments are eternal.  I never was in Ionia: I
passed my life in Greece; to honour this nation I sacked Troy; a city
strong, rich, fortunate, and always victorious, and that was finally
destroyed by an earthquake.  Helen, to whom I have accorded the honours
of fidelity, was the least scrupulous of all our frail damsels.  Leave me
to relent over what hath charmed all the poets of the world.  Go from
this place, and tell mortals you found me reading, against my
inclination, those works that have attained the universal suffrage.”

His discourse affected me.  I pitied this old man, who wept upon reading
his poems; but I reflected that he had invented all those fabulous
incidents, to which both pagans and Christians are equally attached.
Homer, this genius who knew how to assume so many changes, had he need to
endow with heavenly powers, those brave men whom he sent to the siege of
Troy? he might have created heroes, without making them gods: to be sure,
it is always permitted to poets to feign and magnify their subjects; or,
in other words, the subjects thus aggrandised and exalted to heaven have
no sublimity but in poesy and upon paper, like the figures that painters
trace on canvass, or sculptors upon marble.  How could the Greeks mistake
and worship gods who had such an origin? however the thing has happened,
Homer is the cause, and now mourns over his poetry and himself; he has
for companions in misery, his disciples and imitators.  Ought this not to
serve as a lesson to living poets, who, abusing their talents, compose
and read seductive works, causing those who think themselves in a
condition to do the like, to lose their time, and often corrupting the
heart in recreating the mind.

From this chamber I passed into that of the Latin poets.  Ovid and Virgil
there disputed the throne.  Horace chafed that he was not admitted into
the contest, and Martial revenged himself upon them by a piquant epigram.
Horace protested against the whole proceeding of the two first; he
demanded arbitrators, and nominated on his own behalf Scaliger, who has
declared that he would rather have been the author of the ninth ode, than
the possessor of the crown of Arragon; but they would not notice him.
The other poets espoused the party that suited them best: many declared
for Seneca the tragedian, for Terence, and Plautus.  These last, read in
a corner of the chamber the finest passages of their compositions.  They
now began to talk of settling the dispute with blows: fearing, therefore,
that I might get an unlucky hit in the mêlée, I left the place, and
passed hastily into the chambers of the Spaniards, Italians, French,
English, Turkish, Chinese, and Persian.  I noticed the ancient Gaulish
poets, crowned with misletoe of the oak, making processions, and singing
the histories of their first kings.

“Here, upon this side,” said Curiosity to me, “is a chamber of perfumers;
they have fine scents for the gratification of the damned; but you would
hardly be able to bear them.”

“I will take,” said I, “a pinch of snuff.”

I drew forth my box, helped myself, and offered it to my devil; he filled
his nose, but from the titilation he felt in his olfactories, he withdrew
his fingers, when he began to sneeze in such a manner, and with such a
noise, that hell itself seemed sinking under us, he belched forth fire
from his nose, as lightning flashes from a cloud; he put his fore-finger
to it, and there issued forth a rivulet of liquid sulphur, which uniting
with his saliva, formed a torrent of boiling water, that flowed across
the chamber, and passed through the doors and windows; without that I
believe I should have been drowned.  These waters fell upon people
underneath, who began to call for help, thinking a river of melted
sulphur and pitch fell upon them.  The devil laughed heartily at this
disorder, and told me my snuff was excellent: he asked for another pinch;
I did not dare to refuse him, because he was in his own house; and such a
refusal might, perhaps, have made him regard me as impolite.  But this
time, when I put my fingers into the box, the powder took fire as if it
had been saltpetre, and burnt in my hands, at which accident I was not
sorry, being apprehensive of another disorder, similar to the first.

We then entered the chamber of the perfumers: they were occupied in
extracting essences of intolerable odours, which are as agreeable to them
as jessamine, tuberose, orange, and others in use among the men and women
of our world: they made these essences from the oil of the box tree, from
wax, jet, and yellow amber.  Their pomatums were composed of galbanum,
assafœtida, rosin, pitch, and turpentine.  I was informed that these were
for the use of the ladies of hell, who were served by the perfumers, and
who were, at the same time, obliged to use their compounds, in obedience
to the laws of Lucifer.

From thence, we proceeded along a broad aisle, which terminated at an
elevated pavilion, the apartment of the astrologers and magicians.  I met
at the door a chiromancer, who desired to inspect my hand.  I extended it
without ceremony; but scarcely had I touched his, before I was glad to
withdraw it, it seemed so hot and fiery.

“I have remarked at a glance,” said he, “that you will be happy if you
are prudent.”

“And you,” said I, “what have you noticed with regard to your own?”

“I knew,” replied he, “by the mount of Saturn, that I was to be damned.”

“Ah, well! if you had exercised the prudence you recommend to me, you
would not have been here.”

I passed without further speech, and saw a man, who, with compasses,
measured upon a globe, the distances between the celestial signs: “what
are you doing, good man?” said I.

“Ah, God!” replied he, “if I had been born but half an hour sooner, when
Saturn changed his aspect, and Mars lodged in the house of life, my
salvation had been certain.”

The others made similar observations, so that one could hardly forbear
laughing at their complaints.  There came up one named Taisnerius, author
of a book upon physiognomy and chiromancy, who gazed in my face for such
a length of time, that he quite embarrassed me.

“You look like an old burnt shoe,” said I to him; “go your ways; do not
stop so near me.”

“Look at this beggar,” said he; “see how he affects the man of
consequence, because he wears a sword by his side, and hath the cross of
Saint James!  What a physiognomy!  What an aspect!  What a figure!  This
man goes straight to the gibbet: besides, there is here neither wealth
nor rank; all are equal.”

“Insolent fellow,” said I; “if I draw my sword, I will teach you how to
speak to a man of honour; have you not had experience enough to be wise?
you ought to bear in mind the correction you received in Portugal, for
treating a gentleman in the same indecorous manner you have me; but you
are incorrigible.”

“Taisnerius,” said my devil, “get into your hole, and draw your own
horoscope.”

After this trifling dispute, we advanced, and encountered many
astrologers, among whom were Hali, Gerard of Cremona, Barthelemi of
Parma, a certain personage by the name of Tondin, and Cornelius Agrippa.
The moment this last perceived me, he cried out that “the world did him
injustice, in calling him Agrippa the black—in accusing him of magic, and
other similar things, for which, he averred, he had not been damned: that
he was born in an age of ignorance, when good physicians passed for
magicians, astrologers for sorcerers, and all learned men for people who
had converse with the devil; that his book upon the Cabala, was nothing
more but a satire upon the cabalistic art of the Jews, and the little key
of Solomon; and finally, the book itself might be taken as a criterion of
his faith, in those things by which they deceived the simple, and of the
vanity of that science.  I am no more a magician,” continued he, “than
Cardan, whom you can see if you wish.”

“Why then have you been damned?”

“Because I abused my knowledge, and amused myself with people’s
credulity; if I had indeed been a magician, I should have become
penitent, and been saved.”

While I was speaking, I heard a tremendous uproar, proceeding from
another apartment, and inquiring the cause, was informed the Turks were
fighting; and as I happened to understand their language, discovered the
quarrel was, in fact, between Mahomet and the two prophets, who had each
established a sect in the Mahometan law.  Mahomet complained very
bitterly against Ali, because he had given to the Persians a false
Alcoran, and because Albubekir had so illy explained his own, in Africa.
He, on the contrary, maintained that the Alcoran could have no other
meaning, than what he had attached to it.  Ali asserted, there was no
reason in this law; and furthermore, he contended, that Mahomet himself
knew nothing about the book he had composed.  They chafed furiously upon
this, and cried out, as if enraged to madness; I heard their dialogue,
but do not wish to be the herald of their quarrels.  This was gentleness
itself, compared with what passed among the heretic and schismatic
Christians; there I saw Luther in the habit of the Augustine order, with
his monks about him, and a pot of wine on the table.  “Do the dead
drink,” said I, “to the devil?”

“Not at all; but this wine is set before their eyes, for the purpose of
tormenting them with the sight of what they loved so well; it is for the
same reason, that Luther has his wife with him.”

Melancthon was also there; he wept continually, and was so unquiet, that
he could not remain an instant at rest: he traversed from right to left
upon all sides, and then returned to the place from whence he set out,
only to recommence the same journey.  “What is this man doing?” said I to
Curiosity.

“He imitates the conduct he pursued in the world; for there he was
alternately with Luther and the church; sometimes a Zuinglian, and
sometimes a Calvinist; thus are the inconstant tormented.  This good old
man whom you see here, is Erasmus; this other is Grotius; unhappily, they
neither of them had any religion.  This man, who appears so sour, and is
surrounded with ministers, is Calvin, who brought about the reformation.
These others, are heretics of the first ages, who are here for being
reluctant to submit to legitimate authority.  See the great Photius
patriarch of Constantinople, how the Greeks surround him: he is justly
punished for having quitted the ministry for the patriarchate; if he had
remained in a civil station he would have been saved; but being mixed up
in ecclesiastical affairs, he committed so much wickedness, that he now
suffers no more than he deserves.”

“A man so learned!” said I to the devil.

“Yes, too much so; and too much knowledge is often more injurious than
profitable.”

I began now to tire of hell, and fatigued with my walk, intimated a
desire to my conductor to depart, and to be accompanied by him as far as
the gate.  He replied, he wished first to show me the apartment of the
contractors, whom I had not yet seen, and which was upon a line with that
in which we were.  I then entered into the chambers of these farmers of
the revenue, and was surprised to see such a multitude, each habited in
the garb of his own country.  “There are here, then,” said I, “people
from all quarters of the globe.”

“Yes,” replied the devil, “since there are every where imposts.”

“But why,” demanded I, “are these people damned, who have levied the
lawful tribute of legitimate princes?  I have read in the scripture that
it is lawful to pay tribute unto Cæsar: how shall this tribute be paid,
unless there are people to collect it? must one be damned for doing a
duty?”

“Hold, hold,” cried the demon; “not quite so much philosophy; these
contractors were full as philosophical as you are; but it is nevertheless
true, if they had only levied the tribute due to their prince, they would
not have been damned; but they raised one not due, either to the prince
or to themselves: they would have been much better off, had they not made
so much expense, and the prince had given them but a shilling for a
pound.  Calculate, for a moment, what an enormous sum is requisite, for
the compensation of the host of subalterns attached to an office;
consider then, how much the principal must gain; add to that, what goes
into the coffers of the king, without mentioning what is styled the
_perquisites_, and you will find that not more than one per cent of the
ducats are realized at the treasury; and that, he who gets the most, is
doubtless the farmer.  If the king of Spain would oblige them to send
straight to him the custom on exports and imports, he would profit by
that the contractors get.  There needs but one commissary, for all the
revenues of the king, in each office; he should supervise all the books
and accounts, contenting himself with a generous salary for his care,
punishing frauds by pecuniary fines, and by corporeal inflictions for
second offences.  If the matter was thus managed, the king would be
richer, and taxes less; the people would be less burthened, and almost
all this great number of contractors, would remain in commerce, in the
army, or country.  How much should you say,” demanded the devil, “the
king received, of what is annually taken from the royal mines?”

“About three quarters,” replied I.

“He would be too well off,” exclaimed he, with a cry of admiration; “he
does not get the thousandth part; all goes in outfits, in expenses; and I
verily believe, that if these things are to continue thus, the king would
gain more by closing them, than in causing them to be worked.”

“At present,” said I, “there is a necessity of levying imposts, of having
contractors, and paying them well: the neighbouring princes do the same,
to furnish their charges and expenses of war: if this is an evil, it is
one that must be endured, to preserve the whole body politic from
destruction.  But how is it possible, you can so vehemently dislike the
gentlemen of the revenue, who form by far the largest part of your
infernal population?”

“It is the force of reason,” answered he, “that compels even demons to
avow the truth, and both to love and detest the wickedness we are
desirous of detecting in others, to make them companions of our misery.”

“I admire,” said I, “the force of truth; and I admire not less to see
injustice hated, even among the unjust; but I cannot comprehend, why you
should say, that however legitimate the tribute due to the prince, the
contractors cannot conscientiously take the public money.”

“You misapprehend me; that they can do; but the farmers collect more
money than is consistent with equity, or the orders of the prince; they
extort that which should be useful for the maintenance of the public
weal: it is of this charge, of this waste, the contractors are guilty.”

“I understand you,” said I to the demon; “but conduct me from hence, for
I am weary.”

He continued:—“Do you comprehend what I say, that it is the contractors
who are most happy and rich? and from whence come those superb mansions,
as magnificently furnished as the Escurial palace? how can they support
such enormous expenses? entertain so many gentlemen? give their daughters
such ample dowries? contract advantageous alliances with the noblest
families of Castile and Arragon?  Such an one shall command to-day, and
be covered in the king’s presence, who a year since drove a chariot, or
stood behind a carriage.  Another, who hired his land, shall presently
purchase the farm he formerly cultivated.  Appointed a subaltern in one
of the offices, he soon becomes its head, and is elevated by degrees to
the nobility.”

The demon having finished, I thanked him, and wishing to impress the
lesson on my memory, engaged him to repeat it.  He summed up the whole in
the following manner:—“Observe neither what reason or the law prescribes
to thee, respect neither God nor the king, lay the peasantry under
contribution, succumb to the great, become a great proprietary farmer,
cause the purchaser to pay you twice for what you sell: to put out of
sight the baseness of your origin, obtain an appointment in one of the
bureaux, and accustom yourself to command; for by these gradations one
may arrive at the highest dignities.”

“What signifies all that,” said one of the contractors, who listened to
our discourse; “is it not natural for a person to elevate himself if he
can?  Is it not the order of Providence, that the lofty should be abased,
and the humble exalted?  Fortune is but a wheel, which in its revolutions
puts underneath what but now was on top.  If the subjects were more
attached to the government, the sovereign would have less need of
imposts, and consequently of collectors.  If they were perfectly just,
they would not need a king.  To complain of our avarice is to accuse
heaven; instead of which only the impenetrability of individuals should
be reproached, who would rather see a great kingdom like Spain entirely
overthrown, than advance a single real to repair the slightest breach.
Know, Signor Devil, who has delivered such a philippic against the
contractors, that we have been to our country, what the bones and muscles
are to the human body, or numerous armies to a province threatened with
an invasion: if the king of hell would but consult with us, we should
teach him to fortify his dominions in such a manner, that they would be
impregnable to both saints and angels.  In the first place, I would lay a
tax upon every demon who plies his occupation in the world: secondly, I
would establish a daily employment for each soul in the infernal world:
thirdly, I would make the magicians and sorcerers pay an annual tribute:
this will be done, for I have heard the king of the demons was about to
organise a council of financiers; and this is a subject that might well
engage even the attention of that celebrated Englishman, who invented the
first paper currency of England.”

“And wherefore,” said the demon, “impose a tax on us?  What will you do
when we refuse to pay?  Can you confiscate our estates?  In what prisons
will you confine us when you have decreed our arrest?  We should mock at
all your projects: ah, little man! you grow licentious! you must be
chained up; come, obey; extend your hands and legs.”

“I shall do neither the one nor the other,” said the contractor; “you are
not here our master; I will call the financial council together; and I am
going this instant to denounce you to the grand inquisition, because you
resist paying tribute to the king of Spain.”

“I laugh at your inquisition,” said the demon, “and to be beforehand with
you, I will denounce you to the prince of devils himself: come, quick,
obey; extend your hands and legs.”

The contractor found himself loaded with irons, in spite of his
remonstrances: the devil then went into the apartment of the inquisitors
to subject them to the same treatment, and afterwards returned to
accompany me to the gate, as I had requested.

“These insolents,” muttered he, “these insects! what pride! what
rodomontades! was there ever seen such supercilious knaves?  But I will
humble them in such a manner, and make them suffer so much, that they
will have no stomach to talk of imposts and taxes.”

When we had left these contractors, (whom I regard as the most unhappy
class in hell, because, let them do ever so much good to the prince or to
the state, let them be ever so upright in their administration, nay, even
if they were angels, they could not escape accusation and hatred) our
attention was attracted by an immense crowd, which had arrived and filled
up the avenue in such a manner, that we could not pass, and so were
obliged to fall back to the opposite gate.  “Who are these people?”
inquired I of the demon.

“They are,” replied he, “a corps of tailors; they arrive here in crowds,
like great armies, and when they come, all the demons are put in
requisition to confine them; my duty compels me to assist; go with me,
and amuse yourself with our proceedings.”

We made our way through this crowd of tailors, and arrived at length,
before a great furnace, the mouth of which was more than ten fathoms in
diameter.  There they bound these tailors in faggots, putting from ten to
a dozen in each bundle: they fastened each one by the feet, and then
brought a rope about the whole package, and afterwards suspending the
faggot to a hook, which was elevated by means of a pulley, over the
centre of the furnace, a devil detached it, and let it fall into the
fire.  Sometimes the tailors who had their arms free, grasped so firmly
the pulley, that the devil had an infinite deal of trouble to loose their
hold: when that took place, he caused the whole mass to make a pirouette
in the air, and as the motion was violent, the tailors were always forced
to let go, and drop into the fire.  It happened that one of these faggots
fell outside the aperture, upon a quantity of others, which were ranged
like a pile of wood, and which the devil measured.  The individuals of
this faggot, seized hold of the others in such a manner, that they could
not separate them; so that the devils who united their strength for that
purpose, were obliged to take the whole pile, attach it to the hook, and
let it all go together.  The mass was so great, that it seemed as if it
would choke the fire of hell.  The devils bestirred themselves, and
finally made an end of the tailors; they then cast in a great quantity of
oil, tallow, and sulphur, and stirring them up with long iron tormentors,
and employing large bellows, the fire caught all at once, and raised a
flame, that rose above the mouth of the furnace more than three hundred
feet.  All the tailors having been cast into the fire, their demon
general, with a haughty and severe air, came to demand of me, why I had
not been bound with the others.

“Because,” said I to him, “I am not a tailor, a rogue, a thief, neither a
cabbager of stuff nor money; I am here with my companion, Curiosity, to
inspect the beauties and antiquities of this country.”

“You are a liar,” replied the general; “you are one of my subjects; I
know you by your strait-cut dress, which, without doubt, you have made
out of the clippings of some other; come, obey; cast yourself into the
fire, or I will throw you in.”

As he was about to bind me, my demon informed the general that I was not
yet dead; that I had never been of any trade, and that he believed I
should not be one of their subjects, because those who descended quick
into hell, conducted themselves afterwards in such a manner, as not to
revisit it after death; furthermore, the cross of Saint James, (which I
carried,) would inspire fear, and cause false alarms in the bosoms of the
damned.

“Come hither, then,” said the general, “and profit by what you see; you
know, at least, that tailors are the fuel of hell, and serve to burn
those that come hither.”

My demon advised me to go promptly, because if the general should get
angry, he might do me a mischief.  In walking along, he informed me the
unhappy tailors were so numerous, that they not only fed the great
furnace of hell, which warmed all the apartments, but also furnished the
table of Lucifer, when he had a mind to feast.

“How!” exclaimed I, “Lucifer eat?  Can spirits eat?”

“Do you not know,” replied he, “that the damned are as the herb the sheep
eateth, and that death is this sheep?  Have you not read in your sacred
books, that death devoureth the damned?  _Mors depascet eos_.”

While he was speaking, we met a troop of booksellers, at whose head was
one Peter Marteau, a publisher, of Cologne; he was loaded with a burden
so unwieldy, that it was impossible to comprehend how any one man could
bear it.  They informed me, these were the books printed under his name,
after his death.  The booksellers of Holland were also very heavily
laden; and those of France bore also the books struck off at their
houses, with the title of a Dutch bookseller.  These people were carrying
their books to the furnace, but were prevented by a singular accident: a
demon, who passed by with a flambeau, approaching to look at them, their
papers caught fire, and instantly spread from one to another through the
whole body: when they perceived the flame, they threw down their loads,
and fled with all convenient speed.  I asked them why they were damned:
they answered, for the faults of others.

“An author,” observed they, “often carries a work to the printer, which
has no merit, and besides, as unsaleable as a girl, ugly and poor: by
this means the printer is ruined; in vain he curses the author, and seeks
to reimburse himself by the sale of an unpopular book; this book is the
cause of his failure; his creditors seize his goods and shop; he maddens,
and resigns himself to despair.  A translator, who understands Greek,
undertakes a dull work; sometimes he supposes he has discovered a
manuscript; he carries his translation to the printer, who, not being
able to get rid of it, sells the leaves to the grocer or butter woman.
Another cause of our damnation; a bookseller sells at a handsome profit,
the _satires_ of Juvenal, the _comedies_ of Terence, and of other poets,
as those of Virgil and Ovid; a lackey, a shop-boy, a soldier, a clerk,
purchase these works, and amuse themselves among serving girls, with what
cost long study to these men of genius.  Without mentioning other books
we vend, and which obtain circulation, only because they flatter the
taste or passions of the buyer, is it not true, that a pretty story of
gallantry, secret memoirs, cabinet intrigues, which profess to expose the
designs of the government, or the end of some great affair, are the most
dangerous books? and these are the kind we sell best.  Is it us, then,
upon whom reproach ought to fall, or on the readers?”

“He speaks advisedly,” said a Holland publisher; “we have put to press
all the follies of certain authors, who wished to revenge themselves,
either upon a mistress, judge, minister of state, or prince; and for this
we must needs be adjudged guilty of other’s faults, and share their
punishment! but that would have been slight, if we had not meddled with
books of religion.  We have published in Holland the works of all
parties; Christians, Jews, Catholics, Protestants, Socinians, Quakers,
and every other sect; and often in the same book, sold both sides of the
controversy.”

“You have then,” said I, “no religion!”

“We are,” replied the Dutchman, “the historians of authors; and as a
historian must have neither relations, country, friends, nor religion,
even so we have none of these; but under the name of citizens of the
world, have but one object, and that, the advancement of our own
interests.”

Immediately upon these words, he hastily fled with the others, to
re-assemble themselves near the demon of the book merchants, who called
for his whole crew.  I felt great compassion at the fate of these unhappy
wretches, condemned to hell, because they were brought up to the
profession of publishing the dreams and extravagances of authors: it is
worthy also of reflection, that they are compelled to consult the taste
of the age, and of the multitude.  Now the taste of the age is
exceedingly fickle: it is not that of learned men and wits; books of
morality and criticism are purchased much less readily than novels and
profane histories; so that book merchants, in their condition, have an
unhappiness that attaches itself to no other trade, independently of the
fact, that this business is not held in the same estimation at the
present day, that it formerly was.  They were then ranked with men of
letters; they were admitted to the bar and church; the cardinal Ximenes
bestowed on them great preferments; he ennobled him who published the
famous _Bible d’arrias montars_.  We see, in his time, publishers who
possessed rich abbeys and seats in the council.  And what was not done
for them by the fifth Sixtus, that incomparable genius?  In France, they
arrived at great distinction, and have been seen in the first posts of
the principal cities of the kingdom; and we know that a celebrated
emperor of Germany, was one of the first publishers, if not himself the
inventor of printing.  But to return from this digression: when the book
merchants were re-assembled, the notaries, who had just arrived, wished
to place themselves in their ranks; but the devil used his authority to
separate them, averring that there was, in fact, a vast difference.

“Without doubt,” said the notaries, “we are the book merchants of
manuscripts; we compose and publish our works, to which the public accord
the same faith, as to things they have themselves seen; we are faithful
public witnesses, the guarantees of contracts, promises, and obligations;
the guardians of titles, rights, and privileges; our testimony is true,
infallible; above suspicion, deceit, and fraud.”

“Why,” said the devil, “are you come to hell? for if you fulfilled those
duties, you are honest people, and I declare, not only useful, but
necessary to the public; for, between ourselves, there is so little
public sincerity, that if one could not prove, by writings and witnesses,
the price at which he bought or sold, he would often find himself cheated
of his money.”

“It is,” said one of the notaries, “for some antedates or superfluous
ciphers, that we are damned; judge you, if the matter is of such vital
consequence; one is so often deceived by writings, and one figure is so
easily substituted for another;—the pen too, slips sometimes, and a
nought is so easily made!”

“You are right, in truth,” said the devil, addressing himself to me;
“they wrong these poor people, in sending them to us; they have committed
trifling faults, while they do not punish the apothecaries, even, for
putting up the recipes sent them.  I have a great mind to send these
unfortunate persons home again.—Go; return, my friends; you have suffered
great injustice.”

“And we also,” said the corps of bankrupts; for they had done them the
honour to separate them from the merchants, who had dealt honestly.

“As to you, Signors,” said the devil, “enter into the furnace, without
further examination: we leave it to the notaries to enter at pleasure;
they have within them a torment as cruel as fire; it is conscience, that
never yet respected any person.”

“Oh, oh! ah, ah!” cried the bankrupts, “if they had not wronged us, we
should have kept our faith with every one: would you, because we were
cheated, that we should send our families to the almshouse?”

“I did not go to Holland, or to the islands, when I failed,” said one; “I
shut myself up in a private room in my house, and there negotiated,
through my wife, with my creditors, making each one to remit a part of
his just claims: you know what would have happened, had I appeared; there
is seldom much charity among creditors.”

“I,” said another, “did much better; for I transported from Madrid to
Venice all the merchandises I had collected, changed my name, and after
having made a fortune upon these goods, paid the principal, on condition
they would remit the interest: was there not in this bankruptcy, good
faith, justice, and prudence?”

“Yes,” replied the devil, “and I cannot conceive on what grounds you were
condemned; it is very evident it must have been for something else.”

“No,” continued the man, “it was for this very thing; because they
pretend that for these twenty years, I have injured my creditors, in
depriving them of the enjoyment and possession of their property;
consider, Signor devil, if I am under an obligation to repair this
damage? would it not only be ridiculous, but render them guilty of usury
towards me.”

“Ah! the honest man,” said the devil; “why do they send to us folks so
upright and sincere? but my friend,” continued he, “you have the ill luck
to be found in bad company; we cannot help you; arm yourself, therefore,
with courage, and prepare to support the sufferings to which the
bankrupts are destined; you will be forced to accustom yourself to much
pain; but console yourself, by uniting your complaints with those of your
comrades.”

Directly the devil stamped upon the pavement, where the publishers,
notaries, and bankrupts stood, when a trap door, springing open,
engulphed them all, and closed itself as before.

At this stage of my dream, I was awakened by a serenade of violins and
hautboys, that some one gave to a young lady of the house.  I immediately
arose, and looking from the window, saw a number of young men, who, after
a prelude upon their instruments, began to sing.  As there was no window
but mine open, they imagined they beheld the beauty to whom their homage
was addressed; and to amuse myself at their expense, I threw out a
splendid handkerchief, which one of them eagerly caught; he kissed it
more than an hundred times; then putting a diamond, worth thirty
pistoles, into a purse, threw it into my chamber, with a billet couched
in these terms:—

“My charming princess, at night my heart awakes for thee; by day, I am
only occupied with your charms.  I burn, without cessation, with the love
you have inspired; when shall I have the happiness to express to you in
private, what I feel, and what your silence causes me to suffer? one
sweet line from your hand, shall re-assure and console me.  Speak, and
nothing can equal my happiness; continue silent, my misery is at its
height, and I have no relief, but in death.”

After perusing this billet, I answered it in the following manner, the
substance of which was furnished by a song I happened to remember.

“When one reigns, or when one loves, the pain is not without its
pleasures; solicitude renders them more vivid.  Happy prince!  Happy
lover! it is not in vain you suffer; they will resist you but slightly,
when they themselves suffer from protracted resistance; yes, when one
reigns, or when one loves, the pain is not without its pleasures.”

I cast my billet from the window, and it was soon taken up.  The
adventure seemed to me very pleasant: behold what followed; I deposited
in the bed of the fair, the diamond that was designed for her, not being
able to keep it longer with honour, and without exposing myself to the
anger of the young lady, who would soon know by what window it entered.
Upon retiring the next night, she found it; she informed her lover of the
discovery, and he explained the whole affair.  She thanked me graciously
for my gallantry; I gave her the billet I had received, and she returned
my handkerchief.  The mistake arose from my having lain, that night, in
the chamber ordinarily occupied by this young lady, her bed having been
removed to that of her father, and on that account was unable, as usual,
to answer her gallant.  She made me the confidant of her attachment, and
besought my good offices with her father, which I so zealously used, that
in less than a month, I assisted at the marriage of these lovers.

Those who interpret dreams, say, that the one I had concerning hell,
hardly presaged this adventure.  I pray those who read my reveries, or
nocturnal visions, to consider that they contain more truth, than one
would be apt, at first, to imagine: by day they ought to occupy
themselves with thoughts upon hell, as intently as they would in the most
important affair; or as they would seek the means of deliverance, if shut
up in prison, for a crime against the state.  One is damned for a less
offence than the robbery of the treasury, revolt, or parricide.  Yes, for
a much slighter fault, one shall be eternally tormented in hell.—Reflect
often upon this, dear readers, lest you have it to say, through the
interminable ages of futurity, “_I could not have thought it_.”



SEVENTH NIGHT.
THE REFORMATION OF HELL.


AS I promenaded one day in my garden, thinking of demons, which are
always at the back of every one, the foolish idea struck me, that it
would not be wholly useless to reform my life.  I felt a curiosity to see
my evil demon; but, thought I to myself, if I should see him I believe I
should die with fear.  No, said I again, I should not be terrified, if he
would but show himself in a human shape.  After having repressed this
improper curiosity, and resumed my composure, I heard a man speaking to
me; and turning my eyes to that side from whence the voice proceeded, I
perceived, through a grated door, which separated the garden from the
park, on the other side, a gentleman of a good mien, who requested me to
open the gate, as he wished to have some conversation with me.  As he
resembled a man with whom I had formerly some misunderstanding, I
refused; but he passed over it before I had the power to prevent him.
Immediately drawing my sword, I set upon him; and he doing the same,
parried my thrusts and stood upon the defensive only.  As I perceived
that his figure at one moment contracted, and anon dilated to a huge
magnitude, I began to suspect that he was either a magician or a demon;
and stepping rearward some paces, demanded who he was.  He answered that
he was my demon, and wished to render me a service.

“I have no need of such service,” said I to him; “for demons are both
deceptive and malicious.”

“No, no,” replied he; “fear nothing; only come with me.”

Forthwith he transported me into the air, and I soon lost sight of my
house and garden.  In a short time we drew near the moon; and while
passing, I gazed attentively upon those valleys, mountains, and lakes,
which are but imperfectly perceived from the earth by the aid of
telescopes.  The demon transported me to Sicily and set me down upon the
summit of a mountain covered with cinders yet hot, which he told me was
Etna.  There was, from this place, a very fine prospect; one sees all the
beauties of the isle, and of the surrounding seas: in the distance, the
highlands of Africa are distinguished, like fleecy clouds, upon the verge
of the horizon; a multitude of vessels were sailing in view, which seemed
like white ants, or flies, sporting upon the surface of the ocean.  After
we had rested there about one hour, the demon told me to follow him.  We
descended into an aperture from whence belched forth smoke and flame that
illumined the whole mountain.

“It is here,” said the demon, “that Pliny fell, when he had the temerity
to approach too near.”

The whole way, as we proceeded, was composed of rocks and fat earth, like
bitumen, and from time to time, might be seen veins of sulphur.  The
rocks were full of little crevices, from whence issued vapours and
sulphurous exhalations, and sometimes slight gusts of wind.  When we had
travelled downwards about the space of an hour, we came to a vast cavern,
into which we entered; at its extremity was an immense palace, hewn in
the rock, and elevated upon massive pillars.

“This,” said the demon, “is the palace of Lucifer.  Let us enter into the
great hall, where we shall see him give a general audience to the damned:
listen attentively to what shall be said; examine the events that take
place, and let what you shall see serve for your instruction.”

The following is a correct account of what I saw in these subterraneous
abodes.—For a long time, Lucifer, the ruler of hell had not given
audience to his subjects: the disorder that ordinarily obtain in states
from the negligence of princes, are incidental as well among demons as
men.  The evil spirits remained sometimes for ages in the world, without
rendering any account of the souls they had gained, and often suffered
themselves to be driven from the tenements of which they were masters;
the address of some monk or priest snatching from them their conquest.
Men performed in hell the office of demons; and as they frequently left
their chains to seek their enemies, battles were as common, as formerly
between the Romans and Gauls.  Lucifer, either from a fear for his crown,
or weariness at seeing so many combats, resolved one day to hear, in
general convention, the complaints of the damned; to introduce a reform
among the demons; to re-establish the submission and obedience due to his
sceptre, and to extend the boundaries of his empire by new conquests:
this was very easy of execution, provided he would give access and free
parlance to his subjects, and compel his demons to render an exact
account of their administrations.  With this design he secretly consulted
with Belzebub, the prince of devils, Belial, the governor-general of
Pagan nations, and Ashtaroth, the princess who commands all women.  At
the termination of this council, circular letters were published, which
ordained that all those who had complaints to prefer, and all the demons
scattered over the world, should assemble upon an appointed day in the
great hall of the palace, when and where they should be heard.

The day fixed being arrived, the hall was presently filled, and measures
taken, that as soon as one party was heard, another should enter.
Lucifer was seated upon his golden throne, having upon each side those
princes I have before mentioned.  After having inveighed against the
disorders prevalent in hell, and stated his determination to rectify
them, he signified his permission to the standers by to speak.  At this
intimation there arose an old man of a haughty appearance, and having a
crown of laurel upon his head; he read the Roman laws touching
parricides, and amplified upon the ingratitude of natural and adopted
children towards their parents.

“The parties,” said Belzebub to Lucifer, “must be ordered, before
commencing their speeches, to announce their names, because many of them
have been dead a great length of time.”

Such a decree was accordingly made; and he who had now spoken about half
an hour, said that he was Julius Cæsar, the first emperor of the Romans.
“Under the pretext of the liberty of our common country,” continued he,
“Brutus and Cassius, to gratify their ambition, assassinated me in the
midst of the senate, their enmity was not directed against the empire and
monarchy, which were, on the contrary, the object of their desires; but
they hated the emperor, who had magnified the Roman power, and extended
its dominion both north and east.  Was the government better administered
in the hands of those senators, who, by their feuds and personal
dislikes, perilled the salvation of the republic, by resigning it into
the hands of a perpetual dictation, whom they were obliged shortly
afterwards to elect?  Rome having once tasted the benefits of monarchy,
preferred rather to obey a Nero, a Tiberius, a Caligula, or a
Heliogabulus, than to re-establish this pretended public liberty, for
which Brutus and Cassius, those two traitors, took up arms against the
father of their country.”

He continued his discourse in this strain, and concluded by moving, that
they should be treated in hell as assassins, public disturbers, and
traitors.

Brutus then arose, and with a trembling voice, said: “Senators, you have
heard Cæsar; have you not been biassed by his eloquence?  But will you
forget the services I have rendered?  Remember the advice you privately
gave me, to encourage the glorious design I had conceived in favour of
your liberty?  Answer then to Cæsar, that it was by your advice I gave
the fatal stab; that if the laws had not been abrogated and violated by
the formidable power of tyranny, you would, yourselves, have put him to
death under the forms of justice; and that your silence, after the
execution of my project, was an evidence of your approbation.”

Cassius, assuming the discourse, said he would not undertake to plead his
own cause if Cicero was present.

“I will not,” said Cæsar, “listen to this timid sycophant; this cowardly
soul; this selfish orator: when he feared my power, he said, in full
senate, that he would be my buckler against enemies, and, at the same
time, conspired against my life, and defends the act of Brutus and
Cassius.  His cupidity was so eager, that for money, he might be bought
on the same day to speak upon both sides of a case; and so sober-tongued,
that there was not a soldier in the army, who would have bestowed upon
his greatest foe one tittle of the scurrility he heaped upon Anthony.
You recollect, Signors, his phillipics: he had not the courage to support
a change of fortune; and the common cause was abandoned by this patriotic
man before he was slain by Anthony.”

“May all such wretches be ever punished in the same manner! and with what
can they reproach me?  Did I put any senator to death?  Did I pillage the
commonwealth?  Did I not return, by my will, what I had amassed and
conserved for her defence?  Will they accuse me of tyranny and
usurpation?  I, who delivered the Romans from the ambition of a Pompey?
Will they charge me with cruelty?  I, who could not behold without
weeping the head of my most inveterate enemy?  Yes, I can truly say, that
it was grief at the sad fate of Pompey, that invited me to declare war
against Egypt.  I was desirous of avenging the death of this great man.
He would have made himself master of Rome if I had not prevented him; and
because I stood forth as the defender of the public liberty, was
assassinated as a usurper.  What wickedness!  What perfidy!  What
cruelty!  The senate recognized every thing I had done, when, after my
death, they erected statues, and built me temples.  Infernal judge, will
you bear with these impious men, who killed him whom the empire delighted
to honour?”

Cicero would have spoken, fearing the eloquence of Cæsar, or his
vehemency, would impose upon the judges; but Cæsar constantly
interrupting him, Lucifer, tired with their clamours and the length of
the cause, ordered that the emperor, as a punishment for not having
profited by the advice he received on his way to the senate, upon the day
of his death, should remain in his present place.

“It was I,” said Cicero, “who caused this information to be sent him.”

“Base liar! perfidious man!” cried Cæsar, “it was you who gave me this
information! why did you not bring it yourself?”

“It was the will of Fate, that Brutus, Cassius, and other senators,
involved in this conspiracy, should be marks for infamy, as traitors to
their country, and as having afforded a direful example of politicians
without courage.”

After him arose Alexander the Great, very much vexed that Cæsar had
spoken before him, and pretending that the cause of this Roman emperor
should not be considered before that of the emperor of the world; but he
abandoned his pretensions, when a crier had made proclamation, that in
hell, all conditions were equal, and that the damned had among them, no
other distinctions than those of crime.

“Infamous prince,” said Clytus, who stood behind Alexander, “dare you
speak, after having murdered the best of your friends?  Is not the
brightness of thy conquests tarnished by the shame of thy cruelty?  What
punishment dost thou merit, for having despoiled princes so distant from
Macedon, who, so far from having wronged or injured you, did not even
know you?”

“Silence,” said Alexander.

“What! I be silent! if Lucifer, the chief of this empire, imposes silence
upon me, I will obey: but shall I yet receive orders from you, cruel
brigand, notorious robber, sacrilegious rascal, debauchee, fool,
drunkard, incendiary?”

“No, no: speak, son of Olympias,” said Lucifer to Alexander.

He began thus: “Alexander, son of Jupiter Amnion, lord of the world, most
high and mighty emperor, conqueror of the habitable globe—”

Clytus laughed at the boasts: “what a lord! what an emperor! what a god!
Behold the titles which I dispute.  In the first place, his mother was a
virtuous woman.  She but mocked her son, who, through pride, accused her
with having committed adultery with Jupiter Amnion.  Secondly, he was not
lord of the world; since he did not conquer the tenth part of it: and
thirdly, it is false that he is a great emperor; for an emperor is only
ennobled by heroic virtues and qualities, which he did not possess.  And
how is it possible that he should be the conqueror of the habitable
globe, having never been neither to Africa, nor very far in Europe, nor
to China?  Thus he is only Alexander, as I am Clytus.”

Here Lucifer passed an order that this prince should only assume the
titles that veritably pertained to him, and permitted Clytus to continue.

“I was,” said Clytus, “the prime favourite of this Alexander, who,
wishing to conquer every body, had no enemy nearer and more powerful than
himself.  Contemplate our portraits: I was his favourite, and I have
always seen him as ambitious of distinction in wickedness as he was for
honourable action: but as a foundation to my complaints against him, I
ought to state, that this prince, elevated by his flatterers to a place
among the gods, was accustomed to speak without respect of Philip his
father.  He showed himself more munificent towards gladiators, musicians,
and drunkards, than towards his bravest captains.  In conformity to this
disposition, he gave the kingdom of Sidon to Abdolonymus, a well-digger;
he committed numberless extravagances at the instigation of his
mistresses; to please a courtesan named Roxana, he burnt the palace of
the Persian kings; his conduct towards Parmenio, Philotas, and
Calisthenes, as well as Aminthus, his relation, is sufficient proof of
his barbarity.  And did he not exhibit more than cruelty towards me?  I
was the most faithful of his confidants; he who flattered him the least;
who gave him the best of counsel; to whom he owed his reputation and
honour.  Alas! because I had the presumption to speak my true sentiments
at a feast, he arose from the table and inflicted upon me a mortal wound.
I now demand expiation.  King of hell, revenge Clytus, punish Alexander.”

This prince then replied as follows:—“Favourites bear the same relation
to sovereigns as mice to cats.”

At this exordium Clytus began to laugh, and said: “Listen to a comparison
worthy of the disciple of Aristotle.”

“The mouse,” continued Alexander, “seems at first to divert itself with
the cat; but finally this animal, being more powerful, devours the mouse,
who cannot accuse her with cruelty for wishing to take her turn in the
sport.  Such, about me, was the condition of Clytus: but to demonstrate
the mistake of this ungrateful favourite, I aver, that it is the policy
of princes to keep favourites, who are towards them neither forward nor
haughty; and not to accord them too much power.  The liberties they take
with us cause us to fall into contempt; their hauteur makes us appear
timid, and their power fills us with just suspicions.  Clytus having thus
taken advantage of me, I was frequently ashamed of his familiarities.
Such was his pride, that if I dared to contradict him in the least thing,
he reared up like an unruly horse: my bounty had rendered him so
powerful, that he was in fact Alexander, and I was but Clytus.  In
particular, he abused my mistresses, and the officers of my house; in
counsel he was always right and I wrong; in every battle, it was he that
was victorious, and I who had been slack and timid.  If I put some to
death, it was but consonant with justice, to punish the seditious or
conspiring; if I burnt the palace of the kings of Persia, it was for the
purpose of destroying a fortress that had been used against me; if the
pleasures that were indulged in after my conquests were sometimes too
free, it arose from a desire to gratify my generals; in fine, the death
of Clytus crushed those treasonous designs of which I had notice.  He
only waited for an opportunity to set one part of my army against the
other, and to despatch me.  I sang at a feast the songs my soldiers had
composed upon their officers and myself; I rallied Clytus for having, in
a certain action, taken to flight: this madman let loose his rage upon
me; he loaded me with contumely; the wine he had drank deprived him of
reason: I thought it was time to punish his audacity, and to prevent the
excesses to which it might carry him.  Thus perished an usurping,
traitorous, insolent and unworthy favourite.  Lucifer, I have spoken the
truth.”

After having heard the parties, the king said to his demons, “Take notice
how proper it is that a subject should be faithful and submissive to his
prince; and that a favourite should not go beyond the respect he owes to
his sovereign.  _We do order_ that as long as Alexander shall be
tormented by his ambition, Clytus shall experience all the remorse that
springs from rashness and ingratitude.”

At the same moment was heard the voice of Seneca, speaking to Nero:
“Cruel prince, how have you profited by the lessons of clemency,
goodness, and humanity I have given you?  Did you not murder me to
repossess yourself of the wealth I had received from you?  Such was my
recompense for having raised you to empire.  Was it not I who saved you
from the conspiracy formed by Piso, after you had set fire to all
quarters of Rome?  Was it not I who delivered you from the snares which
had been spread for you by the friends of your mother Agrippina, whom you
afterwards put to death?  I was more careful of your reputation than
yourself, when I advised you not to exhibit yourself as a comedian upon
the theatre; when you entered the lists to dispute the prize of poetry
with Lucan, whom you afterwards assassinated.”

“Old fool,” said Nero, in a slender voice, “thou wert become unworthy of
my favours by thy excessive ambition, and by the dishonour you brought
upon my palace.  Great Lucifer, you see a man who, being my preceptor,
did not profit by his own theory.  He maintained a shameful commerce with
my mother; and with a view to favour it, poisoned the Emperor Claudius,
my father, who did not commit suicide, as was the prevalent opinion at
Rome.  The partiality of my mother filled him with such audacity, that he
projected mounting the throne, and having me poisoned.  I was informed of
the intrigue, which I suspected before having received positive advice.
I observed that his immense wealth had obtained him very many friends
among the senators, gentlemen, and officers of the army; and it is worth
while, also, to know, that this man who preached so much about frugality,
and the love of mediocrity, was far from practising these virtues, which
are easily reported of a man possessing twelve millions of revenue.
After having punished the tyranny and usurpation of my mother, I was
bound to punish the crimes of Seneca; but I was yet lenient enough to
leave the manner of his death to his own choice.”

“The subjects and favourites of princes,” said Lucifer, “are always
culpable, when they are ungrateful, or entertain any other desire than
the prosperity of their masters: they ought to leave to them the
recompense of their services, without attempting to reward themselves.
_We will_, then, that the philosopher, Seneca, born in Spain, should be
punished as if he had compassed his designs upon Nero: and that Nero be
treated as an unjust and barbarous prince.”

“This ordinance,” said Sejanus, “does not concern me: Tiberius caused me
to be assassinated without reason, actuated by one of those suspicions to
which he was usually addicted.  He was troubled more by a fear of losing
his life, than the empire.  His courtezans had too much influence over
him.  As to myself, I have never punished any but the enemies of
Tiberius: to be sure, they were also mine.  But were not, in truth, the
opposers of a minister who governed as well as I did, foes to their
prince and country?”

Tiberius would have answered; but Lucifer, interrupting him, ordered that
all the favourites of princes should come in.  There appeared a vast
number, among them Plautius, the favourite of Severus, was particularly
remarkable: also Faustus, the favourite of Phyrrhus, king of Epirus;
Pyreneus and Cleandrus, favourites of the emperor Commodus; Cincinnatus,
favourite of Britulus; Rufus, favourite of Domitian; Ampronisius,
favourite of Adrian; Belisarius, favourite of Justinian.

“Listen,” said Lucifer; “the favour of princes is like quick-silver, the
motion of which cannot be arrested, and which flies the endeavour to
restrain it.  If one would sublimate it, it is a vapour that exhales
itself; and often, if too much is used, it becomes dangerous.  If one
anoints with it, it penetrates to the very bones: those who are
accustomed to draw it from the mine, and purify it, contract a malady
which makes them tremble all their lives.  This is the character of
princes’ favour: it is inconstant, because it depends upon the humour and
passion of one who seeks only novelty and the pleasure of the moment.  If
you are importunate, if you exhibit the least sign of impatience, if you
are even suspected of prudence in the management of your credit or
fortune, the attachment of the prince will cool.  If you show any marks
of envy against another, of discontent in yourself, or indifference in
the presence of your protector, he suspects you, and passes straightway
from suspicion to enmity and hatred.  Bear then with resignation your bad
fortune and the humour of your master: your pains, attentions, time,
health, wealth all lost, you are at length obliged to return into your
humble retreat, there to expect death; which, to your grief, comes not
soon enough to free you from regret and the remembrance of your follies.
A casual sally, an instant of good humor, a lucky word, a sudden caprice,
a nothing, makes a favourite.  Five or six years suffice for his fortune;
if delayed, it escapes him.  The same causes can bestow or withdraw
favour.  A favourite ought to make these reflections in his
prosperity,—that he must abstain from those liberties that are common
among equals, and that freedom which friends indulge in; that he must be
constantly submissive, and know how to accompany respect with
complaisance; that the prince ought always to speak the first word in a
confidential affair; and to preserve his secrets, he must dispose himself
to every kind of privation.  He who hath not regulated his conduct by
these precepts must bear the burden of his own imprudence; and for this
reason _we order_ that those favourites who have incurred the displeasure
of their sovereigns shall be punished as unfaithful subjects.”

Lucifer then commanded an old man to advance, whom he perceived in the
hall behind the others.  There advanced then a man of a pleasant
countenance, in a Greek habit, and followed by other persons clothed in
the same manner.

“I am Solon,” said this old man: “I gave to the Athenians laws which they
did not exactly follow; this person contiguous to me is the philosopher
Anaxarchus, whom the tyrant Nicocreon caused to be brayed in a mortar: in
this little hump-back, behold the famous Aristotle, preceptor to the
great Alexander: his philosophy excused the disciple from practising the
morality he taught.  This academician is Socrates, whom his fellow
citizens put to death with a cup of hemlock.  This old man is the divine
Plato, who, spite of the sublimity of his doctrine, sold oil for the
defrayment of his expenses.  All the rest are men of letters, who, like
ourselves, have excited the envy, and experienced the vengeance of the
princes, Archons and Tyrants, of Athens; and it is now upon these tyrants
we unitedly demand vengeance.”

Then Denis, the tyrant, accompanied by some other princes, presented
themselves and spoke in this manner:—“Of whom do these old dotards
complain?  Infatuated by their conceits, they pretended to dictate law to
the whole world!  In fact they had so imbued the people with their dogmas
and their customs, that when we wished to make some changes, they excited
sedition.  They had so much pride and presumption, that they arrogated to
themselves alone the possession of common sense and reason; while in
truth they were distinguished but for opinions founded upon vain
subtleties, and by a language not common and familiar to men:—and now I
should like to ask them what certain knowledge they had; what was their
idea upon the nature of the soul? and what constituted the reason and
equity of their laws?”

“I will add to that,” said Julian, the apostate, “that there are pedants,
who, under the affectation of austerity, concealed the most extreme
ambition.  Do they complain of the contempt that was shown them, when
their manner of living exposed them to it?  Will they speak of their
poverty, who would not labour for a living?  The people of letters
deceive themselves if they believe that princes and the public ought to
enrich them for vain and useless sciences.  Should they not make their
calculation for that, when, idle in their cabinets, they amuse themselves
in contemplating the figures and number of the stars, which they apply,
to find fault with the common prejudices of our ancestors?”

“At least,” observed Cato of Utica, “you cannot make those remarks with
regard to Cicero, or myself, who have exercised the highest magistracies
of Rome.”

“Old fox,” answered Julian, “I cannot, it is true, say so of you two; for
if you were attached to letters, you were still more so to your fortunes.
And of whom can you complain, you who accelerated your own death?  Did
you not hope to gain an easy immortality in thus quitting your
terrestrial abode?  It was to arrive at this, that you did not wish to
survive the pretended misfortunes of your country.  Fine courage that, of
a man who kills himself to escape fighting with his enemies!  Would you
not have done better to have preserved yourselves for the defence of
Rome, its liberty, and your goods?”

“I recommend you,” said Cato, “to the Antiochians: they will tell the
truth of you better than I can: they know you; they are fully acquainted
with your pusillanimity, your vices, but, above all, with your vanity,
which surpasses your knowledge and eloquence.  Look at this great
emperor, who, to punish Antioch, quits the sword, assumes the pen, and
is, after all, nothing but an ignoramus.”

“I am called Suetonius,” said he, who presented himself next.

“Yes, this is Suetonius,” said the emperor Domitian, who was at his side;
“this is that notorious forger, and compiler of histories and chronicles,
who, after the example of other historians, being a partisan and a
flatterer, speaks the truth from caprice, and lies from inclination.”

“I!” said Suetonius; “I have said nothing that I cannot prove by
indubitable evidence.  Is it not true, that upon the testimony of vile
informers, you have taken from the living, the estates of the dead who
were accused?  Is it not true that you have levied upon your subjects
tributes so enormous, that they were forced to claim protection from a
foreign power?  Is it not true that you have despoiled the Jews of their
goods only because they were born Jews?  Is it then a crime to have been
circumcised at birth and not to adore the gods of the Roman empire?  Is
it not true that by your excessive expenses for theatres, and buildings,
you have exhausted the purses of the Romans, and left to perish with
hunger the bravest soldiers of the army?  To escape the consequences of a
sedition, you committed horrible pillages, and thus paid your debts.
Your pride and impiety are exhibited in these few words, extracted from
one of your declarations: ‘_Your Lord_, _your God_,’ commands thus.”

“What signifies that?” said Domitian: “Are not the emperors gods as well
during their lives as after their death?  Were not Augustus and Cæsar
adored in the empire?  I was as much a god at the time I willed it, as my
predecessors have been gods after their death.  The divinity of men is
nothing but a power superior to that of others, as the present divinity
of Augustus is but a perfection above the virtues and qualities of living
men.  But who, among men of sense, has ever believed that the gods were
like men? or adored in the statue any thing more than the virtue of the
original?  Who ever believed that the number of gods was equal to their
names, their temples, or their statues?  No, no, Suetonius, you did not
believe all this, and it is from perfidiousness that you have accused me
of impiety for being called a god.”

“And your unjust vexations,” replied Suetonius.

“As it regards that,” said the emperor, “subjects who cannot penetrate
the designs of their sovereigns always consider the tributes imposed upon
them as unjust; but if enemies were about to inundate the kingdom; if the
empire was menaced with approaching ruin; if there was danger of the
pillage and sack of frontier cities, would not the prince have reason to
take measures for the prevention of these disasters by a heavier levy,
and a stronger assemblage of troops?  If I had apprized the Romans of
these things, which I had learned by my spies, they would have been more
likely to have risen against myself, than against the common enemy: so
powerful is the voice of interest with the multitude!”

Here Lucifer interrupted the emperor and ordered all the historians,
historiographers, authors of journals, of memoirs and chronicles, to
advance, to listen to their sentence.  “It is,” said he, “for the public
interest, that mendacity should be punished in writers, as in those who
speak falsely; but it is of equal interest that writers should be
permitted to speak the truth, without flattery and without fear, to the
end, that men by reading the history of their ancestors, may learn to
become good, and detest the conduct of the unjust.  Although it is crime
that brings us subjects, _we wish_, nevertheless, that it should be
punished in our empire; and it is that which constitutes the justice of
the torments they feel.  A prince flatters himself in vain with a fine
and secret policy, if his subjects are rendered unhappy by the rules he
has prescribed for their conduct; whatever colour he may take to cover
his actions, and make them appear just, if they are not so in effect,
which the event proves, he expects in vain the approbation, the esteem
and love of his subjects.  The writer who undertakes a history ought to
divest himself of the sentiments of both love and hatred; he ought to
have no partiality for country, relations or friends; he is the sole
judge of the affairs of which he treats, and the master of princes when
he describes their actions.  Accordingly, _we ordain_, that Domitian and
the other princes shall submit to the judgments of their historians; that
the historians shall be punished for flatteries and lies; for the
examination of which, we order them before the tribunals of conscience,
to whom we delegate plenary authority for the decision of their cases;
and as a judgment upon the geometricians, geographers, astronomers, and
mathematicians, we condemn the one party to measure by minutes, seconds,
and lines, the dimensions of all the provinces, kingdoms, and empires of
the earth; and the others to be shut up in the planets upon which they
have pretended to make observations, to the end that they may be
instructed by their experience.  Furthermore we decree, that afterwards,
the aforesaid geometricians, geographers, astronomers, and
mathematicians, to be there punished for their foolish and rash
opinions.”

The audience having now lasted a considerable time, Lucifer commanded
something to eat to be brought into the middle of the hall.  Forthwith
there appeared a vast number of chirurgians, cooks of hell, with an
almost equal number of apothecaries, having the title of confectioners to
the devil.  They set forth a great table of gold, upon which they placed
a vast quantity of silver plate: they informed me that this table and
plate had been fabricated with the gold and silver stolen, and afterwards
sold to the goldsmiths.  I have never any where seen such a quantity of
linen: it proceeded from the thefts committed by linen dealers and washer
women; for all that is stolen upon earth, goes into hell after the second
or third generation of thieves.  They served for the first course a heap
of tailors roasted upon the spit.  Lucifer is very fond of this meal; and
the expression, “_may the devil swallow me_,” which the tailors often
use, is not inappropriate; for he does swallow many; and the demons, his
table companions, do the same: the subjects always having tastes similar
to those of their masters, be they good or bad.  I inquired of one of the
demons, why his infernal majesty devoured more tailors than cooks,
sausage makers, butchers, peruquiers, in short, people of other trades.

“It is,” said he, “for a very politic reason; for otherwise he would soon
want subjects of any other description; those of other trades are by far
the least in number, while the others are so plenty, that if we could eat
them all in one day, the morrow would supply as many more: they arrive
continually, in one eternal troop.  Sometimes in beholding them afar off,
we imagine them to be entire armies, coming to besiege us: this trade is
more useful in hell, than you would be apt to think: we send among the
tailors, young devils without experience: their shops are so many
academies for our youth.  If you had nice eyes, you might perceive more
than fifty young demons in each tailor shop; some cut the cloth; others
the list; these take away the superfluous pieces; those put them in the
place they call the _street_; while some do nothing but open and shut the
place they call the _eye_.  Some carry the cabbaged pieces to sell;
others make complete suits out of the patterns cut from the cloth; in
fine, there are many about the women, girls, and valets of the tailor, to
assist them in stealing the cloth, or stretching the binding.  When these
young devils have finished their diabolical apprenticeship, they are sent
to the merchants.  In that station they abridge all the measures, and
sometimes throw themselves into the scale, among the merchandise, to make
it weigh more: if you could see all their tricks, you would be highly
amused.”

When this course was removed from the table, they served another of
tailors, roasted upon the gridiron: after that, others, baked in pates,
smothered in a pot, fried in a pan, and dressed in a hundred different
ways, with this only difference, that those of each nation had a
particular dressing.  The French tailors were spitted; the English,
grilled; the Holland, fried; the Germans, smothered in a pot; the
Italians, made into ragout; the Spanish, boiled, because they are
ordinarily hard; the Polonese, in pates; the Hungarians, salad; the
Turks, cooked in rice; the Greeks, in wine; the Arabians, dried in the
sun; the Egyptians, with onion sauce; the Algerines, fried in lard; the
Portuguese, preserved in sugar; the Danish, Swedish, and Muscovite, were
almost all dressed in the same manner; that is to say, baked in brandy;
the Tartar, boiled in horse grease; the Persian, fricaseed with gravy _de
demon_; the Indians, baked in bananas; the Chinese, and all the
islanders, were very much seasoned with spices and sugar; the Ethiopians,
negroes of Fez, Morocco, and Guinea, were baked in black butter; and the
Americans, in milk.

“What an immense quantity of tailors,” said I to the demon who was near
me; “your cooks must understand their business, to be able to compound so
many dishes of viands, which differ no more the one from the other, than
the bullocks of Spain from those of Ireland.”

They served to Lucifer wine of the various publicans of the world.
“Fie!” said I to the demon; “your master is hardly a connoisseur of
wine.”

“You are mistaken,” said he; “it is true, that this wine has been mixed
with water, sugar, and spices; but the publicans are obliged to separate
all these drugs, even the water which they ordinarily put in, from the
rest, which remains pure, fair and clear; if the publicans did not do
this, they would put them in the press, and draw from their veins all the
wine they had themselves drank.”

“How!” said I, “do you live upon nothing but human flesh?”

“How should we live else?” answered he.  “Can we eat beef, mutton,
partridges, fish, and beans?  These animals come not hither, but in
smoke; and herbs will not grow in a place so hot.”

“How can you say that animals come here in smoke?”

“It is those the idolaters sacrifice to the prince of demons: this smoke
penetrates even to this place, and is the only perfume agreeable to our
sovereign; for as to the scented oils, powders, and pomatums, of which
the men and women of the other life make use, Lucifer is so incommoded,
that those who are thus scented, dare not approach his apartment.”

“Egad!” said I, “Lucifer has then a smell keener than that of a hound.”

“Yes: he has so fine a scent, that he instantly knows whether a girl has
been cautious or not; whether she has been married, or not, and the exact
number of times: and the other day there came here a _menette_, who made
a profession of _menettisme_, wearing the habits, air, _et cetera_: she
wanted to make every thing appear smooth, saying, that she had been sent
here for having administered to herself the discipline, contrary to the
direction of her directors: but the prince approaching her, perceived,
and said immediately, that this habit, modest as it was, covered much
indevotion, sacrilege, gallantry, and falsehood.  The young girl retired
abashed; she had not imagined that any person could discover, under the
exterior of such simplicity, what she had been guilty of, during her
life; you see Lucifer has an exquisite nose.”

“If he has,” said I, “the other senses in a similar perfection, he well
merits the commandery of hell.”

In the mean time, Lucifer, and the other lords, invited to his table,
continued to eat with good appetite: besides the individuals of his
council, there were a great number whom I heard designated by the names
given to the gods of fable, such as Jupiter, Saturn, Apollo, Mercury: and
to goddesses, such as Juno, Venus, Diana, Proserpina, and others; I
should think there were at least fifty persons at table.  These gods and
goddesses were men and women, like the others; and in reflecting upon
that circumstance, I thought they were princesses and princes, whom the
people had put in the place of gods.  But these ignorant people deceive
themselves; for their gods, instead of being in heaven, are in hell.  The
same thing often happens in the world; a particular person is looked upon
as a man of honour, who is, in fact, worse than one whom they consider
the most knavish; another as a good man, who, in truth, is one of the
worst; they frequently speak of one as happy after death, whose lot, if
they did but know it, is quite the contrary: this is the sentiment of
saint Pere, who said, “they peopled heaven with the inhabitants of hell.”
The dessert served up to this great demon, was very pleasant to behold:
it consisted of hypocrites, bigots, and apostate monks, all preserved in
sugar: in the middle of it was a country seat in sugar: one could
perceive the chateau, with its fosses, garden, park, wood, closes,
vineyards, fish-ponds, fountains, jets of water, mill, stables, and
farms; the whole being executed in the most perfect symmetry of
architecture.

The demon observing my surprise, told me, the devil usually devoured
goods unjustly acquired: “have you not,” said he, “heard it remarked,
that property illy gotten, failed not _to go to the devil_?  It comes to
us; for be it known to you, that what is lost in the world, falls down
here.  You can find in our magazines things of every description: the
entire shops of merchants, stores of grain and wine, tons of silver, an
arsenal filled with arms, cabinets of jewellery and precious stones,
tablets covered with antique medals, a kind of pantheon, filled with
idols of gold, silver, and bronze, which you have no doubt seen at the
houses of antiquaries: for the fruits of larcenies, spunging, and usury,
always come straight to us.”

After the desert, the Jews and Turks brought coffee, tea, chocolate,
tobacco, aqua vitæ, liquors, and opium.  The lords drank of all, and
Jupiter partook so freely of tobacco and brandy, that he became quite
elevated: he began to sing a song in the Greek language, the substance of
which was: “What a charming spectacle for the mighty Lucifer! the dead
dispersed throughout this cavern, are to him delicious meats.  Subtle
Love, and you gods of combat, theft, and drunkenness, contribute to
content the taste and desires of our sovereign.  So long as one remains
in Tartarus, he must not hope for any other pleasure; we must not think
of objects to be procured in other places.”—While Jupiter repeated this
song, Juno accompanied him, saying: “So long as one regains in Tartarus,
he must not hope for any other pleasure.  Lovers, you enhance our joy,
for death hath separated you for ever.”—In imitation of Jupiter and Juno,
Mercury and Mars sang thus: “Yes, while one remains in Tartarus, he
cannot hope for other pleasures.  The money which was our love, is lost
for ever: we love it still, but despairing of enjoyment.”—Mars, with a
voice of thunder, sang.  “Yes, when one is in Tartarus, he must not hope
for other pleasures.  War, which was our delight, is no more for us, but
a vain flourish: here one hears neither fife nor drum.”

After this little concert, which amused Lucifer, he made them call the
players upon instruments, who joined the gods and goddesses.  There was
then heard the most frightful music: with the sound of violins and other
instruments, which were played upon by those who had been musicians in
the other world, there mingled a horrid noise of thunder, and raging
wind, such as it produces when it rushes through a straight street, or
groans, amid a wood of firs.  This noise was succeeded by another, like
that which is heard at the eruption of Mount Vesuvius or Etna: my ear was
struck with a bellowing, like that of the sea, when agitated by a furious
tempest.  All these agents yielded to a choir of voices, that issued from
the lowest depths: there was heard nothing but complaints, groans, cries,
and howlings, similar to those of dogs, impatient of confinement.  I
should have expired with fear, if I had not been previously warned, that
this was the music which would divert the prince of hell.  Jupiter and
Mars, in spite of their intrepidity, found this music so disagreeable,
that they ceased singing, and signified their uneasiness to Lucifer.
They then removed the table, and the service of plate; and the audience
having been resumed, they began to call up cases of different states; and
after having disposed of those pertaining to the people of justice, the
sword, and the church, they cited the women of all conditions.  The
beautiful Helen then appeared, who complained that at her return from the
siege of Troy, she had been condemned to be hung by Polixo, her relation,
at whose house, in the isle of Rhodes, she had taken refuge, Nisistratus
and Megapontus having driven her from Greece.  She was asked if she had
consented to be abducted by Paris; if she had accorded him the last
favours before leaving Peloponessus; if she had granted the same to the
king of Egypt, when his vessel touched at her country.  She answered
ingenuously to these questions, that having been married by policy and
force, to prince Menelaus, she had acquainted him that she did not love
him.

“Did you love,” said Lucifer, “the Trojan prince before marriage?”

“I had not then seen him; but my heart was never for Menclaus; it was
free when Paris came to Argos, and its first impression was in favour of
this stranger prince.  Am I culpable for all the evils caused by the
siege of Troy?  Furthermore, the Greeks ought not to complain of this
abduction, as a breach of hospitality: some years before, they had taken
away a Trojan lady; and in ancient times, had not Jupiter, of Grecian
origin, stolen Europa, a young princess of Asia, from this part of the
world, inhabited by Trojans?”

Menelaus spoke after his wife, whose ingratitude and infidelity he
exaggerated; he accused her of having poisoned him on the return from
Troy.  “Why assassinate me, when she had the liberty to go to her
relations?  Could I have done more to express my regret at her loss,
after her elopement, than by building to her memory a temple, consecrated
to Venus?”

“You are a very clever man,” said Jupiter to Menelaus; “who told you that
a husband could make his wife love him by caresses and services?  A woman
who does not love her husband, takes all his cares for stratagems,
invented by jealousy: she believes him false and wicked.  Accuse only
your patience and weakness; and between ourselves who are dead, since the
living cannot hear it, it is a very good joke, to make so much noise
about the infidelity of a coquette:” and Jupiter sang a song, the burden
of which was, that one was often very happy to be rid of his wife, as he
then could enjoy the advantages of liberty.

“Am I permitted to be as stoical as you are?” said Menelaus.  “One must
have a great force of spirit, to vanquish a passion like that of love:
how cruel, to love without return!  Ah! I now condemn myself: let Helen
prosecute her quarrel with her relation Polixo, to which I am a
stranger.”

“Since this Grecian prince is voluntarily condemned,” said Lucifer, “I am
about to pass sentence upon the husbands who have complained of their
wives; and upon the wives who have complained of their husbands.”

The judgment was couched in these words: “Since love is natural, and no
one can dictate a woman’s will, and since neither the jealousy nor
severity of a husband are of any avail, to compel a wife to conjugal
fidelity, we order, that all husbands shall suffer the pain of foolish
and indiscreet love, without having from that any pretence to restrain
them; provided, however, that they may revenge themselves with chance
intrigues, and contribute, by their patience and complaisance, to the
ruin of their rivals.  We ordain, also, that women who complain of the
amours of their husbands, shall be condemned to the torments of jealousy;
with an equal permission to those ladies who are not beloved by their
husbands, to receive the cares and attentions of their neighbours.
Finally, we forbid the married of both sexes, to bring any more actions
upon these subjects, and reject them, in advance, from court.  We command
our demons, and principally Asmodeus, the demon of marriage, to bear in
hand the execution of the present ordinance.  Given in hell, at the grand
audience hall, to be signified to whom it may concern.—Signed, _Lucifer_,
king of hell: and countersigned by my lord, the devil _Patiras_.”

“Signor,” said Cleopatra, “this edict cannot prejudice my rights against
Augustus, emperor of the Romans: his ambition prompted him to attach to
his triumphal car the queen of the Egyptians: to save myself from this
shame, I laid violent hands upon myself.  I demand that Augustus should
be punished as guilty of my death.”

“Am I responsible for your actions?” said Augustus.  “Who informed you
that I should put this indignity upon you?  Cæsar had loved you; Pompey
also, as I believe: that Antony did, no one can doubt.  The reputation of
those charms by which you had subdued the conquerors of the world, had
made such an impression upon my heart, that I would not only have made
you its governor, but have re-established you upon the throne of your
ancestors; but the timidity so natural to your sex, pride, and
haughtiness, misled you: the poison you employed to produce death was so
subtle, that I could never discover its nature.”

“All! tyrant,” said Antony to Augustus, “you were not satisfied with
having at the same time caused my death and the loss of my empire; but
you must also effect the death of my spouse, whom I preferred to the
throne.”

“I deny that,” replied Augustus; “you abandoned the field of battle to
follow Cleopatra; yourself commanded a servant to give the blow of death,
to prevent falling into my hands; it was in conformity to your counsel
that Cleopatra killed herself; great Lucifer, I am innocent of these
things.”

“We ordain,” said Lucifer, “that both parties should be delivered to
their remorse of conscience; if they are not satisfied with this
judgment, let them present themselves before Astarte, sovereign of women,
to whom Venus and Pallas are associated, where their cases shall be more
amply examined.”

There came next a queen, accompanied by many women and girls, armed as
soldiers: this was said to be the foundress of the kingdom of the
Amazons.  To this troop, Zenobia, queen of Palmyra, Elizabeth, queen of
England, and other princesses who had governed their states, joined
themselves.  Amazonide, daughter of Samornas, (so they called the
foundress of this female monarchy,) complained against Hercules that he
had made some of her subjects captive: against Theseus, who had married
one, when their army was defeated in Greece; against Achilles, who had
put to death the princess Orythia, for having succoured the Trojans;
against Alexander the Great, because, not content with the favours he had
received from the queen Thalestris, he had put her kingdom under
contribution; against the Ephesians, who, for their ingratitude towards
the Amazons, who had founded their city, were themselves delivered to
other masters: and thus in the same manner against many other princes and
people.

“Illustrious women,” said Lucifer, “a sex so fragile as yours, a monarchy
so naturally given to tenderness, could not resist the force of men, nor
get away from an empire so sweet as that of love.  You have wished to act
contrary to your destiny: made to submit, you have desired to command;
but women cannot reign but by submissions to the laws of love; that
renders men completely amenable to the will of woman.  If men have done
you wrong, accuse your own hearts; they have done the injury of which you
complain.  A warrior, proud and gallant, is full of ardour for victory
when a fair Amazon is the price of conquest; and on the other hand an
Amazon fears to vanquish a young soldier whose amiable qualities have now
disarmed her.  So we re-commit to yourselves the examination of those
affairs you have brought to our tribunal: do yourselves the justice I
should do, if I examined the matter with more care, and let all women be
convinced, they have no greater enemies than their own hearts.”

Zenobia then took the stand, and said to Lucifer, that her heart had
never been master of her head: “I lost,” continued she, “my husband
Odenatus, for whom I had the purest attachment: although he left me
young, my subjects were willing to obey me.  During the thirty years of
my government, I can now say, that I maintained my sway with as much
mildness as wisdom.  When the thirty tyrants under Galienus divided the
empire, I took possession of a province in Syria, that had formerly been
separated, and united it to my kingdom.  Aurelian declared war against
me, and having taken me captive, led me in chains behind his triumphal
car.  In the endeavour to overcome the fidelity with which I preserved
the memory of my spouse, and which was my sole consolation for the loss
of my crown, he exiled me, under a specious pretext, into the Tybertine
country; but he could not vanquish my constancy.  Spite and rage seized
him; he put to death Herennianus and Timolaus, my two sons, whom I had
myself brought up; I had given them an excellent education, and had
taught them the Egyptian, Greek and Latin languages; it was for their
use, that I had compiled an abridgment of the oriental history, and that
of Alexandria.  What was my grief at seeing myself deprived of two
children, who would have perpetuated my name, and honoured my blood upon
the throne of Palmyra!  Let no one boast to me of the liberality of this
prince towards his subjects: I am aware that he often distributed among
them clothing, corn, wine and oil: but this virtue was tarnished by his
avarice towards strangers.  Could he not be contented with the boundaries
of the Roman empire, which was a world of itself, in which one could make
voyages both by land and sea?  And why should I not accuse him of the
murder of my two sons, since he even put to death the son of his sister?
His cruel jealousy might well extend itself to the children of a queen
whom he had ruined.  Justice, god of hell! do not suffer Zenobia to
remain under the tyranny of this haughty emperor; for even here, he
pretends to exercise it over me.  Does not death reduce to an equality
monarchs and their subjects, conquerors and their slaves?  A
distinguished Roman poet has said, ‘he knocks, without distinction, at
the gates of palaces and huts.’  Lucifer, hell, remorse, eternity, do me
justice for these grievous tyrannies.”

“Speak Aurelian,” said Lucifer; “what prerogative do you pretend over
this princess?”

The emperor answered in this manner: “Aurelian, emperor of the Romans,
pontifex maximus, consul, censor, augur, tribune of the people, supreme
head of Germany, Parthia, Persia, Arabia, Scythia, and Africa, to
Lucifer—”

“Lay aside these vain titles,” said Belial, who sat near Lucifer: “could
not the scurviest beggar who had traversed with his pack, for a living,
the various countries of the globe, assume as many with as much
propriety?”

“I must then be but plain Aurelian?”

“Yes, you are nothing else.”

“I will not consent to it; and I had rather be condemned than not to
affix my titles to the head of my defence.”

This emperor having declined answering, Lucifer accorded to queen Zenobia
what she had demanded.

Elizabeth, queen of England, then came forward: she complained of the
count of Essex, who slighted her affections at the time she was sought by
all the princes of Europe.  Lucifer referred her to the tribunal of
Astarte, where he had sent the Amazons.

After her appeared Dido, queen of Carthage.  She testified great
dissatisfaction at Virgil, who had represented her as enamoured with a
man she had never seen.—Referred to the same tribunal.

Sappho also was in court: she averred that there had never been any other
Sappho than herself, who was born in the Island of Mitylene: had given
her name to the sapphic poetry, and was the author of poems dedicated to
her friend Phaon, one of which had been translated by Ovid.

The other Sappho declared that she was the true, the only Sappho who had
existed; that she was born at Erise, in the time of the elder Tarquin,
king of Rome; that she had married Cersyla, of Andros, one of the
ancestors of the muse Clio; and that she had composed poems of different
kinds.  The claims of Sappho of Mitylene were then recognized, and the
other forbidden to assume this name, or any work thereunto appertaining,
because the property of a wife belonged to her husband: and according to
the laws of all nations, her acts ought to appear in his name.

Sappho having been confirmed in her rights, accused Phaon of coldness and
ingratitude.  “When,” said she, “I had given him my heart, I was no more
mistress of myself; I wished by my works to immortalize my love and his
name: hard as the rocks of Parnassus, inflexible as the fiercest dog of
Thessaly, impenetrable as the isthmus of Corinth, he disdained my flame;
my verse made no impression upon him; weary of my love, he sought but to
escape from me; insensible to my anguish, when I threw myself from the
precipice of Leucadia, he manifested no sorrow.  O, rage!  O, fury of
love! avenge my wrongs.”

Lucifer ordained that Sappho should present her case before the goddess
of females.

Artemisa rehearsed all she had done to eternise the memory of her spouse:
she repeated a hundred times the name of her dear Mausoleus, and demanded
that he should be again restored to her, since she had died for love of
him.

The matron of Ephesus, who stood near her, began to laugh loudly, at the
idea of a woman’s demanding her lost husband from hell.

Both of them being adjudged fools, for contrary reasons, were remanded to
their dungeons.

Lucretia, a Roman lady, succeeded them; she demanded justice against
Tarquin, who, by her violation, had been the cause of her death.
Jupiter, who wished to amuse himself, asked her if she had made any
resistance.

“Yes,” said she.

“What hindered you from stabbing Tarquin as he approached you?”

“He was the stronger party, and would have killed me.”

“Was he alone?”

“Yes.”

“Was there ever seen a man, who could, unassisted, force a woman to the
gratification of his lust?  Why did you not rather suffer death, than
permit him to consummate his enterprise?”

“You are so importunate, that I must needs avow the truth: Collatinus, my
husband, discovering my intrigues with the young prince, poinarded me,
and then spread a false report, to advance the designs of Brutus and
himself.  This Jupiter,” murmured she, retiring, very angry, “is an
impertinent—he will not believe that any woman could be capable of so
heroic an action as that attributed to me, and that they are all
coquettes.”

“Let all the women,” said Lucifer, “betake themselves to the tribunal
established for them.”  He then gave orders for the approach of four
princes, who craved audience: the first was Darius, who impleaded
Alexander the Great: the second, Bajazet, who accused Tamerlane of
robbery: the third, Constantine Paleologus, who reproached Mahomet with
his cruelty and ambition; the fourth, Montezuma, king of Mexico, who
complained against Fernandez Cortes, and the usurpation of the Spaniards.
The three first replied, custom, and the laws of war: as to the last, he
was listened to, more from curiosity than any intention to reinstate him
in his possessions.

Montezuma spake very nearly in these words: “I was formerly the
legitimate and peaceful possessor of the Mexican states, which my fathers
had enjoyed from the universal deluge, if not before; for there are
people called _preadamites_, who maintain, that God created men in that
part of the world called _America_, who did not descend from the first
man born in Asia, and whom they called _Adam_.  The avarice and temerity
of certain merchants, led them across the immense sea, which separates
America from Europe; they represented themselves as persons, who, having
been shipwrecked, had need of succour: we gave them firs, wood, and
silver; we aided them to the extent of our power.  All these gifts, which
ought to have served for the establishment of an honourable commerce and
friendship, only inflamed their cupidity and avarice.  We were their
friends; they made us their vassals, after having combatted us with arms,
of which we were ignorant: mounted on horses of which we were horribly
afraid, they put us to flight with the terrible noise of their cannon;
having rallied, we assembled all our troops; they prevailed by the
superiority of their arms; shutting us up in villages, they besieged,
they massacred, they took us captive, and carried all before them, with
fire and sword.  Regardless of royal majesty, which I held of God, they
took my life.  If it is right to usurp the goods and estate of another,
why do not subjects war against their sovereigns?  Why do not families
seek the downfall of families?  Why do not the wicked and strong
dominate, the one over the weak, and the other take away their goods?
Natural right, which bestows every thing that hath no owner, was it upon
the side of the king of Spain, or on mine, who had received the kingdom
of Mexico, as an inheritance from my fathers?  The civil law, which
maintains possession, and which protects legitimate proprietors, was it
in favour of the king of Spain, or in mine?  The reason of all ages and
countries accuse the Spaniards.  We learn in childhood, that we must not
do to others, what we would not have them to do to us; Did I carry war
into Spain?  Why then have they brought it to me, and that too, in a
country where they had experienced the cares of hospitality, to destroy a
prodigious number of men?  What horrible ingratitude! what frightful
injustice! what atrocious cruelty!  Lucifer, be the avenger of one half
the world: punish the Spaniards.”

Fernandez Cortes excused himself on the score of orders from the king,
his master: he confessed that reason, humanity, and justice, spake by the
mouth of Montezuma; but he observed, that the conquests of the Spaniards
had instructed the Indians in the knowledge of the true God.

Upon that, Montezuma cried out, that the design of the Spaniards was not
to eradicate idolatry in America, but solely to enrich Spain, at the
expense of that part of the world; that this was so true, that in Mexico,
the christian Spaniards and their slaves, did not compose more than one
hundred thousandth part of the inhabitants.

“What do you desire,” said Lucifer, “that I should do to the Spaniards?”

“I do not demand,” said the prince, “to be reinstated in my dominions;
some day, perhaps, one of my descendants, or some generous Indian, will
deliver my country from the Spanish yoke; I wish only that the Indians
who were killed in the conquest of Mexico, should have the liberty to
roast upon spits, and eat their cruel enemies; and in this manner my
nation shall be sufficiently revenged.”

“We accord to Montezuma,” said Lucifer, “the Spaniards who conquered
Mexico, with the exception of the tailors, whom we reserve for our own
table.”

After that came an abbot, who took the title of ten abbeys, besides
priories, and eighteen cures.  “Behold,” said Lucifer, “an abbot, with as
many titles as a Roman emperor: speak, of whom do you complain? had you
not a sufficient income to live honourably in the world, according to
your degree?  How have you employed your revenue?  Play, women, good
cheer, horses, dogs, equipage, dress, and relations, have eaten it.  You
demand, without doubt, justice against the authors of your ruin: I grant
it amply and promptly.  For the mortification of your enemies, I
surrender you to the troop of beggars who throng the avenues of my
palace, and who would not have been damned, if, by alms which would have
cost you but little, you had removed from them the necessity of becoming
thieves and robbers: go, learn in hell to spend but little yourself.”

The minettes, the bigots, and hypocrites, demanded audience.  “These are
very pleasant people,” said Lucifer to Jupiter; “they will divert us.”

“An Italian comic writer,” said one of them, “has burlesqued us, as if it
was wrong to _seem_ honest men in the public eye.  When one has not the
substance of virtue, is it reprehensible to set a good example?  It is
true, that if our lives, hidden under this cloak, had been exposed, our
hypocrisy and spurious piety would have been easily detected; but we
injured no person, and if any one was scandalized by our example, it was
for conscience sake.”

The Italian writer, who happened to be present, and whom I had not before
perceived, cried out, “satyrists of France and Italy, our cause is
common.”

Immediately there appeared a number of comic writers, ranged under their
respective masters, among whom I saw, with pleasure, Juvenal, Terence,
Plautus, Seneca the tragedian, and Greek, Latin, and French authors,
ancient and modern.  The writer, behind whom they were ranged, decried
the manners of his age, and exposed the wickedness of hypocrites, who,
abusing all that is sacred in religion, to deceive men, dupe the simple,
and gain an unmerited reputation.  Who would believe that a man was
wicked enough to wish to deceive, at the same time, both God and man?
This is what hypocrites do, when under the veil of divine love, and with
an air of humility, more haughty than vanity itself, they conceal sensual
affections, hatred of brethren, and a licentious life, unknown but to
those who participate in it.—A woman wishes to hide from her husband an
amorous intrigue; she is at her devotions in the morning, and in the
evening still goes to a lecture, where she knows she shall see her
friend.  Often the church itself is the theatre of a love scene—the
preacher, a fine young man, whose manners are more fascinating than his
discourse.  Frequently some broad-shouldered fellow sets at nought truth,
chastity, continence, the money of husbands, and so forth.  Affairs of
business are conducted on the same principle, as those of love.  “Who
would believe that this devout man was a usurer: that he had possession,
almost for nothing, of the meadow, the vineyard, and the house of a
peasant!  Oh, this is a holy man! he is full of conscience; every day
constantly at church, his piety is exemplary.  Behold the fate of a
hypocrite: this knavery, is it any thing but a dead loss? for of what
service is it to bigots to live in such uneasy constraint, if that does
not procure them pleasure, property, or the gratification of their
vanity?

“And I,” said a woman, “can I be accused of hypocrisy?  My virtue, my
science, my writings, do they not demonstrate the unfeignedness of my
devotion?  Should I be spoken of in any other way than as Saint Therese?
Have I not had, in that character, apparitions, visions, a spirit of
prophecy, and a discernment into the heart and conscience?”

“Contemplate, sirs,” said the satirist, “the people of the spirit, if
such a thing is not above your comprehension.  What is this but to
deceive the world by spiritual artifices?  What is this incomprehensible
new grace?  What devotee but has possessed it; and what mystick but has
held the same language?  Truly, madam, grace is very much obliged to you,
and fanaticism owes you thanks; visionaries and lunaticks have gained
their causes; the ancient heretics and comforters owe you a statue and a
chapel.”

Another woman said, “I have not had visions; but I have experienced
realities: I have seen what I thought I saw; and if I had any devotion it
was for my directors.  I had one whom I looked upon as my guardian angel;
I had for him an extreme friendship; I made him presents and he never
failed in any thing towards me; I saw him every day, and should have
preferred deceiving my father rather than him.  Was he sick, I suffered
also; and to solace him, sent meats, confections, fruits, and even money.
I was so chagrined at his absence that I could not bear my own house; I
became unquiet, impatient and melancholy; every thing vexed me.  His
superiors having ordered his change, I almost expired with grief; I wrote
to him by every mail; if I received not his letters, I felt new sorrow: a
thousand phantoms presented themselves to my imagination.  I fancied him
as bestowing his pains upon another object, and thought that absence and
change of residence had altered his inclination.  He returned: what
rapture!  I ran to his house, although in dishabille: on the morrow I was
at his feet; each day of the week I go to recount to him my pleasures and
pains.  In the mean time an honest man sought me in marriage; I consulted
my director; he charged me to dismiss this man, who accordingly received
his farewell.  Another brave cavalier offered himself and received the
same answer.  Behold me now in my thirty-fifth year; my director exhorted
me to consecrate to God my virginity: I retired to a monastery, but he
was not willing that I should take the veil.  At length he died; I wept,
I regretted him; I observed a nine days’ devotion for his death.  When my
grief was assuaged, I reflected upon my age: the time of youth was past;
I took the veil, contracted some amiable acquaintances, founded funeral
obsequies for the repose of my soul, bequeathed my estate to the convent,
and died.  This is my history; this is true devotion.”

“And I,” said another menette, “had no such object to fix my imagination;
I wore invariably a modest dress, my veil always drawn over my eyes, and
sleeves to my very hands: I rose early in the morning to go to church,
and was constantly seen at all devotional exercises; for me there was
neither parties, assemblies, nor feasts: I did not attach myself to my
confessor, although often at his grate.  In the mean time, I had some
good friends, who went about preaching my virtue far and wide, and
principally to those rich men whom they knew not to be fond of gallantry,
and yet exceedingly fearful of what generally happens to men of their
years after marriage.  Your affair is finished, say they to the marrying
men; I have discovered a girl of superlative virtue, who knows not a
single man in the world, and who is so unsophisticated with respect to
love matters, that she does not even know the name of masculine garments;
always engaged in her domestic duties; without luxury, without vanity,
rich withal, and beloved of her father.  ‘This is a girl that will
exactly suit me,’ said an opulent citizen with sixty years and the gout;
‘I shall have a nurse for the remainder of my life; I will make her fine
presents, and after my death she shall have the enjoyment of my estate.’
In fine, they consulted me with regard to this man; I demanded time to
determine; something unlucky might happen to my virtue; I asked light
from above; heaven appeared favourable to this union.  See me then
espoused; I play the innocent, the ingenuous: my husband, deceived,
felicitates himself in my simplicity: all this time I secretly received
the attentions of a handsome young man; the more I saw him, the stronger
appeared my conjugal attachment.  Behold my history, and discreet
devotion.”

I saw still other menettes of different characters, who exposed the
motives of their hypocrisy, and confessed that they had no other
religion.  These are liars, for truly religious souls shun ostentation:
true devotion is so considerate, that those who possess it endeavour to
conceal it, to avoid being elevated in the opinion of the world.
Christian humility flies the eulogies of men: their praise seems a
dangerous enemy, which, in flattering, withdraws the heart from the right
way; it refuses the recompense due to merit, and contents itself with
affording that good example, which the honour of virtue and religion
demand; all which, Jupiter, in a homily to the fanatics, set forth at
large.  The following is the decree that was then read and published
before this great audience, in presence of the demons and the damned.



DECREE OF LUCIFER.


“LUCIFER, to the legions of demons and damned people of hell,
unhappiness, despair, eternal pains.  In order to the due execution of
justice and vengeance entrusted to our hands, _we will_, _ordain_, and
_command_, under the severest penalties:

“First, that our demons be always present at the tribunals of the world,
whether secular or canonical; that they take care of the account books of
merchants; prevent soldiers from thinking of death; trouble the
imagination of fanatics; inspire mundane sentiments in those who wish to
enter holy orders, benefices, and monasteries; that they be the
confidants of intrigues; that they repeat every day, to wives and
daughters, what a lovely young man has said to them once only: in fine,
let nothing be done in the world; let nothing be transacted in the shops,
bureaus, academies, places of commerce, etc. at which they shall not be
present; and we charge them to render an account to ourselves once a
year.

“Secondly, we ordain them reporters, flatterers, go-betweens, authors of
discord, divisions and lawsuits, under pain of disobedience.

“Thirdly, we order, also, in the matter which concerns those condemned to
hell, that the judgments we have pronounced against them in their causes
be put into immediate execution; that all those who have been condemned,
whether individually or collectively, return to their cells, resume their
irons, and there remain to all eternity, without hope of solace, or
change in their sufferings.  Such is our will, and we make no distinction
in favour of pagan gods and goddesses, whom we regard in the same light
as other subjects of our empire.”

                                * * * * *

When Lucifer had spoken, his visage entirely changed; his eyes became
sparkling like two flambeaus; his nostrils cast out smoke mixed with
fire; his mouth exhaled an infectious odour; his hands and feet changed
to claws; from behind him issued a long tail, upon the end of which was a
great button of iron; his ears were horns like those of the rhinoceros:
he spoke again, and his voice sounded like the crash of thunder.  This is
the substance of what he uttered: “Let these places return to their
former state; let darkness pervade the whole region; let the prisons shut
with horrid sound upon all this infernal race; let rage and despair seize
upon the damned; let a violent fire devour them; let the worm of remorse
knaw without consuming, and let the habitude of torment afford no solace.
Go, miserable wretches! obey! precipitate yourselves into these black
retreats! suffer without expiation! and let my ears be sweetly flattered
by the sound of your cries and chains!”

When Lucifer had pronounced this terrible sentence my demon transported
me out of the hall, and at the same instant I heard it and the whole
palace sink with a horrid crash.  Those crushed among the ruins uttered
the most lamentable cries: I then perceived an immense volume of smoke;
after that I found myself in the midst of the field which is at the
extremity of my garden, from whence I returned to my house, totally
absorbed in the contemplation of this vision.—If the things here related
did not actually pass in hell as I have supposed, the probability is,
that the fact does not widely differ from the representation.  The
judgments of Lucifer are there promptly executed, without notice to the
culprit: cases are decided without advocates: no person is absolved, for
innocence never enters places destined to eternal punishment.  The fire
of hell exposes their perfidious designs, their passions and crimes; it
reveals all secrets, and sets forth the reasons for which the guilty have
been condemned.  The sight of suffering companions affords no relief; it
rather augments their grief; contrary to which, in the world, egotism and
corruption render them insensible to the sufferings of another.  The
_reformation_ made by Lucifer operates invisibly in the commerce of men;
the demons and our passions are the causes of the disorder and injustice
that prevail in society.  Oh! if it was possible for each one really to
behold what is here only imagined, how soon would they abandon their
careless manner of life!  But ought we to be more wicked because we have
less fear?  Let us think, let us think upon the other world; let us
seriously reflect upon our latter end; if that offers us happiness and
rapture, let us, by perseverance, endeavour to attain it; but if, on the
contrary, we anticipate unhappiness and anguish, let us spare no pains to
escape so direful a doom; let the aspect of hell contribute to the
reformation of our manners, and be so impressed upon our minds as to be
the means of our salvation from the greatest of all evils.

                                * * * * *

                                 THE END.





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Visions of Quevedo" ***

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