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MADAME PERNELLE and FLIPOTTE, her servant; ELMIRE, MARIANE, CLÉANTE, DAMIS, DORINE
Madame Pernelle Come, come, Flipotte, and let me get away. | |
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Elmire You hurry so, I hardly can attend you. | |
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Madame Pernelle Then dont, my daughter-in-law. Stay where you are. | |
| I can dispense with your polite attentions. | |
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Elmire Were only paying what is due you, mother. | 5 |
| Why must you go away in such a hurry? | |
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Madame Pernelle Because I cant endure your carryings-on, | |
| And no one takes the slightest pains to please me. | |
| I leave your house, I tell you, quite disgusted; | |
| You do the opposite of my instructions; | 10 |
| Youve no respect for anything; each one | |
| Must have his say; its perfect pandemonium. | |
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Dorine If
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Madame Pernelle Youre a servant wench, my girl, and much | |
| Too full of gab, and too impertinent | 15 |
| And free with your advice on all occasions. | |
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Damis But
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Madame Pernelle Youre a fool, my boyf, o, o, l | |
| Just spells your name. Let grandma tell you that | |
| Ive said a hundred times to my poor son, | 20 |
| Your father, that youd never come to good | |
| Or give him anything but plague and torment. | |
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Mariane I think
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Madame Pernelle O dearie me, his little sister! | |
| Youre all demureness, butter wouldnt melt | 25 |
| In your mouth, one would think to look at you. | |
| Still waters, though, they say
you know the proverb; | |
| And I dont like your doings on the sly. | |
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Elmire But, mother
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Madame Pernelle Daughter, by your leave, your conduct | 30 |
| In everything is altogether wrong; | |
| You ought to set a good example for em; | |
| Their dear departed mother did much better. | |
| You are extravagant; and it offends me, | |
| To see you always decked out like a princess. | 35 |
| A woman who would please her husbands eyes | |
| Alone, wants no such wealth of fineries. | |
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Cléante But, madam, after all
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Madame Pernelle Sir, as for you, | |
| The ladys brother, I esteem you highly, | 40 |
| Love and respect you. But, sir, all the same, | |
| If I were in my sons, her husbands, place, | |
| Id urgently entreat you not to come | |
| Within our doors. You preach a way of living | |
| That decent people cannot tolerate. | 45 |
| Im rather frank with you; but thats my way | |
| I dont mince matters, when I mean a thing. | |
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Damis Mr. Tartuffe, your friend, is mighty lucky
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Madame Pernelle He is a holy man, and must be heeded; | |
| I cant endure, with any show of patience, | 50 |
| To hear a scatterbrains like you attack him. | |
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Damis What! Shall I let a bigot criticaster | |
| Come and usurp a tyrants power here? | |
| And shall we never dare amuse ourselves | |
| Till this fine gentleman deigns to consent? | 55 |
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Dorine If we must hark to him, and heed his maxims, | |
| Theres not a thing we do but whats a crime; | |
| He censures everything, this zealous carper. | |
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Madame Pernelle And all he censures is well censured, too. | |
| He wants to guide you on the way to heaven; | 60 |
| My son should train you all to love him well. | |
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Damis No, madam, look you, nothingnot my father | |
| Nor anythingcan make me tolerate him. | |
| I should belie my feelings not to say so. | |
| His actions rouse my wrath at every turn; | 65 |
| And I foresee that there must come of it | |
| An open rupture with this sneaking scoundrel. | |
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Dorine Besides, tis downright scandalous to see | |
| This unknown upstart master of the house | |
| This vagabond, who hadnt, when he came, | 70 |
| Shoes to his feet, or clothing worth six farthings, | |
| And who so far forgets his place, as now | |
| To censure everything, and rule the roost! | |
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Madame Pernelle Eh! Mercy sakes alive! Things would go better | |
| If all were governed by his pious orders. | 75 |
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Dorine He passes for a saint in your opinion. | |
| In fact, hes nothing but a hypocrite. | |
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Madame Pernelle Just listen to her tongue! | |
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Dorine I wouldnt trust him, | |
| Nor yet his Lawrence, without bonds and surety. | 80 |
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Madame Pernelle I dont know what the servants character | |
| May be; but I can guarantee the master | |
| A holy man. You hate him and reject him | |
| Because he tells home truths to all of you. | |
| Tis sin alone that moves his heart to anger, | 85 |
| And heavens interest is his only motive. | |
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Dorine Of course. But why, especially of late, | |
| Can he let nobody come near the house? | |
| Is heaven offended at a civil call | |
| That he should make so great a fuss about it? | 90 |
| Ill tell you, if you like, just what I think; (Pointing to Elmire) | |
| Upon my word, hes jealous of our mistress. | |
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Madame Pernelle You hold your tongue, and think what you are saying. | |
| Hes not alone in censuring these visits; | |
| The turmoil that attends your sort of people, | 95 |
| Their carriages forever at the door, | |
| And all their noisy footmen, flocked together, | |
| Annoy the neighbourhood, and raise a scandal. | |
| Id gladly think theres nothing really wrong; | |
| But it makes talk; and thats not as it should be. | 100 |
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Cléante Eh! madam, can you hope to keep folks tongues | |
| From wagging? It would be a grievous thing | |
| If, for the fear of idle talk about us, | |
| We had to sacrifice our friends. No, no; | |
| Even if we could bring ourselves to do it, | 105 |
| Think you that everyone would then be silenced? | |
| Against backbiting there is no defence | |
| So let us try to live in innocence, | |
| To silly tattle pay no heed at all, | |
| And leave the gossips free to vent their gall. | 110 |
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Dorine Our neighbour Daphne, and her little husband, | |
| Must be the ones who slander us, Im thinking. | |
| Those whose own conducts most ridiculous, | |
| Are always quickest to speak ill of others; | |
| They never fail to seize at once upon | 115 |
| The slightest hint of any love affair, | |
| And spread the news of it with glee, and give it | |
| The character theyd have the world believe in. | |
| By others actions, painted in their colours, | |
| They hope to justify their own; they think, | 120 |
| In the false hope of some resemblance, either | |
| To make their own intrigues seem innocent, | |
| Or else to make their neighbours share the blame | |
| Which they are loaded with by everybody. | |
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Madame Pernelle These arguments are nothing to the purpose. | 125 |
| Orante, we all know, lives a perfect life; | |
| Her thoughts are all of heaven; and I have heard | |
| That she condemns the company you keep. | |
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Dorine O admirable pattern! Virtuous dame! | |
| She lives the model of austerity; | 130 |
| But age has brought this piety upon her, | |
| And shes a prude, now she cant help herself. | |
| As long as she could capture mens attentions | |
| She made the most of her advantages; | |
| But, now she sees her beauty vanishing, | 135 |
| She wants to leave the world, thats leaving her, | |
| And in the specious veil of haughty virtue | |
| Shed hide the weakness of her worn-out charms. | |
| That is the way with all your old coquettes; | |
| They find it hard to see their lovers leave em; | 140 |
| And thus abandoned, their forlorn estate | |
| Can find no occupation but a prudes. | |
| These pious dames, in their austerity, | |
| Must carp at everything, and pardon nothing. | |
| They loudly blame their neighbours way of living, | 145 |
| Not for religions sake, but out of envy, | |
| Because they cant endure to see another | |
| Enjoy the pleasures age has weaned them from. | |
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Madame Pernelle (to ELMIRE) There! Thats the kind of rigmarole to please you, | |
| Daughter-in-law. One never has a chance | 150 |
| To get a word in edgewise, at your house, | |
| Because this lady holds the floor all day; | |
| But none the less, I mean to have my say, too. | |
| I tell you that my son did nothing wiser | |
| In all his life, than take this godly man | 155 |
| Into his household; heaven sent him here, | |
| In your great need, to make you all repent; | |
| For your salvation, you must hearken to him; | |
| He censures nothing but deserves his censure. | |
| These visits, these assemblies, and these balls, | 160 |
| Are all inventions of the evil spirit. | |
| You never hear a word of godliness | |
| At thembut idle cackle, nonsense, flimflam. | |
| Our neighbour often comes in for a share, | |
| The talk flies fast, and scandal fills the air; | 165 |
| It makes a sober persons head go round, | |
| At these assemblies, just to hear the sound | |
| Of so much gab, with not a word to say; | |
| And as a learned man remarked one day | |
| Most aptly, tis the Tower of Babylon, | 170 |
| Where all, beyond all limit, babble on. | |
| And just to tell you how this point came in
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(To CLÉANTE) So! Now the gentlemen must snicker, must he? | |
| Go find fools like yourself to make you laugh | |
| And dont
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(To ELMIRE) Daughter, good-bye; not one word more. | |
| As for this house, I leave the half unsaid; | |
| But I shant soon set foot in it again, | |
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(Cuffing FLIPOTTE) Come, you! What makes you dream and stand agape, | |
| Hussy! Ill warm your ears in proper shape! | 180 |
| March, trollop, march! | |
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