Scene I.
Madame PERNELLE and
Flipotte
, her
servant;
Elmire
,
Mariane
,
Cleante
,
Damis, Dorine
Madame PERNELLE
Come, come, Flipotte, and let me get away.
Elmire
You hurry so, I hardly can attend you.
Madame PERNELLE
Then don’t, my daughter-in law.
Stay where you are.
I can dispense with your polite attentions.
Elmire
We’re only paying what is due you,
mother.
Why must you go away in such a hurry?
Madame PERNELLE
Because I can’t 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;
You’ve no respect for anything;
each one
Must have his say; it’s perfect
pandemonium.
Dorine
If ...
Madame PERNELLE
You’re a servant wench, my girl,
and much
Too full of gab, and too impertinent
And free with your advice on all occasions.
Damis
But ...
Madame PERNELLE
You’re a fool, my boy f,
o, o, l
Just spells your name.
Let grandma
tell you that
I’ve said a hundred times to my
poor son,
Your father, that you’d never come
to good
Or give him anything but plague and torment.
Mariane
I think ...
Madame PERNELLE
O dearie me, his little sister!
You’re all demureness, butter wouldn’t
melt
In your mouth, one would think to look
at you.
Still waters, though, they say ... you
know the proverb;
And I don’t like your doings on
the sly.
Elmire
But, mother ...
Madame PERNELLE
Daughter, by your leave, your conduct
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.
A woman who would please her husband’s
eyes
Alone, wants no such wealth of
fineries
.
Cleante
But, madam, after all ...
Madame PERNELLE
Sir, as for you,
The lady’s brother, I esteem you
highly,
Love and respect you.
But, sir, all
the same,
If I were in my son’s, her husband’s,
place,
I’d urgently entreat you not to
come
Within our doors.
You preach a way
of living
That decent people cannot tolerate.
I’m rather frank with you; but that’s
my way
I don’t mince matters, when I mean
a thing.
Damis
Mr. Tartuffe, your friend, is mighty lucky
...
Madame PERNELLE
He is a holy man, and must be heeded;
I can’t endure, with any show of
patience,
To hear a scatterbrains like you attack
him.
Damis
What!
Shall I let a bigot criticaster
Come and usurp a tyrant’s power
here?
And shall we never dare amuse ourselves
Till this fine gentleman deigns to consent?
Dorine
If we must hark to him, and heed his maxims,
There’s not a thing we do but what’s
a crime;
He censures everything, this zealous carper.
Madame PERNELLE
And all he censures is well censured,
too.
He wants to guide you on the way to heaven;
My son should train you all to love him
well.
Damis
No, madam, look you, nothing not
my father
Nor anything can make me tolerate
him.
I should belie my feelings not to say
so.
His actions rouse my wrath at every turn;
And I foresee that there must come of
it
An open rupture with this sneaking scoundrel.
Dorine
Besides, ’tis downright scandalous
to see
This unknown upstart master of the house
This vagabond, who hadn’t, when
he came,
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!
Madame PERNELLE
Eh!
Mercy sakes alive!
Things
would go better
If all were governed by his pious orders.
Dorine
He passes for a saint in your opinion.
In fact, he’s nothing but a hypocrite.
Madame PERNELLE
Just listen to her tongue!
Dorine
I wouldn’t trust him,
Nor yet his Lawrence, without bonds and
surety.
Madame PERNELLE
I don’t know what the servant’s
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,
And heaven’s interest is his only
motive.
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?
I’ll tell you, if you like, just
what I think;
(Pointing to Elmire)
Upon my word, he’s jealous of our
mistress.
Madame PERNELLE
You hold your tongue, and think what you
are saying.
He’s not alone in censuring these
visits;
The turmoil that attends your sort of
people,
Their carriages forever at the door,
And all their noisy footmen, flocked together,
Annoy the neighbourhood, and raise a scandal.
I’d gladly think there’s nothing
really wrong;
But it makes talk; and that’s not
as it should be.
Cleante
Eh! madam, can you hope to keep folk’s
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,
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.
Dorine
Our neighbour Daphne, and her little husband,
Must be the ones who slander us, I’m
thinking.
Those whose own conduct’s most ridiculous,
Are always quickest to speak ill of others;
They never fail to seize at once upon
The slightest hint of any love affair,
And spread the news of it with glee, and
give it
The character they’d have the world
believe in.
By others’ actions, painted in their
colours,
They hope to justify their own; they think,
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.
Madame PERNELLE
These arguments are nothing to the purpose.
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.
Dorine
O admirable pattern!
Virtuous dame!
She lives the model of austerity;
But age has brought this piety upon her,
And she’s a prude, now she can’t
help herself.
As long as she could capture men’s
attentions
She made the most of her advantages;
But, now she sees her beauty vanishing,
She wants to leave the world, that’s
leaving her,
And in the specious veil of haughty virtue
She’d 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;
And thus abandoned, their forlorn estate
Can find no occupation but a prude’s.
These pious
dames
, in their austerity,
Must carp at everything, and pardon nothing.
They loudly blame their neighbours’
way of living,
Not for religion’s sake, but out
of envy,
Because they can’t endure to see
another
Enjoy the pleasures age has weaned them
from.
Madame PERNELLE (to Elmire)
There!
That’s the kind of rigmarole
to please you,
Daughter-in-law.
One never has a
chance
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
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,
Are all inventions of the evil spirit.
You never hear a word of godliness
At them but idle cackle, nonsense,
flimflam.
Our neighbour often comes in for a share,
The talk flies fast, and scandal fills
the air;
It makes a sober person’s 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,
Where all, beyond all limit, babble on.
And just to tell you how this point came
in ...
(To Cleante)
So!
Now the gentlemen must snicker,
must he?
Go find fools like yourself to make you
laugh
And don’t ...
(To Elmire)
Daughter, good-bye; not one word more.
As for this house, I leave the half unsaid;
But I shan’t soon set foot in it
again,
(Cuffing Flipotte)
Come, you!
What makes you dream and
stand agape,
Hussy!
I’ll warm your ears
in proper shape!
March, trollop, march!
Scene II.
Cleante, Dorine
Cleante
I won’t escort her down,
For fear she might fall foul of me again;
The good old lady ...
Dorine
Bless us!
What a pity
She shouldn’t hear the way you speak
of her!
She’d surely tell you you’re
too “good” by half,
And that she’s not so “old”
as all that, neither!
Cleante
How she got angry with us all for nothing!
And how she seems possessed with her Tartuffe!
Dorine
Her case is nothing, though, beside her
son’s!
To see him, you would say he’s ten
times worse!
His conduct in our late unpleasantness
Had won him much esteem, and proved his
courage
In service of his king; but now he’s
like
A man besotted, since he’s been
so taken
With this Tartuffe.
He calls him
brother, loves him
A hundred times as much as mother, son,
Daughter, and wife.
He tells him
all his secrets
And lets him guide his acts, and rule
his conscience.
He fondles and embraces him; a sweetheart
Could not, I think, be loved more tenderly;
At table he must have the seat of honour,
While with delight our master sees him
eat
As much as six men could; we must give
up
The choicest tidbits to him; if he belches,
(’tis a servant speaking)
Master exclaims:
“God bless
you!” Oh, he dotes
Upon him! he’s his universe, his
hero;
He’s lost in constant admiration,
quotes him
On all occasions, takes his trifling acts
For wonders, and his words for oracles.
The fellow knows his dupe, and makes the
most on’t,
He fools him with a hundred masks of virtue,
Gets money from him all the time by canting,
And takes upon himself to carp at us.
Even his silly coxcomb of a lackey
Makes it his business to instruct us too;
He comes with rolling eyes to preach at
us,
And throws away our ribbons, rouge, and
patches.
The wretch, the other day, tore up a kerchief
That he had found, pressed in the
Golden
Legend
,
Calling it a horrid crime for us to mingle
The devil’s finery with holy things.
Scene III.
Elmire, Mariane, Damis, Cleante, Dorine
Elmire (to Cleante)
You’re very lucky to have missed
the speech
She gave us at the door.
I see my
husband
Is home again.
He hasn’t seen
me yet,
So I’ll go up and wait till he comes
in.
Cleante
And I, to save time, will await him here;
I’ll merely say good-morning, and
be gone.
Scene IV
Cleante, Damis, Dorine
Damis
I wish you’d say a word to him about
My sister’s marriage; I suspect
Tartuffe
Opposes it, and puts my father up
To all these wretched shifts.
You
know, besides,
How nearly I’m concerned in it myself;
If love unites my sister and
Valere
,
I love his sister too; and if this marriage
Were to ...
Dorine
He’s coming.
Scene V
Orgon, Cleante, Dorine
Orgon
Ah!
Good morning, brother.
Cleante
I was just going, but am glad to greet
you.
Things are not far advanced yet, in the
country?
Orgon
Dorine ...
(To Cleante)
Just wait a bit, please, brother-in-law.
Let me allay my first anxiety
By asking news about the family.
(To Dorine)
Has everything gone well these last two
days?
What’s happening?
And how is
everybody?
Dorine
Madam had fever, and a splitting headache
Day before yesterday, all day and evening.
Orgon
And how about Tartuffe?
Dorine
Tartuffe?
He’s well;
He’s mighty well; stout, fat, fair,
rosy-lipped.
Orgon
Poor man!
Dorine
At evening she had nausea
And couldn’t touch a single thing
for supper,
Her headache still was so severe.
Orgon
And how
About Tartuffe?
Dorine
He supped alone, before her,
And unctuously ate up two partridges,
As well as half a leg o’ mutton,
deviled.
Orgon
Poor man!
Dorine
All night she couldn’t get a wink
Of sleep, the fever racked her so; and
we
Had to sit up with her till daylight.
Orgon
How
About Tartuffe?
Dorine
Gently inclined to slumber,
He left the table, went into his room,
Got himself straight into a good warm
bed,
And slept quite undisturbed until next
morning.
Orgon
Poor man!
Dorine
At last she let us all persuade her,
And got up courage to be bled; and then
She was relieved at once.
Orgon
And how about
Tartuffe?
Dorine
He plucked up courage properly,
Bravely entrenched his soul against all
evils,
And to replace the blood that she had
lost,
He drank at breakfast four huge draughts
of wine.
Orgon
Poor man!
Dorine
So now they both are doing well;
And I’ll go straightway and inform
my mistress
How pleased you are at her recovery.
Scene VI
Orgon, Cleante
Cleante
Brother, she ridicules you to your face;
And I, though I don’t want to make
you angry,
Must tell you candidly that she’s
quite right.
Was such infatuation ever heard of?
And can a man to-day have charms to make
you
Forget all else, relieve his poverty,
Give him a home, and then ... ?
Orgon
Stop there, good brother,
You do not know the man you’re speaking
of.
Cleante
Since you will have it so, I do not know
him;
But after all, to tell what sort of man
He is ...
Orgon
Dear brother, you’d be charmed to
know him;
Your raptures over him would have no end.
He is a man ... who ... ah! ... in fact
...a man
Whoever does his will, knows perfect peace,
And counts the whole world else, as so
much dung.
His converse has transformed me quite;
he weans
My heart from every friendship, teaches
me
To have no love for anything on earth;
And I could see my brother, children,
mother,
And wife, all die, and never care a
snap.
Cleante
Your feelings are humane, I must say,
brother!
Orgon
Ah!
If you’d seen him, as I
saw him first,
You would have loved him just as much
as I.
He came to church each day, with contrite
mien,
Kneeled, on both knees, right opposite
my place,
And drew the eyes of all the congregation,
To watch the fervour of his prayers to
heaven;
With deep-drawn sighs and great ejaculations,
He humbly kissed the earth at every moment;
And when I left the church, he ran before
me
To give me holy water at the door.
I learned his poverty, and who he was,
By questioning his servant, who is like
him,
And gave him gifts; but in his modesty
He always wanted to return a part.
“It is too much,” he’d
say, “too much by half;
I am not worthy of your pity.”
Then,
When I refused to take it back, he’d
go,
Before my eyes, and give it to the poor.
At length heaven bade me take him to my
home,
And since that day, all seems to prosper
here.
He censures everything, and for my sake
He even takes great interest in my wife;
He lets me know who ogles her, and seems
Six times as jealous as I am myself.
You’d not believe how far his zeal
can go:
He calls himself a sinner just for trifles;
The merest nothing is enough to shock
him;
So much so, that the other day I heard
him
Accuse himself for having, while at prayer,
In too much anger caught and killed a
flea.
Cleante
Zounds, brother, you are mad, I think!
Or else
You’re making sport of me, with
such a speech.
What are you driving at with all this
nonsense ... ?
Orgon
Brother, your language smacks of atheism;
And I suspect your soul’s a little
tainted
Therewith.
I’ve preached to
you a score of times
That you’ll draw down some judgment
on your head.
Cleante
That is the usual strain of all your kind;
They must have every one as blind as they.
They call you atheist if you have good
eyes;
And if you don’t adore their vain
grimaces,
You’ve neither faith nor care for
sacred things.
No, no; such talk can’t frighten
me; I know
What I am saying; heaven sees my heart.
We’re not the dupes of all your
canting mummers;
There are false heroes and
false devotees;
And as true heroes never are the ones
Who make much noise about their deeds
of honour,
Just so true devotees, whom we should
follow,
Are not the ones who make so much vain
show.
What!
Will you find no difference
between
Hypocrisy and genuine devoutness?
And will you treat them both alike, and
pay
The self-same honour both to masks and
faces
Set artifice beside sincerity,
Confuse the semblance with reality,
Esteem a phantom like a living person,
And counterfeit as good as honest coin?
Men, for the most part, are strange creatures,
truly!
You never find them keep the golden mean;
The limits of good sense, too narrow for
them,
Must always be passed by, in each direction;
They often spoil the noblest things, because
They go too far, and push them to extremes.
I merely say this by the way, good brother.
Orgon
You are the sole expounder of the doctrine;
Wisdom shall die with you, no doubt, good
brother,
You are the only wise, the sole enlightened,
The oracle, the Cato, of our age.
All men, compared to you, are downright
fools.
Cleante
I’m not the sole expounder of the
doctrine,
And wisdom shall not die with me, good
brother.
But this I know, though it be all my knowledge,
That there’s a difference ’twixt
false and true.
And as I find no kind of hero more
To be admired than men of true religion,
Nothing more noble or more beautiful
Than is the holy zeal of true devoutness;
Just so I think there’s naught more
odious
Than whited sepulchres of outward unction,
Those barefaced charlatans, those hireling
zealots,
Whose sacrilegious, treacherous pretence
Deceives at will, and with impunity
Makes mockery of all that men hold sacred;
Men who, enslaved to selfish interests,
Make trade and merchandise of godliness,
And try to purchase influence and office
With false eye-rollings and affected raptures;
Those men, I say, who with uncommon zeal
Seek their own fortunes on the road to
heaven;
Who, skilled in prayer, have always much
to ask,
And live at court to preach retirement;
Who reconcile religion with their vices,
Are quick to anger, vengeful, faithless,
tricky,
And, to destroy a man, will have the boldness
To call their private grudge the cause
of heaven;
All the more dangerous, since in their
anger
They use against us weapons men revere,
And since they make the world applaud
their passion,
And seek to stab us with a sacred sword.
There are too many of this canting kind.
Still, the sincere are easy to distinguish;
And many splendid patterns may be found,
In our own time, before our very eyes
Look at Ariston, Periandre, Oronte,
Alcidamas, Clitandre, and Polydore;
No one denies their claim to true religion;
Yet they’re no braggadocios of virtue,
They do not make insufferable display,
And their religion’s human, tractable;
They are not always judging all our actions,
They’d think such judgment savoured
of presumption;
And, leaving pride of words to other men,
’Tis by their deeds alone they censure
ours.
Evil appearances find little credit
With them; they even incline to think
the best
Of others.
No caballers, no intriguers,
They mind the business of their own right
living.
They don’t attack a sinner tooth
and nail,
For sin’s the only object of their
hatred;
Nor are they over-zealous to attempt
Far more in heaven’s behalf than
heaven would have ’em.
That is my kind of man, that is true living,
That is the pattern we should set ourselves.
Your fellow was not fashioned on this
model;
You’re quite sincere in boasting
of his zeal;
But you’re deceived, I think, by
false pretences.
Orgon
My dear good brother-in-law, have you
quite done?
Cleante
Yes.
Orgon
I’m your humble servant.
(Starts to go.)
Cleante
Just a word.
We’ll drop that other subject.
But you know
Valere
has had the promise of your
daughter.
Orgon
Yes.
Cleante
You had named the happy day.
Orgon
’Tis true.
Cleante
Then why put off the celebration of it?
Orgon
I can’t say.
Cleante
Can you have some other plan
In mind?
Orgon
Perhaps.
Cleante
You mean to break your word?
Orgon
I don’t say that.
Cleante
I hope no obstacle
Can keep you from performing what you’ve
promised.
Orgon
Well, that depends.
Cleante
Why must you beat about?
Valere
has sent me here to settle
matters.
Orgon
Heaven be praised!
Cleante
What answer shall I take him?
Orgon
Why, anything you please.
Cleante
But we must know
Your plans.
What are they?
Orgon
I shall do the will
Of Heaven.
Cleante
Come, be serious.
You’ve given
Your promise to
Valere
.
Now
will you keep it?
Orgon
Good-bye.
Cleante (alone)
His love, methinks, has much to fear;
I must go let him know what’s happening
here.