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Tartuffe or the Hypocrite
act i   Scene II
Jean Baptiste Poquelin Moliere
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       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.
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Introductory Note
Characters
act i
   Scene I
   Scene II
   Scene III
   Scene IV
   Scene V
   Scene VI
act ii
   Scene I
   Scene II
   Scene III
   Scene IV
act iii
   Scene I
   Scene II
   Scene III
   Scene IV
   Scene V
   Scene VI
   Scene VII
act iv
   Scene I
   Scene II
   Scene III
   Scene IV
   Scene V
   Scene VI
   Scene VII
   Scene VIII
act v
   Scene I
   Scene II
   Scene III
   Scene IV
   Scene V
   Scene VI
   Scene VII
   Scene VIII