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Rousseau, Jean-Jacques

"The Confessions Of Jean-Jacques Rousseau"

How
is it possible to fall into such a state in the flower of one's age,
without any inward decay, or without having done anything to destroy
health?
It is sometimes said, "the sword wears out the scabbard," this was
truly the case with me: the violence of my passions both kept me alive
and hastened my dissolution. What passions? will be asked: mere
nothings: the most trivial objects in nature, but which affected me as
forcibly as if the acquisition of a Helen, or the throne of the
universe were at stake. In the first place- women, when I possessed
one my senses, for instance, were at ease with one woman, but my heart
never was, and the necessities of love consumed me in the very bosom
of happiness. I had a tender, respected and lovely friend, but I
sighed for a mistress; my prolific fancy painted her as such, and gave
her a thousand forms, for had I conceived that my endearments had been
lavished on Madam de Warrens, they would not have been less tender,
though infinitely more tranquil. If I had believed that I held Madam
de Warrens in my arms, when I held her there, my embraces would not
have been less spirited, but all my desires would have been
extinguished; I should have sobbed from love, but I should not have
enjoyed it. Enjoyment! Can ever man be so happy? Ah! If only once in
my life I had tasted all the delights of love in their fullness, I
imagine that my frail body would be inadequate, and I should have died
on the spot. But is it possible for man to taste, in their utmost
extent, the delights of love? I cannot tell, but I am persuaded my
frail existence would have sunk under the weight of them.


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