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Translators make choices at every point, some explicit and some implicit, some made at the beginning and others arising in the course of translation. The sum of these decisions can make for very different versions of the same work.[1] In this paper treating twelve twentieth-century English versions of Molière’s Tartuffe, I will first make some remarks on the kinds of choices made by the translators. Then I will look in detail at how they deal with a few short passages, chosen to illustrate aspects of seventeenth-century French language, religion and everyday life. The eight prose translations included here are by Stanley Appelbaum, Haskell M. Block, David Edney, Miles Malleson, Renée Waldinger, A. R. Waller, and John Wood, as well as one, published in the Modern Library series, where the name of the translator is not given. The four verse translations are by Morris Bishop, Donald Frame, Christopher Hampton and Richard Wilbur. I have not included versions that are very free adaptations.

The kinds of choices

Any translator of Molière, and indeed any literary translator, must choose where he or she stands on the continuum between, on the one hand, bringing the work to the public, and on the other hand bringing the public to the work.[2] Should the reader or theatre audience be expected to make an effort to understand the play and its time, or should the play be adapted to appeal to the taste of the public? Each translation will bring a different answer, as will each production of a play.

A theatrical text has of course two possible destinations. It can be performed, with each production supplying a different interpretation. It can also be read with no intention of putting it on stage, in which case the reader’s imagination supplies an individual interpretation, including a vision of the characters, their relations, and the overall meaning of the play. In effect, the play might be compared to a novel consisting of dialogue, stage directions, and in some cases more or less copious notes. In this way theatrical texts reach a public which does not have access to stage performances for geographical, financial or other reasons. Although different aims of translating a play are not mutually exclusive, a translator will probably have one uppermost in mind: is the play to be performed, will it most often be read, will the translation accompany the original text as an aid to the reader? Hampton and Malleson refer to specific productions of their texts; Wilbur mentions audiences’ reactions to his (frequently-performed) verse translations; Edney gives alternate versions of the officer’s speech in the final scene, depending on whether the director chooses a seventeenth-century setting or a modern one. On the other hand, the manner of presenting Appelbaum’s and Waller’s English texts makes visible their relation to the original French on facing pages, and allows the reader to pass easily from one to the other.[3]

Many factors other than purely literary ones may affect translations, particularly when a play is to be performed (as is so often the case for Molière, who always wrote for the stage). Susan Bassnett criticizes “the link between theatre translation and crude economic concerns” which sometimes leads to questionable practices.[4] As one might expect, the “crude economic concerns” she mentions are not cited to justify such practices; rather, a more respectable explanation is given. “It is principally among English language translators, directors and impresarios that we find the use of the notion of ‘performability’ as a criterion essential to the translation process.” (Bassnett, 1991, p. 102) Bassnett argues that assumptions about the relation of the text and performance on which this notion is based are “often oversimplistic and based on a concept of theatre that is extremely restricted”. (p. 103) Traditions of performance vary from one time and place to another, and there are “enormous differences in rehearsal convention, in performance convention and in audience expectation”. There is no such thing as a universal “performability”, and the concept should not be used to prove that changes must be made in order to make a play accessible to audiences. Bassnett’s argument can be used by those who think the public should come some distance to meet the work, rather than having the work come to meet the expectations of the public.

Neal A. Peacock shows more sympathy than does Bassnett with steps taken to obtain what he calls “theatrically successful solutions to the problem of translating Molière for the English stage” (Peacock, 1994, p. 83). He groups translators (or adapters) into three categories: conservationists, who wish to preserve all the features of the seventeenth-century structure, though in a renewed form; modernisers, who “have upgraded certain aspects for the modern age”; and post-modernisers, who “have knocked down and rebuilt the main structure but have reused some of the original materials” (p. 84). According to Peacock, Malleson subjected Molière’s texts to “the theatrical emendations appropriate to the English stage”, keeping the French setting and plot but having the characters speak in “a modern idiom” (p. 85). Peacock considers Malleson to be halfway between conservationist and moderniser. Peacock’s language is revealing: the word “upgrade” seems to imply that modern versions are superior to the original work, and the expression “emendations appropriate to the English stage” suggests that a translator who departs from the rhythms of the original is doing the author a favour. According to Peacock, Malleson’s Tartuffe, dating from 1950, is even now a source for adapters who do not read the original French play. One may guess that their use of this version, already quite different from Molière in phrasing, will give an adaptation far from the original in many respects.

A translation of Molière may be intended to last for years, or, as Bassnett and Peacock point out, it may be aimed specifically at a particular production. The text of Tartuffe gives various indications about the title character, not all of which are compatible and coherent. Is Tartuffe a buffoon, a vulgar sensualist, a convincing con man, a menacing force of evil, a man trying but failing to lead a godly life? Does he fall in love with Elmire, or is he a habitual seducer? Is Elmire flirtatious, or just calm and clever? Does she enjoy Tartuffe’s attempt to seduce her, is it painful for her, is she tempted or disgusted? Molière’s text moves from comedy at the beginning to disturbing final acts. Should comedy be emphasized, at the expense of the serious material underneath? What kind of comedy should it be? How subtle or crude? A translator can emphasize one aspect of the action and characters, or keep many possibilities open.

French theatre has a long history of different interpretations for this play, as Roger Planchon observes: “When I decided to stage Tartuffe I studied all the previous productions. That’s when I realized that there is no such thing as tradition” (Quoted by Carmody, 1993, p. 56).[5] In the twentieth century serious interpretations, including notably those of Planchon, have been predominant.[6] A modern sensibility often finds dark elements where seventeenth-century directors and audiences may have seen the opposite. In the final scene, the officer arresting Tartuffe announces that the King knows everything and reads all hearts. This flattery of Louis XIV was presumably meant to be reassuring at the time, and to win royal support in the controversy raised by the play. (See Salomon, 1962, Ch. 1 and 2.) Today it can sound considerably less benign. Planchon’s staging, building on the invasion of private life, showed the terrifying power of a police state by means of a massive show of force in the arrest. In contrast, the North American tradition of playing Tartuffe tends toward broad, often farcical comedy, to the point that spectators may wonder how anyone could be taken in by such an obvious impostor.[7] When the play is performed for the broadest laughs, much of the content is lost; character study disappears and menace is removed. Copley's remark about adaptations could apply as well to some stagings: “Molière has largely disappeared in the process; he has been transformed from a dramatic poet into an expert purveyer of near-farce.” (Copley 1960, p. 116)

What language to use

The question of setting must be considered not only by the director of a performance, but also by the translator. To what extent is the audience supposed to see the play as set in a particular time and place? Should it be fully of its time, should it be timeless, or of the translator’s own time? If the setting is specifically Molière’s time, how much information should be given to help the present-day public understand things that people of Molière’s time knew immediately? The language of translation will be chosen as a result of that choice. It can either keep some strangeness, some feeling of the foreign origin of the text; or else it can aim for fluency, for a “naturalness” that gives the impression the work was written in the target language.[8] The translator could in theory use language of the time the play was written. This option in its pure form is practically never chosen, for writing authentic-sounding seventeenth-century English is a daunting task, and the result would probably not be appreciated by the public. A commonly adopted middle way is to use modern English while avoiding anachronisms as much as possible, so that obviously recent words and references do not break the illusion. At the other extreme, especially for purposes of comedy, a translator may use deliberate anachronisms. (See Simon, 1976)

In the case of a verse play, the choice between verse and prose in the target language is probably the first definite decision to be made. Other considerations such as those discussed above no doubt underlie the decision; but only the question of verse or prose must receive an explicit answer before one can put pen to paper or fingers to keyboard. Frame writes in an introduction to his translations that since “rhyme affects what Molière says as well as the way he says it”, it is worth while to use it in English as well. (Frame, 1967, p. xiv) In English as well as in the French original, rhythm and rhyme can create surprising and memorable lines. As Wilbur points out, Molière’s lines are arranged in intricate patterns of balancing half-lines, lines, couplet, quatrains and sestets. “There is no question that words, when dancing within such patterns, are not their prosaic selves, but have a wholly different meaning.” (Wilbur 1958, pp. x-xi. See also Waldinger, 1999.) Some other translators consider that prose is more suitable for the twentieth century stage. At about the same time Wilbur finds verse essential, Block argues that “the language of present-day prose is much closer to [Molière’s] idiom than that of verse” (Block 1958, p. xii), and Hampton says that the ingenuity demanded for rhymed translations “cannot avoid drawing attention to itself, somewhat at the expense of the line of the play as a whole”. (Hampton 1984, p. 8)

Translators of French classical theatre usually maintain a high level of decorum, corresponding to the bienséances required at the time. The restrictions on what could be said certainly did not make for dull comedies. Molière is often earthy but not obscene. In many plays he suggests improper things, and allows the audience to complete the thought. In L’Ēcole des femmes, a great deal is made of the fact that Horace has taken something from the innocent Agnès. The audience, along with her jealous suitor Arnolphe, can imagine things other than the ribbon that Horace has in fact stolen. Certain English versions of Molière take a different approach, using openly obscene language, with corresponding staging.[9] Molière’s wit is replaced by crudeness, perhaps because the translator or director thinks that otherwise a modern audience will not understand the jokes.

One challenge to translators is to deal with word play, which may not survive the passage into another language. In Act I, sc. 2 of Tartuffe, when Cléante refers to Madame Pernelle as “cette bonne femme”, the servant Dorine remarks:

Ah! certes, c’est dommage
Qu’elle ne vous ouît tenir un tel langage :
Elle vous dirait qu’elle vous trouve bon,
Et qu’elle n’est point d’âge à lui donner ce nom.

The adjective bon is taken in several senses here, including uncomplimentary ones as well as the obvious favourable meaning. The 1694 Dictionnaire de l’Académie Française mentions that “un bon homme” can mean “Un vieillard, homme avancé en âge”, as well as “Simple, idiot”. Cléante’s reference to Madame Pernelle may be polite; on the other hand, it may refer to her age or to her limited intellectual capacities. Dorine then uses it in yet another sense; according to the Dictionnaire, “On dit aussi d'Un homme, Il a esté bon, pour dire, qu'Il a fait ou dit quelque conte, soit avec esprit, soit par sottise.” According to Dorine then, if Madame Pernelle heard Cléante call her a bonne femme, she would object to the slighting reference to her age, and would say that he was being silly. None of the translators quite manage to replace all the word play by an equivalent one, though most transmit the general idea of the exchange and some do have Dorine make humorous remarks. Waldinger simply uses “old”, both for Cléante’s expression “this old lady”, and for Dorine’s reply: “she would soon tell you that you have some nerve and that she is not old enough to be called that”. Edney introduces another adjective: “What a strange, old lady!” Dorine takes up both: “‘Strange’ she might not like, but ‘old’ would really have her up in arms.” Bishop has Cléante say “that good woman”, to which Dorine replies that Madame Pernelle would say she is “not old enough yet to be good” — a clever remark, but perhaps not one that the prudish Madame Pernelle would make. Hampton’s Cléante exclaims: “Silly old...”, and his Dorine remarks: “I know / she’d tell you you’re the one who’s being silly / and that no one would ever call her old.” With Wilbur, Cléante begins a remark about “How that old lady...”, but is interrupted by Dorine’s observation: “She’d thank you for the lady, but I’m sure / She’d find the old a little premature.”

Everyday life then and now

More or less information may be included in a translation, particularly in the case of references to social or cultural matters. One may simply convey as directly as possible what is in the original text, or add additional information, or shorten or omit passages that risk losing audiences of one’s own time. References to things not familiar to the target audience can be translated without concession; alternatively, a more general term can be used, or the reference can be replaced by something that will give a similar effect. Sometimes a familiar term can be misleading. One might think that the deceptively familiar mouchoir, mentioned in Act I sc. 2, would present no difficulties. Dorine complains to Cléante about Tartuffe’s servant Laurent, who in her opinion is as unbearable as his master:

Le traître, l’autre jour, nous rompit de ses mains
Un mouchoir qu’il trouva dans une Fleur des Saints,
Disant que nous mêlions, par un crime effroyable,
Avec la sainteté les parures du diable.

A mouchoir could be a “Linge dont on se sert pour se moucher” (Dictionnaire de l’Académie), that is, a handkerchief — not a frivolous thing, unless it is especially fine. Indeed, in his first appearance at the beginning of Act III, Tartuffe proffers his own mouchoir to Dorine, saying, “Couvrez ce sein que je ne saurais voir”. The mouchoir found in the Fleur des saints is more likely to be a “Mouchoir de col, Le linge dont les femmes se couvrent le col & la gorge” (Dictionnaire de l’Académie), in which case it might be considered a “parure du diable” — though one would think that to wear a low-cut dress without one would be even more shocking, as Tartuffe’s reaction to Dorine’s appearance shows. (See Salomon, 1962, Ch. 1, on the controversy about les nudités) For mouchoir, Waller says “a handkerchief”; Waldinger “a fine handkerchief”; Edney and Wilbur “a kerchief”; Appelbaum, Block and Bishop “a neckerchief”; Hampton explains the function: “my lace bib”.

Another question arises in the same line. Is it necessary for the reader or spectator to know that the book in which the mouchoir was pressed was about the lives of the saints, or is it sufficient to know that it was a religious book of some sort? Frame keeps the French “Fleur des Saints”, The Modern Library version and Waller use the expression “Flower of the Saints”, Hampton gives “The Lives of the Saints”, Appelbaum explains that it was “a huge volume of saints’ lives”, Block generalizes to “a book about saints”, Edney and Waldinger change it to “a prayer book”. All those who use “Fleur des Saints” or “Flower of the Saints” keep the strangeness and remind us that the action is happening in 17th century France. “Lives of the saints” is less strange, “prayer book” perhaps even less so. The latter is based on what Eugene Nida calls the principle of “dynamic equivalence”, where the translator abandons parallel linguistic structures in order to give what he or she considers to be an equivalent effect in the target language. (Nida 1964, pp. 159-160) We may note that the eighteenth-century translators Baker and Miller go even further in this way, substituting a religious book familiar to an English audience, though certainly of dubious relevance to Catholicism: “The Pilgrim’s Progress”.

One of the funniest scenes in the play, the first one in which Orgon appears (Act I, sc. 4), presents a number of questions to the translator. The scene has been prepared by the various characters’ comments about Orgon’s infatuation with Tartuffe, and it confirms all that has been said. It gives information about Tartuffe himself, who has not yet been seen; the man’s sensuality is revealed, in contrast with what has previously been said about his severity towards others.[10] When Orgon, just returned from a trip, inquires what has happened in his absence, Dorine informs him that his wife Elmire has been ill. After each description of Elmire’s suffering, Orgon asks: “Et Tartuffe?” Each time, Dorine tells him that Tartuffe has been well: he has eaten heartily, drunk copiously, and slept well. Orgon replies each time: “Le pauvre homme!” In the last of the exchanges, Dorine says that Elmire finally agreed to be bled, and felt better afterwards. Orgon asks the same question:

Orgon

Et Tartuffe?

Dorine

Il reprit courage comme il faut
Et contre tous les maux fortifiant son âme,
Pour réparer le sang qu’avait perdu Madame,
But, à son déjeuner, quatre grands coups de vin.

Orgon

Le pauvre homme!

Translation of this passage raises a number of questions concerning everyday life, including how to deal with words having several meanings, and words whose meanings have changed since the seventeenth century. Tartuffe drank to fortify “son âme”, a term that may refer simply to oneself, or the soul (appropriate in the context of this play). It is translated as “his soul” (Appelbaum, Block, Waldinger, Frame), “his spirit” (Bishop), “himself” (Edney, Hampton, Modern Library, Waller, Wood), “his cheerfulness” (Bishop). The line is omitted by Malleson. Against what was he fortifying his âme? It could be “all ills” (Appelbaum, Waller), “all evils” (Block), “disease” (Edney), “all harm” (Modern Library), “the worst that might happen” (Wood), “trouble” (Bishop), “the blows of fate” (Hampton). The expression is replaced by a different formulation, “at any cost”, by Wilbur and Frame. The latter two verse translators, working independently, came to the same solution because of the need for a rhyme with “lost”.

Wilbur

To keep his cheerfulness at any cost
And make up for the blood Madame had lost
He drank, at lunch, four beakers full of port.

Frame

And, girding up his soul at any cost
To make up for the blood Madame had lost
He downed at breakfast four great drafts of wine.

Few of the translators managed to capture Dorine’s ironic use of religious terminology to describe Tartuffe’s self-indulgent behaviour.

It was at déjeuner that Tartuffe drank the wine. As the origin of its name indicates, le déjeuner was the first meal, at which one ceased to jeûner (like the English “break fast”); people normally ate it several hours after rising.[11] Translators must decide whether to say “breakfast” or to translate it as “lunch”, as the word déjeuner is used in France today. The choice of “breakfast” is perhaps more comic; to a modern public the idea of drinking wine early in the morning is particularly odd. Appelbaum, Block, Edney, Malleson, Waller, Wood, Frame and Hampton say “breakfast”, while Bishop, Bolt, and Wilbur choose “lunch”, and Waldinger does not specify the meal. Wilbur and Frame keep in mind the whole line and its rhythm: “He drank, at lunch, four beakers full of port” (Wilbur); “He downed at breakfast four great drafts of wine” (Frame).

Tartuffe drank “quatre grands coups de vin”. How much was that? Un coup is not an exact measurement. Several translators choose “draughts” (or the variant spelling, “drafts”): “big draughts” (Appelbaum), “great drafts” (Frame), “large draughts” (Modern Library). For others, he drank four “glasses”: “large glasses” (Block), “big glasses” (Edney), “glasses full of wine” (Bishop). Waller has him drink “four large bumpers”, Bolt writes “several stoups”, Wood has “good swigs” (a colourful word, but “three or four good swigs of wine” is not necessarily a large quantity), Hampton gives “tumblersful” (which suggests a large amount), and Wilbur writes “four beakers full of port”.[12]

Orgon’s repeated exclamation “le pauvre homme”, following Dorine’s reports on Tartuffe’s hearty appetite, is the chief source of laughs in the scene. Even today the adjective pauvre has a double meaning in French, expressing either pity or affection. Orgon could have used it in either sense in speaking of Elmire, in view of her illness. However, ignoring the news of his wife, he expresses his attachment to Tartuffe by this word. At the same time the audience thinks of the other meaning, clearly not applicable to Tartuffe. The English translator cannot have it both ways; he or she must choose “dear” or “poor”. Either Orgon says something in English that makes sense but is not very comic aside from the repetition, or else his exclamation is wildly inappropriate and thus funny. None of the translators find a way to have Orgon mean the remark one way while the audience takes it in another way. All of them, with one exception, use “poor”. Edney has considered the two possibilities; while in his article he mentions the expression "Poor man!", in his own translation he writes "Dear man!"

Language sacred and salacious

The scene in which Tartuffe tries to seduce Elmire (Act III, sc. 3) presents another kind of challenge to translators, for Tartuffe uses religious terminology to speak of sensual desire. The scene must have been deliciously shocking to some members of the audience and truly horrifying to others. Its power depends on the widespread and ancient practice of using erotic language in speaking of religion. The love poems in the Song of Solomon were interpreted in Jewish tradition as an expression of God’s love for Israel. Christian commentators applied the same approach to the work, assuming the love to be that of Christ for the Church. (See Reese, 1993) Over the centuries, writers such as John of the Cross have continued to use the language of human love to express love of God.[13] The image of a nun as the bride of Christ is still used today in the Catholic Church.[14] In the other direction, the language of religion was used in the literature of courtly love, where the lover’s devotion to the lady was of a quasi-religious nature.

Many seventeenth-century religious writers presented the austere practices of religious devotion in terms of pleasure. One of the most eminent of these was François de Sales, whose extremely influential Introduction à la vie dévote was published in 1608. According to him, “la dévotion est le vrai sucre spirituel, qui ôte de l’amertume aux mortifications et la nuisance aux consolations.” (Sales, 1804, Première Partie, Ch. II) A prayer states: “Et vous, ô mon Dieu, mon Sauveur, vous serez dorénavant le seul objet de mes pensées; [...] vous serez les délices de mon coeur et la suavité de mes affections.” (Première Partie, Ch. X) Devout people are like happy birds in the air of divinity, “qui les environne de toutes parts de plaisirs incroyables”. (Première Partie, Ch. XVI)

Tartuffe’s attempt to seduce Elmire must be seen in the light of this back-and-forth movement between sensual and mystic impulses and the expression of one in terms of the other. In his declaration, he assures her:

Que si vous contemplez d’une âme un peu bénigne
Les tribulations de votre esclave indigne
S’il faut que vos bontés veuillent me consoler,
Et jusqu’à mon néant daignent se ravaler,
J’aurai toujours pour vous, ô suave merveille,
Une dévotion à nulle autre pareille.

While this may seem like ordinary language to a modern audience, in seventeenth-century France it was highly charged in both a religious and an erotic sense. Tartuffe speaks of the possibility that “vos bontés veuillent me consoler”. While the singular “votre bonté” would probably mean simply “your goodness” or “your kindness”, the plural suggests “vos faveurs”.[15] These bontés are meant to console him. While la consolation is often used in the ordinary sense of “soulagement que l’on donne à l’affliction, à la douleur, au desplaisir de quelqu’un” (Dictionnaire de l’Académie), it is often used in a religious sense. The same dictionary gives as examples for this meaning: “Dieu est toute sa consolation.” “Dieu est le consolateur de nos ames, le consolateur des malheureux, des affligez. L’Eglise appelle le saint Esprit Le consolateur, l’Esprit consolateur.” Tartuffe asks Elmire, in consoling him, to condescend “jusqu’à mon néant”. In addition to its meaning of “nothing”, as in mathematics, néant can refer to the unworthiness of the sinner before God. According to the Dictionnaire, “les creatures se sentent tousjours du neant dont elles sont sorties.”

Tartuffe addresses Elmire as “suave merveille”. The adjective suave may not be recognized today as a religious one even in French, and the English word borrowed from French is even further from the seventeenth-century meaning.[16] As we have seen above, François de Sales often uses the word to speak of the sweetness of religious devotion. The Dictionnaire de l’Académie defines suave as “Qui est doux & agreable, il n’a guere d’usage qu’en parlant des odeurs.” Suavité is “La douceur d’une odeur.[...] Il signifie en termes de spiritualité, Certaine douceur qui se fait sentir à l’ame, quand Dieu la favorise. Durant l’oraison il sent des suavitez merveilleuses.” On the other hand, a merveille is simply a “Chose rare, & qui cause de l’admiration”, such as the seven wonders of the world. In translating the expression “suave merveille”, one obviously cannot use the borrowed word suave, since its meaning is inappropriate. The entire expression is omitted by Frame, Malleson and Wilbur. It is translated without religious connotations by Appelbaum (“sweet wonder”) and Hampton (“delicious prodigy”). A number of translators use the noun miracle to restore some of the lost meaning of the adjective: “lovely miracle” (Bishop), “delicate miracle” (Block), “miracle of nature” (Edney), “miracle of sweetness” (Modern Library), “sweet miracle” (Waldinger), “miracle of loveliness” (Wood).

Tartuffe promises Elmire “une dévotion à nulle autre pareille”. Dévotion is “Pieté, attachement au service de Dieu”, according to the Dictionnaire de l’Académie. Even today it retains the same meaning; the Petit Robert defines it as “attachement sincère à la religion et à ses pratiques”. The Robert & Collins Senior offers the English equivalent “devoutness, religious devotion”. The cognate English word refers only secondarily to religious practice; the primary meaning is attachment, as in devotion to duty or to family. For the French dévotion, all the translators use the English “devotion”. In the combination “Immeasurable worship and devotion”, Bishop restores religion by an additional noun. Frame omits the language of spirituality entirely:

A bit of sympathy is all I crave
For the distress of your unworthy slave.
If your kindness, Madame, should ever deign
To condescend to me, and end my pain,
Nothing would be as constant and as true
As the devotion I shall have for you.

Hampton omits most of it as well:

If you could bring yourself to show some favour
to your unworthy servant’s tribulations,
if you would deign to stoop down to my level
and out of kindness offer me relief,
delicious prodigy, I guarantee
my eternal, unparalleled devotion.

Wilbur keeps a religious flavour:

And if, in your great goodness, you will deign
To look upon your slave, and ease his pain, —
If, in compassion for my soul’s distress,
You’ll stoop to comfort my unworthiness,
I’ll raise to you, in thanks for that sweet manna,
An endless hymn, an infinite hosanna.

The use of “manna” and “hosanna” recall biblical language, though “hosanna”, a public exclamation of praise, is inappropriate in a declaration of illicit love where Tartuffe later promises complete secrecy. The translator’s clever rhyme reduces the character’s cleverness and the menace that he represents for the family.

When the attempt at seduction is revealed to Orgon, Tartuffe shows himself to be a master of deception. He diverts attention from the act of which he is accused, by accusing himself of all kinds of terrible but unspecified crimes:

Oui, mon frère, je suis un méchant, un coupable,
Un malheureux pécheur, tout plein d’iniquité,
Le plus grand scélérat qui jamais ait été;
Chaque instant de ma vie est chargé de souillures;
Elle n’est qu’un amas de crimes et d’ordures;
Et je vois que le Ciel, pour ma punition,
Me veut mortifier en cette occasion.

While Tartuffe’s confession is true, Orgon takes it — as Tartuffe intends — to be an expression of Christian humility and a willingness to be accused of sins which he has not committed. It echoes jansenist language expressing the conviction of sin in every human being. Tartuffe says that every moment of his life is “chargé de souillures”. The word souillures is rendered by a number of translators (Block, Modern Library, Waller) as “pollution” or “pollutions”; or Tartuffe’s life “has been polluted” (Bishop). For souillures Appelbaum uses “impurity”, Wood “foul deed”, Frame “grime” (to rhyme with “crime” in the following line). For Wilbur, Tartuffe’s life has been “one heap of crimes”. Waldinger mentions “blemishes”, which is rather weak, evoking character faults rather than evil deeds. One may wonder whether those translators who chose “pollution” would do so today. The word is now so often used to refer to such things as chemicals washing into rivers, that it does not evoke immorality in private life.

In the second seduction scene (Act IV, sc. 5), where Orgon, hidden under a table, hears for himself the proof of Tartuffe’s treachery, Tartuffe uses less religious language. The tension here comes less from a contradiction between his words and his intentions, than from suspense about what is going to happen next. While the scene can be very funny, it has a more serious aspect because of Elmire’s distress. As I mentioned earlier, Elmire’s character can be played in different ways. In some interpretations she finds her dealings with Tartuffe unpleasant but necessary, while in others she enjoys flirting with him. A translator may tend to one or the other of these views. In addition, the rendering of as little as a half-line may make a difference in the way the audience sees her. When Tartuffe demands that Elmire prove her feelings towards him by “un peu de vos faveurs”, Orgon still remains hidden, and Elmire coughs loudly to signal that it is high time to reveal himself. The coughing is so obvious that Tartuffe remarks:

Tartuffe

Vous toussez fort, Madame.

Elmire

Oui, je suis au supplice.

Tartuffe

Vous plaît-il un morceau de ce jus de réglisse?

Elmire

C’est un rhume obstiné, sans doute; et je vois bien
Que tous les jus du monde ici ne feront rien.

Tartuffe

Cela certes est fâcheux.

Elmire

Oui, plus qu’on ne peut dire.

Elmire’s remarks “je suis au supplice” and “plus qu’on ne peut dire” indicate clearly that she is suffering. Not only is her cold “obstiné”, as she says two lines later, but her husband is so as well. While Tartuffe takes the first of her remarks, “Oui, je suis au supplice”, to refer to the cough, the audience understands that she is calling on Orgon to end the situation. In the wording chosen by some translators, Elmire refers to the source of her distress as “it”, which logically would mean the cough: “Yes, it is very bad” (Block), “It tortures me” (Bishop), “Yes, it racks me” (Waller), “Yes, yes. It’s bad indeed” (Wilbur). Other translators avoid the pronoun “it”, so that the remark can equally indicate other causes of suffering, understood immediately by the audience if not by the slow-acting Orgon: “Yes, I’m in torture” (Appelbaum), “Yes, I am in agony” (Edney), “Yes, I am very much tormented” (Modern Library), “Yes, I am very uncomfortable” (Waldinger), “Yes! I’m in great distress” (Wood). Even if the rhythm is sometimes heavy, these versions retain the double meaning which is essential to the passage; they thus express her distress, and contribute to the portrayal of her as “une honnête femme” at the mercy of an evil man.

Conclusion

Earlier in this article I mentioned some questions that a translator must answer explicitly or implicitly, the most general one being whether to bring the work to the public or the public to the work. According to some people, the criterion of “performability” — criticized by Bassnett, accepted by Peacock — must be met in translations of dramatic works to be used on stage. In some of the passages from Tartuffe quoted above, concessions can be made to changing times without too much damage. Adapting or explaining matters of everyday life, for example, does not touch the heart of the play. The translators studied here describe the amount of wine drunk by Tartuffe in various ways, some more colourful than others. In dealing with mouchoir and with Fleur des Saints, some go further than others in explaining the references to seventeenth-century life or in replacing them with more familiar references. All the solutions in these two passages are more or less satisfactory, and nothing essential is lost. In other cases, it is impossible to retain everything that is in the French text. None of the translators quite manages to capture cette bonne femme, and all of them lose the double meaning, and thus much of the comic effect, of le pauvre homme.[17] In the latter case, Orgon's repetition of the expression, whether it be “Poor man!” or “Dear man!”, still conveys his infatuation with Tartuffe.

One of the most difficult challenges is to capture the religious language and references which were so shocking at the time of the play's first appearance, and which are still powerful today to the reader or spectator who understands them. In the passage quoted from the first seduction scene, some of the translators retain this crucial element, while others omit it almost entirely.[18] Tartuffe becomes simply ridiculous, without the danger or scandal of the original.

The language of seventeenth-century French religious devotion, as we have seen, includes many common lexical items having a specialized meaning. Tartuffe masters this language perfectly, and uses it to serve his lechery and greed; he increases his crimes by hiding them under cover of the sacred. In a double borrowing, words such as suave, bonté or consolation move from the neutral register to the sacred, and in Tartuffe's speech, to the obscene. Such a complex set of relations is difficult to capture in another language, and yet if a translation loses this aspect, the work loses much of its force.

The challenge may in some ways be compared to translating a sociolect, that is, the language of a particular social group. In this play, there is no question of non-standard grammar or constructions; the language of devotion expresses ideology more than regional origin or social class.[19] What subset of the target language can best render this aspect of the source text? If historical accuracy is the translator's main aim, the language of Catholic devotion in English would probably be used. If one wishes a dynamic equivalent, to use Nida's terminology, the vocabulary of another religious group might be chosen. If a translator aims to show the universality of the theme — after all, religious frauds are as common in our time as they were in Molière's, and they are found in religions both traditional and new — he or she may prefer to use a more general pious language. The application desired for a particular performance can be made by means of staging. Stage sets, costumes and acting can evoke many different contexts in which an opportunist takes advantage of the gullible, or an oppressive regime threatens the integrity of private and family life.[20] Anne-Françoise Benhamou warns of the danger of attempting a too-precise parallel with contemporary situations in translating great theatrical texts: “La traduction doit conserver, évidemment, le 'feuilletage' du texte, et ne pas réduire à une seule possibilité de représentation un texte qui en offre plusieurs.” How, otherwise, can one play (with) a text that already supplies all its interpretation? (Benhamou, 1990, p. 13)

In the remarks above, I have assumed that the public recognizes religious language — an assumption that perhaps cannot be justified. Every teacher of literature has had to explain religious references so that they will not be missed by many students. It can no longer be taken for granted that readers will catch the biblical references that are so important in English literature. In Tartuffe, the power to shock came from seeing a hypocrite manipulating the language of the sacred for evil ends. Since for many members of the public today, religious language is often no longer even recognized, and if recognized, often not held sacred, it is a real challenge to translate at the same time the comedy, the scandal and the menace of the play.

According to Antoine Berman, “Il faut retraduire parce que les traductions vieillissent, et parce qu'aucune n'est la traduction.”[21] (Berman, 1990, p. 1) André Topia analyzes the reason for this different fate: the original has a network of organic interactions with its time, language and culture, which the translation cannot have.[22] (Topia, 1990, p. 46) Tartuffe more than most literary works has both deep roots in its time and potential applications to specific situations in other times. In the words of Ariane Mnouchkine, it is “une fontaine de jouvence”. (Mnouchkine, 2000) For these reasons it will no doubt continue to attract translators, who will make choices based on their understanding of the work, their talents and the purpose for which they undertake the translation.