Lucretia — Complete
“Lucretia; or, The Children of Night,” was begun simultaneously with “The Caxtons: a Family Picture.” The two fictions were intended as pendants; both serving, amongst other collateral aims and objects, to show the influence of home education, of early circumstance and example, upon after character and conduct. “Lucretia” was completed and published before “The Caxtons.” The moral design of the first was misunderstood and assailed; that of the last was generally acknowledged and approved: the moral design in both was nevertheless precisely the same. But in one it was sought through the darker side of human nature; in the other through the more sunny and cheerful: one shows the evil, the other the salutary influences, of early circumstance and training. Necessarily, therefore, the first resorts to the tragic elements of awe and distress,—the second to the comic elements of humour and agreeable emotion. These differences serve to explain the different reception that awaited the two, and may teach us how little the real conception of an author is known, and how little it is cared for; we judge, not by the purpose he conceives, but according as the impressions he effects are pleasurable or painful. But while I cannot acquiesce in much of the hostile criticism this fiction produced at its first appearance, I readily allow that as a mere question of art the story might have been improved in itself, and rendered more acceptable to the reader, by diminishing the gloom of the catastrophe. In this edition I have endeavoured to do so; and the victim whose fate in the former cast of the work most revolted the reader, as a violation of the trite but amiable law of Poetical Justice, is saved from the hands of the Children of Night. Perhaps, whatever the faults of this work, it equals most of its companions in the sustainment of interest, and in that coincidence between the gradual development of motive or passion, and the sequences of external events constituting plot, which mainly distinguish the physical awe of tragedy from the coarse horrors of melodrama. I trust at least that I shall now find few readers who will not readily acknowledge that the delineation of crime has only been employed for the grave and impressive purpose which brings it within the due province of the poet,—as an element of terror and a warning to the heart.
Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
LUCRETIA
PREFACE TO THE EDITION OF 1853.
PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.
PART THE FIRST.
PROLOGUE TO PART THE FIRST.
CHAPTER I. A FAMILY GROUP.
CHAPTER II. LUCRETIA.
CHAPTER III. CONFERENCES.
CHAPTER IV. GUY’S OAK.
CHAPTER V. HOUSEHOLD TREASON.
CHAPTER VI. THE WILL
CHAPTER VII. THE ENGAGEMENT.
CHAPTER VIII. THE DISCOVERY.
CHAPTER IX. A SOUL WITHOUT HOPE.
CHAPTER X. THE RECONCILIATION BETWEEN FATHER AND SON.
EPILOGUE TO PART THE FIRST.
PART THE SECOND.
PROLOGUE TO PART THE SECOND.
CHAPTER I. THE CORONATION.
CHAPTER II. LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT.
CHAPTER III. EARLY TRAINING FOR AN UPRIGHT GENTLEMAN.
CHAPTER IV. JOHN ARDWORTH.
CHAPTER V. THE WEAVERS AND THE WOOF.
CHAPTER VI. THE LAWYER AND THE BODY-SNATCHER.
CHAPTER VII. THE RAPE OF THE MATTRESS.
CHAPTER VIII. PERCIVAL VISITS LUCRETIA.
CHAPTER IX. THE ROSE BENEATH THE UPAS.
CHAPTER X. THE RATTLE OF THE SNAKE.
CHAPTER XI. LOVE AND INNOCENCE.
CHAPTER XII. SUDDEN CELEBRITY AND PATIENT HOPE.
CHAPTER XIII. THE LOSS OF THE CROSSING.
CHAPTER XIV. NEWS FROM GRABMAN.
CHAPTER XV. VARIETIES.
CHAPTER XVI. THE INVITATION TO LAUGHTON.
CHAPTER XVII. THE WAKING OF THE SERPENT.
CHAPTER XVIII. RETROSPECT.
CHAPTER XIX. MR. GRABMAN’S ADVENTURES.
CHAPTER XX. MORE OF MRS. JOPLIN.
CHAPTER XXI. BECK’S DISCOVERY.
CHAPTER XXII. THE TAPESTRY CHAMBER.
CHAPTER XXIII. THE SHADES ON THE DIAL
CHAPTER XXIV. MURDER, TOWARDS HIS DESIGN, MOVES LIKE A GHOST.
CHAPTER XXV. THE MESSENGER SPEEDS.
CHAPTER XXVI. THE SPY FLIES.
CHAPTER XXVII. LUCRETIA REGAINS HER SON.
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE LOTS VANISH WITHIN THE URN.
EPILOGUE TO PART THE SECOND.