DEDICATION
To Monsieur Victor Hugo,
It was your birthright to be, like a Rafael
or a Pitt, a great poet at an age when other men
are children; it was your fate, the fate of Chateaubriand
and of every man of genius, to struggle against
jealousy skulking behind the columns of a newspaper,
or crouching in the subterranean places of journalism.
For this reason I desired that your victorious name
should help to win a victory for this work that
I inscribe to you, a work which, if some persons
are to be believed, is an act of courage as well as
a veracious history. If there had been journalists
in the time of Moliere, who can doubt but that they,
like marquises, financiers, doctors, and lawyers,
would have been within the province of the writer
of plays? And why should Comedy, qui castigat
ridendo mores, make an exception in favor of
one power, when the Parisian press spares none?
I am happy, monsieur, in this opportunity of subscribing
myself your sincere admirer and friend,
DE BALZAC.
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