I tell you that my tidings has never done anything more sensible than in receiving this good personage in his house; that Heaven itself, in quantify of need, has sent him here to reclaim all your erring minds; that for your salvation's sake, you ought to see to him; and that he censures nothing but what is reprehensible (MoliFre, Act I, characterization I).
Orgon is as deceived as Madame Pernelle, elevating Tartuffe to the level of a saint. MoliFre demonstrates through Orgon's flip with
Dorine that Orgon is so intent upon endowing Tartuffe with saintliness that he does so without any correlation to the truth.
When Dorine relates the many sufferings of her mistress, Orgon ignores those and commiserates with Tartuffe instead, even though Dorine reports that he is doing "wonderfully well":
MoliFre. "Tartuffe, ou L'Imposteur." Bibliomania. http://www.bibliomania.com/0/6/4/1966/frameset.html
Dorine. The day before yesterday my mistress had an firing of fever until evening, accompanied by an extraordinary headache.
Orgon. Poor mate! (MoliFre, Act I, Scene V).
Dorine. He supped by himself in her battlefront; and very devoutly ate two partridges, and half a leg of mutton hashed.
MoliFre's critique of religious hypocrisy seems to have a hidden objective to show how the only trade protection from the shams of predatory characters like Tartuffe is a real life of faith. In the last analysi
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