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in the Oedipus story: should any author use it, he would be
hissed off the stage. The same holds true for other stories of this
kind. No one conceals his incestuous loves any longer.
A hundred years ago crimes of passion were punished with
death; under the influence of romanticism they are no longer
dangerous for their perpetrators. In fifty years, under the influ
ence of DADA, parricides will be acquitted with the congratu
lations of the jury.
Relations of M and his children:
They vary, according to the mood of the gentleman, from pure
and simple suppression to the meal of Ugolin, who was only a
timid fore runner. There should be a law against respect for
infancy.
The nineteenth century will have tried in vain to establish the
supremacy of youth in the world: the overthrow of its ideas
takes place amid general hilarity (the sanctity of childhood is
now only a joke).
Relations of the man and his neighbour:
M has no neighbour. He cuts up men and puts them in water
to ornament his apartment. He kills as he can at random. He
robs, he rests, he fornicates, he reproaches no one, he breaks
bodies for his pleasure, he has already said that he is good.
Relations of M with himself:
They are the relations of politeness with brusque attacks of
frankness. One sets sail on an uncertain sea: there is no fore
seeing the mood of the next minute except perhaps there is an
innate horror of blows (and still see the boxers). Has M a self?
He asks himself sometimes without the least anxiety. He will
know in several years his ideas on suicide.
Relations of M with his family, his country, society, the race,
humanity:
They are the relations of humanity, the race, society, country,
family with the M.
Blood relationship is not indispensable for sex relations.
When one has a large intelligence one admits that two compatri