Charlotte Temple

by Susanna Rowson
Belcour is a selfish, untrustworthy lieutenant in the British army, and one of Montraville’s close friends. While Montraville seduces Charlotte, Belcour endears himself to Mademoiselle La Rue, finding it easy to convince her to travel with him to America. Although he originally promises to marry her in America, he has no intention of actually doing so. La Rue senses that this is the case, so she abandons him for a wealthy man named Crayton. But Belcour doesn’t care: instead of fixating on La Rue, he takes an interest in Charlotte, not caring that she’s romantically involved with his good friend Montraville. He decides to wait for an opportunity to break them up—an opportunity that presents itself when he realizes, upon reaching America, that Montraville isn’t interested in Charlotte anymore. Belcour starts paying her frequent visits when Montraville isn’t around, and he even tells Montraville that everybody knows Charlotte is cheating on him. One day, he finds Charlotte sleeping and sees that Montraville is coming down the road, so he jumps into bed and pretends to be asleep next to Charlotte. Montraville enters and flies into a rage, assuming they’re having an affair and vowing never to speak to Charlotte again, even though she’s now carrying his unborn child. With Montraville out of the picture, Belcour tries to win over Charlotte’s affection, but doing so is harder than he thought it’d be. When he tells her that Montraville has married a young woman named Julia Franklin, she loses control and falls into a grave illness. Belcour tries to nurse her back to health, but her feeble state repulses him, so he stops visiting altogether and gives up on the idea of starting a relationship with her. Montraville later blames him for Charlotte’s ultimate demise, since he thought Belcour would take care of her in his absence. In the end, Montraville murders Belcour, but even this doesn’t assuage his guilt about leading Charlotte into a life of hardship.

Belcour Quotes in Charlotte Temple

The Charlotte Temple quotes below are all either spoken by Belcour or refer to Belcour. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Temptation and Vice Theme Icon
).

Chapter 9 Quotes

[…] eager in the pursuit of pleasure, he minded not the miseries he inflicted on others, provided his own wishes, however extravagant, were gratified. Self, darling self, was the idol he worshipped, and to that he would have sacrificed the interest and happiness of all mankind. Such was the friend of Montraville: will not the reader be ready to imagine, that the man who could regard such a character, must be actuated by the same feelings, follow the same pursuits, and be equally unworthy with the person to whom he thus gave his confidence?

Related Characters: Belcour, Montraville, Charlotte Temple
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 10 Quotes

Montraville therefore concluded it was impossible he should ever marry Charlotte Temple; and what end he proposed to himself by continuing the acquaintance he had commenced with her, he did not at that moment give himself time to enquire.

Related Characters: Belcour, Montraville, Charlotte Temple, Mademoiselle La Rue (Mrs. Crayton)
Page Number: 41
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 11 Quotes

Belcour and Mademoiselle heard this last speech, and conceiving it a proper time to throw in their advice and persuasions, approached Charlotte, and so well seconded the entreaties of Montraville, that finding Mademoiselle intended going with Belcour, and feeling her own treacherous heart too much inclined to accompany them, the hapless Charlotte, in an evil hour, consented that the next evening they should bring a chaise to the end of the town and that she would leave her friends, and throw herself entirely on the protection of Montraville.

Related Characters: Charlotte Temple, Belcour, Mademoiselle La Rue (Mrs. Crayton), Montraville
Page Number: 43-44
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 16 Quotes

Let not the reader imagine Belcour’s designs were honourable. Alas! when once a woman has forgot the respect due to herself, by yielding to the solicitations of illicit love, they lose all their consequence, even in the eyes of the man whose art has betrayed them, and for whose sake they have sacrificed every valuable consideration.

Related Characters: Belcour, Charlotte Temple, Montraville, Mademoiselle La Rue (Mrs. Crayton), The Author (Susanna Rowson)
Page Number: 62-63
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 24 Quotes

“I am a seducer, a mean, ungenerous seducer of unsuspecting innocence. I dare not hope that purity like her’s [sic] would stoop to unite itself with black, premeditated guilt: yet by heavens I swear, Belcour, I thought I loved the lost, abandoned Charlotte till I saw Julia—I thought I never could forsake her; but the heart is deceitful, and I now can plainly discriminate between the impulse of a youthful passion, and the pure flame of disinterested affection.”

Related Characters: Montraville (speaker), Belcour, Charlotte Temple, Julia Franklin
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 93
Explanation and Analysis:
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Belcour Quotes in Charlotte Temple

The Charlotte Temple quotes below are all either spoken by Belcour or refer to Belcour. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Temptation and Vice Theme Icon
).

Chapter 9 Quotes

[…] eager in the pursuit of pleasure, he minded not the miseries he inflicted on others, provided his own wishes, however extravagant, were gratified. Self, darling self, was the idol he worshipped, and to that he would have sacrificed the interest and happiness of all mankind. Such was the friend of Montraville: will not the reader be ready to imagine, that the man who could regard such a character, must be actuated by the same feelings, follow the same pursuits, and be equally unworthy with the person to whom he thus gave his confidence?

Related Characters: Belcour, Montraville, Charlotte Temple
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 10 Quotes

Montraville therefore concluded it was impossible he should ever marry Charlotte Temple; and what end he proposed to himself by continuing the acquaintance he had commenced with her, he did not at that moment give himself time to enquire.

Related Characters: Belcour, Montraville, Charlotte Temple, Mademoiselle La Rue (Mrs. Crayton)
Page Number: 41
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 11 Quotes

Belcour and Mademoiselle heard this last speech, and conceiving it a proper time to throw in their advice and persuasions, approached Charlotte, and so well seconded the entreaties of Montraville, that finding Mademoiselle intended going with Belcour, and feeling her own treacherous heart too much inclined to accompany them, the hapless Charlotte, in an evil hour, consented that the next evening they should bring a chaise to the end of the town and that she would leave her friends, and throw herself entirely on the protection of Montraville.

Related Characters: Charlotte Temple, Belcour, Mademoiselle La Rue (Mrs. Crayton), Montraville
Page Number: 43-44
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 16 Quotes

Let not the reader imagine Belcour’s designs were honourable. Alas! when once a woman has forgot the respect due to herself, by yielding to the solicitations of illicit love, they lose all their consequence, even in the eyes of the man whose art has betrayed them, and for whose sake they have sacrificed every valuable consideration.

Related Characters: Belcour, Charlotte Temple, Montraville, Mademoiselle La Rue (Mrs. Crayton), The Author (Susanna Rowson)
Page Number: 62-63
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 24 Quotes

“I am a seducer, a mean, ungenerous seducer of unsuspecting innocence. I dare not hope that purity like her’s [sic] would stoop to unite itself with black, premeditated guilt: yet by heavens I swear, Belcour, I thought I loved the lost, abandoned Charlotte till I saw Julia—I thought I never could forsake her; but the heart is deceitful, and I now can plainly discriminate between the impulse of a youthful passion, and the pure flame of disinterested affection.”

Related Characters: Montraville (speaker), Belcour, Charlotte Temple, Julia Franklin
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 93
Explanation and Analysis: