Thérèse Raquin

by

Émile Zola

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Thérèse Raquin Character Analysis

Thérèse is a nervous, quiet woman who grew up in the care of her aunt, Madame Raquin. She was born in Algeria, but when her mother—an Algerian woman—died, her father brought her to his native France and left her with Madame Raquin, who raised her alongside her own son, Camille. Because Camille was always sick in childhood, Madame Raquin fawned over him and forced Thérèse to do the same. She always felt held back by Camille and dreamt of leading a more exciting life, but she adopted a passive, acquiescent attitude instead, eventually marrying Camille at the behest of Madame Raquin. The family moves to Paris after the wedding, and Thérèse passes her time in idle boredom at a haberdashery that she runs with Madame Raquin. She’s depressed by her circumstances but resigns herself to her bleak existence—until, that is, Laurent comes along. Attracted to Laurent’s strength and power, Thérèse feels emboldened by passion for the first time in her life. She eagerly embarks on an affair with him and is so swept up in their fiery desire for one another that she doesn’t care about deceiving Camille. In fact, the intensity of her passion even scares Laurent, ultimately foreshadowing the way the couple’s yearning for each other drives them out of control. They end up murdering Camille so they can get married, but their plan goes awry in the aftermath of the crime. Thérèse’s nervous disposition comes back in full force, as she can’t stop thinking about Camille’s corpse when she’s alone with Laurent. She tries everything to make herself feel better, but nothing works. Overwhelmed and desperate, she decides to stab Laurent to death, but just as she’s about to do so, she catches him poisoning her drink. After a pause, she embraces him. They weep together and then both drink the poison.

Thérèse Raquin Quotes in Thérèse Raquin

The Thérèse Raquin quotes below are all either spoken by Thérèse Raquin or refer to Thérèse Raquin. 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:
Passion and Pleasure Theme Icon
).
Chapter 2 Quotes

This life of enforced convalescence made her turn in on herself; she developed a habit of speaking in an undertone, walking about the house without making any noise, and sitting silent and motionless on a chair with a vacant look in her eyes. Yet whenever she lifted an arm or moved a foot forward, it was apparent that she had all the litheness of a cat, with taut, powerful muscles and a store of passion and energy which lay dormant in her inert body.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Camille
Page Number: 13
Explanation and Analysis:

Camille was irritated by his mother’s constant fussing; he had rebellious moments when he wanted to rush about and make himself ill, just to escape from her cloying attentions which were starting to make him feel sick. Then he would drag Thérèse off and challenge her to wrestle with him in the grass. One day he gave his cousin a push and she fell over; she leapt up at once like a wild animal, with her cheeks red and eyes blazing with anger, and threw herself on him with both fists raised. Camille slid to the ground. He was scared.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Camille
Page Number: 16
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

The truth was that only stupid ambition had driven Camille to think of leaving. He wanted to be an employee in some large administration, and would go pink with pleasure at the thought of himself sitting in the middle of a huge office, wearing shiny artificial cuffs and with a quill pen tucked behind his ear.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Camille
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

Thérèse, who had not yet said a word, looked at the newcomer. She had never seen a real man before. Laurent, tall, strong, and fresh-faced, filled her with astonishment. She stared with a kind of wonder at the low forehead, from which sprung black bushy hair, the full cheeks, red lips, and regular features which made up his handsome, full-blooded face. Her gaze lingered for a while on his neck, which was broad and short, thick and powerful. Then she became lost in contemplation of the huge hands, which he kept spread across his knees as he sat there; their fingers were square and his clenched fist must be enormous, capable of felling an ox.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 26
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

It is true that he found Thérèse plain and did not love her, but then she would not cost him anything; the women he usually picked up cheaply were certainly no prettier, nor any better loved. On grounds of economy alone, it was a good idea to take his friend’s wife. […] Then again, when he came to think about it, an affair like this could hardly lead to any trouble: it would be in Thérèse’s interests to cover it up, and he could easily jilt her when he felt like it; even if Camille did find out and get annoyed, he would just thump him if he started to throw his weight around. Whichever way he looked at it, the prospect seemed an easy and alluring one to Laurent.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Camille
Page Number: 33
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

When he left her he was tottering like a drunkard. The next day, once he had regained his caution and his rather forced composure, he asked himself whether or not to go back to this lover whose kisses so inflamed his passions. At first he firmly resolved to stay at home. Then he began to weaken. He wanted to forget Thérèse, the sight of her naked body and her sweet but brutal caresses, yet there she still was, implacable, holding her arms out to him. The physical pain which this vision caused him soon became unbearable.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

I don’t know how I can have loved you; actually, it was more like hate. The sight of you irritated me, I couldn’t stand it; when you were there, my nerves were stretched to breaking-point, my mind went blank, and I saw red. Oh, how I suffered! Yet I wanted my suffering and longed for you to come; […]

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin (speaker), Laurent
Page Number: 39
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

But, unbeknown to him, desire had worked away deep inside him until it had finally delivered him, bound hand and foot, into the wild embrace of Thérèse. Now he was afraid he would cast prudence aside altogether, and did not dare go to the Passage du Pont-Neuf of an evening for fear of committing some act of folly. He was no longer in control of his actions; his mistress, with her cat-like suppleness and nervous sensitivity, had slowly insinuated herself into every fibre of his body. He needed this woman to live, as one needs food and drink.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 48
Explanation and Analysis:

Before Thérèse had come he had not had any thought of murdering Camille; then, under the pressure of events and in exasperation at the thought that he would not see his lover ever again, he had talked of his death. Thus a new corner of his unconscious nature had revealed itself: carried away by his adultery, he had started dreaming of murder.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 51
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

The two lovers no longer made any attempt to see each other on their own. They never sought a rendez-vous or exchanged a furtive kiss. For the moment, the murder had as it were smothered the sensual fire in their flesh; by killing Camille, they had managed to assuage those fierce and insatiable desires which had remained unsatisfied while they had lain locked in each other’s arms. The crime had given them a feeling of acute pleasure which made their embraces seem insipid and loathsome in comparison.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Camille
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:

Whenever he reflected that he might have been found out and guillotined, all his caution and cowardice rushed back, making him shudder and bringing a cold sweat to his brow as he felt the icy kiss of the blade on the back of his neck. While he had been busily occupied he had gone straight ahead, with the blind tenacity of a dumb beast. Now, when he looked back at the chasm which he had just crossed, he was overcome by terror and faintness of heart.

‘I must really have been drunk,’ he thought; ‘that woman must have intoxicated me with her caresses. Good God, what a crazy fool I’ve been! To risk the guillotine for something like that…It went off all right in the end, but if I had my time again I wouldn’t even consider it.’

Related Characters: Laurent (speaker), Thérèse Raquin
Page Number: 87-8
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

If they were in a hurry to get marriage over with, it was because they could no longer stand being apart and on their own. Every night they were visited by the drowned man, and insomnia laid them on a bed of burning coals, turning them over with red-hot irons. The state of nervous irritation in which they were living still kindled new desires in them each evening, setting atrocious hallucinations before their eyes.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 100
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 21 Quotes

But in the dreadful silence that followed, the two murderers still went on conversing about their victim. […] They could not have understood each other better if they had both screamed in heart-rending tones: ‘We killed Camille, and his body is still here between us, turning our limbs to ice.’ And the terrible confessions went on flowing between them, more visible and resounding than ever, in the calm, damp air of the room.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Camille
Page Number: 122
Explanation and Analysis:

‘You know,’ he said, ‘I didn’t get married for sleepless nights…We’re behaving like children…It’s your fault; when you put on your graveyard expression like that, it flusters me. Do try and be a bit more cheerful tonight and not scare me to death.’

Related Characters: Laurent (speaker), Thérèse Raquin, Camille
Page Number: 128
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 22 Quotes

His remorse was purely physical. Only his body, with its over-stretched nerves and trembling flesh, was afraid of the drowned man. His conscience had nothing to do with the terror he felt, and he did not in the least regret having killed Camille; in periods of calm when the ghost was not there, he would have committed the murder all over again if he had thought it was in his interests to do so. […] His body was suffering terribly but his soul remained absent; the wretched fellow did not feel in the least repentant. Thérèse’s passion had infected him with a terrible sickness, and that was all.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Camille
Page Number: 130
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 24 Quotes

Meanwhile, Thérèse and Laurent continued to lead their double lives. It was as if there were two quite distinct people in each of them: one, nervy and terrified, who started shaking as soon as darkness fell, the other sluggish and unconcerned, who breathed easily as soon as the sun was up. They were living two different existences, screaming in terror when they were left on their own, smiling serenely when there were other people there.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 145
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 25 Quotes

Thérèse remained tight-lipped, for she had no intention of letting Laurent fritter away the small fortune on which her freedom depended. When her husband pressed her with questions in an attempt to gain her assent, she replied drily, pointing out that, if he left his office, he would no longer be bringing in any money, so he would have to depend entirely on her. While she was speaking, Laurent looked at her sharply in a disconcerting way that made the rejection she was about to pronounce stick in her throat; she thought she could read in her accomplice’s eyes the menacing threat: ‘If you don’t agree, I’ll spill the beans.’

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 148
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 27 Quotes

‘It’s perfectly clear, I can guess the whole sentence from the look in Madame’s eye. I don’t need things written out for me on a table, one glance from her is enough. What she meant to say is: “Thérèse and Laurent have taken good care of me.’”

Grivet had reason to feel pleased with his powers of imagination, because this time the whole company agreed with him. The guests began to sing the couple’s praises for having been so kind to the poor lady.

Related Characters: Grivet (speaker), Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Madame Raquin, Michaud, Olivier, Suzanne
Page Number: 167-8
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 32 Quotes

Suddenly, Thérèse and Laurent burst into tears. An overwhelming crisis broke them and flung them into each other’s arms, as weak as children. They both felt something gentle and tender awakening in their bosom. They cried, unable to speak, thinking of the sordid life they had led and would go on leading, if they were cowardly enough to go on at all. Then, as they thought back over the past, they felt so weary and disgusted with themselves that they were filled with an immense need for rest, oblivion. They exchanged a final glance, a glance of gratitude, before the knife and the glass of poison. Then Thérèse took the glass, drank half of it, and handed it to Laurent, who swallowed the rest straight down.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 204-5
Explanation and Analysis:
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Thérèse Raquin PDF

Thérèse Raquin Quotes in Thérèse Raquin

The Thérèse Raquin quotes below are all either spoken by Thérèse Raquin or refer to Thérèse Raquin. 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:
Passion and Pleasure Theme Icon
).
Chapter 2 Quotes

This life of enforced convalescence made her turn in on herself; she developed a habit of speaking in an undertone, walking about the house without making any noise, and sitting silent and motionless on a chair with a vacant look in her eyes. Yet whenever she lifted an arm or moved a foot forward, it was apparent that she had all the litheness of a cat, with taut, powerful muscles and a store of passion and energy which lay dormant in her inert body.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Camille
Page Number: 13
Explanation and Analysis:

Camille was irritated by his mother’s constant fussing; he had rebellious moments when he wanted to rush about and make himself ill, just to escape from her cloying attentions which were starting to make him feel sick. Then he would drag Thérèse off and challenge her to wrestle with him in the grass. One day he gave his cousin a push and she fell over; she leapt up at once like a wild animal, with her cheeks red and eyes blazing with anger, and threw herself on him with both fists raised. Camille slid to the ground. He was scared.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Camille
Page Number: 16
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

The truth was that only stupid ambition had driven Camille to think of leaving. He wanted to be an employee in some large administration, and would go pink with pleasure at the thought of himself sitting in the middle of a huge office, wearing shiny artificial cuffs and with a quill pen tucked behind his ear.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Camille
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

Thérèse, who had not yet said a word, looked at the newcomer. She had never seen a real man before. Laurent, tall, strong, and fresh-faced, filled her with astonishment. She stared with a kind of wonder at the low forehead, from which sprung black bushy hair, the full cheeks, red lips, and regular features which made up his handsome, full-blooded face. Her gaze lingered for a while on his neck, which was broad and short, thick and powerful. Then she became lost in contemplation of the huge hands, which he kept spread across his knees as he sat there; their fingers were square and his clenched fist must be enormous, capable of felling an ox.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 26
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

It is true that he found Thérèse plain and did not love her, but then she would not cost him anything; the women he usually picked up cheaply were certainly no prettier, nor any better loved. On grounds of economy alone, it was a good idea to take his friend’s wife. […] Then again, when he came to think about it, an affair like this could hardly lead to any trouble: it would be in Thérèse’s interests to cover it up, and he could easily jilt her when he felt like it; even if Camille did find out and get annoyed, he would just thump him if he started to throw his weight around. Whichever way he looked at it, the prospect seemed an easy and alluring one to Laurent.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Camille
Page Number: 33
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

When he left her he was tottering like a drunkard. The next day, once he had regained his caution and his rather forced composure, he asked himself whether or not to go back to this lover whose kisses so inflamed his passions. At first he firmly resolved to stay at home. Then he began to weaken. He wanted to forget Thérèse, the sight of her naked body and her sweet but brutal caresses, yet there she still was, implacable, holding her arms out to him. The physical pain which this vision caused him soon became unbearable.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

I don’t know how I can have loved you; actually, it was more like hate. The sight of you irritated me, I couldn’t stand it; when you were there, my nerves were stretched to breaking-point, my mind went blank, and I saw red. Oh, how I suffered! Yet I wanted my suffering and longed for you to come; […]

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin (speaker), Laurent
Page Number: 39
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

But, unbeknown to him, desire had worked away deep inside him until it had finally delivered him, bound hand and foot, into the wild embrace of Thérèse. Now he was afraid he would cast prudence aside altogether, and did not dare go to the Passage du Pont-Neuf of an evening for fear of committing some act of folly. He was no longer in control of his actions; his mistress, with her cat-like suppleness and nervous sensitivity, had slowly insinuated herself into every fibre of his body. He needed this woman to live, as one needs food and drink.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 48
Explanation and Analysis:

Before Thérèse had come he had not had any thought of murdering Camille; then, under the pressure of events and in exasperation at the thought that he would not see his lover ever again, he had talked of his death. Thus a new corner of his unconscious nature had revealed itself: carried away by his adultery, he had started dreaming of murder.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 51
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

The two lovers no longer made any attempt to see each other on their own. They never sought a rendez-vous or exchanged a furtive kiss. For the moment, the murder had as it were smothered the sensual fire in their flesh; by killing Camille, they had managed to assuage those fierce and insatiable desires which had remained unsatisfied while they had lain locked in each other’s arms. The crime had given them a feeling of acute pleasure which made their embraces seem insipid and loathsome in comparison.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Camille
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:

Whenever he reflected that he might have been found out and guillotined, all his caution and cowardice rushed back, making him shudder and bringing a cold sweat to his brow as he felt the icy kiss of the blade on the back of his neck. While he had been busily occupied he had gone straight ahead, with the blind tenacity of a dumb beast. Now, when he looked back at the chasm which he had just crossed, he was overcome by terror and faintness of heart.

‘I must really have been drunk,’ he thought; ‘that woman must have intoxicated me with her caresses. Good God, what a crazy fool I’ve been! To risk the guillotine for something like that…It went off all right in the end, but if I had my time again I wouldn’t even consider it.’

Related Characters: Laurent (speaker), Thérèse Raquin
Page Number: 87-8
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

If they were in a hurry to get marriage over with, it was because they could no longer stand being apart and on their own. Every night they were visited by the drowned man, and insomnia laid them on a bed of burning coals, turning them over with red-hot irons. The state of nervous irritation in which they were living still kindled new desires in them each evening, setting atrocious hallucinations before their eyes.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 100
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 21 Quotes

But in the dreadful silence that followed, the two murderers still went on conversing about their victim. […] They could not have understood each other better if they had both screamed in heart-rending tones: ‘We killed Camille, and his body is still here between us, turning our limbs to ice.’ And the terrible confessions went on flowing between them, more visible and resounding than ever, in the calm, damp air of the room.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Camille
Page Number: 122
Explanation and Analysis:

‘You know,’ he said, ‘I didn’t get married for sleepless nights…We’re behaving like children…It’s your fault; when you put on your graveyard expression like that, it flusters me. Do try and be a bit more cheerful tonight and not scare me to death.’

Related Characters: Laurent (speaker), Thérèse Raquin, Camille
Page Number: 128
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 22 Quotes

His remorse was purely physical. Only his body, with its over-stretched nerves and trembling flesh, was afraid of the drowned man. His conscience had nothing to do with the terror he felt, and he did not in the least regret having killed Camille; in periods of calm when the ghost was not there, he would have committed the murder all over again if he had thought it was in his interests to do so. […] His body was suffering terribly but his soul remained absent; the wretched fellow did not feel in the least repentant. Thérèse’s passion had infected him with a terrible sickness, and that was all.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Camille
Page Number: 130
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 24 Quotes

Meanwhile, Thérèse and Laurent continued to lead their double lives. It was as if there were two quite distinct people in each of them: one, nervy and terrified, who started shaking as soon as darkness fell, the other sluggish and unconcerned, who breathed easily as soon as the sun was up. They were living two different existences, screaming in terror when they were left on their own, smiling serenely when there were other people there.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 145
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 25 Quotes

Thérèse remained tight-lipped, for she had no intention of letting Laurent fritter away the small fortune on which her freedom depended. When her husband pressed her with questions in an attempt to gain her assent, she replied drily, pointing out that, if he left his office, he would no longer be bringing in any money, so he would have to depend entirely on her. While she was speaking, Laurent looked at her sharply in a disconcerting way that made the rejection she was about to pronounce stick in her throat; she thought she could read in her accomplice’s eyes the menacing threat: ‘If you don’t agree, I’ll spill the beans.’

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 148
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 27 Quotes

‘It’s perfectly clear, I can guess the whole sentence from the look in Madame’s eye. I don’t need things written out for me on a table, one glance from her is enough. What she meant to say is: “Thérèse and Laurent have taken good care of me.’”

Grivet had reason to feel pleased with his powers of imagination, because this time the whole company agreed with him. The guests began to sing the couple’s praises for having been so kind to the poor lady.

Related Characters: Grivet (speaker), Thérèse Raquin, Laurent, Madame Raquin, Michaud, Olivier, Suzanne
Page Number: 167-8
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 32 Quotes

Suddenly, Thérèse and Laurent burst into tears. An overwhelming crisis broke them and flung them into each other’s arms, as weak as children. They both felt something gentle and tender awakening in their bosom. They cried, unable to speak, thinking of the sordid life they had led and would go on leading, if they were cowardly enough to go on at all. Then, as they thought back over the past, they felt so weary and disgusted with themselves that they were filled with an immense need for rest, oblivion. They exchanged a final glance, a glance of gratitude, before the knife and the glass of poison. Then Thérèse took the glass, drank half of it, and handed it to Laurent, who swallowed the rest straight down.

Related Characters: Thérèse Raquin, Laurent
Page Number: 204-5
Explanation and Analysis: