FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75  
76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   >>  
n alluding, and I felt no curiosity about it; but it annoyed me that a Jesuit should interfere and try to make my friends do anything otherwise than through my instrumentality, and I wanted that intriguer to know that my influence was greater than his own. After that, I dressed, masked myself, and went to the opera, where I sat down to a faro-table and lost all my money. Fortune was determined to shew me that it does not always agree with love. My heart was heavy, I felt miserable; I went to bed. When I woke in the morning, I saw De la Haye come into my room with a beaming countenance, and, assuming an air of devoted friendship, he made a great show of his feelings towards me. I knew what to think of it all, and I waited for the 'denouement'. "My dear friend," he said to me at last, "why did you dissuade M. Dandolo from doing what I had insinuated to him?" "What had you insinuated to him?" "You know well enough." "If I knew it, I would not ask you!" "M. Dandolo himself told me that you had advised him against it." "Advised against, that may be, but certainly not dissuaded, for if he had been persuaded in his own mind he would not have asked my advice." "As you please; but may I enquire your reasons?" "Tell me first what your proposal was." "Has he not told you?" "Perhaps he has; but if you wish to know my reasons, I must hear the whole affair from your own lips, because M. Dandolo spoke to me under a promise of secrecy." "Of what good is all this reserve?" "Everyone has his own principles and his own way of thinking: I have a sufficiently good opinion of you to believe that you would act exactly as I do, for I have heard you say that in all secret matters one ought to guard against surprise." "I am incapable of taking such an advantage of a friend; but as a general rule your maxim is a right one; I like prudence. I will tell you the whole affair. You are aware that Madame Tripolo has been left a widow, and that M. Dandolo is courting her assiduously, after having done the same for fourteen years during the life of the husband. The lady, who is still young, beautiful and lovely, and also is very respectable, wishes to become his wife. It is to me that she has confided her wishes, and as I saw nothing that was not praiseworthy, either in a temporal or in a spiritual point of view, in that union, for after all we are all men, I took the affair in hand with real pleasure. I fancied even that M
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75  
76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   >>  



Top keywords:

Dandolo

 

affair

 
friend
 

wishes

 

insinuated

 

reasons

 

incapable

 
taking
 
surprise
 
curiosity

advantage

 

Madame

 

prudence

 
matters
 

general

 

secret

 

Jesuit

 

annoyed

 

reserve

 

secrecy


promise
 

Everyone

 
principles
 

thinking

 
sufficiently
 

opinion

 

Tripolo

 

praiseworthy

 
temporal
 
confided

spiritual

 

pleasure

 
fancied
 

respectable

 

fourteen

 

courting

 

assiduously

 

alluding

 

husband

 

beautiful


lovely

 
friendship
 

devoted

 

assuming

 

feelings

 
denouement
 

waited

 

countenance

 
beaming
 

miserable