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elf of him, and added that, as I was going to Paris, I might as well take him with me, as the dullness of Augsburg was almost killing him. "What do you want at Paris?" "What do you want yourself?" "To put my talents to account." "So do I." "Well, then, you don't require me, and can fly on your own wings. The people who are taking me to Paris would probably not care for me if I had you for a companion." "You promised not to abandon me." "Can a man who leaves another well provided for and an assured future be said to abandon him?" "Well provided! I have not got a penny." "What do you want with money? You have a good table, a good lodging, clothes, linen, attendance, and so forth. And if you want pocket-money, why don't you ask your brethren the monks?" "Ask monks for money? They take it, but they don't give it." "Ask your friends, then." "I have no friends." "You are to be pitied, but the reason probably is that you have never been a friend to anyone. You ought to say masses, that is a good way of getting money." "I am unknown." "You must wait, then, till you are known, and then you can make up for lost time." "Your suggestions are idle; you will surely give me a few sequins." "I can't spare any." "Wait for the dean. He will be back to-morrow. You can talk to him and persuade him to lend me some money. You can tell him that I will pay it back." "I cannot wait, for I am setting out on my journey directly, and were he here this moment I should not have the face to tell him to lend you money after all his generous treatment of you, and when he or anyone can see that you have all you need." After this sharp dialogue I left him, and travelling post I set out, displeased with myself for having given such advantages to a man wholly unworthy of them. In the March following I had a letter from the good Dean Bassi, in which he told me how Balbi had run away, taking with him one of his servant girls, a sum of money, a gold watch, and a dozen silver spoons and forks. He did not know where he was gone. Towards the end of the same year I learnt at Paris that the wretched man had taken refuge at Coire, the capital of the Grisons, where he asked to be made a member of the Calvinistic Church, and to be recognized as lawful husband of the woman with him; but in a short time the community discovered that the new convert was no good, and expelled him from the bosom of the Church of Calvin. O
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