FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202  
203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   >>  
Monseigneur. --Ah, do not tell a falsehood. It is a mortal sin to tell a falsehood in confession. Who is your Confessor? --He is Monsieur Matou. --Ah, Matou! the Abbe Matou. Yes, yes, he has spoken to you about it, I know him; he must have spoken to you about it. Come, tell me all about that. --Well, once he asked me.... --Ah, ah! well, well! do not stop. What is it he asked you? --He asked me ... ah! it is a long time ago, before my first communion. --Well? --He asked me, if I did not go and play with the little boys. --And then? --If I had not culpable relations with them. --Culpable relations with little boys, well! And what did you answer him? --I answered him that I had not. --That you had not! Was that quite true? Do not blush, and do not tell a falsehood. I shall see if you are going to tell a falsehood. --Yes, Monseigneur, it was quite true; I did not even know what Monsieur Matou meant. --And you know it now? --Yes, he explained it to me. --Oh, oh! he explained it to you. And how did he explain that to you? --He told me.... --Let us see what he told you. Come, come, you most not hang down your head: see, lift up this pretty face and show me this little dimple; what did the Abbe Matou say to you?... Eh, eh! who is there! who is knocking at the door? Is it you, Gaudinet? Rise up, my little daughter, and go and sit down there, in the corner. Come in, Gaudinet, come in then. Gaudinet put his head discreetly inside. --Monseigneur, I came to inform you that the Cure of Althausen has been there for some time. --There? where is that? --In the cabinet. --What! in the cabinet? Ah, are you mad, Gaudinet, to send people in this way into my cabinet? I do not approve of that, I do not approve of that at all. What does that Cure of Althausen want with me? LXXXVI. SERIOUS TALK. "Such were the words of the man of the Rock; his authority was too great, his wisdom too deep, not to obey him." CHATEAUBRIAND (_Atala_). Marcel had not heard these last words. At Gaudinet's first word, he had quickly vanished, foreseeing that a terrible tempest would burst upon his head, if the Bishop should suspect that he had been a witness of his way of hearing little girls' confessions, the usual way however of nearly all priests; I appeal to the memories of the Lord's sheep. --Monsieur le Cure!... cried Gaudinet, opening the door. Ah, he is no longer there.
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202  
203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   >>  



Top keywords:
Gaudinet
 

falsehood

 

Monseigneur

 
Monsieur
 
cabinet
 
relations
 

explained

 

approve

 

Althausen


spoken

 
wisdom
 
SERIOUS
 

people

 

LXXXVI

 

authority

 

suspect

 

priests

 

confessions


witness

 

hearing

 
appeal
 

memories

 

opening

 
longer
 

CHATEAUBRIAND

 
Marcel
 
quickly

vanished

 

Bishop

 

tempest

 

foreseeing

 

terrible

 
Culpable
 
answer
 

culpable

 
answered

communion

 

Confessor

 

confession

 

mortal

 

daughter

 

knocking

 
corner
 

inform

 
discreetly

inside
 

explain

 

dimple

 
pretty