FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   565   566   567   568   569   570   571   572   573   574   575   576   577   578   579   580   581   582   583   584   585   586   587   588   589  
590   >>  
large scale in a paper-mill, which means that the discovery must pass into other hands. Oh! Petit-Claud was right!" A very vivid light sometimes dawns in the darkest prison. "Pshaw!" said David; "I shall see Petit-Claud to-morrow no doubt," and he turned and slept on the filthy mattress covered with coarse brown sacking. So when Eve unconsciously played into the hands of the enemy that morning, she found her husband more than ready to listen to proposals. She put her arms about him and kissed him, and sat down on the edge of the bed (for there was but one chair of the poorest and commonest kind in the cell). Her eyes fell on the unsightly pail in a corner, and over the walls covered with inscriptions left by David's predecessors, and tears filled the eyes that were red with weeping. She had sobbed long and very bitterly, but the sight of her husband in a felon's cell drew fresh tears. "And the desire of fame may lead one to this!" she cried. "Oh! my angel, give up your career. Let us walk together along the beaten track; we will not try to make haste to be rich, David. . . . I need very little to be very happy, especially now, after all that we have been through. . . . And if you only knew--the disgrace of arrest is not the worst. . . . Look." She held out Lucien's letter, and when David had read it, she tried to comfort him by repeating Petit-Claud's bitter comment. "If Lucien has taken his life, the thing is done by now," said David; "if he has not made away with himself by this time, he will not kill himself. As he himself says, 'his courage cannot last longer than a morning----'" "But the suspense!" cried Eve, forgiving almost everything at the thought of death. Then she told her husband of the proposals which Petit-Claud professed to have received from the Cointets. David accepted them at once with manifest pleasure. "We shall have enough to live upon in a village near L'Houmeau, where the Cointets' paper-mill stands. I want nothing now but a quiet life," said David. "If Lucien has punished himself by death, we can wait so long as father lives; and if Lucien is still living, poor fellow, he will learn to adapt himself to our narrow ways. The Cointets certainly will make money by my discovery; but, after all, what am I compared with our country? One man in it, that is all; and if the whole country is benefited, I shall be content. There! dear Eve, neither you nor I were meant to be successful in bu
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   565   566   567   568   569   570   571   572   573   574   575   576   577   578   579   580   581   582   583   584   585   586   587   588   589  
590   >>  



Top keywords:

Lucien

 

Cointets

 

husband

 

proposals

 

morning

 

discovery

 

country

 
covered
 

thought

 

longer


suspense
 

forgiving

 
letter
 

comment

 

bitter

 

comfort

 
repeating
 
courage
 

narrow

 
living

fellow

 

compared

 
successful
 

benefited

 

content

 

father

 

pleasure

 

manifest

 

professed

 
received

accepted

 
village
 

punished

 

Houmeau

 
stands
 

listen

 
played
 
sacking
 

unconsciously

 

poorest


commonest

 

kissed

 
coarse
 

mattress

 

turned

 

filthy

 
morrow
 

darkest

 

prison

 

beaten