登陆注册
19302600000628

第628章

"We will see. Here is my hand on the table, and I stake a louis on each of the thirteen cards."

According to the laws of probability, I should certainly have lost, but fate decided otherwise and I won eighty louis. At eight o'clock I bowed to the company, and I went as usual to the place where my new love dwelt. I found the invalid ravishing. She said she had had a little fever, which the country-woman pronounced to be milk fever, and that she would be quite well and ready to get up by the next day.

As I stretched out my hand to lift the coverlet; she seized it and covered it with kisses, telling me that she felt as if she must give me that mark of her filial affection. She was twenty-one, and I was thirty-five. A nice daughter for a man like me! My feelings for her were not at all of a fatherly character. Nevertheless, I told her that her confidence in me, as shewn by her seeing me in bed, increased my affection for her, and that I should be grieved if I

found her dressed in her nun's clothes next day.

"Then I will stop in bed," said she; "and indeed I shall be very glad to do so, as I experience great discomfort from the heat of my woollen habit; but I think I should please you more if I were decently dressed; however, as you like it better, I will stop in bed."

The country-woman came in at that moment, and gave her the abbess'

letter which her nephew had just brought from Chamberi. She read it and gave it to me. The abbess told her that she would send two lay-

sisters to bring her back to the convent, and that as she had recovered her health she could come on-foot, and thus save money which could be spent in better ways. She added that as the bishop was away, and she was unable to send the lay-sisters without his permission, they could not start for a week or ten days. She ordered her, under pain of the major excommunication, never to leave her room, never to speak to any man, not even to the master of the house, and to have nothing to do with anybody except with the woman. She ended by saying that she was going to have a mass said for the repose of the departed sister's soul.

"I am obliged to you for having shewn me this letter, but be pleased to tell me if I may visit you for the next week or ten days, without doing hurt to your conscience; for I must tell you I am a man. I

have only stopped in this place because of the lively interest with which you have inspired me, but if you have the least objection to receive me on account of the singular excommunication with which you are threatened, I will leave Aix tomorrow. Speak."

"Sir, our abbess is lavish of these thunders, and I have already incurred the excommunication with which she threatens me; but I hope it will not be ratified by God, as my fault has made me happy and not miserable. I will be sincere with you; your visits are my only joy, and that joy is doubled when you tell me you like to come. But if you can answer my question without a breach of confidence, I should like to know for whom you took me the first time you saw me; you cannot imagine how you astonished and frightened me. I have never felt such kisses as those you lavished on me, but they cannot increase my sin as I was not a consenting party, and you told me yourself that you thought you were kissing another."

"I will satisfy your curiosity. I think I can do so as you are aware by this time that the flesh is weak, or rather stronger than the spirit, and that it compels the strongest intellects to commit faults against right reason. You shall hear the history of an amour that lasted for two years with the fairest and the best of all the nuns of Venice."

"Tell me all, sir. I have fallen myself, and I should be cruel and unjust if I were to take offence at anything you may tell me, for you cannot have done anything with her that Coudert did not do to me."

"I did much more and much less, for I never gave her a child. If I

had been so unfortunate I should have carried her off to Rome, where we should have fallen at the feet of the Holy Father, who would have absolved her from her vows, and my dear M---- M---- would now be my wife."

"Good heavens M---- M---- is my name."

This circumstance, which was really a mere coincidence, rendered our meeting still more wonderful, and astonished me as much as it did her. Chance is a curious and fickle element, but it often has the greatest influence on our lives.

After a brief silence I told her all that had taken place between the fair Venetian and myself. I painted our amorous combats in a lively and natural manner, for, besides my recollections, I had her living picture before my eyes, and I could follow on her features the various emotions aroused by my recital. When I had finished she said, "But is your M---- M---- really so like me, that you mistook me for her?"

Drawing from my pocket-book the portrait in which M---- M---- was dressed as a nun, I gave it to her, saying, "Judge for yourself."

"She really is; it might pass for my portrait. It is my dress and my face; it is wonderful. To this likeness I owe all my good fortune.

Thanks be to God that you do not love me as you loved her, whom I am glad to call my sister. There are indeed two M---- M----s. Mighty Providence, all Thy least ways are wonderful, and we are at best poor, weak, ignorant mortals."

The worthy country-woman came up and have us a still better supper than on the previous night. The invalid only ate soup, but she promised to do better by the following evening.

I spent an hour with her after supper, and I convinced her by my reserve that she had made a mistake in thinking that I only loved her as a daughter. Of her own accord she shewed me that her breast had regained its usual condition. I assured myself of the fact by my sense of touch, to which she made no opposition, not thinking that I

could be moved by such a trifle. All the kisses which I lavished on her lips and eyes she put down to the friendship for her. She said, smiling, that she thanked God she was not fair like her sister, and I

smiled myself at her simplicity.

同类推荐
  • 佛说无量门微密持经

    佛说无量门微密持经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 郑成功传

    郑成功传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 道德真经集义

    道德真经集义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 石田诗选

    石田诗选

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 张太史明道杂志

    张太史明道杂志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 半路人

    半路人

    深夜在公路上的奇遇之后,阎师傅的人生发生了彻底的改变,一切正在发生......
  • 子不言之解心谱

    子不言之解心谱

    漠北四镇不属于魏国,也不属于魏国的敌国席柔,却为魏国抵御席柔进攻整整三十年。三十年后,漠北四镇内乱。为了一本绝世仙谱“解心谱”,有人起了不轨之心,试图把“四镇”变为“三镇”,并且有了更大的野心。故事发生在漠北,却是从魏国都城洛城开始。一路争夺,一路厮杀,各种残酷,各种阴谋。看各路侠义之士如何斩奸除魔,保家卫国!
  • 音乐鉴赏手册(最新21世纪生活百科手册)

    音乐鉴赏手册(最新21世纪生活百科手册)

    中国当代歌曲的显著特点,是它紧密配合着、伴随着社会变迁和各个时期的政治任务以至党的各项具体政策。当党的政策符合广大人民的利益时,当歌曲反映了人民群众的愿望时,就留下了经久耐唱的好作品。
  • 尸界寻夫

    尸界寻夫

    一觉醒来,我变成了我好朋友的样子。全世界都变了,变得硝烟弥漫,残破不全。为什么会这样,这到底是怎么一回事?为什么不是我的身体,我的身体在哪?
  • 浴火重生:狐儿一笑值千金

    浴火重生:狐儿一笑值千金

    “靠,我怎么这么倒霉……”在一个美丽的夜晚,我们傲娇的逗逼女主角蓝溪因为不会做晚饭,而被一个装蓝莓果酱的罐子砸死了…可真正的故事却要从这里说起——她,居然穿越了!!这真的是一点也不科学!穿越居然走的是复仇之路!我去,让人家好好的在古代玩会好不好啦!前世,因为她,她被心爱的人抛弃。现在,因为她,她又欠上一身的债。……(雪琴依为你打造一个女配的等级与地位是如何蹭蹭蹭的往上涨的励志故事)摸摸扎,求支持~
  • 落泪梨花

    落泪梨花

    小时候和黎阳有着美好的回忆,长大后遇见了个对她无比好的季凌陌,正当她的心开始被一步步瓦解时。黎阳的出现打破了她原本平静的生活……
  • 春天不再遥远

    春天不再遥远

    又闷又宅的剩女,在飘雪的冬夜,捡到一个醉酒的帅哥……于是开始了他们的爱情故事。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 舞倾天下

    舞倾天下

    一不小心穿成小不点就算,还得忍受封建社会下类似于‘三纲五常’的种种“不平等条约”。作为新女性的她又怎么可能向这万恶的旧社会妥协,于是打架,赌博,进花楼那是家常便饭,竟然一小心还混成了公主,美男纷纷像她涌来,艾玛,吃不消了,快跑!
  • 失踪未解之谜(世界未解之谜精编)

    失踪未解之谜(世界未解之谜精编)

    本书是《世界未解之谜精编》系列之一,该系列精心收集了众多千奇百怪、扑朔迷离的世界未解之谜,内容涉及宇宙、生物、地理、飞碟、人体、恐龙、宝藏、百慕大、历史、金字塔、文化等多个领域,书中令人耳目一新和不可思议的未解之谜,给予了人类新的思索。人类究竟创造了多少奇迹,又留下了多少谜团,有待我们进一步探索和研究……我们深信,通过不断的努力,未知一定会变为已知。让无数探寻声化做利刃,刺破一桩桩人类千年未解之谜。
  • 孪生替爱:冷王的双生妃子

    孪生替爱:冷王的双生妃子

    慕容弦、慕容汐,两个本是隐居在幽谷的平凡姐妹,一家人过着与世无争的悠闲日子。但是因为一支望霄笛,一把幻幽剑,害得她们父母双亡,而她们也险些命丧黄泉。十年后,她们重现江湖,物是人非,再次相逢,却是笛剑相残,各为其主,正邪不两立。他们之间有情,有义,有爱,有恨,是弹指一笑保江山,还是一个红颜一怒震山河?再或者是一旦红颜为君绝?