Rating: ***
Tags: Lang:en
Publisher: Project Gutenberg
Added: August 28, 2018
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
Excerpt: ...he was very well acquainted; and that after
the marriage she had vowed him an implacable hatred, as well
as all the Genevese. "Although La Popliniere has a friendship
for you, do not," said he, "depend upon his protection: he is
still in love with his wife: she hates you, and is vindictive
and artful; you will never do anything in that house." All
this I took for granted. The same Gauffecourt rendered me
much about this time, a service of which I stood in the
greatest need. I had just lost my virtuous father, who was
about sixty years of age. I felt this loss less severely than
I should have done at any other time, when the embarrassments
of my situation had less engaged my attention. During his
life-time I had never claimed what remained of the property
of my mother, and of which he received the little interest.
His death removed all my scruples upon this subject. But the
want of a legal proof of the death of my brother created a
difficulty which Gauffecourt undertook to remove, and this he
effected by means of the good offices of the advocate De
Lolme. As I stood in need of the little resource, and the
event being doubtful, I waited for a definitive account with
the greatest anxiety. One evening on entering my apartment I
found a letter, which I knew to contain the information I
wanted, and I took it up with an impatient trembling, of
which I was inwardly ashamed. What? said I to myself, with
disdain, shall Jean Jacques thus suffer himself to be subdued
by interest and curiosity? I immediately laid the letter
again upon the chimney-piece. I undressed myself, went to bed
with great composure, slept better than ordinary, and rose in
the morning at a late hour, without thinking more of my
letter. As I dressed myself, it caught my eye; I broke the
seal very leisurely, and found under the envelope a bill of
exchange. I felt a variety of pleasing sensations at the same
time: but I can assert, upon my honor, that the most lively
of them all was that... **