BOOK SEVENTH.
CHAPTER 8. THE UTILITY OF WINDOWS WHICH OPEN ON THE RIVER.
(continued)
Beside the pallet was a window, whose panes broken like a
spider's web upon which rain has fallen, allowed a view, through
its rent meshes, of a corner of the sky, and the moon lying
far away on an eiderdown bed of soft clouds.
The young girl was blushing, confused, palpitating. Her
long, drooping lashes shaded her crimson cheeks. The officer,
to whom she dared not lift her eyes, was radiant. Mechanically,
and with a charmingly unconscious gesture, she traced
with the tip of her finger incoherent lines on the bench, and
watched her finger. Her foot was not visible. The little
goat was nestling upon it.
The captain was very gallantly clad; he had tufts of embroidery
at his neck and wrists; a great elegance at that day.
It was not without difficulty that Dom Claude managed to
hear what they were saying, through the humming of the
blood, which was boiling in his temples.
(A conversation between lovers is a very commonplace
affair. It is a perpetual "I love you." A musical phrase
which is very insipid and very bald for indifferent listeners,
when it is not ornamented with some fioriture; but Claude
was not an indifferent listener.)
"Oh!" said the young girl, without raising her eyes, "do
not despise me, monseigneur Phoebus. I feel that what I am
doing is not right."
"Despise you, my pretty child!" replied the officer with
an air of superior and distinguished gallantry, "despise you,
tête-Dieu! and why?"
"For having followed you!"
"On that point, my beauty, we don't agree. I ought not to
despise you, but to hate you."
The young girl looked at him in affright: "Hate me! what
have I done?"
"For having required so much urging."
"Alas!" said she, "'tis because I am breaking a vow. I
shall not find my parents! The amulet will lose its virtue.
But what matters it? What need have I of father or mother now?"
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