BOOK SIXTH.
CHAPTER 3. HISTORY OF A LEAVENED CAKE OF MAIZE.
 (continued)
"So she was very sad, very miserable, and furrowed her
 cheeks with tears.  But in the midst of her shame, her folly,
 her debauchery, it seemed to her that she should be less wild,
 less shameful, less dissipated, if there were something or
 some one in the world whom she could love, and who could love
 her.  It was necessary that it should be a child, because only
 a child could be sufficiently innocent for that.  She had
 recognized this fact after having tried to love a thief, the
 only man who wanted her; but after a short time, she perceived
 that the thief despised her.  Those women of love require either
 a lover or a child to fill their hearts.  Otherwise, they are
 very unhappy.  As she could not have a lover, she turned
 wholly towards a desire for a child, and as she had not ceased
 to be pious, she made her constant prayer to the good God
 for it.  So the good God took pity on her, and gave her a
 little daughter.  I will not speak to you of her joy; it was a
 fury of tears, and caresses, and kisses.  She nursed her child
 herself, made swaddling-bands for it out of her coverlet, the
 only one which she had on her bed, and no longer felt either
 cold or hunger.  She became beautiful once more, in consequence
 of it.  An old maid makes a young mother.  Gallantry claimed
 her once more; men came to see la Chantefleurie; she found
 customers again for her merchandise, and out of all
 these horrors she made baby clothes, caps and bibs, bodices
 with shoulder-straps of lace, and tiny bonnets of satin, without
 even thinking of buying herself another coverlet.--Master
 Eustache, I have already told you not to eat that cake.--It
 is certain that little Agnes, that was the child's name, a
 baptismal name, for it was a long time since la Chantefleurie
 had had any surname--it is certain that that little one
 was more swathed in ribbons and embroideries than a
 dauphiness of Dauphiny!  Among other things, she had a pair
 of little shoes, the like of which King Louis XI. certainly
 never had!  Her mother had stitched and embroidered them
 herself; she had lavished on them all the delicacies of her
 art of embroideress, and all the embellishments of a robe for
 the good Virgin.  They certainly were the two prettiest little
 pink shoes that could be seen.  They were no longer than my
 thumb, and one had to see the child's little feet come out of
 them, in order to believe that they had been able to get into
 them.  'Tis true that those little feet were so small, so pretty,
 so rosy! rosier than the satin of the shoes!  When you have
 children, Oudarde, you will find that there is nothing prettier
 than those little hands and feet." 
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