Beatrix by Honoré de Balzac
page 264 of 427 (61%)
page 264 of 427 (61%)
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she held on her knees and stroked with her beautiful hands. I never
look at Thisbe but what I see the hands of Madame l'Amirale." "Did you see Madame de Rochefide?" asked Calyste. "No," replied the chevalier. "It is sixty-eight years since I have looked at any woman with attention--except your mother, who has something of Madame l'Amirale's complexion." Three days later, the chevalier said to Calyste, on the mall,-- "My child, I have a hundred and forty /louis/ laid by. When you know where Madame de Rochefide is, come and get them and follow her." Calyste thanked the old man, whose existence he envied. But now, from day to day, he grew morose; he seemed to love no one; all things hurt him; he was gentle and kind to his mother only. The baroness watched with ever increasing anxiety the progress of his madness; she alone was able, by force of prayer and entreaty, to make him swallow food. Toward the end of October the sick lad ceased to go even to the mall in search of the chevalier, who now came vainly to the house to tempt him out with the coaxing wisdom of an old man. "We can talk of Madame de Rochefide," he would say. "I'll tell you my first adventure." "Your son is ill," he said privately to the baroness, on the day he became convinced that all such efforts were useless. Calyste replied to questions about his health that he was perfectly |
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