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"
Not
at
all
,
for
a
man
whom
I
knew
only
too
well
.
I
refused
.
It
was
terribly
imprudent
.
From
that
moment
I
had
the
Liberals
on
my
hands
as
well
,
and
my
position
became
intolerable
.
I
believe
that
if
the
vicar
had
got
it
into
his
head
to
accuse
me
of
assassinating
my
servant
,
there
would
be
twenty
witnesses
of
the
two
parties
who
would
swear
that
they
had
seen
me
committing
the
crime
.
"
"
You
mean
to
say
you
want
to
live
in
the
country
without
pandering
to
the
passions
of
your
neighbours
,
without
even
listening
to
their
gossip
.
What
a
mistake
!
"
"
It
is
rectified
at
last
.
Monfleury
is
for
sale
.
I
will
lose
50
,
000
francs
if
necessary
,
but
I
am
over
-
joyed
I
am
leaving
that
hell
of
hypocrisy
and
annoyance
.
I
am
going
to
look
for
solitude
and
rustic
peace
in
the
only
place
where
those
things
are
to
be
found
in
France
,
on
a
fourth
storey
looking
on
to
the
Champs
-
Elysées
;
and
,
moreover
,
I
am
actually
deliberating
if
I
shall
not
commence
my
political
career
by
giving
consecrated
bread
to
the
parish
in
the
Roule
quarter
.
"
"
All
this
would
not
have
happened
under
Bonaparte
,
"
said
Falcoz
with
eyes
shining
with
rage
and
sorrow
.
"
Very
good
,
but
why
didn
’
t
your
Bonaparte
manage
to
keep
his
position
?
Everything
which
I
suffer
to
-
day
is
his
work
.
"
At
this
point
Julien
’
s
attention
was
redoubled
.
He
had
realised
from
the
first
word
that
the
Bonapartist
Falcoz
was
the
old
boyhood
friend
of
M
.
de
Rênal
,
who
had
been
repudiated
by
him
in
1816
,
and
that
the
philosopher
Saint
-
Giraud
must
be
the
brother
of
that
chief
of
the
prefecture
of
—
—
who
managed
to
get
the
houses
of
the
municipality
knocked
down
to
him
at
a
cheap
price
.
"
And
all
this
is
the
work
of
your
Bonaparte
.
An
honest
man
,
aged
forty
,
and
possessed
of
five
hundred
thousand
francs
however
inoffensive
he
is
,
cannot
settle
in
the
provinces
and
find
peace
there
;
those
priests
and
nobles
of
his
will
turn
him
out
.
"
"
Oh
don
’
t
talk
evil
of
him
,
"
exclaimed
Falcoz
.
"
France
was
never
so
high
in
the
esteem
of
the
nations
as
during
the
thirteen
years
of
his
reign
;
then
every
single
act
was
great
.
"
"
Your
emperor
,
devil
take
him
,
"
replied
the
man
of
forty
-
four
,
"
was
only
great
on
his
battle
fields
and
when
he
reorganised
the
finances
about
1802
.
What
is
the
meaning
of
all
his
conduct
since
then
?
What
with
his
chamberlains
,
his
pomp
,
and
his
receptions
in
the
Tuileries
,
he
has
simply
provided
a
new
edition
of
all
the
monarchical
tomfoolery
.
It
was
a
revised
edition
and
might
possibly
have
lasted
for
a
century
or
two
.
The
nobles
and
the
priests
wish
to
go
back
to
the
old
one
,
but
they
did
not
have
the
iron
hand
necessary
to
impose
it
on
the
public
.
"