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This
was
the
stage
Julien
had
reached
,
when
after
several
months
of
probation
the
steward
of
the
household
handed
him
the
third
quarter
of
his
wages
.
M
.
de
la
Mole
had
entrusted
him
with
the
administration
of
his
estates
in
Brittany
and
Normandy
.
Julien
made
frequent
journeys
there
.
He
had
chief
control
of
the
correspondence
relating
to
the
famous
lawsuit
with
the
abbé
de
Frilair
.
M
.
Pirard
had
instructed
him
.
On
the
data
of
the
short
notes
which
the
marquis
would
scribble
on
the
margin
of
all
the
various
paper
which
were
addressed
to
him
,
Julien
would
compose
answers
which
were
nearly
all
signed
.
At
the
Theology
School
his
professors
complained
of
his
lack
of
industry
,
but
they
did
not
fail
to
regard
him
as
one
of
their
most
distinguished
pupils
.
This
varied
work
,
tackled
as
it
was
with
all
the
ardour
of
suffering
ambition
,
soon
robbed
Julien
of
that
fresh
complexion
which
he
had
brought
from
the
provinces
.
His
pallor
constituted
one
of
his
merits
in
the
eyes
of
his
comrades
,
the
young
seminarist
;
he
found
them
much
less
malicious
,
much
less
ready
to
bow
down
to
a
silver
crown
than
those
of
Besançon
;
they
thought
he
was
consumptive
.
The
marquis
had
given
him
a
horse
.
Julien
fearing
that
he
might
meet
people
during
his
rides
on
horseback
,
had
given
out
that
this
exercise
had
been
prescribed
by
the
doctors
.
The
abbé
Pirard
had
taken
him
into
several
Jansenist
Societies
.
Julien
was
astonished
;
the
idea
of
religion
was
indissolubly
connected
in
his
mind
with
the
ideas
of
hypocrisy
and
covetousness
.
He
admired
those
austere
pious
men
who
never
gave
a
thought
to
their
income
.
Several
Jansenists
became
friendly
with
him
and
would
give
him
advice
.
A
new
world
opened
before
him
.
At
the
Jansenists
he
got
to
know
a
comte
Altamira
,
who
was
nearly
six
feet
high
,
was
a
Liberal
,
a
believer
,
and
had
been
condemned
to
death
in
his
own
country
.
He
was
struck
by
the
strange
contrast
of
devoutness
and
love
of
liberty
.
Julien
’
s
relations
with
the
young
comte
had
become
cool
.
Norbert
had
thought
that
he
answered
the
jokes
of
his
friends
with
too
much
sharpness
.
Julien
had
committed
one
or
two
breaches
of
social
etiquette
and
vowed
to
himself
that
he
would
never
speak
to
mademoiselle
Mathilde
.
They
were
always
perfectly
polite
to
him
in
the
Hôtel
de
la
Mole
but
he
felt
himself
quite
lost
.
His
provincial
common
sense
explained
this
result
by
the
vulgar
proverb
Tout
beau
tout
nouveau
.
He
gradually
came
to
have
a
little
more
penetration
than
during
his
first
days
,
or
it
may
have
been
that
the
first
glamour
of
Parisian
urbanity
had
passed
off
.
As
soon
as
he
left
off
working
,
he
fell
a
prey
to
a
mortal
boredom
.
He
was
experiencing
the
withering
effects
of
that
admirable
politeness
so
typical
of
good
society
,
which
is
so
perfectly
modulated
to
every
degree
of
the
social
hierarchy
.
No
doubt
the
provinces
can
be
reproached
with
a
commonness
and
lack
of
polish
in
their
tone
;
but
they
show
a
certain
amount
of
passion
,
when
they
answer
you
.
Julien
’
s
self
-
respect
was
never
wounded
at
the
Hôtel
de
la
Mole
,
but
he
often
felt
at
the
end
of
the
day
as
though
he
would
like
to
cry
.
A
café
-
waiter
in
the
provinces
will
take
an
interest
in
you
if
you
happen
to
have
some
accident
as
you
enter
his
café
,
but
if
this
accident
has
everything
about
it
which
is
disagreeable
to
your
vanity
,
he
will
repeat
ten
times
in
succession
the
very
word
which
tortures
you
,
as
he
tells
you
how
sorry
he
is
.
At
Paris
they
make
a
point
of
laughing
in
secret
,
but
you
always
remain
a
stranger
.
We
pass
in
silence
over
a
number
of
little
episodes
which
would
have
made
Julien
ridiculous
,
if
he
had
not
been
to
some
extent
above
ridicule
.
A
foolish
sensibility
resulted
in
his
committing
innumerable
acts
of
bad
taste
.
All
his
pleasures
were
precautions
;
he
practiced
pistol
shooting
every
day
,
he
was
one
of
the
promising
pupils
of
the
most
famous
maîtres
d
’
armes
.
As
soon
as
he
had
an
instant
to
himself
,
instead
of
employing
it
in
reading
as
he
did
before
,
he
would
rush
off
to
the
riding
school
and
ask
for
the
most
vicious
horses
.
When
he
went
out
with
the
master
of
the
riding
school
he
was
almost
invariably
thrown
.