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"
Well
,
my
friend
,
"
she
said
to
him
at
last
,
"
are
you
satisfied
with
my
husband
?
"
"
How
could
I
be
otherwise
,
"
answered
Julien
,
with
a
bitter
smile
,
"
he
has
given
me
a
hundred
francs
.
"
Madame
de
Rênal
looked
at
him
doubtfully
.
"
Give
me
your
arm
,
"
she
said
at
last
,
with
a
courageous
intonation
that
Julien
had
not
heard
before
.
She
dared
to
go
as
far
as
the
shop
of
the
bookseller
of
Verrières
,
in
spite
of
his
awful
reputation
for
Liberalism
.
In
the
shop
she
chose
ten
louis
worth
of
books
for
a
present
for
her
sons
.
But
these
books
were
those
which
she
knew
Julien
was
wanting
.
She
insisted
on
each
child
writing
his
name
then
and
there
in
the
bookseller
’
s
shop
in
those
books
which
fell
to
his
lot
.
While
Madame
de
Rênal
was
rejoicing
over
the
kind
reparation
which
she
had
had
the
courage
to
make
to
Julien
,
the
latter
was
overwhelmed
with
astonishment
at
the
quantity
of
books
which
he
saw
at
the
bookseller
’
s
.
He
had
never
dared
to
enter
so
profane
a
place
.
His
heart
was
palpitating
.
Instead
of
trying
to
guess
what
was
passing
in
Madame
de
Rênal
’
s
heart
he
pondered
deeply
over
the
means
by
which
a
young
theological
student
could
procure
some
of
those
books
.
Eventually
it
occurred
to
him
that
it
would
be
possible
,
with
tact
,
to
persuade
M
.
de
Rênal
that
one
of
the
proper
subjects
of
his
sons
’
curriculum
would
be
the
history
of
the
celebrated
gentlemen
who
had
been
born
in
the
province
.
After
a
month
of
careful
preparation
Julien
witnessed
the
success
of
this
idea
.
The
success
was
so
great
that
he
actually
dared
to
risk
mentioning
to
M
.
de
Rênal
in
conversation
,
a
matter
which
the
noble
mayor
found
disagreeable
from
quite
another
point
of
view
.
The
suggestion
was
to
contribute
to
the
fortune
of
a
Liberal
by
taking
a
subscription
at
the
bookseller
’
s
.
M
.
de
Rênal
agreed
that
it
would
be
wise
to
give
his
elder
son
a
first
hand
acquaintance
with
many
works
which
he
would
hear
mentioned
in
conversation
when
he
went
to
the
Military
School
.
But
Julien
saw
that
the
mayor
had
determined
to
go
no
further
.
He
suspected
some
secret
reason
but
could
not
guess
it
.
"
I
was
thinking
,
sir
,
"
he
said
to
him
one
day
,
"
that
it
would
be
highly
undesirable
for
the
name
of
so
good
a
gentleman
as
a
Rênal
to
appear
on
a
bookseller
’
s
dirty
ledger
.
"
M
.
de
Rênal
’
s
face
cleared
.
"
It
would
also
be
a
black
mark
,
"
continued
Julien
in
a
more
humble
tone
,
"
against
a
poor
theology
student
if
it
ever
leaked
out
that
his
name
had
been
on
the
ledger
of
a
bookseller
who
let
out
books
.
The
Liberals
might
go
so
far
as
to
accuse
me
of
having
asked
for
the
most
infamous
books
.
Who
knows
if
they
will
not
even
go
so
far
as
to
write
the
titles
of
those
perverse
volumes
after
my
name
?
"
But
Julien
was
getting
off
the
track
.
He
noticed
that
the
Mayor
’
s
physiognomy
was
re
-
assuming
its
expression
of
embarrassment
and
displeasure
.
Julien
was
silent
.
"
I
have
caught
my
man
,
"
he
said
to
himself
.
It
so
happened
that
a
few
days
afterwards
the
elder
of
the
children
asked
Julien
,
in
M
.