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"
And
happily
,
"
added
the
abbé
,
"
worldly
wisdom
is
in
this
instance
in
agreement
with
religion
.
Could
one
,
in
view
of
Mdlle
.
de
la
Mole
’
s
passionate
character
,
rely
for
a
minute
on
her
keeping
any
secret
which
she
did
not
herself
wish
to
preserve
?
If
one
does
not
reconcile
oneself
to
the
frankness
of
a
public
marriage
,
society
will
concern
itself
much
longer
with
this
strange
mésalliance
.
Everything
must
be
said
all
at
once
without
either
the
appearance
or
the
reality
of
the
slightest
mystery
.
"
"
It
is
true
,
"
said
the
marquis
pensively
.
Two
or
three
friends
of
M
.
de
la
Mole
were
of
the
same
opinion
as
the
abbé
Pirard
.
The
great
obstacle
in
their
view
was
Mathilde
’
s
decided
character
.
But
in
spite
of
all
these
fine
arguments
the
marquis
’
s
soul
could
not
reconcile
itself
to
giving
up
all
hopes
of
a
coronet
for
his
daughter
He
ransacked
his
memory
and
his
imagination
for
all
the
variations
of
knavery
and
duplicity
which
had
been
feasible
in
his
youth
.
Yielding
to
necessity
and
having
fear
of
the
law
seemed
absurd
and
humiliating
for
a
man
in
his
position
.
He
was
paying
dearly
now
for
the
luxury
of
those
enchanting
dreams
concerning
the
future
of
his
cherished
daughter
in
which
he
had
indulged
for
the
last
ten
years
.
"
Who
could
have
anticipated
it
?
"
he
said
to
himself
.
"
A
girl
of
so
proud
a
character
,
of
so
lofty
a
disposition
,
who
is
even
prouder
than
I
am
of
the
name
she
bears
?
A
girl
whose
hand
has
already
been
asked
for
by
all
the
cream
of
the
nobility
of
France
.
"
"
We
must
give
up
all
faith
in
prudence
.
This
age
is
made
to
confound
everything
.
We
are
marching
towards
chaos
.
"
The
prefect
said
to
himself
as
he
rode
along
the
highway
on
horseback
,
"
why
should
I
not
be
a
minister
,
a
president
of
the
council
,
a
duke
?
This
is
how
I
should
make
war
.
.
.
.
By
these
means
I
should
have
all
the
reformers
put
in
irons
.
"
—
The
Globe
.
No
argument
will
succeed
in
destroying
the
paramount
influence
of
ten
years
of
agreeable
dreaming
.
The
marquis
thought
it
illogical
to
be
angry
,
but
could
not
bring
himself
to
forgive
.
"
If
only
this
Julien
could
die
by
accident
,
"
he
sometimes
said
to
himself
.
It
was
in
this
way
that
his
depressed
imagination
found
a
certain
relief
in
running
after
the
most
absurd
chimæras
.
They
paralysed
the
influence
of
the
wise
arguments
of
the
abbé
Pirard
.
A
month
went
by
in
this
way
without
negotiations
advancing
one
single
stage
.
The
marquis
had
in
this
family
matter
,
just
as
he
had
in
politics
,
brilliant
ideas
over
which
he
would
be
enthusiastic
for
two
or
three
days
.
And
then
a
line
of
tactics
would
fail
to
please
him
because
it
was
based
on
sound
arguments
,
while
arguments
only
found
favour
in
his
eyes
in
so
far
as
they
were
based
on
his
favourite
plan
.
He
would
work
for
three
days
with
all
the
ardour
and
enthusiasm
of
a
poet
on
bringing
matters
to
a
certain
stage
;
on
the
following
day
he
would
not
give
it
a
thought
.
Julien
was
at
first
disconcerted
by
the
slowness
of
the
marquis
;
but
,
after
some
weeks
,
he
began
to
surmise
that
M
.
de
La
Mole
had
no
definite
plan
with
regard
to
this
matter
.