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Madame
de
La
Mole
and
the
whole
household
believed
that
Julien
was
travelling
in
the
provinces
in
connection
with
the
administration
of
the
estates
;
he
was
in
hiding
in
the
parsonage
of
the
abbé
Pirard
and
saw
Mathilde
every
day
;
every
morning
she
would
spend
an
hour
with
her
father
,
but
they
would
sometimes
go
for
weeks
on
end
without
talking
of
the
matter
which
engrossed
all
their
thoughts
.
"
I
don
’
t
want
to
know
where
the
man
is
,
"
said
the
marquis
to
her
one
day
.
"
Send
him
this
letter
.
"
Mathilde
read
:
"
The
Languedoc
estates
bring
in
20
,
600
francs
.
I
give
10
,
600
francs
to
my
daughter
,
and
10
,
000
francs
to
M
.
Julien
Sorel
.
It
is
understood
that
I
give
the
actual
estates
.
Tell
the
notary
to
draw
up
two
separate
deeds
of
gift
,
and
to
bring
them
to
me
to
-
morrow
,
after
this
there
are
to
be
no
more
relations
between
us
.
Ah
,
Monsieur
,
could
I
have
expected
all
this
?
The
marquis
de
La
Mole
.
"
"
I
thank
you
very
much
,
"
said
Mathilde
gaily
.
"
We
will
go
and
settle
in
the
Château
d
’
Aiguillon
,
between
Agen
and
Marmande
.
The
country
is
said
to
be
as
beautiful
as
Italy
.
"
This
gift
was
an
extreme
surprise
to
Julien
.
He
was
no
longer
the
cold
,
severe
man
whom
we
have
hitherto
known
.
His
thoughts
were
engrossed
in
advance
by
his
son
’
s
destiny
.
This
unexpected
fortune
,
substantial
as
it
was
for
a
man
as
poor
as
himself
,
made
him
ambitious
.
He
pictured
a
time
when
both
his
wife
and
himself
would
have
an
income
of
36
,
000
francs
.
As
for
Mathilde
,
all
her
emotions
were
concentrated
on
her
adoration
for
her
husband
,
for
that
was
the
name
by
which
her
pride
insisted
on
calling
Julien
.
Her
one
great
ambition
was
to
secure
the
recognition
of
her
marriage
.
She
passed
her
time
in
exaggerating
to
herself
the
consummate
prudence
which
she
had
manifested
in
linking
her
fate
to
that
of
a
superior
man
.
The
idea
of
personal
merit
became
a
positive
craze
with
her
.
Julien
’
s
almost
continuous
absence
,
coupled
with
the
complications
of
business
matters
and
the
little
time
available
in
which
to
talk
love
,
completed
the
good
effect
produced
by
the
wise
tactics
which
Julien
had
previously
discovered
.
Mathilde
finished
by
losing
patience
at
seeing
so
little
of
the
man
whom
she
had
come
really
to
love
.
In
a
moment
of
irritation
she
wrote
to
her
father
and
commenced
her
letter
like
Othello
:
"
My
very
choice
is
sufficient
proof
that
I
have
preferred
Julien
to
all
the
advantages
which
society
offered
to
the
daughter
of
the
marquis
de
la
Mole
.
Such
pleasures
,
based
as
they
are
on
prestige
and
petty
vanity
mean
nothing
to
me
.
It
is
now
nearly
six
weeks
since
I
have
lived
separated
from
my
husband
.
That
is
sufficient
to
manifest
my
respect
for
yourself
.
Before
next
Thursday
I
shall
leave
the
paternal
house
.
Your
acts
of
kindness
have
enriched
us
.
No
one
knows
my
secret
except
the
venerable
abbé
Pirard
.
I
shall
go
to
him
:
he
will
marry
us
,
and
an
hour
after
the
ceremony
we
shall
be
on
the
road
to
Languedoc
,
and
we
will
never
appear
again
in
Paris
except
by
your
instructions
.
But
what
cuts
me
to
the
quick
is
that
all
this
will
provide
the
subject
matter
for
piquant
anecdotes
against
me
and
against
yourself
.