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511
But
a
deep
night
had
succeeded
the
day
,
and
there
were
still
two
leagues
to
walk
before
he
could
descend
to
the
cabin
in
which
Fouqué
lived
.
Before
leaving
the
little
cave
,
Julien
made
a
light
and
carefully
burnt
all
that
he
had
written
.
He
quite
astonished
his
friend
when
he
knocked
at
his
door
at
one
o
clock
in
the
morning
.
He
found
Fouqué
engaged
in
making
up
his
accounts
.
He
was
a
young
man
of
high
stature
,
rather
badly
made
,
with
big
,
hard
features
,
a
never
-
ending
nose
,
and
a
large
fund
of
good
nature
concealed
beneath
this
repulsive
appearance
.
512
"
Have
you
quarelled
with
M
.
de
Rênal
then
that
you
turn
up
unexpectedly
like
this
?
"
Julien
told
him
,
but
in
a
suitable
way
,
the
events
of
the
previous
day
.
513
"
Stay
with
me
,
"
said
Fouqué
to
him
.
Отключить рекламу
514
"
I
see
that
you
know
M
.
de
Rênal
,
M
.
Valenod
,
the
sub
-
prefect
Maugron
,
the
curé
Chélan
.
You
have
understood
the
subtleties
of
the
character
of
those
people
.
So
there
you
are
then
,
quite
qualified
to
attend
auctions
.
You
know
arithmetic
better
than
I
do
;
you
will
keep
my
accounts
;
I
make
a
lot
in
my
business
.
The
impossibility
of
doing
everything
myself
,
and
the
fear
of
taking
a
rascal
for
my
partner
prevents
me
daily
from
undertaking
excellent
business
.
It
s
scarcely
a
month
since
I
put
Michaud
de
Saint
-
Amand
,
whom
I
haven
t
seen
for
six
years
,
and
whom
I
ran
across
at
the
sale
at
Pontarlier
in
the
way
of
making
six
thousand
francs
.
Why
shouldn
t
it
have
been
you
who
made
those
six
thousand
francs
,
or
at
any
rate
three
thousand
.
For
if
I
had
had
you
with
me
that
day
,
I
would
have
raised
the
bidding
for
that
lot
of
timber
and
everybody
else
would
soon
have
run
away
.
Be
my
partner
.
"
515
This
offer
upset
Julien
.
It
spoilt
the
train
of
his
mad
dreams
.
Fouqué
showed
his
accounts
to
Julien
during
the
whole
of
the
supper
which
the
two
friends
prepared
themselves
like
the
Homeric
heroes
(
for
Fouqué
lived
alone
)
and
proved
to
him
all
the
advantages
offered
by
his
timber
business
.
Fouqué
had
the
highest
opinion
of
the
gifts
and
character
of
Julien
.
516
When
,
finally
,
the
latter
was
alone
in
his
little
room
of
pinewood
,
he
said
to
himself
:
"
It
is
true
I
can
make
some
thousands
of
francs
here
and
then
take
up
with
advantage
the
profession
of
a
soldier
,
or
of
a
priest
,
according
to
the
fashion
then
prevalent
in
France
.
The
little
hoard
that
I
shall
have
amassed
will
remove
all
petty
difficulties
.
517
In
the
solitude
of
this
mountain
I
shall
have
dissipated
to
some
extent
my
awful
ignorance
of
so
many
of
the
things
which
make
up
the
life
of
all
those
men
of
fashion
.
But
Fouqué
has
given
up
all
thoughts
of
marriage
,
and
at
the
same
time
keeps
telling
me
that
solitude
makes
him
unhappy
.
It
is
clear
that
if
he
takes
a
partner
who
has
no
capital
to
put
into
his
business
,
he
does
so
in
the
hopes
of
getting
a
companion
who
will
never
leave
him
.
"
Отключить рекламу
518
"
Shall
I
deceive
my
friend
,
"
exclaimed
Julien
petulantly
.
This
being
who
found
hypocrisy
and
complete
callousness
his
ordinary
means
of
self
-
preservation
could
not
,
on
this
occasion
,
endure
the
idea
of
the
slightest
lack
of
delicate
feeling
towards
a
man
whom
he
loved
.
519
But
suddenly
Julien
was
happy
.
He
had
a
reason
for
a
refusal
.
What
!
Shall
I
be
coward
enough
to
waste
seven
or
eight
years
.
I
shall
get
to
twenty
-
eight
in
that
way
!
But
at
that
age
Bonaparte
had
achieved
his
greatest
feats
.
When
I
shall
have
made
in
obscurity
a
little
money
by
frequenting
timber
sales
,
and
earning
the
good
graces
of
some
rascally
under
-
strappers
who
will
guarantee
that
I
shall
still
have
the
sacred
fire
with
which
one
makes
a
name
for
oneself
?
520
The
following
morning
,
Julien
with
considerable
sangfroid
,
said
in
answer
to
the
good
Fouqué
,
who
regarded
the
matter
of
the
partnership
as
settled
,
that
his
vocation
for
the
holy
ministry
of
the
altars
would
not
permit
him
to
accept
it
.
Fouqué
did
not
return
to
the
subject
.