<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2><h3><SPAN name="div2_09">THE UNKNOWN PERIL.</SPAN></h3>
<br/>
<p class="normal">Dark and ominous as was the prospect of every thing around the Count
de Morseuil, when the blessings of his bright days were passing away,
one by one, and his best hope was exile, yet the interview which had
just taken place between him and Clémence de Marly was like a bright
summer hour in the midst of storms, and even when it was over, like
the June sun, it left a long twilight of remembered joy behind it. But
there are times in human life when dangers are manifold, when we are
pressed upon by a thousand difficulties, and when, nevertheless,
though the course we have determined on is full of risks and perils,
sorrows and sufferings, we eagerly, perhaps even imprudently, hurry
forward upon it, to avoid those very doubts and uncertainties, which
are worse than actual pains.</p>
<p class="normal">Such was the case with the Count de Morseuil, and he felt within him
so strong an inclination to take the irrevocable step of quitting
France for ever, and seeking peace and toleration in another land,
that, much accustomed to examine and govern his own feelings, he
paused, and pondered over the line of conduct he was about to pursue,
during his visit to the Bishop of Meaux, perceiving in himself a half
concealed purpose of forcing on the conversation to the subject of
religion, and of showing Bossuet clearly, that there was no chance
whatever of inducing him to abandon the religion of his fathers.
Against this inclination, on reflection, he determined to be upon his
guard, although he adhered rigidly to his resolution of countenancing,
in no degree, a hope of his becoming a convert to the Roman Catholic
faith; and his only doubt now was whether his passing two evenings so
close together with the Bishop of Meaux, with whom he had so slight an
acquaintance, might not afford some encouragement to expectations
which he felt himself bound to check.</p>
<p class="normal">Having promised, however, he went, but at the same time made up his
mind not to return to the prelate's abode speedily. On the present
occasion, he not only found Bossuet alone, but was left with him for
more than an hour, without any other visiter appearing. The good
Bishop himself was well aware of the danger of scaring away those whom
he sought to win; and, sincerely desirous, for the Count's own sake,
of bringing him into that which he believed to be the only path to
salvation, he was inclined to proceed calmly and gently in the work of
his conversion.</p>
<p class="normal">There were others, however, more eager than himself; the King was as
impetuous in the apostolic zeal which he believed himself to feel, as
he had formerly been in pursuits which though, certainly more gross
and sensual, would perhaps, if accurately weighed, have been found to
be as little selfish, vain, and personal, as the efforts that he made
to convert his Protestant subjects. The hesitation even in regard to
embracing the <i>King's creed</i> was an offence, and he urged on Bossuet
eagerly to press the young Count, so far, at least, as to ascertain if
there were or were not a prospect of his speedily following the
example of Turenne, and so many others. The Bishop was thus driven to
the subject, though against his will; and shortly after the young
Count's appearance, he took him kindly and mildly by the hand, and led
him into a small cabinet, where were ranged, in goodly order, a
considerable number of works on the controversial divinity of the
time. Amongst others, appeared some of the good prelate's own
productions, such as "L'Exposition de la Doctrine Catholique," the
"Traité de la Communion sous les deux Espèces," and the "Histoire des
Variations." Bossuet ran his finger over the titles as he pointed them
out to the young Count.</p>
<p class="normal">"I wish, my young friend," he said, "that I could prevail upon you to
read some of these works: some perhaps even of my own, not from the
vanity of an author alone, though I believe that the greatest
compliment that has ever been paid to me was that which was paid by
some of the pastors of your own sect, who asserted when I wrote that
book," and he pointed to the Exposition, "that I had altered the
Catholic doctrines in order to suit them to the purposes of my
defence. Nor indeed would they admit the contrary, till the full
approbation of the head of our church stamped the work as containing
the true doctrines of our holy faith. But, as I was saying, I wish I
could persuade you to read some of these, not so much to gratify the
vanity of an author, nor even simply to make a convert, but because I
look upon you as one well worthy of saving, as a brand from the
burning--and because I should look upon your recall to the bosom of
the mother church as worth a hundred of any ordinary conversions. In
short, my dear young friend, because I would save you from much
unhappiness, in life, in death, and in eternity."</p>
<p class="normal">"I owe you deep thanks, Monsieur de Meaux," said the Count, "for the
interest that you take in me; and I will promise you most sincerely to
read, with as unprejudiced an eye as possible, not only any but all of
the works you have written on such subjects. I have already read some,
and it is by no means too much to admit, that if any one could induce
me to quit the faith in which I have been brought up, it would be
Monsieur de Meaux. He will not think me wrong, however, when I say
that I am, as yet, unconvinced. Nor will he be offended if I make one
observation, or, rather, ask one question, in regard to something he
has just said."</p>
<p class="normal">"Far, far from it, my son," replied the Bishop. "I am ever willing to
explain any thing, to enter into the most open and candid exposition
of every thing that I think or feel. I have no design to embarrass, or
to perplex, or to obscure; my whole view is to make my own doctrine
clear and explicit, so that the mind of the merest child may choose
between the right and the wrong."</p>
<p class="normal">"I merely wish to ask," said the Count, "whether by the words
'unhappiness in life, and in death,' you meant to allude to temporal
or spiritual unhappiness? whether you meant delicately to point out to
me that the hand of persecution is likely to be stretched out to
oppress me? or----"</p>
<p class="normal">"No! no!" cried Bossuet, eagerly. "Heaven forbid that I should hold
out as an inducement the apprehension of things that I disapprove of!
No, Monsieur de Morseiul, I meant merely spiritual happiness and
unhappiness, for I do not believe that any man can be perfectly happy
in life while persisting in a wrong belief; certainly I believe that
he must be unhappy in his death; and, alas! my son, reason and
religion both teach me that he must be unhappy in eternity."</p>
<p class="normal">"The great question of eternity," replied the Count, solemnly, "is in
the hands of God. But the man, and the only man, who, in this sense,
must be unhappy in life, in death, and in eternity, seems to me to be
the man who is uncertain in his faith. In life and in death I can
conceive the deist, or (if there be such a thing) the atheist--if
perfectly convinced of the truth of his system--perfectly happy and
perfectly contented. But the sceptic can never be happy. He who, in
regard to religious belief, is doubtful, uncertain, wavering, must
assuredly be unhappy in life and in death, though to God's great mercy
we must refer the eternity. If I remain unshaken, Monsieur de Meaux,
in my firm belief that what we call the reformed church is right in
its views and doctrines, the only thing that can disturb or make me
unhappy therein is temporal persecution. Were my faith in that church,
however, shaken, I would abandon it immediately. I could not, I would
not, remain in a state of doubt."</p>
<p class="normal">"The more anxious am I, my son," replied the Bishop, "to withdraw you
from that erroneous creed, for so firm and so decided a mind as yours
is the very one which could the best appreciate the doctrines of the
church of Rome, which are always clear, definite, and precise, the
same to-day as they were yesterday, based upon decisions that never
change, and not, as your faith does, admitting doubts and fostering
variations. You must listen to me, my young friend. Indeed, I must
have you listen to me. I hear some of our other friends in the next
room; but we must converse more, and the sooner the better. You have
visited me twice, but I will next visit you, for I think nothing
should be left undone that may court a noble spirit back to the church
of God."</p>
<p class="normal">Thus saying, he slowly led the way into the larger room, the young
Count merely replying as he did so,--</p>
<p class="normal">"Would to God, Monsieur de Meaux, that by your example and by your
exhortations you could prevent others from giving us Protestants the
strongest of all temporal motives to remain attached to our own
creed."</p>
<p class="normal">"What motive is that?" demanded Bossuet, apparently in some surprise.</p>
<p class="normal">"Persecution!" replied the Count; "for depend upon it, to all those
who are worthy of being gained, persecution is the strongest motive of
resistance."</p>
<p class="normal">"Alas! my son," replied Bossuet, "that you should acknowledge such a
thing as pride to have any thing on earth to do with the eternal
salvation of your souls. An old friend of mine used to say, 'It is
more often from pride than from want of judgment that people set
themselves up against established opinions. Men find the first places
occupied in the right party, and they do not choose to take up with
back seats.' I have always known this to be true in the things of the
world; but I think that pride should have nothing to do with the
things of eternity."</p>
<p class="normal">Thus ended the conversation between the Count and Bossuet on the
subject of religion for that night. Two guests had arrived, more soon
followed, and the conversation became more general. Still, however, as
there were many ecclesiastics, the subject of religion was more than
once introduced, the restraint which the presence of a Protestant
nobleman had occasioned on the first visit of the Count having now
been removed. The evening passed over calmly and tranquilly, however,
till about ten o'clock at night, when the Count took his leave, and
departed. The rest of the guests stayed later; and on issuing out into
the street the young nobleman found himself alone in a clear, calm,
moonlight night, with the irregular shadows of the long line of houses
chequering the pavement with the yellow lustre of the moon.</p>
<p class="normal">Looking up into the wide open square beyond, the shadows were lost,
and there the bright planet of the night seemed to pour forth a flood
of radiance without let or obstruction. There was a fountain in the
middle of the square, casting up its sparkling waters towards the sky,
as if spirits were tossing about the moonbeams in their sport, and
casting the bright rays from hand to hand. As the Count gazed,
however, and thought that he would stroll on, giving himself up to
calm reflection at that tranquil hour, and arranging his plans for the
momentous future without disturbance from the hum of idle multitudes,
a figure suddenly came between the fountain and his eyes, and crept
slowly down on the dark side of the street towards him. He was
standing at the moment in the shadow of Bossuet's porch, so as not to
be seen: but the figure came down the street to the door of the
Count's own dwelling, paused for a minute, as if in doubt, then walked
over into the moonlight, and gazed up into the windows of the
prelate's hotel. The Count instantly recognised the peculiar form and
structure of his valet, Jerome Riquet, and, walking out from the porch
towards his own house, he called the man to him, and asked it any
thing were the matter.</p>
<p class="normal">"Why yes, Sir," said Riquet in a low voice, "so much so that I thought
of doing what I never did in my life before--sending in for you, to
know what to do. There has been a person seeking you twice or three
times since you went, and saying he must speak with you immediately."</p>
<p class="normal">"Do you know him?" demanded the Count.</p>
<p class="normal">"Oh yes, I know him," answered Riquet; "a determined devil he is too;
a man in whom you used to place much confidence in the army, and who
was born, I believe, upon your own lands--Armand Herval, you know him
well. I could give him another name if I liked."</p>
<p class="normal">"Well," said the Count, as tranquilly as possible; "what of him,
Riquet? What does he want here?"</p>
<p class="normal">"Ay, Sir, that I can't tell," replied the man: "but I greatly suspect
he wants no good. He is dressed in black from his head to his feet;
and his face is black enough too, that is to say, the look of it. It
was always like a thunder cloud, and now it is like a thunder cloud
gone mad. I don't think the man is sane, Sir; and the third time he
came down here, about ten minutes ago, he said he could not stop a
minute, that he had business directly; and so he went away, pulling
his great dark hat and feather over his head, as if to prevent people
from seeing how his eyes were flashing; and then I saw that the breast
of his great heavy coat was full of something else than rosemary or
honeycomb."</p>
<p class="normal">"What do you mean? what do you mean?" demanded the Count. "What had he
in his breast?"</p>
<p class="normal">"Why, I mean pistols, Sir," said the man; "if I must speak good
French, I say he had pistols, then. So thinking he was about some
mischief, I crept after him from door to door, dodged him across the
square, and saw him go in by a gate, that I thought was shut, into the
garden behind the château. I went in after him, though I was in a
desperate fright for fear any one should catch me; and I trembled so,
that I shook three crowns in my pocket till they rang like sheep
bells. I thought he would have heard me; but I watched him plant
himself under one of the statues on the terrace, and there he stood
like a statue himself. I defy you to have told the one from the other,
or to have known Monsieur Herval from Monsieur Neptune. Whenever I saw
that, I came back to look for you, and tell you what had happened; for
you know, Sir, I am awfully afraid of firearms; and I had not even a
pair of curling irons to fight him with."</p>
<p class="normal">"That must be near the apartments of Louvois," said the young Count
thoughtfully. "This man may very likely seek to do him some injury."</p>
<p class="normal">"More likely the King, Sir," said the valet in a low voice. "I have
heard that his Majesty walks there on that terrace every fine night
after the play for half an hour. He is quite alone, and it would be as
much as one's liberty is worth to approach him at that time."</p>
<p class="normal">"Come with me directly, Riquet," said the Count, "and show me where
this is. Station yourself at the gate you mention after I have gone
in, and if you hear me call to you aloud, instantly give the alarm to
the sentries. Come, quick, for the play must soon be over."</p>
<p class="normal">Thus saying, the young Count strode on, crossed the place, and, under
the guidance of Riquet, approached the gate through which Herval had
entered. The key was in the lock on the outside, and the door ajar;
and, leaving the man in the shadow, the Count entered alone. The
gardens appeared perfectly solitary, sleeping in the moonlight. The
principal water-works were still; and no sound or motion was to be
seen or heard, but such as proceeded from the smaller fountains that
were sparkling on the terrace making the night musical with the
plaintive murmur of their waters, or from the tops of the high trees
as they were waved by the gentle wind. The palace was full of lights,
and nothing was seen moving across any of the windows, so that it was
evident that the play was not yet concluded; and the young Count
looked about for the person he sought for a moment or two in vain.</p>
<p class="normal">At length, however, he saw the shadow cast by one of the groups of
statues, alter itself somewhat in form; and instantly crossing the
terrace to the spot, he saw Herval sitting on the first step which led
from the terrace down to the gardens, his back leaning against the
pedestal, and his arms crossed upon his chest. He did not hear the
step of the young Count till he was close upon him; but the moment he
did so, he started up, and drew a pistol from his breast. He soon
perceived who it was, however; and the Count, saying in a low voice,
"My servants tell me you have been seeking me," drew him, though
somewhat unwilling apparently, down the steps.</p>
<p class="normal">"What is it you wanted with me?" continued the Count, gazing in his
face, to see whether the marks of insanity which Riquet had spoken of
were visible to him. But there was nothing more in the man's
countenance than its ordinary fierce and fiery expression when
stimulated by high excitement.</p>
<p class="normal">"I came to you, Count," he said, "to make you, if you will, the
sharer of a glorious deed; and now you are here, you shall at least be
the spectator thereof--the death of your great enemy--the death of him
who tramples upon his fellow-creatures as upon grapes in the
winepress--the death of the slayer of souls and bodies."</p>
<p class="normal">"Do you mean Louvois?" said the Count in a calm tone.</p>
<p class="normal">"Louvois!" scoffed the man. "No I no! no! I mean him who gives fangs
to the viper, and poison to the snake! I mean him without whom Louvois
is but a bundle of dry reeds to be consumed to light the first fire
that wants kindling, or to rot in its own emptiness! I mean the giver
of the power, the lord of the persecutions: the harlot-monger, and the
murderer, that calls himself King of France; and who, from that holy
title, which he claims from God, thinks himself entitled to pile vice
upon folly, and sin upon vice, and crime upon sin, till the
destruction which he has so often courted to his own head shall this
night fall upon him. The first of the brutal murderers that he sent
down to rob our happy hearths of the jewel of their peace, this hand
has slain; and the same that crushed the worm shall crush the serpent
also."</p>
<p class="normal">The Count now saw that there was, indeed, in the state of Herval's
mind, something different from its usual tone and character. It could
hardly be said that the chief stay thereof was broken, so as to
justify the absolute supposition of insanity; but it seemed as if one
of the fine filaments of the mental texture had given way, leaving all
the rest nearly as it was before, though with a confused and morbid
line running through the whole web. It need not be said that Albert of
Morseiul was determined to prevent at all or any risk the act that the
man proposed to commit; but yet he wished to do so, without calling
down death and torture on the head of one who was kindled almost into
absolute madness, by wrongs which touched the finest affections of his
heart, through religion and through love.</p>
<p class="normal">"Herval," he said, calmly, "I am deeply grieved for you. You have
suffered, I know how dreadfully; and you have suffered amongst the
first of our persecuted sect: but still you must let me argue with
you, for you act regarding all this matter in a wrong light, and you
propose to commit a great and terrible crime."</p>
<p class="normal">"Argue with me not, Count of Morseiul!" cried the man; "argue with me
not, for I will hear no arguments. Doubtless you would have argued
with me, too, about killing that small pitiful insect, that blind
worm, who murdered her I loved, and three or four noble and brave men
along with her."</p>
<p class="normal">"I will tell you in a word, Herval," replied the Count, "had you not
slain him, I would have done so. My hand against his, alone, and my
life against his. He had committed a base, foul, ungenerous murder,
for which I knew that the corrupted law would give us no redress, and
I was prepared to shelter under a custom which I abhor and detest in
general, the execution of an act of justice which could be obtained by
no other means. Had it been but for that poor girl's sake, I would
have slain him like a dog."</p>
<p class="normal">"Thank you, Count, thank you," cried the man, grasping his hand in his
with the vehemence of actual phrensy. "Thank you for those words from
my very soul. But he was not worthy of your noble sword. He died the
death that he deserved; strangled like a common felon, writhing and
screaming for the mercy he had never shown."</p>
<p class="normal">To what he said on that head the Count did not reply; but he turned
once more to the matter immediately before them.</p>
<p class="normal">"Now, Herval," he said, "you see that I judge not unkindly or hardly
by you. You must listen to my advice however----"</p>
<p class="normal">"Not about this, not about this," cried the man, vehemently; "I am
desperate, and I am determined. I will not see whole herds of my
fellow Christians slaughtered like swine to please the bloody butcher
on the throne. I will not see the weak and the faint-hearted driven,
by terror, to condemn their own souls and barter eternity for an hour
of doubtful peace. I will not see the ignorant and the ill-instructed
bought by scores, like cattle at a market. I will not see the infants
torn from their mothers' arms to be offered a living sacrifice to the
Moloch of Rome. This night he shall die, who has condemned so many
others; this night he shall fall, who would work the fall of the pure
church that condemns him. I will hear no advice: I will work the work
for which I came, and then perish when I may. Was it not for this that
every chance has favoured me? Was it not for this that the key was
accidentally left in the door till such time as I laid my hand upon it
and took it away? Was it not for this that no eye saw me seize upon
that key, this morning, though thousands were passing by? Was it not
for this that such a thing should happen on the very night in which he
comes forth to walk upon that terrace' And shall I now pause,--shall I
now listen to any man's advice, who tells me that I must hold my
hand?"</p>
<p class="normal">"If you will not listen to my advice," said the Count, "you must
listen to my authority, Herval. The act you propose to commit you
shall not commit."</p>
<p class="normal">"No!" cried he. "Who shall stop me?--Yours is but one life against
mine, remember; and I care not how many fall, or how soon I fall
myself either, so that this be accomplished."</p>
<p class="normal">"My life, as you say," replied the Count, "is but one. But even,
Herval, if you were to take mine, which would neither be just nor
grateful, if even you were to lose your own, which may yet be of great
service to the cause of our faith, you could not, and you should not,
take that of the King. If you are determined, I am determined too. My
servant stands at yonder gate, and on the slightest noise he gives the
alarm. Thus, then, I tell you," he continued, glancing his eyes
towards the windows of the palace, across which various figures were
now beginning to move; "thus, then, I tell you, you must either
instantly quit this place with me, or that struggle begins between us,
which, end how it may as far as I am concerned, must instantly insure
the safety of the King, and lead you to trial and execution. The way
is still open for you to abandon this rash project at once, or to call
down ruin upon your own head without the slightest possible chance of
accomplishing your object."</p>
<p class="normal">"You have frustrated me," cried the man, "you have foiled me! You have
overthrown, by preventing a great and noble deed, the execution of a
mighty scheme for the deliverance of this land, and the security of
our suffering church! The consequences be upon your own head, Count of
Morseiul! the consequences be upon your own head! I see that you have
taken your measures too well, and that, even if you paid the just
penalty for such interference, the result could not be accomplished."</p>
<p class="normal">"Come then," said the Count; "come, Herval, I must forgive anger as I
have thwarted a rash purpose; but make what speed you may to quit the
gardens, for, ere another minute be over, many a one will be crossing
that terrace to their own apartments."</p>
<p class="normal">Thus saying, he laid his hand upon the man's arm, to lead him gently
away from the dangerous spot on which he stood. But Herval shook off
his grasp sullenly, and walked on before with a slow and hesitating
step, as if, every moment, he would have turned in order to effect his
purpose. The Count doubted and feared that he would do so, and glad
was he, indeed, when he saw him pass the gate which led out of the
gardens. As soon as Herval had gone forth, the young Count closed the
door, locked it, and threw the key over the wall, saying, "There!
thank God, it is now impossible!"</p>
<p class="normal">"Ay," replied the man. "But there are other things possible, Count;
and things that may cause more bloodshed and more confusion than one
little pistol shot.--It would have saved all France," he continued,
muttering to himself, "it would have saved all France.--What a
change!--But if we must fight it out in the field, we must."</p>
<p class="normal">While he spoke he walked onward towards the Count's house, in a sort
of gloomy but not altogether silent reverie; in the intervals of
which, he spoke or murmured to himself in a manner which almost seemed
to justify the opinion expressed by Riquet, that he was insane.
Suddenly turning round towards the valet who followed, however, he
demanded sharply, "Has there not been a tall man, with a green feather
in his hat, asking for your lord two or three times to-day?"</p>
<p class="normal">"So I have heard," replied Riquet, "from the Swiss, but I did not see
him myself."</p>
<p class="normal">"The Swiss never informed me thereof," said the Count. "Pray, who
might he be, and what was his business?"</p>
<p class="normal">"His name, Sir," replied Herval, "is Hatréaumont, and his business was
for your private ear."</p>
<p class="normal">"Hatréaumont!" said the Count in return. "What, he who was an officer
in the guards?"</p>
<p class="normal">Herval nodded his head, and the Count went on: "A brave man, a
determined man he was; but in other respects a wild rash profligate.
He can have no business for my private ear, that I should be glad or
even willing to hear."</p>
<p class="normal">"You know not that, Count," said Herval; "he has glorious schemes in
view, schemes which perhaps may save his country."</p>
<p class="normal">The Count shook his head; "schemes," he said, "which will bring ruin
on himself, and on all connected with him. I have rarely known or
heard of a man unprincipled and profligate in private life, who could
be faithful and just in public affairs. Such men there may be perhaps;
but the first face of the case is against them; for surely they who
are not to be trusted between man and man, are still less to be
trusted when greater temptations lie in their way, and greater
interests are at stake."</p>
<p class="normal">"Well, well," said Herval, "he will not trouble you again. This was
the last day of his stay in Paris, and ere to-morrow be two hours old,
he will be far away."</p>
<p class="normal">"And pray," demanded the Count, "was it by his advice--he who owes
nothing but gratitude to the King--was it by his advice that you were
stationed where I found you?"</p>
<p class="normal">"He knew nothing of it," said the man sharply, "he knew nothing of it;
nor did I intend that he should know, till it was all over--and now,"
he continued, "what is to become of me?"</p>
<p class="normal">"Why, in the first place," replied the Count "you had better come in
with me and take some refreshment. While we are doing so, we will
think of the future for you."</p>
<p class="normal">The man made no reply, but followed the Count, who led the way into
his house, and then ordered some refreshments of various kinds to be
set before his guest from Poitou, examining the man's countenance as
he did so, and becoming more and more convinced that something
certainly had given way in the brain to produce the wandering and
unsettled eye which glared in his face, as well as the rash words and
actions that he spoke and performed.</p>
<p class="normal">"And now, Herval," he said, as soon as they were alone, "there is but
one question which you should ask yourself,--whether it is better for
you to return at once to Poitou, or, since you are so far on your way
to Holland, to take advantage of that circumstance, and speed to the
frontier without delay. I know not what is the situation of your
finances; but if money be wanting for either step, I am ready to
supply you as an old comrade."</p>
<p class="normal">"I want no money," exclaimed the man; "I am wealthy in my station
beyond yourself. What have I to do with money whose life is not worth
an hour? I have a great mind to divide all I have into a hundred
portions, spend one each day, and die at the end of it.--Holland! no,
no; this is no time for me to quit France. I will be at my post at the
coming moment; I will set off again to-night for Poitou. But let me
tell you, Count--for I had forgotten--if you should yourself wish to
secure aught in Holland--and I have heard that there is a lady dearer
to you than all your broad lands--remember there is a schoolmaster
living three doors on this side of the barrier of Passy, called
Vandenenden, passing for a Fleming by birth, but in reality a native
of Dort. He has regular communication with his native land, and will
pass any thing you please with the utmost security."</p>
<p class="normal">"I thank you for that information sincerely," replied the Count; "it
may be most useful to me. But give me one piece of information more,"
he added, as the man rose after having drank a glass of water, with a
few drops of wine in it. "What was the state of the province when you
left it?"</p>
<p class="normal">"If you mean, Count, what was the state of the reformed party," said
Herval, gazing round with a look of wild carelessness, "it was a girl
in a consumption, where something is lost every day, no one knows how,
and yet the whole looks as pretty as ever, till there is nothing but a
skeleton remains. But there will be this difference, Count, there will
be this difference. There will be strength found in the skeleton! Have
you not heard? There were three thousand men, together with women and
children, all converted at once, within ten miles of Niort; and it
cost the priest so much bread and wine giving them the sacrament, that
he swore he would make no more converts unless the King would double
the value of the cure--ha! ha! ha!" and laughing loud and wildly, he
turned upon his heel and left the room without bidding the Count good
night.</p>
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