resignation, or rather with mild confidence, this
innocent and benevolent creature met the approach of
death. She seemed attached to earth only by affection
for those whom she was to leave in this world.
Two of the youngest of the children who had formerly
been placed under her care, and who were not yet able
to earn their own subsistence, she kept with her,
and in the last days of her life she continued her
instructions to them with the fond solicitude of a
parent. Her father confessor, an excellent man,
who never even in these dangerous times shrank from
his duty, came to Sister Frances in her last moments,
and relieved her mind from all anxiety, by promising
to place the two little children with the lady who
had been abbess of her convent, who would to the utmost
of her power protect and provide for them suitably.
Satisfied by this promise, the good Sister Frances
smiled upon Victoire, who stood beside her bed, and
with that smile upon her countenance expired.—It
was some time before the little children seemed to
comprehend, or to believe, that Sister Frances was
dead: they had never before seen any one die;
they had no idea what it was to die, and their first
feeling was astonishment; they did not seem to understand
why Victoire wept. But the next day when no
Sister Frances spoke to them, when every hour they
missed some accustomed kindness from her,—when
presently they saw the preparations for her funeral,—when
they heard that she was to be buried in the earth,
and that they should never see her more,—they
could neither play nor eat, but sat in a corner holding
each other’s hands, and watching everything that
was done for the dead by Victoire.
In those times, the funeral of a nun, with a priest
attending, would not have been permitted by the populace.
It was therefore performed as secretly as possible:
in the middle of the night the coffin was carried
to the burial-place of the Fleury family; the old steward,
his son Basile, Victoire, and the good father confessor,
were the only persons present. It is necessary
to mention this, because the facts were afterwards
misrepresented.
CHAPTER XIV
“The character is lost!
Her head adorned with lappets, pinned
aloft,
And ribands streaming gay, superbly
raised,
Indebted to some smart wig-weaver’s
hand
For more than half the tresses it
sustains.”—COWPER.
Upon her return to Paris, Victoire felt melancholy;
but she exerted herself as much as possible in her
usual occupation; finding that employment and the
consciousness of doing her duty were the best remedies
for sorrow.