Dona Perfecta eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 279 pages of information about Dona Perfecta.

Dona Perfecta eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 279 pages of information about Dona Perfecta.

“Just so.  Will you deny that you went to look at the pictures, passing among a group of worshippers who were hearing mass?  I assure you that my attention was so distracted by your comings and goings that—­well, you must not do it again.  Then you went into the chapel of San Gregorio.  At the elevation of the Host at the high altar you did not even turn around to make a gesture of reverence.  Afterward you traversed the whole length of the church, you went up to the tomb of the Adelantado, you touched the altar with your hands, then you passed a second time among a group of worshippers, attracting the notice of every one.  All the girls looked at you, and you seemed pleased at disturbing so finely the devotions of those good people.”

“Good Heavens!  How many things I have done!” exclaimed Pepe, half angry, half amused.  “I am a monster, it seems, without ever having suspected it.”

“No, I am very well aware that you are a good boy,” said Dona Perfecta, observing the canon’s expression of unalterable gravity, which gave his face the appearance of a pasteboard mask.  “But, my dear boy, between thinking things and showing them in that irreverent manner, there is a distance which a man of good sense and good breeding should never cross.  I am well aware that your ideas are——­Now, don’t get angry!  If you get angry, I will be silent.  I say that it is one thing to have certain ideas about religion and another thing to express them.  I will take good care not to reproach you because you believe that God did not create us in his image and likeness, but that we are descended from the monkeys; nor because you deny the existence of the soul, asserting that it is a drug, like the little papers of rhubarb and magnesia that are sold at the apothecary’s—­”

“Senora, for Heaven’s sake!” exclaimed Pepe, with annoyance.  “I see that I have a very bad reputation in Orbajosa.”

The others remained silent.

“As I said, I will not reproach you for entertaining those ideas.  And, besides, I have not the right to do so.  If I should undertake to argue with you, you, with your wonderful talents, would confute me a thousand times over.  No, I will not attempt any thing of that kind.  What I say is that these poor and humble inhabitants of Orbajosa are pious and good Christians, although they know nothing about German philosophy, and that, therefore, you ought not publicly to manifest your contempt for their beliefs.”

“My dear aunt,” said the engineer gravely, “I have shown no contempt for any one, nor do I entertain the ideas which you attribute to me.  Perhaps I may have been a little wanting in reverence in the church.  I am somewhat absent-minded.  My thoughts and my attention were engaged with the architecture of the building and, frankly speaking, I did not observe——­But this was no reason for the bishop to think of putting me out of the church, nor for you to suppose me capable of attributing to a paper from the apothecary’s the functions of the soul.  I may tolerate that as a jest, but only as a jest.”

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Project Gutenberg
Dona Perfecta from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.