Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 21: South of France eBook

Giacomo Casanova
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 130 pages of information about Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 21.

Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 21: South of France eBook

Giacomo Casanova
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 130 pages of information about Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 21.

I left her to go to Marcoline, whom I longed to press to my heart.  I found her in an ecstasy of joy, and she said that if she could understand what her maid said her happiness would be complete.  I saw that her situation was a painful one, especially as she was a woman, but for the present I saw no way out of the difficulty; I should have to get an Italian-speaking servant, and this would have been a troublesome task.  She wept with joy when I told her that my niece desired to be remembered to her, and that in a day she would be on her father’s hearth.  Marcoline had found out that she was not my real niece when she found her in my arms.

The choice supper which the old man had procured us, and which spewed he had a good memory for my favorite tastes, made me think of Rosalie.  Marcoline heard me tell the story with great interest, and said that it seemed to her that I only went about to make unfortunate girls happy, provided I found them pretty.

“I almost think you are right,” said I; “and it is certain that I have made many happy, and have never brought misfortune to any girl.”

“God will reward you, my dear friend.”

“Possibly I am not worth His taking the trouble!”

Though the wit and beauty of Marcoline had charmed me, her appetite charmed me still more; the reader knows that I have always liked women who eat heartily.  And in Marseilles they make an excellent dish of a common fowl, which is often so insipid.

Those who like oil will get on capitally in Provence, for it is used in everything, and it must be confessed that if used in moderation it makes an excellent relish.

Marcoline was charming in bed.  I had not enjoyed the Venetian vices for nearly eight years, and Marcoline was a beauty before whom Praxiteles would have bent the knee.  I laughed at my brother for having let such a treasure slip out of his hands, though I quite forgave him for falling in love with her.  I myself could not take her about, and as I wanted her to be amused I begged my kind old landlord to send her to the play every day, and to prepare a good supper every evening.  I got her some rich dresses that she might cut a good figure, and this attention redoubled her affection for me.

The next day, which was the second occasion on which I had visited her, she told me that she had enjoyed the play though she could not understand the dialogues; and the day after she astonished me by saying that my brother had intruded himself into her box, and had said so many impertinent things that if she had been at Venice she would have boxed his ears.

“I am afraid,” she added, “that the rascal has followed me here, and will be annoying me.”

“Don’t be afraid,” I answered, “I will see what I can do.”

When I got to the hotel I entered the abbe’s room, and by Possano’s bed I saw an individual collecting lint and various surgical instruments.

“What’s all this?  Are you ill?”

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Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 21: South of France from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.