The Complete Memoirs of Jacques Casanova eBook

Giacomo Casanova
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,501 pages of information about The Complete Memoirs of Jacques Casanova.

The Complete Memoirs of Jacques Casanova eBook

Giacomo Casanova
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,501 pages of information about The Complete Memoirs of Jacques Casanova.

“Nevertheless, it is my first and I hope it will be my last intrigue”

“I hope she won’t defy me to ’give evidence of my health.”

“You are quite well so far, I think?”

“Yes; and, by the way, it is possible she may only have leucorrhoea.  I am longing to see the end of the piece, and to set my mind at rest.”

“Will you give Madame an account of our scheme?”

“Yes; but I shall not be able to give you the credit you deserve.”

“I only want to have credit in your eyes.”

“You cannot doubt that I honour you immensely, and I shall certainly not deprive you of the reward that is your due.”

“The only reward I ask for is for you to be perfectly open with me.”

“You are very wonderful.  Why do you interest yourself so much in my affairs?  I don’t like to think you are really inquisitive.”

“You would be wrong to think that I have a defect which would lower me in my own eyes.  Be sure, sir, that I shall only be curious when you are sad.”

“But what can have made you feel so generously towards me?”

“Only your honourable conduct towards me.”

“You touch me profoundly, and I promise to confide in you for the future.”

“You will make me happy.”

Le Duc had scarcely gone an hour when a messenger on foot came to bring me a second letter from the widow.  He also gave me a small packet, telling me that he had orders to wait for a reply.  I sent him down to wait, and I gave the letter to Madame Dubois, that she might see what it contained.  While she was reading it I leant upon the window, my heart beating violently.

“Everything is getting on famously,” cried my housekeeper.  “Here is the letter; read it.”

“Whether I am being told the truth, or whether I am the victim of a myth arising from your fertile imagination (for which you are too well known all over Europe), I will regard the whole story as being true, as I am not in a position to disprove it.  I am deeply grieved to have injured an innocent man who has never done me any ill, and I will willingly pay the penalty by giving him a sum which will be more than sufficient to cure him of the plague with which I infected him.  I beg that you will give him the twenty-five louis I am sending you; they will serve to restore him to health, and to make him forget the bitterness of the pleasure I am so sorry to have procured for him.  And now are you sufficiently generous to employ your authority as master to enjoin on your man the most absolute secrecy?  I hope so, for you have reason to dread my vengeance otherwise.  Consider that, if this affair is allowed to transpire, it will be easy for me to give it a turn which may be far from pleasant to you, and which will force the worthy man you are deceiving to open his eyes; for I have not changed my opinion, as I have too many proofs of your understanding with his wife.  As I do not desire that we should meet again, I shall go to Lucerne on the pretext of family concerns.  Let me know that you have got this letter.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Complete Memoirs of Jacques Casanova from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.