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.

On hearing that M. M——­ F——­ was sure of finding lodgings, I was precluded from offering to accommodate them in my own house, as the lady might think that I only made the offer because I was sure it would not be accepted.

When we got to the door of their house we alighted, and the mother begged me to come in.  She and her husband slept on the second floor, and the two girls on the third.  Everything was upside down, and as Madame M——­ F——­ had something to say to the landlady she asked me to go up with her daughters.  It was cold, and the room we entered had no fire in it.  The sister went into the room adjoining and I stayed with Sara, and all of a sudden I clasped her to my breast, and feeling that her desires were as ardent as mine I fell with her on to a sofa where we mingled our beings in all the delights of voluptuous ardours.  But this happiness was short lived; scarcely was the work achieved when we heard a footstep on the stair.  It was the father.

If M——­ F——­ had had any eyes he must have found us out, for my face bore the marks of agitation, the nature of which it was easy to divine.  We exchanged a few brief compliments; I shook his hand and disappeared.  I was in such a state of excitement when I got home that I made up my mind to leave England and to follow Sara to Switzerland.  In the night I formed my plans, and resolved to offer the family my house during the time they stayed in England, and if necessary to force them to accept my offer.

In the morning I hastened to call on M——­ F——­, and found him on his doorstep.

“I am going to try and get a couple of rooms,” said he.

“They are already found,” I replied.  “My house is at your service, and you must give me the preference.  Let us come upstairs.”

“Everybody is in bed.”

“Never mind,” said I, and we proceeded to go upstairs.

Madame M——­ F——­ apologized for being in bed.  Her husband told her that I wanted to let them some rooms, but I laughed and said I desired they would accept my hospitality as that of a friend.  After some polite denials my offer was accepted, and it was agreed that the whole family should take up their quarters with me in the evening.

I went home, and was giving the necessary orders when I was told that two young ladies wished to see me.  I went down in person, and I was agreeably surprised to see Sara and her sister.  I asked them to come in, and Sara told me that the landlady would not let their belongings out of the house before her father paid a debt of forty guineas, although a city merchant had assured her it should be settled in a week.  The long and snort of it was that Sara’s father had sent me a bill and begged me to discount it.

I took the bill and gave her a bank note for fifty pounds in exchange, telling her that she could give me the change another time.  She thanked me with great simplicity and went her way, leaving me delighted with the confidence she had placed in me.

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