An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete eBook

Émile Souvestre
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete.

An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete eBook

Émile Souvestre
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete.

At last the sun sets, and we have to think of returning.  While Madeleine and Frances clear away the dinner, I walk down to the manufactory to ask the hour.  The merrymaking is at its height; the blasts of the trombones resound from the band under the acacias.  For a few moments I forget myself with looking about; but I have promised the two sisters to take them back to the Bellevue station; the train cannot wait, and I make haste to climb the path again which leads to the walnut-trees.

Just before I reached them, I heard voices on the other side of the hedge.  Madeleine and Frances were speaking to a poor girl whose clothes were burned, her hands blackened, and her face tied up with bloodstained bandages.  I saw that she was one of the girls employed at the gunpowder mills, which are built further up on the common.  An explosion had taken place a few days before; the girl’s mother and elder sister were killed; she herself escaped by a miracle, and was now left without any means of support.  She told all this with the resigned and unhopeful manner of one who has always been accustomed to suffer.  The two sisters were much affected; I saw them consulting with each other in a low tone:  then Frances took thirty sous out of a little coarse silk purse, which was all they had left, and gave them to the poor girl.  I hastened on to that side of the hedge; but, before I reached it, I met the two old sisters, who called out to me that they would not return by the railway, but on foot!

I then understood that the money they had meant for the journey had just been given to the beggar!  Good, like evil, is contagious:  I run to the poor wounded girl, give her the sum that was to pay for my own place, and return to Frances and Madeleine, and tell them I will walk with them.

..........................

I am just come back from taking them home; and have left them delighted with their day, the recollection of which will long make them happy.  This morning I was pitying those whose lives are obscure and joyless; now, I understand that God has provided a compensation with every trial.  The smallest pleasure derives from rarity a relish otherwise unknown.  Enjoyment is only what we feel to be such, and the luxurious man feels no longer:  satiety has destroyed his appetite, while privation preserves to the other that first of earthly blessings:  the being easily made happy.  Oh, that I could persuade every one of this! that so the rich might not abuse their riches, and that the poor might have patience.  If happiness is the rarest of blessings, it is because the reception of it is the rarest of virtues.

Madeleine and Frances! ye poor old maids whose courage, resignation, and generous hearts are your only wealth, pray for the wretched who give themselves up to despair; for the unhappy who hate and envy; and for the unfeeling into whose enjoyments no pity enters.

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An Attic Philosopher in Paris — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.