Manon Lescaut eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 217 pages of information about Manon Lescaut.

Manon Lescaut eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 217 pages of information about Manon Lescaut.

“It was an easy matter at supper to account for the low spirits which I could not conceal, by attributing them to a loss I had that day sustained at the gaming-table.  I considered it most fortunate that the idea of my remaining all the next day at Chaillot was suggested by herself:  I should thus have ample time for deliberation.  My presence would prevent any fears for at least the next day; and if nothing should occur to compel me to disclose the discovery I had already made, I was determined on the following day to move my establishment into town, and fix myself in a quarter where I should have nothing to apprehend from the interference of princes.  This arrangement made me pass the night more tranquilly, but it by no means put an end to the alarm I felt at the prospect of a new infidelity.

“When I awoke in the morning, Manon said to me, that although we were to pass the day at home, she did not at all wish that I should be less carefully dressed than on other occasions; and that she had a particular fancy for doing the duties of my toilette that morning with her own hands.  It was an amusement she often indulged in:  but she appeared to take more pains on this occasion than I had ever observed before.  To gratify her, I was obliged to sit at her toilette table, and try all the different modes she imagined for dressing my hair.  In the course of the operation, she made me often turn my head round towards her, and putting both hands upon my shoulders, she would examine me with most anxious curiosity:  then, showing her approbation by one or two kisses, she would make me resume my position before the glass, in order to continue her occupation.

“This amatory trifling engaged us till dinner-time.  The pleasure she seemed to derive from it, and her more than usual gaiety, appeared to me so thoroughly natural, that I found it impossible any longer to suspect the treason I had previously conjured up; and I was several times on the point of candidly opening my mind to her, and throwing off a load that had begun to weigh heavily upon my heart:  but I flattered myself with the hope that the explanation would every moment come from herself, and I anticipated the delicious triumph this would afford me.

“We returned to her boudoir.  She began again to put my hair in order, and I humoured all her whims; when they came to say that the Prince of ——­ was below, and wished to see her.  The name alone almost threw me into a rage.

“`What then,’ exclaimed I, as I indignantly pushed her from me, `who?—­what prince?’

“She made no answer to my enquiries.

“`Show him upstairs,’ said she coolly to the servant; and then turning towards me, `Dearest love! you whom I so fervently adore,’ she added in the most bewitching tone, `I only ask of you one moment’s patience; one moment, one single moment!  I will love you ten thousand times more than ever:  your compliance now shall never, during my life, be forgotten.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Manon Lescaut from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.