The Mysteries of Paris, Volume 4 of 6
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Эжен Сю. The Mysteries of Paris, Volume 4 of 6
CHAPTER I. RIGOLETTE'S FIRST SORROW
CHAPTER II. THE WILL
CHAPTER III. L'ILE DU RAVAGEUR
CHAPTER IV. THE FRESHWATER PIRATE
CHAPTER V. THE MOTHER AND SON
CHAPTER VI. FRANÇOIS AND AMANDINE
CHAPTER VII. A LODGING-HOUSE
CHAPTER VIII. THE VICTIMS OF MISPLACED CONFIDENCE.6
CHAPTER IX. THE RUE DE CHAILLOT
CHAPTER X. THE COMTE DE SAINT-REMY
CHAPTER XI. THE INTERVIEW
CHAPTER XII. THE SEARCH
CHAPTER XIII. THE ADIEUX
CHAPTER XIV. RECOLLECTIONS
CHAPTER XV. THE BOATS
CHAPTER XVI. THE HAPPINESS OF MEETING
CHAPTER XVII. DOCTOR GRIFFON
CHAPTER XVIII. THE PORTRAIT
CHAPTER XIX. THE AGENT OF SAFETY
CHAPTER XX. THE CHOUETTE
Отрывок из книги
François Germain resided No. 11 Boulevard St. Denis. It may not be amiss to recall to the reader, who has probably forgotten the circumstance, that Madame Mathieu, the diamond-matcher, whose name has been already mentioned as the person for whom Morel the lapidary worked, lodged in the same house as Germain. During the long ride from the Rue du Temple to the Rue St. Honoré, where dwelt the dressmaker for whom Rigolette worked, Rodolph had ample opportunities of more fully appreciating the fine natural disposition of his companion. Like all instinctively noble and devoted characters, she appeared utterly unconscious of the delicacy and generosity of her conduct, all she said and did seeming to her as the most simple and matter-of-course thing possible.
Nothing would have been more easy than for Rodolph to provide liberally both for Rigolette's present and future wants, and thus to have enabled her to carry her consoling attentions to Louise and Germain, without grieving over the loss of that time which was necessarily taken from her work, – her sole dependence; but the prince was unwilling to diminish the value of the grisette's devotion by removing all the difficulties, and, although firmly resolved to bestow a rich reward on the rare and beautiful qualities he hourly discovered in her, he determined to follow her to the termination of this new and interesting trial. It is scarcely necessary to say that, had the health of the young girl appeared to suffer in the smallest degree from the increase of labour she so courageously imposed on herself, in order to dedicate a portion of each week to the unhappy daughter of the lapidary and the son of the Schoolmaster, Rodolph would instantaneously have stepped forward to her aid; and he continued to study with equal pleasure and emotion the workings of a nature so naturally disposed to view everything on its sunny side, so full of internal happiness, and so little accustomed to sorrow that occasionally she would smile, and seem the mirthful creature nature had made her, spite of all the grief by which she was surrounded.
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"Pray come to the point – pray!"
"And playing with a pistol, which he did not believe to be loaded – "
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