Page:The Story of Manon Lescaut and the Chevalier Des Grieux.djvu/25

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THE STORY OF MANON LESCAUT.

gentleman, so that he may let me know of it if you do : and I have influence enoug'h to see that you are punished, depend upon it." The affair thus cost me six louis d^or. The young" stranger expressed such deep gratitude and thanked me so gracefully that I was confirmed in mj^ im- pression that he was of noble bh'th, and fully deserving of the liberality I had shown hhn. I spoke a few words to his mistress before I left the room. She answered me so sweetly and with such charming modesty of manner that, as I went out, I fell to musing for a long while over the incomprehensibility of the female characti^r. Returning, as I did, to my life of solitude, I was left in ignorance of the sequel of this adventure. The lapse of two years had driven the matter completely out of my mind, when chance again afforded me an opportunity of learning the full particulars of the affair. I w^as returning from London, with my pupil, the Mar- quis of , and had jiLst arrived at Calais. We put up, if I remember rightly, at the Golden Lion, where, for some reason, we were obliged to spend the whole of that day and the following night. As I was taking a walk through the streets in the afternoon, I caught sight of the same