Page:The Story of Manon Lescaut and the Chevalier Des Grieux.djvu/39

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THE STORY OF MANON LESCAUT.

It is certain that with my affectionate and constant nature, I should now have been happy for the rest of my life, had Manon remained faithful to me. The better I grew to know her, the more fascinating qualities did I dis- cover in her. Her mind, her heart, her g-entleness, and her beauty, were. all links in a chain by which it was so sweet to be bound, that I should have asked for no other happiness than to be held captive by it forever. Yet, by a temble caprice of fate, the verj'^ thing which might have given me complete felicity is that which has brought me to the verge of despair ! I am at this moment the most misei'able of men, in consequence of that self-same constancy from ^vhich I might justly have expected a life of supreme contentment and the most perfect rewards of love !