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.
add, that he hoped Manon had also employed herself in the same edifying manner at the Magdalen.  Notwithstanding the thrill of horror I felt at the sound of the name, I had still presence of mind enough to beg, in the gentlest manner, that he would explain himself. `Oh! yes,’ he replied, `she has been these last two months at the Magdalen learning to be prudent, and I trust she has improved herself as much there, as you have done at St. Lazare!’

“If an eternal imprisonment, or death itself, had been presented to my view, I could not have restrained the excitement into which this afflicting announcement threw me.  I flung myself upon him in so violent a rage that half my strength was exhausted by the effort.  I had, however, more than enough left to drag him to the ground, and grasp him by the throat.  I should infallibly have strangled him, if his fall, and the half-stifled cries which he had still the power to utter, had not attracted the governor and several of the priests to my room.  They rescued him from my fury.

“I was, myself, breathless and almost impotent from rage. `Oh God!’ I cried—­`Heavenly justice!  Must I survive this infamy?’ I tried again to seize the barbarian who had thus roused my indignation—­they prevented me.  My despair—­my cries—­my tears, exceeded all belief:  I raved in so incoherent a manner that all the bystanders, who were ignorant of the cause, looked at each other with as much dread as surprise.

“G——­ M——­ in the meantime adjusted his wig and cravat, and in his anger at having been so ill-treated, ordered me to be kept under more severe restraint than before, and to be punished in the manner usual with offenders in St. Lazare. `No, sir!’ said the governor, `it is not with a person of his birth that we are in the habit of using such means of coercion; besides, he is habitually so mild and well-conducted, that I cannot but think you must have given provocation for such excessive violence.’  This reply disconcerted G——­ M——­ beyond measure and he went away, declaring that he knew how to be revenged on the governor, as well as on me, and everyone else who dared to thwart him.

“The Superior, having ordered some of the brotherhood to escort him out of the prison, remained alone with me.  He conjured me to tell him at once what was the cause of the fracas.—­`Oh, my good sir!’ said I to him, continuing to cry like a child, `imagine the most horrible cruelty, figure to yourself the most inhuman of atrocities—­that is what G——­ M——­ has had the cowardly baseness to perpetrate:  he has pierced my heart.  Never shall I recover from this blow!  I would gladly tell you the whole circumstance,’ added I, sobbing with grief; `you are kind-hearted, and cannot fail to pity me.’

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Manon Lescaut from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.