[Led Astray and The Sphinx by Octave Feuillet]@TWC D-Link bookLed Astray and The Sphinx CHAPTER III 3/14
And then, why oppose a vocation which I really look upon as providential? In the interest of the child herself, you should congratulate yourself upon the resolution she has taken; I appeal to your husband to say if that is not so.
Come, let me ask you, my dear sir, what could be expected of such an organization, if she were once let loose upon the world? Why! she would be a dangerous character for society! You know what a head she has! a volcano! And pray observe, my friend, that at this present moment she is a perfect odalisk.
You have not seen her for some time; you cannot imagine how she has developed.
I, who enjoy the treat of seeing her twice a week, can positively assure you that she is a perfect odalisk, and besides, divinely dressed.
In fact, she is so well made! you might throw a window-curtain over her with a pitch-fork, and she would look as if she were just coming out of Worth's! There, ask Pierre what he thinks about it, he who has the honor of being admitted to her good graces!" Monsieur de Moras, who was coming in at that very moment, shared, indeed, with a very limited number of friends of the family, the privilege of accompanying Clotilde occasionally on her visits to Julia's convent. "Well, my good Pierre," resumed the baroness, "we were speaking of Julia, and I was telling my son-in-law that it was really quite fortunate that she was willing to become a saint, because otherwise she would certainly set Paris on fire!" "Because ?" asked the count. "Because she is beautiful as Sin!" "Undoubtedly she is quite good-looking," said the count somewhat coldly. The baroness having gone out on some errands with Clotilde, Monsieur de Moras remained alone with Lucan. "It really seems to me," he said to the latter, "that our poor Julia is being very harshly treated." "In what way ?" "Her grandmother speaks of her as of a perverse creature! And what fault do they find with her after all? Her worship of her father's memory! It is excessive, I grant; but filial piety, even when exaggerated, is not a vice, that I know of.
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