Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 25: Russia and Poland by Giacomo Casanova
page 147 of 158 (93%)
page 147 of 158 (93%)
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"Schwerin is here, is he?"
"Yes; and in prison on account of a forged bill. I am sure I do not know what they will do to the poor wretch. He would have been wise to have fled, but it seems as if he wanted to get hanged." "And you have been with him ever since you left England? that is, three years ago." "Exactly. Our occupation is robbing, cheating, and escaping from one land to another. Never was a woman so unhappy as I." "For how much is the forged bill?" "For three hundred crowns. Do a generous action M. Casanova, and let bygones be bygones; deliver the poor wretch from the gallows and me from death, for if he is hanged I shall kill myself." "Indeed, madam, he may hang for me, for he did his best to send me to the gallows with his forged bills; but I confess I pity you. So much, indeed, that I invite you to come to Dresden with me the day after to-morrow, and I promise to give you three hundred crowns as soon as Schwerin has undergone the extreme penalty of the law. I can't understand how a woman like you can have fallen in love with a man that has neither face, nor talents, nor wit, nor fortune, for all that he has to boast of is his name of Schwerin." "I confess, to my shame, that I never loved him. Ever since the other rogue, Castelbajac--who, by the way, was never married to me--made me know him, I have only lived with him by force, though his tears and his |
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