Mysteries of Paris, V3 by Eugène Sue
page 56 of 592 (09%)
page 56 of 592 (09%)
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"Cecily!"
"You should speak the truth." "I speak the truth! Oh! you shall see." "Your countenance is lowering. Your expression formidable. Hold, you are as fearful and beautiful as a mad tiger. But you speak the truth, do you not?" "I have committed crimes, I tell you." "So much the better, if by their avowal you prove your love." "And if I tell you all?" "I grant all; for if you have this blind confidence in me--do you see, Jacques--it will no longer be the ideal lover of the song I call. It is to you, my tiger, you, that I shall say come--come--come." "Oh, you will be mine. I shall be your tiger," cried he; "and then, if you will, you shall dishonor me--my head shall fall. My honor, my life, all is yours now," "Your honor?" "My honor! Listen; ten years since an infant was confided to my care, and two hundred thousand francs for its support; I have abandoned this child. I spread the report the child was dead, and I kept the money." "It was bold and skillful--who would have thought it of you?" |
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