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Updated: June 14, 2025


At the period I allude to a madame de Blessac, a very well-looking woman, took upon herself to be very kindly disposed towards the gentleman-in-waiting. She told him so, and thereupon M. de D n ranged himself under her banner, and swore eternal constancy.

Then, whilst his eye flashed with indignation, he turned towards Rodin, who had not ceased to look him full in the face, and said to him, with an air of lofty disdain: "What! do you accuse M. de Blessac?" "Yes, I accuse him," replied Rodin, briefly. "Do you know him?" "I have never seen him." "Of what do you accuse him? And how dare you say that he has betrayed me?"

"Marcel! how pale you are! you do not answer!" "Marcel! this, then, is M. de Blessac?" cried Rodin, feigning the most painful surprise. "Oh, sir, if I had known " "But don't you hear this man, Marcel?" cried M. Hardy. "He says that you have betrayed me infamously." He seized the hand of M. de Blessac. That hand was cold as ice. "Oh, God!

Now the prince de la Trimouille had for his mistress mademoiselle Lubert, an opera-dancer, very pretty and extraordinarily silly. M. D n went to her; "Mademoiselle," said he, "I come to offer my services to you in the same way that M. de la Trimouille has offered his to madame de Blessac, with whom I was on exceedingly intimate terms." The services of young D n were accepted, and he was happy.

"Sir!" cried M. de Blessac, overcome with shame; "I am at your orders and " He could not finish. The sound of voices was heard behind the door, which opened violently, and an aged woman entered, in spite of the efforts of the servant, exclaiming in an agitated voice: "I tell you, I must speak instantly to your master."

M. D n went to Russia, therefore, and on his return came to see me, and is now one of the most welcome and agreeable of the men of my private circle. As to madame de Blessac, she continued to carry on the war in grand style. Her husband dying she married again a foolish count, three parts ruined, and who speedily dissipated the other quarter of his own fortune and the whole of his wife's.

Then, addressing the servant, M. Hardy bade him: "Ask the gentleman to walk in." "The postilion wishes to know if he is to wait?" "Certainly: he will take M. de Blessac back to Paris." The servant withdrew, and presently returned, introducing Rodin, with whom M. de Blessac was not acquainted, his treacherous bargain having been negotiated through another agent.

M. D n and madame de Blessac Anecdote The rendezvous and the Ball The wife of Gaubert They wish to give her to the king Intrigues Their results Letter from the duc de la Vrilliere to the countess Reply Reconciliation

A carriage with post horses, in which was M. Hardy, with M. de Blessac, the unworthy friend who was betraying him in so infamous a manner, entered at this moment the courtyard of the factory. A little while after, a humble hackney-coach was seen advancing also towards the factory, from the direction of Paris. In this coach was Rodin.

At the period I allude to a madame de Blessac, a very well-looking woman, took upon herself to be very kindly disposed towards the gentleman-in-waiting. She told him so, and thereupon M. de D n ranged himself under her banner, and swore eternal constancy.

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