old notary felt his heart dead within him, but he thought it none
the less necessary to humor the Duchess, to laugh when she laughed, and
shed tears when she wept; groaning in spirit, all the same, over the
feminine frivolity which could find matter for a jest while setting
about a matter so serious. What would he not have done to save the
Count? While Chesnel dressed; Mme. de Maufrigneuse sipped the cup of
coffee and cream which Brigitte brought her, and agreed with herself
that provincial women cooks are superior to Parisian chefs, who despise
the little details which make all the difference to an epicure. Thanks
to Chesnel's taste for delicate fare, Brigitte was found prepared to set
an excellent meal before the Duchess.
Chesnel and his charming companion set out for M. and Mme. Camusot's
house.
"Ah! so there is a Mme. Camusot?" said the Duchess. "Then the affair may
be managed."
"And so much the more readily, because the lady is visibly tired enough
of living among us provincials; she comes from Paris," said Chesnel.
"Then we must have no secrets from her?"
"You will judge how much to tell or to conceal," Chesnel replied humbly.
"I am sure that she will be greatly flattered to be the Duchesse de
Maufrigneuse's hostess; you will be obliged to stay in her house until
nightfall, I expect, unless you find it inconvenient to remain."
"Is this Mme. Camusot a good-looking woman?" asked the Duchess, with a
coxcomb's air.
"She is a bit of a queen in her own house."
"Then she is sure to meddle in court-house affairs," returned the
Duchess. "Nowhere but in France, my dear M. Chesnel, do you see women
so much wedded to their husbands that they are wedded to their husband's
professions, work, or business as well. In Italy, England, and Germany,
women make it a point of honor to leave men to fight their own battles;
they shut their eyes to their husbands' work as perseveringly as our
French citizens' wives do all that in them lies to understand the
position of their joint-stock partnership; is not that what you call
it in your legal language? Frenchwomen are so incredibly jealous in the
conduct of their married life, that they insist on knowing everything;
and that is how, in the least difficulty, you feel the wife's hand in
the business; the Frenchwoman advises, guides, and warns her husband.
And, truth to tell, the man is none the worse off. In England, if a
married man is put in prison for debt for twenty-four
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