paid her the price which she asked
for her little property.
As soon as my installation was over, the Abbé Sérapion returned to the seminary. I was, therefore, left alone, with no one but myself to look to for aid or counsel. The thought of Clarimonde again began to haunt me, and in spite of all my endeavors to banish it, I always found it present in my meditations. One evening, while promenading in my little garden along the walks bordered with box-plants, I fancied that I saw through the elm-trees the figure of a woman, who followed my every movement, and that I beheld two sea-green eyes gleaming through the foliage; but it was only an illusion, and on going round to the other side of the garden, I could find nothing except a footprint on the sanded walk — a footprint so small that it seemed to have been made by the foot of a child. The garden was enclosed by very high walls. I searched every nook and corner of it, but could discover no one there. I have never succeeded in fully accounting for this circumstance, which, after all, was nothing compared with the strange things which happened to me afterward.
For a whole year I lived thus, filling all the duties of my calling with the most scrupulous exactitude, praying and fasting, exhorting and lending spiritual aid to the sick, and bestowing alms even to the extent of frequently depriving myself of the very necessaries of life. But I felt a great aridness within me, and the sources of grace seemed closed against me. I never found that happiness which should spring from the fulfilment of a holy mission; my thoughts were far away, and the words of Clarimonde were ever upon my lips like an involuntary refrain. Oh, brother, meditate well on this! Through having but once lifted my eyes to look upon a woman, through one fault apparently so venial, I have for years remained a victim to the most miserable agonies, and the happiness of my life has been destroyed for ever.
I will not longer dwell upon those
defeats, or on those inward victories invariably followed by yet
more terrible falls, but will at once
proceed to the facts of my story. One
night my door-bell was long and
violently rung. The aged house¬
keeper arose and opened to the
stranger, and the figure of a man,
whose complexion was deeply bronzed,
and who was richly clad in a foreign
costume, with a poniard at his girdle,
appeared under the rays of Barbara’s
lantern. Her first impulse was one
of terror, but the stranger reassured
her, and stated that he desired to see
me at once on matters relating to my
holy calling. Barbara invited him
upstairs, where I was on the point of
retiring. The stranger told me that
his mistress, a very noble lady, was
lying at the point of death, and desired to see a priest. I replied that
I was prepared to follow him, took
with me the sacred articles necessary
for extreme unction, and descended
in all haste. Two horses black as the
night itself stood without the gate,
pawing the ground with impatience,
and veiling their chests with long
streams of smoky vapor exhaled from
their nostrils. He held the stirrup
and aided me to mount upon one;
then, merely laying his hand upon
the pommel of the saddle, he vaulted
on the other, pressed the animal’s
sides with his knees, and loosened
The horse bounded forward with the velocity of an arrow. Mine, of which the stranger held the bridle, also started off at a swift gallop, keeping up with his companion. We devoured the road. The ground flowed backward beneath us in a long streaked line of pale gray, and the black silhouettes of the trees seemed fleeing by us on either side like an