"What do you say, Madam?" answered he;

"you accuse me of having told what passed between you and me, and you

inform me that the thing is known; I don't go about to clear myself

from this charge, you can't think me guilty of it; without doubt you

have applied to yourself what was told you of some other." "Ah! Sir,"

replied she, "the world has not an adventure like mine, there is not

another woman capable of such a thing. The story I have heard could

not have been invented by chance; nobody could imagine any like it; an

action of this nature never entered any thoughts but mine. The

Queen-Dauphin has just told me the story; she had it from the Viscount

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de Chartres, and the Viscount from the Duke de Nemours." "The Duke de

Nemours!" cried Monsieur de Cleves, like a man transported and

desperate: "How! does the Duke de Nemours know that you are in love

with him, and that I am acquainted with it?" "You are always for

singling out the Duke de Nemours rather than any other," replied she;

"I have told you I will never answer you concerning your suspicions: I

am ignorant whether the Duke de Nemours knows the part I have in this

adventure, and that which you have ascribed to him; but he told it to

the Viscount de Chartres, and said he had it from one of his friends,

who did not name the lady: this friend of the Duke de Nemours must

needs be one of yours, whom you entrusted the secret to, in order to

clear up your suspicions." "Can one have a friend in the world, in

whom one would repose such a confidence," replied Monsieur de Cleves,

"and would a man clear his suspicions at the price of informing another

with what one would wish to conceal from oneself? Think rather, Madam,

to whom you have spoken; it is more probable this secret should have

escaped from you than from me; you was not able alone to support the

trouble you found yourself in, and you endeavoured to comfort yourself

by complaining to some confidant who has betrayed you."

"Do not wholly destroy me," cried she, "and be not so hard-hearted as

to accuse me of a fault you have committed yourself: can you suspect me

of it? and do you think, because I was capable of informing you of this

matter, I was therefore capable of informing another?"

The confession which Madam de Cleves had made to her husband was so

great a mark of her sincerity, and she so strongly denied that she had

entrusted it to any other, that Monsieur de Cleves did not know what to

think. On the other hand he was sure he had never said anything of it;

it was a thing that could not have been guessed, and yet it was known;

it must therefore come from one of them two; but what grieved him most

was to know that this secret was in the hands of somebody else, and

that in all probability it would be soon divulged.




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