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Chapter 12
Treats Of Love, And Prepares For Death
And to begin this chapter, we cannot do better than quote a part of a letter from M.
l'Abbe O'Flaherty to Madame la Comtesse de X----- at Paris:
"MADAM,--The little Arouet de Voltaire, who hath come 'hither to take a turn in England,'
as I see by the Post of this morning, hath brought me a charming pacquet from your
Ladyship's hands, which ought to render a reasonable man happy; but, alas! makes
your slave miserable. I think of dear Paris (and something more dear than all Paris, of
which, Madam, I may not venture to speak further)--I think of dear Paris, and find myself
in this dismal Vitehall, where, when the fog clears up, I can catch a glimpse of muddy
Thames, and of that fatal palace which the kings of England have been obliged to
exchange for your noble castle of Saint Germains, that stands so stately by silver Seine.
Truly, no bad bargain. For my part, I would give my grand ambassadorial saloons,
hangings, gildings, feasts, valets, ambassadors and all, for a bicoque in sight of the
Thuilleries' towers, or my little cell in the Irlandois.
"My last sheets have given you a pretty notion of our ambassador's public doings; now
for a pretty piece of private scandal respecting that great man. Figure to yourself,
Madam, his Excellency is in love; actually in love, talking day and night about a certain
fair one whom he hath picked out of a gutter; who is well nigh forty years old; who was
his mistress when he was in England a captain of dragoons, some sixty, seventy, or a
hundred years since; who hath had a son by him, moreover, a sprightly lad, apprentice
to a tailor of eminence that has the honour of making his Excellency's breeches.
"Since one fatal night when he met this fair creature at a certain place of publique
resort, called Marylebone Gardens, our Cyrus hath been an altered creature. Love hath
mastered this brainless ambassador, and his antics afford me food for perpetual mirth.
He sits now opposite to me at a table inditing a letter to his Catherine, and copying it
from--what do you think?--from the 'Grand Cyrus.' 'I swear, madam, that my happiness
would be to offer you this hand, as I have my heart long ago, and I beg you to bear in
mind this declaration.' I have just dictated to him the above tender words; for our Envoy,
I need not tell you, is not strong at writing or thinking.
"The fair Catherine, I must tell you, is no less than a carpenter's wife, a well-to-do
bourgeois, living at the Tyburn, or Gallows Road. She found out her ancient lover very
soon after our arrival, and hath a marvellous hankering to be a Count's lady. A pretty
little creature is this Madam Catherine. Billets, breakfasts, pretty walks, presents of silks
and satins, pass daily between the pair; but, strange to say, the lady is as virtuous as
Diana, and hath resisted all my Count's cajoleries hitherto. The poor fellow told me, with
tears in his eyes, that he believed he should have carried her by storm on the very first
night of their meeting, but that her son stepped into the way; and he or somebody else
 

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