Louise de la Valliere Part 6
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"How was it?" said D'Artagnan, smiling, "and why was it you could not move?"
Porthos, perceiving that he had made a mistake, wished to correct it.
"Yes, I came from Belle-Isle upon very hard horses," he said, "and that fatigued me."
"I am no longer astonished, then, since I, who followed you, found seven or eight lying dead on the road."
"I am very heavy, you know," said Porthos.
"So that you were bruised all over."
"My marrow melted, and that made me very ill."
"Poor Porthos! But how did Aramis act towards you under those circ.u.mstances?"
"Very well, indeed. He had me attended to by M. Fouquet's own doctor.
But just imagine, at the end of a week I could not breathe any longer."
"What do you mean?"
"The room was too small; I had absorbed every atom of air."
"Indeed?"
"I was told so, at least; and so I was removed into another apartment."
"Where you were able to breathe, I hope and trust?"
"Yes, more freely; but no exercise--nothing to do. The doctor pretended that I was not to stir; I, on the contrary, felt that I was stronger than ever; that was the cause of a very serious accident."
"What accident?"
"Fancy, my dear fellow, that I revolted against the directions of that a.s.s of a doctor, and I resolved to go out, whether it suited him or not: and, consequently, I told the valet who waited on me to bring me my clothes."
"You were quite naked, then?"
"Oh, no! on the contrary, I had a magnificent dressing-gown to wear. The lackey obeyed; I dressed myself in my own clothes, which had become too large for me; but a strange circ.u.mstance had happened,--my feet had become too large."
"Yes, I quite understand."
"And my boots too small."
"You mean your feet were still swollen?"
"Exactly; you have hit it."
"_Pardieu!_ And is that the accident you were going to tell me about?"
"Oh, yes; I did not make the same reflection you have done. I said to myself: 'Since my feet have entered my boots ten times, there is no reason why they should not go in the eleventh.'"
"Allow me to tell you, my dear Porthos, that on this occasion you failed in your logic."
"In short, then, they placed me opposite to a part of the room which was part.i.tioned; I tried to get my boot on; I pulled it with my hands, I pushed with all the strength of the muscles of my leg, making the most unheard-of efforts, when suddenly the two tags of my boot remained in my hands, and my foot struck out like a ballista."
"How learned you are in fortification, dear Porthos."
"My foot darted out like a ballista, and came against the part.i.tion, which it broke in; I really thought that, like Samson, I had demolished the temple. And the number of pictures, the quant.i.ty of china, vases of flowers, carpets, and window-panes that fell down were really wonderful."
"Indeed!"
"Without reckoning that on the other side of the part.i.tion was a small table laden with porcelain--"
"Which you knocked over?"
"Which I dashed to the other side of the room," said Porthos, laughing.
"Upon my word, it is, as you say, astonis.h.i.+ng," replied D'Artagnan, beginning to laugh also; whereupon Porthos laughed louder than ever.
"I broke," said Porthos, in a voice half-choked from his increasing mirth, "more than three thousand francs worth of china--ha, ha, ha!"
"Good!" said D'Artagnan.
"I smashed more than four thousand francs worth of gla.s.s!--ho, ho, ho!"
"Excellent."
"Without counting a l.u.s.ter, which fell on my head and was broken into a thousand pieces--ha, ha, ha!"
"Upon your head?" said D'Artagnan, holding his sides.
"On top."
"But your head was broken, I suppose?"
"No, since I tell you, on the contrary, my dear fellow, that it was the l.u.s.ter which was broken, like gla.s.s, which, in point of fact, it was."
"Ah! the l.u.s.ter was gla.s.s, you say."
"Venetian gla.s.s! a perfect curiosity, quite matchless, indeed, and weighed two hundred pounds."
"And it fell upon your head!"
"Upon my head. Just imagine, a globe of crystal, gilded all over, the lower part beautifully encrusted, perfumes burning at the top, with jets from which flame issued when they were lighted."
"I quite understand, but they were not lighted at the time, I suppose?"
"Happily not, or I should have been grilled prematurely."
"And you were only knocked down flat, instead?"
Louise de la Valliere Part 6
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Louise de la Valliere Part 6 summary
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