[Ursula by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link book
Ursula

CHAPTER XVII
20/26

To your refusal you may attribute not only your own misfortunes, but those which will fall on others.
"He who loves you, and whose wife you will be." Curiously enough, at the very moment that the gentle victim of this plot was drooping like a cut flower, Mesdemoiselles Massin, Dionis, and Cremiere were envying her lot.
"She is a lucky girl," they were saying; "people talk of her, and court her, and quarrel about her.

The serenade was charming; there was a cornet-a-piston." "What's a piston ?" "A new musical instrument, as big as this, see!" replied Angelique Cremiere to Pamela Massin.
Early that morning Savinien had gone to Fontainebleau to endeavor to find out who had engaged the musicians of the regiment then in garrison.
But as there were two men to each instrument it was impossible to find out which of them had gone to Nemours.

The colonel forbade them to play for any private person in future without his permission.

Savinien had an interview with the procureur du roi, Ursula's legal guardian, and explained to him the injury these scenes would do to a young girl naturally so delicate and sensitive, begging him to take some action to discover the author of such wrong.
Three nights later three violins, a flute, a guitar, and a hautboy began another serenade.

This time the musicians fled towards Montargis, where there happened then to be a company of comic actors.


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