[Ten Years Later by Alexandre Dumas Pere]@TWC D-Link book
Ten Years Later

CHAPTER 4
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During all the time that the rupture between the king and the prince had lasted, the prince, who had long entertained a great regard for Bragelonne, had in vain offered him advantages of the most dazzling kind for a young man.
The Comte de la Fere, still faithful to his principles of loyalty and royalty, one day developed before his son in the vaults of Saint Denis,--the Comte de la Fere, in the name of his son, had always declined them.

Moreover, instead of following M.de Conde in his rebellion, the vicomte had followed M.de Turenne, fighting for the king.

Then when M.de Turenne, in his turn, had appeared to abandon the royal cause, he had quitted M.de Turenne, as he had quitted M.de Conde.

It resulted from this invariable line of conduct that, as Conde and Turenne had never been conquerors of each other but under the standard of the king, Raoul, however young, had ten victories inscribed on his list of services, and not one defeat from which his bravery or conscience had to suffer.
Raoul, therefore, had, in compliance with the wish of his father, served obstinately and passively the fortunes of Louis XIV., in spite of the tergiversations which were endemic, and, it might be said, inevitable, at that period.
M.de Conde, on being restored to favor, had at once availed himself of all the privileges of the amnesty to ask for many things back again which had been granted him before, and among others, Raoul.

M.de la Fere, with his invariable good sense, had immediately sent him again to the prince.
A year, then, had passed away since the separation of the father and son; a few letters had softened, but not removed, the pains of absence.
We have seen that Raoul had left at Blois another love in addition to filial love.


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