[An Old Maid by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link book
An Old Maid

CHAPTER VII
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OTHER RESULTS.
The news of Mademoiselle Cormon's choice stabbed poor Athanase Granson to the heart; but he showed no outward sign of the terrible agitation within him.

When he first heard of the marriage he was at the house of the chief-justice, du Ronceret, where his mother was playing boston.
Madame Granson looked at her son in a mirror, and thought him pale; but he had been so all day, for a vague rumor of the matter had already reached him.
Mademoiselle Cormon was the card on which Athanase had staked his life; and the cold presentiment of a catastrophe was already upon him.

When the soul and the imagination have magnified a misfortune and made it too heavy for the shoulders and the brain to bear; when a hope long cherished, the realization of which would pacify the vulture feeding on the heart, is balked, and the man has faith neither in himself, despite his powers, nor in the future, despite of the Divine power,--then that man is lost.

Athanase was a fruit of the Imperial system of education.
Fatality, the Emperor's religion, had filtered down from the throne to the lowest ranks of the army and the benches of the lyceums.


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