[Sons of the Soil by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link bookSons of the Soil CHAPTER VI 5/23
To avoid a lawsuit, she allowed the neighbors to encroach upon her land.
Knowing that the park walls were sufficient protection, she did not fear any interruption of her personal comfort, and cared for nothing but her peaceful existence, true philosopher that she was! A few thousand a year more or less, the indemnities exacted by the wood-merchants for the damages committed by the peasants,--what were they to a careless and extravagant Opera-girl, who had gained her hundred thousand francs a year at the cost of pleasure only, and who had just submitted, without a word of remonstrance, to a reduction of two thirds of an income of sixty thousand francs? "Dear me!" she said, in the easy tone of the wantons of the old time, "people must live, even if they are republicans." The terrible Mademoiselle Cochet, her maid and female vizier, had tried to enlighten her mistress when she saw the ascendency Gaubertin was obtaining over one whom he began by calling "Madame" in defiance of the revolutionary laws about equality; but Gaubertin, in his turn, enlightened Mademoiselle Cochet by showing her a so-called denunciation sent to his father, the prosecuting attorney, in which she was vehemently accused of corresponding with Pitt and Coburg.
From that time forward the two powers went on shares--shares a la Montgomery. Cochet praised Gaubertin to Madame, and Gaubertin praised Cochet.
The waiting-maid had already made her own bed, and knew she was down for sixty thousand francs in the will.
Madame could not do without Cochet, to whom she was accustomed.
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