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

CHAPTER XIX
13/17

The matter was nothing less than putting flood-gates with double bridges, draining three or four hundred acres, cutting canals, and laying out roadways.

When the duke had explained the condition of the land, Charles Mignon remarked that time must be allowed for the soil, which was still moving, to settle and grow solid in a natural way.
"Time, which has providentially enriched your house, Monsieur le duc, can alone complete the work," he said, in conclusion.

"It would be prudent to let fifty years elapse before you reclaim the land." "Do not let that be your final word, Monsieur le comte," said the duke.
"Come to Herouville and see things for yourself." Charles Mignon replied that every capitalist should take time to examine into such matters with a cool head, thus giving the duke a pretext for his visits to the Chalet.

The sight of Modeste made a lively impression on the young man, and he asked the favor of receiving her at Herouville with her father, saying that his sister and his aunt had heard much of her, and wished to make her acquaintance.

On this the count proposed to present his daughter to those ladies himself, and invited the whole party to dinner on the day of his return to the villa.


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