[Louise de la Valliere by Alexandre Dumas Pere]@TWC D-Link bookLouise de la Valliere CHAPTER VII 2/7
Porthos breakfasted with a very good appetite, and when he had finished, he said, looking at Truchen, "I could make myself very happy here." Truchen smiled at his remark, and so did Planchet, but not without embarrassment. D'Artagnan then addressed Porthos: "You must not let the delights of Capua make you forget the real object of our journey to Fontainebleau." "My presentation to the king ?" "Certainly.
I am going to take a turn in the town to get everything ready for that.
Do not think of leaving the house, I beg." "Oh, no!" exclaimed Porthos. Planchet looked at D'Artagnan nervously. "Will you be away long ?" he inquired. "No, my friend; and this very evening I will release you from two troublesome guests." "Oh! Monsieur d'Artagnan! can you say--" "No, no; you are a noble-hearted fellow, but your house is very small. Such a house, with half a dozen acres of land, would be fit for a king, and make him very happy, too.
But you were not born a great lord." "No more was M.Porthos," murmured Planchet. "But he has become so, my good fellow; his income has been a hundred thousand francs a year for the last twenty years, and for the last fifty years Porthos has been the owner of a couple of fists and a backbone, which are not to be matched throughout the whole realm of France. Porthos is a man of the very greatest consequence compared to you, and...
well, I need say no more, for I know you are an intelligent fellow." "No, no, monsieur, explain what you mean." "Look at your orchard, how stripped it is, how empty your larder, your bedstead broken, your cellar almost exhausted, look too...
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|