Volume IV Part 92 (2/2)

”Ah! I see it is my heart you want”

”Exactly”

”To ht”

”To love you till death, and to obey your slightest wishes”

”My slightest wishes?”

”Yes, for to me they would be inviolable laws”

”Would you settle in Milan?”

”Certainly, if you made that a condition of my happiness”

”What ait, if indeed you really loveit! That is so new If I am not aware of it, I a to ad me none the less, for after you had ceased to love ain”

”That, of course, ht happen, but I don't choose to entertain such unpleasant thoughts; I prefer to think ofyou to all eternity It is certain at all events that no other woirl aited on us, and whose aro?”

”What are you saying? She is the wife of the tailor who made your clothes She left directly after you, and her husband would not have allowed her to come at all if he was not aware that she would be wanted to wait on the ladies whose dresses he had made”

”She is wonderfully pretty Is it possible that you are not in love with her?”

”How could one love a woly fellow? The only pleasure she gave ”

”Ofasked her which of the ladies she waited on looked handsomest without her chemise”

”That was a libertine's question Well, what did she say?”

”That the lady with the beautiful hair was perfect in every respect”

”I don't believe a word of it I have learnt how to change ht not shew a man She only wished to flatter your impertinent curiosity If I had a o about her business”

”You are angry with me”

”No”