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and you think this cousin pays her attentions?โ€

โ€œI only suppose so. What else can a strapping chap of twenty-one mean with a fine wench of seventeen?โ€

โ€œAnd you say that Dantรจs has gone to the Catalans?โ€

โ€œHe went before I came down.โ€

โ€œLet us go the same way; we will stop at La Rรฉserve, and we can drink a glass of La Malgue, whilst we wait for news.โ€

โ€œCome along,โ€ said Caderousse; โ€œbut you pay the score.โ€

โ€œOf course,โ€ replied Danglars; and going quickly to the designated place, they called for a bottle of wine, and two glasses.

Pรจre Pamphile had seen Dantรจs pass not ten minutes before; and assured that he was at the Catalans, they sat down under the budding foliage of the planes and sycamores, in the branches of which the birds were singing their welcome to one of the first days of spring.

III The Catalans

Beyond a bare, weatherworn wall, about a hundred paces from the spot where the two friends sat looking and listening as they drank their wine, was the village of the Catalans. Long ago this mysterious colony quitted Spain, and settled on the tongue of land on which it is to this day. Whence it came no one knew, and it spoke an unknown tongue. One of its chiefs, who understood Provenรงal, begged the commune of Marseilles to give them this bare and barren promontory, where, like the sailors of old, they had run their boats ashore. The request was granted; and three months afterwards, around the twelve or fifteen small vessels which had brought these gypsies of the sea, a small village sprang up. This village, constructed in a singular and picturesque manner, half Moorish, half Spanish, still remains, and is inhabited by descendants of the first comers, who speak the language of their fathers. For three or four centuries they have remained upon this small promontory, on which they had settled like a flight of seabirds, without mixing with the Marseillaise population, intermarrying, and preserving their original customs and the costume of their mother-country as they have preserved its language.

Our readers will follow us along the only street of this little village, and enter with us one of the houses, which is sunburned to the beautiful dead-leaf color peculiar to the buildings of the country, and within coated with whitewash, like a Spanish posada. A young and beautiful girl, with hair as black as jet, her eyes as velvety as the gazelleโ€™s, was leaning with her back against the wainscot, rubbing in her slender delicately moulded fingers a bunch of heath blossoms, the flowers of which she was picking off and strewing on the floor; her arms, bare to the elbow, brown, and modelled after those of the Arlesian Venus, moved with a kind of restless impatience, and she tapped the earth with her arched and supple foot, so as to display the pure and full shape of her well-turned leg, in its red cotton, gray and blue clocked, stocking. At three paces from her, seated in a chair which he balanced on two legs, leaning his elbow on an old worm-eaten table, was a tall young man of twenty, or two-and-twenty, who was looking at her with an air in which vexation and uneasiness were mingled. He questioned her with his eyes, but the firm and steady gaze of the young girl controlled his look.

โ€œYou see, Mercรฉdรจs,โ€ said the young man, โ€œhere is Easter come round again; tell me, is this the moment for a wedding?โ€

โ€œI have answered you a hundred times, Fernand, and really you must be very stupid to ask me again.โ€

โ€œWell, repeat itโ โ€”repeat it, I beg of you, that I may at last believe it! Tell me for the hundredth time that you refuse my love, which had your motherโ€™s sanction. Make me understand once for all that you are trifling with my happiness, that my life or death are nothing to you. Ah, to have dreamed for ten years of being your husband, Mercรฉdรจs, and to lose that hope, which was the only stay of my existence!โ€

โ€œAt least it was not I who ever encouraged you in that hope, Fernand,โ€ replied Mercรฉdรจs; โ€œyou cannot reproach me with the slightest coquetry. I have always said to you, โ€˜I love you as a brother; but do not ask from me more than sisterly affection, for my heart is anotherโ€™s.โ€™ Is not this true, Fernand?โ€

โ€œYes, that is very true, Mercรฉdรจs,โ€ replied the young man, โ€œYes, you have been cruelly frank with me; but do you forget that it is among the Catalans a sacred law to intermarry?โ€

โ€œYou mistake, Fernand; it is not a law, but merely a custom, and, I pray of you, do not cite this custom in your favor. You are included in the conscription, Fernand, and are only at liberty on sufferance, liable at any moment to be called upon to take up arms. Once a soldier, what would you do with me, a poor orphan, forlorn, without fortune, with nothing but a half-ruined hut and a few ragged nets, the miserable inheritance left by my father to my mother, and by my mother to me? She has been dead a year, and you know, Fernand, I have subsisted almost entirely on public charity. Sometimes you pretend I am useful to you, and that is an excuse to share with me the produce of your fishing, and I accept it, Fernand, because you are the son of my fatherโ€™s brother, because we were brought up together, and still more because it would give you so much pain if I refuse. But I feel very deeply that this fish which I go and sell, and with the produce of which I buy the flax I spinโ โ€”I feel very keenly, Fernand, that this is charity.โ€

โ€œAnd if it were, Mercรฉdรจs, poor and lone as you are, you suit me as well as the daughter of the first shipowner or the richest banker of Marseilles! What do such as we

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