A Passion in the Desert by Honoré de Balzac (the little red hen ebook .TXT) 📕
The Provencal threw his arms round the trunk of one of the palm trees,as though it were the body of a friend, and then, in the shelter ofthe thin, straight shadow that the palm cast upon the granite, hewept. Then sitting down he remained as he was, contemplating withprofound sadness the implacable scene, which was all he had to lookupon. He cried aloud, to measure the solitude. His voice, lost in thehollows of the hill, sounded faintly, and aroused no echo--the echowas in his own heart. The Provencal was twenty-two years old:--heloaded his carbine.
"There'll be time enough," he said to himself, laying on the groundthe weapon which alone could bring him deliverance.
Viewing alternately the dark expanse of the desert and the blueexpanse of the sky, the soldier dreamed of France--he smelled withdelight the gutters of Paris--he remembered the towns through which hehad passed, the faces of his comrades, the most
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A Passion in the Desert
by Honore de Balzac
Translated by Ernest Dowson
December, 1998 [Etext #1555]
The Project Gutenberg Etext of A Passion in the Desert by Balzac
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A PASSION IN THE DESERT
by HONORE DE BALZAC
Translated By
Ernest Dowson
“The whole show is dreadful,” she cried coming out of the menagerie of
M. Martin. She had just been looking at that daring speculator
“working with his hyena,”—to speak in the style of the programme.
“By what means,” she continued, “can he have tamed these animals to
such a point as to be certain of their affection for–-”
“What seems to you a problem,” said I, interrupting, “is really quite
natural.”
“Oh!” she cried, letting an incredulous smile wander over her lips.
“You think that beasts are wholly without passions?” I asked her.
“Quite the reverse; we can communicate to them all the vices arising
in our own state of civilization.”
She looked at me with an
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