Madame Firmiani
MADAME FIRMIANI BY HONORE DE BALZAC Translated By Katharine Prescott Wormeley DEDICATION To my dear Alexandre de Berny. His old friend, De Balzac.
"Ah! I knew it! He is of noble birth!" exclaimed Rosalie, dropping the
letter.
"You know how conscientiously I studied, how faithful and useful I
was as an obscure journalist, and how excellent a secretary to the
statesman who, on his part, was true to me in 1829. Flung to the
depths once more by the revolution of July just when my name was
becoming known, at the very moment when, as Master of Appeals, I
was about to find my place as a necessary wheel in the political
machine, I committed the blunder of remaining faithful to the
fallen, and fighting for them, without them. Oh! why was I but
three-and-thirty, and why did I not apply to you to make me
eligible? I concealed from you all my devotedness and my dangers.
What would you have? I was full of faith. We should not have
agreed.
"Ten months ago, when you saw me so gay and contented, writing my
political articles, I was in despair; I foresaw my fate, at the
age of thirty-seven, with two thousand francs for my whole
fortune, without the smallest fame, just having failed in a noble
undertaking, the founding, namely, of a daily paper answering only
to a need of the future instead of appealing to the passions of
the moment. I did not know which way to turn, and I felt my own
value! I wandered about, gloomy and hurt, through the lonely
places of Paris--Paris which had slipped through my fingers
MADAME FIRMIANI BY HONORE DE BALZAC Translated By Katharine Prescott Wormeley DEDICATION To my dear Alexandre de Berny. His old friend, De Balzac.