rousseau, confession 002

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:
my
my
quiet
counter
counter
mistakes,
passed
my
How different are
bitterness there-
situation by
the
yet
as
to
proper object
my re-
deuce at
the Hermitage
and
the
fountain-head
of
all
my
subsequent
misfortunes.
As
to
any
of
success.
Judge,
then,
if
handsome pictures
dis-
posed
to
a
man
he
my
sor-
rowful
of
asked
exactly the same thing.
a
passable
figure
and
M.
horse
vorite of
the Princess
no
as to other
to
learning
not
over-
loaded
striking,
but
it
was
have
for
the
discovery
Memoirs with attention.
of
breathing-time.
Instead
of
giving
myself
over
to
despair,
I
calmly
to Madam
Broglie
approached
her
us
the
acquaintance
she
would
see
in
Paris.
me. Madam
in
the more imposing,
mine.
had, simply, perhaps,
good-natured
but
terms
with
tivated accomplishments of one
between
us.
him. Suddenly, however,
Madam Dupin
it
came,
he
would
him
to
dishonor
his
Madam
Dupin
given
me
act,
and
I
went
into
it
gave
myself
io
the
Dupin
family,
more than
whom
I
was
recommended.
M.
de
was on
four
of straw on
where,
I
families,
kept up for
my
life,
I
I
a
task
which
assuredly
the
duties,
until
deprived him
the bureaus,
Italians, from disputing the
I
although this
the
belongs
to
me
without his
tending
to
anything
of
me,
I
was
the
very
items
they
I
could
at
least
head to
ling
me
dispatch, decorated
with the
would
not
have
signed
something different
for me
to become
had
given
palace
of
Zustiniani.
Those
ad-
vantage
of
their
of
my
functions
—a
always
afterwards felt
for
wigs
received
from
delays and
such heavy
expenses, that
service.
I
knew
him
might
settle
the
matter
with
the
whole
sum.
What
would
in
recovering
my
employ-
ment
made
his
secretary
in
where,
leaving
every
day
after
dinner
to
there,
I
ordered
the
foot-
man
various
I
was
the
most
re-
that city, or at
change,
was the
two or
like
same
time
re-
I
thing.
Never
can
this
composi-
tion
I lived
I left it with-
said
I
must
make
the
acquaintance
of
me,
observed
and,
as
lar
the
I
suffered
for
three
weeks,
If
that
reveals
to
the
full
mother-
in-law,
to
my
claim
for
;
fairs.
that
know
what
tolerance
is.
He
never
in on it.
him with
politeness. He
self, and
frolicsome,
his
voice
ringing
out
clear
would let
out some
witty speech
on
man
in
his
best
laid
I
had
which
mint
of
Orleans
being
hands.
She could
France,
of
the
highest
allurement
and
I
first. Nothing can be
brought about in Paris
de La Popliniere
he would
I wished for
the
disjointed
manner in which the
fortune
that
need of this
thought
and
had not a
brought
out,
but
met
with
surmount
way,
frequenting
the
There
was
not
the
least
M.
de
Fraucueil
was
then
work in contemplation also,
wished
to
have
me
between
soon
got
even
Poitiers,
whose
ciphers
owned
: I became as
of
goyety.
banks
of
the
Cher.
All
this
too
;
mother,
however,
who,
besides,
dreaded
Mile.
Gouin,
who
lived
litera-
ture
what he
my
ers
are
at the
hotel du
invariably
broke
his
one
of
these.
as to the
de
or
else
ob-
Pompadour,
conjuring
or ob-
misfortunes.
my
lack
of
tary of Saxe-Gotha and
reader,
waiting
meanwhile
very
slender
outfit
two
come a competitor
moment
I
M.
Grimm's,
or
yet become a
not support
her himself,
was at
the service
her to
quartier Saint-
preserved
or Ma-
dam de
? I
know
i
not
them
1
My
regard
of our
de
Luxembourg
out being
under the
everybody;
I
had
had
the
care
of
my
poor
no harm
faults,
they
are
the
blackest
knowledge I
ness,
I
had
yet
caught
and
induced
serious
reflection
on
my
I
had
to
Uve
to
the
slavery
of
an
employment
for
which
I
felt
nothmg
but
disgust.
Besides,
how
linen,
free me from
was
hanging
after
and among
the rest
de-
scription
the
neighbors
gave
of
a
and
finally
disappeared
turn me
aside from
in
the
Bastille.
This
appre-
hension
then
my
publisher,
never
gave
ofi"
get noised abroad
To
persecuted.
about his business
from morning to
I
insupportable to me,
one occasion
Grimm accompanied
vicar
tinkered
a
very
good
counterpoint.
nies,
seeing
the
that
I
who
after
having
acquired
a
handsome
and affairs, and enjoymg
believe that
remains
ter end
tea,
a worthy
the tumult
I
was
in
my piece played,
and the Fetits
who was the
author until a
with it, and
piece
day at the
been separated. Ap-
plication was made
to
au-
thority,
to
be
played
at
Fontaine-
bleau.
The
part
I
words.
This
said
but
little :
Jelyotte
had
directed
the
most
marvelous
113
leaving
the
narration.
my life,
narrate simply
courage,
I
entered
just
On the
Said I to myself,
to
the
jealousy
would not have acted
would not have acted
the
king.
given that
Madam
d'Epinay's,
where
I
indifference
to
the
against us,
he constantly
with the
cir-
should be
and
so,
songs
and
dances
had
to
middling
success.
I
suppressed
Jelyotte's
recitative,
and
engraved
as
much
general
not till long afterwards
the
pecuni-
ary
ease
in
which
it
printed it

;
could not
bring myself
de
Bou-
logne,
meditating
the
perience
that,
up
till
forty-two
drawing
us
all
the
way
entreaties,
I
would
the clouds, on
wards, gouty, impotent,
belonging to his
book and the sight
with indignation, pitched
alone
together
m
attempts
character—
Chamberi, and
ligible
of
the
Scriptures,
and
of
formularies
wherewith
men
have
overlaid
terrified
me
guards,
the
and who
given
whereof
I
to
me,
going
even
so
far
as
to
gain
over
might
have
spared
of such as concern me, and then no farther than
I
am
? My Con-
it
with
me,
my
fifteen
years,
I
paid
myself
though
indolent,
I
work.
My
calling
of
a
du
Village
and
my
other
writings
enable
from the
considering the
talent
not
Montmorency,
which
Baubonne, at
anything
but
government
makes
people, taking that
acceptation
residence,
;
would seem
and
satirical
than
least murmur
idea was
of the
*
ourselves.
For
is his
same
desii'es
at
their
source,
were
he
and
succumbs
again
physical
basis,
they
seemed
;
promised me was
many
being confined to
country,
I
had
scarcely
enjoyed
it
at
all
sick
of
ing
showers
chervil
omelette
song was
enough
thousand
ex-
cellent
qualities,
seek
and
these
in-
which
This
my
conduct:
I
celestial fire that
for
myself.
Seeing
nothing
in
all
this
but
her,
undertaking.
I
throw up
is
astonishing
I
government,
was happy for him
Saint-Pierre
as
a
sort
of
different
thing,
had
I
succeeded
in
compelling
attention
to
him.
He
might wish to
I
I loved
Therese too
seeing
me
entertain
profounder
sentiments
for
others
than
has
in
grew
ed whole
truly, this and
given
me
a
very
different
reputation.
himself,
and
proving
man
not its origin
in
reply
himself,
the
subject.
Tronchin,
I
letters, nor even
;
he promised,
radically
cured
me
of
my
fantastic
so
vexed thereat
world.
Only,
I
afterwards
deliberated
whether
or
no
I
should
to
my
reve-
ries
in
a
lonely
house
in
the
midst
of
woods,
often
thereto. It
her portrait, at the
brings
I
found
served
of
ing,
tears
of
joy,
I
same
period.*
retentions
in
that calm, simple,
congratu-
lated
seeing
me
escaped
from
their
tyranny
my
retirement,
my
heart
gave
way
to
none
winter that
I had composed
It was from
fancy
complexion was
there
was
a
spite of
herself. She
to
her
dis-
position,
She could
proves
purifies, its
as
far
arise between
the
spoke to
bitter to
my
situation.
Shame,
and it was
:
and
;
a
nothing
with
more
cured me of it,
I,
then,
a
young
cavalier,
hugely
air so as to
humility
back to
a
utmost
amity
would,
I
believed
to
be
make
a
Larnage, whom
I did
not know,
might have
charm.
At
first,
she
it,
did
not
leave
;
have
the
a
mock
of
me.
She
saw
that
herself
off
be
constru-
ed
my blood com-
and senses
now pay
intoxication,
really
de-
elevates
'twas impossible.
own
free
of
the
garden
was,
a
considerable
of
me
long
to
conceal
my
love
was
not
conceal
from
Madam
d'Epinay
kept
up
a
Madam d'Houdetot's letters.
so
palpable
to
every
up Madam d'Houdetot's
whom
I
had
to
use
and,
with
my
usual
often promised me to
at liberty
does it
mean ? I
have re-read
uneasy
me
on
confidence
would
recover
it.
I
I do
to re-
anything
I
shall
frankly
tellhig
you
what
the
world thinks of you, and the breaches you have to re-
pau'
by
whom you surrounded, when you see me go, you may
bid adieu to
that
will
;
This last letter
extricated me from
impru-
dence.
There
was
nothing
interviews were simply
nor whence
seemed
quarrel soon
of
the
of
they
wanted
remember
him,
not
to
have
made
—matters
but
myself
obstinately
bent
of
set,
and
having
one
in
the
A
find
if
better
health
than
in
Paris.
Her
Hermitage,
which
complaisance
so
age,
without
recollecting
that
door:
as
though,
there
were
pathetic
exclamation
signified,
including
cheek
to
the
comedy
pour
on
foot
;
nay
herself
another in
Madam Le
and
her
returning
t(j
Paris
had
reproach in Dide-
you were wont to
of
Montmo-
his
lodgings.
This
was
my
second
journey
to
Paris
since
my
to
forget
I
He
did
so,
and
carried
so.
throw on
loved
:
sent
her
the
letters
were,
Chevrette, for which
myself honor in
author
of
had
given
seized the
nay, not even
to me, the
from Grimm,
might
have
he artfully
contrived to
with
everybody
I
remember
once,
Saint-Lambert
came
near
of upstart
tribe
a
man,
he
passed
with
d'esprit. It
was not
affliction.
There,
every
moruing,
separated
even
Count
Friese,
with
things
depriving
they
interviews.
to
take
her
colloquies continued,
we
advantage
did
all
he
along
end to
favor.
I
judged
his
character
best
Having re-
solved to
founded.
She
together,
wherein,
without
facts
of
the
matter,
she
through
a
thousand
meannesses
when
I
not
be
disarmed
by
mildness
and
Tronchin,
become
my
two
;
to
the
latter
[Tronchin]
harangue
he
had
prepared
for
thing
al-
thereto.
He
returned
to
this
had
fol-
by
death,
us, why did
he choose to
heart's
of
peace,
in
a
slight
as scarcely to
leave me strength
and I resolved to make a full confession to him,
keeping
back
only
what
might
compromise
the
hands
and
carrying
sincerity
as
far
as
it
was
possible
the
sad
cause
of
his
under the
fatigues of
a
me imme-
diately, sent
trials.
Happily
my
attack,
sen-
timents
and
his
situation.
But
at
astonished
take with her. She said she would take her son
and
M.
de
Linant
?"
matter
the necessary pi"e-
which
she
was
such
to
nobody
in
either
by
word
or
pen,
attempt
to
get
on the expedition.
that
to
Tr
do as you
came
over
me
kinder,
"It is impossible,
to bid
purpose
of
completmg
the
preparations
efforts
I
had
seeing that her
that
the
reali-
unite
honest
and
amongst
the
du'e
between
of
my
wronging
either
Madam
d'Epinay,
of
to
name
was
I
justified
my
conduct.
I
my
ture
asked to
; regards
to
Madam
Le
in the
habit of
been
read
with
more
sang-froid
"
to meditate : I
managed
to
step
to
be
taken,
at
least
her.
I
spoke
to
give
in.
contradicts
me
go and
come from
days, and
the
I
long as
as long as I
my
re-
maining
at
the
Hermitage,
I
accordingly
left
it
on
and
age,
and
to
leave
it.
as given in the Memoires of Mme. d'Epinay ends with
the following
Confessions, and
struck with
the
term
of
your
stay
at
dence
Whilst
diffi-
in
silence
the
germs
that,
four
years
left
them.'*
thrown off
:
If there were
independent,
unbound
by
aught
save
truth
and
in
soli-
themselves men of the
nor
the
last
all I
fear
that
him
execute
it.
The
ascendency
rate
with
enveloped
in
tain
a
his
very
I
in
my
power
to
know,
amity,
Hermitage, the
necessity of
account
of
with
it.
I
caught
mg anything
many
with much art
presenting as
cold that,
me, but
my
my
over
my
I
looked
foreward
a
conversation
of
up-
wards
of
two
of us.
of the lady,
the
matter
by
by the very
applauded, and
me of inserting
in my work, in the form of a note, a passage from
the book
any
world,
endeavoring,
at
we should
dead. All this, how-
or
in Montes-
of it,
written me
was
innocent
of
the
pretended
indiscretions
you
had
imputed
to
He
the
you
had
He
may,
for
243
tions
he
is
cannot
keep
at
least
pride
again,
I
answered
him
in
did
fool
enough
I did
several
times,
the
to grow weary
She had
me.
We
talked
together
a
part
of
estrangement.
as
almost
of her;
success
at
schooling
regulated the
letter of thanks, which
Madam d'Hou-
detot, I
an
immense
success.
All
my
works
had
public
to
mistrust
seeing
that
was
evident
it
another enemy among
acquainted
with
Marmoutol
at
M.
de
liLs
position,
or
agreeable
my oppressors,
the cavilings,
Dm'ing my
residence at
the Hermitage,
of cases, and
virtue, his genius,
afterwards printed
incum-
with
tainly would have
close of
the death of
conversation
I
grew
Hermitage, whither
Here
he
the offer.
pension
of
three
hundred
livres,
and
the
proposition
Uvres
a
year,
taking
her
to
m
the
interim.
I
saw
that
the
permission,
which
she
so fanny,
gave
them
tlie
have
never
had
about,
buying
provisions,
tmie.
As
they
acquaintances. I had
the
;
patriot, and
Coiudet, a
:
sought
my
acquaintance,
I
lost
neither
my
bureaux
for
always
find
be
thought
 
girls of his acquaint-
can
truly
de-
clare,
said supper,
and seeing
planation
of
ever
A.bbe
Paris
than
once
rather
roughly
handled
certain
sale
of
seeing my
edi-
tion
delayed
until
be-
fallen
im-
prudent
principle
I
had
adopted
of
interpretations
that
might
be
I
had
phrase,
and
the issue.
being
to feel quite
indeed he
already
knew,
and
the
other
two
acquainted
being
limited
to
set
the
public
never
got
the
least
on by
very
well,
at
least
it
was
succession.
The
women
of
Paris,
distinguished
as
some
little
distance
from
my
write
me
from
pro-
pose
I
should
and
consideration. In course of time
I
was
Then, had this sort
consciousness that
was
by
petuate it,
be
ex-
tracted,
re-
fill
up
the
void
thus for
to
nothing
concerned,
of its right-
of the vassals
a
private
bears
the
the terrace whereon it is built, the view from it,
un-
painted
by
a
master-hand,
its
court
chateau
: I
and I
returning
the
visit,
and
going
la
Marechale,
mechante
satu'ical and
ness
to
sweet that
Though
it
was
any place
was
de
of the
to serve
affability
exposed
hun,
I
hastened
to
get
by
conducting
him,
notwithstauding
in
the
middle
of
the
'

-
a
to
a
domain
in
opens and widens
ex-
quisite
taste
a peristyle
a mo-
them,
I
re-
turn
:
course
disposition,
I
That
and em-
There must
;
"
some scrujph
of
words,
and
I at
last wrote
meaning
be
designs
of
Couidet
ceeded.
ornaments to the designs,
the rea-
towards
me,
a
clerk
of
M.
me
by
this
with
the
common
de
Montmorency
from
my
sincere
formed
a
friend-
ship
I
return
long
the
Hermitage,
on
occasions
then
solely
to
take
supper,
not
set
foot
in
the
streets
of
Paris.
In
the
roaring,
scolding,
storm-
she had
other through Madam
together,
without
saying
This
not
flowers
to be able to believe she could
heartily
forgive
me.
thereat
given them
is much iu
years
the
best
time
success
with
it
"Montmorency
Dec.
2,
your
administration
and
who
your
festation,
and
?
up
to
see
Therese,
then
be not
absolutely witless.
and
had fallen
it
might
sir,
to
express
to
Madam
la
Marechale
de
Luxembourg
the
pain
she and the
Luxem-
bourg
may
in
advance
that,
should
it
be
her
pleasure
of
the
Parliament,
"August 1st.*
the
thanks
a
few
days
afterwards
which he
but whom I had very
seldom seen,
wrote me
journal my
him from wheedling
from a book already published, clap his own to it,
and
coolly
sell
it
in
no
rights
the rights
likely, or from
be
easy
for
you,
assured
it
what
one
man
writes
to
another,
public.
But
have
ever
brought
me,
to manifest that he
 
with him.
chess." This
a
and
curi-
osity,
the hands
of Madam
which
will
ever
make
to arouse the
the same in-
the
beauty
my
pride
than
all
the
compHments
the
work
of
she
dressed
the new novel.
carriage was ready,—
she rang to
*
take
so
deep
me
was
the
myself
the
neither
wished
to
confirm
my own
;
same
I was most
subject :
this
faithfully
kept
she
still
ill-success
of
Venice,
between
M.
I wished
prevented me from
nesses
incident
to
the
me
gance
of
her
oracles,
her
excessive
admiration
article
I
do
possess.
I
had
a
dog
that
'Duke.'
Whatever
given
it away from him.
a number of
;
shadow
in-
and
good-will,
which
made
her
in
public.
The
poor
girl
was
the
Foundling-Hospital.
She
knew
meanwhile.
However
birth
as
my
Reserve
with
being
contrary
to
my
I
have
since
that
time
for the
of return-
retirement,
yet
entirely
whom
of
upon
himself
pocket. In passing
an
interior
days,
many
hard
things
the
execution
of
my
works
was the
exercising
his
wished
at
least
himself and
me without
ostentation, pretension
I
consented
means
of
rendering
from the other
using a
was richer
ineffectual.
Is
either
well
French edition,
the
I
shall
presently
the
agreement
letter
full
of
could
do
less
to
remedy
than
circumspection
he
and
government
heart
the
publication
of
this
my
last
and
best
from
delirium.
Unfortunately,
I
Jesuits,
furious
at
the
contempt
with
which
I
had
spoken
were
until
after
given them
because all
confidence
and
the
not the least
Madam
de
Luxembourg
aided
 
dieted I
1
believed
this
taking pen from
miuds
of
honest
men
Males-
herbes
this
come
and
and am
of
another person
of
me,
so
that
'Social
Contract;'
and,
stitching
together
tender
incurable
without
being
long
as
bore
the
latter
done before,
and I
He
then
proposed
to
me
the
chateau
me, and where
send
his
valet
the sub-
ject of
the work.
I
returned
all
the
to the
object to make
Duclos^
a
sure
old
rise to
passage,
one
Balexsert,
purpose
of
not until
of
it
the
cumstances and my imprudence
no great
the
especially
the
Parliament,
relates
and
gave
me
to
understand
that
it
was
in
very
deed
against
prince's efibrts.
should
leave
the
kingdom
and
go
to
England,
where
a footing
authority, that
youth.
Since
that
time
I
try
and
doze
for
a
This
which
without
seeing
at
;
same
finish it
should
leave
without
entrusting
chamber
in
which
become
of
my
to arrest
she might with truth
most
You
share my
set
out,
and
they
a postillion,
consequence
of
the
measure
he
had
taken,
I
me,
335
me
altogether
exempt
containing
four
men
in
black,
who
saluted
was
carrying
tongue,
and
suffering
what
had
me
fro:n
recollecting
is
needless
which reigns
a more
aflfecting mildness
sub-
ject
—in
its
to
me.
I
have
shut
up
within
him.
I
learned
Lyons
was
much
I,
just
the
same,
a recollection
able,
do
what
I
ation
I
fall upon my head
openly manifest. When from my heart, wi'ung
and
rent,
a
groan
ment
I
I
motives are
intrigue,
populace, it was against
especially,
that
be
it
had
me,
when
ever dwelt
my secret
the King
and jDractice to
ings
to the prince.
of the
Madam
but thereby
as
a
ruler
to
permitting
her
to
hitherto
been
a
favor
remained
proof
agaiust
mis-
fortune,
her
morsel
nor
my
Therese
as
I
had
with
to me,
considerations
could
fault
at
the
beginning
of
opportunity
continuation
that she
of a
most bitterly.
What emotion
!
States of his Prussian
;
see
him.
I
went
with
M.
Martinet,
of
life,
in his
a
life
which,
however,
of
save that
had he
him
old
with
ser-
vice and needed rest, let him retire with the government
of
of
passing
The Neufchatelese,
by
because, desirous of
him
every other feeling.
woman
, but
being
too
divided
it
so few
King, sealed
zeal
had
been
:
ing every possible
who
this
new
dress,
of Madam
savage,
I
took
from me
for
her
called
me
'papa/
and
I
fame did
not attend
court, on bad
visit. However, as
her
second
husband.
Du
beloved
by
his
mother,
had
happy
put the finishing touch to my favorable opinion, he frequently
addressed me,
my
books,
and
said
was
always
true
esteem led
not
:
what
my
persecutors
the
air
by
merit
of
their
not
to
go
to
^euf-
chiltel,
and money,
to outrage
office,
;
sort
on its object.
with the
being
at
I
flock.
I
never
in
my
had
constantly
and
openly
declared
the
matter
becoming
the
sub-
stitutes
of
our
ministers.
however, there
aggressor
were at that
memory
see if
and why
afterwards
that
I
suspected
the
one.
I
anything
about
appropriate
those
he
sliould
find
have
supposed
materials
I
the
would remonstrate
against the
against
me.
Every
thing
Council.
to take the
for ever
silent.
According-
for that year
citizens
abandoning
my
Council,
which
felt
written
hope
opinion
res
I
I
obstacles
by
which
my
secret
had
having
even
flattery
—an
by M. de
common
Mile.
Fel,
a
mule
loaded
and the
M.
de
Montauban,
traveling,
works,
was
a
young
and
his
:
that
of
Latin,
I
there. He
had caused
some dis-
but Sauttersheim.
Baron,
given
him
inSwitzerland,
I
could
not
it
who was
held in
piqued
all
ex-
certain
af-
fected
demonstrations—
becoming
ever
fewer
and
farther
between
change
of
friendship.
Switzerland
four
or
five
times,
and
then
broke
and
believable,
so
I
had
that feeling very
my
friends.'
for me,
as also
of
I
learned
ceased
to
suffer
herself.
from
lliat;
I
had
no
friends
left
to
lose
—was
Marshal. He did not die, but, weary of serving a
set
of
ungrateful
still
one
what one inspires
did
not
of
Keith-Hall,
was
I
Mably
and
and tliat mine
had
shown
himself
took
self of
en-
deavoring
the
prince,
be
present
at
patriot, to
appointed,
illustrious
assembly,
became
who, following the
put
any
writmg.
He
given
change
necessary
to
be
made
of
pul-
pit-eloquence,
ministers in
influence,
case
individual,
did
more,
the
sedition
justice and reason,
so-
licitude,
I
gations
I
of being
ai^pointed
to the
residence there
agreeable. On
opinion
of
him,
and
Wallace, who had
copies of
zeal,
and
write
to
and
did
going
the
rab-
ble,
whose
fury
pages
after
the
Du Peyroa
truly
theologic,
chose
was
not
a
Christian.
These
letters,
written
in
nothing in this work
;
of rage, and d'lvernois
up
with
fine
things
My
first
its real value every-
failing
was
his
as a
a frequenter of places of that description, and finding myself
charged
considered,
no great
than astonishing in
not
to
have
de-
me, to
being the author of the sheet, and whether or no
I
to get
did not make
was
of
any
kind,
went
out.
I
ran
into
did,
that
covered
with
pleasant. The form of the lake is an almost regular
oval.
Neufchatel, form
which
I
count it as one of the
most deli-
my
own
dishonor.
inspired
my
writings,
They
might
describe
another
not
fail
here
to
add
another
to
precisely thereby
stupidity
said
and
every
compliment
paid,
and
compelled
this
is
in total
them
beyond
it
necessary
to
make
the
parts.
The
by
day raise
sole
off. This
kuow
something
of
nature's
work
but
nothiug
agitated.
of
The
determine
to
be
When
I
that of
and infirm)
place of abode.
While waiting an
on me, and
time
of
the
treaty
con-
trary
to
the
—unable ration-
legislation,
until
profound
meditation
the midst of
my
undertaking.
I
thought
of
an
myself
to
writ-
ing
in
and
more
at
my
my dearly
beloved solitude,
obhging
me
to
to
Corsica.
I
expected
the island
and the
Lord Marshal,
so
much
diligence
that
from Bienne
quaintance since
pected and
He
pro-
nounced
the
and its in-
closely
connected
as
to
call
them
several
fathers.
This
course
of
Barthes
quite
to remain
Forthwith
my
mind
to inform
confide
man.
Wildremet
and it
Berlin,
I
0\SCHARGl-UR