"Surely, sir, you are not speaking seriously? and yet any attempt at pleasantry would be most unseasonable."
"I speak most seriously, madame."
"And so then," said Madame de Hansfeld, with a contemptuous smile, "you imagine I am a prey to grief, and that you have discovered the cause of it?"
"There are symptoms which are infallible."
"The outward marks of every kind of sorrow are the same, sir."
"Ah, madame, there is but one mode of lamenting the person we love."
"Is this mentioned in confidence? is this an allusion to your own regrets?"
"Alas! I, madame, have no more regrets; you have made me forget them all."
"I do not comprehend your meaning, sir; I expected you were about to tell me an important secret, and yet to the present moment——"
"One other word, madame. A sentiment that I believed unalterable, a long-cherished remembrance, spite of myself, was gradually effaced from my heart. In vain did I blame my weakness: in vain did I foresee to what this love would expose me. The charm was too powerful. I yielded before it. I had but one thought, one desire, one pleasure—that of seeing you. From constantly contemplating your features, I fancied I could read in them, so often overclouded with sorrow and melancholy, that despair, sometimes mute, sometimes so expressive, which the absence or loss of one dear to us invariably occasions."