themselves to the utmost to enable me to pursue my studies. For my part, I am not ashamed of them, but their—simplicity—their rustic manners—might, perhaps, render you uncomfortable.”
She smiled, delightfully, her face lit up with gentle kindness as she replied: “No. I shall be very fond of them. We will go and see them. I want to. I will speak of this to you again. I, too, am a daughter of poor people, but I have lost my parents. I have no longer anyone in the world.” She held out her hand to him as she added: “But you.”
He felt softened, moved, overcome, as he had been by no other woman.
“I had thought about one matter,” she continued, “but it is rather difficult to explain.”
“What is it?” he asked.
“Well, it is this, my dear boy, I am like all women, I have my weaknesses, my pettinesses. I love all that glitters, that catches the ear. I should have so delighted to have borne a noble name. Could you not, on the occasion of your marriage, ennoble yourself a little?”
She had blushed in her turn, as if she had proposed something indelicate.
He replied simply enough: “I have often thought about it, but it did not seem to me so easy.”
“Why so?”
He began to laugh, saying: “Because I was afraid of making myself look ridiculous.”
She shrugged her shoulders. “Not at all, not at all Everyone does it, and nobody laughs. Separate your name in two—Du Roy. That looks very well.”