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A short story by Jean de La Fontaine |
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The Unhappily Married Man |
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Title: The Unhappily Married Man Author: Jean de La Fontaine [More Titles by La Fontaine] If goodness were always the comrade of beauty I would seek a wife to-morrow; but as divorce between these two is no new thing, and as there are so few lovely forms that enshrine lovely souls, thus uniting both one and the other delight, do not take it amiss that I refrain from seeking such a rare combination.
"Well, my dear, how have you been getting on? How did you spend your time? Did you like the simple life of the country?" "Oh, pretty well!" she said, "but what annoyed me was to see the laziness of those people. They are worse there than here. They showed no care whatever for the herds and flocks they were supposed to mind. I didn't forget to let them know what I thought of them. Of course, they didn't like it, and they all hated me in the end." "Ah! my dear. If you fell foul of people whom you saw for but a moment or so in the day and when they returned in the evening--if you made them tired of you; what will the servants in this house become, who must have you railing at them the whole day long? And what will your poor husband do whom you expected to have near you all day and night too? Return to the village, my dear. Adieu! and if during my life the idea should possess me to have you back again, may I, for my sins, have two such as you for ever at my elbows in the world to come." [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |