Page:Villette (1st edition).djvu/770

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VILLETTE.

discussion of such subjects. I dislike it the more because——"

"You believe?"

"No: but it has happened to me to experience impressions——"

"Since you came here?"

"Yes: not many months ago."

"Here?—in this house?"

"Yes."

"Bon! I am glad of it. I knew it somehow before you told me. I was conscious of rapport between you and myself. You are patient, and I am choleric; you are quiet and pale, and I am tanned and fiery; you are a strict Protestant, and I am a sort of lay Jesuit: but we are alike—there is affinity. Do you see it, mademoiselle, when you look in the glass? Do you observe that your forehead is shaped like mine—that your eyes are cut like mine? Do you hear that you have some of my tones of voice? Do you know that you have many of my looks? I perceive all this, and believe that you were born under my star. Yes, you were born under my star! Tremble! for where that is the case with mortals, the threads of their destinies are difficult to disentangle; knottings and catchings