Page:Clermont - Roche (1798, volume 3).djvu/78

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Madeline accepted the offer of Lubin, nor did they again pause till they had reached the cottage they were bound to; they found it shut up for the night, and Lubin knocked loudly with his stick against the door, but without effect.


"You see, Mademoiselle, (said he, after the silence of a few minutes) I was right in saying it was next to impossible to waken these cottagers."

"Poor people, (cried Madeline) it is a pity to disturb them."

"Oh, not at all, (said Lubin) they can go to bed immediately again, you know, and I warrant they will not rest the worse for having had their slumbers interrupted."


He now repeated the knocks with a violence that shook the door: at last a window was opened, and an old man, putting out his head, asked who came there.