Louise De La Valliere

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He who, a quarter of an hour previously, would hardly yield up his own rooms for a million francs, was now ready to expend a million, if it were necessary, upon the acquisition of the two happy rooms he coveted so eagerly. But he did not meet with so many obstacles. M. de Guiche did not yet know where he was to lodge, and, besides, was still too far ill to trouble himself about his lodgings; and so Saint–Aignan obtained De Guiche's two rooms without difficulty. As for M. Dangeau, he was so immea...surably delighted, that he did not even give himself the trouble to think whether Saint–Aignan had any particular reason for removing. Within an hour after Saint–Aignan's new resolution, he was in possession of the two rooms; and ten minutes later Malicorne entered, followed by the upholsterers. During this time, the king asked for Saint–Aignan; the valet ran to his late apartments and found M. Dangeau there; Dangeau sent him on to De Guiche's, and Saint–Aignan was found there; but a little delay had of course taken place, and the king had already exhibited once or twice evident signs of impatience, when Saint–Aignan entered his royal master's presence, quite out of breath."You, too, abandon me, then," said Louis XIV., in a similar tone of lamentation to that with which Caesar, eighteen hundred years previously, had pronounced the Et tu quoque."Sire, I am far from abandoning you, for, on the contrary, I am busily occupied in changing my lodgings.""What do you mean?

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