* * * * *
Mademoiselle de Watteville, who lived
alone on her estate of les Rouxey, riding, hunting,
refusing two or three offers a year, going to Besancon
four or five times in the course of the winter, and
busying herself with improving her land, was regarded
as a very eccentric personage. She was one of
the celebrities of the Eastern provinces.
Madame de Soulas has two children,
a boy and a girl, and she has grown younger; but Monsieur
de Soulas has aged a good deal.
“My fortune has cost me dear,”
said he to young Chavoncourt. “Really to
know a bigot it is unfortunately necessary to marry
her!”
Mademoiselle de Watteville behaves
in the most extraordinary manner. “She
has vagaries,” people say. Every year she
goes to gaze at the walls of the Grande Chartreuse.
Perhaps she dreams of imitating her grand-uncle by
forcing the walls of the monastery to find a husband,
as Watteville broke through those of his monastery
to recover his liberty.
She left Besancon in 1841, intending,
it was said, to get married; but the real reason of
this expedition is still unknown, for she returned
home in a state which forbids her ever appearing in
society again. By one of those chances of which
the Abbe de Grancey had spoken, she happened to be
on the Loire in a steamboat of which the boiler burst.
Mademoiselle de Watteville was so severely injured
that she lost her right arm and her left leg; her
face is marked with fearful scars, which have bereft
her of her beauty; her health, cruelly upset, leaves
her few days free from suffering. In short, she
now never leaves the Chartreuse of les Rouxey, where
she leads a life wholly devoted to religious practices.
PARIS, May 1842.