Ten Years Later: The Man in The Iron Mask by Alexandre Dumas Chapter 16 Page 17

that perfidious girl so boldly took his part! Gratitude! and who can tell whether it was not a stronger feeling — love itself?” He gave himself up for a moment to the bitterest reflections. “A satyr!” he thought, with that abhorrent hate with which young men regard those more advanced in life, who still think of love. “A man who has never found opposition or resistance in any one, who lavishes his gold and jewels in every direction, and who retains his staff of painters in order to take the portraits of his mistresses in the costume of goddesses.” The king trembled with passion as he continued, “He pollutes and profanes everything that belongs to me! He destroys everything that is mine. He will be my death at last, I know.

That man is too much for me; he is my mortal enemy, but he