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Valentine Villefort Quotes

50 of the best book quotes from Valentine Villefort
01
“When I wished to retire into a convent, you remember how angry you were with me?” A tear trembled in the eye of the invalid. “Well,” continued Valentine, “the reason of my proposing it was that I might escape this hateful marriage, which drives me to despair.”
Source: Chapter 58, Paragraph 63
02
Alas, you, who would have been such a powerful protector to me in the days of your health and strength, can now only sympathize in my joys and sorrows, without being able to take any active part in them.
Source: Chapter 58, Paragraph 64
03
Heaven has not taken away all my blessings when it leaves me your sympathy and kindness.
Source: Chapter 58, Paragraph 64
04
“Well, listen,” said Valentine, throwing herself on her knees, and putting her arm round her grandfather’s neck, “I am vexed, too, for I do not love M. Franz d’Épinay.”
Source: Chapter 58, Paragraph 61
05
During the six years which had passed since Noirtier first fell into this sad state, Valentine’s powers of invention had been too often put to the test not to render her expert in devising expedients for gaining a knowledge of his wishes, and the constant practice had so perfected her in the art that she guessed the old man’s meaning as quickly as if he himself had been able to seek for what he wanted.
Source: Chapter 58, Paragraph 74
06
“I perfectly understand my grandfather’s meaning at all times.”
Source: Chapter 59, Paragraph 4
07
Noirtier gave Valentine such a look of tenderness and gratitude that it was comprehended even by the notary himself.
Source: Chapter 59, Paragraph 11
08
I have now been six years with M. Noirtier, and let him tell you if ever once, during that time, he has entertained a thought which he was unable to make me understand.
Source: Chapter 59, Paragraph 25
09
“Well,” said she; “if you love me, grandpapa, try and bring that love to bear upon your actions at this present moment.”
Source: Chapter 59, Paragraph 89
10
“M. Noirtier tenderly loves his granddaughter, Mademoiselle de Villefort; it is she who has nursed and tended him for six years, and has, by her devoted attention, fully secured the affection, I had almost said the gratitude, of her grandfather, and it is but just that she should reap the fruit of her devotion.”
Source: Chapter 59, Paragraph 71
11
“I consider that I am the best judge of the propriety of the marriage in question. I am the only person possessing the right to dispose of my daughter’s hand. It is my wish that she should marry M. Franz d’Épinay—and she shall marry him.”
Source: Chapter 59, Paragraph 108
12
“Yes, yes,” said Valentine, “you mean that I have yet a kind grandfather left, do you not.” The old man intimated that such was his meaning. “Ah, yes, happily I have,” replied Valentine. “Without that, what would become of me?”
Source: Chapter 72, Paragraph 50
13
“A stepmother is never a mother, sir.”
Source: Chapter 72, Paragraph 77
14
I fancy you have no further need of me than to recommend you not to allow your imagination to take too wide a field.
Source: Chapter 72, Paragraph 113
15
“Truly, it is I who am mad, and you prove to me that passion blinds the most well-meaning.”
Source: Chapter 73, Paragraph 39
16
“Truly,” murmured Valentine, “who on this earth cares for me, if he does not? Who has consoled me in my sorrow but he? On whom do my hopes rest? On whom does my bleeding heart repose? On him, on him, always on him!”
Source: Chapter 73, Paragraph 71
17
“My adored Valentine, words cannot express one half of my satisfaction.”
Source: Chapter 73, Paragraph 88
18
I have but one promise and but one heart to give; that promise is pledged to you, that heart is also yours.
Source: Chapter 73, Paragraph 95
19
How great is the power of a woman who has made so courageous a resolution! What devotion does she deserve from him for whom she has sacrificed everything! How ought she really to be supremely loved!
Source: Chapter 73, Paragraph 102
20
“I love him, and will be only his; were I compelled to marry another, I would destroy myself.”
Source: Chapter 73, Paragraph 232
21
It is not because Mademoiselle Valentine is going to marry you that he is angry, but because she will marry, a union with any other would have caused him the same sorrow. Old age is selfish, sir, and Mademoiselle de Villefort has been a faithful companion to M. Noirtier, which she cannot be when she becomes the Baroness d’Épinay. My father’s melancholy state prevents our speaking to him on any subjects, which the weakness of his mind would incapacitate him from understanding, and I am perfectly convinced that at the present time, although, he knows that his granddaughter is going to be married, M. Noirtier has even forgotten the name of his intended grandson.
Source: Chapter 74, Paragraph 62
22
“Ah, my father!” said Franz, interrupting himself. “I understand now why they murdered him.” Valentine could not help casting one glance towards the young man, whose filial enthusiasm it was delightful to behold.
Source: Chapter 75, Paragraph 69
23
“I shall not leave my grandfather,—that is an understood thing between us.”
Source: Chapter 79, Paragraph 11
24
“Once under my grandfather’s roof, M. Morrel can visit me in the presence of my good and worthy protector, if we still feel that the union we contemplated will be likely to insure our future comfort and happiness; in that case I shall expect M. Morrel to come and claim me at my own hands.”
Source: Chapter 79, Paragraph 17
25
“I have heard it said that hearts inflamed by obstacles to their desire grew cold in time of security; I trust we shall never find it so in our experience!”
Source: Chapter 79, Paragraph 17
26
She looked marvellously beautiful in her deep mourning dress, and Morrel experienced such intense delight in gazing upon her that he felt as if he could almost have dispensed with the conversation of her grandfather.
Source: Chapter 79, Paragraph 2
27
Valentine, with her woman’s instinct, guessed that Morrel would be Monte Cristo’s second, and from the young man’s well-known courage and his great affection for the count, she feared that he would not content himself with the passive part assigned to him.
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 2
28
Noirtier looked at Valentine to impose silence, but she did not notice him; her looks, her eyes, her smile, were all for Morrel.
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 7
29
“M. Noirtier may be right; you have not seemed to be well for the last fortnight.”
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 10
30
“I have the greatest confidence in him, because he knows everything.”
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 11
31
Maximilian, in his devotedness, gazed silently at her. She was very beautiful, but her usual pallor had increased; her eyes were more brilliant than ever, and her hands, which were generally white like mother-of-pearl, now more resembled wax, to which time was adding a yellowish hue.
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 16
32
“That poor child,” said Madame de Villefort when Valentine was gone, “she makes me very uneasy, and I should not be astonished if she had some serious illness.”
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 55
33
“Oh, oh, indeed, Maximilian, you are too timid for an officer, for a soldier who, they say, never knows fear.”
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 67
34
“So long as you are not mine, Valentine, I shall always think I may lose you.”
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 66
35
Valentine looked around her; she saw the deepest terror depicted in Noirtier’s eyes.
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 60
36
“Don’t worry, dear grandpapa,” said she, endeavoring to smile; “it is nothing—it is nothing; I was giddy, that is all.”
Source: Chapter 93, Paragraph 61
37
God has condemned them, and they must submit to their punishment. They will all disappear, like the fabrics children build with cards, and which fall, one by one, under the breath of their builder, even if there are two hundred of them. Three months since it was M. de Saint-Méran; Madame de Saint-Méran two months since; the other day it was Barrois; today, the old Noirtier, or young Valentine.
Source: Chapter 94, Paragraph 70
38
“He told me your life was his, and I have promised him that you shall live.”
Source: Chapter 100, Paragraph 22
39
“Do not call anyone—do not be alarmed,” said the count; “do not let a shade of suspicion or uneasiness remain in your breast; the man standing before you, Valentine (for this time it is no ghost), is nothing more than the tenderest father and the most respectful friend you could dream of.”
Source: Chapter 100, Paragraph 17
40
The dim light, the profound silence, and the gloomy thoughts inspired by the hour, and still more by her own conscience, all combined to produce a sensation of fear; the poisoner was terrified at the contemplation of her own work.
Source: Chapter 102, Paragraph 3
41
The minutes passed; Madame de Villefort could not drop the curtain which she held like a funeral pall over the head of Valentine. She was lost in reverie, and the reverie of crime is remorse.
Source: Chapter 102, Paragraph 6
42
She saw d’Avrigny curiously examining the glass, which she felt certain of having emptied during the night. It was now a third full, just as it was when she threw the contents into the ashes. The spectre of Valentine rising before the poisoner would have alarmed her less. It was, indeed, the same color as the draught she had poured into the glass, and which Valentine had drunk; it was indeed the poison, which could not deceive M. d’Avrigny, which he now examined so closely; it was doubtless a miracle from heaven, that, notwithstanding her precautions, there should be some trace, some proof remaining to reveal the crime.
Source: Chapter 102, Paragraph 23
43
A sob was the only sound he heard. He saw as though in a mist, a black figure kneeling and buried in a confused mass of white drapery. A terrible fear transfixed him. It was then he heard a voice exclaim “Valentine is dead!”
Source: Chapter 102, Paragraph 46
44
I knew nothing of this engagement, of this love, yet I, her father, forgive you, for I see that your grief is real and deep; and besides my own sorrow is too great for anger to find a place in my heart. But you see that the angel whom you hoped for has left this earth—she has nothing more to do with the adoration of men. Take a last farewell, sir, of her sad remains; take the hand you expected to possess once more within your own, and then separate yourself from her forever.
Source: Chapter 103, Paragraph 12
45
“Live, then, and be happy, beloved children of my heart, and never forget that until the day when God shall deign to reveal the future to man, all human wisdom is summed up in these two words,—‘Wait and hope.‘”
Source: Chapter 117, Paragraph 135
46
“The general remark is, ‘Oh, it cannot be expected that one of so stern a character as M. Villefort could lavish the tenderness some fathers do on their daughters. What though she has lost her own mother at a tender age, she has had the happiness to find a second mother in Madame de Villefort.’ The world, however, is mistaken; my father abandons me from utter indifference, while my stepmother detests me with a hatred so much the more terrible because it is veiled beneath a continual smile.”
Source: Chapter 51, Paragraph 28
47
The old man’s declaration that Valentine was not the destined inheritor of his fortune had excited the hopes of Madame de Villefort; she gradually approached the invalid, and said: “Then, doubtless, dear M. Noirtier, you intend leaving your fortune to your grandson, Edward de Villefort?” The winking of the eyes which answered this speech was most decided and terrible, and expressed a feeling almost amounting to hatred.
Source: Chapter 59, Paragraphs 82-84
48
“M. Noirtier has evinced, you say, a kind feeling towards me. Well, before you leave, tell him all; his consent would be your justification in God’s sight. As soon as we are married, he shall come and live with us, instead of one child, he shall have two.”
Source: Chapter 73, Paragraph 72
49
“Whatever may happen, Valentine, do not be alarmed; though you suffer; though you lose sight, hearing, consciousness, fear nothing; though you should awake and be ignorant where you are, still do not fear; even though you should find yourself in a sepulchral vault or coffin. Reassure yourself, then, and say to yourself: ‘At this moment, a friend, a father, who lives for my happiness and that of Maximilian, watches over me!‘”
Source: Chapter 101, Paragraph 50
50
“Now, sir,” continued Morrel, “in these days no one can disappear by violent means without some inquiries being made as to the cause of her disappearance, even were she not a young, beautiful, and adorable creature like Valentine.”
Source: Chapter 103, Paragraph 19

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