absence, 
but had supported herself by opening a little café, which she assured us 
had succeeded admirably, they were proceeding, with well-filled purses, 
to see their only child who was in the keeping of its grandmother. She 
told wondrous histories of his exploits amongst the ice, of his 
encounters with the natives--"les Indiens," of the success of all his 
voyages, and the virtues of his captain, who was an Englishman and 
never spoke to his crew, but was the most just man in the world, and 
ended by saying that when she met with English people she felt in 
Paradise. 
Although we listened to her continued chattering with amused attention, 
it was far otherwise with some quiet, silent, women who sat beside us; 
we soon gathered, by certain contemptuous glances which they 
exchanged, that they did not give credit to half our little Dejazet was 
telling; and when to crown the whole, she related a story of a beautiful 
maiden of Lisieux, who had been distinguished by the notice of the 
Duke de Nemours when he visited that place on his way to join his ship 
at Havre, they could support their impatience no longer, and broadly 
contradicted her on the ground that the Prince de Joinville and not 
Nemours was the sailor. 
Nothing daunted, our gay whaler's wife insisted on every part of her 
history being true, asserting that she must know best, and if the young 
prince had left the navy since, it was not her affair. 
As she approached Lisieux she became more and more animated, 
darting her body half way out of the window every minute to look out 
for her papa or her other relations;--at length, with a scream which
would have secured Dejazet three rounds of applause, she recognised 
her parent in a peasant en blouse, trudging along the road carrying his 
bundle--on his way, no doubt, as she assured us, to see her sister, who 
lived at a village near. Tears and smiles alternately divided the 
expression of her countenance, as she now feared her sister was ill, and 
now rejoiced at seeing her father. All was however happily settled 
when the coach stopped and she sprang out into the arms of her papa, 
who had followed the diligence, and came up out of breath; and it was 
then that we became aware that a remarkably ill-looking, dirty, elderly, 
Jewish featured man, to whom she had occasionally spoken on the 
journey, was the identical perfection of a mari, of whom she had been 
boasting all the way. The incredulous listeners, whom she had so 
annoyed, now revenged themselves by sundry depreciatory remarks on 
the appearance of this phoenix, whom they pronounced to have the air 
of a tinker or old clothesman, and by no means that of the hero he had 
been represented. 
As it was raining violently on our arrival at Lisieux, the town presented 
to us but an uncomfortable appearance; and as we had to search for an 
hotel, and were at last obliged to be content with one far from inviting, 
our first impression was by no means agreeable; nor does Lisieux offer 
anything to warrant a change in the traveller's opinion who considers it 
dreary, slovenly, and ruinous. There is much, however, to admire in the 
once beautiful cathedral, and the church of St. Jacques, both grand 
specimens of the massive architecture of the twelfth century. 
In this town lived and died the traitor Bishop of Bayeux, Pierre 
Cauchon, who sold the heroic Jeanne d'Arc for English gold. An 
expiatory chapel was erected by him in the cathedral, where it was 
hoped the tears of the pious would help to wash his sins away; but no 
one now remembers either him or his crime, for we asked in vain for 
the spot; and when prayers are offered at the shrine of the Virgin in the 
chapel dedicated to her, which we eventually discovered to be its site, 
not one is given to the cruel bishop, whose ill-gotten money was 
therefore expended in vain; for the centuries it must have required to 
rescue his soul from purgatory cannot have expired by this time. The 
churches are being restored, and building, as usual in all French towns,
is going on: when numerous ugly striped houses are removed, and their 
places filled up, the principal square of Lisieux may deserve to be 
admired, though whether it will ever merit the encomium of an old lady 
who resides in it, and who assured us it would in a short time be 
superbe, time will determine. The public promenades are good, and the 
views round the town pretty, but we did not feel tempted to wait for 
finer weather, and took our departure for Falaise with little delay. 
The drive from Lisieux to Falaise is charming;    
    
		
	
	
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