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Rousseau, Jean-Jacques

"The Confessions Of Jean-Jacques Rousseau"

I felt, and since that time, when these
circumstances have been present to my recollection, have frequently
done the same; that although the sacrifices made to virtue and our
duty may sometimes be painful, we are well rewarded by the agreeable
remembrance they leave deeply engraven in our hearts.
I this time saw Paris in as favorable a point of views as it had
appeared to me in an unfavorable one at my first journey; not that
my ideas of its brilliancy arose from the splendor of my lodgings: for
in consequence of an address given me by M. Bordes, I resided at the
Hotel St. Quentin, Rue des Cordiers, near the Sorbonne; a vile street,
a miserable hotel, and a wretched apartment: but nevertheless a
house in which several men of merit, such as Gresset, Bordes, Abbe
Mably, Condillac, and several others, of whom unfortunately I found
not one, had taken up their quarters: but I there met with M.
Bonnefond, a man unacquainted with the world, lame, litigious, and who
affected to be a purist. To him I owe the acquaintance of M. Roguin,
at present the oldest friend I have, and by whose means I became
acquainted with Diderot, of whom I shall soon have occasion to say a
good deal.
I arrived at Paris in the autumn of 1741, with fifteen louis in my
purse, and with my comedy of Narcissus and my musical project in my
pocket. These composed my whole stock, consequently, I had not much
time to lose before I attempted to turn the latter to some
advantage. I therefore immediately thought of making use of my
recommendations.


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