Chapter 462 Heavenly Tragedy 27.Blatant breach of contract
Also known as "Marriage is the Grave of Love" Zhang Baotong 2016.7.4
However, her uncle and family began to seek solace in their shame. Pen @ fun @ pavilion wWw. ļ½ļ½ļ½Uļ½Eć info They spread the word that Eloise was married to Abelard. Because in this way, the bad influence and great humiliation caused by Eloise's affair and elopement with Abelard would be washed away. In this way, the face he lost because of this can be slowly recovered.
One day, when the diocese vicar of Pabloa came to their house, Fulbert deliberately summoned Eloise into the drawing-room, introduced her to the vicar, and said, "This is my niece, Mademoiselle Eloise, who is a well-known and talented woman in Paris." ā
Bishop Pabloa sat Eloise beside him and discussed with her some knowledge of theology, since he had studied theology and was a student of Abelard. However, in the presence of Eloise, his little knowledge was very pitiful. So he said to Fulbert, "I have heard of your niece, and when I saw it today, she was very beautiful and learned. No wonder my teacher was captivated by her and would fall in love with her at all costs. ā
Fulbert took the opportunity to say, "Dear Mr. Abelard is married to my niece, and he is already my son-in-law. ā
When the vicar heard this, he looked very surprised, and said, "Yes? If I had known that they were married, I would have come there to congratulate them. ā
"They married in secret, because Abelard was still a teacher in a church school, and it would be bad for him to marry publicly," Fulbert said. ā
Aloise was very angry at her uncle's immorality in violating the agreement, and said to him in a resolute and retortive tone, "Please don't make nonsense out of nothing. It is impossible for me and Abelard to get married. He knew that the teaching profession was binding on marriage. And I won't ruin his noble honor because of love. ā
Fulbert was very annoyed when his niece refuted him in the presence of the vicar bishop, but he did not have a seizure, and said, "But it is true, and there were many people present at the time to testify." ā
Eloise vehemently denied it, saying, "Maybe they could testify, but that could only be false testimony." I can swear to the vicar, the vicar, that what my uncle said is the most absolute lie in the world. ā
Apparently, the vicar believed Eloise's words more. He watched his uncle and niece arguing, and got up to leave. Fulbert was supposed to leave the vicar for dinner, but the vicar was so displeased with his shame and lying to his face that he insisted on leaving, so he had to send him away.
As soon as the vicar had been sent away, Fulbert went into the study, and as if he had gone mad, he threw himself at his dear niece, grabbed her by the hair, and knocked her to the ground, and then, in a flurry of punches and kicks. When he was tired and couldn't move, he sat down in a chair and scolded Eloise, who was wearing a cloak and full of tears, "You incorruptible, shameful, and immoral slut, I raised you and raised you to be a talented woman in Paris, but you are wolf-hearted and don't know how to reciprocate, but you embarrass me everywhere and corrupts the door." ā
Then he put his hands together and prayed, "God, what's wrong with me, why are you punishing me in this way?"
At this time, Ramani came and told them to go to the restaurant for dinner. He got up from his chair and gritted his teeth and said, "I just want everyone to know about your marriage, and I want to make Abelard notorious." He has humiliated me so much and taken away my beloved niece, and I will not spare him. If I see you again and dare to confront me, I will make you suffer. With that, he left the study in a rage.
As it turned out, Eloise's fears were not unfounded, and her predictions were entirely correct. Her uncle would not have forgiven and forgiven Abelard so easily, nor would he have kept the agreement between them. This is something that Abelard could not have imagined. He began to regret that he had not listened to Eloise and should not have brought her back from the Rose Estate to Paris. However, he woke up too late.
After several times of this happened, Abelard came to Fulbert with the agreement they had signed, and said to him, "Mr. Fulbert, we had an agreement before we were married, and you promised to keep our marriage secret, but in fact you spread it everywhere, and you made it public, and you beat Eloise many times. You should explain this to me. ā
Fulbert sneered and said in a very vicious and brutal tone, "Nothing to explain. You have taken advantage of my trust in you, deceived me by very despicable means, deceived my niece, made me the laughing stock and humiliation of the whole of Paris, and I will not spare you. ā
"But now that I have confessed my mistake to you, and have received your forgiveness, and promised to marry your niece," said Abelard, "you should no longer do this to me and Eloise." ā
Fulbert said disapprehantly, "Yes, if I don't do that, you won't marry my niece." But if you don't get married, my niece and our family will be humiliated and ridiculed. If I don't let people know that you and my niece are married, then my family and I will always have to carry this shame and never be able to get rid of it. Yes, you thought very well and easily got my niece, but you didn't want to openly admit to marrying her, how do you make her face the world?
Abelard frowned, thought for a moment, and said, "If you can't keep the agreement, you shouldn't sign an agreement with me." I can put Eloise in the Rose Estate and not let her return to Paris. Since you have signed an agreement with me, you should keep the agreement, and it is the agreement that you kissed. ā
Fulbert stretched over the couch, yawned, and said impatiently, "I didn't want to keep that agreement you wrote from the beginning. That agreement is an agreement in your eyes, but in my eyes it is just a piece of waste paper. ā
Seeing Fulbert's attitude, Abelard said helplessly, "Since you are like this, then I have nothing to say to you." ā
Fulbert said, "That's what I am, you see." "He felt that he had a handle in his hand, and he could put him in ruin.
Abelard was furious at Fulbert's breach of contract and arrogance, especially when Eloise was beaten. Eloise was already his. Her uncle was no longer her guardian and had no right to beat or abuse her. If it weren't for the fact that he didn't want others to know about their marriage, he would have taken Eloise away from their house long ago.
A few days later, however, Eloise was again severely beaten for vehemently denying and refuting her uncle's propaganda of their marriage. Eloise ran to Abelard and lifted her dress so that he could look at the scars on her body. Seeing that his lover and wife were beaten and bruised and purple, Abelard's lungs were about to explode. He felt that his rights had been seriously violated, because he was married to her, and she was already his wife, and only husbands had the right to punish her, according to the law. Looking at his lover's scars, he burst into tears and began to plan how to free Eloise from her uncle's control once and for all.