Page:Gaston Leroux--The man with the black feather.djvu/15

Rh through them with considerable weariness. Very soon it changed to the liveliest interest As I went deeper and deeper into these posthumous docimients I found the story related in them more and more extraordinary, more and more incredible. For a long while I disbelieved it. However, since the proofs of it exist, I ended, after a searching inquiry into them, by believing it to be true.

M. Theophrastus Longuet's reason for bequeathing this strange legacy to me was itself strange. He did not know me; but he had read articles by me in Le Matin, "his favourite organ"; and among the many contributors to that journal he had chosen me, not for my superior knowledge, an allegation which would have made me blush, but because he had come to the conclusion that I. possessed "a more solid intellect" than the others.

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