THE COUNT OF MONTE-CRISTO.
147
and di Ripetta meet, the two uprights of the scaffold, between which glittered the curved knife of the mandaïa.
At the corner of the street they met the count's steward, who was awaiting his master. The window, let at an exorbitant price, which the
count had doubtless wished to conceal from his guests, was on the second floor of the great palace, situated between the Via del Babuino and the Monte Pincio. It consisted, as we have said, of a small dressing-room, opening into a bedroom, and when the door of communication was shut,