took no notice of this ill-natured remark. "But still, if Albert be not so rich as Mademoiselle Danglars," said the count, "you must allow that he has a fine name?" "So he has; but I like mine as well." "Certainly; your name is popular, and does honor to the title they have adorned it with; but you are too intelligent not to know that according to a prejudice, too firmly rooted to be exterminated, a nobility which dates back five centuries is worth more than one that can only reckon twenty years." "And for this very reason," said Danglars with a smile, which he tried to make sardonic, "I prefer M. Andrea Cavalcanti to M. Albert de Morcerf."
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