Ten Years Later by Alexandre Dumas (free e books to read online .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Alexandre Dumas
Read book online ยซTen Years Later by Alexandre Dumas (free e books to read online .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Alexandre Dumas
โHe was presented to your highness a short while ago; it is the handsome Duke of Buckingham.โ
โAh, yes, I remember.โ
โMadameโs knight,โ added the favorite, with an inflection of the voice which envious minds can alone give to the simplest phrases.
โWhat do you say?โ replied the prince.
โI said โMadameโs knightโ.โ
โHas she a recognized knight, then?โ
โOne would think you can judge of that for yourself; look, only, how they are laughing and flirting. All three of them.โ
โWhat do you mean by all three?โ
โDo you not see that De Guiche is one of the party?โ
โYes, I see. But what does that prove?โ
โThat Madame has two admirers instead of one.โ
โYou poison the simplest thing!โ
โI poison nothing. Ah! your royal highnessโs mind is perverted. The honors of the kingdom of France are being paid to your wife and you are not satisfied.โ
The Duke of Orleans dreaded the satirical humor of the Chevalier de Lorraine whenever it reached a certain degree of bitterness, and he changed the conversation abruptly. โThe princess is pretty,โ said he, very negligently, as if he were speaking of a stranger.
โYes,โ replied the chevalier, in the same tone.
โYou say โyesโ like a โnoโ. She has very beautiful black eyes.โ
โYes, but small.โ
โThat is so, but they are brilliant. She is tall, and of a good figure.โ
โI fancy she stoops a little, my lord.โ
โI do not deny it. She has a noble appearance.โ
โYes, but her face is thin.โ
โI thought her teeth beautiful.โ
โThey can easily be seen, for her mouth is large enough. Decidedly, I was wrong, my lord; you are certainly handsomer than your wife.โ
โBut do you think me as handsome as Buckingham?โ
โCertainly, and he thinks so, too; for look, my lord, he is redoubling his attentions to Madame to prevent your effacing the impression he has made.โ
Monsieur made a movement of impatience, but as he noticed a smile of triumph pass across the chevalierโs lips, he drew up his horse to a foot-pace. โWhy,โ said he, โshould I occupy myself any longer about my cousin? Do I not already know her? Were we not brought up together? Did I not see her at the Louvre when she was quite a child?โ
โA great change has taken place in her since then, prince. At the period you allude to, she was somewhat less brilliant, and scarcely so proud, either. One evening, particularly, you may remember, my lord, the king refused to dance with her, because he thought her plain and badly dressed!โ
These words made the Duke of Orleans frown. It was by no means flattering for him to marry a princess of whom, when young, the king had not thought much. He would probably have retorted, but at this moment De Guiche quitted the carriage to join the prince. He had remarked the prince and the chevalier together, and full of anxious attention he seemed to try and guess the nature of the remarks which they had just exchanged. The chevalier, whether he had some treacherous object in view, or from imprudence, did not take the trouble to dissimulate. โCount,โ he said, โyouโre a man of excellent taste.โ
โThank you for the compliment,โ replied De Guiche; โbut why do you say that?โ
โWell I appeal to his highness.โ
โNo doubt of it,โ said Monsieur; โand Guiche knows perfectly well that I
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