The Parisians โ Complete by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (best novels ever txt) ๐
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While with her, while under her chastening influence, he was sensible of a poetry infused within him far more true to the Camoenae than all he had elaborated into verse. In these moments he was ashamed of the vices he had courted as distractions. He imagined that with her all his own, it would be easy to reform.
No; to withdraw wholly from Isaura was to renounce his sole chance of redemption.
While these thoughts, which it takes so long to detail, passed rapidly through his brain, he felt a soft touch on his arm, and, turning his face slowly, encountered the tender, compassionate eyes of Isaura.
โBe consoled, dear friend,โ she said, with a smile, half cheering, half mournful. โPerhaps for all true artists the solitary lot is the best.โ
โI will try to think so,โ answered Rameau; โand meanwhile I thank you with a full heart for the sweetness with which you have checked my presumptionโthe presumption shall not be repeated. Gratefully I accept the friendship you deign to tender me. You bid me forget the words I uttered. Promise in turn that you will forget themโor at least consider them withdrawn. You will receive me still as friend?โ
โAs friend, surely: yes. Do we not both need friends?โ She held out her hand as she spoke; he bent over it, kissed it with respect, and the interview thus closed.
CHAPTER V.
It was late in the evening that day when a man who had the appearance of a decent bourgeois, in the lower grades of that comprehensive class, entered one of the streets in the Faubourg Montmartre, tenanted chiefly by artisans. He paused at the open doorway of a tall narrow house, and drew back as he heard footsteps descending a very gloomy staircase.
The light from a gas lamp on the street fell full on the face of the person thus quitting the houseโthe face of a young and handsome man, dressed with the quiet elegance which betokened one of higher rank or fashion than that neighbourhood was habituated to find among its visitors. The first comer retreated promptly into the shade, and, as by sudden impulse, drew his hat low down over his eyes.
The other man did not, however, observe him, went his way with a quick step along the street, and entered another house some yards distant.
โWhat can that pious Bourbonite do here?โ muttered the first comer. โCan he be a conspirator? Diable! โtis as dark as Erebus on that staircase.โ
Taking cautious hold of the banister, the man now ascended the stairs. On the landing of the first floor there was a gas lamp which threw upward a faint ray that finally died at the third story. But at that third story the manโs journey ended; he pulled a bell at the door to the right, and in another moment or so the door was opened by a young woman of twenty-eight or thirty, dressed very simply, but with a certain neatness not often seen in the wives of artisans in the Faubourg Montmartre. Her face, which, though pale and delicate, retained much of the beauty of youth, became clouded as she recognised the visitor; evidently the visit was not welcome to her.
โMonsieur Lebeau again!โ she exclaimed, shrinking back.
โAt your service, chere dame. The goodman is of course at home? Ah, I catch sight of him,โ and sliding by the woman, M. Lebeau passed the narrow lobby in which she stood, through the open door conducting into the room in which Armand Monnier was seated, his chin propped on his hand, his elbow resting on a table, looking abstractedly into space. In a corner of the room two small children were playing languidly with a set of bone tablets, inscribed with the letters of the alphabet. But whatever the children were doing with the alphabet, they were certainly not learning to read from it.
The room was of fair size and height, and by no means barely or shabbily furnished. There was a pretty clock on the mantelpiece. On the wall were hung designs for the decoration of apartments, and shelves on which were ranged a few books.
The window was open, and on the sill were placed flowerpots; you could scent the odour they wafted into the room. Altogether it was an apartment suited to a skilled artisan earning high wages. From the room we are now in, branched on one side a small but commodious kitchen; on the other side, on which the door was screened by a portiere, with a border prettily worked by female handsโsome years ago, for it was faded nowโwas a bedroom, communicating with one of less size in which the children slept. We do not enter those additional rooms, but it may be well here to mention them as indications of the comfortable state of an intelligent skilled artisan of Paris, who thinks he can better that state by some revolution which may ruin his employer.
Monnier started up at the entrance of Lebeau, and his face showed that he did not share the dislike to the visit which that of the female partner of his life had evinced. On the contrary, his smile was cordial, and there was a hearty ring in the voice which cried outโ
โI am glad to see youโsomething to do? Eh!โ
โAlways ready to work for liberty, mon brave.โ
โI hope so: whatโs in the wind now?โ
โO Armand, be prudentโbe prudent!โ cried the woman, piteously. โDo not lead him into further mischief, Monsieur Lebeau;โ as she faltered forth the last words, she bowed her head over the two little ones, and her voice died in sobs.
โMonnier,โ said Lebeau, gravely, โMadame is right. I ought not to lead you into further mischief; there are three in the room who have better claims on you thanโโ
โThe cause of millions,โ interrupted Monnier.
โNo.โ
He approached the woman and took up one of the children very tenderly, stroking back its curls and kissing the face, which, if before surprised and saddened by the motherโs sob, now smiled gaily under the fatherโs kiss.
โCanst thou doubt, my Heloise,โ said the artisan, mildly, โthat whatever I do thou and these are not uppermost in my thoughts? I act for thine interest and theirsโthe world as it exists is the foe of you three. The world I would replace it by will be more friendly.โ
The poor woman made no reply, but as he drew her towards him, she leant her head upon his breast and wept quietly. Monnier led her thus from the room, whispering words of soothing. The children followed the parents into
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