The Parisians β Complete by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (best novels ever txt) π
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Read book online Β«The Parisians β Complete by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (best novels ever txt) πΒ». Author - Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
PARIS, August 28, 1872.
THE PARISIANS.
BOOK I.
CHAPTER I.
It was a bright day in the early spring of 1869. All Paris seemed to have turned out to enjoy itself. The Tuileries, the Champs Elysees, the Bois de Boulogne, swarmed with idlers. A stranger might have wondered where Toil was at work, and in what nook Poverty lurked concealed. A millionaire from the London Exchange, as he looked round on the magasins, the equipages, the dresses of the women; as he inquired the prices in the shops and the rent of apartments,βmight have asked himself, in envious wonder, How on earth do those gay Parisians live? What is their fortune? Where does it come from?
As the day declined, many of the scattered loungers crowded into the Boulevards; the cafes and restaurants began to light up.
About this time a young man, who might be some five or six and twenty, was walking along the Boulevard des Italiens, heeding little the throng through which he glided his solitary way: there was that in his aspect and bearing which caught attention. He looked a somebody; but though unmistakably a Frenchman, not a Parisian. His dress was not in the prevailing mode: to a practised eye it betrayed the taste and the cut of a provincial tailor. His gait was not that of the Parisian,βless lounging, more stately; and, unlike the Parisian, he seemed indifferent to the gaze of others.
Nevertheless there was about him that air of dignity or distinction which those who are reared from their cradle in the pride of birth acquire so unconsciously that it seems hereditary and inborn. It must also be confessed that the young man himself was endowed with a considerable share of that nobility which Nature capriciously distributes among her favourites with little respect for their pedigree and blazon, the nobility of form and face. He was tall and well shaped, with graceful length of limb and fall of shoulders; his face was handsome, of the purest type of French masculine beauty,βthe nose inclined to be aquiline, and delicately thin, with finely-cut open nostrils; the complexion clear,βthe eyes large, of a light hazel, with dark lashes,βthe hair of a chestnut brown, with no tint of auburn,βthe beard and mustache a shade darker, clipped short, not disguising the outline of lips, which were now compressed, as if smiles had of late been unfamiliar to them; yet such compression did not seem in harmony with the physiognomical character of their formation, which was that assigned by Lavater to temperaments easily moved to gayety and pleasure.
Another man, about his own age, coming quickly out of one of the streets of the Chausee dβAntin, brushed close by the stately pedestrian above described, caught sight of his countenance, stopped short, and exclaimed, βAlain!β The person thus abruptly accosted turned his eye tranquilly on the eager face, of which all the lower part was enveloped in black beard; and slightly lifting his hat, with a gesture of the head that implied, βSir, you are mistaken; I have not the honour to know you,β continued his slow indifferent way. The would-be acquaintance was not so easily rebuffed. βPeste,β he said, between his teeth, βI am certainly right. He is not much altered: of course I AM; ten years of Paris would improve an orang-outang.β Quickening his step, and regaining the side of the man he had called βAlain,β he said, with a well-bred mixture of boldness and courtesy in his tone and countenance,
βTen thousand pardons if I am wrong. Put surely I accost Alain de Kerouec, son of the Marquis de Rochebriant.β
βTrue, sir; butββ
βBut you do not remember me, your old college friend, Frederic Lemercier?β
βIs it possibly?β cried Alain, cordially, and with an animation which charged the whole character of his countenance. βMy dear Frederic, my dear friend, this is indeed good fortune! So you, too, are at Paris?β
βOf course; and you? Just come, I perceive,β he added, somewhat satirically, as, linking his arm in his new-found friendβs, he glanced at the cut of that friendβs coat-collar.
βI have been here a fortnight,β replied Alain.
βHem! I suppose you lodge in the old Hotel de Rochebriant. I passed it yesterday, admiring its vast facade, little thinking you were its inmate.β
βNeither am I; the hotel does not belong to me; it was sold some years ago by my father.β
βIndeed! I hope your father got a good price for it; those grand hotels have trebled their value within the last five years. And how is your father? Still the same polished grand seigneur? I never saw him but once, you know; and I shall never forget his smile, style grand monarque, when he patted me on the head and tipped me ten napoleons.β
βMy father is no more,β said Alain, gravely; βhe has been dead nearly three years.β
βCiel! forgive me; I am greatly shocked. Hem! so you are now the Marquis de Rochebriant, a great historical name, worth a large sum in the market. Few such names left. Superb place your old chateau, is it not?β
βA superb place, noβa venerable ruin, yes!β
βAh, a ruin! so much the better. All the bankers are mad after ruins: so charming an amusement to restore them. You will restore yours, without doubt. I will introduce you to such an architect! has the βmoyen ageβ at his fingersβ ends. Dear,βbut a genius.β
The young Marquis smiled,βfor since he had found a college friend, his face showed that it could smile,βsmiled, but not cheerfully, and answered,
βI have no intention to restore Rochebriant. The walls are solid: they have weathered the storms of six centuries, they will last my time, and with me the race perishes.β
βBah! the race perish, indeed! you will marry. βParlez moi de caβ: you could not come to a better man. I have a list of all the heiresses at Paris, bound in russia leather. You may take your choice out of twenty. Ah, if I were but a Rochebriant! It is an infernal thing to come into the world a Lemercier. I am a democrat, of course. A Lemercier would be in a false position if he were not. But if any one would leave me twenty acres of land, with some antique right to the De and a title, faith, would not I be an aristocrat, and
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