In the Days of My Youth. Amelia Ann Blanford Edwards

In the Days of My Youth - Amelia Ann Blanford Edwards


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the next morning without remembering that she had ever seen you in her life. Actresses are a race apart, my dear fellow, and care for no one who is neither rich nor famous."

      "I never imagined," said I, half annoyed, "that she would take any notice of me at all. Even a bow from such a woman is an event to be remembered."

      "Having received that bow, then," continued Dalrymple, "and having enjoyed the ineffable satisfaction of returning it, you can go on with me to the house of a lady close by, who receives every Monday evening. At her soirées you will meet pleasant and refined people, and having been once introduced by me, you will, I have no doubt, find the house open to you for the future."

      "That would, indeed, be a privilege. Who is this lady?"

      "Her name," said Dalrymple, with an involuntary glance at the little note upon his desk, "is Madame de Courcelles. She is a very charming and accomplished lady."

      I decided in my own mind that Madame de Courcelles was the writer of that note.

      "Is she married?" was my next question.

      "She is a widow," replied Dalrymple. "Monsieur de Courcelles was many years older than his wife, and held office as a cabinet minister during the greater part of the reign of Louis Phillippe. He has been dead these four or five years."

      "Then she is rich?"

      "No--not rich; but sufficiently independent."

      "And handsome?"

      "Not handsome, either; but graceful, and very fascinating."

      Graceful, fascinating, independent, and a widow! Coupling these facts with the correspondence which I believed I had detected, I grouped them into a little romance, and laid out my friend's future career as confidently as if it had depended only on myself to marry him out of hand, and make all parties happy.

      Dalrymple sat musing for a moment, with his chin resting on his hands and his eyes fixed on the desk. Then shaking back his hair as if he would shake back his thoughts with it, he started suddenly to his feet and said, laughingly:--

      "Now, young Damon, to Michaud's--to Michaud's, with what speed we may! Farewell to 'Tempe and the vales of Arcady,' and hey for civilization, and a swallow-tailed coat!"

      I noticed, however, that before we left the room, he put the little note tenderly away in a drawer of his desk, and locked it with a tiny gold key that hung upon his watch-chain.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      At ten o'clock on Monday evening, Dalrymple called for me, and by ten o'clock, thanks to the great Michaud and other men of genius, I presented a faultless exterior. My friend walked round me with a candle, and then sat down and examined me critically.

      "By Jove!" said he, "I don't believe I should have known you! You are a living testimony to the science of tailoring. I shall call on Michaud, to-morrow, and pay my tribute of admiration."

      "I am very uncomfortable," said I, ruefully.

      "Uncomfortable! nonsense--Michaud's customers don't know the meaning of the word."

      "But he has not made me a single pocket!"

      "And what of that? Do you suppose the great Michaud would spoil the fit of a masterpiece for your convenience?"

      "What am I to do with my pocket-handkerchief?"

      "Michaud's customers never need pocket-handkerchiefs."

      "And then my trousers … "

      "Unreasonable Juvenile, what of the trousers?"

      "They are so tight that I dare not sit down in them."

      "Barbarian! Michaud's customers never sit down in society."

      "And my boots are so small that I can hardly endure them."

      "Very becoming to the foot," said Dalyrmple, with exasperating indifference.

      "And my collar is so stiff that it almost cuts my throat."

      "Makes you hold your head up," said Dalrymple, "and leaves you no inducement to commit suicide."

      I could not help laughing, despite my discomfort.

      "Job himself never had such a comforter!" I exclaimed.

      "It would be a downright pleasure to quarrel with you."

      "Put on your hat instead, and let us delay no longer," replied my friend. "My cab is waiting."

      So we went down, and in another moment were driving through the lighted streets. I should hardly have chosen to confess how my heart beat when, on turning an angle of the Rue Trudon, our cab fell into the rear of three or four other carriages, passed into a courtyard crowded with arriving and departing vehicles, and drew up before an open door, whence a broad stream of light flowed out to meet us. A couple of footmen received us in a hall lighted by torches and decorated with stands of antique armor. From the centre of this hall sprang a Gothic staircase, so light, so richly sculptured, so full of niches and statues, slender columns, foliated capitals, and delicate ornamentation of every kind, that it looked a very blossoming of the stone. Following Dalrymple up this superb staircase and through a vestibule of carved oak, I next found myself in a room that might have been the scene of Plato's symposium. Here were walls painted in classic fresco; windows curtained with draperies of chocolate and amber; chairs and couches of ebony, carved in antique fashion; Etruscan amphorae; vases and paterae of terracotta; exquisite lamps, statuettes and candelabra in rare green bronze; and curious parti-colored busts of philosophers and heroes, in all kinds of variegated marbles. Powdered footmen serving modern coffee seemed here like anachronisms in livery. In such a room one should have been waited on by boys crowned with roses, and have partaken only of classic dishes--of Venafran olives or oysters from the Lucrine lake, washed down with Massic, or Chian, or honeyed Falernian.

      Some half-dozen gentlemen, chatting over their coffee, bowed to Dalrymple when we came in. They were talking of the war in Algiers, and especially of the gallantry of a certain Vicomte de Caylus, in whose deeds they seemed to take a more than ordinary interest.

      "Rode single-handed right through the enemy's camp," said a bronzed, elderly man, with a short, gray beard.

      "And escaped without a scratch," added another, with a tiny red ribbon at his button-hole.

      "He comes of a gallant stock," said a third. "I remember his father at Austerlitz--literally cut to pieces at the head of his squadron."

      "You are speaking of de Caylus," said Dalrymple. "What news of him from Algiers?"

      "This--that having volunteered to carry some important despatches to head-quarters, he preferred riding by night through Abd-el-Kader's camp, to taking a détour by the mountains," replied the first speaker.

      "A wild piece of boyish daring," said Dalrymple, somewhat drily. "I presume he did not return by the same road?"

      "I should think not. It would have been certain death a second time!"

      "And this happened how long since?"

      "About a fortnight ago. But we shall soon know all particulars from himself."

      "From himself?"

      "Yes, he has obtained leave of absence--is, perhaps, by this time in Paris."

      Dalrymple set down his cup untasted, and turned away.

      "Come, Arbuthnot," he said, hastily, "I must introduce you


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