Alexandre Dumas

The Son of Clemenceau, A Novel of Modern Love and Life


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       Alexandre Dumas

      The Son of Clemenceau, A Novel of Modern Love and Life

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664570642

       CHAPTER I.

       STUDENT AND SOLDIER.

       CHAPTER II.

       SOLDIER'S SWORD AND WANDER-STAFF.

       CHAPTER III.

       "THE JINGLE-JANGLE."

       CHAPTER IV.

       THE STAR IS DEAD LONG LIVE THE STAR!

       CHAPTER V.

       UNDER MUNICH.

       CHAPTER VI.

       TWO AUGURS.

       CHAPTER VII.

       ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES—A BAD ONE.

       CHAPTER VIII.

       A SECOND DEFEAT.

       CHAPTER IX.

       REPARATION.

       CHAPTER X.

       THE FOX IN THE FOLD.

       CHAPTER XI.

       A SPRAT AND THE WHALE.

       CHAPTER XII.

       WHEN THE CAT'S AWAY.

       CHAPTER XIII.

       THE REVOLUTION IN ARTILLERY.

       CHAPTER XIV.

       TRULY A MAN.

       CHAPTER XV.

       THE MAN OF MANY MASKS.

       CHAPTER XVI.

       STRIKE NOT WOMAN, EVEN WITH ROSES.

       CHAPTER XVII.

       DEMON AND ARCH-DEMON.

       CHAPTER XVIII.

       A BITTER PARTING.

       CHAPTER XIX.

       THE COMPACT.

       CHAPTER XX.

       ON THE EVE.

       CHAPTER XXI.

       THE LAST APPEAL.

       CHAPTER XXII

       FELIX.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      The sunset-gun had been fired from the ramparts of the fortifications of Munich and the shadows were thickly descending on the famous old city of Southern Germany. The evening breeze in this truly March weather came chill over the plain of stones where Isar flowed darkly, and at the first puff of it, forcing him to wind his cloak round him, a lonely wanderer in the low quarter recognized why "the City of Monks" was also called "the Realm of Rheumatism."

      The new town, which he had not yet seen, might justify yet another of its nicknames, "the German Athens," but here were, in this southern and unfashionable suburb, only a few modern structures, and most of the quaint and rather picturesque dwellings, overhanging the stores, dated anterior to the filling up of the town moat in 1791.

      The stranger was clearly fond of antiquarian spectacles, for his eye, though too youthful to belong to a Dryasdust professor, and unshaded by the almost universal colored spectacles of the learned classes, gloated on the mansions, once inhabited by the wealthy burghers. They were irregular