Amelia Ann Blanford Edwards

In the Days of My Youth


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de Simoneourt twitched at the supercilious moustache.

      "And you think you would not care to take the black mare with the Tilbury?" said he, negligently.

      "No--I have a capital horse, already."

      "Hah I--well--'tis almost a pity. The mare is a dead bargain. Shouldn't wonder if I buy her, after all."

      "And yet you don't want her," said Dalrymple.

      "Quite true; but one must have a favorite sin, and horseflesh is mine. I shall ruin myself by it some day--mort de ma vie! By the way, have you seen my chestnut in harness? No? Then you will be really pleased. Goes delightfully with the gray, and manages tandem to perfection. Parbleu! I was forgetting--do we meet to-night?"

      "Where?"

      "At Chardonnier's."

      Dalrymple shook his head, and turned the key in his cash box.

      "Not this evening," he replied. I have other engagements."

      "Bah! and I promised to go, believing you were sure to be of the party. St. Pol, I know, will be there, and De Brézy also."

      "Chardonnier's parties are charming things in their way," said Dalrymple, somewhat coldly, "and no man enjoys Burgundy and lansquenet more heartily than myself; but one might grow to care for nothing else, and I have no desire to fall into worse habits than those I have contracted already."

      M. de Simoneourt laughed a dry, short laugh, and twitched again at the supercilious moustache.

      "I had no idea you were a philosopher," said he.

      "Nor am I. I am a mauvais sujet--mauvais enough, already, without seeking to become worse."

      "Well, adieu--I will see to this affair of the Tilbury, and desire them to let you have it by noon to-morrow."

      "A thousand thanks. I am ashamed that you have so much trouble in the matter. Au revoir."

      "Au revoir."

      Whereupon M. de Simoncourt honored me with a passing bow, and took his departure. Being near the window, I saw him spring into an elegant cabriolet, and drive off with the showiest of high horses and the tiniest of tigers.

      He was no sooner gone than Dalrymple took me by the shoulders, placed me in an easy chair, poured out a couple of glasses of hock, and said:--

      "Now, then, my young friend, your news or your life! Out with it, every word, as you hope to be forgiven!"

      I had but little to tell, and for that little, found myself, as I had anticipated, heartily laughed at. My adventure at the restaurant, my unlucky meeting with Dr. Chéron, and the history of my interview with him next morning, delighted Dalrymple beyond measure.

      Nothing would satisfy him, after this, but to call me Damon, to tease me continually about Doctor Pythias, and to remind me at every turn of the desirableness of Arcadian friendships.

      "And so, Damon," said he, "you go nowhere, see nothing, and know nobody. This sort of life will never do for you! I must take you out--introduce you--get you an entrée into society, before I leave Paris."

      "I should be heartily glad to visit at one or two private houses," I replied. "To spend the winter in this place without knowing a soul, would be something frightful."

      Dalrymple looked at me half laughingly, half compassionately.

      "Before I do it, however," said he, "you must look a little less like a savage, and more like a tame Christian. You must have your hair cut, and learn to tie your cravat properly. Do you possess an evening suit?"

      Blushing to the tips of my ears, I not only confessed that I was destitute of that desirable outfit, but also that I had never yet in all my life had occasion to wear it.

      "I am glad of it; for now you are sure to be well fitted. Your tailor, depend on it, is your great civilizer, and a well-made suit of clothes is in itself a liberal education. I'll take you to Michaud--my own especial purveyor. He is a great artist. With so many yards of superfine black cloth, he will give you the tone of good society and the exterior of a gentleman. In short, he will do for you in eight or ten hours more than I could do in as many years."

      "Pray introduce me at once to this illustrious man," I exclaimed laughingly, "and let me do him homage!"

      "You will have to pay heavily for the honor," said Dalrymple. "Of that I give you notice."

      "No matter. I am willing to pay heavily for the tone of good society and the exterior of a gentleman."

      "Very good. Take a book, then, or a cigar, and amuse yourself for five minutes while I write a note. That done, you may command me for as long as you please."

      I took the first book that came, and finding it to be a history of the horse, amused myself, instead, by observing the aspect of Dalrymple's apartment.

      Rooms are eloquent biographies. They betray at once if the owner be careless or orderly, studious or idle, vulgar or refined. Flowers on the table, engravings on the walls, indicate refinement and taste; while a well-filled book-case says more in favor of its possessor than the most elaborate letter of recommendation. Dalrymple's room was a monograph of himself. Careless, luxurious, disorderly, crammed with all sorts of costly things, and characterized by a sort of reckless elegance, it expressed, as I interpreted it, the very history of the man. Rich hangings; luxurious carpets; walls covered with paintings; cabinets of bronze and rare porcelain; a statuette of Rachel beside a bust of Homer; a book-case full of French novels with a sprinkling of Shakespeare and Horace; a stand of foreign arms; a lamp from Pompeii; a silver casket full of cigars; tables piled up with newspapers, letters, pipes, riding-whips, faded bouquets, and all kinds of miscellaneous rubbish--such were my friend's surroundings; and such, had I speculated upon them beforehand, I should have expected to find them. Dalrymple, in the meanwhile, despatched his letter with characteristic rapidity. His pen rushed over the paper like a dragoon charge, nor was once laid aside till both letter and address were finished. Just as he was sealing it, a note was brought to him by his servant--a slender, narrow, perfumed note, written on creamy paper, and adorned on the envelope with an elaborate cypher in gold and colors. Had I lived in the world of society for the last hundred seasons, I could not have interpreted the appearance of that note more sagaciously.

      "It is from a lady," said I to myself. Then seeing Dalrymple tear up his own letter immediately after reading it, and begin another, I added, still in my own mind--"And it is from the lady to whom he was writing."

      Presently he paused, laid his pen aside, and said:--

      "Arbuthnot, would you like to go with me to-morrow evening to one or two soirées?"

      "Can your Civilizer provide me with my evening suit in time?"

      "He? The great Michaud? Why, he would equip you for this evening, if it were necessary!"

      "In that case, I shall be very glad."

      "Bon! I will call for you at ten o'clock; so do not forget to leave me your address."

      Whereupon he resumed his letter. When it was written, he returned to the subject.

      "Then I will take you to-morrow night," said he, "to a reception at Madame Rachel's. Hers is the most beautiful house in Paris. I know fifty men who would give their ears to be admitted to her salons."

      Even in the wilds of Saxonholme I had heard and read of the great tragedienne whose wealth vied with the Rothschilds, and whose diamonds might have graced a crown. I had looked forward to the probability of beholding her from afar off, if she was ever to be seen on the boards of the Theatre Français; but to be admitted to her presence--received in her house--introduced to her in person … it seemed ever so much too good to be true!

      Dalrymple smiled good-naturedly, and put my thanks aside.

      "It is a great sight," said he, "and nothing more. She will bow to you--she may not even speak; and she would pass