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find, and rejoiced that the sun of Auster-
litz had re-arisen. But after the affair of
Mexico the sun of Austerlitz waxed very
sickly. Imperialism was fast going out
of fashion. The Count transferred his
affection to Jules Favre, and joined the
ranks of the advanced Liberals. During
all these political changes, the Count had
remained very much the same man in
private life; agreeable, good-natured,
witty, and, above all, a devotee of the
fair sex.
When he had reached the age
of sixty-eight he was still fort bel homme
- unmarried, with a grand presence and
charming manner. At that age he said,
"Je me range," and married a young lady
of eighteen. She adored her husband,
and was wildly jealous of him; while the
Count did not seem at all jealous of her,
and submitted to her adoration with a
gentle shrug of the shoulders.

was displeasing rather to men than to women; and one could well conceive that, among the latter, the enthusiastic admiration it challenged would be largely conceded.

The conversation at dinner was in complete contrast to that at the American's the day before. There the talk, though animated, had been chiefly earnest and serious - here it was all touch and go, sally and repartee. The subjects were the light on dits and lively anecdotes of the day, not free from literature and politics, but both treated as matters of persiflage, hovered round with a jest, and quitted with an epigram. The two French lady authors, the Count de Passy, the physician, and the host, far outshone all the other guests. Now and then, however, the German Count struck in with an ironical remark condensing a great deal The three other guests who, with Gra- of grave wisdom, and the young author ham and the two Italian ladies, made up with ruder and more biting sarcasm. If the complement of ten, were the German the sarcasm told, he showed his triumph Count von Rudesheim, whom Vane had by a low-pitched laugh; if it failed, he met at M. Louvier's, a celebrated French evinced his displeasure by a contemptuphysician named Bacourt, and a young au-ous sneer or a grim scowl.

thor whom Savarin had admitted into his Isaura and Graham were not seated clique and declared to be of rare promise. near each other, and were for the most This author, whose real name was Gus-part contented to be listeners. tave Rameau, but who, to prove, I suppose, the sincerity of that scorn for ancestry which he professed, published his verses under the patrician designation of Alphonse de Valcour, was about twentyfour, and might have passed at the first glance for younger; but, looking at him closely, the signs of old age were already stamped on his visage.

He was undersized, and of a feeble slender frame. In the eyes of women and artists the defects of his frame were redeemed by the extraordinary beauty of the face. His black hair, carefully parted in the centre, and worn long and flowing, contrasted the whiteness of a high though narrow forehead, and the delicate pallor of his cheeks. His features were very regular, his eyes singularly bright; but the expression of the face spoke of fatigue and exhaustion the silky locks were already thin, and interspersed with threads of silver-the bright eyes shone out from sunken orbits the lines round the mouth were marked as they are in the middle age of one who has lived too fast. It was a countenance that might have excited a compassionate and tender interest, but for something arrogant and supercilious in the expression-something that demanded not tender pity but enthusiastic admiration. Yet that expression

On adjourning to the salon after dinner, Graham, however, was approaching the chair in which Isaura had placed herself, when the young author, forestalling him, dropped into the seat next to her, and began a conversation in a voice so low that it might have passed for a whisper. The Englishman drew back and observed them. He soon perceived, with a pang of jealousy not unmingled with scorn, that the author's talk appeared to interest Isaura. She listened with evident attention; and when she spoke in return, though Graham did not hear her words, he could observe on her expressive countenance an increased gentleness of aspect.

"I hope," said the physician, joining Graham, as most of the other guests gathered round Savarin, who was in his livliest vein of anecdote and wit- “ I hope that the fair Italian will not allow that inkbottle imp to persuade her that she has fallen in love with him."

"Do young ladies generally find him so seductive?" asked Graham, with a forced smile.

"Probably enough. He has the reputation of being very clever and very wicked, and that is a sort of character which has the serpent's fascination for the daughters of Eve."

"Is the reputation merited?”

Isaura took up one of the prints. "Ah!" she exclaimed, "Sorrento - my Sorrento. Have you ever visited Sorrento, Mr. Vane ?"

Her question and her movement were evidently in conciliation. Was the conciliation prompted by coquetry, or by a sentiment more innocent and artless?

As to the cleverness, I am not a fair | hitherto bent in an earnest listening judge. I dislike that sort of writing attitude that seemed to justify the which is neither manlike nor womanlike, Doctor's remarks, and looked round. and in which young Rameau excels. He Her eyes met Graham's with the fearless has the knack of finding very exaggerated candour which made half the charm of phrases by which to express common- their bright yet soft intelligence. But place thoughts. He writes verses about she dropped them suddenly with a halflove in words so stormy that you might start and a change of colour, for the exfancy that Jove was descending upon pression of Graham's face was unlike that Semele. But when you examine his which she had hitherto seen on it — it was words, as a sober pathologist like myself hard, stern, and somewhat disdainful. A is disposed to do, your fear for the peace minute or so afterwards she rose, and in of households vanishes they are Vox passing across the room towards the et præterea nihil'. no man really in group round the host, paused at a table love would use them. He writes prose covered with books and prints near to about the wrongs of humanity. You feel which Graham was standing-alone. for humanity. You say, 'Grant the wrongs, The Doctor had departed in company with now for the remedy,' and you find noth- the German Count. ing but balderdash." Still Í am bound to say that both in verse and prose Gustave Rameau is in unison with a corrupt taste of the day, and therefore he is coming into vogue. So much as to his writings: as to his wickedness, you have only to look at him to feel sure that he is not a hundredth part so wicked as he wishes to seem. In a word, then, Mons. Gustave Rameau is a type of that somewhat numerous class among the youth of Paris, which I call 'the Lost Tribe of Absinthe.' There is a set of men who begin to live full gallop while they are still boys. As a general rule, they are originally of the sickly frames which can scarcely even trot, much less gallop, without the spur of stimulants, and no stimulant so fascinates their peculiar nervous system as absinthe. The number of patients in this set who at the age of thirty are more worn out than septuagenarians, increases so rapidly as to make one dread to think what will be the next race of Frenchmen. To A somewhat sharp and incisive voice the predeliction for absinthe young Ra-speaking in French here struck in and meau and the writers of his set add the prevented Graham's rejoinder: "Quel imitation of Heine, after, indeed, the man- joli dessin! What is it, Mademoiselle?" ner of caricaturists, who effect a likeness striking in proportion as it is ugly. It is not easy to imitate the pathos and the wit of Heine, but it is easy to imitate his defiance of the Deity, his mockery of right and wrong, his relentless war on that heroic standard of thought and action which the writers who exalt their

nation intuitively preserve. Rameau cannot be a Heine, but he can be to Heine what a misshapen snarling dwarf is to a mangled blaspheming Titan. Yet he interests the women in general, and he evidently interests the fair Signorina in especial."

Graham doubted, and replied coldly as he bent over the print

"I once stayed there a few days, but my recollection of it is not sufficiently lively to enable me to recognize its features in this design."

"That is the house, at least so they say, of Tasso's father; of course you visited that?”

66

'Yes, it was a hotel in my time; I lodged there."

"And I too. There I first read the Gerusalemme."" The last words were said in Italian, with a low measured tone, inwardly and dreamily.

Graham recoiled: the speaker was Gustave Rameau, who had, unobserved, first watched Isaura, then rejoined her side.

"A view of Sorrento, Monsieur, but it does not do justice to the place. I was pointing out the house which belonged to Tasso's father."

"Tasso! Hein! and which is the fair Eleonora's?"

"Monsieur," answered Isaura, rather startled at that question from a professed homme de lettres, "Eleonora did not live at Sorrento."

"Tant pis pour Sorrente," said the homme de lettres, carelessly. "No one Just as Bacourt finished that last sen- would care for Tasso if it were not for tence, Isaura lifted the head which had Eleonora."

"I should rather have thought," said Graham, "that no one would have cared for Eleonora if it were not for Tasso." Rameau glanced at the Englishman superciliously.

"Pardon, Monsieur - in every age a love-story keeps its interest; but who cares nowadays for le clinquant du

Tasse?"

"Le clinquant du Tasse!" exclaimed Isaura, indignantly.

"The expression is Boileau's, Mademoiselle, in ridicule of the 'Sot de qualité, who prefers

Le clinquant du Tasse à tout l'or de Virgile.

But for my part I have as little faith in the last as the first."

"I do not know Latin, and have fore not read Virgil," said Isaura. "Possibly," remarked Graham, "Monsieur does not know Italian, and has therefore not read Tasso."

"If that be meant in sarcasm," retorted Rameau, "I construe it as a compliment. A Frenchman who is contented to study the masterpieces of modern literature need learn no language and read no authors but his own."

Isaura laughed her pleasant silvery laugh. "I should admire the frankness of that boast, Monsieur, if in our talk just now you had not spoken as contemptously of what we are accustomed to consider French masterpieces as you have done of Virgil and Tasso.”

of Isaura. "Her dearest friend Madame de Grantmesnil!"— he muttered.

A word now on Isaura's chief correspondent. Madame de Grantmesnil was a woman of noble birth and ample fortune. She had separated from her husband in the second year after marriage. She was a singularly eloquent writer, surpassed among contemporaries of her sex in popularity and renown only by Georges Sand.

At least as fearless as that great novelist in the frank exposition of her views, she had commenced her career in letters by a work of astonishing power and pathos, directed against the institution of marriage as regulated in Roman Catholic communities. I do not know that it said more on this delicate subject than the English Milton has said; but then Milthere-ton did not write for a Roman Catholic community, nor adopt a style likely to captivate the working classes. Madame de Grantmesnil's first book was deemed an attack on the religion of the country, and captivated those among the working classes who had already abjured that religion. This work was followed up by others more or less in defiance of "received opinions;" some with political, some with social revolutionary aim and tendency, but always with a singular purity of style. Search all her books, and however you might revolt from her doctrine, you could not find a hazardous expression. The novels of English young ladies are naughty in comparison. Of late years, whatever might be hard or audacious in her political or social doc trines, softened itself into charm amid the golden haze of romance. Her writings had grown more and more purely artistic poetizing what is good and beautiful in the realities of life, rather than creating a false ideal out of what is vicious and deformed. Such a woman, separated young from her husband, could not enunciate such opinions and lead a life so independent and uncontrolled as Madame de Grantmesnil had done, without scandal, without calumny. Nothing, however, in her actual life, had ever been so proved against her as to lower the high position she occupied in right of birth, fortune, renown. Wherever she went she was fêtée-as in England foreign princes, and in America foreign authors are fetes. "The dearest I have in the world." Those who knew her well concurred in Graham's face darkened; he turned praise of her lofty, generous, lovable away in silence, and in another minute qualities. Madame de Grantmesnil had vanished from the room, persuading him-known Mr. Selby; and when at his death, self that he felt not one pang of jealousy Isaura, in the innocent age between childin leaving Gustave Rameau by the side hood and youth, had been left the most

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Ah, Mademoiselle! it is not my fault if you have had teachers of taste so rococo as to bid you find masterpieces in the tiresome stilted tragedies of Corneille and Racine. Poetry of a court, not of a people -one simple novel, one simple stanza that probes the hidden recesses of the human heart, reveals the sores of this wretched social state, denounces the evils of superstition, kingcraft, and priestcraft, is worth a library of the rubbish which pedagogues call the classics.' We agree, at least, in one thing, Mademoiselle; we both do homage to the genius of your friend, Madame de Grantmesnil."

"Your friend, Signorina!” cried Graham incredulously; "is Madame de Grantmesnil your friend?"

sorrowful and most lonely creature on the somewhat melancholy indolence, but in face of the earth, this famous woman wor- speaking it became singularly sweet, with shipped by the rich for her intellect, a smile of the exquisite urbanity which adored by the poor for her beneficence, no artificial politeness can bestow; it came to the orphan's friendless side, must emanate from that native high breathing love once more into her pining breeding which has its source in goodheart, and waking for the first time the ness of heart. desires of genius, the aspirations of art, in the dim self-consciousness of a soul between sleep and waking.

But, my dear Englishman, put yourself in Graham's place, and suppose that you were beginning to fall in love with a girl whom for many good reasons you ought not to marry; suppose that in the same hour in which you were angrily conscious of jealousy on account of a man whom it wounds your self-esteem to consider a rival, the girl tells you that her dearest friend is a woman who is famed for her hostility to the institution of marriage!

CHAPTER IV.

Enguerrand was fair, with curly locks of a golden chestnut. He wore no beard, only a small moustache rather darker than his hair. His complexion might in itself be called effeminate, its bloom was so fresh and delicate, but there was so much of boldness and energy in the play of his countenance, the hardy outline of the lips, and the breadth of the forehead, that "effeminate " was an epithet no one ever assigned to his aspect. He was somewhat under the middle height, but beautifully proportioned, carried himself well, and somehow or other did not look short even by the side of tall men. Altogether he seemed formed to be a mother's darling, and spoiled by women, yet to hold his own among men with a strength of will more evident in his look and his bearing than it was in those of his graver and statelier brother.

On the same day in which Graham dined with the Savarins, M. Louvier assembled round his table the élite of the young Parisians who constituted the oligarchy of fashion, to meet whom he had invited Both were considered by their young his new friend the Marquis de Rochebri- co-equals models in dress, but in Raoul ant. Most of them belonged to the Le- there was no sign that care or thought gitimist party the noblesse of the fau- upon dress had been bestowed; the simbourg; those who did not, belonged to plicity of his costume was absolute and no political party at all, indifferent to severe. On his plain shirt front there the cares of mortal states as the gods of gleamed not a stud, on his fingers there Epicurus. Foremost among this jeunesse sparkled not a ring. Enguerrand, on the dorée were Alain's kinsmen, Raoul and contrary, was not without pretension in Enguerrand de Vandemar. To these his attire; the broderie in his shirt-front Louvier introduced him with a burly pa- seemed woven by the Queen of the Fairental bonhomie, as if he were the head of ries. His rings of turquoise and opal, the family. "I need not bid you, young his studs and wrist-buttons of pearl and folks, to make friends with each other. brilliants, must have cost double the rentA Vandemar and a Rochebriant are not al of Rochebriant, but probably they cost made friends they are born friends." him nothing. He was one of those happy So saying he turned to his other guests. Lotharios to whom Calistas make conAlmost in an instant Alain felt his con- stant presents. All about him was so straint melt away in the cordial warmth | bright that the atmosphere around seemed with which his cousins greeted him. gayer for his presence.

These young men had a striking family | likeness to each other, and yet in feature, colouring, and expression, in all save that strange family likeness, they were con

trasts.

Raoul was tall, and, though inclined to be slender, with sufficient breadth of shoulder to indicate no inconsiderable strength of frame. His hair worn short, and his silky beard worn long, were dark, So were his eyes, shaded by curved, drooping lashes; his complexion was pale, but clear and healthful. In repose the expression of his face was that of a

In one respect at least the brothers closely resembled each other—in that exquisite graciousness of manner for which the genuine French noble is traditionally renowned — a graciousness that did not desert them even when they came reluctantly into contact with roturiers or republícans; but the graciousness became égalité, fraternité towards one of their caste and kindred.

"We must do our best to make Paris pleasant to you," said Raoul, still retaining in his grasp the hand he had taken.

"Vilain cousin," said the livelier En

guerrand, "to have been in Paris twenty-tary rank or social position. With these four hours, and without letting us know." the name of Rochebriant was too histor"Has not your father told you that I ically famous not to insure respect of its called upon him?" owner; they welcomed him among them as if he were their brother.

"Our father," answered Raoul, "was not so savage as to conceal that fact, but The French duke claimed him as a conhe said you were only here on business nection by an alliance in the fourteenth for a day or two, had declined his invita- century; the Russian prince had known tion, and would not give your address. the late Marquis, and "trusted that the Pauvre père! we scolded him well for son would allow him to improve into letting you escape from us thus. My friendship the acquaintance he had mother has not forgiven him yet; we formed with the father." must present you to her to-morrow. I answer for your liking her almost as much as she will like you.'

"

Before Alain could answer dinner was announced. Alain's place at dinner was between his cousins. How pleasant they made themselves! it was the first time in which Alain had been brought into such familiar conversation with countrymen of his own rank as well as his own age. His heart warmed to them. The general talk of the other guests was strange to his ear; it ran much upon horses and races, upon the opera and the ballet; it was enlivened with satirical anecdotes of persons whose names were unknown to the Provincial-not a word was said that showed the smallest interest in politics or the slightest acquaintance with literature. The world of these well-born guests seemed one from which all that concerned the great mass of mankind was excluded, yet the talk was that which could only be found in a very polished society; in it there was not much wit, but there was a prevalent vein of gaiety, and the gaiety was never violent, the laughter was never loud; the scandals circulated might imply cynicism the most absolute, but in language the most refined. The Jockey Club of Paris has its perfume.

Raoul did not mix in the general conversation; he devoted himself pointedly to the amusement of his cousin, explaining to him the point of the anecdotes circulated, or hitting off in terse sentences the characters of the talkers.

Enguerrand was evidently of temper more vivacious than his brother, and contributed freely to the current play of light gossip and mirthful sally.

Louvier, seated between a duke and a Russian prince, said little, except to recommend a wine or an entrée, but kept his eye constantly on the Vandemars and Alain.

Immediately after coffee the guests departed. Before they did so, however, Raoul introduced his cousin to those of the party most distinguished by heredi

Those ceremonials over, Raoul linked his arm in Alain's, and said: "I am not going to release you so soon after we have caught you. You must come with me to a house in which I at least spend an hour or two every evening. I am at home there. Bah! I take no refusal. Do not suppose I carry you off to Bohemia, a country which, I am sorry to say, Enguerrand now and then visits, but which is to me as unknown as the mountains of the moon. The house I speak of is comme il faut to the utmost. It is that of the Contessa di Rimini a charming Italian by marriage, but by birth and in character French—jusqu'au bout des ongles. My mother adores her."

That dinner at M. Louvier's had already effected a great change in the mood and temper of Alain de Rochebriant; he felt, as if by magic, the sense of youth, of rank, of station, which had been so suddenly checked and stifled, warmed to life within his veins. He should have deemed himself a boor had he refused the invitation so frankly tendered.

But on reaching the coupé which the brothers kept in common, and seeing it only held two, he drew back.

66 Nay, enter, mon cher," said Raoul, divining the cause of his hesitation; "Enguerrand has gone on to his club.”

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