A Distinguished Provincial at Paris by Honoré de Balzac
page 155 of 450 (34%)
page 155 of 450 (34%)
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"What is he doing?" asked Blondet of the head-clerk, who rose to bid
him good-evening. "He is buying a weekly newspaper. He wants to put new life into it, and set up a rival to the _Minerve_ and the _Conservateur_; Eymery has rather too much of his own way in the _Minerve_, and the _Conservateur_ is too blindly Romantic." "Is he going to pay well?" "Only too much--as usual," said the cashier. Just as he spoke another young man entered; this was the writer of a magnificent novel which had sold very rapidly and met with the greatest possible success. Dauriat was bringing out a second edition. The appearance of this odd and extraordinary looking being, so unmistakably an artist, made a deep impression on Lucien's mind. "That is Nathan," Lousteau said in his ear. Nathan, then in the prime of his youth, came up to the group of journalists, hat in hand; and in spite of his look of fierce pride he was almost humble to Blondet, whom as yet he only knew by sight. Blondet did not remove his hat, neither did Finot. "Monsieur, I am delighted to avail myself of an opportunity yielded by chance----" ("He is so nervous that he is committing a pleonasm," said Felicien in an aside to Lousteau.) |
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