The Nabob by Alphonse Daudet
page 32 of 516 (06%)
page 32 of 516 (06%)
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ps--first sponger that comes along. Have you seen the horses that Bois
l'Hery has persuaded him to buy? Absolute rubbish those animals. And he paid twenty thousand francs for them. We may wager that Bois l'Hery got them for six thousand." "Oh, for shame--a nobleman!" said Jenkins, with the indignation of a lofty soul refusing to believe in baseness. Monpavon continued, without seeming to hear: "All that because the horses came from Mora's stable." "It is true that the dear Nabob's heart is very full of the duke. I am about to make him very happy, therefore, when I inform him----" The doctor paused, embarrassed. "When you inform him of what, Jenkins?" Somewhat abashed, Jenkins had to confess that he had obtained permission from his excellency to present to him his friend Jansoulet. Scarcely had he finished his sentence before a tall spectre, with flabby face and hair and whiskers diversely coloured, bounded from the dressing-room into the chamber, with his two hands folding round a fleshless but very erect neck a dressing-gown of flimsy silk with violet spots, in which he was wrapped like a sweetmeat in its paper. The most striking thing about this mock-heroic physiognomy was a large curved nose all shiny with cold cream, and an eye alive, keen, too young, too bright, for the heavy and wrinkled eyelid which covered it. Jenkins's patients all had that eye. |
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