Pelham — Volume 04 by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
page 1 of 84 (01%)
page 1 of 84 (01%)
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VOLUME IV.
CHAPTER XLIV. Cum pulchris tunicis sumet nova consilia et spes. --Horace. And look always that they be shape, What garment that thou shalt make Of him that can best do With all that pertaineth thereto. --Romaunt of the Rose How well I can remember the feelings with which I entered London, and took possession of the apartments prepared for me at Mivart's. A year had made a vast alteration in my mind; I had ceased to regard pleasure for its own sake, I rather coveted its enjoyments, as the great sources of worldly distinction. I was not the less a coxcomb than heretofore, nor the less a voluptuary, nor the less choice in my perfumes, nor the less fastidious in my horses and my dress; but I viewed these matters in a light wholly different from that in which I had hitherto regarded them. Beneath all the carelessness of my exterior, my mind was close, keen, and inquiring; and under the affectations of foppery, and the levity of a manner almost unique, for the effeminacy of its tone, I veiled an ambition the most extensive in its object, and a resolution the most daring in the accomplishment of its means. I was still lounging over my breakfast, on the second morning of my arrival, when Mr. N--, the tailor, was announced. |
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