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قراءة كتاب The Azure Rose: A Novel
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The Azure Rose
A Novel
BY
REGINALD WRIGHT KAUFFMAN
Author of “Jim,” “The House of Bondage,”
“The Mark of The Beast,” “Our Navy at Work,” etc.
NEW YORK
THE MACAULAY COMPANY
Copyright, 1919
By The Macaulay Co.
For
My Friend and Secretary,
LANCE-CORPORAL ARNOLD ROBSON,
No. 10864, “C” Company, Sixth Battalion,
Yorkshire Regiment—“The Green Howards”—
Who, Leading His Squad, Died for His Country
At Suvla Bay, Gallipoli, 21st August, 1915,
Aged Twenty.
PREFACE
A novel about Paris that is not about the war requires even now, I am told, some word of explanation. Mine is brief:
This story was conceived before the war began. I came to the task of putting it into its final shape after nine months passed between the Western Front and a Paris war-torn and war-darkened, both physically and spiritually. Yet, though I had found the old familiar places, and the ever young and ever familiar people, wounded and sad, I did not long have to seek for the Parisian bravery in pain and the Parisian smile shining, rainbowlike, through the tears. Nothing can conquer France and nothing can lastingly hurt Paris. They are, as a famous wit said of our own so different Boston, a state of mind. Had the German succeeded in the Autumn of 1914 or the Spring of 1918, France would have remained, and Paris. What used to happen in the Land of Love and the City of Lights will happen there again and be always happening, so that my story is at once a retrospect and a prophecy.
Realizing these things, I have found it a pleasure to make this book. A book without problems and without horrors, its sole purpose is to give to the reader some of that pleasure which went to its making. Wars come and go; but for every man the Door Opposite stands open beside the Seine, the hurdy-gurdy plays “Annie Laurie” in the Street of the Valley of Grace and—a Lady of the Rose is waiting.
R. W. K.
Columbia, Penna.,
Christmas Day, 1918.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | In Which, if not Love, at Least Anger, Laughs at Locksmiths | 13 |
II. | Providing the Gentle Reader with a Card of Admission to the Nest of the Two Doves | 36 |
III. | In Which a Fool and His Money Are Soon Parted | 49 |
IV. | A Damsel in Distress | 64 |
V. | Which Tells How Cartaret Returned to the Rue du Val-de-Grâce, and What He Found There | 84 |
VI. | Cartaret Sets Up Housekeeping | 102 |
VII. | Of Domestic Economy, of Day-Dreams, and of a Far Country and Its Sovereign Lady | 118 |
VIII. | Chiefly Concerning Strawberries | 144 |
IX. | Being the True Report of a Chaperoned Déjeuner | 154 |
X. | An Account of an Empty Purse and a Full Heart, in the Course of Which the Author Barely Escapes Telling a Very Old Story | 169 |
XI. | Tells How Cartaret’s Fortune Turned Twice in a Few Hours and How He Found One Thing and Lost Another | 192 |
XII. | Narrating How Cartaret Began His Quest of the Rose | 206 |
XIII. | Further Adventures of an Amateur Botanist | 222 |
XIV. | Something or Other About Traditions | 253 |
XV. | In Which Cartaret Takes Part in the Revival of an Ancient Custom | 273 |
XVI. | And Last | 300 |