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قراءة كتاب Love Among the Lions: A Matrimonial Experience

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Love Among the Lions: A Matrimonial Experience

Love Among the Lions: A Matrimonial Experience

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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LOVE AMONG THE LIONS

 

LOVE AMONG The LIONS
A MATRIMONIAL EXPERIENCE

BY F. ANSTEY
AUTHOR OF "VICE VERSA," ETC.

 

LONDON
J. M. DENT & CO.
29 & 30 BEDFORD STREET, W.C.

 



List of Illustrations

  Page
The exquisite face looking out over the wire blind 4
Æneas Polkinghorne 5
Still I persevered 9
The Introduction of Mr Blenkinsop to Miss Lurana de Castro 12
"And whom should I marry, Mr Blenkinsop?" 18
"Let us be married in the Lion's Cage" 26
"Yes, papa, we are a little late" 31
"First-rate idea of yours, Blenkinsop" 33
"Well, if the lady's as game as she seems, and the gentleman likewise, I don't see any objection" 41
We were still chatting when Laurana returned 43
A Cleric of the broad-minded school 51
"If you go on like that I shall begin to think you want to frighten me" 55
Mademoiselle 63
"A de Castro can never marry a Craven" 73
"If them two got together, there'd be the doose's delight" 79
I was forlornly mopping when Niono returned 82
My wedding toilette was complete 87
It's a swindle 91
A kind of small procession entered the arena 95
Then he addressed the audience 101
"If only you had been firmer, Theodore" 113

 


Love among the Lions


PART I

In the following pages will be found the only authentic account of an affair which provided London, and indeed all England, with material for speculation and excitement for a period of at least nine days.

So many inaccurate versions have been circulated, so many ill-natured and unjust aspersions have been freely cast, that it seemed advisable for the sake of those principally concerned to make a plain unvarnished statement of the actual facts. And when I mention that I who write this am the Theodore Blenkinsop whose name was, not long since, as familiar in the public mouth as household words, I venture to think that I shall at once recall the matter to the shortest memory, and establish my right to speak with authority on the subject.

At the time I refer to I was—and for the matter of that still am—employed at a lucrative salary as taster to a well-known firm of tea-merchants in the City. I occupied furnished apartments, a sitting-room and bedroom, over a dairy establishment in Tadmor Terrace, near Baalbec Road, in the pleasant and salubrious district of Highbury.

Arrived at the age of twenty-eight, I was still a bachelor and had felt no serious inclination to change my condition until the memorable afternoon on which the universe became transformed for me in the course of a quiet stroll round Canonbury Square.

For the information of those who may be unacquainted with it, I may state that Canonbury Square is in Islington; the houses, though undeniably dingy as to their exteriors, are highly respectable, and mostly tenanted by members of the medical, musical, or scholastic

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