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The Chevalier d'Auriac

S. Levett Yeats




  Produced by Charles Bowen, from page scans provided by the Web Archive

  Transcriber's notes:

  1. Page scan source: https://www.archive.org/details/chevalierdauriac00leverich

  2. The diphthong oe is represented by [oe].

  The

  CHEVALIER D'AURIAC

  BY

  S. LEVETT YEATS

  AUTHOR OF "THE HONOUR OF SAVELLI" ETC.

  NEW YORK

  LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.

  LONDON AND BOMBAY

  1897

  Copyright, 1896 and 1897 By S. LEVETT YEATS * * * _All rights reserved_.

  FIRST EDITION, MARCH, 1897 REPRINTED, AUGUST, AND SEPTEMBER, 1897

  TROW DIRECTORY PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY NEW YORK

  THE CHEVALIER D'AURIAC

  TO THE

  CHUMMERY OF THE PALMS

  I DEDICATE THIS, IN MEMORY OF CERTAIN

  RED-HOT DAYS

  S. L. Y.

  PREFACE

  This story, like its predecessor, has been written in those raremoments of leisure that an Indian official can afford. Bits of timewere snatched here and there, and much, perhaps too much, reliance hashad to be placed on memory, for books there were few or none to referto. Occasionally, too, inspiration was somewhat rudely interrupted.Notably in one instance, in the Traveller's Bungalow at Hassan Abdal(Moore's Lalla Rookh was buried hard by), when a bat, after making anineffectual swoop at a cockroach, fell into the very hungry author'ssoup and put an end to dinner and to fancy. There is an anachronism inthe tale, in which the writer finds he has sinned with M. C. deRemusat in "Le Saint-Barthelemy." The only excuse the writer has fornot making the correction is that his object is simply to enable areader to pass away a dull hour.

  Umballa Cantonments, March 16, 1896.

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER I.

  The Justice of M. de Rone.

  CHAPTER II.

  M. de Rone Cannot Read a Cypher.

  CHAPTER III.

  The Red Cornfield.

  CHAPTER IV.

  The Chateau de la Bidache.

  CHAPTER V.

  A Good Deed Comes Home to Roost.

  CHAPTER VI.

  'Green as a Jade Cup.'

  CHAPTER VII.

  Poor Nicholas!

  CHAPTER VIII.

  Monsieur de Preaulx.

  CHAPTER IX.

  The Master-General.

  CHAPTER X.

  An Old Friend.

  CHAPTER XI.

  A Swim in the Seine.

  CHAPTER XII.

  Monsieur Ravaillac does not Suit.

  CHAPTER XIII.

  The Louvre.

  CHAPTER XIV.

  Under the Limes.

  CHAPTER XV.

  The Hand of Babette.

  CHAPTER XVI.

  A Council of War.

  CHAPTER XVII.

  Maitre Pantin Sells Cabbages.

  CHAPTER XVIII.

  The Skylight in the Toison d'Or.

  CHAPTER XIX.

  'Plain Henri de Bourbon.'

  CHAPTER XX.

  At the Sign of 'The Toison d'Or.'