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<h1> THE GUEST OF QUESNAY </h1>
<h2> By Booth Tarkington </h2>
<h3> 1915 </h3>
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<p><br/><br/></p>
<h3> TO OVID BUTLER JAMESON </h3>
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<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXII </SPAN></p>
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<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<p>There are old Parisians who will tell you pompously that the boulevards,
like the political cafes, have ceased to exist, but this means only that
the boulevards no longer gossip of Louis Napoleon, the Return of the
Bourbons, or of General Boulanger, for these highways are always too
busily stirring with present movements not to be forgetful of their
yesterdays. In the shade of the buildings and awnings, the loungers, the
lookers-on in Paris, the audience of the boulevard, sit at little tables,
sipping coffee from long glasses, drinking absinthe or bright-coloured
sirops, and gazing over the heads of throngs afoot at others borne along
through the sunshine of the street in carriages, in cabs, in glittering
automobiles, or high on the tops of omnibuses.</p>
<p>From all the continents the multitudes come to join in that procession:
Americans, tagged with race-cards and intending hilarious disturbances;
puzzled Americans, worn with guide-book plodding; Chinese princes in silk;
queer Antillean dandies of swarthy origin and fortune; ruddy English,
thinking of nothing; pallid English, with upper teeth bared and eyes
hungrily searching for sign-boards of tea-rooms; over-Europeanised
Japanese, unpleasantly immaculate; burnoosed sheiks from the desert, and
red-fezzed Semitic peddlers; Italian nobles in English tweeds; Soudanese
negroes swaggering in frock coats; slim Spaniards, squat Turks,
travellers, idlers, exiles, fugitives, sportsmen—all the tribes and
kinds of men are tributary here to the Parisian stream which, on a fair
day in spring, already overflows the banks with its own much-mingled
waters. Soberly clad burgesses, bearded, amiable, and in no fatal hurry;
well-kept men of the world swirling by in miraculous limousines; legless
cripples flopping on hands and leather pads; thin-whiskered students in
velveteen; walrus-moustached veterans in broadcloth; keen-faced old
prelates; shabby young priests; cavalrymen in casque and cuirass;
workingmen turned horse and harnessed to carts; sidewalk jesters,
itinerant vendors of questionable wares; shady loafers dressed to resemble
gold-showering America; motor-cyclists in leather; hairy musicians, blue
gendarmes, baggy red zouaves; purple-faced, glazed-hatted,
scarlet-waistcoated, cigarette-smoking cabmen, calling one another “onions,”
“camels,” and names even more terrible. Women prevalent over
all the concourse; fair women, dark women, pretty women, gilded women,
haughty women, indifferent women, friendly women, merry women. Fine women
in fine clothes; rich women in fine clothes; poor women in fine clothes.
Worldly old women, reclining befurred in electric landaulettes; wordy old
women hoydenishly trundling carts full of flowers. Wonderful automobile
women quick-glimpsed, in multiple veils of white and brown and sea-green.
Women in rags and tags, and women draped, coifed, and befrilled in the
delirium of maddened poet-milliners and the hasheesh dreams of ladies’
tailors.</p>
<p>About the procession, as it moves interminably along the boulevard, a blue
haze of fine dust and burnt gasoline rises into the sunshine like the haze
over the passages to an amphitheatre toward which a crowd is trampling;
and through this the multitudes seem to go as actors passing to their
cues. Your place at one of the little tables upon the sidewalk is that of
a wayside spectator: and as the performers go by, in some measure acting
or looking their parts already, as if in preparation, you guess the roles
they play, and name them comedians, tragedians, buffoons, saints,
beauties, sots, knaves, gladiators, acrobats, dancers; for all of these
are there, and you distinguish the principles from the unnumbered
supernumeraries pressing forward to the entrances. So, if you sit at the
little tables often enough—that is, if you become an amateur
boulevardier—you begin to recognise the transient stars of the
pageant, those to whom the boulevard allows a dubious and fugitive role of
celebrity, and whom it greets with a slight flutter: the turning of heads,
a murmur of comment, and the incredulous boulevard smile, which seems to
say: “You see? Madame and monsieur passing there—evidently
they think we still believe in them!”</p>
<p>This flutter heralded and followed the passing of a white touring-car with
the procession one afternoon, just before the Grand Prix, though it needed
no boulevard celebrity to make the man who lolled in the tonneau
conspicuous. Simply for THAT, notoriety was superfluous; so were the
remarkable size and power of his car; so was the elaborate touring-costume
of flannels and pongee he wore; so was even the enamelled presence of the
dancer who sat beside him. His face would have done it without
accessories.</p>
<p>My old friend, George Ward, and I had met for our aperitif at the Terrace
Larue, by the Madeleine, when the white automobile came snaking its way
craftily through the traffic. Turning in to pass a victoria on the wrong
side, it was forced down to a snail’s pace near the curb and not far
from our table, where it paused, checked by a blockade at the next corner.
I heard Ward utter a half-suppressed guttural of what I took to be
amazement, and I did not wonder.</p>
<p>The face of the man in the tonneau detached him to the spectator’s
gaze and singled him out of the concourse with an effect almost ludicrous
in its incongruity. The hair was dark, lustrous and thick, the forehead
broad and finely modelled, and certain other ruinous vestiges of youth and
good looks remained; but whatever the features might once have shown of
honour, worth, or kindly semblance had disappeared beyond all tracing in a
blurred distortion. The lids of one eye were discoloured and swollen
almost together; other traces of a recent battering were not lacking, nor
was cosmetic evidence of a heroic struggle, on the part of some valet of
infinite pains, to efface them. The nose lost outline in the
discolorations of the puffed cheeks; the chin, tufted with a small
imperial, trembled beneath a sagging, gray lip. And that this bruised and
dissipated mask should suffer the final grotesque touch, it was decorated
with the moustache of a coquettish marquis, the ends waxed and exquisitely
elevated.</p>
<p>The figure was fat, but loose and sprawling, seemingly without the will to
hold itself together; in truth the man appeared to be almost in a
semi-stupor, and, contrasted with this powdered Silenus, even the woman
beside him gained something of human dignity. At least, she was thoroughly
alive, bold, predatory, and in spite of the gross embon-point that
threatened her, still savagely graceful. A purple veil, dotted with gold,
floated about her hat, from which green-dyed ostrich plumes cascaded down
across a cheek enamelled dead white. Her hair was plastered in blue-black
waves, parted low on the forehead; her lips were splashed a startling
carmine, the eyelids painted blue; and, from between lashes gummed into
little spikes of blacking, she favoured her companion with a glance of
carelessly simulated tenderness,—a look all too vividly suggesting
the ghastly calculations of a cook wheedling a chicken nearer the kitchen
door. But I felt no great pity for the victim.</p>
<p>“Who is it?” I asked, staring at the man in the automobile and
not turning toward Ward.</p>
<p>“That is Mariana—‘la bella Mariana la Mursiana,’”
George answered; “—one of those women who come to Paris from
the tropics to form themselves on the legend of the one great famous and
infamous Spanish dancer who died a long while ago. Mariana did very well
for a time. I’ve heard that the revolutionary societies intend
striking medals in her honour: she’s done worse things to royalty
than all the anarchists in Europe! But her great days are over: she’s
getting old; that type goes to pieces quickly, once it begins to slump,
and it won’t be long before she’ll be horribly fat, though she’s
still a graceful dancer. She danced at the Folie Rouge last week.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, George,” I said gratefully. “I hope you’ll
point out the Louvre and the Eiffel Tower to me some day. I didn’t
mean Mariana.”</p>
<p>“What did you mean?”</p>
<p>What I had meant was so obvious that I turned to my friend in surprise. He
was nervously tapping his chin with the handle of his cane and staring at
the white automobile with very grim interest.</p>
<p>“I meant the man with her,” I said.</p>
<p>“Oh!” He laughed sourly. “That carrion?”</p>
<p>“You seem to be an acquaintance.”</p>
<p>“Everybody on the boulevard knows who he is,” said Ward
curtly, paused, and laughed again with very little mirth. “So do
you,” he continued; “and as for my acquaintance with him—yes,
I had once the distinction of being his rival in a small way, a way so
small, in fact, that it ended in his becoming a connection of mine by
marriage. He’s Larrabee Harman.”</p>
<p>That was a name somewhat familiar to readers of American newspapers even
before its bearer was fairly out of college. The publicity it then
attained (partly due to young Harman’s conspicuous wealth) attached
to some youthful exploits not without a certain wild humour. But frolic
degenerated into brawl and debauch: what had been scrapes for the boy
became scandals for the man; and he gathered a more and more unsavoury
reputation until its like was not to be found outside a penitentiary. The
crux of his career in his own country was reached during a midnight
quarrel in Chicago when he shot a negro gambler. After that, the negro
having recovered and the matter being somehow arranged so that the
prosecution was dropped, Harman’s wife left him, and the papers
recorded her application for a divorce. She was George Ward’s second
cousin, the daughter of a Baltimore clergyman; a belle in a season and
town of belles, and a delightful, headstrong creature, from all accounts.
She had made a runaway match of it with Harman three years before, their
affair having been earnestly opposed by all her relatives—especially
by poor George, who came over to Paris just after the wedding in a
miserable frame of mind.</p>
<p>The Chicago exploit was by no means the end of Harman’s notoriety.
Evading an effort (on the part of an aunt, I believe) to get him locked up
safely in a “sanitarium,” he began a trip round the world with
an orgy which continued from San Francisco to Bangkok, where, in the
company of some congenial fellow travellers, he interfered in a native
ceremonial with the result that one of his companions was drowned.
Proceeding, he was reported to be in serious trouble at Constantinople,
the result of an inquisitiveness little appreciated by Orientals. The
State Department, bestirring itself, saved him from a very real peril, and
he continued his journey. In Rome he was rescued with difficulty from a
street mob that unreasonably refused to accept intoxication as an excuse
for his riding down a child on his way to the hunt. Later, during the
winter just past, we had been hearing from Monte Carlo of his disastrous
plunges at that most imbecile of all games, roulette.</p>
<p>Every event, no matter how trifling, in this man’s pitiful career
had been recorded in the American newspapers with an elaboration which,
for my part, I found infuriatingly tiresome. I have lived in Paris so long
that I am afraid to go home: I have too little to show for my years of
pottering with paint and canvas, and I have grown timid about all the
changes that have crept in at home. I do not know the “new men,”
I do not know how they would use me, and fear they might make no place for
me; and so I fit myself more closely into the little grooves I have worn
for myself, and resign myself to stay. But I am no “expatriate.”
I know there is a feeling at home against us who remain over here to do
our work, but in most instances it is a prejudice which springs from a
misunderstanding. I think the quality of patriotism in those of us who
“didn’t go home in time” is almost pathetically deep and
real, and, like many another oldish fellow in my position, I try to keep
as close to things at home as I can. All of my old friends gradually
ceased to write to me, but I still take three home newspapers, trying to
follow the people I knew and the things that happen; and the ubiquity of
so worthless a creature as Larrabee Harman in the columns I dredged for
real news had long been a point of irritation to this present exile. Not
only that: he had usurped space in the Continental papers, and of late my
favourite Parisian journal had served him to me with my morning coffee,
only hinting his name, but offering him with that gracious satire
characteristic of the Gallic journalist writing of anything American. And
so this grotesque wreck of a man was well known to the boulevard—one
of its sights. That was to be perceived by the flutter he caused, by the
turning of heads in his direction, and the low laughter of the people at
the little tables. Three or four in the rear ranks had risen to their feet
to get a better look at him and his companion.</p>
<p>Some one behind us chuckled aloud. “They say Mariana beats him.”</p>
<p>“Evidently!”</p>
<p>The dancer was aware of the flutter, and called Harman’s attention
to it with a touch upon his arm and a laugh and a nod of her violent
plumage.</p>
<p>At that he seemed to rouse himself somewhat: his head rolled heavily over
upon his shoulder, the lids lifted a little from the red-shot eyes,
showing a strange pride when his gaze fell upon the many staring faces.</p>
<p>Then, as the procession moved again and the white automobile with it, the
sottish mouth widened in a smile of dull and cynical contempt: the look of
a half-poisoned Augustan borne down through the crowds from the Palatine
after supping with Caligula.</p>
<p>Ward pulled my sleeve.</p>
<p>“Come,” he said, “let us go over to the Luxembourg
gardens where the air is cleaner.”</p>
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