A Parisian Sultana, Vol. 1 (of 3) - Adolphe Belot - Book

A Parisian Sultana, Vol. 1 (of 3)

Produced by Douglas Ethington
A TRANSLATION OF ADOLPHE BELOT'S La Sultane parisienne BY H. MAINWARING DUNSTAN.
A charming retreat, one of a luxurious suite of apartments in the Boulevard Malesherbes, the abode, evidently, of a woman both young and of elegant tastes. One glance round the room sufficed to establish the innate refinement of its owner—the couch covered with pearl-grey brocaded satin, the timepiece of Dresden china, the Venetian mirror, the crayons bearing the signature of Latour, the tasteful what-nots filled with miniature figures, the Smyrna carpet, the cushions adorned with antique lace, and the diminutive chairs, a modern creation, which the Parisians have invented to enable them, on the first approach of frost, to creep as closely as possible to the genial warmth of a winter fire—everything, in short, bore the impress of the owner's taste and refinement.
Nevertheless, however ardent might be the desire to meet the goddess of this charming sanctum, the sight of the various articles with which the furniture was laden could not fail to temper that eagerness, if indeed a decided chill did not result from the inspection. A feeling of astonishment, at all events, would inevitably succeed, as, on a closer examination, the room, which at first sight appeared to be a boudoir, was seen to be equally suitable for the study of the most indefatigable of members of a modern Geographical Society.
As a matter of fact, the couch was lost to view, almost entirely, beneath a mass of books or pamphlets, published by Hachette, Arthur Bertrand, Delegrave and Lassailly, bearing some such titles as: Au cœur de l'Afrique, l'Albert Nyanza, le Fleuve Blanc, Ismailia, Les Grandes Entreprises Géographiques, &c., &c. The corners of the room were littered with numbers of the Annales des Voyages, and the slender frame of a gilded chair bent under the weight of Bouillet's famous Atlas d'Histoire et de Géographie.
Even the satin-flock, with which the walls were covered, had not been respected, for, here and there, simply fastened by pins, appeared a map by Stieler of Gotha, another by Brué, a survey by Emile Lavasseur of the Institute, and sketches by Malte-Brun, Peterman and the Viscount de Bizemont, all of them explanatory or illustrative of the discoveries made by Burton, Speke, Grant, Livingstone and Dr. Cuny.

Adolphe Belot
Содержание

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2019-01-12

Темы

Paris (France) -- Fiction

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