The Bright Face of Danger / Being an Account of Some Adventures of Henri de Launay, Son of the Sieur de la Tournoire
THE BRIGHT FACE OF DANGER is, in a distant way, a sequel to An Enemy to the King, but may be read alone, without any reference to that tale. The title is a phrase of Robert Louis Stevenson's.
THE AUTHOR.
If, on the first Tuesday in June, in the year 1608, anybody had asked me on what business I was riding towards Paris, and if I had answered, To cut off the moustaches of a gentleman I have never seen, that I may toss them at the feet of a lady who has taunted me with that gentleman's superiorities, —if I had made this reply, I should have been taken for the most foolish person on horseback in France that day. Yet the answer would have been true, though I accounted myself one of the wisest young gentlemen you might find in Anjou or any other province.
I was, of a certainty, studious, and a lover of books. My father, the Sieur de la Tournoire, being a daring soldier, had so often put himself to perils inimical to my mother's peace of mind, that she had guided my inclinations in the peaceful direction of the library, hoping not to suffer for the son such alarms as she had undergone for the husband. I had grown up, therefore, a musing, bookish youth, rather shy and solitary in my habits: and this despite the care taken of my education in swordsmanship, riding, hunting, and other manly accomplishments, both by my father and by his old follower, Blaise Tripault. I acquired skill enough to satisfy these well-qualified instructors, but yet a volume of Plutarch or a book of poems was more to me than sword or dagger, horse, hound, or falcon. I was used to lonely walks and brookside meditations in the woods and meads of our estate of La Tournoire, in Anjou; and it came about that with my head full of verses I must needs think upon some lady with whom to fancy myself in love.
Contiguity determined my choice. The next estate to ours, separated from it by a stream flowing into the Loir, had come into the possession of a rich family of bourgeois origin whom heaven had blessed (or burdened, as some would think) with a pretty daughter. Mlle. Celeste was a small, graceful, active creature, with a clear and well-coloured skin, and quick-glancing black eyes which gave me a pleasant inward stir the first time they rested on me. In my first acquaintance with this young lady, the black eyes seemed to enlarge and soften when they fell on me: she regarded me with what I took to be interest and approval: her face shone with friendliness, and her voice was kind. In this way I was led on.
Robert Neilson Stephens
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The Bright Face of Danger
"'I GIVE YOU ONE CHANCE FOR YOUR LIFE,' SAID I QUICKLY."
CONTENTS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
THE BRIGHT FACE OF DANGER
MONSIEUR HENRI DE LAUNAY SETS OUT ON A JOURNEY
A YOUNG MAN WHO WENT SINGING
"'AND NOW SHE WILL WAIT FOR HIM IN VAIN!'"
WHERE THE LADY WAS
WHO THE LADY WAS
THE CHATEAU DE LAVARDIN
WHAT THE PERIL WAS
"WE WERE INTERRUPTED BY A LOW CRY."
STRANGE DISAPPEARANCES
MATHILDE
THE WINDING STAIRS
"'THE WRETCHES!' SAID THE TORTURED COUNT, STAGGERING TO HIS FEET."
MORE THAN MERE PITY
THE RAT-HOLE AND THE WATER-JUG
THE ROPE LADDER
"I LEAPED OVER THE BED, AND UPON THE MAN WHO WAS TRYING TO STRANGLE THE COUNTESS."
THE PARTING
IN THE FOREST
THE TOWER OF MORLON
THE MERCY OF CAPTAIN FERRAGANT
THE SWORD OF LA TOURNOIRE
"MY FATHER'S THRUSTS BECAME NOW SO QUICK AND CONTINUOUS."
THE MOUSTACHES OF BRIGNAN DE BRIGNAN
AFTERWARDS