A Modern Chronicle — Complete
Honora Leffingwell is the original name of our heroine. She was born in the last quarter of the Nineteenth Century, at Nice, in France, and she spent the early years of her life in St. Louis, a somewhat conservative old city on the banks of the Mississippi River. Her father was Randolph Leffingwell, and he died in the early flower of his manhood, while filling with a grace that many remember the post of United States Consul at Nice. As a linguist he was a phenomenon, and his photograph in the tortoise-shell frame proves indubitably, to anyone acquainted with the fashions of 1870, that he was a master of that subtlest of all arts, dress. He had gentle blood in his veins, which came from Virginia through Kentucky in a coach and six, and he was the equal in appearance and manners of any duke who lingered beside classic seas.
Honora has often pictured to herself a gay villa set high above the curving shore, the amethyst depths shading into emerald, laced with milk-white foam, the vivid colours of the town, the gay costumes; the excursions, the dinner-parties presided over by the immaculate young consul in three languages, and the guests chosen from the haute noblesse of Europe. Such was the vision in her youthful mind, added to by degrees as she grew into young-ladyhood and surreptitiously became familiar with the writings of Ouida and the Duchess, and other literature of an educating cosmopolitan nature.
Honora's biography should undoubtedly contain a sketch of Mrs. Randolph Leffingwell. Beauty and dash and a knowledge of how to seat a table seem to have been the lady's chief characteristics; the only daughter of a carefully dressed and carefully, preserved widower, likewise a linguist,—whose super-refined tastes and the limited straits to which he, the remaining scion of an old Southern family, had been reduced by a gentlemanly contempt for money, led him 'to choose Paris rather than New York as a place of residence. One of the occasional and carefully planned trips to the Riviera proved fatal to the beautiful but reckless Myrtle Allison. She, who might have chosen counts or dukes from the Tagus to the Danube, or even crossed the Channel; took the dashing but impecunious American consul, with a faith in his future that was sublime. Without going over too carefully the upward path which led to the post of their country's representative at the court of St. James, neither had the slightest doubt that Randolph Leffingwell would tread it.
Winston Churchill
A MODERN CHRONICLE
A MODERN CHRONICLE
CHAPTER II. PERDITA RECALLED
CHAPTER III. CONCERNING PROVIDENCE
CHAPTER IV. OF TEMPERAMENT
CHAPTER V. IN WHICH PROVIDENCE BEEPS FAITH
CHAPTER VI. HONORA HAS A GLIMPSE OF THE WORLD
Volume 2.
CHAPTER VII. THE OLYMPIAN ORDER
CHAPTER VIII. A CHAPTER OF CONQUESTS
CHAPTER IX. IN WHICH THE VICOMTE CONTINUES HIS STUDIES
CHAPTER X. IN WHICH HONORA WIDENS HER HORIZON
CHAPTER XI. WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN
CHAPTER XII. WHICH CONTAINS A SURPRISE FOR MRS. HOLT
BOOK II. Volume 3.
CHAPTER I. SO LONG AS YE BOTH SHALL LIVE!
CHAPTER II. “STAFFORD PARK”
CHAPTER III. THE GREAT UNATTACHED
CHAPTER IV. THE NEW DOCTRINE
CHAPTER V. QUICKSANDS
CHAPTER VI. GAD AND MENI.
Volume 4.
CHAPTER VII. OF CERTAIN DELICATE MATTERS
CHAPTER VIII. OF MENTAL PROCESSES—FEMININE AND INSOLUBLE
CHAPTER IX. INTRODUCING A REVOLUTIONIZING VEHICLE
CHAPTER X. ON THE ART OF LION TAMING
CHAPTER XI. CONTAINING SOME REVELATIONS
BOOK III.
CHAPTER I. ASCENDI.
CHAPTER II. THE PATH OF PHILANTHROPY
CHAPTER III. VINELAND
CHAPTER IV. THE VIKING
CHAPTER V. THE SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST
Volume 6.
CHAPTER VI. CLIO, OR THALIA?
CHAPTER VII. “LIBERTY, AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS”
CHAPTER VIII. IN WHICH THE LAW BETRAYS A HEART
CHAPTER IX. WYLIE STREET
CHAPTER X. THE PRICE OF FREEDOM
Volume 7.
CHAPTER XI. IN WHICH IT IS ALL DONE OVER AGAIN
CHAPTER XII. THE ENTRANCE INTO EDEN
CHAPTER XIII. OF THE WORLD BEYOND THE GATES
CHAPTER XIV. CONTAINING PHILOSOPHY FROM MR. GRAINGER
CHAPTER XV. THE PILLARS OF SOCIETY
Volume 8.
CHAPTER XVI. IN WHICH A MIRROR IS HELD UP
CHAPTER XVII. THE RENEWAL OF AN ANCIENT HOSPITALITY
CHAPTER XVIII. IN WHICH MR. ERWIN SEEK PARIS
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