THE TRANSFORMATION OF PHILIP JETTAN

GEORGETTE HEYER

Bibliographical Note

First publication: Mills & Boon, London, 1923

The original edition was published with the subtitle
A Comedy of Manners,
and the author used the pseudonym Stella Martin.
The book was later published as Powder and Patch,
with Chapter Twenty deleted.


Contents

[One]The House of Jettan
[Two]In Which Is Presented Mistress Cleone Charteris
[Three]Mr. Bancroft Brings Trouble into Little Fittledean
[Four]The Trouble Comes to a Head
[Five] In Which Philip Finds That His Uncle Is More Sympathetic Than His Father
[Six]The Beginning of the Transformation
[Seven]Mr. Bancroft Comes to Paris and Is Annoyed
[Eight]In Which Philip Delivers Himself of a Rondeau
[Nine]Mr. Bancroft Is Enraged
[Ten]In Which a Letter Is Read
[Eleven]Philip Astonishes His Uncle
[Twelve]Philip Plays a Dangerous Game
[Thirteen]Sir Maurice Comes to Town
[Fourteen]The Strange Behaviour of Mistress Cleone
[Fifteen]Lady Malmerstoke on Husbands
[Sixteen]Mistress Cleone Finds There Is No Safety in Numbers
[Seventeen]Mistress Cleone at Her Wits' End
[Eighteen]Philip Takes Charge of the Situation
[Nineteen]Philip Justifies His Chin
[Twenty]Mademoiselle de Chaucheron Rings Down the Curtain