The Lock and Key Library eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 477 pages of information about The Lock and Key Library.

The Lock and Key Library eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 477 pages of information about The Lock and Key Library.

I could form no system to explain the phenomenon.

I had got a riddle to amuse me for the rest of the evening, so I walked upstairs to my chamber.

OVERHEARD

The man who either disdains or fears to walk up a dark entry may be an excellent, good man, and fit for a hundred things, but he will not do to make a sentimental traveler.  I count little of the many things I see pass at broad noonday, in large and open streets; Nature is shy, and hates to act before spectators; but in such an unobservable corner you sometimes see a single short scene of hers worth all the sentiments of a dozen French plays compounded together; and yet they are absolutely fine, and whenever I have a more brilliant affair upon my hands than common, as they suit a preacher just as well as a hero, I generally make my sermon out of them, and for the text, “Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphilia,” is as good as anyone in the Bible.

There is a long, dark passage issuing out from the Opera Comique into a narrow street.  It is trod by a few who humbly wait for a fiacre* or wish to get off quietly o’ foot when the opera is done.  At the end of it, toward the theater, ’tis lighted by a small candle, the light of which is almost lost before you get halfway down, but near the door—­it is more for ornament than use—­you see it as a fixed star of the least magnitude; it burns, but does little good to the world that we know of.

Hackney coach.

In returning [from the opera] along this passage, I discerned, as I approached within five or six paces of the door, two ladies standing arm in arm with their backs against the wall, waiting, as I imagined, for a fiacre.  As they were next the door, I thought they had a prior right, so I edged myself up within a yard or little more of them, and quietly took my stand.  I was in black and scarce seen.

The lady next me was a tall, lean figure of a woman of about thirty-six; the other, of the same size and make of about forty.  There was no mark of wife or widow in any one part of either of them.  They seemed to be two upright vestal sisters, unsapped by caresses, unbroke in upon by tender salutations.  I could have wished to have made them happy.  Their happiness was destined, that night, to come from another quarter.

A low voice with a good turn of expression and sweet cadence at the end of it, begged for a twelve-sous piece between them for the love of heaven.  I thought it singular that a beggar should fix the quota of an alms, and that the sum should be twelve times as much as what is usually given in the dark.  They both seemed astonished at it as much as myself.  “Twelve sous,” said one.  “A twelve-sous piece,” said the other, and made no reply.

The poor man said he knew not how to ask less of ladies of their rank, and bowed down his head to the ground.

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Project Gutenberg
The Lock and Key Library from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.