Page:Chandos, Ouida volume 1.djvu/24

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

14

CHANDOS

mutual compliment, to go through all the old routine with well-trained faces, befitting the arena.

It was April. The last carriages had rolled out by the Corner, the last hacks paced out of the Ride, the last sunlight was fading ; epicures were reflecting on their club-dinners, beauties were studying the contents of their jewel-boxes, the one enjoying a matelote, the other a conquest, in dreamy anticipation ; chandeliers were being lit for political receptions, where it would be a three hours’ campaign to crush up the stairs ; and members, waiting to go in on Supply, were improving their minds by discussing a new dancer’s ankles, and the extraordinary scratching of Lord of the Isles for the Guineas. The West, in a word, was beginning its Business, which is Pleasure; while the East laid aside its Pleasure, which is Business; and it was near eight o’clock on a spring night in London.

Half a hundred entertainments waited for his selection ; all the loveliest women, of mondes proper and improper, were calculating their chances of securing his preference; every sort of intellectual or material pleasure waited for him as utterly as they ever waited for Sulla when the rose-wreaths were on his hair, and Quintus Roscius ready with his ripest wit; and for him, as truly as for Sulla, "Felix" might have described him as the darling of the gods; yet, alone in his house in Park-lane, a man lay in idleness and ease, indolently smoking a narghilé from a great silver basin of rose-water. A stray sunbeam