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Deputy of Arcis, The
Part 2. Letters Explanatory   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 19. Marie-Gaston To The Comtesse De L'estorade
Honore de Balzac
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       _ PART II LETTERS EXPLANATORY CHAPTER XIX. MARIE-GASTON TO THE COMTESSE DE L'ESTORADE
       Arcis-sur-Aube, May 17, 1839.
       That stupid riot in Paris, the incredible particulars of which we heard this morning by telegraph, came near causing us to lose the election.
       The sub-prefect instantly placarded all over the town the news of this attempt at insurrection--no doubt instigated by the government to affect the elections. "What! elect a democrat!" was repeated everywhere in Arcis, and doubtless elsewhere, "so that his speeches in the Chamber may be made the ammunition of insurgents!"
       That argument threw our phalanx into disorder and hesitation. But the idea occurred to Jacques Bricheteau to turn the danger itself to good account, and he hastily printed on a sheet of paper and distributed all over the town in enormous quantities the following notice:--
       A bloody riot took place yesterday in Paris. Questioned as to the employment of such guilty and desperate means of opposition, one of our candidates, Monsieur de Sallenauve, answered thus: "Riots will always be found to serve the interests of the government; for this reason the police are invariably accused of inciting them. True resistance, that which I stand for, will always be legal resistance, pursued by legal means, by the press, by the tribune, and with Patience--that great force granted to the oppressed and to the vanquished."
       These words, you will remember, madame, were those in which Sallenauve answered his questioners at the preparatory meeting. Then followed in large letters:--
       THE RIOT HAS BEEN SUPPRESSED. WHO WILL PROFIT BY IT?
       That sheet of paper did marvels; it completely foiled the efforts of Monsieur de Trailles, who, throwing off the mask, had spent his day in perorating, in white gloves, on the market-place and from the steps of the electoral college.
       This evening the result is known; namely, two hundred and one votes cast: two for Beauvisage; twenty-nine for Simon Giguet; one hundred and seventy for Sallenauve.
       Consequently, Monsieur Charles de Sallenauve is proclaimed Deputy. _
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本书目录

Part 1. The Election
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 1. All Elections Begin With A Bustle
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 2. Revolt Of A Liberal Rotten-Borough
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 3. Opposition Defines Itself
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 4. The First Parliamentary Tempest
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 5. The Perplexities Of The Government In Arcis
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 6. The Campaign Of 1814 From The Hosiery Point Of View
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 7. The Beauvisage Family
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 8. In Which The Dot, One Of The Heroines Of This History, Appears
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 9. A Stranger
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 10. The Revelations Of An Opera-Glass
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 11. In Which The Candidate Begins To Lose Votes
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 12. The Salon Of Madame D'espard
   Part 1. The Election - Chapter 13. Preface Before Lettering
Part 2. Letters Explanatory
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 1. The Comte De L'estorade To Monsieur Marie-Gaston
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 2. The Comtesse De L'estorade To Madame Octave De Camps
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 3. The Comte De L'estorade To Monsieur Marie-Gaston
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 4. The Comtesse De L'estoraade To Madame Octave De Camps
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 5. The Comtesse De L'estorade To Madame Octave De Camps
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 6. The Comtesse De L'estorade To Madame Octave De Camps
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 7. The Comtesse De L'estorade To Madame Octave De Camps
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 8. The Comtesse De L'estorade To Madame Octave De Camps
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 9. Dorlange To Marie-Gaston
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 10. Dorlange To Marie-Gaston
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 11. The Comtesse De L'estorade To Madame Octave De Camps
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 12. Dorlange To Marie-Gaston
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 13. Dorlange To Marie-Gaston
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 14. Marie-Gaston To Madame La Comtesse De L'estorade
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 15. Marie-Gaston To The Comtesse De L'estorade
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 16. Marie-Gaston To The Comtesse De L'estorade
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 17. Marie-Gaston To Madame La Comtesse De L'estorade
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 18. Charles De Sallenauve To The Comtesse De L'estorade
   Part 2. Letters Explanatory - Chapter 19. Marie-Gaston To The Comtesse De L'estorade
Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve
   Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve - Chapter 1. The Sorrows Of Monsieur De Trailles
   Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve - Chapter 2. A Conversation Between Eleven O'clock And Midnight
   Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve - Chapter 3. A Minister's Morning
   Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve - Chapter 4. A Catechism
   Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve - Chapter 5. Children
   Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve - Chapter 6. Curiosity That Came Within An Ace Of Being Fatal
   Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve - Chapter 7. The Way To Manage Political Intrigues
   Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve - Chapter 8. Some Old Acquaintances
   Part 3. Monsieur De Sallenauve - Chapter 9. In The Chamber