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The Grandissimes
Chapter 8. Signed--Honore Grandissime
George Washington Cable
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       _ CHAPTER VIII. SIGNED--HONORE GRANDISSIME
       On the afternoon of the same day, having decided what he would "do," he started out in search of new quarters. He found nothing then, but next morning came upon a small, single-story building in the rue Royale,--corner of Conti,--which he thought would suit his plans. There were a door and show-window in the rue Royale, two doors in the intersecting street, and a small apartment in the rear which would answer for sleeping, eating, and studying purposes, and which connected with the front apartment by a door in the left-hand corner. This connection he would partially conceal by a prescription-desk. A counter would run lengthwise toward the rue Royale, along the wall opposite the side-doors. Such was the spot that soon became known as "Frowenfeld's Corner."
       The notice "A Louer" directed him to inquire at numero--rue Conde. Here he was ushered through the wicket of a _porte cochere_ into a broad, paved corridor, and up a stair into a large, cool room, and into the presence of a man who seemed, in some respects, the most remarkable figure he had yet seen in this little city of strange people. A strong, clear, olive complexion; features that were faultless (unless a woman-like delicacy, that was yet not effeminate, was a fault); hair _en queue_, the handsomer for its premature streakings of gray; a tall, well knit form, attired in cloth, linen and leather of the utmost fineness; manners Castilian, with a gravity almost oriental,--made him one of those rare masculine figures which, on the public promenade, men look back at and ladies inquire about.
       Now, who might _this_ be? The rent poster had given no name. Even the incurious Frowenfeld would fain guess a little. For a man to be just of this sort, it seemed plain that he must live in an isolated ease upon the unceasing droppings of coupons, rents, and like receivables. Such was the immigrant's first conjecture; and, as with slow, scant questions and answers they made their bargain, every new glance strengthened it; he was evidently a _rentier_. What, then, was his astonishment when Monsieur bent down and made himself Frowenfeld's landlord, by writing what the universal mind esteemed the synonym of enterprise and activity--the name of Honore Grandissime. The landlord did not see, or ignored, his tenant's glance of surprise, and the tenant asked no questions.
       * * * * *
       We may add here an incident which seemed, when it took place, as unimportant as a single fact well could be.
       The little sum that Frowenfeld had inherited from his father had been sadly depleted by the expenses of four funerals; yet he was still able to pay a month's rent in advance, to supply his shop with a scant stock of drugs, to purchase a celestial globe and some scientific apparatus, and to buy a dinner or two of sausages and crackers; but after this there was no necessity of hiding his purse.
       His landlord early contracted a fondness for dropping in upon him, and conversing with him, as best the few and labored English phrases at his command would allow. Frowenfeld soon noticed that he never entered the shop unless its proprietor was alone, never sat down, and always, with the same perfection of dignity that characterized all his movements, departed immediately upon the arrival of any third person. One day, when the landlord was making one of these standing calls,--he always stood' beside a high glass case, on the side of the shop opposite the counter,--he noticed in Joseph's hand a sprig of basil, and spoke of it.
       "You ligue?"
       The tenant did not understand. "You--find--dad--nize?"
       Frowenfeld replied that it had been left by the oversight of a customer, and expressed a liking for its odor.
       "I sand you," said the landlord,--a speech whose meaning Frowenfeld was not sure of until the next morning, when a small, nearly naked black boy, who could not speak a word of English, brought to the apothecary a luxuriant bunch of this basil, growing in a rough box. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. Masked Batteries
Chapter 2. The Fate Of The Immigrant
Chapter 3. "And Who Is My Neighbor?"
Chapter 4. Family Trees
Chapter 5. A Maiden Who Will Not Marry
Chapter 6. Lost Opportunities
Chapter 7. Was It Honore Grandissime?
Chapter 8. Signed--Honore Grandissime
Chapter 9. Illustrating The Tractive Power Of Basil
Chapter 10. "OO Dad Is, 'Sieur Frowenfel'?"
Chapter 11. Sudden Flashes Of Light
Chapter 12. The Philosophe
Chapter 13. A Call From The Rent-Spectre
Chapter 14. Before Sunset
Chapter 15. Rolled In The Dust
Chapter 16. Starlight In The Rue Chartres
Chapter 17. That Night
Chapter 18. New Light Upon Dark Places
Chapter 19. Art And Commerce
Chapter 20. A Very Natural Mistake
Chapter 21. Doctor Keene Recovers His Bullet
Chapter 22. Wars Within The Breast
Chapter 23. Frowenfeld Keeps His Appointment
Chapter 24. Frowenfeld Makes An Argument
Chapter 25. Aurora As A Historian
Chapter 26. A Ride And A Rescue
Chapter 27. The Fete De Grandpere
Chapter 28. The Story Of Bras-Coupe
Chapter 29. The Story Of Bras-Coupe, Continued
Chapter 30. Paralysis
Chapter 31. Another Wound In A New Place
Chapter 32. Interrupted Preliminaries
Chapter 33. Unkindest Cut Of All
Chapter 34. Clotilde As A Surgeon
Chapter 35. "Fo' Wad You Cryne?"
Chapter 36. Aurora's Last Picayune
Chapter 37. Honore Makes Some Confessions
Chapter 38. Tests Of Friendship
Chapter 39. Louisiana States Her Wants
Chapter 40. Frowenfeld Finds Sylvestre
Chapter 41. To Come To The Point
Chapter 42. An Inheritance Of Wrong
Chapter 43. The Eagle Visits The Doves In Their Nest
Chapter 44. Bad For Charlie Keene
Chapter 45. More Reparation
Chapter 46. The Pique-En-Terre Loses One Of Her Crew
Chapter 47. The News
Chapter 48. An Indignant Family And A Smashed Shop
Chapter 49. Over The New Store
Chapter 50. A Proposal Of Marriage
Chapter 51. Business Changes
Chapter 52. Love Lies A-Bleeding
Chapter 53. Frowenfeld At The Grandissime Mansion
Chapter 54. "Cauldron Bubble"
Chapter 55. Caught
Chapter 56. Blood For A Blow
Chapter 57. Voudou Cured
Chapter 58. Dying Words
Chapter 59. Where Some Creole Money Goes
Chapter 60. "All Right"
Chapter 61. "No!"