
CHAPTER I. MR. HERMAN MERL
CHAPTER II. MR. MERL
CHAPTER III. A YOUNG DUCHESS AND AN OLD FRIEND
CHAPTER IV. A VERY GREAT FAVOR
CHAPTER V. A LETTER FROM HOME
CHAPTER VI. MR. MERL'S DEPARTURE
CHAPTER VII. THE CLUB
CHAPTER VIII. AN EVENING OF ONE OP THE “THREE DAYS”
CHAPTER IX. SOME CONFESSIONS OF JACK MASSINGBRED
CHAPTER X. HOW ROGUES AGREE!
The story opens with a sweeping portrait of Paris, a city the narrator describes as effortlessly welcoming to strangers. From bustling boulevards to the glittering salons of Place Vendôme, the narrative revels in the city’s light, its cafés, and the endless parade of characters who drift through its streets. Amid this vivid backdrop, a weary young aristocrat watches the world from his window, his melancholy hinted at by tired eyes and a brocaded gown, while a flamboyant newcomer—Mr. Herman Merl, a sharply dressed “Red Jew” with a flair for ostentatious dress— occupies the same space, his gaudy attire and sharp tongue providing a lively contrast.
Their banter over breakfast, laced with jokes about oysters and Chablis, quickly turns to reminiscences of past voyages and promised feasts, hinting at deeper ties and unspoken tensions. As the two men navigate the glitter of Parisian society, the novel promises a witty exploration of identity, ambition, and the delicate dance between appearance and reality in the heart of the French capital.
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (743K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2011-02-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1806–1872
A lively Irish novelist with a gift for wit, adventure, and fast-moving storytelling, he became famous for exuberant tales of soldiers, rogues, and life on the road. His books helped bring a swaggering, humorous version of nineteenth-century Irish and European life to a wide audience.
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