Quotation from: The Arrow of Gold

Written by: Joseph Conrad


The Marquis of Villarel had of course gone long before. The man
who was there was another type of Carlist altogether, and his
temperament was that of a trader. He was the chief purveyor of the
Legitimist armies, an honest broker of stores, and enjoyed a great
reputation for cleverness. His important task kept him, of course,
in France, but his young wife, whose beauty and devotion to her
King were well known, represented him worthily at Headquarters,
where his own appearances were extremely rare. The dissimilar but
united loyalties of those two people had been rewarded by the title
of baron and the ribbon of some order or other. The gossip of the
Legitimist circles appreciated those favours with smiling
indulgence. He was the man who had been so distressed and
frightened by Dona Rita's first visit to Tolosa. He had an extreme
regard for his wife. And in that sphere of clashing arms and
unceasing intrigue nobody would have smiled then at his agitation
if the man himself hadn't been somewhat grotesque.

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