The Project Gutenberg EBook of Bel Ami, by Henri Rene Guy de Maupassant
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Title: Bel Ami
Author: Henri Rene Guy de Maupassant
Posting Date: May 13, 2009 [EBook #3733]
Release Date: February, 2003
First Posted: August 13, 2001
Language: English
Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team. HTML version by Al Haines.
BEL AMI
OR
THE HISTORY OF A SCOUNDREL
A NOVEL
BY
GUY DE MAUPASSANT
CHAPTER I. | POVERTY |
CHAPTER II. | MADAME FORESTIER |
CHAPTER III. | FIRST ATTEMPTS |
CHAPTER IV. | DUROY LEARNS SOMETHING |
CHAPTER V. | THE FIRST INTRIGUE |
CHAPTER VI. | A STEP UPWARD |
CHAPTER VII. | A DUEL WITH AN END |
CHAPTER VIII. | DEATH AND A PROPOSAL |
CHAPTER IX. | MARRIAGE |
CHAPTER X. | JEALOUSY |
CHAPTER XI. | MADAME WALTER TAKES A HAND |
CHAPTER XII. | A MEETING AND THE RESULT |
CHAPTER XIII. | MADAME MARELLE |
CHAPTER XIV. | THE WILL |
CHAPTER XV. | SUZANNE |
CHAPTER XVI. | DIVORCE |
CHAPTER XVII. | THE FINAL PLOT |
CHAPTER XVIII. | ATTAINMENT |
BEL-AMI
CHAPTER I.
POVERTY
After changing his five-franc piece Georges Duroy left the restaurant. He twisted his mustache in military style and cast a rapid, sweeping glance upon the diners, among whom were three saleswomen, an untidy music-teacher of uncertain age, and two women with their husbands.
When he reached the sidewalk, he paused to consider what route he should take. It was the twenty-eighth of June and he had only three francs in his pocket to last him the remainder of the month. That meant two dinners and no lunches, or two lunches and no dinners, according to choice. As he pondered upon this unpleasant state of affairs, he sauntered down Rue Notre Dame de Lorette, preserving his military air and carriage, and rudely jostled the people upon the streets in order to clear a path for himself. He appeared to be hostile to the passers-by, and even to the houses, the entire city.
Tall, well-built, fair, with blue eyes, a curled mustache, hair naturally wavy and parted in the middle, he recalled the hero of the popular romances.
It was one of those sultry, Parisian evenings when not a breath of air is stirring; the sewers exhaled poisonous gases and the restaurants the disagreeable odors of cooking and of kindred smells. Porters in their shirt-sleeves, astride their chairs, smoked their pipes at the carriage gates, and pedestrians strolled leisurely along, hats in hand.
When Georges Duroy reached the boulevard he halted again, undecided as to which road to choose. Finally he turned toward the Madeleine and followed the tide of people.
The large, well-patronized cafes tempted Duroy, but were he to drink only two glasses of beer in an evening, farewell to the meager supper the following night! Yet he said to himself: "I will take a glass at the Americain. By Jove, I am thirsty."