218. The Dawn of Love - The Eternal Collection
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83 pages
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Description

Handsome, popular and much in demand in the Social world, Alstone, Duke of Windlemere is bored with life and, seeking entertainment he is drawn into a foolhardy wager with his friend Sir Hugo Benson. The bet concerns whether they can successfully replicate the experiment in Shaw’s Pygmalion in which Eliza Doolittle is trained to pass as a ‘lady’ in Society.Unbeknown to her, Sir Hugo’s niece, the beautiful, innocent orphan Lorena – whom he summons from her French Convent school. On arrival with her uncle at the Duke’s palatial family home, Mere, Lorena is overawed by her surroundings and by the dashing Duke. And for his part, the Duke is captivated by Lorena’s intelligence, honesty and loveliness. Not only is this young capable, it seems, of being accepted by his snobbish friends. She also inspires adoration – and even love. "Barbara Cartland was the world’s most prolific novelist who wrote an amazing 723 books in her lifetime, of which no less than 644 were romantic novels with worldwide sales of over 1 billion copies and her books were translated into 36 different languages.As well as romantic novels, she wrote historical biographies, 6 autobiographies, theatrical plays and books of advice on life, love, vitamins and cookery.She wrote her first book at the age of 21 and it was called Jigsaw. It became an immediate bestseller and sold 100,000 copies in hardback in England and all over Europe in translation.Between the ages of 77 and 97 she increased her output and wrote an incredible 400 romances as the demand for her romances was so strong all over the world.She wrote her last book at the age of 97 and it was entitled perhaps prophetically The Way to Heaven. Her books have always been immensely popular in the United States where in 1976 her current books were at numbers 1 & 2 in the B. Dalton bestsellers list, a feat never achieved before or since by any author.Barbara Cartland became a legend in her own lifetime and will be best remembered for her wonderful romantic novels so loved by her millions of readers throughout the world, who have always collected her books to read again and again, especially when they feel miserable or depressed.Her books will always be treasured for their moral message, her pure and innocent heroines, her handsome and dashing heroes, her blissful happy endings and above all for her belief that the power of love is more important than anything else in everyone’s life."

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Publié par
Date de parution 14 juin 2019
Nombre de lectures 37
EAN13 9781788671774
Langue English

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Author’s Note
George Bernard Shaw published his play,Pygmalion, in 1913. This story of a flower girl trained by a phonetician to pass as a lady, although a most effective satire upon the English class system, is less a play of ideas than are Shaw’s other major plays. Its rich human content made it a favourite with the public both as a musical on the stage and on the screen with Rex Harrison and Audrey Hepburn in the leading parts. Cecil Beaton’s exquisite decor and dresses greatly contributed to its success and Eliza Doolittle is one of Shaw’s unforgettable personalities.
Chapter One ~ 1913
The Honourable Peregrine Gillingham jumped out of the hansom carriage, paid the cabby and walked up the steps of Windlemere House. The front door was already open and he handed his tall hat to a footman who wore a powdered wig and then he nodded to the butler. “Good evening, Dawkins.” “Good evening, sir.” “Is His Grace in the library?” “Yes, sir, he’s been waiting for nearly an hour.” There was a touch of rebuke in the butler’s well-modulated voice and Peregrine smiled to himself as he followed the servant’s rather pompous tread across the marble hall. Windlemere House of all the magnificent mansions in Park Lane was the most outstanding. It had been built by the Duke’s grandfather and was the early Victorians’ idea of what a Ducal house should look like. Fortunately there was still an architectural hangover from the Georgian period, so it had been designed in better taste than had many of its neighbours. But Peregrine was not concerned with Windlemere House, which he had seen often enough. He was only hoping that Alstone would not be in one of his disagreeable moods because he was late. The Duke had an awe-inspiring effect on friend and foe alike and even Peregrine, who was one of his closest friends, found that when he withdrew into an icy reserve to show his disapproval, it was distinctly depressing. “Mr. Peregrine Gillingham, Your Grace,” Dawkins announced at the library door and the Duke, who was readingThe Times, looked up from the newspaper to say, “Perry! Why the devil are you so late?” “I am sorry, Alstone,” his friend replied, advancing towards him. “My father sent for me unexpectedly and you know how long-winded he can be.” The Duke threw down the newspaper. “I suppose I must accept that as an excuse, as I well know that there is no stopping your father once he gets going on a subject that interests him.” “He was not particularly interested in anything,” Perry replied ruefully, “only annoyed.” “Money?” the Duke questioned. “Of course. What else does my father ever talk to me about?” “You should not be so extravagant!” “That is all very well for you – ” Perry began and then, realising that the Duke was teasing him, he laughed. “All right, I have been slightly overdoing it lately, but you know as well as I do that Molly is extremely expensive and very much more so since you took an interest in her.” “I did not spoil the market, as you so often tell me I do, for long,” the Duke replied. “Long enough,” Perry retorted. “You gave her a taste not only for caviar and champagne but for diamonds too and my allowance from my father has never been able to stretch that far.” He groaned before he added, “It’s hell being a younger son, a situation you have never had to face.” “I also have my difficulties,” the Duke pointed out. “It bewilders me to think what they can possibly be.” As Perry spoke, he accepted a glass of champagne from a silver tray presented to him by a footman. The Duke also took a glass and then the bottle of champagne, which Dawkins carried, was placed in a magnificent silver wine cooler filled with ice before the two servants withdrew. “You were telling me about your troubles,” the Duke said with a faint smile. “Would you like to listen to mine?”
“I would be delighted, but I have always imagined that you had none.” “Mine are not financial but mental,” the Duke replied. “The truth is, Perry, I was thinking before you arrived that I am bored!” Peregrine sat upright. “My God, Alstone!” he exclaimed, “if ever I heard a preposterous statement, that is the tallest. You, bored? You, who have everything? I don’t believe it.” “It’s true,” the Duke answered, “and I blame you because by being late you have made me realise it.” “What in God’s name have you to be bored about?” Perry asked. “You are the richest man in the British Isles and the biggest landowner, you own the finest and most outstanding horses and you have the pick of every ‘fair charmer’ in London who takes your fancy!” He drew in his breath before he continued, “And we all know the answer to that, it’s because you are sodamnedgood-looking and the hero of any maiden’s dreams!” “Shut up, Perry, you make me feel sick,” the Duke interposed. “It’s nothing to what you make me feel by saying you are bored. Shall I go on with a list of the rest of your possessions? Your yacht, yourChâteau in France with the best boar hunting in Europe, your salmon river in Scotland – ” “Keep quiet!” the Duke ordered him. “What I am talking about is something quite different.” “In what way?” “I think I can best express it as a need for mental stimulation,” the Duke said slowly. “The trouble is that everything I do has a certain familiarity about it, which completely eliminates any element of surprise or of anticipation.” He was speaking unexpectedly seriously and his friend looked at him in perplexity. Perry was in fact quite intelligent when he wanted to be. He realised now that the Duke was not joking or speaking idly but clearly pursuing an unusual and serious train of thought. “I was thinking last night when we were playing poker,” the Duke went on, “that we all knew one another too well for the game to be really amusing. I know immediately when Archie has a good hand because his eyes flicker, Charles’s lips tighten when he has a bad one and you click your fingers when you draw to a straight flush.” Dammit all, Alstone, that is almost cheating!” Perry protested. “Oh the contrary, it is simply being observant and thus knowing for sure what is going to happen, which I may add applies also to my other interests.” “I suppose by that you are referring to Daisy,” Perry hazarded. “I have felt for some time that she was beginning to get on your nerves.” He thought for a moment that he had gone too far. The Duke was always very reserved when it came to anybody talking of his love affairs. But tonight he was in a confiding mood. “Daisy is without exception the most beautiful woman in London, but even beauty can have a certain sameness about it.” “I agree,” Perry replied. He thought as he spoke that he was not surprised that the Duke was growing bored with the Countess of Hellingford. There was no doubt about her beauty, which was breathtaking when you first saw her, but she was also inclined to be possessive and at times bossy and, to be honest, he was surprised that the Duke had tolerated her for as long as he had. “What about a trip abroad?” he asked aloud. “Where shall I go?” the Duke enquired. “Another thing I was considering last night is that I have visited nearly all the most attractive places in the world, so unless I am prepared to cross the Gobi Desert or climb Mount Everest, there is not much left for me to do.” Perry laughed. “It really is a case of ‘poor little rich boy’!” “Exactly,” the Duke agreed disarmingly. “And so I am asking you for suggestions.”
“For Goodness sake, confine your enquiries to me,” Perry said. “You know what a furore it would cause if you said anything like this to the Gang. They are very content with things as they are.” The Duke’s lips curved in a cynical smile. He was well aware that what Perry called ‘the Gang’ was a collection of his friends who depended on him for their racing, fishing, yachting, shooting and every other entertainment that was provided so generously on the Duke’s estates and in the many houses he possessed in the countryside. It had become almost a habit for him to entertain the same people every weekend at Mere, his large and extremely fine house in Surrey. His special coterie of friends looked on it so much as part of their existence that the same bedrooms were always kept ready for them and they even left a number of their personal possessions behind to save the bother of taking them back to London. If the Duke intended to change his way of life, Perry thought, there would certainly be weeping and wailing amongst what he secretly called ‘hangers-on’ and he had no wish to be there to listen to it. “Where are you thinking of going?” he queried. “I am not going anywhere, as far as I know,” the Duke replied. “I am just asking you what I should do and what I might find interesting instead of sitting waiting as I am now and feeling as if I am becoming fossilised.” “That is the last thing you will ever be,” Perry exclaimed. “At the same time I understand what you are saying to me and I shall try to think of a solution.” “All I want is something new, something that is different from the ordinary pattern, that makes my life at the moment seem as dull and unruffled as a duck pond.” “Would you change places with me?” Perry asked. “I can assure you there would be a great deal of ruffle if you had to listen to my father croaking on about responsibility, extravagance and my aimless life that shows that I am nothing but a waster!” The Duke laughed. “Your father has always resented your being a friend of mine. He does not think I take my responsibilities seriously enough, as he told my father almost before I was old enough to wear long trousers.” “If he could hear you at the moment, he would realise that you are taking everything fartoo seriously. Enjoy yourself, Alstone! Or why not try marriage? That would certainly be a change!” There was for a moment an ominous silence. Then the Duke said, “You well know the answer to that. Never again!Never!” “That is the most ridiculous statement you have ever made,” Perry responded. “Of course you have to marry sometime. What about an heir?” “My brother, Thomas, has three sons.” “That is not the same as having one yourself. It would amuse you to teach your own boy to ride and shoot and to know that he would carry on the family traditions.” “It is a picture that does not appeal to me in the slightest,” the Duke stipulated firmly. “When Elaine was killed, I had no feeling of grief and I can assure you that, having escaped the noose of matrimony once, I have no wish to put the rope round my neck for a second time.” Perry did not answer. He was remembering that the Duke had been very young when his father arranged for him to marry the daughter of another Duke. From a social point of view it had been an admirable alliance, but the bride and bridegroom had quarrelled from the moment they had left the Church and, when Alstone’s wife was killed while out hunting, everyone expected him to marry again. From that moment on, however, he made it clear that his intentions where women were concerned were strictly dishonourable. Surrounded and pursued by the loveliest and most sophisticated women in Society, he chose to amuse himself always with those who were married and had complacent husbands, most of whom were years older than himself. Only recently, now that he was thirty-three, had the Duke chosen as his companions beauties
who were near his own age or younger, but they too were always already married and it is doubtful if he ever met a marriageable girl or spoke to one. It was the traditional pattern set by the late Monarch, King Edward VII, with the ‘Marlborough House Set’ at the end of the last century. Once a beautiful woman had been married for some years and presented her husband with an heir then it was more or less expected that she should enjoy a love affair, provided that it was discreet and never in any way caused a scandal. King Edward’s liaisons, which continued up to the day of his death, were, of course, known to his close friends, but outside the Royal circle, the presence of the beautiful Queen Alexandra on every public occasion protected him even from the newspapers. Perry was aware that his friend the Duke, while described as a ‘lady killer’ by his friends, was a paragon of virtue to the outside world. “Even if you are not at present inclined towards matrimony,” he said now, “we shall still have to look round for someone suitable to attract your interest.” “I doubt if you will find anyone,” the Duke said gloomily. “I have begun to believe that they are all alike from whatever stratum of Society they may come.” He rose to his feet to walk across the room and poured himself another glass of champagne and, as he did so, he said, “If you think Molly is extravagant, you have no idea what I am expected to provide.” “You can afford it.” “Yes, but it is decidedly irritating when you know that a woman’s real interest in you is that you are a bottomless cornucopia.” The Duke spoke bitterly and Perry laughed as he said, “I remember an old uncle of mine saying to me once, ‘at my age I expect to pay’. By altering the text a little, I can tell you that as a Duke you cannot expect anything for nothing.” The Duke did not reply and Perry went on, “Stop thinking like an idealist and wanting to be loved for yourself. Just accept what the Gods have given you and be grateful for it. Incidentally, if any of the Gang heard this conversation between us, they would not believe it!” The Duke chuckled. “If it will please you, Perry, I will admit that you are right. I am making a fool of myself. We had better go and join the others. I expect they will have arrived by now.” As he spoke, he looked at the clock over the mantelpiece and saw that it was a quarter-to-eight. “Why do we not go out after dinner?” Perry suggested. “There are masses of parties that I expect we have all been invited to. Or what about seeing the last act at theGaiety?” “I have already seen it three times,” the Duke muttered. “There are other theatres.” “We are dining too late for that, but if you like we could drop in atRomano’slater and see if there is anybody there worth looking at.” “All right,” Perry agreed, “but I should not mention it in front of Archie and the rest or they will all want to come too.” “No, we will go alone,” the Duke promised. He put down his empty glass and they walked along the lofty passage from the library to the Blue Drawing Room, where the Duke’s friends congregated before dinner. Tonight it was to be a stag party for a number of the guests had come from the races and they wanted to talk about horses, which invariably bored the opposite sex. There were six men in the Blue Drawing Room and they all had glasses in their hands as the Duke and Perry came into the room. “Hello, Alstone,” they all chorused, lifting their glasses. “We were beginning to think you had forgotten us.” “No, I have not,” the Duke replied to them amiably. “Did you have a good day?” A babble of voices answered him and he learnt that as far as the betting went, it had been a disaster, the favourites having been beaten at the post by outsiders, which nobody had thought to
back. “I am prepared to drown my sorrows,” Lord Carnforth said. “But before I do so, I want your opinion, Alstone, on an argument I was having with Hugo when you came into the room.” The Duke took another glass of champagne and, seating himself in a chair, answered, “I am prepared to adjudicate. What is the subject that you disagree on?” “We were talking about this new play by George Bernard Shaw,” Sir Hugo Benson said. “It’s calledPygmalion.Have you seen it?” “No,” the Duke replied. “What is it about?” “It is about a phonetician who trains a flower girl from Covent Garden so cleverly that when she can speak correctly and is well-dressed, he introduces her into Society without anyone being suspicious of her.” “Anything more ridiculous I have never heard!” Lord Carnforth expostulated. “I have rather admired Shaw in the past, because at least he has some interesting ideas, but this is sheer fantasy and an insult to the public’s intelligence.” “That is your opinion,” Hugo Benson replied. “I say that given a brilliant teacher, a girl young enough to be pliable could possibly, if she had enough intelligence, deceive at any rate a large number of people.” “They would have to be half-witted or morons!” Archie Carnforth exclaimed. “Do you imagine for one moment that any of us could be taken in by an outsider? No, of course not.” “I suppose it might depend on how good-looking the girl was and how well-dressed,” Perry suggested. “We are not talking about prostitutes,” Archie Carnforth replied. “We are talking about making a young girl from the gutter deceive intelligent people into believing that she is a Lady of Quality. That is the plot of Shaw’s play and I think it’s ridiculous!” “I rather agree with you,” one of the other guests remarked. “You know as well as I do that in any Society it is easy to make gaffes that are exceedingly revealing to those in the know.” “What do you mean by that?” someone enquired. “Well, take a for instance,” Archie Carnforth interposed. “Supposing anybody tried to foist some outsider onto us, we would know immediately whether she was genuine or not. It would be like pretending that a paste necklace came from Cartier’s. We would recognise it as false at once. What do you think, Alstone?” “I am inclined to agree with you,” the Duke replied. “At the same time I can understand that Shaw’s play could be interesting and I must go and see it sometime.” “I should not waste your money,” Archie Carnforth said. “The whole thing is rubbish from start to finish!” “I disagree with you,” Hugo Benson said sharply, “for apart from anything else, I think women are so adaptable that like a chameleon they can take their colour from whomever they are with.” “That again is sheer nonsense,” Lord Carnforth said aggressively. “Women have to stick, as they always have, to their own environment, to the people with whom they have ties of blood and brain. Outside that they are helpless and they stand out as obviously as a pimple on the nose.” Hugo rose to his feet. “That is the most damned silly statement I have ever heard!” he boomed. “All through history women have acclimatised themselves and adjusted themselves into Societies that they have been introduced into by circumstances. What is more they have been successful in queening it, literally in some cases, over those who they have associated with,” “I rather agree with Hugo on that,” the Duke remarked. “I doubt if he can substantiate such a statement,” Archie Carnforth said. “But canyou?” another man asked. “Well, look at it this way,” Lord Carnforth replied, “we know one another very well and so do the women whom Alstone entertains as he so generously entertains us. Do you imagine that a stranger with an entirely different background, suddenly thrown in amongst us, would not stand out isolated in a most embarrassing manner and be a crashing bore as far as we were concerned?” “I see what you mean,” someone commented, “they would be out of it. They would not
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