[Saracinesca by F. Marion Crawford]@TWC D-Link book
Saracinesca

CHAPTER II
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He was always elaborately dressed, he was always ready to take a hand at cards, and he was always invited to every party in the season.

He had cultivated with success the science of amusing, and people asked him to dinner in the winter, and to their country houses in the summer.

He had been seen in Paris, and was often seen at Monte Carlo; but his real home and hunting-ground was Rome, where he knew every one and every one knew him.
He had made one or two fruitless attempts to marry young women of American extraction and large fortune; he had not succeeded in satisfying the paternal mind in regard to guarantees, and had consequently been worsted in his endeavours.

Last summer, however, it appeared that he had been favoured with an increase of fortune.

He gave out that an old uncle of his, who had settled in the south of Italy, had died, leaving him a modest competence; and while assuming a narrow band of _crepe_ upon his hat, he had adopted also a somewhat more luxurious mode of living.
Instead of going about on foot or in cabs, he kept a very small coupe, with a very small horse and a diminutive coachman: the whole turn-out was very quiet in appearance, but very serviceable withal.


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