[The Honor of the Name by Emile Gaboriau]@TWC D-Link bookThe Honor of the Name CHAPTER XIII 6/19
A nattering distinction, which he seldom lavished upon his visitors.
The marquis was long rather than tall, and very solemn in deportment.
The head that surmounted his angular form was remarkably small, a characteristic of his race, and covered with thin, glossy black hair, and lighted by cold, round black eyes. The pride that becomes a gentleman, and the humility that befits a Christian, were continually at war with each other in his countenance. He pressed the hands of M.de Sairmeuse and Martial, overwhelming them with compliments uttered in a thin, rather nasal voice, which, issuing from his immense body, was as astonishing as the sound of a flute issuing from the pipes of an orphicleide would be. "At last you have come," he said; "we were waiting for you before beginning our deliberations upon a very grave, and also very delicate matter.
We are thinking of addressing a petition to His Majesty.
The nobility, who have suffered so much during the Revolution, have a right to expect ample compensation.
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