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The Husbands of Edith

George Barr McCutcheon

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CHAPTER II THE SISTER-IN-LAW.

The Gare de l'Est was thronged with people when Brock appeared, fully half an hour before departing time. In no little dismay, he found himself wondering if the whole of Paris was going away or, on the other hand, if the rest of the continent was arriving. He felt a fool in Medcroft's unspeakable checked suit; and the eyeglass was a much more obstinate, untractable thing than he had even suspected it could be. The right side of his face was in a condition of semi-paralysis due to the muscular exactions required; he had a sickening fear that the scowl that marked his brow was destined to form a perpetual alliance with the smirk at the corner of his nose, forever destroying the symmetry of his face. If one who has not the proper facial construction will but attempt the feat of holding a monocle in place for unbroken hours, he may come to appreciate at least one of the trials which beset poor Brock.Read More

Community Reviews

Charming little comedy. Not much substance, but that’s not really the point of McCutcheon’s books. My copy was a 1908 edition with lovely green decoration in the margins of every page. That may very well end up being the thing I best remember about this book.

“The Husbands of Edith” is not, as I suspected it might be, about a woman who is married several times. The Edith of the title is in fact happily married to one man, however, the man in question needs to be in two places at one, thus he asks a good friend whom he meets in Paris to deputise for him s