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The Romantic Lady

Michael Arlen

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .ikely enough shades, you'll say, the bedizened and the tortuous, to be joined together even in sentimental discourse about a girl's name, with whom I've already bored you sufficiently...."

"But I haven't met her yet!" I protested actively from my side of the fireplace, in his room in the Beaumont Street nursing home.

Influenza had already gripped and released me, so that I was now in an irritatingly robust state of health in which to visit a less fortunate friend who had succumbed to its second wave; for that second53 wave was more virulent and more treacherous than the first, mocking its victim into partial convalescence and then, with a jeer and a snarl at the ambuscaded wretch, fixing again upon the damaged lungs, so inexorably that there was only the one release. And thus Howard Wentworth, who was thought, even by himself, to have cheated the thing, in the end died; not ten days after that afternoon when I had sat listening to him, as he lo. . . Read More

Community Reviews

he Romantic Lady – The story of a beautiful Italian woman who choses her new husband by inviting a man home and forbidding him to ever see her again.
Fay Richmond – A man finds himself a frequent guest and friend in the house of the beautiful Fay Richmond, engaged to an Italian count, and unable to

In a London of gentlemen’s clubs, society dinners, ‘noted beauties’ and gentleman adventurers, four stories of love are told…

This is not Michael Arlen’s finest hour. His favourite device of tales told at one remove distances the reader from the characters rather than surprising one by the impact of

Let's just say I won't be seeking out anything else by this author. He seems to know a lot more about overgrown public schoolboys than about women.