Unfortunately she had mislaid or lost Mademoiselle Reisz's card, and looking up her address in the city
directory, she found that the woman lived on Bienville Street, some distance away.
Their theory, suitable for primitive and peaceful periods of history, has the inconvenience- in application to complex and stormy periods in the life of nations during which various powers arise simultaneously and struggle with one another- that a Legitimist historian will prove that the National Convention, the
Directory, and Bonaparte were mere infringers of the true power, while a Republican and a Bonapartist will prove: the one that the Convention and the other that the Empire was the real power, and that all the others were violations of power.
The servant was sent at once to the nearest stationer's to borrow a
Directory. She returned with the book just as we sat down to dinner.
Thence to a public library, but could find no satisfactory Schlegel in the
directory. On the morrow he searched again.
We looked it out in the
directory. The only hotel of that name was in the Rue des Moines.
I procured a local
directory, put fifty tickets in my pocket, dressed myself in nankeen pantaloons and a sky-blue coat (then the height of fashion), and set forth to tout for dancers among all the members of the genteel population, who, not being notorious Puritans, had also not been so obliging as to take tickets for the ball.
From my small medical shelf I took down the Medical
Directory and turned up the name.
A New York
directory and an atlas were at his elbow.
At ten o'clock he arose and pored over the city
directory. Then he put on his shoes, took a cab, and departed into the night.
It was the heart of a most respectable rich man, whose name is certain to be found in the
Directory.
This anticipation was strictly verified, for Kit had had his dinner, and his tea, and had read all the lighter matter in the Law-List, and the Post-Office
Directory, and had fallen asleep a great many times, before the gentleman whom he had seen before, came in; which he did at last in a very great hurry.
The chevalier allowed two watch-chains to hang parallel to each other from each of his waistcoat pockets,--another vestige of the eighteenth century, which the Incroyables had not disdained to use under the
Directory. This transition costume, uniting as it did two centuries, was worn by the chevalier with the high-bred grace of an old French marquis, the secret of which is lost to France since the day when Fleury, Mole's last pupil, vanished.