Old Creole Days eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 263 pages of information about Old Creole Days.

Old Creole Days eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 263 pages of information about Old Creole Days.

The sun broke through a clearing sky, and Baptiste pronounced it good for luck.  There had been a hurricane in the night.  The weed-grown tile-roofs were still dripping, and from lofty brick and low adobe walls a rising steam responded to the summer sunlight.  Up-street, and across the Rue du Canal, one could get glimpses of the gardens in Faubourg Ste.-Marie standing in silent wretchedness, so many tearful Lucretias, tattered victims of the storm.  Short remnants of the wind now and then came down the narrow street in erratic puffs heavily laden with odors of broken boughs and torn flowers, skimmed the little pools of rain-water in the deep ruts of the unpaved street, and suddenly went away to nothing, like a juggler’s butterflies or a young man’s money.

It was very picturesque, the Rue Royale.  The rich and poor met together.  The locksmith’s swinging key creaked next door to the bank; across the way, crouching, mendicant-like, in the shadow of a great importing-house, was the mud laboratory of the mender of broken combs.  Light balconies overhung the rows of showy shops and stores open for trade this Sunday morning, and pretty Latin faces of the higher class glanced over their savagely-pronged railings upon the passers below.  At some windows hung lace certains, flannel duds at some, and at others only the scraping and sighing one-hinged shutter groaning toward Paris after its neglectful master.

M. St.-Ange stood looking up and down the street for nearly an hour.  But few ladies, only the inveterate mass-goers, were out.  About the entrance of the frequent cafes the masculine gentility stood leaning on canes, with which now one and now another beckoned to Jules, some even adding pantomimic hints of the social cup.

M. St.-Ange remarked to his servant without turning his head that somehow he felt sure he should soon return those bons that the mulatto had lent him.

“What will you do with them?”

“Me!” said Baptiste, quickly; “I will go and see the bull-fight in the Place Congo.”

“There is to be a bull-fight?  But where is M. Cayetano?”

“Ah, got all his affairs wet in the tornado.  Instead of his circus, they are to have a bull-fight—­not an ordinary bull-fight with sick horses, but a buffalo-and-tiger fight.  I would not miss it”—­

Two or three persons ran to the opposite corner, and commenced striking at something with their canes.  Others followed.  Can M. St.-Ange and servant, who hasten forward—­can the Creoles, Cubans, Spaniards, San Domingo refugees, and other loungers—­can they hope it is a fight?  They hurry forward.  Is a man in a fit?  The crowd pours in from the side-streets.  Have they killed a so-long snake?  Bareheaded shopmen leave their wives, who stand upon chairs.  The crowd huddles and packs.  Those on the outside make little leaps into the air, trying to be tall.

“What is the matter?”

“Have they caught a real live rat?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Old Creole Days from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.