Caesar or Nothing
CAESAR OR NOTHING by PIO BAROJA _translated from the Spanish by_ LOUIS HOW CONTENTS PROLOGUE PART ONE ROME I THE PARIS-VENTIMIGLIA EXPRESS II AN EXTRAORDINARY FAMILY
been elected a Fellow there, he had become a Tutor there, he had been
Proctor and College Dean there; there, during the long vacation, he
had written his celebrated "Disquisition on the Greek Particles,"
afterwards published in eight octavo volumes; and finally, there he
had been elected Master of his college, in which office, honoured and
respected, he appeared likely to end his days. He was unmarried;
perhaps he had never found time to think of a wife; perhaps he had
never had the courage to propose for one; perhaps he had met with
early crosses and disappointments, and had shrined in his heart a
fair image that should never be displaced. Who knows? for dons are
mortals, and have been undergraduates once.
The little hair he had was of a silvery white, although his eye-brows
retained their black hue; and to judge from the fine fresh-coloured
features and the dark eyes that were now nervously twinkling upon Mr.
Green, Dr. Portman must, in his more youthful days, have had an ample
share of good looks. He was dressed in an old-fashioned reverend
suit of black, with knee-breeches and gaiters, and a massive
watch-seal dangling from under his waistcoat, and was deep in the
study of his favourite particles. He received our hero and his
father both nervously and graciously, and bade them be seated.
"I shall al-ways," he said, in monosyllabic tones, as though he were
reading out of a child's primer, - "I shall al-ways be glad to see any
of the young friends of my old col-lege friend Lar-kyns; and I do
re-joice to be a-ble to serve you, Mis-ter Green; and I hope your
CAESAR OR NOTHING by PIO BAROJA _translated from the Spanish by_ LOUIS HOW CONTENTS PROLOGUE PART ONE ROME I THE PARIS-VENTIMIGLIA EXPRESS II AN EXTRAORDINARY FAMILY