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day." "Yesterday! I do not want it." "The milk is very good." "Milk! I never drink any. Make me a cup of fresh coffee without milk." "Without milk! Well, sir, we never make coffee but in the afternoon. Would you like a good bavaroise, or a decanter of orgeat?" "Yes, give me the orgeat." I find that beverage delicious, and make up my mind to have it daily for my breakfast. I enquire from the waiter whether there is any news; he answers that the dauphine has been delivered of a prince. An abbe, seated at a table close by, says to him,-- "You are mad, she has given birth to a princess." A third man comes forward and exclaims,-- "I have just returned from Versailles, and the dauphine has not been delivered either of a prince or of a princess." Then, turning towards me, he says that I look like a foreigner, and when I say that I am an Italian he begins to speak to me of the court, of the city, of the theatres, and at last he offers to accompany me everywhere. I thank him and take my leave. The abbe rises at the same time, walks with me, and tells me the names of all the women we meet in the garden. A young man comes up to him, they embrace one another, and the abbe presents him to me as a learned Italian scholar. I address him in Italian, and he answers very wittily, but his way of speaking makes me smile, and I tell him why. He expressed himself exactly in the style of Boccacio. My remark pleases him, but I soon prove to him that it is not the right way to speak, however perfect may have been the language of that ancient writer. In less than a quarter of an hour we are excellent friends, for we find that our tastes are the same. My new friend was a poet as I was; he was an admirer of Italian literature, while I admired the French. We exchanged addresses, and promise to see one another very often. I see a crowd in one corner of the garden, everybody standing still and looking up. I enquire from my friend whether there is anything wonderful going on. "These persons are watching the meridian; everyone holds his watch in his hand in order to regulate it exactly at noon." "Is there not a meridian everywhere?" "Yes, but the meridian of the Palais-Royal is the most exact." I laugh heartily. "Why do you laugh?" "Because it is impossible for all meridians not to be the same. That is true 'badauderie'." My friend looks at me for a moment, then he laughs likewise, and supplies me with am
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