The Way We Live Now

Anthony Trollope
The Way We Live Now

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Title: The Way We Live Now
Author: Anthony Trollope
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THE WAY WE LIVE NOW
by Anthony Trollope

CHAPTER I
- THREE EDITORS

Let the reader be introduced to Lady Carbury, upon whose character
and doings much will depend of whatever interest these pages may
have, as she sits at her writing-table in her own room in her own house
in Welbeck Street. Lady Carbury spent many hours at her desk, and
wrote many letters wrote also very much beside letters. She spoke of
herself in these days as a woman devoted to Literature, always spelling
the word with a big L. Something of the nature of her devotion may be
learned by the perusal of three letters which on this morning she had
written with a quickly running hand. Lady Carbury was rapid in
everything, and in nothing more rapid than in the writing of letters.
Here is Letter No. 1

'Thursday, Welbeck Street.
DEAR FRIEND,
I have taken care that you shall have the early sheets of my two new
volumes tomorrow, or Saturday at latest, so that you may, if so minded,
give a poor struggler like myself a lift in your next week's paper. Do
give a poor struggler a lift. You and I have so much in common, and I
have ventured to flatter myself that we are really friends! I do not flatter
you when I say, that not only would aid from you help me more than

from any other quarter, but also that praise from you would gratify my
vanity more than any other praise. I almost think you will like my
'Criminal Queens.' The sketch of Semiramis is at any rate spirited,
though I had to twist it about a little to bring her in guilty. Cleopatra, of
course, I have taken from Shakespeare. What a wench she was! I could
not quite make Julia a queen; but it was impossible to pass over so
piquant a character. You will recognise in the two or three ladies of the
empire how faithfully I have studied my Gibbon. Poor dear old
Belisarius! I have done the best I could with Joanna, but I could not
bring myself to care for her. In our days she would simply have gone to
Broadmore. I hope you will not think that I have been too strong in my
delineations of Henry VIII and his sinful but unfortunate Howard. I
don't care a bit about Anne Boleyne. I am afraid that I have been
tempted into too great length about the Italian Catherine; but in truth
she has been my favourite. What a woman! What a devil! Pity that a
second Dante could not have constructed for her a special hell. How
one traces the effect of her training in the life of our Scotch Mary. I
trust you will go with me in my view as to the Queen of Scots. Guilty!
guilty always! Adultery, murder, treason, and all the rest of it. But
recommended to mercy because she was royal. A queen bred, born and
married, and with such other queens around her, how could she have
escaped to be guilty? Marie Antoinette I have not quite acquitted. It
would be uninteresting perhaps untrue. I have accused her lovingly, and
have kissed when I scourged. I trust the British public will not be angry
because I do not whitewash Caroline, especially as I go along with
them altogether in abusing her husband.
But
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