John Constantine, by Prosper 
Paleologus Constantine 
 
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Title: Sir John Constantine Memoirs Of His Adventures At Home And 
Abroad And Particularly In The Island Of Corsica: Beginning With 
The Year 1756 
Author: Prosper Paleologus Constantine 
Editor: "Q" (A. T. Quiller-Couch) 
Release Date: April 6, 2005 [EBook #15565] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR JOHN 
CONSTANTINE *** 
 
Produced by Lionel Sear 
 
SIR JOHN CONSTANTINE.
MEMOIRS OF HIS ADVENTURES AT HOME AND ABROAD 
AND PARTICULARLY IN THE ISLAND OF CORSICA: 
BEGINNING WITH THE YEAR 1756. 
WRITTEN BY HIS SON PROSPER PALEOLOGUS OTHERWISE 
CONSTANTINE AND EDITED BY "Q" (A. T. QUILLER-COUCH). 
"For knighthood is not in the feats of warre, As for to fight in quarrel 
right or wrong, But in a cause which truth can not defarre He ought 
himself for to make sure and strong Justice to keep mixt with mercy 
among: And no quarrell a knight ought to take But for a truth, or for a 
woman's sake." 
 
TO THE READER 
A hundred and fifty episodes, two sermons, and a number of moral 
digressions, have been omitted from this story. 
The late ingenious Mr. Fett (whose acquaintance you will make in the 
following pages), having been commissioned by Mr. Dodsley, the 
publisher, to write a conspectus of the Present State of the Arts in Italy 
at two guineas the folio--a fair price for that class of work-- had 
delivered close upon two hundred folios before Mr. Dodsley interposed, 
professing unbounded admiration of the work, its style, and matter, but 
desiring to know when he might expect the end: "For," said he, "I have 
other enterprises which will soon be demanding attention, and, as a 
business-man, I like to make my arrangements in good time." To this 
Mr. Fett replied, that he, for his part, being well content with the rate of 
remuneration, did not propose to end the work at all!--and, the 
agreement, having unaccountably failed to stipulate for any such thing 
as a conclusion, Mr. Dodsley had to compound for one at a crippling 
price. 
So this story had, in Browning's phrase, "grown old along with me," 
but for the forethought of Messrs. Smith, Elder and Co., in limiting its 
serial flow to twelve numbers of The Cornhill Magazine As it is, I have
added a few chapters; but a hundred and fifty episodes remain 
unwritten, with the courtships of Mr. Priske, and the funeral oration 
spoken by the Rev. Mr. Grylls over the cenotaph Of Sir John 
Constantine in Constantine Parish Church. These omissions, however, 
may be remedied if you will ask the publishers for another edition. 
Now, if it be objected against some of the adventures of Sir John 
Constantine that they are extravagant, or against some of his notions 
that they are fantastic, I answer that this book attempts to describe a 
man and not one of these calculable little super men who, of late, have 
been taking up so much more of your attention than they deserve. 
Students who engage in psychical research, as it is called, often confess 
themselves puzzled by the behaviour of ghosts, it appears to them 
wayward and trivial. How much more likely are ghosts to be puzzled 
by the actions of real men? And we are surely ghosts if we keep 
nothing of the blood which sent our fathers like schoolboys to the 
crusades. 
Lastly, my friend, if you would know anything of the writer who has so 
often addressed you under an initial, you may find as much of him here 
as in any of his books. Here is interred part, at any rate, of the soul of 
the Bachelor Q, in a book which, though it tell of adventures, I would 
ask you not to disdain, though you be a boy no longer. An acquaintance 
of mine near the Land's End had a remarkably fine tree of apples--to be 
precise, of Cox's Orange Pippins--and one night was robbed of the 
whole of them. But what, think you, had the thief left behind him, at the 
foot of the tree? Why, a pair of gold-rimmed spectacles. 
ARTHUR T. QUILLER-COUCH. 
THE HAVEN, FOWEY, October 1st, 1906. 
 
CONTENTS 
Chapter. 
I. OF THE LINEAGE AND CONDITION OF SIR JOHN
CONSTANTINE. 
II. I RIDE ON A PILGRIMAGE. 
III. I ACQUIRE A KINGDOM. 
IV. LONG VACATION. 
V. THE SILENT MEN. 
VI. HOW MY FATHER OUT OF NOTHING BUILT AN ARMY, 
AND IN FIVE MINUTES PLANNED AN INVASION. 
VII. THE COMPANY OF THE    
    
		
	
	
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