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The Age of Innocence

✒ Author
📖 Pages538
⏰ Reading time 17 hours 45 minutes
💡 Originally published1920
🌏 Original language English
📌 Type Novels
📌 Genres Psychological, Realism, Social

Table of contents

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Book I1
I1
II13
III24
IV36
V45
VI61
VII75
VIII86
IX99
X121
XI138
XII152
XIII172
XIV183
XV195
XVI212
XVII228
XVIII245
Book II264
XIX264
XX282
XXI302
XXII324
XXIII338
XXIV354
XXV363
XXVI379
XXVII398
XXVIII410
XXIX421
XXX432
XXXI448
XXXII468
XXXIII483
XXXIV510

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Book I

I.

On a January evening of the early seventies, Christine Nilsson was singing in Faust at the Academy of Music in New York.
Though there was already talk of the erection, in remote metropolitan distances "above the Forties," of a new Opera House which should compete in costliness and splendour with those of the great European capitals, the world of fashion was still content to reassemble every winter in the shabby red and gold boxes of the sociable old Academy.
Conservatives cherished it for being small and inconvenient, and thus keeping out the "new people" whom New York was beginning to dread and yet be drawn to; and the sentimental clung to it for its historic associations, and the musical for its excellent acoustics, always so problematic a quality in halls built for the hearing of music.
It was Madame Nilsson's first appearance that winter, and what the daily press had already learned to describe as "an exceptionally brilliant audience" had gathered to hear her, transported through the slippery, snowy streets in private broughams, in the spacious family landau, or in the humbler but more convenient "Brown coupe."
To come to the Opera in a Brown coupe was almost as honourable a way of arriving as in one's own carriage; and departure by the same means had the immense advantage of enabling one (with a playful allusion to democratic principles) to scramble into the first Brown conveyance in the line, instead of waiting till the cold-and-gin congested nose of one's own coachman gleamed under the portico of the Academy.
It was one of the great livery-stableman's most masterly intuitions to have discovered that Americans want to get away from amusement even more quickly than they want to get to it.
When Newland Archer opened the door at the back of the club box the curtain had just gone up on the garden scene.
There was no reason why the young man should not have come earlier, for he had dined at seven, alone with his mother and sister, and had lingered afterward over a cigar in the Gothic library with glazed black-walnut bookcases and finial-topped chairs which was the only room in the house where Mrs. Archer allowed smoking.
But, in the first place, New York was a metropolis, and perfectly aware that in metropolises it was "not the thing" to arrive early at the opera; and what was or was not "the thing" played a part as important in Newland Archer's New York as the inscrutable totem terrors that had ruled the destinies of his forefathers thousands of years ago.
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Download the free e-book by Edith Wharton, «The Age of Innocence» , in English. You can also print the text of the book. For this, the PDF and DOC formats are suitable.

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