Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 How the Bohemian Society Was Established
- Chapter 2 A Gift from the Gods
- Chapter 3 Love at Lent
- Chapter 4 Ali-Rodolphe, or A Turk by Necessity
- Chapter 5 Charlemagne’s Coin
- Chapter 6 Mademoiselle Musette
- Chapter 7 The Sands of Pactolus
- Chapter 8 What Five Francs Can Cost
- Chapter 9 Polar Violets
- Chapter 10 The Cape of Storms
- Chapter 11 A Bohemian Café
- Chapter 12 A Reception in Bohemia
- Chapter 13 The Housewarming Party
- Chapter 14 Mademoiselle Mimi
- Chapter 15 Donec Gratus
- Chapter 16 The Passage of the Red Sea
- Chapter 17 The Graces Adorned
- Chapter 18 Francine’s Muff
- Chapter 19 Musette’s Whims
- Chapter 20 Mimi’s Fine Feathers
- Chapter 21 Romeo and Juliet
- Chapter 22 Epilogue to Love
- Chapter 23 Only Young Once
- Appendix: Murger’s Preface
- Notes
Chapter 11 - A Bohemian Café
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 How the Bohemian Society Was Established
- Chapter 2 A Gift from the Gods
- Chapter 3 Love at Lent
- Chapter 4 Ali-Rodolphe, or A Turk by Necessity
- Chapter 5 Charlemagne’s Coin
- Chapter 6 Mademoiselle Musette
- Chapter 7 The Sands of Pactolus
- Chapter 8 What Five Francs Can Cost
- Chapter 9 Polar Violets
- Chapter 10 The Cape of Storms
- Chapter 11 A Bohemian Café
- Chapter 12 A Reception in Bohemia
- Chapter 13 The Housewarming Party
- Chapter 14 Mademoiselle Mimi
- Chapter 15 Donec Gratus
- Chapter 16 The Passage of the Red Sea
- Chapter 17 The Graces Adorned
- Chapter 18 Francine’s Muff
- Chapter 19 Musette’s Whims
- Chapter 20 Mimi’s Fine Feathers
- Chapter 21 Romeo and Juliet
- Chapter 22 Epilogue to Love
- Chapter 23 Only Young Once
- Appendix: Murger’s Preface
- Notes
Summary
This is the story of the circumstances that led Carolus Barbemuche, a man of letters and a platonic philosopher, to become a member of the bohemian group in the twenty-fourth year of his life.
At that time, Gustave Colline, the great philosopher, Marcel, the great artist, Schaunard, the great musician, and Rodolphe, the great poet—for this is how they referred to each other—regularly went to the Café Momus, where they were known as the four musketeers because they were always seen together. Most of the time, they came and went together, they played together and sometimes they didn't pay the bill, but always with the togetherness worthy of a Conservatory orchestra performance.
For their meeting place, they’d chosen a room that once held forty people comfortably, but now they always found themselves alone because they’d succeeded in making the place unbearable for all the other regulars.
Anyone who just happened to be passing by and ventured into their den immediately became the victim of this uncontrollable quartet, and while these unfortunate customers would usually escape, they would not have succeeded in getting newspapers or coffee. In any case, their outrageous commentaries on the arts, human feelings and political economy were enough to turn the coffee cream sour. The conversations of the four companions were of such a nature that the waiter who served them, a man in the very prime of life, went mad.
After some time, things had gotten so out of control that the café owner finally ran out of patience. He approached them very seriously one evening to discuss his grievances:
First, M. Rodolphe comes in at breakfast time and takes all the cafe's newspapers to their room. He takes this to such an extreme that he becomes angry if he finds the newspapers have already been opened. As a result, the other customers are deprived of access to these organs of news and opinion and thus remain until dinner time as ignorant as fish on all political matters. The Bosquet Society hardly even knows the names of the members of the government's most recent cabinet.
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- Scenes of Bohemian Life , pp. 91 - 96Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2023