Count BunkerBeing a Bald Yet Veracious Chronicle Containing Some Further Particulars of Two Gentlemen Whose Previous Careers Were Touched Upon in a Tome Entitled "The Lunatic at Large"
  CHAPTER XXXII  

  CHAPTER XXXIII  

  CHAPTER XXXIV  

  CHAPTER XXXV  

  CHAPTER XXXVI  

  CHAPTER XXXVII  

  EPILOGUE  

   

    

       COUNT BUNKER     

  

       CHAPTER I     

       It is only with the politest affectation of interest, as a rule, that English Society learns the arrival in its midst of an ordinary Continental nobleman; but the announcement that the Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg had been appointed attache to the German embassy at the Court of St. James was unquestionably received with a certain flutter of excitement. That his estates were as vast as an average English county, and his ancestry among the noblest in Europe, would not alone perhaps have arrested the attention of the paragraphists, since acres and forefathers of foreign extraction are rightly regarded as conferring at the most a claim merely to toleration. But in addition to these he possessed a charming English wife, belonging to one of the most distinguished families in the peerage (the Grillyers of Monkton-Grillyer), and had further demonstrated his judgment by purchasing the winner of the last year's Derby, with a view to improving the horse-flesh of his native land.     

       From a footnote attached to the engraving of the Baron in a Homburg hat holding the head of the steed in question, which formed the 
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