A landless aristocrat in troubled times
In the 18th-century Calvados region, an aristocratic family that had fallen into business finally welcomed a healthy heir. Pen ~ fun ~ pavilion www.biquge.info
Unlike his other six siblings, he was the only one who survived the plague and disease, and even the riots and fires.
In the aftermath of the horrific fire, the family prayed for the boy who had been knocked unconscious by a brain blow, thankfully because as a Calvinist aristocratic family, the boy was not only properly cared for, but also spared from bloodletting and possible infections.
Under the protection of an unknown being, the boy came back to life and has since become a normal child, no longer talking nonsense as before, and is equal to each other.
Under the light of the gas lamp (the invention of the little boy), the boy tried countless times to recover his lost memories using the diary that survived the fire.
But the scorched and incomplete diary can obviously only cause him a headache.
When the steam spinning machine appeared, Pozzo, who had grown up, discovered that the black leather manual might not have recorded a diary, but a series of prophecies.
Due to illness and the debauchery of the nobility, Pozzo, who had just taken over the family business, had to face the fact that his father died of illness and began to fight to preserve the dignity of the nobility.
The young Anglo lad, though he had some aristocratic friends, was offered an olive branch to him at a time when countless old nobles were bankrupt and nouveau riche and captains ruled the dinner, accompanied by high interest.
While the bankers waited for Pozzo Jr. to go bankrupt, he sold off the last of his family's estates, including the profitable Calvados winery.
Then he disappeared like a human vapor, evaded the creditors who knocked on the bone with his patent, and disappeared with a large sum of cash.
Heaven seemed to have responded to the creditors' curses at Little Pozzo, and a widespread drought enveloped the country.
Three years later, the Franks of Notdae have not recovered from the drought, countless former propertied people are still desperate for black bread, and successive cabinets have failed to save the country's huge fiscal deficit.
But God played a joke with the king, and another spring drought came to this prestigious kingdom.
When people were hungry and bankers were struggling to find food, a grain merchant became the new upstart of Parisian society.
At the reception, in order to impress this aristocratic tycoon with a Calvados accent, bankers and nobles were recruited from the countryside of Calvados, and they easily recognized the missing little Pozzo for the New Year.
The former debts seemed to be nothing more than a stepping stone to curry favor with him, and Pozzo de Les had already made a fortune with his far-sighted grain trade and hundreds of patents.
Because he was wealthy but landless, and even his assets were scattered among intricate corporations, he had enormous influence over the country and even the emerging countries across the ocean, and he inevitably became a regular at political salons.
Whether it is the ancestral business of Calvados or the winery of Bordeaux, this rich man who appeared out of thin air not only cleaned himself but also sold food and daily necessities to the citizens of Paris at low prices.
Of course, compared to the luxury goods he sold to old and new nobles and queens, those half-sold goods were insignificant.
After the outbreak of the Revolution, the aristocracy was in danger and finally helped Pozzo get rid of the trouble of blind dates.
After the establishment of the parliament, he became an irresistible member of parliament, but he always spoke for the king at meetings.
Some people have turned up his family history as a grain merchant, but because of his long and continuous good deeds, Calvinist faith, and his status as one of the initiators of the "August Decree", after repeatedly refusing the invitation of the King to the banquet, Pozo still managed to keep his peace in the midst of the council's turmoil with the trust of the faithful and the faithful of the faith.
In the same way, he had to join a faction, sacrificing some principles and wealth for the benefit of his private party.
Compared with his political inaction, Pozo, who has never been a ship, has a prosperous business on both sides of the ocean, whether it is perfume, lace and other luxury goods, or buying land and mining, and going to sea to salvage sunken ships, this Pozo has never missed a hand like God's darling.
Someone has tried to take away the land he has won for a high price or connection, but it costs a lot of money and gets nothing. Someone looted his fleet and bought his captain, but illness and accident soon took the lives of the treacherous family, and Pozzo would always take over the uninherited inheritance because of debts or contracts.
Is he Satan or the Son of God? This question became the sword of Damocles of the greedy, protecting the rich bachelor Pozo.
"My luck may come from my purity." Pozzo relied on this sentence to dismiss the proposed Sir and the crazy ladies.
As the Constituent Assembly became more and more radical, it abolished princes, hereditary nobility, and knighthoods, and redivided administrative regions. Pozzo's landlessness became a talk of conversation, and his approachable image was deeply rooted in the hearts of the citizens, who worked for him, from Bordeaux to Calais, living a relatively better life.
Having stripped him of the title of single aristocrat, as a well-regarded capitalist, the parliament wanted his wealth to be invested in the expansion of employment, or in the factories and mines that the parliamentarians planned to open.
A few people even believe that even sand can be used to produce coal, and that even a shipload of rotten pears can be turned into a livre through Pozzo.
Only Pozzo himself knew that he had only restrained his greed and arrogance, and had been his own puppet as a child, as recorded in the black leather manual.
Therefore, neither the praise of the youth nor the superior can make him proud, and no beautiful and virtuous lady can be his companion.
He was afraid that his secret would be known, that someone would steal the booklet from under his pillow after he was asleep, because he had lost thought and self because he had been a marionette for so long, at least so he thought of himself.
After all, human beings are sensual animals, and they can neither escape their emotions nor escape the constraints of hormones.
At a salon at the house of a councillor, he found himself feverishly in love with the hostess there. Despite the lady's age and humble background, Pozo's heart would beat faster and his vision blurred even if it was just a simple conversation.
In his pamphlet, this is exactly the manifestation of the arrow of Eros in his body. In order to prove that he was not in love with her, not with a lady ten years older, Pozo, who had once saddened many ladies, gave the first time to a maid with similar age characteristics to the lady.
The village girl from Rouen left Paris with her husband in less than a month, with a large severance pay and secrets.
During this time, the maid and her husband became Pozzo's keepers, and they had heard of the former noble gentleman having fornications with women of different classes, ages, and even races. The only thing that reassured the maid's husband was that Pozzo always called out the same name, no matter which lady or lady it was, and it was not his wife's name.
The political situation in the country changed almost daily, and the Pozo family was one of the few peaceful places in the city where there was no shortage of food and drink, and the loyalty of this stable servant and the search for short-term ladies facilitated it.
Before the inevitable revelation of the secrets in the house, a mysterious private message puts an end to the farce.
All those in the know were dismissed, some were "starved or frozen" to death on the streets, some encountered bandits or mobs on the road, and some returned home smoothly like the special maid couple.
The platonic love based on the exchange of letters occupied all of Pozzo's energy and time, and he may have been absent from the regular session of the council, but he never missed the salon of the lady. His business came to a standstill like never before, and his employees enjoyed a rare leisure, and those who regarded it as a democratic benefit soon discovered the boss's secrets.
There are no secrets, at least not in Paris. But Pozzo's fortune can be deferred, at least easily in Paris, where food and clothing are starved.
But the lady was a pious and self-disciplined lady, and since she could refuse easy private dates and any outrageous skin-to-skin contact, she naturally had the courage to confess her feelings to her husband.
The congressman, who thought he was more special, and who had received many times of economic assistance from Pozo, obviously could not accept the result of this subversion of the three views. In fact, except for the two parties, all the insiders do not believe in the innocence of the two, especially when there will be deaths of insiders one after another.
Although her private life was not going well, Pozzo, who was in love, confided her views on the world and some of the words in the manual to his wife, who had read the classics, and the lady who presided over the salon would always inadvertently blurt out some points of view that she agreed with, which made her audience a unique group of people in the council.
The revolution did not end with the establishment of democracy, and after the defeat of an army led by painters and doctors rather than military strategists without training and discipline, some in Parliament blamed the crown as if it were victory without the chaotic artillery-deficient and unarmed rabble of the king's front.
However, the unscrupulous men who had been destroyed by the early revolution and had a fear for the nobility and the royal family, and even the government, relentlessly relaunched the rebellion.
Pozzo tried to reverse the patrical shame of the prince eating feces and the princess being gang-raped as recorded in the handbook according to his own wishes.
But his usual favors to the citizens have become ironclad evidence of speculation, not only did he not stop the mob who were gang-raping the princess, but he was also broken into his home by sans-culottes and ransacked the small two-story building.
Although Pozo survived the death of the rabbit under the armed protection of his loyal employees, he lost his prestige in Paris and his seat in parliament, and it can be said that his love and career fell into a trough at the same time.
After the mob calmed down from the euphoria, Pozzo's once-party took the leadership of Parliament and went one step further to seize the dominance of the First Republic after repelling foreign intervention forces on the front.
During this period, Pozo became the pocket of the ruling party, and had to pay for the prostitution of the state and even the parliamentarians without compensation, and let his wealth dry up without limits. Employees and customers in all links are more inclined to get everything for free, and even the originally loyal bodyguards are presumptuous.
After the king and queen were executed, Pozzo secretly rescued Marie Theresia himself, and after meeting the princess who had just arrived in his prime, Pozzo resolutely began his treasonous escape plan.
It wasn't long before the Anti-French League formed a parliament and gave Pozzo an astronomical list of supplies, and not a single penny of all the allocated budget would actually go into his pocket. Based on the revenge of her husband, Pozzo had to dispose of her property cheaply and make the illusion of bankruptcy.
After Pozzo was sacked in the Second Revolution, ending years of price leveling, the lives of the sans-culottes in Paris deteriorated.
People don't think about how to work or create wealth, they just want to get everything from people who are still living a decent life.
Hunger and the agitation of careerists have led to the gradual disorganization of the city, and the efforts of the ruling party have lost the patience of the citizens.
A third revolt inevitably broke out, and Pozzo forsook all disguises in Paris and fled, and although he did not have time to place the princess, he took the risk of picking up the lady he liked.
Unlike the princess, who saw Pozzo as her savior for the rest of her life, this very assertive lady once again rejected the opportunity for love and survival, resolutely and voluntarily arrested, and after being imprisoned, she repeatedly refused the opportunity to escape from prison, and died for the sake of her husband's reputation and the end of the marriage and shattered ideals that tormented her soul.
"Freedom and freedom, there are many evils in the world, ancient and modern, in the name of you!"
These are the words of the wife who contributed to the democratic government on her deathbed. Four days later, Roland was found guilty of suicide with a cane, and Pozzo, who fled with money, eventually lost to his grandfather's rival.
Thankfully, the princess survived under the protection of an upright gentleman, and the councillors who escaped the coup kept the lady's dignity and did not let her holy deeds drench in sewage.
Before the new government catches the gentleman with a love letter sent to prison by Pozzo, Pozzo has overcome his fear of being shipwrecked and takes a small boat from his hometown to England on the other side of the river to start a new life.
Pozo, who has the legend of getting rich, is highly sought after by local aristocrats and capital in London, and this time I don't know if it's because love is dead, he wanders among celebrities and ladies with an ambiguous attitude.
While the British capitalists waited for Pozzo to buy the assets at a high price, the Boy of Dots magically consolidated countless small companies and properties under the renamed sole proprietorship of Rice Bank.
This not only caused a small number of speculators to lose money, but also triggered a thorough investigation of the newly established companies established by local forces in the past three to five years, and many foreign capital innocently appeared.
Before the more powerful lose patience, Pozzo, a banker who has become a national mining and industrial tycoon, is magically engaged to Princess Sophia, the daughter of George III, under the vacant title of Baron de Mondeville, which he retained before the establishment of the Republic.
In this way, Pozzo was no longer a wealthy French fugitive aristocrat, but a future member of the Hanoverian royal family.
It was later verified that many MPs and King George III himself had gained what they wanted.
The Amazing Sir Pozzo, who bought a manor house in Cornwall and claimed that it was his marital residence, left London alone under the escort of the British army in the name of renovating the property.
This trip, in order to escape the betrayal of love, was originally only a careful idea of annexing and integrating the mining areas of Cornwall and Wales at a low price.
Unexpectedly, a public trial in the city of Truro reactivated his newly cooled heart.
Rose Poldark, who came from an aristocratic family and hated drinking parties and gambling, was a retired captain who did not rely on the army for profit, but simply ran his own copper mines honestly and faithfully, and when the market price was insufficient to mine the cost of mining, he also devoted himself to the death of his fellow villagers.
In the face of the windfall of the shipwreck, not only did he not take a penny, but he also saved the fallen gentlemen from the hands of the frenzied mob.
In order to prove this idealistic aristocracy, the three views that are close to the manual will inevitably bring destruction. Pozzo handed over the task of buying the Welsh minerals to Rice Bank, and the public takeover plan benefited many of London's magnates.
And he himself not only provided Ross with a loan of 3,000 pounds at low interest and without collateral, but also provided him with the companies needed for the subsequent industrial chain for industrial integration.
Both the smelting company and the sales company are mature assets acquired, and Ross has complete autonomy as the manager of all three companies.
In order to dissect the man, Rose befriended his cousin Francis Poldark, and also poached his kitchen maid.
I have to say that with Rose's selfless help, he avoided having children out of wedlock, and even after marriage, he was not expelled because of her husband's viciousness, and Ginny, who raised her widow with Rose's grace, was very loyal to the Ross family.
But under the temptation that her son could be educated as a governess and that her mother and son could live in the newly purchased castle in Pozzo, she took her young children and accepted the position of head maid.
When Ginny talks about Rose's marriage to her wife, this happy marriage that breaks the rules reminds Pozzo of his own weakness in love.
After fierce resistance, on the soft carpet in front of the burning fireplace, Ginny becomes Pozzo's victim to escape the past and prove herself.
The abuser unabashedly calls out the name of his deceased lover, indulging in his own fantasies as he did with those of the past.
After this incident, out of the belief that nothing had happened to Bonzy, Ginny continued to command other servants who had somehow begun to obey the command, and managed a luxurious estate with a long history.
Until his departure, Pozzo continued to listen to Rose Poldark's story every night, but never did that night again, and kept the name secret.
Ginny, who was uneducated and spoke only native Cornish and plain English, misinterpreted the name of a French lady and applied it to a similar-sounding English name.
The protracted war against France plunged England and Hanover into a quagmire as well as the whole of Europe. When Pozzo returned to London, he seemed to forget his marriage contract and concentrate on his bank, gradually consolidating his globally dispersed investments.
After the war had fallen into disadvantage, the Parliament learned of Pozzo's dark history from the fugitive French aristocracy, and by the time they wanted to take over the reason for having sponsored the revolution, he had already concocted the same method as the most beloved nobleman and banker in the city of London.
After a large amount of sponsorship was in place, Pozzo became the god of wealth in parliament as in the past, but the difference was that there were more good people in the citizens and councillors of London, who did not regard Pozzo's contribution as a source of hatred.
At the urging of the citizens and the council, Pozzo married his fiancée, who had been engaged for ten years, in 1804 and received the vacant title of Earl of Cornwall.
After the marriage, Pozzo received a private message from Marie Theresia in exile, but the regret and condemnation of his betrayal of France did not affect the marriage.
Sophia failed to get hold of Pozzo's list of fortunes after her marriage, but she still lived a luxurious life in London second only to the queen.
Enjoying the bustling London princess, if Pozzo's well-furnished wedding room is a holiday hotel, she may not stay there for a month a year.
Unable to get his heart from Sophia, Pozo's heart grew more and more lonely as his wealth grew.
After the business stalled again, Pozzo's net income was able to cover his living expenses and aid to Congress. He himself often went to Cornwall, looking for the shadow of his lost innocence and ideals from the irritable Poldaq family.
After Ginny volunteered to be a stand-in for the lady whose name she only knew, the childless Pozzo treated Ginny's child as his own, but in his confused perception, the healthy boy was his own and the lady's child, the crystallization of their love.
The wife lives in London for a long time, and the husband often goes to live in the countryside, which inevitably brings gossip and loneliness.
Several nobles who are said to have died because of their fornication with Princess Sophia have been carefully investigated, despite the strict denials of the princess and Pozo. The townspeople were reminded of the rumors in Paris that the merchants who had maliciously competed with Pozzo had died in the same way as these newcomers, under the rendering of the Intentional Publications.
Whether it is true or not, this series of coincidences has drunk away those who have a heart and contributed to Sophia's special in the social circle.
For the sake of continued financial support, the king and several of her royal brothers were also angry about the lack of an heir, and if it were not for the fact that the unhidden country mistress would never have been available, the king considered marrying another daughter to the gold collector.
After ten years of marriage, France has been restored, Ginny has died of illness, but Pozo still has no heir, when the Duchess of Angoulim claimed that her eldest son was Pozzo's illegitimate son, because of this malicious lie, Pozo's relationship with his wife Sophia completely broke down, and before the British royal family detained and arrested him, Pozo was forced to flee to the United States again under the protection of the captain of the guard Ross (Ginny's son) and a group of Cornish militants.
For diplomatic and religious reasons, as long as Pozo, who was not divorced, confiscated Ross as his stepson, it was inconvenient for England to act excessively.
Rumors have also stood the test of time and have been confirmed to be a conspiracy to restore the government.
Pozo, a big capitalist who settled in Washington, D.C., had a major impact on the fledgling young U.S. government.
After Pozzo's industry in the United States was exposed, the English parliament proposed a plan to use him to recover the lost land, and for this political purpose, Congress connived at the transfer of the headquarters of Rice Bank, and even forced Sophia to go to the United States by boat to fulfill his wife's obligations.
The inadequacy of this marriage was blamed on Sophia, who refused to live in the marital house that Pozo had claimed beforehand.
Since George IV had no children, Parliament privately made a condition to elect Pozzo and Sophia's eldest son as his successor, inducing Pozzo to work hard and be loyal to the British.
In fact, after Sophia arrived in the United States, the couple did take the time to fulfill their obligations, but until the marriage of William IV, the Pozzos did not receive a legitimate child from God, and Rose gradually took over Pozzo's business.
Although once the majority shareholder of the First Bank, the First Bank had been dissolved by the time Pozzo moved in, and Rice Bank could no longer go it alone in its search for a living space, and had to rely on allies and partners.
When William IV was at Victoria's birthday banquet in Kent, news of the unambiguous declaration of the heir reached Washington, D.C.
Pozzo then had a romantic evening with the young, unmarried daughter of a Jewish banker at his own birthday party, due to his wife's willful absence. Ten months later, after Victoria succeeded to the throne, Pozzo announced that he would renounce his right to the crown of the Hanover crown forever, recognizing an illegitimate son of Jewish descent.
This behavior was a humiliation to both the royal family and the queen, but Sophia, because she hated Victoria's mother, the Duchess of Kent, finally approved of the Jewish son.
Since then, Rice Bank has flourished, and Pozzo's home has coexisted in harmony.
Ross moved to New York State after his marriage, where he lived independently as an independent factory owner and majority shareholder and manager of a small bank.
Since the baby boy entered the Pozo family alone, he and Sophia had a child in their old age, but unfortunately died.
After this blow, Sophia died in the company of the Bible.
After a mad confession in church, Pozzo converted to Judaism and married his son's biological mother.
The marriage, which was nearly sixty years apart, lasted only a few months, and Pozzo died three hours before Rose returned home.
Rose the Puritan and Pozzo's young Jewish wife, broke up after the funeral, and despite not having a will, Rose was able to share most of the property with the help of the will of the government and the public, while the Rice Bank was dismembered and lost to the dust of history.