The Hunchback of Notre Dame by Book 7 Chapter 1 Page 11

The captain took up a corner of the tapestry.

“Who, my fair cousin, is this big gendarme, who is puffing out his cheeks to their full extent and blowing a trumpet?”

“‘Tis Triton,” she replied.

There was a rather pettish intonation in Fleur-de-Lys’s — laconic words. The young man understood that it was indispensable that he should whisper something in her ear, a commonplace, a gallant compliment, no matter what. Accordingly he bent down, but he could find nothing in his imagination more tender and personal than this, —

“Why does your mother always wear that surcoat with armorial designs, like our grandmothers of the time of Charles VII.?