Complete Original Short Stories of Guy De Maupassant eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,791 pages of information about Complete Original Short Stories of Guy De Maupassant.

Complete Original Short Stories of Guy De Maupassant eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,791 pages of information about Complete Original Short Stories of Guy De Maupassant.

She was indeed an old maid—­one of those old maids with a harsh voice and angular motions, whose very soul seems to be hard.  She never would stand contradiction, argument, hesitation, indifference, laziness nor fatigue.  She had never been heard to complain, to regret anything, to envy anyone.  She would say:  “Everyone has his share,” with the conviction of a fatalist.  She did not go to church, she had no use for priests, she hardly believed in God, calling all religious things “weeper’s wares.”

For thirty years she had lived in her little house, with its tiny garden running along the street; she had never changed her habits, only changing her servants pitilessly, as soon as they reached twenty-one years of age.

When her dogs, cats and birds would die of old age, or from an accident, she would replace them without tears and without regret; with a little spade she would bury the dead animal in a strip of ground, throwing a few shovelfuls of earth over it and stamping it down with her feet in an indifferent manner.

She had a few friends in town, families of clerks who went to Paris every day.  Once in a while she would be invited out, in the evening, to tea.  She would inevitably fall asleep, and she would have to be awakened, when it was time for her to go home.  She never allowed anyone to accompany her, fearing neither light nor darkness.  She did not appear to like children.

She kept herself busy doing countless masculine tasks—­carpentering, gardening, sawing or chopping wood, even laying bricks when it was necessary.

She had relatives who came to see her twice a year, the Cimmes and the Colombels, her two sisters having married, one of them a florist and the other a retired merchant.  The Cimmes had no children; the Colombels had three:  Henri, Pauline and Joseph.  Henri was twenty, Pauline seventeen and Joseph only three.

There was no love lost between the old maid and her relatives.

In the spring of the year 1882 Queen Hortense suddenly fell sick.  The neighbors called in a physician, whom she immediately drove out.  A priest then having presented himself, she jumped out of bed, in order to throw him out of the house.

The young servant, in despair, was brewing her some tea.

After lying in bed for three days the situation appeared so serious that the barrel-maker, who lived next door, to the right, acting on advice from the doctor, who had forcibly returned to the house, took it upon himself to call together the two families.

They arrived by the same train, towards ten in the morning, the Colombels bringing little Joseph with them.

When they got to the garden gate, they saw the servant seated in the chair against the wall, crying.

The dog was sleeping on the door mat in the broiling sun; two cats, which looked as though they might be dead, were stretched out in front of the two windows, their eyes closed, their paws and tails stretched out at full length.

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Project Gutenberg
Complete Original Short Stories of Guy De Maupassant from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.