[A Mummer’s Tale by Anatole France]@TWC D-Link book
A Mummer’s Tale

CHAPTER I
15/24

She gave advice to beginners, wrote their letters for them, and thus, in the morning or evenings earned what was almost every day her only meal.
"Doctor," asked Felicie, while Madame Michon was fastening a black velvet ribbon round her neck: "You say that my fits of dizziness are due to my stomach.

Are you sure of that ?" Before Trublet could answer, Madame Doulce exclaimed that fits of dizziness always proceeded from the stomach, and that two or three hours after meals she experienced a feeling of distension in hers, and she thereupon asked the doctor for a remedy.
Felicie, however, was thinking, for she was capable of thought.
"Doctor," she said suddenly, "I want to ask you a question, which you may possibly think a droll one; but I do really want to know whether, considering that you know just what there is in the human body, and that you have seen all the things we have inside us, it doesn't embarrass you, at certain moments, in your dealings with women?
It seems to me that the idea of all that must disgust you." From the depths of his cushions Trublet, wafting a kiss to Felicie, replied: "My dear child, there is no more exquisitely delicate, rich, and beautiful tissue than the skin of a pretty woman.

That is what I was telling myself just now, while contemplating the back of your neck, and you will readily understand that, under such an impression----" She made a grimace at him like that of a disdainful monkey.
"You think it witty, I suppose, to talk nonsense when anyone asks you a serious question ?" "Well, then, since you wish it, mademoiselle, you shall have an instructive answer.

Some twenty years ago we had, in the post-mortem room at the Hopital Saint-Joseph, a drunken old watchman, named Daddy Rousseau, who every day at eleven o'clock used to lunch at the end of the table on which the corpse was lying.

He ate his lunch because he was hungry.


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