The Nabob by Alphonse Daudet
page 111 of 516 (21%)
page 111 of 516 (21%)
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"Aline is twenty, M. le Baron. She is the eldest. Then we have Elise,
who is preparing for the examination which she must pass when she is eighteen. Henriette, who is fourteen, and Zara or Yaia who is only twelve." That pet name of Yaia intensely amused M. le Baron, who inquired next what were the resources of this interesting family. "My salary, M. le Baron; nothing else. I had a little money put aside, but my poor wife's illness, the education of the girls--" "What you are earning is not sufficient, my dear Joyeuse. I raise your salary to a thousand francs a month." "Oh, M. le Baron, it is too much." But although he had uttered this last sentence aloud, in the ear of a policeman who watched with a mistrustful eye the little man pass, gesticulating and nodding his head, the poor visionary awoke not. With admiration he saw himself returning home, announcing the news to his daughters, taking them to the theatre in the evening in celebration of the happy day. _Dieu!_ how pretty they looked in the front of their box, the Demoiselles Joyeuse, what a bouquet of rosy faces! And then, the next day, the two eldest asked in marriage by--Impossible to determine by whom, for M. Joyeuse had just suddenly found himself once more beneath the arch of the Hemerlingue establishment, before the swing-door surmounted by a "counting-house" in letters of gold. "I shall always be the same, it seems," said he to himself, laughing a little and passing his hand over his forehead, on which the perspiration |
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