Original Short Stories — Volume 09 by Guy de Maupassant
page 5 of 199 (02%)
page 5 of 199 (02%)
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And, rolling his sleeves back from his enormous arm, he said:
"That would make a fine wing now, wouldn't it?" And the customers, doubled up with laughter, would thump the table with their fists and stamp their feet on the floor. The old woman, mad with rage, would repeat: "Wait a bit! Wait a bit! You'll see what'll happen. He'll burst like a sack of grain!" And off she would go, amid the jeers and laughter of the drinkers. Toine was, in fact, an astonishing sight, he was so fat, so heavy, so red. He was one of those enormous beings with whom Death seems to be amusing himself--playing perfidious tricks and pranks, investing with an irresistibly comic air his slow work of destruction. Instead of manifesting his approach, as with others, in white hairs, in emaciation, in wrinkles, in the gradual collapse which makes the onlookers say: "Gad! how he has changed!" he took a malicious pleasure in fattening Toine, in making him monstrous and absurd, in tingeing his face with a deep crimson, in giving him the appearance of superhuman health, and the changes he inflicts on all were in the case of Toine laughable, comic, amusing, instead of being painful and distressing to witness. "Wait a bit! Wait a bit!" said his wife. "You'll see." At last Toine had an apoplectic fit, and was paralyzed in consequence. The giant was put to bed in the little room behind the partition of the |
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