The Nabob, Vol. 1 (of 2), by 
Alphonse Daudet 
 
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Title: The Nabob, Vol. 2 (of 2) 
Author: Alphonse Daudet 
Commentator: Brander Matthews 
Translator: George Burnham Ives 
Release Date: May 5, 2007 [EBook #21329] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
NABOB, VOL. 2 (OF 2) *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net
[Illustration: The Duc, the Duchesse, and the Doctor. ] 
THE NABOB 
BY 
ALPHONSE DAUDET 
TRANSLATED BY 
GEORGE BURNHAM IVES 
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY 
BRANDER MATTHEWS 
IN TWO VOLUMES 
VOL. II. 
BOSTON 
LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY 
1902 
Copyright, 1898, 
BY LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. 
All rights reserved. 
University Press: 
JOHN WILSON AND SON, CAMBRIDGE, U.S.A. 
 
CONTENTS.
PAGE 
XIII. A DAY OF SPLEEN 1 
XIV. THE EXHIBITION 20 
XV. MEMOIRS OF A CLERK.--IN THE RECEPTION-ROOM 42 
XVI. A PUBLIC MAN 57 
XVII. THE APPARITION 86 
XVIII. THE JENKINS PEARLS 107 
XIX. THE OBSEQUIES 135 
XX. BARONESS HEMERLINGUE 163 
XXI. THE SITTING 194 
XXII. PARISIAN DRAMAS 230 
XXIII. MEMOIRS OF A CLERK.--LAST SHEETS 255 
XXIV. AT BORDIGHERA 267 
XXV. THE FIRST NIGHT OF "RÉVOLTE" 287 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
The Duc, the Duchesse, and the Doctor Frontispiece 
"'Don't be afraid. I have no evil designs on you'" Page 153 
The First Night of "Révolte" " 287 
From drawings by Lucius Rossi.
THE NABOB. 
XIII. 
A DAY OF SPLEEN. 
Five o'clock in the afternoon. Rain ever since the morning, a gray sky, 
so low that one can touch it with one's umbrella, dirty weather, puddles, 
mud, nothing but mud, in thick pools, in gleaming streaks along the 
edge of the sidewalks, driven back in vain by automatic sweepers, 
sweepers with handkerchiefs tied over their heads, and carted away on 
enormous tumbrils which carry it slowly and in triumph through the 
streets toward Montreuil; removed and ever reappearing, oozing 
between the pavements, splashing carriage panels, horses' breasts, the 
clothing of the passers-by, soiling windows, thresholds, shop-fronts, 
until one would think that all Paris was about to plunge in and 
disappear beneath that depressing expanse of miry earth in which all 
things are jumbled together and lose their identity. And it is a pitiable 
thing to see how that filth invades the spotless precincts of new houses, 
the copings of the quays, the colonnades of stone balconies. There is 
some one, however, whom this spectacle rejoices, a poor, ill, 
disheartened creature, who, stretched out at full length on the 
embroidered silk covering of a divan, her head resting on her clenched 
fists, gazes gleefully out through the streaming window-panes and 
gloats over all these ugly details: 
"You see, my Fairy, this is just the kind of weather I wanted to-day. 
See them splash along. Aren't they hideous, aren't they filthy? What 
mud! It's everywhere, in the streets, on the quays, even in the Seine, 
even in the sky. Ah! mud is a fine thing when you're downhearted. I 
would like to dabble in it, to mould a statue with it, a statue one 
hundred feet high, and call it, 'My Ennui.'" 
"But why do you suffer from ennui, my darling?" mildly inquires the 
ex-ballet-dancer, good-natured and rosy, from her armchair, in which 
she sits very erect for fear of damage to her hair, which is even more
carefully arranged than usual. "Haven't you all that any one can need to 
be happy?" 
And she proceeds, in her placid voice, to enumerate for the hundredth 
time her reasons for happiness, her renown, her genius, her beauty, all 
men at her feet, the handsomest, the most powerful; oh! yes, the most 
powerful, for that very day--But an ominous screech, a heart-rending 
wail from the jackal, maddened by the monotony of her desert, 
suddenly makes the studio windows rattle and sends the terrified old 
chrysalis back into her cocoon. 
The completion of her group and its departure for the Salon has left 
Felicia for a week past in this state of prostration, of disgust, of 
heart-rending, distressing irritation. It requires all of the old fairy's 
unwearying patience, the magic of the memories she evokes every 
moment in the day, to make life endurable to her beside that 
restlessness, that wicked wrath which she can hear grumbling beneath 
the girl's silences, and which suddenly bursts forth in a bitter word, in a 
pah! of disgust àpropos of everything. Her group is hideous. No one 
will speak of it. All the critics are donkeys. The public? an immense 
goître with three    
    
		
	
	
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