Mademoiselle de Maupin, v2 . lways be, in my mind, the man who opened to mea world of novel sensations. Those are things a womandoesnt readily forget. Although absent, I shall thinkof you often, more often than if you were with me. Do your best to console poor Rosette, who is likelyto be at least as grieved as you at my departure. Loveeach other well in memory of me, whom you have bothloved, and mention my name sometimes in a kiss. NOTES 1 As You Like It. 2 The last word in this quotation, which justifies the succeedingepithets, is not in the English version of the play. i !! I ! Iilliiiil. (S


Mademoiselle de Maupin, v2 . lways be, in my mind, the man who opened to mea world of novel sensations. Those are things a womandoesnt readily forget. Although absent, I shall thinkof you often, more often than if you were with me. Do your best to console poor Rosette, who is likelyto be at least as grieved as you at my departure. Loveeach other well in memory of me, whom you have bothloved, and mention my name sometimes in a kiss. NOTES 1 As You Like It. 2 The last word in this quotation, which justifies the succeedingepithets, is not in the English version of the play. i !! I ! Iilliiiil. (S^apter XM Her supple, yielding body shaped itself to mine likewax and took its whole- exterior outline as exactly aspossible:—water would not have found its way morescrupulously into every irregularity in the line. — Thusglued to my side, she produced the effect of the doublestroke that painters give to the shadow side of theirpicture in laying on their color. BIBLIOTHEQUE DES CHEFS-DOEUVRE DU ROMAN CONTEMPORAIN MADEMOISELLE DE MAUPIN VOLUME TWO THEOPHILE GAUTIER PRINTED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY BYGEORGE BARRIE & SONS, Philadelphia COPYRIGHTED, 1897, BY G. B. &. SON THIS EDITION OF MADEMOISELLE DE MAUPIN HAS BEEN COMPLETELY TRANSLATEDBY I. G. BURNHAM THE ETCHINGS ARE BY FRANCOIS-XAVIER LE SUEUR AND DRAWINGS BY EDOUARD TOUDOUZE MADEMOISELLE DE MAUPIN IX That is the fact.—I love a man, Silvio.—I tried fora long while to deceive myself; I gave a different nameto the sentiment I felt, I clothed it in the guise of pure,disinterested friendship; I believed that it was nothingmmademoiselledema10gaut


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