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Notre Dame de Paris - Bartleby.com

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The good, fat Oudar<strong>de</strong> was preparing to reply, and the quarrel would no doubt have en<strong>de</strong>d in the pulling<br />

of caps, had not Mahiette sud<strong>de</strong>nly ma<strong>de</strong> a diversion by exclaiming:<br />

“Look at those people gathered over there at the end of the bridge. There’s something in the middle of<br />

the crowd that they’re looking at.”<br />

“True,” said Gervaise. “I hear a tambourine. I think it must be little Esmeralda doing tricks with her<br />

goat. Quick, Mahiette, mend your pace and bring your boy! You came to see the sights of <strong>Paris</strong>.<br />

Yesterday you saw the Flemings; to-day you must see the gipsy.”<br />

“The gipsy!” cried Mahiette, turning round and clutching her boy by the arm. “God preserve us! She<br />

might steal my child! Come, Eustache!”<br />

And she set off running along the quay towards the Grève till she had left the bridge far behind her.<br />

Presently the boy, whom she dragged rapidly after her, stumbled and fell on his knees. She drew up<br />

breathless, and Oudar<strong>de</strong> and Gervaise were able to join her.<br />

“That gipsy steal your child!” said Gervaise. “What a very strange notion!”<br />

Mahiette shook her head thoughtfully.<br />

“The strange thing about it,” observed Oudar<strong>de</strong>, “is that the sachette has the same notion about the<br />

Egyptian women.”<br />

“The sachette?” asked Mahiette. “What is that?”<br />

“Why, Sister Gudule, to be sure,” answered Oudar<strong>de</strong>.<br />

“And who is Sister Gudule?”<br />

“It is very evi<strong>de</strong>nt that you have lived in Reims not to know that!” exclaimed Oudar<strong>de</strong>. “That is the nun<br />

in the Rat-Hole.”<br />

“What?” said Mahiette, “not the poor woman we are taking this cake to?”<br />

Oudar<strong>de</strong> nod<strong>de</strong>d. “Yes, the very one. You will see her directly at her window looking on the Grève. She<br />

thinks the same as you about these vagabonds of Egypt that go about with their tambourines and<br />

fortune-telling. Nobody knows why she has this abhorrence of Zingari and Egyptians. But you, Mahiette,<br />

why should you run away at the mere sight of them?”<br />

“Oh,” answered Mahiette, clasping her boy’s fair head to her bosom, “I would not have that happen to<br />

me that happened to Paquette la Chantefleurie.”<br />

“Oh, you must tell us that story, my good Mahiette,” said Gervaise, taking her arm.<br />

“Willingly,” returned Mahiette, “but it is very evi<strong>de</strong>nt that you have lived in <strong>Paris</strong> not to know it! Well,<br />

you must know—but there is no need for us to stand still while I tell you the story—that Paquette la<br />

Chantefleurie was a pretty girl of eighteen when I too was one—that is to say, eighteen years ago—and<br />

has had only herself to blame if she’s not, like me, a buxom, hearty woman of six-and-thirty, with a<br />

husband and a fine boy. But there!—from the time she was fourteen it was too late! I must tell you, then,<br />

that she was the daughter of Guybertaut, a boat-minstrel at Reims, the same that played before King<br />

Charles VII at his coronation, when he went down our river Vesle from Sillery to Muison, and had Mme.

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