cakes, and mineral water, my dear ! Yes, the
dirty beasts drank nothing but Evian water, because
of an epidemic of typhoid fever that was raging at
Versailles. In the winter Madame had the cheek to
take the stove out of my chamber, and put it in the
room where the monkey and the cats slept. Would
you believe it? I detested them, especially one of
the dogs, a horrible old pug, that was always
snif&ng at my skirts, in spite of the kicks that I
gave it. The other morning Madame caught me
whipping it. You can imagine the scene. She
showed me the door in double-quick time."
Oh ! this Clecle ! how agreeable and amusing she
People have no idea of all the annoyances to which domestics are subjected, or of the fierce and eternal exploitation under which they suffer. Now the masters, now the keepers of employment- bureaus, now the charitable institutions, to say nothing of the comrades, some of whom are capa- ble of terrible meanness. And nobody takes any interest in anybody else. Each one lives, grows fat, and is entertained by the misery of some one poorer than himself. Scenes change, settings are shifted, you traverse social surroundings that are different and even hostile, but everywhere you find the same appetites and passions. In the cramped apartments of the bourgeois and in the elegant