CONTENTS

PAGE
[Pierre Et Jean].[1]
[Dreams][184]
[Moonlight][189]
[The Corsican Bandit][195]
[A Dead Woman's Secret][200]
[The Cake][206]
[A Lively Friend][213]
[The Orphan][221]
[The Blind Man][230]
[A Wife's Confession][235]
[Relics of the Past][242]
[The Peddler][247]
[The Avenger][257]
[All Over][265]
[Letter Found on a Drowned Man][274]
[Mother and Son][282]
[The Spasm][290]
[A Duel][298]
[The Love of Long Ago][305]
[An Uncomfortable Bed][311]
[A Warning Note][315]
[The Horrible][324]
[A New Year's Gift][333]
[Beside a Dead Man][342]
[After][348]
[A Queer Night in Paris][356]
[Boitelle][369]

OF "THE NOVEL"

do not intend in these pages to put in a plea for this little novel. On the contrary, the ideas I shall try to set forth will rather involve a criticism of the class of psychological analysis which I have undertaken in Pierre et Jean. I propose to treat of novels in general.

I am not the only writer who finds himself taken to task in the same terms each time he brings out a new book. Among many laudatory phrases, I invariably meet with this observation, penned by the same critics: "The greatest fault of this book is that it is not, strictly speaking, a novel."

The same form might be adopted in reply:

"The greatest fault of the writer who does me the honor to review me is that he is not a critic."