FOREWORD.

In the rooms of my friend Otto Struve there hangs a parrot cage containing a somewhat dejected-looking lark. It was given to him by Gustave Garnier, the man who took the Prix de Rome last year—or was it the year before?—and whose picture of a girl was bought by the state for I do not know how many thousand francs before it had hung a fortnight in the Salon. A story connects the painter and the picture and the bird—a story whose name ought to have been “Célestin” but for that eternal unfitness of things which makes the comedy of real life an inverted image of the comedy of romance and demands for the story of Célestin the title of “Toto,” or, if it please you better, “The Rapin.”

H. de V. S.


CONTENTS.

Part I.
CHAPTERPAGE
I.

Toto

[1]
II.

The Good Advice of M. de Nani

[20]
III.

The Fag End of a Night and the Beginning ofa Morning

[35]
IV.

The Poetry of Hats

[45]
V.

Gaillard the Comforter

[62]
VI.

Fanfoullard, Mirmillard, and Papillard

[76]
Part II.
I.

It Is Not Always May

[88]
II.

Fête Champêtre

[103]
III.

The Genesis of “Pantin”

[117]
IV.

Receipt for Stuffing a Marquis

[130]
V.

Angélique

[141]
VI.

The Departure

[146]
Part III.
I.

Garnier

[153]
II.

The Sorrows of Gaillard

[165]
III.

The Sorrows of Art

[185]
IV.

Bourgeois—Banker—Prince

[192]
V.

The Shower

[218]
Part IV.
I.

Adam Froissart

[227]
II.

The Story of Fantoff and Bastiche

[253]
III.

The Revenge of M. de Nani

[262]
IV.

Envoy

[290]

THE RAPIN.