"Let me find another watch!" roared my unfortunate friend, with a closed fist as if threatening the future.
A YOUNG GIRL'S DIARY
BY MARCEL PRÉVOST
Marcel Prévost, a student of the psychology of women, born at Paris in 1862, is a graduate of the Polytechnic School, and was for several years connected with the manufacturing of tobacco. He retired from business in 1890 after having published three novels, and then wrote "Les Demi Vierges," which he turned into a successful play, and other novels, besides "Lettres de Femme," etc., and "Les Lettres à Françoise," 1902, intended for the instruction of young girls.
Prévost's great strength lies in his weakness. He is a facile analyst of sentiment, delicate and graceful. He does not lack a certain amount of vigor either—in "Le Scorpion" this vigor approaches brutality, in "Mademoiselle Jauffre" it is strength.
A YOUNG GIRL'S DIARY
BY MARCEL PRÉVOST
Translated by Mrs. Clay C. MacDonald.
Copyright, 1899, by The Current Literature Publishing Company.