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A Mummer's Tale

Anatole France

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .Nanteuil was tormenting herself in this fashion in her box, when Jenny Fagette came to join her there; Jenny Fagette, slender and fragile, the incarnation of Alfred de Musset's Muse, who at night wore out her eyes of periwinkle-blue by scribbling society notes and fashion articles. A mediocre actress, but a clever and wonderfully energetic woman, she was Nanteuil's most intimate friend. They recognized in each other remarkable qualities, qualities which differed from those which each discovered in herself, and they acted in concert as the two great Powers of the Odéon. Nevertheless, Fagette was doing her best to take Ligny away from her friend; not from inclination, for she was insensible as a stick and held men in contempt, but with the idea that a liaison with a diplomatist would procure her certain advantages, and above all, in order not to miss the opportunity of doing something [Pg 47] scandalous. Nanteuil was aware of this. She knew that all her sister-ac. . . Read More

Community Reviews

Written with all of France's usual cleverness and wit despite being a very forgettable story.

Another great book by Anatole France. This book follows a cast of actors, primarily Chevalier and Felice Nanteuil. The two were lovers until Felice took on another lover and Chevalier committed suicide in front of her. As in almost all of France's books the story is a critique of religion and, in th