BOOK SIXTH.
CHAPTER 3. HISTORY OF A LEAVENED CAKE OF MAIZE.
 (continued)
*  Ox-eye daisy. 
**  Easter daisy. 
Mahiette sighed, and wiped away a tear which trickled from
 her eyes. 
"This is no very extraordinary history," said Gervaise, "and
 in the whole of it I see nothing of any Egyptian women or
 children." 
"Patience!" resumed Mahiette, "you will see one child.--In
 '66, 'twill be sixteen years ago this month, at Sainte-
 Paule's day, Paquette was brought to bed of a little girl.
 The unhappy creature! it was a great joy to her; she had long
 wished for a child.  Her mother, good woman, who had never
 known what to do except to shut her eyes, her mother was
 dead.  Paquette had no longer any one to love in the world
 or any one to love her.  La Chantefleurie had been a poor
 creature during the five years since her fall.  She was alone,
 alone in this life, fingers were pointed at her, she was hooted
 at in the streets, beaten by the sergeants, jeered at by the
 little boys in rags.  And then, twenty had arrived: and twenty
 is an old age for amorous women.  Folly began to bring her
 in no more than her trade of embroidery in former days; for
 every wrinkle that came, a crown fled; winter became hard to
 her once more, wood became rare again in her brazier, and
 bread in her cupboard.  She could no longer work because,
 in becoming voluptuous, she had grown lazy; and she suffered
 much more because, in growing lazy, she had become voluptuous.
 At least, that is the way in which monsieur the cure of
 Saint-Remy explains why these women are colder and hungrier
 than other poor women, when they are old." 
"Yes," remarked Gervaise, "but the gypsies?" 
"One moment, Gervaise!" said Oudarde, whose attention
 was less impatient.  "What would be left for the end if all
 were in the beginning?  Continue, Mahiette, I entreat you.
 That poor Chantefleurie!" 
Mahiette went on. 
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