Two years in the French West Indies. Partie 2

Page 46

La

Vérette.

225

XVIII.

March 10th.

and her little ones are all in Manm-Robert's shop;—she is recounting her troubles,—fresh troubles : forty-seven francs' worth of work delivered on time, and no money received. . . . So much I hear as I enter t h e little boutique myself, to buy a package of " b o u t s . " —"Assise/" says Manm-Robert, handing me her own chair ;—she is always pleased to see me, pleased to chat with me about Creole folk-lore. Then observing a smile exchanged between myself and Mimi, she tells the children to bid me g o o d - d a y : — " A l l é di bonjou' Missiê-à!" One after another, each holds up a velvety cheek to kiss. And Mimi, who has been asking her mother the same question over and over again for at least five minutes without being able to obtain an answer, ventures to demand of me on the strength of this introduction :— . . . YZORE

—"Missiê,

oti masque-à

?"

the mother cries o u t ; — " W h y , the child must be going out of her senses ! . . . Mimi pa —"Y

'mbêté

ben fou,

moune

pouloss

conm

ça!—pa

!"

nipiess

masque:

c'est

la-vérette

qui ni." (Don't annoy people like that!—there are no maskers n o w ; there is nothing but the verette!) [You are not annoying me at all, little Mimi ; but I would not like to answer your question truthfully. I know where the maskers are,— most of them, child; and 1 do not think it would be well for you to know. They wear no masks now ; but if you were to see them for even one moment, by some extraordinary accident, pretty Mimi, I think you would feel more frightened than you ever felt before.] . . . —" Toutt lanuite y k'anni rêvé masque-à," continues Yzore. . . . I am curious to know what Mimi's dreams are like ;—wonder if I can coax her to tell m e . . . ,


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