Five Short Stories Alphonse Daudet The Harvard Classics Shelf of Fiction, Vol. XIII, Part 4. Selected by Charles William Eliot
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Bibliographic Record
Contents Biographical Note Criticisms and Interpretations I. By Henry James II. By George Pellissier 1. The Siege of Berlin 2. The Last Class—The Story of a Little Alsatian 3. The Child Spy 4. The Game of Billiards 5. The Bad Zouave
Biographical Note ALPHONSE DAUDET was born at Nîmes in the south of France on May 13, 1840. His father was an unsuccessful silk manufacturer, and his boyhood was far from happy. After a period of schooling at Lyons, he became at sixteen usher in a school, but before the end of the following year he abandoned a profession in which he found only misery. Going up to Paris he joined his elder brother, Ernest, who was then trying to get a foothold in journalism. At eighteen he published a volume of poems, “Les Amoureuses,” wrote for the “Figaro,” and began experimenting with playwriting. He attracted the attention of the Duc de Morny, who made him one of his secretaries and in various ways helped him to a start in life. His first notable success came in 1866 with his “Lettres de mon Moulin,” a series of sketches and stories of great charm and delicacy, and this was followed up by a longer work, “Le petit chose,” a