Tartarin de Tarascon

Alphonse Daudet

Tartarin de Tarascon

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Title: Tartarin de Tarascon
Author: Alphonse Daudet
Release Date: January 11, 2004 [EBook #10687]
Language: French (with English)
Character set encoding: ISO Latin-1
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TARTARIN DE TARASCON
PAR
ALPHONSE DAUDET

WITH INTRODUCTION, NOTES, AND EXERCISES
BY
BARRY CERF
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES IN THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN

PREFACE
The test of this edition is reprinted without alteration from that of the "Collection Guillaume" (E. Flammarion, Paris, publisher).
"Tartarin de Tarascon" should be read by high-school students at the end of their second or in their third year and by college students at the end of the first or in the second year.
It is with great pleasure that I express my indebtedness for many suggestions to my friend Professor W.F. Giese of the University of Wisconsin.
B.C.
MADISON, WISCONSIN

CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE TEXT PREMIER ��PISODE: A TARASCON I. Le jardin du baobab. II. Coup d'oeil g��n��ral jet�� sur la bonne ville de Tarascon; les chasseurs de Casquettes. III. Nan! nan! nan! Suite du coup d'oeil g��n��ral jet�� sur la bonne ville de Tarascon. IV. Ils!!! V. Quand Tartarin de Tarascon allait au cercle. VI. Les deux Tartarins. VII. Les Europ��ens �� Shang-ha?. Le Haut Commerce. Les Tartares. Tartarin de Tarascon serait-il un imposteur? Le mirage. VIII. La m��nagerie Mitaine. Un lion de l'Atlas �� Tarascon. Terrible et solennelle entrevue! IX. Singuliers effets du mirage. X. Avant le d��part. XI. Des coups d'��p��e, messieurs, des coups d'��p��e, mais pas de coups d'��pingle! XII. De ce qui fut dit dans la petite maison du baobab. XIII. Le d��part. XIV. Le port de Marseille. Embarque! embarque!
DEUXI��ME ��PISODE CHEZ LES TEURS
I. La travers��e. Les cinq positions de la ch��chia. Le soir du troisi��me jour. Mis��ricorde! II. Aux armes! aux armes! III. Invocation �� Cervantes. D��barquement. O�� sont les Teurs? Pas de Teurs. D��sillusion. IV. Le premier aff?t. V. Pan! Pan! VI. Arriv��e de la femelle. Terrible combat. Le Rendez-vous des Lapins. VII. Histoire d'un omnibus, d'une Mauresque et d'un chapelet de fleurs De Jasmin. VIII. Lions de l'Atlas, dormez! IX. Le prince Gr��gory du Mont��n��gro. X. Dis-moi le nom de ton p��re, et je te dirai le nom de cette fleur. XI. Sidi Tart'ri ben Tart'ri. XII. On nous ��crit de Tarascon.
TROISI��ME ��PISODE: CHEZ LES LIONS
I. Les diligences d��port��es. II. O�� l'on voit passer un petit monsieur. III. Un couvent de lions. IV. La caravane en marche. V. L'aff?t du soir dans un bois de lauriers-roses. VI. Enfin! VII. Catastrophes sur catastrophes. VIII. Tarascon! Tarascon!
NOTES EXERCISES

INTRODUCTION
ALPHONSE DAUDET
(N?mes, May 13, 1840; Paris, December 16, 1897)
Alphonse Daudet was born in the ancient Proven?al city of N?mes, near the Rh?ne, May 13, 1840. In this same year ��mile Zola, destined like Daudet to pass his youth in Provence, was born at Paris.
As a result of the commercial upheaval which attended the revolution of 1848, Daudet's father, a wealthy silk manufacturer, was ruined. After a hard struggle he was forced to give up his business at N?mes and moved to Lyons (1849). He was not successful here, and finally, in 1856, the family was broken up. The sons now had to shift for themselves.
These first sixteen years of Alphonse Daudet's life were far from unhappy. He had found delight in exploring the abandoned factory at N?mes. His school days at Lyons were equally agreeable to the young vagabond. His studies occupied him little; he loved to wander through the streets of the great city, finding everywhere food for fanciful speculation. He would follow a person he did not know, scrutinizing his every movement, and striving to lose his own identity in that of the other, to live the other's life. His frequent days of truancy he spent in these idle rambles, or in drifting down the river. Literary ambition had already seized him; he had written a novel (of which no trace remains) and numerous verses. Notwithstanding his lack of application to study, he had succeeded in completing the course of the lyc��e.
In 1856 when it became certain that the father could no longer care for the family, the mother and daughter took refuge in the home of relatives; Ernest, the older of the two surviving sons, sought his fortune in the literary circles of Paris; and Alphonse accepted a position as "master of the study hall" (ma?tre d'��tudes, pion) at the college of Alais in the C��vennes. The boy was too young, too delicate, and too sensitive to be able to endure the mental suffering and humiliation to which he
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