me, and at the same time he interests me prodi-
giously. Often I have seen frightful things pass-
ing in the troubled water, in the dead water of his
eye§. Since I have been observing him, I have
changed the opinion that I formed of him when I
first entered this house, — the opinion that he is a
gross, stupid, and clumsy peasant. I ought to
have examined him more attentively. Now I think
him singularly shrewd and crafty, and even better
than shrewd, worse than clever ; I know not how
to express myself concerning him. And then — is
it because I am in the habit of seeing him every
day? — I no longer find him so ugly or so old.
Habit, like a fog, tends to â– oalliate things and
beings. Little by little it obscures the features of
a face and rubs down deformities ; if you live with
a humpback day in and day out, after a time he
loses his hump. But there is something else ; I
am discovering something new and profound in
Joseph, which upsets me. It is not harmony of
features or purity of lines that makes a man beau-
tiful to a woman. It is something less apparent,
less defined, a sort of affinity, and, if I dare say
so, a sort of sexual atmosphere, pungent, terrible,
or intoxicating, to the haunting influence of which
certain, women are susceptible, even in spite of
themselves. Well, such an atmosphere emanates
from Joseph. The other day I admired him as he
was lifting a cask of wine. He played with it