like a child with its rubber ball. His exceptional
strength, his supple skill, the terrible leverage of
his loins, the athletic push of his shoulders, all
combined to make me dreamy. The strange and
unhealthy curiosity, prompted by fear as much as
by attraction, which is excited in me by the riddle
of these suspicious manners, of this closed mouth,
of this impressing look, is doubled by this mus-
cular power, this bull's back. Without being
able to explain it to myself further, I feel that
there is a secret correspondence between Joseph and
me, — a physical and moral tie that is becoming a
little more binding every day.
From the window of the linen-room where I work, I sometimes follow him with my eyes in the gar- den. There he is, bending over his work, his face almost touching the ground, or else kneeling against the wall where the espaliers stand in line. And suddenly he disappears, he vanishes. Lower your head, and, before you can raise it again, he is gone. Does he bury himself in the ground? Does he pass through the walls? From time to time I have occasion to go to the garden to give him an order from Madame. I do not see him anywhere, and I call him:
" Joseph! Joseph! where are you? " Suddenly, without a sound, Joseph arises before me, from behind a tree, from behind a vegetable- bed. He rises before me in the sunlight, with his