
To - MONSIEUR OCTAVE MIRBEAU.
To - MONSIEUR JULES HURET.
A CHAMBERMAID'S DIARY - BY - OCTAVE MIRBEAU - Translated from the French by - BENJ. R. TUCKER - NEW YORK: - BENJ. R. TUCKER, PUBLISHER - 1900
A CHAMBERMAID'S DIARY
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A sharp‑eyed French chambermaid begins a new chapter of her life when she takes up service with a wealthy country couple. From the moment she steps into the grand hallway, she records the rhythm of daily chores, the whispered gossip, and the peculiar customs of those she serves. Her entries are vivid snapshots that pull the listener into the hidden world behind polished doors.
As she tends to rooms and meals, the maid’s mind drifts back to earlier posts in Parisian mansions, salons, and bourgeois homes, weaving past anecdotes into present observations. Through witty asides and biting commentary she sketches a panorama of French society—revealing the pretensions of aristocrats, the petty ambitions of officials, and the surprising solidarity among servants. The diary balances humor with a sobering honesty, offering a candid, often sardonic look at the class divide of the era.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (560K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Clare Graham & Marc D'Hooghe (Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.)
Release date
2013-11-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1848–1917
A fearless French writer of the Belle Époque, remembered for sharp satire, dark humor, and a restless willingness to challenge polite society. His novels and plays often mixed scandal, psychology, and social criticism in ways that still feel startlingly modern.
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