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    Chapter 11

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    XI

    THE chair, with the old lady beaming in it, was wheeled away
    towards the doors at the further end of the salon, while our
    party hastened to crowd around her, and to offer her their
    congratulations. In fact, eccentric as was her conduct, it was
    also overshadowed by her triumph; with the result that the
    General no longer feared to be publicly compromised by being
    seen with such a strange woman, but, smiling in a condescending,
    cheerfully familiar way, as though he were soothing a child, he
    offered his greetings to the old lady. At the same time, both he
    and the rest of the spectators were visibly impressed.
    Everywhere people kept pointing to the Grandmother, and talking
    about her. Many people even walked beside her chair, in order to
    view her the better while, at a little distance, Astley was
    carrying on a conversation on the subject with two English
    acquaintances of his. De Griers was simply overflowing with
    smiles and compliments, and a number of fine ladies were staring
    at the Grandmother as though she had been something curious.

    "Quelle victoire!" exclaimed De Griers.

    "Mais, Madame, c'etait du feu!" added Mlle. Blanche with an
    elusive smile.

    "Yes, I have won twelve thousand florins," replied the old
    lady. "And then there is all this gold. With it the total ought
    to come to nearly thirteen thousand. How much is that in Russian
    money? Six thousand roubles, I think?"

    However, I calculated that the sum would exceed seven thousand
    roubles--or, at the present rate of exchange, even eight
    thousand.

    "Eight thousand roubles! What a splendid thing! And to think of
    you simpletons sitting there and doing nothing! Potapitch!
    Martha! See what I have won!"

    "How DID you do it, Madame?" Martha exclaimed ecstatically.
    "Eight thousand roubles!"

    "And I am going to give you fifty gulden apiece. There they
    are."

    Potapitch and Martha rushed towards her to kiss her hand.

    "And to each bearer also I will give a ten-gulden piece. Let
    them have it out of the gold, Alexis Ivanovitch. But why is this
    footman bowing to me, and that other man as well? Are they
    congratulating me? Well, let them have ten gulden apiece."


    "Madame la princesse--Un pauvre expatrie--Malheur continuel--Les
    princes russes sont si genereux!" said a man who for some time
    past had been hanging around the old lady's chair--a personage
    who, dressed in a shabby frockcoat and coloured waistcoat, kept
    taking off his cap, and smiling pathetically.

    "Give him ten gulden," said the Grandmother. "No, give him
    twenty. Now, enough of that, or I shall never get done with you
    all. Take a moment's rest, and then carry me away. Prascovia, I
    mean to buy a new dress for you
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