Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Pierrot (short story)

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Language
  
French

Published in
  
Le Gaulois

Publication date
  
1 October 1882

Originally published
  
1 October 1882

Country
  
France

Series
  
Contes de la bécasse

Media type
  
Print

Preceded by
  
"La Folle"

Author
  
Guy de Maupassant

Publication type
  
Periodical literature

Pierrot (short story) staticfnacstaticcommultimediaImagesFRNR61

Similar
  
Guy de Maupassant books, Other books

"Pierrot" is a short story by French writer Guy de Maupassant. It was originally published on 1 October 1882 in the French newspaper Le Gaulois. A year later, in 1883, it appeared in the short story collection Contes de la bécasse. The story was dedicated to Henry Roujon, novelist and public servant.

Plot

Ms. Lefevre, a rich, miserly widow has a dozen onions stolen from her garden. Following the advice of a neighbor, she decides to buy a small dog. The baker brings her a dog named Pierrot. He would always bark because he is hungry. He isn't even scaring the thief away.

She refuses to pay eight francs for the animal and decides to throw Pierrot into a Denehole (alternatively Dene hole or Dene-hole) is an underground structure consisting of a number of small chalk caves entered by a vertical shaft, which is the well in which all dogs from the area end up. They slowly starve to death and eat those that have already died.

She throws Pierrot in the well, but when she hears the barking of the dog, it tears her heart. The following nights she sees Pierrot in her dreams, but she keeps refusing to pay the tax. To appease her guilty conscience, she goes every day beside the hole to throw Pierrot some bread. Then she hears a second dog in the well. She refuses to feed another dog because it was bigger and stronger. She leaves Pierrot to die.

References

Pierrot (short story) Wikipedia