Claude Lantier occasionally took
his meals there. L'Oeuvre.
GONIN, a family of fisher-folks who lived at Bonneville. It consisted of
Gonin, his wife, and one little girl. A cousin of the wife, named Cuche,
came to live with them after his house had been washed away by the sea.
Gonin soon after fell into bad health, and his wife and Cuche treated
him so badly that the police talked of an inquiry. Pauline Quenu tried
to reform the little girl, who had been allowed to grow up wild. La Joie
de Vivre.
GORJU, a pupil of Dequersonniere, and himself a future architect. On one
of the walls of the studio one could read this brief statement: "The 7th
June, Gorju has said that he cared nothing for Rome. Signed, Godemard."
L'Oeuvre.
GOUJET, a blacksmith from the Departement du Nord, who came to Paris and
got employment in a manufactory of bolts. "Behind the silent quietude
of his life lay buried a great sorrow: his father in a moment of drunken
madness had killed a fellow-workman with a crowbar, and after arrest had
hanged himself in his cell with a pocket-handkerchief." Goujet and his
mother, who lived with him, always seemed to feel this horror weighing
upon them, and did their best to redeem it by strict uprightness.
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