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Leroux, Gaston, 1868-1927

"The Phantom of the Opera"

"
I then spoke of the two successors and expressed my surprise that,
in his Memoirs of a Manager, M. Moncharmin should describe the Opera
ghost's behavior at such length in the first part of the book and hardly
mention it at all in the second. In reply to this, the Persian,
who knew the MEMOIRS as thoroughly as if he had written them himself,
observed that I should find the explanation of the whole business
if I would just recollect the few lines which Moncharmin devotes
to the ghost in the second part aforesaid. I quote these lines,
which are particularly interesting because they describe the very
simple manner in which the famous incident of the twenty-thousand
francs was closed:
"As for O. G., some of whose curious tricks I have related in the
first part of my Memoirs, I will only say that he redeemed by one
spontaneous fine action all the worry which he had caused my dear
friend and partner and, I am bound to say, myself. He felt, no doubt,
that there are limits to a joke, especially when it is so expensive
and when the commissary of police has been informed, for, at the moment
when we had made an appointment in our office with M.


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