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and came back to Paris. Ah! quelle place! that Angleterre! J'etais toujours, toujours triste la! In Paris I make a good living; ten francs a day--that's not bad, is it? and my time is taken often a year ahead. I like to pose for the painters--the studios are cleaner than those of the sculptor's. Some of the sculptors' studios are so dirty--clay and dust over everything! Did you see Fabien's studio the other day when I posed for him? You thought it dirty? Tiens!--you should have seen it last year when he was working on the big group for the Exposition! It is clean now compared with what it was. You see, I go to my work in the plainest of clothes--a cheap print dress and everything of the simplest I can make, for in half an hour, left in those studios, they would be fit only for the blanchisseuse--the wax and dust are in and over everything! There is no time to change when one has not the time to go home at mid-day." [Illustration: JEAN PAUL LAURENS] And so I learned much of the good sense and many of the economies in the life of this most celebrated model. You can see her superb figure wrought in marble and bronze by some of the most famous of modern French sculptors all over Paris. There is another type of model you will see, too--one who rang my bell one sunny morning in response to a note written by my good friend, the sculptor, for whom this little Parisienne posed. She came without her hat--this "vrai type"--about seventeen years of age--with exquisite features, her blue eyes shining under a wealth of delicate blonde hair arranged in the prettiest of fashions--a little white bow tied jauntily at her throat, and her exquisitely delicate, strong young figure clothed in a simple black dress. She had about her such a frank, childlike air! Yes, she posed for so and so, and so and so, but not many; she liked it better than being in a shop; and it was far more independent, for one could go about and see one's friends--and there were many of her girl friends living on the same street where this chic demoiselle lived. At noon my drawing was finished. As she sat buttoning her boots, she looked up at me innocently, slipped her five francs for the morning's work in her reticule, and said: "I live with mama, and mama never gives me any money to spend on myself. This is Sunday and a holiday, so I shall go with Henriette and her brother to Vincennes. It is delicious there under the trees." [Illustration: OLD MAN MOD
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