have always been most amiable with her. She is jealous
of me--that is it--oh! I am certain of it. Because I am young and
happy. Jealous of me! that's funny, is it not? The old pig! Poor
'Loisette'--she shivered all night with fright and from being wet.
Edmond and I are going to find another place. Yes, she shall see what it
will be there without us--with no one to depend upon for her snuff and
her wine. If she were concierge at Edmond's old atelier she would be
treated like that horrid old Madame Fouquet."
The boys in the atelier over her window hated this old Madame Fouquet, I
remember. She was always prying about and complaining, so they fished up
her pet gold-fish out of the aquarium on her window-sill, and fried them
on the atelier stove, and put them back in the window on a little plate
all garnished with carrots. She swore vengeance and called in the
police, but to no avail. One day they fished up the parrot in its cage,
and the green bird that screamed and squawked continually met a speedy
and painless death and went off to the taxidermist. Then the cage was
lowered in its place with the door left ajar, and the old woman felt
sure that her pet had escaped and would some day find his way back to
her--a thing this garrulous bird would never have thought of doing had
he had any say in the matter.
So the old lady left the door of the cage open for days in the event of
his return, and strange to tell, one morning Madame Fouquet got up to
quarrel with her next-door neighbor, and, to her amazement, there was
her green pet on his perch in his cage. She called to him, but he did
not answer; he simply stood on his wired legs and fixed his glassy eyes
on her, and said not a word--while the gang of Indians in the windows
above yelled themselves hoarse.
It was just such a crowd as this that initiated a "nouveau" once in one
of the ateliers. They stripped the new-comer, and, as is often the
custom on similar festive occasions, painted him all over with
sketches, done in the powdered water-colors that come in glass jars.
They are cheap and cover a lot of surface, so that the gentleman in
question looked like a human picture-gallery. After the ceremony, he was
put in a hamper and deposited, in the morning, in the middle of the Pont
des Arts, where he was subsequently found by the police, who carted him
off in a cab.
[Illustration: THE FONTAINE DE MEDICIS]
But you must see more of this vast garden of the Luxembourg to
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