leep in their costumes or what
remains of them, wherever fortune lands them--others to studios, where
the gaiety is often kept up for days.
Ah! but life is not all "couleur de rose" in this true Bohemia.
"One day," says little Marguerite (she who lives in the rue Monge), "one
eats and the next day one doesn't. It is always like that, is it not,
monsieur?--and it costs so much to live, and so you see, monsieur, life
is always a fight."
And Marguerite's brown eyes swim a little and her pretty mouth closes
firmly.
"But where is Paul?" I ask.
"I do not know, monsieur," she replies quietly; "I have not seen him in
ten days--the atelier is closed--I have been there every day, expecting
to find him--he left no word with his concierge. I have been to his cafe
too, but no one has seen him--you see, monsieur, Paul does not love me!"
I recall an incident that I chanced to see in passing the little shop
where Marguerite works, that only confirms the truth of her realization.
Paul had taken Marguerite back to the little shop, after their dejeuner
together, and, as I passed, he stopped at the door with her, kissed her
on both cheeks, and left her; but before they had gone a dozen paces,
they ran back to embrace again. This occurred four times, until Paul and
Marguerite finally parted. And, as he watched her little heels disappear
up the wooden stairs to her work-room above, Paul blew a kiss to the
pretty milliner at the window next door, and, taking a long whiff of his
cigarette, sauntered off in the direction of his atelier whistling.
[Illustration: A MORNING'S WORK]
It is ideal, this student life with its student loves of four years, but
is it right to many an honest little comrade, who seldom knows an hour
when she is away from her ami? who has suffered and starved and slaved
with him through years of days of good and bad luck--who has encouraged
him in his work, nursed him when ill, and made a thousand golden hours
in this poet's or painter's life so completely happy, that he looks back
on them in later life as never-to-be-forgotten? He remembers the good
dinners at the little restaurant near his studio, where they dined among
the old crowd. There were Lavaud the sculptor and Francine, with the
figure of a goddess; Moreau, who played the cello at the opera; little
Louise Dumont, who posed at Julian's, and old Jacquemart, the very soul
of good fellowship, who would set them roaring with his inimitable
humor.
Wh
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