the embers to see if a spark were yet alive, Madame Felix de
Vandenesse was undergoing those
violent palpitations which a woman
feels at the
certainty of doing wrong, and stepping on forbidden
ground,--emotions that are not without charm, and which
awaken various
dormant faculties. Women are fond of using Bluebeard's
bloody key,
that fine mythological idea for which we are
indebted to Perrault.
The dramatist--who knew his Shakespeare--displayed his wretchedness,
related his struggle with men and things, made his
hearer aware of his
baseless
grandeur, his unrecognized political
genius, his life without
noble affections. Without
saying a single
definite word, he contrived
to suggest to this
charming woman that she should play the noble part
of Rebecca in Ivanhoe, and love and protect him. It was all, of
course, in the
ethereal regions of
sentiment. Forget-me-nots are not
more blue, lilies not more white than the images, thoughts, and
radiantly illumined brow of this
accomplished artist, who was likely
to send his conversation to a
publisher. He played his part of reptile
to this poor Eve so cleverly, he made the fatal bloom of the apple so
dazzling to her eyes, that Marie left the ball-room filled with that
species of
remorse which
resembles hope, flattered in all her
vanities, stirred to every corner of her heart, caught by her own
virtues, allured by her native pity for misfortune.
Perhaps Madame de Manerville had taken Vandenesse into the salon where
his wife was talking with Nathan; perhaps he had come there himself to
fetch Marie, and take her home; perhaps his conversation with his
former flame had
awakened slumbering griefs; certain it is that when
his wife took his arm to leave the ball-room, she saw that his face
was sad and his look serious. The
countess wondered if he was
displeased with her. No sooner were they seated in the
carriage than
she turned to Felix and said, with a
mischievous smile,--
"Did not I see you talking half the evening with Madame de
Manerville?"
Felix was not out of the tangled paths into which his wife had led him
by this
charming little quarrel, when the
carriage turned into their
court-yard. This was Marie's first artifice dictated by her new
emotion; and she even took pleasure in triumphing over a man who,
until then, had seemed to her so superior.
CHAPTER V
FLORINE
Between the rue Basse-du-Rempart and the rue Neuve-des-Mathurins,
Raoul had, on the third floor of an ugly and narrow house, in the
Passage Sandrie, a poor enough
lodging, cold and bare, where he lived
ostensibly for the general public, for
literary neophytes, and for his
creditors, duns, and other
annoying persons whom he kept on the
threshold of private life. His real home, his fine
existence, his
presentation of himself before his friends, was in the house of
Mademoiselle Florine, a second-class
comedyactress, where, for ten
years, the said friends, journalists, certain authors, and writers in
general disported themselves in the society of
equally illustrious
actresses. For ten years Raoul had attached himself so closely to this
woman that he passed more than half his life with her; he took all his
meals at her house unless he had some friend to invite, or an
invitation to dinner elsewhere.
To
consummatecorruption, Florine added a
lively wit, which
intercourse with artists had developed and practice sharpened day by
day. Wit is thought to be a quality rare in comedians. It is so
natural to suppose that persons who spend their lives in showing
things on the outside have nothing within. But if we
reflect on the
small number of actors and
actresses who live in each century, and
also on how many
dramatic authors and
fascinating women this
population has supplied
relatively to its numbers, it is allowable to
refute that opinion, which rests, and
apparently will rest forever, on
a
criticism" target="_blank" title="n.批评;评论(文)">
criticism made against
dramatic artists,--namely, that their
personal
sentiments are destroyed by the plastic
presentation of
passions;
whereas, in fact, they put into their art only their gifts
of mind, memory, and
imagination. Great artists are beings who, to
quote Napoleon, can cut off at will the
connection which Nature has
put between the senses and thought. Moliere and Talma, in their old
age, were more in love than ordinary men in all their lives.
Accustomed to listen to journalists, who guess at most things, putting
two and two together, to writers, who
foresee and tell all that they
see; accustomed also to the ways of certain political personages, who
watched one another in her house, and profited by all admissions,
Florine presented in her own person a
mixture of devil and angel,
which made her
peculiarly fitted to receive these roues. They
delighted in her cool self-possession; her anomalies of mind and heart
entertained them prodigiously. Her house, enriched by
gallanttributes, displayed the exaggerated
magnificence of women who, caring
little about the cost of things, care only for the things themselves,
and give them the value of their own caprices,--women who will break a
fan or a smelling-bottle fit for queens in a moment of
passion, and
scream with rage if a servant breaks a ten-franc
saucer from which
their poodle drinks.
Florine's dining-room, filled with her most
distinguished offerings,
will give a fair idea of this pell-mell of regal and
fantasticluxury.
Throughout, even on the ceilings, it was panelled in oak, picked out,
here and there, by dead-gold lines. These panels were framed in
reliefwith figures of children playing with
fantastic animals, among which
the light danced and floated,
touching here a
sketch by Bixiou, that
maker of caricatures, there the cast of an angel
holding a
vessel of
holy water (presented by Francois Souchet), farther on a coquettish
painting of Joseph Bridau, a
gloomy picture of a Spanish alchemist by
Hippolyte Schinner, an autograph of Lord Byron to Lady Caroline Lamb,
framed in carved ebony, while,
hanging opposite as a
species of
pendant, was a letter from Napoleon to Josephine. All these things
were placed about without the slightest symmetry, but with almost
imperceptible art. On the chimney-piece, of
exquisitely carved oak,
there was nothing except a strange,
evidently Florentine, ivory
statuette attributed to Michael Angelo, representing Pan discovering a
woman under the skin of a young
shepherd, the original of which is in
the royal palace of Vienna. On either side were candelabra of
Renaissance design. A clock, by Boule, on a tortoise-shell stand,
inlaid with brass, sparkled in the centre of one panel between two
statuettes,
undoubtedly obtained from the demolition of some abbey. In
the corners of the room, on pedestals, were lamps of royal
magnificence, as to which a
manufacturer had made strong remonstrance
against adapting his lamps to Japanese vases. On a marvellous
sideboard was displayed a service of silver plate, the gift of an
English lord, also porcelains in high
relief; in short, the
luxury of
an
actress who has no other property than her furniture.
The bedroom, all in
violet, was a dream that Florine had indulged from
her debut, the chief features of which were curtains of
violet velvet
lined with white silk, and looped over tulle; a ceiling of white
cashmere with
violet satin rays, an ermine
carpet beside the bed; in
the bed, the curtains of which
resembled a lily turned
upside down was
a
lantern by which to read the newspaper plaudits or
criticism" target="_blank" title="n.批评;评论(文)">
criticisms before
they appeared in the morning. A yellow salon, its effect
heightened by
trimmings of the color of Florentine
bronze, was in
harmony with the
rest of these
magnificences, a further
description of which would make
our pages
resemble the posters of an
auction sale. To find comparisons
for all these fine things, it would be necessary to go to a certain
house that was almost next door, belonging to a Rothschild.
Sophie Grignault, surnamed Florine by a form of
baptism common in
theatres, had made her first appearances, in spite of her beauty, on
very
inferior boards. Her success and her money she owed to Raoul
Nathan. This association of their two fates, usual enough in the
dramatic and
literary world, did no harm to Raoul, who kept up the
outward conventions of a man of the world. Moreover, Florine's actual
means were
precarious; her revenues came from her salary and her
leaves of
absence, and
barely sufficed for her dress and her household
expenses. Nathan gave her certain perquisites which he managed to levy
as
critic on several of the new enterprises of
industrial art. But
although he was always
gallant and protecting towards her, that
protection had nothing regular or solid about it.
This un
certainty, and this life on a bough, as it were, did not alarm
Florine; she believed in her
talent, and she believed in her beauty.
Her
robust faith was somewhat
comical to those who heard her s
takingher future upon it, when remonstrances were made to her.
"I can have
income enough when I please," she was wont to say; "I have
invested fifty francs on the Grand-livre."
No one could ever understand how it happened that Florine, handsome as
she was, had remained in
obscurity for seven years; but the fact is,
Florine was enrolled as a supernumerary at thirteen years of age, and