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 uncertainty,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 staking her 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 made her debut two years later at an obscure boulevard theatre.At fifteen,neither beauty nor talent exist;a woman is simply all promise.
She was now twenty-eight,--the age at which the beauties of a French woman are in their glory.Painters particularly admired the lustre of her white shoulders,tinted with olive tones about the nape of the neck,and wonderfully firm and polished,so that the light shimmered over them as it does on watered silk.When she turned her head,superb folds formed about her neck,the admiration of sculptors.She carried on this triumphant neck the small head of a Roman empress,the delicate,round,and self-willed head of Pompeia,with features of elegant correctness,and the smooth forehead of a woman who drives all care away and all reflection,who yields easily,but is capable of balking like a mule,and incapable at such times of listening to reason.That forehead,turned,as it were,with one cut of the chisel,brought out the beauty of the golden hair,which was raised in front,after the Roman fashion,in two equal masses,and twisted up behind the head to prolong the line of the neck,and enhance that whiteness by its beautiful color.Black and delicate eyebrows,drawn by a Chinese brush,encircled the soft eyelids,which were threaded with rosy fibres.The pupils of the eyes,extremely bright,though striped with brown rays,gave to her glance the cruel fixity of a beast of prey,and betrayed the cold maliciousness of the courtesan.The eyes were gray,fringed with black lashes,--a charming contrast,which made their expression of calm and contemplative voluptuousness the more observable;the circle round the eyes showed marks of fatigue,but the artistic manner in which she could turn her eyeballs,right and left,or up and down,to observe,or seem to mediate,the way in which she could hold them fixed,casting out their vivid fire without moving her head,without taking from her face its absolute immovability (a manoeuvre learned upon the stage),and the vivacity of their glance,as she looked about a theatre in search of a friend,made her eyes the most terrible,also the softest,in short,the most extraordinary eyes in the world.Rouge had destroyed by this time the diaphanous tints of her cheeks,the flesh of which was still delicate;but although she could no longer blush or turn pale,she had a thin nose with rosy,passionate nostrils,made to express irony,--the mocking irony of Moliere's women-servants.Her sensual mouth,expressive of sarcasm and love of dissipation,was adorned with a deep furrow that united the upper lip with the nose.Her chin,white and rather fat,betrayed the violence of passion.Her hands and arms were worthy of a sovereign.
But she had one ineradicable sign of low birth,--her foot was short and fat.No inherited quality ever caused greater distress.Florine had tried everything,short of amputation,to get rid of it.The feet were obstinate,like the Breton race from which she came;they resisted all treatment.Florine now wore long boots stuffed with cotton,to give length,and the semblance of an instep.Her figure was of medium height,threatened with corpulence,but still well-balanced,and well-made.
Morally,she was an adept in all the attitudinizing,quarrelling,alluring,and cajoling of her business;and she gave to those actions a savor of their own by playing childlike innocence,and slipping in among her artless speeches philosophical malignities.Apparently ignorant and giddy,she was very strong on money-matters and commercial law,--for the reason that she had gone through so much misery before attaining to her present precarious success.She had come down,story by story,from the garret to the first floor,through so many vicissitudes!She knew life,from that which begins in Brie cheese and ends at pineapples;from that which cooks and washes in the corner of a garret on an earthenware stove,to that which convokes the tribes of pot-bellied chefs and saucemakers.She had lived on credit and not killed it;she was ignorant of nothing that honest women ignore;she spoke all languages:she was one of the populace by experience;she was noble by beauty and physical distinction.