her liked to have
you look like a stick,--she had her reasons for it. If you care for
my advice, take Madame de Fischtaminel for a model: she is a lady of
taste.' I, unsuspecting creature that I was, saw no perfidy in the
recommendation.
"One evening as we returned from a party, he said, 'Did you notice how
Madame de Fischtaminel was dressed!' 'Yes, very neatly.' And I said to
myself, 'He's always talking about Madame de Fischtaminel; I must really
dress just like her.' I had noticed the stuff and the make of the dress,
and the style of the trimmings. I was as happy as could be, as I
went trotting about town, doing everything I could to obtain the same
articles. I sent for the very same dressmaker.
"'You work for Madame de Fischtaminel,' I said.
"'Yes, madame.'
"'Well, I will employ you as my dressmaker, but on one condition: you
see I have procured the stuff of which her gown is made, and I want you
to make me one exactly like it.'
"I confess that I did not at first pay any attention to a rather shrewd
smile of the dressmaker, though I saw it and afterwards accounted for
it. 'So like it,' I added, 'that you can't tell them apart.'
"Oh," says Caroline, interrupting herself and looking at me, "you
men teach us to live like spiders in the depths of their webs, to see
everything without seeming to look at it, to investigate the meaning and
spirit of words, movements, looks. You say, 'How cunning women are!' But
you should say, 'How deceitful men are!'
"I can't tell you how much care, how many days, how many manoeuvres, it
cost me to become Madame de Fischtaminel's duplicate! But these are our
battles, child," she adds, returning to Josephine. "I could not find a
certain little embroidered neckerchief, a very marvel! I finally learned
that it was made to order. I unearthed the embroideress, and ordered a
kerchief like Madame de Fischtaminel's. The price was a mere trifle,
one hundred and fifty francs! It had been ordered by a gentleman who
had made a present of it to Madame de Fischtaminel. All my savings were
absorbed by it. Now we women of Paris are all of us very much restricted
in the article of dress. There is not a man worth a hundred thousand
francs a year, that loses ten thousand a winter at whist, who does not
consider his wife extravagant, and is not alarmed at her bills for what
he calls 'rags'! 'Let my savings go,' I said. And they went. I had the
modest pride of a woman in love: I would not speak
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