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I
Dedication
To
Mademoiselle Marie de Montheau
Half-way down the Rue Saint-Denis,
almost at the corner of the Rue du
Petit-Lion, there stood formerly one
of those delightful houses which
enable historians to reconstruct old
Paris by analogy. The threatening
walls of this tumbledown abode
seemed to have been decorated with
hieroglyphics. For what other name
could the passer-by give to the Xs
and Vs which the horizontal or
diagonal timbers traced on the front,
outlined by little parallel cracks
in the plaster? It was evident that
every beam quivered in its mortices
at the passing of the lightest
vehicle. This venerable structure
was crowned by a triangular roof of
which no example will, ere long, be
seen in Paris. This covering,
warped by the extremes of the Paris climate,
projected three feet over
the roadway, as much to protect the
threshold from the rainfall as to
shelter the wall of a loft and its
sill-less dormer-window. This upper
story was built of planks,
overlapping each other like slates, in
order, no doubt, not to overweight
the frail house.
One rainy morning in the month of
March, a young man, carefully
wrapped in his cloak, stood under
the awning of a shop opposite this
old house, which he was studying
with the enthusiasm of an antiquary.
In point of fact, this relic of the
civic life of the sixteenth
century offered more than one
problem to the consideration of an
observer. Each story presented some
singularity; on the first floor
four tall, narrow windows, close
together, were filled as to the lower
panes with boards, so as to produce
the doubtful light by which a
clever salesman can ascribe to his
goods the color his customers
inquire for. The young man seemed
very scornful of this part of the
house; his eyes had not yet rested
on it. The windows of the second
floor, where the Venetian blinds
were drawn up, revealing little dingy
muslin curtains behind the large
Bohemian glass panes, did not
interest him either. His attention
was attracted to the third floor,
to the modest sash-frames of wood,
so clumsily wrought that they might
have found a place in the Museum of Arts and Crafts
to illustrate the
early efforts of French carpentry.
These windows were glazed with
small squares of glass so green
that, but for his good eyes, the young
man could not have seen the
blue-checked cotton curtains which
screened the mysteries of the room
from profane eyes. Now and then the
watcher, weary of his fruitless
contemplation, or of the silence in
which the house was buried, like the
whole neighborhood, dropped his
eyes towards the lower regions. An
involuntary smile parted his lips
each time he looked at the shop,
where, in fact, there were some
laughable details.
A formidable wooden beam, resting on
four pillars, which appeared to
have bent under the weight of the
decrepit house, had been encrusted
with as many coats of different
paint as there are of rouge on an old
duchess' cheek. In the middle of
this broad and fantastically carved
joist there was an old painting
representing a cat playing rackets.
This picture was what moved the
young man to mirth. But it must be
said that the wittiest of modern
painters could not invent so comical
a caricature. The animal held in one
of its forepaws a racket as big
as itself, and stood on its hind
legs to aim at hitting an enormous
ball, returned by a man in a fine
embroidered coat. Drawing, color,
and accessories, all were treated in
such a way as to suggest that the
artist had meant to make game of the
shop-owner and of the passing
observer. Time, while impairing this
artless painting, had made it yet
more grotesque by introducing some
uncertain features which must have
puzzled the conscientious idler. For
instance, the cat's tail had been
eaten into in such a way that it
might now have been taken for the
figure of a spectator--so long, and
thick, and furry were the tails of
our forefathers' cats. To the right
of the picture, on an azure field
which ill-disguised the decay of the
wood, might be read the name
"Guillaume," and to the
left, "Successor to Master Chevrel." Sun and
rain had worn away most of the
gilding parsimoniously applied to the
letters of this superscription, in
which the Us and Vs had changed
places in obedience to the laws of
old-world orthography.
To quench the pride of those who
believe that the world is growing
cleverer day by day, and that modern
humbug surpasses everything, it
may be observed that these signs, of
which the origin seems so
whimsical to many Paris merchants, are
the dead pictures of once
living pictures by which our roguish
ancestors contrived to tempt
customers into their houses. Thus
the Spinning Sow, the Green Monkey,
and others, were animals in cages
whose skills astonished the passer-
by, and whose accomplishments prove
the patience of the fifteenth-
century artisan. Such curiosities
did more to enrich their fortunate
owners than the signs of "Providence,"
"Good-faith," Grace of God,"
and "Decapitation of John the
Baptist," which may still be seen in the
Rue Saint-Denis.
However, our stranger was certainly
not standing there to admire the
cat, which a minute's attention
sufficed to stamp on his memory. The
young man himself had his
peculiarities. His cloak, folded after the
manner of an antique drapery, showed
a smart pair of shoes, all the
more remarkable in the midst of the Paris mud, because he
wore white
silk stockings, on which the
splashes betrayed his impatience. He had
just come, no doubt, from a wedding
or a ball; for at this early hour
he had in his hand a pair of white
gloves, and his black hair, now out
of curl, and flowing over his
shoulders, showed that it had been
dressed /a la Caracalla/, a fashion
introduced as much by David's
school of painting as by the mania
for Greek and Roman styles which
characterized the early years of
this century.
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