登陆注册
18895800000018

第18章 THE CALVINIST MARTYR(1)

A HOUSE WHICH NO LONGER EXISTS AT THE CORNER OF A STREETWHICH NO LONGER EXISTS IN A PARIS WHICH NO LONGER EXISTSFew persons in the present day know how plain and unpretentious were the dwellings of the burghers of Paris in the sixteenth century, and how simple their lives. Perhaps this simplicity of habits and of thought was the cause of the grandeur of that old bourgeoisie which was certainly grand, free, and noble,--more so, perhaps, than the bourgeoisie of the present day. Its history is still to be written; it requires and it awaits a man of genius. This reflection will doubtless rise to the lips of every one after reading the almost unknown incident which forms the basis of this Study and is one of the most remarkable facts in the history of that bourgeoisie. It will not be the first time in history that conclusion has preceded facts.

In 1560, the houses of the rue de la Vieille-Pelleterie skirted the left bank of the Seine, between the pont Notre-Dame and the pont au Change. A public footpath and the houses then occupied the space covered by the present roadway. Each house, standing almost in the river, allowed its dwellers to get down to the water by stone or wooden stairways, closed and protected by strong iron railings or wooden gates, clamped with iron. The houses, like those in Venice, had an entrance on /terra firma/ and a water entrance. At the moment when the present sketch is published, only one of these houses remains to recall the old Paris of which we speak, and that is soon to disappear;it stands at the corner of the Petit-Pont, directly opposite to the guard-house of the Hotel-Dieu.

Formerly each dwelling presented on the river-side the fantastic appearance given either by the trade of its occupant and his habits, or by the originality of the exterior constructions invented by the proprietors to use or abuse the Seine. The bridges being encumbered with more mills than the necessities of navigation could allow, the Seine formed as many enclosed basins as there were bridges. Some of these basins in the heart of old Paris would have offered precious scenes and tones of color to painters. What a forest of crossbeams supported the mills with their huge sails and their wheels! What strange effects were produced by the piles or props driven into the water to project the upper floors of the houses above the stream!

Unfortunately, the art of genre painting did not exist in those days, and that of engraving was in its infancy. We have therefore lost that curious spectacle, still offered, though in miniature, by certain provincial towns, where the rivers are overhung with wooden houses, and where, as at Vendome, the basins, full of water grasses, are enclosed by immense iron railings, to isolate each proprietor's share of the stream, which extends from bank to bank.

The name of this street, which has now disappeared from the map, sufficiently indicates the trade that was carried on in it. In those days the merchants of each class of commerce, instead of dispersing themselves about the city, kept together in the same neighborhood and protected themselves mutually. Associated in corporations which limited their number, they were still further united into guilds by the Church. In this way prices were maintained. Also, the masters were not at the mercy of their workmen, and did not obey their whims as they do to-day; on the contrary, they made them their children, their apprentices, took care of them, and taught them the intricacies of the trade. In order to become a master, a workman had to produce a masterpiece, which was always dedicated to the saint of his guild.

Will any one dare to say that the absence of competition destroyed the desire for perfection, or lessened the beauty of products? What say you, you whose admiration for the masterpieces of past ages has created the modern trade of the sellers of bric-a-brac?

In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries the trade of the furrier was one of the most flourishing industries. The difficulty of obtaining furs, which, being all brought from the north, required long and perilous journeys, gave a very high price and value to those products.

Then, as now, high prices led to consumption; for vanity likes to override obstacles. In France, as in other kingdoms, not only did royal ordinances restrict the use of furs to the nobility (proved by the part which ermine plays in the old blazons), but also certain rare furs, such as /vair/ (which was undoubtedly Siberian sable), could not be worn by any but kings, dukes, and certain lords clothed with official powers. A distinction was made between the greater and lesser /vair/. The very name has been so long disused, that in a vast number of editions of Perrault's famous tale, Cinderella's slipper, which was no doubt of /vair/ (the fur), is said to have been made of /verre/(glass). Lately one of our most distinguished poets was obliged to establish the true orthography of the word for the instruction of his brother-feuilletonists in giving an account of the opera of the "Cenerentola," where the symbolic slipper has been replaced by a ring, which symbolizes nothing at all.

Naturally the sumptuary laws about the wearing of fur were perpetually infringed upon, to the great satisfaction of the furriers. The costliness of stuffs and furs made a garment in those days a durable thing,--as lasting as the furniture, the armor, and other items of that strong life of the fifteenth century. A woman of rank, a seigneur, all rich men, also all the burghers, possessed at the most two garments for each season, which lasted their lifetime and beyond it. These garments were bequeathed to their children. Consequently the clause in the marriage-contract relating to arms and clothes, which in these days is almost a dead letter because of the small value of wardrobes that need constant renewing, was then of much importance.

同类推荐
  • 洗髓经

    洗髓经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Boyhood

    Boyhood

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Devil's Paw

    The Devil's Paw

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 灵枢识

    灵枢识

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • WOMEN IN LOVE

    WOMEN IN LOVE

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 超级军霸

    超级军霸

    生当作人杰,死亦为鬼雄,国仇家恨,焉能不报,手握神器九重天功德塔,且看岳维华来到1900年后,如何将这段历史,掀起另类的腥风血雨!
  • 一泪成劫

    一泪成劫

    本应是一次瑰丽的黄山之旅,却意外地看到一株红色妖娆的曼珠沙华,却将自己送入了另一个时空。华丽的一场异世梦却是情劫一场。一滴仙泪而已,却是酝酿成三生的情缘,遇上了,谁又是谁的劫?云雾缭绕的花神殿上,她看向九天之下的凡尘,为了他而落下一滴泪,因此被贬转世,却不知他是刺族王爷历劫所化之人。花神大殿,她为了姐姐匆匆忙忙,撞到了他,他看向她却是一改冷淡,微笑而语:“如此美丽的花灵怎么不去神殿呢?”她却是不知他便是让前世自己流泪之人。为救她一命,竟是舍弃了一根法刺,那盈盈绿光中融入她体内的不只是法刺,更是缘分!人间,他转世为幽深皇子,受太子所害,暂时失去了内力,她却白衣胜雪,手持一朵菊花,翩翩而来。
  • 八荒仙魔传

    八荒仙魔传

    杀戮于九天,纵横于苍穹,八荒六合唯我独尊!叶枫,被家族所遗弃的天生废物,绝灵死体受到世人所藐视,意外获得青灵之气,身体血脉被彻底激发!修筑基、领悟五行术决,吞噬凝元兽珠,修为不断突破,一步一步走向巅峰,凭一己之力,扬名修真界!
  • 天焰变

    天焰变

    这里是焱气的领域,修炼焱气没有终极,只有青出于蓝而胜于蓝的英雄传奇。今天你站在了焱气的顶端,明天也许已是过眼浮华。在这条漫长飘渺的修炼路途上,追求焰气的巅峰永无止境。友情提示:请勿模仿,猪脚是有练过的。1.本书含有成人内容,未满18周岁者谨慎进入(最好由家长的指导下阅读),否则后果自负。2.本书即将拍出同名电视剧及打造史上最绚丽大型的3D网络游戏,敬请大家拭目以待,只是现在导演不详,公司未定,资金短缺,剧本在写,演员暂无,唯有一样就是希望大家多多支持!
  • 吾命无量

    吾命无量

    吾本只求苟生,奈小人难缠,友人欺我,同门不容,幸得本命仙煞,怎甘做凡,自当灭小人,战四方,得我道,成吾命,得永生,吾命无量!
  • 最妲己

    最妲己

    只得嘴巴上彪悍的苏招娣穿越成了苏妲己?没关系,改变历史原本就是穿越者的本职工作,嫁不嫁纣王这要看心情而定,关键是对方长的够不够帅。可问题是……尼玛,肚子里的孩子又是怎么回事,经手人又特码的是哪个王八蛋。哪吒?为嘛当妈的连给孩子取名字的权利都没有……还有,还有……哪吒你的小弟弟上哪去了……改变历史,尼玛,当大王还要通过元老投票的大商朝,这又特码的是哪门子的历史啊。微子辛,你个死胖子能不能把哈喇子收起来!伯邑考,吹箫的时候,咱能不能不翘兰花指丫……还有申公豹,长的难看点你会死啊!放下黑点虎,有种你骑老娘身上来!本书很混乱,请不要用正统的封神眼光来看待,否则,我只能抱歉,其实你不知道我知道你不知道我知道你不懂我的心。
  • 师傅,带我修仙,带我飞

    师傅,带我修仙,带我飞

    “哇,师傅你好厉害,带我装裱,带我飞!”“珠珠,你给为师回来,别丢脸!”此生最丢脸的时刻,从遇见你开始。从此袖手天下,烧杀抢掠,欺男霸女,没有丢脸,只有更更更——丢脸!修仙为辅,打小三,虐小四,生煎小五,油炸小六顺手,扑倒师傅才是正经事!!【爆笑虐宠,跳坑断腿请坚强!】
  • 世界最具精悍性的微型小说(5)

    世界最具精悍性的微型小说(5)

    世界最具财富性的企业精英、世界最具传世性的思想巨人、世界最具发明性的科学大家、世界最具感悟性的哲理美文、世界最具故事性的中篇小说等。
  • Cast Upon the Breakers

    Cast Upon the Breakers

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 漂亮宝贝

    漂亮宝贝

    《漂亮宝贝》清新婉约,活泼明朗,夸张幽默,稚趣可爱,风格多姿多彩。书中的每一个故事都旨在通过简短优美的童话故事,让孩子感悟“爱”、“真”、“善”、“美”等人生的真谛,欣赏到多彩的图画,在孩子幼小的心灵中种下真善美的种子,引导孩子学习理解并欣赏优秀插图画家的画作,让孩子懂得绘画也是表达思想的一种重要的方式。