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<h2> BOOK THIRD. </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I. NOTRE-DAME. </h2>
<p>The church of Notre-Dame de Paris is still no doubt, a majestic and
sublime edifice. But, beautiful as it has been preserved in growing old,
it is difficult not to sigh, not to wax indignant, before the numberless
degradations and mutilations which time and men have both caused the
venerable monument to suffer, without respect for Charlemagne, who laid
its first stone, or for Philip Augustus, who laid the last.</p>
<p>On the face of this aged queen of our cathedrals, by the side of a
wrinkle, one always finds a scar. <i>Tempus edax, homo edacior*</i>; which
I should be glad to translate thus: time is blind, man is stupid.</p>
<p>* Time is a devourer; man, more so.<br/></p>
<p>If we had leisure to examine with the reader, one by one, the diverse
traces of destruction imprinted upon the old church, time's share would be
the least, the share of men the most, especially the men of art, since
there have been individuals who assumed the title of architects during the
last two centuries.</p>
<p>And, in the first place, to cite only a few leading examples, there
certainly are few finer architectural pages than this fa�ade, where,
successively and at once, the three portals hollowed out in an arch; the
broidered and dentated cordon of the eight and twenty royal niches; the
immense central rose window, flanked by its two lateral windows, like a
priest by his deacon and subdeacon; the frail and lofty gallery of trefoil
arcades, which supports a heavy platform above its fine, slender columns;
and lastly, the two black and massive towers with their slate penthouses,
harmonious parts of a magnificent whole, superposed in five gigantic
stories;—develop themselves before the eye, in a mass and without
confusion, with their innumerable details of statuary, carving, and
sculpture, joined powerfully to the tranquil grandeur of the whole; a vast
symphony in stone, so to speak; the colossal work of one man and one
people, all together one and complex, like the Iliads and the Romanceros,
whose sister it is; prodigious product of the grouping together of all the
forces of an epoch, where, upon each stone, one sees the fancy of the
workman disciplined by the genius of the artist start forth in a hundred
fashions; a sort of human creation, in a word, powerful and fecund as the
divine creation of which it seems to have stolen the double character,—variety,
eternity.</p>
<p>And what we here say of the fa�ade must be said of the entire church; and
what we say of the cathedral church of Paris, must be said of all the
churches of Christendom in the Middle Ages. All things are in place in
that art, self-created, logical, and well proportioned. To measure the
great toe of the foot is to measure the giant.</p>
<p>Let us return to the fa�ade of Notre-Dame, as it still appears to us, when
we go piously to admire the grave and puissant cathedral, which inspires
terror, so its chronicles assert: <i>quoe mole sua terrorem incutit
spectantibus</i>.</p>
<p>Three important things are to-day lacking in that fa�ade: in the first
place, the staircase of eleven steps which formerly raised it above the
soil; next, the lower series of statues which occupied the niches of the
three portals; and lastly the upper series, of the twenty-eight most
ancient kings of France, which garnished the gallery of the first story,
beginning with Childebert, and ending with Phillip Augustus, holding in
his hand "the imperial apple."</p>
<p>Time has caused the staircase to disappear, by raising the soil of the
city with a slow and irresistible progress; but, while thus causing the
eleven steps which added to the majestic height of the edifice, to be
devoured, one by one, by the rising tide of the pavements of Paris,—time
has bestowed upon the church perhaps more than it has taken away, for it
is time which has spread over the fa�ade that sombre hue of the centuries
which makes the old age of monuments the period of their beauty.</p>
<p>But who has thrown down the two rows of statues? who has left the niches
empty? who has cut, in the very middle of the central portal, that new and
bastard arch? who has dared to frame therein that commonplace and heavy
door of carved wood, � la Louis XV., beside the arabesques of Biscornette?
The men, the architects, the artists of our day.</p>
<p>And if we enter the interior of the edifice, who has overthrown that
colossus of Saint Christopher, proverbial for magnitude among statues, as
the grand hall of the Palais de Justice was among halls, as the spire of
Strasbourg among spires? And those myriads of statues, which peopled all
the spaces between the columns of the nave and the choir, kneeling,
standing, equestrian, men, women, children, kings, bishops, gendarmes, in
stone, in marble, in gold, in silver, in copper, in wax even,—who
has brutally swept them away? It is not time.</p>
<p>And who substituted for the ancient gothic altar, splendidly encumbered
with shrines and reliquaries, that heavy marble sarcophagus, with angels'
heads and clouds, which seems a specimen pillaged from the Val-de-Gr�ce or
the Invalides? Who stupidly sealed that heavy anachronism of stone in the
Carlovingian pavement of Hercandus? Was it not Louis XIV., fulfilling the
request of Louis XIII.?</p>
<p>And who put the cold, white panes in the place of those windows, "high in
color," which caused the astonished eyes of our fathers to hesitate
between the rose of the grand portal and the arches of the apse? And what
would a sub-chanter of the sixteenth century say, on beholding the
beautiful yellow wash, with which our archiepiscopal vandals have
desmeared their cathedral? He would remember that it was the color with
which the hangman smeared "accursed" edifices; he would recall the H�tel
du Petit-Bourbon, all smeared thus, on account of the constable's treason.
"Yellow, after all, of so good a quality," said Sauval, "and so well
recommended, that more than a century has not yet caused it to lose its
color." He would think that the sacred place had become infamous, and
would flee.</p>
<p>And if we ascend the cathedral, without mentioning a thousand barbarisms
of every sort,—what has become of that charming little bell tower,
which rested upon the point of intersection of the cross-roofs, and which,
no less frail and no less bold than its neighbor (also destroyed), the
spire of the Sainte-Chapelle, buried itself in the sky, farther forward
than the towers, slender, pointed, sonorous, carved in open work. An
architect of good taste amputated it (1787), and considered it sufficient
to mask the wound with that large, leaden plaster, which resembles a pot
cover.</p>
<p>'Tis thus that the marvellous art of the Middle Ages has been treated in
nearly every country, especially in France. One can distinguish on its
ruins three sorts of lesions, all three of which cut into it at different
depths; first, time, which has insensibly notched its surface here and
there, and gnawed it everywhere; next, political and religious revolution,
which, blind and wrathful by nature, have flung themselves tumultuously
upon it, torn its rich garment of carving and sculpture, burst its rose
windows, broken its necklace of arabesques and tiny figures, torn out its
statues, sometimes because of their mitres, sometimes because of their
crowns; lastly, fashions, even more grotesque and foolish, which, since
the anarchical and splendid deviations of the Renaissance, have followed
each other in the necessary decadence of architecture. Fashions have
wrought more harm than revolutions. They have cut to the quick; they have
attacked the very bone and framework of art; they have cut, slashed,
disorganized, killed the edifice, in form as in the symbol, in its
consistency as well as in its beauty. And then they have made it over; a
presumption of which neither time nor revolutions at least have been
guilty. They have audaciously adjusted, in the name of "good taste," upon
the wounds of gothic architecture, their miserable gewgaws of a day, their
ribbons of marble, their pompons of metal, a veritable leprosy of
egg-shaped ornaments, volutes, whorls, draperies, garlands, fringes, stone
flames, bronze clouds, pudgy cupids, chubby-cheeked cherubim, which begin
to devour the face of art in the oratory of Catherine de Medicis, and
cause it to expire, two centuries later, tortured and grimacing, in the
boudoir of the Dubarry.</p>
<p>Thus, to sum up the points which we have just indicated, three sorts of
ravages to-day disfigure Gothic architecture. Wrinkles and warts on the
epidermis; this is the work of time. Deeds of violence, brutalities,
contusions, fractures; this is the work of the revolutions from Luther to
Mirabeau. Mutilations, amputations, dislocation of the joints,
"restorations"; this is the Greek, Roman, and barbarian work of professors
according to Vitruvius and Vignole. This magnificent art produced by the
Vandals has been slain by the academies. The centuries, the revolutions,
which at least devastate with impartiality and grandeur, have been joined
by a cloud of school architects, licensed, sworn, and bound by oath;
defacing with the discernment and choice of bad taste, substituting the <i>chicor�es</i>
of Louis XV. for the Gothic lace, for the greater glory of the Parthenon.
It is the kick of the ass at the dying lion. It is the old oak crowning
itself, and which, to heap the measure full, is stung, bitten, and gnawed
by caterpillars.</p>
<p>How far it is from the epoch when Robert Cenalis, comparing Notre-Dame de
Paris to the famous temple of Diana at Ephesus, *so much lauded by the
ancient pagans*, which Erostatus *has* immortalized, found the Gallic
temple "more excellent in length, breadth, height, and structure."*</p>
<p>* <i>Histoire Gallicane</i>, liv. II. Periode III. fo. 130, p. 1.<br/></p>
<p>Notre-Dame is not, moreover, what can be called a complete, definite,
classified monument. It is no longer a Romanesque church; nor is it a
Gothic church. This edifice is not a type. Notre-Dame de Paris has not,
like the Abbey of Tournus, the grave and massive frame, the large and
round vault, the glacial bareness, the majestic simplicity of the edifices
which have the rounded arch for their progenitor. It is not, like the
Cathedral of Bourges, the magnificent, light, multiform, tufted, bristling
efflorescent product of the pointed arch. Impossible to class it in that
ancient family of sombre, mysterious churches, low and crushed as it were
by the round arch, almost Egyptian, with the exception of the ceiling; all
hieroglyphics, all sacerdotal, all symbolical, more loaded in their
ornaments, with lozenges and zigzags, than with flowers, with flowers than
with animals, with animals than with men; the work of the architect less
than of the bishop; first transformation of art, all impressed with
theocratic and military discipline, taking root in the Lower Empire, and
stopping with the time of William the Conqueror. Impossible to place our
Cathedral in that other family of lofty, aerial churches, rich in painted
windows and sculpture; pointed in form, bold in attitude; communal and
bourgeois as political symbols; free, capricious, lawless, as a work of
art; second transformation of architecture, no longer hieroglyphic,
immovable and sacerdotal, but artistic, progressive, and popular, which
begins at the return from the crusades, and ends with Louis IX. Notre-Dame
de Paris is not of pure Romanesque, like the first; nor of pure Arabian
race, like the second.</p>
<p>It is an edifice of the transition period. The Saxon architect completed
the erection of the first pillars of the nave, when the pointed arch,
which dates from the Crusade, arrived and placed itself as a conqueror
upon the large Romanesque capitals which should support only round arches.
The pointed arch, mistress since that time, constructed the rest of the
church. Nevertheless, timid and inexperienced at the start, it sweeps out,
grows larger, restrains itself, and dares no longer dart upwards in spires
and lancet windows, as it did later on, in so many marvellous cathedrals.
One would say that it were conscious of the vicinity of the heavy
Romanesque pillars.</p>
<p>However, these edifices of the transition from the Romanesque to the
Gothic, are no less precious for study than the pure types. They express a
shade of the art which would be lost without them. It is the graft of the
pointed upon the round arch.</p>
<p>Notre-Dame de Paris is, in particular, a curious specimen of this variety.
Each face, each stone of the venerable monument, is a page not only of the
history of the country, but of the history of science and art as well.
Thus, in order to indicate here only the principal details, while the
little Red Door almost attains to the limits of the Gothic delicacy of the
fifteenth century, the pillars of the nave, by their size and weight, go
back to the Carlovingian Abbey of Saint-Germain des Pr�s. One would
suppose that six centuries separated these pillars from that door. There
is no one, not even the hermetics, who does not find in the symbols of the
grand portal a satisfactory compendium of their science, of which the
Church of Saint-Jacques de la Boucherie was so complete a hieroglyph.
Thus, the Roman abbey, the philosophers' church, the Gothic art, Saxon
art, the heavy, round pillar, which recalls Gregory VII., the hermetic
symbolism, with which Nicolas Flamel played the prelude to Luther, papal
unity, schism, Saint-Germain des Pr�s, Saint-Jacques de la Boucherie,—all
are mingled, combined, amalgamated in Notre-Dame. This central mother
church is, among the ancient churches of Paris, a sort of chimera; it has
the head of one, the limbs of another, the haunches of another, something
of all.</p>
<p>We repeat it, these hybrid constructions are not the least interesting for
the artist, for the antiquarian, for the historian. They make one feel to
what a degree architecture is a primitive thing, by demonstrating (what is
also demonstrated by the cyclopean vestiges, the pyramids of Egypt, the
gigantic Hindoo pagodas) that the greatest products of architecture are
less the works of individuals than of society; rather the offspring of a
nation's effort, than the inspired flash of a man of genius; the deposit
left by a whole people; the heaps accumulated by centuries; the residue of
successive evaporations of human society,—in a word, species of
formations. Each wave of time contributes its alluvium, each race deposits
its layer on the monument, each individual brings his stone. Thus do the
beavers, thus do the bees, thus do men. The great symbol of architecture,
Babel, is a hive.</p>
<p>Great edifices, like great mountains, are the work of centuries. Art often
undergoes a transformation while they are pending, <i>pendent opera
interrupta</i>; they proceed quietly in accordance with the transformed
art. The new art takes the monument where it finds it, incrusts itself
there, assimilates it to itself, develops it according to its fancy, and
finishes it if it can. The thing is accomplished without trouble, without
effort, without reaction,—following a natural and tranquil law. It
is a graft which shoots up, a sap which circulates, a vegetation which
starts forth anew. Certainly there is matter here for many large volumes,
and often the universal history of humanity in the successive engrafting
of many arts at many levels, upon the same monument. The man, the artist,
the individual, is effaced in these great masses, which lack the name of
their author; human intelligence is there summed up and totalized. Time is
the architect, the nation is the builder.</p>
<p>Not to consider here anything except the Christian architecture of Europe,
that younger sister of the great masonries of the Orient, it appears to
the eyes as an immense formation divided into three well-defined zones,
which are superposed, the one upon the other: the Romanesque zone*, the
Gothic zone, the zone of the Renaissance, which we would gladly call the
Greco-Roman zone. The Roman layer, which is the most ancient and deepest,
is occupied by the round arch, which reappears, supported by the Greek
column, in the modern and upper layer of the Renaissance. The pointed arch
is found between the two. The edifices which belong exclusively to any one
of these three layers are perfectly distinct, uniform, and complete. There
is the Abbey of Jumi�ges, there is the Cathedral of Reims, there is the
Sainte-Croix of Orleans. But the three zones mingle and amalgamate along
the edges, like the colors in the solar spectrum. Hence, complex
monuments, edifices of gradation and transition. One is Roman at the base,
Gothic in the middle, Greco-Roman at the top. It is because it was six
hundred years in building. This variety is rare. The donjon keep of
d'Etampes is a specimen of it. But monuments of two formations are more
frequent. There is Notre-Dame de Paris, a pointed-arch edifice, which is
imbedded by its pillars in that Roman zone, in which are plunged the
portal of Saint-Denis, and the nave of Saint-Germain des Pr�s. There is
the charming, half-Gothic chapter-house of Bocherville, where the Roman
layer extends half way up. There is the cathedral of Rouen, which would be
entirely Gothic if it did not bathe the tip of its central spire in the
zone of the Renaissance.**</p>
<p>* This is the same which is called, according to locality,<br/>
climate, and races, Lombard, Saxon, or Byzantine. There are four sister<br/>
and parallel architectures, each having its special character, but<br/>
derived from the same origin, the round arch.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Facies non omnibus una,<br/>
No diversa tamen, qualem</i>, etc.<br/></p>
<p>Their faces not all alike, nor yet different, but such as the faces of<br/>
sisters ought to be.<br/>
<br/>
** This portion of the spire, which was of woodwork, is precisely<br/>
that which was consumed by lightning, in 1823.<br/></p>
<p>However, all these shades, all these differences, do not affect the
surfaces of edifices only. It is art which has changed its skin. The very
constitution of the Christian church is not attacked by it. There is
always the same internal woodwork, the same logical arrangement of parts.
Whatever may be the carved and embroidered envelope of a cathedral, one
always finds beneath it—in the state of a germ, and of a rudiment at
the least—the Roman basilica. It is eternally developed upon the
soil according to the same law. There are, invariably, two naves, which
intersect in a cross, and whose upper portion, rounded into an apse, forms
the choir; there are always the side aisles, for interior processions, for
chapels,—a sort of lateral walks or promenades where the principal
nave discharges itself through the spaces between the pillars. That
settled, the number of chapels, doors, bell towers, and pinnacles are
modified to infinity, according to the fancy of the century, the people,
and art. The service of religion once assured and provided for,
architecture does what she pleases. Statues, stained glass, rose windows,
arabesques, denticulations, capitals, bas-reliefs,—she combines all
these imaginings according to the arrangement which best suits her. Hence,
the prodigious exterior variety of these edifices, at whose foundation
dwells so much order and unity. The trunk of a tree is immovable; the
foliage is capricious.</p>
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