<h2> <SPAN name="ch16" id="ch16"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI. </h2>
<p>VERSAILLES! It is wonderfully beautiful! You gaze and stare and try to
understand that it is real, that it is on the earth, that it is not the
Garden of Eden—but your brain grows giddy, stupefied by the world of
beauty around you, and you half believe you are the dupe of an exquisite
dream. The scene thrills one like military music! A noble palace,
stretching its ornamented front, block upon block away, till it seemed
that it would never end; a grand promenade before it, whereon the armies
of an empire might parade; all about it rainbows of flowers, and colossal
statues that were almost numberless and yet seemed only scattered over the
ample space; broad flights of stone steps leading down from the promenade
to lower grounds of the park—stairways that whole regiments might
stand to arms upon and have room to spare; vast fountains whose great
bronze effigies discharged rivers of sparkling water into the air and
mingled a hundred curving jets together in forms of matchless beauty; wide
grass-carpeted avenues that branched hither and thither in every direction
and wandered to seemingly interminable distances, walled all the way on
either side with compact ranks of leafy trees whose branches met above and
formed arches as faultless and as symmetrical as ever were carved in
stone; and here and there were glimpses of sylvan lakes with miniature
ships glassed in their surfaces. And every where—on the palace
steps, and the great promenade, around the fountains, among the trees, and
far under the arches of the endless avenues—hundreds and hundreds of
people in gay costumes walked or ran or danced, and gave to the fairy
picture the life and animation which was all of perfection it could have
lacked.</p>
<p>It was worth a pilgrimage to see. Everything is on so gigantic a scale.
Nothing is small—nothing is cheap. The statues are all large; the
palace is grand; the park covers a fair-sized county; the avenues are
interminable. All the distances and all the dimensions about Versailles
are vast. I used to think the pictures exaggerated these distances and
these dimensions beyond all reason, and that they made Versailles more
beautiful than it was possible for any place in the world to be. I know
now that the pictures never came up to the subject in any respect, and
that no painter could represent Versailles on canvas as beautiful as it is
in reality. I used to abuse Louis XIV for spending two hundred millions of
dollars in creating this marvelous park, when bread was so scarce with
some of his subjects; but I have forgiven him now. He took a tract of land
sixty miles in circumference and set to work to make this park and build
this palace and a road to it from Paris. He kept 36,000 men employed daily
on it, and the labor was so unhealthy that they used to die and be hauled
off by cartloads every night. The wife of a nobleman of the time speaks of
this as an "inconvenience," but naively remarks that "it does not seem
worthy of attention in the happy state of tranquillity we now enjoy."</p>
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<p>I always thought ill of people at home who trimmed their shrubbery into
pyramids and squares and spires and all manner of unnatural shapes, and
when I saw the same thing being practiced in this great park I began to
feel dissatisfied. But I soon saw the idea of the thing and the wisdom of
it. They seek the general effect. We distort a dozen sickly trees into
unaccustomed shapes in a little yard no bigger than a dining room, and
then surely they look absurd enough. But here they take two hundred
thousand tall forest trees and set them in a double row; allow no sign of
leaf or branch to grow on the trunk lower down than six feet above the
ground; from that point the boughs begin to project, and very gradually
they extend outward further and further till they meet overhead, and a
faultless tunnel of foliage is formed. The arch is mathematically precise.
The effect is then very fine. They make trees take fifty different shapes,
and so these quaint effects are infinitely varied and picturesque. The
trees in no two avenues are shaped alike, and consequently the eye is not
fatigued with anything in the nature of monotonous uniformity. I will drop
this subject now, leaving it to others to determine how these people
manage to make endless ranks of lofty forest trees grow to just a certain
thickness of trunk (say a foot and two-thirds); how they make them spring
to precisely the same height for miles; how they make them grow so close
together; how they compel one huge limb to spring from the same identical
spot on each tree and form the main sweep of the arch; and how all these
things are kept exactly in the same condition and in the same exquisite
shapeliness and symmetry month after month and year after year—for I
have tried to reason out the problem and have failed.</p>
<p>We walked through the great hall of sculpture and the one hundred and
fifty galleries of paintings in the palace of Versailles, and felt that to
be in such a place was useless unless one had a whole year at his
disposal. These pictures are all battle scenes, and only one solitary
little canvas among them all treats of anything but great French
victories. We wandered, also, through the Grand Trianon and the Petit
Trianon, those monuments of royal prodigality, and with histories so
mournful—filled, as it is, with souvenirs of Napoleon the First, and
three dead kings and as many queens. In one sumptuous bed they had all
slept in succession, but no one occupies it now. In a large dining room
stood the table at which Louis XIV and his mistress Madame Maintenon, and
after them Louis XV, and Pompadour, had sat at their meals naked and
unattended—for the table stood upon a trapdoor, which descended with
it to regions below when it was necessary to replenish its dishes. In a
room of the Petit Trianon stood the furniture, just as poor Marie
Antoinette left it when the mob came and dragged her and the King to
Paris, never to return. Near at hand, in the stables, were prodigious
carriages that showed no color but gold—carriages used by former
kings of France on state occasions, and never used now save when a kingly
head is to be crowned or an imperial infant christened. And with them were
some curious sleighs, whose bodies were shaped like lions, swans, tigers,
etc.—vehicles that had once been handsome with pictured designs and
fine workmanship, but were dusty and decaying now. They had their history.
When Louis XIV had finished the Grand Trianon, he told Maintenon he had
created a Paradise for her, and asked if she could think of anything now
to wish for. He said he wished the Trianon to be perfection—nothing
less. She said she could think of but one thing—it was summer, and
it was balmy France—yet she would like well to sleigh ride in the
leafy avenues of Versailles! The next morning found miles and miles of
grassy avenues spread thick with snowy salt and sugar, and a procession of
those quaint sleighs waiting to receive the chief concubine of the gaiest
and most unprincipled court that France has ever seen!</p>
<p>From sumptuous Versailles, with its palaces, its statues, its gardens, and
its fountains, we journeyed back to Paris and sought its antipodes—the
Faubourg St. Antoine. Little, narrow streets; dirty children blockading
them; greasy, slovenly women capturing and spanking them; filthy dens on
first floors, with rag stores in them (the heaviest business in the
Faubourg is the chiffonier's); other filthy dens where whole suits of
second and third-hand clothing are sold at prices that would ruin any
proprietor who did not steal his stock; still other filthy dens where they
sold groceries—sold them by the half-pennyworth—five dollars
would buy the man out, goodwill and all. Up these little crooked streets
they will murder a man for seven dollars and dump the body in the Seine.
And up some other of these streets—most of them, I should say—live
lorettes.</p>
<p>All through this Faubourg St. Antoine, misery, poverty, vice, and crime go
hand in hand, and the evidences of it stare one in the face from every
side. Here the people live who begin the revolutions. Whenever there is
anything of that kind to be done, they are always ready. They take as much
genuine pleasure in building a barricade as they do in cutting a throat or
shoving a friend into the Seine. It is these savage-looking ruffians who
storm the splendid halls of the Tuileries occasionally, and swarm into
Versailles when a king is to be called to account.</p>
<p>But they will build no more barricades, they will break no more soldiers'
heads with paving-stones. Louis Napoleon has taken care of all that. He is
annihilating the crooked streets and building in their stead noble
boulevards as straight as an arrow—avenues which a cannon ball could
traverse from end to end without meeting an obstruction more irresistible
than the flesh and bones of men—boulevards whose stately edifices
will never afford refuges and plotting places for starving, discontented
revolution breeders. Five of these great thoroughfares radiate from one
ample centre—a centre which is exceedingly well adapted to the
accommodation of heavy artillery. The mobs used to riot there, but they
must seek another rallying-place in future. And this ingenious Napoleon
paves the streets of his great cities with a smooth, compact composition
of asphaltum and sand. No more barricades of flagstones—no more
assaulting his Majesty's troops with cobbles. I cannot feel friendly
toward my quondam fellow-American, Napoleon III., especially at this time,—[July,
1867.]—when in fancy I see his credulous victim, Maximilian, lying
stark and stiff in Mexico, and his maniac widow watching eagerly from her
French asylum for the form that will never come—but I do admire his
nerve, his calm self-reliance, his shrewd good sense.<br/> <br/> <br/>
<br/> <br/> <br/></p>
<h2> <SPAN name="ch17" id="ch17"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII. </h2>
<p>We had a pleasant journey of it seaward again. We found that for the three
past nights our ship had been in a state of war. The first night the
sailors of a British ship, being happy with grog, came down on the pier
and challenged our sailors to a free fight. They accepted with alacrity,
repaired to the pier, and gained—their share of a drawn battle.
Several bruised and bloody members of both parties were carried off by the
police and imprisoned until the following morning. The next night the
British boys came again to renew the fight, but our men had had strict
orders to remain on board and out of sight. They did so, and the besieging
party grew noisy and more and more abusive as the fact became apparent (to
them) that our men were afraid to come out. They went away finally with a
closing burst of ridicule and offensive epithets. The third night they
came again and were more obstreperous than ever. They swaggered up and
down the almost deserted pier, and hurled curses, obscenity, and stinging
sarcasms at our crew. It was more than human nature could bear. The
executive officer ordered our men ashore—with instructions not to
fight. They charged the British and gained a brilliant victory. I probably
would not have mentioned this war had it ended differently. But I travel
to learn, and I still remember that they picture no French defeats in the
battle-galleries of Versailles.</p>
<p>It was like home to us to step on board the comfortable ship again and
smoke and lounge about her breezy decks. And yet it was not altogether
like home, either, because so many members of the family were away. We
missed some pleasant faces which we would rather have found at dinner, and
at night there were gaps in the euchre-parties which could not be
satisfactorily filled. "Moult" was in England, Jack in Switzerland,
Charley in Spain. Blucher was gone, none could tell where. But we were at
sea again, and we had the stars and the ocean to look at, and plenty of
room to meditate in.</p>
<p>In due time the shores of Italy were sighted, and as we stood gazing from
the decks, early in the bright summer morning, the stately city of Genoa
rose up out of the sea and flung back the sunlight from her hundred
palaces.</p>
<p>Here we rest for the present—or rather, here we have been trying to
rest, for some little time, but we run about too much to accomplish a
great deal in that line.</p>
<p>I would like to remain here. I had rather not go any further. There may be
prettier women in Europe, but I doubt it. The population of Genoa is
120,000; two-thirds of these are women, I think, and at least two-thirds
of the women are beautiful. They are as dressy and as tasteful and as
graceful as they could possibly be without being angels. However, angels
are not very dressy, I believe. At least the angels in pictures are not—they
wear nothing but wings. But these Genoese women do look so charming. Most
of the young demoiselles are robed in a cloud of white from head to foot,
though many trick themselves out more elaborately. Nine-tenths of them
wear nothing on their heads but a filmy sort of veil, which falls down
their backs like a white mist. They are very fair, and many of them have
blue eyes, but black and dreamy dark brown ones are met with oftenest.<br/>
<br/> <br/></p>
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<p>The ladies and gentlemen of Genoa have a pleasant fashion of promenading
in a large park on the top of a hill in the center of the city, from six
till nine in the evening, and then eating ices in a neighboring garden an
hour or two longer. We went to the park on Sunday evening. Two thousand
persons were present, chiefly young ladies and gentlemen. The gentlemen
were dressed in the very latest Paris fashions, and the robes of the
ladies glinted among the trees like so many snowflakes. The multitude
moved round and round the park in a great procession. The bands played,
and so did the fountains; the moon and the gas lamps lit up the scene, and
altogether it was a brilliant and an animated picture. I scanned every
female face that passed, and it seemed to me that all were handsome. I
never saw such a freshet of loveliness before. I did not see how a man of
only ordinary decision of character could marry here, because before he
could get his mind made up he would fall in love with somebody else.</p>
<p>Never smoke any Italian tobacco. Never do it on any account. It makes me
shudder to think what it must be made of. You cannot throw an old cigar
"stub" down anywhere, but some vagabond will pounce upon it on the
instant. I like to smoke a good deal, but it wounds my sensibilities to
see one of these stub-hunters watching me out of the corners of his hungry
eyes and calculating how long my cigar will be likely to last. It reminded
me too painfully of that San Francisco undertaker who used to go to
sick-beds with his watch in his hand and time the corpse. One of these
stub-hunters followed us all over the park last night, and we never had a
smoke that was worth anything. We were always moved to appease him with
the stub before the cigar was half gone, because he looked so viciously
anxious. He regarded us as his own legitimate prey, by right of discovery,
I think, because he drove off several other professionals who wanted to
take stock in us.</p>
<p>Now, they surely must chew up those old stubs, and dry and sell them for
smoking-tobacco. Therefore, give your custom to other than Italian brands
of the article.</p>
<p>"The Superb" and the "City of Palaces" are names which Genoa has held for
centuries. She is full of palaces, certainly, and the palaces are
sumptuous inside, but they are very rusty without and make no pretensions
to architectural magnificence. "Genoa the Superb" would be a felicitous
title if it referred to the women.</p>
<p>We have visited several of the palaces—immense thick-walled piles,
with great stone staircases, tesselated marble pavements on the floors,
(sometimes they make a mosaic work, of intricate designs, wrought in
pebbles or little fragments of marble laid in cement,) and grand salons
hung with pictures by Rubens, Guido, Titian, Paul Veronese, and so on, and
portraits of heads of the family, in plumed helmets and gallant coats of
mail, and patrician ladies in stunning costumes of centuries ago. But, of
course, the folks were all out in the country for the summer, and might
not have known enough to ask us to dinner if they had been at home, and so
all the grand empty salons, with their resounding pavements, their grim
pictures of dead ancestors, and tattered banners with the dust of bygone
centuries upon them, seemed to brood solemnly of death and the grave, and
our spirits ebbed away, and our cheerfulness passed from us. We never went
up to the eleventh story. We always began to suspect ghosts. There was
always an undertaker-looking servant along, too, who handed us a program,
pointed to the picture that began the list of the salon he was in, and
then stood stiff and stark and unsmiling in his petrified livery till we
were ready to move on to the next chamber, whereupon he marched sadly
ahead and took up another malignantly respectful position as before. I
wasted so much time praying that the roof would fall in on these
dispiriting flunkies that I had but little left to bestow upon palace and
pictures.<br/> <br/> <br/></p>
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<p>And besides, as in Paris, we had a guide. Perdition catch all the guides.
This one said he was the most gifted linguist in Genoa, as far as English
was concerned, and that only two persons in the city beside himself could
talk the language at all. He showed us the birthplace of Christopher
Columbus, and after we had reflected in silent awe before it for fifteen
minutes, he said it was not the birthplace of Columbus, but of Columbus'
grandmother! When we demanded an explanation of his conduct he only
shrugged his shoulders and answered in barbarous Italian. I shall speak
further of this guide in a future chapter. All the information we got out
of him we shall be able to carry along with us, I think.</p>
<p>I have not been to church so often in a long time as I have in the last
few weeks. The people in these old lands seem to make churches their
specialty. Especially does this seem to be the case with the citizens of
Genoa. I think there is a church every three or four hundred yards all
over town. The streets are sprinkled from end to end with shovel-hatted,
long-robed, well-fed priests, and the church bells by dozens are pealing
all the day long, nearly. Every now and then one comes across a friar of
orders gray, with shaven head, long, coarse robe, rope girdle and beads,
and with feet cased in sandals or entirely bare. These worthies suffer in
the flesh and do penance all their lives, I suppose, but they look like
consummate famine-breeders. They are all fat and serene.</p>
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<p>The old Cathedral of San Lorenzo is about as notable a building as we have
found in Genoa. It is vast, and has colonnades of noble pillars, and a
great organ, and the customary pomp of gilded moldings, pictures, frescoed
ceilings, and so forth. I cannot describe it, of course—it would
require a good many pages to do that. But it is a curious place. They said
that half of it—from the front door halfway down to the altar—was
a Jewish synagogue before the Saviour was born, and that no alteration had
been made in it since that time. We doubted the statement, but did it
reluctantly. We would much rather have believed it. The place looked in
too perfect repair to be so ancient.</p>
<p>The main point of interest about the cathedral is the little Chapel of St.
John the Baptist. They only allow women to enter it on one day in the
year, on account of the animosity they still cherish against the sex
because of the murder of the Saint to gratify a caprice of Herodias. In
this Chapel is a marble chest, in which, they told us, were the ashes of
St. John; and around it was wound a chain, which, they said, had confined
him when he was in prison. We did not desire to disbelieve these
statements, and yet we could not feel certain that they were correct—partly
because we could have broken that chain, and so could St. John, and partly
because we had seen St. John's ashes before, in another church. We could
not bring ourselves to think St. John had two sets of ashes.</p>
<p>They also showed us a portrait of the Madonna which was painted by St.
Luke, and it did not look half as old and smoky as some of the pictures by
Rubens. We could not help admiring the Apostle's modesty in never once
mentioning in his writings that he could paint.</p>
<p>But isn't this relic matter a little overdone? We find a piece of the true
cross in every old church we go into, and some of the nails that held it
together. I would not like to be positive, but I think we have seen as
much as a keg of these nails. Then there is the crown of thorns; they have
part of one in Sainte Chapelle, in Paris, and part of one also in Notre
Dame. And as for bones of St. Denis, I feel certain we have seen enough of
them to duplicate him if necessary.</p>
<p>I only meant to write about the churches, but I keep wandering from the
subject. I could say that the Church of the Annunciation is a wilderness
of beautiful columns, of statues, gilded moldings, and pictures almost
countless, but that would give no one an entirely perfect idea of the
thing, and so where is the use? One family built the whole edifice, and
have got money left. There is where the mystery lies. We had an idea at
first that only a mint could have survived the expense.</p>
<p>These people here live in the heaviest, highest, broadest, darkest,
solidest houses one can imagine. Each one might "laugh a siege to scorn."
A hundred feet front and a hundred high is about the style, and you go up
three flights of stairs before you begin to come upon signs of occupancy.
Everything is stone, and stone of the heaviest—floors, stairways,
mantels, benches—everything. The walls are four to five feet thick.
The streets generally are four or five to eight feet wide and as crooked
as a corkscrew. You go along one of these gloomy cracks, and look up and
behold the sky like a mere ribbon of light, far above your head, where the
tops of the tall houses on either side of the street bend almost together.
You feel as if you were at the bottom of some tremendous abyss, with all
the world far above you. You wind in and out and here and there, in the
most mysterious way, and have no more idea of the points of the compass
than if you were a blind man. You can never persuade yourself that these
are actually streets, and the frowning, dingy, monstrous houses dwellings,
till you see one of these beautiful, prettily dressed women emerge from
them—see her emerge from a dark, dreary-looking den that looks
dungeon all over, from the ground away halfway up to heaven. And then you
wonder that such a charming moth could come from such a forbidding shell
as that. The streets are wisely made narrow and the houses heavy and thick
and stony, in order that the people may be cool in this roasting climate.
And they are cool, and stay so. And while I think of it—the men wear
hats and have very dark complexions, but the women wear no headgear but a
flimsy veil like a gossamer's web, and yet are exceedingly fair as a
general thing. Singular, isn't it?</p>
<p>The huge palaces of Genoa are each supposed to be occupied by one family,
but they could accommodate a hundred, I should think. They are relics of
the grandeur of Genoa's palmy days—the days when she was a great
commercial and maritime power several centuries ago. These houses, solid
marble palaces though they be, are in many cases of a dull pinkish color,
outside, and from pavement to eaves are pictured with Genoese battle
scenes, with monstrous Jupiters and Cupids, and with familiar
illustrations from Grecian mythology. Where the paint has yielded to age
and exposure and is peeling off in flakes and patches, the effect is not
happy. A noseless Cupid or a Jupiter with an eye out or a Venus with a
fly-blister on her breast, are not attractive features in a picture. Some
of these painted walls reminded me somewhat of the tall van, plastered
with fanciful bills and posters, that follows the bandwagon of a circus
about a country village. I have not read or heard that the outsides of the
houses of any other European city are frescoed in this way.</p>
<p>I can not conceive of such a thing as Genoa in ruins. Such massive arches,
such ponderous substructions as support these towering broad-winged
edifices, we have seldom seen before; and surely the great blocks of stone
of which these edifices are built can never decay; walls that are as thick
as an ordinary American doorway is high cannot crumble.</p>
<p>The republics of Genoa and Pisa were very powerful in the Middle Ages.
Their ships filled the Mediterranean, and they carried on an extensive
commerce with Constantinople and Syria. Their warehouses were the great
distributing depots from whence the costly merchandise of the East was
sent abroad over Europe. They were warlike little nations and defied, in
those days, governments that overshadow them now as mountains overshadow
molehills. The Saracens captured and pillaged Genoa nine hundred years
ago, but during the following century Genoa and Pisa entered into an
offensive and defensive alliance and besieged the Saracen colonies in
Sardinia and the Balearic Isles with an obstinacy that maintained its
pristine vigor and held to its purpose for forty long years. They were
victorious at last and divided their conquests equably among their great
patrician families. Descendants of some of those proud families still
inhabit the palaces of Genoa, and trace in their own features a
resemblance to the grim knights whose portraits hang in their stately
halls, and to pictured beauties with pouting lips and merry eyes whose
originals have been dust and ashes for many a dead and forgotten century.</p>
<p>The hotel we live in belonged to one of those great orders of knights of
the Cross in the times of the Crusades, and its mailed sentinels once kept
watch and ward in its massive turrets and woke the echoes of these halls
and corridors with their iron heels.<br/> <br/> <br/></p>
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<p>But Genoa's greatness has degenerated into an unostentatious commerce in
velvets and silver filagree-work. They say that each European town has its
specialty. These filagree things are Genoa's specialty. Her smiths take
silver ingots and work them up into all manner of graceful and beautiful
forms. They make bunches of flowers, from flakes and wires of silver, that
counterfeit the delicate creations the frost weaves upon a windowpane; and
we were shown a miniature silver temple whose fluted columns, whose
Corinthian capitals and rich entablatures, whose spire, statues, bells,
and ornate lavishness of sculpture were wrought in polished silver, and
with such matchless art that every detail was a fascinating study and the
finished edifice a wonder of beauty.</p>
<p>We are ready to move again, though we are not really tired yet of the
narrow passages of this old marble cave. Cave is a good word—when
speaking of Genoa under the stars. When we have been prowling at midnight
through the gloomy crevices they call streets, where no footfalls but ours
were echoing, where only ourselves were abroad, and lights appeared only
at long intervals and at a distance, and mysteriously disappeared again,
and the houses at our elbows seemed to stretch upward farther than ever
toward the heavens, the memory of a cave I used to know at home was always
in my mind, with its lofty passages, its silence and solitude, its
shrouding gloom, its sepulchral echoes, its flitting lights, and more than
all, its sudden revelations of branching crevices and corridors where we
least expected them.</p>
<p>We are not tired of the endless processions of cheerful, chattering
gossipers that throng these courts and streets all day long, either; nor
of the coarse-robed monks; nor of the "Asti" wines, which that old doctor
(whom we call the Oracle,) with customary felicity in the matter of
getting everything wrong, misterms "nasty." But we must go, nevertheless.</p>
<p>Our last sight was the cemetery (a burial place intended to accommodate
60,000 bodies,) and we shall continue to remember it after we shall have
forgotten the palaces. It is a vast marble collonaded corridor extending
around a great unoccupied square of ground; its broad floor is marble, and
on every slab is an inscription—for every slab covers a corpse. On
either side, as one walks down the middle of the passage, are monuments,
tombs, and sculptured figures that are exquisitely wrought and are full of
grace and beauty. They are new and snowy; every outline is perfect, every
feature guiltless of mutilation, flaw, or blemish; and therefore, to us
these far-reaching ranks of bewitching forms are a hundred fold more
lovely than the damaged and dingy statuary they have saved from the wreck
of ancient art and set up in the galleries of Paris for the worship of the
world.<br/> <br/> <br/></p>
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<p>Well provided with cigars and other necessaries of life, we are now ready
to take the cars for Milan.<br/> <br/> <br/> <br/> <br/> <br/></p>
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