<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII" href="#TOC8"> <span title=" Return to CONTENTS. " class="hoverlink">CHAPTER VIII</span></SPAN></h2>
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<h3>THE LUXEMBOURG GARDENS</h3>
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<p class="dropcap"><span class="frstltr">I</span>N this busy Quarter,
where so many
people are confined
throughout
the day in work-shops
and studios,
a breathing-space
becomes a necessity.
The gardens
of the Luxembourg,
brilliant in
flowers and laid
out in the Renaissance,
with shady
groves and long
avenues of chestnut-trees
stretching up to the Place de
l’Observatoire, afford the great breathing-ground
for the Latin Quarter.</p>
<p>If one had but an hour to spend in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">- 152 -</SPAN></span>
Quartier Latin, one could not find a more
interesting and representative sight of student
life than between the hours of four and
five on Friday afternoon, when the military
band plays in the Luxembourg Gardens.
This is the afternoon when Bohemia is on
parade. Then every one flocks here to see
one’s friends—and a sort of weekly reception
for the Quarter is held. The walks about
the band-stand are thronged with students
and girls, and hundreds of chairs are filled
with an audience of the older people—shopkeepers
and their families, old women in
white lace caps, and gray-haired old men,
many in straight-brimmed high hats of a
mode of twenty years past. Here they sit
and listen to the music under the cool
shadow of the trees, whose rich foliage
forms an arbor overhead—a roof of green
leaves, through which the sunbeams stream
and in which the fat, gray pigeons find a
paradise.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image073.jpg" width-obs="620" height-obs="392" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">THE CHILDREN’S SHOP—LUXEMBOURG GARDENS</span></div>
<p>There is a booth near-by where waffles,
cooked on a small oven in the rear, are
sold. In front are a dozen or more tables
for ices and drinkables. Every table and
<!--[image 73]<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">- 153 -</SPAN></span>-->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">- 154 -</SPAN></span>chair
is taken within hearing distance of
the band. When these musicians of the
army of France arrive, marching in twos
from their barracks to the stand, it is always
the signal for that genuine enthusiasm
among the waiting crowd which one
sees between the French and their soldiers.</p>
<p>If you chance to sit among the groups at
the little tables, and watch the passing
throng in front of you, you will see some
queer “types,” many of them seldom en
evidence except on these Friday afternoons
in the Luxembourg. Buried, no doubt, in
some garret hermitage or studio, they
emerge thus weekly to greet silently the
passing world.</p>
<p>A tall poet stalks slowly by, reading intently,
as he walks, a well-worn volume of
verses—his faded straw hat shading the
tip of his long nose. Following him, a boy
of twenty, delicately featured, with that
purity of expression one sees in the faces
of the good—the result of a life, perhaps,
given to his ideal in art. He wears his hair
long and curling over his ears, with a
long stray wisp over one eye, the whole<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">- 155 -</SPAN></span>
cropped evenly at the back as it reaches
his black velvet collar. He wears, too, a
dove-gray vest of fine corduroy, buttoned
behind like those of the clergy, and a
velvet tam-o’-shanter-like cap, and carries
between his teeth a small pipe with a long
goose-quill stem. You can readily see that
to this young man with high ideals there is
only one corner of the world worth living
in, and that lies between the Place de l’Observatoire
and the Seine.</p>
<p>Three students pass, in wide broadcloth
trousers, gathered in tight at the
ankles, and wearing wide-brimmed black
hats. Hanging on the arm of one of the trio is
a short snub-nosed girl, whose Cleo-Merodic
hair, flattened in a bandeau over her ears,
not only completely conceals them, but all
the rest of her face, except her two merry
black eyes and her saucy and neatly rouged
lips. She is in black bicycle bloomers and
a white, short duck jacket—a straw hat
with a wide blue ribbon band, and a fluffy
piece of white tulle tied at the side of her
neck.</p>
<p>The throng moves slowly by you. It is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">- 156 -</SPAN></span>
impossible, in such a close crowd, to be in
a hurry; besides, one never is here.</p>
<p>Near-by sit two old ladies, evidently concierges
from some atelier court. One holds
the printed program of the music, cut carefully
from her weekly newspaper; it is
cheaper than buying one for two sous, and
these old concierges are economical.</p>
<p>In this Friday gathering you will recognize
dozens of faces which you have seen at
the “Bal Bullier” and the cafés.</p>
<p>The girl in the blue tailor-made dress,
with the little dog, who you remember dined
the night before at the Panthéon, is walking
now arm in arm with a tall man in black, a
mourning band about his hat. The girl is
dressed in black, too—a mark of respect to
her ami by her side. The dog, who is so
small that he slides along the walk every
time his chain is pulled, is now tucked
under her arm.</p>
<p>One of the tables near the waffle stand is
taken by a group of six students and four
girls. All of them have arrived at the table
in the last fifteen minutes—some alone, some
in twos. The girl in the scarlet gown and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">- 157 -</SPAN></span>
white kid slippers, who came with the queer-looking
“type” with the pointed beard, is
Yvonne Gallois—a bonne camarade. She
keeps the rest in the best of spirits, for
she is witty, this Yvonne, and a great favorite
with the crowd she is with. She is
pretty, too, and has a whole-souled good-humor
about her that makes her ever welcome.
The fellow she came with is Delmet
the architect—a great wag—lazy, but full
of fun—and genius.</p>
<p>The little girl sitting opposite Yvonne is
Claire Dumont. She is explaining a very
sad “histoire” to the “type” next to her,
intense in the recital of her woes. Her
alert, nervous little face is a study; when
words and expression fail, she shrugs her
delicate shoulders, accenting every sentence
with her hands, until it seems as
if her small, nervous frame could express
no more—and all about her little dog
“Loisette!”</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image074.jpg" width-obs="603" height-obs="450" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">AT THE HEAD OF THE LUXEMBOURG GARDENS</span></div>
<p>“Yes, the villain of a concierge at Edmond’s
studio swore at him twice, and
Sunday, when Edmond and I were breakfasting
late, the old beast saw ‘Loisette’
<!--[image 74]<p class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">- 158 -</SPAN></p>-->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">- 159 -</SPAN></span>on
the stairs and threw water over her;
she is a sale bête, that grosse femme! She
shall see what it will cost her, the old miser;
and you know I have always been most
amiable with her. She is jealous of me—that
is it—oh! I am certain of it. Because
I am young and happy. Jealous of me!
that’s funny, is it not? The old pig! Poor
‘Loisette’—she shivered all night with fright
and from being wet. Edmond and I are
going to find another place. Yes, she shall
see what it will be there without us—with
no one to depend upon for her snuff and her
wine. If she were concierge at Edmond’s
old atelier she would be treated like that
horrid old Madame Fouquet.”</p>
<p>The boys in the atelier over her window
hated this old Madame Fouquet, I remember.
She was always prying about and
complaining, so they fished up her pet
gold-fish out of the aquarium on her
window-sill, and fried them on the atelier
stove, and put them back in the window
on a little plate all garnished with carrots.
She swore vengeance and called in the
police, but to no avail. One day they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">- 160 -</SPAN></span>
fished up the parrot in its cage, and the
green bird that screamed and squawked
continually met a speedy and painless death
and went off to the taxidermist. Then the
cage was lowered in its place with the door
left ajar, and the old woman felt sure that
her pet had escaped and would some day
find his way back to her—a thing this garrulous
bird would never have thought of
doing had he had any say in the matter.</p>
<p>So the old lady left the door of the cage
open for days in the event of his return, and
strange to tell, one morning Madame Fouquet
got up to quarrel with her next-door
neighbor, and, to her amazement, there was
her green pet on his perch in his cage. She
called to him, but he did not answer; he
simply stood on his wired legs and fixed his
glassy eyes on her, and said not a word—while
the gang of Indians in the windows
above yelled themselves hoarse.</p>
<p>It was just such a crowd as this that initiated
a “nouveau” once in one of the
ateliers. They stripped the new-comer,
and, as is often the custom on similar festive
occasions, painted him all over with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">- 161 -</SPAN></span>
sketches, done in the powdered water-colors
that come in glass jars. They are cheap
and cover a lot of surface, so that the gentleman
in question looked like a human picture-gallery.
After the ceremony, he was
put in a hamper and deposited, in the morning,
in the middle of the Pont des <span title=" Artz " class="hoverbox">Arts</span>,
where he was subsequently found by the
police, who carted him off in a cab.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/image075.jpg" width-obs="273" height-obs="425" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">THE FONTAINE DE MEDICIS</span></div>
<p><span class="nowrap">But you must see</span> more of this vast garden
of the Luxembourg to appreciate truly
its beauty and its charm. Filled with beautiful
sculpture in bronze and marble, with
its musée of famous modern pictures bought
by the Government, with flower-beds brilliant
in geraniums and fragrant in roses,
with the big basin spouting a jet of water
in its center, where the children sail their
boats, and with that superb “Fontaine de
Medicis” at the end of a long, rectangular
basin of water—dark as some pool in a forest
brook, the green vines trailing about its
sides, shaded by the rich foliage of the trees
overhead.</p>
<p>On the other side of the Luxembourg
you will find a garden of roses, with a
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">- 163 -</SPAN></span>rich
bronze group of Greek runners in the
center, and near it, back of the long marble
balustrade, a croquet ground—a favorite
spot for several veteran enthusiasts who
play here regularly, surrounded for hours
by an interested crowd who applaud and
cheer the participants in this passé sport.</p>
<p>This is another way of spending an afternoon
at the sole cost of one’s leisure. It
takes but little to amuse these people!</p>
<p>Often at the Punch and Judy show near-by,
you will see two old gentlemen,—who
may have watched this same Punch and
Judy show when they were youngsters,—and
who have been sitting for half an hour,
waiting for the curtain of the miniature
theater to rise. It is popular—this small
“Théâtre Guignol,” and the benches in
front are filled with the children of rich and
poor, who scream with delight and kick
their little, fat bare legs at the first shrill
squeak of Mr. Punch. The three who compose
the staff of this tiny attraction have
been long in its service—the old harpist,
and the good wife of the showman who
knows every child in the neighborhood, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">- 164 -</SPAN></span>
her husband who is Mr. Punch, the hangman,
and the gendarme, and half a dozen
other equally historical personages. A
thin, sad-looking man, this husband, gray-haired,
with a careworn look in his deep-sunken
eyes, who works harder hourly,
daily, yearly, to amuse the heart of a child
than almost any one I know.</p>
<p>The little box of a theater is stifling hot
in summer, and yet he must laugh and
scream and sing within it, while his good
wife collects the sous, talking all the while
to this and to that child whom she has
known since its babyhood; chatting with
the nurses decked out in their gay-colored,
Alsatian bows, the ribbons reaching nearly
to the ground.</p>
<p>A French nurse is a gorgeous spectacle
of neatness and cleanliness, and many of
the younger ones, fresh from country homes
in Normandy and Brittany, with their rosy
cheeks, are pictures of health. Wherever
you see a nurse, you will see a “piou-piou”
not far away, which is a very belittling word
for the red-trousered infantryman of the
République Française.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">- 165 -</SPAN></span>
Surrounding the Palais du Luxembourg,
these “piou-pious,” less fortunate for the
hour, stand guard in the small striped
sentry-boxes, musket at side, or pace stolidly
up and down the flagged walk. Marie,
at the moment, is no doubt with the children
of the rich Count, in a shady spot
near the music. How cruel is the fate of
many a gallant “piou-piou”!</p>
<p>Farther down the gravel-walk strolls a
young Frenchman and his fiancée—the
mother of his betrothed inevitably at her
side! It is under this system of rigid chaperonage
that the young girl of France is
given in marriage. It is not to be wondered
at that many of them marry to be free, and
that many of the happier marriages have
begun with an elopement!</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image076.jpg" width-obs="620" height-obs="395" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">THE PALACE OF THE LUXEMBOURG</span></div>
<p>The music is over, and the band is filing
out, followed by the crowd. A few linger
about the walks around the band-stand to
chat. The old lady who rents the chairs
is stacking them up about the tree-trunks,
and long shadows across the walks tell of
the approaching twilight. Overhead, among
the leaves, the pigeons coo. For a few moments
<!--[image 76]<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">- 166 -</SPAN></span>-->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">- 167 -</SPAN></span>the
sun bathes the great garden in a
pinkish glow, then drops slowly, a blood-red
disk, behind the trees. The air grows
chilly; it is again the hour to dine—the hour
when Paris wakes.</p>
<p>In the smaller restaurants of the Quarter
one often sees some strange contrasts
among these true bohemians, for the Latin
Quarter draws its habitués from every part
of the globe. They are not all French—these
happy-go-lucky fellows, who live for
the day and let the morrow slide. You will
see many Japanese—some of them painters—many
of them taking courses in political
economy, or in law; many of them titled
men of high rank in their own country,
studying in the schools, and learning, too,
with that thoroughness and rapidity which
are ever characteristic of their race. You
will find, too, Brazilians; gentlemen from
Haiti of darker hue; Russians, Poles, and
Spaniards—men and women from every
clime and every station in life. They adapt
themselves to the Quarter and become a
part of this big family of Bohemia easily
and naturally.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">- 168 -</SPAN></span>
In this daily atmosphere only the girl-student
from our own shores seems out of
place. She will hunt for some small restaurant,
sacred in its exclusiveness and
known only to a dozen bon camarades of
the Quarter. Perhaps this girl-student, it
may be, from the West and her cousin from
the East will discover some such cosy little
boîte on their way back from their atelier.
To two other equally adventurous female
minds they will impart this newest find;
after that you will see the four dining there
nightly together, as safe, I assure you,
within these walls of Bohemia as they
would be at home rocking on their Aunt
Mary’s porch.</p>
<p>There is, of course, considerable awkwardness
between these bon camarades, to
whom the place really belongs, and these
very innocent new-comers, who seek a table
by themselves in a corner under the few
trees in front of the small restaurant. And
yet every one is exceedingly polite to them.
Madame the patronne hustles about to
see that the dinner is warm and nicely
served; and Henriette, who is waiting on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">- 169 -</SPAN></span>
them, none the less attentive, although she
is late for her own dinner, which she will sit
down to presently with madame the patronne,
the good cook, and the other girls
who serve the small tables.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/image077.jpg" width-obs="314" height-obs="450" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">WHAT IS GOING ON AT THE THEATERS</span></div>
<p><span class="nowrap">This later feast</span> will be augmented perhaps
by half the good boys and girls who
have been dining at the long table. Perhaps
they will all come in and help shell
the peas for to-morrow’s dinner. And yet
this is a public place, where the painters
come, and where one pays only for what
one orders. It is all very interesting to the
four American girls, who are dining at the
small table. “It is so thoroughly bohemian!”
they exclaim.</p>
<p>But what must Mimi think of these silent
and exclusive strangers, and what, too,
must the tall girl in the bicycle bloomers
think, and the little girl who has been ill
and who at the moment is dining with
Renould, the artist, and whom every one—even
to the cook, is so glad to welcome
back after her long illness? There is an
unsurmountable barrier between the Americans
at the little table in the corner and
<!--[image 77]<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">- 170 -</SPAN></span>-->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">- 171 -</SPAN></span>that
jolly crowd of good and kindly people
at the long one, for Mimi and Henriette
and the little girl who has been so ill,
and the French painters and sculptors
with them, cannot understand either the
language of these strangers or their views
of life.</p>
<p>“Florence!” exclaims one of the strangers
in a whisper, “do look at that queer
little ‘type’ at the long table—the tall girl
in black actually kissed him!”</p>
<p>“You don’t mean it!”</p>
<p>“Yes, I do—just now. Why, my dear, I
saw it plainly!”</p>
<p>Poor culprits! There is no law against
kissing in the open air in Paris, and besides,
the tall girl in black has known the
little “type” for a Parisienne age—thirty
days or less.</p>
<p>The four innocents, who have coughed
through their soup and whispered through
the rest of the dinner, have now finished
and are leaving, but if those at the long
table notice their departure, they do not
show it. In the Quarter it is considered
the height of rudeness to stare. You will<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">- 172 -</SPAN></span>
find these Suzannes and Marcelles exceedingly
well-bred in the little refinements of
life, and you will note a certain innate dignity
and kindliness in their bearing toward
others, which often makes one wish to
uncover his head in their presence.</p>
<br/><br/><br/><br/>
<p class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">- 173 -</SPAN></p>
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