<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X" href="#TOC10"> <span title=" Return to CONTENTS. " class="hoverlink">CHAPTER X</span></SPAN></h2>
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<h3>EXILED</h3>
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<p>Scores of men, celebrated in art and in
literature, have, for a longer or shorter period
of their lives, been bohemians of the
Latin Quarter. And yet these years spent
in cafés and in studios have not turned them
out into the world a devil-me-care lot of
dreamers. They have all marched and
sung along the “Boul’ Miche”; danced at
the “Bullier”; starved, struggled, and lived
in the romance of its life. It has all been a
part of their education, and a very important
part too, in the development of their
several geniuses, a development which in
later life has placed them at the head of
their professions. These years of camaraderie—of
a life free from all conventionalities,
in daily touch with everything about
them, and untrammeled by public censure
or the petty views of prudish or narrow<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">- 195 -</SPAN></span>
minds, have left them free to cut a straight
swath merrily toward the goal of their
ideals, surrounded all the while by an
atmosphere of art and good-fellowship that
permeates the very air they breathe.</p>
<p>If a man can work at all, he can work
here, for between the working-hours he
finds a life so charming, that once having
lived it he returns to it again and again, as
to an old love.</p>
<p>How many are the romances of this student
Quarter! How many hearts have
been broken or made glad! How many
brave spirits have suffered and worked on
and suffered again, and at last won fame!
How many have failed! We who come
with a fresh eye know nothing of all that
has passed within these quaint streets—only
those who have lived in and through
it know its full story.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image085.jpg" width-obs="620" height-obs="374" alt="THE MUSÉE CLUNY" title="" /> <p>THE <span title=" MUSEE " class="hoverbox">MUSÉE</span> CLUNY</p> </div>
<p>Pochard has seen it; so has the little old
woman who once danced at the opera;
so have old Bibi La Purée, and Alphonse,
the gray-haired garçon, and Mère Gaillard,
the flower-woman. They have seen the
gay boulevards and the cafés and generations
<!--[image 85]<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">- 196 -</SPAN></span>-->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">- 197 -</SPAN></span>of
grisettes, from the true grisette of
years gone by, in her dainty white cap and
simple dress turned low at the throat, to
the tailor-made grisette of to-day.</p>
<p>Yet the eyes of the little old woman still
dance; they have not grown tired of this
ever-changing kaleidoscope of human nature,
this paradise of the free, where many
would rather struggle on half starved than
live a life of luxury elsewhere.</p>
<p>And the students are equally quixotic. I
knew one once who lived in an air-castle of
his own building—a tall, serious fellow, a
sculptor, who always went tramping about
in a robe resembling a monk’s cowl, with
his bare feet incased in coarse sandals; only
his art redeemed these eccentricities, for he
produced in steel and ivory the most exquisite
statuettes. One at the Salon was the
sensation of the day—a knight in full armor,
scarcely half a foot in height, holding in his
arms a nymph in flesh-tinted ivory, whose
gentle face, upturned, gazed sweetly into
the stern features behind the uplifted vizor;
and all so exquisitely carved, so alive, so
human, that one could almost feel the tender<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">- 198 -</SPAN></span>
heart of this fair lady beating against
the cold steel breastplate.</p>
<p>Another “bon garçon”—a painter whose
enthusiasm for his art knew no bounds—craved
to produce a masterpiece. This
dreamer could be seen daily ferreting
around the Quarter for a studio always
bigger than the one he had. At last he
found one that exactly fitted the requirements
of his vivid imagination—a studio
with a ceiling thirty feet high, with windows
like the scenic ones next to the stage
entrances of the theaters. Here at last he
could give full play to his brush—no subject
seemed too big for him to tackle; he would
move in a canvas as big as a back flat to
a third act, and commence on a “Fall of
Babylon” or a “Carnage of Rome” with
a nerve that was sublime! The choking
dust of the arena—the insatiable fury of the
tigers—the cowering of hundreds of unfortunate
captives—and the cruel multitude
above, seated in the vast circle of the
hippodrome—all these did not daunt his
zeal.</p>
<p>Once he persuaded a venerable old abbé<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">- 199 -</SPAN></span>
to pose for his portrait. The old gentleman
came patiently to his studio and posed for
ten days, at the end of which time the abbé
gazed at the result and said things which I
dare not repeat—for our enthusiast had so
far only painted his clothes; the face was
still in its primary drawing.</p>
<p>“The face I shall do in time,” the enthusiast
assured the reverend man excitedly;
“it is the effect of the rich color of
your robe I wished to get. And may I ask
your holiness to be patient a day longer
while I put in your boots?”</p>
<p>“No, sir!” thundered the irate abbé.
“Does monsieur think I am not a very
busy man?”</p>
<p>Then softening a little, he said, with a
smile:</p>
<p>“I won’t come any more, my friend. I’ll
send my boots around to-morrow by my
boy.”</p>
<p>But the longest red-letter day has its
ending, and time and tide beckon one with
the brutality of an impatient jailer.</p>
<p>On my studio table is a well-stuffed envelope
containing the documents relative to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">- 200 -</SPAN></span>
my impending exile—a stamped card of my
identification, bearing the number of my
cell, a plan of the slave-ship, and six red
tags for my baggage.</p>
<p>The three pretty daughters of old Père
Valois know of my approaching departure,
and say cheering things to me as I pass the
concierge’s window.</p>
<p>Père Valois stands at the gate and stops
me with: “Is it true, monsieur, you are
going Saturday?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I answer; “unfortunately, it is
quite true.”</p>
<p>The old man sighs and replies: “I once
had to leave Paris myself”; looking at me
as if he were speaking to an old resident.
“My regiment was ordered to the colonies.
It was hard, monsieur, but I did my duty.”</p>
<p>The morning of my sailing has arrived.
The patron of the tobacco-shop, and madame
his good wife, and the wine merchant,
and the baker along the little street with
its cobblestone-bed, have all wished me
“bon voyage,” accompanied with many
handshakings. It is getting late and Père
Valois has gone to hunt for a cab—a “galerie,”
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">- 201 -</SPAN></span>
as it is called, with a place for trunks
on top. Twenty minutes go by, but no
“galerie” is in sight. The three daughters
of Père Valois run in different directions to
find one, while I throw the remaining odds
and ends in the studio into my valise. At
last there is a sound of grating wheels below
on the gravel court. The “galerie”
has arrived—with the smallest of the three
daughters inside, all out of breath from her
run and terribly excited. There are the
trunks and the valises and the bicycle in
its crate to get down. Two soldiers, who
have been calling on two of the daughters,
come up to the studio and kindly offer their
assistance. There is no time to lose, and
in single file the procession starts down the
atelier stairs, headed by Père Valois, who
has just returned from his fruitless search
considerably winded, and the three girls,
the two red-trousered soldiers and myself
tugging away at the rest of the baggage.</p>
<p>It is not often one departs with the assistance
of three pretty femmes de ménage,
a jolly old concierge, and a portion of the
army of the French Republic. With many<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">- 202 -</SPAN></span>
suggestions from my good friends and an
assuring wave of the hand from the aged
cocher, my luggage is roped and chained to
the top of the rickety, little old cab, which
sways and squeaks with the sudden weight,
while the poor, small horse, upon whom has
been devolved the task of making the 11.35
train, Gare St. Lazare, changes his position
wearily from one leg to the other. He
is evidently thinking out the distance, and
has decided upon his gait.</p>
<p>“Bon voyage!” cry the three girls and
Père Valois and the two soldiers, as the
last trunk is chained on.</p>
<p>The dingy vehicle groans its way slowly
out of the court. Just as it reaches the last
gate it stops.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter?” I ask, poking my
head out of the window.</p>
<p>“Monsieur,” says the aged cocher, “it is
an impossibility! I regret very much to
say that your bicycle will not pass through
the gate.”</p>
<p>A dozen heads in the windows above offer
suggestions. I climb out and take a look;
there are at least four inches to spare on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">- 203 -</SPAN></span>
either side in passing through the iron
posts.</p>
<p>“Ah!” cries my cocher enthusiastically,
“monsieur is right, happily for us!”</p>
<p>He cracks his whip, the little horse
gathers itself together—a moment of careful
driving and we are through and into the
street and rumbling away, amid cheers from
the windows above. As I glance over my
traps, I see a small bunch of roses tucked
in the corner of my roll of rugs with an engraved
card attached. “From Mademoiselle
Ernestine Valois,” it reads, and on
the other side is written, in a small, fine
hand, “Bon voyage.”</p>
<p>I look back to bow my acknowledgment,
but it is too late; we have turned the corner
and the rue Vaugirard is but a memory!</p>
<p class="starrow">*****</p>
<p>But why go on telling you of what the
little shops contain—how narrow and picturesque
are the small streets—how gay
the boulevards—what they do at the “Bullier”—or
where they dine? It is Love that
moves Paris—it is the motive power of this
big, beautiful, polished city—the love of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">- 204 -</SPAN></span>
adventure, the love of intrigue, the love of
being a bohemian if you will—but it is Love
all the same!</p>
<p>“I work for love,” hums the little couturière.</p>
<p>“I work for love,” cries the miller of
Marcel Legay.</p>
<p>“I live for love,” sings the poet.</p>
<p>“For the love of art I am a painter,”
sighs Edmond, in his atelier—“and for
her!”</p>
<p>“For the love of it I mold and model and
create,” chants the sculptor—“and for her!”</p>
<p>It is the Woman who dominates Paris—“Les
petites femmes!” who have inspired
its art through the skill of these artisans.</p>
<p>“Monsieur! monsieur! Please buy this
fisherman doll!” cries a poor old woman
outside of your train compartment, as you
are leaving Havre for Paris.</p>
<p>“Monsieur!” screams a girl, running near
the open window with a little fishergirl doll
uplifted.</p>
<p>“What, you don’t want it? You have
bought one? Ah! I see,” cries the pretty
vendor; “but it is a boy doll—he will be sad
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">- 205 -</SPAN></span>
if he goes to Paris without a companion!”</p>
<p>Take all the little fishergirls away from
Paris—from the Quartier Latin—and you
would find chaos and a morgue!</p>
<p>L’amour! that is it—L’amour!—L’amour!—L’amour!</p>
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