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第21章

a little tour in france-第21章

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as a magazine of ammunition; and the yard con… tains a multitude of ugly buildings。  The only thing to do is to walk round the bastions for the view; but at the moment of my visit the weather was thick; and the bastions began and ended with themselves。  So I came out and took another look at the big; black ex… terior; buttressed with white…ribbed towers; and per… ceived that a desperate sketcher might extract a picture from it; especially if he were to bring in; as they say; the little black bronze statue of the good King Rene (a weak production of David d'Angers); which; standing within sight; ornaments the melancholy faubourg。  He would do much better; however; with the very striking old timbered house (I suppose of the fifteenth century) which is called the Maison d'Adam; and is easily the first specimen at Angers of the domestic architecture of the past。  This admirable house; in the centre of the town; gabled; elaborately timbered; and much restored; is a really imposing monument。  The basement is occupied by a linen… draper; who flourishes under the auspicious sign of the Mere de Famille; and above his shop the tall front rises in five overhanging stories。  As the house occupies the angle of a little _place_; this front is double; and the black beams and wooden supports; displayed over a large surface and carved and interlaced; have a high picturesqueness。  The Maison d'Adam is quite in the grand style; and I am sorry to say I failed to learn what history attaches to its name。  If I spoke just above of the cathedral as 〃moderate;〃 I suppose I should beg its pardon; for this serious charge was probably prompted by the fact that it consists only of a nave; without side aisles。  A little reflection now convinces me that such a form is a distinction; and; indeed; I find it mentioned; rather inconsistently; in my note…book; a little further on; as 〃extremely simple and grand。〃  The nave is spoken of in the same volume as 〃big; serious; and Gothic;〃 though the choir and transepts are noted as very shallow。  But it is not denied that the air of the whole thing is original and striking; and it would therefore appear; after all; that the cathedral of Angers; built during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries; is a sufficiently honorable church; the more that its high west front; adorned with a very primitive Gothic portal; supports two elegant tapering spires; between which; unfortunately; an ugly modern pavilion has been inserted。

I remember nothing else at Angers but the curious old Cafe Serin; where; after I had had my dinner at the inn; I went and waited for the train which; at nine o'clock in the evening; was to convey me; in a couple of hours; to Nantes; … an establishment remarkable for its great size and its air of tarnished splendor; its brown gilding and smoky frescos; as also for the fact that it was hidden away on the second floor of an un… assuming house in an unilluminated street。  It hardly seemed a place where you would drop in; but when once you had found it; it presented itself; with the cathedral; the castle; and the Maison d'Adam; as one of the historical monuments of Angers。



XV。

If I spent two nights at Nantes; it was for reasons of convenience rather than of sentiment; though; in… deed; I spent them in a big circular room which had a stately; lofty; last…century look; … a look that con… soled me a little for the whole place being dirty。  The high; old…fashioned; inn (it had a huge; windy _porte… cochere_; and you climbed a vast black stone staircase to get to your room) looked out on a dull square; sur… rounded with other tall houses; and occupied on one side by the theatre; a pompous building; decorated with columns and statues of the muses。  Nantes be… longs to the class of towns which are always spoken of as 〃fine;〃 and its position near the mouth of the Loire gives it; I believe; much commercial movement。 It is a spacious; rather regular city; looking; in the parts that I traversed; neither very fresh nor very venerable。  It derives its principal character from the handsome quays on the Loire; which are overhung with tall eighteenth…century houses (very numerous; too; in the other streets); … houses; with big _entresols_ marked by arched windows; classic pediments; balcony… rails of fine old iron…work。  These features exist in still better form at Bordeaux; but; putting Bordeaux aside; Nantes is quite architectural。  The view up and down the quays has the cool; neutral tone of color that one finds so often in French water…side places; … the bright grayness which is the tone of French land… scape art。  The whole city has rather a grand; or at least an eminently well…established air。  During a day passed in it of course I had time to go to the Musee; the more so that I have a weakness for provincial museums; … a sentiment that depends but little on the quality of the collection。  The pictures may be bad; but the place is often curious; and; indeed; from bad pictures; in certain moods of the mind; there is a degree of entertainment to be derived。  If they are tolerably old they are often touching; but they must have a relative antiquity; for I confess I can do no… thing with works of art of which the badness is of receat origin。  The cool; still; empty chambers in which indifferent collections are apt to be preserved; the red brick tiles; the diffused light; the musty odor; the mementos around you of dead fashions; the snuffy custodian in a black skull cap; who pulls aside a faded curtain to show you the lustreless gem of the museum; … these things have a mild historical quality; and the sallow canvases after all illustrate something。 Many of those in the museum of Nantes illustrate the taste of a successful warrior; having been bequeathed to the city by Napoleon's marshal; Clarke (created Duc de Feltre)。  In addition to these there is the usual number of specimens of the contemporary French school; culled from the annual Salons and presented to the museum by the State。  Wherever the traveller goes; in France; he is reminded of this very honorable practice; … the purchase by the Government of a cer… tain number of 〃pictures of the year;〃 which are pre… sently distributed in the provinces。  Governments suc… ceed each other and bid for success by different devices; but the 〃patronage of art〃 is a plank; as we should say here; in every platform。  The works of art are often ill…selected; … there is an official taste which you immediately recognize; … but the custom is essen… tially liberal; and a government which should neglect it would be felt to be painfully common。  The only thing in this particular Musee that I remember is a fine portrait of a woman; by Ingres; … very flat and Chinese; but with an interest of line and a great deal of style。

There is a castle at Nantes which resembles in some degree that of Angers; but has; without; much less of the impressiveness of great size; and; within; much more interest of detail。  The court contains the remains of a very fine piece of late Gothic; a tall ele… gant building of the sixteenth century。  The chateau is naturally not wanting in history。  It was the residence of the old Dukes of Brittany; and was brought; with the rest of the province; by the Duchess Anne; the last representative of that race; as her dowry; to Charles VIII。  I read in the excellent hand…book of M。 Joanne that it has been visited by almost every one of the kings of France; from Louis XI。 downward; and also that it has served as a place of sojourn less voluntary on the part of various other distinguished persons; from the horrible Merechal de Retz; who in the fifteenth century was executed at Nantes for the murder of a couple of hundred young children; sacrificed in abomin… able rites; to the ardent Duchess of Berry; mother of the Count of Chambord; who was confined there for a few hours in 1832; just after her arrest in a neigh… boring house。  I looked at the house in question … you may see it from the platform in front of the chateau … and tried to figure to myself that embarrassing scene。 The duchess; after having unsuccessfully raised the standard of revolt (for the exiled Bourbons); in the legitimist Bretagne; and being 〃wanted;〃 as the phrase is; by the police of Louis Philippe; 

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