a little tour in france-第7章
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eautiful habitation of his exile in order to erect a better one。 With Gaston d'Orleans; however; who lived there with… out dignity; the history of the Chateau de Blois de… clines。 Its interesting period is that of the wars of religion。 It was the chief residence of Henry III。; and the scene of the principal events of his depraved and dramatic reign。 It has been restored more than enough; as I have said; by architects and decorators; the visitor; as he moves through its empty rooms; which are at once brilliant and ill…lighted (they have not been re… furnished); undertakes a little restoration of his own。 His imagination helps itself from the things that re… main; he tries to see the life of the sixteenth century in its form and dress; … its turbulence; its passions; its loves and hates; its treacheries; falsities; touches of faith; its latitude of personal development; its presen… tation of the whole nature; its nobleness of costume; charm of speech; splendor of taste; unequalled pic… turesqueness。 The picture is full of movement; of contrasted light and darkness; full altogether of abomi… nations。 Mixed up with them all is the great name of religion; so that the drama wants nothing to make it complete。 What episode was ever more perfect … looked at as a dramatic occurrence … than the murder of the Duke of Guise? The insolent prosperity of the victim; the weakness; the vices; the terrors; of the author of the deed; the perfect execution of the plot; the accu… mulation of horror in what followed it; … give it; as a crime; a kind of immortal solidity。
But we must not take the Chateau de Blois too hard: I went there; after all; by way of entertainment。 If among these sinister memories your visit should threaten to prove a tragedy; there is an excellent way of removing the impression。 You may treat yourself at Blois to a very cheerful afterpiece。 There is a charming industry practised there; and practised in charming conditions。 Follow the bright little quay down the river till you get quite out of the town; and reach the point where the road beside the Loire be… comes sinuous and attractive; turns the corner of dimi… nutive headlands; and makes you wonder what is be… yond。 Let not your curiosity induce you; however; to pass by a modest white villa which overlooks the stream; enclosed in a fresh little court; for here dwells an artist; … an artist in faience。 There is no sort of sign; and the place looks peculiarly private。 But if you ring at the gate; you will not be turned away。 You will; on the contrary; be ushered upstairs into a parlor … there is nothing resembling a shop… encum… bered with specimens … of remarkably handsome pottery。 The work is of the best; … a careful reproduction of old forms; colors; devices; and the master of the establishment is one of those completely artistic types that are often found in France。 His reception is as friendly as his work is ingenious; and I think it is not too much to say that you like the work the better be… cause he has produced it。 His vases; cups and jars; lamps; platters; _plaques;_ with their brilliant glaze; their innumerable figures; their family likeness; and wide variations; are scattered; through his occupied rooms; they serve at once as his stock…in…trade and as house… hold ornament。 As we all know; this is an age of prose; of machinery; of wholesale production; of coarse and hasty processes。 But one brings away from the establishment of the very intelligent M。 Ulysse the sense of a less eager activity and a greater search for perfection。 He has but a few workmen; and he gives them plenty of time。 The place makes a little vignette; leaves an impression; … the quiet white house in its garden on the road by the wide; clear river; without the smoke; the bustle; the ugliness; of so much of our modern industry。 It ought to gratify Mr。 Ruskin。
V。
The second time I went to Blois I took a carriage for Chambord; and came back by the Chateau de Cheverny and the forest of Russy; … a charming little expedition; to which the beauty of the afternoon (the finest in a rainy season that was spotted with bright days) contributed not a little。 To go to Chambord; you cross the Loire; leave it on one side; and strike away through a country in which salient features be… come less and less numerous; and which at last has no other quality than a look of intense; and peculiar rurality; … the characteristic; even when it is not the charm; of so much of the landscape of France。 This is not the appearance of wildness; for it goes with great cultivation; it is simply the presence of the delving; drudging; economizing peasant。 But it is a deep; unrelieved rusticity。 It is a peasant's landscape; not; as in England; a landlord's。 On the way to Cham… bord you enter the flat and sandy Sologne。 The wide horizon opens out like a great _potager;_ without inter… ruptions; without an eminence; with here and there a long; low stretch of wood。 There is an absence of hedges; fences; signs of property; everything is ab… sorbed in the general flatness; … the patches of vine… yard; the scattered cottages; the villages; the children (planted and staring and almost always pretty); the women in the fields; the white caps; the faded blouses; the big sabots。 At the end of an hour's drive (they assure you at Blois that even with two horses you will spend double that time); I passed through a sort of gap in a wall; which does duty as the gateway of the domain of an exiled pretender。 I drove along a straight avenue; through a disfeatured park; … the park of Chambord has twenty…one miles of circumference; … a very sandy; scrubby; melancholy plantation; in which the timber must have been cut many times over and is to…day a mere tangle of brushwood。 Here; as in so many spots in France; the traveller perceives that he is in a land of revolutoins。 Nevertheless; its great ex… tent and the long perspective of its avenues give this desolate boskage a certain majesty; just as its shabbi… ness places it in agreement with one of the strongest impressions of the chateau。 You follow one of these long perspectives a proportionate time; and at last you see the chimneys and pinnacles of Chambord rise ap… parently out of the ground。 The filling…in of the wide moats that formerly surrounded it has; in vulgar par… lance; let it down; bud given it an appearance of top… heaviness that is at the same time a magnificent Orien… talism。 The towers; the turrets; the cupolas; the gables; the lanterns; the chimneys; look more like the spires of a city than the salient points of a single building。 You emerge from the avenue and find yourself at the foot of an enormous fantastic mass。 Chambord has a strange mixture of society and solitude。 A little village clusters within view of its stately windows; and a couple of inns near by offer entertainment to pilgrims。 These things; of course; are incidents of the political pro… scription which hangs its thick veil over the place。 Chambord is truly royal; … royal in its great scale; its grand air; its indifference to common considerations。 If a cat may look at a king; a palace may lock at a tavern。 I enjoyed my visit to this extraordinary struc… ture as much as if I had been a legitimist; and indeed there is something interesting in any monument of a great system; any bold presentation of a tradition。
You leave your vehicle at one of the inns; which are very decent and tidy; and in which every one is very civil; as if in this latter respect the influence of the old regime pervaded the neighborhood; and you walk across the grass and the gravel to a small door; … a door infinitely subordinate and conferring no title of any kind on those who enter it。 Here you ring a bell; which a highly respectable person answers (a per… son perceptibly affiliated; again; to the old regime); after which she ushers you across a vestibule into an inner court。 Perhaps the strongest impression I got at Chambord came to me as I stood in this court。 The woman who admitted me did not come with me; I was to find my guide somewhere else。 The specialty of Chambord is its prodigious round towers。 There are; I believe; no less than eight of them; placed at each angle of the inner and outer square