第 2 节
作者:      更新:2021-02-19 20:23      字数:9322
  rooms was a thousand francs a year。 Within two years of the time of
  her purchase; Mademoiselle Thuillier was receiving seven thousand two
  hundred francs in rentals; for a house which the late proprietor had
  supplied with outside blinds; renovated within; and adorned with
  mirrors; without being able to sell or let it。 Moreover; the
  Thuilliers themselves; nobly lodged; as we shall see; enjoyed also a
  fine garden;one of the finest in that quarter;the trees of which
  shaded the lonely little street named the rue Neuve…Saint…Catherine。
  Standing between the courtyard and the garden; the main building;
  which they inhabited; seems to have been the caprice of some enriched
  bourgeois in the reign of Louis XIV。; the dwelling; perhaps; of a
  president of the parliament; or that of a tranquil savant。 Its noble
  free…stone blocks; damaged by time; have a certain air of Louis…the…
  Fourteenth grandeur; the courses of the facade define the storeys;
  panels of red brick recall the appearance of the stables at
  Versailles; the windows have masks carved as ornaments in the centre
  of their arches and below their sills。 The door; of small panels in
  the upper half and plain below; through which; when open; the garden
  can be seen; is of that honest; unassuming style which was often
  employed in former days for the porter's lodges of the royal chateaux。
  This building; with five windows to each course; rises two storeys
  above the ground…floor; and is particularly noticeable for a roof of
  four sides ending in a weather…vane; and broken here and there by
  tall; handsome chimneys; and oval windows。 Perhaps this structure is
  the remains of some great mansion; but after examining all the
  existing old maps of Paris; we find nothing which bears out this
  conjecture。 Moreover; the title…deeds of property under Louis XIV。 was
  Petitot; the celebrated painter in miniature; who obtained it
  originally from President Lecamus。 We may therefore believe that
  Lecamus lived in this building while he was erecting his more famous
  mansion in the rue de Thorigny。
  So Art and the legal robe have passed this way in turn。 How many
  instigations of needs and pleasures have led to the interior
  arrangement of the dwelling! To right; as we enter a square hall
  forming a closed vestibule; rises a stone staircase with two windows
  looking on the garden。 Beneath the staircase opens a door to the
  cellar。 From this vestibule we enter the dining…room; lighted from the
  courtyard; and the dining…room communicates at its side with the
  kitchen; which forms a continuation of the wing in which are the
  warerooms of Metivier and Barbet。 Behind the staircase extends; on the
  garden side; a fine study or office with two large windows。 The first
  and second floor form two complete apartments; and the servants'
  quarters are shown by the oval windows in the four…sided roof。
  A large porcelain stove heats the square vestibule; the two glass
  doors of which; placed opposite to each other; light it。 This room;
  paved in black and white marble; is especially noticeable for a
  ceiling of beams formerly painted and gilt; but which had since
  received; probably under the Empire; a coat of plain white paint。 The
  three doors of the study; salon and dining…room; surmounted by oval
  panels; are awaiting a restoration that is more than needed。 The wood…
  work is heavy; but the ornamentation is not without merit。 The salon;
  panelled throughout; recalls the great century by its tall mantelpiece
  of Languedoc marble; its ceiling decorated at the corners; and by the
  style of its windows; which still retain their little panes。 The
  dining…room; communicating with the salon by a double door; is floored
  with stone; the wood…work is oak; unpainted; and an atrocious modern
  wall…paper has been substituted for the tapestries of the olden time。
  The ceiling is of chestnut; and the study; modernized by Thuillier;
  adds its quota to these discordances。
  The white and gold mouldings of the salon are so effaced that nothing
  remains of the gilding but reddish lines; while the white enamelling
  is yellow; cracked; and peeling off。 Never did the Latin saying 〃Otium
  cum dignitate〃 have a greater commentary to the mind of a poet than in
  this noble building。 The iron…work of the staircase baluster is worthy
  of the artist and the magistrate; but to find other traces of their
  taste to…day in this majestic relic; the eyes of an artistic observer
  are needed。
  The Thuilliers and their predecessors have frequently degraded this
  jewel of the upper bourgeoisie by the habits and inventions of the
  lesser bourgeoisie。 Look at those walnut chairs covered with horse…
  hair; that mahogany table with its oilcloth cover; that sideboard;
  also of mahogany; that carpet; bought at a bargain; beneath the table;
  those metal lamps; that wretched paper with its red border; those
  execrable engravings; and the calico curtains with red fringes; in a
  dining…room; where the friends of Petitot once feasted! Do you notice
  the effect produced in the salon by those portraits of Monsieur and
  Madame and Mademoiselle Thuillier by Pierre Grassou; the artist par
  excellence of the modern bourgeoisie。 Have you remarked the card…
  tables and the consoles of the Empire; the tea…table supported by a
  lyre; and that species of sofa; of gnarled mahogany; covered in
  painted velvet of a chocolate tone? On the chimney…piece; with the
  clock (representing the Bellona of the Empire); are candelabra with
  fluted columns。 Curtains of woollen damask; with under…curtains of
  embroidered muslin held back by stamped brass holders; drape the
  windows。 On the floor a cheap carpet。 The handsome vestibule has
  wooden benches; covered with velvet; and the panelled walls with their
  fine carvings are mostly hidden by wardrobes; brought there from time
  to time from the bedrooms occupied by the Thuilliers。 Fear; that
  hideous divinity; has caused the family to add sheet…iron doors on the
  garden side and on the courtyard side; which are folded back against
  the walls in the daytime; and are closed at night。
  It is easy to explain the deplorable profanation practised on this
  monument of the private life of the bourgeoisie of the seventeenth
  century; by the private life of the bourgeoisie of the nineteenth。 At
  the beginning of the Consulate; let us say; some master…mason having
  bought the ancient building; took the idea of turning to account the
  ground which lay between it and the street。 He probably pulled down
  the fine porte…cochere or entrance gate; flanked by little lodges
  which guarded the charming 〃sejour〃 (to use a word of the olden time);
  and proceeded; with the industry of a Parisian proprietor; to impress
  his withering mark on the elegance of the old building。 What a curious
  study might be made of the successive title…deeds of property in
  Paris! A private lunatic asylum performs its functions in the rue des
  Batailles in the former dwelling of the Chevalier Pierre Bayard du
  Terrail; once without fear and without reproach; a street has now been
  built by the present bourgeois administration through the site of the
  hotel Necker。 Old Paris is departing; following its kings who
  abandoned it。 For one masterpiece of architecture saved from
  destruction by a Polish princess (the hotel Lambert; Ile Saint…Louis;
  bought and occupied by the Princess Czartoriska) how many little
  palaces have fallen; like this dwelling of Petitot; into the hands of
  such as Thuillier。
  Here follows the causes which made Mademoiselle Thuillier the owner of
  the house。
  CHAPTER II
  THE HISTORY OF A TYRANNY
  At the fall of the Villele ministry; Monsieur Louis…Jerome Thuillier;
  who had then seen twenty…six years' service as a clerk in the ministry
  of finance; became sub…director of a department thereof; but scarcely
  had he enjoyed the subaltern authority of a position formerly his
  lowest hope; when the events of July; 1830; forced him to resign it。
  He calculated; shrewdly enough; that his pension would be honorably
  and readily given by the new…comers; glad to have another office at
  their disposal。 He was right; for a pension of seventeen hundred
  francs was paid to him immediately。
  When the prudent sub…director first talked of resigning; his sister;
  who was far more the companion of his life than his wife; trembled for
  his future。
  〃What will become of Thuillier?〃 was a question which Madame and
  Mademoiselle Thuillier put to each other with mutual terror in their
  little lodging on a third floor of the rue d'Argenteuil。
  〃Securing his pension will occupy him for a time;〃 Mademoiselle
  Thuillier said one day; 〃but I am thinking of investing my savings in
  a way that will cut out work for him。 Yes; it will be something like
  administrating the finances to manage a piece of property。〃
  〃Oh; sister! you will save his life;〃 cried Madame Thuillier。
  〃I have always looked for a crisis of this kind in Jerome's life;〃
  replied the old maid; with a protecting air。
  Mademoiselle Thuillier had too often heard her brother remark: 〃Such a
  one is dead; he only survived his retirement two years〃; she had too
  often heard Colleville; her brother's intimate friend; a government
  employee like himself; say; jesting on this climacteric of