he appeared to listen to his guide, answering him by gestures or
monosyllables; but imperceptibly he arrogated the
privilege of saying
nothing, and gave himself up without
hindrance to his closing
meditations, which were
appalling. He had a poet's
temperament, his
mind had entered by chance on a vast field; and he must see perforce
the dry bones of twenty future worlds.
At a first glance the place presented a confused picture in which
every
achievement, human and
divine, was mingled. Crocodiles, monkeys,
and serpents stuffed with straw grinned at glass from church windows,
seemed to wish to bite sculptured heads, to chase lacquered work, or
to
scramble up chandeliers. A Sevres vase,
bearing Napoleon's
portraitby Mme. Jacotot, stood beside a sphinx dedicated to Sesostris. The
beginnings of the world and the events of
yesterday were mingled with
grotesque
cheerfulness. A kitchen jack leaned against a pyx, a
republican sabre on a mediaeval hackbut. Mme. du Barry, with a star
above her head, naked, and surrounded by a cloud, seemed to look
longingly out of Latour's pastel at an Indian chibook, while she tried
to guess the purpose of the
spiral curves that wound towards her.
Instruments of death, poniards, curious pistols, and disguised weapons
had been flung down pell-mell among the paraphernalia of daily life;
porcelain tureens, Dresden plates, translucent cups from china, old
salt-cellars, comfit-boxes be
longing to
feudal times. A carved ivory
ship sped full sail on the back of a
motionless tortoise.
The Emperor Augustus remained
unmoved and
imperial with an air-pump
thrust into one eye. Portraits of French sheriffs and Dutch
burgomasters, phlegmatic now as when in life, looked down pallid and
unconcerned on the chaos of past ages below them.
Every land of earth seemed to have contributed some stray
fragment of
its
learning, some example of its art. Nothing seemed
lacking to this
philosophical kitchen-midden, from a redskin's calumet, a green and
golden
slipper from the seraglio, a Moorish yataghan, a Tartar idol,
to the soldier's
tobacco pouch, to the priest's ciborium, and the
plumes that once adorned a
throne. This
extraordinarycombination was
rendered yet more bizarre by the accidents of
lighting, by a multitude
of confused reflections of various hues, by the sharp
contrast of
blacks and whites. Broken cries seemed to reach the ear, unfinished
dramas seized upon the
imagination, smothered lights caught the eye. A
thin coating of
inevitable dust covered all the multitudinous corners
and convolutions of these objects of various shapes which gave highly
picturesque effects.
First of all, the stranger compared the three galleries which
civilization, cults, divinities,
masterpieces, dominions, carousals,
sanity, and
madness had filled to repletion, to a mirror with numerous
facets, each depicting a world. After this first hazy idea he would
fain have selected his pleasures; but by dint of using his eyes,
thinking and musing, a fever began to possess him, caused perhaps by
the gnawing pain of
hunger. The
spectacle of so much
existence,
individual or national, to which these pledges bore
witness, ended by
numbing his senses--the purpose with which he entered the shop was
fulfilled. He had left the real behind, and had climbed gradually up
to an ideal world; he had attained to the enchanted palace of ecstasy,
whence the
universe appeared to him by
fragments and in shapes of
flame, as once the future blazed out before the eyes of St. John in
Patmos.
A crowd of sorrowing faces, beneficent and
appalling, dark and
luminous, far and near, gathered in numbers, in
myriads, in whole
generations. Egypt, rigid and
mysterious, arose from her sands in the
form of a mummy swathed in black bandages; then the Pharaohs swallowed
up nations, that they might build themselves a tomb; and he
beheldMoses and the Hebrews and the desert, and a
solemnantique world.
Fresh and
joyous, a
marblestatue spoke to him from a twisted column
of the pleasure-loving myths of Greece and Ionia. Ah! who would not
have smiled with him to see, against the
earthen red
background, the
brown-faced
maiden dancing with gleeful
reverence before the god
Priapus,
wrought in the fine clay of an Etruscan vase? The Latin queen
caressed her chimera.
The whims of Imperial Rome were there in life, the bath was disclosed,
the toilette of a
languid Julia, dreaming,
waiting for her Tibullus.
Strong with the might of Arabic spells, the head of Cicero evoked
memories of a free Rome, and unrolled before him the scrolls of Titus
Livius. The young man
beheld Senatus Populusque Romanus; consuls,
lictors, togas with
purple fringes; the fighting in the Forum, the
angry people, passed in
review before him like the cloudy faces of a
dream.
Then Christian Rome predominated in his
vision. A
painter had laid
heaven open; he
beheld the Virgin Mary wrapped in a golden cloud among
the angels, shining more
brightly than the sun, receiving the prayers
of sufferers, on whom this second Eve Regenerate smiles pityingly. At
the touch of a mosaic, made of various lavas from Vesuvius and Etna,
his fancy fled to the hot tawny south of Italy. He was present at
Borgia's orgies, he roved among the Abruzzi, sought for Italian love
intrigues, grew
ardent over pale faces and dark, almond-shaped eyes.
He shivered over
midnight ad
ventures, cut short by the cool
thrust of
a
jealous blade, as he saw a mediaeval
dagger with a hilt
wrought like
lace, and spots of rust like splashes of blood upon it.
India and its religions took the shape of the idol with his peaked cap
of
fantastic form, with little bells, clad in silk and gold. Close by,
a mat, as pretty as the bayadere who once lay upon it, still gave out
a faint scent of
sandal wood. His fancy was stirred by a goggle-eyed
Chinese
monster, with mouth awry and twisted limbs, the
invention of a
people who, grown weary of the
monotony of beauty, found an
indescribable pleasure in an
infinitevariety of ugliness. A salt-
cellar from Benvenuto Cellini's
workshop carried him back to the
Renaissance at its
height, to the time when there was no
restraint on
art or morals, when
torture was the sport of sovereigns; and from
their councils, churchmen with courtesans' arms about them issued
decrees of chastity for simple priests.
On a cameo he saw the conquests of Alexander, the massacres of Pizarro
in a matchbox, and religious wars disorderly, fanatical, and cruel, in
the shadows of a
helmet. Joyous pictures of
chivalry were called up by
a suit of Milanese armor,
brightly polished and
richlywrought; a
paladin's eyes seemed to
sparkle yet under the visor.
This sea of
inventions, fashions, furniture, works of art and fiascos,
made for him a poem without end. Shapes and colors and projects all
lived again for him, but his mind received no clear and perfect
conception. It was the poet's task to complete the sketches of the
great master, who had scornfully mingled on his palette the hues of
the
numberless vicissitudes of human life. When the world at large at
last released him, when he had pondered over many lands, many epochs,
and various empires, the young man came back to the life of the
individual. He impersonated fresh characters, and turned his mind to
details, rejecting the life of nations as a burden too overwhelming
for a single soul.
Yonder was a
sleeping child modeled in wax, a relic of Ruysch's
collection, an enchanting
creation which brought back the happiness of
his own
childhood. The cotton
garment of a Tahitian maid next
fascinated him; he
beheld the
primitive life of nature, the real
modesty of naked chastity, the joys of an
idleness natural to mankind,
a
peaceful fate by a slow river of sweet water under a plantain tree
that bears its pleasant manna without the toil of man. Then all at
once he became a corsair, investing himself with the terrible poetry
that Lara has given to the part: the thought came at the sight of the
mother-of-pearl tints of a
myriad sea-shells, and grew as he saw
madrepores redolent of the sea-weeds and the storms of the Atlantic.
The sea was forgotten again at a distant view of
exquisite miniatures;
he admired a precious missal in
manuscript, adorned with arabesques in
gold and blue. Thoughts of
peaceful life swayed him; he devoted
himself afresh to study and
research,
longing for the easy life of the
monk,
devoid alike of cares and pleasures; and from the depths of his
cell he looked out upon the meadows, woods, and vineyards of his
convent. Pausing before some work of Teniers, he took for his own the
helmet of the soldier or the
poverty of the
artisan; he wished to wear
a smoke-begrimed cap with these Flemings, to drink their beer and join
their game at cards, and smiled upon the
comely plumpness of a peasant
woman. He shivered at a
snowstorm by Mieris; he seemed to take part in
Salvator Rosa's battle-piece; he ran his fingers over a tomahawk form
Illinois, and felt his own hair rise as he touched a Cherokee
scalping-knife. He marveled over the rebec that he set in the hands of
some lady of the land, drank in the
musical notes of her
ballad, and
in the
twilight by the
gothic arch above the
hearth he told his love
in a gloom so deep that he could not read his answer in her eyes.
He caught at all delights, at all sorrows; grasped at
existence in
every form; and endowed the phantoms conjured up from that inert and
plastic material so liberally with his own life and feelings, that the
sound of his own footsteps reached him as if from another world, or as
the hum of Paris reaches the towers of Notre Dame.
He ascended the inner
staircase which led to the first floor, with its