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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60213 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60213)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notre Dame de Paris, by Charles Hiatt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Notre Dame de Paris
- A short history & description of the Cathedral, with some
- account of the churches which preceded it
-
-Author: Charles Hiatt
-
-Release Date: September 1, 2019 [EBook #60213]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTRE DAME DE PARIS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- BELL’S HANDBOOKS TO
- CONTINENTAL CHURCHES
-
- NOTRE DAME DE PARIS
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: NOTRE DAME AND THE PONT DE L’ARCHEVÊQUE.
- (_From an etching by C. Méryon._)]
-
-
-
-
- NOTRE DAME DE PARIS
-
- A SHORT HISTORY & DESCRIPTION
- OF THE CATHEDRAL, WITH SOME
- ACCOUNT OF THE CHURCHES
- WHICH PRECEDED IT
-
- BY
- CHARLES HIATT
-
- AUTHOR OF
- “CHESTER CATHEDRAL,” “BEVERLEY MINSTER,”
- “WESTMINSTER ABBEY,” ETC., ETC.
-
- WITH FORTY-ONE ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- LONDON: GEORGE BELL & SONS 1902
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The task of writing an account of the cathedral of Notre Dame is
-materially lightened by the minute details of its history and
-architecture to be found in the various writings of M. Viollet-le-Duc,
-of which, unfortunately, the Library of the British Museum does not
-contain a complete set. The _Description de Notre Dame_, published
-in 1856 by M. de Guilhermy in conjunction with M. Viollet-le-Duc,
-contains much useful material, while the splendidly illustrated account
-of the church in the first volume of _Paris à travers les Ages_
-is full of interesting archæological particulars. As the numerous
-other authorities which have been used are quoted in the text, it is
-unnecessary to enumerate them here. The writer has found Mr. Charles
-Herbert Moore’s _Development of Gothic Architecture_ useful in not a
-few difficult matters. He wishes specially to thank Mr. Edward Bell for
-valuable suggestions on many important points.
-
- CHARLES HIATT.
-
- CHELSEA,
- _October, 1902_.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. A BRIEF HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE CATHEDRAL 3
-
- II. THE PLACE OF NOTRE DAME IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF
- FRENCH GOTHIC 19
-
- III. THE EXTERIOR 27
-
- IV. THE INTERIOR.--THE NAVE 55
-
- V. THE TRANSEPTS AND THE CHOIR 71
-
- VI. CONCLUSION.--THE SACRISTY, ETC. 94
-
- VII. LIST OF THE BISHOPS AND ARCHBISHOPS OF PARIS 98
-
- INDEX 103
-
- GROUND PLAN AT END
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- Notre Dame and the Pont de l’Archevêque _Frontispiece_
-
- Notre Dame from the South 2
-
- Notre Dame from the Quai St. Bernard 3
-
- Queen Marie Antoinette returning Thanks 11
-
- The Chevet 18
-
- Section of Nave and Double Aisle 21
-
- North Aisles of the Nave 23
-
- The West Front 26
-
- Chimères 27
-
- String-course on the West Front 29
-
- Carved Foliage, Portail de la Vierge 30
-
- Portail de la Sainte-Vierge 31
-
- Figure of St. Marcel 33
-
- Sculpture of the Last Judgement 34
-
- Tympanum of the Porte Sainte Anne 35
-
- Apostles--Central Doorway 36
-
- Figures--Porte Sainte Anne 37
-
- Chimères 38
-
- ” 39
-
- Le Stryge, after Méryon 41
-
- The Roof-ridge of Notre Dame, by J. Pennell 43
-
- The Original Flèche 44
-
- Clocheton 45
-
- Windows of the South Aisle 46
-
- Triforium Windows 47
-
- The North Transept Front 49
-
- Tympanum, North Transept 52
-
- The Interior from the West End 54
-
- The Nave: South Arcade 58
-
- Capital in the Nave 59
-
- The Nave: North Arcade 61
-
- The Triforium Gallery 63
-
- Elevations of the Nave 65
-
- Angle of the Choir and South Transept 70
-
- The North Transept 73
-
- View of the Choir at the End of the Thirteenth Century 80
-
- Grille at Entrance of Choir 82
-
- The Choir, looking West 83
-
- The Choir from the South Transept 87
-
- The Place du Parvis in 1650 94
-
- Notre Dame in the Thirteenth Century, with the Bishop’s Palace 98
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- NOTRE DAME FROM THE SOUTH.]
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: NOTRE DAME FROM THE QUAI ST. BERNARD.]
-
-NOTRE DAME DE PARIS.
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-A BRIEF HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE CATHEDRAL.
-
-
-No city of the modern world has seen such amazing changes as the French
-metropolis. In the eyes of many persons, from every downfall Paris has
-arisen more incontestably splendid. But not to all is the Paris of
-Baron Hausmann lovelier than the city which preceded it. For instance,
-M. Joris-Karl Huysmans, the author at once modern and mystical of
-_A Rebours_ and _La Cathédrale_, bitterly regrets the disappearance
-of those ancient and brooding byways which lent to the Paris of his
-youth a curious charm which has now almost disappeared. The Paris of
-magnificent vistas is at least less fascinating to the artist than the
-comparatively provincial city of crooked lanes which has gone to make
-way for a series of lofty and pretentious street fronts and spacious
-squares.
-
-Strange it is that, where so much has been changed, the cathedral
-church of Notre Dame has remained almost unaltered in outline and
-general effect. Revolutions have surged round it; monstrous rites have
-been perpetrated within it; even the hail of shot and shell have left
-this wonderful Gothic creation poorer only in decorative detail. There
-is a certain fascination in the grimness of this mysterious building
-in _la ville lumière_, and I am disposed to agree with Mr. Richard
-Whiteing that it symbolises the underlying sadness, as opposed to
-the superficial gaiety of the Parisian. Thousands of French churches
-are dedicated to Notre Dame: even in Paris itself we have Notre Dame
-de l’Assomption, Notre Dame de l’Abbaye aux Bois, Notre Dame des
-Blancs-Manteaux, Notre Dame des Champs, Notre Dame de Lorette, and
-Notre Dame des Victoires. But still when we speak of Notre Dame we
-allude instinctively to that vast edifice which frowns over the slow
-and winding Seine. The cathedral church of Notre Dame is almost as
-closely connected with the history of the French people as is the Abbey
-of Westminster with that of the English. And indeed the gray-white
-building whose foundations are nearly washed by the waters of the Seine
-has seen pageants more superb, and tragedies more luridly dramatic,
-than our own proud Minster of the West. Although it can boast no such
-marvellous continuity of vital historic episodes, Notre Dame is the one
-building in the French metropolis which seems to stand as a symbol for
-the whole city in all its memorable phases: with it may not be compared
-the bragging grandeur of the Arc de Triomphe, the extensive splendour
-of the Louvre, nor the rebuilt Hôtel de Ville. We do not forget the
-exquisite beauties of La Sainte Chapelle, the strange fascination of
-the resting-place of the Great Napoleon, nor the majesty of the once
-royal church of Saint Denis. None of these, however, will bear serious
-comparison with the great Metropolitan Cathedral of Paris. Notre Dame
-has an almost unearthly power of asserting its existence. Neither in
-full sunshine, nor in the twilight, nor when night has finally set in,
-will it allow its majestic proportions to be overlooked. Mr. Henley
-has finely spoken of “the high majesty of Paul’s,” but even our own
-metropolitan cathedral, with its overwhelming dome, is scarcely more
-predominant than Notre Dame.
-
-The geographical position of the Cathedral of Paris is not unlike that
-anciently possessed by Westminster Abbey, and by that crown of the
-Fens, Ely Cathedral. We find that Notre Dame dominates an islet of
-the Seine. At its east end is that tragical commentary on the life of
-modern Paris, The Morgue. The late Mr. Grant Allen, with a cheerfulness
-which we are far from sharing, noted that this triumphant example of
-the best Gothic in the world has often been restored. We believe that
-he was one of many intelligent persons who derive a real satisfaction
-from the so-called “restoration” of an ancient work, of which no real
-“restoration” is possible, though repair is an obvious duty.
-
-The mediæval churches of western Europe nearly all claim a
-pre-Christian origin. It is charming to the mind of a certain type
-of antiquary to discover the origin of a Christian cathedral in the
-wreck of a Roman temple. For Westminster Abbey and for St. Paul’s
-Roman foundations have, with more or less accuracy, been described.
-In the case of Notre Dame it is certain that the remains of an altar
-of Jupiter were discovered in 1711, which would seem to indicate that
-a pagan temple once stood on or near the site in the Gaulish city
-of Lutetia Parisiorum. In point of fact, it is a matter of no small
-difficulty to make out clearly the origin of Notre Dame, or to describe
-with certainty the ecclesiastical buildings which in the dim past
-occupied its site. A lady writer who has discussed the church with much
-intelligence writes on this matter as follows:[1]
-
-[Footnote 1: _The Churches of Paris_, by S. Sophia Beale: London, W. H.
-Allen and Co., 1893.]
-
-“The origin of Notre Dame is enveloped in mystery. Whether its first
-bishop, St. Denis, or Dionysius, was the Areopagite converted by St.
-Paul’s preaching at Athens, and sent by St. Clement to preach the
-Gospel to the Parisians, or whether he was another personage of the
-same name who was sent into Gaul in the third century and martyred
-during the persecutions under Decius, it is impossible to say, as there
-is no evidence of any value. Certain it is, however, that the first
-bishop of Paris bore the name of Denis, and that he suffered martyrdom,
-with his two companions Rusticus and Eleutherius, on the summit of the
-hill now called Montmartre. Tradition went so far as to point out the
-spot where they first gathered their followers together--the crypt of
-Notre Dame des Champs; also the prison where our Lord appeared to
-them and strengthened them with His Holy Body and Blood at St. Denis
-de la Chartre; the place, at St. Denis du Pas, where they suffered
-their first tortures; and lastly, Montmartre, where they were beheaded.
-But, with the exception of the latter, all these holy spots have
-disappeared. So, too, have the crosses which marked the route taken by
-the Saint, when he carried his head to the place chosen for his burial,
-at St. Denis. An ancient church covered the remains of the three saints
-until the present splendid building was erected, in the reign of
-Dagobert I. Under the Roman dominion, Paris was comprised in the fourth
-Lyonnaise division, of which Sens was the metropolis. Hence the bishops
-of Paris acknowledged the Archbishop of Sens as their primate until
-1622, when, at the request of Louis XIII., Pope Gregory XV. raised
-Paris to the see of an archbishopric. The succession has consisted of
-one hundred and nine bishops and fifteen archbishops, eight of whom
-have been raised to the dignity of Cardinal. Besides St. Denis six have
-been venerated as Saints: Marcel, in the fifth century; Germain, in the
-sixth century; Ceran, Landry, and Agilbert in the seventh, and Hugues
-in the eighth century.”
-
-We must leave this ancient and hazy story of saints and martyrs, and
-return to the thorny question of the origin of the cathedral. From the
-brief account of Notre Dame by Mr. A. J. C. Hare in his entertaining
-volume on Paris, we glean that about the year 375 a church, dedicated
-to St. Stephen (St. Etienne), was built on the islet under Prudentius,
-eighth bishop of Paris. “In 528,” says Mr. Hare, “through the gratitude
-of Childebert--‘_le nouveau Melchisedech_’--for his recovery from a
-sickness by St. Germain, another far more rich and beautiful edifice
-(dedicated to Sainte Marie--) arose by the side of the first church,
-and was destined to become _ecclesia parisiaca_, the cathedral of
-Paris. Childebert endowed it with three estates--at Chelles-en-Brie,
-at La Celle near Monterau, and at La Celle near Fréjus--which last
-supplied the oil for its sacred ordinances. The new church had not long
-been finished when La Cité, in which the monks of S. Germain had taken
-refuge with their treasures, was besieged by the Normans; but it was
-successfully defended by Bishop Gozlin, who died during the siege. It
-is believed that the substructions of this church were found during
-recent excavations in the Parvis Notre Dame,[2] and architectural
-fragments then discovered are now preserved at the Palais des Thermes.”
-It may be taken for granted that Childebert’s church took the form of
-a Roman basilica, and it is probable that Roman materials were used in
-its construction. In 1847 further Roman remains were discovered on the
-site which doubtless formed part of Childebert’s building. Some of them
-are preserved at the Hôtel-Cluny.
-
-[Footnote 2: The space to the west of the church was called _Parvis
-paradisus_, the earthly paradise leading by the celestial Jerusalem.]
-
-I am, however, inclined to agree with M. de Guilhermy and M.
-Viollet-le-Duc,[3] that the story of the cathedral previous to the
-episcopacy of Bishop Maurice de Sully (1160-96) is, if not absolutely
-fictitious, at least merely conjectural.
-
-[Footnote 3: See _Description de Notre-Dame, Cathédrale] de Paris_:
-Paris, 1856. The main points of Viollet-le-Duc’s inventory of the
-cathedral will be found in Queyron’s _Histoire et Description de
-l’Eglise de Notre Dame_, Paris: E. Plon, Nourrit et C^{ie}.]
-
-This prelate--generally counted as the sixty-second occupant of the
-see--seems at first to have united the adjacent churches of St. Stephen
-and St^{e} Marie on the Ile de la Cité, and then (without immediately
-and totally destroying them) to have commenced a new one on the same
-site, of which Pope Alexander III. laid the foundation-stone in 1163.
-Rapid progress must have been made with the work, for it is certain
-that in 1185 Heraclitus, patriarch of Jerusalem, officiated at the
-altar, in front of which, in the year following, Geoffrey, Count of
-Brittany, son of Henry II. of England, was buried. Maurice de Sully
-provided for the continuation of the work after his death, which took
-place in 1196. By his will he left five thousand _livres_ in order
-that the choir might be roofed with lead. At this time, according to
-Viollet-le-Duc, considerable progress must have been made with the
-nave. Maurice de Sully was succeeded by Eudes de Sully (1197-1208), on
-whose death the see was occupied, until 1219, by Pierre de Nemours.
-Towards 1223 the west front was completed to the base of the great
-gallery, and by 1235 the towers were left much as we see them to-day.
-The spires, which it is generally admitted they were intended to carry,
-were never added.
-
-Between the years 1235 and 1240, a fire seems to have broken out at
-Notre Dame. On this subject history is silent, but that it did serious
-damage is maintained by Viollet-le-Duc on what appear to be sufficient
-grounds. According to him, repair was made in haste, so that rose
-windows, flying buttresses and other structural details were ruthlessly
-sacrificed. The west front seems to have escaped mutilation. Up to 1245
-the cathedral, vast as was its area, possessed either no chapels at
-all, or chapels of inconsiderable dimensions. In that year, however,
-the addition of new chapels was proceeded with. It would appear that,
-shortly after, the plainness of the transept fronts in comparison with
-the splendidly decorated west façade was acutely felt. In 1257, Jean
-de Chelles was engaged on reconstructing the southern doorway. At this
-time St. Louis was King of France, and Renaud de Corbeil bishop of
-Paris. The northern door and the chapels next the transepts on either
-side were altered immediately after the southern entrance. In 1351,
-Jean Ravy and Jean de Bouteiller were engaged about the cathedral as
-sculptors.
-
-During the next three centuries Notre Dame escaped anything in the
-nature of important change, destruction or addition; but in 1699 an
-era of reckless mutilation began. Between the last-named date and 1753
-the Cloister, the stalls of the sixteenth century, the old high altar,
-many sepulchral monuments, and a vast quantity of stained glass were
-destroyed. The work done in the names of “repair” and “beautification”
-deprived the cathedral of mouldings, foliated capitals, gargoyles
-and pinnacles. The damage inflicted by the architect Soufflot (who
-designed the Panthéon) will be noticed later. Towards the end of Louis
-XV.’s reign the church was refloored with squares of marble. The new
-pavement involved the tearing up of a number of curious tombstones,
-some of which covered the dust of men greatly distinguished in French
-history. Between 1773 and 1787 minor alterations in the taste of the
-time were made in various parts of the building, but further additions
-were brought to an end by the outbreak of the Revolution. That any
-sculpture of a religious or royal character was spared at Notre Dame
-during that terrific upheaval seems to have been due to the eloquence
-of Citoyen Chaumette and the influence of Citoyen Dupuis. Of the great
-work of repair and addition performed by the architects Viollet-le-Duc
-and Lassus, their assistants and successors, much will be said when we
-consider the cathedral in detail.
-
-We have already discussed the early story of Notre Dame, and noted the
-vicissitudes through which the fabric has passed. I propose, before
-concluding this introductory chapter, to state in the briefest possible
-way the great historical events with which the cathedral is connected,
-from the death, in 1196, of Maurice de Sully to the present time.
-
-From the tenth century up to the end of the fifteenth century the
-extraordinary _Fête des Fous_ was celebrated in Notre Dame. One of
-the cathedral employés was elected _Evêque des Fous_, and, wearing
-the actual vestments used in religious services, was honoured with
-a great banquet accompanied with grotesque dances and songs. This
-orgy took place in the church itself, and was so popular that it
-flourished in spite of the most determined efforts to suppress it. A
-similar custom was observed in La Sainte Chapelle. During the early
-years of the thirteenth century the Dominican order was established.
-St. Dominic himself preached once at least in Notre Dame. During his
-prayer before the sermon, the Virgin is said to have appeared to him
-in a cloud of light and to have given to him a book containing the
-subject-matter of his discourse. Raymond VII., Count of Toulouse,
-underwent the discipline of the lash for heresy before the door of the
-cathedral in 1229. This spot was for centuries occupied by a pillory.
-From 1220 onwards a series of disputes took place between the officials
-of the church and the university. During the long reign of St. Louis,
-which ended in 1271, the power of the bishop and chapter of Paris
-had increased enormously, and a host of vassals did homage to Bishop
-Etienne II. for their lands. The body of St. Louis was laid in state
-in Notre Dame previous to its burial at St. Denis. This custom was
-followed in the case of many other French monarchs and princes of the
-blood.
-
-On April 10th, 1302, Philippe-le-Bel held the first meeting of the
-States-general in the cathedral. In the month of June, 1389, Isabeau
-de Bavière made a solemn entry into Paris. Froissart tells us that:
-“Devant ladite église de Notre-Dame, en la place, l’évêque de Paris
-étoit revêtu des armes de Notre-Seigneur et tout le collège. Aussi on
-moult avoit grand clergé et la descendit la royne et la mirent hors de
-sa litière les quatre ducs qui là estoyent, Berry, Bourgogne, Touraine
-et Bourbon.... La royne de France fut adestrée et menée parmy l’église
-et le chœur jusqu’au grand autel et la se mit à genoux et fit ses
-oraisons ainsi que bon lui sembla, et bailla et offrit à la trésorerie
-de Notre-Dame quatre draps d’or et la belle couronne que les anges lui
-avoient posée sur la porte de Paris.”
-
-A great thanksgiving service was held when Charles VI. had been saved
-from burning. The King, it may be recalled, was dressed as a satyr at
-a palace fête with five companions. The Duke of Orleans was curious as
-to the identity of the disguised, and approached them with a torch,
-which accidentally set their clothing alight. The King was saved by
-the Duchess de Berri, who threw a cloak over him, but four of his
-companions were burned to death.
-
-We must now turn to the time of Henry V. of England, who, after
-Agincourt, became Regent of France with the right of succession to
-the throne. After his marriage with Catherine, daughter of Charles
-VI., in 1420, he paid a solemn state visit to Notre Dame. On Henry’s
-death his son, afterwards Henry VI., was crowned King of France in the
-cathedral. When the English were driven from Rouen, a great service of
-thanksgiving was held to celebrate the entry of Charles VII. into the
-Norman capital.
-
- [Illustration: QUEEN MARIE ANTOINETTE RETURNING THANKS FOR
- THE BIRTH OF A DAUPHIN, JANUARY 21ST, 1782.
- (_From “Paris à travers les Ages.”_)]
-
-“In the annals of Notre Dame,” says Mr. W. F. Lonergan in his _Historic
-Churches of Paris_, “from the days of Louis XI., the rebellious dauphin
-who succeeded his father, Charles VII., to the reign of the fourteenth
-Louis, there is chiefly a long record of _Te Deums_ after the victories
-of the French army. Historic Rheims, where Clovis had been baptized
-by S. Remi in 496, was the favoured city of the Merovingians, who
-had accorded it great privileges.” Amongst these was the right of
-crowning and consecrating the Kings of France. Save Henri Quatre and
-Louis XVIII., all of them were crowned at Rheims; but it was the
-custom of the newly made sovereigns to go in state to Notre Dame at
-Paris to return thanks for their advent to the throne. Amongst the
-most interesting of the historic events which took place in, or were
-magnificently celebrated at Notre Dame, were the following: the French
-victory over the Venetians at Agnadel or, as the Italians call it,
-Vaila, in 1509; the marriage of Louis XII. with Mary, sister of Henry
-VIII. of England; the victories of Francis I.; and the marriage of
-Mary Stuart with the Dauphin. The marriage of Henri, King of Navarre,
-with Marguerite de Valois, took place at the entrance to the cathedral,
-as the King was a Protestant. In 1590 the Catholic nobles swore at
-the altar of Notre Dame to fight this same Henri to the bitter end.
-In 1593, however, he became a Catholic, and attended mass at the
-cathedral on the occasion of his accession to the throne as the first
-monarch of the Bourbon line. The metropolitan see was raised to the
-dignity of an archbishopric by Pope Gregory XV. in 1622. In 1682, under
-Louis XIV., the great bell or _bourdon_ of the church was christened
-Emmanuel Louis Thérèse, the King and Queen being the sponsors. Later
-on, in 1699, the great changes in the church, undertaken in fulfilment
-of the vow of Louis XIII., were begun. The first stone of the new
-altar was laid by the Archbishop with the utmost pomp. The foundation
-slab was inscribed: “Louis the Great--son of Louis the Just--after
-he had suppressed heresy, established the true faith in his kingdom,
-terminated gloriously wars by land and sea, wishing to accomplish the
-vow of his father, built this altar in the cathedral church of Paris,
-dedicating it to the God of Arms, Master of Peace and Victory, under
-the invocation of the Virgin, patron and protector of his State,
-A.D. 1699.” During the reign of the “Grand Monarque,” _Te
-Deums_ were even more frequent than before.
-
-We come at length to the part played by the cathedral during the
-Revolution. We need say nothing of the fate of the fabric itself,
-for that has already been alluded to. Its escape is little short of
-marvellous. The result of the sack of the treasuries of the churches
-of Paris is best told in Carlyle’s vivid translation of Mercier:
-“This, accordingly, is what the streets of Paris saw: Most of these
-persons were still drunk, with the brandy they had swallowed out of
-chalices;--eating mackerel on the patenas! Mounted on Asses, which were
-housed with Priests’ cloaks, they reined them with Priests’ stoles;
-they held clutched with the same hand communion-cup and sacred wafer.
-They stopped at the doors of Dramshops; held out ciboriums: and the
-landlord, stoup in hand, had to fill them thrice. Next came Mules
-high laden with crosses, chandeliers, censers, holy-water vessels,
-hyssops;--recalling to mind the Priests of Cybele, whose panniers,
-filled with the instruments of their worship, served at once as
-storehouse, sacristy and temple.” On November 10th, 1793, the Cult of
-Reason was decreed by the Convention, and Notre Dame converted into
-the temple of the new religion. To quote Carlyle again: “For the same
-day, while this brave Carmagnole-dance has hardly jigged itself out,
-there arrive Procureur Chaumette and Municipals and Departmentals,
-and with them the strangest freightage: a New Religion! Demoiselle
-Candeille, of the Opera; a woman fair to look upon, when well rouged;
-she borne on palanquin shoulder high; with red woollen nightcap; in
-azure mantle; garlanded with oak; holding in her hand the Pike of
-the Jupiter-_Peuple_, sails in: heralded by white young women girt
-in tricolor. Let the world consider it! This, O National Convention,
-wonder of the universe, is our New Divinity; _Goddess of Reason_,
-worthy, and alone worthy of revering. Her henceforth we adore. Nay,
-were it too much of an august National Representation that it also
-went with us to the _ci-devant_ Cathedral called of Notre Dame, and
-executed a few strophes in worship of her?... And now after due pause
-and flourishes of oratory, the Convention, gathering its limbs, does
-get under way in the required procession towards Notre Dame;--Reason,
-again in her litter, sitting in the van of them, borne, as one judges,
-by men in the Roman costume; escorted by wind-music, red nightcaps, and
-the madness of the world. And so, straightway, Reason taking seat on
-the high-altar of Notre Dame, the requisite worship or quasi-worship
-is, say the Newspapers, _executed_; National Convention chanting ‘the
-_Hymn to Liberty_, words by Chénier, music by Gossec.’ It is the
-first of the _Feasts of Reason_; first communion-service of the New
-Religion of Chaumette.” The real heroine of this orgy was probably an
-opera dancer called Maillard. ‘Demoiselle Candeille’ was an actress
-and writer of some repute, who strenuously denied that she ever had
-anything to do with the Feast of Reason. An imitation “mountain” was
-erected in the nave for the “fête,” on which was built a Gothic temple
-inscribed _A la Philosophie_. Around were busts of famous philosophers,
-and below an altar surmounted with the so-called Torch of Truth. The
-goddess sat on the hill, hymns were sung in her honour and vows of
-fidelity to her were taken. In 1794 the church was used as a bonded
-store for the wine seized in the cellars of guillotined or outlawed
-Royalists. The month of May in the same year saw the “Temple of Reason”
-turned into that of the “Supreme Being,” for Robespierre persuaded the
-Convention to sign a decree recognising “the consoling principle of
-the Immortality of the Soul.” In 1795 Christian worship was once more
-restored at Notre Dame. Nothing of great importance happened to the
-church until the star of Napoleon rose--until, indeed, the first Consul
-had become Emperor.
-
-Of all the magnificent ceremonies of which Notre Dame has been the
-scene, the most splendid was the joint coronation of Napoleon and
-Josephine in the winter of 1804. A full account of it will be found
-in the _Mémoires de la Duchesse d’Abrantès_, of which I quote a part,
-purposely leaving it in the original French, as any translation would
-be comparatively colourless and unpicturesque: “Le pape arriva le
-premier. Au moment où il entra dans la basilique, le clergé entonna
-_Tu es Petrus_, etc.; et ce chant grave et religieux fit une profonde
-impression sur les assistants. Pie VII. avançait du fond de cette
-église, avec un air à la fois majestueux et humble.... L’instant qui
-réunit peut-être le plus de regards sur les marches de l’autel, fut
-celui où Joséphine reçut de l’empereur la couronne et fut sacrée
-solennellement impératrice des Français. Lorsqu’il fut temps pour elle
-de paraître activement dans le grand drame, l’impératrice descendit
-du trône et s’avança vers l’autel, où l’attendait l’empereur, suivie
-de ses dames du palais et de tout son service d’honneur, et ayant
-son manteau porté par la princesse Caroline, la princesse Julie,
-la princesse Elisa et la princesse Louis.... Je vis tout ce que je
-viens de dire dans les yeux de Napoléon. Il jouissait en regardant
-l’impératrice s’avancer vers lui; et lorsqu’elle s’agenouilla ...
-lorsque les larmes qu’elle ne pouvait retenir, roulèrent sur ses mains
-jointes qu’elle élevait bien plus vers lui que vers Dieu, dans ce
-moment où Napoléon, ou plutôt _Bonaparte_, était pour elle sa véritable
-providence, alors il y eut entre ces deux êtres une de ces minutes
-fugitives, unique dans toute une vie, et qui comblent le vide de bien
-des années. L’empereur mit une grâce parfaite à la moindre des actions
-qu’il devait faire pour accomplir la cérémonie. Mais ce fut surtout
-lorsqu’il s’agit de couronner l’impératrice. Cette action devait être
-accompli par l’empereur, qui, après avoir reçu la petite couronne
-fermée et surmontée de la croix, qu’il fallait placer sur la tête de
-Joséphine, devait la poser sur sa propre tête, puis la mettre sur celle
-de l’impératrice. Il mit à ces deux mouvements une lenteur gracieuse
-qui était remarquable. Mais lorsqu’il en fut au moment de couronner
-enfin celle qui était pour lui, selon un préjugé, son _étoile heureuse_
-il fut _coquet_ pour elle, si je puis dire le mot. Il arrangeait cette
-petite couronne qui surmontait la diadème, en diamant, la plaçait, la
-déplaçait, la remettait encore, il semblait qu’il voulût lui promettre
-que cette couronne lui serait douce et légère.”
-
-Napoleon, on this occasion, hastily took his crown from the Pope’s
-hands and placed it haughtily on his own head--a proceeding which
-doubtless startled his Holiness. In May 1814 Louis XVIII. and his
-family attended mass at Notre Dame after their entry into Paris. A
-great service was held there in 1840, to celebrate the restoration of
-the remains of Napoleon I. to French soil, while Archbishops Affre,
-Sibour and Darboy, who died violent deaths, were commemorated with
-fitting solemnities.
-
-The marriage of Napoleon III. to Eugénie de Montijo, Comtesse de
-Teba, on January 29th, 1853, was the occasion of a great display of
-gorgeous pageantry at Notre Dame, as was the baptism of the ill-fated
-Prince Imperial in 1857. The Terrorists of 1871 robbed the treasury of
-the cathedral of many valuable relics, but their intention to injure
-the fabric itself was prevented by the timely arrival of troops. The
-most notable ceremonies during the existence of the present Republic
-have been the funeral service, in June 1894, for President Carnot,
-assassinated in that year at Lyons, and the splendid State funeral of
-Louis Pasteur in October 1895.
-
-The great festivals of the Church are celebrated at Notre Dame on
-a scale of almost unrivalled magnificence. On Assumption Day, in
-particular, splendid music, wedded to the most ornate ritual, produces
-an effect never to be forgotten. The pulpit of the metropolitan
-cathedral has been occupied by a succession of great preachers, amongst
-them Bossuet and Bourdaloue, and the services and conferences are noted
-throughout the Roman Catholic world. The Dominican Lacordaire began in
-1835 a series of majestic and picturesque discourses, which earned for
-him the title _le Romantique de la Chaire_, and he has been described
-as filling as a preacher the place occupied in literature by Victor
-Hugo and in painting by Delacroix, H. Vernet, and Delaroche. In recent
-times among the most popular pulpit orators have been the fiery Jesuit
-Père Ravignan, Monseigneur d’Hulst, Père Monsabré, and M. Hyacinthe
-Loyson, better known to fame as Père Hyacinthe.
-
-Needless to say, this is the merest outline of the wonderful history
-of the Cathedral Church of Paris. If the columns of Notre Dame could
-speak, they would--to adapt a phrase of Viollet-le-Duc--be able to
-recount the history of France from the time of Philip Augustus to our
-own day. It is therefore natural that the whole French nation has for
-Notre Dame a feeling of veneration and affection similar to that which
-is called forth in English hearts by the Abbey Church of Westminster.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE CHEVET.]
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE PLACE OF NOTRE DAME IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF FRENCH GOTHIC.
-
-
-The place of the Cathedral of Paris in the evolution of French
-Gothic[4] is so important that I propose to devote a brief chapter to
-it. The subject is essentially technical, but I will endeavour to make
-it as easy of comprehension as possible. The reader will doubtless
-ask himself what is the difference between Gothic and the style which
-preceded it. The reply, unfortunately, cannot consist of a dogmatic
-statement. The subject is a great one, and only a few sentences of this
-handbook may be devoted to it. I shall rely for the most part on the
-materials for a definition of Gothic given by M. Viollet-le-Duc in his
-_Dictionnaire Raisonné de l’Architecture Française_. The question is
-one of essential structural peculiarity as opposed to mere decorative
-idiosyncrasy. I am aware that many English writers whose opinions are
-entitled to respect hold views in conflict with those here maintained.
-The style which immediately preceded Gothic is known generically as
-Romanesque. In Romanesque the system may be described as one of inert
-stability: in Gothic the system is one of scientifically calculated
-thrusts and counter-thrusts. It was the affair of art to inform what
-one may call the mechanics of the building with interest and beauty.
-There have been many attempts to compromise the two systems, so that
-we often find Romanesque features in obviously Gothic buildings. Much
-will be said in subsequent pages of the vaulting of Notre Dame. I
-would willingly have left this vexed question alone, but were I so to
-do, this handbook would be little more than a descriptive catalogue
-of objects of interest together with some historical reminiscences.
-For the vaulting is of the essence of the whole matter: compared
-with it the consideration of mouldings and of ornament is relatively
-unimportant. To put the matter plainly, the very existence of a Gothic
-church depends upon the proper arrangement of what we may call its
-mechanism--_i.e._ its vaulting, piers, buttresses and so forth. The
-mechanics being duly devised, art steps in, and renders the essential
-beautiful.[5]
-
-[Footnote 4: French Gothic is here generally intended to convey the
-Gothic of the Ile-de-France. The contemporary architecture of Normandy
-has a character of its own, probably not less valuable than that of the
-Ile-de-France. But it is different, and its differences have been dealt
-with in other handbooks of this series.]
-
-[Footnote 5: The difficulty of attributing mediæval work in any
-countries to particular designers is generally recognised. I do not
-wish to imply, in the passage to which this note has reference,
-that the mechanic and the artist were of necessity separate people.
-Most often the plan was arranged by a master-builder who himself
-superintended the scheme of decoration.]
-
-It is not at Paris that we can trace the first attempt to break away
-from the principles of Romanesque: the first step in the distinctly
-Gothic development of French architecture, according to some recent
-authorities, is to be found in the apse of the church of Morienval.
-Morienval is a Romanesque church, but it has ribbed vaulting, of which
-there is no earlier instance in France. At St. Germer-de-Fly we find
-the first truly Gothic apse on a large scale ever constructed. It
-belongs to the second quarter of the twelfth century. The same church
-possesses a vaulted triforium which may fairly be considered the
-forerunner of the far grander one at Paris. Again, the now suburban
-church of St. Denis has double aisles, which clearly foreshadow the
-noble arrangement which exists at Paris, Amiens, and elsewhere. Many
-writers are agreed in regarding St. Denis as the starting-point of
-French Gothic.
-
- [Illustration: SECTION OF NAVE AND DOUBLE AISLE, AND A PLAN
- OF ONE BAY.
- SCALE 1 INCH = 29 FEET.
- (_From Viollet-le-Duc._)]
-
-Notre Dame was the first of the greater French cathedrals in which
-Gothic principles of construction were logically carried out. The
-choir was begun, according to M. V. Mortet in his _Etude Historique
-et Archéologique sur la Cathédrale de Paris_, in the year 1163.[6]
-The nave (with the exception of the extreme west end) was completed
-about the year 1195. The west façade was built in the early part of
-the thirteenth century. Notre Dame is thus older than the cathedral
-of Amiens, with which one naturally compares it. Amiens was built
-between the years 1220 and 1288, except the lower stages of the west
-front, which were only completed towards the end of the fourteenth
-century. The towers are a “debased” addition. In England the work being
-done while the older parts of Notre Dame were in course of erection was
-transitional; the new style had by no means been fully understood and
-put into practice. Perhaps we do not overstate the case when we say
-that the _science_ (as well as the art) of Gothic found its first real
-expression on a large scale in the Cathedral of Paris.
-
-[Footnote 6: I give the dates assumed by M. V. Mortet and later writers
-as well as those affixed by M. Viollet-le-Duc. It will be noticed that
-the differences between them are not material.]
-
-A glance at the ground-plan of Notre Dame shows us how widely it
-differs from that of our own great churches. First of all we notice
-that not merely the nave, but the choir, possesses double aisles--a
-feature which is lacking in English churches[7] on so vast a scale
-as Canterbury, York, Ely or Peterborough. The magnificence which the
-system of double aisles lends to a great church need hardly be insisted
-upon. For a French church the nave of Paris is long, consisting of ten
-bays. The smaller Norman nave of Norwich possesses, however, no less
-than fourteen bays. At Paris one is struck by the slight projection
-of the transepts. In nearly all the greater churches of England the
-transepts are of large proportions, and frequently (as at Canterbury
-and Lincoln) we find two pairs of transepts. The transepts at Notre
-Dame are without aisles, and are so shallow that the church is only
-just cruciform. Speaking of these transepts Professor Roger Smith
-observes: “They do not project beyond the line of the side walls, so
-that, although fairly well marked in the exterior and interior of the
-building, they add nothing to its floor-space.”
-
-[Footnote 7: Chichester, which is an early church, has double aisles;
-it is, however, comparatively small, and can in no sense be compared
-with so immense a building as Notre Dame.]
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- NORTH AISLES OF THE NAVE.]
-
-The east end of Notre Dame takes the form of a magnificent semicircular
-apse,--a form assuredly the most appropriate to a Gothic church. The
-square eastern termination, so common in England, is rare amongst the
-larger churches of the best period of French Gothic. “A more beautiful
-eastern termination than the Gothic apse,” says Mr. Charles Herbert
-Moore,[8] “could hardly be conceived. No part of the edifice does more
-honour to the Gothic builders. The low Romanesque apse, covered with
-the primitive semi-dome, and enclosed with its simple wall, presented
-no constructive difficulties, and produced no imposing effect. But
-the soaring French _chevet_, with its many-celled vault, its arcaded
-stories, its circling aisles and its radial chapels, taxed the utmost
-inventive power, and entranced the eye of the beholder.” It seems to
-me that throughout his study of Gothic Mr. Moore is a little less than
-fair to the Romanesque builders. The Gothic apse, which he so justly
-admires, is, after all, evolved from the Romanesque apse, which he
-holds in such light esteem. While we may admit the superiority of the
-Gothic apse, it is going too far to assert that the Romanesque apse
-“produces no imposing effect.” The apse of Norwich or Peterborough,
-or of St. Bartholomew’s (London) is assuredly imposing in a very high
-degree.
-
-[Footnote 8: _Development and Character of Gothic Architecture._ Second
-edition. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1899.]
-
-In a subsequent chapter the structural and decorative details will be
-fully discussed. It may, however, be noted in passing that, although
-the Cathedral of Paris is in all essentials a Gothic building, the
-influence of the Romanesque style is so marked in some of its details
-that it is frequently described as a transitional structure. As we
-have seen, the greater part of Notre Dame belongs to the twelfth
-century; and De Caumont, who in his _Abécédaire_ attempted for French
-architecture a work of scientific division similar to that which
-Rickman essayed for English architecture, describes French work of the
-twelfth century as _Architecture Romane-Tertiaire ou de Transition_.
-The _Abécédaire_, however, is now considered ingenious rather than
-authoritative.
-
-With a few words about the west front this brief chapter must be
-concluded. The great façade of Notre Dame was begun in 1202. It
-bears a general structural resemblance to that of the cathedral of
-Senlis, which dates from the second half of the twelfth century,
-especially in the matter of its triple portals and the towers at the
-termination of the aisles. At Senlis we have unmistakable evidence
-of the Gothic spirit, but in its main plan this front is similar to
-the Romanesque Abbaye-aux-Hommes at Caen. The builders of the west
-front of Notre Dame thus owe something to the designers of Senlis and
-the Abbaye-aux-Hommes, but they have achieved a variety and symmetry
-of which their forerunners probably did not dream. In construction,
-as well as in the organic significance of its wealth of sculptured
-decoration, the façade of Notre Dame is genuinely Gothic as opposed to
-Romanesque.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE WEST FRONT.]
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE EXTERIOR.
-
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- CHIMÈRES.]
-
-I have already said enough in reference to the commanding position
-occupied by Notre Dame among the monuments of Paris. The great
-cathedral seen at a distance looks ancient indeed, but a closer
-inspection proves to us that the hands of modern men have been at
-work on it. Indeed, one writer goes so far as to regret that it has
-been scraped and patched without, and bedizened and bedaubed within.
-In the first edition of Victor Hugo’s famous novel, _Notre Dame_,
-he tells us that if we examine one by one the traces of destruction
-imprinted on this ancient church, the work of time would be found to
-form the lesser portion--the worst destruction has been perpetrated
-by men--especially by men of art. Since Hugo wrote this much more
-“restoration” has been carried out at the metropolitan church of Paris.
-But though I regret so-called “restoration” on principle, I cannot help
-feeling that the work executed by M. Viollet-le-Duc and M. Lassus is
-far less objectionable than it might have been. Fortunately, unlike so
-many great Continental churches, Notre Dame stands free and clear,
-and may be examined on all sides without difficulty. Indeed, it is now
-perhaps somewhat too isolated at the west end. Of course it does not
-possess one of those venerable closes, with a supplement of ancient
-ecclesiastical buildings, which is the glory of the great churches of
-our own land.
-
-=The Façade.=--The west fronts of the greater Gothic churches of
-France are as a rule the most majestic features of their exteriors. One
-might write much to prove that the west front of Amiens or of Chartres
-is superior to that of Notre Dame, but this, after all, is an arguable
-question. When we stand in front of the church by the Seine we are
-struck by the reticence, by the obvious disdain of the easily obtained
-picturesque, which seem to have animated its designers. The thing is
-symmetrical with a fine symmetry rare among buildings of the time.
-Before we discuss the façade in detail, let us quote a translation of
-Victor Hugo’s detailed description, in the romance already alluded to:
-
-“Assuredly there are few finer pages of architecture than this façade,
-in which, successively and at once, the three receding pointed portals;
-the decorated and lace-like band of twenty-eight royal niches; the
-vast central rose window flanked by the two lateral ones, like the
-priest by the deacon and sub-deacon; the lofty yet slender gallery of
-trefoiled arcading, which supports a heavy platform upon its light
-and delicate columns; and lastly the two dark and massive towers with
-their eaves of slate,[9]--harmonious parts of an entirely magnificent
-whole,--rising one above another in five gigantic stories,--unfolding
-themselves to the eye combined and unconfused, with innumerable details
-of statuary and sculpture which powerfully emphasise the grandeur
-of the _ensemble_: a vast symphony in stone, if one may say so--the
-colossal work of a man and of a nation ... on each stone of which one
-sees, in a hundred varieties, the fancy of the craftsman disciplined
-by the artist: a kind of human creation, mighty and prolific as the
-Divine Creation itself of which it seems to have caught the double
-characteristics--variety, eternity.” In the last few phrases Victor
-Hugo has, perhaps, been guilty of the licence readily granted to so
-great a master of rhetoric; but the west front of Notre Dame was a
-monument certain to appeal to a writer to whom none deny the gift
-of eloquence. Even a specialist who scrupulously avoids rhapsody is
-compelled to use superlatives in his description of this façade: “This
-vast and superb design is not only the most elaborate that had been
-produced up to its time, but in point of architectural grandeur it has
-hardly ever been equalled.” Mr. C. H. Moore, in the book alluded to in
-a former chapter, rightly insists that the component elements of the
-front are so treated as to manifest the Gothic spirit not merely in the
-portals, the arcades, and the apertures, but even in so comparatively
-small a matter as the profiles of the mouldings.
-
-[Footnote 9: These have been removed.]
-
- [Illustration: STRING-COURSE ON THE WEST FRONT.
- [_From Viollet-le-Duc._]]
-
-The late P. G. Hamerton has well expressed a feeling of vague
-disappointment which many persons who are not experts in Gothic
-construction and decoration feel on seeing the west front: “May I
-confess frankly,” says Mr. Hamerton, “that until I had carefully
-studied it under the guidance of Viollet-le-Duc, the front of Notre
-Dame never produced upon me the same effect as the west fronts of some
-other French cathedrals of equal rank? I believe the reason to be that
-Notre Dame is not so picturesque as some others, and does not so much
-excite the imagination as they do. It is well ordered, and a perfectly
-_sane_ piece of work (which Gothic architecture is not always), but it
-has not the imaginative intricacy of Rouen, nor the rich exuberance of
-Amiens and Reims, nor the fortress-like grandeur of Bourges, nor the
-elegant variety of Chartres.... The truth is that the virtues of the
-west front of Notre Dame are classic rather than romantic. Everything
-in it seems the result of perfect knowledge and consummate calculation.
-There are none of those mistakes which generally occur in a work of
-wilder genius.”
-
- [Illustration: CARVED FOLIAGE FROM THE PORTAIL DE LA VIERGE.
- [_From Viollet-le-Duc._]]
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- PORTAIL DE LA SAINTE VIERGE.]
-
-The sculptured decoration of the three great portals exceeds, if
-not in actual ornateness, at all events in real beauty, that of any
-cathedral in the west of Europe. Much of it has suffered at the hands
-of the iconoclast, but, looking to the vicissitudes through which Notre
-Dame has passed, it is wonderful that so much of the original sculpture
-has been preserved. The recent restoration has been carried out with
-a skill which is simply marvellous, and the uninformed observer may
-easily be betrayed into the belief that he is looking at an unaltered
-ancient work. Whether this is a gain or a loss each of us must decide
-for himself. Some able writers have urged that the success with which
-ancient work has been imitated shows that modern artists are capable
-of the triumphs of the middle ages. Others dismiss the new work as an
-unpardonable forgery. It is outside the scope of this book to attempt
-to describe in detail the wealth of statuary and carving which the
-thirteenth-century craftsmen and those of modern times have lavished on
-these portals. For such a description we must refer the reader to the
-voluminous accounts of Viollet-le-Duc and other writers. The sculptures
-of the north door, called the _Portail de la Saint Vierge_, have been
-described as constituting a complete poem in stone. Viollet-le-Duc
-considered the portal as the masterpiece of French carving of the
-early thirteenth century. I adapt the following description of the
-chief sculptures from Mr. Lonergan: On the pedestal of the central
-pier are bas reliefs representing the Creation of Eve, the Temptation
-in the Garden of Eden, and the Ejection from Paradise. Above is the
-Virgin crowned, and over her a small gabled construction referring to
-the Ark of the Covenant. On the upper part of the arch in the lower
-division are three prophets and three kings. In the second angels hold
-the winding-sheet in which Mary’s body lies, near a coffin-shaped
-tomb. Over this stands Christ with eight apostles. In the third
-division we see Mary glorified. In the _voussure_ are sixty figures of
-angels, patriarchs, kings and prophets as witnesses of the Virgin’s
-glorification. Under the large statues are medallions referring to
-incidents in the lives of those represented. Thirty-seven bas reliefs
-ornament the sides and pillars, amongst them being the signs of the
-zodiac and symbolic representations of the months of the year. The
-ironwork of the doors of this and of the adjoining portals is of a
-splendidly elaborate character, due, according to a quaint tradition,
-to the skill and energy of the devil.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- FIGURE OF ST. MARCEL, PORTE SAINTE ANNE.]
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE LAST JUDGEMENT.
- (From the central doorway.)]
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- TYMPANUM OF THE PORTE SAINTE ANNE.]
-
-The _Central portal_ has suffered more from mutilation than those which
-are on either side of it. In the eighteenth century the architect
-Soufflot--a man who was nothing if not “classic”--removed the dividing
-pier and cut away the lower division of the tympanum in order to
-facilitate the passage of processions on high ceremonial occasions.
-All traces of his vandalism have been removed, and the dividing pillar
-bears a modern statue of Christ by Geoffroy Dechaume. The pedestal
-is a pentagon, and has seven bas-relief medallions. At the sides are
-the apostles, while in the medallions are represented the virtues
-and vices. Traces of mutilation are apparent in much of this work.
-The tympanum itself is devoted to the Last Judgment. “First we have
-figures of the dead rising at the blast of the trumpet. Men and women
-of all conditions and ranks wearily shake off the sleep of death.”
-Also there is the Archangel, with representations on the right of “the
-elect joyfully glancing heavenwards, while on the left the grinning
-demons haul a row of chained souls to hell. Crowning all is seen the
-Redeemer, showing the wounds in His hands. Near Him are two angels,
-and behind the Virgin and St. John the Evangelist interceding on their
-knees for fallen humanity. As a setting to this magnificent composition
-are six rows of sculptured forms, making a _voussure_ or set of curves,
-with figures of prophets, doctors, martyrs, devils, toads, damned
-souls, and a hideous ape with crooked toes and fingernails. Some of
-the ornamentation of the six ranges of arch curves is gruesome and
-terrible. It relates either to the celestial or infernal results of
-the last judgment.” In its original state this great doorway must have
-been a work of unrivalled dignity. Nowhere else do we find carving more
-expressive, nor more perfectly subordinated to the architectural scheme.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- APOSTLES.
- (From the central doorway.)]
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE PORTE SAINTE ANNE.
- (Figures from the Old Testament)]
-
-The doorway on the south is variously described as the _Portal of St.
-Anne_ or _St. Marcel_. According to some writers it is the most ancient
-of the three, and contains fragments of “the sculpture which formerly
-adorned the old church of St. Stephen (St. Etienne). These, it is said,
-were executed at the expense of Etienne de Garlande, who died in 1142.
-The dividing pier or _trumeau_ bears the statue of St. Marcel (see p.
-33). The tympanum is adorned with the “History of Joachim and Anna,”
-the “Marriage of the Virgin,” and the “Budding of Joseph’s Staff.” Each
-side is occupied with four statues of saints of the Old Testament. The
-four main buttresses which divide the façade perpendicularly into three
-parts are pierced with niches containing statues on a level with the
-vaulting of the portals. These statues represent Religion, Faith, St.
-Denis, and St. Stephen.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- “CHIMÈRES.”]
-
-The second story of the façade is occupied by a noble arcade which
-shelters twenty-eight colossal statues. This is known as _La Galerie
-des Rois_, and stretches across the entire width of the front. The
-statues were formerly believed to be conventional representations
-of the ancient kings of France, but they are doubtless intended for
-the kings of Judah as ancestors of the Virgin. A similar feature
-will be found as part of the façade of Amiens. There, however, the
-statues are at a greater height from the ground, and are twenty-two
-in number. Above the _Galerie des Rois_ at Paris there is a graceful
-open arcade of slender arches and columns. The five large statues
-here date only from the year 1854. The third main division has in
-the centre a vast wheel window with open tracery, while in each of
-the lateral bays we have pointed arches with twin pointed openings
-and small circular panels in the tympanum. The vacant space in the
-spandrels of each division is occupied by a trefoil panel. At Amiens
-once more we meet with a main division similarly composed. At Notre
-Dame, immediately over the division containing the wheel window, is an
-open arcaded screen of gigantic proportions, surmounted by a parapet
-or pierced cornice behind which rise the two towers. So dexterously
-has this arcade been planned, so graceful are its lines, so delicate
-its details, that the impression which it leaves on the mind--in
-spite of the solidity of its construction and the vastness of its
-scale--is almost that of some such unsubstantial material as lace. To
-the platform supported by this screen everybody should ascend, if only
-to make the acquaintance of the famous _Chimères_ or “_Devils of Notre
-Dame_.” This collection of specimens of fantastic sculptured zoology is
-without parallel in Europe. These weird beasts which scowl from their
-point of vantage upon the French metropolis fascinated the great etcher
-Méryon, and more recently they have formed the subject of a series of
-admirable drawings by Mr. Joseph Pennell, the value of which has been
-enhanced by an essay, partly descriptive, partly philosophical, from
-the pen of the late R. A. M. Stevenson. The _chimères_ are not merely
-curious examples of the extravagantly grotesque. Their horror lies, not
-in their departure from natural forms, but in the fact that, while the
-features of various beasts or monsters are retained, they are impressed
-with characteristics of ferocity and cunning which are essentially
-diabolical or suggestive of the lowest depths of human depravity. They
-have nothing in common with the crude and impossible gargoyles so
-frequently found in buildings erected when the pointed style was in
-its decadence. Speaking roughly, their anatomy is possible: it is
-conceivable that they should breathe and live.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- “CHIMÈRES.”]
-
-Readers of Hugo’s _Notre Dame_ will remember his description of the
-Archdeacon as he clung to the lead gutter of the tower: “Meanwhile he
-felt himself going bit by bit; his fingers slipped upon the gutter;
-he felt more and more the increasing weakness of his arms and the
-weight of his body; the piece of lead which supported him inclined
-more and more downwards. He saw beneath him, frightful to contemplate,
-the pointed roof of St. Jean-le-Rond, small as a card bent double.
-He looked, one after another, at the imperturbable sculptures of the
-tower--like him suspended over the precipice--but without terror for
-themselves or pity for him. All around him was stone,--before his eyes
-the gaping monsters; in the Parvis below, the pavement; above his
-head, Quasimodo weeping.”
-
- [Illustration: “LE STRYGE,” ONE OF THE CHIMÈRAS OF NOTRE
- DAME, WITH THE TOWER OF ST. JACQUES.
- (After Méryon’s Etching.
- _Insatiable vampire l’éternelle luxure,
- Sur la grande cité convoite sa pâture._)]
-
-The =Towers=, though not of precisely the same size, appear to
-be so. The summit of the north tower is reached by an ascent of two
-hundred and ninety-seven steps. Each of the towers is pierced with
-coupled pointed openings and profusely enriched with mouldings and
-gargoyles. Both of them terminate with open parapets, the staircases
-ending in small turrets. The panorama of Paris from the top is
-magnificent, while the view of Notre Dame itself reveals to the full
-its structural beauty. Few sights are more impressive than that of the
-great roof ridge of the church, broken by the graceful modern _flèche_,
-and ending in the circular _chevet_. From this high place, likewise,
-one is able fully to appreciate the grand arrangement of flying
-buttresses, the forest of pinnacles, the host of gargoyles, statues,
-and other sculptured ornaments which adorn the structure. Of the famous
-peal of thirteen ancient _bells_ which formerly occupied the belfries
-of the two towers, only one--_le bourdon de Notre Dame_--still remains.
-It has announced to Paris most of the great victories of the French
-army, and it still gives the signal to other bells to usher in the
-great festivals of the Church. Of the other bells existing here, the
-most interesting is one of Russian workmanship, which was brought from
-Sebastopol.
-
- [Illustration: THE ROOF-RIDGE OF NOTRE DAME.
- (_From a drawing by Joseph Pennell, by
- permission of the “Pall Mall Magazine.”_)]
-
-The =Flèche=, over the crossing, was built in 1859-60, the ancient one
-being destroyed in 1787 and replaced by a bulb-like structure which
-was irreverently compared to a pepper box. To this circumstance Victor
-Hugo alludes scornfully: “Un architecte de bon goût l’a amputé, et
-a cru qu’il suffisait de masquer la plaie avec ce large emplâtre de
-plomb, qui ressemble au couvercle d’une marmite.” In removing this
-atrocity Viollet-le-Duc was assuredly performing a necessary service.
-His elaborate though slender steeple is of oak covered with lead, and
-weighs 750,000 kilos. It is ornamented with numberless crockets and
-pierced with well-contrived openings. The base is led up to by tiers
-of statues placed on brackets in the angles formed by the junction of
-the roofs of the nave, transepts and choir. The ball below the cross
-encloses reputed fragments of the cross and the crown of thorns. There
-can be little doubt that Viollet-le-Duc, speaking generally, has
-constructed a flèche which would have commended itself to mediæval
-designers. It is interesting to note the slender character of the
-structures which in France rise above the crossings, as compared with
-the huge towers which occupy a like position in the English cathedrals
-of Lincoln, Canterbury and York, or with the comparatively substantial
-spires to be found at Salisbury, Norwich and Lichfield.
-
- [Illustration: THE ORIGINAL FLÈCHE.
- (_From “Paris à travers les Ages.”_)]
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- CLOCHETON OR TURRET--APSIDAL CHAPELS.]
-
-=The Buttress System.=--The buttress system of Notre Dame has
-been the subject of careful study and explanation by Mr. Moore. “In
-the external system,” he remarks, “the flying buttresses were, as
-at first constructed, magnificently developed, and were double in a
-twofold sense. That is, the piers which divide the double aisles were
-formerly carried up through the roof so as to form buttresses to the
-vaulted triforium gallery, and, rising above the roof of this gallery,
-they received the heads of the double flying buttresses over the outer
-aisle, and gave foothold to another pair of arches over the triforium
-gallery. The lower arch of the outer pair was above the aisle roof,
-while the lower arch of the inner pair was beneath the roof of the
-triforium. The principle of equilibrium maintained by opposing thrusts
-was here completely developed; the inert principle no longer governs
-the construction, though a survival of the former method of building is
-found in the walls of the aisles and clerestory, which are no longer
-necessary to the strength of the edifice.” The flying buttresses, as
-we now see them, are (according to Viollet-le-Duc) alterations dating
-from the early part of the thirteenth century. They consist of huge
-arches clearing both aisles with a single span. The flying buttresses
-of the upper tier are wonderfully light and elegant, looking always to
-the large span which they have to clear. They join the space between
-the windows of the clerestory to lofty upright buttresses terminating
-in fine crocketed pinnacles and ornamented with an amazing wealth of
-sculpture. The flying buttresses of the lower tier are thicker, and
-most frequently spring from elaborate _clochetons_, one of which is
-illustrated here.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- WINDOWS ON THE SOUTH SIDE.]
-
-=The Windows= of Notre Dame are on the vast scale which is usual
-in the greater Gothic churches of the Ile-de-France, and present a very
-remarkable contrast to the small and simple windows which were deemed
-sufficient by the builders of our own early cathedrals in the pointed
-style. At Notre Dame the area of solid wall is slight in relation to
-the area filled in with glass. It is not so much a case of windows in
-walls, as of walls connecting windows. The external buttress system
-and the internal vaulting system at Notre Dame comprise the essentials
-of the structure, so that the walls are of the nature of enclosures
-rather than necessary structural parts. We have travelled far from the
-Romanesque principle, in which the walls were primarily weight-bearers.
-The windows of the aisles and of the ambulatory are of great size and
-display many differences of detail, but they nevertheless maintain a
-general similarity, the designers, while appreciating the value of
-uniformity, being too richly endowed with the prevailing fertility of
-invention in matters of decorative detail exactly to repeat even the
-most successful arrangement. Each is divided into two main pointed
-lights, above which a large circle, quatrefoil or similar device,
-occupies the head of the window, the arches also being cusped or foiled
-in varying patterns. The main lights are again subdivided into two,
-with trefoils or quatrefoils in the heads.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- TRIFORIUM WINDOWS.]
-
-Above these noble windows are gabled heads whose sides are enriched
-with crockets or cusps, their centres being occupied with circular
-decorative panels, and their angles having small richly carved
-bosses. Sometimes the canopies consist of beautiful open-work.
-Everywhere grotesque gargoyles project between them, and the mouldings
-terminate in corbels in the shape of small, highly wrought human
-heads. This series of windows emphasises the prodigality with which
-sculpture in human forms or in the forms of naturalistic or fantastic
-animals is to be found in nearly all parts of Notre Dame. It is this
-prodigality, wisely distributed, which places this cathedral in such
-acute contrast--speaking from the standpoint of the uninitiated
-observer--to our own early pointed structures. The upper aisle-wall
-between the lower tier of flying buttresses is in some parts of the
-building occupied by wheel windows of varied pattern, most elaborately
-ornamented. But at the east end the triforium lights show another
-device: two small arches have in the angle between them quatrefoiled
-openings. It is notable that this dignified and beautiful device is
-foreshadowed by some of the windows in the Byzantine church in Athens,
-and even in the sixth-century church of Qualb Louzeh, in Central Syria.
-
-The clerestory lights occupy the full width of the space between the
-piers of the upper flying buttresses. Finally, at the base of the roof
-runs an open-work parapet. As we have already observed, many of the
-windows were hastily rebuilt after the fire of which we have previously
-spoken.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- NORTH TRANSEPT FRONT.]
-
-=North and South Transept Fronts.=--These, as we have seen, are
-comparatively late work, but though subordinate to the great façade,
-they are of intricate design and great ornateness. They fail of effect,
-however, when they are compared with the monumental and inevitable
-grandeur of the west front. The south façade, of the date 1257, is
-undoubtedly the work of Jean de Chelles. An inscription tells us very
-exactly that it was begun on the second day of the Ides of February,
-in honour of the mother of Christ. There are writers who would have
-us believe that to the work of de Chelles we should apply, if not the
-word “debased,” at least the word “flamboyant.” For this there seems
-to be no good reason, unless, indeed, we are prepared to allow that
-systems of architectural classification are more important than the
-buildings which are their subject-matter. It will be at once recognised
-that the lateral fronts of Notre Dame--while they lack the elementary
-grandeur so conspicuous in the works of the pioneers of Gothic in the
-Ile-de-France--have nothing in common with the later Perpendicular
-buildings of England, wherein decoration runs riot and construction
-sometimes degenerates into trickery. The great feature of each of
-these minor fronts is a vast rose window. It is difficult to repress
-the feeling that these fronts have been deliberately constructed with
-a view to lend emphasis to these lovely circular insertions, rich as
-they are in appropriate tracery. Whether or not we are to limit the
-work of Jean de Chelles to the southern front (or the lower portion
-of it), or whether we are to attribute to him the opposite front and
-the arrangement of chapels adjacent to and east of the transepts, is a
-nice question. The documentary evidence, to which access is difficult,
-would, indeed, appear narrowly to limit the work of Jean de Chelles to
-that fragment with which he has been immemorially associated. But it
-were unwise to rely too closely on ancient documents in which definite
-statements of fact are not to be found. It is possible that, even if
-Jean de Chelles did not personally superintend the erection of the
-southern front, he designed the opposite front and the chapels in
-question. He may, indeed, have left pupils fully acquainted with his
-methods and nearly tied to him by bonds of sentiment, who in their own
-productions perpetuated, not merely the main features of the style of
-their master, but used exactly the same material as he employed. Once
-more, the sculptor is prominent; once more, the structural parts are
-adorned with beautiful statuary. The great point is that (using the
-word as widely as it may fairly be used) uniformity is achieved. Of
-Notre Dame we may say--what we cannot say of buildings possibly more
-interesting to the architect and the antiquary--that from east to west,
-from north to south, it strikes the observer as the splendid outcome
-of a single imagination, or of a number of imaginations dominated by
-the same impulse, rather than the haphazard result of peculiar and
-fortuitous circumstances.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- TYMPANUM OF THE NORTH TRANSEPT DOORWAY.]
-
-The sculpture of the portal of the North Transept is devoted to the
-history of the Virgin--of whom the dividing pier between the doors
-bears a beautiful statue. The carving in the lowest division of the
-tympanum deals with the Birth of Christ, the Visit of the Magi, the
-Presentation in the Temple, and the Flight into Egypt. The carving of
-the other divisions refers to the history of Theophilus, a mythical
-monk who signed a contract with the Devil, like Faust, but was saved by
-the interference of the Virgin. On each side of the portal are three
-empty niches. These, as well as the portal, possess canopies. An arcade
-of lights is the chief feature, between the entrance and the great
-rose window previously alluded to. The portal of the South Transept
-has figures of Christ, St. Martin, St. Stephen, St. John the Baptist,
-Moses, St. Denis, St. Thomas, St. Peter, St. Bartholomew, David,
-and Aaron. The tympanum has a representation of the Martyrdom of St.
-Stephen. This portal is seldom used. Again we have the arcade of lights
-leading to the great rose. The gable end is in its turn pierced by
-another smaller circular window of remarkable beauty. It will be seen
-that while there are great differences between the fronts of the two
-transepts, structurally they resemble one another.
-
-Returning to the north side of the church, beneath one of the windows
-belonging to a choir chapel is the well-known _Porte Rouge_, a delicate
-masterpiece which we may probably attribute to the early part of the
-fourteenth century. In its tympanum is represented the Coronation
-of the Virgin, while in its vaulting we have scenes in the life
-of St. Marcel. The door gained its name from the fact that it was
-originally painted red. It seems always to have held a high place in
-the affections of the Parisians. Victor Hugo appears specially to have
-delighted in it, for he writes: “La petite Porte-Rouge atteint presque
-les limites des délicatesses gothiques du quinzième siècle.” Near
-the _Porte Rouge_, under the windows of the Choir chapels, are seven
-bas-reliefs representing scenes from the Virgin’s life. They date from
-the sixteenth century.
-
-He must be insensible indeed to the grandeur of Gothic building who
-fails to be impressed when he stands at the east end of Notre Dame.
-There, in the great main circular sweep, we can appreciate the tiers of
-buttresses, the spear-like forest of pinnacles, each one constructively
-necessary, each duly subordinated to an ordered scheme, each wisely
-and appropriately decorated. Standing here, we are indeed under the
-spell of the august _ecclesia parisiaca_, the ancient silent witness of
-changes so immense and so fruitful of result, of victories in the arts
-alike of peace and war which have been of such profound consequence not
-merely to Paris, and to France, but to mankind in general.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE INTERIOR FROM THE WEST END.]
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE INTERIOR.--THE NAVE.
-
-
-It is difficult accurately to state why a sense of disappointment is
-so often felt on entering the Cathedral of Paris. The unsatisfactory
-impression given by Notre Dame is one experienced by visitors of all
-kinds. The architectural critic, who looks upon a Gothic church as
-the result of certain clearly defined principles of construction and
-decoration, must inevitably find in it much to admire. But while it
-satisfies the specialist, and possibly impresses those who have little
-pretence to technical information, it lacks the qualities of mystery
-and of surprise which distinguish some buildings less ancient and less
-stately. Thus we find one writer complaining that it is heavy, another
-that it is cold, and a third that it is relatively unpicturesque.
-Most of those who have recorded their dissatisfaction with the
-interior of Notre Dame have sought to explain the causes thereof.
-The splendid promise of the exterior, it is suggested, discounts the
-remarkable beauties of the inside. Some feel that the regularity,
-the coherence which distinguish the church, produce an _ensemble_ at
-once ponderous and monotonous. Others complain of the lack of colour;
-while on the other hand not a few protest against the intrusion of
-recent polychromatic decorations. It is possible that the secret lies
-in certain structural idiosyncrasies. The church is extremely broad
-in comparison with its length. The bays are so few as to give to
-the interior an air of undue severity. Fergusson, in his history of
-architecture, condemns the vaulting ribs as ineffective. The marble
-pavement is regarded on all hands as a misfortune: nothing could be
-more tedious or inappropriate. It is, however, to be observed that as
-one becomes familiar with the interior its shortcomings are forgotten
-and the dignity of its proportions and details are apprehended more
-fairly.
-
-=Dimensions.=--The length of Notre Dame is 390 ft.; the width at
-the transepts, 144 ft.; the length of the nave, 225 ft.; and the width
-of the nave (without the aisles), 39 ft. The height of the vaulting is
-102 ft. De Breul, in his _Théâtre des Antiquités de Paris_, mentions a
-copper tablet which formerly hung against one of the pillars of Notre
-Dame and gave the dimensions of the cathedral in the following verses:--
-
- Si tu veux sçavoir comme est ample,
- De Notre-Dame le grand temple,
- Il y a, dans œuvre, pour le seur,
- Dix et sept toises[10] de hauteur,
- Sur la largeur de vingt-quatre,
- Et soixante-cinq sans rebattre,
- A de long aux tours haut montées
- Trente-quatre sont comptées;
- Le tout fondé sur pilotis,
- Aussi vrai que je te le dis.
-
-[Footnote 10: A “toise” is something over six feet.]
-
-The curiosity of these lines excuses the inaccurate statements,
-comparatively trifling, conveyed in them. Notre Dame, unlike most
-mediæval churches on the Continent, is almost painfully clean. The
-gaudy shrines which render some of the most splendid of Italian
-churches almost grotesque are absent from Notre Dame. The broom and the
-duster have been too freely used: all that is not appropriate has been
-too sedulously banished.
-
-In the old floor, amongst a multitude of other interesting memorials of
-the dead, the tombstones of the following were to be found: Philippe
-(son of Louis VI. and Archdeacon of Paris), _d._ 1161; Prince Geoffrey
-of England, _d._ 1186; Queen Isabelle of Hainault, _d._ 1189; the
-dauphin, Louis (son of Charles VI.), _d._ 1415; Louise (mother of
-François I.), _d._ 1531; and Louis XIII. (his viscera only), 1643.
-Amongst the more famous ecclesiastics were the following: Eudes de
-Sully (1208); Etienne II. (1279); Cardinal Aymeric de Magnac (1348);
-Bishop Pierre d’Orgemont (1409); and Dumoulin, Patriarch of Antioch
-(1447). In addition there were three Archbishops of Paris who died
-during the seventeenth century, and Renaud, Archbishop of Sens (_d._
-1616). The substitution of squares of marble for the tombstones of
-these historic personages admits of absolutely no defence.
-
-Let us now consider the =Roof=. Mr. Charles Herbert Moore
-thus describes it in his _Development and Character of Gothic
-Architecture_:--
-
-“Here is a vast nave (completed except the extreme west end by
-about the year 1196), so admirably roofed with stone that the work
-has lasted intact for seven hundred years, and will probably, if
-not wantonly injured, last for centuries to come. These vaults are
-sexpartite.... The diagonal ribs are round-arched, while the transverse
-and longitudinal ribs are pointed. The intermediate transverse ribs
-are, however, pointed but slightly; and to bring their crowns up to
-the level of the intersections of the diagonals they are considerably
-stilted. The crowns of the main transverse ribs are a little lower
-than those of the diagonals, and those of the longitudinals are lower
-still. The vaults have, therefore, a distinctly domical form. These
-various adjustments, by greater or less pointing, stilting, and even
-by the retention of the round arch where it will serve best, exhibit
-the flexibility of the Gothic system in an interesting and instructive
-manner.” Mr. Moore, after some further details, continues:--“In the
-vaults of Paris, as in all Gothic vaults, the shells consist of
-successive courses of masonry which are slightly arched from rib to rib
-over each triangular cell. The beds of these successive courses are
-not parallel, but are variously inclined according as the mason found
-necessary or convenient in developing the concave and winding surfaces
-engendered by the forms and positions of the ribs to which they had
-to be accommodated. These courses of masonry have here in Paris, as
-they have in most Gothic vaults, a considerable inclination near the
-springing from the longitudinal rib upward toward the diagonal, and
-they become gradually more level as they approach the crown of the
-vault, where they are more nearly parallel. But perfectly parallel
-they can hardly ever be, since each course forms a portion of a
-surface that is concaved in all directions.” Mr. Moore adds that in
-the earliest and finest Gothic vaultings this masonry is composed of
-small stones perfectly faced and closely jointed; and the vaulting of
-Paris, especially that of the choir, is a model of careful and finished
-workmanship.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE NAVE: SOUTH ARCADE.]
-
-The vaulting of the choir differs from that of the nave, but the
-difference is one rather of detail than of principle. We have already
-said much about the external buttress system by which this splendid
-roof is sustained. Internally this vaulting rises from slender
-shafts springing from the capitals of the great cylindrical columns
-constituting the main arcade of the ground story. The piers at Paris
-are ill adjusted to the vaults, a feature which has resulted in an
-immense amount of learned discussion. They were obviously intended
-for quadripartite vaulting. It seems probable that suddenly, for
-a reason which we are not now in a position to appreciate, the
-quadripartite form was abandoned in favour of the sexpartite form
-actually adopted. Students of this subject are advised to refer to pp.
-114-15 of the second edition of Mr. Moore’s book, where the differences
-between the vaulting imposts of the nave and choir are discussed and
-delineated. They may profitably compare this with M. Viollet-le-Duc’s
-_Construction_ (p. 164). M. Viollet-le-Duc, it may be added, suggests
-that the necessities of the sexpartite system were provided for by the
-monolithic shafts grouped round every other pier in the arcade dividing
-the aisles.
-
- [Illustration: CAPITAL IN THE NAVE.
- _From Viollet-le-Duc._]
-
-The somewhat heavy character of the great cylindrical piers which
-divide the nave from the aisles is largely redeemed by the beautiful
-carving with which the capitals are ornamented. The plants which the
-sculptors have conventionalised are those commonly found in the fields
-adjacent to Paris. These ornate capitals are genuinely Gothic in
-feeling, and have nothing in common with those which crown the piers
-of our Anglo-Norman (Romanesque) cathedrals. Again, the plinths of the
-columns are utterly unlike the simple and massive bases on which the
-round columns of our older churches most often rest. We have already
-alluded to the ill-adaptation of these piers and their capitals to the
-sexpartite form of vaulting employed. In the case of the most westerly
-piers of the main arcade an attempt seems to have been made--with no
-great success, as it appears to me--to minimise the illogical effect
-of the vaulting imposts. The result has been the emphasis of that very
-want of congruity which it was sought to remedy. It would be difficult
-to find a less satisfactory arrangement than that which obtains in the
-pier and capital delineated in our illustration, where four smaller
-cylinders are attached to the main one. Here, not merely is the pier
-itself rendered unwieldy by its satellites, but the capital loses
-all symmetry owing to the interposition of the small capitals which
-crown those satellites. It will be noticed that the arches of the main
-arcade are by no means uniform. Thus we have a wide arch adjacent to an
-extremely narrow one, while the builders of the period did not hesitate
-to make use of a round arch where they found that form more convenient.
-It is in some measure these peculiarities which have induced not a few
-authors to describe Notre Dame as a transitional church.
-
-In no part of Notre Dame do we more perfectly appreciate the grandeur
-of the scale of the church than when we stand in the vast double aisles
-on either side of the nave. With every step we take the view changes.
-We hesitate to leave the spot upon which we stand lest we should lose
-its charm, and yet we feel that probably a vista even more beautiful
-awaits us a few paces beyond. The lines of vast piers seem as if they
-were consciously engaged in surprising us: now they come together and
-close the view suddenly, unexpectedly; then they open, revealing a
-richly furnished altar in, as it were, a colossal frame of masonry.
-Everywhere the lines of the building strike us as vast, massive, almost
-elemental, but everywhere there is an ordered, if a somewhat ponderous
-symmetry. It is strange that there ever was an age in which the innate
-dignity and majesty of these lines were not felt. Yet so barbarous did
-the architecture of Notre Dame appear to eighteenth-century eyes, that
-a desperate attempt was made to hide it. Vast pictures in gilt frames
-were placed from capital to capital of the main arcade on both sides.
-In this way the arches were completely hidden, and a square appearance
-(supposed to suggest the classical) was given to the lowest story. The
-openings of the triforium were spared, as anything placed in front of
-them would block the view of the crowds who used to fill the _tribunes_
-on state occasions. The nave, however, thus turned into a kind of
-picture gallery, was considered very satisfactory (see illustration,
-p. 11). Needless to say, no trace of the pictures now remains, and
-the great arches are free and open once more. The piers dividing the
-aisles are not all of the same construction. Round every other pier
-are grouped monolithic shafts, possessing delicately foliated capitals
-with moulded abaci. Two shafts, with a single abacus and plinth,
-alternate with a single shaft. In all there are twelve shafts round
-the pier. These piers, with their cluster of satellites, contrast
-finely with the simple cylinders with bold foliated capitals with which
-they alternate, and lend variety and interest to the arcades (see
-illustration, p. 23).
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE NAVE, NORTH ARCADE.]
-
-The vaulting of the aisles is quadripartite, the ribs being strongly
-marked and possessing carved bosses at the point of intersection.
-Beyond the outer aisles on each side is a series of chapels, which will
-be described presently. The accompanying illustrations give a good idea
-of the piers, capitals and vaulting of this part of the church.
-
-=The Triforium=, to which there are four staircases, is of immense
-size, owing to the fact that it passes over the double aisles on
-both sides of the nave. Its designers no doubt contemplated its use
-as a gallery from which the grand ceremonies which took place in the
-church could be witnessed by large numbers of people. It is ceiled
-with stone--a feature common to most of the greater cathedrals of
-France--so that no wooden beams can be seen anywhere in the building.
-This obviously increases the massiveness of the whole, though a certain
-tendency to heaviness is perhaps emphasised. The masonry is everywhere
-very fine, and in the small details a high degree of wise as opposed to
-futile finish is maintained throughout. The galleries are excellently
-lighted. Above the nave-aisles low pointed arches enclose a foliated
-circle, the corners at the base being filled with small trefoils. In
-the choir the lights consist of rose or wheel windows, in the tracery
-of which there is great variety of pattern. The openings towards
-the church take their place admirably in the elevation, being in
-character with the main arcade beneath and the clerestory above. They
-are almost austerely simple, and possess none of the ornateness which
-characterises the triforiums of Westminster, Lincoln, and other English
-buildings of slightly later date. A large plain pointed arch encloses
-two and in some cases three pointed arches, which are separated from
-one another by delicate columns bearing foliated capitals with square
-abaci. They have small square bases. These columns are a hundred and
-four in number. A low openwork railing of iron fills in the front
-of the gallery. The triforium goes round the whole building: that
-portion which is at the end of the transepts, however, consists of a
-narrow passage which is not open to the church. The banners which were
-captured by French armies were exhibited from the triforium so long as
-war continued. On the conclusion of peace, they were taken down--a
-proceeding which might be followed in other countries with advantage.
-The part of the triforium in the choir differs only in detail from
-that in the nave. Over the triforium come the vast windows, altered in
-the thirteenth century, which comprise the =Clerestory=, of which
-more is said on page 72. The stained glass will be fully discussed
-hereafter.
-
- [Illustration: THE TRIFORIUM GALLERY, OR “TRIBUNES.”
- (_From “Paris à travers les Ages.”_)]
-
-The upper portion of the west end is filled by the great rose window,
-which, as we have noticed, is so beautiful a feature of the façade.
-The tops of the pipes of the great organ hide the lower part of it
-from our view inside. The lovely painted glass, which is ancient, has
-representations of the Virgin and Child surrounded by prophets. Amongst
-other features are the signs of the Zodiac, the labours of the months,
-and the Virtues in triumph with lances in their hands. The gallery on
-which the organ is now placed was possibly used for the performance of
-miracle plays. As it is at a relatively great height from the pavement,
-this is at least doubtful. The =Organ= is a fine instrument of
-wonderful power. It was practically rebuilt by Thierry Lesclope in
-1730, and enlarged by Cliquot in 1785. In recent years it has been
-immensely improved by M. Cavaillé-Coll, who gave it 5266 pipes and 80
-stops. It plays a great part in the splendid musical services for which
-the Cathedral is famous.
-
- [Illustration: Exterior. Interior.
- ELEVATIONS OF THE NAVE.
- (_From Viollet-le-Duc._)]
-
-The Nave is almost devoid of monuments; nothing breaks up the vast
-lines of the architecture. The most important tomb is that of Jean
-Etienne Yver, Canon of Paris and Rouen, who died in February 1467.
-It has escaped serious mutilation, and is a realistic performance in
-the style prevailing in France at the end of the fifteenth century.
-On the base is a gruesome representation of the body of the Canon
-being given over to the worms. Above this, two saints are helping him
-to rise from the coffin, and directing his attention towards Heaven.
-The whole thing is repulsive, but it is interesting as a curiosity.
-Many historic memorials perished during the Revolution, but some were
-removed to Versailles and still exist there. They include the tombs
-of Jean Jouvenel des Ursins (_d._ 1431) and his wife Michelle de
-Vitry; the Maréchal Albert de Gondi, Duc de Retz (_d._ 1602); and his
-brother Pierre de Gondi, Bishop of Paris (_d._ 1616). Two monuments
-have disappeared from the nave which were highly esteemed in their
-day. Writing of Notre Dame in his _Crudities_ in 1611, Thomas Coryat
-says: “I could see no notable matter in the cathedral church, saving
-the statue of Saint Christopher on the right hand at the coming in of
-the great gate, which is indeed very exquisitely done, all the rest
-being but ordinary.” The statue so delighted the old traveller that
-he had eyes for nothing else, for the architecture of Notre Dame is
-anything but ordinary. The Chapter of the Cathedral did not share his
-view, for they deliberately destroyed it in 1786. It was presented
-to the church in 1413 by Antoine des Essarts, whose tomb with his
-effigy in armour stood near it. Its destruction is remarkable, for
-colossal things were very much to the taste of those who lived at the
-end of the seventeenth century. The Revolution is responsible for the
-destruction of a famous equestrian statue which stood in the nave
-until 1792. It is generally considered to have been that of Philippe
-le Bel, clothed in the armour in which he won his victory over the
-Flemings at Mons-en-Pucelle in 1304. The identity of the statue has,
-however, been the subject of controversy. Viollet-le-Duc tells us that
-it represented, not Philippe le Bel, but Philippe VI. (of Valois), who
-defeated the Flemings at Cassel in 1328. On his return to Paris he rode
-into the cathedral on horseback in state, and vowed his harness to the
-Virgin. The Chapter disagree with Viollet-le-Duc, who is, however,
-supported in his contention by the Benedictine Père Montfaucon, by
-the writers who continued the chronicle of William of Nangis, and
-some others. The monument stood close to the last pillar on the right
-side of the nave. The =Pulpit= is a modern work, after the design of
-Viollet-le-Duc. It is of oak, and its decorations include statues of
-six of the apostles and of angelic figures. Suspended from the vaulting
-are eight imposing candelabra in bronze-gilt.
-
-=The Chapels of the Nave= contain singularly few features of
-historic interest, nor amongst the furniture of their altars are there
-many recent works of art of outstanding merit. They introduce us,
-however, to the vast scheme of mural painting which has been carried
-out from the designs and partly under the direction of Viollet-le-Duc.
-There can be no doubt that some scheme of polychromatic decoration was
-legitimate: almost every ancient church in France has indisputable
-evidence of its employment in the middle ages. The problem which faced
-Viollet-le-Duc was one of extreme difficulty. The area to be covered
-was enormous: the variations of light were excessive. Some parts were
-luminous, even radiant; others were hidden in almost continuous gloom.
-The schemes of colour had to be adapted to these varying conditions.
-The use of mosaic was considered and discarded. The expense would have
-been gigantic, and the material was considered, perhaps rightly,
-to be inappropriate to the style of architecture. Wall pictures, as
-such, were regarded as destructive to the _ensemble_, fatiguing to the
-eyes and mind, and productive of a certain patchy effect. A series of
-symbolical patterns of a rigidly conventional type, in which human
-figures are very sparingly used, was devised. It may be admitted
-at once that the learning and ingenuity displayed in the design of
-the scheme were such as might be expected from the most erudite and
-accomplished French architectural scholar of our time. The minute
-consideration which Viollet-le-Duc devoted to the subject may be judged
-from the following passage: “D’abord, la cathédrale de Paris, comme
-on sait, est orientée de telle façon que tout un côté du monument se
-présente vers le midi et l’autre vers le nord. Un de ces côtés reçoit
-donc une lumière plus vive et plus colorée que l’autre. Il a paru
-qu’il était nécessaire de profiter de cette disposition pour établir
-l’harmonie générale. Au lieu de combattre l’effet de cette orientation,
-on a cru devoir l’appuyer. Ainsi, en premier lieu, toutes les fenêtres
-des chapelles tournées vers le sud sont garnies de grisailles à tons
-nacrés et froids. De là il resulte qu’en entrant dans le monument on
-voit un côté de lumière, un côté d’ombre, un côté chaud et brillant
-et un côté froid. Il en résulte instinctivement pour l’œil un effet
-général tranquille. Rien n’est plus fatigant pour les yeux qu’un
-intérieur éclairé par les jours contraires de qualités semblables comme
-intensité de lumière, valeur de tons et coloration. La peinture des
-chapelles devait concorder naturellement avec le système de répartition
-de la lumière. Suivant une règle générale, la tonalité des peintures
-du côté nord est plus froide que celle du côté du midi. Cependant,
-comme il faut conserver l’unité, de distance en distance, du côté sud,
-des tons gris, des tons verts, froids, rappellent l’harmonie générale
-du côté nord, et, du côté septentrional, des tons chauds rappellent
-l’harmonie générale du côté méridional.”[11]
-
-[Footnote 11: “Peintures Murales des Chapelles de Notre-Dame de Paris.”
-Paris: A. Morel. See the preface by Viollet-le-Duc for further details
-of his principles of decoration.]
-
-In spite of all these elaborate precautions, in spite of so
-much patience and learning, the result as a whole seems to me
-unsatisfactory. One wearies of the ingenious geometrical curves, the
-crosses, the squares, the lozenges, the coloured stars, the excessively
-and laboriously conventionalised foliage, and the rest. The whole
-strikes one as dead and mechanical, as mere covering of stone for the
-sake of doing so. And the colour, though by no means aggressive, is
-unsatisfying. The experiment was heroic, and the result might certainly
-have been very much worse, but the stone-work would have been better
-untouched.
-
-The Chapels on the north side of the nave (from west to east) are: 1.
-The _Chapelle des Fonts Baptismaux_. The bronze carving of the font is
-by Brachelet. 2. The _Chapelle Saint-Charles_. There are a statue in
-painted stone by M. de Chaume and a good piscina. The wall decorations
-are cold and sombre. 3. The _Chapelle de la Sainte-Enfance_. It
-contains a group representing Christ caressing a French and a Chinese
-child, by M. de Chaume. 4. The _Chapelle Saint-Vincent-de-Paul_.
-The decorations of this chapel are somewhat elaborate, and gilding
-is freely used. 5. The _Chapelle de Saint-François-Xavier_. There
-is a group representing the Saint baptising a Chinese. 6. _Chapelle
-de Saint-Landry_, with statue by De Chaume. 7. _Chapelle de
-Sainte-Clotilde_, with statue by the same artist.
-
-The following are on the south side (west to east):
-
-1. _Chapelle des Ames du Purgatoire._ Christ rescuing a soul from
-Purgatory. A statue by De Chaume in coloured stone. The colour scheme
-of the chapel is warm and brilliant. 2. _Chapelle de Sainte-Geneviève._
-The decorations, which are somewhat profuse, were given by the
-“dames de l’Institut de l’œuvre de Sainte Geneviève.” 3. _Chapelle
-Saint-Joseph_, with statue of Joseph with the Child Jesus in his
-arms. 4. _Chapelle Saint-Pierre._ Statue in wood of the saint by M.
-Corbon. The carved woodwork of the sixteenth century still remains,
-and includes panels with representations of the Twelve Apostles, St.
-Germain, and Sainte Geneviève. 5. _Chapelle Saint-Anne._ 6. _Chapelle
-du Sacré-Cœur._ Statue in coloured stone by M. de Chaume. 7. _Chapelle
-de l’Annonciation._ With a statue of the Virgin in wood by M. Corbon.
-Paintings by Perrodin, one of the best pupils of Flandrin, of David,
-St. Michel, Isaiah, St. Anne, St. Joseph, St. John, St. Luke, St.
-Augustine, St. Bernard, St. Dominic, and St. Bonaventure.
-
-Before we turn from the nave to the choir and transepts, let us say
-a few words as to the _stained glass_, which was once the glory of
-the church. There is probably no Gothic interior in France which has
-suffered more terribly from the destruction of its ancient windows than
-Notre Dame. The coldness and severity which the mural decorations of
-Viollet-le-Duc vainly strive to mitigate were perhaps not felt at all
-when the light from every window seemed to be transmitted in glowing
-and gleaming shafts of every conceivable colour and tone. Fortunately,
-the old glass still remains in the great rose windows. That over the
-west door has been described; the others will be noticed in the account
-of the transepts. The rest of the glass was deliberately destroyed, not
-by an infuriated mob, but by those in authority, in 1741.
-
-The work of destruction was performed by Jean Leviel and his brother,
-who cheerfully substituted for the priceless material they removed
-great sheets of dull, monotonous _grisaille_, with borders ornamented
-with the _fleur-de-lis_. The introduction of _grisaille_ has been
-quaintly described by Michelet as _le protestantisme entrant dans
-la peinture_. Its use at Notre Dame is nothing short of a disaster.
-Efforts have been made in some parts of the building to replace it with
-glass of a less sombre character, but these efforts so far have done
-little to lessen our regret for the calamity of 1741.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- ANGLE OF THE CHOIR AND SOUTH TRANSEPT.]
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE TRANSEPTS AND THE CHOIR.
-
-
-The austere character of the nave emphasises the splendid decorations
-of the eastern parts. No massive screen prevents our seeing the church
-from the great entrance to the apse. The fact that the choir is open
-possibly lessens our sense of mystery and of awe, but we are more than
-compensated by the splendid view of the building from end to end.
-
-The irritating custom of railing off the eastern limb of the church
-and demanding a fee for admission happily does not obtain at Notre
-Dame. It is all but universal in England, and renders an intelligent
-appreciation of the architectural history of our great churches a
-matter of some difficulty. At Paris one may wander where one will,
-so long as one does not interrupt the offices. That pompous and
-irresponsible chatterer the cathedral verger does not impose himself
-upon us, and disturb our study and diminish our pleasure, as he does in
-churches on this side the Channel. Only the Sacristy need be visited in
-the company of an official.
-
-The transepts of French cathedrals are rarely such important features
-as they are in those of this country. The vast church of Bourges has no
-transepts at all. At Noyon, as at Paris, the transepts have no aisles.
-Of the crossing and transepts at Paris Viollet-le-Duc and Guilhermy
-write as follows:
-
-“At the four angles of the crossing, massive piers, some covered with
-combined pilasters, others with clustered columns, rise without a break
-from the ground to the vaulting. The two transepts at the outset were
-only of two bays similar to those of the nave. They were lengthened
-by a shallower bay when the façades were rebuilt. The later bays are
-easily distinguished from the four older ones. Thin round vaulting-ribs
-cross at a crown deeper and more pronounced than those of the older
-parts. The north and south doors are set in a rich arcading, of which
-the divisions and the tympanums can be compared to nothing more fitly
-than a large window with mullions. In the south transept, statues more
-or less mutilated, representing Christ and the saints, remain at the
-points of the gables. In describing the exterior of the façades we
-pointed out the open gallery which extends the whole breadth of each
-transept, and the great rose window a little above it. The exterior
-arcading of the gallery is repeated by a similar arcading inside.
-There is a passage between the two rows of little columns, and there
-is another above this. The effect of the rose windows in the interior,
-with glowing stained glass in all their compartments, recalls the
-marvellous descriptions that Dante has given us of the circles of
-Paradise. The incomparable splendour alternately astonishes and
-enchants us. To decorate the side walls of his bays, Jean de Chelles
-continued the arcading and the mullioned windows.”
-
-The vaulting and the rose of the south transept were repaired between
-the years 1725 and 1728 by Boffrand, the king’s architect, at the
-expense of Cardinal de Noailles. The pair of arches leading to the
-choir aisles with their elaborate crocketed canopies are somewhat
-feebly contrived in both transepts. The clustered shafts are clumsily
-arranged. The details on the north side differ from those on the south.
-On the east and west sides of both transepts there are two narrow bays
-of the triforium. The clerestory consists of short pointed windows
-with wheel windows beneath them. This is due to Viollet-le-Duc, and
-is intended to show us the arrangement which obtained throughout the
-church previous to the alterations which resulted from the fire in the
-thirteenth century.[12]
-
-[Footnote 12: In his “Paris” (London, Edward Arnold, 1900), Mr. Hilaire
-Belloc thus refers to the fire of 1218: “In 1218 a happy accident gave
-us the incomparable unity which the Cathedral alone possesses among
-mediæval monuments; for in that year, on the eve of the Assumption,
-four inspired thieves climbed into the roof-tree and warily let down
-ropes with slip-knots to lasso the silver candlesticks on the altar.
-These they snared, but as they pulled them up the lights set fire to
-the hangings that were stretched for the feasts, and the fire spread to
-the whole choir.” The writer gives no authority for this story.]
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE NORTH TRANSEPT.]
-
-At the angle of the south transept in front of the great south-east
-pier of the crossing is the famous statue of the =Virgin and
-Child=, which, in Notre Dame, occupies a place not unlike the far
-more famous and more venerable statue of S. Peter in the vast basilica
-which at Rome is dedicated to him. Mr. Belloc has used a photograph of
-it as the frontispiece to the volume quoted in the footnote, and he
-writes of it as follows: “But of all the additions to the interior of
-Notre Dame which popular fancy or the traditions of some crisis give
-it, none is more worthy of being known than that which alone survives
-of them, and which I have made the frontispiece of this book. It is not
-that the statue has--as so much of the fourteenth century can boast--a
-peculiar beauty; it is indeed (when seen from below, as it was meant
-to be) full of a delicacy that the time was adding to the severity of
-the thirteenth century; it has from that standpoint a very graceful
-gesture; the exaggeration of the forehead disappears, the features
-show the delicate and elusive smile that the fourteenth century always
-gave to its Madonnas, and there appears also in its general attitude
-the gentle inclination of courtesy and attention that was also a
-peculiar mark of a statuary which was just escaping the rigidity of
-Early Gothic. But its beauty, slight and ill-defined, is not, I repeat,
-the interest of the statue. It is because this image dates from the
-awakening of the capital to its position in France, because it is the
-symbol of Paris, that it rises up alone, as you may see it now, where
-the southern transept comes into the nave,[13] all lit with candles
-and standing out against the blue and the lilies. It is a kind of core
-and centre to the city, and is, as it were, the genius catching up the
-spirit of the wars, and giving the generation of the last siege and
-reconstruction, as it will give on in the future to others in newer
-trials, a figure in which all the personality of the place is stored
-up and remembered. It was made just at the outbreak of the Hundred
-Years’ War, it received the devotion of Etienne Marcel, it heard the
-outcry that followed the defeat of Poictiers and the captivity of the
-king.” Mr. Belloc concludes: “It has been for these five hundred years
-and more the middle thing, carrying with full meaning the name ‘Our
-Lady of Paris,’ which seems to spread out from it to the Church, and
-to overhang like an influence the whole city, so that one might wonder
-sometimes as one looked at it whether it was not the figure of Paris
-itself one saw.”
-
-[Footnote 13: See p. 70.]
-
-In front of the statue is an iron grille terminating in spikes for
-candles. After Poitiers, the citizens of Paris annually offered a
-gigantic candle to be burned in front of this statue in order that the
-ills which afflicted France might cease. It was of the exact length of
-the walls of the capital itself, and was of course coiled up ropewise.
-The first presentation was made on August 14th, 1437. The candle
-necessarily grew with every increase in the area of the city. By the
-beginning of the seventeenth century it was felt that the limits of
-vastness had been reached, and in 1605 a silver lamp, which was always
-to burn before the statue, was presented instead of the candle. This
-was destroyed by the Revolutionists. On the pillar below the statue is
-a sculpture said to represent Eve with the serpent’s tail. The identity
-of the existing statue with the original one so eloquently described
-by Mr. Belloc has been doubted, but the grounds for doubt appear to be
-small. In this transept are two marble slabs in memory of seventy-five
-victims of the Commune.
-
-The place on the north side, corresponding with the statue of
-Notre-Dame de Paris on the south, is filled by a statue of St. Denis,
-a fairly good work by Nicolas Coustou.[14] The splendid glass of the
-great rose window in the south transept has in the main divisions of
-its four circles the twelve apostles, and a host of bishops and saints
-with symbols and palms, to whom angels bear golden crowns of glory. In
-one of the small compartments St. Denis is represented carrying his
-head, and in others are scenes from what is known as “les Combats des
-Apôtres,” amongst them being the arrival of St. Matthew in the presence
-of the King of Egypt, and the baptism of the King after his conversion
-by the Apostle. The great rose window of the opposite transept is
-devoted to scenes from the life of the Virgin. She is represented with
-Christ in her arms, and is surrounded with an army of patriarchs,
-judges, prophets, priests and kings, all of whom are related to the
-Saviour by ties of blood or as His spiritual forerunners. The glass
-includes curious representations of the Antichrist, decapitating
-Enoch; and of the destruction of the Antichrist by the Almighty, who
-appears in a cloud. The small rose or wheel windows in the sides of
-the transepts have been filled with glass from designs by Steinheil.
-The pavement of the transepts is of squares of black Bourbon
-marble alternating with Dinan stone. Great attention was given by
-Viollet-le-Duc to the polychromatic decoration of the transepts,
-
-[Footnote 14: See p. 89.] but it cannot be said that he has been more
-successful in these parts of the church than elsewhere. The effect
-aimed at appears to have been that of tapestry with simple patterns;
-indeed, of the whole it is said, “cette décoration forme, jusque sous
-les roses, une sort de brillante tapisserie.” Some of the canopies are
-of the most intricate patterns, but they would be better suited to
-wood or metal work than to painting. The scheme includes a series of
-paintings by Perrodin of persons distinguished in the history of the
-diocese of Paris. The figures have elaborate decorative borders.
-
-The removal of statues and memorials from the nave, which we have
-already deplored, had just the shadow of a justification from the
-purely æsthetic standpoint. Many of the monuments were incongruous,
-some were positively grotesque. In Westminster Abbey we have an example
-of the shocking effect of inappropriate statuary in a Gothic building;
-we know, only too well, how terribly one of the most beautiful
-interiors in the world suffers from a crowd of tombs which are out
-of keeping with the very spirit of the place. By the removal of the
-memorials at Notre Dame, the church has doubtless regained the aspect
-intended by its designers.
-
-The nave leads uninterruptedly to the choir, which ends in the high
-altar; and the high altar, with the adjacent shrine of St. Marcel, was
-the primary reason of the existence of the cathedral. We have seen that
-in its earlier form little or no provision was made for chapels and
-consequently for side altars. Everything was arranged to concentrate
-the eye on the chief altar, and to lend dignity to its position. Its
-sacred character was respected even in the far-off days in which the
-body of the church was used for commercial purposes, or for festivals
-the reverse of religious.
-
-The great eastern limb of the church is raised above the transepts
-by three steps. Once we have passed into the =Ambulatory=, or
-_pourtour_, of the choir, we are in the most interesting part of the
-building; for here our story is of historical monuments and decorative
-objects still happily existing, and not an account of things which have
-long since ceased to be. When we step into the ambulatory, we pass from
-newer to older work, but we experience no violent transition from one
-style to another. The style of the choir is, speaking generally, the
-style of the whole church. The differences, interesting as they are
-to the minute student of architectural development, are such as would
-remain unnoticed by those who do not pretend to special knowledge.
-This unity reminds one of an Italian Romanesque basilica rather than
-a Gothic cathedral. Viollet-le-Duc has noted that the capitals in the
-triforium of the choir seem to be earlier in date than those of the
-main arcade beneath it; that if nothing were left save the capitals
-of the two parts, one would conclude that those of the triforium were
-earlier. This is manifestly impossible, but it shows that not the
-smallest deviation of style was allowed in constructing the upper story.
-
-Among the capitals of the columns in the choir there are a few
-representations of animal life amongst the conventional foliage,
-while the capitals in the nave represent foliage alone. The choir is
-throughout a shade nearer Romanesque than the nave, but the difference
-is so slight that only close examination reveals it. Already we have
-remarked on the superiority of an apsidal termination to any other form
-in a Gothic church. The ordered grandeur of Notre Dame is nowhere more
-impressive than in the beautiful sweep of the apse with its spacious
-ambulatory. It must have been even more imposing in its simplicity
-before the construction of the side chapels was undertaken, although
-we are far from regretting an addition which, though it may have
-reduced the original dignity of the church, has added variety to it and
-rendered it more interesting.
-
-Let us begin our detailed examination of the choir and its chapels with
-the famous =Screen= of sculptures by Jehan Ravy and his nephew
-Jehan le Bouteiller, which we must study from the ambulatory. In his
-_History of Sculpture_, Professor Wilhelm Lübke devotes considerable
-space to this series in the chapter devoted to “Northern Sculpture
-in the Late Gothic Epoch” (1300 to 1450). After stating that France
-exhausted herself during the golden age of Gothic sculpture, and that
-the period under discussion was so stormy as to be unfavourable to the
-production of works of art, he writes of the screen as follows:
-
-“One of the most important works of the epoch [the end of the
-thirteenth and the beginning of the fourteenth centuries] are the
-extensive reliefs which cover the choir screen in the interior of the
-Cathedral of Paris. These are only the remains of the formerly far
-richer plastic ornament which, in a great measure, fell a sacrifice
-under Louis XIV. to a vain love of ostentation. The earlier series
-on the north side contains a crowded representation in an unbroken
-line of the History of Christ; from the Annunciation to the Prayer
-at Gethsemane. These representations are vividly conceived, and the
-style in which they are executed breathes the spirit of the thirteenth
-century. Perhaps they belong to the end of that century or to the
-beginning of the next. The reliefs on the south side are different in
-many points. They continue the History of Christ; and, indeed, the
-whole was so arranged that the cycle which began at the east passed
-along the north side to the west end of the choir, and was continued
-on the lectern,[15] where the Passion, Crucifixion and Resurrection
-were depicted in front of the congregation, concluding at the south
-side in a scene moving from west to east. Of the latter scenes, the
-only ones now in existence are those which extend from the Meeting
-of Christ as the Gardener with Mary Magdalen to the Farewell to the
-Disciples after the Resurrection. The artist of these later scenes left
-his name, in an inscription that has now disappeared,[16] as Jehan
-Ravy, who for twenty-six years conducted the building of Notre Dame,
-at the end of which time it was completed under his nephew Master
-Jehan de Bouteiller, in 1351. Master Ravy evidently thought that he
-could improve upon his predecessor’s work on the north side; for
-while the latter had combined the scenes into one unbroken series, he
-divided his into separate compartments by arcades, so that these later
-representations, which are still in existence, are separated from each
-other by small columns. In so doing he followed the general taste of
-the century, which was inclined to exchange a picturesque character
-for the calm epic relief of the former period. While, however, his
-somewhat short figures are certainly superior in correctness to the
-figures of the north side, owing to his understanding of the physical
-structure and to the neatness of execution, there is in the figures
-of the north side a fresher tone of feeling and more grace of action,
-compared with which the far more constrained attitudes of the later
-works form an unpleasing contrast, and even occasionally degenerate
-into commonplaceness. Thus in these works, in spite of all expenditure
-of artistic care, there is an unmistakable decline of creative power.”
-
-[Footnote 15: The Rood-loft.]
-
-[Footnote 16: This has been restored, and reads: “C’est maistre
-Jehan Ravy maçon de Notre Dame par l’espace XXV ans qui commença
-ces nouvelles histoires, et Jehan le Bouteiller son nepveu qui les
-aparfaites en MCCCLI.”]
-
-The series on the north side should be visited first. The scenes are
-fourteen in number, and have reference to the Visitation:
-
- The Shepherds and the Star of Bethlehem;
- The Nativity;
- The Visit of the Magi;
- The Slaughter of the Innocents;
- The Flight into Egypt;
- The Presentation in the Temple;
- Christ among the Doctors;
- His Baptism;
- The Marriage-Feast at Cana;
- The Entry into Jerusalem;
- The Last Supper;
- Christ Washing the Feet of St. Peter;
- The scene in the Garden of Olives.
-
-The later works on the south side, in which Professor Lübke traces a
-decline of creative force, represent:
-
- The Meeting of Christ as the Gardener with Mary Magdalen;
- The Holy Women (the Three Maries) Kissing the Saviour’s Feet;
- Jesus appearing to the Apostles (who are represented in a
- turreted building);
- The Disciples of Emmaus, with Christ among them;
- The Breaking of the Bread;
- Another version of Christ Appearing to the Apostles;
- The Doubt and the Conversion of St. Thomas;
- The Miraculous Draught of Fishes;
- Christ’s Message to the Apostles to Preach the Gospel to
- all Nations.
-
-It is extremely fortunate that these very interesting sculptures have
-been left to us, for they constitute incomparably the most important
-of the internal decorations at Notre Dame, which, as we have seen,
-is relatively poor in the mediæval tombs which are the glory of
-Westminster Abbey. While we are thankful for what is left, we cannot
-help feeling a grudge against Cardinal de Noailles, who caused some of
-the scenes to be removed, and thus left the series incomplete. That the
-modern restoration of the painting of the sculpture was wise can hardly
-be maintained.[17]
-
-[Footnote 17: The fine collection of casts at the Crystal Palace
-includes most of this series. It is a pity that they cannot be placed
-in some more appropriate and convenient place.]
-
- [Illustration: VIEW OF THE CHOIR AT THE END OF THE XIII. CENTURY,
- SHOWING THE CARVED ROOD-SCREEN AND THE SHRINE OF
- ST. MARCEL.
- (_From Viollet-le-Duc._)]
-
-For the moment we will leave the ambulatory, and consider the
-=Choir and Sanctuary=. It will be interesting, before we examine
-the present state of these parts, to sketch briefly their aspect in the
-fourteenth century. Corrozet and De Breul have left us descriptions
-which have been illustrated and elucidated by the indefatigable
-Viollet-le-Duc. The entrance to the choir at the crossing was filled
-by a magnificent screen of stone richly adorned with carving. This
-was about eighteen feet high. The top formed the rood-loft, which was
-approached by two circular staircases placed at either end of the
-screen. In the centre was, of course, the entrance to the choir. When
-the doors were open the high altar could be seen from the end of the
-nave. Over this door was a decorated gable terminating in a great
-crucifix. According to De Breul this crucifix was a masterpiece of
-sculpture, as were the other statues which composed the group. The loft
-was broad, and had on both sides an open stone parapet, on which were
-placed carved lecterns. The west front of the screen had sculptured
-scenes of the Passion, which formed part of the series by Jehan Ravy
-and Jehan de Bouteiller lately described. On either side of the
-doorway, beneath the sculptures, were small altars. The choir-stalls
-of carved wood occupied much the same place as do those which we see
-to-day. Between the rows of stalls were low tombs with recumbent
-figures. The Sanctuary, approached by steps, was railed off, and filled
-the apse. The space between the columns was filled by a screen with
-carved scenes, which rose almost to the level of the bases of the
-capitals. The altar was low, and of stone, and possessed a re-table on
-which was placed a cross. Enclosing it on all sides, save that towards
-the church, was a screen with hangings of tapestry. At the four corners
-of this screen were tall figures of angels. Immediately behind the
-altar, and towering over it, was the shrine of St. Marcel, a lofty open
-structure of brass and other metals in two stages, ending in a gable at
-the apex of which rose a crucifix.
-
-On the first stage, so that it could be seen from all parts of the
-choir, was the feretrum or reliquary of St. Marcel. This chief shrine
-had on its side shrines of less importance, while, in the background
-to the north, was the small altar of the Trinity, on which was placed
-the reliquary of Notre Dame, containing portions of the dress and other
-relics of the mother of Christ. A few fine tombs were also in the
-sanctuary, and not far away was a bronze statue of Eudes de Sully. An
-illustration, partly conjectural, of the choir and sanctuary in the
-condition which I have attempted to describe from Viollet-le-Duc’s
-_Dictionnaire_, is reproduced here. It will be seen that while the
-furniture and ornament of this part of the church is sufficiently
-splendid, it is nevertheless simple. There would be ample space for the
-due performance of the great ceremonials which constantly took place.
-Such was the appearance of the choir and sanctuary until Louis XIV., in
-fulfilment of the vow of Louis XIII., who had dedicated himself and his
-kingdom to the Virgin, began his transformation.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- GRILLE AT ENTRANCE OF CHOIR.]
-
-The =Choir= is raised above the body of the church by three steps,
-and on the right and left hand is enclosed by a low _grille_ in
-wrought iron with gilding. This rests on a stone foundation, and is
-terminated towards the centre by two massive columns, on which
-are hung the gates, which are of very beautiful design, representing
-conventionalised foliage and flowers. At the top of the gate, in the
-centre, is a foliated cross. The two bays on the south side of the
-choir nearest the entrance have the same arrangement of a small pointed
-window with a rose window beneath it, as exists in the side of the
-transept immediately adjacent. The remaining windows are in the altered
-and enlarged form, and the triforium of the choir is similar to, though
-of earlier date than, that which runs round the nave.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE CHOIR, LOOKING WEST.]
-
-The =Stalls= occupy three bays on either side of the choir. The
-erection of these stalls is part of the work undertaken by order of
-Louis XIV. in accomplishment of his father’s vow, and it follows that
-they are not in character with the architecture of the choir. It was
-once proposed that for this reason new stalls of “Gothic” design should
-take their place. There is little likelihood of this being done now.
-Incongruity among things beautiful in themselves is by no means a
-calamity, and we may fairly question alike the taste and the learning
-of those who crave for uniformity at all cost. One is glad to think
-that Viollet-le-Duc never for a moment contemplated the banishment of
-these stalls, which are a particularly fine example of the best work
-of which the craftsmen of the time were capable. The stalls have been
-rearranged since they were first placed in the choir, and their number
-has diminished. Originally there were one hundred and fourteen stalls;
-now there are ten less. They are divided on each side into upper and
-lower tiers, each tier having twenty-six seats. The carvings are the
-work of Jean Nel and Louis Marteau, the designs being supplied by Jean
-de Goulon. The designer and the executants have combined to produce a
-really admirable piece of work, of which a full account is given in a
-very careful monograph, published by Chouvet in Paris in 1855, entitled
-_Album des Boiseries sculptées du Chœur de Notre Dame de Paris_. In
-this volume the carvings are dealt with one by one, and their merits
-intelligently discussed. At the back of the upper row of stalls are
-eight large carved panels, which represent scenes in the life of the
-Virgin. At the west end of the stalls are placed, opposite to one
-another, the throne of the archbishop and a similar throne for the
-dean of the chapter. These thrones or seats have elaborately-carved
-canopies. The relief on the back of the chair or throne on the right
-represents the cure of Childebert I. by St. Germain, Bishop of Paris.
-On the opposite chair is represented in similar style the martyrdom of
-St. Denis. Throughout the entire cathedral, in sculpture, in stained
-glass, in carving, the Virgin is glorified, and next to her in honour
-comes St. Denis. The stalls are lighted by lamps in metal brackets,
-and the choir itself is illuminated by handsome candelabra similar to
-those in the nave. In the second bay on the north side of the choir is
-a small organ used in the daily offices.
-
-Close by this organ the stones of the pavement are movable, and cover
-the entrance of a small crypt. This is the principal subterranean
-chamber of the cathedral, and it was constructed so recently as the
-eighteenth century. It was set apart as the burial place of the
-Archbishops of Paris, and is little more than a vault. Over the coffins
-of those of the Archbishops who have been Cardinals are suspended their
-red hats and tassels. The excavations for this little crypt led to a
-discovery which was of great interest to archæologists. Amongst other
-Roman remains was a small altar to Jupiter, which is now preserved in
-the Cluny Museum. In _Paris à travers les Ages_ we read of a small
-crypt below the Chapelle S. Anne, on the south side of the nave. Used
-now as a coal cellar, it was formerly a burial place, as is attested
-by the following inscription: “Cave pour les cercueils de plomb; cave
-pour la sépulture des chanoines; caves pour la sépulture des musiciens,
-enfants de Chœurs et officiers clercs.”
-
-The pavement of the choir is of pieces of marble of various colours,
-which together form a geometrical pattern. As one looks at it, one
-laments the magnificent tombs with bronze effigies which were formerly
-the glory of this part of the church.
-
- [Illustration: _Photo_] [_Ed. Hautecœur, Paris._
- THE CHOIR FROM THE SOUTH TRANSEPT.]
-
-The =Sanctuary= is approached by four steps of Languedoc marble, and
-three additional steps of the same material lead to the high altar.
-The =High Altar= still retains most of the leading features of the
-arrangement of Louis XIV. It was begun in 1699, and finished in 1714.
-The pseudo-classical architecture by means of which the great pillars
-of the apse were hidden has of course been swept away. The principal
-group of sculpture, representing the Descent from the Cross, is
-by Nicolas Coustou, who was born at Lyons in 1658. He was a pupil of
-Coysevox, his uncle, who at that time was director of the Academy of
-Painting and Sculpture at Paris. He obtained the _grand prix_, and went
-to study at Rome, where he was profoundly influenced by the work of
-Michael Angelo. Coustou’s output on his return to France was enormous.
-The “Descent from the Cross,” at Notre Dame was doubtless inspired by
-the famous group by Michael Angelo in St. Peter’s at Rome. It cannot
-be said that Coustou has approached the greatest of the Italians in
-the profundity of his pathos or in tragic solemnity, but the group at
-Notre Dame is not without decided merit, although it leans towards the
-melodramatic and artificial.
-
-On one side of the altar is a kneeling statue of Louis XIII. by
-Guillaume Coustou, and on the other a similar statue of Louis XIV.
-by Antoine Coysevox. Guillaume Coustou was the younger brother of
-Nicolas, and like him studied at Rome. He represents Louis XIII.
-offering his crown and sceptre, which he holds in his hands, to the
-Virgin. The statue of Louis XIV. suggests the accomplishment of his
-father’s vow. Coysevox, from whose chisel it came, was the leading
-French sculptor of his time. He was born at Lyons in 1640, and died
-in 1720. The statues of angels bearing the instruments of the Passion
-are by various sculptors. The angel with the crown of thorns and that
-carrying the reed are by Corneille Van Clève. The angel with the nails
-is by Claude Poirier; that with the sponge by Simon Hurtrelle; that
-with the scroll by Laurent Magnier; and that with the lance by Anselme
-Flamen. The bas-relief in bronze-gilt in front of the altar represents
-the Entombment, and is by Van Clève. The cross and candelabra formerly
-belonged to the cathedral of Arras. The lectern of sculptured bronze
-is dated 1755, and has on its base the name of Duplessis, founder to
-the King. A superb example of Gobelins tapestry, the gift of Napoleon
-I., is used on great festivals to cover the floor of the sanctuary. The
-pavement is partly in mosaic, and has a representation of the arms of
-France.
-
-The comparatively new stained glass of the choir and apse is not so bad
-as one might expect. It is by Maréchal of Metz. The central window of
-the apse is devoted to the Visitation. To the right are Eudes de Sully
-and St. Marcel; St. Augustine and St. Jerome; St. Luke and St. John;
-Daniel and Jeremiah; David and Abraham; St. George and St. Martin;
-Charlemagne and Pope Leo. III.; and St. Hilaire and St. Irénée. To the
-right the subjects are St. Denis and Maurice de Sully; St. Gregory and
-St. Ambrose; St. Mark and St. Matthew; Ezekiel and Isaiah; Aaron and
-Melchisedec; St. Stephen and St. Laurent, St. Louis and St. Gregory
-VII., and St. Remi and St. Martin. The small rose windows of the
-choir, like those of the transept, are filled with glass by Steinheil.
-The choir, more perhaps than any other part of the cathedral, has
-suffered from the wholesale destruction of glass which has already
-been described. Visitors to the cathedral of Chartres can estimate the
-value of mediæval glass in a Gothic cathedral. It is unfortunate that
-the great windows of the clerestory at Paris were filled up before
-the notable revival in the art of stained glass, which commenced in
-England, and has now extended to France.
-
-We must now return to the Ambulatory and the adjacent chapels. It is
-in this part of the church that Viollet-le-Duc’s decorations are most
-profuse, and it is not possible to consider them successful. It is
-quite probable that no such scheme of decoration could be open to fewer
-objections than that of Viollet-le-Duc. The truth is that the colour
-confuses our appreciation of the fine lines of the architecture, and it
-is frequently restless and irritating where it should be most reposeful.
-
-=The Chapels of the Choir.= On the south side are the following
-chapels:--
-
-_Chapelle Saint-Denis._ The chief object of interest here is a statue,
-by Auguste de Bay, of Archbishop Affre, who is represented at the
-moment when he made his heroic appearance on the barricade of the
-Faubourg Saint Antoine with an olive branch. This was on June 25th,
-1848, during the Commune. The Archbishop was struck by a ball and
-killed.
-
-_Chapelle Sainte-Madeleine._ This chapel contains the grave of
-the Papal nuncio Garibaldi, Archbishop of Myra, who died in 1853.
-Archbishop Sibour, who was murdered in the church of St. Etienne du
-Mont on Jan. 8th, 1857, by a priest, is commemorated by a kneeling
-statue in marble by Dubois.
-
-_Chapelle Saint-Guillaume._ The statue of the Virgin seated, with
-the Child Jesus in her arms, is attributed to Bernini, who came from
-Rome to Paris during the reign of Louis XIV. to make alterations and
-additions to the Louvre. The Mausoleum of Henri-Charles d’Harcourt,
-Lieutenant-general of the armies of the King, who died in 1769, is a
-pretentious and theatrical work which was once highly esteemed. It is
-by the sculptor Pigalle, and is of white marble. The widow who kneels
-by the tomb and appears to be calling her husband is warned away by a
-figure of Death. The genius of War is represented lamenting, and the
-whole is completed by trophies of arms.
-
-_Chapelle Saint-Georges._ Amongst the elaborate mural decorations of
-this chapel is a picture by Steinheil of St. George and the Dragon.
-The statue of Archbishop Darboy is by Bonnassieux. The prelate is
-represented falling amidst the bullets of the Communists, whom he
-blesses as he dies. This tragic incident took place in the prison
-of La Roquette, on May 27th, 1871. Close by is a kneeling statue of
-Archbishop Morlot (_d._ 1862) by Lescorné. The chapel also contains a
-statue of St. George by the same artist.
-
-The following are the chapels on the _north_ side of the choir:--
-
-_La Chapelle de Notre Dame des Sept Douleurs_, or _La Chapelle du Petit
-Chœur_. The bas-reliefs over the altar represent the angel appearing
-to the Virgin Mary, the Descent from the Cross, and the Entombment.
-The statue in wood of Notre Dame des Sept Douleurs is by Corbon. The
-compositions, in six panels, by Perrodin, represent: Jesus bearing the
-Cross; Christ on Calvary; the Descent from the Cross; the Communion of
-the Virgin; and the Death of the Virgin. The nine carved wood stalls
-are of the same period as those of the choir. They were possibly
-part of the original series, which, as we have seen, was reduced in
-number. At all events, the details indicate that the same designer
-and craftsmen were employed on them. This chapel contains the only
-important fragment of the original polychromatic decoration with which
-the walls of the cathedral were anciently embellished. It consists of
-a mural painting dating from the fourteenth century. In the centre is
-represented the Virgin enthroned with the Child. To the right is St.
-Denis, and on the left Bishop Simon Matiffas de Buci, who built the
-three chapels on the left of the apse. Beneath the picture was formerly
-the Bishop’s tomb. Below the representation of the Virgin and Child is
-a curious design representing angels bearing away a human soul. This
-painting was unfortunately restored by M. Maillot the elder, and has
-consequently lost much of its antiquarian interest.
-
-_Chapelle Saint-Marcel._ Pierre Deseine’s enormous monument to
-Cardinal de Belloy fills a large part of this chapel. The cardinal is
-represented giving alms to two orphan girls. St. Denis looks on, and
-records the cardinal’s name on a list of the bishops of Paris noted
-for their charity. Close by is the tomb, with reclining figure, of
-Monseigneur de Quelen, by De Chaume. Amongst the mural decorations of
-this chapel the chief is a large painting by Maillot the younger. The
-subject is the “Translation of the relics of St. Marcel from the old
-Church of St. Marie to the Church of Notre Dame by Bishop Eudes de
-Sully.” The personages represented are portraits of the officials of
-the diocese, and include Archbishop Darboy and the Abbé la Place. In
-the vaulting is a design representing the Coronation of St. Marcel.
-
-_Chapelle Saint-Louis._ This chapel has six statues in wood by Corbon,
-representing Christ, the Virgin, St. John, St. Denis, St. Rustiguex,
-and St. Eleutherius. The kneeling statue of Archbishop Louis-Antoine de
-Noailles, who died in 1729, is by De Chaume.
-
-_Chapelle Saint-Germain._ Tomb of Archbishop Leclerc de Juigné
-(died 1811), a kneeling figure in relief. The tomb was repaired by
-Viollet-le-Duc, who modified its original design.
-
-_Chapelle Saint-Ferdinand._ Monument of Archbishop de Beaumont (died
-1781), from designs by Viollet-le-Duc.
-
-_Chapelle Saint-Martin._ Monument of Jean-Baptiste de Vardes, Comte
-de Guébriant, Marshal of France, who died in 1643, and of his wife
-Renée du Bec Crespin. A splendid service was celebrated in Notre Dame
-on the Marshal’s death. His wife was sent to Poland as ambassadress
-extraordinary, and died there in 1643, without being able to erect a
-monument to her husband. The Marquis de Vardes erected the tomb, which
-was practically destroyed during the Revolution. It was renewed from
-designs by Viollet-le-Duc.
-
-Behind the Sanctuary is the tomb with a jewelled effigy of Archbishop
-Matiffas de Buci, who died in 1304. It was removed from La Chapelle
-de Notre Dame des Sept Douleurs. In the arcading below the bas-reliefs
-of Jehan Revy and Jean le Bouteiller are placed little brasses with
-the names, arms, and date of the death of the persons whose remains
-are buried at Notre Dame. A list of the most interesting of these has
-already been given.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: THE PLACE DU PARVIS IN 1650.
- (_From an engraving by Van Merlen._)]
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-CONCLUSION. THE SACRISTY, ETC.
-
-
-Notre Dame was within comparatively recent times surrounded with
-streets so narrow that vehicular traffic was impossible. Amongst the
-most characteristic were the Rue de Glatigny and the Rue de Marmousets,
-which, as late as 1865, preserved the dimensions, and something of
-the aspect, of a side street in the middle ages. The _quartier_ thus
-intersected literally teemed with churches of which nothing remains.
-Amongst them perhaps the most important were those dedicated to
-Saint-Landry, Sainte-Geneviève des Ardents, Saint-Pierre aux Bœufs,
-Saint-Aguan, Saint-Marine, Saint-Luc, Saint-Jean le Rond, Saint-Denis
-au Pays and Saint-Christophe. None of them appear to have been large,
-and of some the origin and history remain obscure.
-
-On the south side of the Cathedral stood the _Palais Episcopal_, which
-was constructed by Maurice de Sully and added to by Matiffas de Bucy
-and other prelates. On Feb. 14th, 1831, it was attacked by the mob, and
-five hours sufficed for its complete destruction. The contents included
-a library of 20,000 volumes, a collection of 1,500 manuscripts,
-those of the ancient archives of the church, which escaped the
-Revolutionists, a fine collection of pictures, and priceless works of
-art of an ecclesiastical character. These were thrown into the Seine,
-burned, or stolen.
-
-The =Cloître= or Cloister of Notre Dame was on the north side and
-at the east end of the church. It is difficult to say what was its
-early aspect, but in the sixteenth century and afterwards it in
-no way resembled the cloister of a monastery, but consisted of an
-agglomeration of separate houses. It was in the nature of a College
-of Secular Canons. It was similar to the Temple in London in that it
-possessed gates of its own, which shut it off from the rest of the
-city. The Cloister contained thirty-seven houses for the canons of the
-Cathedral, who were allowed to have living with them their near female
-relatives. No other women, lay or religious, were allowed to sleep in
-the cloister. The tedious Rue du Cloître Notre-Dame occupies a portion
-of the space on which the Cloister stood.
-
-=The Sacristy= was formerly a part of the Palais Episcopal. It had
-been rebuilt by Soufflot, whose work was partially destroyed in 1831. A
-new sacristy has been constructed by Viollet-le-Duc in the style of the
-thirteenth century. The exterior is richly ornamented with statues and
-pinnacles. It communicates with the south ambulatory of the choir by
-means of two covered passages, one of which leads into the _Sacristie
-du Chapitre_, which contains a large hall, the room of the Chapter
-above, which is the cathedral treasury, and a vestry for the canons.
-The great hall has stained glass windows in which bishops of Paris are
-represented.
-
-It contains a crucifix and two statuettes by Corbon, a fine _armoire_
-decorated with paintings of scenes in the life of St. Denis. There are
-pictures in various parts of the building by Vaulos, Salvator Rosa,
-Lebrun, Louis Testelin, Charles Poerson and others, but none of them
-are of much note. A picturesque little cloister, with a fountain in the
-middle surmounted by a crucifix, is one of the agreeable features of
-the building. Its eastern arcade is glazed, the windows representing
-scenes in the life of Ste. Geneviève.
-
-=The Treasury=, once endowed with enormous riches, was despoiled at the
-Revolution of all but a few objects of value. There still remains the
-reputed Crown of Thorns (supposed to have been given to St. Louis),
-brought hither from La Sainte Chapelle. The so-called Nail of the True
-Cross formerly belonged to the royal abbey of St. Denis. These relics
-are only exposed on Fridays in Lent. The reliquaries are for the most
-part imitations of those which were formerly in La Sainte Chapelle.
-Perhaps the most interesting of the objects exhibited is a gold cross,
-probably of twelfth-century workmanship. It belonged to the Emperor
-Manuel Comnenus, and was bequeathed by the Princess Anne de Gonzague to
-the church of St. Germain des Prés in 1863. In addition there are the
-relic of the True Cross sent to Bishop Galon in 1109, from the Church
-of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem; the “discipline” of St. Louis; the
-crozier in copper and wood of Bishop Eudes de Sully; the crucifix used
-by St. Vincent-de-Paul at the death-bed of Louis XIII.; the pastoral
-cross of Archbishop Affre; a silver image of the Virgin and Child
-presented in 1821 by Charles X.; the _ostensoir_ given by Napoleon I.,
-and services of plate presented by the same monarch and by Napoleon
-III. The vestments are very magnificent, and include the coronation
-mantle of Napoleon I. and the chasuble worn by Pope Pius VI. when he
-crowned him. The _soutanes_ worn by Archbishops Affre, Sibour, and
-Darboy in their last moments, marked by the instruments which produced
-their violent deaths, have a tragic interest.
-
-The somewhat obtrusively picturesque modern building to the west of the
-Sacristy is known as the _Presbytère_. It has been often ridiculed,
-and at times rather fiercely denounced, but if any building was to
-be erected on the site, it seems difficult to imagine anything less
-offensive. It is pleasing and unpretentious, and contrasts only too
-favourably with the dull houses of the Rue du Cloître Notre-Dame, which
-are as undistinguished as they well can be.
-
-The space at the back of the Cathedral is laid out as a garden. This
-is modern and somewhat formal, but it affords a fine view of the east
-end, and constitutes a welcome oasis of trees and grass in a grey waste
-of commonplace buildings. In the centre is a fountain with a statue
-of the Virgin and Child, and fragments of sculpture and carving taken
-from the church at different times lie about. The reader who wishes to
-understand at a glance the various changes which have taken place in
-that part of the French metropolis which lies in the very shadow of
-the cathedral should refer to the second volume of the magnificent work
-_Paris à travers les Ages_, in which a plan of the district in 1881 is
-compared with conjectural plans of the same in the years 1150, 1550,
-and 1750.
-
-The huge open space west of the cathedral is the Place du Parvis
-Notre-Dame. This oblong _place_ far exceeds the church itself in area,
-and gives to the west front a somewhat dwarfed appearance. On the
-left-hand side (looking east) is the vast Hotel Dieu, the modern name
-of the hospital, known as the Maison Dieu, which for centuries has been
-associated with Notre Dame. The present building was only completed
-in 1877. It is from the designs of M. Diet, and is by no means of an
-ornamental character, although the total cost was 36,400,000 francs.
-On the west side of the Place du Parvis are the barracks of the Garde
-Republicaine. Close to them is one of those open-air flower markets
-which are so charming and characteristic a feature of the Paris of
-to-day.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: NOTRE DAME IN THE XIII CENTURY, SHOWING THE BISHOP’S
- PALACE (L’ÉVÊCHÉ) ON THE LEFT.
- (_From “Paris à travers les Ages.”_)]
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-LIST OF THE BISHOPS AND ARCHBISHOPS OF PARIS.
-
-(I have adopted the spelling and dates generally given by French
-Catholic writers in compiling this list).
-
-
-St. Denis, who is counted as the first bishop by Roman Catholic
-writers, is said to have been succeeded by the following, of whom
-little or nothing is known: Mallo or Mallon; Massus; Marcus; Adventus;
-Ventorien; Paul; Prudence; St. Marcel (died about 436); Vivien; Felix;
-Flavien; Ursicien; Apedemius; Heraclitus (? 490-525); Probat; Amelius;
-
-Saffarac (545-552).
-
-Eusèbe I. (552-555).
-
-St. Germain (555-576).
-
-Raguemond (576-591).
-
-Eusèbe II. (592-594).
-
-Faramode (?); Simplicius (?); Saint Céran (606-621); Leudebert (?);
-Aubert.
-
-St. Landry (650-656).
-
-Chrodobert (656-663).
-
-Sigobrand (663-664).
-
-Importun (?).
-
-St. Agilbert (666-680).
-
-Sigefroid (?); Tournsaede (?); Adolphe (?); Bernechaire, (?).
-
-St. Hugues (722-730).
-
-Marséide.
-
-Fédole (?); Raguecapt (?); Madalbert (?); Desdefroid (?); Escheurade
-(?).
-
-Ermenfroi (?)
-
-Inchalde (809-831).
-
-Ercheurade (831-857).
-
-Enée (857-883).
-
-Ingelvin (?).
-
-Gozlin (883-886).
-
-Anschéric (886-911).
-
-Théodulphe or Gendulphe (911-922). This bishop is believed to have
-been succeeded by Falrade; Adelhelme; Gauthier I.; Albéric; Constante;
-Garin; Rainaud I.; Elisiard, and Giselbert.
-
-Renault II., de Vendome (992-1019).
-
-Azelin or Albert (?).
-
-Francon (1020-1030).
-
-Imbert Hesselin (1030-1060).
-
-Godefroi de Boulogne (1061-1093).
-
-Guillaume I. de Montfort (1095-1102).
-
-Foulques I. (1102-1104).
-
-Galon (1105-1116).
-
-Giselbert or Gilbert (1116-1124).
-
-Etienne I. de Senlis (1124-1142).
-
-Thiébault (1143-1157).
-
-Pierre Lombard (1158-1159).
-
-Maurice de Sully (1160-1196).
-
-Eudes de Sully (1197-1208).
-
-Pierre II. de Nemours (1208-1219).
-
-Guillaume de Seiguelay (1220-1223).
-
-Barthélémy (1223-1227).
-
-(The see is believed to have been vacant for a year)
-
-Guillaume d’Auvergne (also called Guillaume de Paris) (1228-1249).
-
-Gauthier II. de Chateau-Thierry (1249-1250).
-
-Renault III. de Corbeil (1250-1268).
-
-Etienne II. (1268-1279).
-
-Ranulfe ou Raoul d’Homblières (1279-1288).
-
-Simon Matiffas de Bucy (1290-1304).
-
-Guillaume IV. de Baufet (1304-1319).
-
-Etienne de Bourret (1320-1325).
-
-Hugues II. (1326-1332).
-
-Guillaume V. de Chanac (1332-1342).
-
-Foulques II. (1342-1349).
-
-Audoin Aubert (?).
-
-Pierre III. de la Forêt (1350-1352).
-
-Jean I. de Meulan (1352-1363).
-
-Etienne IV. de Paris (1363-1368).
-
-Aimeric de Maignac (1368-1384).
-
-Pierre IV. d’Orgement (1384-1409).
-
-Gérard de Montaigu (1409-1420).
-
-Jean II. de Courte-Cuisse (1421-1422).
-
-Jean III. de la Roche-Taillé (1422-1423).
-
-Jean IV. de Nant (1423-1427).
-
-Jacques de Chastelier (1427-1439).
-
-Denis II. du Moulin (1439-1447).
-
-Guillaume VI. Chartier (1447-1472).
-
-Louis de Beaumont (1473-1492).
-
-Gerard Gobaille (1494).
-
-Jean V., Simon de Champigny (1494-1502).
-
-Etienne V., Poncher (1503-1519).
-
-François de Poncher (1519-1532).
-
-Jean VI. de Bellay (1532-1551).
-
-Eustache de Bellay (1551-1564).
-
-Guillaume Viole (1564-1568).
-
-Cardinal Pierre V. de Gondi (1568-1598).
-
-Cardinal Henri de Gondi de Retz (1598-1622).
-
-
-ARCHBISHOPS.
-
-Paris was raised to the rank of an archbishopric on the demand of Louis
-XIII. to Pope Gregory XV. (The Bull is dated Oct. 20th, 1622.)
-
-1. Jean-François de Gondi (1622-1654). First Archbishop of Paris.
-Buried in Notre Dame.
-
-2. Jean-François-Paul de Gondi (Cardinal de Retz). Buried in
-Saint-Denis (1654-1679).
-
-3. Pierre VI. de Marca (_d._ 1662). Buried in Notre Dame.
-
-4. Hardouin de Péréfix de Beaumont (_d._ 1671). Buried in Notre Dame.
-
-5. François de Harlay de Champvallon (_d._ 1695). Buried in Notre Dame.
-
-6. Louis-Antoine de Noailles. Cardinal (_d._ 1729). Buried in Notre
-Dame.
-
-7. Charles-Gaspard-Guillaume de Vintimille du Luc (_d._ 1746). Buried
-in Notre Dame.
-
-8. Jacques-Bonnet-Gigault de Bellefonds (_d._ 1746). Buried in Notre
-Dame.
-
-9. Christophe de Beaumont du Repaire (_d._ 1781). Buried in Notre Dame.
-
-10. Antoine-Eléonore-Léon Le Clerc de Juigné de Neuchelle (_d._ 1811).
-Buried in Notre Dame.
-
-11. Jean-Baptiste de Belloy. Cardinal. Died, aged ninety-eight years
-and eight months, in 1808, and buried in Notre Dame.
-
-12. Alexandre-Angélique de Tallyrand-Perigord. Born 1736. Archbishop of
-Reims 1776. Cardinal 1817; Died 1821.
-
-13. Hyacinthe-Louis de Quélen. Born 1778. Bishop of Samosate 1817;
-Archbishop of Paris 1821. Died 1839.
-
-14. Denis III., Auguste Affre. Born 1793. Archbishop of Paris 1840.
-Struck by a ball at the barricades in the Faubourg Saint-Antoine on
-June 25th, 1848, and died two days later.
-
-15. Marie-Dominique-Auguste Sibour. Born 1792. Bishop of Digue 1839;
-Archbishop of Paris 1848. Was assassinated on Jan. 3rd, 1857, in the
-church of Saint-Etienne du Mont by a priest. He had as auxiliary bishop
-Léon-François Sibour.
-
-16. François III., Nicolas-Madeleine Morlot. Born 1795. Bishop of
-Orléans 1839; Archbishop of Tours 1842; Cardinal 1853; Archbishop of
-Paris 1857. Died 1862.
-
-17. Georges Darboy. Born 1813. Bishop of Nancy 1850; Archbishop of
-Paris 1863. Arrested as a hostage by the Commune on April 4th, 1871,
-and shot on May 27th.
-
-18. Joseph-Hippolyte Guibert. Born 1802. Archbishop of Tours 1857;
-Archbishop of Paris 1871; Cardinal 1873. Died 1886.
-
-19. François-Marie-Benjamin Richard. Born 1819. Bishop of Belley
-1871; Coadjutor of Archbishop Guibert 1875; Archbishop of Paris 1886.
-Cardinal 1889.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Aisles, double, 22, 60
-
- Altar, high, 86
-
- Ambulatory, 76
-
- Apse, 22
-
- Archbishops, list of, 100-102
-
-
- Bells, 42
-
- Bishops, list of, 98-100
-
- Bishop’s Palace, 94, 98
-
- Buttress system, 44
-
-
- Chapels added, 8
-
- ” of the choir, 90-93;
- of the nave, 66-69
-
- “Chimères,” 40
-
- Choir, 82; in the thirteenth century, 81
-
- Clerestory: nave, 64;
- transepts, 72
-
- Cloister, or Cloître, 8, 95
-
- Crypt, 86
-
-
- Darboy, Archbishop, statue of, 91
-
- Decoration, coloured mural, 66-68, 75
-
- “Devils of Notre Dame,” 20
-
- Dimensions of the cathedral, 56
-
- Doorways: west, 30-38;
- transepts, 48-53
-
-
- Flèche, 42
-
-
- Galerie des Rois, 39
-
- Garden, 96
-
- Glass, stained, 69, 89
-
- Gothic construction, 20
-
- Grille of choir, 82
-
-
- Historical events, 9-16
-
- Hospital (Hotel Dieu), 97
-
- Hugo, Victor, on Notre Dame (_see_ Notre Dame)
-
-
- Maurice de Sully, Bishop, first builder of the present church, 7
-
- Monuments in the nave, 64
-
-
- Napoleon I., coronation of, 14
-
- Notre Dame: early history of the church, 5-7;
- historical events in, 9-16;
- its place in French Gothic, 19;
- Victor Hugo on, 27-29, 40, 42
-
- “Notre Dame de Paris,” statue of, 72-75
-
-
- Organ, 64
-
-
- Parvis, Place du, 94, 97
-
- Piers of the nave, 58, 60
-
- Portail de la Ste. Vierge, 30
-
- ” central, 34
-
- ” Ste. Anne or St. Marcel, 33, 38
-
- Porte Rouge, 53
-
- Presbytère, 96
-
-
- Relics, 95, 96
-
- Revolution, the, 12
-
- Roman remains, 5, 86
-
- Roof, 42, 57
-
- Rose windows of transepts, 75
-
-
- Sacristy, 95
-
- St. Denis, 5; statue of, 75;
- chapel of, 90
-
- St. Marcel, statue of, 33, 38;
- shrine of, 76, 81;
- chapel of, 92
-
- Sanctuary, 81, 86
-
- Screen, sculptured, in choir, 77
-
- Stalls, choir, 85
-
- “Stryge, le,” 41
-
-
- Tombstones in the nave, 56
-
- Towers, 42
-
- Transepts, 22, 48, 72
-
- Treasury, 95
-
- Triforium, 62
-
-
- Vaulting, 57, 62
-
-
- West front, 7, 24, 28-42
-
- Windows, 46
-
-
-
-
- CHISWICK PRESS: PRINTED BY CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-INTERNAL DIMENSIONS.
-
-
- Length (total) 390 feet.
- ” of nave 225 ”
- ” of transepts 144 ”
- Width of nave vault 39 ”
- Height of ” “ 102 ”
- ” ” towers 204 ”
- Area 54,050 sq. feet.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: PLAN OF THE CATHEDRAL OF NOTRE DAME, PARIS
-
- ENTRANCE TO THE TOWERS.
-
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
-
- 14 13 12 11 10 9 8
-
- 50 40 30 20 10 0 50 100
-
- SCALE OF FEET.
-
- 1. Chapelle des Fonts Baptismaux.
- 2. Chapelle Saint-Charles.
- 3. ” de la Sainte-Enfance.
- 4. ” Saint-Vincent-de-Paul.
- 5. Chapelle de Saint-François-Xavier.
- 6. Chapelle de Saint-Landry.
- 7. ” de Sainte-Clotilde.
- 8. Chapelle de l’Annonciation.
- 9. ” du Sacré Cœur.
- 10. ” Sainte-Anne.
- 11. ” Saint-Pierre.
- 12. ” Saint-Joseph.
- 13. ” Sainte-Geneviève.
- 14. ” des Ames du Purgatoire.
- 15. Statue of Notre Dame de Paris.
-
- A. Chapelle Saint-Martin.
- B. ” Saint-Ferdinand.
- C. ” Saint-Germain.
- D. ” Saint-Louis.
- E. ” Saint-Marcel.
- F. ” de N. D. des Sept Douleurs,
- _or_ du Petit Chœur.
- G. Chapelle Saint-Georges.
- H. ” Saint-Guillaume.
- I. ” Sainte-Madelaine.
- J. ” Saint-Denis.
-
- A.K.M^{o}RGAN. del:]
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: _H. N. King, photo._]
- WESTMINSTER. WALL ARCADE AND FRESCOES IN THE
- CHAPTER-HOUSE]
-
-
-
-
-BELL’S CATHEDRAL SERIES
-
-_Post 8vo. Profusely Illustrated, 1s. 6d. net each_
-
- “This excellent series of Cathedral handbooks which have
- thoroughly established their reputation as guides to the
- archaeological, architectural, historical, and religious
- stories of our cathedrals.”--_Saturday Review._
-
-Volumes on London Cathedrals & Churches
-
-
- =ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL.= An Account of the Old and New
- Buildings, with a short Historical Sketch. By the Rev.
- ARTHUR DIMOCK, M.A. Fourth Edition, Revised. With 38
- Illustrations and a Plan.
-
- “One of the richest volumes of Messrs. Bell’s ‘Cathedral
- Series.’ The study of the fabric is painstaking, and the
- details as to monuments will be found very helpful to a
- visitor.... The whole history is brought down to the present
- day.”--_London Quarterly Review._
-
- “The work is cleverly compiled, and the illustrations add not
- a little to its value as a souvenir to be treasured by those
- who visit the cathedral, not because it is one of the sights
- of London, but for the reason that they take an intelligent
- and reverential interest in that great monument of Wren’s
- genius.”--_City Press._
-
-
- =WESTMINSTER ABBEY.= By CHARLES HIATT. Third
- Edition. With 45 Illustrations and 2 Plans.
-
- “It has been compiled with great care from the best
- authorities, and is especially full on the monuments. Visitors
- could not have a better guide to the most famous of English
- minsters.”--_London Quarterly Review._
-
- “This excellent work is likely to become the most popular guide
- to Westminster Abbey. It supplies the need both of the student
- of architecture and the visitor to London, giving a capital
- _résumé_ of the history of the Abbey, with a well-written
- description of the building itself. The book is profusely
- illustrated.”--_Liverpool Mercury._
-
-
- =ST. SAVIOUR’S, SOUTHWARK.= By GEORGE WORLEY. With
- 36 Illustrations and a Plan.
-
- “Mr. Worley’s painstaking description of the cathedral is the
- most complete that we have seen, and its value is increased by
- many good illustrations and a plan.”--_Manchester Guardian._
-
- “Those who wish to visit this Metropolitan Cathedral
- intelligently, and with personal profit, will do well to
- possess themselves with this reliable and interesting little
- handbook.”--_Builder._
-
- “An admirable example of careful work.”--_Gentleman’s Magazine._
-
-
- =ST. BARTHOLOMEW-THE-GREAT, SMITHFIELD.= A short History of the
- Foundation, and a Description of the Fabric, and also of the
- Church of St. Bartholomew-the-Less. By GEORGE WORLEY. With 42
- Illustrations and a Plan.
-
- “The author has made a conscientious study of the venerable
- Smithfield church, and has succeeded in presenting a thoroughly
- interesting account of this remarkable relic of the twelfth
- century.”--_Builder’s Journal._
-
- “Mr. Worley has treated his subject with skill, and produced a
- most readable volume.”--_Church Times._
-
-
- =THE TEMPLE CHURCH.= A Description of the Fabric and its Contents,
- with a short History of the Order. By GEORGE WORLEY. Second
- Edition, Revised. With 31 Illustrations and a Plan.
-
- “A short and excellent account of the church of the Knights
- Templars in London, prefaced by a brief history of the Order.
- Nothing has been forgotten that the curious might reasonably
- want to know.... To any one interested, such an excellent
- handbook as this, with its lucid explanations, plans,
- photographs, and technical information of the very best, is
- indispensable.”--_Spectator._
-
- [Illustration: _Photo._] [_Photochrom Co._
- SOUTHWARK CATHEDRAL FROM THE EAST]
-
- BELL’S CATHEDRAL SERIES—_continued_
- _1s. 6d. net each_
-
- BANGOR. By P. B. IRONSIDE BAX.
-
- BRISTOL. By H. J. L. J. MASSÉ, M.A. 2nd Edition.
-
- CANTERBURY. By HARTLEY WITHERS. 6th Edition.
-
- CARLISLE. By C. K. ELEY. 2nd Edition.
-
- CHESTER. By CHARLES HIATT. 4th Edition.
-
- CHICHESTER. By H. C. CORLETTE, A.R.I.B.A. 3rd Edition.
-
- DURHAM. By J. E. BYGATE, A.R.C.A. 4th Edition.
-
- ELY. By REV. W. D. SWEETING, M.A. 3rd Edition.
-
- EXETER. By PERCY ADDLESHAW, B.A. 4th Edition, revised.
-
- GLOUCESTER. By H. J. L. J. MASSÉ, M.A. 5th Edition.
-
- HEREFORD. By A. HUGH FISHER, A.R.E. 2nd Edition,
- revised.
-
- LICHFIELD. By A. B. CLIFTON. 3rd Edition, revised.
-
- LINCOLN. By A. F. KENDRICK, B.A. 5th Edition.
-
- LLANDAFF. By E. C. MORGAN WILLMOTT, A.R.I.B.A.
-
- MANCHESTER. By the REV. T. PERKINS, M.A.
-
- NORWICH. By C. H. B. QUENNELL. 2nd Edition, revised.
-
- OXFORD. By the REV. PERCY DEARMER, M.A. 2nd Edition,
- revised.
-
- PETERBOROUGH. By the REV. W. D. SWEETING, M.A. 4th
- Edition.
-
- RIPON. By CECIL HALLETT, B.A. 2nd Edition.
-
- ROCHESTER. By G. H. PALMER, B.A. 2nd Edition, revised.
-
- ST. ALBANS. By the REV. T. PERKINS, M.A.
-
- ST. ASAPH. By P. B. IRONSIDE BAX.
-
- ST. DAVID’S. By PHILIP A. ROBSON, A.R.I.B.A. 2nd
- Edition.
-
- ST. PATRICK’S, DUBLIN. By the VERY REV. J. H. BERNARD,
- M.A., D.D. 2nd Edition.
-
- SALISBURY. By GLEESON WHITE. 5th Edition.
-
- SOUTHWELL. By the REV. ARTHUR DIMOCK, M.A. 2nd
- Edition, revised.
-
- WELLS. By the REV. PERCY DEARMER, M.A. 5th Edition.
-
- WINCHESTER. By P. W. SERGEANT. 4th Edition, revised.
-
- WORCESTER. By E. F. STRANGE. 3rd Edition.
-
- YORK. By A. CLUTTON BROCK. 5th Edition.
-
- AN ITINERARY OF ENGLISH CATHEDRALS FOR THE USE OF TRAVELLERS.
- By JAMES G. GILCHRIST, A.M., M.D., and the REV. T.
- PERKINS, M.A., F.R.A.S. 2nd Edition, revised.
-
-
-_Uniform with above Series, 1s. 6d. net each_
-
- BATH ABBEY, MALMESBURY ABBEY, AND BRADFORD-ON-AVON CHURCH. By
- the REV. T. PERKINS, M.A.
-
- BEVERLEY MINSTER. By CHARLES HIATT. 3rd Edition.
-
- ST. MARTIN’S CHURCH, CANTERBURY. By the REV. CANON C. F.
- ROUTLEDGE. 2nd Edition.
-
- ROMSEY ABBEY. By the REV. T. PERKINS, M.A.
-
- STRATFORD-ON-AVON CHURCH. By HAROLD BAKER. 2nd Edition.
-
- TEWKESBURY ABBEY. By H. J. L. J. MASSÉ, M.A. 4th
- Edition.
-
- WIMBORNE MINSTER and CHRISTCHURCH PRIORY. By the REV. T.
- PERKINS, M.A. 2nd Edition.
-
- THE CHURCHES OF COVENTRY. By FREDERICK W. WOODHOUSE.
-
- MALVERN PRIORY. By the REV. ANTHONY C. DEANE.
- [_In preparation._
-
- LONDON: G. BELL AND SONS, LTD.
- YORK HOUSE, PORTUGAL STREET, KINGSWAY, W.C.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Punctuation has been standardised; hyphenation retained as it appears
-in the original publication.
-
-Changes have been made as follows:
-
- Page 4
- that our own proud Minster _changed to_
- than our own proud Minster
-
- Page 7
- Description de Notre-Dame, Cathédral de Paris _changed to_
- Description de Notre-Dame, Cathédrale de Paris
-
- Page 10
- se mit A genoux et fit _changed to_
- se mit à genoux et fit
-
- Page 13
- music by Gossee _changed to_
- music by Gossec
-
- Page 14
- parfaite à la moinde des actions _changed to_
- parfaite à la moindre des actions
-
- Page 15
- apres avoir reçu _changed to_
- après avoir reçu
-
- douce et legère _changed to_
- douce et légère
-
- Page 19
- mere decorative idiosyncracy _changed to_
- mere decorative idiosyncrasy
-
- Page 20
- Ths choir was begun _changed to_
- The choir was begun
-
- Page 40
- _Chimères or “Devils of Notre Dame_.” _changed to_
- _Chimères_ or “_Devils of Notre Dame_.”
-
- was in its decadance _changed to_
- was in its decadence
-
- Page 41
- ONE OF THE CHIMAERAS OF NOTRE DAME _changed to_
- ONE OF THE CHIMÈRAS OF NOTRE DAME
-
- Page 42
- which was irrevently compared _changed to_
- which was irreverently compared
-
- Page 52
- TYMPANIUM OF THE NORTH TRANSEPT DOORWAY _changed to_
- TYMPANUM OF THE NORTH TRANSEPT DOORWAY
-
- Page 53
- Near the _Port Rouge_ _changed to_
- Near the _Porte Rouge_
-
- Page 65
- in the cathedrall church _changed to_
- in the cathedral church
-
- Page 67
- Il en résultei nstinctivement pour _changed to_
- Il en résulte instinctivement pour
-
- Page 78
- Notre Dame par Vespace XXV _changed to_
- Notre Dame par l’espace XXV
-
- Page 89
- by Antoine Coyevox _changed to_
- by Antoine Coysevox
-
- Page 90
- Archbishop Sibor, who was murdered _changed to_
- Archbishop Sibour, who was murdered
-
- Page 92
- Archbishop Leclercq de Juigné _changed to_
- Archbishop Leclerc de Juigné
-
- Page 95
- The =Cloîture= or Cloister of Notre Dame was on
- The =Cloître= or Cloister of Notre Dame was on
-
- Page 96
- church of St. Germain des Près _changed to_
- church of St. Germain des Prés
-
- dull houses of the Rue du Cloîture Notre-Dame _changed to_
- dull houses of the Rue du Cloître Notre-Dame
-
- Page 99
- Barthélemy (1223-1227) _changed to_
- Barthélémy (1223-1227)
-
- Page 105
- Cloister, or Cloiture _changed to_
- Cloister, or Cloître
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notre Dame de Paris, by Charles Hiatt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Notre Dame de Paris
- A short history & description of the Cathedral, with some
- account of the churches which preceded it
-
-Author: Charles Hiatt
-
-Release Date: September 1, 2019 [EBook #60213]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTRE DAME DE PARIS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<hr class="divider" />
-<h1>BELL’S HANDBOOKS TO<br />
-CONTINENTAL CHURCHES<br />
-<span>NOTRE DAME DE PARIS</span></h1>
-<hr class="divider2" />
-
-
-<div class="figcenter hidehand" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/i-cover.jpg" width="500" height="784" alt="Cover" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
-<a name="frontispiece" id="frontispiece"></a>
-<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="800" height="462" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">NOTRE DAME AND THE PONT DE L’ARCHEVÊQUE.<br />
-
-(<i>From an etching by C. Méryon.</i>)</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<p class="center"><span class="p180">NOTRE DAME DE PARIS</span><br />
-A SHORT HISTORY &amp; DESCRIPTION<br />
-OF THE CATHEDRAL, WITH SOME<br />
-ACCOUNT OF THE CHURCHES<br />
-WHICH PRECEDED IT</p>
-
-<p class="center mt3">BY<br />
-<span class="p140">CHARLES HIATT</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">AUTHOR OF<br />
-“CHESTER CATHEDRAL,” “BEVERLEY MINSTER,”<br />
-“WESTMINSTER ABBEY,” ETC., ETC.</p>
-
-<p class="center mt3">WITH FORTY-ONE ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
-
-<p class="center p140 mt3">LONDON: GEORGE BELL &amp; SONS 1902</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<h2><a name="preface" id="preface"></a>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">The</span> task of writing an account of the cathedral of Notre
-Dame is materially lightened by the minute details of its
-history and architecture to be found in the various writings
-of M. Viollet-le-Duc, of which, unfortunately, the Library
-of the British Museum does not contain a complete set.
-The <i>Description de Notre Dame</i>, published in 1856 by
-M. de Guilhermy in conjunction with M. Viollet-le-Duc,
-contains much useful material, while the splendidly illustrated
-account of the church in the first volume of <i>Paris à travers
-les Ages</i> is full of interesting archæological particulars. As
-the numerous other authorities which have been used are
-quoted in the text, it is unnecessary to enumerate them here.
-The writer has found Mr. Charles Herbert Moore’s <i>Development
-of Gothic Architecture</i> useful in not a few difficult
-matters. He wishes specially to thank Mr. Edward Bell for
-valuable suggestions on many important points.</p>
-
-<p class="right smcap">Charles Hiatt.</p>
-
-<p class="smcap">Chelsea,<br />
-<span class="pl2"><i>October, 1902</i>.</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="contents" id="contents"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
-<tr>
-<th class="tdr">CHAPTER</th>
-<th class="tdr">&nbsp;</th>
-<th class="tdr2">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">I.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">A Brief Historical Account of the Cathedral</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#i">3</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">II.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The Place of Notre Dame in the Development of
- French Gothic</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#ii">19</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">III.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The Exterior</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#iii">27</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">IV.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The Interior.&mdash;The Nave</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#iv">55</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">V.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">The Transepts and the Choir</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#v">71</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VI.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">Conclusion.&mdash;The Sacristy, etc.</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#vi">94</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VII.</td>
-<td class="tdl smcap">List of the Bishops and Archbishops of Paris</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#vii">98</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl2 smcap" colspan="2">Index</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#index">103</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl2 smcap" colspan="2">Ground Plan</td>
-<td class="tdr2 smcap"><a href="#plan">At End</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-<h2><a name="illustrations" id="illustrations"></a>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<table summary="List of Illustrations">
-<tr>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-<th class="tdr2">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Notre Dame and the Pont de l’Archevêque</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Notre Dame from the South</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-2">2</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Notre Dame from the Quai St. Bernard</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-3">3</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Queen Marie Antoinette returning Thanks</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-11">11</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Chevet</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-18">18</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Section of Nave and Double Aisle</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-21">21</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">North Aisles of the Nave</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-23">23</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The West Front</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-26">26</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Chimères</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-27">27</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">String-course on the West Front</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-29">29</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Carved Foliage, Portail de la Vierge</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-30">30</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Portail de la Sainte-Vierge</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-31">31</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Figure of St. Marcel</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-33">33</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Sculpture of the Last Judgement</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-34">34</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Tympanum of the Porte Sainte Anne</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-35">35</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Apostles&mdash;Central Doorway</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-36">36</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Figures&mdash;Porte Sainte Anne</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-37">37</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Chimères</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-38">38</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="pl2">”</span></td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-39">39</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Le Stryge, after Méryon</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-41">41</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Roof-ridge of Notre Dame, by J. Pennell</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-43">43</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Original Flèche</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-44">44</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Clocheton</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-45">45</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Windows of the South Aisle</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-46">46</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Triforium Windows</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-47">47</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The North Transept Front</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-49">49</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">x</a></span>
-Tympanum, North Transept</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-52">52</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Interior from the West End</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-54">54</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Nave: South Arcade</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-58">58</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Capital in the Nave</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-59">59</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Nave: North Arcade</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-61">61</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Triforium Gallery</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-63">63</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Elevations of the Nave</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-65">65</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Angle of the Choir and South Transept</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-70">70</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The North Transept</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-73">73</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">View of the Choir at the End of the Thirteenth Century</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-80">80</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Grille at Entrance of Choir </td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-82">82</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Choir, looking West</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-83">83</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Choir from the South Transept</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-87">87</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">The Place du Parvis in 1650</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-94">94</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Notre Dame in the Thirteenth Century, with the Bishop’s Palace</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#img-98">98</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
-<a name="img-2" id="img-2"></a>
-<img src="images/i-002.jpg" width="800" height="548" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i>]</div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">NOTRE DAME FROM THE SOUTH.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</a></span>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a name="img-3" id="img-3"></a>
-<img src="images/i-003.jpg" width="500" height="256" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">NOTRE DAME FROM THE QUAI ST. BERNARD.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center p180">NOTRE DAME DE PARIS.</p>
-
-<h2 style="page-break-before: avoid;"><a name="i" id="i"></a>CHAPTER I.<br />
-<span>A BRIEF HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE CATHEDRAL.</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">No</span> city of the modern world has seen such amazing changes
-as the French metropolis. In the eyes of many persons,
-from every downfall Paris has arisen more incontestably
-splendid. But not to all is the Paris of Baron Hausmann
-lovelier than the city which preceded it. For instance, M.
-Joris-Karl Huysmans, the author at once modern and mystical
-of <i>A Rebours</i> and <i>La Cathédrale</i>, bitterly regrets the disappearance
-of those ancient and brooding byways which lent
-to the Paris of his youth a curious charm which has now
-almost disappeared. The Paris of magnificent vistas is at
-least less fascinating to the artist than the comparatively
-provincial city of crooked lanes which has gone to make
-way for a series of lofty and pretentious street fronts and
-spacious squares.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Strange it is that, where so much has been changed, the
-cathedral church of Notre Dame has remained almost unaltered
-in outline and general effect. Revolutions have surged round
-it; monstrous rites have been perpetrated within it; even the
-hail of shot and shell have left this wonderful Gothic creation
-poorer only in decorative detail. There is a certain fascination
-in the grimness of this mysterious building in <i>la ville lumière</i>,
-and I am disposed to agree with Mr. Richard Whiteing that it
-symbolises the underlying sadness, as opposed to the superficial
-gaiety of the Parisian. Thousands of French churches
-are dedicated to Notre Dame: even in Paris itself we have
-Notre Dame de l’Assomption, Notre Dame de l’Abbaye aux
-Bois, Notre Dame des Blancs-Manteaux, Notre Dame des
-Champs, Notre Dame de Lorette, and Notre Dame des
-Victoires. But still when we speak of Notre Dame we allude
-instinctively to that vast edifice which frowns over the slow
-and winding Seine. The cathedral church of Notre Dame
-is almost as closely connected with the history of the French
-people as is the Abbey of Westminster with that of the
-English. And indeed the gray-white building whose foundations
-are nearly washed by the waters of the Seine has seen
-pageants more superb, and tragedies more luridly dramatic,
-<a name="than" id="than"></a><ins title="Original has 'that'">than</ins>
-our own proud Minster of the West. Although it can
-boast no such marvellous continuity of vital historic episodes,
-Notre Dame is the one building in the French metropolis
-which seems to stand as a symbol for the whole city in all
-its memorable phases: with it may not be compared the
-bragging grandeur of the Arc de Triomphe, the extensive
-splendour of the Louvre, nor the rebuilt Hôtel de Ville.
-We do not forget the exquisite beauties of La Sainte Chapelle,
-the strange fascination of the resting-place of the Great
-Napoleon, nor the majesty of the once royal church of Saint
-Denis. None of these, however, will bear serious comparison
-with the great Metropolitan Cathedral of Paris. Notre Dame
-has an almost unearthly power of asserting its existence.
-Neither in full sunshine, nor in the twilight, nor when night
-has finally set in, will it allow its majestic proportions to be
-overlooked. Mr. Henley has finely spoken of “the high
-majesty of Paul’s,” but even our own metropolitan cathedral,
-with its overwhelming dome, is scarcely more predominant
-than Notre Dame.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The geographical position of the Cathedral of Paris is not
-unlike that anciently possessed by Westminster Abbey, and
-by that crown of the Fens, Ely Cathedral. We find that
-Notre Dame dominates an islet of the Seine. At its east
-end is that tragical commentary on the life of modern Paris,
-The Morgue. The late Mr. Grant Allen, with a cheerfulness
-which we are far from sharing, noted that this triumphant
-example of the best Gothic in the world has often been
-restored. We believe that he was one of many intelligent
-persons who derive a real satisfaction from the so-called
-“restoration” of an ancient work, of which no real “restoration”
-is possible, though repair is an obvious duty.</p>
-
-<p>The mediæval churches of western Europe nearly all claim a
-pre-Christian origin. It is charming to the mind of a certain
-type of antiquary to discover the origin of a Christian cathedral
-in the wreck of a Roman temple. For Westminster Abbey
-and for St. Paul’s Roman foundations have, with more or less
-accuracy, been described. In the case of Notre Dame it is
-certain that the remains of an altar of Jupiter were discovered
-in 1711, which would seem to indicate that a pagan temple
-once stood on or near the site in the Gaulish city of Lutetia
-Parisiorum. In point of fact, it is a matter of no small difficulty
-to make out clearly the origin of Notre Dame, or to describe
-with certainty the ecclesiastical buildings which in the dim
-past occupied its site. A lady writer who has discussed the
-church with much intelligence writes on this matter as follows:<a name="FNanchor-1" id="FNanchor-1"></a><a href="#Footnote-1" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 1">[1]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote-1" id="Footnote-1"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>The Churches of Paris</i>, by S. Sophia Beale: London, W. H. Allen
-and Co., 1893.</p></div>
-
-<p>“The origin of Notre Dame is enveloped in mystery.
-Whether its first bishop, St. Denis, or Dionysius, was the
-Areopagite converted by St. Paul’s preaching at Athens, and
-sent by St. Clement to preach the Gospel to the Parisians,
-or whether he was another personage of the same name who
-was sent into Gaul in the third century and martyred during
-the persecutions under Decius, it is impossible to say, as there
-is no evidence of any value. Certain it is, however, that the
-first bishop of Paris bore the name of Denis, and that he
-suffered martyrdom, with his two companions Rusticus and
-Eleutherius, on the summit of the hill now called Montmartre.
-Tradition went so far as to point out the spot where they first
-gathered their followers together&mdash;the crypt of Notre Dame<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</a></span>
-des Champs; also the prison where our Lord appeared to
-them and strengthened them with His Holy Body and Blood
-at St. Denis de la Chartre; the place, at St. Denis du Pas,
-where they suffered their first tortures; and lastly, Montmartre,
-where they were beheaded. But, with the exception of the
-latter, all these holy spots have disappeared. So, too, have
-the crosses which marked the route taken by the Saint, when
-he carried his head to the place chosen for his burial, at
-St. Denis. An ancient church covered the remains of the
-three saints until the present splendid building was erected,
-in the reign of Dagobert I. Under the Roman dominion,
-Paris was comprised in the fourth Lyonnaise division, of which
-Sens was the metropolis. Hence the bishops of Paris acknowledged
-the Archbishop of Sens as their primate until
-1622, when, at the request of Louis XIII., Pope Gregory XV.
-raised Paris to the see of an archbishopric. The succession
-has consisted of one hundred and nine bishops and fifteen
-archbishops, eight of whom have been raised to the dignity
-of Cardinal. Besides St. Denis six have been venerated as
-Saints: Marcel, in the fifth century; Germain, in the sixth
-century; Ceran, Landry, and Agilbert in the seventh, and
-Hugues in the eighth century.”</p>
-
-<p>We must leave this ancient and hazy story of saints and
-martyrs, and return to the thorny question of the origin of
-the cathedral. From the brief account of Notre Dame by Mr.
-A. J. C. Hare in his entertaining volume on Paris, we glean
-that about the year 375 a church, dedicated to St. Stephen
-(St. Etienne), was built on the islet under Prudentius, eighth
-bishop of Paris. “In 528,” says Mr. Hare, “through the
-gratitude of Childebert&mdash;‘<i>le nouveau Melchisedech</i>’&mdash;for his
-recovery from a sickness by St. Germain, another far more rich
-and beautiful edifice (dedicated to Sainte Marie&mdash;) arose by the
-side of the first church, and was destined to become <i>ecclesia
-parisiaca</i>, the cathedral of Paris. Childebert endowed it with
-three estates&mdash;at Chelles-en-Brie, at La Celle near Monterau,
-and at La Celle near Fréjus&mdash;which last supplied the oil for
-its sacred ordinances. The new church had not long been
-finished when La Cité, in which the monks of S. Germain had
-taken refuge with their treasures, was besieged by the
-Normans; but it was successfully defended by Bishop Gozlin,
-who died during the siege. It is believed that the substructions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-of this church were found during recent excavations
-in the Parvis Notre Dame,<a name="FNanchor-2" id="FNanchor-2"></a><a href="#Footnote-2" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 2">[2]</a> and architectural fragments then
-discovered are now preserved at the Palais des Thermes.”
-It may be taken for granted that Childebert’s church took
-the form of a Roman basilica, and it is probable that Roman
-materials were used in its construction. In 1847 further
-Roman remains were discovered on the site which doubtless
-formed part of Childebert’s building. Some of them are
-preserved at the Hôtel-Cluny.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-2" id="Footnote-2"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The space to the west of the church was called <i>Parvis paradisus</i>, the
-earthly paradise leading by the celestial Jerusalem.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I am, however, inclined to agree with M. de Guilhermy and
-M. Viollet-le-Duc,<a name="FNanchor-3" id="FNanchor-3"></a><a href="#Footnote-3" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 3">[3]</a> that the story of the cathedral previous to
-the episcopacy of Bishop Maurice de Sully (1160&ndash;96) is, if
-not absolutely fictitious, at least merely conjectural.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-3" id="Footnote-3"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> See <i>Description de Notre-Dame,
-<a name="Cathedrale" id="Cathedrale"></a><ins title="Original has 'Cathédral'">Cathédrale</ins> de Paris</i>: Paris, 1856.
-The main points of Viollet-le-Duc’s inventory of the cathedral will be
-found in Queyron’s <i>Histoire et Description de l’Eglise de Notre Dame</i>,
-Paris: E. Plon, Nourrit et C<sup>ie</sup>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This prelate&mdash;generally counted as the sixty-second occupant
-of the see&mdash;seems at first to have united the adjacent churches
-of St. Stephen and St<sup>e</sup> Marie on the Ile de la Cité, and then
-(without immediately and totally destroying them) to have
-commenced a new one on the same site, of which Pope
-Alexander III. laid the foundation-stone in 1163. Rapid
-progress must have been made with the work, for it is certain
-that in 1185 Heraclitus, patriarch of Jerusalem, officiated at
-the altar, in front of which, in the year following, Geoffrey,
-Count of Brittany, son of Henry II. of England, was buried.
-Maurice de Sully provided for the continuation of the work
-after his death, which took place in 1196. By his will he left
-five thousand <i>livres</i> in order that the choir might be roofed
-with lead. At this time, according to Viollet-le-Duc, considerable
-progress must have been made with the nave. Maurice
-de Sully was succeeded by Eudes de Sully (1197&ndash;1208), on
-whose death the see was occupied, until 1219, by Pierre de
-Nemours. Towards 1223 the west front was completed to
-the base of the great gallery, and by 1235 the towers were
-left much as we see them to-day. The spires, which it is
-generally admitted they were intended to carry, were never
-added.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Between the years 1235 and 1240, a fire seems to have
-broken out at Notre Dame. On this subject history is silent,
-but that it did serious damage is maintained by Viollet-le-Duc
-on what appear to be sufficient grounds. According to him,
-repair was made in haste, so that rose windows, flying
-buttresses and other structural details were ruthlessly sacrificed.
-The west front seems to have escaped mutilation. Up to 1245
-the cathedral, vast as was its area, possessed either no chapels
-at all, or chapels of inconsiderable dimensions. In that year,
-however, the addition of new chapels was proceeded with. It
-would appear that, shortly after, the plainness of the transept
-fronts in comparison with the splendidly decorated west façade
-was acutely felt. In 1257, Jean de Chelles was engaged on
-reconstructing the southern doorway. At this time St. Louis
-was King of France, and Renaud de Corbeil bishop of Paris.
-The northern door and the chapels next the transepts on
-either side were altered immediately after the southern
-entrance. In 1351, Jean Ravy and Jean de Bouteiller were
-engaged about the cathedral as sculptors.</p>
-
-<p>During the next three centuries Notre Dame escaped anything
-in the nature of important change, destruction or addition;
-but in 1699 an era of reckless mutilation began. Between
-the last-named date and 1753 the Cloister, the stalls of the
-sixteenth century, the old high altar, many sepulchral monuments,
-and a vast quantity of stained glass were destroyed.
-The work done in the names of “repair” and “beautification”
-deprived the cathedral of mouldings, foliated capitals, gargoyles
-and pinnacles. The damage inflicted by the architect Soufflot
-(who designed the Panthéon) will be noticed later. Towards
-the end of Louis XV.’s reign the church was refloored with
-squares of marble. The new pavement involved the tearing
-up of a number of curious tombstones, some of which covered
-the dust of men greatly distinguished in French history.
-Between 1773 and 1787 minor alterations in the taste of the
-time were made in various parts of the building, but further
-additions were brought to an end by the outbreak of the
-Revolution. That any sculpture of a religious or royal
-character was spared at Notre Dame during that terrific
-upheaval seems to have been due to the eloquence of Citoyen
-Chaumette and the influence of Citoyen Dupuis. Of the
-great work of repair and addition performed by the architects<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">9</a></span>
-Viollet-le-Duc and Lassus, their assistants and successors, much
-will be said when we consider the cathedral in detail.</p>
-
-<p>We have already discussed the early story of Notre Dame,
-and noted the vicissitudes through which the fabric has
-passed. I propose, before concluding this introductory chapter,
-to state in the briefest possible way the great historical events
-with which the cathedral is connected, from the death, in
-1196, of Maurice de Sully to the present time.</p>
-
-<p>From the tenth century up to the end of the fifteenth
-century the extraordinary <i>Fête des Fous</i> was celebrated in
-Notre Dame. One of the cathedral employés was elected
-<i>Evêque des Fous</i>, and, wearing the actual vestments used
-in religious services, was honoured with a great banquet
-accompanied with grotesque dances and songs. This orgy
-took place in the church itself, and was so popular that it
-flourished in spite of the most determined efforts to suppress
-it. A similar custom was observed in La Sainte Chapelle.
-During the early years of the thirteenth century the Dominican
-order was established. St. Dominic himself preached once
-at least in Notre Dame. During his prayer before the
-sermon, the Virgin is said to have appeared to him in a
-cloud of light and to have given to him a book containing
-the subject-matter of his discourse. Raymond VII., Count
-of Toulouse, underwent the discipline of the lash for heresy
-before the door of the cathedral in 1229. This spot was
-for centuries occupied by a pillory. From 1220 onwards
-a series of disputes took place between the officials of the
-church and the university. During the long reign of St.
-Louis, which ended in 1271, the power of the bishop and
-chapter of Paris had increased enormously, and a host of
-vassals did homage to Bishop Etienne II. for their lands.
-The body of St. Louis was laid in state in Notre Dame
-previous to its burial at St. Denis. This custom was
-followed in the case of many other French monarchs and
-princes of the blood.</p>
-
-<p>On April 10th, 1302, Philippe-le-Bel held the first meeting
-of the States-general in the cathedral. In the month of
-June, 1389, Isabeau de Bavière made a solemn entry into
-Paris. Froissart tells us that: “Devant ladite église de
-Notre-Dame, en la place, l’évêque de Paris étoit revêtu des
-armes de Notre-Seigneur et tout le collège. Aussi on moult<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-avoit grand clergé et la descendit la royne et la mirent hors
-de sa litière les quatre ducs qui là estoyent, Berry, Bourgogne,
-Touraine et Bourbon.... La royne de France fut adestrée
-et menée parmy l’église et le chœur jusqu’au grand autel et la
-se mit <a name="lower-a" id="lower-a"></a><ins title="Original has 'A'">à</ins>
-genoux et fit ses oraisons ainsi que bon lui sembla,
-et bailla et offrit à la trésorerie de Notre-Dame quatre draps
-d’or et la belle couronne que les anges lui avoient posée sur la
-porte de Paris.”</p>
-
-<p>A great thanksgiving service was held when Charles VI.
-had been saved from burning. The King, it may be recalled,
-was dressed as a satyr at a palace fête with five companions.
-The Duke of Orleans was curious as to the identity of the
-disguised, and approached them with a torch, which accidentally
-set their clothing alight. The King was saved by the Duchess
-de Berri, who threw a cloak over him, but four of his companions
-were burned to death.</p>
-
-<p>We must now turn to the time of Henry V. of England,
-who, after Agincourt, became Regent of France with the
-right of succession to the throne. After his marriage with
-Catherine, daughter of Charles VI., in 1420, he paid a
-solemn state visit to Notre Dame. On Henry’s death his
-son, afterwards Henry VI., was crowned King of France in
-the cathedral. When the English were driven from Rouen,
-a great service of thanksgiving was held to celebrate the
-entry of Charles VII. into the Norman capital.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-11" id="img-11"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-011.jpg" width="500" height="634" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">QUEEN MARIE ANTOINETTE RETURNING THANKS FOR THE BIRTH
-OF A DAUPHIN, JANUARY 21ST, 1782.<br />
-(<i>From “Paris à travers les Ages.”</i>)</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“In the annals of Notre Dame,” says Mr. W. F. Lonergan
-in his <i>Historic Churches of Paris</i>, “from the days of
-Louis XI., the rebellious dauphin who succeeded his father,
-Charles VII., to the reign of the fourteenth Louis, there is
-chiefly a long record of <i>Te Deums</i> after the victories of the
-French army. Historic Rheims, where Clovis had been
-baptized by S. Remi in 496, was the favoured city of the
-Merovingians, who had accorded it great privileges.” Amongst
-these was the right of crowning and consecrating the Kings
-of France. Save Henri Quatre and Louis XVIII., all of them
-were crowned at Rheims; but it was the custom of the newly
-made sovereigns to go in state to Notre Dame at Paris to
-return thanks for their advent to the throne. Amongst the
-most interesting of the historic events which took place in,
-or were magnificently celebrated at Notre Dame, were the
-following: the French victory over the Venetians at Agnadel
-or, as the Italians call it, Vaila, in 1509; the marriage of
-Louis XII. with Mary, sister of Henry VIII. of England;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-the victories of Francis I.; and the marriage of Mary Stuart
-with the Dauphin. The marriage of Henri, King of Navarre,
-with Marguerite de Valois, took place at the entrance to the
-cathedral, as the King was a Protestant. In 1590 the
-Catholic nobles swore at the altar of Notre Dame to fight
-this same Henri to the bitter end. In 1593, however,
-he became a Catholic, and attended mass at the cathedral
-on the occasion of his accession to the throne as the first
-monarch of the Bourbon line. The metropolitan see was
-raised to the dignity of an archbishopric by Pope Gregory XV.
-in 1622. In 1682, under Louis XIV., the great bell or
-<i>bourdon</i> of the church was christened Emmanuel Louis
-Thérèse, the King and Queen being the sponsors. Later on,
-in 1699, the great changes in the church, undertaken in
-fulfilment of the vow of Louis XIII., were begun. The first
-stone of the new altar was laid by the Archbishop with the
-utmost pomp. The foundation slab was inscribed: “Louis
-the Great&mdash;son of Louis the Just&mdash;after he had suppressed
-heresy, established the true faith in his kingdom, terminated
-gloriously wars by land and sea, wishing to accomplish the
-vow of his father, built this altar in the cathedral church
-of Paris, dedicating it to the God of Arms, Master of Peace
-and Victory, under the invocation of the Virgin, patron and
-protector of his State, <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 1699.” During the reign of
-the “Grand Monarque,” <i>Te Deums</i> were even more frequent
-than before.</p>
-
-<p>We come at length to the part played by the cathedral
-during the Revolution. We need say nothing of the fate of
-the fabric itself, for that has already been alluded to. Its
-escape is little short of marvellous. The result of the sack of
-the treasuries of the churches of Paris is best told in Carlyle’s
-vivid translation of Mercier: “This, accordingly, is what the
-streets of Paris saw: Most of these persons were still drunk,
-with the brandy they had swallowed out of chalices;&mdash;eating
-mackerel on the patenas! Mounted on Asses, which were
-housed with Priests’ cloaks, they reined them with Priests’
-stoles; they held clutched with the same hand communion-cup
-and sacred wafer. They stopped at the doors of Dramshops;
-held out ciboriums: and the landlord, stoup in hand,
-had to fill them thrice. Next came Mules high laden with
-crosses, chandeliers, censers, holy-water vessels, hyssops;&mdash;recalling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-to mind the Priests of Cybele, whose panniers, filled
-with the instruments of their worship, served at once as
-storehouse, sacristy and temple.” On November 10th, 1793,
-the Cult of Reason was decreed by the Convention, and Notre
-Dame converted into the temple of the new religion. To
-quote Carlyle again: “For the same day, while this brave
-Carmagnole-dance has hardly jigged itself out, there arrive
-Procureur Chaumette and Municipals and Departmentals, and
-with them the strangest freightage: a New Religion! Demoiselle
-Candeille, of the Opera; a woman fair to look upon, when
-well rouged; she borne on palanquin shoulder high; with red
-woollen nightcap; in azure mantle; garlanded with oak;
-holding in her hand the Pike of the Jupiter-<i>Peuple</i>, sails in:
-heralded by white young women girt in tricolor. Let the
-world consider it! This, O National Convention, wonder of
-the universe, is our New Divinity; <i>Goddess of Reason</i>, worthy,
-and alone worthy of revering. Her henceforth we adore.
-Nay, were it too much of an august National Representation
-that it also went with us to the <i>ci-devant</i> Cathedral called of
-Notre Dame, and executed a few strophes in worship of
-her?... And now after due pause and flourishes of oratory,
-the Convention, gathering its limbs, does get under way in
-the required procession towards Notre Dame;&mdash;Reason, again
-in her litter, sitting in the van of them, borne, as one judges,
-by men in the Roman costume; escorted by wind-music, red
-nightcaps, and the madness of the world. And so, straightway,
-Reason taking seat on the high-altar of Notre Dame, the
-requisite worship or quasi-worship is, say the Newspapers,
-<i>executed</i>; National Convention chanting ‘the <i>Hymn to Liberty</i>,
-words by Chénier, music by
-<a name="Gossec" id="Gossec"></a><ins title="Original has 'Gossee'">Gossec</ins>.’
-It is the first of the
-<i>Feasts of Reason</i>; first communion-service of the New Religion
-of Chaumette.” The real heroine of this orgy was probably
-an opera dancer called Maillard. ‘Demoiselle Candeille’
-was an actress and writer of some repute, who strenuously
-denied that she ever had anything to do with the Feast
-of Reason. An imitation “mountain” was erected in the
-nave for the “fête,” on which was built a Gothic temple
-inscribed <i>A la Philosophie</i>. Around were busts of famous
-philosophers, and below an altar surmounted with the so-called
-Torch of Truth. The goddess sat on the hill, hymns were sung
-in her honour and vows of fidelity to her were taken. In 1794<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-the church was used as a bonded store for the wine seized in
-the cellars of guillotined or outlawed Royalists. The month
-of May in the same year saw the “Temple of Reason” turned
-into that of the “Supreme Being,” for Robespierre persuaded
-the Convention to sign a decree recognising “the consoling
-principle of the Immortality of the Soul.” In 1795 Christian
-worship was once more restored at Notre Dame. Nothing
-of great importance happened to the church until the star
-of Napoleon rose&mdash;until, indeed, the first Consul had become
-Emperor.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the magnificent ceremonies of which Notre Dame has
-been the scene, the most splendid was the joint coronation of
-Napoleon and Josephine in the winter of 1804. A full account
-of it will be found in the <i>Mémoires de la Duchesse d’Abrantès</i>,
-of which I quote a part, purposely leaving it in the original
-French, as any translation would be comparatively colourless
-and unpicturesque: “Le pape arriva le premier. Au moment
-où il entra dans la basilique, le clergé entonna <i>Tu es Petrus</i>,
-etc.; et ce chant grave et religieux fit une profonde impression
-sur les assistants. Pie VII. avançait du fond de cette
-église, avec un air à la fois majestueux et humble....
-L’instant qui réunit peut-être le plus de regards sur les marches
-de l’autel, fut celui où Joséphine reçut de l’empereur la
-couronne et fut sacrée solennellement impératrice des Français.
-Lorsqu’il fut temps pour elle de paraître activement dans le
-grand drame, l’impératrice descendit du trône et s’avança vers
-l’autel, où l’attendait l’empereur, suivie de ses dames du palais
-et de tout son service d’honneur, et ayant son manteau porté
-par la princesse Caroline, la princesse Julie, la princesse Elisa
-et la princesse Louis.... Je vis tout ce que je viens de dire dans
-les yeux de Napoléon. Il jouissait en regardant l’impératrice
-s’avancer vers lui; et lorsqu’elle s’agenouilla ... lorsque les
-larmes qu’elle ne pouvait retenir, roulèrent sur ses mains
-jointes qu’elle élevait bien plus vers lui que vers Dieu, dans ce
-moment où Napoléon, ou plutôt <i>Bonaparte</i>, était pour elle
-sa véritable providence, alors il y eut entre ces deux êtres une
-de ces minutes fugitives, unique dans toute une vie, et qui
-comblent le vide de bien des années. L’empereur mit
-une grâce parfaite à la
-<a name="moindre" id="moindre"></a><ins title="Original has 'moinde'">moindre</ins>
-des actions qu’il devait faire
-pour accomplir la cérémonie. Mais ce fut surtout lorsqu’il
-s’agit de couronner l’impératrice. Cette action devait être<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-accompli par l’empereur, qui,
-<a name="apres" id="apres"></a><ins title="Original has 'apres'">après</ins>
-avoir reçu la petite couronne
-fermée et surmontée de la croix, qu’il fallait placer sur la tête
-de Joséphine, devait la poser sur sa propre tête, puis la mettre
-sur celle de l’impératrice. Il mit à ces deux mouvements
-une lenteur gracieuse qui était remarquable. Mais lorsqu’il
-en fut au moment de couronner enfin celle qui était pour
-lui, selon un préjugé, son <i>étoile heureuse</i> il fut <i>coquet</i> pour elle,
-si je puis dire le mot. Il arrangeait cette petite couronne
-qui surmontait la diadème, en diamant, la plaçait, la déplaçait,
-la remettait encore, il semblait qu’il voulût lui promettre que
-cette couronne lui serait douce et
-<a name="legere" id="legere"></a><ins title="Original has 'legère'">légère</ins>.”</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon, on this occasion, hastily took his crown from
-the Pope’s hands and placed it haughtily on his own head&mdash;a
-proceeding which doubtless startled his Holiness. In May
-1814 Louis XVIII. and his family attended mass at Notre
-Dame after their entry into Paris. A great service was held
-there in 1840, to celebrate the restoration of the remains of
-Napoleon I. to French soil, while Archbishops Affre, Sibour
-and Darboy, who died violent deaths, were commemorated
-with fitting solemnities.</p>
-
-<p>The marriage of Napoleon III. to Eugénie de Montijo,
-Comtesse de Teba, on January 29th, 1853, was the occasion
-of a great display of gorgeous pageantry at Notre Dame, as
-was the baptism of the ill-fated Prince Imperial in 1857. The
-Terrorists of 1871 robbed the treasury of the cathedral of
-many valuable relics, but their intention to injure the fabric
-itself was prevented by the timely arrival of troops. The
-most notable ceremonies during the existence of the present
-Republic have been the funeral service, in June 1894, for
-President Carnot, assassinated in that year at Lyons, and
-the splendid State funeral of Louis Pasteur in October 1895.</p>
-
-<p>The great festivals of the Church are celebrated at Notre
-Dame on a scale of almost unrivalled magnificence. On
-Assumption Day, in particular, splendid music, wedded to the
-most ornate ritual, produces an effect never to be forgotten.
-The pulpit of the metropolitan cathedral has been occupied
-by a succession of great preachers, amongst them Bossuet
-and Bourdaloue, and the services and conferences are noted
-throughout the Roman Catholic world. The Dominican
-Lacordaire began in 1835 a series of majestic and picturesque
-discourses, which earned for him the title <i>le Romantique de la<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span>
-Chaire</i>, and he has been described as filling as a preacher
-the place occupied in literature by Victor Hugo and in painting
-by Delacroix, H. Vernet, and Delaroche. In recent times
-among the most popular pulpit orators have been the fiery
-Jesuit Père Ravignan, Monseigneur d’Hulst, Père Monsabré,
-and M. Hyacinthe Loyson, better known to fame as Père
-Hyacinthe.</p>
-
-<p>Needless to say, this is the merest outline of the wonderful
-history of the Cathedral Church of Paris. If the columns of
-Notre Dame could speak, they would&mdash;to adapt a phrase of
-Viollet-le-Duc&mdash;be able to recount the history of France from
-the time of Philip Augustus to our own day. It is therefore
-natural that the whole French nation has for Notre Dame a
-feeling of veneration and affection similar to that which is called
-forth in English hearts by the Abbey Church of Westminster.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-18" id="img-18"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-018.jpg" width="500" height="712" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i>]</div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">THE CHEVET.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="ii" id="ii"></a>CHAPTER II.<br />
-<span>THE PLACE OF NOTRE DAME IN THE DEVELOPMENT
-OF FRENCH GOTHIC.</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">The</span> place of the Cathedral of Paris in the evolution of French
-Gothic<a name="FNanchor-4" id="FNanchor-4"></a><a href="#Footnote-4" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 4">[4]</a> is so important that I propose to devote a brief
-chapter to it. The subject is essentially technical, but I will
-endeavour to make it as easy of comprehension as possible.
-The reader will doubtless ask himself what is the difference
-between Gothic and the style which preceded it. The reply,
-unfortunately, cannot consist of a dogmatic statement. The
-subject is a great one, and only a few sentences of this handbook
-may be devoted to it. I shall rely for the most part on
-the materials for a definition of Gothic given by M. Viollet-le-Duc
-in his <i>Dictionnaire Raisonné de l’Architecture Française</i>.
-The question is one of essential structural peculiarity as
-opposed to mere decorative
-<a name="idiosyncrasy" id="idiosyncrasy"></a><ins title="Original has 'idiosyncracy'">idiosyncrasy</ins>. I am aware that
-many English writers whose opinions are entitled to respect
-hold views in conflict with those here maintained. The style
-which immediately preceded Gothic is known generically as
-Romanesque. In Romanesque the system may be described
-as one of inert stability: in Gothic the system is one of
-scientifically calculated thrusts and counter-thrusts. It was
-the affair of art to inform what one may call the mechanics
-of the building with interest and beauty. There have been
-many attempts to compromise the two systems, so that we
-often find Romanesque features in obviously Gothic buildings.
-Much will be said in subsequent pages of the vaulting of
-Notre Dame. I would willingly have left this vexed question
-alone, but were I so to do, this handbook would be little more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-than a descriptive catalogue of objects of interest together with
-some historical reminiscences. For the vaulting is of the
-essence of the whole matter: compared with it the consideration
-of mouldings and of ornament is relatively unimportant.
-To put the matter plainly, the very existence of a Gothic
-church depends upon the proper arrangement of what we may
-call its mechanism&mdash;<i>i.e.</i> its vaulting, piers, buttresses and so
-forth. The mechanics being duly devised, art steps in, and
-renders the essential beautiful.<a name="FNanchor-5" id="FNanchor-5"></a><a href="#Footnote-5" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 5">[5]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-4" id="Footnote-4"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> French Gothic is here generally intended to convey the Gothic of the
-Ile-de-France. The contemporary architecture of Normandy has a character
-of its own, probably not less valuable than that of the Ile-de-France. But
-it is different, and its differences have been dealt with in other handbooks
-of this series.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-5" id="Footnote-5"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The difficulty of attributing mediæval work in any countries to particular
-designers is generally recognised. I do not wish to imply, in the passage
-to which this note has reference, that the mechanic and the artist were
-of necessity separate people. Most often the plan was arranged by a
-master-builder who himself superintended the scheme of decoration.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is not at Paris that we can trace the first attempt to
-break away from the principles of Romanesque: the first step
-in the distinctly Gothic development of French architecture,
-according to some recent authorities, is to be found in the
-apse of the church of Morienval. Morienval is a Romanesque
-church, but it has ribbed vaulting, of which there is no
-earlier instance in France. At St. Germer-de-Fly we find
-the first truly Gothic apse on a large scale ever constructed.
-It belongs to the second quarter of the twelfth century. The
-same church possesses a vaulted triforium which may fairly be
-considered the forerunner of the far grander one at Paris.
-Again, the now suburban church of St. Denis has double
-aisles, which clearly foreshadow the noble arrangement which
-exists at Paris, Amiens, and elsewhere. Many writers are
-agreed in regarding St. Denis as the starting-point of French
-Gothic.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-21" id="img-21"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-021.jpg" width="500" height="759" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-SECTION OF NAVE AND DOUBLE AISLE, AND A PLAN OF ONE BAY.<br />
-SCALE 1 INCH = 29 FEET.<br />
-(<i>From Viollet-le-Duc.</i>)</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Notre Dame was the first of the greater French cathedrals
-in which Gothic principles of construction were logically
-carried out.
-<a name="The" id="The"></a><ins title="Original has 'Ths'">The</ins>
-choir was begun, according to M. V. Mortet
-in his <i>Etude Historique et Archéologique sur la Cathédrale de
-Paris</i>, in the year 1163.<a name="FNanchor-6" id="FNanchor-6"></a><a href="#Footnote-6" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 6">[6]</a> The nave (with the exception of the
-extreme west end) was completed about the year 1195. The
-west façade was built in the early part of the thirteenth
-century. Notre Dame is thus older than the cathedral of
-Amiens, with which one naturally compares it. Amiens was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-built between the years 1220 and 1288, except the lower
-stages of the west front, which were only completed towards
-the end of the fourteenth century. The towers are a
-“debased” addition. In England the work being done while
-the older parts of Notre Dame were in course of erection was
-transitional; the new style had by no means been fully
-understood and put into practice. Perhaps we do not overstate
-the case when we say that the <i>science</i> (as well as the
-art) of Gothic found its first real expression on a large scale
-in the Cathedral of Paris.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-6" id="Footnote-6"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> I give the dates assumed by M. V. Mortet and later writers as
-well as those affixed by M. Viollet-le-Duc. It will be noticed that the
-differences between them are not material.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A glance at the ground-plan of Notre Dame shows us how
-widely it differs from that of our own great churches. First of
-all we notice that not merely the nave, but the choir, possesses
-double aisles&mdash;a feature which is lacking in English churches<a name="FNanchor-7" id="FNanchor-7"></a><a href="#Footnote-7" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 7">[7]</a>
-on so vast a scale as Canterbury, York, Ely or Peterborough.
-The magnificence which the system of double aisles lends
-to a great church need hardly be insisted upon. For a French
-church the nave of Paris is long, consisting of ten bays. The
-smaller Norman nave of Norwich possesses, however, no
-less than fourteen bays. At Paris one is struck by the slight
-projection of the transepts. In nearly all the greater
-churches of England the transepts are of large proportions,
-and frequently (as at Canterbury and Lincoln) we find two
-pairs of transepts. The transepts at Notre Dame are without
-aisles, and are so shallow that the church is only just
-cruciform. Speaking of these transepts Professor Roger Smith
-observes: “They do not project beyond the line of the side
-walls, so that, although fairly well marked in the exterior and
-interior of the building, they add nothing to its floor-space.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-7" id="Footnote-7"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Chichester, which is an early church, has double aisles; it is, however,
-comparatively small, and can in no sense be compared with so immense a
-building as Notre Dame.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-23" id="img-23"></a>
-<img src="images/i-023.jpg" width="500" height="647" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">NORTH AISLES OF THE NAVE.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The east end of Notre Dame takes the form of a magnificent
-semicircular apse,&mdash;a form assuredly the most appropriate
-to a Gothic church. The square eastern termination, so
-common in England, is rare amongst the larger churches of
-the best period of French Gothic. “A more beautiful eastern
-termination than the Gothic apse,” says Mr. Charles Herbert
-Moore,<a name="FNanchor-8" id="FNanchor-8"></a><a href="#Footnote-8" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 8">[8]</a> “could hardly be conceived. No part of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span>
-edifice does more honour to the Gothic builders. The low
-Romanesque apse, covered with the primitive semi-dome,
-and enclosed with its simple wall, presented no constructive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-difficulties, and produced no imposing effect. But the soaring
-French <i>chevet</i>, with its many-celled vault, its arcaded stories,
-its circling aisles and its radial chapels, taxed the utmost
-inventive power, and entranced the eye of the beholder.” It
-seems to me that throughout his study of Gothic Mr. Moore
-is a little less than fair to the Romanesque builders. The
-Gothic apse, which he so justly admires, is, after all, evolved
-from the Romanesque apse, which he holds in such light
-esteem. While we may admit the superiority of the Gothic
-apse, it is going too far to assert that the Romanesque apse
-“produces no imposing effect.” The apse of Norwich or
-Peterborough, or of St. Bartholomew’s (London) is assuredly
-imposing in a very high degree.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-8" id="Footnote-8"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> <i>Development and Character of Gothic Architecture.</i> Second edition.
-New York: The Macmillan Company, 1899.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In a subsequent chapter the structural and decorative
-details will be fully discussed. It may, however, be noted in
-passing that, although the Cathedral of Paris is in all essentials
-a Gothic building, the influence of the Romanesque style is
-so marked in some of its details that it is frequently described
-as a transitional structure. As we have seen, the greater
-part of Notre Dame belongs to the twelfth century; and
-De Caumont, who in his <i>Abécédaire</i> attempted for French
-architecture a work of scientific division similar to that which
-Rickman essayed for English architecture, describes French
-work of the twelfth century as <i>Architecture Romane-Tertiaire
-ou de Transition</i>. The <i>Abécédaire</i>, however, is now considered
-ingenious rather than authoritative.</p>
-
-<p>With a few words about the west front this brief chapter
-must be concluded. The great façade of Notre Dame was
-begun in 1202. It bears a general structural resemblance to
-that of the cathedral of Senlis, which dates from the second
-half of the twelfth century, especially in the matter of its
-triple portals and the towers at the termination of the aisles.
-At Senlis we have unmistakable evidence of the Gothic spirit,
-but in its main plan this front is similar to the Romanesque
-Abbaye-aux-Hommes at Caen. The builders of the west front
-of Notre Dame thus owe something to the designers of Senlis
-and the Abbaye-aux-Hommes, but they have achieved a
-variety and symmetry of which their forerunners probably
-did not dream. In construction, as well as in the organic
-significance of its wealth of sculptured decoration, the façade
-of Notre Dame is genuinely Gothic as opposed to Romanesque.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-26" id="img-26"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-026.jpg" width="500" height="725" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">THE WEST FRONT.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="iii" id="iii"></a>CHAPTER III.<br />
-<span>THE EXTERIOR.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter width300">
-<a name="img-27" id="img-27"></a>
-<img src="images/i-027.jpg" width="300" height="232" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">CHIMÈRES.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">I have</span> already said
-enough in reference
-to the commanding
-position occupied by
-Notre Dame among
-the monuments of
-Paris. The great
-cathedral seen at a
-distance looks ancient
-indeed, but a closer
-inspection proves to
-us that the hands of
-modern men have been
-at work on it. Indeed,
-one writer goes so far
-as to regret that it
-has been scraped and patched without, and bedizened and
-bedaubed within. In the first edition of Victor Hugo’s
-famous novel, <i>Notre Dame</i>, he tells us that if we examine
-one by one the traces of destruction imprinted on this
-ancient church, the work of time would be found to form
-the lesser portion&mdash;the worst destruction has been perpetrated
-by men&mdash;especially by men of art. Since Hugo
-wrote this much more “restoration” has been carried out
-at the metropolitan church of Paris. But though I regret
-so-called “restoration” on principle, I cannot help feeling
-that the work executed by M. Viollet-le-Duc and M. Lassus
-is far less objectionable than it might have been. Fortunately,
-unlike so many great Continental churches, Notre Dame<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-stands free and clear, and may be examined on all sides
-without difficulty. Indeed, it is now perhaps somewhat too
-isolated at the west end. Of course it does not possess one
-of those venerable closes, with a supplement of ancient ecclesiastical
-buildings, which is the glory of the great churches of
-our own land.</p>
-
-<p><strong>The Façade.</strong>&mdash;The west fronts of the greater Gothic
-churches of France are as a rule the most majestic features
-of their exteriors. One might write much to prove that the
-west front of Amiens or of Chartres is superior to that of
-Notre Dame, but this, after all, is an arguable question. When
-we stand in front of the church by the Seine we are struck
-by the reticence, by the obvious disdain of the easily obtained
-picturesque, which seem to have animated its designers. The
-thing is symmetrical with a fine symmetry rare among
-buildings of the time. Before we discuss the façade in detail,
-let us quote a translation of Victor Hugo’s detailed description,
-in the romance already alluded to:</p>
-
-<p>“Assuredly there are few finer pages of architecture than
-this façade, in which, successively and at once, the three
-receding pointed portals; the decorated and lace-like band
-of twenty-eight royal niches; the vast central rose window
-flanked by the two lateral ones, like the priest by the deacon
-and sub-deacon; the lofty yet slender gallery of trefoiled
-arcading, which supports a heavy platform upon its light and
-delicate columns; and lastly the two dark and massive towers
-with their eaves of slate,<a name="FNanchor-9" id="FNanchor-9"></a><a href="#Footnote-9" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 9">[9]</a>&mdash;harmonious parts of an entirely
-magnificent whole,&mdash;rising one above another in five gigantic
-stories,&mdash;unfolding themselves to the eye combined and unconfused,
-with innumerable details of statuary and sculpture
-which powerfully emphasise the grandeur of the <i>ensemble</i>: a
-vast symphony in stone, if one may say so&mdash;the colossal work
-of a man and of a nation ... on each stone of which one
-sees, in a hundred varieties, the fancy of the craftsman
-disciplined by the artist: a kind of human creation, mighty
-and prolific as the Divine Creation itself of which it seems
-to have caught the double characteristics&mdash;variety, eternity.”
-In the last few phrases Victor Hugo has, perhaps, been guilty
-of the licence readily granted to so great a master of rhetoric;
-but the west front of Notre Dame was a monument certain to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-appeal to a writer to whom none deny the gift of eloquence.
-Even a specialist who scrupulously avoids rhapsody is compelled
-to use superlatives in his description of this façade: “This
-vast and superb design is not only the most elaborate that had
-been produced up to its time, but in point of architectural
-grandeur it has hardly ever been equalled.” Mr. C. H.
-Moore, in the book
-alluded to in a former
-chapter, rightly insists
-that the component
-elements of the front
-are so treated as to
-manifest the Gothic
-spirit not merely in the
-portals, the arcades,
-and the apertures, but
-even in so comparatively
-small a matter as the
-profiles of the mouldings.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-9" id="Footnote-9"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> These have been removed.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width300">
-<a name="img-29" id="img-29"></a>
-<img src="images/i-029.jpg" width="300" height="176" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">STRING-COURSE ON THE WEST FRONT.<br />
-<small>[<i>From Viollet-le-Duc.</i>]</small></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The late P. G. Hamerton has well expressed a feeling
-of vague disappointment which many persons who are not
-experts in Gothic construction and decoration feel on seeing
-the west front: “May I confess frankly,” says Mr. Hamerton,
-“that until I had carefully studied it under the guidance of
-Viollet-le-Duc, the front of Notre Dame never produced upon
-me the same effect as the west fronts of some other French
-cathedrals of equal rank? I believe the reason to be that
-Notre Dame is not so picturesque as some others, and does
-not so much excite the imagination as they do. It is well
-ordered, and a perfectly <i>sane</i> piece of work (which Gothic
-architecture is not always), but it has not the imaginative
-intricacy of Rouen, nor the rich exuberance of Amiens and
-Reims, nor the fortress-like grandeur of Bourges, nor the
-elegant variety of Chartres.... The truth is that the
-virtues of the west front of Notre Dame are classic rather
-than romantic. Everything in it seems the result of perfect
-knowledge and consummate calculation. There are none of
-those mistakes which generally occur in a work of wilder
-genius.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width200">
-<a name="img-30" id="img-30"></a>
-<img src="images/i-030.jpg" width="200" height="362" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">CARVED FOLIAGE FROM THE PORTAIL
-DE LA VIERGE.<br />
-
-[<i>From Viollet-le-Duc.</i>]</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-31" id="img-31"></a>
-<img src="images/i-031.jpg" width="500" height="649" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-
-<div class="clear-both">PORTAIL DE LA SAINTE VIERGE.]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The sculptured decoration of the three great portals exceeds,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-if not in actual ornateness, at all events in real beauty, that of
-any cathedral in the west of Europe. Much of it has
-suffered at the hands of the iconoclast, but, looking to the
-vicissitudes through which Notre Dame has passed, it is
-wonderful that so much of the original sculpture has been
-preserved. The recent restoration has been carried out with
-a skill which is simply marvellous,
-and the uninformed
-observer may easily be betrayed
-into the belief that he
-is looking at an unaltered
-ancient work. Whether this
-is a gain or a loss each of
-us must decide for himself.
-Some able writers have urged
-that the success with which
-ancient work has been imitated
-shows that modern
-artists are capable of the
-triumphs of the middle ages.
-Others dismiss the new work
-as an unpardonable forgery.
-It is outside the scope of
-this book to attempt to describe
-in detail the wealth
-of statuary and carving which
-the thirteenth-century craftsmen
-and those of modern
-times have lavished on these
-portals. For such a description
-we must refer the reader
-to the voluminous accounts
-of Viollet-le-Duc and other
-writers. The sculptures of the
-north door, called the <i>Portail
-de la Saint Vierge</i>, have been described as constituting a complete
-poem in stone. Viollet-le-Duc considered the portal as the
-masterpiece of French carving of the early thirteenth century.
-I adapt the following description of the chief sculptures from
-Mr. Lonergan: On the pedestal of the central pier are
-bas reliefs representing the Creation of Eve, the Temptation in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-the Garden of Eden, and the Ejection from Paradise. Above
-is the Virgin crowned, and over her a small gabled construction
-referring to the Ark of the Covenant. On the upper part
-of the arch in the lower division are three prophets and three
-kings. In the second angels hold the winding-sheet in which
-Mary’s body lies, near a coffin-shaped tomb. Over this stands
-Christ with eight apostles. In the third division we see
-Mary glorified. In the <i>voussure</i> are sixty figures of angels,
-patriarchs, kings and prophets as witnesses of the Virgin’s
-glorification. Under the large statues are medallions referring
-to incidents in the lives of those represented. Thirty-seven
-bas reliefs ornament the sides and pillars, amongst them being
-the signs of the zodiac and symbolic representations of the
-months of the year. The ironwork of the doors of this and
-of the adjoining portals is of a splendidly elaborate character,
-due, according to a quaint tradition, to the skill and energy
-of the devil.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-33" id="img-33"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-033.jpg" width="500" height="608" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-
-<div class="clear-both">FIGURE OF ST. MARCEL, PORTE SAINTE ANNE.]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-34" id="img-34"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-034.jpg" width="500" height="390" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-
-<div class="clear-both">THE LAST JUDGEMENT.<br />
-(From the central doorway.)]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-35" id="img-35"></a>
-<img src="images/i-035.jpg" width="500" height="379" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-
-<div class="clear-both">TYMPANUM OF THE PORTE SAINTE ANNE.]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Central portal</i> has suffered more from mutilation than
-those which are on either side of it. In the eighteenth
-century the architect Soufflot&mdash;a man who was nothing if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-not “classic”&mdash;removed the dividing pier and cut away the
-lower division of the tympanum in order to facilitate the
-passage of processions on high ceremonial occasions. All
-traces of his vandalism have been removed, and the dividing
-pillar bears a modern statue of Christ by Geoffroy Dechaume.
-The pedestal is a pentagon, and has seven bas-relief medallions.
-At the sides are the apostles, while in the medallions are
-represented the virtues and vices. Traces of mutilation are
-apparent in much of this work. The tympanum itself is
-devoted to the Last Judgment. “First we have figures of the
-dead rising at the blast of the trumpet. Men and women of
-all conditions and ranks wearily shake off the sleep of death.”
-Also there is the Archangel, with representations on the right
-of “the elect joyfully glancing heavenwards, while on the
-left the grinning demons haul a row of chained souls to hell.
-Crowning all is seen the Redeemer, showing the wounds in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-His hands. Near Him are two angels, and behind the Virgin
-and St. John the Evangelist interceding on their knees for
-fallen humanity. As a setting to this magnificent composition
-are six rows of sculptured forms, making a <i>voussure</i> or set of
-curves, with figures of prophets, doctors, martyrs, devils, toads,
-damned souls, and a hideous ape with crooked toes and fingernails.
-Some of the ornamentation of the six ranges of arch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-curves is gruesome and terrible. It relates either to the
-celestial or infernal results of the last judgment.” In its
-original state this great doorway must have been a work of
-unrivalled dignity. Nowhere else do we find carving more
-expressive, nor more perfectly subordinated to the architectural
-scheme.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-36" id="img-36"></a>
-<img src="images/i-036.jpg" width="500" height="641" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">APOSTLES.<br />
-(From the central doorway.)]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-37" id="img-37"></a>
-<img src="images/i-037.jpg" width="500" height="613" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">THE PORTE SAINTE ANNE.<br />
-(Figures from the Old Testament)]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The doorway on the south is variously described as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-<i>Portal of St. Anne</i> or <i>St. Marcel</i>. According to some writers it
-is the most ancient of the three, and contains fragments of “the
-sculpture which formerly adorned the old church of St. Stephen
-(St. Etienne). These, it is said, were executed at the expense
-of Etienne de Garlande, who died in 1142. The dividing
-pier or <i>trumeau</i> bears the statue of St. Marcel (<a href="#Page_33">see p. 33</a>). The
-tympanum is adorned with the “History of Joachim and Anna,”
-the “Marriage of the Virgin,” and the “Budding of Joseph’s
-Staff.” Each side is occupied with four statues of saints
-of the Old Testament. The four main buttresses which
-divide the façade perpendicularly into three parts are pierced
-with niches containing statues on a level with the vaulting of
-the portals. These statues represent Religion, Faith, St. Denis,
-and St. Stephen.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-38" id="img-38"></a>
-<img src="images/i-038.jpg" width="500" height="371" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">“CHIMÈRES.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The second story of the façade is occupied by a noble
-arcade which shelters twenty-eight colossal statues. This is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-known as <i>La Galerie des Rois</i>, and stretches across the entire
-width of the front. The statues were formerly believed to be
-conventional representations of the ancient kings of France,
-but they are doubtless intended for the kings of Judah as
-ancestors of the Virgin. A similar feature will be found as
-part of the façade of Amiens. There, however, the statues
-are at a greater height from the ground, and are twenty-two
-in number. Above the <i>Galerie des Rois</i> at Paris there is a
-graceful open arcade of slender arches and columns. The
-five large statues here date only from the year 1854. The
-third main division has in the centre a vast wheel window
-with open tracery, while in each of the lateral bays we have
-pointed arches with twin pointed openings and small circular
-panels in the tympanum. The vacant space in the spandrels
-of each division is occupied by a trefoil panel. At Amiens
-once more we meet with a main division similarly composed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-At Notre Dame, immediately over the division containing
-the wheel window, is an open arcaded screen of gigantic
-proportions, surmounted by a parapet or pierced cornice
-behind which rise the two towers. So dexterously has this
-arcade been planned, so graceful are its lines, so delicate
-its details, that the impression which it leaves on the mind&mdash;in
-spite of the solidity of its construction and the vastness of
-its scale&mdash;is almost that of some such unsubstantial material
-as lace. To the platform supported by this screen everybody
-should ascend, if only to make the acquaintance of the famous
-<i>Chimères</i> <a name="italic" id="italic"></a><ins title="Original has italic 'or'">or</ins> “<i>Devils of Notre Dame</i>.” This collection of
-specimens of fantastic sculptured zoology is without parallel
-in Europe. These weird beasts which scowl from their
-point of vantage upon the French metropolis fascinated the
-great etcher Méryon, and more recently they have formed
-the subject of a series of admirable drawings by Mr. Joseph
-Pennell, the value of which has been enhanced by an
-essay, partly descriptive, partly philosophical, from the pen
-of the late R. A. M. Stevenson. The <i>chimères</i> are not merely
-curious examples of the extravagantly grotesque. Their
-horror lies, not in their departure from natural forms, but in
-the fact that, while the features of various beasts or monsters
-are retained, they are impressed with characteristics of ferocity
-and cunning which are essentially diabolical or suggestive of
-the lowest depths of human depravity. They have nothing
-in common with the crude and impossible gargoyles so
-frequently found in buildings erected when the pointed style
-was in its
-<a name="decadence" id="decadence"></a><ins title="Original has 'decadance'">decadence</ins>. Speaking roughly, their anatomy is
-possible: it is conceivable that they should breathe and live.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-39" id="img-39"></a>
-<img src="images/i-039.jpg" width="500" height="370" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">“CHIMÈRES.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Readers of Hugo’s <i>Notre Dame</i> will remember his description
-of the Archdeacon as he clung to the lead gutter of the tower:
-“Meanwhile he felt himself going bit by bit; his fingers
-slipped upon the gutter; he felt more and more the increasing
-weakness of his arms and the weight of his body; the piece
-of lead which supported him inclined more and more downwards.
-He saw beneath him, frightful to contemplate, the
-pointed roof of St. Jean-le-Rond, small as a card bent double.
-He looked, one after another, at the imperturbable sculptures
-of the tower&mdash;like him suspended over the precipice&mdash;but
-without terror for themselves or pity for him. All around
-him was stone,&mdash;before his eyes the gaping monsters; in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-Parvis below, the pavement; above his head, Quasimodo
-weeping.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-41" id="img-41"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-041.jpg" width="500" height="663" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">“LE STRYGE,” ONE OF THE
-<a name="CHIMERAS" id="CHIMERAS"></a><ins title="Original has 'CHIMAERAS'">CHIMÈRAS</ins>
-OF NOTRE DAME, WITH THE TOWER
-OF ST. JACQUES.<br />
-(After Méryon’s Etching.<br />
-<i>Insatiable vampire l’éternelle luxure,<br />
-Sur la grande cité convoite sa pâture.</i>)</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <strong>Towers</strong>, though not of precisely the same size, appear
-to be so. The summit of the north tower is reached by
-an ascent of two hundred and ninety-seven steps. Each
-of the towers is pierced with coupled pointed openings and
-profusely enriched with mouldings and gargoyles. Both of
-them terminate with open parapets, the staircases ending in
-small turrets. The panorama of Paris from the top is
-magnificent, while the view of Notre Dame itself reveals to
-the full its structural beauty. Few sights are more impressive
-than that of the great roof ridge of the church, broken by
-the graceful modern <i>flèche</i>, and ending in the circular <i>chevet</i>.
-From this high place, likewise, one is able fully to appreciate
-the grand arrangement of flying buttresses, the forest of
-pinnacles, the host of gargoyles, statues, and other sculptured
-ornaments which adorn the structure. Of the famous peal
-of thirteen ancient <i>bells</i> which formerly occupied the belfries
-of the two towers, only one&mdash;<i>le bourdon de Notre Dame</i>&mdash;still
-remains. It has announced to Paris most of the great victories
-of the French army, and it still gives the signal to other bells
-to usher in the great festivals of the Church. Of the other
-bells existing here, the most interesting is one of Russian
-workmanship, which was brought from Sebastopol.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-43" id="img-43"></a>
-<img src="images/i-043.jpg" width="500" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-THE ROOF-RIDGE OF NOTRE DAME.<br />
-(<i>From a drawing by Joseph Pennell, by permission of the “Pall Mall Magazine.”</i>)</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <strong>Flèche</strong>, over the crossing, was built in 1859&ndash;60, the
-ancient one being destroyed in 1787 and replaced by a bulb-like
-structure which was
-<a name="irreverently" id="irreverently"></a><ins title="Original has 'irrevently'">irreverently</ins>
-compared to a pepper box.
-To this circumstance Victor Hugo alludes scornfully: “Un
-architecte de bon goût l’a amputé, et a cru qu’il suffisait
-de masquer la plaie avec ce large emplâtre de plomb, qui
-ressemble au couvercle d’une marmite.” In removing this
-atrocity Viollet-le-Duc was assuredly performing a necessary
-service. His elaborate though slender steeple is of oak
-covered with lead, and weighs 750,000 kilos. It is ornamented
-with numberless crockets and pierced with well-contrived
-openings. The base is led up to by tiers of statues placed
-on brackets in the angles formed by the junction of the roofs
-of the nave, transepts and choir. The ball below the cross
-encloses reputed fragments of the cross and the crown
-of thorns. There can be little doubt that Viollet-le-Duc,
-speaking generally, has constructed a flèche which would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-have commended itself to
-mediæval designers. It is interesting
-to note the slender
-character of the structures
-which in France rise above
-the crossings, as compared
-with the huge towers which
-occupy a like position in the
-English cathedrals of Lincoln,
-Canterbury and York,
-or with the comparatively
-substantial spires to be
-found at Salisbury, Norwich
-and Lichfield.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width295">
-<a name="img-44" id="img-44"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-044.jpg" width="295" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE ORIGINAL FLÈCHE.<br />
-(<i>From “Paris à travers les Ages.”</i>)</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<a name="img-45" id="img-45"></a>
-<img src="images/i-045.jpg" width="400" height="473" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">CLOCHETON OR TURRET&mdash;APSIDAL CHAPELS.]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><strong>The Buttress System.</strong>&mdash;The
-buttress system of
-Notre Dame has been the
-subject of careful study and
-explanation by Mr. Moore.
-“In the external system,”
-he remarks, “the flying buttresses
-were, as at first
-constructed, magnificently
-developed, and were double
-in a twofold sense. That
-is, the piers which divide
-the double aisles were formerly
-carried up through
-the roof so as to form buttresses
-to the vaulted triforium
-gallery, and, rising
-above the roof of this gallery,
-they received the heads of
-the double flying buttresses
-over the outer aisle, and
-gave foothold to another
-pair of arches over the triforium
-gallery. The lower
-arch of the outer pair was
-above the aisle roof, while the lower arch of the inner pair
-was beneath the roof of the triforium. The principle of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-equilibrium maintained by opposing thrusts was here completely
-developed; the inert principle no longer governs the
-construction, though a survival of the former method of
-building is found in the walls of the aisles and clerestory,
-which are no longer necessary to the strength of the edifice.”
-The flying buttresses, as we now see them, are (according to
-Viollet-le-Duc) alterations dating from the early part of the
-thirteenth century. They consist of huge arches clearing both
-aisles with a single span. The flying buttresses of the upper
-tier are wonderfully light and elegant, looking always to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-large span which they have to clear. They join the space
-between the windows of the clerestory to lofty upright
-buttresses terminating in fine crocketed pinnacles and ornamented
-with an amazing wealth of sculpture. The flying
-buttresses of the lower tier are thicker, and most frequently
-spring from elaborate <i>clochetons</i>, one of which is illustrated here.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-46" id="img-46"></a>
-<img src="images/i-046.jpg" width="500" height="370" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">WINDOWS ON THE SOUTH SIDE.]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><strong>The Windows</strong> of Notre Dame are on the vast scale
-which is usual in the greater Gothic churches of the Ile-de-France,
-and present a very remarkable contrast to the small
-and simple windows which were deemed sufficient by the
-builders of our own early cathedrals in the pointed style.
-At Notre Dame the area of solid wall is slight in relation to
-the area filled in with glass. It is not so much a case of
-windows in walls, as of walls connecting windows. The
-external buttress system and the internal vaulting system at
-Notre Dame comprise the essentials of the structure, so that
-the walls are of the nature of enclosures rather than necessary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-structural parts. We have travelled far from the Romanesque
-principle, in which the walls were primarily weight-bearers.
-The windows of the aisles and of the ambulatory are of great
-size and display many differences of detail, but they nevertheless
-maintain a general similarity, the designers, while
-appreciating the value of uniformity, being too richly endowed
-with the prevailing fertility of invention in matters of decorative
-detail exactly to repeat even the most successful arrangement.
-Each is divided into two main pointed lights, above which a
-large circle, quatrefoil or similar device, occupies the head of
-the window, the arches also being cusped or foiled in varying
-patterns. The main lights are again subdivided into two,
-with trefoils or quatrefoils in the heads.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-47" id="img-47"></a>
-<img src="images/i-047.jpg" width="500" height="329" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">TRIFORIUM WINDOWS.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Above these noble windows are gabled heads whose sides
-are enriched with crockets or cusps, their centres being
-occupied with circular decorative panels, and their angles
-having small richly carved bosses. Sometimes the canopies
-consist of beautiful open-work. Everywhere grotesque gargoyles
-project between them, and the mouldings terminate in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-corbels in the shape of small, highly wrought human heads.
-This series of windows emphasises the prodigality with which
-sculpture in human forms or in the forms of naturalistic or
-fantastic animals is to be found in nearly all parts of Notre
-Dame. It is this prodigality, wisely distributed, which places
-this cathedral in such acute contrast&mdash;speaking from the
-standpoint of the uninitiated observer&mdash;to our own early pointed
-structures. The upper aisle-wall between the lower tier of
-flying buttresses is in some parts of the building occupied by
-wheel windows of varied pattern, most elaborately ornamented.
-But at the east end the triforium lights show another device:
-two small arches have in the angle between them quatrefoiled
-openings. It is notable that this dignified and beautiful
-device is foreshadowed by some of the windows in the
-Byzantine church in Athens, and even in the sixth-century
-church of Qualb Louzeh, in Central Syria.</p>
-
-<p>The clerestory lights occupy the full width of the space
-between the piers of the upper flying buttresses. Finally, at
-the base of the roof runs an open-work parapet. As we have
-already observed, many of the windows were hastily rebuilt
-after the fire of which we have previously spoken.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-49" id="img-49"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-049.jpg" width="500" height="704" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">NORTH TRANSEPT FRONT.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><strong>North and South Transept Fronts.</strong>&mdash;These, as we
-have seen, are comparatively late work, but though subordinate
-to the great façade, they are of intricate design and great
-ornateness. They fail of effect, however, when they are
-compared with the monumental and inevitable grandeur of
-the west front. The south façade, of the date 1257, is
-undoubtedly the work of Jean de Chelles. An inscription
-tells us very exactly that it was begun on the second day
-of the Ides of February, in honour of the mother of Christ.
-There are writers who would have us believe that to the
-work of de Chelles we should apply, if not the word
-“debased,” at least the word “flamboyant.” For this there
-seems to be no good reason, unless, indeed, we are prepared
-to allow that systems of architectural classification are more
-important than the buildings which are their subject-matter.
-It will be at once recognised that the lateral fronts of
-Notre Dame&mdash;while they lack the elementary grandeur so
-conspicuous in the works of the pioneers of Gothic in the
-Ile-de-France&mdash;have nothing in common with the later Perpendicular
-buildings of England, wherein decoration runs riot
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-and construction sometimes degenerates into trickery. The
-great feature of each of these minor fronts is a vast rose
-window. It is difficult to repress the feeling that these
-fronts have been deliberately constructed with a view to lend
-emphasis to these lovely circular insertions, rich as they are
-in appropriate tracery. Whether or not we are to limit the
-work of Jean de Chelles to the southern front (or the lower
-portion of it), or whether we are to attribute to him the
-opposite front and the arrangement of chapels adjacent to
-and east of the transepts, is a nice question. The documentary
-evidence, to which access is difficult, would, indeed, appear
-narrowly to limit the work of Jean de Chelles to that fragment
-with which he has been immemorially associated. But it
-were unwise to rely too closely on ancient documents in
-which definite statements of fact are not to be found. It
-is possible that, even if Jean de Chelles did not personally
-superintend the erection of the southern front, he designed
-the opposite front and the chapels in question. He may,
-indeed, have left pupils fully acquainted with his methods
-and nearly tied to him by bonds of sentiment, who in their
-own productions perpetuated, not merely the main features of
-the style of their master, but used exactly the same material
-as he employed. Once more, the sculptor is prominent; once
-more, the structural parts are adorned with beautiful statuary.
-The great point is that (using the word as widely as it may
-fairly be used) uniformity is achieved. Of Notre Dame we
-may say&mdash;what we cannot say of buildings possibly more
-interesting to the architect and the antiquary&mdash;that from east
-to west, from north to south, it strikes the observer as the
-splendid outcome of a single imagination, or of a number
-of imaginations dominated by the same impulse, rather than
-the haphazard result of peculiar and fortuitous circumstances.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-52" id="img-52"></a>
-<img src="images/i-052.jpg" width="500" height="608" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">
-<a name="TYMPANUM" id="TYMPANUM"></a><ins title="Original has 'TYMPANIUM'">TYMPANUM</ins>
-OF THE NORTH TRANSEPT DOORWAY.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The sculpture of the portal of the North Transept is devoted
-to the history of the Virgin&mdash;of whom the dividing pier between
-the doors bears a beautiful statue. The carving in the lowest
-division of the tympanum deals with the Birth of Christ, the
-Visit of the Magi, the Presentation in the Temple, and the
-Flight into Egypt. The carving of the other divisions refers
-to the history of Theophilus, a mythical monk who signed
-a contract with the Devil, like Faust, but was saved by
-the interference of the Virgin. On each side of the portal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-are three empty niches. These, as well as the portal, possess
-canopies. An arcade of lights is the chief feature, between
-the entrance and the great rose window previously alluded
-to. The portal of the South Transept has figures of Christ,
-St. Martin, St. Stephen, St. John the Baptist, Moses, St. Denis,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-St. Thomas, St. Peter, St. Bartholomew, David, and Aaron.
-The tympanum has a representation of the Martyrdom of
-St. Stephen. This portal is seldom used. Again we have
-the arcade of lights leading to the great rose. The gable
-end is in its turn pierced by another smaller circular
-window of remarkable beauty. It will be seen that while
-there are great differences between the fronts of the two
-transepts, structurally they resemble one another.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the north side of the church, beneath one of
-the windows belonging to a choir chapel is the well-known
-<i>Porte Rouge</i>, a delicate masterpiece which we may probably
-attribute to the early part of the fourteenth century. In its
-tympanum is represented the Coronation of the Virgin, while
-in its vaulting we have scenes in the life of St. Marcel. The
-door gained its name from the fact that it was originally painted
-red. It seems always to have held a high place in the
-affections of the Parisians. Victor Hugo appears specially
-to have delighted in it, for he writes: “La petite Porte-Rouge
-atteint presque les limites des délicatesses gothiques du
-quinzième siècle.” Near the
-<i><a name="Porte" id="Porte"></a><ins title="Original has 'Port Rouge'">Porte Rouge</ins></i>,
-under the windows
-of the Choir chapels, are seven bas-reliefs representing scenes
-from the Virgin’s life. They date from the sixteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>He must be insensible indeed to the grandeur of Gothic
-building who fails to be impressed when he stands at the
-east end of Notre Dame. There, in the great main circular
-sweep, we can appreciate the tiers of buttresses, the spear-like
-forest of pinnacles, each one constructively necessary,
-each duly subordinated to an ordered scheme, each wisely
-and appropriately decorated. Standing here, we are indeed
-under the spell of the august <i>ecclesia parisiaca</i>, the ancient
-silent witness of changes so immense and so fruitful of result,
-of victories in the arts alike of peace and war which have
-been of such profound consequence not merely to Paris,
-and to France, but to mankind in general.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<a name="img-54" id="img-54"></a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-<img src="images/i-054.jpg" width="500" height="738" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">THE INTERIOR FROM THE WEST END.]</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="iv" id="iv"></a>CHAPTER IV.<br />
-<span>THE INTERIOR.&mdash;THE NAVE.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">It</span> is difficult accurately to state why a sense of disappointment
-is so often felt on entering the Cathedral of Paris. The
-unsatisfactory impression given by Notre Dame is one experienced
-by visitors of all kinds. The architectural critic,
-who looks upon a Gothic church as the result of certain
-clearly defined principles of construction and decoration, must
-inevitably find in it much to admire. But while it satisfies
-the specialist, and possibly impresses those who have little
-pretence to technical information, it lacks the qualities of
-mystery and of surprise which distinguish some buildings less
-ancient and less stately. Thus we find one writer complaining
-that it is heavy, another that it is cold, and a third that it
-is relatively unpicturesque. Most of those who have recorded
-their dissatisfaction with the interior of Notre Dame have
-sought to explain the causes thereof. The splendid promise
-of the exterior, it is suggested, discounts the remarkable
-beauties of the inside. Some feel that the regularity, the
-coherence which distinguish the church, produce an <i>ensemble</i>
-at once ponderous and monotonous. Others complain of
-the lack of colour; while on the other hand not a few
-protest against the intrusion of recent polychromatic decorations.
-It is possible that the secret lies in certain structural
-idiosyncrasies. The church is extremely broad in comparison
-with its length. The bays are so few as to give to the
-interior an air of undue severity. Fergusson, in his history
-of architecture, condemns the vaulting ribs as ineffective. The
-marble pavement is regarded on all hands as a misfortune:
-nothing could be more tedious or inappropriate. It is,
-however, to be observed that as one becomes familiar with
-the interior its shortcomings are forgotten and the dignity
-of its proportions and details are apprehended more fairly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-<strong>Dimensions.</strong>&mdash;The length of Notre Dame is 390 ft.; the
-width at the transepts, 144 ft.; the length of the nave,
-225 ft.; and the width of the nave (without the aisles), 39 ft.
-The height of the vaulting is 102 ft. De Breul, in his
-<i>Théâtre des Antiquités de Paris</i>, mentions a copper tablet
-which formerly hung against one of the pillars of Notre Dame
-and gave the dimensions of the cathedral in the following
-verses:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-<div class="line">Si tu veux sçavoir comme est ample,</div>
-<div class="line">De Notre-Dame le grand temple,</div>
-<div class="line">Il y a, dans œuvre, pour le seur,</div>
-<div class="line">Dix et sept toises<a name="FNanchor-10" id="FNanchor-10"></a><a href="#Footnote-10" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 10.">[10]</a> de hauteur,</div>
-<div class="line">Sur la largeur de vingt-quatre,</div>
-<div class="line">Et soixante-cinq sans rebattre,</div>
-<div class="line">A de long aux tours haut montées</div>
-<div class="line">Trente-quatre sont comptées;</div>
-<div class="line">Le tout fondé sur pilotis,</div>
-<div class="line">Aussi vrai que je te le dis.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-10" id="Footnote-10"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> A “toise” is something over six feet.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The curiosity of these lines excuses the inaccurate statements,
-comparatively trifling, conveyed in them. Notre Dame,
-unlike most mediæval churches on the Continent, is almost
-painfully clean. The gaudy shrines which render some of
-the most splendid of Italian churches almost grotesque are
-absent from Notre Dame. The broom and the duster have
-been too freely used: all that is not appropriate has been
-too sedulously banished.</p>
-
-<p>In the old floor, amongst a multitude of other interesting
-memorials of the dead, the tombstones of the following were
-to be found: Philippe (son of Louis VI. and Archdeacon of
-Paris), <i>d.</i> 1161; Prince Geoffrey of England, <i>d.</i> 1186; Queen
-Isabelle of Hainault, <i>d.</i> 1189; the dauphin, Louis (son of
-Charles VI.), <i>d.</i> 1415; Louise (mother of François I.), <i>d.</i>
-1531; and Louis XIII. (his viscera only), 1643. Amongst
-the more famous ecclesiastics were the following: Eudes de
-Sully (1208); Etienne II. (1279); Cardinal Aymeric de
-Magnac (1348); Bishop Pierre d’Orgemont (1409); and
-Dumoulin, Patriarch of Antioch (1447). In addition there were
-three Archbishops of Paris who died during the seventeenth
-century, and Renaud, Archbishop of Sens (<i>d.</i> 1616). The
-substitution of squares of marble for the tombstones of these
-historic personages admits of absolutely no defence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-Let us now consider the <strong>Roof</strong>. Mr. Charles Herbert
-Moore thus describes it in his <i>Development and Character of
-Gothic Architecture</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Here is a vast nave (completed except the extreme west
-end by about the year 1196), so admirably roofed with stone
-that the work has lasted intact for seven hundred years, and
-will probably, if not wantonly injured, last for centuries to
-come. These vaults are sexpartite.... The diagonal ribs
-are round-arched, while the transverse and longitudinal ribs
-are pointed. The intermediate transverse ribs are, however,
-pointed but slightly; and to bring their crowns up to the
-level of the intersections of the diagonals they are considerably
-stilted. The crowns of the main transverse ribs are a little
-lower than those of the diagonals, and those of the longitudinals
-are lower still. The vaults have, therefore, a distinctly domical
-form. These various adjustments, by greater or less pointing,
-stilting, and even by the retention of the round arch where it
-will serve best, exhibit the flexibility of the Gothic system in
-an interesting and instructive manner.” Mr. Moore, after some
-further details, continues:&mdash;“In the vaults of Paris, as in all
-Gothic vaults, the shells consist of successive courses of masonry
-which are slightly arched from rib to rib over each triangular
-cell. The beds of these successive courses are not parallel,
-but are variously inclined according as the mason found
-necessary or convenient in developing the concave and winding
-surfaces engendered by the forms and positions of the
-ribs to which they had to be accommodated. These courses
-of masonry have here in Paris, as they have in most Gothic
-vaults, a considerable inclination near the springing from the
-longitudinal rib upward toward the diagonal, and they become
-gradually more level as they approach the crown of the vault,
-where they are more nearly parallel. But perfectly parallel
-they can hardly ever be, since each course forms a portion
-of a surface that is concaved in all directions.” Mr. Moore
-adds that in the earliest and finest Gothic vaultings this
-masonry is composed of small stones perfectly faced and
-closely jointed; and the vaulting of Paris, especially that of
-the choir, is a model of careful and finished workmanship.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-58" id="img-58"></a>
-<img src="images/i-058.jpg" width="500" height="607" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">THE NAVE: SOUTH ARCADE.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The vaulting of the choir differs from that of the nave,
-but the difference is one rather of detail than of principle.
-We have already said much about the external buttress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-system by which this splendid roof is sustained. Internally
-this vaulting rises from slender shafts springing from the
-capitals of the great cylindrical columns constituting the main
-arcade of the ground story. The piers at Paris are ill
-adjusted to the vaults, a feature which has resulted in an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-immense amount of learned discussion. They were obviously
-intended for quadripartite vaulting. It seems probable that
-suddenly, for a reason which we are not now in a position
-to appreciate, the quadripartite form was abandoned in favour
-of the sexpartite form actually adopted. Students of this
-subject are advised to refer to pp. 114&ndash;15 of the second edition
-of Mr. Moore’s book, where the differences between the
-vaulting imposts of the nave and choir are discussed and
-delineated. They may profitably compare this with M.
-Viollet-le-Duc’s <i>Construction</i> (p. 164). M. Viollet-le-Duc, it
-may be added, suggests that
-the necessities of the sexpartite
-system were provided
-for by the monolithic shafts
-grouped round every other
-pier in the arcade dividing
-the aisles.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width300">
-<a name="img-59" id="img-59"></a>
-<img src="images/i-059.jpg" width="300" height="295" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">CAPITAL IN THE NAVE.<br />
-<i>From Viollet-le-Duc.</i></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The somewhat heavy
-character of the great cylindrical
-piers which divide the
-nave from the aisles is
-largely redeemed by the
-beautiful carving with which
-the capitals are ornamented.
-The plants which the sculptors
-have conventionalised
-are those commonly found in
-the fields adjacent to Paris.
-These ornate capitals are genuinely Gothic in feeling, and have
-nothing in common with those which crown the piers of our
-Anglo-Norman (Romanesque) cathedrals. Again, the plinths
-of the columns are utterly unlike the simple and massive
-bases on which the round columns of our older churches
-most often rest. We have already alluded to the ill-adaptation
-of these piers and their capitals to the sexpartite form of
-vaulting employed. In the case of the most westerly piers
-of the main arcade an attempt seems to have been made&mdash;with
-no great success, as it appears to me&mdash;to minimise the
-illogical effect of the vaulting imposts. The result has been
-the emphasis of that very want of congruity which it was
-sought to remedy. It would be difficult to find a less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-satisfactory arrangement than that which obtains in the pier
-and capital delineated in our illustration, where four smaller
-cylinders are attached to the main one. Here, not merely
-is the pier itself rendered unwieldy by its satellites, but the
-capital loses all symmetry owing to the interposition of the
-small capitals which crown those satellites. It will be noticed
-that the arches of the main arcade are by no means uniform.
-Thus we have a wide arch adjacent to an extremely narrow
-one, while the builders of the period did not hesitate to make
-use of a round arch where they found that form more
-convenient. It is in some measure these peculiarities which
-have induced not a few authors to describe Notre Dame as
-a transitional church.</p>
-
-<p>In no part of Notre Dame do we more perfectly appreciate
-the grandeur of the scale of the church than when we stand
-in the vast double aisles on either side of the nave. With
-every step we take the view changes. We hesitate to leave
-the spot upon which we stand lest we should lose its charm,
-and yet we feel that probably a vista even more beautiful
-awaits us a few paces beyond. The lines of vast piers seem
-as if they were consciously engaged in surprising us: now
-they come together and close the view suddenly, unexpectedly;
-then they open, revealing a richly furnished altar in, as it were,
-a colossal frame of masonry. Everywhere the lines of the
-building strike us as vast, massive, almost elemental, but
-everywhere there is an ordered, if a somewhat ponderous
-symmetry. It is strange that there ever was an age in which
-the innate dignity and majesty of these lines were not felt. Yet
-so barbarous did the architecture of Notre Dame appear to
-eighteenth-century eyes, that a desperate attempt was made
-to hide it. Vast pictures in gilt frames were placed from
-capital to capital of the main arcade on both sides. In this
-way the arches were completely hidden, and a square appearance
-(supposed to suggest the classical) was given to the
-lowest story. The openings of the triforium were spared,
-as anything placed in front of them would block the view
-of the crowds who used to fill the <i>tribunes</i> on state occasions.
-The nave, however, thus turned into a kind of picture gallery,
-was considered very satisfactory (see illustration, p. 11).
-Needless to say, no trace of the pictures now remains, and
-the great arches are free and open once more. The piers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-dividing the aisles are not all of the same construction.
-Round every other pier are grouped monolithic shafts, possessing
-delicately foliated capitals with moulded abaci. Two
-shafts, with a single abacus and plinth, alternate with a single
-shaft. In all there are twelve shafts round the pier. These
-piers, with their cluster of satellites, contrast finely with the
-simple cylinders with bold foliated capitals with which they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-alternate, and lend variety and interest to the arcades (see
-illustration, p. 23).</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-61" id="img-61"></a>
-<img src="images/i-061.jpg" width="500" height="571" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">THE NAVE, NORTH ARCADE.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The vaulting of the aisles is quadripartite, the ribs being
-strongly marked and possessing carved bosses at the point of
-intersection. Beyond the outer aisles on each side is a series
-of chapels, which will be described presently. The accompanying
-illustrations give a good idea of the piers, capitals and
-vaulting of this part of the church.</p>
-
-<p><strong>The Triforium</strong>, to which there are four staircases, is of
-immense size, owing to the fact that it passes over the double
-aisles on both sides of the nave. Its designers no doubt
-contemplated its use as a gallery from which the grand
-ceremonies which took place in the church could be witnessed
-by large numbers of people. It is ceiled with stone&mdash;a feature
-common to most of the greater cathedrals of France&mdash;so that
-no wooden beams can be seen anywhere in the building. This
-obviously increases the massiveness of the whole, though
-a certain tendency to heaviness is perhaps emphasised. The
-masonry is everywhere very fine, and in the small details a
-high degree of wise as opposed to futile finish is maintained
-throughout. The galleries are excellently lighted. Above the
-nave-aisles low pointed arches enclose a foliated circle, the
-corners at the base being filled with small trefoils. In the choir
-the lights consist of rose or wheel windows, in the tracery of
-which there is great variety of pattern. The openings towards
-the church take their place admirably in the elevation, being in
-character with the main arcade beneath and the clerestory
-above. They are almost austerely simple, and possess none
-of the ornateness which characterises the triforiums of
-Westminster, Lincoln, and other English buildings of slightly
-later date. A large plain pointed arch encloses two and in
-some cases three pointed arches, which are separated from one
-another by delicate columns bearing foliated capitals with
-square abaci. They have small square bases. These columns
-are a hundred and four in number. A low openwork railing
-of iron fills in the front of the gallery. The triforium goes
-round the whole building: that portion which is at the end
-of the transepts, however, consists of a narrow passage which
-is not open to the church. The banners which were captured
-by French armies were exhibited from the triforium so long
-as war continued. On the conclusion of peace, they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-taken down&mdash;a proceeding which might be followed in other
-countries with advantage. The part of the triforium in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-choir differs only in detail from that in the nave. Over the
-triforium come the vast windows, altered in the thirteenth
-century, which comprise the <strong>Clerestory</strong>, of which more
-is said on page 72. The stained glass will be fully discussed
-hereafter.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-63" id="img-63"></a>
-<img src="images/i-063.jpg" width="500" height="758" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE TRIFORIUM GALLERY, OR “TRIBUNES.”<br />
-(<i>From “Paris à travers les Ages.”</i>)</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The upper portion of the west end is filled by the great
-rose window, which, as we have noticed, is so beautiful a
-feature of the façade. The tops of the pipes of the great
-organ hide the lower part of it from our view inside. The
-lovely painted glass, which is ancient, has representations of
-the Virgin and Child surrounded by prophets. Amongst other
-features are the signs of the Zodiac, the labours of the months,
-and the Virtues in triumph with lances in their hands. The
-gallery on which the organ is now placed was possibly used
-for the performance of miracle plays. As it is at a relatively
-great height from the pavement, this is at least doubtful. The
-<strong>Organ</strong> is a fine instrument of wonderful power. It was
-practically rebuilt by Thierry Lesclope in 1730, and enlarged
-by Cliquot in 1785. In recent years it has been immensely
-improved by M. Cavaillé-Coll, who gave it 5266 pipes and
-80 stops. It plays a great part in the splendid musical
-services for which the Cathedral is famous.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-65" id="img-65"></a>
-<img src="images/i-065.jpg" width="500" height="546" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left">Exterior.</div>
-<div class="float-right">Interior.</div>
-<div class="clear-both">ELEVATIONS OF THE NAVE.<br />
-(<i>From Viollet-le-Duc.</i>)</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Nave is almost devoid of monuments; nothing breaks
-up the vast lines of the architecture. The most important
-tomb is that of Jean Etienne Yver, Canon of Paris and
-Rouen, who died in February 1467. It has escaped serious
-mutilation, and is a realistic performance in the style prevailing
-in France at the end of the fifteenth century. On the base is
-a gruesome representation of the body of the Canon being
-given over to the worms. Above this, two saints are helping
-him to rise from the coffin, and directing his attention towards
-Heaven. The whole thing is repulsive, but it is interesting
-as a curiosity. Many historic memorials perished during the
-Revolution, but some were removed to Versailles and still
-exist there. They include the tombs of Jean Jouvenel des
-Ursins (<i>d.</i> 1431) and his wife Michelle de Vitry; the Maréchal
-Albert de Gondi, Duc de Retz (<i>d.</i> 1602); and his brother
-Pierre de Gondi, Bishop of Paris (<i>d.</i> 1616). Two monuments
-have disappeared from the nave which were highly esteemed
-in their day. Writing of Notre Dame in his <i>Crudities</i> in
-1611, Thomas Coryat says: “I could see no notable matter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-in the
-<a name="cathedral" id="cathedral"></a><ins title="Original has 'cathedrall'">cathedral</ins>
-church, saving the statue of Saint Christopher
-on the right hand at the coming in of the great gate, which is
-indeed very exquisitely done, all the rest being but ordinary.”
-The statue so delighted the old traveller that he had eyes for
-nothing else, for the architecture of Notre Dame is anything
-but ordinary. The Chapter of the Cathedral did not share his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-view, for they deliberately destroyed it in 1786. It was
-presented to the church in 1413 by Antoine des Essarts,
-whose tomb with his effigy in armour stood near it. Its
-destruction is remarkable, for colossal things were very much
-to the taste of those who lived at the end of the seventeenth
-century. The Revolution is responsible for the destruction of
-a famous equestrian statue which stood in the nave until
-1792. It is generally considered to have been that of
-Philippe le Bel, clothed in the armour in which he won his
-victory over the Flemings at Mons-en-Pucelle in 1304. The
-identity of the statue has, however, been the subject of
-controversy. Viollet-le-Duc tells us that it represented, not
-Philippe le Bel, but Philippe VI. (of Valois), who defeated the
-Flemings at Cassel in 1328. On his return to Paris he rode
-into the cathedral on horseback in state, and vowed his
-harness to the Virgin. The Chapter disagree with Viollet-le-Duc,
-who is, however, supported in his contention by the
-Benedictine Père Montfaucon, by the writers who continued
-the chronicle of William of Nangis, and some others. The
-monument stood close to the last pillar on the right side of
-the nave. The <strong>Pulpit</strong> is a modern work, after the design
-of Viollet-le-Duc. It is of oak, and its decorations include
-statues of six of the apostles and of angelic figures. Suspended
-from the vaulting are eight imposing candelabra in bronze-gilt.</p>
-
-<p><strong>The Chapels of the Nave</strong> contain singularly few features
-of historic interest, nor amongst the furniture of their altars are
-there many recent works of art of outstanding merit. They
-introduce us, however, to the vast scheme of mural painting
-which has been carried out from the designs and partly under
-the direction of Viollet-le-Duc. There can be no doubt
-that some scheme of polychromatic decoration was legitimate:
-almost every ancient church in France has indisputable evidence
-of its employment in the middle ages. The problem which
-faced Viollet-le-Duc was one of extreme difficulty. The area
-to be covered was enormous: the variations of light were
-excessive. Some parts were luminous, even radiant; others
-were hidden in almost continuous gloom. The schemes of
-colour had to be adapted to these varying conditions. The
-use of mosaic was considered and discarded. The expense
-would have been gigantic, and the material was considered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-perhaps rightly, to be inappropriate to the style of architecture.
-Wall pictures, as such, were regarded as destructive to the
-<i>ensemble</i>, fatiguing to the eyes and mind, and productive of
-a certain patchy effect. A series of symbolical patterns of
-a rigidly conventional type, in which human figures are very
-sparingly used, was devised. It may be admitted at once
-that the learning and ingenuity displayed in the design of
-the scheme were such as might be expected from the most
-erudite and accomplished French architectural scholar of our
-time. The minute consideration which Viollet-le-Duc devoted
-to the subject may be judged from the following passage:
-“D’abord, la cathédrale de Paris, comme on sait, est orientée
-de telle façon que tout un côté du monument se présente vers
-le midi et l’autre vers le nord. Un de ces côtés reçoit donc
-une lumière plus vive et plus colorée que l’autre. Il a paru
-qu’il était nécessaire de profiter de cette disposition pour
-établir l’harmonie générale. Au lieu de combattre l’effet
-de cette orientation, on a cru devoir l’appuyer. Ainsi, en
-premier lieu, toutes les fenêtres des chapelles tournées vers
-le sud sont garnies de grisailles à tons nacrés et froids. De
-là il resulte qu’en entrant dans le monument on voit un côté
-de lumière, un côté d’ombre, un côté chaud et brillant et
-un côté froid. Il en
-<a name="resulte" id="resulte"></a><ins title="Original has 'résultei nstinctivement'">résulte instinctivement</ins>
-pour l’œil un effet
-général tranquille. Rien n’est plus fatigant pour les yeux
-qu’un intérieur éclairé par les jours contraires de qualités
-semblables comme intensité de lumière, valeur de tons et
-coloration. La peinture des chapelles devait concorder
-naturellement avec le système de répartition de la lumière.
-Suivant une règle générale, la tonalité des peintures du côté
-nord est plus froide que celle du côté du midi. Cependant,
-comme il faut conserver l’unité, de distance en distance, du
-côté sud, des tons gris, des tons verts, froids, rappellent
-l’harmonie générale du côté nord, et, du côté septentrional,
-des tons chauds rappellent l’harmonie générale du côté
-méridional.”<a name="FNanchor-11" id="FNanchor-11"></a><a href="#Footnote-11" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 11.">[11]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-11" id="Footnote-11"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> “Peintures Murales des Chapelles de Notre-Dame de Paris.” Paris:
-A. Morel. See the preface by Viollet-le-Duc for further details of his
-principles of decoration.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In spite of all these elaborate precautions, in spite of so
-much patience and learning, the result as a whole seems to
-me unsatisfactory. One wearies of the ingenious geometrical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-curves, the crosses, the squares, the lozenges, the coloured
-stars, the excessively and laboriously conventionalised foliage,
-and the rest. The whole strikes one as dead and mechanical,
-as mere covering of stone for the sake of doing so. And the
-colour, though by no means aggressive, is unsatisfying. The
-experiment was heroic, and the result might certainly have
-been very much worse, but the stone-work would have been
-better untouched.</p>
-
-<p>The Chapels on the north side of the nave (from west
-to east) are: 1. The <i>Chapelle des Fonts Baptismaux</i>. The
-bronze carving of the font is by Brachelet. 2. The <i>Chapelle
-Saint-Charles</i>. There are a statue in painted stone by
-M. de Chaume and a good piscina. The wall decorations
-are cold and sombre. 3. The <i>Chapelle de la Sainte-Enfance</i>.
-It contains a group representing Christ caressing a French
-and a Chinese child, by M. de Chaume. 4. The <i>Chapelle
-Saint-Vincent-de-Paul</i>. The decorations of this chapel are
-somewhat elaborate, and gilding is freely used. 5. The
-<i>Chapelle de Saint-François-Xavier</i>. There is a group representing
-the Saint baptising a Chinese. 6. <i>Chapelle de Saint-Landry</i>,
-with statue by De Chaume. 7. <i>Chapelle de Sainte-Clotilde</i>,
-with statue by the same artist.</p>
-
-<p>The following are on the south side (west to east):</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>Chapelle des Ames du Purgatoire.</i> Christ rescuing a soul
-from Purgatory. A statue by De Chaume in coloured stone.
-The colour scheme of the chapel is warm and brilliant.
-2. <i>Chapelle de Sainte-Geneviève.</i> The decorations, which are
-somewhat profuse, were given by the “dames de l’Institut
-de l’œuvre de Sainte Geneviève.” 3. <i>Chapelle Saint-Joseph</i>,
-with statue of Joseph with the Child Jesus in his arms.
-4. <i>Chapelle Saint-Pierre.</i> Statue in wood of the saint by
-M. Corbon. The carved woodwork of the sixteenth century
-still remains, and includes panels with representations of
-the Twelve Apostles, St. Germain, and Sainte Geneviève.
-5. <i>Chapelle Saint-Anne.</i> 6. <i>Chapelle du Sacré-Cœur.</i> Statue
-in coloured stone by M. de Chaume. 7. <i>Chapelle de
-l’Annonciation.</i> With a statue of the Virgin in wood by
-M. Corbon. Paintings by Perrodin, one of the best pupils
-of Flandrin, of David, St. Michel, Isaiah, St. Anne, St. Joseph,
-St. John, St. Luke, St. Augustine, St. Bernard, St. Dominic,
-and St. Bonaventure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-Before we turn from the nave to the choir and transepts,
-let us say a few words as to the <i>stained glass</i>, which was once
-the glory of the church. There is probably no Gothic interior
-in France which has suffered more terribly from the destruction
-of its ancient windows than Notre Dame. The coldness
-and severity which the mural decorations of Viollet-le-Duc
-vainly strive to mitigate were perhaps not felt at all when the
-light from every window seemed to be transmitted in glowing
-and gleaming shafts of every conceivable colour and tone.
-Fortunately, the old glass still remains in the great rose
-windows. That over the west door has been described;
-the others will be noticed in the account of the transepts.
-The rest of the glass was deliberately destroyed, not by an
-infuriated mob, but by those in authority, in 1741.</p>
-
-<p>The work of destruction was performed by Jean Leviel and
-his brother, who cheerfully substituted for the priceless
-material they removed great sheets of dull, monotonous
-<i>grisaille</i>, with borders ornamented with the <i>fleur-de-lis</i>. The
-introduction of <i>grisaille</i> has been quaintly described by
-Michelet as <i>le protestantisme entrant dans la peinture</i>. Its use
-at Notre Dame is nothing short of a disaster. Efforts have
-been made in some parts of the building to replace it with
-glass of a less sombre character, but these efforts so far have
-done little to lessen our regret for the calamity of 1741.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-70" id="img-70"></a>
-<img src="images/i-070.jpg" width="500" height="737" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">ANGLE OF THE CHOIR AND SOUTH TRANSEPT.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="v" id="v"></a>CHAPTER V.<br />
-<span>THE TRANSEPTS AND THE CHOIR.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">The</span> austere character of the nave emphasises the splendid
-decorations of the eastern parts. No massive screen prevents
-our seeing the church from the great entrance to the apse.
-The fact that the choir is open possibly lessens our sense of
-mystery and of awe, but we are more than compensated by
-the splendid view of the building from end to end.</p>
-
-<p>The irritating custom of railing off the eastern limb of the
-church and demanding a fee for admission happily does not
-obtain at Notre Dame. It is all but universal in England, and
-renders an intelligent appreciation of the architectural history
-of our great churches a matter of some difficulty. At Paris
-one may wander where one will, so long as one does not
-interrupt the offices. That pompous and irresponsible
-chatterer the cathedral verger does not impose himself upon
-us, and disturb our study and diminish our pleasure, as he
-does in churches on this side the Channel. Only the Sacristy
-need be visited in the company of an official.</p>
-
-<p>The transepts of French cathedrals are rarely such important
-features as they are in those of this country. The vast church
-of Bourges has no transepts at all. At Noyon, as at Paris,
-the transepts have no aisles. Of the crossing and transepts
-at Paris Viollet-le-Duc and Guilhermy write as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“At the four angles of the crossing, massive piers, some
-covered with combined pilasters, others with clustered columns,
-rise without a break from the ground to the vaulting. The
-two transepts at the outset were only of two bays similar to
-those of the nave. They were lengthened by a shallower bay
-when the façades were rebuilt. The later bays are easily
-distinguished from the four older ones. Thin round vaulting-ribs
-cross at a crown deeper and more pronounced than those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-of the older parts. The north and south doors are set in a
-rich arcading, of which the divisions and the tympanums
-can be compared to nothing more fitly than a large window
-with mullions. In the south transept, statues more or less
-mutilated, representing Christ and the saints, remain at the
-points of the gables. In describing the exterior of the façades
-we pointed out the open gallery which extends the whole
-breadth of each transept, and the great rose window a little
-above it. The exterior arcading of the gallery is repeated by
-a similar arcading inside. There is a passage between the
-two rows of little columns, and there is another above this.
-The effect of the rose windows in the interior, with glowing
-stained glass in all their compartments, recalls the marvellous
-descriptions that Dante has given us of the circles of Paradise.
-The incomparable splendour alternately astonishes and enchants
-us. To decorate the side walls of his bays, Jean de
-Chelles continued the arcading and the mullioned windows.”</p>
-
-<p>The vaulting and the rose of the south transept were
-repaired between the years 1725 and 1728 by Boffrand, the
-king’s architect, at the expense of Cardinal de Noailles. The
-pair of arches leading to the choir aisles with their elaborate
-crocketed canopies are somewhat feebly contrived in both
-transepts. The clustered shafts are clumsily arranged. The
-details on the north side differ from those on the south. On
-the east and west sides of both transepts there are two narrow
-bays of the triforium. The clerestory consists of short pointed
-windows with wheel windows beneath them. This is due to
-Viollet-le-Duc, and is intended to show us the arrangement
-which obtained throughout the church previous to the
-alterations which resulted from the fire in the thirteenth
-century.<a name="FNanchor-12" id="FNanchor-12"></a><a href="#Footnote-12" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 12.">[12]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-12" id="Footnote-12"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> In his “Paris” (London, Edward Arnold, 1900), Mr. Hilaire
-Belloc thus refers to the fire of 1218: “In 1218 a happy accident gave
-us the incomparable unity which the Cathedral alone possesses among
-mediæval monuments; for in that year, on the eve of the Assumption,
-four inspired thieves climbed into the roof-tree and warily let down ropes
-with slip-knots to lasso the silver candlesticks on the altar. These they
-snared, but as they pulled them up the lights set fire to the hangings that
-were stretched for the feasts, and the fire spread to the whole choir.”
-The writer gives no authority for this story.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-73" id="img-73"></a>
-<img src="images/i-073.jpg" width="500" height="640" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">THE NORTH TRANSEPT.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>At the angle of the south transept in front of the great
-south-east pier of the crossing is the famous statue of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-<strong>Virgin and Child</strong>, which, in Notre Dame, occupies a place
-not unlike the far more famous and more venerable statue of
-S. Peter in the vast basilica which at Rome is dedicated to
-him. Mr. Belloc has used a photograph of it as the frontispiece<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-to the volume quoted in the footnote, and he writes of it as
-follows: “But of all the additions to the interior of Notre
-Dame which popular fancy or the traditions of some crisis
-give it, none is more worthy of being known than that which
-alone survives of them, and which I have made the frontispiece
-of this book. It is not that the statue has&mdash;as so much of
-the fourteenth century can boast&mdash;a peculiar beauty; it is
-indeed (when seen from below, as it was meant to be) full
-of a delicacy that the time was adding to the severity of
-the thirteenth century; it has from that standpoint a very
-graceful gesture; the exaggeration of the forehead disappears,
-the features show the delicate and elusive smile that the
-fourteenth century always gave to its Madonnas, and there
-appears also in its general attitude the gentle inclination of
-courtesy and attention that was also a peculiar mark of a
-statuary which was just escaping the rigidity of Early Gothic.
-But its beauty, slight and ill-defined, is not, I repeat, the
-interest of the statue. It is because this image dates from the
-awakening of the capital to its position in France, because it
-is the symbol of Paris, that it rises up alone, as you may see
-it now, where the southern transept comes into the nave,<a name="FNanchor-13" id="FNanchor-13"></a><a href="#Footnote-13" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 13.">[13]</a> all
-lit with candles and standing out against the blue and the
-lilies. It is a kind of core and centre to the city, and is, as it
-were, the genius catching up the spirit of the wars, and giving
-the generation of the last siege and reconstruction, as it will
-give on in the future to others in newer trials, a figure in
-which all the personality of the place is stored up and
-remembered. It was made just at the outbreak of the
-Hundred Years’ War, it received the devotion of Etienne
-Marcel, it heard the outcry that followed the defeat of
-Poictiers and the captivity of the king.” Mr. Belloc concludes:
-“It has been for these five hundred years and more
-the middle thing, carrying with full meaning the name ‘Our
-Lady of Paris,’ which seems to spread out from it to the
-Church, and to overhang like an influence the whole city, so
-that one might wonder sometimes as one looked at it whether
-it was not the figure of Paris itself one saw.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-13" id="Footnote-13"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> <a href="#Page_70">See p. 70.</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In front of the statue is an iron grille terminating in spikes
-for candles. After Poitiers, the citizens of Paris annually
-offered a gigantic candle to be burned in front of this statue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-in order that the ills which afflicted France might cease.
-It was of the exact length of the walls of the capital itself,
-and was of course coiled up ropewise. The first presentation
-was made on August 14th, 1437. The candle necessarily
-grew with every increase in the area of the city. By the
-beginning of the seventeenth century it was felt that the limits
-of vastness had been reached, and in 1605 a silver lamp,
-which was always to burn before the statue, was presented
-instead of the candle. This was destroyed by the Revolutionists.
-On the pillar below the statue is a sculpture said to represent
-Eve with the serpent’s tail. The identity of the existing statue
-with the original one so eloquently described by Mr. Belloc
-has been doubted, but the grounds for doubt appear to be
-small. In this transept are two marble slabs in memory
-of seventy-five victims of the Commune.</p>
-
-<p>The place on the north side, corresponding with the statue
-of Notre-Dame de Paris on the south, is filled by a statue
-of St. Denis, a fairly good work by Nicolas Coustou.<a name="FNanchor-14" id="FNanchor-14"></a><a href="#Footnote-14" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 14.">[14]</a> The
-splendid glass of the great rose window in the south transept
-has in the main divisions of its four circles the twelve apostles,
-and a host of bishops and saints with symbols and palms, to
-whom angels bear golden crowns of glory. In one of the
-small compartments St. Denis is represented carrying his head,
-and in others are scenes from what is known as “les Combats
-des Apôtres,” amongst them being the arrival of St. Matthew
-in the presence of the King of Egypt, and the baptism of the
-King after his conversion by the Apostle. The great rose
-window of the opposite transept is devoted to scenes from
-the life of the Virgin. She is represented with Christ in her
-arms, and is surrounded with an army of patriarchs, judges,
-prophets, priests and kings, all of whom are related to the
-Saviour by ties of blood or as His spiritual forerunners.
-The glass includes curious representations of the Antichrist,
-decapitating Enoch; and of the destruction of the Antichrist
-by the Almighty, who appears in a cloud. The small rose
-or wheel windows in the sides of the transepts have been
-filled with glass from designs by Steinheil. The pavement
-of the transepts is of squares of black Bourbon marble
-alternating with Dinan stone. Great attention was given by
-Viollet-le-Duc to the polychromatic decoration of the transepts,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-but it cannot be said that he has been more successful in these
-parts of the church than elsewhere. The effect aimed at
-appears to have been that of tapestry with simple patterns;
-indeed, of the whole it is said, “cette décoration forme, jusque
-sous les roses, une sort de brillante tapisserie.” Some of the
-canopies are of the most intricate patterns, but they would
-be better suited to wood or metal work than to painting. The
-scheme includes a series of paintings by Perrodin of persons
-distinguished in the history of the diocese of Paris. The
-figures have elaborate decorative borders.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-14" id="Footnote-14"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a>
-<a href="#Page_89">See p. 89.</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The removal of statues and memorials from the nave, which
-we have already deplored, had just the shadow of a justification
-from the purely æsthetic standpoint. Many of the monuments
-were incongruous, some were positively grotesque. In Westminster
-Abbey we have an example of the shocking effect of
-inappropriate statuary in a Gothic building; we know, only
-too well, how terribly one of the most beautiful interiors in
-the world suffers from a crowd of tombs which are out of
-keeping with the very spirit of the place. By the removal of
-the memorials at Notre Dame, the church has doubtless regained
-the aspect intended by its designers.</p>
-
-<p>The nave leads uninterruptedly to the choir, which ends in
-the high altar; and the high altar, with the adjacent shrine of
-St. Marcel, was the primary reason of the existence of the
-cathedral. We have seen that in its earlier form little or no
-provision was made for chapels and consequently for side
-altars. Everything was arranged to concentrate the eye on
-the chief altar, and to lend dignity to its position. Its sacred
-character was respected even in the far-off days in which the
-body of the church was used for commercial purposes, or for
-festivals the reverse of religious.</p>
-
-<p>The great eastern limb of the church is raised above the
-transepts by three steps. Once we have passed into the
-<strong>Ambulatory</strong>, or <i>pourtour</i>, of the choir, we are in the most
-interesting part of the building; for here our story is of
-historical monuments and decorative objects still happily
-existing, and not an account of things which have long since
-ceased to be. When we step into the ambulatory, we pass
-from newer to older work, but we experience no violent
-transition from one style to another. The style of the choir
-is, speaking generally, the style of the whole church. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-differences, interesting as they are to the minute student of
-architectural development, are such as would remain unnoticed
-by those who do not pretend to special knowledge. This
-unity reminds one of an Italian Romanesque basilica rather
-than a Gothic cathedral. Viollet-le-Duc has noted that the
-capitals in the triforium of the choir seem to be earlier in
-date than those of the main arcade beneath it; that if nothing
-were left save the capitals of the two parts, one would
-conclude that those of the triforium were earlier. This is
-manifestly impossible, but it shows that not the smallest
-deviation of style was allowed in constructing the upper
-story.</p>
-
-<p>Among the capitals of the columns in the choir there are
-a few representations of animal life amongst the conventional
-foliage, while the capitals in the nave represent foliage alone.
-The choir is throughout a shade nearer Romanesque than
-the nave, but the difference is so slight that only close
-examination reveals it. Already we have remarked on the
-superiority of an apsidal termination to any other form in
-a Gothic church. The ordered grandeur of Notre Dame is
-nowhere more impressive than in the beautiful sweep of the
-apse with its spacious ambulatory. It must have been even
-more imposing in its simplicity before the construction of
-the side chapels was undertaken, although we are far from
-regretting an addition which, though it may have reduced
-the original dignity of the church, has added variety to it
-and rendered it more interesting.</p>
-
-<p>Let us begin our detailed examination of the choir and its
-chapels with the famous <strong>Screen</strong> of sculptures by Jehan Ravy
-and his nephew Jehan le Bouteiller, which we must study from
-the ambulatory. In his <i>History of Sculpture</i>, Professor Wilhelm
-Lübke devotes considerable space to this series in the chapter
-devoted to “Northern Sculpture in the Late Gothic Epoch”
-(1300 to 1450). After stating that France exhausted herself
-during the golden age of Gothic sculpture, and that the period
-under discussion was so stormy as to be unfavourable to the
-production of works of art, he writes of the screen as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“One of the most important works of the epoch [the end
-of the thirteenth and the beginning of the fourteenth centuries]
-are the extensive reliefs which cover the choir screen in the
-interior of the Cathedral of Paris. These are only the remains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-of the formerly far richer plastic ornament which, in a great
-measure, fell a sacrifice under Louis XIV. to a vain love of
-ostentation. The earlier series on the north side contains
-a crowded representation in an unbroken line of the History
-of Christ; from the Annunciation to the Prayer at Gethsemane.
-These representations are vividly conceived, and the style in
-which they are executed breathes the spirit of the thirteenth
-century. Perhaps they belong to the end of that century or
-to the beginning of the next. The reliefs on the south side
-are different in many points. They continue the History
-of Christ; and, indeed, the whole was so arranged that the
-cycle which began at the east passed along the north side to
-the west end of the choir, and was continued on the lectern,<a name="FNanchor-15" id="FNanchor-15"></a><a href="#Footnote-15" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 15.">[15]</a>
-where the Passion, Crucifixion and Resurrection were depicted
-in front of the congregation, concluding at the south side in
-a scene moving from west to east. Of the latter scenes, the
-only ones now in existence are those which extend from the
-Meeting of Christ as the Gardener with Mary Magdalen to
-the Farewell to the Disciples after the Resurrection. The artist
-of these later scenes left his name, in an inscription that has
-now disappeared,<a name="FNanchor-16" id="FNanchor-16"></a><a href="#Footnote-16" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 16.">[16]</a> as Jehan Ravy, who for twenty-six years
-conducted the building of Notre Dame, at the end of which
-time it was completed under his nephew Master Jehan de
-Bouteiller, in 1351. Master Ravy evidently thought that he
-could improve upon his predecessor’s work on the north side;
-for while the latter had combined the scenes into one unbroken
-series, he divided his into separate compartments by arcades,
-so that these later representations, which are still in existence,
-are separated from each other by small columns. In so doing
-he followed the general taste of the century, which was inclined
-to exchange a picturesque character for the calm epic relief
-of the former period. While, however, his somewhat short
-figures are certainly superior in correctness to the figures of
-the north side, owing to his understanding of the physical
-structure and to the neatness of execution, there is in the
-figures of the north side a fresher tone of feeling and more grace
-of action, compared with which the far more constrained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-attitudes of the later works form an unpleasing contrast, and
-even occasionally degenerate into commonplaceness. Thus in
-these works, in spite of all expenditure of artistic care, there
-is an unmistakable decline of creative power.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-15" id="Footnote-15"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The Rood-loft.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-16" id="Footnote-16"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> This has been restored, and reads: “C’est maistre Jehan Ravy maçon
-de Notre Dame par
-<a name="lespace" id="lespace"></a><ins title="Original has 'Vespace'">l’espace</ins>
-XXV ans qui commença ces nouvelles
-histoires, et Jehan le Bouteiller son nepveu qui les aparfaites en MCCCLI.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The series on the north side should be visited first.
-The scenes are fourteen in number, and have reference to
-the Visitation:</p>
-
-<ul class="nobullet2">
-<li>The Shepherds and the Star of Bethlehem;</li>
-<li>The Nativity;</li>
-<li>The Visit of the Magi;</li>
-<li>The Slaughter of the Innocents;</li>
-<li>The Flight into Egypt;</li>
-<li>The Presentation in the Temple;</li>
-<li>Christ among the Doctors;</li>
-<li>His Baptism;</li>
-<li>The Marriage-Feast at Cana;</li>
-<li>The Entry into Jerusalem;</li>
-<li>The Last Supper;</li>
-<li>Christ Washing the Feet of St. Peter;</li>
-<li>The scene in the Garden of Olives.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The later works on the south side, in which Professor Lübke
-traces a decline of creative force, represent:</p>
-
-<ul class="nobullet2">
-<li>The Meeting of Christ as the Gardener with Mary Magdalen;</li>
-<li>The Holy Women (the Three Maries) Kissing the Saviour’s Feet;</li>
-<li>Jesus appearing to the Apostles (who are represented in a turreted building);</li>
-<li>The Disciples of Emmaus, with Christ among them;</li>
-<li>The Breaking of the Bread;</li>
-<li>Another version of Christ Appearing to the Apostles;</li>
-<li>The Doubt and the Conversion of St. Thomas;</li>
-<li>The Miraculous Draught of Fishes;</li>
-<li>Christ’s Message to the Apostles to Preach the Gospel to all Nations.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>It is extremely fortunate that these very interesting
-sculptures have been left to us, for they constitute incomparably
-the most important of the internal decorations at Notre
-Dame, which, as we have seen, is relatively poor in the
-mediæval tombs which are the glory of Westminster Abbey.
-While we are thankful for what is left, we cannot help feeling
-a grudge against Cardinal de Noailles, who caused some of the
-scenes to be removed, and thus left the series incomplete.
-That the modern restoration of the painting of the sculpture
-was wise can hardly be maintained.<a name="FNanchor-17" id="FNanchor-17"></a><a href="#Footnote-17" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 17.">[17]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote-17" id="Footnote-17"></a><a title="Return to text" href="#FNanchor-17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> The fine collection of casts at the Crystal Palace includes most of this
-series. It is a pity that they cannot be placed in some more appropriate
-and convenient place.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-<a name="img-80" id="img-80"></a>
-<img src="images/i-080.jpg" width="500" height="813" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div>VIEW OF THE CHOIR AT THE END OF THE XIII. CENTURY, SHOWING
-THE CARVED ROOD-SCREEN AND THE SHRINE OF ST. MARCEL.<br />
-(<i>From Viollet-le-Duc.</i>)</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>For the moment we will leave the ambulatory, and consider
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-the <strong>Choir and Sanctuary</strong>. It will be interesting, before
-we examine the present state of these parts, to sketch briefly
-their aspect in the fourteenth century. Corrozet and De
-Breul have left us descriptions which have been illustrated
-and elucidated by the indefatigable Viollet-le-Duc. The
-entrance to the choir at the crossing was filled by a magnificent
-screen of stone richly adorned with carving. This was about
-eighteen feet high. The top formed the rood-loft, which was
-approached by two circular staircases placed at either end of
-the screen. In the centre was, of course, the entrance to
-the choir. When the doors were open the high altar could
-be seen from the end of the nave. Over this door was a
-decorated gable terminating in a great crucifix. According to
-De Breul this crucifix was a masterpiece of sculpture, as were
-the other statues which composed the group. The loft was
-broad, and had on both sides an open stone parapet, on which
-were placed carved lecterns. The west front of the screen
-had sculptured scenes of the Passion, which formed part of
-the series by Jehan Ravy and Jehan de Bouteiller lately described.
-On either side of the doorway, beneath the sculptures,
-were small altars. The choir-stalls of carved wood occupied
-much the same place as do those which we see to-day.
-Between the rows of stalls were low tombs with recumbent
-figures. The Sanctuary, approached by steps, was railed off,
-and filled the apse. The space between the columns was
-filled by a screen with carved scenes, which rose almost to
-the level of the bases of the capitals. The altar was low, and
-of stone, and possessed a re-table on which was placed a
-cross. Enclosing it on all sides, save that towards the church,
-was a screen with hangings of tapestry. At the four corners
-of this screen were tall figures of angels. Immediately behind
-the altar, and towering over it, was the shrine of St. Marcel, a
-lofty open structure of brass and other metals in two stages,
-ending in a gable at the apex of which rose a crucifix.</p>
-
-<p>On the first stage, so that it could be seen from all parts
-of the choir, was the feretrum or reliquary of St. Marcel.
-This chief shrine had on its side shrines of less importance,
-while, in the background to the north, was the small altar of
-the Trinity, on which was placed the reliquary of Notre Dame,
-containing portions of the dress and other relics of the mother
-of Christ. A few fine tombs were also in the sanctuary, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-not far away was a bronze statue of Eudes de Sully. An
-illustration, partly conjectural, of the choir and sanctuary in
-the condition which I have attempted to describe from
-Viollet-le-Duc’s <i>Dictionnaire</i>, is reproduced here. It will be
-seen that while the furniture and ornament of this part of
-the church is sufficiently splendid, it is nevertheless simple.
-There would be ample space for the due performance of the
-great ceremonials which constantly took place. Such was the
-appearance of the choir and sanctuary until Louis XIV., in
-fulfilment of the vow of Louis XIII., who had dedicated
-himself and his kingdom to the Virgin, began his transformation.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-82" id="img-82"></a>
-<img src="images/i-082.jpg" width="500" height="397" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">GRILLE AT ENTRANCE OF CHOIR.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <strong>Choir</strong> is raised above the body of the church by three
-steps, and on the right and left hand is enclosed by a low
-<i>grille</i> in wrought iron with gilding. This rests on a stone
-foundation, and is terminated towards the centre by two
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-massive columns, on which are hung the gates, which are of
-very beautiful design, representing conventionalised foliage and
-flowers. At the top of the gate, in the centre, is a foliated
-cross. The two bays on the south side of the choir nearest
-the entrance have the same arrangement of a small pointed
-window with a rose window beneath it, as exists in the side
-of the transept immediately adjacent. The remaining windows
-are in the altered and enlarged form, and the triforium of the
-choir is similar to, though of earlier date than, that which runs
-round the nave.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width800">
-<a name="img-83" id="img-83"></a>
-<img src="images/i-083.jpg" width="800" height="523" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">THE CHOIR, LOOKING WEST.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-The <strong>Stalls</strong> occupy three bays on either side of the choir.
-The erection of these stalls is part of the work undertaken
-by order of Louis XIV. in accomplishment of his father’s
-vow, and it follows that they are not in character with the
-architecture of the choir. It was once proposed that for this
-reason new stalls of “Gothic” design should take their place.
-There is little likelihood of this being done now. Incongruity
-among things beautiful in themselves is by no means a
-calamity, and we may fairly question alike the taste and the
-learning of those who crave for uniformity at all cost. One
-is glad to think that Viollet-le-Duc never for a moment
-contemplated the banishment of these stalls, which are a
-particularly fine example of the best work of which the
-craftsmen of the time were capable. The stalls have been
-rearranged since they were first placed in the choir, and their
-number has diminished. Originally there were one hundred
-and fourteen stalls; now there are ten less. They are divided
-on each side into upper and lower tiers, each tier having
-twenty-six seats. The carvings are the work of Jean Nel and
-Louis Marteau, the designs being supplied by Jean de
-Goulon. The designer and the executants have combined to
-produce a really admirable piece of work, of which a full
-account is given in a very careful monograph, published by
-Chouvet in Paris in 1855, entitled <i>Album des Boiseries
-sculptées du Chœur de Notre Dame de Paris</i>. In this volume
-the carvings are dealt with one by one, and their merits
-intelligently discussed. At the back of the upper row of stalls
-are eight large carved panels, which represent scenes in the
-life of the Virgin. At the west end of the stalls are placed,
-opposite to one another, the throne of the archbishop and
-a similar throne for the dean of the chapter. These thrones<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-or seats have elaborately-carved canopies. The relief on the
-back of the chair or throne on the right represents the cure
-of Childebert I. by St. Germain, Bishop of Paris. On the
-opposite chair is represented in similar style the martyrdom
-of St. Denis. Throughout the entire cathedral, in sculpture,
-in stained glass, in carving, the Virgin is glorified, and next to
-her in honour comes St. Denis. The stalls are lighted by
-lamps in metal brackets, and the choir itself is illuminated
-by handsome candelabra similar to those in the nave. In the
-second bay on the north side of the choir is a small organ
-used in the daily offices.</p>
-
-<p>Close by this organ the stones of the pavement are movable,
-and cover the entrance of a small crypt. This is the principal
-subterranean chamber of the cathedral, and it was constructed
-so recently as the eighteenth century. It was set apart as the
-burial place of the Archbishops of Paris, and is little more
-than a vault. Over the coffins of those of the Archbishops
-who have been Cardinals are suspended their red hats and
-tassels. The excavations for this little crypt led to a discovery
-which was of great interest to archæologists. Amongst other
-Roman remains was a small altar to Jupiter, which is now
-preserved in the Cluny Museum. In <i>Paris à travers les Ages</i>
-we read of a small crypt below the Chapelle S. Anne, on the
-south side of the nave. Used now as a coal cellar, it was
-formerly a burial place, as is attested by the following
-inscription: “Cave pour les cercueils de plomb; cave pour
-la sépulture des chanoines; caves pour la sépulture des
-musiciens, enfants de Chœurs et officiers clercs.”</p>
-
-<p>The pavement of the choir is of pieces of marble of various
-colours, which together form a geometrical pattern. As
-one looks at it, one laments the magnificent tombs with
-bronze effigies which were formerly the glory of this part of
-the church.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter width800">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-<a name="img-87" id="img-87"></a>
-<img src="images/i-087.jpg" width="800" height="531" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Ed. Hautecœur, Paris.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">THE CHOIR FROM THE SOUTH TRANSEPT.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-The <strong>Sanctuary</strong> is approached by four steps of Languedoc
-marble, and three additional steps of the same material
-lead to the high altar. The <strong>High Altar</strong> still retains most
-of the leading features of the arrangement of Louis XIV.
-It was begun in 1699, and finished in 1714. The pseudo-classical
-architecture by means of which the great pillars of
-the apse were hidden has of course been swept away. The
-principal group of sculpture, representing the Descent from the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-Cross, is by Nicolas Coustou, who was born at Lyons in 1658.
-He was a pupil of Coysevox, his uncle, who at that time was
-director of the Academy of Painting and Sculpture at Paris.
-He obtained the <i>grand prix</i>, and went to study at Rome, where
-he was profoundly influenced by the work of Michael Angelo.
-Coustou’s output on his return to France was enormous.
-The “Descent from the Cross,” at Notre Dame was doubtless
-inspired by the famous group by Michael Angelo in St. Peter’s
-at Rome. It cannot be said that Coustou has approached the
-greatest of the Italians in the profundity of his pathos or in
-tragic solemnity, but the group at Notre Dame is not without
-decided merit, although it leans towards the melodramatic
-and artificial.</p>
-
-<p>On one side of the altar is a kneeling statue of Louis XIII.
-by Guillaume Coustou, and on the other a similar statue of
-Louis XIV. by Antoine
-<a name="Coysevox" id="Coysevox"></a><ins title="Original has 'Coyevox'">Coysevox</ins>.
-Guillaume Coustou was
-the younger brother of Nicolas, and like him studied at Rome.
-He represents Louis XIII. offering his crown and sceptre,
-which he holds in his hands, to the Virgin. The statue of
-Louis XIV. suggests the accomplishment of his father’s vow.
-Coysevox, from whose chisel it came, was the leading French
-sculptor of his time. He was born at Lyons in 1640, and
-died in 1720. The statues of angels bearing the instruments
-of the Passion are by various sculptors. The angel with the
-crown of thorns and that carrying the reed are by Corneille
-Van Clève. The angel with the nails is by Claude Poirier;
-that with the sponge by Simon Hurtrelle; that with the scroll
-by Laurent Magnier; and that with the lance by Anselme
-Flamen. The bas-relief in bronze-gilt in front of the altar
-represents the Entombment, and is by Van Clève. The
-cross and candelabra formerly belonged to the cathedral of
-Arras. The lectern of sculptured bronze is dated 1755, and
-has on its base the name of Duplessis, founder to the King.
-A superb example of Gobelins tapestry, the gift of Napoleon I.,
-is used on great festivals to cover the floor of the sanctuary.
-The pavement is partly in mosaic, and has a representation
-of the arms of France.</p>
-
-<p>The comparatively new stained glass of the choir and apse
-is not so bad as one might expect. It is by Maréchal of
-Metz. The central window of the apse is devoted to the
-Visitation. To the right are Eudes de Sully and St. Marcel;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-St. Augustine and St. Jerome; St. Luke and St. John;
-Daniel and Jeremiah; David and Abraham; St. George and
-St. Martin; Charlemagne and Pope Leo. III.; and St. Hilaire
-and St. Irénée. To the right the subjects are St. Denis and
-Maurice de Sully; St. Gregory and St. Ambrose; St. Mark and
-St. Matthew; Ezekiel and Isaiah; Aaron and Melchisedec;
-St. Stephen and St. Laurent, St. Louis and St. Gregory VII.,
-and St. Remi and St. Martin. The small rose windows of
-the choir, like those of the transept, are filled with glass by
-Steinheil. The choir, more perhaps than any other part of
-the cathedral, has suffered from the wholesale destruction
-of glass which has already been described. Visitors to the
-cathedral of Chartres can estimate the value of mediæval
-glass in a Gothic cathedral. It is unfortunate that the great
-windows of the clerestory at Paris were filled up before the
-notable revival in the art of stained glass, which commenced
-in England, and has now extended to France.</p>
-
-<p>We must now return to the Ambulatory and the adjacent
-chapels. It is in this part of the church that Viollet-le-Duc’s
-decorations are most profuse, and it is not possible to consider
-them successful. It is quite probable that no such scheme
-of decoration could be open to fewer objections than that
-of Viollet-le-Duc. The truth is that the colour confuses our
-appreciation of the fine lines of the architecture, and it is
-frequently restless and irritating where it should be most
-reposeful.</p>
-
-<p><strong>The Chapels of the Choir.</strong> On the south side are the
-following chapels:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Chapelle Saint-Denis.</i> The chief object of interest here
-is a statue, by Auguste de Bay, of Archbishop Affre, who is
-represented at the moment when he made his heroic appearance
-on the barricade of the Faubourg Saint Antoine with
-an olive branch. This was on June 25th, 1848, during the
-Commune. The Archbishop was struck by a ball and killed.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chapelle Sainte-Madeleine.</i> This chapel contains the grave
-of the Papal nuncio Garibaldi, Archbishop of Myra, who
-died in 1853. Archbishop
-<a name="Sibour" id="Sibour"></a><ins title="Original has 'Sibor'">Sibour</ins>,
-who was murdered in the
-church of St. Etienne du Mont on Jan. 8th, 1857, by a
-priest, is commemorated by a kneeling statue in marble by
-Dubois.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chapelle Saint-Guillaume.</i> The statue of the Virgin seated,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-with the Child Jesus in her arms, is attributed to Bernini, who
-came from Rome to Paris during the reign of Louis XIV. to
-make alterations and additions to the Louvre. The Mausoleum
-of Henri-Charles d’Harcourt, Lieutenant-general of the armies
-of the King, who died in 1769, is a pretentious and theatrical
-work which was once highly esteemed. It is by the sculptor
-Pigalle, and is of white marble. The widow who kneels by
-the tomb and appears to be calling her husband is warned
-away by a figure of Death. The genius of War is represented
-lamenting, and the whole is completed by trophies of arms.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chapelle Saint-Georges.</i> Amongst the elaborate mural decorations
-of this chapel is a picture by Steinheil of St. George
-and the Dragon. The statue of Archbishop Darboy is by
-Bonnassieux. The prelate is represented falling amidst the
-bullets of the Communists, whom he blesses as he dies. This
-tragic incident took place in the prison of La Roquette, on
-May 27th, 1871. Close by is a kneeling statue of Archbishop
-Morlot (<i>d.</i> 1862) by Lescorné. The chapel also contains a
-statue of St. George by the same artist.</p>
-
-<p>The following are the chapels on the <i>north</i> side of the
-choir:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>La Chapelle de Notre Dame des Sept Douleurs</i>, or
-<i>La Chapelle du Petit Chœur</i>. The bas-reliefs over the
-altar represent the angel appearing to the Virgin Mary, the
-Descent from the Cross, and the Entombment. The statue in
-wood of Notre Dame des Sept Douleurs is by Corbon. The
-compositions, in six panels, by Perrodin, represent: Jesus
-bearing the Cross; Christ on Calvary; the Descent from the
-Cross; the Communion of the Virgin; and the Death of the
-Virgin. The nine carved wood stalls are of the same period
-as those of the choir. They were possibly part of the original
-series, which, as we have seen, was reduced in number. At all
-events, the details indicate that the same designer and craftsmen
-were employed on them. This chapel contains the only
-important fragment of the original polychromatic decoration
-with which the walls of the cathedral were anciently embellished.
-It consists of a mural painting dating from the fourteenth
-century. In the centre is represented the Virgin enthroned
-with the Child. To the right is St. Denis, and on the left
-Bishop Simon Matiffas de Buci, who built the three chapels
-on the left of the apse. Beneath the picture was formerly the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-Bishop’s tomb. Below the representation of the Virgin and
-Child is a curious design representing angels bearing away
-a human soul. This painting was unfortunately restored by
-M. Maillot the elder, and has consequently lost much of its
-antiquarian interest.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chapelle Saint-Marcel.</i> Pierre Deseine’s enormous monument
-to Cardinal de Belloy fills a large part of this chapel.
-The cardinal is represented giving alms to two orphan girls.
-St. Denis looks on, and records the cardinal’s name on a list
-of the bishops of Paris noted for their charity. Close by
-is the tomb, with reclining figure, of Monseigneur de Quelen,
-by De Chaume. Amongst the mural decorations of this
-chapel the chief is a large painting by Maillot the younger.
-The subject is the “Translation of the relics of St. Marcel from
-the old Church of St. Marie to the Church of Notre Dame
-by Bishop Eudes de Sully.” The personages represented are
-portraits of the officials of the diocese, and include Archbishop
-Darboy and the Abbé la Place. In the vaulting is a design
-representing the Coronation of St. Marcel.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chapelle Saint-Louis.</i> This chapel has six statues in wood
-by Corbon, representing Christ, the Virgin, St. John, St. Denis,
-St. Rustiguex, and St. Eleutherius. The kneeling statue of
-Archbishop Louis-Antoine de Noailles, who died in 1729, is
-by De Chaume.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chapelle Saint-Germain.</i> Tomb of Archbishop
-<a name="Leclerc" id="Leclerc"></a><ins title="Original has 'Leclercq'">Leclerc</ins>
-de Juigné (died 1811), a kneeling figure in relief. The tomb
-was repaired by Viollet-le-Duc, who modified its original
-design.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chapelle Saint-Ferdinand.</i> Monument of Archbishop de
-Beaumont (died 1781), from designs by Viollet-le-Duc.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chapelle Saint-Martin.</i> Monument of Jean-Baptiste de
-Vardes, Comte de Guébriant, Marshal of France, who died
-in 1643, and of his wife Renée du Bec Crespin. A splendid
-service was celebrated in Notre Dame on the Marshal’s death.
-His wife was sent to Poland as ambassadress extraordinary,
-and died there in 1643, without being able to erect a monument
-to her husband. The Marquis de Vardes erected the
-tomb, which was practically destroyed during the Revolution.
-It was renewed from designs by Viollet-le-Duc.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the Sanctuary is the tomb with a jewelled effigy of
-Archbishop Matiffas de Buci, who died in 1304. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-removed from La Chapelle de Notre Dame des Sept Douleurs.
-In the arcading below the bas-reliefs of Jehan Revy and Jean
-le Bouteiller are placed little brasses with the names, arms,
-and date of the death of the persons whose remains are buried
-at Notre Dame. A list of the most interesting of these has
-already been given.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-94" id="img-94"></a>
-<img src="images/i-094.jpg" width="500" height="244" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE PLACE DU PARVIS IN 1650.<br />
-(<i>From an engraving by Van Merlen.</i>)</div>
-</div>
-
-<h2 style="page-break-before: avoid;"><a name="vi" id="vi"></a>CHAPTER VI.<br />
-<span>CONCLUSION. THE SACRISTY, ETC.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Notre Dame</span> was within comparatively recent times surrounded
-with streets so narrow that vehicular traffic was
-impossible. Amongst the most characteristic were the Rue
-de Glatigny and the Rue de Marmousets, which, as late as
-1865, preserved the dimensions, and something of the aspect,
-of a side street in the middle ages. The <i>quartier</i> thus
-intersected literally teemed with churches of which nothing
-remains. Amongst them perhaps the most important were
-those dedicated to Saint-Landry, Sainte-Geneviève des Ardents,
-Saint-Pierre aux Bœufs, Saint-Aguan, Saint-Marine, Saint-Luc,
-Saint-Jean le Rond, Saint-Denis au Pays and Saint-Christophe.
-None of them appear to have been large, and of some the
-origin and history remain obscure.</p>
-
-<p>On the south side of the Cathedral stood the <i>Palais
-Episcopal</i>, which was constructed by Maurice de Sully and
-added to by Matiffas de Bucy and other prelates. On
-Feb. 14th, 1831, it was attacked by the mob, and five
-hours sufficed for its complete destruction. The contents
-included a library of 20,000 volumes, a collection of 1,500<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-manuscripts, those of the ancient archives of the church, which
-escaped the Revolutionists, a fine collection of pictures, and
-priceless works of art of an ecclesiastical character. These
-were thrown into the Seine, burned, or stolen.</p>
-
-<p>The
-<a name="Cloitre" id="Cloitre"></a><ins title="Original has 'Cloîture'"><strong>Cloître</strong></ins>
-or Cloister of Notre Dame was on the
-north side and at the east end of the church. It is difficult
-to say what was its early aspect, but in the sixteenth century
-and afterwards it in no way resembled the cloister of a
-monastery, but consisted of an agglomeration of separate
-houses. It was in the nature of a College of Secular
-Canons. It was similar to the Temple in London in that it
-possessed gates of its own, which shut it off from the rest of
-the city. The Cloister contained thirty-seven houses for the
-canons of the Cathedral, who were allowed to have living with
-them their near female relatives. No other women, lay or
-religious, were allowed to sleep in the cloister. The tedious
-Rue du Cloître Notre-Dame occupies a portion of the space
-on which the Cloister stood.</p>
-
-<p><strong>The Sacristy</strong> was formerly a part of the Palais Episcopal.
-It had been rebuilt by Soufflot, whose work was
-partially destroyed in 1831. A new sacristy has been constructed
-by Viollet-le-Duc in the style of the thirteenth century.
-The exterior is richly ornamented with statues and pinnacles.
-It communicates with the south ambulatory of the choir by
-means of two covered passages, one of which leads into the
-<i>Sacristie du Chapitre</i>, which contains a large hall, the
-room of the Chapter above, which is the cathedral treasury,
-and a vestry for the canons. The great hall has stained glass
-windows in which bishops of Paris are represented.</p>
-
-<p>It contains a crucifix and two statuettes by Corbon, a fine
-<i>armoire</i> decorated with paintings of scenes in the life of
-St. Denis. There are pictures in various parts of the building
-by Vaulos, Salvator Rosa, Lebrun, Louis Testelin, Charles
-Poerson and others, but none of them are of much note.
-A picturesque little cloister, with a fountain in the middle
-surmounted by a crucifix, is one of the agreeable features
-of the building. Its eastern arcade is glazed, the windows
-representing scenes in the life of Ste. Geneviève.</p>
-
-<p><strong>The Treasury</strong>, once endowed with enormous riches, was
-despoiled at the Revolution of all but a few objects of value.
-There still remains the reputed Crown of Thorns (supposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-to have been given to St. Louis), brought hither from La
-Sainte Chapelle. The so-called Nail of the True Cross
-formerly belonged to the royal abbey of St. Denis. These
-relics are only exposed on Fridays in Lent. The reliquaries
-are for the most part imitations of those which were formerly
-in La Sainte Chapelle. Perhaps the most interesting of the
-objects exhibited is a gold cross, probably of twelfth-century
-workmanship. It belonged to the Emperor Manuel Comnenus,
-and was bequeathed by the Princess Anne de Gonzague to the
-church of St. Germain des
-<a name="Pres" id="Pres"></a><ins title="Original has 'Près'">Prés</ins>
-in 1863. In addition there
-are the relic of the True Cross sent to Bishop Galon in 1109,
-from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem; the
-“discipline” of St. Louis; the crozier in copper and wood of
-Bishop Eudes de Sully; the crucifix used by St. Vincent-de-Paul
-at the death-bed of Louis XIII.; the pastoral cross of
-Archbishop Affre; a silver image of the Virgin and Child
-presented in 1821 by Charles X.; the <i>ostensoir</i> given by
-Napoleon I., and services of plate presented by the same monarch
-and by Napoleon III. The vestments are very magnificent,
-and include the coronation mantle of Napoleon I. and the
-chasuble worn by Pope Pius VI. when he crowned him.
-The <i>soutanes</i> worn by Archbishops Affre, Sibour, and Darboy
-in their last moments, marked by the instruments which produced
-their violent deaths, have a tragic interest.</p>
-
-<p>The somewhat obtrusively picturesque modern building
-to the west of the Sacristy is known as the <i>Presbytère</i>. It
-has been often ridiculed, and at times rather fiercely denounced,
-but if any building was to be erected on the site, it seems
-difficult to imagine anything less offensive. It is pleasing
-and unpretentious, and contrasts only too favourably with the
-dull houses of the Rue du
-<a name="Cloitre2" id="Cloitre2"></a><ins title="Original has 'Cloîture'">Cloître</ins>
-Notre-Dame, which are
-as undistinguished as they well can be.</p>
-
-<p>The space at the back of the Cathedral is laid out as a garden.
-This is modern and somewhat formal, but it affords a fine view
-of the east end, and constitutes a welcome oasis of trees and
-grass in a grey waste of commonplace buildings. In the centre
-is a fountain with a statue of the Virgin and Child, and
-fragments of sculpture and carving taken from the church at
-different times lie about. The reader who wishes to understand
-at a glance the various changes which have taken place
-in that part of the French metropolis which lies in the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-shadow of the cathedral should refer to the second volume of
-the magnificent work <i>Paris à travers les Ages</i>, in which a
-plan of the district in 1881 is compared with conjectural plans
-of the same in the years 1150, 1550, and 1750.</p>
-
-<p>The huge open space west of the cathedral is the Place
-du Parvis Notre-Dame. This oblong <i>place</i> far exceeds the
-church itself in area, and gives to the west front a somewhat
-dwarfed appearance. On the left-hand side (looking east)
-is the vast Hotel Dieu, the modern name of the hospital,
-known as the Maison Dieu, which for centuries has been
-associated with Notre Dame. The present building was only
-completed in 1877. It is from the designs of M. Diet, and is
-by no means of an ornamental character, although the total cost
-was 36,400,000 francs. On the west side of the Place du
-Parvis are the barracks of the Garde Republicaine. Close
-to them is one of those open-air flower markets which are
-so charming and characteristic a feature of the Paris of
-to-day.</p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="vii" id="vii"></a>CHAPTER VII.<br />
-<span>LIST OF THE BISHOPS AND ARCHBISHOPS OF PARIS.</span></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-98" id="img-98"></a>
-<img src="images/i-098.jpg" width="500" height="324" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">NOTRE DAME IN THE XIII CENTURY, SHOWING THE BISHOP’S PALACE
-(L’ÉVÊCHÉ) ON THE LEFT.<br />
-(<i>From “Paris à travers les Ages.”</i>)</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>(I have adopted the spelling and dates generally given by
-French Catholic writers in compiling this list).</p>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">St. Denis</span>, who is counted as the first bishop by Roman
-Catholic writers, is said to have been succeeded by the
-following, of whom little or nothing is known: Mallo or
-Mallon; Massus; Marcus; Adventus; Ventorien; Paul;
-Prudence; St. Marcel (died about 436); Vivien; Felix;
-Flavien; Ursicien; Apedemius; Heraclitus (? 490&ndash;525);
-Probat; Amelius;</p>
-
-<ul class="nobullet2">
-<li>Saffarac (545&ndash;552).</li>
-<li>Eusèbe I. (552&ndash;555).</li>
-<li>St. Germain (555&ndash;576).</li>
-<li>Raguemond (576&ndash;591).</li>
-<li>Eusèbe II. (592&ndash;594).
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span></li>
-<li>Faramode (?); Simplicius (?); Saint Céran (606&ndash;621);
-Leudebert (?); Aubert.</li>
-<li>St. Landry (650&ndash;656).</li>
-<li>Chrodobert (656&ndash;663).</li>
-<li>Sigobrand (663&ndash;664).</li>
-<li>Importun (?).</li>
-<li>St. Agilbert (666&ndash;680).</li>
-<li>Sigefroid (?); Tournsaede (?); Adolphe (?); Bernechaire, (?).</li>
-<li>St. Hugues (722&ndash;730).</li>
-<li>Marséide.</li>
-<li>Fédole (?); Raguecapt (?); Madalbert (?); Desdefroid (?);
-Escheurade (?).</li>
-<li>Ermenfroi (?)</li>
-<li>Inchalde (809&ndash;831).</li>
-<li>Ercheurade (831&ndash;857).</li>
-<li>Enée (857&ndash;883).</li>
-<li>Ingelvin (?).</li>
-<li>Gozlin (883&ndash;886).</li>
-<li>Anschéric (886&ndash;911).</li>
-<li>Théodulphe or Gendulphe (911&ndash;922). This bishop is
-believed to have been succeeded by Falrade; Adelhelme;
-Gauthier I.; Albéric; Constante; Garin; Rainaud I.; Elisiard,
-and Giselbert.</li>
-<li>Renault II., de Vendome (992&ndash;1019).</li>
-<li>Azelin or Albert (?).</li>
-<li>Francon (1020&ndash;1030).</li>
-<li>Imbert Hesselin (1030&ndash;1060).</li>
-<li>Godefroi de Boulogne (1061&ndash;1093).</li>
-<li>Guillaume I. de Montfort (1095&ndash;1102).</li>
-<li>Foulques I. (1102&ndash;1104).</li>
-<li>Galon (1105&ndash;1116).</li>
-<li>Giselbert or Gilbert (1116&ndash;1124).</li>
-<li>Etienne I. de Senlis (1124&ndash;1142).</li>
-<li>Thiébault (1143&ndash;1157).</li>
-<li>Pierre Lombard (1158&ndash;1159).</li>
-<li>Maurice de Sully (1160&ndash;1196).</li>
-<li>Eudes de Sully (1197&ndash;1208).</li>
-<li>Pierre II. de Nemours (1208&ndash;1219).</li>
-<li>Guillaume de Seiguelay (1220&ndash;1223).</li>
-<li><a name="Barthelemy" id="Barthelemy"></a><ins title="Original
-has 'Barthélemy'">Barthélémy</ins> (1223&ndash;1227).</li>
-<li>(The see is believed to have been vacant for a year)
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span></li>
-<li>Guillaume d’Auvergne (also called Guillaume de Paris)
-(1228&ndash;1249).</li>
-<li>Gauthier II. de Chateau-Thierry (1249&ndash;1250).</li>
-<li>Renault III. de Corbeil (1250&ndash;1268).</li>
-<li>Etienne II. (1268&ndash;1279).</li>
-<li>Ranulfe ou Raoul d’Homblières (1279&ndash;1288).</li>
-<li>Simon Matiffas de Bucy (1290&ndash;1304).</li>
-<li>Guillaume IV. de Baufet (1304&ndash;1319).</li>
-<li>Etienne de Bourret (1320&ndash;1325).</li>
-<li>Hugues II. (1326&ndash;1332).</li>
-<li>Guillaume V. de Chanac (1332&ndash;1342).</li>
-<li>Foulques II. (1342&ndash;1349).</li>
-<li>Audoin Aubert (?).</li>
-<li>Pierre III. de la Forêt (1350&ndash;1352).</li>
-<li>Jean I. de Meulan (1352&ndash;1363).</li>
-<li>Etienne IV. de Paris (1363&ndash;1368).</li>
-<li>Aimeric de Maignac (1368&ndash;1384).</li>
-<li>Pierre IV. d’Orgement (1384&ndash;1409).</li>
-<li>Gérard de Montaigu (1409&ndash;1420).</li>
-<li>Jean II. de Courte-Cuisse (1421&ndash;1422).</li>
-<li>Jean III. de la Roche-Taillé (1422&ndash;1423).</li>
-<li>Jean IV. de Nant (1423&ndash;1427).</li>
-<li>Jacques de Chastelier (1427&ndash;1439).</li>
-<li>Denis II. du Moulin (1439&ndash;1447).</li>
-<li>Guillaume VI. Chartier (1447&ndash;1472).</li>
-<li>Louis de Beaumont (1473&ndash;1492).</li>
-<li>Gerard Gobaille (1494).</li>
-<li>Jean V., Simon de Champigny (1494&ndash;1502).</li>
-<li>Etienne V., Poncher (1503&ndash;1519).</li>
-<li>François de Poncher (1519&ndash;1532).</li>
-<li>Jean VI. de Bellay (1532&ndash;1551).</li>
-<li>Eustache de Bellay (1551&ndash;1564).</li>
-<li>Guillaume Viole (1564&ndash;1568).</li>
-<li>Cardinal Pierre V. de Gondi (1568&ndash;1598).</li>
-<li>Cardinal Henri de Gondi de Retz (1598&ndash;1622).</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center">ARCHBISHOPS.</p>
-
-<p>Paris was raised to the rank of an archbishopric on the
-demand of Louis XIII. to Pope Gregory XV. (The Bull is
-dated Oct. 20th, 1622.)</p>
-
-<ul class="nobullet2">
-<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-&nbsp; 1. Jean-François de Gondi (1622&ndash;1654). First Archbishop
-of Paris. Buried in Notre Dame.</li>
-
-<li>&nbsp; 2. Jean-François-Paul de Gondi (Cardinal de Retz). Buried
-in Saint-Denis (1654&ndash;1679).</li>
-
-<li>&nbsp; 3. Pierre VI. de Marca (<i>d.</i> 1662). Buried in Notre Dame.</li>
-
-<li>&nbsp; 4. Hardouin de Péréfix de Beaumont (<i>d.</i> 1671). Buried
-in Notre Dame.</li>
-
-<li>&nbsp; 5. François de Harlay de Champvallon (<i>d.</i> 1695). Buried
-in Notre Dame.</li>
-
-<li>&nbsp; 6. Louis-Antoine de Noailles. Cardinal (<i>d.</i> 1729). Buried
-in Notre Dame.</li>
-
-<li>&nbsp; 7. Charles-Gaspard-Guillaume de Vintimille du Luc (<i>d.</i>
-1746). Buried in Notre Dame.</li>
-
-<li>&nbsp; 8. Jacques-Bonnet-Gigault de Bellefonds (<i>d.</i> 1746). Buried
-in Notre Dame.</li>
-
-<li>&nbsp; 9. Christophe de Beaumont du Repaire (<i>d.</i> 1781). Buried
-in Notre Dame.</li>
-
-<li>10. Antoine-Eléonore-Léon Le Clerc de Juigné de Neuchelle
-(<i>d.</i> 1811). Buried in Notre Dame.</li>
-
-<li>11. Jean-Baptiste de Belloy. Cardinal. Died, aged ninety-eight
-years and eight months, in 1808, and buried in Notre
-Dame.</li>
-
-<li>12. Alexandre-Angélique de Tallyrand-Perigord. Born
-1736. Archbishop of Reims 1776. Cardinal 1817; Died
-1821.</li>
-
-<li>13. Hyacinthe-Louis de Quélen. Born 1778. Bishop of
-Samosate 1817; Archbishop of Paris 1821. Died 1839.</li>
-
-<li>14. Denis III., Auguste Affre. Born 1793. Archbishop of
-Paris 1840. Struck by a ball at the barricades in the
-Faubourg Saint-Antoine on June 25th, 1848, and died two
-days later.</li>
-
-<li>15. Marie-Dominique-Auguste Sibour. Born 1792. Bishop
-of Digue 1839; Archbishop of Paris 1848. Was assassinated
-on Jan. 3rd, 1857, in the church of Saint-Etienne du Mont by
-a priest. He had as auxiliary bishop Léon-François Sibour.</li>
-
-<li>16. François III., Nicolas-Madeleine Morlot. Born 1795.
-Bishop of Orléans 1839; Archbishop of Tours 1842; Cardinal
-1853; Archbishop of Paris 1857. Died 1862.</li>
-
-<li>17. Georges Darboy. Born 1813. Bishop of Nancy 1850;
-Archbishop of Paris 1863. Arrested as a hostage by the
-Commune on April 4th, 1871, and shot on May 27th.</li>
-
-<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-18. Joseph-Hippolyte Guibert. Born 1802. Archbishop
-of Tours 1857; Archbishop of Paris 1871; Cardinal 1873.
-Died 1886.</li>
-
-<li>19. François-Marie-Benjamin Richard. Born 1819. Bishop
-of Belley 1871; Coadjutor of Archbishop Guibert 1875;
-Archbishop of Paris 1886. Cardinal 1889.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-</div>
-<div class="index">
-<h2><a name="index" id="index"></a>INDEX</h2>
-
-
-<ul class="nobullet">
-<li>Aisles, double, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li>Altar, high, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li>Ambulatory, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li>Apse, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-
-<li>Archbishops, list of, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Bells, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li>Bishops, list of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
-
-<li>Bishop’s Palace, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li>Buttress system, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Chapels added, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li>Chapels<br />
-<span class="pl2">of</span> the choir, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_93">93</a>;<br />
-<span class="pl2">of</span> the nave, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li>“Chimères,” <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li>Choir, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>; in the thirteenth century, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li>Clerestory: nave, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;<br />
-<span class="pl2">transepts</span>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li>Cloister, or
-<a name="Cloitre3" id="Cloitre3"></a><ins title="Original has
-'Cloiture'">Cloître</ins>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li>Crypt, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Darboy, Archbishop, statue of, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li>Decoration, coloured mural, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li>“Devils of Notre Dame,” <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-
-<li>Dimensions of the cathedral, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li>Doorways: west, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br />
-<span class="pl2">transepts</span>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Flèche, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Galerie des Rois, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-
-<li>Garden, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li>Glass, stained, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li>Gothic construction, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-
-<li>Grille of choir, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Historical events, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-
-<li>Hospital (Hotel Dieu), <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li>Hugo, Victor, on Notre Dame (<i>see</i> Notre Dame)</li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Maurice de Sully, Bishop, first builder of the present church, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
-
-<li>Monuments in the nave, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Napoleon I., coronation of, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li>Notre Dame: early history of the church, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_7">7</a>;<br />
-<span class="pl2">historical</span> events in, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_16">16</a>;<br />
-<span class="pl2">its</span> place in French Gothic, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;<br />
-<span class="pl2">Victor</span> Hugo on, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li>“Notre Dame de Paris,” statue of, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Organ, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Parvis, Place du, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li>Piers of the nave, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li>Portail de la Ste. Vierge, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
-<li>Portail central, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li>Portail Ste. Anne or St. Marcel, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li>Porte Rouge, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-
-<li>Presbytère, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-Relics, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li>Revolution, the, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li>Roman remains, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li>Roof, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-
-<li>Rose windows of transepts, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Sacristy, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li>St. Denis, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>; statue of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;<br />
-<span class="pl2">chapel</span> of, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li>St. Marcel, statue of, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;<br />
-<span class="pl2">shrine</span> of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;<br />
-<span class="pl2">chapel</span> of, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li>Sanctuary, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li>Screen, sculptured, in choir, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li>Stalls, choir, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-
-<li>“Stryge, le,” <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Tombstones in the nave, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li>Towers, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li>Transepts, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li>Treasury, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li>Triforium, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">Vaulting, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-
-<li class="mt2">West front, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li>Windows, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center">CHISWICK PRESS: PRINTED BY CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.<br />
-TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="internal_dimensions" id="internal_dimensions"></a>INTERNAL DIMENSIONS.</h2>
-
-<table summary="Internal dimensions">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Length (total)</td>
-<td class="tdr2">390 feet.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Length of nave</td>
-<td class="tdr2">225 feet.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Length of transepts</td>
-<td class="tdr2">144 feet.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Width of nave vault</td>
-<td class="tdr2">39 feet.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Height of nave vault</td>
-<td class="tdr2">102 feet.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Height of towers</td>
-<td class="tdr2">204 feet.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Area</td>
-<td class="tdr2">54,050 sq. feet.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="plan" id="plan"></a>PLAN OF THE CATHEDRAL
-OF NOTRE DAME, PARIS</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter width800">
-<a name="img-plan" id="img-plan"></a>
-<img src="images/i-q002-3.jpg" width="800" height="562" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Entrance to
-the Towers.</span></p>
-
-<!--<p>1 2 3 4 5 6 7</p>
-
-<p>14 13 12 11 10 9 8</p>
-
-<p class="noi">50 40 30 20 10 0 50 100<br />
-SCALE OF FEET.</p>-->
-
-<ul class="nobullet">
-<li>&nbsp; 1. Chapelle des Fonts Baptismaux.</li>
-<li>&nbsp; 2. Chapelle Saint-Charles.</li>
-<li>&nbsp; 3. Chapelle de la Sainte-Enfance.</li>
-<li>&nbsp; 4. Chapelle Saint-Vincent-de-Paul.</li>
-<li>&nbsp; 5. Chapelle de Saint-François-Xavier.</li>
-<li>&nbsp; 6. Chapelle de Saint-Landry.</li>
-<li>&nbsp; 7. Chapelle de Sainte-Clotilde.</li>
-<li>&nbsp; 8. Chapelle de l’Annonciation.</li>
-<li>&nbsp; 9. Chapelle du Sacré Cœur.</li>
-<li>10. Chapelle Sainte-Anne.</li>
-<li>11. Chapelle Chapelle Saint-Pierre.</li>
-<li>12. Chapelle Saint-Joseph.</li>
-<li>13. Chapelle Sainte-Geneviève.</li>
-<li>14. Chapelle des Ames du Purgatoire.</li>
-<li>15. Statue of Notre Dame de Paris.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="nobullet">
-<li>A. Chapelle Saint-Martin.</li>
-<li>B. Chapelle Saint-Ferdinand.</li>
-<li>C. Chapelle Saint-Germain.</li>
-<li>D. Chapelle Saint-Louis.</li>
-<li>E. Chapelle Saint-Marcel.</li>
-<li>F. Chapelle de N. D. des Sept Douleurs,
-<i>or</i> du Petit Chœur.</li>
-<li>G. Chapelle Saint-Georges.</li>
-<li>H. Chapelle Saint-Guillaume.</li>
-<li>I. Chapelle Sainte-Madelaine.</li>
-<li>J. Chapelle Saint-Denis.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>A.K.M<sup>o</sup>RGAN. del:</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-bells1" id="img-bells1"></a>
-<img src="images/i-q005.jpg" width="500" height="318" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>H. N. King, photo.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">WESTMINSTER. WALL ARCADE AND FRESCOES IN THE CHAPTER-HOUSE</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center p180">BELL’S CATHEDRAL SERIES</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Post 8vo. Profusely Illustrated, 1s. 6d. net each</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“This excellent series of Cathedral handbooks which have
-thoroughly established their reputation as guides to the archaeological,
-architectural, historical, and religious stories of our cathedrals.”&mdash;<i>Saturday
-Review.</i></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="center p130">Volumes on London Cathedrals &amp; Churches</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><strong>ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL.</strong> An Account of the Old
-and New Buildings, with a short Historical Sketch. By
-the Rev. <span class="smcap">Arthur Dimock</span>, M.A. Fourth Edition, Revised.
-With 38 Illustrations and a Plan.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“One of the richest volumes of Messrs. Bell’s ‘Cathedral
-Series.’ The study of the fabric is painstaking, and the details
-as to monuments will be found very helpful to a visitor....
-The whole history is brought down to the present day.”&mdash;<i>London
-Quarterly Review.</i></p>
-
-<p>“The work is cleverly compiled, and the illustrations add not
-a little to its value as a souvenir to be treasured by those who
-visit the cathedral, not because it is one of the sights of London,
-but for the reason that they take an intelligent and reverential
-interest in that great monument of Wren’s genius.”&mdash;<i>City Press.</i></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="hang"><strong>WESTMINSTER ABBEY.</strong> By <span class="smcap">Charles Hiatt</span>. Third
-Edition. With 45 Illustrations and 2 Plans.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“It has been compiled with great care from the best authorities,
-and is especially full on the monuments. Visitors could
-not have a better guide to the most famous of English minsters.”&mdash;<i>London
-Quarterly Review.</i></p>
-
-<p>“This excellent work is likely to become the most popular
-guide to Westminster Abbey. It supplies the need both of the
-student of architecture and the visitor to London, giving a
-capital <i>résumé</i> of the history of the Abbey, with a well-written
-description of the building itself. The book is profusely illustrated.”&mdash;<i>Liverpool
-Mercury.</i></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="hang"><strong>ST. SAVIOUR’S, SOUTHWARK.</strong> By <span class="smcap">George
-Worley</span>. With 36 Illustrations and a Plan.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“Mr. Worley’s painstaking description of the cathedral is the
-most complete that we have seen, and its value is increased by
-many good illustrations and a plan.”&mdash;<i>Manchester Guardian.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Those who wish to visit this Metropolitan Cathedral intelligently,
-and with personal profit, will do well to possess themselves
-with this reliable and interesting little handbook.”&mdash;<i>Builder.</i></p>
-
-<p>“An admirable example of careful work.”&mdash;<i>Gentleman’s
-Magazine.</i></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="hang"><strong>ST. BARTHOLOMEW-THE-GREAT, SMITHFIELD.</strong>
-A short History of the Foundation, and a
-Description of the Fabric, and also of the Church of St.
-Bartholomew-the-Less. By <span class="smcap">George Worley</span>. With 42
-Illustrations and a Plan.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“The author has made a conscientious study of the venerable
-Smithfield church, and has succeeded in presenting a thoroughly
-interesting account of this remarkable relic of the twelfth century.”&mdash;<i>Builder’s
-Journal.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Worley has treated his subject with skill, and produced
-a most readable volume.”&mdash;<i>Church Times.</i></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="hang"><strong>THE TEMPLE CHURCH.</strong> A Description of the Fabric
-and its Contents, with a short History of the Order. By
-<span class="smcap">George Worley</span>. Second Edition, Revised. With 31
-Illustrations and a Plan.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“A short and excellent account of the church of the Knights
-Templars in London, prefaced by a brief history of the Order.
-Nothing has been forgotten that the curious might reasonably
-want to know.... To any one interested, such an excellent
-handbook as this, with its lucid explanations, plans, photographs,
-and technical information of the very best, is indispensable.”&mdash;<i>Spectator.</i></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter width500">
-<a name="img-bells2" id="img-bells2"></a>
-<img src="images/i-q007.jpg" width="500" height="718" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<div class="float-left"><i>Photo.</i></div>
-<div class="float-right">[<i>Photochrom Co.</i></div>
-<div class="clear-both">SOUTHWARK CATHEDRAL FROM THE EAST</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center p130">BELL’S CATHEDRAL SERIES&mdash;<i>continued</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>1s. 6d. net each</i></p>
-
-<p class="hang">BANGOR. By <span class="smcap">P. B. Ironside Bax</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">BRISTOL. By <span class="smcap">H. J. L. J. Massé</span>, M.A. 2nd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">CANTERBURY. By <span class="smcap">Hartley Withers</span>. 6th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">CARLISLE. By <span class="smcap">C. K. Eley</span>. 2nd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">CHESTER. By <span class="smcap">Charles Hiatt</span>. 4th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">CHICHESTER. By <span class="smcap">H. C. Corlette</span>, A.R.I.B.A. 3rd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">DURHAM. By <span class="smcap">J. E. Bygate</span>, A.R.C.A. 4th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">ELY. By <span class="smcap">Rev. W. D. Sweeting</span>, M.A. 3rd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">EXETER. By <span class="smcap">Percy Addleshaw</span>, B.A. 4th Edition, revised.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">GLOUCESTER. By <span class="smcap">H. J. L. J. Massé</span>, M.A. 5th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">HEREFORD. By <span class="smcap">A. Hugh Fisher</span>, A.R.E. 2nd Edition, revised.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">LICHFIELD. By <span class="smcap">A. B. Clifton</span>. 3rd Edition, revised.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">LINCOLN. By <span class="smcap">A. F. Kendrick</span>, B.A. 5th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">LLANDAFF. By <span class="smcap">E. C. Morgan Willmott</span>, A.R.I.B.A.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">MANCHESTER. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. T. Perkins</span>, M.A.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">NORWICH. By <span class="smcap">C. H. B. Quennell</span>. 2nd Edition, revised.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">OXFORD. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. Percy Dearmer</span>, M.A. 2nd Edition, revised.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">PETERBOROUGH. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. W. D. Sweeting</span>, M.A. 4th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">RIPON. By <span class="smcap">Cecil Hallett</span>, B.A. 2nd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">ROCHESTER. By <span class="smcap">G. H. Palmer</span>, B.A. 2nd Edition, revised.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">ST. ALBANS. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. T. Perkins</span>, M.A.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">ST. ASAPH. By <span class="smcap">P. B. Ironside Bax</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">ST. DAVID’S. By <span class="smcap">Philip A. Robson</span>, A.R.I.B.A. 2nd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">ST. PATRICK’S, DUBLIN. By the <span class="smcap">Very Rev. J. H. Bernard</span>,
-M.A., D.D. 2nd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">SALISBURY. By <span class="smcap">Gleeson White</span>. 5th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">SOUTHWELL. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. Arthur Dimock</span>, M.A. 2nd Edition,
-revised.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">WELLS. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. Percy Dearmer</span>, M.A. 5th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">WINCHESTER. By <span class="smcap">P. W. Sergeant</span>. 4th Edition, revised.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">WORCESTER. By <span class="smcap">E. F. Strange</span>. 3rd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">YORK. By <span class="smcap">A. Clutton Brock</span>. 5th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">AN ITINERARY OF ENGLISH CATHEDRALS FOR THE USE
-OF TRAVELLERS. By <span class="smcap">James G. Gilchrist</span>, A.M., M.D., and
-the <span class="smcap">Rev. T. Perkins</span>, M.A., F.R.A.S. 2nd Edition, revised.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>Uniform with above Series, 1s. 6d. net each</i></p>
-
-<p class="hang">BATH ABBEY, MALMESBURY ABBEY, AND BRADFORD-ON-AVON
-CHURCH. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. T. Perkins</span>, M.A.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">BEVERLEY MINSTER. By <span class="smcap">Charles Hiatt</span>. 3rd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">ST. MARTIN’S CHURCH, CANTERBURY. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. Canon
-C. F. Routledge</span>. 2nd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">ROMSEY ABBEY. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. T. Perkins</span>, M.A.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">STRATFORD-ON-AVON CHURCH. By <span class="smcap">Harold Baker</span>. 2nd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">TEWKESBURY ABBEY. By <span class="smcap">H. J. L. J. Massé</span>, M.A. 4th Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">WIMBORNE MINSTER and CHRISTCHURCH PRIORY. By
-the <span class="smcap">Rev. T. Perkins</span>, M.A. 2nd Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">THE CHURCHES OF COVENTRY. By <span class="smcap">Frederick W. Woodhouse</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">MALVERN PRIORY. By the <span class="smcap">Rev. Anthony C. Deane</span>. [<i>In preparation.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb-short" />
-
-<p class="center">LONDON: G. BELL AND SONS, LTD.<br />
-<span class="smcap">York House, Portugal Street, Kingsway, W.C.</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-<div class="tn">
-<p class="center">Transcriber’s Note:</p>
-
-<p class="noi">Punctuation has been standardised; hyphenation retained as it appears
-in the original publication.</p>
-
-<p class="noi">Changes have been made as follows:</p>
-
-<ul class="nobullet">
-<li>Page 4<br />
- that our own proud Minster<br />
- <a href="#than">than</a> our own proud Minster</li>
-
-<li>Page 7<br />
- Description de Notre-Dame, Cathédral de Paris <i>changed to</i><br />
- Description de Notre-Dame, <a href="#Cathedrale">Cathédrale</a> de Paris</li>
-
-<li>Page 10<br />
- se mit A genoux et fit <i>changed to</i><br />
- se mit <a href="#lower-a">à</a> genoux et fit</li>
-
-<li>Page 13<br />
- music by Gossee <i>changed to</i><br />
- music by <a href="#Gossec">Gossec</a></li>
-
-<li>Page 14<br />
- parfaite à la moinde des actions <i>changed to</i><br />
- parfaite à la <a href="#moindre">moindre</a> des actions</li>
-
-<li>Page 15<br />
- apres avoir reçu <i>changed to</i><br />
- <a href="#apres">après</a> avoir reçu</li>
-<li>Page 15<br />
- douce et legère <i>changed to</i><br />
- douce et <a href="#legere">légère</a></li>
-
-<li>Page 19<br />
- mere decorative idiosyncracy <i>changed to</i><br />
- mere decorative <a href="#idiosyncrasy">idiosyncrasy</a></li>
-
-<li>Page 20<br />
- Ths choir was begun <i>changed to</i><br />
- <a href="#The">The</a> choir was begun</li>
-
-<li>Page 40<br />
- <i>Chimères or “Devils of Notre Dame</i>.” <i>changed to</i><br />
- <i>Chimères</i> <a href="#italic">or</a> “<i>Devils of Notre Dame</i>.”</li>
-<li>Page 40<br />
- was in its decadance <i>changed to</i><br />
- was in its <a href="#decadence">decadence</a></li>
-
-<li>Page 41<br />
- ONE OF THE CHIMAERAS OF NOTRE DAME <i>changed to</i><br />
- ONE OF THE <a href="#CHIMERAS">CHIMÈRAS</a> OF NOTRE DAME</li>
-
-<li>Page 42<br />
- which was irrevently compared <i>changed to</i><br />
- which was <a href="#irreverently">irreverently</a> compared</li>
-
-<li>Page 52<br />
- TYMPANIUM OF THE NORTH TRANSEPT DOORWAY <i>changed to</i><br />
- <a href="#TYMPANUM">TYMPANUM</a> OF THE NORTH TRANSEPT DOORWAY</li>
-
-<li>Page 53<br />
- Near the <i>Port Rouge</i> <i>changed to</i><br />
- Near the <i><a href="#Porte">Porte Rouge</a></i></li>
-
-<li>Page 65<br />
- in the cathedrall church <i>changed to</i><br />
- in the <a href="#cathedral">cathedral</a> church</li>
-
-<li>Page 67<br />
- Il en résultei nstinctivement pour <i>changed to</i><br />
- Il en <a href="#resulte">résulte instinctivement</a> pour</li>
-
-<li>Page 78<br />
- Notre Dame par Vespace XXV <i>changed to</i><br />
- Notre Dame par <a href="#lespace">l’espace</a> XXV</li>
-
-<li>Page 89<br />
- by Antoine Coyevox <i>changed to</i><br />
- by Antoine <a href="#Coysevox">Coysevox</a></li>
-
-<li>Page 90<br />
- Archbishop Sibor, who was murdered <i>changed to</i><br />
- Archbishop <a href="#Sibour">Sibour</a>, who was murdered</li>
-
-<li>Page 92<br />
- Archbishop Leclercq de Juigné <i>changed to</i><br />
- Archbishop <a href="#Leclerc">Leclerc</a> de Juigné</li>
-
-<li>Page 95<br />
- The <strong>Cloîture</strong> or Cloister of Notre Dame was on<br />
- The <a href="#Cloitre"><strong>Cloître</strong></a> or Cloister of Notre Dame was on</li>
-
-<li>Page 96<br />
- church of St. Germain des Près <i>changed to</i><br />
- church of St. Germain des <a href="#Pres">Prés</a></li>
-<li>Page 96<br />
- dull houses of the Rue du Cloîture Notre-Dame <i>changed to</i><br />
- dull houses of the Rue du <a href="#Cloitre2">Cloître</a> Notre-Dame</li>
-
-<li>Page 99<br />
- Barthélemy (1223&ndash;1227) <i>changed to</i><br />
- <a href="#Barthelemy">Barthélémy</a> (1223&ndash;1227)</li>
-
-<li>Page 105<br />
- Cloister, or Cloiture <i>changed to</i><br />
- Cloister, or <a href="#Cloitre3">Cloître</a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notre Dame de Paris, by Charles Hiatt
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