<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II" href="#TOC2"> <span title=" Return to CONTENTS. " class="hoverlink">CHAPTER II</span></SPAN></h2>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image007.jpg" width-obs="30" height-obs="22" alt="" title="" /></div>
<h3>THE BOULEVARD ST. MICHEL</h3>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image007.jpg" width-obs="30" height-obs="22" alt="" title="" /></div>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="figleft" src="images/image018a.jpg" width-obs="140" height-obs="144" alt="F" title="" />
<ANTIMG class="figleft" src="images/image018b.jpg" width-obs="50" height-obs="105" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p class="dropcap"><span class="frstltr">F</span>ROM the Place St.
Michel, this ever gay and crowded boulevard ascends a long
incline, up which the tired horses tug at the traces of the fiacres,
and the big double-decked steam trams crawl, until
they reach the Luxembourg Gardens,—and
so on a level road as far as the
Place de l’Observatoire. Within this
length lies the life of the “Boul’
Miche.”</p>
<p>Nearly every highway has its popular
side, and on the “Boul’ Miche” it is the
left one, coming up from the Seine. Here
are the cafés, and from 5 <span class="smfont">P.M.</span> until long
past midnight, the life of the Quartier pours<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">- 30 -</SPAN></span>
by them—students, soldiers, families, poets,
artists, sculptors, wives, and sweethearts;
bicycle girls, the modern grisette, the shop
girl, and the model; fakirs, beggars, and
vagrants. Yet the word vagrant is a misnomer
in this city, where economy has
reached a finesse that is marvelous. That
fellow, in filth and rags, shuffling along, his
eyes scrutinizing, like a hungry rat, every
nook and corner under the café tables on
the terrace, carries a stick spiked with a
pin. The next instant, he has raked the
butt of your discarded cigarette from beneath
your feet with the dexterity of a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">- 31 -</SPAN></span>
croupier. The butt he adds to the collection
in his filthy pocket, and shuffles on to
the next café. It will go so far at least
toward paying for his absinthe. He is
hungry, but it is the absinthe for which
he is working. He is a “marchand de
mégots”; it is his profession.</p>
<table class="fig"> border="0" cellpadding="10" summary="caption">
<tr>
<td class="caption">TERRACE<br/>TAVERNE<br/>DU<br/>PANTHÉON</td>
<td align="right"><ANTIMG src="images/image019.jpg" width-obs="438" height-obs="450" alt="" title="" /></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>One finds every type of restaurant, tavern,
and café along the “Boul’ Miche.” There
are small restaurants whose plat du jour
might be traced to some faithful steed finding
a final oblivion in a brown sauce and
onions—an important item in a course dinner,
to be had with wine included for one
franc fifty. There are brasseries too,
gloomy by day and brilliant by night (dispensing
good Munich beer in two shades,
and German and French food), whose rich
interiors in carved black oak, imitation
gobelin, and stained glass are never half
illumined until the lights are lit.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/image020.jpg" width-obs="271" height-obs="450" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">A “TYPE”<br/><br/> </span></div>
<p><span class="nowrap">All day, when the</span> sun blazes, and the
awnings are down, sheltering those chatting
on the terrace, the interiors of these
brasseries appear dark and cavernous.</p>
<!--[image 20]<p class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">- 32 -</SPAN></p>-->
<p>The clientèle is somber too, and in keeping<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">- 33 -</SPAN></span>
with the place; silent poets, long haired,
pale, and always writing; serious-minded
lawyers, lunching alone, and fat merchants
who eat and drink methodically.</p>
<p>Then there are bizarre cafés, like the
d’Harcourt, crowded at night with noisy
women tawdry in ostrich plumes, cheap
feather boas, and much rouge. The d’Harcourt
at midnight is ablaze with light, but
the crowd is common and you move on up
the boulevard under the trees, past the
shops full of Quartier fashions—velvet
coats, with standing collars buttoning close
under the chin; flamboyant black silk
scarfs tied in a huge bow; queer broad-brimmed,
black hats without which no
“types” wardrobe is complete.</p>
<p>On the corner facing the square, and opposite
the Luxembourg gate, is the Taverne
du Panthéon. This is the most brilliant
café and restaurant of the Quarter,
forming a V with its long terrace, at the
corner of the boulevard and the rue Soufflot,
at the head of which towers the superb
dome of the Panthéon.</p>
<!--[image 21]<p class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">- 34 -</SPAN></p>-->
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image021.jpg" width-obs="620" height-obs="467" alt="(view of Panthéon from Luxembourg gate)" title="" /></div>
<p>It is 6 <span class="smfont">P.M.</span> and the terrace, four rows
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">- 35 -</SPAN></span>
deep with little round tables, is rapidly filling.
The white-aproned garçons are hurrying
about or squeezing past your table, as
they take the various orders.</p>
<p>“Un demi! un!” shouts the garçon.</p>
<p>“Deux pernod nature, deux!” cries another,
and presently the “Omnibus” in his
black apron hurries to your table, holding
between his knuckles, by their necks, half a
dozen bottles of different apéritifs, for it is
he who fills your glass.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image022.jpg" width-obs="507" height-obs="450" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">ALONG THE “BOUL’ MICHE”</span></div>
<p>It is the custom to do most of one’s correspondence
in these cafés. The garçon brings
you a portfolio containing note-paper, a bottle
of violet ink, an impossible pen that spatters,
and a sheet of pink blotting-paper that
does not absorb. With these and your<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">- 36 -</SPAN></span>
<span title=" apératif " class="hoverbox">apéritif</span>,
the place is yours as long as you
choose to remain. No one will ask you to
“move on” or pay the slightest attention
to you.</p>
<p>Should you happen to be a cannibal chief
from the South Seas, and dine in a green
silk high hat and a necklace of your latest
captive’s teeth, you would occasion a passing
glance perhaps, but you would not be a
sensation.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/image023.jpg" width-obs="188" height-obs="350" alt="(hotel sign)" title="" /></div>
<p><span class="nowrap">Céleste would say</span> to Henriette:</p>
<p>“Regarde ça, Henriette! est-il drôle, ce
sauvage?”</p>
<p>And Henriette would reply quite assuringly:</p>
<p>“Eh bien quoi! c’est pas si extraordinaire,
il est peut-être de Madagascar; il y
en a beaucoup à Paris maintenant.”</p>
<p>There is no phase of character, or eccentricity
of dress, that Paris has not seen.</p>
<p>Nor will your waiter polish off the marble
top of your table, with the hope that your
ordinary sensibility will suggest another
drink. It would be beneath his professional
dignity as a good garçon de café. The two
sous you have given him as a pourboire, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">- 37 -</SPAN></span>
is well satisfied with, and expresses his contentment
in a “merci, monsieur, merci,”
the final syllable ending in a little hiss,
prolonged in proportion to his satisfaction.
After this just formality, you will find him
ready to see the point of a joke or discuss
the current topics of the day. He is intelligent,
independent, very polite, but never
servile.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/image024.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="361" alt="(woman walking near fountain)" title="" /></div>
<p><span class="nowrap">It is difficult now</span> to find a vacant chair on the long
terrace. A group of students are having a
“Pernod,” after a long day’s work at
the atelier. They finish their absinthe and then, arm
in arm, start off to Madame Poivret’s for dinner.
It is cheap there; besides, the little “<span
title=" boite " class="hoverbox">boîte</span>,”
with its dingy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">- 38 -</SPAN></span>
room and sawdust floor, is a favorite haunt
of theirs, and the good old lady, with her
credit slate, a friendly refuge in time of
need.</p>
<p>At your left sits a girl in bicycle bloomers,
yellow-tanned shoes, and short black socks
pulled up snug to her sunburned calves.
She has just ridden in from the Bois de
Boulogne, and has scorched half the way
back to meet her “officier” in pale blue.
The two are deep in conversation. Farther
on are four older men, accompanied by a
pale, sweet-faced woman of thirty, her blue-black
hair brought in a bandeau over her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">- 39 -</SPAN></span>
dainty ears. She is the model of the gray-haired
man on the left, a man of perhaps
fifty, with kindly intelligent eyes and strong,
nervous, expressive hands—hands that
know how to model a colossal Greek war-horse,
plunging in battle, or create a nymph
scarcely a foot high out of a lump of clay, so
charmingly that the French Government
has not only bought the nymph, but given
him a little red ribbon for his pains.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image025.jpg" width-obs="515" height-obs="450" alt="(omnibus)" title="" /></div>
<p>He is telling the others of a spot he knows
in Normandy, where one can paint—full of
quaint farm-houses, with thatched roofs;
picturesque roadsides, rich in foliage; bright
waving fields, and cool green woods, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">- 40 -</SPAN></span>
purling streams; quaint gardens, choked
with lavender and roses and hollyhocks—and
all this fair land running to the white
sand of the beach, with the blue sea beyond.
He will write to old Père Jaqueline that
they are all coming—it is just the place in
which to pose a model “en plein air,”—and
Suzanne, his model, being a Normande herself,
grows enthusiastic at the thought of
going down again to the sea. Long before
she became a Parisienne, and when her
beautiful hair was a tangled shock of curls,
she used to go out in the big boats, with
the fisherwomen—barefooted, brown, and
happy. She tells them of those good
days, and then they all go into the Taverne
to dine, filled with the idea of the
new trip, and dreaming of dinners under
the trees, of “Tripes à la mode de Caen,”
Normandy cider, and a lot of new sketches
besides.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/image026.jpg" width-obs="350" height-obs="450" alt="(shop front)" title="" /></div>
<p><span class="nowrap">Already the tables</span> within are well filled.
The long room, with its newer annex, is as
brilliant as a jewel box—the walls rich in
tiled panels suggesting the life of the Quarter,
the woodwork in gold and light oak,
<!--[image 26]<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">- 41 -</SPAN></span>-->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">- 42 -</SPAN></span>the
big panels of the rich gold ceiling exquisitely
painted.</p>
<p>At one of the tables two very chic young
women are dining with a young Frenchman,
his hair and dress in close imitation
of the Duc d’Orleans. These poses in
dress are not uncommon.</p>
<p>A strikingly pretty woman, in a scarlet-spangled
gown as red as her lips, is dining
with a well-built, soldierly-looking man in
black; they sit side by side as is the custom
here.</p>
<p>The woman reminds one of a red lizard—a
salamander—her “svelte” body seemingly
boneless in its gown of clinging scales.
Her hair is purple-black and freshly onduléd;
her skin as white as ivory. She has
the habit of throwing back her small, well-posed
head, while under their delicately
penciled lids her gray eyes take in the
room at a glance.</p>
<p>She is not of the Quarter, but the Taverne
du Panthéon is a refuge for her at
times, when she grows tired of Paillard’s
and Maxim’s and her quarreling retinue.</p>
<p>“Let them howl on the other bank of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">- 43 -</SPAN></span>
Seine,” says this empress of the half-world
to herself, “I dine with Raoul where I
please.”</p>
<p>And now one glittering, red arm with its
small, heavily-jeweled hand glides toward
Raoul’s open cigarette case, and in withdrawing
a cigarette she presses for a
moment his big, strong hand as he holds
near her polished nails the flaming
match.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image027.jpg" width-obs="590" height-obs="450" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">ALONG THE SEINE</span></div>
<p>Her companion watches her as she
smokes and talks—now and then he leans
closer to her, squaring his broad shoulders
and bending lower his strong, determined
face, as he listens to her,—half-amused,
replying to her questions leisurely, in short,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">- 44 -</SPAN></span>
crisp sentences. Suddenly she stamps
one little foot savagely under the table,
and, clenching her jeweled hands, breathes
heavily. She is trembling with rage;
the man at her side hunches his great
shoulders, flicks the ashes from his cigarette,
looks at her keenly for a moment,
and then smiles. In a moment she is herself
again, almost penitent; this little savage,
half Roumanian, half Russian, has
never known what it was to be ruled! She
has seen men grow white when she has
stamped her little foot, but this big Raoul,
whom she loves—who once held a garrison
with a handful of men—he does not tremble!
she loves him for his devil-me-care
indifference—and he enjoys her temper.</p>
<p>But the salamander remembers there are
some whom she dominated, until they
groveled like slaves at her feet; even the
great Russian nobleman turned pale when
she dictated to him archly and with the
voice of an angel the price of his freedom.</p>
<p>“Poor fool! he shot himself the next
day,” mused the salamander.</p>
<p>Yes, and even the adamant old banker in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">- 45 -</SPAN></span>
Paris, crabbed, stern, unrelenting to his
debtors—shivered in his boots and ended
in signing away half his fortune to her,
and moved his family into a permanent
chateau in the country, where he keeps
himself busy with his shooting and his
books.</p>
<hr class="hr33" />
<p>As it grows late, the taverne becomes
more and more animated.</p>
<p>Every one is talking and having a good
time. The room is bewildering in gay color,
the hum of conversation is everywhere, and
as there is a corresponding row of tables
across the low, narrow room, friendly greetings
and often conversations are kept up
from one side to the other. The dinner, as
it progresses, assumes the air of a big
family party of good bohemians. The
French do not bring their misery with
them to the table. To dine is to enjoy
oneself to the utmost; in fact the French
people cover their disappointment, sadness,
annoyances, great or petty troubles,
under a masque of “blague,” and have
such an innate dislike of sympathy or ridicule<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">- 46 -</SPAN></span>
that they avoid it by turning everything
into “blague.”</p>
<p>This veneer is misleading, for at heart
the French are sad. Not to speak of their
inmost feelings does not, on the other hand,
prevent them at times from being most
confidential. Often, the merest exchange
of courtesies between those sharing the
same compartment in a train, or a seat on
a “bus,” seems to be a sufficient introduction
for your neighbor to tell you where he
comes from, where he is going, whether he
is married or single, whom his daughter
married, and what regiment his son is in.
These little confidences often end in his
offering you half his bottle of wine and extending
to you his cigarettes.</p>
<div>
<ANTIMG class="figright" style="margin-bottom: -1em;" src="images/image028a.jpg" width-obs="184" height-obs="180" alt="" title="" />
<ANTIMG class="figright" style="margin-top: 1em;" src="images/image028b.jpg" width-obs="306" height-obs="259" alt="" title="" />
<p class="figright" style="margin-right: 4em; padding-left: 3em; margin-bottom: .5em;"><span class="caption">LES BEAUX MAQUEREAUX</span></p>
</div>
<p><span class="nowrap">If you have</span> finished dinner, you go out on
the terrace for your coffee. The fakirs are
passing up and down in front, selling their
wares—little rabbits, wonderfully lifelike,
that can jump along your table and sit on
their hind legs, and wag their ears; toy
snakes; small leaden pigs for good luck;
and novelties of every description. Here
one sees women with baskets of écrivisse<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">- 47 -</SPAN></span>
boiled scarlet; an acrobat tumbles on the
pavement, and two men and a girl, as a
marine, a soldier, and a vivandière, in silvered
faces and suits, pose in melodramatic
attitudes. The vivandière is rescued alternately
from a speedy death by the marine
and the soldier.</p>
<p>Presently a little old woman approaches, shriveled and
smiling, in her faded furbelows now in rags. She sings
in a piping voice and executes between the verses a
tottering pas seul, her eyes ever smiling, as if she
still saw over
the glare of the footlights,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">- 48 -</SPAN></span>
in the haze beyond, the vast audience
of by-gone days; smiling as if she still heard
the big orchestra and saw the leader with
his vibrant baton, watching her every movement.
She is over seventy now, and was
once a premier danseuse at the opera.</p>
<p>But you have not seen all of the Taverne
du Panthéon yet. There is an “American
Bar” downstairs; at least, so the sign reads
at the top of a narrow stairway leading to a
small, tavern-like room, with a sawdust
floor, heavy deal tables, and wooden stools.
In front of the bar are high stools that
one climbs up on and has a lukewarm whisky
soda, next to Yvonne and Marcelle, who
are both singing the latest catch of the day
at the top of their lungs, until they are
howled at to keep still or are lifted bodily
off their high stools by the big fellow in the
“type” hat, who has just come in.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image029.jpg" width-obs="620" height-obs="393" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">MOTHER AND DAUGHTER</span></div>
<p>Before a long table at one end of the room
is the crowd of American students singing
in a chorus. The table is full now, for many
have come from dinners at other cafés to
join them. At one end, and acting as interlocutor
for this impromptu minstrel show,
<!--[image 29]<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">- 49 -</SPAN></span>-->
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">- 50 -</SPAN></span>presides
one of the best fellows in the world.
He rises solemnly, his genial round face
wreathed in a subtle smile, and announces
that he will sing, by earnest request, that
popular ballad, “’Twas Summer and the
Little Birds were Singing in the Trees.”</p>
<p>There are some especially fine “barber
chords” in this popular ditty, and the words
are so touching that it is repeated over and
over again. Then it is sung softly like the
farmhand quartettes do in the rural melodrama
outside the old homestead in harvest
time. Oh! I tell you it’s a truly rural octette.
Listen to that exhibition bass voice
of Jimmy Sands and that wandering tenor
of Tommy Whiteing, and as the last chord
dies away (over the fields presumably) a
shout goes up:</p>
<p>“How’s that?”</p>
<p>“Out of sight,” comes the general verdict
from the crowd, and bang go a dozen beer
glasses in unison on the heavy table.</p>
<p>“Oh, que c’est beau!” cries Mimi, leading
the successful chorus in a new vocal
number with Edmond’s walking-stick; but
this time it is a French song and the whole<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">- 51 -</SPAN></span>
room is singing it, including our old friend,
Monsieur Frank, the barkeeper, who is
mixing one of his famous concoctions which
are never twice quite alike, but are better
than if they were.</p>
<p>The harmonic beauties of “’Twas Summer
and the Little Birds were Singing in
the Trees” are still inexhausted, but it
sadly needs a piano accompaniment—with
this it would be perfect; and so the whole
crowd, including Yvonne, and <span title=" Celeste " class="hoverbox">Céleste</span>,
and Marcelle, and the two Frenchmen, and the
girl in the bicycle clothes, start for Jack
Thompson’s studio in the rue des Fourneaux,
where there is a piano that, even if
the candles in the little Louis XVI brackets
do burn low and spill down the keys, and
the punch rusts the strings, it will still
retain that beautiful, rich tone that every
French upright, at seven francs a month,
possesses.</p>
<br/><br/><br/><br/>
<p class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">- 52 -</SPAN></p>
<br/>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/image030.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="436" alt="(Bullier)" title="" /></div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />