“For my own part,” said
Emile Blondet, “if I try to recall my childhood
memories, I remember that the nickname of ’Collection
of Antiquities’ always made me laugh, in spite
of my respect—my love, I ought to say—for
Mlle. d’Esgrignon. The Hotel d’Esgrignon
stood at the angle of two of the busiest thoroughfares
in the town, and not five hundred paces away from
the market place. Two of the drawing-room windows
looked upon the street and two upon the square; the
room was like a glass cage, every one who came past
could look through it from side to side. I was
only a boy of twelve at the time, but I thought, even
then, that the salon was one of those rare curiosities
which seem, when you come to think of them afterwards,
to lie just on the borderland between reality and
dreams, so that you can scarcely tell to which side
they most belong.
“The room, the ancient Hall
of Audience, stood above a row of cellars with grated
air-holes, once the prison cells of the old court-house,
now converted into a kitchen. I do not know that
the magnificent lofty chimney-piece of the Louvre,
with its marvelous carving, seemed more wonderful
to me than the vast open hearth of the salon d’Esgrignon
when I saw it for the first time. It was covered
like a melon with a network of tracery. Over
it stood an equestrian portrait of Henri III., under
whom the ancient duchy of appanage reverted to the
crown; it was a great picture executed in low relief,
and set in a carved and gilded frame. The ceiling
spaces between the chestnut cross-beams in the fine
old roof were decorated with scroll-work patterns;
there was a little faded gilding still left along
the angles. The walls were covered with Flemish
tapestry, six scenes from the Judgment of Solomon,
framed in golden garlands, with satyrs and cupids playing
among the leaves. The parquet floor had been laid
down by the present Marquis, and Chesnel had picked
up the furniture at sales of the wreckage of old chateaux
between 1793 and 1795; so that there were Louis Quatorze
consoles, tables, clock-cases, andirons, candle-sconces
and tapestry-covered chairs, which marvelously completed
a stately room, large out of all proportion to the
house. Luckily, however, there was an equally
lofty ante-chamber, the ancient Salle des Pas Perdus
of the presidial, which communicated likewise with
the magistrate’s deliberating chamber, used
by the d’Esgrignons as a dining-room.
“Beneath the old paneling, amid
the threadbare braveries of a bygone day, some eight
or ten dowagers were drawn up in state in a quavering
line; some with palsied heads, others dark and shriveled
like mummies; some erect and stiff, others bowed and
bent, but all of them tricked out in more or less
fantastic costumes as far as possible removed from
the fashion of the day, with be-ribboned caps above
their curled and powdered ‘heads,’ and
old discolored lace. No painter however earnest,
no caricature however wild, ever caught the haunting
fascination of those aged women; they come back to
me in dreams; their puckered faces shape themselves
in my memory whenever I meet an old woman who puts
me in mind of them by some faint resemblance of dress
or feature. And whether it is that misfortune
has initiated me into the secrets of irremediable
and overwhelming disaster; whether that I have come
to understand the whole range of human feelings, and,
best of all, the thoughts of Old Age and Regret; whatever
the reason, nowhere and never again have I seen among
the living or in the faces of the dying the wan look
of certain gray eyes that I remember, nor the dreadful
brightness of others that were black.
“Neither Hoffmann nor Maturin,
the two weirdest imaginations of our time, ever gave
me such a thrill of terror as I used to feel when I
watched the automaton movements of those bodies sheathed
in whalebone. The paint on actors’ faces
never caused me a shock; I could see below it the
rouge in grain, the rouge de naissance, to quote a
comrade at least as malicious as I can be. Years
had leveled those women’s faces, and at the
same time furrowed them with wrinkles, till they looked
like the heads on wooden nutcrackers carved in Germany.
Peeping in through the window-panes, I gazed at the
battered bodies, and ill-jointed limbs (how they were
fastened together, and, indeed, their whole anatomy
was a mystery I never attempted to explain); I saw
the lantern jaws, the protuberant bones, the abnormal
development of the hips; and the movements of these
figures as they came and went seemed to me no whit
less extraordinary than their sepulchral immobility
as they sat round the card-tables.
“The men looked gray and faded
like the ancient tapestries on the wall, in dress
they were much more like the men of the day, but even
they were not altogether convincingly alive. Their
white hair, their withered waxen-hued faces, their
devastated foreheads and pale eyes, revealed their
kinship to the women, and neutralized any effects of
reality borrowed from their costume.
“The very certainty of finding
all these folk seated at or among the tables every
day at the same hours invested them at length in my
eyes with a sort of spectacular interest as it were;
there was something theatrical, something unearthly
about them.
“Whenever, in after times, I
have gone through museums of old furniture in Paris,
London, Munich, or Vienna, with the gray-headed custodian
who shows you the splendors of time past, I have peopled
the rooms with figures from the Collection of Antiquities.
Often, as little schoolboys of eight or ten we used
to propose to go and take a look at the curiosities
in their glass cage, for the fun of the thing.
But as soon as I caught sight of Mlle. Armande’s
sweet face, I used to tremble; and there was a trace
of jealousy in my admiration for the lovely child
Victurnien, who belonged, as we all instinctively felt,
to a different and higher order of being from our own.
It struck me as something indescribably strange that
the young fresh creature should be there in that cemetery
awakened before the time. We could not have explained
our thoughts to ourselves, yet we felt that we were
bourgeois and insignificant in the presence of that
proud court.”