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<h2> CHAPTER VIII—POST CORDA LAPIDES </h2>
<p>After having sketched its moral face, it will not prove unprofitable to
point out, in a few words, its material configuration. The reader already
has some idea of it.</p>
<p>The convent of the Petit-Picpus-Sainte-Antoine filled almost the whole of
the vast trapezium which resulted from the intersection of the Rue
Polonceau, the Rue Droit-Mur, the Rue Petit-Picpus, and the unused lane,
called Rue Aumarais on old plans. These four streets surrounded this
trapezium like a moat. The convent was composed of several buildings and a
garden. The principal building, taken in its entirety, was a juxtaposition
of hybrid constructions which, viewed from a bird's-eye view, outlined,
with considerable exactness, a gibbet laid flat on the ground. The main
arm of the gibbet occupied the whole of the fragment of the Rue Droit-Mur
comprised between the Rue Petit-Picpus and the Rue Polonceau; the lesser
arm was a lofty, gray, severe grated facade which faced the Rue
Petit-Picpus; the carriage entrance No. 62 marked its extremity. Towards
the centre of this facade was a low, arched door, whitened with dust and
ashes, where the spiders wove their webs, and which was open only for an
hour or two on Sundays, and on rare occasions, when the coffin of a nun
left the convent. This was the public entrance of the church. The elbow of
the gibbet was a square hall which was used as the servants' hall, and
which the nuns called the buttery. In the main arm were the cells of the
mothers, the sisters, and the novices. In the lesser arm lay the kitchens,
the refectory, backed up by the cloisters and the church. Between the door
No. 62 and the corner of the closed lane Aumarais, was the school, which
was not visible from without. The remainder of the trapezium formed the
garden, which was much lower than the level of the Rue Polonceau, which
caused the walls to be very much higher on the inside than on the outside.
The garden, which was slightly arched, had in its centre, on the summit of
a hillock, a fine pointed and conical fir-tree, whence ran, as from the
peaked boss of a shield, four grand alleys, and, ranged by twos in between
the branchings of these, eight small ones, so that, if the enclosure had
been circular, the geometrical plan of the alleys would have resembled a
cross superposed on a wheel. As the alleys all ended in the very irregular
walls of the garden, they were of unequal length. They were bordered with
currant bushes. At the bottom, an alley of tall poplars ran from the ruins
of the old convent, which was at the angle of the Rue Droit-Mur to the
house of the Little Convent, which was at the angle of the Aumarais lane.
In front of the Little Convent was what was called the little garden. To
this whole, let the reader add a courtyard, all sorts of varied angles
formed by the interior buildings, prison walls, the long black line of
roofs which bordered the other side of the Rue Polonceau for its sole
perspective and neighborhood, and he will be able to form for himself a
complete image of what the house of the Bernardines of the Petit-Picpus
was forty years ago. This holy house had been built on the precise site of
a famous tennis-ground of the fourteenth to the sixteenth century, which
was called the "tennis-ground of the eleven thousand devils."</p>
<p>All these streets, moreover, were more ancient than Paris. These names,
Droit-Mur and Aumarais, are very ancient; the streets which bear them are
very much more ancient still. Aumarais Lane was called Maugout Lane; the
Rue Droit-Mur was called the Rue des Eglantiers, for God opened flowers
before man cut stones.</p>
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