<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></SPAN>CHAPTER V</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">wherein everything seems strange because
everything is logical</span></p>
</div>
<div class='clearfix'><div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/imgt.jpg" width-obs="73" height-obs="80" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>HE Chapel of the Holy Angels, which
lies on the right hand as you
enter the Church of St. Sulpice,
was hidden behind a scaffolding of
planks. Abbé Patouille, Monsieur
Gaétan, Monsieur Maurice, his nephew, and Monsieur
Sariette, entered in single file through the
low door cut in the wooden hoarding, and found
old Guinardon on the top of his ladder standing
in front of the Heliodorus. The old artist,
surrounded by all sorts of tools and materials,
was putting a white paste in the crack which cut
in two the High Priest Onias. Zéphyrine, Paul
Baudry's favourite model, Zéphyrine, who had
lent her golden hair and polished shoulders to so
many Magdalens, Marguerites, sylphs, and mermaids,
and who, it is said, was beloved of the Emperor
Napoleon III, was standing at the foot of
the ladder with tangled locks, cadaverous cheeks,
and dim eyes, older than old Guinardon, whose life
she had shared for more than half a century. She
had brought the painter's lunch in a basket.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<p>Although the slanting rays fell grey and cold
through the leaded and iron-barred window, Delacroix's
colouring shone resplendent, and the roses
on the cheeks of men and angels dimmed with
their glorious beauty the rubicund countenance
of old Guinardon, which stood out in relief against
one of the temple's columns. These frescoes of the
Chapel of the Holy Angels, though derided and
insulted when they first appeared, have now become
part of the classic tradition, and are united in
immortality with the masterpieces of Rubens and
Tintoretto.</p>
<p>Old Guinardon, bearded and long-haired, looked
like Father Time effacing the works of man's genius.
Gaétan, in alarm, called out to him:</p>
<p>"Carefully, Monsieur Guinardon, carefully. Do
not scrape too much."</p>
<p>The painter reassured him.</p>
<p>"Fear nothing, Monsieur Gaétan. I do not
paint in that style. My art is a higher one. I work
after the manner of Cimabue, Giotto, and Beato
Angelico, not in the style of Delacroix. This
surface here is too heavily charged with contrast
and opposition to give a really sacred effect. It is
true that Chenavard said that Christianity loves
the picturesque, but Chenavard was a rascal with
neither faith nor principle—an infidel.... Look,
Monsieur d'Esparvieu, I fill up the crevice, I relay
the scales of paint which are peeling. That is all....<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span>
The damage, due to the sinking of the wall, or
more probably to a seismic shock, is confined to a
very small space. This painting of oil and wax
applied on a very dry foundation is far more solid
than one might think.</p>
<p>"I saw Delacroix engaged on this work. Impassioned
but anxious, he modelled feverishly,
scraped out, re-painted unceasingly; his mighty
hand made childish blunders, but the thing is done
with the mastery of a genius and the inexperience
of a schoolboy. It is a marvel how it holds."</p>
<p>The good man was silent, and went on filling in
the crevice.</p>
<p>"How classic and traditional the composition is,"
said Gaétan. "Time was when one could recognise
nothing but its amazing novelty; now one can see
in it a multitude of old Italian formulas."</p>
<p>"I may allow myself the luxury of being just,
I possess the qualifications," said the old man from
the top of his lofty ladder. "Delacroix lived in a
blasphemous and godless age. A painter of the
decadence, he was not without pride nor grandeur.
He was greater than his times. But he lacked faith,
single-heartedness, and purity. To be able to see
and paint angels he needed that virtue of angels
and primitives, that supreme virtue which, with
God's help, I do my best to practise, chastity."</p>
<p>"Hold your tongue, Michel; you are as big a
brute as any of them."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Thus Zéphyrine, devoured with jealousy because
that very morning on the stairs she had seen her
lover kiss the bread-woman's daughter, to wit the
youthful Octavie, who was as squalid and radiant
as one of Rembrandt's Brides. She had loved Michel
madly in the happy days long since past, and love
had never died out in Zéphyrine's heart.</p>
<p>Old Guinardon received the flattering insult with
a smile that he dissembled, and raised his eyes to the
ceiling, where the archangel Michael, terrible in
azure cuirass and gilt helmet, was springing heavenwards
in all the radiance of his glory.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Abbé Patouille, blinking, and shielding
his eyes with his hat against the glaring light from
the window, began to examine the pictures one
after another: Heliodorus being scourged by the
angels, St. Michael vanquishing the Demons, and
the combat of Jacob and the Angel.</p>
<p>"All this is exceedingly fine," he murmured at
last, "but why has the artist only represented
wrathful angels on these walls? Look where I
will in this chapel, I see but heralds of celestial
anger, ministers of divine vengeance. God wishes
to be feared; He wishes also to be loved. I would
fain perceive on these walls messengers of peace and
of clemency. I should like to see the Seraphim
who purified the lips of the prophet, St. Raphael
who gave back his sight to old Tobias, Gabriel who
announced the Mystery of the Incarnation to Mary,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span>
the Angel who delivered St. Peter from his chains,
the Cherubim who bore the dead St. Catherine to
the top of Sinai. Above all, I should like to be able
to contemplate those heavenly guardians which
God gives to every man baptized in His name. We
each have one who follows all our steps, who comforts
us and upholds us. It would be pleasant
indeed to admire these enchanting spirits, these
beautiful faces."</p>
<p>"Ah, Abbé! it depends on the point of view,"
answered Gaétan. "Delacroix was no sentimentalist.
Old Ingres was not very far wrong in
saying that this great man's work reeks of fire and
brimstone. Look at the sombre, splendid beauty of
those angels, look at those androgynes so proud and
fierce, at those pitiless youths who lift avenging rods
against Heliodorus, note this mysterious wrestler
touching the patriarch on the hip...."</p>
<p>"Hush," said Abbé Patouille. "According to
the Bible he is no angel like the others; if he be
an angel, he is the Angel of Creation, the Eternal
Son of God. I am surprised that the Venerable
Curé of St. Sulpice, who entrusted the
decoration of this chapel to Monsieur Eugène
Delacroix, did not tell him that the patriarch's
symbolic struggle with Him who was nameless took
place in profound darkness, and that the subject is
quite out of place here, since it prefigures the Incarnation
of Jesus Christ. The best artists go<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span>
astray when they fail to obtain their ideas of Christian
iconography from a qualified ecclesiastic.
The institutions of Christian art form the subject
of numerous works with which you are doubtless
acquainted, Monsieur Sariette."</p>
<p>Monsieur Sariette was gazing vacantly about
him. It was the third morning after his adventurous
night in the library. Being, however, thus called
upon by the venerable ecclesiastic, he pulled himself
together and replied:</p>
<p>"On this subject we may with advantage consult
Molanus, <i>De Historia Sacrarum Imaginum et Picturarum</i>,
in the edition given us by Noël Paquot,
dated Louvain, 1771; Cardinal Frederico Borromeo,
<i>De Pictura Sacra</i>, and the Iconography of
Didron; but this last work must be read with
caution."</p>
<p>Having thus spoken, Monsieur Sariette relapsed
into silence. He was pondering on his devastated
library.</p>
<p>"On the other hand," continued Abbé Patouille,
"since an example of the holy anger of the angels
was necessary in this chapel, the painter is to be
commended for having depicted for us in imitation
of Raphael the heavenly messengers who chastised
Heliodorus. Ordered by Seleucus, King of Syria,
to carry off the treasures contained in the Temple,
Heliodorus was stricken by an angel in a cuirass of
gold mounted on a magnificently caparisoned steed.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
Two other angels smote him with rods. He fell
to earth, as Monsieur Delacroix shows us here,
and was swallowed up in darkness. It is right
and salutary that this adventure should be cited
as an example to the Republican Commissioners
of Police and to the sacrilegious agents of the
law. There will always be Heliodoruses, but, let
it be known, every time they lay their hands on
the property of the Church, which is the property
of the poor, they shall be chastised with rods and
blinded by the angels."</p>
<p>"I should like this painting, or, better still,
Raphael's sublimer conception of the same subject,
to be engraved in little pictures fully coloured, and
distributed as rewards in all the schools."</p>
<p>"Uncle," said young Maurice, with a yawn, "I
think these things are simply ghastly. I prefer
Matisse and Metzinger."</p>
<p>These words fell unheeded, and old Guinardon
from his ladder held forth:</p>
<p>"Only the primitives caught a glimpse of Heaven.
Beauty is only to be found between the thirteenth
and fifteenth centuries. The antique, the impure
antique, which regained its pernicious influence
over the minds of the sixteenth century,
inspired poets and painters with criminal notions
and immodest conceptions, with horrid impurities,
filth. All the artists of the Renaissance were swine,
including Michael-Angelo."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Then, perceiving that Gaétan was on the point
of departure, Père Guinardon assumed an air of
bonhomie, and said to him in a confidential tone:</p>
<p>"Monsieur Gaétan, if you're not afraid of climbing
up my five flights, come and have a look at
my den. I've got two or three little canvases
I wouldn't mind parting with, and they might
interest you. All good, honest, straightforward
stuff. I'll show you, among other things, a tasty,
spicy little Baudouin that would make your mouth
water."</p>
<p>At this speech Gaétan made off. As he descended
the church steps and turned down the Rue Princesse,
he found himself accompanied by old Sariette, and
fell to unburdening himself to him, as he would
have done to any human creature, or indeed to a
tree, a lamp-post, a dog, or his own shadow, of the
indignation with which the æsthetic theories of the
old painter inspired him.</p>
<p>"Old Guinardon overdoes it with his Christian
art and his Primitives! Whatever the artist conceives
of Heaven is borrowed from earth; God,
the Virgin, the Angels, men and women, saints, the
light, the clouds. When he was designing figures
for the chapel windows at Dreux, old Ingres drew
from life a pure, fine study of a woman, which may
be seen, among many others, in the Musée Bonnat
at Bayonne. Old Ingres had written at the bottom
of the page in case he should forget: 'Made<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>moiselle
Cécile, admirable legs and thighs'—and so
as to make Mademoiselle Cécile into a saint in
Paradise, he gave her a robe, a cloak, a veil, inflicting
thus a shameful decline in her estate, for the tissues
of Lyons and Genoa are worthless compared with
the youthful living tissue, rosy with pure blood;
the most beautiful draperies are despicable compared
with the lines of a beautiful body. In fact,
clothing for flesh that is desirable and ripe for
wedlock is an unmerited shame, and the worst
of humiliations"; and Gaétan, walking carelessly
in the gutter of the Rue Garancière, continued:
"Old Guinardon is a pestilential idiot. He blasphemes
Antiquity, sacred Antiquity, the age when
the gods were kind. He exalts an epoch when the
painter and the sculptor had all their lessons to
learn over again. In point of fact, Christianity has
run contrary to art in so much as it has not favoured
the study of the nude. Art is the representation of
nature, and nature is pre-eminently the human
body; it is the nude."</p>
<p>"Pardon, pardon," purred old Sariette. "There
is such a thing as spiritual, or, as one might term it,
inward beauty, which, since the days of Fra Angelico
down to those of Hippolyte Flandrin, Christian art
has—"</p>
<p>But Gaétan, never hearing a word of all this, went
on hurling his impetuous observations at the stones of
the old street and the snow-laden clouds overhead:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"The Primitives cannot be judged as a whole,
for they are utterly unlike each other. This old
madman confounds them all together. Cimabue
is a corrupt Byzantine, Giotto gives hints of powerful
genius, but his modelling is bad, and, like children,
he gives all his characters the same face.
The early Italians have grace and joy, because
they are Italians. The Venetians have an instinct
for fine colour. But when all is said and done
these exquisite craftsmen enamel and gild rather
than paint. There is far too much softness about
the heart and the colouring of your saintly Angelico
for me. As for the Flemish school, that's quite
another pair of shoes. They can use their hands,
and in glory of workmanship they are on a level
with the Chinese lacquer-workers. The technique
of the brothers Van Eyck is a marvel, but
I cannot discover in their Adoration of the Lamb
the charm and mystery that some have vaunted.
Everything in it is treated with a pitiless perfection;
it is vulgar in feeling and cruelly ugly.
Memling may touch one perhaps; but he creates
nothing but sick wretches and cripples; under the
heavy, rich, and ungraceful robing of his virgins
and saints one divines some very lamentable anatomy.
I did not wait for Rogier van der Wyden
to call himself Roger de la Pasture and turn Frenchman
in order to prefer him to Memling. This
Rogier or Roger is less of a ninny; but then<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span>
he is more lugubrious, and the rigidity of his lines
bears eloquent testimony to his poverty-stricken
figures. It is a strange perversion to take pleasure in
these carnivalesque figures when one can have the
paintings of Leonardo, Titian, Correggio, Velasquez,
Rubens, Rembrandt, Poussin, or Prud'hon. Really
it is a perverted instinct."</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Abbé Patouille and Maurice
d'Esparvieu were strolling leisurely along in the
wake of the esthete and the librarian. As a general
rule the Abbé Patouille was little inclined to talk
theology with laymen, or, for that matter, with
clerics either. Carried away, however, by the
attractiveness of the subject, he was telling the
youthful Maurice all about the sacred mission
of those guardian angels which Monsieur Delacroix
had so inopportunely excluded from his picture.
And in order to give more adequate expression to
his thoughts on such lofty themes, the Abbé Patouille
borrowed whole phrases and sentences from
Bossuet. He had got them up by heart to put in his
sermons, for he adhered strongly to tradition.</p>
<p>"Yes, my son," he was saying, "God has appointed
tutelary spirits to be near us. They come
to us laden with His gifts. They return laden
with our prayers. Such is their task. Not an hour,
not a moment passes but they are at our side,
ready to help us, ever fervent and unwearying
guardians, watchmen that never slumber."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Quite so, Abbé," murmured Maurice, who was
wondering by what cunning artifice he could get
on the soft side of his mother and persuade her to
give him some money of which he was urgently in
need.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />