French Men and French Manners
French Men and French Manners
French Men and French Manners
fc-'l
t ,[
;
FRENCH MEN AND FRENCH MANNERS.
FRENCH MEN
AND
FEENCH MANNERS
(ODD CHAPTERS AND SKETCHES)
WITH AN INTKODUCTION
BY
ALBEET D. VANDAM
AUTHOR OF "AN ENGLISHMAN IN PARIS," "MY PARIS NOTE-BOOK," ETC.
1895
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
PAGE
French home-life The mistake ofEnglishmen and Americans
with regard to the docilityof French servants the cause of
;
CHAPTER II.
252301
vi Contents.
PAGE
of foreign, but especially English, visitors The maison
meubtee The police and the maisons metibleesThe femme
de manage The concierge how she influences the whole of
;
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
PAGE
A chapter on French girls The ingenue The demoiselle libre
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
PAGE
man or farm-labourer The first day in barracks The first
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
An obscure heroine How I met with her How she got her
liviug I pay her a visit She refuses assistance, and tells
me the story of her life Three generations of revolutionaries
Her death, burial, and gravestone ... ... ... 151
CHAPTER X.
CHAPTER XL
Poverty-stricken Paris Wretchedness in rags, wretchedness in
a blouse, wretchedness in a black coat and chimney-pot hat
The working man the spoilt child of the Radical politician
A glimpse of the Government employe' and the clerk in
large industrial establishmentsThe clerk's wants and the
workman's The clerk's salary and the workman's pay
The clerk's family and the workman's The positions com-
"
pared A glance at a copying office and its personnel
"
A true story The general registry office for the unemployed
Attempted reform of the Paris Municipality ... ... 187
Contents.
CHAPTER XII.
PAGE
Poverty-stricken Paris still The paternal pawnshop, otherwise
"
Le Mont de Piete " The English would-be philanthropist
with regard to it Parliamentary Commissions and their
theoretical result The paternal pawnshop as it is The
impecunious Englishman face to face with "uncle;" the
impecunious Frenchman face to face with "aunt" Docu-
mentary evidence with regard to one's identity The pawn-
shop as a borrower Formalities The valuation of property
To whom such valuation is left Rate of interest, etc.
Illiuit traffic in pawn-tickets Does the French pawnshop
offer the best guarantee for the tracing and recovery of
stolen property? Proofs to the contrary The tailors at
the central pawnshop ... ... ... ... 212
CHAPTER XIII.
CHAPTER XIV.
The manufacture of street arabs A short preamble The
resources of the London street arab and those of the Paris
one The manufacturing of little angels The Assistance
Publique and illegitimate children A trial for baby-
farming The French nurse Whence she springs
Maternity a profitable speculation on her part Some
personal experiences ... ... ... ... ... 254
Contents.
CHAPTER XV.
PAGE
Idle days The rag-gatherers and M. Poubelle eleven years ago
The extra-mural headquarters of the Paris rag-gatherers
The Route de la Re'volte A bit of history To explore
Paris, no disguise is necessary Papa Alexandre con- A
versation with him An anecdote of the Cite Foucault
Papa Alexandre offers to do me a good turn The Villa
Cobain and Madame Plancard Papa Beresina The state-
ment of a young rag-gatherer ... ... .., ... 270
CHAPTER XVI.
THOSE who know Paris and France are aware that the
capital virtually rules the whole of the land, not only
in politics, but in matters of literature, art, fashion, and
the drama. This uncontrovertible fact must be the
" "
Sigurd when Paris impresarios declined to pro-
duce these works. However anxious they may have
been to give a provincial director the benefit of such
an experiment, they knew that no provincial manager
could afford to undertake it, and that apart from the
cost of production involved.
will either for good or evil, or for b$th. The fact is,
that, with few exceptions, he is the very reverse. If he
be a Parisian of either the second or third generation
and there are probably not 350,000, all told, of them in
Paris both his physique and constitution will be below
the average physique and constitution of his provincial
countrymen and, if we bear in mind that in stature
;
1
Count Bernard d'Armagnac played an important part in the Civil
Wars during the reign of Charles VI.
Introduction. xxi
"
they may be pronounced almost phenomenal. L'amour,
c'est Tegoisme en deux personnes," wrote Boufflers
"
says, but you'll help me to
perform it." And, taking
out hispistols, he adds, "Here are the cups for the
wine and the oil." The people applauded, and almost
"
trampled the would-be assassin to death. Each epi-
gram gave Maury a month's rest and security," said
the almost equally famous Abbe de Pradt.
And here I may be permitted to give a personal
anecdote, showing that the hundred years which have
gone by since then have wrought no change in the Paris-
ian's temper in that respect. At the outset of the
logical conditions.
For the Parisian, and, for that matter, the provincial
who has become assimilated to the Parisian by a long
residence in the capital is as often attracted to the
scene of disorder by sheer, idle curiosity as by the
wish to participate actively in what goes on. In fact,
turn these two whichever way you will, it is difficult
to deny that in most cases they are simpletons writ
they be prosperous. It is they who
large, especially if
during the Commune toiled up the heights of Mont-
martre to see the insurgents at work, to have a chat
with them, and in several instances, and at the cost
of a few francs, they gave themselves the gratification of
If Therese de Fontenay
throne of his great-grandfather.
(nee Cabarrus) had been less handsome than she was,
Tallien might not have delivered her from her prison
at Bordeaux, she would not have accompanied him to
Paris as his mistress, they would not have incurred
for himself.
Introduction. xliii
September, 1870 ;
of M. Arago, whom the biographical
dictionaries describe as auteur dramatique et homme
'
Paris has the right of execution over the whole of the
CHAPTEE I.
A
\ Their meeting-place preliminary glance at the concierge
The trained female servant a rarity in France The French and
English female servants in their own homes ; their ambitions ;
thing ;
but it may safely be asserted that, out of every
hundred girls in the English provinces who go wrong,
6 French Men and French Manners.
servant from the country, and, two days after her arrival,
found her violently ringing the bell in the dining-room.
" "
What are you ringing for ? was the natural question.
"
I am ringing for madame, I want to speak to her,"
was the answer. " When madame wants me, she rings
for me." It was with the greatest difficulty that my
friend succeeded in convincing her that the argument
only applied on one side.
Cleanliness, is not the besetting sin of the French
middle classes I am speaking of personal cleanliness,
and where such cleanliness is simply to be
least of all
we get
O more work out of them."
To return to the female servant. "Ever since a
village girl, who went out as a servant, came back to
her native place in a silk dress, and with a gold watch,
the provinces cry in vain for domestics." Thus writes
M. Aurelien Scholl, whose truths are none the less
"
The Painter of LAngelus? 1 1
her from the moment she could form any notion at all,
The Innocent Lambs. 13
how she influences the whole of Paris home life The con-
cierge not the servant of the tenants The real and ideal French
manservant The frotteur The concierge once more Utterly
unnecessary, if the French would but see it The concierges as
a married couple Their duties One's neighbours in a French
house Landlord and tenant Various degrees of concierges
The salary of the concierge what she has to do for it Her
;
Glasgow ;
he does not know that those flights of stairs
are kept clean in said Middle Temple and Buchanan
hourly. One may live in a house for ten years and not
know the name of his neighbour on the same landing,
unless the gossip of the servants acquaints him with it.
There is a tacit disinclination to fraternize, which almost
amounts to monomania.
Eor full two years I happened to meet a man whose
striking resemblance to a portrait I had seen in my
youth puzzled me. One day I was ill-advised enough
to inquire his name of the concierge. The next day I
received a.
polite but freezing note, hinting that I had
committed a breach of etiquette, which, in consideration
of my foreign ignorance, was pardoned to me. The
D
34 French Men and French Manners.
sonage in Paris^
home life. The reader, therelorefSfisT;
not be surprised at the space I have devoted to her,
seeing that her lodge is often not unlike a little court,
where every one of the tenants,to say nothing of their
every tenant, and of the wood stored for the winter. The
custom is falling into abeyance, and this curtailing of
of the concierge's perquisites has not improved her
temper. In
short, look at the concierge whichever way
we will, the fact stares one in the face that she is
placed in the house for the extra security of the land-
lord, and for the undoubted annoyance of the tenants.
Nevertheless, from them she derives the greater part of
her support. Therefore, the feeling that they are not
only submitting to a constant watch upon their doings,
but that they are paying for this watch, is not calcu-
lated to improve the relations between them.
It may be safely said that a proprietor who was suffi-
family are very well off, that the husband has some
good employment, that the children are being educated
above the stations of the parents. If girls, they are
of the daily papers, but she does not quite believe the
whole of it as gospel truth. Her credulity is consider-
ably tempered by her experience. Her optimism, if
ever she had much to start with, is constantly receiving
terrible shocks but scarcely shocks to her from any
and every one of the two hundred persons she comes
in hourly contact with. Long before she occupied the
present position she has been told and taught that there
are but two things that rule French existence money
and^women. She has no illusions about the young
madame of the second or third floor. The experience
gained in her former business tells that the dress young
madame wears means about four or five months of her
husband's salary; but she also knows that no part of
that salary has paid for it. Her memory travels back
in other respects. She remembers her young fellow-
workwomen too well not to know the one who pays
periodical visits to the single man in the entresol ;
albeit that the visitor comes with a band-box or parcel
in order to account for her call. And every scrap of
this knowledge influences her doings with her own
daughters, with the result that she becomes like the
Madame Cardinal M. Halevy has so amusingly described.
But M. and Madame Cardinal are too important per-
sonages for the fag end of a chapter.
**
CHAPTEE III.
withstanding
Halevy presents himself, in this instance at any rate,
with far better credentials no one would suspect or
;
but the girl cannot bear the sight of him, and Madame
Cardinal is essentially a tender-hearted mother, who
would not force her children's inclinations.
48 French Men and French Manners.
" "
I haven't the heart to bully her/' she says ; besides,
that is not a mother's duty. Yes," she continues,
answering the compliment about her right sentiments
"
in such matters. Yes, my sentiments are what they
should be. After all, what's the good of being in a
hurry, I ask you ? The girl will be prettier in another
year than she is now."
Madame Cardinal does not add, "and consequently
worth more money," but that is what she means. And
why She had already bought one house at
not ?
"
Virginie is an angel. Before leaving for Italy, she
insisted that the, marquis should provide very comfort-
ably for us. Of course I need not tell you that the
affair was treated directly through me, and that the
dignity of M.onsieur Cardinal did not suffer for a
moment. The morning after the departure of the
. . .
'
house property. . . .
to another."
M. Cardinal's note has the desired effect of bringing
the Marquis Cavalcanti to the house on the following
The Cardinal-speculation and its basis The French youth and his
accredited mistress The philosophy of "Be'be'"
(Betsy) The
French public-school system and its attempt to counteract the
evil Humiliating surveillance What the system really is
The uniform, and its effect upon the younger and elder pupils
The school and its discipline The food Recreation The
masters ;the pion or usher in general The attempts to
introduce athletic sports "Tom Brown's Schooldays" and
"Jacques Vingtras" The French schoolboy apparently more
docile than the English ; apparently only The French schoolboy
from a physical point Results.
bidden books the French boy will take all those things
as being due to fear of him, or rather than as a wish to
oblige him.
It is not surprising that, at the end of the scholastic
year, the lad returns to his home an altered being and
a complete stranger. The barrack system has produced
its effect. The infHvifjna.ljiky_of the J)py_J.s .gone ;
he
has become part and parcel of a barrack population,
to the full a&.coarso_in thought, if not in expression, as
life has been forced upon him. After
the soldier's whose
the first
year he has little or no feeling left. Inter-
course with his older fellows has taught him things
of which he had .better have remained ignorant. The
dragooning to which he has been subject has made him
shy with those he loves most ;
and the few weeks spent
in their society are not calculated to soften the rind
with which the whole of his being has been hardened.
He has become suspicious, careful according to college
lights, his nature no longer expands. With the sel-
Schooldays Recollections. 69
Mariage." A
little farther on she sums up a conjugal
moisalle-lrbre ;
the ingenue proper is a different kind
of creature. Her knowledge of^ thgjarorld, especially if
" "
un homme ou une femme ? Comment veux-tu que
" "
je sache ? was the answer. Tu vois Men que ce n'est
pas habilled."
Carpet dances with friends of her own age, panto-
mimes, and good classical concerts are almost out
of the question. If she is taken to dances at all, it is
to children's balls and to Kobert Houdin's, or rather
M. Dickenson's, in the shape of a theatre. On ordinary
days she sent to bed regularly at half-past nine now
is ;
libres and the ingenues into their married life, but the
reader himself can, without our aid, guess the sequels
to such unions, even if he has never looked into a daily
"
I see a dead body," she said " you have lost a near
;
parents' permission ;
but there is not one in a thousand
parents who would give it under the circumstances, and
without that there can be no marriage in France for one
so young. And though not versed in the world's ways,
the youth is not quite sure that marriage would be a
" "
attacking his enemy from his manner of attacking
his notes. For not even the most persistent detractor
of the French will deny their courage. The furia
francese is by no means an idle boast with the foe
facing them, few Frenchmen will turn tail; yet, to
judge from the manner in which some of them sing
on that ill-fated morning, one would decidedly suspect
them of being arrant cowards. Cowards tbej__.are
decidedly but their courage is of a kind that
not,
requires a stimulus, and that stimulus is lacking, for
there isno actual danger to la patrie, only the
prospect of a few years of bondage. During the journey
to the market town, the young Frenchman, who, until
ditty ;
for five out of every ten do not know
a word of French even now. His square jaws, his
big clenched fists, his wild locks streaming in the
morning breeze or hiding his beardless face, make the
song doubly weird. The chances are, even in the latter
days of the nineteenth century, that this song is an
invocation to his half-pagan saints or half-Christian
gods, or else a terrible threat of vengeance on some
real or imaginary enemy whom his superstition blames
beforehand for all the evil he fancies there is in store
for him.
As different as possible from both the former is the
fiftrp.p.ly __orftatip.n1_a.t.iTig t higtrionfo, mercTirja.! youth from
the^Sputh,. who turns on the wind- or the water-power
of his constitution as his mood dictates. Hejveeps and
laughs and both manifestations^ are genuine in the
space of two minutes ; and you need not be his friend,
or even The acquaintance of a day, to be made the
"
faints away, or else sobs fit to break her heart." She
might just as well save herself the pains, as far as
the object of her affections is concerned. If not abso-
orphan.
All chances of hoodwinking the authorities having
failed, our embryo warrior, who, the reverse of Barkis,
is neither ready nor willing, but simply compelled,
She does not spoil them with petting/ though they are
as brave as any of her land forces. Few students of
"
ifanywhere, is verified the adage, Out of sight, out of
mind."
One day, amongst the official documents of the war
in Mexico, the following despatch was published.
Admiral La Bonciere reproduces it as a reminder of
the indifference of France with regard to her sailors.
" The
Let those families who are uneasy take heart.
only unhealthy parts of Mexico are the tropical parts,
and they are occupied by the navy." Comment is
bad ;
for there is not the least doubt that the authori-
ties, who
are never tired of extolling the virtues of the
"
TAPLEYISM," as Dickens conceived and sketched it, is
something different from resignation to the inevitable.
Eesignation is, after all, nothing more than a very nega-
"
tive Virtue, submission to circumstances. Tapleyism,"
as I take it, circumstances in trying to
rises superior to
overcome them. In the reorganized French army, the
attempts to overcome many difficulties have always been
hampered, up to the present
time, by the turbulent
and refractory so-called Eepublican element from the
capital and larger provincial centres, instigated by pro-
fessional politicians in the Chamber. I have an idea
that the task of removing difficulties will be still farther
"
aggravated by the abolition of the one year's voluntary
system," which, in spite of its unquestionably excellent
loS French Men and French Manners.
1 ill tourer or
shepherd returns to his village, and occupies
his former place noLso the ^lawyer, the banker's clerk,
:
Is the drill_excessive ?
Undoubtedly it is, and the
greater part of it unnecessary. It puzzles the stupid,
it worries the bright, recruit. Martinetism is the
A
few years ago, a young backwoodsman, the son
of a wealthy American farmer, after making ducks and
drakes of his money in Europe, being afraid to go back,
took into his head to enlist in the Foreign Legion.
it
lesson is
interrupted by a patriotic song of regret that
might even make those walls shed tears, especially
when the last lines are taken up by the whole room-
ful, no matter whether they are on their knees washing
the brick floor, or perched up near the ceiling to
improvise a sort of hanging candelabrum. Close to
the walls four and twenty slanting boards, with their
mattress, blankets, and pillows; above each bed a double
shelf;two large wooden tables, each flanked by a pair
of wooden benches a few pails of water with mugs
;
quarters, smart but sad. They are not unwilling t_Q go,
but they would perhaps not be unwilling to stay that
is, those of the lower middle classes those of the upper
;
and, but for that fatal hankering to get into the best or
second-best set, an unobjectionable companion. He
was introduced to me at the editorial offices of a paper
"
amis, void ma
politigue : Vive 1'Empereur !the
when there are no " five o'clocks " among the duchesses
living in the neighbourhood of St. Philippe du Koule.
The Vicomte de Parabere, when I made his acquaint-
ance, was a few years older than Broulard that is,
134 French Men and French Manners.
'
about a thousand good-looking fellows quite as well-
'
born as I, who would be similarly self-sacrificing ;
while there are, all told, perhaps, a score and a half of
heiresses whom it would be worth while to marry. If
I happened to be among the thirty who will be suffi-
ciently lucky to land a big fish, well and good ; but the
theory of probabilities, of chances, is dead against me.
I could never pull off a big stake against tremendous
odds, so the idea of marriage may be dismissed at once.
There remain, therefore, four courses open to me
business, stock-exchange operations, the diplomatic
and political careers. I will, with your permission,
136 French Men and French Manners.
"
Under the title, Whither the Fates call me,' the
'
"
moves the barrel whereon the morceau has been " set
for him by his chief, the Minister for Foreign Affairs.
But and here's the rub he must be a gentleman, and,
above all, a man of the world, used to good society.
The corps diplomatique, and especially the European
corps diplomatique, is, after all, only an international
coterie of men, who are essentially "good form," who
know one another as intimately as the inhabitants of a
very small provincial town.
" "
Unfortunately, good form what the big wigs of
is
"
d'ambassade en mission has asked his neighbour to be
"
kind enough to present him to these gentlemen," the
said gentlemen being none other than the late Due
d'Aosta and the Due's brother, the then heir to the
throne, and the present King of Italy
.
a fourth, a ;
" "
aware that the race of real diplomatists in the other
142 French Men and French Manners.
"
tious mediocrities, fancying themselves" very much,
and persistently disregarding instructions from head-
quarters, even if they can be induced to accept service
under Eepublican Ministers of Foreign Affairs, whom, in
their inmos*t hearts, they regard as mountebanks, and,
what is worse from their point of view, mountebanks
lacking the showy qualities upon which they might
graft their own, as Benedetti grafted his on those of the
Due de Gramont.
Under such circumstances, Parabere was a godsend.
He would not want to distinguish himself; all he
wanted was a snug berth, pending the discovery of a
Sclavonic or other heiress, with whose fortune the
ancient splendour of the Parabere-Craons might be
revived.
I have endeavoured to sketch Broulard, whom no
one, not even Broulard himself, takes an serieux. I
have tried to do the same with Parabere, who, whatever
the Eepublicans may think of him, rarely fosters illu-
sions with regard to his potentiality for good or evil as
a wheel in the political and diplomatic machinery of
the Kepublic. But the influence of my third tyj)e is
absolutely pernicious in more respects than one. He is
very numerously represented in .the Chambers, for there
are at least a score or more of deputies and senators of
the present day whose pseudo-martyrdom for the Eepub-
lican cause imposes upon the credulous. M. Theophile
Mirandol has both shed his blood and suffered imprison-
ment for that cause not once, but half a dozen times.
A Republican Martyr. 143
purport of my
call.
"
I have an objection to all this vulgar publicity,"
"
were his first words. I would not be beholden to it
for mypopularity, such as it may be ; and, least of all,
" "
You are right, monsieur," he said at last and, ;
;
and !
"
fall of the tyrant who oppressed France I could not
Apprenticeship in Martyrdom. 147
paper ;
but after the sentence passed upon it for that
sensational article, which you probably also remember
I mean the article headed Political Scum
' '
the paper
picked up wonderfully, and, as a matter of course,
became a very good property. At my release I sold it,
because I know well enough how fickle the people are.
Since then I have embarked in several of those com-
binations which are always more or less profitable but :
An obscure heroine How I met with her How she got her living
Ipay her a visit She refuses assistance, and tells me the story
of her life Three generations of revolutionaries Her death,
burial, and gravestone.
noticing it ;
was well rewarded for
in this instance I
my glance, for the lad who had made the modest request
was sweet to look upon as he stood there, swinging his
pretty astrachan cap by its tassel, baring his fair young
forehead to the cutting wind, and gazing earnestly into
his mother's face.
152 French Men and French Manners.
"
"
A sou ! what do you want with a sou ? asked the
latter.
"
To buy plaisirs of Madame Barbette. Felicie always
gives me a sou when we come to the park."
"
But you have more sweets at home than you can
eat, and they much more wholesome."
"
Never mind, mamma I'd sooner have the plaisirs.
;
Just let me take you it's such fun. You turn, and then
;
took the small bronze coin from the rosy, chubby palm
of the little gambler the body, almost bent in twain,
;
silver coin, the old woman lifted her hand, and, without
saying a word, pointed towith her long, bony finger.
it
keep my appointment.
An hour later I mounted the seemingly endless
The Heroines Home. 155
"
She would like to help you."
"
I do not ask for charity."
I kept silent for a moment. There was nothing
defiant in the tone of the latter words. They were
meant as a mere statement, not as a boast.
"You may rest assured," I remarked timidly, and
"
almost at random, that there is no wish to hurt your
feelings; but you cannot object to the offer of some
and warm clothing for the winter."
fuel
was four years old, died during the siege. He was ill,
and the doctor said he wanted milk. But there was no
milk for us."
Another bit of Autobiography. 157
" "
And your son ?
"
My son died far, far away from here, over the sea,
in the accursed spot you call New Caledonia." And her
"
Better days Not here, at any rate
!
"
If not here, elsewhere, perhaps."
I felt sorry I had spoken. The old woman literally
jumped from her seat, and stood upright before me.
"
That's the religion the rich preach to keep the poor
to each other,
'
we had but the Eepublic
If over again !
spoke of
Helena. In 1830 I had been married about two years,
my child was still at the breast I was taken with fear
and trembling when I heard the women in the street
pronounce the word barricade.' We lived in the
'
going to fight; it is
Eepublic.'for the
I could not
utter a word, my tears were almost choking me but ;
who had never said a harsh word tome, who had never
given me a moment's pain. He was dead. Whilst I
was lifting him from the ground, whiter than the blouse
he wore, whilst kneeling at his side I kissed him, trying
to call him back to life, a bullet struck me down also."
And the old woman, with a lofty disregard of sex,
tore open her dress,and showed me, just above the
shrunken bosom, a scar in which one could have placed
one's finger.
"I fell by the side of my husband," she went on,
your friend."
About four and twenty hours later M. Francion and
his political sponsor found that there was a dark side to
the picture. They had already come well within sight
of the second commune, which lay basking in the July
And as if this had been the signal for which they had
been waiting, the back of the hall broke into thunders
The Story of an Electoral Canvass. 177
gardener."
"
My
cousin has got some nice people in his service,"
says M. Francion.
"
That fellow will not be there very long, at any
rate," replies a big- wig of the neighbourhood, standing
"
in the group of which the candidate is the centre. I
am a friend of your cousin, and I'll make it my business
to have him dismissed to-morrow."
M. Francion signifies neither approval nor disapproval
of the proposed step, though, on his way to the hotel, he
"
says to himself, It would serve him right, the scamp.
What business had he to fall foul of his betters in that
"
way ? In the act of putting his hat on the table, he
"
suddenly stops. Hasn't a man the right to fall foul
of his supposed enemies, whether they be his betters or
not?" he says to himself. Then he sits down and
"
argues the thing mentally. After all, if I don't get
to the Palais Bourbon, I shall not be one jot the worse
for it ; if this fellow loses his place, he may be left to
" "
Perfectly," replies the nephew, calmly. dear My
uncle, I consider the Government, in whose interest
"
Of course I should."
"
you may depend on
Very well ;
me to obtain him
such a position. The difficult part of the affair is to
find a vacancy."
"
That ought not to be difficult just now," came the
"
immediate answer. That registrar at Houilleville
does you more harm than good. It would serve him
disposal ;
it is, nevertheless, equally deserving of sym-
pathy and redress.
The winter just passed was a hard one in Paris ;
1 88 French Men and French Manners.
Before the pickaxe has laid the first hovel low, -the air
" "
resounds with, Where is the workman to live ?
This demand for charity for a class of people who, more
than any other in Paris, are best able to take care of
themselves is not only wholly unnecessary, it is a down-
right insult to them. However badly the Fren^jotact-
man fares in slack times, his lot is ten James .preferable
to that of the educated jack-of-all- trades and master of
none. The former may get half a week's work he has ;
strife the miserable outcast, who has not even the half-
;
penny to spare for a paper that will inform him how the
political battle goes, counts for nothing with a lot of
mendacious and interested flatterers, who are never tired
of telling the artisan and craftsman that he is less
favoured than the man who lives by his brains.
French workman who works and does not spout is
worthy of respect and sympathy, mat^ri^hejj^jie
absolutely needs none. In spite of his continual agita-
tion for higher wages of which agitation he already
A few Statistics. 1 89
pride,
false if you will, often steps in and prevents her.
A chapter on women of the lower-middle classes would
lead me too far from my subject sufficient to say that
specialist ;
the more the better, provided it be within
the limits of his own The
clerk, on the contrary,
trade.
is a generalist one might almost say a general in an
army where there are nothing but generals. If the
workman's employer annoys him, he sends him to the
devil, takes his tool-basket and seeks another shop.
The employe must grin and bear, for another shop is
not easily found, and meanwhile he must eat, and he
has no society money to keep him from starvation. The
workman who applies for work is put to the bench ;
" "
Actor." The latest comer was baptized the Minister/'
because, at his first appearance, he boasted of a decent
suit of black and spotless linen. When he left, mainly
at my instigation, the suit was no longer black, the
linen was by.no means white. I happened to be in
and then I saw him start, and well he might. They had
been lunching copiously for them, because work hap-
pened to be plentiful. They smelt horribly of cheap
wine, and still cheaper brandy. Some were smoking ;
those that were not had their hollow cheeks puffed out
with a quid.
With the free masonry bred from poverty, they told
him at once about his expectations. The work he was
engaged upon consisted of eighty pages, and would be
paid 2 frs. 50 centimes. Eighty pages of twenty-five
lines, written in the style required, would at least take
" '
quoted Dante :
the elders said, " One might as well die here as else-
where." Elsewhere, of course, meant in the streets.
The chasseur lifted his voice in deprecation of any
But for the bright sunlight shining in, and the absence
"
of refreshments, it would look like a picture of high
life below stairs." In the general registry office the
room is windows look upon an inner court,
dark, the
dark and deep, like a well. Not a word is exchanged
above a whisper, and then it is only to make an inquiry.
A mere glance at its occupants tells of their pains to
make themselves look respectable, nay, presentable.
The threadbare black coat, inked at the seams, and
lightly buttoned across the chest ;
the too brilliant hat,
clerkship.
" " "
A simple clerk's place ? is the answer ;
I have
just given away the last one."
The crestfallen, poor, deluded creature turns away,
when the director calls him back.
"
Listen, young man ;
I take an interest in you. I
have a situation of trust open at one of my friend's.
The fee is three francs. Pay them, and I will send you
to him immediately."
The victim remonstrates, on the plea that he has
already paid the regulation money.
The Spider and the Fly. 209
" "
Yes/' answers the director, but that was for situa-
tions open to any and every one for situations inscribed
on theregister. This is a private affair. Never mind,
ifthe terms do not suit you, there is no harm done."
And the director makes a show of ending the interview.
The poor fellow hesitates. Three francs is not much,
but he hasn't them. " I shall be back in an hour's *
time," he gasps. jp
And he is back. In the interval, he has probably *
registers ;
one for employers to record their wants,
another for the poor applicants to inscribe their
offersand qualifications. There is no intermediary
between the employer and the would-be employed, for
the official in charge of those registers is like Dickens's
"Jo" he has heard nothing, seen nothing, knows
nothing. He has no interest in the matter and affects
none, for his charge is merely nominal. He himself
does not write a line. The two registers are merely
"
visitors' books." An inquiry as to particulars, either
from the employer or would-be employed, would make
him stare as only a French official can stare, for the
whole of his training is based upon the assumption that
it ishis place to ask questions, not to answer them.
At the cost of about 75 per annum to each arrondisse-
ment, the whole affair might have been perfected that ;
" Le
Poverty-stricken Paris still The paternal pawnshop, otherwise
Mont de Piete " The English would-be philanthropist with
regard to it Parliamentary Commissions and their theoretical
result The paternal pawnshop as it is The impecunious
" uncle " the
Englishman face to face with ; impecunious French-
man face to face with "aunt" Documentary evidence with
regard to one's identity The pawnshop as a borrower For-
malities The valuation of property To whom such valuation is
left Rate of interest, etc. Illicit traffic in pawn-tickets Does
the French pawnshop offer the best guarantee for the tracing and
recovery of stolen property ? Proofs to the contrary The tailors
at the central pawnshop.
Your pledge, then, has been taken from you, and, for
the next quarter or half-hour, you stand straining your
ears for your number to be called out from an inner
"
You make us responsible for the losses, consequently
we will provide, or, at any rate, try to provide against
them by lending ridiculously small sums. If you
find that the arrangement no longer suits you, you
have only to appoint employes of your own to value."
This the State pawnshop cannot possibly do, for various
reasons. First of all, it would be impossible to find
such employes. That kind of business requires not
only a long training, but an absolute callousness to
human suffering and the various appeals for kindness
on the part of the borrowers; the callousness might
be provided, but the business training and expe-
rience would not be easy to find 'at a short notice.
Another thing the employe not being responsible for
;
" "
of the Paris Mont de Piete have been too cramped
for room to store wearing apparel by suspending it
from the walls. stowed into the smallest possible
It is
could not have left the capital, every issue from which
was carefully watched they even suspected them to be
;
Quai de la Greve
to their starting point, the angle of the
and the Eue du Long-Font, facing the end of which
"
street stood the church of St. Gervais. Did you notice
a church in the street whither you took the trunk ? " he
asked Dubronet. " No, monsieur;" was the answer. "At
any rate, I don't remember." After that, Canler con-
sidered all further efforts in company of the commis-
sionnaire a waste of time, and gave orders to take him
to the nearest police-station, where he would join him
presently. The way to the station lay through the Ene
du Long-Font, and scarcely had the trio proceeded a
couple of dozen yards on their way before one of the
'
Paris Street Cries. 233
out once for all that I am not responsible for the French of the lower
or, for that matter, of the higher classes. I will thank my would-
be critics to remember this.
The Professor of Street Cries. 235
/ns-'X.
.
her very strong lungs, and when the professor tells her
that she is half a tone flat, she shouts louder still,
ing for the institutions to which they belonged, while the Asylum
for the Blind sent out its inmates in charge of a guide.
240 French Men and French Manners.
to Parmentier, who
introduced the potato into France,
to Louis Charles Petit-Radel, a member of the Institute,
to Mirabeau-Tonnerre, who seems to have had this much
in common with his younger brother, Mirabeau-Tonneau,
that he would have nothing to do with water for himself.
All these, and a good many of lesser fame, deliberately
set their faces against any and every improvement in
the water supply of Paris, and their arguments, which
"
have been preserved in the " Transactions of the
Academic des Sciences, are irresistibly comic. When
Antoine Deparcieux, the well-known mathematician,
who, even at that time, was a great authority on hydro-
statics, proposed to give the Parisians the water they
seemed to need so much, Parmentier raised all kinds of
could handle his musket and sword with the best, but
beyond that he knew nothing. That which he did
know was of no use whatsoever to him in times of
" "
the consumption of bunnies in the department of the
Seine is very large so large, in fact, that the purchase
of rabbit-skins is an occupation by itself. Strange to
relate, the peripatetic purchaser seldom fails to ask for
the head of the deceased animal. One day my concierge,
in answer to my remarks about that almost stereotyped
"
request, said, Ma foi, monsieur, I don't know exactly
why they do ask, but I fancy they sell those heads to
the traiteurs at the barrieres, who put them in the dish
with the matou they serve you up as rabbit." Her
answer reminded me of Babinet, whose lectures I used
to attend when was a young man.
I
To return to Chapelier. The episode of the varnish
has shown us his talent for converting two and two into
five, and no sooner had he caught sight of the number-
less crusts of bread than the whole of the business
connected with the feeding of poultry and rabbits took
shape in his mind. He made no second attempt to enter
into business with his former employer; he left there
and then. Five or six hours later he had purchased a
pony and cart ;
an hour or so after that he had rented
a very large room in one of the deserted colleges of the
Quartier Latin. Next day he paid visits to the scullions
*
Jacques Babinet, who did more for the popularizing of science in
France than any one before him.
252 French Men and French Manners.
made, and the father found out that his son and heir
had been let out in the daytime to a couple of wander-
ing beggars, who taught him their business, and brought
him back every evening, giving the nurse part of the
receipts." Monsieur Eochefort further offered to intro-
duce me gentleman in question, whose offspring
to the
had had an apprenticeship.
so curious
This brings me back to the nurse, who must be dealt
with from two different aspects. I will take first the one
who leaves her home save the mark husband, and
I
"
invariably told one and the same thing You know, :
"
That I cannot say, for I have only been here five-and-
twenty years, but I know that when he returns in the
morning with a good load, he would not change with a
king. When his rags are sorted he is off to La '
nothing to correct.
"
In a short time the Parisian rag-picker will have
ceased to exist, if the authorities have their way for ;
"
general appearance. No, I thought not. I fancy you
are used to wandering about in all sorts of places.
They have
that corner yonder, you will see some of it,. but not all."
I followed the direction of his eyes, and noticed in
the far-off angle a shapeless heap of what seemed to
me an incongruous assortment of wooden things, to
none of which, except a few stout cudgels, I could have
given a name. But, though not exactly short-sighted, I
do not very clearly distinguish at a distance, and I felt
no wiser than before. Seeing which, Papa Alexandre
explained: "You are in one of the haunts of the
mendicant fraternity of Paris, and the corner at which
you have been looking is their temporary property-
room. You cannot go nearer to it without
arousing
u
290 French Men and French Manners.
went to work At
present, he walks out every
again.
morning with his right arm tightly strapped to his
body, under his clothes, and the sleeve of his coat
hanging empty by his side, or, to speak by the card,
from the elbow downward for he has made himself a
;
'
"
use to him, because he is on the make," like himself.
French Neiuspapers. 297
belonged.
" "
What did you tell him ? I asked.
"
Ma monsieur,
foi, we did not tell him anything,"
was the answer, " because we did not know ourselves.
And then he remarked upon the different papers you
received, and the different persons with whom you
associated."
" "
Well, how did you explain that ?
"
That was easy enough. We told him that you are
a foreign newspaper correspondent, and likely to know
all sortsand conditions of people. After that he went
away without leaving his name. He said he would not
call again, and when he got outside we heard him say to
a friend, Eien a faire c'est un Anglais, un journaliste
'
:
;
In Search of Prey. 299
"
you have a few moments to spare, and will
If
allow me
to offer you some refreshment, I will tell
THE END.
X
YL
252301