The origin and foundation of this most lovely example of mediÆval art is so much a part of S. Louis' life that it may not be out of place to give some account of the Saint's character and habits before proceeding to describe the history of the chapel. THE SAINTE-CHAPELLE FROM THE PONT SAINT-MICHEL. Louis IX. was pious and practical, and inconvenienced his courtiers as much by his punctuality and the assiduity with which he conducted his business, as by his religious duties. These he considered a part of his daily work, hearing all the canonical offices with the same regularity as he attended to the grievances of his subjects. Often, like our own George Herbert, was he found prostrate before the altar wrapped in prayer. Even Gibbon allowed that he united the virtues of a king, a hero, and a man—he might have added those of a just judge and a lawgiver; and Voltaire sums up his character as follows: "Il n'est guÈre donnÉ À l'homme de pousser la vertu plus loin." When his more worldly friends cavilled at his austerities, he made his case good by retorting: "Si je passais deux fois autant de temps À jouer, ou À courir les bois, pour m'occuper de la chasse, personne n'en parleroit." As in the case of nearly all exceptionally good men, he probably owed everything to the extreme care that his mother had bestowed upon his education—a care which he repaid by a life-long devotion to her memory. Of good Queen Blanche's character we get a glimpse in the following touching anecdote. It is related that one day at Court, the Queen noticed a beautiful youth with long, fair hair, and asking his name, was answered, "Prince Herman, the son of the sainted Elizabeth of Hungary." On hearing this, Queen Blanche rose from her seat, and, gazing at the boy, said to him, "Fair youth, thou hadst a blessed mother; where did she kiss thee?" Whereat Herman, blushing, placed his finger on his forehead between his eyes, and the Queen, reverently pressing her lips upon the spot, looked up to Heaven and breathed the invocation: Sancta Elisabetha, Patrona nostra dulcissima, ora pro nobis. That a mother so imbued with admiration for the The bringing home of the relics reads like a royal pageant. They were carried to Venice by the "DÉputÉs de Saint Louis et les ambassadeurs de l'Empire, accompagnÉs des plus nobles d'entre les VÉnitiens. Le convoi mit À la voile dans le tems de NoËl, saison oÙ la mer est le plus orageuse. La confidence des DÉputÉs Éleva leur ame au dessus de la crainte des pÉrils, et elle fut justifiÉe; ils arrivÈrent À Venise sans avoir essuyÉ de tempÊtes. Vatace, Empereur Grec, avait dÉtachÉ plusieurs galÈres qui croisoient aux diffÉrens dÉtroits oÙ les FranÇois devoient passer, pour leur enlever ce prÉcieux butin. Sa vigilance fut trompÉe; Dieu veilloit sur eux." "ArrivÉe À Venise la Relique fut mise en dÉpÔt dans le TrÉsor de la Chapelle de Saint-Marc. Le roi instruit du succÈs de la nÉgociation de ses dÉputÉs, envoya, ainsi que Baudouin, des Ambassadeurs avec l'argent nÉcessaire pour se l'approprier. De leur cÔtÉ les Marchands FranÇois Établis À Venise, plus riches encore des dons de la foi qu'avantagÉs de la fortune, ouvrirent leur bourse pour payer la somme stipulÉe. Les VÉnitiens auroient bien desirÉ garder cette Relique, mais retenus par la foi du traitÉ ils la restituÈrent quoique À regret." "Les Ambassadeurs aprÈs avoir reconnu les sceaux se mirent en route, et quoique la saison fÛt pluvieuse ils n'essuyÈrent pas une goutte d'eau. ArrivÉs en Champagne, le Roi partit aussi-tÔt pour les joindre. Il Étoit accompagnÉ de la Reine, de ses FrÈres, de l'ArchevÊque de Sens, de l'EvÊque du Puy, et des Seigneurs les plus distinguÉs de sa cour. II rencontra la Relique prÈs de Sens; elle Étoit enfermÉe dans une triple cassette. La premiÈre Étoit de bois. On l'ouvrit, et on vÉrifia les sceaux des seigneurs FranÇois et du Duc de Venise apposÉs sur la cassette d'argent dans laquelle se trouva un vase d'or, "Le lendemain la Relique fut portÉe À Sens dont on avoit tendu toutes les rues. A l'entrÉe de la Ville, le Roi et le Comte d'Artois, l'aÎnÉ de ses FrÈres, la portÈrent sur leurs epaules, les pieds nuds. Le ClergÉ alla au-devant, et les principaux Seigneurs chargÉs À leur tour de ce fardeau honorable la placÈrent dans l'Eglise MÉtropolitaine de Saint-Etienne. On se mit ensuite en route pour Paris, oÙ la rÉception de la Relique se fit avec la plus grande solennitÉ. Tout le ClergÉ rÉgulier et sÉculier fut convoquÉ À cette cÉrÉmonie. Les Religieux de Saint-Denis dÈs la pointe du jour se rendirent À l'endroit qui avoit ÉtÉ indiquÉ hors de Paris du cÔtÉ de Vincennes; tous ceux qui assistÈrent À cette Procession marchÈrent nuds pieds. On avoit dressÉ un magnifique reposoir prÈs de l'Abbaye Saint-Antoine, oÙ la ChÂsse fut exposÉe aux yeux du peuple. Guillaume, Chantre de Saint-Denis, entonna tout ce qui fut chantÉ pendant la marche et l'AbbÉ eut place À la droite de l'Autel, avec les ArchevÊques, EvÊques et les autres AbbÉs, tous en habits pontificaux. Enfin le 18e jour d'AoÛt la Relique arriva, et fut placÉe au Palais dans la Chapelle de Saint-Nicolas." A medal was struck to commemorate this event, with the legend: HÆC REGIS REGUM TOTO PRETIOSIOR AURO, and S. Louis kneeling before an altar upon which is the crown of thorns. As to the particular tree of which the crown was composed, there was much difference of opinion. Clement of Alexandria calls it ex rubo, a sort of thicket; other writers a different sort of shrub or bush, called nerprun, or wild plum; and others, the white thorn. The antiphon used every day in the offices of the Sainte-Chapelle began: Ecce Crux et Corona Spinea Arnia Regis Pierre de Montereau, or Montreau, as it is sometimes written, lived eighteen years after the completion of his chef-d'oeuvre, and doubtless assisted at some of the splendid ceremonies held in it. He died March 17th, 1266, and was buried in the chapel of the Virgin belonging to the religious of S. Germain des PrÈs, where a splendid monument was erected to his memory. Some of the finest of the buildings attached to the monastery were his work, and up to the last century a stone was to be seen over his burial-place, upon which he was represented with a rule and compass in his hands. His epitaph gives him the titles of fleur pleine de bonnes moeurs, and of docteur des architectes: FLOS PLENUS MORUM, VIVENS DOCTOR LATO MORUM, MUSTEROLO NATUS JACET HIC PETRUS TUMULATUS QUEM REX COELORUM PERDUCAT IN ALTA POLORUM CHRISTE MILLENO, BIS CENTENO DUODENO CUM QUINQUAGENO QUARTO DECESSIT IN ANNO. Another stone recorded the name of his wife Agnes, and on that he is termed, in old French, mestre Pierre de Montereul. The chapel has disappeared, and with it all trace of the tombs; but one at Reims, erected in honour of Hugues Libergier, architect of the celebrated abbey church of S. Nicaise, who died in 1263, gives some idea of what those of Pierre de Montereau and his wife must have been. The first stone of the church was laid by S. Louis in 1245, Two charters dated Paris, 1245, and Aigues-Mortes, 1248, respectively give the terms of the endowment by the king. The number of ecclesiastics who first formed the college was fixed at twenty-one; five principal priests or maÎtres chapelains, each having an assistant chaplain (a priest), and a deacon, and three beadles who had as many clerks under them. The number was modified from time to time, during five centuries, and latterly it consisted of a treasurer, twelve canons, and nineteen chaplains. The office of treasurer was generally filled by some important personage, and he had the privilege of wearing the mitre and other insignia of the episcopate, and of giving the Benediction upon great festivals; but he was not allowed to bear the crozier. The most important event of the 13th century connected with the Sainte-Chapelle was the translation of some of S. Louis' bones from S. Denis, in which church they had been laid twenty-seven years previously upon their arrival from Tunis, where the king had died of fever on the 25th August, 1270. Feeling his last moments to have arrived, he caused his body to be placed upon a bed of ashes, and wearing the habit of the L'an mil et trois cens et six ans, Ot À Paris joie nouvele, Car li rois mit en sa chapele, Que S. Loys fist tele faire Qu'a tout le monde devroit plaire, Le chief de lui si richement Et si trÈs-honorablement, Que par raison de la bel euvre Que li dons saintuaire queuvre Le vessel oÙ l'en la mis prisent Toutes personnes qui l'avisent. (Guil. Guiart.) On the 15th May, 1843, an interesting discovery was made in the chapel. Some workmen, in removing a stone of the pavement of the apse, discovered a tin box containing the remains of a heart, and a procÈs-verbal, stating that it had been previously found on the 21st January, 1803. Although the position of the box (the centre of the apse) indicated that it had belonged to some distinguished person, yet there was no clue to its owner, neither inscription, nor name, nor date. The box, it is true, was in the style of the 13th century; but it seemed doubtful, that, had the heart been S. Louis', such an important relic should have been lost sight of, and no record of it given by the Benedictines at S. Denis in their inventory of the treasures which they had received from the Sainte-Chapelle. The matter was referred to the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres, and fully discussed; but the members could arrive at no decision, and consequently the box was replaced where it had been found. While the kings resided in the old CitÉ, the most brilliant ceremonies succeeded one another at the Sainte-Chapelle; it was, in fact, the chapel belonging to the adjoining palace, now the Palais de Justice. The Queens, Marie de Brabant, second wife of Philippe le Hardi; Marie de Luxembourg, second wife of Charles le Bel; Jeanne d'Evreux, third wife of the same Prince; and Isabelle de BaviÈre, wife of Charles VI., were all crowned there. The marriage of the Emperor, Henri VII. and Marguerite de Brabant, and the betrothal of Isabeau, eldest daughter of Charles VI. with Richard II. of England, were also solemnised in the chapel. There, in 1332, Philippe de Valois held a great assembly of prelates and barons, to announce his project of another crusade against the Infidels—a project which was never carried out. On the feast of the Epiphany, 1378, King Charles V., the Emperor Charles IV., and his son Wenceslas, King of the Romans, offered gold, frankincense and myrrh, after the manner of the three holy Magi. Every time that the sovereigns convoked an assemblage of the clergy in the palace, the prelates first went to the chapel and asked the blessing of the Holy Spirit, while prostrated before the relics. In 1483, when Louis XI. was lying Boileau, in his Lutrin, gives an amusing account of an unseemly squabble which took place between the canons of the chapel, and which was in this wise. On a certain Sunday in 1667, one of the precentors named Barrin found a huge lectern placed in front of his stall. He protested against the intruder, and the other canons taking his part, it was ordered to be removed. But here the treasurer stepped in with objections, and a whole month was passed in discussions, orders, and counter-orders; the dispute only being ended through the mediation of the first president, Guillaume de Lamoignon, who decreed that the precentor should remain imprisoned behind the lectern an entire morning, until the end of the High Mass, the treasurer undertaking to remove the offending piece of furniture before the hour of vespers. It was the president who suggested this subject to the poet. Boileau had remarked to M. de Lamoignon that an epic poem could be written upon the most trivial incident, if only a poet had sufficient imagination to work it out. "Faites donc un poÈme sur le dÉbat de la Sainte-Chapelle. Vous pourrez l'intituler 'Le Lutrin enlevÉ,' ou 'La ConquÊte du Lutrin." "Pourquoi non," replied Boileau. "Il ne faut jamais dÉfier un fou; et je le suis assez, non seulement pour entreprendre ce poÈme, mais encore pour le dÉdier À Monsieur le premier president." The result of defying the "fool," who was withal a wit, is a series of portraits in verse, of the canons, the singers, the precentor, and the treasurer. The latter was not spared, as may be seen by the following lines:— The canons are touched off with an equal vivacity; all their failings and follies, their idleness and their gluttony, brought into the pure light of day: "Parmi les doux plaisirs d'une paix fraternelle, Paris voyait fleurir son antique chapelle; Ses chanoines vermeils et brillants de santÉ S'engraissaient d'une longue et sainte oisivetÉ; Sans sortir de leurs lits, plus doux que leurs hermines, Ces pieux fainÉants faisaient chanter matines, Veillaient À bien diner, et laissaient en leur lieu A des chantres gagÉs le soin de leur Dieu." And then the "machine" itself, the offending lutrin, is described: "AussitÔt dans le choeur la machine emportÉe, Est sur le banc du chantre À grand bruit remontÉe, Ses ais demi-pourris, que l'Âge a relÂchÉs, Sont À coups de maillet unis et rapprochÉs; Sous les coups redoublÉs tous les bancs retentissent Les murs en sont Émus, les voÛtes en mugissent, Et l'orgue mÊme en pousse un long gemissement." The dream of the Chantre, perhaps the indirect cause of all the trouble, in making the man cantankerous, and extra liable to be rubbed up the wrong way, is no less worth quoting: "Les cloches dans les airs, de leurs voix argentines, Appelaient À grand bruit les chantres À matines, Quand leur chef, agitÉ d'un sommeil effrayant, Encor tout en sueur, se rÉveille en criant: 'Pour la seconde fois (dit-il) un sommeil gracieux Avait sous ses pavots appesenti mes yeux; Quand, l'esprit agitÉ d'une douce fumÉe, J'ai cru remplir au choeur ma place accoutumÉe. LÀ, triomphant aux yeux des chantres impuissants, Je bÉnissais le peuple, et j'avalais l'encens: Lorsque, du fond cachÉ de notre sacristie, Une Épaisse nuÉe À grands flots est sortie, Que s'ouvrant À mes yeux, dans son bleuÂtre Éclat M'a fait voir un serpent conduit par le prÉlat. Du corps de ce dragon plein de soufre et de nitre, Une tÊte sortait en forme de pupitre, Dont le triangle affreux, tout hÉrissÉ de crins, Surpassait en grosseur nos plus Épais lutrins: AnimÉ par son guide, en sifflant il s'Élance. J'ai criÉ, mais en vain; et, fuyant sa fureur Je me suis rÉveillÉ plein de trouble et d'horreur." An order of the Conseil d'Etat, dated March 11, 1787, sequestered all the goods of the chapel, suppressed the chaplaincies and canonries, and ordained that the services should be continued by the king's ordinary chaplains. Three years later, the chapel shared the fate of all the abbeys, chapters, and religious foundations; and soon after, S. Louis' beautiful oratory was closed. The relics were sent to S. Denis, and the other objects were dispersed to the National museums. PropriÉtÉ Nationale À Vendre was written upon the building, a piece of information which has only disappeared in our own time. Under the Directoire a club held its meetings there; and later, it was converted into a warehouse for corn and flour. Towards 1800, certain ecclesiastics hired the lower chapel and celebrated mass there, but in 1803 it was further profaned; the upper chapel was turned into a depository for judicial documents, and the lower one was given for the same purpose to the Cour des Comptes. In vain Louis XVIII. and Charles X. endeavoured to restore the building to its proper use; and it was only in 1837, in the reign of Louis Philippe, that its restoration was decided upon. MM. Duban, Lassus, Viollet-le-Duc, and Boeswillwald were commissioned to undertake the work at a cost of 2,000,000 francs, a sum nearly equal to the original value of the relics and reliquaries (2,800,000 francs), while it exceeded by nearly two millions the original cost of the building, 800,000 francs. The 3rd November, 1849, the work was sufficiently advanced for the ceremony of the Institution of the Judicature, when the ancient chants were sung as in former times. Since then, until quite recently, a mass has always been celebrated in the chapel, upon the opening of the Law Courts, in the presence of the judges, barristers, and others who could gain admission. But this function has lately been abolished, and the keeper now impresses upon visitors (rather eagerly and unnecessarily), the permission to keep on their hats. "Mais couvrez vous, messieurs, ce n'est plus une chapelle, ce n'est qu'un monument"! The celebration of the FÊte des Fous was one of the customs of the Middle Ages which was very tenacious of life. Although forbidden by the legate in 1198, it flourished for another 250 years. The Council of Paris, held in 1212, endeavoured to put it down; but it was only in 1435 that the Council of Basle succeeded in suppressing it, together with stage plays and other profanities. It was the custom at the Sainte-Chapelle, upon the Holy Innocents' day, for the boy acolytes On the Good Fridays of each year the chapel scarcely sufficed to contain the crowds of sick persons who flocked to it from all parts of the city. All maladies were supposed to be curable through the virtues of the holy relics, but specially that known formerly as le mal caduc. At midnight the relic of the True Cross was exposed, and at the same moment the chapel was Another custom peculiar to the chapel was the singing upon Christmas-day of the hymn "NoËl," in place of "O Salutaris Hostia." The former had been originally a joy-song, welcoming the kings upon their entry into Paris; and thus, when our Henry V. entered the capital in 1420, and likewise Henry VI. in 1431, they were greeted with this exclamation. The kings were not the only persons who profited by the virtues of the relics; the first president of the parlement was so far privileged that he could have them brought to him on his death-bed; and on Quinquagesima Sunday they were exposed at the central window of the chevet for the good of the public in the street. The chÂsse containing the relics had no less than ten locks, the keys thereof being in the custody of the kings until the reign of Louis XIII.; but while that monarch was at Lyons, a fire broke out in the chapel (26th July, 1630), and the doors of the chÂsse had to be broken open, a disaster which led to a change in the custodian, the president of the Chambre des Comptes being substituted for the sovereign. This worthy lived opposite; and it was also his duty to keep the relics clean, assisted of course by a vast number of other presidents and officials. It was the duty, or the privilege, of the kings to mount the little winding staircase at the side of the altar, and to exhibit the relics to the people gathered in the chapel below. S. Louis probably ofttimes walked up the steps on the left for this purpose (the right-hand staircase is modern); and on Good Friday, 1423, the Duke of Bedford, as Another antique, an agate bust of Valentinian III., THE CHAPEL IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY. Some idea of the richness of the contents of the treasury may be formed by stating that the list of the images, vessels, The Royal archives were stowed away in two great rooms above the sacristy of the upper church. When they were first installed there, is not known; but in 1615, when an inventory was drawn up by Pierre Dupuy and Theodore Godefroy, there were three hundred and fifty drawers, two hundred and sixty registers, fifty-two sacks, forty-two shelves, and fifteen coffers. This inventory consists of eight volumes of manuscripts in folio. In 1783 the sacristry was sacrificed to the love of symmetry in the new Cour d'honneur, and the archives were removed to the Chancellerie du Palais. At the present time some of them are in the BibliothÈque, but the greater part are at the Archives Nationale in the Rue Rambuteau. The state of dilapidation into which the chapel had fallen when the restoration was commenced, was terrible. The tracery of the windows was destroyed, the glass was broken and filled up with plaster, the flÈche and gargoyles had disappeared, and the interior was filled with shelves and woodwork for the storage of the archives. But the beautiful Renaissance staircase of forty-four steps (the scene of Boileau's poem, the Lutrin) had disappeared long before. The dimensions of the building are as follow:—
M. Viollet-le-Duc, in his "Dictionnaire RaisonnÉ de l'Architecture," thus describes the building: "De la base au faÎte, l'edifice est entiÈrement construit en pierre dure de choix, connue sous le nom de liais cliquart (Portland stone) chaque assise est cramponnÉe par des agrafes de fer coulÉes en plomb, les tailles et la pose sont exÉcutÉes avec une prÉcision rare; la sculpture en est composÉe et ciselÉe avec un soin particulier. Sur aucun point on ne peut constater ces nÉgligences qui ne sont que trop souvent le rÉsultat de la prÉcipitation." At page 401 of the above work is an explanation of the system of courses employed by Pierre de Montereau—a manner of strengthening masonry which was in use before this period (13th century), but which was improved upon by the great architect of the Sainte-Chapelle. It is very similar to the system now in use. The only communication between the lower and upper chapels at the present time is by means of the small turret staircase, but formerly the upper church was approached by a wide exterior flight of forty-four steps. It was reconstructed many times, and the last one, in the Egyptian style, was dated 1811. The demolition of this is no loss; but it seems a pity it should not have been replaced by one in better taste, as the only approach to the upper chapel (except the turret stairs) is through the corridors of the Palais de Justice. The first thing that strikes the visitor upon entering is the enormous size of the windows, which occupy the entire space between the buttresses, and rise to the base of the roof. All the weight of the vaulting rests, therefore, upon the exterior buttresses, but not the slightest inflection has ever taken place. The church is built truly east and west, the entrance to each chapel being by separate portals. The only modification the exterior of the building has sustained since S. Louis' time is the addition of a little oratory attributed to Louis XI., and the rebuilding of a part of the faÇade in the 15th century. The porch of the lower chapel is divided into two bays by a pier, on which is a statue of the Blessed Virgin, while above in the tympanum, is a representation of the Coronation of the Virgin. The restoration of this and the entire ornament of the doorway is the work of M. Geoffroy-Dechaume. The original statue had the reputation of working miracles; and it is related that when, towards 1304, Jean Duns Scotus, a celebrated theologian of the University of Paris, was praying at its The plan of the church is a parallelogram, terminating in a polygonal apse. The buttresses reach to the parapet, and terminate in pinnacles surrounded by gargoyles ornamented with the most grotesque birds and beasts. The windows of the nave are divided into four lights, with foliated circles in the heads very similar to those of the Chapter House at Salisbury. Several flÈches have preceded the present one; the first fell in the reign of Charles VI., the second was burnt in the great fire of 16th July, 1630; the third was erected by Louis XIII. in the ogival style of that period, and remained until the 17th On the lower storey are colossal statues of the twelve Apostles, most of them portraits, the S. Thomas being that of the sculptor Lassus. The gables of the upper storey support Angels with the instruments of the Passion. The crockets of the spire are fleurs-de-lys, and the whole is resplendent with gilding. The summit of the chevet is surmounted by a huge Angel, in lead, holding The vaulting of the lower chapel is supported by fourteen single-shaft pillars, surrounded by foliated capitals of various designs. The walls are decorated with arcading, terminated at the east end by an apse. The two columns without capitals were added at the same time as the apsidal tribune in the upper chapel. The decoration is in imitation of the original 13th century work, some of which, a fragment of an Annunciation, was discovered in removing the remains of some later work in a style utterly at variance with the architecture, by Martin FrÉminet, painter to Henri IV. and Louis XIII. In 1691 the tracery of the windows and the stained glass were destroyed and replaced by white in order to give extra light. Formerly there were seven altars and a font in the lower chapel, Boileau, whose father had a house in the court of the palace, being amongst those who were baptised there. The upper chapel is one of those buildings which one never tires of admiring. When we wend our way up the turret stairs, and enter it from the semi-darkness of the crypt, it strikes us as the most exquisite scheme of colour imaginable. Add to the beauty of the chapel all the associations which crowd upon the memory—S. Louis' beautiful faith and noble life, his enthusiasm for God's work and man's welfare; all the ceremonies and the processions which have taken place there, with the lights, the flowers, and the incense, and our imagination forms a picture that no hand could adequately paint. The chapel is composed of four bays for the nave, and seven smaller for the apse. The vault is groined and is supported by clustered columns and capitals ornamented with foliage. The windows occupy the entire space between the supporting pillars, and are filled with most beautiful stained glass; It has always been the custom at the consecration of a church to place a cross wherever the sign of the cross had been made by the bishop. The architect of the Sainte-Chapelle conceived the happy idea of placing the twelve Apostles as pillars of the Church, supporting these crosses, which are in the form of monstrances. The pedestals on which the figures stand are affixed to the pillars, and the statues, like the rest of the church, are painted and gilt, those of the 13th century being marvellous examples of the sculpture of that period. After the closing of the chapel these statues were sent to the MusÉe des Monuments FranÇais; but when the Museum was suppressed they were dispersed or broken up. S. Peter was discovered in fragments at S. Denis, another was given to the church at Creteil, where it passed as S. Louis, and four were given to the missionaries for their Calvary at Mt. Valerien. The latter were in perfect preservation, and the colour had not disappeared. They remained at the entrance of one of the chapels of the Way of the Cross until 1830, when some senseless vandals threw them down and broke them; but the fragments were preserved, and are now in the garden of the HÔtel Cluny, a The pavement is modern incised stone, with incrustations of colour, representing geometrical patterns, animals, and flowers. In the apse are subjects—the Four rivers of Paradise, and the Seven Sacraments in the form of rivers. The altar is an exact copy of the original one. Above it is the tribune and canopy where the relics were exposed, with a spiral staircase leading up to it; Formerly several statues occupied places in the chapel; one, a terra-cotta Notre-Dame de PitiÉ, by Germain Pilon, which is now in the chapel of the military school of St. Cyr. A 16th century jubÉ, with altars attached to it, marked the nave from the chancel. The retables of these altars (now in the Louvre) were in enamel, signed and dated LÉonard Limousin, 1533, and contain portraits of FranÇois I. and his second wife, ElÉonore d'Autriche, sister of Charles V. and of Henri II. and Catherine de'Medici, all kneeling. The choir was filled with carved stalls of the time of Henri II. At the four corners of the altar pavement, Henri III. elevated bronze Angels upon black marble pillars. On the retro-altar was a silver-gilt model of the chapel, three or four feet high, executed in 1631 by Pijard, goldsmith, and guardian of the relics. This contained some of the treasures, and was considered a very fine work of art, costing some 13,000 livres. There is an excellent drawing of the original altar in Viollet-le-Duc's dictionary. Canon Morand tells us, in his history of the chapel, that the ciborium, which is usually placed in the tabernacle, was here suspended in front of the altar—probably the retro-altar, as in the engraving of the High Altar in the Canon's book, there is no representation of it. All the old furniture of the church has The Canon then goes on to record the want of reverence of the congregation, how they just half kneel when the bell rings; how they must needs sit, and even gossip, during the short quarter of an hour occupied by a low mass; how they take S. Louis ordained, in his foundation charters, that the offerings received by the priests at the altar should be devoted to the reparation of the glass, and that if it should be insufficient, the necessary funds should be taken from the Royal Treasury deposited at the Temple. The restoration of the windows is now complete, this being the work of MM. Steinheil and Lusson. These artists have done their work so well, and matched the colours so perfectly, that it is difficult to distinguish the new from the old. The rose-window is of the 15th century, the others of the 13th century. The subjects are from the Old and New Testament, and from the life of S. Louis. Some of these latter are original, and, as it is probable that the artists assisted at the ceremonies held in the chapel, it is also probable that the pictures may be true portraits of the personages represented. The subjects of the rose-window are all taken from the Apocalypse. Such is the chapel which was so dear to the King that he felt a "malaise" when he heard divine service elsewhere, and of which the troubadour Rutebeuf sings the praises in a poem written after the death of the Saint, entitled, Les RegrÈs au roys Loeys: ChapÈle de Paris! bien Ères maintenue La mort, ce m'est aduis, t'a fet desconvenue Du miex de tes amys, t'a laissÉe toute nue De la mort, sont plaintifs et grant gent et menue."— (MS. BibliothÈque Nationale.) |