Paris Vistas

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PARIS VISTAS

The Invalides from Pont Alexandre III
The Invalides from Pont Alexandre III

PARIS VISTAS

BY
HELEN DAVENPORT GIBBONS
Author of "A Little Gray Home in France,"
"Red Rugs of Tarsus," etc.




WITH SIXTEEN ILLUSTRATIONS
BY
LESTER GEORGE HORNBY


colophon


NEW YORK
THE CENTURY CO.
1919



Copyright, 1919, by
THE CENTURY CO.
———
Published, December, 1919

TO
A CRITIC
WHO LIVED MOST
OF THESE DAYS
WITH ME

FOREWORD

Webster defines a vista as "a view, especially a distant view, through or between intervening objects." If I were literal-minded, I suppose I should either abandon my title or make this book a series of descriptions of SacrÉ Coeur, crowning Montmartre, as you see the church from dark gray to ghostly white, according to the day, at the end of apartment-house-lined streets from the allÉe of the Observatoire, from the Avenue Montaigne, from the rue de SolfÉrino, and from the Rue Taitbout. I ought to be writing about the vistas, than which no other city possesses a more beautiful and varied array, that feature the Arc de Triomphe, the TrocadÉro, the Tour Eiffel, the Grande Roue, the Invalides, the Palais Bourbon, the Madeleine, the OpÉra, Saint-Augustin, Val de GrÂce and the PanthÉon.

But may not one's vistas be memories, with the years acting as "intervening objects"? Has not distance as much to do with time as with space? Vistas in words can no more convey the impression of things seen than Lester Hornby's sketches. If you want a substitute for Baedeker, please do not read this book! If you want a substitute for photographs, you will be disappointed in Lester's sketches.

The monuments of Paris, ticketed by name and historical events to tourists whose eyes have had hardly more time than the camera, known by photographs to prospective tourists who dream of things as yet unseen, are interwoven into the canvas of my life. The Gare Saint-Lazaire, for instance, is the place where I was lost once as a kid, where I have had to say goodbye to my husband starting on a long and perilous journey, and over which I have seen a Zeppelin floating. Since Louis Philippe was long before my time, the obelisk always has been in the Place de la Concorde. And when you pass it, your eyes, meeting the Arc de Triomphe at the end of the Champs-ElysÉes, the Carrousel at the end of the Tuileries, the Madeleine at the end of the Rue Royale and the Palais Bourbon at the end of the bridge, record vistas as natural, as familiar as your mother's face in the doorway of the childhood home. Where else could the Arc de Triomphe be? Of course it looks like that!

I shall not attempt to apologize for the autobiography that comes to the front in my Paris vistas. Perhaps my own insignificance and unimportance and the lack of interest on the part of the public in what I do and think—impressed upon me by more than one critic of earlier volumes—should deter me from telling how I lived and brought up my family in Paris. But it is the only way I can tell how I feel about Paris. Whether the end justifies the means the reader must decide for himself.

H. D. G.

Paris, August, 1919.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

(1887-1888)
CHAPTER   PAGE
I Childhood Vistas 3
(1899)
II At Sixteen 15
(1908)
III A Honeymoon Promise 31
(1909-1910)
IV The Promise Fulfilled 41
V The Pension in the Rue Madame 51
VI Lares and Penates in the Rue Servandoni 63
VII Gold in the Chimney 76
VIII At the BibliothÈque Nationale 86
IX Emilie in Monologue 97
X Hunting Apaches 104
XI Driftwood 112
XII Some of Our Guests 119
XIII Walks at Nightfall 132
XIV After-dinner Coffee 142
XV Repos Hebdomadaire 148
XVI "Many Waters Cannot Quench Love" 154
XVII Real Paris Shows 167
XVIII The Spell of June 181
(1913)
XIX Childhood Vistas for a New Generation 193
XX The Problem of Housing 201
(1914)
XXI "Nach Paris!" 211
(1914-1915)
XXII At Home in the Whirlwind 223
XXIII Sauvons Les BÉbÉs 231
XXIV Uncomfortable Neutrality 243
(1917)
XXV How We Kept Warm 253
XXVI April Sixth 262
XXVII The Vanguard of the A. E. F. 269
(1918)
XXVIII The Darkest Days 277
XXIX The Gothas and Big Bertha 294
XXX The Bird Charmer of the Tuileries 307
XXXI The Quatorze of Testing 313
XXXII The Liberation of Lille 321
XXXIII Armistice Night 326
XXXIV Royal Visitors 341
XXXV The First Peace Christmas 348
(1919)
XXXVI Plotting Peace 361
XXXVII La Vie ChÈre 373
XXXVIII The Revenge of Versailles 378
XXXIX The Quatorze of Victory 385

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

The Invalides from Pont Alexandre III Frontispiece
FACING
PAGE
The Madeleine Flower Market 16
Looking up the Avenue de l'OpÉra 32
The Rue de Vaugirard by the Luxembourg 64
ChÂteau de la Reine Blanche: Rue des Gobelins 88
Where stood the walls of old Lutetia 120
The PanthÉon from the Rue Soufflot 144
HÔtel de Ville from the Pont d'Arcole 168
Market day in the Rue de Seine 184
The first snow in the Luxembourg 224
A passage through the Louvre 256
In an Old Quarter 272
Saint-Germain l'Auxerrois 304
Old Paris is disappearing 320
The Grand Palais 336
Spire of the Saint-Chapelle from the Place Saint-Michel 368


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