CHAPTER VIII. THE HOME OF MADAME DE SÉVIGNÉ
WE are now in the vicinity of that most entrancing of historic
museums, Musée Carnavalet, and its neighbouring library. On the
wall of Rue de Sévigné is still to be read engraved in
the stonework its more ancient name, Rue de la Culture-Ste-Catherine,
so called because it ran across cultivated land in the vicinity of an
ancient church dedicated to St. Catherine. It was in 1677 that Madame
de Sévigné and her daughter, Madame de Grignan, settled
in the first story of the house No. 23, built some hundred and thirty
years before by Jacques de Ligneri under the direction of the renowned
architect Pierre Lescot and the sculptor Jean Goujon. The widow of a
Breton lord, Kernevenoy, or some such word by name, which resolved
itself into Carnavalet, bought the hôtel horn the
Ligneri; inhabitants and owners changed as time went on, but this name
remained. At the Revolution, the mansion was taken possession of by the
State, was used for a school, to become after 1871 the historical
Museum of Paris. In 1898 the museum was taken in hand by M. Georges
Cain and from that day to this has been continually added to, made more
and more valuable and attractive by this eminently capable
administrator. To study the history, and learn "from the life" the
story of Paris and of France, go to the Musée Carnavalet. And to read about all you see there, turn at No.
29 into the Bibliothèque de la Ville. In olden days le Petit Arsenal de
la Ville stood on the site. The edifice we see, l'hôtel St-Fargeau, was
built in 1687. The city library, which had been re-organized by Jules
Cousin, was placed there in 1898.
Rue Payenne runs across the site of ancient houses and of part of
two convents, a door of one is seen at that regrettably modern-style
erection, so out of keeping with its surroundings, the Lycée
Victor-Hugo. At No. 5 we see a bust of Auguste Compte, with an
inscription, for this was the "Temple of the religion of Humanity," and
Compte's friend and inspirer Clotilde de Vaux died here. Here souvenirs
of the philosopher are kept in a memorial chapel. Nos. 11 and 13 formed
the mansion of the due de Lude, one of the most noted admirers of
Madame de Sévigné, Grand Maître d'Artillerie in
1675, and was inhabited at one time by Madame Scarron. In Rue
Elzévir—in the sixteenth century Rue des
Trois-Pavillons—was born Marion Delorme (1613). Ninon de Lenclos
lived here in 1642. We see a fine old house at No. 8, and at No. 2
l'hôtel de Lusignan. Leading out of Rue Elzevir, the old Rue
Barbette records the name of a master of the Mint under
Philippe-le-Bel, and a house he built with extensive gardens, known as
the Courtille Barbette; the Courtille was destroyed by the populace,
displeased at a change in the coinage, in 1306; the house remained and
became a rendezvous of courtiers, passed into the hands of the
extremely light-lived Isabeau de Bavière, who inaugurated there
her wonderful bals masqués. It was on leaving the
hôtel Barbette that the due d'Orléans, Isabeau's lover,
was assassinated, on the threshold of a neighbouring house,by the men of Jean Sans Peur, 23 November, 1407 (see p.
40). The mansion passed subsequently through many hands, and was
finally in part demolished in 1563, and this street cut across the
ground where it had stood. No. 8 was the "petit hotel" of
Maréchal d'Estrées, brother of Gabrielle, confiscated at
the Revolution and made later the mother-house of the Institution "la
Legion d'Honneur" for the education of officer's daughters. The grand
old mansion has been despoiled of its splendid decorations, precious
woodwork, etc.—all sold peacemeal for high prices. Almost every
house in this old street is an ancient hotel. No. 14 was the
hotel Bigot de Chorelle, No. 16 the hotel de Choisy, No. 18 the hotel
Massu, No. 17 the hotel de Bregis, etc. We see other ancient houses in
Rue de la Perle. At No. 1, dating from the close of the seventeenth
century, we find wonderfully interesting things in the courtyard; busts
of old Romans, fine bas-reliefs,- etc.
Rue de Thorigny, sixteenth century, was named after President
Lambert de Thorigny, whose descendants built, a century or two later,
the fine hotel Lambert on l'Ile St-Louis. Marion died in a house in
this street; Madame de Sevigne lived here at one time, as did Balzac in
1814. The fine hotel at
No. 5 goes by the name hotel Sale,
because its owner, Aubert de Fontenay, had grown rich through the
Gabelle (salt-tax). Later it was the abode of Monseigneur
Juigné, Archbishop of Paris, who in the terrible winter 1788-89
gave all he possessed to assuage the misery of the people, yet met his
death by stoning on the outbreak of the Revolution. Confiscated by the
State, the fine old mansion was for a time put to various uses; then
bought and its beauties reverently guarded by its present owners. Rue
Debelleyme, made up of four shortancient streets, shows interesting
vestiges. The nineteenth-century novelist, Eugène Sue, lived
here.
To the east of Rue de Turenne, at its junction with Rue des
Francs-Bourgeois, we find old streets across the site of the ancient
palace des Tournelles; of the palace no trace remains save the name of
the old Rue des Tournelles. Rue du Foin runs where hay was once made in
the fields of the palace park. Rue de Béarn was in olden times
Rue du Parc-Royal. Here we find vestiges of the convent des Minimes,
founded by Marie de' Medici in 1611, suppressed in 1790. Some of its
walls form part of the barracks we see there, and the cloister still
stands intact in the courtyard, while at No. 10, Rue des Minimes, may
be seen the old convent door. The building No. 7 of this latter street,
now a school, dates from the seventeenth century. A famous
chestnut-tree, several hundred years old, flourished in the court at
No. 14 till a few years ago. In Rue St-Gilles, we see among other
ancient houses the Pavilion of the hotel Morangis, No. 22, and at No.
12, the Cour de Venise. In Rue Villehardouin, when it was Rue des Douze
Portes, to which Rue St-Pierre was joined at its change of name, lived
Scarron and his young wife. Rue des Tournelles with its strikingly
old-world aspect shows us two houses inhabited by Ninon de Lenclos,
Nos. 56 and 26, and at No. 58, that of Locré, who with some
other men of law drew up the famous Code Napoléon.
At No. 1, Rue St-Claude, one side of the house in Rue des
Arquebusiers, dwelt the notorious sorcerer, Joseph Balsamo, known as
comte de Cagliostro. The iron balustrade dates from his day and the
heavy handsome doors came from the ancient Temple buildings. Rue
Pont-au-Choux recalls the days when the land was a stretch of market
gardens. Rue Froissard and Rue de Commines lie on the site of the razed
couvent des Filles-du-Calvaire, of which vestiges are to be seen on the
boulevard at No. 13.
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