CHAPTER XX. LE JARDIN DES PLANTES
IT was in the early years of the seventeenth century that the King's physician bought a piece of waste ground—a butte formed
of the refuse of centuries accumulated there—for the culture of
the multitudinous herbs and plants which made up the pharmacopia of the
age. Thus was born the "Jardin Royal de herbes medicinales" laid out in
1626. Chairs of botany, pharmacy, surgery were instituted and endowed,
and in 1650 the garden was thrown open to the public. A century later
Buffon was named superintendent of the royal garden. He set himself to
reorganize and enlarge. The amphitheatre, the natural history
galleries, the chemistry laboratories, the fine lime-tree avenue are
all due to him. Distinguished naturalists succeeded one another as
directors of the garden, and after the death of Louis XVI a museum of
natural history and a menagerie were set up with what was left of the
King's collection at Versailles. Additions and improvements were made
in succeeding years till, after the outbreak of war in 1870, the Jardin
was bombarded by the Prussians, and "during the siege its live-stock
largely drawn upon to feed the population of Paris. The garden and its
buildings have been added to frequently. The labyrinth is on the site
of the hillock bought by Guy de la Brosse, who first laid it out. A
granite statue marks the spot where he and two notabletravellers were
buried. Surrounding streets record the names of great naturalists of
different epochs.
In Rue Geoffroy St-Hilaire, once Rue Jardin du Roi, No. 5, now the
Police Station, was built in 1760. At No. 30 a wheel once worked turned
by the water of the Bièvre, now a malodorous drain-stream hidden
beneath the pavement. No. 36 was Buffon's home. Here he died in 1788.
At No. 37 lived Daubenton. At No. 38 stood in olden days the great
gate, the Porte-Royale, of the Jardin du Roi, with to its left the
hall, a narrow space at that time, where the great surgeon Dionis
described to a marvelling assembly of students his wonderful
discoveries (1672-73). That small cabinet was the nucleus of the great anthropological museum of succeeding centuries.
In Rue Cuvier, in its early days Rue Derrière-les-Murs de
Ste-Victoire, describing accurately its situation, we see at No. 20 a
modern fountain (1840) on the site of one put there in 1671 and traces
of the abbey St-Victor in the courtyard. The pavilion "de
l'Administration" of the Garden is the ancient hôtel Jean Debray
(1650), inhabited subsequently by several men of note. At No. 47 Cuvier
died in 1832. In the eighteenth-century fiacres, a recently
introduced manner- of getting about, were to be hired at No. 45. The
eleventh-century Rue Linné shows many vestiges of the past. We
see Gothic arches of the vanished abbey at No. 4.
In Rue des Fossés St-Bernard, stretching along the line of
Philippe-Auguste 's wall, between the site of two great gates: Porte
St-Victori a spot desecrated by the massacres of September, and Porte
St-Bernard, we see Halle-aux-Vins, where abbey buildings stood of yore.
The Halle-aux-Cuirs, in Rue Censier, is on the site of the famous
orphanage "La Miséricorde," called vulgarly "lès Cent
Filles" or "les Cent Vierges." The apprentice from the Arts and Crafts
Institution, who should choose one of these orphan maidens for his
wife, obtained as her dowry the privilege of becoming at once a full
member of the Corporation.
In Rue de la Clef we have at No. 56 the site of part of the
notorious prison Ste-Pélagie. No. 26 is still owned by the
Savouré, whose ancestors kept the school where Jerome Bonaparte
and many of his compeers were educated. Rue du Fer-à-Moulin,
dating from the twelfth century, a stretch of blackened walls, has been
known by many names. In the little Rue Scipion leading out of it we see
at No. 13 the hôtel built in the sixteenth century for
the Tuscan, Scipion Sardini, who came to France in the suite of
Catherine de' Medici, a rich and rather scandalous financier;
terra-cotta medallions ornament its walls. It serves now as the
bakehouse of the Paris hospitals. In the square opposite we see the
curious piece of statuary: "des Boulangers," by Charpentier.
Rue Monge, running from boulevard St-Germain to Avenue des Gobelins,
was cut through old streets of the district in 1859. A fountain Louis
XV brought here from its original site, Rue Childebert, was set up in
the square, and many other old-time relics: statues from the ancient
hôtel de Ville, débris from the Palais de l'Industrie,
burnt down in 1897; a copy of the statue of Voltaire by Houdin, etc.
Rue d'Arras, so named from a college once there, began as Rue des
Murs, referring to the walls of Philippe- Auguste. The concert hall we
see was not long ago Père Loyson's church. L'École
Communale, No. 19 Rue
des Boulangers, is on the site of part of the convent des "Filles
Anglaises," which had existed there from 1644—razed in 1861.
Rue Rollin began in the sixteenth century as Rue des Moulins-a-vent.
On the site of the house at No. 2 Pascal died in 1662. No. 4, with its
fine staircase, its grille and ancient well in the courtyard, was the home of Bernardine de St. Pierre, during the years he wrote his world-known Paul and Virginie. Rollin
lived and died (1741) at No. 8. Descartes lived at No. 14. When the
street was longer and known as Rue Neuve-St-Etienne, Manon Philipon,
Madame Roland of later days, was a pupil in the annexe of the English Augustine convent on a site crossed now by Rue Monge and Rue de Navarre.
In Rue de Navarre we come to Les Arenes, the disinterred remains of
the Roman Arena. They were discovered here just before the war of 1870,
then quickly covered up to be in part restored to daylight in 1883. We
see before us the grey stones, huge blocks and graduated step-like
seats where the population of the city—Lutetians
then—passed their hours of recreation watching the conflicts of
wild beasts. It is not, perhaps, the original arena built here by the
Romans, for that was attacked twice, first by the northern invaders,
then by the Christians, many of its stones used to build the city
walls. It was, however, soon restored ... evidently. In the course of
subsequent invasions, conquests, new settlements, constructions and the
lapse of years, the Roman theatre sank beneath the surface to be
unearthed in nineteenth-century days. Modern garden paths and a grand
but inharmonious entrance in Louis XIV style now surround this
supremely interesting vestige of a long-gone age. Children play where
savage beasts once fought. Women knit and sew, old men rest, young men
and maidens woo, where Roman soldiers and a primitive Gallic population
once eagerly gathered to watch fierce combats. (On the Peace
Fête, July 14th, 1919, the Arènes were arranged as a
theatre, and the performance of a classical play, "Le Cid,"
took place on the spot where wild beasts had fought of yore; while
twentieth-century Frenchmen sat on the very stone seats whereon had sat
Romans and men of primitive Gallic tribes in the earliest days of the
history of Paris and of France.)
Rue Lacépède: here at No. 1 stood till recently the
Hôpital de la Pitié, founded by Marie de' Medici in 1613,
now replaced by a modern building in the boulevard de l'Hôpital.
Its primary destination was a shelter for beggars—a
refuge—in order to free Paris from the swarms who "gained their
living" by soliciting alms in the streets. The beggars preferred their
liberty. By an edict of some years later, however, beggars were taken
there and closely shut up, safely guarded. They were called in
consequence "les Enfermés" The hospital grew in extent and
importance and was called "Notre-Dame de la Pitié." The convent
Ste-Pélagie was organized in a part of its buildings, in 1660,
to become -at the Revolution the notorious prison. No. 7 is a handsome
eighteenth-century hôtel. Rue Gracieuse has brought down
to our time the graceful name of a family who lived there in the
thirteenth century and some ancient houses. In Rue du Puits de l'Ermite
lived the sculptors Coysevox, Coustou, and the painter Bourdon. The
hospice for aged poor in Rue de l'Epée-de-Bois was formerly an asile founded
by Sœur Rosalie, known for her self-sacrificing work among the
cholera-stricken in 1832, and during the Revolution of 1848. The very
name Rue des Patriarches bids us look for vestiges of past ages. The
patriarchs, thus memorized, were two fourteenth-century ecclesiastics,
one bishop of Paris and Alexandria, the other of Jerusalem, who dwelt
in a fine old hôtel, the big courtyard of which has become a market-place, while the street named after them and a curious impasse stretch
across the site of the razed mansion. The district was a centre of
Calvinism during the religious struggles. The bishop's old house,
"hôtel Chanac," sheltered numerous Protestants, and religious
services were held there.
Rue de l'Arbalète carries us back to the days when archers
had their garden and training-ground here. Later an apothecary's garden
was laid out where now we see the extensive modern buildings of the
Institut Agronomique. A pharmaceutical school was built in this old
street and medicinal herbs were cultivated from the end of the
fifteenth and early years of the sixteenth centuries. Remains of a
Roman cemetery were found some years ago beneath the paving-stones near
No. 16.
In Rue Daubenton we find the presbytery and ancient side-entrance of
St-Médard, and in the old wall distinct traces of two great
gates which led to the churchyard. Traces of past time are seen also in
Rue de la Pitié, where at No. 3 Robespierre's sister lived and,
in 1834, died.
Rue Cardinal-Lemoine begins across the site of the college founded
by the Cardinal in 1302, suppressed at the Revolution, used
subsequently as a barracks, then razed. The wall of Philippe-Auguste
passed on the site of No. 26. Beneath the house a curious leaden coffin
was found in 1908. At No. 49 we see the handsome but
dilapidated-façade of the house of. the painter Lebrun, where
also Watteau lived for a time. Here the Dames Anglaises had their
well-known convent from 1644 to 1859, when they moved to Neuilly. At
the Revolution the convent was confiscated, yet Mass was said daily in
the chapel through the Terror.
At No. 65 we see the Collège des Écossais, founded in
1325 by David, bishop of Moray, to which a second foundation due to the
bishop of Glasgow, 1639, was added, transferred here from Rue des
Armendiers, by Robert Barclay in 1662. Suppressed in 1792, it was used
as a prison under the Terror but restored to the Scots when Revolution
days were over. The seventeenth-century chapel still stands and the
heart of James II is in a casket there. The college staircase, left
untouched, is remarkably fine. Close by, at the end of Rue Thouin, in
what was formerly Place Fourcy, the brothers Perrault, one the famous
architect, the other yet more universally known—the writer of
fairy tales—lived and died. Rue de l'Estrapade recalls the days
when, on the place hard by, rebellious soldiers were punished
by being hoisted to the top of a pole, their hands tied behind their
back, then let fall to the ground. Old-time vestiges are seen all along
the street. Rue Clotilde crosses what were once the grounds of the
abbey Ste-Genevièye.
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