workmen of the Paris suburbs were invaders: they besieged
the village on Sundays in daring swarms, to be beaten back
successfully by the duties of every successive Monday. Now they are
fixed there. They are the colorless inhabitants of these many-storied
houses. The town's long holiday is over. Where the odorous avenues of
lilacs stretched along, affording bouquets for maman and the children
and toothpicks for ferocious young warriors from the garrisons, are
odious lengths of wall. Everything is changed, and from the gardens the
grisettes of Alfred de Musset are with sighing sent. Their haunts are
laboratories now, and the Ile d'Amour is a mayor's office.
I, to whom the beer-scandals of the Rhine and the students' holidays of
the Seine were among the Childe-Harold enormities of a not over-sinful
youth, was sadly disappointed. Thinking of the groves of an Eden, I ran
against the furnaces of a Pandemonium. For a stroll back toward my
adolescence, Belleville was a bad beginning. I determined to console
myself with the green meadows of Saint-Gervais and the pretty woods
of Romainville. Attaining the latter was half an hour's affair among
long walls and melancholy houses: at Saint-Gervais, a double file of
walls and houses--at Romainville, houses and walls again. In the latter,
where formerly there were scarcely three watches distributed amongst
the whole village, I was incensed to find the shop of a clockmaker: it
was somewhat consoling, though, to find it a clockmaker's of the most
pronounced suburban kind, with pairs of wooden shoes amongst the
guard-chains in the window, and pots of golden mustard ranged
alternately with the antiquated silver turnips.
Before the church I found yet standing a knotty little elder tree, a
bewitched-looking vegetable. A beadle in a blouse, engaged in washing
one of the large altar-candles with soap and water at the public pump,
gave me the following history of the elder tree. I am passionately fond
of legends, and this is one quite hot and fresh, only a hundred years old.
Hear the tale of the elder of Romainville.
The excellent curé of Romainville in the last century was a man of such
a charitable nature that his all was in the hands of the poor. The grocer
of the village, a potentate of terrific powers and inexorable temper,
finally refused to trust him with the supply of oil necessary for the lamp
in the sanctuary. Soon the sacred flame sputtered, palpitated, flapped
miserably over the crusted wick: the curé, responsible before Heaven
for the life of his lamp, tottered away from the altar with groans of
anguish. Arrived in the garden, he threw himself on his knees, crying
_Meâ culpâ_, and beating his bosom. The garden contained only
medicinal plants, shaded by a linden and an elder: completely desperate,
the unhappy priest fixed his moist eyes on the latter, when lo! the bark
opened, the trunk parted, and a jet of clear aromatic liquid spouted forth,
quite different from any sap yielded by elder before. It was oil. A
miracle!
The report spread. The grocer came and humbly visited the priest in his
garden, his haughty hat, crammed with bills enough to have spread
agony through all the cottages of Romainville, humbly carried between
his legs. He came proposing a little speculation. In exchange for a
single spigot to be inserted in the tree, and the hydraulic rights going
with the same, he offered all the bounties dearest to the priestly
heart--unlimited milk and honey, livers of fat geese and pies lined with
rabbit. The priest, though hungry--hungry with the demoniac hunger of
a fat and paunchy man--turned his back on the tempter.
[Illustration: STORY OF AN OLD MAN AND AN ELDER.]
One day a salad, the abstemious relish yielded by his garden herbs, was
set on the table by Jeanneton. At the first mouthful the good curé made
a terrible face--the salad tasted of lamp-oil. The unhappy girl had filled
a cruet with the sacred fluid. From that day the bark closed and the flow
ceased.
There is one of the best oil-stories you ever heard, and one of the most
recent of attested miracles. For my part, I am half sorry it is so well
attested, and that I have the authority of that beadle in the blouse, who
took my little two-franc piece with an expression of much intelligence.
I love the Legend.
[Illustration: MERCHANDISE IN THE TEMPLE.]
The environs of Paris are but chary of Legend. I treasure this specimen,
then, as if it had been a rare flower for my botany-box.
But the botany-box indeed, how heavy it was growing! The umbrella,
how awkward! The sun, how vigorous and ardent! Who ever supposed
it could become so hot by half-past eight in the morning?
[Illustration: FATHER JOLIET.]
Certainly the ruthless box, which
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