[The Cathedral by Joris-Karl Huysmans]@TWC D-Link bookThe Cathedral CHAPTER VI 17/27
A brass wicket was opened and closed, and a housekeeper, shuffling up in old shoes, half opened the door.
Durtal was met by the Abbe Plomb, who was watching for him, and who led him into a room full of statues; there were carved images in every spot--on the chimney-shelf, on a chest of drawers, on a side table, and in the middle of the room. "Do not look at them," said the Abbe, "do not heed them; I have no part in the selection of this horrible bazaar.
I have to endure it in spite of myself; these are offerings from my penitents." Durtal laughed, though somewhat scared by the extraordinary specimens of religious art that crowded the room. There was every kind of work: black frames with brass flats, and in them engravings of Virgins by Bouguereau and Signol, Guido's _Ecce Homo_, Pietas, Saint Philomenas--and then the assembly of polychrome statues: Mary painted with the crude green of angelica and the acrid pinks of English pear-drops; Madonnas gazing in rapture at their own feet, with extended hands whence proceeded fans of yellow rays; Joan of Arc squatting like a hen on her eggs, with eyes raised to heaven like white marbles, and pressing a standard to her bosom in its plaster cuirass; Saint Anthonys of Padua, clean and snug, as neat as two pins; Saint Josephs, not enough the carpenter and too little the Saint; Magdalens weeping silver pills; a whole mob of semi-divinities, best quality, of the class known as "The Munich Article" in the Rue Madame. "Oh, Monsieur l'Abbe, the donors are certainly terrible people--but could you not, quite by accident, drop one of these objects every day--" The priest gave a shrug of despair. "They would only bring me more," cried he.
"But if you are willing, we will be off at once, for I am afraid of being caught here if I linger." And as they walked, talking of the Cathedral, Durtal exclaimed,-- "Is it not a monstrous thing that in the splendour of this Cathedral of Chartres it is impossible to hear any genuine plain-song? I am reduced to frequenting the sanctuary only at hours when there is no high service going on.
Above all I avoid being present at High Mass on Sundays; the music that is tolerated infuriates me! Is there no way of having the organist dismissed, and a clean sweep made of the precentor and the teachers in the choir-school, of packing off the basses with their vinous voices to the taverns? Ugh! And the gassy effervescence that rises from the thin pipes of the little boys! and the street tunes eructed in a hiccough, like the run of a lamp-chain when you pull it up, mingling with the noisy bellow of the basses! What a disgrace, what a shame! How is it that the Bishop, the priests, the Canons do not prohibit such treason? "Monseigneur, I know, is old and ill; but those Canons!--They look so weary, to be sure! As I see them droning out the Psalms in their stalls, I wonder whether they know where they are and what they are doing; they always seem to me in a half unconscious state--" "The high winds of la Beauce induce lethargy," said the Abbe, laughing. "But allow me to assure you that though the Cathedral scorns Gregorian chants, here, at Chartres, at the little Seminary, at the church of Notre Dame de la Breche, and at the convent of the Sisters of Saint Paul, they are sung after the Use of Solesmes, so that you can alternately attend that church and those chapels and the Cathedral, since perfection is to be found in neither." "Of course.
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