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rs to view two big towers; which Joanne says were formerly part of the defence of Bourges。 From the lower level of which I speak … the square in front of the post…office … the palace of Jacques Coeur looks very big and strong and feudal; from the upper street; in front of it; it looks very handsome and deli… cate。 To this street it presents two stories and a con… siderable length of facade; and it has; both within and without; a great deal of curious and beautiful detail。 Above the portal; in the stonework; are two false win… dows; in which two figures; a man and a woman; ap… parently household servants; are represented; in sculp… ture; as looking down into the street。 The effect is homely; yet grotesque; and the figures are sufficiently living to make one commiserate them for having been condemned; in so dull a town; to spend several cen… turies at the window。 They appear to be watching for the return of their master; who left his beautiful house one morning and never came back。
The history of Jacques Coeur; which has been written by M。 Pierre Clement; in a volume crowned by the French Academy; is very wonderful and in… teresting; but I have no space to go into it here。 There is no more curious example; and few more tragical; of a great fortune crumbling from one day to the other; or of the antique superstition that the gods grow jealous of human success。 Merchant; million… naire; banker; ship…owner; royal favorite; and minister of finance; explorer of the East and monopolist of the glittering trade between that quarter of the globe and his own; great capitalist who had anticipated the brilliant operations of the present time; he expiated his prosperity by poverty; imprisonment; and torture。 The obscure points in his career have been elucidated by M。 Clement; who has drawn; moreover; a very vivid picture of the corrupt and exhausted state of France during the middle of the fifteenth century。 He has shown that the spoliation of the great merchant was a deliberately calculated act; and that the king sacrificed him without scruple or shame to the avidity of a sin… gularly villanous set of courtiers。 The whole story is an extraordinary picture of high…handed rapacity; … the crudest possible assertion of the right of the stronger。 The victim was stripped of his property; but escaped with his life; made his way out of France; and; betak… ing himself to Italy; offered his services to the Pope。 It is proof of the consideration that he enjoyed in Europe; and of the variety of his accomplishments; that Calixtus III。 should have appointed him to take command of a fleet which his Holiness was fitting out against the Turks。 Jacques Coeur; however; was not destined to lead it to victory。 He died shortly after the expedition had started; in the island of Chios; in 1456。 The house of Bourges; his native place; testifies in some degree to his wealth and splendor; though it has in parts that want of space which is striking in many of the buildings of the Middle Ages。 The court; indeed; is on a large scale; ornamented with turrets and arcades; with several beautiful windows; and with sculptures inserted in the walls; representing the various sources of the great fortune of the owner。 M。 Pierre Clement describes this part of the house as having been of an 〃incomparable richesse;〃 … an estimate of its charms which seems slightly exaggerated to…day。 There is; however; something delicate and familiar in the bas…reliefs of which I have spoken; little scenes of agriculture and industry; which show; that the pro… prietor was not ashamed of calling attention to his harvests and enterprises。 To…day we should question the taste of such allusions; even in plastic form; in the house of a 〃merchant prince〃 (say in the Fifth Avenue)。 Why is it; therefore; that these quaint little panels at Bourges do not displease us? It is perhaps because things very ancient never; for some mysterious reason; appear vulgar。 This fifteenth…century million… naire; with his palace; his egotistical sculptures; may have produced that impression on some critical spirits of his own day。
The portress who showed me into the building was a dear litte old woman; with the gentlest; sweetest; saddest face … a little white; aged face; with dark; pretty eyes … and the most considerate manner。 She took me up into an upper hall; where there were a couple of curious chimney…pieces and a fine old oaken roof; the latter representing the hollow of a long boat。 There is a certain oddity in a native of Bourges … an inland town if there ever was one; without even a river (to call a river) to encourage nautical ambitions … hav… ing found his end as admiral of a fleet; but this boat… shaped roof; which is extremely graceful and is re… peated in another apartment; would suggest that the imagination of Jacques Coeur was fond of riding the waves。 Indeed; as he trafficked in Oriental products and owned many galleons; it is probable that he was personally as much at home in certain Mediterranean ports as in the capital of the pastoral Berry。 If; when he looked at the ceilings of his mansion; he saw his boats upside down; this was only a suggestion of the shortest way of emptying them of their treasures。 He is presented in person above one of the great stone chimney…pieces; in company with his wife; Macee de Leodepart; … I like to write such an extraordinary name。 Carved in white stone; the two sit playing at chess at an open window; through which they appear to give their attention much more to the passers…by than to the game。 They are also exhibited in other attitudes; though I do not recognize them in the composition on top of one of the fireplaces which represents the battle… ments of a castle; with the defenders (little figures be… tween the crenellations) hurling down missiles with a great deal of fury and expression。 It would have been hard to believe that the man who surrounded himself with these friendly and humorous devices had been guilty of such wrong…doing as to call down the heavy hand of justice。
It is a curious fact; however; that Bourges contains legal associations of a purer kind than the prosecution of Jacques Coeur; which; in spite of the rehabilitations of history; can hardly be said yet to have terminated; inasmuch as the law…courts of the city are installed in his quondam residence。 At a short distance from it stands the Hotel Cujas; one of the curiosities of Bourges and the habitation for many years of the great juris… consult who revived in the sixteenth century the study of the Roman law; and professed it during the close of his life in the university of the capital of Berry。 The learned Cujas had; in spite of his sedentary pur… suits; led a very wandering life; he died at Bourges in the year 1590。 Sedentary pursuits is perhaps not exactly what I should call them; having read in the 〃Biographie Universelle〃 (sole source of my knowledge of the renowned Cujacius) that his usual manner of study was to spread himself on his belly on the floor。 He did not sit down; he lay down; and the 〃Biographie Universelle〃 has (for so grave a work) an amusing pic… ture of the short; fat; untidy scholar dragging himself _a plat ventre_ across his room; from one pile of