| BOOK THIRD.
CHAPTER 1. NOTRE-DAME.
 (continued)However, these edifices of the transition from the Romanesque
 to the Gothic, are no less precious for study than the
 pure types.  They express a shade of the art which would be
 lost without them.  It is the graft of the pointed upon the
 round arch. Notre-Dame de Paris is, in particular, a curious specimen
 of this variety.  Each face, each stone of the venerable
 monument, is a page not only of the history of the country, but
 of the history of science and art as well.  Thus, in order to
 indicate here only the principal details, while the little Red
 Door almost attains to the limits of the Gothic delicacy
 of the fifteenth century, the pillars of the nave, by their
 size and weight, go back to the Carlovingian Abbey of
 Saint-Germain des Prés.  One would suppose that six centuries
 separated these pillars from that door.  There is no one,
 not even the hermetics, who does not find in the symbols of
 the grand portal a satisfactory compendium of their science,
 of which the Church of Saint-Jacques de la Boucherie was
 so complete a hieroglyph.  Thus, the Roman abbey, the
 philosophers' church, the Gothic art, Saxon art, the heavy,
 round pillar, which recalls Gregory VII., the hermetic symbolism,
 with which Nicolas Flamel played the prelude to Luther,
 papal unity, schism, Saint-Germain des Prés, Saint-Jacques
 de la Boucherie,--all are mingled, combined, amalgamated in
 Notre-Dame.  This central mother church is, among the
 ancient churches of Paris, a sort of chimera; it has the head
 of one, the limbs of another, the haunches of another, something
 of all. We repeat it, these hybrid constructions are not the least
 interesting for the artist, for the antiquarian, for the historian.
 They make one feel to what a degree architecture is a primitive
 thing, by demonstrating (what is also demonstrated by
 the cyclopean vestiges, the pyramids of Egypt, the gigantic
 Hindoo pagodas) that the greatest products of architecture
 are less the works of individuals than of society; rather the
 offspring of a nation's effort, than the inspired flash of a man
 of genius; the deposit left by a whole people; the heaps
 accumulated by centuries; the residue of successive evaporations
 of human society,--in a word, species of formations.
 Each wave of time contributes its alluvium, each race
 deposits its layer on the monument, each individual brings
 his stone.  Thus do the beavers, thus do the bees, thus do
 men.  The great symbol of architecture, Babel, is a hive. |