An immense old wardrobe, the colossal remnant of some
boudoir of Charles VII. or Henry II., had been converted into a
dwelling-house. The double doors lay open, so that the entire
menage was open to public view. In the open half of the wardrobe
was a common sitting-room of some four feet by six, in which sat,
smoking their pipes round a charcoal brazier, no fewer than six old
soldiers of the First Republic, with their uniforms torn and worn
threadbare. Evidently they were of the mauvais sujet class; their
blear eyes and limp jaws told plainly of a common love of absinthe;
and their eyes had that haggard, worn look which stamps the
drunkard at his worst, and that look of slumbering ferocity which
follows hard in the wake of drink. The other side stood as of old,
with its shelves intact, save that they were cut to half their
depth, and in each shelf of which there were six, was a bed made
with rags and straw. The half-dozen of worthies who inhabited this
structure looked at me curiously as I passed; and when I looked
back after going a little way I saw their heads together in a
whispered conference. I did not like the look of this at all, for
the place was very lonely, and the men looked very, very
villainous. However, I did not see any cause for fear, and went on
my way, penetrating further and further into the Sahara. The way
was tortuous to a degree, and from going round in a series of
semi-circles, as one goes in skating with the Dutch roll, I got
rather confused with regard to the points of the compass.
When I had penetrated a little way I saw, as I turned the corner
of a half-made heap, sitting on a heap of straw an old soldier with
threadbare coat.
"Hallo!" said I to myself; "the First Republic is well
represented here in its soldiery."
As I passed him the old man never even looked up at me, but
gazed on the ground with stolid persistency. Again I remarked to
myself: "See what a life of rude warfare can do! This old man's
curiosity is a thing of the past."
When I had gone a few steps, however, I looked back suddenly,
and saw that curiosity was not dead, for the veteran had raised his
head and was regarding me with a very queer expression. He seemed
to me to look very like one of the six worthies in the press. When
he saw me looking he dropped his head; and without thinking further
of him I went on my way, satisfied that there was a strange
likeness between these old warriors.
Presently I met another old soldier in a similar manner. He,
too, did not notice me whilst I was passing.
By this time it was getting late in the afternoon, and I began
to think of retracing my steps. Accordingly I turned to go back,
but could see a number of tracks leading between different mounds
and could not ascertain which of them I should take. In my
perplexity I wanted to see someone of whom to ask the way, but
could see no one. I determined to go on a few mounds further and so
try to see someone-not a veteran.
I gained my object, for after going a couple of hundred yards I
saw before me a single shanty such as I had seen before-with,
however, the difference that this was not one for living in, but
merely a roof with three walls open in front. From the evidences
which the neighbourhood exhibited I took it to be a place for
sorting. Within it was an old woman wrinkled and bent with age; I
approached her to ask the way.
She rose as I came close and I asked her my way. She immediately
commenced a conversation; and it occurred to me that here in the
very centre of the Kingdom of Dust was the place to gather details
of the history of Parisian rag-picking-particularly as I could do
so from the lips of one who looked like the oldest inhabitant.
I began my inquiries, and the old woman gave me most interesting
answers-she had been one of the ceteuces who sat daily before the
guillotine and had taken an active part among the women who
signalised themselves by their violence in the revolution. While we
were talking she said suddenly: "But m'sieur must be tired
standing," and dusted a rickety old stool for me to sit down. I
hardly liked to do so for many reasons; but the poor old woman was
so civil that I did not like to run the risk of hurting her by
refusing, and moreover the conversation of one who had been at the
taking of the Bastille was so interesting that I sat down and so
our conversation went on.
While we were talking an old man-older and more bent and
wrinkled even than the woman-appeared from behind the shanty. "Here
is Pierre," said she. "M'sieur can hear stories now if he wishes,
for Pierre was in everything, from the Bastille to Waterloo." The
old man took another stool at my request and we plunged into a sea
of revolutionary reminiscences. This old man, albeit clothed like a
scare-crow, was like any one of the six veterans.
I was now sitting in the centre of the low hut with the woman on
my left hand and the man on my right, each of them being somewhat
in front of me. The place was full of all sorts of curious objects
of lumber, and of many things that I wished far away. In one corner
was a heap of rags which seemed to move from the number of vermin
it contained, and in the other a heap of bones whose odour was
something shocking. Every now and then, glancing at the heaps, I
could see the gleaming eyes of some of the rats which infested the
place. These loathsome objects were bad enough, but what looked
even more dreadful was an old butcher's axe with an iron handle
stained with clots of blood leaning up against the wall on the
right hand side. Still these things did not give me much concern.
The talk of the two old people was so fascinating that I stayed on
and on, till the evening came and the dust heaps threw dark shadows
over the vales between them.
After a time I began to grow uneasy, I could not tell how or
why, but somehow I did not feel satisfied.
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