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    Chapter 3 - Page 2

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    a strange little sanctuary
    on the left of the street, which opens in front of the
    Tour Charlemagne, - the rugged base of which, by
    the way, inhabited like a cave, with a diminutive
    doorway, in which, as I passed, an old woman stood
    cleaning a pot, and a little dark window decorated
    with homely flowers, would be appreciated by a
    painter in search of "bits." The present shrine of
    Saint Martin is enclosed (provisionally, I suppose) in
    a very modem structure of timber, where in a dusky
    cellar, to which you descend by a wooden staircase
    adorned with votive tablets and paper roses, is placed
    a tabernacle surrounded by twinkling tapers and pros-
    trate worshippers. Even this crepuscular vault, how-
    ever, fails, I think, to attain solemnity; for the whole
    place is strangely vulgar and garish. The Catholic
    church, as churches go to-day, is certainly the most
    spectacular; but it must feel that it has a great fund
    of impressiveness to draw upon when it opens such
    sordid little shops of sanctity as this. It is impos-
    sible not to be struck with the grotesqueness of such
    an establishment, as the last link in the chain of a
    great ecclesiastical tradition.

    In the same street, on the other side, a little below,
    is something better worth your visit than the shrine
    of Saint Martin. Knock at a high door in a white
    wall (there is a cross above it), and a fresh-faced
    sister of the convent of the Petit Saint Martin will
    let you into the charming little cloister, or rather
    fragment of a cloister. Only one side of this exqui-
    site structure remains, but the whole place is effective.
    In front of the beautiful arcade, which is terribly
    bruised and obliterated, is one of those walks of inter-
    laced _tilleuls_ which are so frequent in Touraine, and
    into which the green light filters so softly through a
    lattice of clipped twigs. Beyond this is a garden,
    and beyond the garden are the other buildings of the
    Convent, - where the placid sisters keep a school, - a
    test, doubtless, of placidity. The imperfect arcade,
    which dates from the beginning of the sixteenth cen-
    tury (I know nothing of it but what is related in Mrs.
    Pattison's "Rennaissance in France") is a truly en-

    chanting piece of work; the cornice and the angles of
    the arches, being covered with the daintiest sculpture
    of arabesques, flowers, fruit, medallions, cherubs, griffins,
    all in the finest and most attenuated relief. It is like
    the chasing of a bracelet in stone. The taste, the
    fancy, the elegance, the refinement, are of those things
    which revive our standard of the exquisite. Such
    a piece of work is the purest flower of the French
    Renaissance; there is nothing more delicate in all
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