The Cathedrals Of Southern France - Part 37
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Part 37

In the magnificent Musee of the city is _un pet.i.t monument_, without an inscription, but bearing a cross _gammee_ or _Swastika_, and a palm-leaf, symbols of the divine Apollo and Artemis. It seems curious that this tiny record in stone should have been found, as it was, in the mountains which separate the sources of the Garonne and the Adour, as the _Swastika_ is a symbol supposedly indigenous to the fire and sun-worshippers of the East, where it figures in a great number of their monuments.

It is called, by the local antiquary, a Pyrenean altar. If this is so, it is of course of pagan origin, and is in no way connected with Christian art.

[Ill.u.s.tration: St. NAZAIRE _de CARCa.s.sONNE_]

XIV

ST. NAZAIRE DE CARCa.s.sONNE

With old and new Carca.s.sonne one finds a contrast, if not as great as between the hyphenated Hungarian cities of Buda and Pest, at least as marked in detail.

In most European settlements, where an old munic.i.p.ality adjoins a modern one, walls have been razed, moats filled, and much general modernization has been undertaken.

With Carca.s.sonne this is not so; its winding ways, its _culs-de-sacs_, narrow alleys, and towering walls remain much as they always were, and the great stronghold of the Middle Ages, vulnerable--as history tells--from but one point, remains to-day, after its admirable restoration of roof and capstone, much as it was in the days when modern Carca.s.sonne was but a scattering hamlet beneath the walls of the older fortification.

One thing will always be recalled, and that is that a part of the _enceinte_ of the ancient _Cite_ was a construction of the sixth century--the days of the Visigoths--and that its subsequent development into an almost invulnerable fortress was but the endors.e.m.e.nt which later centuries gave to the work and forethought of a people who were supposed to possess no arts, and very little of ingenuity.

This should suggest a line of investigation to one so minded; while for us, who regard the ancient walls merely as a boundary which sheltered and protected a charming Gothic church, it is perhaps sufficient to recall the inconsistency in many previous estimates as to what great abilities, if any, the Goths possessed.

If it is true that the Visigoths merely followed Roman tradition, so much the more creditable to them that they preserved these ancient walls to the glory of those who came after, and but added to the general plan.

Old and new Carca.s.sonne, as one might call them, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries had each their own magistrates and a separate government. The _Cite_, elevated above the _ville_, held also the garrison, the _presidial_ seat, and the first seneschalship of the province.

The bishopric of the _Cite_ is not so ancient as the _ville_ itself; for the first prelate there whose name is found upon record was one Sergius, "who subscribed to a 'Council' held at Narbonne in 590."

[Ill.u.s.tration: _The Old Cite de Carca.s.sonne before and after the Restoration_]

St. Hilaire, who founded the abbey at Poitiers, came perhaps before Sergius, but his tenure is obscure as to its exact date.

The cathedral of St. Michel, in the lower town, has been, since 1803, the seat of the bishop's throne.

It is a work unique, perhaps, in its design, but entirely unfeeling and preposterous in its overelaborate decorations. It has a long parallelogram-like nave, "_entierement peinte_," as the custodian refers to it. It has, to be sure, a grand vault, strong and broad, but there are no aisles, and the chapels which flank this gross nave are mere painted boxes.

Episcopal dignity demanded that some show of importance should be given to the cathedral, and it was placed in the hands of Viollet-le-Duc in 1849 for restoration. Whatever his labours may have been, he doubtless was not much in sympathy with this clumsy fabric, and merely "restored"

it in some measure approaching its twelfth-century form.

It is with St. Nazaire de Carca.s.sonne, the tiny _eglise_ of the old _Cite_ and the _ci-devant_ cathedral that we have to do.

This most fascinating church, fascinating for itself none the less than its unique environment, is, in spite of the extended centuries of its growth, almost the equal in the purity of its Gothic to that of St.

Urbain at Troyes. And this, in spite of evidences of rather bad joining up of certain warring constructive elements.

The structure readily composes itself into two distinct parts: that of the Romanesque (round arch and barrel vault) era and that of the Gothic of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.

No consideration of St. Nazaire de Carca.s.sonne is possible without first coming to a realization of the construction and the functions of the splendidly picturesque and effective ramparts which enclosed the ancient _Cite_, its cathedral, chateaux, and various civil and domestic establishments.

In brief, its history and chronology commences with the Visigoth foundation, extending from the fifth to the eighth centuries to the time (1356) when it successfully resisted the Black Prince in his b.l.o.o.d.y ravage, by sword and fire, of all of Languedoc.

Legend has it that in Charlemagne's time, after that monarch had besieged the town for many years and was about to raise the siege in despair, a certain tower,--which flanked the chateau,--defended only by a _Gauloise_ known as _Carcaso_, suddenly gave way and opened a breach by which the army was at last able to enter.

A rude figure perpetuating the fame of this _Madame Carcaso_--a veritable Amazon, it would seem--is still seen, rudely carved, over the Porte Narbonnaise.

[Ill.u.s.tration: _Two Capitals of Pillars in St. Nazaire de Carca.s.sonne; and the Rude Stone Carving of Carcas_]

It is the inner line of ramparts which dates from the earliest period.

The chateau, the postern-gate, and most of the interior construction are of the eleventh and twelfth centuries, while the outer fortification is of the time of St. Louis, the latter part of the thirteenth century.

[Ill.u.s.tration: ST. NAZAIRE ... _de CARCa.s.sONNE_]

The Saracens successfully attacked and occupied the city from 713 to 759, but were routed by Pepin-le-Bref. In 1090 was first founded the strong _vicomtale_ dynasty of the Trencavels. In 1210 the Crusaders, under Simon de Montfort and the implacable Abbot of Citeaux, laid siege to the _Cite_, an act which resulted in the final ma.s.sacre, fifty of the besieged--who surrendered--being hanged, and four hundred burned alive.

In addition to the walls and ramparts were fifty circular protecting towers. The extreme length of the inner enclosure is perhaps three-quarters of a mile, and of the outer nearly a full mile.

It is impossible to describe the magnitude and splendour of these city walls, which, up to the time of their restoration by Viollet-le-Duc, had scarcely crumbled at all. The upper ranges of the towers, roof-tops, ramparts, etc., had become broken, of course, and the sky-line had become serrated, but the walls, their foundations, and their outline plan had endured as few works of such magnitude have before or since.

Carca.s.sonne, its history, its romance, and its picturesque qualities, has ever appealed to the poet, painter, and historian alike.

Something of the halo of sentiment which surrounds this marvellous fortified city will be gathered from the following praiseful admiration by Gustave Nadaud:

CARCa.s.sONNE

"'I'm growing old, I've sixty years; I've laboured all my life in vain; In all that time of hopes and fears I've failed my dearest wish to gain; I see full well that here below Bliss unalloyed there is for none.

My prayer will ne'er fulfilment know; I never have seen Carca.s.sonne, I never have seen Carca.s.sonne!

"'You see the city from the hill-- It lies beyond the mountains blue, And yet to reach it one must still Five long and weary leagues pursue, And, to return, as many more!

Ah! had the vintage plenteous grown, The grape withheld its yellow store!

I shall not look on Carca.s.sonne, I shall not look on Carca.s.sonne!

"'They tell me every day is there Not more nor less than Sunday gay; In shining robes and garments fair The people walk upon their way.

One gazes there on castle walls As grand as those of Babylon, A bishop and two generals!

I do not know fair Carca.s.sonne, I do not know fair Carca.s.sonne!

"'The cure's right; he says that we Are ever wayward, weak, and blind; He tells us in his homily Ambition ruins all mankind; Yet could I there two days have spent, While the autumn sweetly shone, Ah, me! I might have died content When I had looked on Carca.s.sonne, When I had looked on Carca.s.sonne!

"'Thy pardon, Father, I beseech, In this my prayer if I offend; One something sees beyond his reach From childhood to his journey's end.

My wife, our little boy, Aignan, Have travelled even to Narbonne, My grandchild has seen Perpignan, And I have not seen Carca.s.sonne, And I have not seen Carca.s.sonne!'

"So crooned one day, close by Limoux, A peasant double bent with age, 'Rise up, my friend,' said I, 'with you I'll go upon this pilgrimage.'

We left next morning his abode, But (Heaven forgive him) half way on The old man died upon the road; He never gazed on Carca.s.sonne, Each mortal has his Carca.s.sonne!"

St. Nazaire is possessed of a Romanesque nave which dates from 1096, but the choir and transepts are of the most acceptable Gothic forms of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.

This choir is readily accounted as a masterwork of elegance, is purely northern in style and treatment, and possesses also those other attributes of the _perfectionnement_ of the style--fine gla.s.s, delicate fenestration, and superlative grace throughout, as contrasted with the heavier and more cold details of the Romanesque variety.

The nave was dedicated by Urbain II., and was doubtless intended for defence, if its square, firmly bedded towers and piers are suggestive of that quality. The princ.i.p.al _porte_--it does not rise to the grandeur of a _portail_--is a thorough Roman example. The interior, with its great piers, its rough barrel-vault, and its general lack of grace and elegance, bespeaks its functions as a stronghold. A Romanesque tower in its original form stands on the side which adjoins the ramparts.