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CHAPTER
VI.
GERMAINE
AND THE ARTIST
ALL artists are fond of painting French country life,
and there is no part that they like better than the picturesque old villages,
farms, and apple-orchards of Normandy, while perhaps Les Andelys is one of
their favourite stopping-places.
Germaine had made many friends among them, for
they often came to draw or paint the quaint jumble of old buildings at La
Chaumière.
Germaine and the English artist who was staying
at the Belle Etoile were great friends. He was painting near the farm, and he
often dropped in to sit in their garden and drink a glass of cider.
This warm bright morning Germaine could see his
white umbrella under the apple-trees, whereupon she ran into the laiterie
where her mamma was putting away butter in stone jars for winter use.
“Mamma, I see that Mr. Thomson is
painting
again in the field. It is so hot. May I not take him a glass of cider?”
“Yes, truly, my little one, but do not stay
too long, for I shall need you later to help me.” Madame Lafond knew that
when her little daughter was watching the painting of a picture, she would
forget all about how time flies.
Germaine went into the dark cellar where the
large casks of cider were kept cool, and drawing off a jug full, took a glass,
and holding an umbrella over her, carefully carried it down the hillside to
Mr. Thomson, who was lying full length on the grass, smoking vigorously and
scowling at his picture.
“Oh, Germaine,” he called out, when he
caught sight of her, “you are a jewel, a good little girl to bring me a cold
drink. It was just what I wanted, and I was too lazy to walk up to the farm
and ask for it. I am stuck and can’t do a bit of work. I don’t believe
this picture is good for anything, after all.”
Germaine could not believe this, for had she
not heard Mr. Carter tell of pictures that Mr. Thomson had sold for so many
thousands of francs that it took away her breath. Besides, did it not look
just like her papa’s wheat-field, with a bit of the river showing between
the trees?
She shook her head. “I think it is a most
beautiful picture,” she said as she looked at it admiringly.
“Oh! if all the folk who buy pictures had
your good taste, Germaine, how lucky we artist chaps would be,” he said,
draining the cider jug. “I feel much refreshed and must get to work again,
for the light is changing fast. Sit there in the shade, child, and tell me
what you are going to do at the fête of St. Sauveur next week.”
There was nothing Germaine liked better than to watch
the picture grow under the quickly moving brushes; and Mr. Thomson talked to
her so pleasantly in his queer French that it amused her. Germaine never
smiled, even when he made mistakes in grammar that a French child of eight
would not have made.
The French are a proverbially polite people, and at
no time is their politeness so apparent as when a foreigner is speaking their
language. They never laugh nor take the slightest notice of the worst
blunders, but with the greatest pains try to understand them, and even go
out of their way to set them right.
But to-day it was not the fête that Germaine
wanted to talk about. “Tell me more about Paris,” she said, shyly.
“Oh, Germaine, you are just like all the
world — wild about Paris,” laughed Mr. Thomson. He lived in Paris during
the winter, and his big studio looked out on the fine old gardens of the
Luxembourg, and from the windows could be seen the gilded dome of the Hotel
des Invalides, under which is the tomb of the great Napoleon.
It was the dream of Germaine’s life to see
this wonderful city of Paris that she had heard so much about. So she listened
eagerly when Mr. Thomson told her of the broad boulevards shaded by
chestnut-trees, with fine shops on either side, and the great avenue of the
Champs Elysées, at the end of which stands the Arch of Triumph, erected by
Napoleon in memory of his victories.
Along this avenue passes the gay world of Paris
in carriages, automobiles, and on foot, bound for the Bois de Boulogne. A part
of this great park is set aside for the special use of the children. No noisy
automobile is allowed in this special enclosure, and carriages can only drive
at a moderate pace. Here the Parisian mothers bring their children for a good
time. They can romp over the grass and play among the pretty flower-beds; have
games of tennis, croquet, or battledore and shuttlecock (which is a favourite
game with them), while their older relatives sit around on little camp-stools,
which every one carries with them to the parks, and talk or do fancy work.
There are ornamental refreshment houses where
cakes and milk and sweet drinks can be had: thus it is a veritable
children’s paradise!
“But there is even more fun to be had in the
gardens of the Tuileries; there is
where I would like to take you, Germaine,” said Mr. Thomson.
“There among bright flower-beds and shady
alleys the little children play games around the feet of the marble statues;
roll their hoops; run after their toy balloons; and trundle their dolls about,
or sail toy boats with red, blue, or white sails, on the little pond, while
their bonnes, or nurses we would
call them, in their long cloaks and big caps with streamers of bright ribbons,
sit gossiping on the benches.
“We would walk along until we found Guignol,
which English and American girls and boys call ‘Punch and Judy;’ but they
would enjoy it just as much as do the French children, for even though Mr.
Punch and Mrs. Judy speak French, the show is just the same.
“And then we would go on a little farther and
join the crowd standing around a man with birds flying all about him. He is
the ‘bird charmer,’ who seems to draw the birds to him by some magic. He
whistles, and they perch on his head, shoulders, and hands, eat out of his
mouth, and perform tricks on the stick he holds in his hand. This greatly
amuses the children, and they are always ready to give the man a few sous, so
it is a profit to him as well as an amusement.”
Then there is the great Cathedral of Notre
Dame, which is probably the best known church in all the world. It stands on
the river bank, for Paris is built on either side of that same Seine that
Germaine sees through the trees in the distance as she sits under the
apple-trees on her father’s farm.
Mr. Thomson tells her also of the new Palace of
Art, where, among many thousands of others, he hopes to exhibit this picture
he is now painting; and of the beautiful Alexander III. bridge near it, with
its lofty white columns crowned by the great golden-winged horses, named after
a Czar of Russia, for the French and Russian people are very friendly.
“Ah, yes! Paris is a great city,” Mr. Thomson
would always say when he had finished.
“Papa said when I was older perhaps he would
take Marie and me there,” said Germaine. “But now I must go,” she
added, jumping up; “mamma will be waiting for me to help her with the
chickens,” and saying good-bye to her friend, Germaine ran toward the
farmyard gate.
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