291
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English
Documents
2010
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291
pages
English
Ebook
2010
Le téléchargement nécessite un accès à la bibliothèque YouScribe Tout savoir sur nos offres
The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Little Tour in
France, by Henry James
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no
cost and with
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Title: A Little Tour in France
Author: Henry James
Illustrator: Joseph Pennell
Release Date: February 4, 2009 [EBook #28004]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
A LITTLE TOUR IN FRANCE ***
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A LITTLE
TOUR IN FRANCE
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Novels by
HENRY JAMES
Six Shillings each
THE AWKWARD AGE
THE TWO MAGICS
WHAT MAISIE KNEW
THE OTHER HOUSE
THE SPOILS OF POYNTON
EMBARRASSMENTS
TERMINATIONS
london: william heinemann
21 Bedford Street, W.C.
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[Click to view image enlarged.]A LITTLE
TOUR IN FRANCE
By
HENRY JAMES
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with ninety-four illustrations by
JOSEPH PENNELL
LONDON
WILLIAM HEINEMANN
1900
Preface
Contents
List of Illustrations
Introductory
Footnotes
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Preface
Preface
The notes presented in this volume were gathered, aswill easily be perceived, a number of years ago and on
an expectation not at that time answered by the event,
and were then published in the United States. The
expectation had been that they should accompany a
series of drawings, and they themselves were
altogether governed by the pictorial spirit. They made,
and they make in appearing now, after a considerable
interval and for the first time, in England, no
pretension to any other; they are impressions,
immediate, easy, and consciously limited; if the written
word may ever play the part of brush or pencil, they
are sketches on "drawing-paper" and nothing more.
From the moment the principle of selection and
expression, with a tourist, is not the delight of the eyes
and the play of fancy, it should be an energy in every
way much larger; there is no happy mean, in other
words, I hold, between the sense and the quest of the
picture, and the surrender to it, and the sense and the
quest of the constitution, the inner springs of the
subject—springs and connections social, economic,
historic.
One must really choose, in other words, between the
benefits of the perception of surface—a perception,
when fine, perhaps none of the most frequent—and
those of the perception of very complex underlying
matters. If these latter had had, for me, to be taken
into account, my pages would not have been
collected. At the time of their original appearance the
series of illustrations to which it had been their policy
to cling for countenance and company failed them,
after all, at the last moment, through a circumstance
not now on record; and they had suddenly to begin to
live their little life without assistance. That they haveseemed able in any degree still to prolong even so
modest a career might perhaps have served as a
reason for leaving them undisturbed. In fact, however,
I have too much appreciated—for any renewal of
inconsistency—the opportunity of granting them at
last, in an association with Mr. Pennell's admirable
drawings, the benefit they have always lacked. The
little book thus goes forth finally as the picture-book it
was designed to be. Text and illustrations are,
altogether and alike, things of the play of eye and
hand and fancy—views, head-pieces, tail-pieces;
through the artist's work, doubtless, in a much higher
degree than the author's.
But these are words enough on a minor point. Many
things come back to me on reading my pages over—
such a world of reflection and emotion as I can neither
leave unmentioned nor yet, in this place, weigh them
down with the full expression of. Difficult indeed would
be any full expression for one who, deeply devoted
always to the revelations of France, finds himself, late
in life, making of the sentiment no more substantial,
no more direct record than this mere revival of an
accident. Not one of these small chapters but
suggests to me a regret that I might not, first or last,
have gone farther, penetrated deeper, spoken oftener
—closed, in short, more intimately with the great
general subject; and I mean, of course, not in such a
form as the present, but in many another, possible
and impossible. It all comes back, doubtless, this
vision of missed occasions and delays overdone, to
the general truth that the observer, the enjoyer, may,
before he knows it, be practically too far in for all that
free testimony and pleasant, easy talk that areincidental to the earlier or more detached stages of a
relation. There are relations that soon get beyond all
merely showy appearances of value for us. Their value
becomes thus private and practical, and is
represented by the process—the quieter, mostly, the
better—of absorption and assimilation of what the
relation has done for us. For persons thus indebted to
the genius of France—however, in its innumerable
ways, manifested—the profit to be gained, the lesson
to be learnt, is almost of itself occupation enough.
They feel that they bear witness by the intelligent use
and application of their advantage, and the
consciousness of the artist is therefore readily a
consciousness of pious service. He may repeatedly
have dreamt of some such happy combination of
mood and moment as shall launch him in a profession
of faith, a demonstration of the interesting business;
he may have had inner glimpses of an explicit
statement, and vaguely have sketched it to himself as
one of the most candid and charming ever drawn up;
but time, meanwhile, has passed, interruptions have
done their dismal work, the indirect tribute, too, has
perhaps, behind the altar, grown and grown; and the
reflection has at all events established itself that
honour is more rendered by seeing and doing one's
work in the light than by brandishing the torch on the
house-tops. Curiosity and admiration have operated
continually, but with as little waste as they could. The
drawback is only that in this case, to be handsomely
consequent, one would perhaps rather not have
appeared to celebrate any rites. The moral of all of
which is that those here embodied must pass, at the
best, but for what they are worth.H. J.
August 9, 1900.
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Contents
chapter page
Introductory 1
I. Tours 3
II. Tours: the Cathedral 12
III. Tours: Saint Martin 17
"Saint Julian 20
"Plessis-les-Tours 22
"Marmoutier 23
IV. Blois 26
V. Chambord 36
VI. Amboise 47
Chaumont 51
VII. Chenonceaux 54
VIII. Azay-le-Rideau 64
IX. Langeais 68
X. Loches 72
XI. Bourges 77
"The Cathedral 80
XII. Bourges: Jacques Cœur 86XIII. Le Mans 94
XIV. Angers 101
XV. Nantes 107
XVI. La Rochelle 115
XVII. Poitiers 122
XVIII. Angoulême 130
Bordeaux 132
XIX. Toulouse 136
XX. Toulouse: the Capitol 141
XXI. Toulouse: Saint-Sernin 145
XXII. Carcassonne 150
XXIII. Carcassonne 157
XXIV. Narbonne 163
XXV. Montpellier 170
XXVI. The Pont du Gard 178
XXVII. Aigues-Mortes 183
XXVIII. Nîmes 188
XXIX. Tarascon 195
XXX. Arles 202
"The Theatre 205
XXXI. Arles: the Museum 209
XXXII. Les Baux 213
XXXIII. Avignon 223
"The Palace of the Popes 226
XXXIV. Villeneuve-lès-Avignon 230
XXXV. Vaucluse 235
XXXVI. Orange 243XXXVII. Macon 249
XXXVIII. Bourg-en-Bresse 254
The Church at Brou 255
XXXIX. Beaune 262
XL. Dijon 267
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List of Illustrations
Frontispi
Nîmes: the Garden (Photogravure)
ece
To face p
Tours: the House of Balzac 8
age
Tours: the Cathedral (Photogravure) " 14
Tours: the Towers of St. Martin " 18
Blois (Photogravure) " 26
Blois: the Château " 28
Chambord " 38
Amboise: the Château " 48
Chenonceaux (Photogravure) " 56
Azay-le-Rideau " 64
Loches " 72
Loches: the Church " 74
Bourges: the House of Jacques Cœur (Ph
" 86
otogravure)
Bourges: Doorway, House of Jacques C
" 90
œur
Bourges: the Cathedral (West Front) " 92