The Parisian life
Theaters under the Directoire
The History of the French society during the Directoire also depict the
Parisian life in the theaters:
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All the witticism of the sheets having a go at pointed remarks;
there, the lazzi, the singer, the play on words, everything is used to shoot at
any time against the Jacobins and the exclusives. By word of mouth,
circulate the words that are the stirrup leather, and the wipe that flagellate
the shoulders of the revolution is never released. |
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There, all the nobility of Tivoli, of Grouchy, of
Corazza, all the legion of Royal-Anarchy are soldiers, and show
off, with their white flag and their rallying cry "War to the
téo-istes!". |
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The amiable folks walk for and back, gesticulating, listing
about their mistress and their guillotined relatives, talking together about
the day of 10 August, of their messenger who comes from Franconi, and of the
key of their box at Feydeau (a well known theater) that a lady requests,
relating with a guttural pronunciation the last trashed Jacobin , and Melle
d'Espagne frustrated by Abolin, and the trouser of Charette sold twenty-six
Louis and the history of the wine of Constance de Barras.
At any time the wiskis throw away on the boulevard new elegant
muscadins coming from the "café Rigny", from the banks of the "Quatre
Nations", where they drunk a milk punch, and applaud the pendule, covered by a
netting, that plays le Réveil du Peuple. Their password is an
allusion to Louis XVII: "How much height and a half and height and a half
make?" or "What is the half of thirty four?".
They recognize themselves by pulling out the pocket of their
waist coat a wooden talisman which shape at the outline represents "à la
silhouette" the figures of Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette. They recognize
themselves to a button they wear on the shoulder; They recognize themselves to
the eighteen buttons of their coat. They announce their presence to each other
by humming mezzo voce: |
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- Representatives of the just citizen
- You, inhuman legislator,
- Who by an unjust order
- etc.
- Rapsodie.
- One day in Paris. Year V.
- Censor of Papers. November 1796.
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Martainville plays Concert de la rue de Feydeau or the
Agrément du jour; René, Perrin et Cammaille present, at
the Ambigu Theater, the Concert de la rue de Feydeau or the Folie du
jour. Harshly mocked, somehow insulted in their tail coats, regular
audience of Feydeau whistle their disapproval at the Ambigu; beating, crying,
counter-crying: - Down the Jacobins! - Down the Muscadins! They have a set-to;
and at once, the Parisians are wondering if they won't know a civil war for a
milliner quarrel.
So disguised, "the chin falling into the tie, trousers falling
on the calfs", the gilded youth of the Directoire show off. So strangely rigged
out, they walk, square and steady on their legs, curved, making stooped, with
round shoulders, the spectacles, put in fashion by the lawyers of the "tiers"
(third State) in 1789, in the middle of their nose; the hand leaning strongly
on a gnarled stick, their executive power, as they say, they look like
"toucheurs de boeufs" (cattle drover).
By a frequent contradiction in the matter of fashion, these
braggarts, with short sticks, have adopted a voice of weakling, a
childish list, a gurgling parlance. They have muscles to kill an ox; they
simulate such a weak throat that a sound letter would break it!- Everybody say
paole supème, paoles vetes, paole
panassee. |
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Man fashion 1798, ample redingote, and wide trousers.
(La Mesangère, Musée Carnavalet) |
Young boy 1799, redingote seen in the back, large bicorne.
(La Mesangère, Musée Carnavalet) |
Parisian costume in 1799, wide collar coat, boat woman
trousers.( La Mesangère, Musée Carnavalet) |
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Fashion 1799, high collar coat, wide trousers. (La
Mesangère, Musée Carnavalet) |
Iincroyable half open coat, (Tresca, The croyables at the
perron, Bibliothèque nationale) |
Other type of incroyable, Wide lapel. Very high felt hat.
Carle Vernet, (Bibliothèque nationale) |
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Source: History of the French society during the Directoire,
Final edition published under the direction of the Académie
Goncourt. |