登陆注册
25640500000002

第2章

To know how to sell, to be able to sell, and to sell. People generally do not suspect how much of the stateliness of Paris is due to these three aspects of the same problem. The brilliant display of shops as rich as the salons of the noblesse before 1789; the splendors of cafes which eclipse, and easily eclipse, the Versailles of our day; the shop-window illusions, new every morning, nightly destroyed; the grace and elegance of the young men that come in contact with fair customers; the piquant faces and costumes of young damsels, who cannot fail to attract the masculine customer; and (and this especially of late) the length, the vast spaces, the Babylonish luxury of galleries where shopkeepers acquire a monopoly of the trade in various articles by bringing them all together,--all this is as nothing. Everything, so far, has been done to appeal to a single sense, and that the most exacting and jaded human faculty, a faculty developed ever since the days of the Roman Empire, until, in our own times, thanks to the efforts of the most fastidious civilization the world has yet seen, its demands are grown limitless. That faculty resides in the "eyes of Paris."Those eyes require illuminations costing a hundred thousand francs, and many-colored glass palaces a couple of miles long and sixty feet high; they must have a fairyland at some fourteen theatres every night, and a succession of panoramas and exhibitions of the triumphs of art; for them a whole world of suffering and pain, and a universe of joy, must resolve through the boulevards or stray through the streets of Paris; for them encyclopaedias of carnival frippery and a score of illustrated books are brought out every year, to say nothing of caricatures by the hundred, and vignettes, lithographs, and prints by the thousand. To please those eyes, fifteen thousand francs' worth of gas must blaze every night; and, to conclude, for their delectation the great city yearly spends several millions of francs in opening up views and planting trees. And even yet this is as nothing--it is only the material side of the question; in truth, a mere trifle compared with the expenditure of brain power on the shifts, worthy of Moliere, invented by some sixty thousand assistants and forty thousand damsels of the counter, who fasten upon the customer's purse, much as myriads of Seine whitebait fall upon a chance crust floating down the river.

Gaudissart in the mart is at least the equal of his illustrious namesake, now become the typical commercial traveler. Take him away from his shop and his line of business, he is like a collapsed balloon; only among his bales of merchandise do his faculties return, much as an actor is sublime only upon the boards. A French shopman is better educated than his fellows in other European countries; he can at need talk asphalt, Bal Mabille, polkas, literature, illustrated books, railways, politics, parliament, and revolution; transplant him, take away his stage, his yardstick, his artificial graces; he is foolish beyond belief; but on his own boards, on the tight-rope of the counter, as he displays a shawl with a speech at his tongue's end, and his eye on his customer, he puts the great Talleyrand into the shade;he is a match for a Monrose and a Moliere to boot. Talleyrand in his own house would have outwitted Gaudissart, but in the shop the parts would have been reversed.

An incident will illustrate the paradox.

Two charming duchesses were chatting with the above-mentioned great diplomatist. The ladies wished for a bracelet; they were waiting for the arrival of a man from a great Parisian jeweler. A Gaudissart accordingly appeared with three bracelets of marvelous workmanship.

The great ladies hesitated. Choice is a mental lightning flash;hesitate--there is no more to be said, you are at fault. Inspiration in matters of taste will not come twice. At last, after about ten minutes the Prince was called in. He saw the two duchesses confronting doubt with its thousand facets, unable to decide between the transcendent merits of two of the trinkets, for the third had been set aside at once. Without leaving his book, without a glance at the bracelets, the Prince looked at the jeweler's assistant.

"Which would you choose for your sweetheart?" asked he.

The young man indicated one of the pair.

"In that case, take the other, you will make two women happy," said the subtlest of modern diplomatists, "and make your sweetheart happy too, in my name."The two fair ladies smiled, and the young shopman took his departure, delighted with the Prince's present and the implied compliment to his taste.

A woman alights from her splendid carriage before one of the expensive shops where shawls are sold in the Rue Vivienne. She is not alone;women almost always go in pairs on these expeditions; always make the round of half a score of shops before they make up their minds, and laugh together in the intervals over the little comedies played for their benefit. Let us see which of the two acts most in character--the fair customer or the seller, and which has the best of it in such miniature vaudevilles?

If you attempt to describe a sale, the central fact of Parisian trade, you are in duty bound, if you attempt to give the gist of the matter, to produce a type, and for this purpose a shawl or a chatelaine costing some three thousand francs is a more exacting purchase than a length of lawn or dress that costs three hundred. But know, oh foreign visitors from the Old World and the New (if ever this study of the physiology of the Invoice should be by you perused), that this selfsame comedy is played in haberdashers' shops over a barege at two francs or a printed muslin at four francs the yard.

同类推荐
  • 宣汉篇

    宣汉篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 奇效简便良方

    奇效简便良方

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 法句经

    法句经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • My Literary Passions

    My Literary Passions

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • CRESSY

    CRESSY

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 大湖遗子

    大湖遗子

    你相信你不是凡人。你是有来历的,不管境遇给了你什么,你都会坦然面对。你相信,你是聪灵的,相信这一点很重要。因为,上天眷顾如你这样的人,会赐予你神力,赐予你更加广阔的天地,让你施展拳脚。有朝一日,你会振臂一呼,响应者云集,把你拥举到王的宝座。别人,宵小的,和你争霸?开玩笑!我有悯人之心,不让你死的太惨。来吧,上天,来吧,大地,来吧,神灵,赐予我力量!我会感谢你们的。
  • 中外战争的导火索

    中外战争的导火索

    战争的根源是利益之纷争,战争的正式爆发都有一根导火索。本书主要介绍了莱克星顿的枪声、越南骚扰杀戮中国边民、萨拉热窝的枪声、卢沟桥畔的枪炮声、飞机撞向世贸中心、苏格兰女王被处决等战事。阅读完可以帮助读者更全面地,更深刻地认知这些具有重要意义的中外战争。
  • 替身宠妃

    替身宠妃

    向来都是被女人伺候的他,这一夜却无尽温柔,“美人,舒服吗?”“嗯。”她闭眸享受,心里念道,何止是舒服啊!他,乌达鞮侯,塞外的王,至高无上的尊者,却独独为她失了心,万千的宠爱积于她一身,只要她想,任她为之。她以为,他爱的是她的人,可当她替嫁的身份被揭开时,得到的是他狠狠报复…情节虚构,请勿模仿!
  • 勇者异界录

    勇者异界录

    上面的下棋,下面的棋子就该奋斗,但过程那就得自己说的算,什么强者,什么装逼都无关,只要能开心就够。这是一部异界轻松日常升级小说。
  • “空”之x幻想

    “空”之x幻想

    “空”是一系列独创的寓乐流超强的奇幻小说,是一部可以帮助人们提升自己,找到幸福的书。属于哲学科普,论道谈佛,写人类起源,诸神之战,时空穿越,星际旅行,英雄无敌,儿女情长。
  • EXO:女配来袭准备接招

    EXO:女配来袭准备接招

    现在要实名制,我又找不到自己的户口本,省份证又丢了,又要去办,所以请各位读者宝宝多多谅解
  • 掉落凡间的冥界太子

    掉落凡间的冥界太子

    六界出现层层阴谋,冥界遭受大难,太子掉落凡间。神剑再次出世,选定一男子为主,太子身世逐渐浮出。面对天帝的追捕,他仰声长笑:天若不惹我,我必灭天。
  • 仙剑奇侠传五

    仙剑奇侠传五

    蜀山之巅,封印破碎,一代魔尊横空出世……懵懂少年跌跌撞撞堕江湖,邂逅红颜为之倾,恩怨情仇江湖事,一波未平澜又起。感叹红颜多薄命,两情相悦不能久,蜀山之巅孤守彩石……诗曰:红颜曲觞凤鸣舞,一夕流芳苍木情。缘起有落何为始,万道轮回剑相伴。祭都寻鼎求情蛊,磕绊迷途望江湖。吾爱至斯化梦影,花诗蝶恋影成烟。云心雨愿山水梦,无悔今生续仙缘。落拓千山存正气,山摇玉碎破败离。印除魔起乾坤颠,倾定蜀山苍穹灭。独守彩石忆浮沉,红尘飘渺幻化蝶。
  • 重生妖妃:血翼狐妖

    重生妖妃:血翼狐妖

    她和他相爱一世,他死去,她相陪,再次睁眼,与他重温上一世的情,封印开,敌国来袭,他领兵出征,她随他去,战事情急,为保他命,她化为原形,逼退敌军,他保得性命,她却被天罚所擒,扔回生她却抛弃她的地方,待她历经磨难回来,却见他怀报美人,对她冷眼相待
  • 灵魂者的舞会

    灵魂者的舞会

    在这个世界里,只有每个国家的政府首脑才知道,有关灵力的存在。那是可以反抗一切物理法则的力量,而我们的主人公叶晨,轩辕家的败子,天子剑的主人。当众人的心思从横交错时,叶晨手中的剑,将指向何方?银发的剑王。剑舞的巫女。天子的圣剑。三者会擦出怎样的火花?当一切真相水落石出之时,来吧,选择吧。