TTTE SUNDAY OltEGOXlAX, TORTLAXD, JUNE 2. 1012. P2RTOIT5 ST SPLENDID'NEW WSMEN -. a - m. a-Ma St M I a I f AND GUN MEM ARE THEIR HUMBLE MSDERN KNIGHTS. SJk 'if V. . .. - V ! First New Women of .Renaissance Live in World's Memory and Admiration Their Por traits, Greatest of Art Treasures, Must Be Guarded Day and Night by Army of Cus todians to Prevent Another Theft Such as That of the 'Mona Lisa" Women Who Were Ad mitted by Men as Equals. JL 1. , 'aJ V -Womcfa Wear- II ,. RK if - J A y w yii -r-v w- v BT STERLING HF.IL.TO. PIRIS. Mar 15. (Special Cnrrespon. dence) Ferocious mastiff dog lurk bjr night In the Palace of Ver sallies. Slender police-dogs with tiger teeth patrol the Palace of the Louvre bealde their master. Gun-men with automatlc-flrer In their clothea they look Ilk tourists, but they are quick wrestlers and smssher hang about the old royal apartment, audience chambrra. and parade halls, one-time filled with dawdling- courtlera and lovely women. By Oar, tourlata of the world now loiter through. The eld palacea are picture galleries of the Republic. la the allent halla. the tourlata aee the aplendld women of the paat smile down upon them. ro they reallie that they atlll have defrndera like the knight of old. prepared to flint for them? They are the modeat run-men of no birth, who mingle with the throne, who glide with cat-like etep Into the empty corridor. They are the men with maatlfT dog by night, the grim patrola of the French atate, pre pared to fall on the next ravlahera of Mont Lisa's alatera. la theae daya of desperate bandit like Bonnot and eubtle aneaka like the Burglar of the Louvre, the lmmenie value attached to many portralta are continual source of danger for them. A Velasque haa fetched $400,000, a Rembrandt $500,000. There are Leon ardo. Titian and Raphaela that would aell a dearly. The rlchea of the Louvre are calculated at a billion dollar; but no one haa eatlmated the collective vJu ef portralta la the varloua state palace and in particular VereeJllee. Formerly, they were looked on aa boau tlful and aacred object. Now, they are thlnga of value, like gold and Jewel. Bo the French atate haa told 1U guar dian to ahooL rem Kejnal Rlskta. Calmly, the aplendld women of the paat amlle down upon their humble modern knlghta. They era to know that time have changed. They ought to. They began to Chang them. 'Women of the present, undlaputedly man equal, look back with admiration and humility on the strong spirits who won the first battle for you. centuries agol In an epoch of drudges and dolls, they became men's peers by charm and Intelligence. They created a new type which haa remained the modern the Ideal of woman, beautiful, learned, vlr. tuous, artlatlc, pleaaant-apoken. and in teresting heraelf with competence and authority In all the things of life. What a splendid creature was ths famous Jeanne ofVArragon. Her por trait by Raphael Is one of those strange works which fascinate. Once seen. It la never forgotten. Jeanne, at 1 yeara of age, knew ev erything, except arms, that a well-Instructed youth of the time should know. She also danced, plsysd rav Ishlngly on lute and clavlcord, and ex plained Cicero and Virgil. At IS, as wife of Prince Ascanlo Colonna, she took poselon of the old palace like a flood of sunlight. Iu this fortress of the Colonna, her flrt care was to make them give her a tower of her own, which she called her "grotto" a w would say today, her reception-room. There she massed an tiques. Jewels, paintings, tapestries. !1?CSa Vt..VjS TUt. SSL.- If . .--!. i, Mkm- a ft k : I IF L ..MC"k. -a il JJ - . X f J ;aerev-' Yl:-2.! ? :i-J--!au.A. -aj;e-J , .J!aVJMr 14 tU f r .1 f: r ,.v . ,: til l- - TTin W. UiZiJ brle-a-brac. Phe employed artists and gave them fanciful subjects. Soma of them are now In the Louvre, descended from the collection of Cardinal Rich elieu. One la "The Triumph of Mer cury and Comui," the god of elegance, and shows ths Ideals new to her time working In the mind of this charm ing New Woman. On the banks of a rtver, among bos quets and arbors, a gallant society or Court of rolltenesa gracious dames and courteous cavaliers chat in groups,' listen to songs, or compose verses. A breath of ambrosia per fumes the air. It is the world of those first old manuals of the. Art of Liv ing oftenest written by women which were soon to begin appearing, a sort of Arcadia, where business is pnt aside and where they give themselves up In peace and fine leisure to the per fecting of social life; a world which has the charm of a Dialogue of Plato Only more so because women bad become the chiefs and leadera. Jeanne was one of the very first and most no table of the true emancipators of her sex. There were other. If. In those, daya. they had our practice of the referen dum, a popular vote of Europe would have divided the palm of feminine per fection among the 20 foremost of a hundred such beautiful, witty and learned New Women. Venice would have elected Catherine Corano. august widow of the last of the Lustlgnana. who having given a kingdom to her country, lived in ma Jestla retirement at Cyprus. Naples would have voted for that wonderful Queen Jeanne, whose memory still lived. Rome would have pronounced for the blonde Farnese, and Urblno for Laura da Dlantl. whose portrait by Titian haa never been called popularly by any other name than "La Bella" They are symbols of a privileged moment In the history of humanity. They signify a new and charming thing the enthroning of feminine roy alty in the modern world. Because, it woman occupies such a considerable place in Renaissance painting. It la be cause she came suddenly to hold It, really, in society, Awakenlag ef Ulan, The Renaissance was the first great century of women. Held for ao long In an Inferior condition, ah took her revenge at last and passed to the front row. Hhe freed herself, became a per son having her own independent exist ence. Thla transformation had the great consequence of making social life pos sible. Society.- that 1. an ensemble of distinguished people of a locality uniting for a disinterested cause, not by reaaons of family or business, but ! to form a common fund of their intelli gence, a special intercourse distinct from the affections of the heart, and which alone gives "politeness"; that particular convention which permits polite people to meet on a footing of momentary equality business man and scientist, soldier and man of let ters, artist and millionaire under the witty patronage of a few elect women the social circle of tuls kind Is the creature of the French and Italian Re naiaaance. The Middle Agea had at once exalted and curaed women; even idolising her. It put her outside of na tureno society would have been pos sible with the Beatrice of lante Yet some of these first New Women had terrible old possibilities lingering in them. In the Louvre, sister por traits to the stolen Mona Lisa, hang two other works by Leonardo, deemed almost equally priceless and both bearing the same name. Which was the true "Belle FcrronnlereT", Is It she whose two eyes follow the' tourist, no mstter where he my Ktand? Its marvel ta the profound glance, aa Mona ltet ; t 7 1 f-.t ai' ; a , a a iw U .... v-r'K2 1 v A"-' -fl - Lisa's marrel was her smile. Or Is the traa-fc profile. Iron and marble? Neither portrait smiles. The vc Leonardo da Vinci painted her. she was deep In 1C Brought to FTance by the art-loving King, one of the great Ital ian' first work was to portray the ation while looking about her for the most horrible revenge Imaginable. Phe latest royal caprice. The King called her his favorite the rich, cultlvsted and strong-eouled woman whom he had ruthlesnly separated from her family. And she pretended to accept the sltu did not want to kill htm at ohm but first gave him year of agony! It la hltory. At that time. In Europe, every one dreaded a niteriou malady that had auddenly appeared, and never pardoned. It polon waa low. Im placable, making sores like cancer: a poison so strong and suM'e that a touch of the hand of an afflicted one might glva It. One day the Belle Ferronnler slipped out of the palace. In disguise, to seek a thing she wsnted. She was gone two hours. When she returned she had what She went out for the fstal poison was on' her. In her. and about her! Then the beautiful woman watched, with Joy, for Its first signs. "Let my beauty perish." was her meditation. "If I can but make him take the virus!" It was all about her; and the King of France, calling on her constantly, was bound to take It up. who knows, by kissing her hand, or eating a peach that she had pared? But, note, it waa not a poison from a bottle whlrh ahe could be accused of purposely administering. Also, it was slow! Delight la Ciwel Veageemew. She delighted cruely when the first sore stared him. "They are nothing," said the Belle Ferronnlere. "They are nothing," echoed the frightened doc tor; and they ordered sweat baths. Later. King Francis never appeared without gloves. The amount of drugs they mad him take waa awful. In time his face came to be made up with fiesh-colorsd patches. For eight years the proud King drsgged his wretched body, in psln and disgust, through a pretense of royal routine. Courtiers kept a respectful distance. Palace servants buried bis discarded clothes and linen. Surrounded by sham devo tion, he was a pariah In hla own court . Only one person dared to take hla hand ;zetncr f "fii'ili f rrrnniucro" nr. , the beautiful woman whom he had ao Franrl I serins already to Klrw 1 wronged, who had thus revenged her- ia each. foubUes at th mua,eut i self, wiio risked notbinff, fox b bad, the poiaon In her. When Ita ravage howed on her, the King burst Into tears 'What. you. too?" he cried. "Had I not done you enough harm?" Now she dissppears from view; but one stormy afternoon, at ttamhoulllet, when the King was at hi last extremity, a lady came to see him. What pained, no one knows: but. finally, the King was heard to give a great cry. Has tening, bis doctors found him desd. "lie had a shock." the ladv aid; and It wa obvious. White-faced and robed In black, they let her pass. It was the Belle Ferronnlere. V hst had she told old King Francis? None csred. All rejoiced round young King Henri. And she remains mysterious to thla day. Whlrh la her portrait Both are priceless works of Leonsrdo. No his toric character I more authentic. Ye ask any Frenchman, and he will tell you that the Belle Ferronnlere, whose real name waa Ferron. 1 that alster portralt of Mona Lisa which i labeled Lucrexla Crlvelll an Italian woman who wa never In Frnce. The true por trait of the Belle Ferronnlere that of the ancient catalogue and still labeled "formerly known aa the Belle Ferron nlere" is the tragic profile by Leon ardo, white and black, that hangs across the hall, a somber enigma. All Leonardo's work are mysterious and subject to astonishing adventurea. A kort of fate seems to hang over them. There are 2000 authentic Ru bens. There are (00 authentic Rem brandt. There are 200 authentic Tl tlens. But of Leonardo da Vinci there exists only a dosen paintings. The Louvre possesses half of them, and this helps to give their fsbulous value. Leonardo da Vinci was not only a painter, he waa a sculptor, en gineer, architect, naturalist, musician, chemist and aviator. In his paintings, which were for him a pastime, he ac cumulated a prodigious number of ex periments and researches, and it was hla extraordinary activity which worked against them. Pope Julius II. ordered a portrait from him, and Le onardo began by studying a new var nish. "Good," said the pope, "he Is commencing at the wrong end. I will never have my picture." Leonardo dropped most of his paint ing before they mere finished. Others fell into ruin while he Interrupted work on them, like the celebrated fres co of h battle ot AosiUarl, which. half completed, scaled and broke dur ing Leonsrdo' lifetime, and I known only by the sketch of Huhena. Th Belle Ferronnlere remained 151 years in the Chateau of Knntalnehleaii, from the reign of Francis I to the reign of Louis XIV, 'There, while It hung In th" golden room bnslde the Mona Lisa, It was part Imtarly noticed by Buckingham, the f.unous F.ngllsh amhat:alor In IMimas' "Three Ouards men." Visiting the chstonu with Uu bens, he expressed s di-sire to pur chase the palntltiK. Perhaps he hoped It would be offered him ns a gift; hut the French king found the suggestion Indiscreet, and hud loth portraits tak en down and hidden. Louis XIII. knew better how to defend hi pictures than did the present republic. Momrl of Renaissance. Yet If he eaved the Bella Ferron nlere and Mona Lisa, he allowed Leonardo' "Leda" to b sacrificed. The delightful painting rhook the moral scruple of Surlntondrnt Sublet de Noyera, who started to destroy IU He was stopped by a courngeous young maid of honor of the court, who dragged the mutilated and scorched canvas from the open grate lire, where Sublet had thrown It. The new Women of the Renaissance often stirred up such admiration and devotion to their sisters of a later day. But see how. In two different genera tion, the simple needs of the heart cry out above culture, fnshion, art and elegant society, even when the Brest souls of the heroines had thought to still them. The marriage of Anne de Bourbon and tht Hue de I.ongunville ahe young, gracloua and Illustrious, he the handsomest man of his age set the royal town of Fontalnebleau en fete. The importance of the parties made their union of public Import. The am bassadors of four powers were pres ent. The King protected th msrrlase of his kinswoman. A hundred girls in white escorted the bride and 50 chevaliers In armor supported the groom. The poets replaced modern re porters, and Instead of photographers, there were the court painters, whose portraits remain. Yet Anne, It wss known, hsd pre viously loved and parted with an earlier fiance, nohle youth, but young , i jlConcluded on l'ag S.