A FRAGMENT
1879
Originally intended to
serve as the opening chapter of
“Travels with a Donkey
in the Cevennes"
Le Monastier is the chief place of
a hilly canton in Haute Loire, the ancient Velay.
As the name betokens, the town is of monastic origin;
and it still contains a towered bulk of monastery
and a church of some architectural pretensions, the
seat of an archpriest and several vicars. It
stands on the side of a hill above the river Gazeille,
about fifteen miles from Le Puy, up a steep road where
the wolves sometimes pursue the diligence in winter.
The road, which is bound for Vivarais, passes through
the town from end to end in a single narrow street;
there you may see the fountain where women fill their
pitchers; there also some old houses with carved doors
and pédiments and ornamental work in iron.
For Monastier, like Maybole in Ayrshire, was a sort
of country capital, where the local aristocracy had
their town mansions for the winter; and there is a
certain baron still alive and, I am told, extremely
penitent, who found means to ruin himself by high
living in this village on the hills. He certainly
has claims to be considered the most remarkable spendthrift
on record. How he set about it, in a place where
there are no luxuries for sale, and where the board
at the best inn comes to little more than a shilling
a day, is a problem for the wise. His son, ruined
as the family was, went as far as Paris to sow his
wild oats; and so the cases of father and son mark
an epoch in the history of centralization in France.
Not until the latter had got into the train was the
work of Richelieu complete.
It is a people of lace-makers.
The women sit in the streets by groups of five or
six; and the noise of the bobbins is audible from one
group to another. Now and then you will hear
one woman clattering off prayers for the edification
of the others at their work. They wear gaudy shawls,
white caps with a gay ribbon about the head, and sometimes
a black felt brigand hat above the cap; and so they
give the street colour and brightness and a foreign
air. A while ago, when England largely supplied
herself from this district with the lace called torchon,
it was not unusual to earn five francs a day; and
five francs in Monastier is worth a pound in London.
Now, from a change in the market, it takes a clever
and industrious workwoman to earn from three to four
in the week, or less than an eighth of what she made
easily a few years ago. The tide of prosperity
came and went, as with our northern pitmen, and left
nobody the richer. The women bravely squandered
their gains, kept the men in idleness, and gave themselves
up, as I was told, to sweethearting and a merry life.
From week’s end to week’s end it was one
continuous gala in Monastier; people spent the day
in the wine-shops, and the drum or the bagpipes led
on the bourrees up to ten at night. Now
these dancing days are over. “Il n’y
a plus de jeunesse,” said Victor the garcon.
I hear of no great advance in what are thought the
essentials of morality; but the bourree, with
its rambling, sweet, interminable music, and alert
and rustic figures, has fallen into disuse, and is
mostly remembered as a custom of the past. Only
on the occasion of the fair shall you hear a drum
discreetly rattling in a wine-shop or perhaps one
of the company singing the measure while the others
dance. I am sorry at the change, and marvel once
more at the complicated scheme of things upon this
earth, and how a turn of fashion in England can silence
so much mountain merriment in France. The lace-makers
themselves have not entirely forgiven our countrywomen;
and I think they take a special pleasure in the legend
of the northern quarter of the town, called L’Anglade,
because there the English free-lances were arrested
and driven back by the potency of a little Virgin
Mary on the wall.
From time to time a market is held,
and the town has a season of revival; cattle and pigs
are stabled in the streets; and pickpockets have
been known to come all the way from Lyons for the occasion.
Every Sunday the country folk throng in with daylight
to buy apples, to attend mass, and to visit one of
the wine-shops, of which there are no fewer than fifty
in this little town. Sunday wear for the men is
a green tail-coat of some coarse sort of drugget,
and usually a complete suit to match. I have
never set eyes on such degrading raiment. Here
it clings, there bulges; and the human body, with
its agreeable and lively lines, is turned into a mockery
and laughing-stock. Another piece of Sunday business
with the peasants is to take their ailments to the
chemist for advice. It is as much a matter for
Sunday as church-going. I have seen a woman who
had been unable to speak since the Monday before, wheezing,
catching her breath, endlessly and painfully coughing;
and yet she had waited upwards of a hundred hours
before coming to seek help, and had the week been
twice as long, she would have waited still. There
was a canonical day for consultation; such was the
ancestral habit, to which a respectable lady must
study to conform.
Two conveyances go daily to Le Puy,
but they rival each other in polite concessions rather
than in speed. Each will wait an hour or two hours
cheerfully while an old lady does her marketing or
a gentleman finishes the papers in a cafe. The
Courrier(such is the name of one) should leave
Le Puy by two in the afternoon on the return voyage,
and arrive at Monastier in good time for a six o’clock
dinner. But the driver dares not disoblige his
customers. He will postpone his departure again
and again, hour after hour; and I have known the sun
to go down on his delay. These purely personal
favours, this consideration of men’s fancies,
rather than the hands of a mechanical clock, as marking
the advance of the abstraction, time, makes a more
humorous business of stage-coaching than we are used
to see it.
As far as the eye can reach, one swelling
line of hill-top rises and falls behind another; and
if you climb an eminence, it is only to see new and
farther ranges behind these. Many little rivers
run from all sides in cliffy valleys; and one of them,
a few miles from Monastier, bears the great name of
Loire. The mean level of the country is a little
more than three thousand feet above the sea, which
makes the atmosphere proportionally brisk and wholesome.
There is little timber except pines, and the greater
part of the country lies in moorland pasture.
The country is wild and tumbled rather than commanding;
an upland rather than a mountain district; and the
most striking as well as the most agreeable scenery
lies low beside the rivers. There, indeed, you
will find many corners that take the fancy; such as
made the English noble choose his grave by a Swiss
streamlet, where Nature is at her freshest, and looks
as young as on the seventh morning. Such a place
is the course of the Gazeille, where it waters the
common of Monastier and thence downward till it joins
the Loire; a place to hear birds singing; a place
for lovers to frequent. The name of the river
was perhaps suggested by the sound of its passage
over the stones; for it is a great warbler, and at
night, after I was in bed in Monastier, I could hear
it go singing down the valley till I fell asleep.
On the whole, this is a Scottish landscape,
although not so noble as the best in Scotland; and
by an odd coincidence the population is, in its way,
as Scottish as the country. They have abrupt,
uncouth, Fifeshire manners, and accost you, as if
you were trespassing, with an “Ou’st-ce
que vous allez?” only translatable into the
Lowland “Whau’r ye gaun?” They keep
the Scottish Sabbath. There is no labour done
on that day but to drive in and out the various pigs
and sheep and cattle that make so pleasant a tinkling
in the meadows. The lace-makers have disappeared
from the street. Not to attend mass would involve
social degradation; and you may find people reading
Sunday books, in particular a sort of Catholic Monthly
Visitor on the doings of Our Lady of Lourdes.
I remember one Sunday, when I was walking in the country,
that I fell on a hamlet and found all the inhabitants,
from the patriarch to the baby, gathered in the shadow
of a gable at prayer. One strapping lass stood
with her back to the wall and did the solo part, the
rest chiming in devoutly. Not far off, a lad
lay flat on his face asleep among some straw, to represent
the worldly element.
Again, this people is eager to proselytize;
and the postmaster’s daughter used to argue
with me by the half-hour about my heresy, until she
grew quite flushed. I have heard the reverse process
going on between a Scots-woman and a French girl;
and the arguments in the two cases were identical.
Each apostle based her claim on the superior virtue
and attainments of her clergy, and clinched the business
with a threat of hell-fire. “Pas bong prêtres
ici,” said the Presbyterian, “bong
prêtres en Écosse.” And the postmaster’s
daughter, taking up the same weapon, plied me, so
to speak, with the butt of it instead of the bayonet.
We are a hopeful race, it seems, and easily persuaded
for our good. One cheerful circumstance I note
in these guerrilla missions, that each side relies
on hell, and Protestant and Catholic alike address
themselves to a supposed misgiving in their adversary’s
heart. And I call it cheerful, for faith is a
more supporting quality than imagination.
Here, as in Scotland, many peasant
families boast a son in holy orders. And here
also, the young men have a tendency to emigrate.
It is certainly not poverty that drives them to the
great cities or across the seas, for many peasant
families, I was told, have a fortune of at least 40,000
francs. The lads go forth pricked with the spirit
of adventure and the desire to rise in life, and leave
their homespun elders grumbling and wondering over
the event. Once, at a village called Laussonne,
I met one of these disappointed parents: a drake
who had fathered a wild swan and seen it take wing
and disappear. The wild swan in question was
now an apothecary in Brazil. He had flown by way
of Bordeaux, and first landed in America, bare-headed
and barefoot, and with a single halfpenny in his pocket.
And now he was an apothecary! Such a wonderful
thing is an adventurous life! I thought he might
as well have stayed at home; but you never can tell
wherein a man’s life consists, nor in what he
sets his pleasure: one to drink, another to marry,
a third to write scurrilous articles and be repeatedly
caned in public, and now this fourth, perhaps, to
be an apothecary in Brazil. As for his old father,
he could conceive no reason for the lad’s behaviour.
“I had always bread for him,” he said;
“he ran away to annoy me. He loved to annoy
me. He had no gratitude.” But at heart
he was swelling with pride over his travelled offspring,
and he produced a letter out of his pocket, where,
as he said, it was rotting, a mere lump of paper rags,
and waved it gloriously in the air. “This
comes from America,” he cried, “six thousand
leagues away!” And the wine-shop audience looked
upon it with a certain thrill.
I soon became a popular figure, and
was known for miles in the country. Ou’st-ce
que vous allez? was changed for me into Quoi,
vous rentrez au Monastier ce soir? and in the
town itself every urchin seemed to know my name, although
no living creature could pronounce it. There was
one particular group of lace-makers who brought out
a chair for me whenever I went by, and detained me
from my walk to gossip. They were filled with
curiosity about England, its language, its religion,
the dress of the women, and were never weary of seeing
the Queen’s head on English postage-stamps,
or seeking for French words in English Journals.
The language, in particular, filled them with surprise.
“Do they speak patois
in England?” I was once asked; and when I told
them not, “Ah, then, French?” said they.
“No, no,” I said, “not French.”
“Then,” they concluded, “they speak
patois.”
You must obviously either speak French
or patois. Talk of the force of logic here
it was in all its weakness. I gave up the point,
but proceeding to give illustrations of ray native
jargon, I was met with a new mortification. Of
all patois they declared that mine was the most
preposterous and the most jocose in sound. At
each new word there was a new explosion of laughter,
and some of the younger ones were glad to rise from
their chairs and stamp about the street in ecstasy;
and I looked on upon their mirth in a faint and slightly
disagreeable bewilderment. “Bread,”
which sounds a commonplace, plain-sailing monosyllable
in England, was the word that most delighted these
good ladies of Monastier; it seemed to them frolicsome
and racy, like a page of Pickwick; and they all got
it carefully by heart, as a stand-by, I presume, for
winter evenings. I have tried it since then with
every sort of accent and inflection, but I seem to
lack the sense of humour.
They were of all ages: children
at their first web of lace, a stripling girl with
a bashful but encouraging play of eyes, solid married
women, and grandmothers, some on the top of their
age and some falling towards decrepitude. One
and all were pleasant and natural, ready to laugh and
ready with a certain quiet solemnity when that was
called for by the subject of our talk. Life,
since the fall in wages, had begun to appear to them
with a more serious air. The stripling girl would
sometimes laugh at me in a provocative and not unadmiring
manner, if I judge aright; and one of the grandmothers,
who was my great friend of the party, gave me many
a sharp word of judgment on my sketches, my heresy,
or even my arguments, and gave them with a wry mouth
and a humorous twinkle in her eye that were eminently
Scottish. But the rest used me with a certain
reverence, as something come from afar and not entirely
human. Nothing would put them at their ease but
the irresistible gaiety of my native tongue.
Between the old lady and myself I think there was a
real attachment. She was never weary of sitting
to me for her portrait, in her best cap and brigand
hat, and with all her wrinkles tidily composed, and
though she never failed to repudiate the result, she
would always insist upon another trial. It was
as good as a play to see her sitting in judgment over
the last. “No, no,” she would say,
“that is not it. I am old, to be sure,
but I am better-looking than that. We must try
again.” When I was about to leave she bade
me good-bye for this life in a somewhat touching manner.
We should not meet again, she said; it was a long
farewell, and she was sorry. But life is so full
of crooks, old lady, that who knows? I have said
good-bye to people for greater distances and times,
and, please God, I mean to see them yet again.
One thing was notable about these
women, from the youngest to the oldest, and with hardly
an exception. In spite of their piety, they could
twang off an oath with Sir Toby Belch in person.
There was nothing so high or so low, in heaven or
earth or in the human body, but a woman of this neighbourhood
would whip out the name of it, fair and square, by
way of conversational adornment. My landlady,
who was pretty and young, dressed like a lady and
avoided patois like a weakness, commonly addressed
her child in the language of a drunken bully.
And of all the swearers that I ever heard, commend
me to an old lady in Gondet, a village of the Loire.
I was making a sketch, and her curse was not yet ended
when I had finished it and took my departure.
It is true she had a right to be angry; for here was
her son, a hulking fellow, visibly the worse for drink
before the day was well begun. But it was strange
to hear her unwearying flow of oaths and obscenities,
endless like a river, and now and then rising to a
passionate shrillness, in the clear and silent air
of the morning. In city slums, the thing might
have passed unnoticed; but in a country valley, and
from a plain and honest countrywoman, this beastliness
of speech surprised the ear.
The Conductor, as he is called,
of Roads and Bridges was my principal companion.
He was generally intelligent, and could have spoken
more or less falsetto on any of the trite topics; but
it was his specialty to have a generous taste in eating.
This was what was most indigenous in the man; it was
here he was an artist; and I found in his company
what I had long suspected, that enthusiasm and special
knowledge are the great social qualities, and what
they are about, whether white sauce or Shakespeare’s
plays, an altogether secondary question.
I used to accompany the Conductor
on his professional rounds, and grew to believe myself
an expert in the business. I thought I could make
an entry in a stone-breaker’s time-book, or
order manure off the wayside with any living engineer
in France. Gondet was one of the places we visited
together; and Laussonne, where I met the apothecary’s
father, was another. There, at Laussonne, George
Sand spent a day while she was gathering materials
for the “Marquis de Villemer”; and I have
spoken with an old man, who was then a child running
about the inn kitchen, and who still remembers her
with a sort of reverence. It appears that he
spoke French imperfectly; for this reason George Sand
chose him for companion, and whenever he let slip
a broad and picturesque phrase in patois, she
would make him repeat it again and again till it was
graven in her memory. The word for a frog particularly
pleased her fancy; and it would be curious to know
if she afterwards employed it in her works. The
peasants, who knew nothing of letters and had never
so much as heard of local colour, could not explain
her chattering with this backward child; and to them
she seemed a very homely lady and far from beautiful:
the most famous man-killer of the age appealed so little
to Velaisian swine-herds!
On my first engineering excursion,
which lay up by Crouzials towards Mount Mezenc and
the borders of Ardèche, I began an improving acquaintance
with the foreman road-mender. He was in great
glee at having me with him, passed me off among his
subalterns as the supervising engineer, and insisted
on what he called “the gallantry” of paying
for my breakfast in a roadside wine-shop. On the
whole, he was a man of great weather-wisdom, some
spirits, and a social temper. But I am afraid
he was superstitious. When he was nine years old,
he had seen one night a company of bourgeois et
dames qui faisaient la manege avec des chaises,
and concluded that he was in the presence of a witches’
Sabbath. I suppose, but venture with timidity
on the suggestion, that this may have been a romantic
and nocturnal picnic party. Again, coming from
Pradelles with his brother, they saw a great empty
cart drawn by six enormous horses before them on the
road. The driver cried aloud and filled the mountains
with the cracking of his whip. He never seemed
to go faster than a walk, yet it was impossible to
overtake him; and at length, at the corner of a hill,
the whole equipage disappeared bodily into the night.
At the time, people said it was the devil qui s’amusait
a faire ca.
I suggested there was nothing more
likely, as he must have some amusement.
The foreman said it was odd, but there
was less of that sort of thing than formerly. “C’est
difficile,” he added, “a expliquer.”
When we were well up on the moors
and the Conductor was trying some road-metal
with the gauge
“Hark!” said the foreman, “do you
hear nothing?”
We listened, and the wind, which was
blowing chilly out of the east, brought a faint, tangled
jangling to our ears.
“It is the flocks of Vivarais,” said he.
For every summer, the flocks out of
all Ardèche are brought up to pasture on these grassy
plateaux.
Here and there a little private flock
was being tended by a girl, one spinning with a distaff,
another seated on a wall and intently making lace.
This last, when we addressed her, leaped up in a panic
and put out her arms, like a person swimming, to keep
us at a distance, and it was some seconds before we
could persuade her of the honesty of our intentions.
The Conductor told me of another
herdswoman from whom he had once asked his road while
he was yet new to the country, and who fled from him,
driving her beasts before her, until he had given up
the information in despair. A tale of old lawlessness
may yet be read in these uncouth timidities.
The winter in these uplands is a dangerous
and melancholy time. Houses are snowed up, and
wayfarers lost in a flurry within hail of their own
fireside. No man ventures abroad without meat
and a bottle of wine, which he replenishes at every
wine-shop; and even thus equipped he takes the road
with terror. All day the family sits about the
fire in a foul and airless hovel, and equally without
work or diversion. The father may carve a rude
piece of furniture, but that is all that will be done
until the spring sets in again, and along with it
the labours of the field. It is not for nothing
that you find a clock in the meanest of these mountain
habitations. A clock and an almanack, you would
fancy, were indispensable in such a life....